Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 108599 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 time 3 man 3 look 3 like 3 good 3 Sunday 3 CHAPTER 2 weel 2 old 2 head 2 hand 2 day 2 Wiggie 2 Wauch 2 Tommy 2 Thomas 2 Tammie 2 Peter 2 Nanse 2 Mungo 2 Mansie 2 Maister 2 John 2 James 2 Glen 2 Father 2 Edinburgh 2 Duke 2 Dalkeith 2 Cursecowl 2 Benjie 2 Batter 1 work 1 true 1 trade 1 think 1 poor 1 picture 1 illustration 1 great 1 find 1 english 1 away 1 University 1 St. 1 Sandy 1 Prince 1 Ponocrates 1 Picrochole 1 People Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1812 man 841 day 804 time 571 thing 545 way 499 hand 489 head 453 year 441 eye 415 heart 413 life 370 one 366 world 351 word 336 house 329 nothing 313 door 312 face 304 o 288 night 265 work 264 friend 263 people 255 side 241 name 234 mind 230 place 229 woman 228 body 219 hour 216 thought 215 mother 214 wife 211 matter 210 moment 207 arm 205 morning 203 business 197 bit 196 father 192 book 188 coat 187 end 187 country 184 foot 180 shop 179 class 177 room 175 course 174 water Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 733 _ 663 ye 423 God 245 Pantagruel 225 James 201 Gargantua 192 Benjie 173 wi 155 CHAPTER 148 Mr. 146 auld 145 King 138 Nanse 136 thou 133 Lord 131 Tammie 121 Panurge 113 Mackaye 113 Batter 112 Giant 108 Cursecowl 103 Maister 98 Crossthwaite 92 John 90 England 84 Lillian 83 Thomas 80 Peter 80 Mr 78 London 78 Church 72 Grandgousier 71 heaven 67 Father 66 Mansie 64 Sunday 63 Heaven 59 Mungo 56 Ye 56 Dalkeith 54 Friar 53 Wiggie 53 Paris 53 PANTAGRUEL 50 Prince 48 Master 46 Wauch 46 Picrochole 46 GARGANTUA 45 Glen Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8262 i 4212 it 3996 he 2442 me 2122 they 1925 you 1772 him 1576 them 1478 we 801 she 738 us 501 her 445 myself 377 himself 228 themselves 113 itself 105 ye 65 ''em 63 one 63 herself 58 thee 57 ourselves 48 yourself 38 mine 17 his 15 yours 15 theirs 7 hers 6 yourselves 6 ''s 5 thyself 5 ours 5 ay 3 yow 3 hisself 2 yoursell 2 ye''se 2 oneself 2 na 2 meself 2 in''t 2 ha 2 epistemon:-- 2 em 1 you''ll 1 ut 1 they''d 1 them!--they 1 talking:-- 1 pantagruel:-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14511 be 6089 have 2136 do 1505 say 1353 see 1311 make 1078 come 974 go 936 take 844 get 809 think 802 know 712 give 652 find 630 look 562 hear 544 tell 417 let 403 keep 397 seem 324 put 324 leave 321 speak 312 work 305 call 290 turn 289 begin 281 stand 273 bring 267 live 267 believe 256 fall 256 cry 252 sit 251 answer 241 ask 237 become 232 feel 226 try 221 show 215 lie 214 grow 213 run 213 read 208 die 205 pass 201 send 199 break 198 write 198 set Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3324 not 1368 so 1187 up 1036 out 906 more 886 then 859 as 842 good 758 down 729 old 648 well 641 very 640 own 637 now 629 only 624 great 619 never 616 just 551 little 519 long 488 too 484 other 484 first 463 ever 459 away 451 poor 403 much 401 there 379 on 375 last 370 such 332 again 329 here 328 even 319 enough 309 off 299 all 295 back 292 many 288 still 288 most 281 in 273 yet 271 once 262 young 261 bad 260 far 255 true 238 over 221 whole Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 185 good 101 least 54 most 30 bad 20 great 19 high 14 low 13 small 13 deep 10 old 10 fine 9 strong 9 early 8 slight 8 large 6 noble 5 wise 5 strange 5 bright 4 true 4 pure 4 new 4 near 4 late 4 dear 4 cheap 4 big 4 auld 3 tall 3 sweet 3 rich 3 mild 3 mean 3 long 3 furth 3 fair 3 faint 3 clever 2 young 2 wide 2 warm 2 sunny 2 stout 2 sharp 2 severe 2 serene 2 prim 2 poor 2 narrow 2 lound Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 234 most 40 well 10 least 2 long 1 sweetest 1 said:-- 1 hard 1 finest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 2 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 name is mansie 6 ye say there 4 face was as 3 god is not 3 man is not 3 men are not 3 world has never 2 _ is not 2 _ live _ 2 day being pleasant 2 day has long 2 day taken up 2 day was bright 2 day was sharp 2 days are not 2 door is open 2 door took place 2 door was thrawn 2 eyes are bright 2 eyes are dim 2 eyes were like 2 face was friendly 2 friend is often 2 god is great 2 god was great 2 hand is worth 2 hands was likely 2 heads were uppermost 2 heart is idly 2 heart stood still 2 heart was grit 2 heart was like 2 heart was most 2 heart was ready 2 heart was sea 2 heart was sorrowful 2 house was so 2 life being still 2 life is not 2 life was elysium 2 life was likely 2 man be wholly 2 man coming wi 2 man did not 2 man is aye 2 man is free 2 man is uncontrolled 2 man take off 2 men going forward 2 men were perfectly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man had no concern 2 man is not worth 1 _ is not foul 1 _ is not yet 1 day are not unlikely 1 life is not likely 1 man does not more 1 man has no right 1 man has no want 1 man is not likely 1 men are not likely 1 men are not poor 1 men is not equally 1 men tell no tales 1 people are not ripe 1 thing was not right 1 work is not so 1 world is not more A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 8374 author = Kingsley, Charles title = Alton Locke, Tailor and Poet: An Autobiography date = keywords = Alton; April; Bible; CHAPTER; Cambridge; Carlyle; Chartist; Christ; Christianity; Church; Crossthwaite; Eleanor; England; Father; God; Heaven; House; John; Kingsley; Lillian; Locke; London; Lord; Lot; Mackaye; Mammon; Maurice; Mr.; O''Flynn; Parson; People; Sandy; St.; Sunday; University; day; english; find; good; great; like; look; man; poor; time; trade; true; work summary = letter set me thanking God that he has raised up men to do the work of idea, no man has _a right_ to refuse any body of men, into whose heart fellows worked like bricks, spent money, and got midshipman''s half-pay God and man is, "Am I my brother''s keeper?" Men ought to know the condition things, ought to know what the men are like to whose labour, ay, lifeblood, hands, eyes, and brain, followed by the long dreary day''s work of the shop, people''s friends in old times, just to educate poor scholars like you and "Come," I thought, "this looks like work at least." And as I went out my God!" said the old man, in a voice which had a deeper to prove that the working man has feelings like the rest of his kind, else for which you long, not from man, but from God, the King of men. id = 20767 author = Moir, D. M. (David Macbeth) title = The Life of Mansie Wauch Tailor in Dalkeith, written by himself date = keywords = Batter; Benjie; Cursecowl; Dalkeith; Duke; Duncan; Edinburgh; Glen; James; Maister; Mansie; Mungo; Nanse; Peter; Sunday; Tammie; Thomas; Tommy; Wauch; Wiggie; away; good; hand; head; like; look; man; old; think; time; weel summary = so, in the long run, we went like lightning from two-handed cracks on the make a house look like itself, especially in the winter time, when sure like as to how the old man might have come by the bundle in these Batter, we sat round the fireside, and read away like nine-year-aulds. This is not now likely to happen; for twenty long years have come and time, like a great whirlwind; and the hearts of men died within their "It was an awful like way to leave the world," said I. the poor man; and, though he did not look much like one that deserved our trade, turning night intil day, and working like moudiewarts in the dark, "What do ye think came owre her then?" said I to him, liking to be at my Tammie bolted like a nine-year-old, never looking behind his tail; so, in id = 23739 author = Moir, D. M. (David Macbeth) title = The Life of Mansie Wauch tailor in Dalkeith date = keywords = Batter; Benjie; CHAPTER; Cursecowl; Dalkeith; Duke; Edinburgh; Glen; James; Maister; Mansie; Mungo; Nanse; Peter; Sunday; Tammie; Thomas; Tommy; Wauch; Wiggie; day; good; hand; head; like; look; man; old; picture; time; weel summary = honest man in the country, able to clear my day and way by the help of make a house look like itself, especially in the winter time, when sure like as to how the old man might have come by the bundle in these Batter, we sat round the fireside, and read away like nine-year-aulds. This is not now likely to happen; for twenty long years have come and time, like a great whirlwind; and the hearts of men died within their "It was an awful like way to leave the world," said I. the poor man; and, though he did not look much like one that deserved our trade, turning night intil day, and working like moudiewarts in the dark, "What do ye think came owre her then?" said I to him, liking to be at my Tammie bolted like a nine-year-old, never looking behind his tail; so, in id = 59235 author = Rabelais, François title = Three Good Giants Whose Ancient Deeds are recorded in the Ancient Chronicles date = keywords = CHAPTER; Father; Friar; Gargantua; Giant; Grandgousier; INITIAL; John; King; Mare; Master; Pantagruel; Panurge; Paris; Picrochole; Ponocrates; Prince; illustration summary = It was on the day a noble lord came on a visit to his old friend, King Gargantua, who was a good-hearted Giant, little knew what mischief he It was a great day for Gargantua when he reached the end of his two the time away in those little games which wise men know how to play my poor Pantagruel, thou hast lost thy good Mother, a good-hearted young Giant, Pantagruel thought he would take pity on When the stranger had come up to them, Pantagruel said to him: "My good Two days after this, Panurge married the little King with an old GARGANTUA COMES BACK FROM FAIRY-LAND.--AFTER WHICH PANTAGRUEL PREPARES GARGANTUA COMES BACK FROM FAIRY-LAND.--AFTER WHICH PANTAGRUEL PREPARES A few days after this, Pantagruel said good-by to Gargantua, leaving Pantagruel seemed not to hear Panurge, for he stood a long time looking three good Giants, GRANDGOUSIER, GARGANTUA, and PANTAGRUEL--promised to