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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53763 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 William 3 University 3 Sir 3 King 3 Hall 3 College 3 Cambridge 2 Trinity 2 Thomas 2 St. 2 Queen 2 Oxford 2 Master 2 John 2 Henry 2 God 2 English 2 England 2 Church 2 Christ 2 Bishop 1 volume 1 man 1 illustration 1 history 1 great 1 day 1 author 1 Wood 1 Vice 1 Street 1 Professor 1 Mr. 1 Mary 1 Margaret 1 Majesty 1 Lord 1 London 1 Latin 1 Lady 1 Jesus 1 Jemmy 1 James 1 House 1 Greek 1 George 1 Fuller 1 Fellow 1 Ely 1 Edward Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 378 time 321 college 291 year 258 man 249 building 231 day 200 century 195 scholar 164 side 161 foundation 156 name 152 court 152 chapel 146 book 135 student 134 work 129 house 126 place 120 church 115 hall 113 room 112 master 109 town 109 part 109 history 109 friend 107 window 104 life 104 fellow 96 university 93 way 86 school 86 head 84 library 83 order 83 end 81 hand 78 wall 78 age 77 founder 75 site 73 river 73 learning 73 illustration 71 member 69 author 68 fact 67 word 66 thing 66 son Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3434 _ 677 College 597 Cambridge 267 S. 264 King 257 John 222 Dr. 213 University 208 Bishop 202 Oxford 191 Mr. 179 Hall 177 Sir 172 Church 167 Henry 145 Trinity 129 England 112 Ely 111 St. 107 Thomas 107 Christ 106 Queen 102 c. 102 William 97 House 96 Master 92 Doctor 89 Edward 88 Lord 82 Chancellor 81 Street 80 Lady 79 God 77 Jesus 74 Margaret 74 COLLEGE 72 Mary 65 de 59 . 58 Fuller 57 English 56 Vice 54 Court 54 Chapel 53 Archbishop 52 Richard 52 Great 52 Elizabeth 50 Clare 49 New Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1336 he 1260 it 580 i 432 they 398 we 387 him 230 you 223 them 133 me 128 himself 108 she 91 us 52 themselves 46 her 37 itself 21 myself 9 herself 8 one 6 ourselves 5 his 4 mine 4 ''em 2 yourself 2 yours 2 ye 2 theirs 2 thee 1 êde 1 yt 1 you''ld 1 us''d 1 theim 1 re 1 on''t 1 life:-- 1 em 1 described:-- 1 burn Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5224 be 1668 have 521 say 328 do 251 give 245 take 237 make 202 call 188 see 180 know 178 find 174 come 144 build 139 go 133 follow 120 become 115 write 106 stand 105 learn 99 tell 98 add 89 leave 88 seem 84 begin 83 think 83 read 77 remain 76 bring 73 appear 70 keep 66 use 66 speak 66 found 65 pass 64 form 62 observe 60 show 60 let 59 lead 58 put 58 bear 55 live 53 meet 53 fall 53 belong 52 set 51 get 49 carry 48 turn 48 occupy Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 697 not 362 so 347 great 282 more 280 first 261 old 242 other 194 well 194 most 187 early 181 good 179 very 179 only 179 now 169 then 165 new 161 same 154 much 150 many 147 however 145 also 132 long 131 up 129 as 127 out 126 little 120 such 117 still 109 present 106 own 106 down 102 never 101 late 90 here 83 thus 83 there 83 last 82 once 81 later 78 too 78 high 76 original 75 small 72 even 71 large 70 perhaps 70 certain 68 probably 66 young 65 less Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 54 good 44 least 40 most 40 early 29 great 9 high 7 old 6 large 5 fine 4 low 3 stout 3 slight 3 noble 3 long 2 witty 2 wise 2 whyl 2 strong 2 pure 2 late 2 fair 2 extreme 2 e 2 bad 1 words:-- 1 wide 1 white 1 wealthy 1 weak 1 tough 1 sweet 1 sublime 1 sub 1 stately 1 soon 1 small 1 simple 1 rich 1 rare 1 quiet 1 plain 1 palimps 1 odd 1 notable 1 near 1 narrow 1 mean 1 list:-- 1 learned 1 l Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 154 most 7 least 5 well 1 greatest 1 fairest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 _ kept _ 2 _ did _ 2 cambridge was still 2 time was not 1 * was oxford 1 _ are easily 1 _ are mere 1 _ are not 1 _ being due 1 _ called _ 1 _ came up 1 _ did not 1 _ do _ 1 _ do not 1 _ do something 1 _ done better 1 _ had far 1 _ has thus 1 _ have not 1 _ is _ 1 _ is common 1 _ is presumably 1 _ is well 1 _ remained perhaps 1 _ see _ 1 _ standing _ 1 _ take precedence 1 _ took pot 1 _ was _ 1 _ was happily 1 _ was indeed 1 _ was no 1 _ were better 1 _ were freshmen 1 _ were obviously 1 _ were occasionally 1 _ were there 1 _ written there 1 bishop is able 1 bishop was about 1 bishop was not 1 book is new 1 book is too 1 book is well 1 building called rat 1 building is entirely 1 building is now 1 buildings are simple 1 buildings is entirely 1 buildings is obvious Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not only 1 _ do not _ 1 _ was no better 1 chapel has no remarkable 1 college is not possible 1 days took no cognisance 1 scholars had not henry 1 time was not yet 1 times had not infrequently A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 42247 author = Gooch, Richard title = Nuts to crack; or Quips, quirks, anecdote and facete of Oxford and Cambridge Scholars date = keywords = Bishop; Cambridge; Cantab; Chancellor; Christ; Church; College; Dean; Doctor; Dr.; England; English; Fellow; George; God; Greek; Hall; James; Jemmy; John; King; Latin; London; Lord; Majesty; Master; Mr.; Oxford; Professor; Queen; Sir; St.; Thomas; Trinity; University; Vice; William; Wood; author; day; great; man; volume summary = behind St. John''s College, Cambridge, wherein the _old Doctor John Franklin, Fellow and Master of Sidney College, Cambridge, Upon the death of a provost of King''s College, Cambridge, the fellows Sir Thomas Clayton, whose lady, says Wood, "did put the college to The late vice-master of Trinity College, Cambridge, the Rev. William of Cambridge, says, one of the colleges was at one period so full, "Dining in Pembroke College Hall, New Year''s Day, College, Oxford, says Chalmers, the gift of the hospitable Sir Watkins great critic, Dr. Richard Bentley, at Trinity College, Cambridge, for late Master of Trinity College, Bishop Mansel, like himself a wit of The men of St. John''s College, Cambridge, like every other society in The present Vice-Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, being told that Taylor, fellow of St. John''s College, Cambridge. Is recorded of the celebrated Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, id = 12857 author = Home, Gordon title = Cambridge date = keywords = Cambridge; College; Hall; Henry; King; Sir; St.; University; William summary = [Illustration: THE OLD GATEWAY OF KING''S COLLEGE short street is part of the north side of King''s College Chapel.] built for King''s College, Cambridge possesses one of quarried the castle to build King''s Hall; how Henry VI. allowed more stone to be taken for King''s College Chapel; and how Mary At the present time the chapel is on the north side of the college, Trinity College, and the spaciousness of the great court impresses the new college in Cambridge, dissolved not only King''s Hall and Michael expanded by Henry III from the "great college" built by Edward III. Senate House, in the centre the East End of King''s College Chapel, and seen at King''s College, was allowed to rebuild the great court, SELWYN COLLEGE, founded about the same time, is named after the great from the college chapels, whose importance is so great that to fail to id = 43764 author = Stubbs, Charles William title = Cambridge and Its Story date = keywords = Bishop; Cambridge; Chapel; Christ; Church; Clare; College; Edward; Ely; England; English; Fuller; God; Hall; Henry; House; Jesus; John; King; Lady; Margaret; Mary; Master; Oxford; Queen; Sir; Street; Thomas; Trinity; University; William; history; illustration summary = Scholars--King''s Hall--Clare Hall--Pembroke College--Gonville Hall--Dr. John Caius--His Three Gates of Humility, Virtue, and Honour. Unique Foundation of Corpus Christi College--The Cambridge Guilds--The Ely Obedientary Rolls--The College Buildings--The Old Hall--S. Conventual Church into a College Chapel--The Monastic Buildings, College Charter--The Buildings--The Chapel and the old Franciscan Michael House, Trinity Hall, King''s College, S. Hall of the Scholars of the Bishop of Ely. In all probability the University in early days took no cognisance The earliest of these buildings was the library, due to a bequest of Dr. Andrew Perne, Dean of Ely, who was master of the College from 1553 to [Illustration: Gateway to Old Court of King''s College] "History of Trinity Hall," "of the Church by a College whose similar work about the same time in King''s College chapel. The last in date of foundation of the Cambridge Colleges with which we college in the University of Cambridge, to be called the "Lady Frances