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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 59718 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 4 Mrs. 3 Watling 3 Paret 3 Nancy 3 Krebs 3 Hugh 3 Durrett 2 York 2 Tom 2 Scherer 2 Ralph 2 New 2 Miss 2 Maude 2 God 2 Boyne 1 sure 1 man 1 look 1 little 1 irish 1 good 1 father 1 Varney 1 Van 1 Thomas 1 Tallant 1 Street 1 Scoville 1 Royle 1 Robert 1 Pycke 1 Policeman 1 Piper 1 Petrel 1 Peters 1 Perry 1 Peg 1 O''Connell 1 Michael 1 Matthew 1 Man 1 Kingsnorth 1 King 1 Johnnie 1 Jerry 1 Jason 1 Jane 1 Ireland Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 884 man 664 time 593 day 589 father 571 hand 536 eye 452 thing 452 life 412 room 399 way 397 face 385 moment 345 something 335 mother 304 house 299 night 287 year 279 voice 270 people 269 head 269 door 262 child 241 one 238 woman 229 window 227 nothing 221 side 213 heart 202 word 191 friend 190 mind 189 city 188 gentleman 178 world 168 girl 165 table 165 name 165 foot 157 lady 154 sir 154 business 153 thought 152 light 152 family 151 morning 146 place 146 money 144 love 140 feeling 140 arm Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1340 _ 996 Mr. 818 Peg 623 Gwendolyn 409 Mrs. 369 ye 366 Jane 361 Ethel 283 Chichester 265 Nancy 265 Hugh 253 Miss 250 O''Connell 249 Maude 230 Jerry 208 Alaric 203 Van 200 Thomas 192 Pycke 190 Watling 164 Krebs 154 Bosworth 153 Tom 135 Kingsnorth 132 Angela 131 Paret 116 Hawkes 115 New 115 God 114 Royle 108 Ireland 99 Scherer 96 York 90 Ralph 87 Brent 86 Durrett 84 Policeman 82 Dickinson 73 Perry 72 England 72 Colonel 71 Piper 70 yer 70 English 67 Man 66 Jason 62 Gorse 62 Boyne 61 Ye 59 Father Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9043 i 4987 it 4930 he 4160 she 4005 you 2420 me 1670 him 1504 her 1426 we 1191 they 846 them 349 us 211 myself 207 himself 142 herself 91 ''em 81 ye 67 itself 59 themselves 57 one 52 yourself 36 mine 23 ourselves 23 em 20 yours 19 ''s 16 his 14 hers 13 ours 11 yerself 11 meself 7 theirs 7 i''m 3 you''ve 2 you''re 1 you,--you 1 yeself 1 wheedlin 1 well,"--this 1 we''d 1 wait''-- 1 oh!--what 1 man''ll 1 jane''d 1 it,--that 1 i''ll--''i''ll 1 --so 1 --''consequently Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14521 be 6075 have 2860 do 1960 say 1481 go 1092 come 910 see 895 know 891 make 845 think 822 take 789 look 717 get 556 ask 534 give 518 seem 474 tell 469 want 381 begin 376 feel 363 find 361 turn 329 cry 317 hear 292 stand 287 leave 281 put 279 sit 269 call 250 mean 245 try 243 reply 239 answer 238 speak 238 become 233 let 216 hold 202 smile 197 keep 195 grow 195 bring 191 like 190 love 187 talk 183 live 183 laugh 179 follow 172 wait 168 meet 163 understand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4133 not 941 up 933 so 931 little 782 now 702 out 675 more 648 then 529 down 517 good 512 here 505 just 485 back 481 never 476 very 458 only 455 old 418 too 409 other 397 again 389 well 363 long 355 much 340 first 334 there 331 great 324 away 314 even 306 on 301 once 299 all 298 as 258 new 253 always 249 still 239 own 238 in 237 young 234 ever 227 most 214 last 210 over 209 many 208 suddenly 196 rather 195 right 186 such 184 certain 176 yet 173 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 91 good 77 least 53 most 21 great 14 slight 14 late 13 bad 9 high 8 near 5 old 5 fine 5 early 4 dear 4 Most 3 young 3 safe 3 hard 3 fit 2 wise 2 wild 2 wide 2 thin 2 strong 2 small 2 poor 2 odd 2 noble 2 large 2 keen 2 heavy 2 happy 2 farth 2 fair 2 big 2 able 1 z 1 white 1 weak 1 warm 1 sweet 1 strange 1 soft 1 smooth 1 smart 1 slick 1 sincere 1 simple 1 shrill 1 sharp 1 sane Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 174 most 15 well 8 least 1 strangest 1 near 1 bird!--the 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ do _ 11 ye do n''t 10 _ is _ 10 gwendolyn did not 9 _ was _ 8 _ do n''t 7 peg looked up 6 _ did _ 5 _ am _ 5 _ want _ 5 peg went on 4 _ are _ 4 eyes were closed 3 _ have _ 3 _ is n''t 3 _ know _ 3 chichester went on 3 ethel said nothing 3 eyes were wide 3 father did not 3 gwendolyn had often 3 gwendolyn sat up 3 man does n''t 3 mother did n''t 3 mother did not 3 peg looked down 3 peg turned away 3 people do n''t 2 _ come _ 2 _ did n''t 2 _ had _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ hears _ 2 chichester looked up 2 chichester went up 2 day was dark 2 days was so 2 ethel did not 2 ethel looked down 2 ethel went quickly 2 eyes were full 2 father did n''t 2 father is right 2 gwendolyn had never 2 gwendolyn made out 2 gwendolyn stood up 2 hands are full 2 jane put out 2 jane was not 2 life had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 day is no less 1 eyes were no longer 1 face was not always 1 father did not mind 1 father is no longer 1 gwendolyn did not pronounce 1 gwendolyn had no mind 1 gwendolyn was no longer 1 hand was not anything 1 jane made no reply 1 jane was not only 1 mother had no interest 1 room were not more 1 thing was not unheard 1 things are not so 1 time had not yet 1 time has not yet 1 voice was not nasal 1 voice was not quite A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 3736 author = Churchill, Winston title = A Far Country — Volume 1 date = keywords = Blackwood; Boyne; Breck; Cousin; Durrett; Gorse; Hambleton; Hollister; Hugh; Krebs; Mr.; Mrs.; Nancy; Paret; Peters; Petrel; Ralph; Robert; Scherer; Tom; Watling; father summary = "If you''re really going off on a business trip for a day or two, Mr. Paret" (she generally addressed my father thus formally), "I think I''ll the big steel-works, my mother told me, belonging to Mr. Durrett and Mr. Hambleton, the father of Ralph Hambleton and the grandfather of Hambleton "Get out of the way!" said Tom, with a little squeak in his voice. appealing look which I know now was a sign of mother love struggling with "Hugh," he said, "your mother tells me that you have confessed to going, "She went away, Hugh," replied my mother, looking greatly troubled. said:--"I think I''d better walk with the girls to-morrow, Hugh." sitting-room at home, and my father and mother there, thinking of me. He talked a while of my father, to whom, so he said, he had looked up "It is a good thing, Robert," said my mother. id = 3737 author = Churchill, Winston title = A Far Country — Volume 2 date = keywords = Boyne; Colonel; Durrett; Elkington; George; House; Hugh; Hutchins; Krebs; Maude; Mr.; Mrs.; Nancy; Paret; Perry; Scherer; Tom; Varney; Watling summary = "Do you know a man named Krebs in the House?" I said. Theodore Watling had once said to me that the man who can best keep his "A man likes to succeed in his profession, of course," I said. "I asked you to come here to-day, Hugh, because I wished you to know that "A man like you, Hugh?" she said gently. to town and spent much of his time in Mr. Paret''s office smoking Mr. Watling''s cigars and discussing the coming campaign, in which he took a look at Maude, who sat across the table; thereafter I began to feel that "I want to help Maude all I can,--if she''ll let me," Nancy said. "I like her very much indeed," said Nancy, a little gravely. "I have been thinking a long time, I have a little scheme," he said, "and when I went home I asked Maude to call on Mrs. Scherer. id = 3738 author = Churchill, Winston title = A Far Country — Volume 3 date = keywords = Biddy; Club; Dickinson; Durrett; God; Greenhalge; Hugh; Jason; Krebs; Matthew; Maude; Mr.; Nancy; New; Paret; Ralph; Street; Tallant; Watling; York; man summary = "I am flattered," said Nancy, "that a person so affaire should find time remarkable things you have done--even in New York the other day a man was asking me if I knew Mr. Paret, and spoke of you as one of the coming men. "You really wouldn''t want to find that, Hugh," she said in another voice, "I was just asking Paret about the telephone affair," said Mr. Tallant. "I suppose you want something handsome, Hugh," he said, looking at me "I have asked you to come here, Mr. Paret," said the banker, "not only "I believe in taking life in my own hands," I said. "It ought to be life," said Nancy. "I shan''t need all that, Hugh," Maude said, when I handed her a letter of "Look here, Hugh," he said, "we may as well face the fact that we''ve got "It''s my business to know things," said Judd Jason, and added to Tallant, id = 15714 author = Gates, Eleanor title = The Poor Little Rich Girl date = keywords = Bird; Blake; Doctor; English; Faces; Gwendolyn; Jane; Johnnie; King; Man; Miss; Piper; Policeman; Royle; Thomas; little; look summary = Gwendolyn fixed inquiring gray eyes upon that sleeve of Jane''s dress Gwendolyn halted in front of Jane, and lifted a puzzled face. Look!" cried Jane, excitedly, pulling Gwendolyn''s hand away "Oh, Jane," cried Gwendolyn, "when I blow like that, _where_ do all the "You said nobody steals other little girls," went on Jane. "Oh, darlin'', what a grand thing!" cried Jane, lifting Gwendolyn to Gwendolyn let go of Jane''s hand and went toward her mother. ladies, and "Ah, little Miss Gwendolyn!" said the men. Gwendolyn went up to Jane, who was waiting, rooted and rigid, close by. "Say, Miss Gwendolyn," he began, "_you_ like old Thomas, don''t you?" "_How_ did he make faces, Jane?" asked Gwendolyn. "_Gwendolyn?_" Jane held her with doubting eyes. "Miss Royle said you had two faces," admitted Gwendolyn. Gwendolyn, watching, saw two shining spots in Jane''s back face grow As Gwendolyn looked at him she told herself that the Man-Who-Makes-Faces id = 3621 author = Manners, J. Hartley title = Peg O'' My Heart date = keywords = Alaric; Angela; Brent; Cahill; Chichester; England; Ethel; God; Hawkes; Ireland; Jerry; Kingsnorth; Michael; Mr.; Mrs.; New; O''Connell; Peg; York; good; irish; sure summary = with that little bit of a red-headed child," said a man to Father and gave him to Peg. He said the dog''s face had a look of Michael "I didn''t know ye had friends in England?" said Peg, eyeing the letter. "Very well," said Alaric, determinedly: "I''ll work, too." Mrs. Chichester looked up pleadingly. As Peg wandered into the room Mrs. Chichester and Alaric looked at her "This lady is Mrs. Chichester--your aunt." Peg looked at her doubtfully "Thank yez," said Peg, bobbing another little curtsey, at which Mrs. Chichester covered her eyes with her hand as if to shut out some Peg dropped a little curtsey to Mrs. Chichester, smiled at Ethel, "Come, Alaric," and Mrs. Chichester left the room after admonishing Peg Ethel went slowly over to Peg and looked into her eyes: that OLD and RESPECTED custom on yer hand," cried Peg. Ethel answered, this time, excitedly and indignantly, giving full and id = 43071 author = McCutcheon, George Barr title = The Alternative date = keywords = Bosworth; Buzzy; Downing; Doxey; Foe; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Pycke; Scoville; Van summary = His son, Buzzy,--Bosworth Van Pycke,--he''s the "I think I''ll have a high-ball," said Mr. Van Pycke. "I hope Buzzy isn''t going to turn out like the old man," said one of the "I thought you''d like to know, sir," said Bosworth, politely. "I think there''s a dinner going on," said Bosworth, beginning to button "I feel like an ass," said young Mr. Van Pycke, probably to the newel Bosworth Van Pycke stopped just inside the door, clapping his hand to "I am Mr. Van Pycke''s son," said Bosworth, cautiously inclining his "That was some time ago, Mr. Van Pycke," the girl said quickly. "This very night, Mr. Van Pycke," said she, leaning back to see how he "Oh, he''s all right, Mr. Buzzy Van Pycke," she said, "Every one knows that, Mr. Van Pycke," said Miss Downing. "Don''t blame Bellows, old man," said Bosworth Van Pycke.