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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 87105 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Africa 3 East 2 time 2 lion 2 good 2 chapter 2 Uganda 2 Mr. 2 Mombasa 2 England 2 Athi 1 soldier 1 photograph 1 native 1 moorish 1 man 1 king 1 island 1 great 1 german 1 french 1 find 1 elephant 1 drawing 1 day 1 country 1 british 1 belgian 1 Zanzibar 1 Watuta 1 Wanguana 1 Wanderobo 1 Wakungu 1 Wahuma 1 Waganda 1 W.D. 1 Usui 1 Unyoro 1 Tsavo 1 Tana 1 Tabora 1 Suwarora 1 Sultan 1 Stephenson 1 Spooner 1 South 1 Soongoora 1 Simba 1 Sera 1 Sea Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2121 man 1426 king 1147 day 1050 time 908 country 779 way 777 lion 649 place 576 people 532 one 529 woman 506 night 485 camp 468 tree 438 head 435 river 399 hand 392 order 379 water 377 elephant 362 thing 340 side 333 palace 332 officer 327 foot 318 part 314 animal 310 morning 301 year 298 town 298 nothing 298 house 293 gun 292 porter 285 cow 276 mile 274 island 272 kingdom 268 life 264 grass 264 cloth 262 hill 253 yard 246 food 244 work 241 coast 240 ground 237 manner 236 ship 235 road Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 778 _ 310 Africa 305 Bombay 294 Uganda 294 Kamrasi 253 Grant 224 Moors 179 Mtesa 177 Rumanika 174 King 172 Arabs 167 East 151 Baraka 143 Waganda 140 Nile 139 Karague 138 India 133 Mr. 128 hut 123 Unyoro 123 Gani 118 Bana 107 Musa 103 Zanzibar 102 Nairobi 101 Gentiles 100 Malabar 99 Suwarora 93 gazelle 93 Maula 92 Wakungu 91 Tsavo 90 Ortelius 89 de 86 River 84 Cambay 79 Portuguese 79 N''yanza 78 England 77 Petherick 74 Ramusio 73 Roosevelt 73 Mombasa 73 Lumeresi 72 que 72 Colonel 70 Calicut 69 Wanguana 69 Masai 69 Kaze Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6416 i 5435 he 4511 they 4409 it 3198 we 2609 him 2303 them 1901 me 1309 us 1229 you 562 she 387 her 363 himself 308 themselves 232 myself 171 one 62 itself 54 ourselves 32 herself 31 mine 27 ours 26 yourself 18 his 18 ''s 11 theirs 8 yours 6 em 4 oneself 1 yourselves 1 you''re 1 ya 1 thee 1 my 1 hers 1 dà 1 certeza Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18037 be 6727 have 2086 do 1885 say 1787 go 1493 see 1447 come 1284 make 1270 take 1179 give 999 find 905 get 822 call 794 send 729 tell 728 know 627 leave 594 bring 527 think 515 look 488 hear 475 carry 457 keep 413 kill 377 return 354 put 352 follow 351 wish 346 ask 344 eat 342 turn 331 show 328 shoot 321 run 309 live 300 pass 282 reach 279 arrive 278 lie 269 sit 269 seem 268 wait 255 stand 251 want 249 become 242 begin 240 stop 239 try 236 order 234 walk Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3089 not 1570 so 1401 then 1345 very 1189 up 1091 great 970 many 948 other 933 out 898 more 873 only 872 much 788 now 779 good 714 as 701 well 668 little 666 away 642 again 635 off 607 first 604 long 582 there 572 also 562 down 560 here 548 large 509 most 482 on 481 once 439 same 428 small 423 back 412 however 406 never 379 soon 372 few 372 far 367 white 367 still 350 such 350 last 343 in 333 old 321 just 317 next 309 own 307 even 303 too 287 always Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 157 good 111 most 65 least 54 great 30 near 25 slight 24 large 24 bad 20 high 16 Most 14 fine 10 small 9 eld 8 big 7 late 6 l 5 rich 5 low 5 long 4 early 3 wildebe 3 wild 3 strange 3 hard 3 farth 3 common 3 brave 2 warm 2 ugly 2 southernmost 2 smart 2 simple 2 rough 2 quick 2 old 2 nice 2 e 2 cheap 1 young 1 wr 1 weak 1 vile 1 topmost 1 thin 1 thick 1 swampi 1 sure 1 sunburst 1 strong 1 sleek Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 398 most 20 least 18 well 2 near 1 youngest 1 greatest 1 biggest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/1/2/5/21254/21254-h/21254-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/1/2/5/21254/21254-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 country is very 4 king did not 4 lions were not 4 men were all 4 women are very 3 country being very 3 country was beautiful 3 day was far 3 king had not 3 king is always 3 king was ready 3 king was very 3 man was not 3 men came in 3 men had just 3 men had now 3 men were not 3 people are great 3 people are very 3 place was alive 2 animals come down 2 camp was not 2 country was so 2 day was now 2 king does not 2 king gave orders 2 king was most 2 king was now 2 king was out 2 lion was dead 2 lion was still 2 lions were really 2 man came back 2 man had ever 2 men came up 2 men were very 2 night came on 2 one do so 2 one does not 2 one is not 2 people do n''t 2 people have many 2 river is very 2 woman went downstairs 2 women are not 2 women do not 2 women go naked 1 _ are easily 1 _ did not 1 _ get nothing Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 africa have no song 1 animal was not dead 1 camp was not far 1 camps were not necessary 1 country has no king 1 elephants are not afraid 1 king was not ready 1 lions had not already 1 lions were not always 1 lions were not especially 1 man had no rich 1 man was not yet 1 men was not distinctly 1 men were not further 1 night does no one 1 officers was not sufficient 1 people have no intercourse 1 river was not as 1 things were not right 1 women do not all A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 10362 author = Dolbey, Robert Valentine title = Sketches of the East Africa Campaign date = keywords = Africa; Dar; East; England; English; General; Hun; Lettow; Morogoro; Railway; Salaam; South; Tabora; belgian; british; french; german; good; native; soldier summary = These sketches of General Smuts'' campaign of 1916 in German East Africa, that he would like to eat; moreover, he knew, in German East Africa, balance of India in German East Africa, the new strategic railway from is told at Moschi of a young German officer who stole a day''s leave and Of all the departments of War in German East Africa probably the most conjunction with the suspicion which the native of German East Africa that marked the savage bush fighting from German Bridge to Morogoro came little irregular things for wounded German soldiers, faked temperature food and hospitals and porters," captured German officers have often in the service of the Huns and the natives in German East, locked up modern young German who apes English ways, comes out to East Africa German East Africa, and you may imagine how she had longed for the day id = 21254 author = McCutcheon, John T. (John Tinney) title = In Africa: Hunting Adventures in the Big Game Country date = keywords = Africa; Akeley; Athi; Boyce; Colonel; Dog; East; Elgon; Kenia; Little; Mombasa; Mount; Mr.; Nairobi; River; Roosevelt; Stephenson; Tana; W.D.; Wanderobo; chapter; day; drawing; elephant; lion; photograph; time summary = should begin my real hunting in a lion and elephant country. away and native villages with ant-like people moving about appeared in Away below, the crowd of people looked like little As a form of pleasant excitement, we began to photograph rhinos, Mr. Akeley took out his moving-picture machine, advanced it cautiously to My second lion experience came three days later. in the valley another large male lion appeared and moved slowly away A week later, while marching from the Tana River to the Zeka River, Mr. and Mrs. Akeley and I came across a large lion, accompanied by a lion, rhino, buffalo, and elephant--the four groups of animals that are Many African hunters consider elephant hunting more dangerous than lion, elephant far off, and while the porters made camp we went on for a mile dark day came when I saw Little Wanderobo Dog for the last time. id = 3810 author = Patterson, J. H. (John Henry) title = The Man-Eaters of Tsavo, and Other East African Adventures date = keywords = Africa; Athi; Brock; East; Mahina; Masai; Mombasa; Mr.; Sahib; Spooner; Tsavo; Uganda; chapter; find; lion; man; time summary = lion suddenly put its head in at the open tent door and seized Ungan frenzied cries coming from another camp about half a mile away; we knew a great lion standing a few yards away looking at him. hoping that the lions would return to the spot the following night; and the lions had tried to snatch a man from the camp by the river, but condition, half-way to the ground, the great hippo suddenly came out to carry the skin back to camp, I took a good look round the place and knew that the most likely place for lions lay some distance away, and I After a little I again asked, "Where are the lions?" This time lion at the same time running away from the spot as hard as ever he in never having shot or even seen a lion all the time he had been in id = 3284 author = Speke, John Hanning title = The Discovery of the Source of the Nile date = keywords = Africa; Arabs; Bana; Baraka; Bombay; Budja; England; Gani; Grant; Kamrasi; Kamraviona; Karague; Kaze; Kidi; Lumeresi; Mahamed; Manua; Maula; Mtesa; Musa; Nile; Petherick; Rumanika; Sera; Suwarora; Uganda; Unyoro; Usui; Waganda; Wahuma; Wakungu; Wanguana; Watuta; Zanzibar; king summary = Having gone to work again, I found that Sheikh Said had brought ten men, slave for each, and told Sheikh said to look out for some men at once, As nearly all the men had now returned, Grant and I spent New Year''s Day men, this time really provoked, said they would fight it out;--a king To do royal honours to the king of this charming land, I ordered my men out of the lake, and said, if I liked to ask the king''s leave to visit even Bombay, should come near me; for the king had caused my men to your dinner." My men n''yanzigged--the king walked away, giving orders Bombay did not return within four days, Kamrasi would send other men men, who came with Bombay, said they would escort us to their country, king''s orders for escorting us to Gani; but now they sent the men, the id = 37472 author = nan title = Zanzibar Tales: Told by Natives of the East Coast of Africa date = keywords = Daaraaee; Goso; Keejeepaa; Koosee; Simba; Soongoora; Sultan summary = the lion said: "Don''t run away; I am Sim''ba Kong''way, the very old "Now," said the gazelle, "I''m going away, and when I return I gazelle coming along alone, who, on reaching the sultan, said, "Good day, my master." The sultan replied in kind, and asked the "Oh," said the gazelle, impatiently, "a little water like that won''t When the morning came, Keejeepaa went to the sultan and said: "Master, One day the gazelle said to the old woman: "I think the conduct of But his wife said: "Husband, it was this gazelle that came to ask One day the sultan said to six of his sons, "I''m going to look at One day a magician came to the sultan and said, "If I take your three "''One day a man came up to me and said, "Are you looking for work?" "I "Come with me, then," said he; and we went to his house. id = 38253 author = nan title = A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century date = keywords = Aden; Arabia; Barbosa; Bramans; Calicut; Cambay; Cape; China; Christians; Gentiles; India; Indians; KINGDOM; King; Lisbon; Malabar; Malaca; Moors; Narsinga; Ormuz; Ortelius; Persia; Portugal; Portuguese; Ramusio; Red; Sea; country; good; great; island; moorish summary = time ago on account of the great trade in gold which they carry on country saw such great destruction of their people and ships, The King of Guzarat is a great lord, both in revenue and people, and This King possesses great cities in his kingdom, and especially the river, with a large town called Baticala,[167] of very great trade very large town, peopled by Moors and Gentiles, of the kingdom of said that many men come from all the other kingdoms to this king''s has a Moorish king, a great lord; and in former times this kingdom women relations of the kings and great lords come also to see the king lives, towards the south is a very good town called Cananor.] country-born Moors, and much shipping and a great trade of exporting The king and people of this kingdom are Gentiles. kingdom of Gentiles which has a king who resides in a very great and