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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 45825 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 assyrian 2 Sargon 2 Nineveh 2 King 1 sumerian 1 semitic 1 man 1 king 1 illustration 1 greek 1 footnote 1 find 1 egyptian 1 Winckler 1 Warka 1 Travels 1 Tobiah 1 Tigris 1 Tiglath 1 Smith 1 Shushan 1 Sennacherib 1 Sanballat 1 Sabbath 1 Place 1 Ninive 1 Nimroud 1 Nehemiah 1 Museum 1 Mugheir 1 Mesopotamia 1 Merodach 1 Master 1 Louvre 1 Lord 1 LOFTUS 1 LENORMANT 1 LAYARD 1 Kouyundjik 1 Khorsabad 1 Jews 1 Jerusalem 1 God 1 Gate 1 FIG 1 Euphrates 1 Egypt 1 Discoveries 1 City 1 Chaldæans Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 400 wall 383 man 363 time 338 king 329 building 320 brick 316 inscription 316 day 310 year 303 work 300 city 297 palace 296 part 288 place 277 ff 261 temple 222 people 220 foot 217 p. 216 footnote 212 name 209 illustration 208 stone 203 country 200 hand 189 form 171 fig 166 word 163 nothing 158 history 158 character 157 use 154 side 152 case 141 text 140 relief 140 number 136 material 135 fact 134 ruin 132 son 132 art 130 one 130 kind 130 gate 126 house 123 document 121 fragment 118 order 118 column Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2638 _ 296 Nehemiah 266 God 258 vol 255 Babylon 238 Assyria 237 Chaldæa 209 Jerusalem 198 M. 179 Nineveh 167 FIG 165 Egypt 143 Khorsabad 135 i. 126 Chaldæan 125 Sargon 121 Mesopotamia 111 de 110 Lord 110 King 108 pp 106 Babylonia 104 Layard 101 Place 101 Museum 100 CHAPTER 97 II 96 Assyrians 93 LAYARD 91 I. 91 British 90 Fig 86 Ninive 86 Annals 84 Smith 84 B.C. 83 Nimroud 81 ff 78 III 76 Assyrian 73 Euphrates 73 Assur 72 god 71 Winckler 71 . 69 Discoveries 67 Jews 66 temple 66 Tigris 66 Sennacherib Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2111 it 1589 we 1313 they 1195 he 620 them 376 us 330 him 316 i 127 themselves 124 you 117 himself 116 itself 86 me 80 she 50 her 24 ourselves 17 thee 16 one 15 myself 8 herself 6 yourself 4 ours 3 ye 2 thy 2 theirs 2 mine 1 yours 1 thyself 1 oneself 1 iv Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9304 be 3040 have 655 find 563 do 462 give 456 see 443 make 336 take 334 come 237 say 234 call 225 use 215 seem 214 know 191 show 190 go 182 stand 170 bring 161 leave 156 build 142 carry 133 place 132 become 128 lead 125 speak 119 discover 117 tell 112 put 112 pass 105 form 102 cover 101 write 101 represent 101 look 100 set 100 let 96 follow 95 keep 92 live 92 begin 91 preserve 87 believe 86 think 86 remain 86 feel 86 bear 85 rise 85 appear 79 read 76 describe Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1009 not 541 more 530 so 498 great 428 other 373 only 357 same 356 very 319 assyrian 302 first 274 well 270 then 265 most 258 even 257 up 246 long 239 now 236 much 225 as 222 many 216 also 202 such 190 still 178 out 176 far 170 here 161 little 160 however 159 high 159 certain 158 early 157 never 151 thus 149 own 148 less 143 small 139 there 135 old 130 few 128 large 128 good 125 down 122 too 122 sometimes 121 once 115 low 112 yet 112 strong 111 last 108 often Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 89 least 57 most 37 good 35 early 32 old 23 high 21 great 12 strong 12 Most 11 slight 11 late 9 small 9 low 9 large 8 fine 7 bad 6 simple 6 near 5 tall 4 hard 4 full 4 eld 4 clear 3 wise 3 short 3 narrow 3 long 3 deep 3 common 2 weak 2 topmost 2 thick 2 scanty 2 rich 2 poor 2 hot 2 heavy 2 happy 2 grand 2 gentle 2 farth 2 brave 2 bold 1 wide 1 wealthy 1 thin 1 sure 1 soft 1 shrill 1 rude Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 208 most 10 least 8 well 1 soon 1 near 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ tells _ 2 babylon did not 2 chaldæa were not 2 day is holy 2 men did not 2 nehemiah did not 2 nehemiah does not 2 nehemiah speaks not 2 work goes on 1 _ are slightly 1 _ are thus 1 _ be _ 1 _ bring out 1 _ did outlandish 1 _ is entirely 1 _ is virtually 1 _ say _ 1 _ see layard 1 _ see max 1 assyria are less 1 assyria did not 1 assyria had already 1 assyria have therefore 1 assyria was different 1 assyria was military 1 assyria were far 1 assyria were not 1 assyria were smaller 1 babylon are disposed 1 babylon had communication 1 babylon is already 1 babylon seems however 1 babylon was always 1 babylon was complete 1 babylon was equal 1 babylon was khammurabi 1 babylon was more 1 babylon was never 1 babylon was not 1 babylon was sure 1 babylon was thus 1 babylon was too 1 brick had several 1 brick has there 1 brick was ever 1 brick was not 1 brick was only 1 bricks are regular 1 bricks go therefore 1 bricks had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 assyria had no original 1 babylon was not far 1 brick was not always 1 bricks had no mortar 1 bricks was no less 1 building was no less 1 buildings had no outward 1 buildings is not easily 1 chaldæa has no stone 1 city was no empty 1 jerusalem was not merely 1 man was not so 1 nehemiah takes no credit 1 nehemiah was no copper 1 palaces were no more 1 works have not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6559 author = Olmstead, A. T. (Albert Ten Eyck) title = Assyrian Historiography: A Source Study date = keywords = Annals; Ashur; King; Smith; Winckler; footnote summary = latest days of the Assyrian empire in the inscriptions placed on the annals inscription from this earlier period has been discovered, and work is in annals form, in so far as the events of the various years historical inscriptions in which would be given, only those editions not found in the earlier Annals, are given in the Obelisk, [Footnote: Assyrian historical inscriptions, dates the events by the name of the Annals in its account of the Nairi campaign [Footnote: Ann. IV. in the so called Standard Inscription, [Footnote: L. [Footnote: Budge-King, 177 ff.] Bulls, and Ninib inscriptions, No annals or in fact any other inscription has The sources for the reign of Sargon (722-705) [Footnote: Collected in [Footnote: Inscription at building inscriptions, perhaps the most important is the New Year''s Esarhaddon (686-668), [Footnote: Inscriptions of the reign collected 264 ff.; Menant, 291 ff.] and Nabu inscriptions, [Footnote: id = 28072 author = Perrot, Georges title = A History of Art in Chaldæa & Assyria, v. 1 date = keywords = Ancient; Asia; Babylon; British; Chaldæa; Chaldæans; Discoveries; Egypt; Euphrates; FIG; Khorsabad; Kouyundjik; LAYARD; LENORMANT; LOFTUS; Louvre; Mesopotamia; Mugheir; Museum; Nimroud; Nineveh; Ninive; Place; Sargon; Tigris; Travels; Warka; assyrian; egyptian; find; greek; illustration summary = Babylon a great number of men belonging to the different nationalities that bricks are found built into the walls to this day, upon which the Assyrian The great wall of Babylon was set up anew; so was the temple ruins of Babylon began to be used as an open quarry, the stone buildings heads to build palaces, they imported architects, painters, and sculptors, bricks, placed in horizontal courses round a centre of the same material. The Chaldæan palace, like the Egyptian temple, sought mainly for lateral speaking rested, so that, in Chaldæa, the foundations of a great building certain bas-relief that seems to represent one of those great buildings of great use was made of arched openings in Assyria, and the countries in its Fortresses, palaces, temples, all the great buildings of Chaldæa the Assyrian architect never placed his arches or vaults upon columns or bricks formed in different moulds according to their place in the vault, id = 28871 author = Rawlinson, George title = The Seven Great Monarchies of the Ancient Asian World A Linked Index to the Project Gutenberg Editions date = keywords = CHAPTER summary = Chaldaea, Assyria, Media, Babylon, Persia, Parthia, Sassanian Empire; And The History of Phoenicia linked index of the detailed chapters and illustrations PREFACE TO FIVE GREAT MONARCHIES. Cuneiform inscriptions (drawn by the Author, from bricks in the British Museum) Cuneiform inscriptions (drawn by the Author, from bricks in the British Museum) Chaldaean dish-cover tombs (ditto) Chaldaean dish-cover tombs (ditto) Chaldaean jar-coffin (ditto) Chaldaean vases of the first period (drawn by the Author from vases in the Chaldaean vases, drinking-vessels, and amphora of the second period (ditto) Chaldaean lamps of the second period (ditto) Flint knives (drawn by the Author from the originals in the British Museum) (drawn by the Author from the originals in the British Museum) CHAPTER III. CHAPTER III. CHAPTER III. CHAPTER III. CHAPTER III. CHAPTER XIV. Map of Parthia CHAPTER VII�ÆSTHETIC ART CHAPTER XIV�POLITICAL HISTORY 3. Phoenicia during the period of its subjection to Assyria (B.C. 4. id = 37411 author = Sayce, A. H. (Archibald Henry) title = A Primer of Assyriology date = keywords = Assur; B.C.; Babylonia; Bel; Merodach; Nineveh; Sargon; Sennacherib; Tiglath; assyrian; king; semitic; sumerian summary = Babylon a sacred city--Tiglath-pileser I--The First Assyrian Babylonian and Assyrian religion--Sumerian religion Shamanistic-Babylonian Kings--Assyrian Kings--High Priests of Assur--Kings Assyrian population was Semitic, and the common language of the country Assyrian belongs to the northern group of Semitic languages, being more gave a dynasty of kings to Babylonia which lasted 576 years and nine Sumerian.--The decipherment of the Assyrian texts brought with Sumerian texts in the Semitic language of Babylon and Assyria. cuneiform script of Nineveh had been borrowed in the ninth century B.C. As the characters of the script continued to preserve their Assyrian year of his reign marched against Babylonia, captured Babylon and to have been ''the king''s son'' who commanded the Babylonian army in Babylonian city had at least one library, and the Assyrian kings named, as well as of the dynasties of kings and the number of years (1) The Dynasty of Babylon: 11 kings for 304 years 2478-2174 id = 12248 author = Walton, O. F., Mrs. title = The King''s Cup-Bearer date = keywords = City; Gate; God; Jerusalem; Jews; King; Lord; Master; Nehemiah; Sabbath; Sanballat; Shushan; Tobiah; man summary = parents'' home of the comfort of God. How many children Hachaliah had we are not told, but Nehemiah had Then Nehemiah pleads God''s promises to His people in time past, and ends mind to work, and Nehemiah for some time went peacefully on his way, as to leave Jerusalem and the Jews to me and to their God. No answer came back to Nehemiah''s letter, and perhaps he and his But, says Nehemiah, ''I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come the city for more than twenty-eight years, had gone home to God. And as we ate our Christmas dinner that day, as we gathered round the But at the time of the siege of Jerusalem, God was leaving the city, it the work of a man whose name has already come before us in Nehemiah''s three times over does Nehemiah ask God to remember him.