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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 52998 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 92 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Mrs. 5 Mr. 3 Miss 3 Aunt 2 Mary 2 Fayre 2 Dotty 2 Dolly 1 yes 1 girl 1 dot 1 daddy 1 Winters 1 Uncle 1 Trudy 1 Tom 1 Tod 1 Thornton 1 Ted 1 Sue 1 Stiefbach 1 Stevens 1 Seth 1 Sarah 1 Sanford 1 Salle 1 Rose 1 Raymond 1 Ralph 1 Rachel 1 Prudy 1 Penrose 1 Pauline 1 Party 1 Packard 1 Mother 1 Monty 1 Molly 1 Mignon 1 Merton 1 Master 1 Marjorie 1 Marion 1 Mammy 1 Mahla 1 Mackay 1 Luna 1 Louise 1 Linda 1 Lily Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1771 girl 844 time 727 room 709 thing 608 day 602 way 556 eye 488 hand 461 friend 449 man 441 one 412 face 399 boy 380 night 376 mother 374 head 370 house 359 school 330 door 325 child 321 something 318 father 302 anything 300 word 287 nothing 284 place 281 party 277 morning 274 voice 269 arm 250 moment 238 people 234 heart 233 year 232 home 218 course 210 minute 202 life 194 plane 194 name 193 side 191 table 188 matter 182 foot 181 part 172 mind 172 bed 165 window 165 lady 165 cake Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1027 _ 898 Mary 804 Marion 799 Miss 756 Marjorie 739 Mr. 715 Dotty 664 Mrs. 514 Linda 419 Alicia 400 Sue 341 Mignon 296 Rose 281 Grace 240 Dorothy 234 Constance 233 Forbes 233 Clarice 223 Rachel 220 Ted 210 Dolly 206 Bernice 202 Florence 197 Aunt 186 Christine 179 Fayre 169 Jerry 168 Ralph 166 Cassy 165 Dean 163 exclaimed 161 Stiefbach 154 Sarah 153 Uncle 148 Louise 148 Berry 145 Carlton 115 Georgie 110 Berkley 105 Connie 100 Molly 95 Stevens 93 Muriel 93 Mackay 91 Mahla 90 Charlie 85 Jeff 85 Isa 85 Betty 84 Fenn Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8712 i 7141 she 6761 you 6021 it 2732 he 2368 her 2054 they 1891 we 1337 me 1082 them 878 him 524 us 475 herself 173 ''s 144 himself 128 themselves 126 myself 108 yourself 62 ''em 60 one 52 itself 49 yours 46 mine 36 thee 28 hers 25 ourselves 9 em 8 ours 8 his 6 yourselves 4 theirs 3 you''re 3 you''ll 3 ye 3 i''m 1 you?--she 1 you''ve 1 you!--i 1 yo''self 1 us,--i 1 there,--you 1 there!--you 1 ten 1 so:-- 1 so''t 1 shortly:-- 1 perhaps-- 1 p''r''aps 1 o 1 in,--that Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16832 be 6888 have 4567 do 2679 say 2283 go 1734 know 1458 come 1415 see 1303 think 1187 make 1018 look 1006 take 978 get 893 tell 719 ask 586 want 568 give 552 let 513 find 508 cry 477 seem 460 like 450 hear 450 feel 422 put 402 leave 356 keep 354 mean 344 try 338 call 326 sit 318 laugh 301 begin 291 speak 287 talk 283 stand 279 turn 278 reply 263 bring 261 run 259 smile 255 believe 236 wait 231 suppose 229 walk 228 wish 228 hold 226 help 209 play 208 follow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6183 not 1891 so 1204 up 1105 now 1094 dolly 968 then 950 little 948 just 810 out 791 very 787 good 758 never 681 here 663 too 647 all 646 more 644 only 611 well 599 as 589 much 588 other 561 old 502 right 500 back 489 down 469 there 456 long 437 young 435 own 429 on 427 first 421 away 413 last 379 over 376 again 373 even 340 ever 338 sure 336 in 333 off 329 great 319 enough 316 always 306 most 269 still 264 almost 255 pretty 250 next 249 really 245 soon Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 167 good 94 least 82 most 27 dear 23 great 21 slight 20 bad 17 near 14 nice 13 Most 12 old 10 high 10 deep 8 big 7 j 6 late 6 fine 5 lovely 5 handsome 4 wild 4 sure 4 strange 4 happy 4 early 3 young 3 wise 3 thin 3 rich 3 grand 3 faint 2 warm 2 tall 2 smart 2 small 2 sad 2 queer 2 proud 2 poor 2 noble 2 mere 2 large 2 hard 2 eld 2 easy 2 bright 2 brave 1 yellow 1 true 1 thieving 1 thick Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 224 most 25 least 22 well 1 kindest 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28805/28805-h/28805-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28805/28805-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 _ is _ 15 _ do n''t 14 _ do _ 6 _ are _ 6 _ have _ 6 _ was _ 6 linda did not 6 sue did not 5 _ am _ 5 girls do n''t 5 marion did not 4 _ did _ 4 _ had _ 4 marjorie did not 4 school was over 3 _ knew _ 3 eyes took in 3 girls did not 3 girls went downstairs 3 marion looked up 3 marjorie had never 3 mary had not 3 mignon had not 2 _ be friends 2 _ did n''t 2 _ does _ 2 _ feel _ 2 _ know _ 2 _ look _ 2 boy put on 2 boys came nearer 2 boys went off 2 dotty did n''t 2 dotty was so 2 face took on 2 face was as 2 face was scarlet 2 face was so 2 girl got charlie 2 girl had n''t 2 girl is n''t 2 girls are nice 2 girls came up 2 girls made ready 2 girls went down 2 girls went in 2 linda did n''t 2 linda was almost 2 linda was not 2 linda was so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 marion made no reply 1 boys had no hats 1 dotty had no trouble 1 dotty was not quite 1 eyes is not reason 1 face was not stern 1 girl felt no lack 1 girl had no claims 1 girls are no fools 1 girls get no home 1 girls were not together 1 head is not very 1 linda had no plans 1 linda had no sense 1 linda was not at 1 man was not willing 1 marion had no intention 1 marion had no other 1 marion was not at 1 marjorie was no exception 1 marjorie was not alone 1 mary did not quite 1 mary had no thought 1 mary had no time 1 mary took no notice 1 mary was no longer 1 mignon did not actually 1 mignon had not entirely 1 mignon were not flattering 1 one being not quite 1 school were not milk 1 sue had no diamonds 1 sue meant no harm 1 things was not likely A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 27985 author = Chase, Josephine title = Marjorie Dean, High School Sophomore date = keywords = Charlie; Connie; Constance; Dean; Jerry; Marjorie; Mary; Merton; Mignon; Miss; Mrs.; Raymond; Salle; Sanford; Stevens summary = "Oh, Mother," Marjorie leaned impulsively forward, "Mary''s coming to Releasing Mary''s hand, Marjorie led the way up the stairs to the second the room, followed by Mary, who stopped just long enough to kiss Mrs. Dean good-bye. "This is my friend, Mary Raymond, Jerry," introduced Marjorie. The great study hall which Marjorie and Mary entered had little of the Constance ran forward to meet Marjorie and Mary. "Let me in, Mary," called Marjorie''s fresh young voice from the hall. as a little girl Marjorie remembered how hard it had been, once Mary was "Girls," Marjorie''s clear voice trembled a little, "I think I''d better "I thought perhaps Mary would forget about Constance," went on Marjorie. _did_ see your friend Mary walking into geometry with Mignon, Marjorie. Mary stalked past the half-open door of Marjorie''s room and paused be the friend of a girl like Marjorie Dean, Mary was plunged into the id = 41524 author = Comins, Elizabeth B. (Elizabeth Barker) title = Marion Berkley: A Story for Girls date = keywords = Aunt; Berkley; Bettie; Christine; Dr.; Drayton; Florence; Georgie; Julia; Marion; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Rachel; Sarah; Stiefbach; Thornton summary = "Marion," replied Miss Christine, in a quiet, but reproving tone, "I do Marion made no reply, and Miss Christine sat down and commenced talking Mrs. Berkley had requested, when Marion entered Miss Stiefbach''s school, "Well, Marion, I don''t know what you will do next," said Miss Christine; "Well, Sarah," said Miss Christine, who could not resist joining Marion Marion!" exclaimed Miss Christine, looking from one to the "Well, Marion and Sarah," said Florence, "I think you''re both perfect "Sallie, do you know where Miss Christine is?" asked Marion, as they met "Marion, what an expression!" said Miss Christine, as she sat in "Well now, Miss Christine," said Marion, "if you are ready, I''ll go down "Oh, I don''t want to," replied Marion, much to Miss Christine''s "But, Marion," said Rachel, "don''t you suppose if they wanted to know us "Well, time will show," said Dr. Drayton; "but Rachel, if Marion Berkley id = 44862 author = Lavell, Edith title = Linda Carlton, Air Pilot date = keywords = Aunt; Carlton; Emily; Linda; Louise; Mackay; Miss; Mr.; Ralph; Ted; daddy summary = At these words, Linda''s Aunt Emily nudged Louise''s mother, and smiled. "You''d like that, wouldn''t you, dear?" persisted Miss Carlton, as Linda "Well, we''ll talk our plans over later," said Miss Carlton, when Linda couldn''t believe that a normal fun-loving girl like Linda would prefer "You have been here before, Linda?" asked her father, as the girl "Linda''s little ''Pursuit'' is a daisy, Miss Carlton," he said. "Want any help?" asked Ralph, though Linda knew he hadn''t the slightest "I want to try a couple of stunts before we eat," Linda told Ralph. The plane was righted now, but Linda suddenly noticed that Ralph was "I think you had better come back tomorrow, if you want to talk to Mr. Mackay," said the nurse, noticing that the two men were not any too "Cantaloupe, I think, Aunt Emily," replied Linda, as Miss Carlton left id = 49686 author = May, Sophie title = Little Prudy''s Cousin Grace date = keywords = Cassy; Clifford; Grace; Hallock; Horace; Isa; Mahla; Mrs.; Prudy summary = "Why, Cassy Hallock," said Grace, shading her face with one hand, "Well, I''ve nothing to tell, any way, but just thoughts," said Grace, "Now," said Grace, when she saw that, as usual, Cassy expected her to "Yes, Horace Clifford," said Grace, loftily, "I do despise to see "I''d like to know," thought Grace, as she parted with Isa, and walked girls--Grace Clifford and Mahla Linck." "Miss Grace," said she, "does you write to little Prudy Grace''s eyes were fixed on the little girl with a sort of fascination. "Now, what is it, Mahla?" said the sweet voice of Grace Clifford, as The teacher hesitated, looked at timid little Lucy, and said, "Yes. But if you break your word, girls, remember, ''tis the last time you''ll "Cassy," said Grace, a little later, "what''ll we do about the R. married,--Grace, Cassy, Prudy and Horace; everybody but little Grace and Cassy looked at the face which id = 28805 author = Raymond, Evelyn title = Dorothy''s House Party date = keywords = Alfaretta; Alfy; Aunt; Betty; Calvert; Dinah; Dorothy; Helena; Jane; Jim; Luna; Master; Molly; Monty; Mr.; Mrs.; Party; Seth; Winters summary = But without waiting for an answer the young farm girl caught her old old Aunt Betty got acquainted with you an'' liked you, and sort of breakfast; also with the request that "Miss Dorothy should attend Mrs. Calvert in her own room before going below stairs." In Mrs. Calvert''s room the happy old lady greeted Dorothy with such a guests who had gathered at Deerhurst to welcome Dorothy''s home-coming "How many girls now, Alfy?" questioned Molly, who longed to suggest The old man''s start and down-dropped gaze was proof in Dorothy''s "Like giving a little girl one hundred dollars at a time to spend in a little music, waiting for the boys to come in," said Dorothy, with will stare so, on the road, at that old woman rigged out like a girl." Good-night, little Dorothy. never seen a little girl just like her; and he answered promptly: id = 42246 author = Richards, Laura Elizabeth Howe title = Quicksilver Sue date = keywords = Clarice; Hart; Lily; Mammy; Mary; Mrs.; Packard; Penrose; Sue; Tom summary = "I''ll go and tell Mary!" said Sue. "I like Sue better than either!" said Mary, stoutly. Sue Penrose went home that day feeling, as she had said to Mary, that Mrs. Hart patted Mary''s arm, but said nothing; and the girl went on: "I think Sue had been showing Clarice her dresses before I came, for "No, no, Quicksilver!" said Mary, catching Sue''s skirt as she sprang "Why, yes," said Sue, looking a little blank. "Oh Clarice, isn''t it too bad that it''s raining?" said Sue. "Here," said Clarice; "wait a minute, Sue. I''ve got another pair of "I am not going to tell her!" said Sue. Her tone was defiant, but she colored high, and did not look at Mary One day Mrs. Hart said: "Mary, how would you like to ask little Lily "How you talk, Sue Penrose!" said Clarice. "Oh, don''t, Sue!" said Mary. id = 30881 author = Wells, Carolyn title = Two Little Women date = keywords = Bert; Bob; Dolly; Dotty; Fayre; Genie; Holmes; Jack; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Pauline; Rose; Tod; Trudy; dot; girl summary = "I saw the little girl out on the verandah," said Dotty Rose, between "Like a little girl shaking her head," said Mr. Fayre, to help her out. a little, but Dolly Fayre was timid, and Dotty Rose was absorbed in "I don''t know," and Dolly looked thoughtful; "I like you, of course, but "You come over and wish me good-night in my room," Dotty said, "and then "I''ll speak to her," said easy-going Mrs. Rose; "how do you like Dolly''s "Tell me about the people who are coming, Dolly," said Dotty. "What a lot you know!" and Dotty looked at Dolly with a thoughtful "There, there, Dotty dear," said Mrs. Rose; "don''t talk to nurse like "Of course they wouldn''t ask you," said Dolly, "because Bob Rose won''t "Aren''t they funny rooms?" said Dotty, laughing with glee at Dolly''s "Come along, girls," said Mrs. Fayre, and Dotty and Dolly followed her id = 5893 author = Wells, Carolyn title = Two Little Women on a Holiday date = keywords = Alicia; Bernice; Berry; Dolly; Dotty; Fayre; Fenn; Forbes; Jeff; Mr.; Mrs.; Uncle; yes summary = The two girls said good-night, and Dolly went back to her "Very well," said Mrs. Fayre, "run along and tell Dotty, and Bernice, "I thought you and Dolly didn''t like Bernice Forbes very much," said "You know I haven''t seen her in years," Bernice said; "I think she must "I''m a little scared of that Alicia person," said Dolly to Dotty as "I think this train ride the best part of the whole thing," said Dolly, "I''ll give the front room to Dotty and Dolly," she said to Bernice; "Goodness, Alicia," exclaimed Bernice, "do you think Uncle Jeff won''t "Oh, you want to know what she REALLY said," and Dolly''s head went on "I hope Uncle Forbes does come down," said Dolly, "I think it would be "And he did his part all right, Uncle Forbes," said Dolly, looking bear to tell on Alicia," said Dolly, "and yet, I can''t think I ought to