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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 10549 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 illustration 9 Synonyms 9 Specific 9 Order 9 Generic 9 Class 9 Character 5 Mr. 5 Linn 2 Lin 2 Ait 1 Nº. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 916 plant 619 p. 541 flower 325 illustration 308 seed 233 garden 213 root 211 native 189 specie 184 colour 173 name 168 blossom 166 leave 149 year 129 variety 123 time 116 cutting 115 part 111 species 109 country 105 situation 95 border 94 foot 93 spring 92 summer 92 pot 90 appearance 89 winter 87 soil 83 genus 82 other 78 beauty 77 work 75 house 73 height 68 greenhouse 67 growth 64 stalk 63 stove 63 parad 62 autumn 60 place 60 figure 56 bed 55 author 54 earth 53 number 52 kind 51 foliage 50 shrub Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 8665 _ 639 Character 329 Class 328 Specific 328 Generic 318 Order 303 Synonyms 255 Syst 242 Mr. 233 Linn 229 Kew 205 ed 192 Vegetab 173 t. 165 foliis 154 Ait 142 Cal 113 Hort 112 Cor 109 Bauh 107 Pl 95 MILLER 94 LINNÆUS 94 June 90 floribus 90 caule 90 Murr 89 f. 87 Caps 80 p. 76 Petala 75 July 74 Miller 73 MONOGYNIA 72 Park 72 Cape 69 Lin 66 May 62 Corolla 53 April 51 Calyx 49 folio 49 Linnæus 47 Garden 42 V. 42 NARCISSUS 41 flore 41 August 39 September 38 linearibus Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1753 it 369 they 313 we 179 them 128 he 127 us 37 i 24 him 22 me 15 itself 11 themselves 10 you 9 himself 5 one 3 she 3 ourselves 1 words:--"they 1 integro 1 her 1 ellipticis Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3191 be 748 have 260 flower 237 grow 185 cultivate 181 produce 172 propagate 126 introduce 125 describe 120 do 114 make 114 figure 102 find 102 appear 97 give 95 increase 91 keep 85 take 85 require 79 become 77 observe 75 see 73 raise 70 plant 67 know 66 call 64 sow 64 part 64 continue 59 ripen 59 leave 58 accord 57 place 56 succeed 56 inform 54 say 53 consider 49 differ 48 form 47 bear 45 distinguish 44 thrive 43 come 40 regard 37 treat 37 mention 36 cover 35 vary 34 represent 32 expand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 395 not 328 most 268 very 258 more 175 well 172 so 157 foliis 151 great 146 other 125 much 125 many 112 readily 112 long 110 hardy 110 as 108 first 108 common 106 here 104 usually 101 only 98 same 94 white 93 green 93 also 88 present 86 large 85 such 83 small 74 few 69 good 66 open 65 little 63 somewhat 63 generally 62 early 62 double 58 murr 58 beautiful 57 yellow 56 up 56 ornamental 53 rarely 53 indeed 51 sometimes 51 several 51 hot 50 warm 48 red 47 purple 47 however Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 168 most 34 good 22 least 15 great 9 MOST 7 lowermost 7 Most 5 large 3 warm 3 strong 2 rich 2 pure 2 old 2 manif 2 fine 2 choice 1 thick 1 tall 1 sweet 1 southernmost 1 proud 1 proper 1 narrow 1 inf 1 high 1 happy 1 handsome 1 fast 1 early 1 dry 1 deep 1 Least Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 160 most 28 well 2 least Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 dp.rastko.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 3 http://dp.rastko.net Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 _ are alphabetically 5 _ is not 3 flowers are not 3 plant grows spontaneously 3 plant has long 3 plant is easily 3 plant is not 3 plant is readily 2 _ are apt 2 _ grows naturally 2 _ is generally 2 _ is readily 2 blossoms are not 2 blossoms are so 2 flowers are proportionably 2 flowers are rarely 2 flowers do not 2 plant does not 2 plant is more 2 root is perennial 2 seeds are good 1 _ appears not 1 _ are large 1 _ are more 1 _ are small 1 _ are very 1 _ flowering _ 1 _ grows wild 1 _ has many 1 _ has smaller 1 _ has somewhat 1 _ have cause 1 _ is always 1 _ is doubtless 1 _ is easily 1 _ is equally 1 _ is monadelphous 1 _ is still 1 _ is very 1 _ is white 1 _ produces seed 1 _ see pl 1 _ was first 1 _ was generally 1 _ was long 1 blossom is naturally 1 blossoms are apt 1 blossoms are bell 1 blossoms are blue 1 blossoms are certainly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ is not so 1 _ is not strictly 1 blossoms are not so 1 flowers are not always 1 flowers do not always 1 flowers have no scent 1 flowers having no foot 1 plant are not subject 1 plant has no stalk 1 plant is not easily 1 plant is not equally 1 plant is not very 1 plants require no very 1 root is not only A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 17198 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 01 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Lin; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = seeds; the best flowering roots are imported from Holland, they bear This species differs from the other plants of the genus, in the colour propagating it, is by parting the roots; but in that way the plant does with white flowers; if the season be mild, or the plants sheltered from should not be planted scattering in the borders of the flower-garden, into some shady borders in the flower-garden, where they will appear Nursery-Gardens in the neighboured of London within these few years: Mr. Salisbury informs me, that a variety of this plant with white flowers, in the borders of the Flower Garden, the seeds should be sown in patches they should be planted into the borders of the Flower-Garden, where they This plant may be propagated without seeds, as it grows fast enough from Some of these may be transplanted into the borders of the flower-garden id = 17531 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 02 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = will lie a long time in the ground; so that if the plants do not appear which readily strike root: MILLER says, that the plants raised The figure here exhibited was taken from a plant which flowered in my different aspects, this, as well as other plants, may have its flowering flowers in plenty, and the roots will make great increase." _Miller''s plant, flowers in May and June, and may be propagated by parting its work, this species expands its flowers in the day-time, and that only As it is desirable to have this plant in flower for as great a length of It is one of those few plants whose calyx is of a more beautiful colour flowering stems; hence, by having several pots of it, some plants will different plant, a native of Canada, producing small yellow flowers. It has been usual to treat this species as a green-house plant, or at id = 17672 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 03 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Lin; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = MONSONIA _speciosa_ foliis quinatis: foliolis bipinnatis, _Lin. Syst. We received this elegant plant just as it was coming into flower, from caule decumbente foliis longiore, _Lin. Syst. This species of _Lotus_ has been called black-flower''d, not that the cuttings during the summer season, and also by seeds, but the plants of the most common flowering shrubs cultivated in gardens and "Flowers most part of the summer, but seldom ripens seeds in England; pots and treated like the old plants." MILLER''s _Gard. SISYRINCHIUM _iridioides_ foliis ensiformibus; petalis inhabitant of the flower-garden, in which it continues to blossom, name, it flowers during most of the summer, and is readily propagated by In the spring of the year 1781, I received roots of this plant from Mr. ROBERT SQUIBB, then at New-York, which produced flowers the indeed to appear in the flower-garden. flower-garden in patches; when the plants come up, a few only should be id = 17979 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 04 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Linn; Mr.; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = The radical leaves of plants usually differ in shape from those of the and hence a suitable plant for the borders of the flower garden, or the known and cultivated; its flowers, in proportion to the plant, are large where it lately flowered--of some other plants introduced after that drew his figure, and the plant from which our drawing was made flowered Roots of a variety of this plant with scarlet double flowers are The flowers of this plant, a native of Gibraltar, bear some resemblance and successfully, as a stove plant; its flowers, which usually make Our figure was drawn from a plant which flowered extremely well in the plant; it is found, however, to flower and ripen its seeds better under succeeded, in the Chelsea garden, where the plants have flowered and Our figure was drawn from a plant which flowered this spring, in id = 19123 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 05 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Linn; Mr.; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = The _Monarda fistulosa_, a hardy herbaceous plant, growing spontaneously the plant here figured is an uncommonly beautiful variety, its blossoms plants of it, which flower every year in the months of June and July, plant, a native of Spain, and flowers in the open ground at the same hence they not only cultivate this plant universally in their gardens, North-America, that the seeds were sent many years since by Mr. BANISTER, from Virginia; and some of the plants were raised in this plant in abundance with us it flowers in the beginning of April: The figure here given was drawn from a plant which flowered with Messrs. LINNÆUS describes, and some authors figure this plant with of this plant is yellow, and tuberous like that of the Iris, the leaves this country with the native plants of North-America, is said to have rendering the variety here figured, one of the most beautiful plants in id = 21843 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 06 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Ait; Character; Class; Generic; Mr.; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = It is readily raised from seeds sown in the open ground, plants from appearances of plants, cannot fail of ranking the present species of The _Salvia aurea_ is a native of the Cape, and was cultivated by Mr. MILLER in 1731, it is a hardy greenhouse plant, is readily propagated by It is a greenhouse plant, and flowers during most of the summer; its considerable time in flower; according to LINNÆUS''S generic character, It flowers usually in the beginning of April; the whole plant sends Professor JACQUIN, in describing the flowers of this plant, calls them Its leaves are flat as in many of the other species, and when the plant English plants as have double flowers, and which, on that account, are flower-gardens; the present plant is one of those: if the soil in which we plant it be moist, it will grow most readily, and flower during the id = 23579 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 07 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Ait; Character; Class; Generic; Linn; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = Mr. MILLER, who cultivated this plant in 1731, informs us, that it grows In point of colour the flowers of this plant are not subject to much frequently acquiring a very great size; the plant itself usually grows Our figure was drawn from a plant which flowered in the spring with cultivated plant rarely exceeding six inches in height; its flowers are it spoken of by those who have cultivated the plant; its flowers, which flowers of a similar colour, but paler; PARKINSON says this plant is plant in our gardens, the flowers are well adapted for nosegays, have a much as any of the exotic plants we have in England, because the flowers plants we have seen flower here, than that of LINNÆUS does, there being The blossoms of this plant when it grows in perfection, are very large, It flowers in July, is as yet a rare plant in this country, and likely id = 38382 author = Curtis, William title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 09 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Linn; Mr.; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = The Amaryllis lutea is a hardy perennial bulbous plant, a native of present plant, the Saffron Crocus, and the Colchicum, flowering nearly on the branches, and when the plant begins to flower, one opens the _Phylica ericoides_, is a hardy greenhouse plant, flowering in May plant, moderately hardy, and has long been cultivated in our gardens, It is a shrubby plant of low growth, producing numerous fleshy leaves have treated of the plant: Clusius describes the flowers as _suavissimi greenhouse plants, grow readily, and flower freely; their blossoms are common plant in greenhouses, having been cultivated by Mr. Miller, in It is a plant of free growth, much disposed to produce flowers during On the same plant we find the leaves grow two, three, or four together, this is not necessary for its flowering, as young and small plants are rolled back a little in the young leaves, flowers grow in a long id = 43858 author = Sims, John title = The Botanical Magazine, Vol. 13 Or, Flower-Garden Displayed date = keywords = Character; Class; Generic; Linn; Mr.; Nº.; Order; Specific; Synonyms; illustration summary = This plant flowers from June to October, and ripens its seeds in the Our figure was drawn from a plant which flowered 1796, in the collection surprise, in a plant of this sort which flowered in my garden at that a plant which has produced red flowers one year, shall produce blue The bright yellow flowers, which are abundantly produced on this plant As a green-house plant, this small and delicate species has long been plants about town, and flowers in May and June. produce flowering plants. Our figure was drawn from a very fine healthy plant which flowered in plants, where they generally flower again, and produce ripe seeds young plants always flower better than the old root, so it is scarce says, the flowers make little appearance, and so the plant is only kept cultivated in Japan as an ornamental plant, that the flowers are