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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 194268 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 page 2 Windsor 2 Sir 2 Princess 2 Planta 2 Mrs. 2 Mr. 2 Miss 2 Lord 2 Lady 2 Johnson 2 General 2 Fanny 2 Elizabeth 2 Duke 2 Dr. 2 Crewe 2 Court 2 Burney 2 Burke 1 king 1 french 1 Windham 1 Wellbred 1 Wales 1 Turbulent 1 Talleyrand 1 Stael 1 St. 1 Smelt 1 Schwellenberg 1 Queen 1 Prince 1 Phillips 1 Paris 1 Norbury 1 Narbonne 1 Madame 1 Luc 1 Louis 1 London 1 Locke 1 Lafayette 1 Kew 1 James 1 House 1 Hastings 1 Hall 1 Gwynn 1 Goldsworthy Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 740 time 672 king 650 day 606 page 579 queen 490 room 386 friend 348 man 337 nothing 315 house 310 letter 300 father 287 way 282 morning 281 moment 277 majesty 273 place 260 year 247 word 247 hand 237 life 234 princess 227 manner 218 visit 216 part 206 pleasure 204 night 197 one 194 family 193 heart 191 lady 189 spirit 189 party 189 eye 184 evening 183 thing 182 hour 178 subject 176 account 170 mind 167 character 166 door 164 name 160 power 159 gentleman 158 country 156 person 156 honour 154 son 153 town Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1337 Mr. 870 Mrs. 682 de 669 M. 580 Madame 574 Miss 530 d''Arblay 434 � 359 Dr. 358 Page 351 Burney 330 i. 311 Lady 297 Fanny 229 Sir 229 Hastings 228 ii 224 Colonel 210 Princess 210 Lord 199 France 194 Burke 187 Planta 178 England 174 Schwellenberg 165 Paris 163 Duke 161 la 155 Windsor 154 Windham 145 General 123 Crewe 122 iii 114 Court 113 Locke 110 Prince 102 James 99 Charlotte 98 Johnson 98 Elizabeth 90 Goldsworthy 89 St. 86 French 85 le 84 Louis 84 Bath 82 Augusta 81 d''Henin 81 Queen 81 English Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9153 i 4887 he 3291 it 3177 me 2324 she 1892 him 1832 you 1395 we 1049 they 1012 her 817 them 492 us 391 myself 388 himself 183 herself 74 themselves 47 ourselves 45 itself 40 mine 31 one 29 yourself 16 yours 12 hers 7 ''em 4 theirs 4 ours 4 his 4 ''s 2 i- 2 em 1 wthem 1 words--"you 1 windsor.-who 1 to- 1 tired!--what 1 resign!--we 1 powerful?--that 1 not!--we 1 madam,--your 1 madam,--you 1 l''esp 1 l 1 je 1 j''attends 1 it- 1 ho!--you 1 exclaim- 1 d''ici 1 compassion:--what 1 come-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 12936 be 5799 have 1253 say 1212 see 1198 do 1010 make 921 go 894 come 812 know 683 take 666 give 636 tell 594 hear 563 think 552 cry 512 find 449 look 444 speak 439 seem 398 leave 392 call 334 write 332 receive 323 meet 304 bring 275 pass 268 return 265 answer 263 wish 258 begin 257 feel 252 read 247 send 242 enter 239 believe 234 keep 223 follow 196 get 194 ask 189 wait 188 mean 176 let 172 appear 171 join 169 lose 165 arrive 161 talk 159 put 159 add 154 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3102 not 1824 so 1145 very 1015 now 911 then 806 little 800 most 782 more 741 much 686 only 667 well 553 good 544 never 538 own 537 first 514 however 506 as 497 again 493 up 482 great 429 such 414 here 413 long 395 even 386 out 363 other 340 dear 336 too 333 last 331 still 317 just 316 yet 314 royal 314 poor 308 fairly 308 almost 305 new 304 soon 304 indeed 286 ever 275 quite 271 therefore 257 old 252 always 250 next 242 same 237 there 223 all 219 also 215 many Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 126 good 124 least 67 dear 61 most 34 high 34 great 32 small 24 eld 20 bad 17 near 15 young 12 deep 10 warm 10 fine 7 happy 7 full 7 early 6 sweet 6 fair 5 low 4 true 4 strong 4 soft 4 noble 4 long 4 extreme 3 wise 3 slight 3 severe 3 rich 3 large 3 heavy 3 hard 3 gay 3 able 2 tender 2 short 2 pure 2 pleasant 2 plain 2 old 2 mild 2 lucky 2 lively 2 late 2 grave 2 easy 2 dark 2 clear 2 c'' Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 739 most 19 well 11 least 1 worst 1 restor''d 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 d''arblay is now 3 madame do stael 3 queen was so 2 house is old 2 house is very 2 king did not 2 king is so 2 king is very 2 king was extremely 2 king was so 2 letter was most 2 majesty was so 2 queen is so 2 queen looked much 2 queen was alone 2 queen was most 1 burney be so 1 burney is again 1 burney is premature 1 burney is quite 1 burney is so 1 burney know latin 1 burney was seated.-ed 1 burney was still 1 burney was then 1 d''arblay are very 1 d''arblay being as 1 d''arblay came in 1 d''arblay do n''t 1 d''arblay had already 1 d''arblay had entirely 1 d''arblay has now 1 d''arblay has resources 1 d''arblay has so 1 d''arblay is aunt 1 d''arblay is certainly 1 d''arblay is here 1 d''arblay is not 1 d''arblay made frequent 1 d''arblay made page 1 d''arblay was already 1 d''arblay was chiefly 1 d''arblay was general 1 d''arblay was not 1 d''arblay was only 1 d''arblay was slowly 1 d''arblay was too 1 d''arblay was very 1 d''arblay went alone 1 d''arblay went not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 d''arblay is not only 1 king had no share 1 king is not well 1 king was no longer 1 letter has no date 1 majesty had not formerly 1 majesty was not worse 1 men have no fans 1 morning was not very 1 queen has no bell 1 room was not so 1 time was not yet 1 � was no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6042 author = Burney, Fanny title = The Diary and Letters of Madame D''Arblay — Volume 2 date = keywords = Burke; Burney; Colonel; Court; Crewe; Dr.; Duke; Elizabeth; Fairly; Fanny; Fox; General; Goldsworthy; Gwynn; Hall; Hastings; House; James; Johnson; Kew; Lady; Lord; Luc; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Planta; Prince; Princess; Schwellenberg; Sir; Smelt; St.; Turbulent; Wales; Wellbred; Windham; Windsor; king; page summary = July 19.-In the afternoon, while I was working in Mrs. Schwellenberg''s room, Mr. Turbulent entered, to summon Miss "Yes!" cried Mrs. Schwellenberg, "MISS Burney might sit When all were gone Mrs. Schwellenberg said, "I have told it Mr. Fisher that he drove you out from the room, and he says he won''t received visits of inquiry from divers of her ladies--Mrs. Brudenell, bed-chamber woman; Miss Brudenell, her daughter, and a little while, and Miss Palmer said she longed to know him more, Miss Planta came to my room upstairs, to Inquire how long Mr. Fairly had stayed, and I was quite happy to appease her Soon after the king came into the room and said, "So, no Mr. Fairly again?" the royal family--king, queen, and three princesses--came into king was extremely ill, the queen very wretched, poor Mrs. Schwellenberg all spasm and horror, Miss Planta all restlessness, id = 6457 author = Burney, Fanny title = The Diary and Letters of Madame D''Arblay — Volume 3 date = keywords = Alex; Alexander; Augusta; Bath; Bonaparte; Brussels; Burke; Burney; Charles; Charlotte; Consul; Court; Crewe; D''ARBLAY; Dr.; Duchess; Duke; Elizabeth; England; English; Evelina; Fanny; France; General; George; Johnson; Lady; Lafayette; Locke; London; Lord; Louis; Madame; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Narbonne; Norbury; Paris; Phillips; Planta; Princess; Queen; Sir; Stael; Talleyrand; Windsor; french; page summary = on "Camilla"--Anecdote of the Duchess of York--A Visit to Mrs. Boscawen--The Relative Success of Madame d''Arblay''s Novels--A Madame d''Arblay''s Stepmother--The French Emigr''es at Norbury--Dr. Burney''s depressed state--Covetous of Personal Distinction--Baby d''Arblay''s Little Boy at Court--His Presentation to the Queen-Arrival in England--Alexander d''Arblay: Some old Bath Friends-spirits; so now I think it high time to let you know a little came away at night a letter arrived express to Madame de Stael. "Madame d''Arblay," said her majesty, "tells me that Mrs. Boscawen sister''s portrait, said, "Madame d''Arblay, when the princess Mrs. Fisher, "Madame d''Arblay, sir;" and instantly he came on a princess royal appeared, saying, "Madame d''Arblay, I come to my dear Madame d''Arblay, people ought to know more how good the pray, my dear Madame d''Arblay, bring your little boy with you. (Madame d''Arblay to Miss Planta, for the queen and princesses.) desire to meet again his old friend Madame d''Arblay!