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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 55803 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 wing 5 illustration 5 butterfly 5 July 5 August 4 White 4 Scotland 4 June 4 Fritillary 3 spot 3 Plate 3 England 3 Blue 2 insect 2 caterpillar 2 british 2 September 2 North 2 Mr. 2 Fig 2 Butterfly 2 America 1 water 1 southern 1 return 1 nest 1 male 1 look 1 like 1 larva 1 large 1 hive 1 friend 1 form 1 egg 1 dark 1 common 1 come 1 boy 1 black 1 bird 1 Yellow 1 Wood 1 Wave 1 WHITE 1 Synopsis 1 Swan 1 Swallowtail 1 Sulphur 1 Small Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2651 wing 2466 butterfly 1326 caterpillar 1168 spot 1121 specie 1064 side 930 insect 923 egg 818 colour 794 time 773 form 749 illustration 613 surface 603 line 553 part 552 male 540 case 535 day 524 moth 513 plant 493 female 458 body 449 head 446 place 444 number 443 bird 434 margin 423 ground 408 fig 407 way 402 tree 390 leave 389 one 381 end 367 year 364 family 350 eye 349 specimen 347 water 340 food 330 flower 321 back 320 life 308 plate 302 winter 301 size 300 other 298 species 292 spring 291 leaf Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 15886 _ 569 Frank 470 chrysalis 397 June 371 August 368 Butterfly 359 July 356 Jimmy 352 Dick 324 Plate 268 FIG 267 White 259 May 242 Pl 224 England 221 brown 210 Betsy 194 P. 188 Mr. 169 Fritillary 167 Small 162 Blue 158 September 158 Plates 157 Papilio 146 Mrs. 146 Bee 139 | 136 Moth 133 caterpillar 127 Scotland 124 Skipper 123 New 123 Ladybug 121 April 120 Green 117 Brown 105 Wood 101 North 98 Carpet 96 BUTTERFLY 95 B. 94 Fig 90 America 86 Ireland 85 South 84 Yellow 83 See 83 October 81 Orange Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6121 it 2899 they 1737 i 1709 you 1609 he 1359 them 1199 we 524 she 466 him 273 her 264 me 236 us 214 themselves 187 itself 143 one 114 himself 47 yourself 36 myself 35 herself 23 ourselves 7 pg 4 oneself 4 mine 4 ''s 3 yours 3 theirs 3 his 2 yourselves 2 out,-- 1 thee 1 ours 1 my 1 antennae 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 21039 be 4532 have 1289 do 1219 find 1210 see 859 say 859 make 837 take 691 feed 613 know 561 come 541 go 489 give 443 seem 403 look 399 appear 389 show 378 fly 374 lay 373 get 361 become 328 grow 311 follow 294 mark 294 change 287 call 283 occur 281 remain 273 think 268 leave 248 pass 237 form 225 keep 225 cover 217 turn 215 meet 212 eat 211 use 210 set 208 observe 206 bring 203 suppose 197 put 191 place 188 lie 186 let 181 extend 181 begin 179 run 179 distinguish Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2354 not 1466 very 1329 so 1221 more 1089 other 1065 black 847 large 844 then 787 little 781 only 776 white 763 also 699 small 690 many 666 most 665 well 648 up 641 hind 636 out 635 dark 591 now 575 much 563 brown 562 long 562 as 548 common 545 first 536 few 501 great 498 same 470 green 449 such 440 often 436 under 406 upper 399 good 388 sometimes 387 fore 379 rather 378 even 377 generally 374 less 372 last 371 yellow 371 just 370 again 362 far 359 about 351 early 341 various Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 196 most 103 good 102 least 49 large 49 Most 47 common 35 great 25 slight 21 near 17 early 16 small 15 rare 10 simple 8 Least 7 late 7 hot 6 high 6 easy 5 long 5 fine 5 bright 4 bad 3 wide 3 topmost 3 sure 3 strong 3 soft 3 old 3 lovely 3 light 3 grand 3 full 3 faint 3 eld 3 dark 3 broad 2 white 2 sweet 2 slender 2 safe 2 low 2 dr 2 deep 2 cold 2 close 2 cheap 2 brief 2 big 1 yellow 1 wise Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 470 most 30 least 21 well 1 ononaria_--rest 1 hindermost 1 hard 1 easiest 1 broadest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34131/34131-h/34131-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34131/34131-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/butterfliesmoths00furn 1 http://www.archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 39 caterpillar is green 19 _ see page 19 wings are pale 16 butterfly is out 14 caterpillar is black 12 butterfly is not 12 caterpillar is pale 10 butterfly is very 10 caterpillar is dark 10 chrysalis is pale 10 wings are very 9 _ is green 9 caterpillar is very 9 wings are greyish 8 caterpillar is yellowish 8 head is black 8 moth is very 8 wings are dark 8 wings are grey 8 wings are more 7 _ is _ 7 _ is also 7 caterpillars do not 7 colour is pale 7 wings are brown 7 wings are brownish 7 wings are yellowish 6 _ see _ 6 butterflies are very 6 butterfly is common 6 caterpillar is brownish 6 caterpillar is full 6 chrysalis is brownish 6 female is larger 6 female is much 6 moth is not 6 wings are also 6 wings are not 6 wings are white 6 wings is much 5 _ is brown 5 _ is out 5 butterflies are so 5 cases are rather 5 caterpillar is brown 5 chrysalis is green 5 chrysalis is very 5 egg is pale 5 insect is not 5 moth is common Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 moth is not nearly 2 moth is not so 1 _ are not so 1 _ does not _ 1 _ have no immediate 1 _ have no sovereign 1 _ is no more 1 _ was not so 1 _ was not very 1 butterflies are not only 1 butterflies are not separate 1 butterflies are not so 1 butterflies are not very 1 butterflies have not always 1 butterflies was not so 1 butterfly is not everywhere 1 butterfly is not long 1 butterfly is not often 1 butterfly is not only 1 butterfly is not so 1 butterfly is not uncommon 1 butterfly is not widely 1 caterpillar are not conspicuous 1 caterpillar has no large 1 caterpillar is not fully 1 caterpillars are not butterflies 1 caterpillars are not cocoon 1 chrysalides are not angular 1 chrysalides are not nearly 1 colours are not so 1 eggs were not mature 1 female is not so 1 forms are not uncommon 1 head is no longer 1 insect is no less 1 insect is no mean 1 insect is not so 1 insects are not brilliantly 1 moth is not common 1 moth is not uncommon 1 moths are not at 1 moths are not generally 1 moths are not very 1 parts are not easily 1 plants are not always 1 side are not very 1 side was not so 1 species are not likely 1 species are not much 1 species are not often A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21322 author = Bailey, Arthur Scott title = The Tale of Betsy Butterfly Tuck-Me-In Tales date = keywords = Betsy; Butterfly; Ladybug; Mrs. summary = LITTLE Mrs. Ladybug said that she wished Betsy Butterfly no ill luck. MUCH to Mrs. Ladybug''s surprise, she did not find Betsy Butterfly in the The sun hung low in the west when Mrs. Ladybug found Betsy Butterfly LITTLE did Betsy Butterfly guess what Mrs. Ladybug intended to say to Well, Mrs. Ladybug was waiting for Betsy Butterfly among the flowers. Betsy Butterfly had listened in amazement to Mrs. Ladybug''s words. NOW, a crowd had gathered quickly around Betsy Butterfly and Mrs. Ladybug; for the field people are quick to notice anything unusual. But Mrs. Ladybug said that Daddy Longlegs had _seen_ Betsy with her face buried So Mrs. Ladybug and Daddy Longlegs set forth to find Betsy Butterfly. Betsy Butterfly was so cordial that Mrs. Ladybug couldn''t help looking "Come!" said Joseph Bumble, turning suddenly to Betsy Butterfly. "I happen to know," said he, "that Betsy Butterfly has a picture of id = 33852 author = Coleman, W. S. (William Stephen) title = British Butterflies: Figures and Descriptions of Every Native Species date = keywords = August; Blue; Fritillary; July; June; Plate; Scotland; White; Wood; british; butterfly; illustration; insect; male; spot; wing summary = _Butterflies, then, are insects with mealy wings, and whose horns 1, Plate II.) of the common Garden white butterfly The eggs of butterflies, in common with those of insects in general, are of each wing is a small spot of rich orange-colour. The female chiefly differs from the male in the ground colour of the wings, The _butterfly_ seldom is seen on the wing till July, but August is its This butterfly is one of the very local species, though its food plants are same; and on each front wing, near the tip, there is a _black eye-spot_, The _butterfly_ has the wings above of a dark brown colour. spots near the tip, the ground colour of the hind wing is yellowish, and that the _hind wings_ have on _their upper surface a row of black spots_ brown ground, with a row of _red_ spots near border of hind wing. id = 40214 author = Davies, G. Christopher (George Christopher) title = The Swan and Her Crew or The Adventures of Three Young Naturalists and Sportsmen on the Broads and Rivers of Norfolk date = keywords = Bell; Broad; CHAPTER; Dick; Frank; Jimmy; Mary; Meredith; Merivale; Mr.; Norfolk; Swan; bird; boy; come; common; egg; illustration; like; look; nest; water summary = "It shall be done," said Frank decisively, and Dick looked up at him "That''s what all grebe''s nests look like," answered Frank; "they cover Frank will go in for birds''-nesting, Dick will catch "That is a teal," said Frank, "we shall find her nest here, so look Frank saw, by the way she went through the water, even when her sails "Oh, it must have been the hawks!" said Dick, and he and Frank went off "Come, Dick," said Jim, "let us go and birds''-nest in the wood while Frank had agreed to row in the race, and while Jimmy and Dick sailed the "Now it is time to turn in," said Frank; "take up the bucket, Jimmy, and "It is the same with birds''-eggs," said Frank. "Frank would give up anything for sailing," said Dick laughing, as he "Poor Jimmy," said Frank, "he does not like both of us going away, and id = 34131 author = Furneaux, William S. title = Butterflies and Moths (British) date = keywords = April; August; Beauty; Blue; Brown; Carpet; England; FIG; Fritillary; Hawk; July; June; Lepidoptera; Moth; Plate; Pug; Rustic; Scotland; September; Skipper; Small; Wave; White; Yellow; british; butterfly; caterpillar; dark; illustration; insect; large; larva; spot; wing summary = will generally see a ground colour of grey, blue, brown, or black; but species of butterflies and moths _mainly_ by the arrangement and colour how to obtain the perfect butterflies and moths of certain species long white spots that break the dark blotch at the tip of the fore wing; also seen that the ground colour of dark tawny brown is spotted and bordered carpet, and changes to a green chrysalis with pale brown wing cases. little insect, its wings being of a bright tawny orange colour, bordered The fore wings of this moth are of a very rich dark brown, beautifully The caterpillar is black, with a large number of small yellowish white The fore wings of this fine moth are pale brown, clouded with white, and The fore wings of this species are pale ochreous grey, with light brown The fore wings of the moth are light brown, generally with a reddish id = 42606 author = Punnett, Reginald Crundall title = Mimicry in Butterflies date = keywords = America; Ceylon; Danais; Papilio; form summary = close resemblance between butterflies belonging to different families and by certain peculiarities in the form or colour or habits of a species. mimic so closely in appearance species belonging to an entirely different to the three different forms of female, of which one is like the male while female alone of some unprotected species mimics a model with obnoxious serves {24} as a model for several species belonging to different groups. forms are close mimics of a common Danaine or Acraeine model. form, and with its strong red colour and black wing margins broken by white Both supposed that in general colour and pattern the groups to which model resemblance shewn by this form to another species of Swallow-tail, _Papilio years to breeding the different forms of this butterfly in Ceylon[45]. Observations on birds attacking butterflies where mimetic forms occur have resemblances between different species of butterflies have been brought id = 43270 author = Sandham, Elizabeth title = The Perambulations of a Bee and a Butterfly, In which are delineated those smaller traits of character which escape the observation of larger spectators. date = keywords = Bee; Butterfly; CHAP; friend; hive; return; wing summary = A young Bee, deceived by fine weather, leaves the Hive too early, in the Butterfly--Conversation of the Bee and his Friend as they The farther flights of the Bee and the Butterfly--Visit Bees, from a neighbouring hive, taking the air, and appearing like Animated by the Butterfly''s words, the poor half-starved Bee The Butterfly, after seeing his new friend safely landed at his old The Bee thus returned began to feel something like pleasure, and as the "I shall soon be able to visit them," returned the Bee, "and after one In the mean time the Butterfly continued without the hive, not The Bee then returned to his companions, and the Butterfly retired to you do, my friend?" said the Bee, as soon as he drew near; "are you Butterfly, happy to escape, extended his wings, and returned to his "During your absence," said the Bee, "I have seen two friends in this id = 43713 author = South, Richard title = The Butterflies of the British Isles date = keywords = Asia; August; Blue; England; Europe; Fig; Fritillary; Ireland; July; June; Mr.; North; Plates; Scotland; September; White; butterfly; illustration; wing summary = Fig. 9, A, shows a fore and a hind wing of the Swallow-tail butterfly. species has yellow wings ornamented with black, blue, and red, and is an many of these produced butterflies in the following May. In rearing this species from eggs laid in the autumn, a fairly dry brownish-black velvety wings, this butterfly (Plate 29) is always Specimens with white spots on the fore wings, and chiefly in the rarely white spots occur on all the wings (Plate 57, Fig. 1). spotted female and a specimen with the hind wings clouded with black are brownish-orange bands, and lines of black dots; the tip of the fore wing The butterfly figured on Plate 120 is brownish-orange, with black veins central area of the fore wings, and a white pupilled black spot towards colour from the white line towards the margin, in the fore wings forming id = 61981 author = Stewart, Alexander Morrison title = British Butterflies date = keywords = August; BLUE; Fig; Fritillary; July; Plate; Scotland; WHITE; black; butterfly; spot; wing summary = consider the large number of eggs laid by a single female butterfly or THE LARGE GARDEN WHITE BUTTERFLY (_Pieris brassicæ_) Plate I., Fig. 3, SMALL GARDEN WHITE (_Pieris rapæ_), Plate I., Fig. 4.--This butterfly of the hind-wings broadly checkered with a double band of black spots, THE WOOD WHITE BUTTERFLY (_Leucophasia sinapis_), Plate I., Fig. 8. margin of the hind-wing; then comes a row of small dark spots, each the hind-wing near the outer margin, there is a row of dark red spots usual black bands and spots; the hind-wings show a distinct row of two white spots on the costal margin near the tip of the fore-wing. The caterpillar is black, with white dots, and has a row of red spots THE SMALL MEADOW BROWN (_Epinephele Tithonus_), Plate IX., Fig. 8.--Also a common species, but does not so range far north. a black spot near the tip of the fore-wings containing two tiny white id = 37009 author = Weed, Clarence Moores title = Butterflies Worth Knowing date = keywords = America; August; England; Hair; July; June; New; North; Orange; Sulphur; Swallowtail; Synopsis; White; butterfly; caterpillar; illustration; southern; wing summary = color plates of adult butterflies with wings spread have been made The caterpillars of butterflies and moths form a large part of the THE MONARCH BUTTERFLY: CHANGE FROM CATERPILLAR TO CHRYSALIS. THE MONARCH BUTTERFLY: CHANGE FROM CATERPILLAR TO CHRYSALIS. butterflies which have obliterative coloring of the under wing surface general way we may say that the upper wing surface is black marked comes the winged butterfly--unlike the egg, unlike the larva, unlike In a similar way the Telamonides or late spring butterflies lay eggs butterfly larvae it has changed very little in its general appearance lays eggs which develop into caterpillars that produce butterflies of Imported Cabbage Butterfly: the males have the hind wings nearly white Like so many other southern butterflies the eggs of this species are butterflies lay eggs that develop into caterpillars which hibernate butterflies with rounded wings which are found in one species or