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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 12 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 61023 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 look 10 God 6 man 4 like 4 good 4 Sasha 4 Ivan 3 Volodya 3 Moscow 3 Ivanovna 3 Ivanitch 2 russian 2 little 2 life 2 come 2 Yegor 2 Varka 2 Sergeyevna 2 Semyonitch 2 Pyotr 2 Petrovna 2 Petrovitch 2 Olga 2 Nina 2 Nikita 2 Lord 2 Kovrin 2 Fyodorovna 2 Father 2 Dmitritch 2 Chekhov 2 Averyanitch 2 Anna 2 Andrey 1 woman 1 wife 1 people 1 love 1 footnote 1 Zinaida 1 Zina 1 Yéfimitch 1 Yulia 1 Yergunov 1 Yegorushka 1 Yefimitch 1 Yartsev 1 Yalta 1 Yakov 1 Yakob Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2148 man 1527 time 1414 day 1401 face 1232 room 1213 eye 1142 hand 1107 life 1063 nothing 895 woman 885 head 881 something 836 one 827 people 728 doctor 726 house 692 voice 686 thing 679 wife 655 year 642 way 632 night 579 child 577 word 552 table 526 mother 526 father 513 window 500 door 499 evening 493 bed 474 love 472 money 467 lady 466 minute 463 everything 441 morning 430 thought 427 friend 423 town 417 husband 392 horse 392 home 388 boy 386 heart 366 girl 355 side 343 dinner 343 arm 336 shoulder Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 938 _ 722 God 364 Ivan 331 Father 267 Yegorushka 262 Fyodorovna 239 Laevsky 220 Anna 215 Olga 213 Ivanitch 207 Andrey 205 Pyotr 203 Sasha 185 Kovrin 175 Laptev 174 Moscow 158 Von 152 Samoylenko 147 Dmitritch 146 Petrovitch 146 Lord 138 Orlov 136 Liza 135 Yefimitch 133 Groholsky 129 Nadyezhda 128 Yéfimitch 128 Yakov 128 Andréi 127 Chekhov 122 Yulia 121 Ivanovna 120 Koren 119 Volodya 118 Fyodor 116 Nikolay 115 Zinaida 115 Petersburg 115 Akimovna 113 Yegor 109 Mihalovna 101 Nina 96 Matvey 95 Averyanitch 93 Christopher 91 Russia 87 Pavel 87 Marya 85 Vera 85 Masha Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12384 he 10972 i 8879 it 8686 you 5374 she 4197 him 3092 me 2661 they 2333 her 1638 them 1550 we 885 himself 737 us 617 one 344 herself 323 myself 220 yourself 138 themselves 127 itself 43 ourselves 33 mine 29 oneself 21 yours 17 his 17 ''s 8 ours 7 thee 7 hers 5 yourselves 5 theirs 2 ye 1 you''re 1 what?--you 1 water-- 1 us!--will 1 taganrog 1 où 1 on''t 1 my 1 mother--"that 1 it!--they 1 alas!--powerful 1 --they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 29153 be 9723 have 4701 do 4271 say 4147 go 2418 look 2285 come 1959 see 1710 take 1583 get 1556 know 1535 make 1506 think 1450 begin 1286 sit 1235 give 1129 feel 1122 ask 957 tell 883 seem 803 stand 778 put 768 walk 767 talk 763 live 755 want 683 understand 681 hear 655 lie 635 turn 587 let 570 speak 549 leave 530 read 530 keep 519 cry 502 run 493 love 482 call 475 find 472 laugh 471 drink 469 remember 466 listen 464 use 454 write 444 bring 426 fall 425 try 422 grow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7781 not 2334 up 1772 so 1494 then 1393 only 1371 little 1363 out 1331 now 1201 very 1148 long 1088 down 1041 good 996 on 974 old 954 here 950 away 919 more 907 too 800 off 793 again 729 well 710 even 676 there 676 never 675 other 629 all 618 still 605 young 575 back 569 first 566 same 562 great 551 just 547 as 525 always 512 in 507 once 467 whole 460 last 457 own 439 much 436 dark 422 such 394 suddenly 387 over 359 big 353 already 338 high 324 soon 315 right Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 123 good 73 least 39 most 27 slight 23 bad 20 great 19 near 19 high 10 furth 9 late 8 faint 8 eld 7 low 7 happy 6 j 6 hard 6 deep 6 clever 5 young 5 simple 5 busy 5 bitter 4 topmost 4 small 4 bright 4 big 3 old 3 early 2 thick 2 tall 2 paltry 2 heavy 2 grave 2 fine 2 dear 2 cheap 1 vast 1 tiny 1 swift 1 sure 1 subtle 1 strong 1 strange 1 speedy 1 soft 1 smart 1 shy 1 ripe 1 remote 1 proud Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 244 most 15 least 7 well 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 one does not 8 man did not 6 face was pale 6 one does n''t 6 one is not 5 doctor went on 5 face was red 5 life is not 4 eyes were full 4 head went round 4 life is so 4 night came on 4 one was not 4 time is precious 4 woman is not 3 doctor did not 3 doctor got up 3 doctor sat down 3 eyes were red 3 father did not 3 god has not 3 head is full 3 head is heavy 3 head was heavy 3 life was as 3 life was not 3 life was so 3 man is not 3 men did not 3 one had only 3 one has ever 3 one has not 3 one is ashamed 3 one living soul 3 one was silent 3 people do n''t 3 thing is not 3 wife was not 3 women do n''t 3 words did not 2 child is dead 2 children do not 2 day was excellent 2 doctor lay down 2 doctor sat motionless 2 doctor was always 2 doctor went off 2 doctors did not 2 eyes looked big 2 eyes were bright Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 life is not so 1 children has no expression 1 children took no notice 1 day is not enough 1 day thinks no more 1 days is no joke 1 doctor was not nearly 1 face had not even 1 face is not visible 1 face was not visible 1 god has no love 1 house was not big 1 life had no meaning 1 life has no value 1 life is not encouraging 1 life was not over 1 life was not so 1 man are not outside 1 man had no time 1 man is no longer 1 man is not first 1 man made no answer 1 man makes no reply 1 man was not stern 1 men are not dilettanti 1 men are not suitable 1 men is not beauty 1 mother is not so 1 one does not often 1 one had no desire 1 one has no constitutional 1 one has no seed 1 one has not even 1 one is not so 1 one was not always 1 people are no better 1 people did not scruple 1 people had no fear 1 people had no high 1 people have no idea 1 people have no understanding 1 things were not quite 1 voice is not as 1 wife was not kind 1 woman is not brains 1 woman is not yours 1 women had no authority A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 12494 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = Note-Book of Anton Chekhov date = keywords = Chekhov; Moscow; Russian; footnote; life; love; man; people; wife; woman summary = A very good man has such a face that people take him for a detective; A young man, interesting, liked by a lady of forty. he had run off with another woman, people got to like him more and A man and woman marry because both of them don''t know what to do with loved him, but because she thought him a good, wise, ideal man. For a play: an old woman of radical views dresses like a girl, smokes, For the first time in her life a man kissed her hand; it was too much A clever man says: "This is a lie, but since the people can not do A man, forty years old, married a girl of twenty-two who read only the If you wish women to love you, be original; I know a man who used to When a woman destroys things like a man, people think it natural and id = 13409 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Horse-Stealers and Other Stories date = keywords = Andrey; Avdeyev; Averyanitch; Dmitritch; Excellency; God; Hobotov; Ivan; Kalashnikov; Lord; Lyubka; Merik; Mihail; Nellie; Nikita; Yefimitch; Yergunov; like; look; man summary = "Look, Merik, what Kalashnikov brought me to-day," she said. man in town whose society did not bore Andrey Yefimitch, would come Not looking his friend in the face, Andrey Yefimitch would go on, "Good-day, Nikita," Andrey Yefimitch said mildly. Andrey Yefimitch liked Ivan Dmitritch''s voice and his intelligent "What an agreeable young man!" thought Andrey Yefimitch, going back "Good-day, my friend," said Andrey Yefimitch. "Yes, a likely idea!" said Ivan Dmitritch, sitting up and looking things--that is, in carriages, in studies--but a thinking man looks for "My dear man, what should I go there for?" said Andrey Yefimitch Mihail Averyanitch looked upon the doctor as an honourable man, yet In old days Andrey Yefimitch used to walk about his rooms and think Andrey Yefimitch walked away to the window and looked out into the It would be a good thing for an old man like him to abstain altogether id = 13412 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Schoolmaster and Other Stories date = keywords = Abogin; Andreitch; Andrey; Father; Frolov; God; Granny; Ivanovna; Nadya; Navagin; Nina; Pavel; Petrovna; Sasha; Vassilyevitch; good; like; look; man summary = doctor was sitting in the next room and telling his wife in a whisper On the bed under the window lay a boy with open eyes and a look of his hair was grey and he looked like an old man; his faded and I feel for you," Abogin said in an imploring voice, laying his hand The earth, like a ruined woman sitting alone in a dark room and seemed trying to tear themselves from his face, his eyes looked as "She said good-bye, shut her eyes, and half an hour later gave up "Let us go a little way on foot," he said to the doctor. with a strange look in his eyes, as though he were drunk, said: man with curly hair looking like an artist or an actor, were all Nadya said good-night, went upstairs to her room, got "Listen, my good man," Frolov said, addressing him. id = 13413 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Party and Other Stories date = keywords = Akimovna; Anna; Christmas; Dmitritch; God; Ilyin; Ivan; Masha; Mihalovna; Nikitin; Olga; Petrovitch; Petrovna; Pimenov; Pyotr; Ryabovitch; Tchalikov; come; look summary = "Come," he said, making room for Olga Mihalovna and Pyotr Dmitritch. "Let them come," thought Olga Mihalovna; "I shall lie a little "There was more order in my father''s day," thought Anna Akimovna, Anna Akimovna looked at the women and young people, and she suddenly them; looking into Anna Akimovna''s eyes, he smiled with pleasure, nor the other, I''d marry an old man," said Masha mournfully, and and don''t know what you want," Anna Akimovna said bitterly, and "Anna Akimovna," he said, laying his hand on his heart and raising As he went downstairs he looked like a man in the last stage of "I''d as soon they did not come at all," said Auntie; she looked eyes, looking at the sleepy faces of the officers, and said and looking round the room, thought, "Oh, how lovely!" She at once "Varya looked in this evening," said Masha, sitting up. id = 13414 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = Love and Other Stories date = keywords = Ananyev; Bugrov; Cossack; God; Groholsky; Ivan; Ivanitch; Kisotchka; Liza; Lizotchka; Misha; Mishutka; Petrovitch; Sasha; good; like; little; look; man summary = one''s own day-dreams while the spring night looks in at one''s window. "''How good that is!'' she said, looking joyfully into my face. this someone stopped, gave a sob like a little girl, and said in my knees, and, looking at me with shining, loving eyes, asked: "What a wind!" said the sick man, without opening his eyes, "How looking with unseeing eyes about the room till morning had come, "You went away!" she says, looking at him with bright eyes full of "I say," he said, looking straight into her eyes, "I have come to saw him he moved away from his wife and began looking out of the "I am very glad," said Groholsky, looking askance at Bugrov, "very "I want nothing," said Liza, and turned her pale, thin face towards "Like a thief in the night," said Father Kuzma, a grey-headed little id = 13415 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories date = keywords = Anna; Fyodorovna; God; Gurov; Ivanovna; Kovrin; Moscow; Nyuta; Orlov; Pekarsky; Polya; Semyonitch; Sergeyevna; Startsev; Tanya; Volodya; Yegor; Zinaida; look summary = "Time goes fast, and yet it is so dull here!" she said, not looking at "It''s a good thing I am going away," she said to Gurov. "One would run away from a fence like that," thought Gurov, looking from "It looks as though you have no man in the house at all," said Korolyov. Mashenka went into her room, and then, for the first time in her life, did not feel sleepy; he talked to the old man and went to the garden "You are out of humour?" said Zinaida Fyodorovna, taking Orlov''s hand. "Let us talk of our life, of our future," said Zinaida Fyodorovna "Why do you speak to me like that?" said Zinaida Fyodorovna, stepping suppers when you said and did what you liked, and I had to hear, to look "The world of ideas!" she said, and she looked into my face id = 13416 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Darling and Other Stories date = keywords = Ariadne; Fyodor; God; Kostya; Laptev; Lida; Lvovna; Moscow; Nina; Olenka; Olga; Polina; Sasha; Sergeyevna; Sofya; Volodya; Yartsev; Yulia; good; look summary = After seeing Olenka to her gate, he said good-bye and went on. we stared at our floats he went home, and she said, looking at me "Be the darling that you used to be; love me a little," said Ariadne, for a long time been sitting in the young man''s room. drawing-room, gave his hand to Laptev, and asked: "What good news Yulia Sergeyevna went out, and after staying a little longer, Laptev said good-bye to the doctor and went home. At midnight Laptev said good-night to her, and as he went away he "Laptev made me an offer to-day," said Yulia Sergeyevna, and she "I slept well all night," said Laptev, without looking at her; "but "It''s a strange thing," said Laptev, "my Fyodor took my breath away "It''s time your father was here," he said, looking at his watch. which made her little face look like a pie, said: id = 13417 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Cook''s Wedding and Other Stories date = keywords = Auntie; Dyukovsky; God; Grisha; Ivanitch; Ivanovna; Kashtanka; Lentilov; Pashka; Pelageya; Psyekov; Tchubikov; Terenty; Timofeyitch; Varka; Volodya; come; look summary = "One can see he is a good man," said mamma, not taking her eyes off her head, opens her eyes wide, and tries to look at things so that "Come along, lie on mamma''s bed!" says Anya, leading her away from tied up, looking very like a woman, was sitting with his arms spread amusement, but when he looked into the man''s face he felt frightened, "Auntie, why do they look like that?" Pashka asked the nurse. the waiting-room in which he had sat that morning, and began looking He looked at the boy''s big dark eyes, and it seemed to him as though When he had said good-night and gone away his father walked up and "What little things!" says Nina, opening her eyes wide and going with a smile, such as come into people''s faces when they look at All day long Lentilov avoided the little girls, and seemed to look id = 13419 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Bishop and Other Stories date = keywords = Christopher; Deniska; Dymov; Father; God; Ivanitch; Kiruha; Kunin; Kuzmitchov; Lord; Matvey; Moisevitch; Panteley; Reverence; Varlamov; Vassya; Yakov; Yegorushka; little; look summary = The deacon looked timidly at Father Fyodor''s stern face and said: response, or else long after Father Yakov had finished the old man Father Yakov led Kunin into a light little room Kunin took up his hat, waited for Father Yakov to return, and said Father Yakov started like a man asleep who has been struck a blow, "Very good," said Father Yakov, laying his open hand on Kunin''s Yegorushka looked at the town for the last time, pressed his face whirled its sails, and still it looked like a little man waving his Father Christopher screwed up his eyes, thought a minute and said "Ivan Ivanitch and Father Christopher have come," said Moisey When he looked round Yegorushka saw a long red face with a Yegorushka, looking at him, thought of the little ikon glass "He is all right, a good man," said Panteley, looking towards the id = 13505 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Duel and Other Stories date = keywords = Atchmianov; Daviditch; Fyodorovna; God; Kirilin; Konstantinovna; Koren; Laevsky; Marya; Mihalitch; Nadyezhda; Pyotr; Samoylenko; Semyonitch; Vera; Vlassitch; Von; Zina; good; look summary = "One minute, my dear fellow," Laevsky said softly, and he went to "I don''t know why the devil I''m coming with you," said Laevsky. "But look, what a view!" said Samoylenko as the horses turned to the other day that people like Laevsky ought to be destroyed. "Excuse me, but I can''t stay at home," said Laevsky, feeling great Looking at his pale, excited, good-natured face, Samoylenko remembered Laevsky sat down beside Samoylenko, and said with genuine feeling: "You look as though you were coming to arrest me," said Von Koren, "Yes, it is for Laevsky I am asking it," said Samoylenko, standing Laevsky went soon after one o''clock next day to Samoylenko to ask "Now we understand," said Von Koren, coming from behind the table. Laevsky went to the door of the next room, and said: "I''m just going away, Nadyezhda Fyodorovna," said Von Koren, "and id = 55307 author = Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich title = The Black Monk, and Other Stories date = keywords = Abógin; Andréi; Averyanitch; Dmítritch; God; Ivan; Iván; Khobótoff; Kiríloff; Kovrin; Mikhail; Nikita; Sasha; Semiónovitch; Tánya; Varka; Yakob; Yegor; Yéfimitch; man; russian summary = reality you had lived more than a thousand years," said Kovrin. "I am satisfied, Tánya," said Kovrin, laying his hand upon her "Good night!" said the monk, and then, after a moment''s silence, asked, looking vacantly about him like a drunken man, and nibbing his face Looking at his old wife, Yakob somehow remembered that all his life he "Mother of God, what children I have!" continued the old man, paying "Drink, young man!" said Musátoff, without looking at his son. "I know what you are thinking," said the drunken old man, falling and about his wife''s father, the doctor shook his head, and said "What a delightful young man!" thought Andréi Yéfimitch, as he walked "Good morning, my friend," said Andréi Yéfimitch. Andréi Yéfimitch looked feebly at the fair-haired doctor, and said: "I feel very well," said Andréi Yéfimitch, after a moment''s thought; id = 37129 author = Gorky, Maksim title = Reminiscences of Anton Chekhov date = keywords = Anton; Chekhov; Pavlovitch; Yalta; life; like; look; man; russian summary = began to speak simple, weighty, clear-cut words, which illuminated, like When he said good-bye to his host, the teacher took Chekhov''s small, dry I think that in Anton Chekhov''s presence every one involuntarily felt in Anton Pavlovitch looked at her kindly, and answered with a meek smile: "Do you like gramophones?" suddenly asked Anton Pavlovitch in his soft Reading Anton Chekhov''s stories, one feels oneself in a melancholy day Anton Pavlovitch did not like it and was even cross when people told him Chekhov was regarded with a great and heart-felt love by all sorts of Many said that Chekhov had blue eyes. that he was in love with all the Chekhovs at the same time. talented novelist, a serious writer and a man of ideas, he said: "Look involuntarily when one thinks of the last years of Chekhov''s life, of "You are sad to-night, Anton Pavlovitch," I said, looking at his kind