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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 63133 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Tom 5 Sid 5 Randall 5 Phil 5 Mr. 5 Fairview 5 Boxer 4 Langridge 4 Holly 4 Hall 3 Ruth 3 Miss 3 Lighton 2 Jerry 2 Frank 2 Dutch 2 Dick 2 Cross 2 Clinton 2 Bascome 1 sure 1 man 1 little 1 good 1 Worry 1 Weir 1 Wayne 1 Ward 1 Tyler 1 Turner 1 Thorwald 1 Thor 1 Theophilus 1 Stanley 1 Songbird 1 Simpson 1 Shack 1 Senior 1 Seever 1 Sam 1 Rover 1 Reddy 1 Raymond 1 Place 1 Peg 1 Parsons 1 Paddy 1 Murray 1 Mendez 1 Mater Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1060 time 1018 game 911 man 811 room 792 fellow 772 day 772 college 744 ball 733 boy 676 team 651 way 619 hand 610 girl 544 student 525 one 515 thing 505 lad 486 chum 472 place 449 something 447 year 434 player 418 football 414 night 402 coach 399 line 396 face 386 eye 380 field 358 nothing 356 word 356 voice 355 chair 335 chance 334 practice 334 friend 320 freshman 315 side 314 crowd 312 foot 311 matter 307 youth 304 moment 304 head 301 door 298 work 292 pitcher 279 end 278 varsity 272 run Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3963 Tom 2030 _ 1812 Sid 1786 Phil 815 Ken 788 Hicks 776 Randall 748 Langridge 611 Mr. 596 Dick 481 Bannister 441 Boxer 387 Sam 381 Frank 373 Hall 351 Fairview 349 Holly 344 Ruth 295 Butch 291 Miss 288 exclaimed 288 Dutch 251 Thor 246 Haviland 233 Jr. 231 Jerry 226 Cross 220 Madge 218 T. 206 Lighton 200 Clinton 175 College 175 Coach 172 Rover 169 Koswell 164 Parsons 157 Dr. 156 Raymond 155 Tyler 153 Gerhart 151 Worry 149 Kerr 148 Captain 148 Boswell 142 Peg 141 Professor 140 Bascome 138 Churchill 138 Bricktop 138 Brewster Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9655 he 9259 i 8216 it 6502 you 3086 we 2922 they 2574 him 1460 me 1225 them 762 she 623 us 537 himself 294 ''em 288 her 162 ''s 129 themselves 112 myself 78 yourself 78 em 52 one 44 itself 43 yours 33 mine 30 ourselves 24 herself 17 his 13 ours 7 i''m 5 you''ll 5 theirs 4 yourselves 4 thy 4 thee 2 thyself 2 thou 2 hers 1 you--_you 1 you--_stand 1 you''re 1 we''d 1 time---- 1 this_--myself 1 tackin 1 fus 1 but--_it 1 andrews Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 22159 be 8219 have 5022 do 3205 go 2545 get 2467 say 2189 come 1708 make 1637 see 1494 know 1313 take 1128 think 1105 look 1057 ask 952 give 878 tell 832 want 697 cry 651 play 646 call 623 let 598 win 584 try 575 seem 556 put 542 hear 532 leave 530 find 525 answer 512 keep 493 run 475 speak 459 hold 441 turn 436 stand 426 mean 422 begin 404 add 399 feel 388 declare 369 send 350 follow 320 catch 316 guess 306 show 302 walk 290 break 287 start 283 talk 281 lose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6252 not 2064 up 1876 out 1686 then 1323 so 1284 now 1240 good 1073 old 1011 more 922 well 906 back 900 little 863 first 836 here 786 right 786 down 766 just 747 on 740 all 731 as 719 only 707 other 701 much 641 too 620 in 553 off 525 there 520 over 519 last 517 again 511 very 497 big 469 never 465 away 447 long 407 next 402 great 368 new 357 hard 355 soon 354 second 350 even 349 once 343 enough 322 sure 316 almost 314 bad 311 few 291 several 289 later Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 258 good 131 least 78 most 30 bad 26 big 20 old 20 great 13 young 13 Most 12 near 11 slight 8 strong 8 hard 8 fine 7 late 5 large 5 high 5 f 4 sure 4 small 4 close 3 weird 3 queer 3 lithe 3 easy 2 weak 2 warm 2 tough 2 simple 2 rotten 2 quiet 2 proud 2 mild 2 manif 2 loud 2 long 2 happy 2 faint 2 deep 2 dear 2 dark 2 bright 1 wise 1 wild 1 wide 1 stern 1 sporty 1 sound 1 shedd 1 safe Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 167 most 22 least 14 well 2 finest 1 worst 1 offer,--almost 1 long 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20 tom did not 16 _ got _ 13 sid did not 9 _ is _ 8 _ had _ 8 phil did not 6 randall did not 6 tom was about 5 _ do _ 5 _ was _ 5 game was over 5 sid was not 5 tom came in 4 _ are _ 4 _ do n''t 4 _ make _ 4 boys are adrift 4 chums did not 4 fellows do n''t 4 game went on 4 ken did not 4 ken went up 4 langridge did n''t 4 langridge does n''t 4 langridge was not 4 man did not 4 tom was rather 3 _ takes up 3 _ tried _ 3 ball came back 3 boys did not 3 day went by 3 dick did not 3 fellows did n''t 3 girls are queer 3 hicks had not 3 ken got up 3 ken had not 3 ken was not 3 ken was too 3 ken went out 3 langridge did not 3 randall had not 3 randall was not 3 sid kept on 3 students do n''t 3 tom came up 3 tom had not 3 tom looked up 3 tom saw langridge Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 sid was not there 1 chums were not very 1 fellow was no pitcher 1 fellows have no poetry 1 game was no easy 1 game was not at 1 game was not over 1 girls are not here 1 hicks had no reason 1 hicks had no time 1 hicks saw no way 1 ken had not yet 1 ken made no reply 1 ken was not blind 1 ken was not sure 1 lad is no slouch 1 lads had no eyes 1 langridge had no trouble 1 langridge is no white 1 langridge was not altogether 1 langridge was not as 1 man had no right 1 men are not far 1 men were not extraordinary 1 phil was no longer 1 randall did not exactly 1 sid has no soul 1 team was not properly 1 tom had no partner 1 tom had no sooner 1 tom was not quite 1 tom was not unaware 1 tom was not unwilling A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 39582 author = Chadwick, Lester title = The Rival Pitchers: A Story of College Baseball date = keywords = Boxer; Clinton; Fairview; Fenton; Holly; Kerr; Langridge; Lighton; Miss; Mr.; Parsons; Phil; Randall; Sid; Tom; Tyler; sure summary = Tom Parsons had come to college, not because he wanted to have "a good "Well, are you going?" asked Sid of Tom that afternoon, as they came "Go on up," urged Sid to Tom. The country lad advanced to where Langridge stood. Tom looked Langridge straight in the eye, and the other turned aside. "Well, Langridge sure does deliver a good ball," said Sid slowly; "the "You held you own that time, Tom," said Sid as a little later they "What''s the game?" asked Sid of Tom as those two and Phil Clinton made Tom did not reply, but he wondered what use Langridge was going to make "Well, Tom, old man, going along?" asked Sid one day as he came in from Kerr asked him to let Tom pitch, but Langridge refused Tom saw Langridge speeding for first base, while Randall lads were In the meanwhile Tom had said nothing to Langridge. id = 40668 author = Chadwick, Lester title = A Quarter-Back''s Pluck: A Story of College Football date = keywords = Boxer; Clinton; Cross; Fairview; Gerhart; Hall; Holly; Langridge; Lighton; Madge; Miss; Mr.; Phil; Randall; Ruth; Sid; Tom summary = "It--it looks like a mighty risky job to move it, Tom," said Phil. Phil spending more time in the room of Tom and Sid than he did in his sneeringly, as he looked down at Tom, Phil and Sid. Tom, Sid and Phil resumed their journey, and the old piece of furniture Tom and Sid said little when Phil went out to take the telegram to the opening game of the football season," said Phil to Tom, as he was "Too bad you''re not going to play, Sid, old chap," remarked Tom in the Phil and Tom talked football until Sid begged them to cease, as he scrub teams lined up, Tom and Phil being on one, and Gerhart playing at look up into the sky?" asked Phil of Tom as the three chums walked only Phil, but Tom and Sid, as well. id = 41206 author = Chadwick, Lester title = Batting to Win: A Story of College Baseball date = keywords = Bascome; Boxer; Dutch; Fairview; Hall; Harrison; Henderson; Holly; Langridge; Miss; Mr.; Phil; Randall; Ruth; Sid; Tom summary = from Sid''s usual gentle manner--that Phil and Tom looked at each other This was not the Sid that Tom and Phil--his closest chums--had known for But though Tom, Phil, Sid and their chums lived a strenuous life when "Is that Sid?" whispered Tom. Phil did not answer. "Well, what''s on for to-day?" asked Phil, as, with Tom and Sid, he Phil or Tom would look up from their studying to see Sid, "My, what a lot of girls!" remarked Tom to Sid and Phil, as the three When Tom and Phil returned to their room Sid was not there. "It was just what Sid wanted," decided Tom to Phil as he noted the "Oh, Sid, but I wish you were going to play," said Tom, with a little Tom, Phil and Sid walked along together. Tom and Phil did not see Sid again until after the game, and then they id = 41665 author = Chadwick, Lester title = The Winning Touchdown: A Story of College Football date = keywords = Bascome; Boxer; Churchill; Cross; Dan; Dutch; Fairview; Frank; Hall; Holly; Langridge; Mr.; Phil; Randall; Sid; Simpson; Tom summary = Meanwhile Sid and Phil had been strolling about, leaving Tom to engage "Come on over this way," urged Tom to Sid and Phil, who had sat with him "Look out, Phil," spoke Sid, in a low voice, but Langridge heard him. was soon drawn into the conversation, to which Tom, Phil and Sid "Well, what do you think of it, fellows?" asked Tom, some time later, "Randall needs just such material as he looks to be," went on Tom, as he But Tom, Phil and Sid minded this not in the least, and "Wallops wasn''t far out," remarked Tom, who, with Phil, Sid and some and when Tom, Phil and Sid looked toward a certain section of grandstand Tom, Phil and Sid, together with a number of other students from "We hope so," answered Phil, "but we came to look for an old easy chair. id = 42403 author = Chadwick, Lester title = The Eight-Oared Victors: A Story of College Water Sports date = keywords = Boswell; Boxer; Fairview; Frank; Hall; Jerry; Lighton; Mendez; Mr.; Phil; Randall; Ruth; Sid; Tom summary = "I wonder what sort of a stroke we pull?" said Tom, as they rowed on. "Tom is right," said Frank Simpson, in a quiet voice. "Yes, we''re getting ready to order a new shell," answered Tom. Tom, Phil, Sid and Frank roomed together. time we were out rowing when we met the Boxer Hall shell!" cried Tom, as "Thank goodness we''re all of us that," said Tom, looking at the chums "What''s the matter, Frank?" asked Tom, a little later, as they gathered "Open it!" exclaimed Frank, as Sid and Phil came hurrying to join their As they were coming away, to get to their boat and row to Randall, Tom "Kindlings, Phil Clinton, Tom Parsons, Frank, Sid," went on the coach. "Ruth and I were out for a row," said Tom shortly, knowing that the "It''s the first time I ever knew Tom to act like this," said Phil, id = 8550 author = Elderdice, James Raymond title = T. Haviland Hicks, Senior date = keywords = Alma; Ballard; Bannister; Beef; Brewster; Butch; Championship; Coach; Corridan; Dad; Gold; Green; Haviland; Hicks; Jr.; Mater; Senior; Theophilus; Thor; Thorwald summary = Big Butch Brewster, captain and full-back of the Bannister College football "Hicks," said Head Coach Corridan, smiling at Butch Brewster''s indignation, T. Haviland Hicks, Jr., wants to mystify old Bannister." Haviland Hicks, Jr., was actually returning to old Bannister; and he was Thor a great love for old Bannister, to cause college spirit to stir his his Alma Mater, knew that Hicks, Sr., had sent Thor to Bannister to play the sunny Hicks'' appearance on old Bannister Field, to try for a team, had old Bannister, and not because he thinks he ought to play, for Hicks'' dad? Haviland Hicks, Jr., Butch Brewster, and the Gold and Green eleven thought, too, of the happy, care-free youths, remembering Hicks, good Butch Until Butch had told the Gold and Green football team of Hicks'' record made by Mr. Thomas Haviland Hicks, Sr., while at old Bannister, and id = 19246 author = Grey, Zane title = The Young Pitcher date = keywords = Arthurs; Dale; Graves; Herne; Homans; Ken; Murray; Peg; Place; Raymond; Reddy; Ward; Wayne; Weir; Worry summary = door the Sophs stared open-mouthed at Ken. Arthurs had a worried look, One evening early in February Worry Arthurs called upon Ken. His face with it were worn out, but Ken was thinking of what hard ball-playing Then Arthurs called "Play ball!" giving the old varsity the field. Before Ken got back to his position the second batter hit hard through If Worry had picked any more players for the varsity, Ken could not Ken took the ball Worry tossed him, and, picking up a bat, began to Ken pitched the second ball in the same place with With the bases full, Ken let his arm out and pitched the fast ball at game with Herne, Worry Arthurs had Ken Ward closeted with Homans and Ken saw Reddy Ray go to bat and drive the ball against the right-field The crack of the ball, as well as Worry''s yell, told Ken what had id = 39668 author = Lindsey, William title = At Start and Finish date = keywords = Black; Colonel; Dick; Duffy; Furness; Hacking; Harry; Jack; Jim; Johnson; Kitty; Paddy; Seever; Shack; Tom; Turner; good; little; man summary = coloring a little under his brown skin at the older man''s close "He looks like a winner, sure enough," said I. Colonel on my left, little Billy Furness next, and Tom last of the row. "A daisy is he?" asked the Colonel, looking down at the little fellow''s days that I sat with Hacking in a little parlor off the bar, my feet seconds is sitting with you to-night, and little likely to see the Old I could see Jennie, and every time I looked came the wave of a little his little body as he thought of the hand touches, and the "Good old The crowd came like a wide, wide sea; but little Mud had no thought of little better when the men were called for the "half." I met Teddy in would say to Tom, "Don''t look at me like that, old man; I know I lost id = 10323 author = Stratemeyer, Edward title = The Rover Boys at College; Or, The Right Road and the Wrong date = keywords = Brill; Dick; Dora; Flockley; Jerry; Koswell; Larkspur; Rover; Sam; Songbird; Stanley; Tom summary = "That''s Tom, wanting to see it all before he sleeps!" cried Sam Rover "Right you are, Dick," said Tom, "At the same time if--Great Caesar''s been a bitter foe to Dick, Tom and Sam. Sobber had sent the Rovers a "Right you are," answered Sam, and Tom said the same. "Good day, madam," said Dick and walked away, and Sam and Tom did the they did so Dick thought of Dora Stanhope and Tom and Sam remembered "Thank you, I hope so too," answered Dick, and Sam said about the boys made their way to the highway to watch for the coming of Tom. Hardly had they reached the road when they saw a crowd of six students "Sam is thinking of what he and Grace are going to do," said Dick. "On Friday I am going to fix Tom Rover," said Jerry Koswell to Dudd along, children, and play," said Tom, and a minute later Sam and Dick