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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 103139 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 3 Sir 3 Lord 3 London 2 William 2 Mrs. 2 Lady 2 John 1 year 1 time 1 old 1 nay 1 man 1 italian 1 good 1 face 1 come 1 Yoxham 1 Westmorland 1 Tom 1 Thwaite 1 Thomas 1 Sunday 1 Stubber 1 Street 1 St. 1 Solicitor 1 Sheriff 1 Serjeant 1 Ritson 1 Rev. 1 Ralphie 1 Peter 1 Penrith 1 Paul 1 Parson 1 Natt 1 Mercy 1 Matthew 1 Luck 1 Lowther 1 Lovel 1 Kirkby 1 King 1 Kendal 1 Julia 1 Humblethwaite 1 Hugh 1 Hotspur 1 Henry Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1450 man 725 day 576 mother 573 hand 558 face 557 time 548 eye 529 girl 479 nothing 461 word 435 woman 432 daughter 426 head 400 house 393 year 389 father 383 thing 365 life 365 child 363 room 356 way 353 wife 351 moment 342 door 339 money 329 heart 318 night 315 marriage 290 voice 288 lady 287 tailor 276 world 275 name 275 letter 274 church 272 friend 268 cousin 267 place 258 love 246 one 231 family 229 morning 222 son 222 foot 214 case 212 lawyer 205 side 203 people 200 something 198 hour Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1037 Mr. 800 Hugh 754 Lady 721 Ritson 700 Paul 581 Sir 578 Lovel 573 Anna 550 Countess 465 Greta 436 George 416 Earl 386 Harry 378 Mrs. 336 Drayton 303 Thwaite 284 Lord 273 Daniel 223 London 222 Bonnithorne 218 _ 194 William 194 Hotspur 188 Serjeant 186 God 182 Cousin 174 Emily 160 lord 157 Bluestone 152 Cumberland 149 Gubblum 143 Mercy 139 Flick 139 Captain 132 Solicitor 130 Goffe 130 General 127 Humblethwaite 123 Christian 119 CHAPTER 118 Elizabeth 105 Street 98 Boltby 97 Church 94 Natt 91 Parson 89 Yoxham 89 Penrith 86 John 84 Carlisle Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6664 he 5160 it 4586 i 4182 she 4067 you 2422 him 1823 her 1384 me 1205 they 730 them 640 we 484 himself 402 herself 250 us 103 yourself 96 myself 64 itself 59 one 53 themselves 43 mine 34 yours 22 thee 22 his 21 hers 20 ''em 12 ourselves 9 ''s 7 theirs 6 hisself 5 em 4 ye 2 yes;--you 2 yes;--for 2 thowt 2 them,--she 2 ours 2 i''m 1 yes;--your 1 yes;--mamma,--we 1 us,--i 1 theirselves 1 tease,--or 1 tears,--she 1 na 1 my 1 make-- 1 know,--for 1 ij 1 him,--this 1 him,--except Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19623 be 7498 have 3149 say 2930 do 1345 go 1302 come 1281 know 1103 make 1042 think 931 tell 931 see 800 take 714 give 484 ask 465 leave 439 look 424 hear 415 get 385 speak 378 let 367 stand 351 find 349 call 323 love 300 believe 283 live 274 put 274 bring 271 sit 263 become 261 marry 259 keep 257 pay 252 turn 246 seem 237 mean 233 write 233 follow 231 hold 227 pass 226 feel 215 fall 212 understand 202 want 190 walk 185 lie 184 allow 179 send 178 show 174 die Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4442 not 1421 so 1272 then 883 now 836 very 788 up 656 old 630 well 606 good 602 other 591 never 584 more 582 own 528 only 516 young 489 much 483 little 453 out 450 again 442 as 434 still 422 there 401 great 394 away 389 down 385 such 379 here 375 long 363 last 355 once 341 back 326 even 319 first 318 too 308 yet 247 sure 246 many 244 all 243 ever 240 also 238 same 238 almost 226 on 221 poor 215 no 210 just 209 quite 208 bad 208 always 205 most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 120 good 80 least 53 most 45 dear 22 bad 21 eld 14 near 9 great 8 happy 8 early 7 slight 6 low 6 fine 6 bright 6 bitter 5 rich 5 old 5 high 5 base 4 wise 4 strong 4 loud 4 black 4 Most 3 vile 3 pleasant 3 manif 3 late 3 large 3 deep 2 sweet 2 stormy 2 soon 2 lusty 2 heavy 2 fair 2 faint 2 easy 2 dark 2 cheap 2 bonny 2 bl 1 wicked 1 wealthy 1 tithe 1 sure 1 subtle 1 strange 1 sovereign 1 soul,--l Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 152 most 24 well 12 least 1 said]--here 1 long 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 ritson did not 5 earl had not 5 face was pale 5 george did not 5 man was not 4 harry did not 4 paul was not 3 anna did not 3 anna had not 3 anna was not 3 day was over 3 earl did not 3 eyes were full 3 face was very 3 george was not 3 greta did not 3 hugh did not 3 lovel did not 3 ritson came out 3 ritson was not 3 time is near 2 anna had never 2 anna was still 2 countess is very 2 countess was frightened 2 countess was quite 2 day is not 2 days went by 2 earl was not 2 earl was now 2 eyes were now 2 eyes were red 2 face was as 2 face was ashy 2 face was full 2 face was now 2 face was still 2 father was so 2 george was able 2 george was there 2 girl is not 2 girl was no 2 girls do not 2 greta came out 2 greta had already 2 harry was not 2 head was bent 2 lovel had not 2 lovel was almost 2 man had ever Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 countess was no countess 2 earl did not quite 2 george was not quite 2 girl was no doubt 1 anna had no answer 1 anna had not even 1 anna having no other 1 anna is not papa 1 anna was no cousin 1 anna was no lady 1 anna was not prepared 1 countess made no further 1 countess spoke no further 1 countess was not cruelly 1 daughter has no right 1 daughter made no reply 1 daughters are not married 1 day had not yet 1 day is not young 1 days was no doubt 1 earl had not as 1 earl had not yet 1 earl was not yet 1 eye had not yet 1 eye was not always 1 eyes had not time 1 eyes were not more 1 father had no scotch 1 father is not yet 1 george did not quite 1 george made no immediate 1 george made no more 1 george made no sort 1 george was no credit 1 george was no fitting 1 girl be not united 1 girl is no better 1 greta made no answer 1 harry did not then 1 harry gave no indication 1 harry is not well 1 harry was not quite 1 harry was not surprised 1 house was not up 1 houses was not yet 1 hugh did not immediately 1 lovel did not clearly 1 lovel had no other 1 lovel had not as 1 lovel had not much A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 26088 author = Caine, Hall, Sir title = A Son of Hagar: A Romance of Our Time date = keywords = Bonnithorne; CHAPTER; Christian; Drayton; Fisher; Ghyll; God; Greta; Gubblum; Hendon; Hugh; John; London; Lowther; Matthew; Mercy; Mr.; Mrs.; Natt; Parson; Paul; Peter; Ralphie; Ritson; Tom; come; face; good; man; nay summary = "Mr. Bonnithorne," said Hugh Ritson, holding out his hand, "you and I Paul glanced into his brother''s face a moment, and said: Hugh looked earnestly into the girl''s glowing face, and said with "I wish I''d gone in place of him," said Paul, turning to Greta. "Bonnithorne," said Hugh Ritson--his voice trembled and broke--"if it is "You''re a happy man, Mr. Christian," said Mr. Bonnithorne, as Greta left "To the Deluge!" said Paul; and he turned his head slowly to where Hugh "My brother Paul slept here a few nights ago, I hear?" said Hugh. "And Hugh was in his own room?" said Paul, his eyes flashing and his "Nor you in mine, my friend," said Hugh Ritson, facing about. "And now, Mercy," said Hugh Ritson, "I want you to be a good little Paul Ritson laughed a little, lifted his red eyes, and said: your man for you," said Hugh Ritson. id = 37891 author = Scott, Daniel title = Bygone Cumberland and Westmorland date = keywords = Appleby; Bishop; Carlisle; Castle; Church; Court; Cumberland; England; Hall; Henry; John; Kendal; King; Kirkby; London; Lord; Luck; Mr.; Penrith; Rev.; Sheriff; Sir; St.; Sunday; Thomas; Westmorland; William; old; time; year summary = hill, where in old time the watch was kept day and night for seawake, says in his account of Great Salkeld Church, that in his time there was a meet with evidences of old-time church builders having a much keener eye old-time churches of the northern counties might be noted that cannot here make clean the church att all times according to the Vicar''s order, and to whip the dogs out of the church in time of divine service and sermon, and officer whose duty it was to whip dogs out of church during service time, quarter ago:--"The tenants have a lease granted to them generally by Mr. Lancelot Salkeld, father of Sir Francis, for 999 years, paying a certain penance, a wax candle of three pounds weight, before the image of St. Mary in the parish church of Penrith on the following Sunday. old-time life in the county, said the last case of "telling the bees" id = 27712 author = Trollope, Anthony title = Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite date = keywords = Boltby; Captain; Cousin; Elizabeth; Emily; George; Harry; Hart; Hotspur; Humblethwaite; Lady; Lord; Mr.; Sir; Stubber summary = from which George Hotspur came, declared that Sir Harry would never at that time learned a good deal of his cousin George''s mode of life coming of the day on which the cousin took his departure Sir Harry reached Sir Harry''s ears about Cousin George. "I want to know, Mamma," said Emily Hotspur, the day before the ball, Sir Harry vacillated, Lady Elizabeth doubted, and Cousin George MY DEAR COUSIN GEORGE,--Sir Harry and I will be very happy the day for George''s coming had been fixed, Sir Harry thought it One word Cousin George did say to Emily Hotspur that night, just as this day Sir Harry liked his cousin better than he had ever done Sir Harry went to London, and Lady Elizabeth and Emily were left "Words mean so little, Sir Harry," said Mr. Boltby, "and come so Sir Harry Hotspur returned to Humblethwaite before Cousin George''s id = 31274 author = Trollope, Anthony title = Lady Anna date = keywords = Anna; Bluestone; Countess; Daniel; Earl; Flick; General; Goffe; Julia; Lady; London; Lord; Lovel; Mr.; Mrs.; Serjeant; Sir; Solicitor; Street; Thwaite; William; Yoxham; italian summary = Lady Anna, and her mother shall be the Countess Lovel." The estate of "You would have to call her Lady Anna," said Mrs. Lovel. "Mamma," Lady Anna said, as soon as the maid had left the room, "has the young Earl and Lady Anna Lovel should agree to be married. Mrs. Lovel thought that if the girl were Lady Anna, then the mother Lady Anna said very little, but Miss Lovel explained a good many "You shall see her when you come down from dressing," said Mrs. Lovel,--in a low voice, but still audible to the solitary girl. "Shall we attempt to get her up to the road, Minnie, or wait till Mr. Cross comes to help us?" Lady Anna declared that she did not want any When Mrs. Lovel went up-stairs into Lady Anna''s room not a word was "Mamma," said Lady Anna; "will Lord Lovel be here to-day?"