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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 54543 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Venice 1 venetian 1 roman 1 italian 1 hand 1 dalmatian 1 Zuan 1 Zara 1 Yaga 1 Udine 1 Turk 1 Trieste 1 Trani 1 Spalato 1 Salona 1 Saint 1 Rome 1 Ragusa 1 Otranto 1 Korkyra 1 Italy 1 Greek 1 Gradenigo 1 Curzola 1 Corfu 1 Cattaro 1 Austria 1 Arbe 1 Aquileia Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 534 city 365 church 253 time 248 name 243 land 205 place 197 building 183 way 179 side 179 part 173 island 172 history 168 town 168 day 162 man 148 wall 143 sea 141 arch 135 point 132 form 130 column 130 coast 123 hand 111 house 111 eye 107 work 107 tower 102 capital 96 century 95 kind 91 rule 91 mountain 90 end 90 date 89 window 88 palace 87 hill 85 nothing 81 change 81 arcade 79 thing 78 dominion 77 something 75 head 74 traveller 74 course 73 power 67 world 67 street 64 woman Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 724 _ 179 Venice 175 Ragusa 131 Saint 104 Spalato 96 Greek 94 Aquileia 92 Zuan 91 Italy 90 Venetian 85 Salona 85 Rome 83 Dalmatia 80 Zara 78 Korkyra 68 Cattaro 67 Austria 65 lord 64 Corfu 63 Trieste 61 Otranto 59 Turk 54 Trani 53 Curzola 52 Udine 49 Pola 47 Europe 46 Treviso 45 Norman 45 Gradenigo 44 Gorizia 43 Diocletian 42 King 40 TraĆ¼ 40 Republic 39 England 39 Antivari 38 Ragusan 38 Parenzo 38 Durazzo 37 Ravenna 37 Hadriatic 36 Emperor 36 Christendom 33 Mark 31 Bari 30 Gothic 29 Renaissance 28 Greece 28 Forum Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1353 it 926 we 508 he 302 they 269 i 231 you 206 them 174 she 168 us 166 itself 135 him 92 me 76 her 56 himself 38 themselves 33 ourselves 30 one 18 herself 3 hers 2 yourself 2 myself 2 his Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 4137 be 1530 have 325 do 319 see 245 say 241 come 205 look 191 go 188 make 183 take 182 stand 179 find 161 seem 161 pass 118 call 117 become 113 show 111 give 98 know 95 lie 94 keep 87 think 85 hold 81 bring 77 speak 75 leave 75 form 73 set 67 rise 66 reach 65 lead 64 bear 63 build 61 mark 57 put 55 fall 54 get 53 remain 52 turn 52 begin 49 carry 44 use 42 suggest 42 live 42 cry 40 tell 39 feel 38 contain 35 win 34 lose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 777 not 325 more 319 great 311 so 236 still 232 other 218 only 184 first 174 out 161 own 161 old 159 now 158 well 156 up 155 small 151 even 149 most 143 once 139 long 137 far 136 very 132 little 132 again 131 early 129 here 127 same 117 venetian 114 as 113 away 112 many 110 then 110 italian 107 much 105 such 105 modern 98 roman 97 last 94 indeed 93 there 92 dalmatian 91 later 88 good 86 down 86 back 85 new 83 on 81 less 81 hardly 80 least 80 greek Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 72 least 41 most 30 great 28 good 11 noble 10 early 9 old 9 high 9 furth 7 small 6 new 6 near 5 late 5 fine 4 lovely 3 strange 3 Most 2 wide 2 vast 2 strong 2 slight 2 proud 2 narrow 2 low 2 large 2 innermost 2 bitter 2 bad 1 young 1 wise 1 warm 1 vague 1 true 1 tall 1 stately 1 smooth 1 slender 1 poor 1 plain 1 minute 1 mighty 1 mere 1 manif 1 hoary 1 heavy 1 happy 1 grand 1 full 1 foremost 1 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 108 most 8 least 2 well 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ is unknown 2 church was not 2 history goes on 2 ragusa is certainly 2 ragusa is not 2 ragusa stands alone 2 town is not 1 _ be later 1 _ came in 1 _ found as 1 _ had ever 1 _ had fully 1 _ is not 1 _ is nothing 1 _ took refuge 1 arch came in 1 arch is _ 1 arches are not 1 arches is thoroughly 1 building is simply 1 building looks strangely 1 building stands just 1 building was not 1 building was sometimes 1 buildings does not 1 church are largely 1 church has not 1 church is as 1 church is indeed 1 church is not 1 church is so 1 church is striking 1 church shows portions 1 church stand up 1 church stands close 1 church was therefore 1 church was twice 1 churches became mosques 1 churches do not 1 churches were so 1 cities are again 1 cities are cities 1 cities do not 1 cities have simply 1 cities is conveniently 1 cities stand out 1 cities were thus 1 city are architecturally 1 city brings better 1 city comes near Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 church has not much 1 church was not likely 1 churches do not all 1 cities do not fully 1 history is not yet 1 island is no other 1 name is no corruption 1 name was not unfittingly 1 place were not spalato 1 time is no mere 1 town does not even 1 town is not striking 1 town is not very 1 towns are not venetian A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 47723 author = Forman, Justus Miles title = The Island of Enchantment date = keywords = Arbe; Gradenigo; Venice; Yaga; Zuan; hand summary = "Are these men?" cried out young Zuan, in fine Venetian scorn. "Take these men away," said young Gradenigo, "and bring in the woman. "They shall be punished, child!" said Zuan Gradenigo, between tight "Surely you are a lady," said young Zuan, but the girl bent her head "I know," said Zuan Gradenigo, "that all I say is true. "Your hand, child!" said young Zuan. Young Zuan raised a white face, and his eyes looked bitterly into the "If you cannot see, lord," she said, hiding her face with her hands, "They got away!" said young Zuan, staring with wide, bright eyes across "No," said young Zuan, shaking his head, "I do not know them. "Unharmed?" said Zuan Gradenigo, watching the woman''s eyes. "I shall be," said the woman of abomination, "in the city, lord, when "Out of my way!" said young Zuan, in a great voice of agony, and he id = 40394 author = Freeman, Edward A. (Edward Augustus) title = Sketches from the Subject and Neighbour Lands of Venice date = keywords = Aquileia; Austria; Cattaro; Corfu; Curzola; Greek; Italy; Korkyra; Otranto; Ragusa; Rome; Saint; Salona; Spalato; Trani; Trieste; Turk; Udine; Venice; Zara; dalmatian; italian; roman; venetian summary = The heart of an Italian city is to be looked for in its town-house and in our own island, that thorough "church city," where a great minster fronted by a city which hardly comes within the old Venetian land, No city at first sight seems more thoroughly modern; old town and new, that, setting aside the coast cities, the land in which Trieste stands plainest round-arched work, called, as usual, the "old church," the remains of a building, perhaps a church, earlier than the time of No one could surely have placed a church with pointed arches, walls, this certainly looks as if the eastern part were the old city, great church of the city. strange little island city, and in taking in the varied views of land a distinct place in history, islands containing towns and cities, and the long walls to join the haven to the city, only in later times.