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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 47407 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Miss 2 good 2 Mr. 2 Lady 1 order 1 know 1 girl 1 check 1 business 1 York 1 Win 1 Watkins 1 Stein 1 Spirit 1 Sally 1 Sadie 1 Rolls 1 Rennie 1 Raygan 1 Petro 1 Peter 1 O''Hara 1 New 1 Mystery 1 Moon 1 Meggison 1 Meg 1 Marvin 1 Maggie 1 Lucile 1 Lord 1 Logan 1 Les 1 Leavitt 1 Laurie 1 Jennings 1 James 1 Hawkins 1 Hands 1 God 1 Forbes 1 Florence 1 Faith 1 Fairbanks 1 Ena 1 Eileen 1 Dick 1 Department 1 Denton 1 Day Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 842 girl 585 man 505 time 415 thing 377 day 335 faith 323 way 314 eye 305 hand 294 store 277 good 277 face 273 woman 272 room 265 door 253 department 249 one 240 business 238 word 216 moment 213 mother 212 customer 211 place 206 order 205 something 204 head 196 hour 195 night 188 book 183 money 171 nothing 166 minute 162 house 159 lady 158 life 158 anything 151 question 150 people 147 work 146 voice 145 friend 145 father 143 name 134 floor 122 heart 118 morning 115 paper 115 office 114 child 112 bag Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 734 Miss 707 Mr. 696 _ 428 Peter 382 Win 356 Denton 343 Faith 270 Lucile 261 Rolls 181 Cordie 154 Ena 147 Marvin 144 Christmas 132 Jennings 130 Logan 128 Forbes 120 Watkins 118 Child 109 Florence 104 Lady 101 Petro 96 Laurie 84 Sadie 84 Mrs. 80 New 77 Hands 76 Fairbanks 72 York 72 God 71 Maggie 70 Brady 69 Raygan 69 Dick 66 Lord 63 Eileen 60 Day 59 Meg 57 James 57 Ann 50 CHAPTER 49 Sam 46 Hardy 45 exclaimed 45 Winifred 45 Stein 45 Leavitt 44 Spirit 44 Mystery 44 Jones 44 Jim Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4102 she 3837 i 3146 it 3103 you 2409 he 1261 her 1017 they 817 me 737 him 500 we 495 them 298 herself 167 us 104 himself 62 myself 60 yourself 54 one 50 themselves 29 ''em 26 itself 26 ''s 23 yours 17 mine 16 hers 12 ourselves 4 i''m 3 em 2 theirs 2 ours 2 his 1 you''ve 1 you''re 1 you''ll 1 y''can 1 sprightliness--"does 1 o 1 all''ll Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10556 be 4084 have 2116 do 1340 say 873 go 763 see 722 know 680 think 644 come 633 make 588 get 498 look 491 tell 403 take 359 give 357 ask 319 want 301 find 252 seem 244 keep 238 feel 229 hear 227 speak 220 put 217 mean 215 try 206 turn 195 let 185 leave 181 stand 178 begin 166 call 146 cry 144 send 143 buy 141 happen 140 show 139 like 136 answer 134 whisper 134 believe 133 work 132 wait 132 lose 128 talk 123 wish 123 laugh 123 help 118 catch 113 sell Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3133 not 696 so 588 up 494 then 483 out 428 more 422 now 416 just 408 only 382 good 379 little 373 very 334 as 307 young 298 here 291 well 290 other 283 back 274 away 273 never 258 even 252 too 242 down 240 much 239 all 235 again 230 great 222 first 221 right 216 long 215 old 211 there 201 last 199 own 192 in 184 on 184 almost 178 still 174 enough 172 sure 171 once 163 poor 160 ever 159 same 156 new 155 such 146 perhaps 142 always 127 off 125 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 102 good 59 least 28 most 14 late 12 great 10 slight 10 near 10 bad 8 Most 7 deep 5 strange 5 small 5 new 5 large 4 smart 4 old 4 high 4 dear 3 tall 3 sweet 3 pretty 3 nice 3 low 3 hard 3 fine 3 big 2 quick 2 poor 2 happy 2 grand 2 gay 2 frail 2 faint 2 cheap 1 young 1 wild 1 weary 1 wealthy 1 vain 1 true 1 subtle 1 strong 1 snappy 1 slim 1 sharp 1 sad 1 remote 1 quaint 1 onli 1 odd Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 most 10 well 10 least 1 worst 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 win did not 9 _ was _ 8 _ do _ 8 _ is _ 5 _ are _ 5 _ do n''t 5 faith did not 4 faith was so 3 _ am _ 3 _ know _ 3 business is large 3 faith looked up 3 lucile had never 3 rolls did not 3 things are possible 2 _ did _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ was n''t 2 departments are usually 2 eyes did not 2 eyes were red 2 face was very 2 face went white 2 faith was almost 2 faith was not 2 faith was surprised 2 faith went back 2 girl was so 2 girl was still 2 girls were not 2 goods do not 2 lucile stood there 2 one did not 2 one has ever 2 peter did n''t 2 peter did not 2 peter had never 2 thing stood out 2 win had just 2 win had often 2 win was not 2 win went on 2 words were fairly 1 _ ai n''t 1 _ are more 1 _ are n''t 1 _ be eager 1 _ be something Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 door had no latch 1 eyes found no guilt 1 eyes was no longer 1 faith had no opportunity 1 faith heard no more 1 faith was not afraid 1 faith was not quite 1 girl did not quite 1 girls are not all 1 girls were not always 1 goods are not all 1 men make no complaints 1 mother had no more 1 one did not exactly 1 one was not rude 1 peter was not stupid 1 win did not even 1 win had no intention 1 win was not conscious 1 woman was not bad 1 words are not sincere 1 words were not extraordinary A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31073 author = Phillips, W. B. (Wesley Briggs) title = How Department Stores Are Carried On date = keywords = Department; business; check; good; order summary = space secured, and "The Advertising Department" is ready for business. the selection of goods and in the direct management of his department, Space is allotted to each department, and all goods bought must pass checked, and goods are then placed in proper department space ready for The mail-order trade as associated with Department Stores began in a look over the catalogue, select the goods required and mail your order, check is sent with the goods to the mail-order sorting section, and the as orders are numbered consecutively as they are received, the goods are order, and this number appearing on his checks only, all his goods find representing all goods on this card are received the order is complete when the order was first received and before goods were bought, may now The payment for goods purchased by the mail-order department is As each department secures the goods required, the mail id = 11166 author = Sheldon, Lurana title = For Gold or Soul? The Story of a Great Department Store date = keywords = Brady; Day; Denton; Fairbanks; Faith; Forbes; God; Jennings; Maggie; Marvin; Miss; Mr.; Watkins summary = The woman had not taken her eyes from Faith''s face while the young girl "That''s old Denton''s son Jim," explained Miss Jennings to Faith as she "Now, Faith, to business," said Miss Jennings, as soon as they were "That would mean a dollar, my dear Faith," said Miss Jennings sharply. "Miss Faith Marvin," said the boy, loudly. "But won''t Denton, Day & Co. be losing money, too?" asked Faith. "Miss Marvin," said Mr. Denton, "I wish you to answer a question: Are "I will not ask you to state whom you suspect, Miss Marvin," said Mr. Denton, "for I see in your face that you would not tell me; but in He bent toward the young girl as he said the words, and as Faith saw the "I will ask Mr. Denton to come, if you wish," said Faith, a little "Good-by," said Faith, sweetly, "and you believe me, Miss Brady. id = 41909 author = Snell, Roy J. (Roy Judson) title = The Crimson Thread: An Adventure Story for Girls date = keywords = Christmas; Cordie; Dick; Florence; James; Lady; Laurie; Lucile; Meg; Miss; Mystery; O''Hara; Rennie; Spirit summary = boys'' and girls'' books for only three days, yet Lucile liked him, liked by having a good general look at the room, Lucile sauntered away to the The noon hour had come before Lucile found time to again look at the Left to herself, Lucile had time for a few moments of quiet thinking. Cordie looked up from the book she was reading, stared at Lucile for a At ten minutes before closing time Lucile, having promised to meet Cordie "Wait!" exclaimed Lucile as she read in Cordie''s eyes the story of some There was a knowing grin on Laurie''s face as he said this, but Lucile, "And this man who followed you after you had bought the bag," said Lucile They were the Mystery Lady, Laurie Seymour, Lucile and Cordie. Cordie said, turning to Lucile, "when I saw the work there was to do and id = 51092 author = Warner, Harry title = Rattle OK date = keywords = Ann; Hawkins; Les; Sally summary = Dress for three-year-old girl." She turned to the Two-year-old Sally heard the box rattling. "Your dress ought to be here," Ann said. "It''s probably the wrong size, too," Ann said, pulling off Sally''s "We''ll have to send it back," Ann said, "and get the one we ordered." "That''s the doorbell, I think," he said, looking at the next object. and said: "Les, about Sally. Ann went into the hall to order Les to disconnect the doorbell. "Les, I think we''ve made poor Mrs. Burnett angry," Ann said. She picked up the child, felt the hot forehead, and said: "Les, I think "You aren''t going to believe me, Doctor," Ann said while he took the He looked helpless as he said to Ann: "I don''t know quite what to do. Ann looked doubtfully at Les, then followed Bob down the stairs. The policeman warily stepped through the door, looking at Les. Dr. id = 15014 author = Williamson, C. N. (Charles Norris) title = Winnie Childs, the Shop Girl date = keywords = Child; Eileen; Ena; Hands; Lady; Leavitt; Logan; Lord; Meggison; Miss; Moon; Mr.; New; Peter; Petro; Raygan; Rolls; Sadie; Stein; Win; York; girl; good; know summary = Peter Rolls wondered whether he would like to ask his sister Ena if In the veranda cafe Peter Rolls was asking his sister Ena if she knew "Looks like it," remarked Lord Raygan, as Miss Child obeyed. When Peter returned Miss Child was wearing a robe like an illuminated While the storm held, Peter Rolls went several times each dreadful day "Oh, Peter, _would_ you help me like that, in a man''s way?" Yes, Ena thought, Peter was right; the creature was a lady. "I thought he seemed kind and nice--I mean Mr. Thorpe," said Win. "The girl at the door told me I was to buy it of her," said Win, "and "I don''t know, for I don''t want to look back," said Win. place where Peter Rolls had talked of Win to Lady Eileen. "I think I know just what you want," said Win briskly.