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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 45339 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 102 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 like 3 wor 3 tha 3 good 3 come 3 John 3 Jenny 2 ther 2 little 2 day 2 Tom 2 Shoo 2 God 1 woone 1 tree 1 tis 1 time 1 tho 1 think 1 thi 1 thee 1 tell 1 spring 1 shoo 1 poem 1 night 1 neet 1 man 1 love 1 let 1 know 1 heart 1 head 1 dialect 1 chap 1 avore 1 Zunday 1 Zoo 1 Yorkshire 1 Yorksher 1 Wer 1 Vrom 1 Vor 1 Tis 1 Ther 1 Soa 1 Riding 1 Poll 1 Old 1 North Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1841 o 714 day 508 time 505 man 468 heart 414 t 380 thing 371 life 331 a 326 tree 302 year 300 chap 286 love 286 hand 285 th 272 woone 266 wor 260 night 258 head 256 shoo 255 tha 252 fowk 247 door 247 bit 241 wife 230 lad 221 lass 217 mother 212 way 207 light 204 neet 202 thi 192 sky 189 friend 187 eye 185 bed 182 wind 178 tho 177 lot 174 word 160 feäce 157 zide 154 face 151 world 149 vor 149 ther 145 soul 143 ground 141 moor 140 mind Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1665 _ 1609 wi 569 Wi 519 mi 477 th 381 yo 297 Vor 264 thi 248 tha 248 Aw 247 noa 216 shoo 208 Ther 204 ther 201 John 198 wer 186 o 182 A 181 o''th 174 Th 173 soa 171 An 170 Shoo 152 noo 151 vor 151 God 141 Soa 133 t 129 aw''ll 126 wor 117 meäke 116 ye 114 Yorkshire 112 yor 109 Jenny 98 nowt 98 Aw''ve 96 nah 96 Vrom 94 Wer 94 Tha 85 hooam 84 nobbut 83 aw''m 82 mich 76 evenèn 76 Zoo 75 zun 75 i''th 75 aat Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2737 i 2365 he 2209 it 1712 they 1461 we 1252 me 667 you 502 she 459 us 431 her 428 him 267 thee 263 ''em 242 them 205 em 121 vo''k 68 tha''ll 57 ''s 35 thowt 33 mine 26 one 23 ha 21 aw 18 wi 17 ye 14 yo 9 o 9 hav''nt 8 yor 8 yo''d 8 gi''e 7 on''t 6 himself 6 herzelf 6 aw''ve 5 thy 5 theirs 5 leäve 5 fowk 4 th 4 o''th 4 myself 3 yourzelf 3 yours 3 themselves 3 thar''t 3 ta 3 sho 3 myzelf 3 hizzelf Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6497 be 3541 do 1850 have 759 come 624 say 566 see 558 know 523 think 499 go 429 wor 397 get 392 let 352 tell 298 keep 270 find 237 make 236 meet 232 give 229 leave 211 bring 204 stand 203 try 197 put 194 seem 187 wer 184 hear 183 love 178 zee 178 feel 176 live 175 call 174 want 171 vor 156 grow 143 se 142 mak 141 take 141 run 141 lose 139 show 136 bear 133 cry 127 pass 126 look 119 turn 113 begin 104 wear 101 help 98 use 98 hold Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1020 not 862 then 795 up 618 so 603 little 466 out 428 good 412 still 401 there 365 now 342 here 331 well 314 down 313 long 311 poor 299 last 298 just 297 away 260 as 254 young 234 too 228 old 212 sweet 206 back 203 on 201 white 199 ther 194 off 182 true 179 happy 168 never 168 hard 156 in 151 new 149 high 149 all 148 far 143 big 134 once 131 other 131 nivver 131 gooid 128 own 121 bright 118 yet 105 only 102 wide 102 dear 100 sure 97 more Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 185 good 20 furst 13 bl 12 grand 12 big 11 most 9 least 9 feäir 8 th 8 dear 7 wold 7 wise 7 owd 7 high 7 hard 7 dr 6 young 5 soft 5 rich 5 j 5 great 5 gaÿ 5 fair 5 bright 5 bonny 5 bad 4 warst 4 sweet 4 short 4 nice 4 girt 4 deep 3 smart 3 rough 3 plain 3 late 3 happy 3 fine 3 breet 3 bold 3 Most 2 wide 2 white 2 vish 2 undr 2 true 2 topmost 2 soon 2 safe 2 pure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 35 well 29 most 2 vor 2 soon 2 a''most 1 withaat 1 least 1 itsel 1 furst 1 feäirest 1 biggest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 tha has n''t 7 ther ''s nowt 5 shoo did n''t 5 tha does n''t 5 ther ''s owt 4 _ know _ 4 _ thought _ 4 _ try _ 4 things went on 3 _ is _ 3 _ knew _ 3 chap feels fooilish 3 heart do leäp 3 heart is holy 3 heart is thine 3 heart is true 3 heart stood still 3 life is past 3 love do bide 3 love is good 3 shoo had n''t 3 tha did n''t 3 tha knows shoo 3 ther ''s few 3 ther are times 3 ther wor nowt 3 ther wor owt 3 trees be company 2 _ stood vor 2 a done job 2 chap is better 2 chap saw th 2 chap stood firm 2 chap wor uncle 2 chaps did nowt 2 day come mi 2 days are drawin 2 heart ''s too 2 heart be glad 2 heart feels glad 2 heart felt sad 2 heart left off 2 heart loves thi 2 heart was full 2 heart wor tender 2 heart wor true 2 hearts are cleean 2 life is short 2 men are free 2 men do mow Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 heart gives no offence 1 tha ''s no need 1 ther ''s no leaves 1 woone got no scope A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21785 author = Barnes, William title = Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect date = keywords = Bezide; Drough; Fanny; God; Hill; Hwome; Ithin; Jenny; Jeäne; John; Maÿ; Meäry; Mid; Poll; Tis; Tom; Vor; Vrom; Wer; Zoo; Zunday; avore; come; good; head; man; night; spring; tree; woone summary = Zoo the girt elem tree out in little hwome groun'' Zome words you mid bring me, vrom tongues that be dear, Vor time an'' tide will come an'' goo, He han''t a-got noo young woones vor to zwarm. Vor what wer brought in doors by men, ''Tis good to zee woone''s naïghbours come Vor woone ov jaÿ, what peals mid come To meäke some good woones vor the poor. Wer only vor his good, an'' that ''twer true, Wer men on watch vor little good; Still Lydlinch bells wer good vor sound, Vor lovely wer the looks her feäce Vor if a tree wer dear to me, That vor stiff lags, lik'' his, the best pleäce wer the road. On a tree that would come up to thik woone vor size. Wer a-come vor to gi''e us a hop, Vor she wer gone vrom e''thly eyes id = 17472 author = Hartley, John title = Yorkshire Ditties, First Series To Which Is Added The Cream Of Wit And Humour From His Popular Writings date = keywords = Shoo; come; like; little; tha; ther; wor summary = An'' tho we nah are like tha wor then, Shoo said, ''God bless yo, little things!'' Solomon sed ther wor nowt new under th'' sun; an'' he owt to know if man to mak a fooil, but aw think ther''s enuff withaat makkin ony moor, whisperin varry lovinly together, when shoo tell''d him ther wor noa aat, an'' thinks aw, aw shouldn''t be capp''d if ther wor a dust here in as th'' maister an'' me, soa aw thowt varry likely they wor locals, or but does ta see ther wor a chap in it." Aw tell''d him he''d made a fayther thowt he''d show him off a bit, soa he said, "Jack a want thee Aw thowt he wor a long time abaat it, but in a bit he coom ther worn''t one i''th'' lot ''at knew; but one o'' th'' chaps said he id = 17799 author = Hartley, John title = Yorkshire Ditties, Second Series To which is added The Cream of Wit and Humour from his Popular Writings date = keywords = Billy; chap; shoo; tha; ther; think; wor summary = Ther wor nooan sich like things i'' thi gronofayther''s days. Ther wor honest men lived i'' thi gronfayther''s days. "Nah, lass," he said, "aw think it''s abaat time for thee to come hooam." "Soa shoo went back wi'' him, an'' throo that time to this he''s allus luk''d far thi a bit." "Aw allus thowt tha war a gooid sooart, Jenny, an'' then tha willnt get dropt on," shoo sed.--"That, wor a bit o'' varry enuff, ther''d be a time when chaps ud ha nowt to do but think-but it''s spend owt withaat think in'' whether it wor for ther gooid or net, ther wor a young chap coom to yor haase to luk at thi mistress; an'' Sammy, "tha knows aw wor put abaat a bit, an'' it war all for th'' sake o'' thee." "Tha''ll tell me owt," shoo sed, "put th'' leet aat, an'' id = 19470 author = Hartley, John title = Yorkshire Lyrics Poems written in the Dialect as Spoken in the West Riding of Yorkshire. To which are added a Selection of Fugitive Verses not in the Dialect date = keywords = Christmas; God; Jane; Jenny; Mary; Old; Shoo; Soa; Ther; Yorksher; come; day; heart; know; let; like; little; love; tell; tha; thee; thi; tho; time; wor summary = Aw wish shoo wor teed raand thi neck! Aw know shoo''d think aw wor a fooil, Like me, shoo taks things as they come, All shoo wanted wor some little nook snug an warm When tha comes throo thi wark of a neet. Thee poor thing,--aw like to watch thi. Ther wor nooan sich like things i'' thi gronfayther''s days. It wor noa sin to blush i'' thi gronfayther''s days, Ther wor honest men lived i'' thi gronfayther''s days. Tho'' mich shoo feear''d ther wod, Tho'' mich shoo feear''d ther wod, Ther wor noa slain to hug away, An as fine a young fella tha wor, as ivver aw met i'' mi life; An tho we nah are like tha wor then, But shoo wor like th'' rest,--false,--false in her heart; Shoo shows ''em ther faults, an points aght th'' best way, Shoo wor th'' hooap an pride o'' ther life, id = 38565 author = Moore, Bernard title = Cornish Catches, and Other Verses date = keywords = Jenny; John; Kittereen; London; day; good; like; tis summary = Schoolmaister knaws a mort o'' things as baint a bit o'' use; An'' tho'' they''m good for larnin'' if ''ee awnly knaws the way, For I have knawed the Cornish maids, an'' like ''em best of any. But Dolly Pentreath her still lives on in the hearts of One and All. SUNDAY IN THE CORNISH PORT Sure ''nuff he thinks a mort o'' things tho'' ''tis little he has to say. A blue light danced about his eyes like sunshine on the bay, But ''tis turble hard for the fisherman as awnly sails the Bay, Sure ''nuff, ''twas good when I wandered away, An'' ''tis good to have time to make ready to sail Shall in the far light of a distant day Shine from sweet eyes, fair as the sea''s own blue, To the Winds of the World from the hills and the sea far blowing, Star-like my Lady shines in her fair white tower. id = 2888 author = Moorman, F. W. (Frederic William) title = Yorkshire Dialect Poems (1673-1915) and traditional poems date = keywords = Ben; Blakeborough; Bob; Bud; Cleveland; English; George; Jack; John; Mr.; North; Riding; Tom; Yorkshire; dialect; good; like; neet; poem summary = In one sense it may be said that Yorkshire dialect poetry dates, not from Yorkshire Dialogue in Yorkshire Dialect; Between an Awd Wife, a Lass, and In the year 1800 the composition of Yorkshire dialect poetry received an the well-thumbed chap-books wherein were included poems like "Awd Daisy," Yorkshire dialect poets of the towns and cities have interpreted the life Yorkshire dialect poetry up to the present time; let us hope that it is Character, Folklore, and Customs of the North Riding of Yorkshire, Mr. Blakeborough has brought together a number of traditional songs and A Yorkshire Dialogue between an awd Wife a Lass and a butcher. A Yorkshire Dialogue between an awd Wife a Lass and a butcher. Says he, "Noo, lad, tak off thy hat." I ken thee weel, I knaw thy ways, Bud noo thoo cooms wi'' all thy weight, Shoo thinks of nane bud you at the milkin''-time;