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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 229282 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 3 Miss 3 Lord 3 Lady 2 Sir 2 Phineas 2 Parliament 2 Mrs. 2 Mary 2 Madame 2 Low 2 London 2 Laura 2 Kennedy 2 House 2 Gresham 2 Goesler 2 Finn 2 Erle 2 Duke 2 Chiltern 2 CHAPTER 2 Bonteen 1 man 1 come 1 Wharton 1 Violet 1 Turnbull 1 Toole 1 Tankerville 1 Stukely 1 Street 1 Spooner 1 Slide 1 Richard 1 Parucci 1 Palliser 1 O''Leary 1 O''Hanlon 1 O''Connor 1 Nicholas 1 Morley 1 Monk 1 Minister 1 Mildmay 1 Max 1 Maule 1 Major 1 Laurence 1 Larry Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2917 man 1024 friend 1010 day 934 nothing 923 time 894 word 841 thing 785 way 774 hand 718 life 660 room 644 moment 609 woman 558 house 532 course 519 place 513 gentleman 510 matter 508 wife 494 lady 486 world 475 phinea 469 something 450 question 448 year 445 mind 431 father 428 one 428 heart 423 anything 417 night 404 money 403 eye 398 door 378 letter 364 country 360 love 360 hour 355 husband 354 member 352 head 349 party 342 face 341 side 338 girl 328 people 322 morning 312 horse 297 seat 287 truth Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4505 Mr. 1825 Phineas 1604 Lady 1400 Lord 1266 _ 1071 Finn 953 Laura 900 Chiltern 642 Kennedy 631 Duke 594 Violet 590 Madame 589 House 563 Goesler 560 Ashwoode 497 Bonteen 447 Sir 405 Mary 380 Miss 357 Mrs. 357 Monk 351 Gresham 345 Parliament 322 London 322 Effingham 312 O''Connor 287 Low 259 Earl 255 Blarden 254 Palliser 238 Erle 237 Duchess 228 Daubeny 225 Maule 225 Chancey 222 Fitzgibbon 221 Barrington 215 Glencora 208 Mildmay 192 God 189 Fawn 186 Minister 186 Baldock 183 Loughlinter 180 Brentford 177 Cabinet 176 Richard 174 Henry 171 Bunce 168 Laurence Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13677 he 11887 i 8729 you 8637 it 5059 him 4457 she 2634 me 1940 they 1900 her 1558 himself 1547 we 1108 them 459 herself 425 us 378 myself 203 yourself 159 themselves 126 itself 122 one 69 yours 41 mine 39 his 35 ourselves 24 hers 23 ''em 9 oneself 7 ''s 6 theirs 6 thee 5 you''ll 5 yes;--you 4 ours 3 you''re 3 ye 3 i''m 2 yourselves 2 you--_you 2 you,--you 2 yes;--there 2 yes,--as 2 thyself 2 no;--they 2 it,--that 2 em 1 young"--mr 1 you,--you,--you 1 yes;--why 1 yes;--what 1 yes;--we 1 yes;--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 30919 be 15175 have 6297 do 5223 say 2544 know 2344 think 2135 go 2018 make 1903 come 1582 tell 1500 see 1401 take 1001 give 914 speak 857 get 850 ask 808 find 764 look 729 hear 675 leave 628 feel 593 believe 542 stand 503 seem 502 become 492 sit 476 suppose 475 call 463 want 445 understand 437 bring 435 put 433 love 431 let 428 like 422 mean 402 live 356 turn 355 begin 350 write 347 reply 342 talk 333 wish 322 remember 322 pass 321 declare 316 show 304 use 302 meet 302 marry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 8873 not 3181 so 2305 very 1682 then 1582 now 1405 well 1364 more 1199 never 1121 up 1112 much 1089 as 998 own 997 good 934 little 933 old 902 other 898 great 856 again 791 there 733 such 729 only 723 young 701 even 678 ever 659 out 645 here 602 too 591 once 590 yet 580 down 575 last 565 almost 550 long 539 first 538 always 530 still 527 all 523 most 520 quite 487 just 483 indeed 436 perhaps 408 same 407 sure 397 away 392 hardly 369 enough 366 of 363 on 362 right Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 212 good 191 least 95 most 54 bad 42 great 35 slight 26 dear 18 near 17 high 15 small 12 manif 9 sweet 9 happy 9 early 8 fine 8 eld 8 Most 7 young 7 pleasant 7 low 7 long 7 deep 6 true 6 short 6 loud 6 faint 6 extreme 5 strong 5 safe 5 rich 5 old 5 hard 5 bitter 4 soft 4 heavy 4 grand 4 close 3 warm 3 simple 3 remote 3 plain 3 noble 3 mere 3 mean 3 l 3 handsome 3 gross 3 dark 3 clear 3 bland Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 428 most 43 well 21 least 1 lowest 1 fictitious,--prepared 1 duke,--the Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18640/18640-h/18640-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18640/18640-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/phineasredux00trolrich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 31 _ is _ 13 _ do _ 11 _ have _ 11 phineas did not 9 _ are _ 9 phineas was not 7 finn had not 6 _ did _ 6 kennedy did not 5 chiltern was not 5 finn was not 5 man was not 4 _ does _ 4 _ was _ 4 friend had not 4 friends were not 4 goesler was not 4 house was full 4 laura had not 4 phineas was very 3 ashwoode did not 3 chiltern is not 3 goesler had not 3 kennedy had not 3 kennedy was not 3 laura got up 3 life had not 3 man has ever 3 man is not 3 men are so 3 men do n''t 3 men do not 3 phineas had not 3 phineas left london 3 phineas was almost 3 phineas was as 3 phineas was too 3 phineas went down 3 phineas went on 3 thing was so 3 things are not 3 violet did not 2 _ am _ 2 _ be none 2 _ come up 2 _ had _ 2 _ is not 2 _ make _ 2 ashwoode had hardly 2 ashwoode had never Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man is not fit 1 _ is not exactly 1 ashwoode made no answer 1 ashwoode was not there 1 chiltern is not so 1 chiltern was not fond 1 chiltern was not there 1 duke had no wish 1 duke is not so 1 finn be not guilty 1 finn had not even 1 finn is not so 1 finn made no answer 1 finn was no longer 1 finn was not well 1 friend had not yet 1 friends were not hearty 1 friends were not likely 1 friends were not long 1 goesler was no more 1 house is not always 1 kennedy had no strong 1 kennedy is not likely 1 kennedy made no direct 1 kennedy was not there 1 laura had no misgivings 1 laura had not at 1 laura had not then 1 laura is not happy 1 laura were not kind 1 life be not too 1 life had no more 1 life had not quite 1 life was not difficult 1 man does not usually 1 man had not therefore 1 man is not nothing 1 man made no reply 1 man was not equal 1 man was not necessarily 1 man was not too 1 men are not so 1 men had not even 1 moment had no interest 1 phineas did not quite 1 phineas got no card 1 phineas had no alternative 1 phineas had no doubt 1 phineas had no further 1 phineas had no power A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 40126 author = Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan title = The Cock and Anchor date = keywords = Ashwoode; Aspenly; Audley; Blarden; CHAPTER; Carey; Chancey; Cock; Copland; Court; Dublin; Emily; Flora; French; God; Guy; Henry; Lady; Larry; Lord; Major; Mary; Miss; Morley; Mr.; Nicholas; O''Connor; O''Hanlon; O''Leary; Parucci; Richard; Sir; Stukely; Toole; Wharton; come; man summary = he breaks the poor young man''s head the moment he comes within reach of "Unless my memory deceives me, I have had the honour of meeting Mr. O''Connor before," said the young man, with a cold bow, which was "I am very glad, my dear O''Connor," said the young man as he entered, Sir Richard Ashwoode had set his heart upon having Lord Aspenly for his "Do you speak to _me_, sir?" inquired young Ashwoode, turning almost "My lord," said young Ashwoode, "have the goodness to conduct the Mr. Chancey, dear sir--good Mr. Chancey," said the young man, "you "Brother," said Mary Ashwoode, throwing one hand fondly round his neck, "Young man," said O''Hanlon, turning to O''Connor, "what say you to own hand," said the Italian; "as sure as I am leeving man, Sir Henry is "I have already told you, sir," said Mary Ashwoode, "that I do not wish id = 18000 author = Trollope, Anthony title = Phineas Finn The Irish Member date = keywords = Baldock; Barrington; Bonteen; Brentford; Bunce; Cabinet; Chiltern; Duke; Earl; Effingham; Erle; Finn; Fitzgibbon; Glencora; Goesler; Gresham; House; Kennedy; Lady; Laura; Laurence; London; Lord; Low; Madame; Mary; Max; Mildmay; Miss; Monk; Mr.; Mrs.; Parliament; Phineas; Turnbull; Violet summary = "I am so glad you have come, Mr. Finn," said Lady Laura, meeting Lady Laura had said some word about her brother, and Phineas had opinion as to his probable successor." Then the objectionable Mr. Kennedy took his leave, and Phineas was left alone with Lady Laura. "I don''t think that Oswald and Lady Baldock are great friends," said "Mr. Finn certainly looks like a gentleman," said Lady Laura. "I think you like my friend, Mr. Finn," Lady Laura said to Miss "It is very hard certainly on a man like Mr. Bunce," said Lady Laura. hand, and Lady Laura said that of course Phineas would come to them "To tell you the truth, Lady Laura," said Phineas, "I doubt whether "Yes," said Phineas; "I think we shall; but by the votes of men who "Our friend Phineas Finn," said Lady Laura, speaking still with an id = 18640 author = Trollope, Anthony title = Phineas Redux date = keywords = Adelaide; Bonteen; CHAPTER; Chaffanbrass; Chiltern; Church; Daubeny; Duchess; Duke; England; Erle; Fawn; Finn; Gerard; Goesler; Gresham; Hall; House; Kennedy; Lady; Laura; London; Lord; Low; Madame; Maule; Minister; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Palliser; Parliament; Phineas; Sir; Slide; Spooner; Street; Tankerville summary = "Come upstairs, Phineas, and I''ll show you your room," said Lord together, Lady Chiltern had said not a word to Phineas of her aunt, "We shall carry the seat on a scrutiny as sure as eggs," said Mr. Ruddles, who had been quite won by the gallant way in which Phineas know," said he, "whether we are justified in thinking that one man matter of course that he should return to public life,--so said Lady Lady Chiltern, in describing her to Phineas Finn, had said that she "Nobody knows," said Lady Chiltern, "but I believe he has gone." "I knew she would come," said the old man, turning his head round "So the poor old man has gone at last," said Lady Chiltern, with that The man who was Mr. Finn''s enemy," said Lady Chiltern. "And yet I feel that I know it was that other man," said Lady