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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 143617 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 65 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 King 4 Abyssinia 3 Nile 3 Gondar 3 God 3 Galla 3 Emperor 2 great 2 Sea 2 Red 2 Ras 2 Mr. 2 Michael 2 Majesty 2 Debra 2 Amba 2 Africa 1 royal 1 man 1 long 1 european 1 english 1 day 1 country 1 christian 1 british 1 arab 1 abyssin 1 Woosen 1 Woema 1 Valentia 1 Turks 1 Tigré 1 Theodore 1 Tajura 1 Tabor 1 Sultan 1 Stern 1 Somauli 1 Shoa 1 Sennaar 1 Selassie 1 Samuel 1 Salt 1 Saint 1 Sahela 1 Rassam 1 Queen 1 Prophet 1 Portuguese Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1107 day 1047 man 898 country 860 time 707 king 648 water 631 hand 529 foot 493 people 487 year 484 place 476 mountain 455 part 429 head 402 order 387 life 386 night 360 side 356 party 354 house 349 ground 336 chief 328 land 326 way 326 number 323 mile 311 hour 303 eye 300 tree 299 tent 291 morning 290 river 288 road 288 letter 284 death 273 horse 268 friend 264 plain 260 tribe 250 church 249 servant 249 hill 244 camp 243 person 243 one 243 camel 242 slave 240 village 240 nothing 236 priest Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2049 _ 1183 Bruce 644 Abyssinia 598 Theodore 447 Mr. 396 Majesty 374 Galla 340 Shoa 321 Emperor 291 Ras 227 Nile 206 Rassam 205 God 185 King 181 Gondar 157 Ali 156 Michael 153 Amhara 147 Magdala 115 Sea 112 Africa 110 el 110 Ayto 107 Europeans 107 Amba 105 Queen 102 Selassie 101 Samuel 99 England 97 Sahela 97 Red 96 Abyssinians 94 Lord 92 Debra 91 Massowah 91 Embassy 89 Masuah 89 Danakil 88 Hawash 88 Ethiopia 88 Egypt 87 Adaiel 84 Saint 84 Christians 84 Cameron 82 Mohammad 82 Arabs 80 Tajura 80 Portuguese 80 Flad Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5013 he 3306 it 2555 i 2540 they 2039 we 1918 him 1365 them 987 us 950 you 782 me 559 himself 305 themselves 299 she 141 myself 132 her 97 itself 89 ourselves 30 herself 24 one 14 mine 13 yourself 11 theirs 10 yours 10 ours 10 his 8 thee 1 yourselves 1 ye 1 wigwam 1 was--(they 1 thyself 1 hers 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20056 be 7759 have 1046 make 1026 do 977 say 837 take 724 come 710 see 701 give 578 find 556 send 545 go 532 leave 511 receive 487 pass 446 know 427 bring 405 follow 364 fall 356 carry 355 form 340 tell 334 call 334 appear 320 return 314 remain 313 become 294 arrive 281 reach 277 stand 273 seem 259 cover 258 proceed 255 rise 251 believe 241 think 241 put 238 present 236 hear 226 meet 226 continue 219 hold 218 keep 215 set 214 enter 207 surround 207 obtain 195 throw 190 prove 189 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2620 not 1129 so 1120 great 984 more 950 very 853 now 839 most 800 only 772 long 723 many 719 well 712 other 637 first 597 few 528 then 525 as 518 up 505 still 501 much 497 small 490 large 488 own 475 even 456 high 408 last 407 far 397 out 394 good 391 little 389 royal 382 same 381 never 379 again 366 also 365 soon 355 however 348 here 348 about 339 several 324 old 320 ever 308 thus 304 down 300 wild 293 such 274 once 267 off 265 almost 258 white 251 therefore Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 109 good 101 least 92 great 73 high 69 most 39 large 30 slight 29 small 27 near 22 bad 17 strong 14 fine 13 eld 13 brave 12 rich 12 deep 10 fair 9 low 9 hot 9 early 8 late 8 choice 7 young 6 bold 5 wise 5 warm 5 rude 5 full 4 wild 4 strict 4 stout 4 pure 4 mean 4 lofty 4 cold 4 bitter 3 topmost 3 tall 3 ready 3 poor 3 old 3 noble 3 manif 3 hardy 3 happy 3 gross 3 fit 3 fierce 3 farth 3 dear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 770 most 22 least 21 well 1 fast 1 crest 1 boldest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 bruce was now 4 bruce did not 4 bruce was not 4 theodore did not 4 theodore was quite 4 theodore was still 3 _ is _ 3 bruce had now 3 bruce was again 3 bruce was very 3 day was not 3 majesty did not 3 people are bad 2 _ was _ 2 _ was not 2 abyssinia are not 2 abyssinia was now 2 bruce being now 2 bruce had never 2 bruce had no 2 bruce had scarcely 2 bruce had several 2 bruce leaves gondar 2 bruce was much 2 bruce was then 2 bruce was thus 2 country are not 2 ground is always 2 king was about 2 majesty had already 2 night was far 2 parties went out 2 party were fain 2 people are afraid 2 shoa are not 2 theodore had several 2 theodore is unable 2 theodore was delighted 2 theodore was not 2 theodore was so 1 _ are equally 1 _ are insignificant 1 _ are low 1 _ are objects 1 _ be angry 1 _ been satisfactorily 1 _ does not 1 _ give _ 1 _ had fortunately 1 _ had just Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not at 1 _ was not procurable 1 abyssinia are not easily 1 abyssinia were no improper 1 bruce had no longer 1 bruce had no means 1 bruce had no sooner 1 bruce has no concealments 1 chiefs are not always 1 country are not much 1 country is not free 1 day brought no nearer 1 day was not far 1 day was not favourable 1 majesty had not yet 1 majesty took no notice 1 men are not turks 1 men have no beard 1 order had not so 1 part was not idle 1 party had no doubt 1 party were not long 1 people have no foundation 1 shoa are not high 1 shoa are not martyrs 1 shoa were not slow 1 theodore had no scruples 1 theodore had no sooner 1 theodore took no notice 1 theodore was not very 1 years are not even A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 8815 author = Blanc, Henry title = Narrative of Captivity in Abyssinia with Some Account of the Late Emperor the Late Emperor Theodore, His Country and People date = keywords = Abyssinia; Amba; Bishop; Cameron; Debra; Emperor; Europeans; Flad; Gaffat; Galla; Gondar; King; Kourata; Magdala; Majesty; Massowah; Mr.; Plowden; Queen; Rassam; Samuel; Stern; Tabor; Theodore summary = Hut--Theodore''s Second Visit to the Amba--He sends for Mr. Rassam, Majesty to Magdala; arrived there, Theodore called for the Head of At the time Theodore sent Cameron with a letter Carpet--Cameron, with his Followers, is put in Chains--Mr. Bardel''s Return from the Soudan--Theodore''s Dealings with Cameron''s arrival Theodore sent several messages, asking, "Where The following day, during the march, Theodore sent Samuel backwards Instead of that Mr. Rassam took a half-way course; he told Theodore The following day Theodore sent repeated kind messages; but we did As soon as we reached Debra Tabor, the Emperor sent word to Mr. Rassam to come out with the other Europeans, as he had something this chief having sent a servant to Theodore to ask as a reward to The day of our arrival, and whilst the chiefs were reading Theodore''s The chief on the following day told me that, at the time, Theodore id = 35369 author = Harris, William Cornwallis, Sir title = The Highlands of Ethiopia date = keywords = Abyssinia; Adaiel; Adel; Aden; Africa; Ali; Allah; Amba; Amhara; Angollala; Ankober; Arabia; Aussa; Ayto; Bedouin; Chapter; Christianity; Danakil; Debra; Eesah; Efat; Embassy; Emperor; Ethiopia; Galla; Giddem; God; Gondar; Gurague; Hawash; Holy; Hurrur; Ibrahim; India; Izhak; Kafilah; King; Krapf; Lake; Majesty; Medoko; Michael; Mohammad; Moslem; Mudaito; Negoos; Nile; Prophet; Ras; Sahela; Saint; Selassie; Shoa; Somauli; Sultan; Tajura; Woema; Woosen; arab; british; christian; country; day; european; great; long; royal summary = The treaty concluded with the king of Shoa having now been placed by time; whilst, neither grass nor green food remaining near the sea-shore, return, passed the sultry day beneath the mock shelter afforded by a low missing man having been obtained to the present hour, he is believed by several days previously, of a large band of Eesah, the hot night passed water existed over the whole of the wide plain within a day''s journey, long in order that they may run away like poltroons in the day of danger wild Galla enters the scene of confusion, his long tresses streaming in white body and black head and neck, covered with hair, and having thick, Receiving a long shot through the thigh at the royal hands, whilst in the asserted fact of his having sailed seven days across a great sea, countries beyond the great sea, and must receive at my hands those id = 39615 author = Head, Francis Bond, Sir title = The Life and Adventures of Bruce, the African Traveller date = keywords = Abyssinia; Africa; Algiers; Arabs; Bruce; Cairo; Egypt; England; Esther; Fasil; Galla; God; Gondar; Jidda; King; Lord; Masuah; Michael; Mohammed; Mr.; Nile; Ozoro; Ras; Red; Salt; Sea; Sennaar; Tigré; Valentia; english; man summary = Cyprus; but, occupied with his great undertaking, Bruce naturally says "Dendera," says Bruce, "is a considerable town at this day, all covered "What is the reason," said this great man, very gravely, to Bruce, travellers have visited Abyssinia since the days of Bruce, we have [21] By a letter which Bruce addressed from London to his friend Mr. Wood, it appears that it was on the 16th of March he left Kenné for "At half past eight o''clock," says Bruce, "we encamped at a place called "One day," says Bruce, "when I was standing by the king in the palace, "I now," says Bruce, "for the first time since my arrival at Abyssinia, "Late in the evening," says Bruce, "Ozoro Esther came to the king''s king appeared affected by Bruce''s statement, and, with great kindness, "After travelling for nearly three days," says Bruce, "we had an "In that country," says Bruce, "it is not the value of the present, but id = 1436 author = Lobo, Jerónimo title = A Voyage to Abyssinia date = keywords = Abyssinia; Emperor; Galles; God; Indies; King; Moors; Nile; Portuguese; Red; Sea; Turks; abyssin; great summary = and soon afterwards left Pate to return to the Indies, and in nine-andtwenty days arrived at the famous fortress of Diou. account of the coast of the Red Sea. The patriarch having met with many obstacles and disappointments in his of land, which came out a great way into the sea, we found ourselves in welcomed by great numbers of Catholics, both Portuguese and Abyssins, who having taken his haunt near the place where I lived, killed all the oxen way, we were in great perplexity a long time what measures to take; at AEthiopia, lived on the top of a mountain, received us with very great left the place, and went to another mountain, higher and better peopled. in a short time great numbers whom we thought capable of being admitted scarce had I left the place before the viceroy came in person to put me