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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 84139 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 3 Mrs. 3 London 2 Roland 2 Lady 2 CHAPTER 1 work 1 way 1 screw 1 right 1 pile 1 person 1 man 1 like 1 good 1 foot 1 day 1 content 1 art 1 Zoe 1 Waterford 1 Treatise 1 Tavern 1 Tarbox 1 Street 1 Steam 1 St. 1 Shuckleford 1 Sharpley 1 Shanklin 1 Sefton 1 Scilly 1 Samson 1 Sam 1 Rosevean 1 Rocket 1 Robert 1 Riversborough 1 Richmond 1 Reginald 1 Practical 1 Portland 1 Philippa 1 Phebe 1 Peter 1 People 1 Pascal 1 Paris 1 Nixey 1 Mrs Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1456 man 968 day 900 time 696 thing 591 hand 589 nothing 581 way 562 face 556 boy 537 eye 508 year 500 work 497 mother 482 girl 477 one 453 life 445 room 437 place 414 father 408 pile 408 name 399 friend 388 money 371 child 358 word 356 woman 346 night 335 something 331 heart 323 head 301 world 300 foot 289 house 288 voice 288 mind 284 anything 276 door 270 picture 268 hour 266 letter 257 people 250 home 248 moment 245 evening 242 morning 238 water 230 sea 216 side 215 business 215 book Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2603 _ 839 Mr. 806 Armorel 662 Reginald 639 Roland 588 Phebe 516 Frank 414 Craven 404 Mr 399 Felicita 296 Felix 271 Cruden 262 Horace 261 Mrs. 255 Sharpley 253 Alec 243 London 204 Sefton 180 Mrs 176 Durfy 173 Effie 165 Merle 157 Samson 153 God 151 Clifford 150 Jean 145 Tarbox 133 Katy 127 CHAPTER 119 Zoe 113 Philippa 109 Feilding 106 Marlowe 105 Medlock 101 Madame 99 Pascal 98 Alice 90 Hilda 88 Canon 87 St. 87 Peter 82 Miss 79 Scilly 78 Street 75 England 75 Blandford 72 Riversborough 70 Dorcas 66 Lady 65 Liverpool Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8519 i 8274 he 7284 it 6962 you 3941 she 2935 him 2145 they 2012 me 1600 we 1472 them 1453 her 697 himself 432 us 274 herself 178 myself 174 one 130 yourself 116 themselves 72 itself 49 mine 43 yours 38 hers 33 ourselves 32 his 23 ''em 13 ''s 8 em 6 ay 4 theirs 4 hisself 3 oneself 2 yourselves 2 ye 1 you''re 1 you''ll 1 yit 1 yesterday---- 1 wrong---- 1 whosoever 1 whispered,-- 1 whether---- 1 us''d 1 unsympathetic--''you 1 theirselves 1 thee 1 subject--''you 1 presently,-- 1 politely,-- 1 pale--''you 1 ow Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20829 be 8451 have 3769 do 3445 say 1953 go 1849 know 1401 see 1355 come 1317 make 1204 think 1071 take 1015 get 967 look 899 tell 719 find 662 give 556 leave 544 ask 534 hear 478 want 473 seem 471 feel 466 stand 440 let 420 keep 407 turn 402 put 378 call 358 sit 340 speak 337 like 335 live 332 bring 327 write 325 begin 321 talk 312 mean 302 answer 301 lie 292 suppose 291 believe 269 read 265 remember 256 fall 252 pass 251 understand 243 show 240 become 236 break 229 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5455 not 1665 so 1316 up 1160 more 1142 then 1083 now 1029 very 980 out 966 good 940 well 920 old 873 never 869 only 835 little 805 as 704 much 684 here 682 other 665 own 659 long 650 down 621 again 577 young 570 too 550 great 523 all 512 even 505 away 493 back 469 there 466 first 445 always 434 last 409 just 404 still 385 on 382 few 373 most 357 once 356 ever 345 many 339 in 326 right 324 off 319 perhaps 319 enough 317 yet 303 same 301 quite 292 poor Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 208 good 137 least 102 most 37 high 36 bad 29 clever 24 near 21 great 18 eld 13 late 12 Most 11 old 11 low 11 fine 10 happy 10 deep 10 dear 8 slight 8 early 7 large 6 easy 6 calm 5 long 5 dark 5 big 4 wise 4 small 4 rich 4 noble 4 j 4 heavy 4 faint 3 warm 3 sweet 3 soft 3 safe 3 pure 3 poor 3 mean 3 lovely 3 kind 3 hard 3 brave 2 weak 2 tall 2 simple 2 nice 2 neat 2 mere 2 keen Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 271 most 30 well 17 least 3 hard 1 ¦ 1 purest 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 one does not 6 _ is _ 6 frank did not 5 frank is alive 4 _ do _ 4 armorel took out 4 phebe did not 4 piles are not 3 _ are _ 3 armorel went on 3 boy was not 3 man called dick 3 one did not 3 one is not 3 phebe had not 3 phebe was not 3 reginald did not 3 roland was dead 2 _ are not 2 _ do n''t 2 _ knew _ 2 armorel did not 2 armorel got up 2 armorel had never 2 armorel knew nothing 2 armorel took down 2 armorel turned over 2 armorel was well 2 boy is dead 2 boy looked up 2 craven did not 2 craven was not 2 eyes were bright 2 eyes were wild 2 face did not 2 face was not 2 face was pale 2 face was so 2 face was still 2 father had never 2 father was not 2 girl be hilda 2 life is not 2 man got up 2 man was not 2 men are so 2 men were not 2 mother is not 2 mother looked up 2 name turned inside Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 armorel made no reply 1 _ are not competent 1 _ are not sufficiently 1 _ is not ill 1 _ made no demur 1 _ sees no company 1 armorel had no better 1 armorel had no companions 1 armorel had no experience 1 armorel had no inclination 1 armorel had no portrait 1 armorel is not good 1 armorel made no further 1 armorel making no reply 1 armorel wanted no thanks 1 boy asked no more 1 boy had no thought 1 boy was not well 1 father ''s no better 1 father was no longer 1 father was not dead 1 frank is not likely 1 frank said no more 1 girl made no reply 1 girls have not black 1 life is not good 1 life is not simply 1 man has no business 1 man has no trade 1 man is no better 1 man was not only 1 men was not much 1 men were not unprotected 1 mother ''s not very 1 name is not mrs. 1 name was no longer 1 one does not always 1 one does not often 1 one has no money 1 one is no longer 1 one is not afraid 1 one is not often 1 one knows not whither 1 phebe had no clue 1 phebe had not long 1 phebe made no answer 1 phebe was not old 1 phebe was not so 1 phebe was not there 1 pile be not exactly A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 56602 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Frank Hunter''s Peril date = keywords = Ben; CHAPTER; Colonel; Craven; Frank; Hunter; Jonathan; Katy; Mr.; Mrs.; Paris; Sharpley; Tarbox summary = "Seems to me he has a good deal of business with mother," Frank said "I am afraid Frank won''t like the idea of my marrying again," said Mrs. Hunter, anxiously. "He takes it very well," thought Frank, as Mr. Craven said good-night. "Good morning, sir," said Frank, for the first time noticing the "I thought perhaps I ought to save up the surplus for Frank," said Mrs. Craven, hesitating. "You--you don''t think he is likely to be taken away?" said Mrs. Craven, "Do you want Mr. Craven to be guardian with you, mother?" asked Frank, "Frank," said Mr. Craven, "this is my friend, Colonel Sharpley. "He seems a little so," said Frank; "but I hope, Mr. Tarbox, you won''t "I care very little what Mr. Craven would like," said Frank. "I think we''ll go now, Frank," said Sharpley. "Then," said Mrs. Craven, "Frank may be alive." id = 42125 author = Besant, Walter title = Armorel of Lyonesse: A Romance of To-day date = keywords = Alec; Archie; Armorel; Bryher; Chessun; Dick; Dorcas; Effie; Elstree; Feilding; Fletcher; Jagenal; Justinian; Lady; Lee; London; Mr.; Mrs.; Peter; Philippa; Robert; Roland; Rosevean; Samson; Scilly; St.; Zoe; art; man; way summary = what things Armorel did and how she looked on this day? Armorel plays the fiddle and makes the old lady ''A long time ago,'' Armorel went on, ''these islands formed part of the ''Roland Lee,'' said the girl, ''you are talking like your friend Dick ''One day last year,'' said Armorel--''it was in July, after a fortnight but little to make a young man open his heart to a girl; only a pair ''There was an old allegory, Armorel,'' this young man went on, ''of a When you come to stand before a great picture, Armorel, perhaps you ''She has trained her eye, and knows good work,'' Armorel repeated. ''I will play if you like,'' said Armorel, simply. ''I did not think that Alec was that kind of man,'' said Philippa, still ''I have come to ask a favour,'' said Armorel, taking the hand that was id = 34942 author = Newman, John title = Scamping Tricks and Odd Knowledge Occasionally Practised upon Public Works date = keywords = Assoc; C.E.; CHAPTER; Engineering; Engineers; Gas; Iron; Machinery; Mr.; Portland; Practical; Steam; Treatise; content; foot; good; like; pile; right; screw; work summary = known screw piles to penetrate hard and dense sand, gravel, soft sandy "I have seen piles screwed into a kind of clay rock seam, the end of We were working two triangles of screw piles I thought lovely, and like disc piles better for sand, those that sink by water-pressure I any cast-iron screw piles that are less than half an inch in thickness. sufficient length for men to walk round, I have screwed piles by ropes, like a copper ring on the head of the iron pile and a good long timber humble like, and said to the engineer, ''I think you will agree, sir, I said to him, ''It wants a lot of experience to know when piles are not will cease work, I think, very soon?'' ''They will,'' said the engineer. ''extra'' profit string of my brain worked right, and I pointed and said, id = 21043 author = Reed, Talbot Baines title = Reginald Cruden A Tale of City Life date = keywords = Blandford; Corporation; Cruden; Durfy; Gedge; Horace; Jemima; Liverpool; London; Love; Medlock; Mrs; Reginald; Richmond; Rocket; Sam; Shanklin; Shuckleford; Street; Waterford summary = "Well," said Reginald laughing, "I can hardly fancy Horace the head of The boys walked for some time in silence; then Horace said,-"We want to see the manager," said Reginald, offended at the man''s tone, Mr Durfy mused for some time, then, turning to Reginald, he said,-"My poor boy!" she murmured; then, turning to Reginald, she said, "And "My dear boy," said Mrs Cruden, "you think far more about it than you Cruden," said the boy, "I know exactly what you''re going to say. "You know I''ll stick by you, young ''un," said Reginald; "but that won''t "Gedge is not going with you," said Reginald, keeping the boy''s arm in "Upon my word I hardly know whether I want him to," said Reginald, "By the way," said Reginald, as he started, "bring young Gedge home with "What made you think I would come?" said Reginald, looking down with id = 19802 author = Stretton, Hesba title = Cobwebs and Cables date = keywords = Alice; Canon; Clifford; Engelberg; England; Felicita; Felix; God; Hilda; Jean; London; Madame; Marlowe; Merle; Mr.; Mrs.; Nixey; Pascal; Phebe; Riversborough; Roland; Sefton summary = years old to-day; and when I''m a man I''m going to be a pastor, like "But she knows where Mr. Sefton is," answered Phebe, "and we must ask "Phebe Marlowe!" she said, her eyes brightening a little, as the fresh, "Felicita," said Madame, her voice altering a little, "where is my son "Phebe," said Felicita, in her low-toned, softly-modulated voice, always opened, though Phebe spoke to him; for he could not face old Marlowe, or "Mother," he said one day, when Roland had been gone more than a month, "Poor father!" said Phebe aloud, with a little sob. life, Felicita: you and my mother and Felix and Hilda; the old home "I should like to see to-day''s _Times_," said Felicita. "I worship my mother still," said Felix one day to Phebe, "but I feel "Canon Pascal said to me," answered Phebe, "that your noble life and the id = 29582 author = Thomson, John, active 1732 title = The Tricks of the Town: or, Ways and Means of getting Money date = keywords = Business; Company; Door; Fellow; Gentleman; House; Lady; Man; Mercer; People; Tavern; day; person summary = Hands it was done; and the Lady is teaz''d almost to death with People proper time for _setting_ them is generally soon after Seven in the assist the People, he got clear off with two or three blind old Women patience, I paid, and went to my Friend''s House, about twenty Doors Years, having laid hands on a good number of Acres, and got an Goods, to her Husband''s House, naming a very eminent Surgeon at St. _James''s_. be sure she''s in the House, for the Lady came with me in a Coach from time he comes to the House, he is sure to have the _Look_ which a the Man has not been starv''d before the time, but surviv''d to St. _Stephen_''s Day, and seen his wonderful Prediction happen and come to a good number of them, but it would give him a great deal of Trouble