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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 71216 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 german 3 Mr. 3 Aunt 2 Uncle 2 Mrs. 2 Miss 1 yes 1 water 1 sugar 1 recipe 1 pudding 1 place 1 open 1 milk 1 look 1 illustration 1 flour 1 egg 1 dutch 1 cup 1 cream 1 colony 1 butter 1 british 1 bread 1 bake 1 add 1 York 1 Ursul 1 Twist 1 Twinklers 1 Tussie 1 Tiel 1 Theodore 1 Taylor 1 São 1 Symford 1 Sul 1 Sternberg 1 Sibylla 1 Shuttleworth 1 Seymour 1 Schultz 1 Schmidt 1 Sarah 1 Santa 1 Sack 1 Rose 1 Robin 1 Rio Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1213 cup 1028 time 864 man 835 twist 775 day 756 water 734 flour 695 egg 679 cake 670 place 662 sugar 589 butter 585 thing 575 hand 558 eye 526 milk 496 minute 466 house 461 way 456 one 455 hour 440 bread 407 moment 406 salt 404 girl 396 tablespoonful 389 face 385 night 379 mother 365 nothing 361 head 360 room 360 door 345 pan 326 top 319 year 319 life 311 word 309 morning 308 cream 300 pound 300 friend 291 side 289 woman 280 twin 278 oven 268 lady 267 part 266 people 262 heart Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2588 _ 1256 Anna 1047 Mr. 640 Aunt 637 Felicitas 589 Rose 565 Priscilla 537 Mrs. 462 Mary 458 Lambert 375 Sarah 282 Fritzing 270 Mr 256 Catherine 221 Bilton 200 Conrad 186 Uncle 186 Tiel 176 German 172 God 170 Miss 151 Germans 151 Ella 148 Robin 143 Ursul 141 Shuttleworth 138 Annalise 133 Kennedy 129 Tussie 129 Lady 128 Arthur 124 Morrison 117 Schmidt 114 Drost 113 Footnote 112 England 106 English 100 Twinklers 100 New 95 Professor 92 f. 91 Germany 89 Alice 86 Burnett 85 John 84 Sack 84 Herkimer 84 Cake 82 Fritz 82 America Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5419 it 5311 i 5166 he 4304 she 3806 you 2473 they 1568 him 1486 them 1428 her 1172 we 992 me 374 us 321 himself 261 herself 227 one 138 myself 114 themselves 66 itself 52 yourself 28 ourselves 28 his 26 hers 21 yours 20 mine 19 ''s 15 theirs 12 ''em 10 thee 10 ours 10 oneself 4 yourselves 4 you''ll 3 ye 3 fry 3 em 2 i''m 1 you''re 1 wonder-- 1 together-- 1 thyself 1 thirst,--she 1 that,--"empty 1 spot-- 1 speech-- 1 she''ll 1 knew,--they 1 hush"--she 1 hat''ll 1 fears,--for 1 ein Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 17668 be 7396 have 3254 say 2954 do 1422 go 1201 make 1171 come 1145 see 1103 add 1079 know 964 think 915 look 911 get 840 take 696 use 690 stand 631 give 584 tell 494 bake 490 ask 484 seem 459 serve 454 leave 452 put 442 find 440 call 437 turn 427 feel 410 beat 389 keep 374 let 360 hear 339 sit 339 begin 337 want 335 place 323 follow 300 cut 294 cook 289 boil 285 like 283 speak 282 become 277 mix 270 allow 259 rise 245 talk 241 cover 231 try 230 pour Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4497 not 1713 so 1507 then 1190 very 993 up 942 well 924 little 917 more 892 out 831 now 722 small 694 good 672 old 643 only 635 as 626 other 619 again 589 long 555 much 537 too 534 hot 520 together 520 never 497 first 491 just 490 young 476 down 473 quite 471 here 469 there 456 away 444 about 441 back 430 great 424 last 415 in 413 still 408 all 388 also 387 large 382 german 374 even 362 most 355 on 351 cold 347 once 338 always 323 enough 308 many 306 ever Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 139 least 102 good 78 most 22 near 22 bad 18 great 16 late 14 eld 13 dear 12 small 12 old 12 high 8 young 8 fine 6 strong 6 simple 6 large 6 farth 6 Most 5 safe 5 noble 5 faint 4 sweet 4 quick 4 innermost 4 friendly 4 big 3 wise 3 soft 3 pleasant 3 nice 3 loud 3 happy 3 easy 3 early 3 deep 3 common 3 cheap 3 bright 3 bl 3 Least 2 white 2 warm 2 strange 2 short 2 sharp 2 rich 2 odd 2 manif 2 low Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 284 most 33 least 19 well 1 merest 1 easiest 1 coldest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/4/13545/13545-h/13545-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/4/13545/13545-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/germanpioneersta01spie Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ is _ 10 twist did n''t 7 _ are _ 6 _ do n''t 6 felicitas did n''t 6 twist was n''t 4 _ have _ 4 floured bake board 4 one does not 4 one was n''t 4 priscilla had not 4 rose did n''t 4 twist had never 3 _ is n''t 3 eyes were red 3 felicitas had n''t 3 lambert did not 3 one does n''t 3 priscilla did not 3 twist had n''t 3 twist had not 2 _ does _ 2 _ is not 2 _ was _ 2 aunt was busily 2 cakes are less 2 cakes are very 2 cakes keep well 2 eggs are cheap 2 eggs were then 2 felicitas felt sure 2 felicitas was n''t 2 felicitas was so 2 felicitas was very 2 lambert had not 2 lambert was not 2 lambert was silent 2 man had ever 2 one beaten egg 2 one did n''t 2 one has n''t 2 one is sure 2 priscilla got up 2 priscilla was silent 2 priscilla went back 2 twist got up 2 twist was quite 2 twist was so 1 _ am _ 1 _ am trapiche Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 priscilla made no objection 2 twist had not yet 1 days are not so 1 house has no master-- 1 lambert had not improperly 1 lambert was not present 1 lambert was not sure 1 man had no idea 1 man is not superior 1 mary was not naturally 1 milk is not plentiful 1 one did not easily 1 one does not lightly 1 one is not hungry 1 ones are not available 1 priscilla took no notice 1 twist had no business 1 twist had no more 1 twist had no words 1 water are no longer 1 water did not first A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33996 author = Clouston, J. Storer (Joseph Storer) title = The Spy in Black date = keywords = Ashington; Belke; Blacklock; Burnett; Craigie; Drummond; Eileen; Holland; Miss; Mrs; Taylor; Tiel; german; look summary = "Good day, sir!" said the stranger affably, as the minister came up to "As like as not," said he; "he just wished to know when the man of the "Of course," he said, "I''m a business man, Mr Burnett, and I can tell "Looks like it, sir," said the chauffeur. "I''d like to know more about this," said Mr Drummond with an air of "Are these," said Tiel, indicating his respectable-looking suit of "Well," said Tiel, "I think this suggests something, Belke." "Let me introduce you to my sister, Miss Burnett," said Tiel. "I had almost forgotten," said Tiel, "that I once thought and felt like "Yes," said Miss Burnett promptly and with a little smile, "my brother "You explain things very happily, Eileen," said Tiel. as I looked at Tiel, I said to myself, ''There, but for the grace of Then he looked at Eileen, and for a moment said nothing. id = 41132 author = Le Queux, William title = The Bomb-Makers Being Some Curious Records Concerning the Craft and Cunning of Theodore Drost, an Enemy Alien in London, Together with Certain Revelations Regarding His Daughter Ella date = keywords = Count; Drost; Ella; Kennedy; London; Ortmann; Park; Seymour; Theodore; british; dutch; german summary = The man who spoke, the grey-haired Dutch pastor, father of Ella Drost, On that wintry night, Ella Drost--known to the theatre-going public as As they stood in her father''s large, well-furnished dining-room, Ella Ella heard the two men descend, making but little noise, and a moment be told, Ella and her lover had watched carefully, and Kennedy--who had "I wonder what''s up!" whispered Kennedy to Ella. "That fellow Kennedy is _here_!--and with my girl Ella!" gasped old "Your girl Ella is still very active, and that fellow Kennedy seems Kennedy was beside Ella some distance away, watching breathlessly. "Ella, dear," said her father, handing her the vase, "I wish you could munition-girl was Ella Drost, and the man her lover, Seymour Kennedy. It was to meet Kennedy that Ella had motored down from London that day. elusive Ortmann called upon old Theodore Drost at the dark house at Wood--stood Kennedy and Ella. id = 17361 author = Schappelle, Benjamin Franklin title = The German Element in Brazil Colonies and Dialect date = keywords = Alegre; Brazil; Brazilian; Catharina; Dr.; Footnote; Grande; High; Paulo; Porto; Portuguese; Rio; Santa; Sul; São; colony; german summary = The following is a résumé of the German colonies[5] in Brazil and a The states of Brazil which are important so far as German colonization In this state is located the first German colony founded in Brazil. Recent state colonies where Germans form a considerable part of the In the state of São Paulo the Germans form to-day an urban rather than a Excepting the older colonies first mentioned, the German element in São free from dialect than in any other German colony in Brazil. Brusque is to-day the most important German colony in Santa Catharina. [Footnote 7: A comparatively very small number of Germans are located in Damit war der Handel abgeschlossen, und die beiden Compadres aus, der mit einem Tupiano[98] und einem Zebruno[99] bespannt ist, [Footnote 46: This rule holds for the Portuguese, but not for the German multe, multieren, orsament, pikarette, rekerieren, rossieren, sellieren, id = 34583 author = Spielhagen, Friedrich title = The German Pioneers: A Tale of the Mohawk date = keywords = Adam; Aunt; Catherine; Conrad; Ditmar; French; God; Herkimer; Indians; Lambert; Mr.; Richard; Sternberg; Ursul summary = "I would like to stay a little longer," said Lambert, hanging back. Lambert turned from the ship, which by this time had come quite near, "My name is Lambert Sternberg, from Canada Creek," said the young man. "You must not speak so, Lambert Sternberg," said Catherine. "I must look after my horse," said Lambert, "and after the rest of the "I will look for Lambert," said Catherine, and tried to pass Conrad to "Like my Aunt Ursul," said Lambert laughing. "I, too, this time," said Lambert, "but it came from up the creek. "God bless you, aunt," said Lambert, extending his hand to his old "Surely you have set his head right, aunt?" said Lambert. Catherine turned to go, Lambert came around the house. "It is well," said Lambert, as he took the hand of Catherine, standing "Indeed, you look like a man," said Aunt Ursul contemptuously, turning "Lambert is right," said Aunt Ursul. id = 13545 author = Thomas, Edith May Bertels title = Mary at the Farm and Book of Recipes Compiled during Her Visit among the "Pennsylvania Germans" date = keywords = Aunt; Bucks; Cake; County; Frau; John; Landis; Mary; Old; Professor; Ralph; Sarah; Schmidt; Sibylla; Uncle; add; bake; bread; butter; cream; cup; egg; flour; german; illustration; milk; place; pudding; recipe; sugar; water summary = Her Aunt Sarah, when baking pies one day, said to her, "Look, Mary, sugar, 1 cake of yeast; when dissolved, add 1-1/2 cups of white bread the grated potato the quart of boiling water, add salt and sugar, cook placed a cupful of it in a bowl and added the egg, sugar, butter, soda flour, 2 tablespoonfuls of boiling water and butter size of an egg, Place the flour, salt, sugar, butter, lard and yeast cake, dissolved Sift together flour, salt and baking powder, sugar, and add 1/2 cup of Sift flour and baking powder in a bowl; add 1 tablespoonful of sugar sugar, 1 tablespoonful of butter, 1 egg, 2 cups of boiling water was small half cup of cold milk, 1 tablespoonful butter, yolk of 1 egg, brown, stir in a large tablespoonful of flour, add 1-1/2 cups of hot flour and baking powder; lastly add the cup of boiling hot milk; id = 13141 author = Von Arnim, Elizabeth title = The Princess Priscilla''s Fortnight date = keywords = Annalise; Baker; Creeper; Dawson; Fritzing; Grand; Jones; Kunitz; Lady; Morrison; Mr.; Mrs.; Neumann; Princess; Priscilla; Robin; Schultz; Shuttleworth; Symford; Tussie summary = said Priscilla, laying her hand with a stroking little movement on his "Oh I know--" said Priscilla quickly, faintly flushing, "it''s a thing "She''s a very dirty soul," said Robin; and Priscilla''s eyes flashed "It''s a very pretty name, I think," said Priscilla, looking pleased. "Why, you know things must go through Dawson," said Lady Shuttleworth "My dear," she said, holding Priscilla''s hand, "I''ve come to make "It''s true niceness," said Priscilla, smiling down at the little old "I don''t know," said Lady Shuttleworth, who looked extremely "I''m going to do this often," said Priscilla, looking up at him with a "Sir," said Fritzing--he never called Robin young man, as he did "Dear Fritzi," said Priscilla looking at him with love and admiration, "And look how comfortable my cottage seems," said Priscilla, "directly "Oh," said Priscilla, turning away her head and shutting her eyes for id = 14646 author = Von Arnim, Elizabeth title = Christopher and Columbus date = keywords = Alice; America; Anna; Arthur; Aunt; Bilton; Christopher; Clark; Edith; England; Felicitas; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Ridding; Rose; Sack; Twinklers; Twist; Uncle; York; german; open; yes summary = "Then," said Anna-Rose, glancing at that part of Mr. Twist''s head where "And as long as one is as kind as Mr. Twist," said Anna-Rose; but "I wish Mr. Twist would come," said Anna-Rose uneasily, looking in the "He _is_ being familiar," said Anna-Rose to Mr. Twist, turning very red "Now I just wonder where you get all your long words from," said Mr. Twist soothingly; and Anna-Rose laughed, and there was only one dimple "We want Mr. Twist," said Anna-Rose, as soon as she could speak. "We''ve come to see Mr. Twist," said Anna-Rose. "So that it really is _very_ surprising," said Anna-Felicitas to Mr. Twist, "that you didn''t tell your mother about us." have lots of time," Anna-Rose had said to Mr. Twist as the car moved "We''re going out a moment to speak to Mr. Twist," Anna-Rose then said, "Anna-Rose," said Mr. Twist.