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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 33515 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 95 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 2 little 2 Mrs. 2 Jack 1 look 1 illustration 1 grandmother 1 good 1 Vandeleur 1 Uncle 1 Sylvia 1 Sharley 1 Sawyer 1 Ralph 1 Queerbody 1 Queerbodies 1 Prof. 1 Nestor 1 Molly 1 Miss 1 Master 1 Mary 1 Marie 1 Lord 1 Kezia 1 Karte 1 Hobbs 1 Helena 1 Havisham 1 Harry 1 Granny 1 Gramp 1 Goldenhair 1 Godfrey 1 Fauntleroy 1 Errol 1 England 1 Ellen 1 Earl 1 Dr. 1 Dorincourt 1 Dir 1 Dick 1 Dearest 1 Chris 1 Cedric 1 Castle 1 Carlo 1 Briggs 1 Berkeley Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 445 grandmother 431 time 380 way 357 thing 348 day 335 room 333 boy 319 child 270 house 258 one 239 eye 231 hand 224 door 215 story 213 head 196 mother 196 face 177 something 177 girl 174 man 172 voice 172 grandmamma 158 people 157 morning 155 anything 153 nothing 152 gander 151 year 147 moment 139 woman 129 father 125 name 120 night 117 friend 116 life 113 place 107 course 105 home 102 word 102 mind 102 lady 99 dear 99 chair 98 heart 92 picture 88 window 88 side 87 hour 86 bed 85 sort Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2236 _ 392 Mr. 323 Ellen 240 Molly 225 Earl 219 Chris 205 Granny 203 Fauntleroy 190 Sylvia 167 Dr. 159 Jack 144 Mrs. 123 Ralph 115 Cedric 113 Mary 113 Briggs 110 Prof. 107 Lord 97 Havisham 96 Hobbs 94 Sharley 90 Kezia 87 grandmamma 79 Uncle 79 Dick 78 Sawyer 76 Aufl 75 Harry 74 Godfrey 71 Miss 70 Vandeleur 60 London 59 Cousin 58 Mit 58 Gramp 57 Helena 57 CHAPTER 55 de 54 Grandmother 51 Nestor 51 Dorincourt 50 Grandmamma 49 Carlo 48 Marie 48 Errol 46 Cosmo 45 England 42 Court 41 von 41 Dir Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5499 i 3319 it 2974 he 2569 you 2402 she 1235 me 909 him 862 they 767 we 742 her 549 them 247 us 180 myself 140 himself 116 herself 44 yourself 43 one 35 themselves 24 itself 19 ourselves 13 thee 13 his 11 hers 11 ''s 8 mine 7 yours 5 yerself 4 theirs 2 ye 2 ours 1 you''ll 1 well''--she 1 there,''you 1 tact 1 p''r''aps 1 mother,''--that 1 hisself 1 em 1 better''n 1 belinda,''they 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8660 be 3311 have 2106 say 1883 do 923 go 811 come 809 see 776 think 681 know 657 look 584 tell 550 make 448 get 387 take 362 ask 295 seem 290 feel 279 hear 261 give 252 find 245 speak 237 begin 232 want 222 leave 213 like 199 cry 196 put 188 stand 183 answer 181 call 173 remember 165 sit 162 mean 159 turn 156 reply 151 try 150 let 149 grow 148 wish 148 die 147 live 135 talk 130 run 130 forget 126 keep 121 write 116 understand 111 bring 104 open 102 send Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2522 not 1146 so 1062 little 1045 very 614 then 541 up 472 good 424 now 410 out 404 old 389 more 371 much 368 never 349 well 335 just 326 only 317 too 303 again 295 there 287 quite 276 long 261 all 260 down 259 great 259 as 246 first 234 back 225 away 222 still 216 other 211 rather 208 here 202 on 194 dear 194 always 185 even 182 young 176 ever 169 last 167 really 167 own 166 in 163 many 161 poor 161 once 150 almost 149 off 147 sure 139 nice 126 bad Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 78 good 64 least 33 most 22 bad 19 great 7 eld 6 old 5 young 5 dear 4 strong 4 nice 4 happy 4 deep 3 sweet 3 slight 3 lovely 3 early 3 cunning 3 clever 3 big 3 Most 2 strange 2 small 2 safe 2 near 2 high 2 fine 2 farth 2 faint 1 wise 1 wild 1 ugly 1 sunny 1 sorry 1 slow 1 simple 1 queer 1 pleasant 1 plain 1 low 1 loud 1 long 1 little 1 large 1 kind 1 hearty 1 hard 1 handsome 1 grave 1 gay Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 most 7 well 5 least Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/9/6/20963/20963-h/20963-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/9/6/20963/20963-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 17 _ was _ 14 _ do _ 14 _ is _ 13 _ did _ 11 _ had _ 5 _ am _ 5 _ are _ 4 _ do n''t 4 _ have _ 4 _ were _ 3 _ ai nt 3 _ want _ 3 chris did not 3 grandmother went on 2 _ be _ 2 _ did n''t 2 _ did not 2 _ has n''t 2 _ is sylvia 2 _ know _ 2 _ like _ 2 _ made up 2 _ think _ 2 children do n''t 2 children had already 2 children were so 2 door was ajar 2 earl did not 2 earl was still 2 ellen was frightened 2 ellen was not 2 ellen was very 2 eyes looked large 2 eyes were very 2 fauntleroy looked up 2 fauntleroy was not 2 grandmamma did not 2 grandmamma was not 2 grandmamma was so 2 grandmamma was very 2 grandmother did not 2 grandmother was very 2 granny did not 2 granny said gently 2 house was very 2 molly did not 2 one came out 2 one looked in 2 room was ready 2 room was very Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has no pin 1 boy was not slow 1 children were no doubt 1 chris did not at 1 chris has no father 1 chris is not easily 1 ellen saw no more 1 eyes are not ours 1 fauntleroy was not nearly 1 girls were not strangers 1 grandmamma was not quite 1 grandmother was not uneasy 1 granny did not at 1 granny made no mysteries 1 granny was not altogether 1 house is not far 1 molly did not once 1 molly said no more 1 molly was not so 1 one has no pin 1 ones did not particularly 1 things were not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 49579 author = Burnett, Frances Hodgson title = Little Lord Fauntleroy [abridged]: Für den Schulgebrauch bearbeitet date = keywords = Castle; Cedric; Dearest; Dick; Dir; Dorincourt; Dr.; Earl; England; Errol; Fauntleroy; Havisham; Hobbs; Karte; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Prof. summary = Die günstige Aufnahme, welche diese Ausgabe des _Little Lord_ bei den "I am sorry to have been obliged to leave you so long," she said to Mr. Havisham; "but a poor woman, who is in great trouble, came to see me." "Oh!" Mrs. Errol said, "that was very kind of the Earl; Cedric will be Lord Fauntleroy this morning, the next Earl of Dorincourt will think for As Cedric''s mother had said, he was a very little boy. time would lie in the small, chubby hands little Lord Fauntleroy thrust "Oh!" said Lord Fauntleroy, "perhaps you didn''t know about Dick, and the "She is my mother," said Lord Fauntleroy, in a rather low, quiet little "It''s a very beautiful place, of course," said Fauntleroy, with a little "It looks like a boy''s room," he said at last, catching his breath a "They all think that," said the Earl, looking rather black. id = 61186 author = De Vet, Charles V. title = Gramp date = keywords = Gramp summary = "Why is Gramma making mad pictures at you?" I asked Gramp. "I really did see mad pictures in Gramma''s mind," I said. "Have you ever seen pictures in anybody''s mind before?" Gramp asked. I was glad Gramp told me, because he always knows the best things to "Tell me the pictures you see in Mr. Van''s mind," Gramp whispered in my "He''s making pictures of the fishing boats coming in," I said. pictures in people''s minds meant instead of just what they looked like. He had bad pictures in his mind about taking Mr. Van''s money and I you see pictures in Gramma''s mind about her hurting me," he said. "We all make bad pictures like that, but we don''t mean them," Gramp "I told you I don''t know what you''re talking about," Gramp said. "Now I''ve had just about enough of this," Gramp said, with a big frown id = 36166 author = Hall, Edith King title = That Little Beggar date = keywords = Briggs; Chris; Godfrey; Granny; Jack; Master; Uncle; little summary = And Master Chris was naughty?" Granny said, "Go away, Briggs; I don''t want you," the little beggar remarked with Granny, and Briggs left, with a last admonitory look at the little "I want to get on your knee, my Granny," Chris said, suiting the action At this point, Granny stroked Chris''s head and said commendingly: "I wish he hadn''t died, my Granny," said the little beggar mournfully, "I think I had better teach him," the little beggar said, looking very "But there is one other question I want to ask very much," Chris said, "Come, Chris," I said laughing, "we''ll leave Granny in peace now and go "Now, look here," said Uncle Godfrey, when Chris returned with the gun, "Yes, my Chris; a few lessons, or a nice walk," Granny said, But Granny did not at once reply; she was looking at the little beggar id = 20963 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = Grandmother Dear: A Book for Boys and Girls date = keywords = Berkeley; Carlo; Jack; Marie; Mary; Miss; Molly; Mr.; Ralph; Sawyer; Sylvia; good; grandmother; little summary = "Only from London, grandmother dear," said Molly; "that isn''t very far." got hold of the wrong end of the story, Molly?" said grandmother. "Good night, grandmother dear," said Molly, in a voice which tried hard "Ralph, my boy," said grandmother, seeing that by this time Molly was "Yes," said Sylvia, "and do you know, Molly, I think I liked it better. "It isn''t, grandmother dear," said Molly, rather surprised at the turn of "Because, grandmother dear," said Molly, opening wide her eyes, "hers is "_Would_ I, grandmother dear?" said Molly, looking rather mystified. "What is the story of Marie''s apple-tree, grandmother?" said Sylvia, as "Has she been a long time with you, grandmother dear?" said Molly. "_Can''t_ you tell it to us to-night then, grandmother dear?" said Molly. "_Can''t_ you tell it to us to-night then, grandmother dear?" said Molly. "What did you like when you were little, grandmother?" said Sylvia. id = 26310 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = My New Home date = keywords = Harry; Helena; Kezia; Mr.; Mrs.; Nestor; Sharley; Vandeleur summary = Happy children are made like that, I think, and a very good thing it is Then dear little Vallie came close up to me, and said in a low voice-''My dear little girl,'' she said, ''you really must not get into the way ''So I came home to my little girl,'' said grandmamma, ''though I have ''_I_ don''t think granny looks ill at all,'' I said. ''I''m going out for a little, grandmamma,'' I said, putting my head in ''Do you really mean, grandmamma,'' I said, ''that--that you are thinking Grandmamma noticed it, I think, but she said nothing, and very soon ''No,'' said grandmamma, ''I have been thinking about it myself, for of ''Kezia,'' I said, ''I think grandmamma might have told me about the boys ''Do you think grandmamma will let me stay here a little?'' I said. would come in,'' I said aloud, ''I think I should write to grandmamma id = 48593 author = Pyle, Katharine title = As the Goose Flies date = keywords = Ellen; Goldenhair; Queerbodies; Queerbody; illustration; look summary = Ellen stood at the nursery window looking out at the gray sky and the curious little house that Ellen went nearer to look at it. The gander stayed his wings so that Ellen could look. Ellen said she did, so the gander turned in that direction. "What''s the matter, you poor little pig?" asked Ellen, looking down at As the little pig hurried in through the door, Ellen asked of the "It''s a dear little house," said Ellen. "I thought maybe the gander would carry us," said Ellen, but the white As Ellen followed the dwarf into the house she looked about her and "Who lives there?" asked Ellen, pointing to a little house she had just "Come, then," and Ellen began to run toward the house; while the gander Ellen, who heard this, looked at the gander. "Was that a parade that just went away?" asked Ellen, as the gander