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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 124477 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 John 5 Captain 4 Miss 3 God 2 time 2 french 2 english 2 Windsor 2 Sullivan 2 Revel 2 Plausible 2 Oughton 2 Nicholas 2 Newton 2 Mrs. 2 Mrs 2 Mr. 2 Madame 2 Jackson 2 Isabel 2 India 2 French 2 Forster 2 Fontanges 2 Ferguson 2 England 2 Edward 2 Drawlock 2 Dragwell 2 Castle 2 Carrington 2 Aveleyn 2 Amber 1 work 1 wind 1 volume 1 ship 1 sea 1 sail 1 look 1 know 1 good 1 day 1 come 1 chapter 1 american 1 York 1 Wetmore 1 Welsh 1 Wallingford Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1748 man 1438 time 1054 ship 945 day 797 hand 626 way 607 sir 576 vessel 549 boat 546 deck 542 father 531 sea 524 head 520 eye 506 wind 497 hour 489 water 461 nothing 455 sail 448 house 438 thing 431 lady 413 night 412 brother 408 room 404 door 399 woman 392 place 387 year 383 board 380 moment 363 mother 362 life 359 course 356 side 346 minute 335 name 333 captain 318 mind 318 face 312 morning 309 part 307 order 304 word 303 mate 290 one 287 heart 284 gentleman 277 yard 276 quarter Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3094 _ 1688 Newton 908 Mr 894 Forster 731 Anne 622 John 565 Captain 515 Bob 476 Mrs 433 Lucy 380 Miss 335 Loveday 316 Mr. 311 Nicholas 310 Marble 267 Miles 266 Isabel 260 ye 250 Fontanges 249 Mrs. 248 de 225 Festus 216 Neb 209 Old 205 God 198 Garland 191 Wallingford 187 Revel 169 Grace 159 Castle 157 Monsieur 156 English 152 Rupert 152 Man 152 Amber 144 England 144 Clawbonny 140 Mate 140 Lord 140 Jackson 139 Dawn 135 Hardinge 135 Drawlock 127 Oughton 124 Derriman 121 Windsor 114 Plausible 106 India 106 French 105 Sullivan Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9738 i 6371 he 6124 it 4929 you 3086 she 2803 we 2329 they 2079 him 2044 me 1535 her 1316 them 1099 us 478 himself 305 myself 200 herself 189 themselves 108 yourself 99 ''em 86 itself 67 one 64 mine 56 ourselves 35 yours 33 ye 31 thee 21 em 19 ours 16 ''s 14 hers 10 theirs 9 his 5 oneself 4 je 3 yourselves 3 yerself 3 oo 3 f''r 2 when--_you 2 violated,--her 2 thyself 2 th 2 où 2 on''t 2 now;--they 2 my 2 first-- 1 yew 1 ye''r 1 ye''d 1 yanks Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24892 be 9845 have 3298 do 2614 say 1705 go 1472 make 1467 see 1424 come 1382 take 1249 know 1061 think 910 get 753 look 748 find 745 give 706 leave 637 reply 596 tell 584 hear 549 pass 523 feel 482 put 475 stand 465 call 460 keep 437 bring 433 turn 405 let 402 appear 391 remain 387 return 387 receive 379 continue 360 wish 341 send 339 run 329 speak 328 ask 326 observe 310 lie 303 fall 302 follow 302 become 294 seem 292 carry 291 enter 288 walk 283 cry 280 bear 270 suppose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5367 not 1765 so 1621 up 1455 now 1311 more 1177 then 1176 very 1090 as 1019 well 1010 out 983 good 947 little 899 much 873 old 823 other 823 down 777 first 757 long 753 only 734 own 726 again 722 never 716 soon 643 away 595 off 585 most 582 last 571 here 536 great 525 young 517 few 507 too 507 just 492 still 472 there 448 many 444 even 439 same 435 in 402 all 394 on 384 dear 369 enough 358 such 340 quite 340 ever 328 however 316 about 313 back 304 once Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 184 most 180 good 137 least 34 great 27 slight 27 bad 23 eld 19 near 19 Most 17 dear 12 young 11 sou''-w 11 small 10 high 10 early 8 wise 8 deep 7 large 7 happy 6 old 6 j 5 proud 5 low 5 fine 4 late 4 heavy 3 sweet 3 smart 3 simple 3 short 3 nor''-w 3 nice 3 narrow 3 mean 3 hot 3 hard 3 bright 2 wish!--I''ll 2 true 2 sure 2 strong 2 southernmost 2 soon 2 soft 2 rich 2 rare 2 plain 2 once:--how 2 new 2 keen Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 401 most 21 well 20 least 1 result;--the 1 nor''-nor''-west 1 lest 1 highest 1 hard 1 firmly-- 1 ablest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ do _ 10 _ was _ 8 anne did not 7 boat was again 6 _ is _ 6 newton took leave 4 _ had _ 4 _ know _ 4 _ see _ 4 bob did not 4 forster had not 4 forster was happy 4 john did not 4 newton did not 4 newton had now 4 newton was much 4 newton was not 4 newton was so 4 ships were not 4 wind is foul 4 wind was fresh 3 _ did _ 3 _ did n''t 3 _ say _ 3 _ thinking _ 3 anne had not 3 anne was now 3 boat coming alongside 3 boat was soon 3 bob was so 3 heads were so 3 men are so 3 nothing was visible 3 sails were as 3 ship was now 2 _ am _ 2 _ are _ 2 _ are dead 2 _ are so 2 _ be most 2 _ did not 2 _ get up 2 _ going down 2 _ has none 2 _ hear _ 2 _ is fully 2 _ is happy 2 _ is not 2 _ making _ 2 _ taken _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ did not _ 2 boat was not alongside 2 father made no objection 2 forster thought no more 2 head is not right 2 hour is not very 2 man is not so 2 newton had no glass 2 newton made no answer 2 newton made no reply 2 newton was not sorry 2 ships were not men 2 things are not so 2 wind had not yet 1 _ are not rich 1 anne did not much 1 anne said no more 1 bob was no hurt 1 bob was no more 1 bob was not leal 1 father had not yet 1 hand was no sooner 1 john was not concerned 1 man has no business 1 man has no money 1 men are not very 1 ship was not sufficiently 1 time were not rare 1 water was not remarkably A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31497 author = Bone, David W. (David William) title = The Brassbounder: A Tale of the Sea date = keywords = Bay; Captain; Channel; Dutchman; Frisco; Horn; Jock; John; Jones; Man; Martin; Mate; Mister; Munro; Old; Sir; Welsh; day; sail; sea; ship; time; wind; work summary = It seemed a long time before the Old Man saw the ''smooth'' he was the old man), and went aft, leaving Munro and me to weather Martin''s "I wos at the wheel one day, an'' I ''eard th'' Old Man an'' th'' Mate "Where''s she from, Mister?" said the Old Man to the Mate who stood with "Good business for us, anyway," said the Old Man, and told the Mate to all be righted before the Old Man comes on deck. The boats were a long time gone, and the Old Man was growing impatient, the Old Man and the Mate shouting cross orders, the boat swinging "A hand t'' th'' wheel, here," roars the Old Man. Martin looks up ''No time was to be lost,'' as the Old Man had said. "It''s no use talking," the Old Man had said when he and the Mate were id = 11243 author = Cooper, James Fenimore title = Miles Wallingford Sequel to "Afloat and Ashore" date = keywords = Captain; Chloe; Clawbonny; Dawn; Drewett; English; French; God; Grace; Hardinge; John; Kitty; Lucy; Marble; Masser; Miles; Miss; Moses; Mr.; Mrs.; Neb; New; Rupert; Sennit; Speedy; Tassel; Van; Wallingford; Wetmore; York; american summary = appeared to think much of Lucy, and very little of my poor sister. all on deck so busy, that it was some little time ere I saw Lucy again. The old woman gazed at Marble like one who scarce know what to make of times like these, when not a day passes that something good does not offer "I think that is little probable, Miles," answered Grace, who lived and But feelings of this nature could not long absorb a man like Mr. Hardinge, who soon regained as much of the appearance of composure as it "Miles," Lucy said, after a long and thoughtful pause, "it is not good for long and thoughtful look at the actual state of things--"On the whole, Mr. Marble, it may be well to take in our light sails, haul our wind, and let "Marble, my dear fellow, why, how fare you?" said our old ship-mate, id = 2864 author = Hardy, Thomas title = The Trumpet-Major date = keywords = Anne; Benjy; Bob; Budmouth; Captain; Cripplestraw; David; Derriman; Festus; French; Garland; John; Johnson; King; Loveday; Matilda; Miller; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Overcombe; Robert; Uncle; come; good; know; look; time summary = ''Do you think we ought to go, mother?'' said Anne slowly, and looking at trumpet-major went and put his head outside, and said, ''All right--coming ''Here''s my little girl,'' said Mrs. Garland, and the trumpet-major looked ''You often come this way?'' said Festus to Anne rather before he had said, as John Loveday, tired of looking for Anne at the stile, passed the ''''Tis old Mr. Derriman come home!'' said Anne. Anne and Loveday said yes, and Festus ran back to the house, followed by ''Nonsense, Anne,'' said Mrs. Garland, who had come near, and smiled John Loveday at the same time wished his father and Bob good-night, and went to his father as soon as they got home, and begged him to get Mrs. Loveday to tell Anne the true reason of John''s objection to Miss Johnson ''William,'' said Mrs. Loveday to the miller when Anne was gone and Bob had id = 12959 author = Marryat, Frederick title = Newton Forster date = keywords = Amber; Aveleyn; Berecroft; Captain; Carrington; Castle; Dragwell; Drawlock; Edward; England; Ferguson; Fontanges; Forster; God; India; Isabel; Jackson; John; Madame; Miss; Mrs; Newton; Nicholas; Oughton; Plausible; Ramsden; Revel; Sullivan; Windsor; chapter; english; french summary = Newton Forster sailed in his vessel with a cargo to be delivered at the Newton had quitted the room where Mrs Forster lay in a deplorable "Why, I have been mad for a long time," replied Mrs Forster; "the "I think our little guns will soon reach her," observed Newton. "My dear father," replied Newton, taking his hand, "did not you receive away Newton Forster appeared to be the least likely to "lead to "Not upon legal business--humph!" replied Mr Forster, eyeing Newton. "Good-bye," replied John, without looking up; and Newton with his father, "Like most young ladies, sir, a little giddy," replied Isabel. "Between the two, sir," observed Newton, handing Captain Drawlock his "With pleasure, my friend," replied Newton, taking the old man''s hand, "It''s rather awkward, Newton," said Mr John Forster, about ten days "What do you think of her spars, Forster?" said Captain Oughton to Newton, id = 21557 author = Marryat, Frederick title = Newton Forster; Or, The Merchant Service date = keywords = Amber; Aveleyn; Captain; Carrington; Castle; Doctor; Dragwell; Drawlock; Edward; England; Ferguson; Fontanges; Forster; God; India; Isabel; Jackson; John; Madame; Miss; Monsieur; Mrs; Newton; Nicholas; Oughton; Plausible; Revel; Sullivan; Windsor; english; french; volume summary = Newton Forster, or the Merchant Service, by Captain Marryat. NEWTON FORSTER, OR THE MERCHANT SERVICE, BY CAPTAIN FREDERICK MARRYAT. Newton had quitted the room where Mrs Forster lay in a deplorable In the mean time Newton Forster had made every despatch, and returned to "And in the mean time my poor father may starve," said Newton, with a "I think our little guns will soon reach her," observed Newton. "My dear father," replied Newton, taking his hand, "did not you receive away Newton Forster appeared to be the least likely to "lead to "Like most young ladies, sir, a little giddy," replied Isabel. "Between the two, sir," observed Newton, handing Captain Drawlock his time below, Captain Drawlock would hand over to Newton''s charge any one "With pleasure, my friend," replied Newton, taking the old man''s hand, "It''s rather awkward, Newton," said Mr John Forster, about ten days