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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 56526 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 States 9 New 8 York 7 United 7 Europe 7 England 6 american 5 man 4 people 4 european 4 West 4 South 4 President 4 Mr. 4 English 3 thing 3 like 3 great 3 french 3 english 3 Washington 3 Chicago 2 little 2 good 2 german 2 country 2 british 2 Wilson 2 War 2 Spirit 2 North 2 London 2 Lincoln 2 John 2 God 2 Franklin 2 France 2 Englishman 2 East 2 Congress 2 Boston 2 Avenue 2 Americans 2 America 1 work 1 woman 1 way 1 war 1 sense 1 russian Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1921 man 951 people 802 thing 704 life 691 time 587 country 556 way 534 day 522 world 437 sense 429 year 414 war 409 fact 398 something 359 place 357 city 354 one 345 power 343 spirit 326 woman 323 mind 319 child 317 nation 312 word 300 part 294 book 289 state 289 point 284 work 284 hand 270 nothing 265 literature 262 side 257 house 250 line 250 history 248 self 246 class 244 sort 244 school 237 p. 231 order 231 business 229 name 213 story 212 idea 210 town 209 question 209 quality 206 right Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2886 _ 1053 America 731 New 671 States 573 United 557 England 515 York 483 Mr. 435 Americans 430 American 252 English 238 Europe 236 Boston 224 Director 221 Herr 199 Washington 193 Englishman 185 Sam 171 Uncle 162 President 153 France 146 Chicago 139 State 133 Union 130 Wilson 122 London 116 South 113 West 112 God 109 Spirit 104 John 98 War 93 James 90 House 86 Lincoln 84 North 81 Great 80 World 78 Frau 78 Directorin 74 Troy 74 Philadelphia 74 British 73 Old 73 Germany 69 Indians 68 East 68 Congress 65 Mrs. 65 July Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5827 it 4114 i 3619 he 2665 they 1876 we 1173 them 972 him 777 me 768 you 540 she 485 us 307 himself 241 one 220 themselves 207 itself 184 her 116 myself 60 ourselves 44 herself 16 yourself 15 mine 10 ours 7 theirs 7 his 6 ''em 5 thee 4 ''s 2 yours 2 ye 2 oneself 1 thyself 1 pp 1 hisself 1 hers 1 hands;--they 1 au Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19822 be 5996 have 1967 do 1211 make 1132 say 888 see 844 come 788 go 735 find 733 know 679 take 635 seem 574 think 549 give 445 call 371 get 353 feel 344 look 335 write 331 become 288 tell 269 meet 251 follow 249 leave 247 stand 245 believe 244 mean 235 speak 231 show 231 put 228 begin 227 understand 221 pass 210 use 209 bring 206 live 204 hear 197 grow 196 ask 190 carry 189 lead 186 hold 185 want 181 talk 180 try 179 keep 167 turn 167 let 166 bear 165 read Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3767 not 1749 american 1509 more 1249 so 1019 great 834 very 834 other 801 most 793 only 773 even 734 well 688 as 667 good 642 much 596 many 578 little 566 own 557 up 531 first 499 now 481 out 480 same 452 old 452 long 443 such 428 new 420 still 419 then 401 too 382 far 381 never 372 english 345 large 344 perhaps 344 less 338 rather 332 also 329 true 324 here 323 social 322 certain 320 national 319 almost 315 all 305 just 299 high 293 always 277 really 276 often 258 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 238 good 212 least 190 most 61 great 49 bad 35 high 33 large 27 late 27 Most 24 fine 15 strong 14 rich 13 slight 12 near 11 old 11 early 10 small 9 noble 9 low 7 topmost 7 deep 6 new 6 j 5 simple 5 pure 5 big 4 young 4 wise 4 wild 4 strange 4 narrow 4 manif 4 hard 4 easy 4 crude 4 broad 3 weak 3 true 3 tiny 3 sharp 3 severe 3 keen 3 hot 3 heavy 3 hardy 3 happy 3 full 3 dear 3 common 3 cheap Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 611 most 32 least 22 well 1 youngest 1 lest 1 eldest 1 begins:-- 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 america is not 6 things are not 5 _ are _ 5 people are not 4 _ is _ 4 america does not 4 america has not 4 american is not 4 americans did not 4 americans do not 4 spirit is not 4 states did not 3 _ is not 3 america is apt 3 america is more 3 america is still 3 american does not 3 americans are very 3 england is not 3 men are equal 3 men are not 3 thing is true 3 world has ever 2 _ do _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ stand sam 2 _ tells _ 2 _ was _ 2 america is rather 2 america is really 2 america was still 2 american is certainly 2 americans had not 2 americans have not 2 americans were not 2 country was not 2 day was calm 2 england is english 2 england is right 2 life are as 2 life is not 2 life is worth 2 man called john 2 man does not 2 man is always 2 man is more 2 men are as 2 one comes out 2 one does not 2 one goes west Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not only 1 _ had no ornaments 1 _ is no more 1 _ is not fully 1 _ is not necessarily 1 america has not so 1 america has not yet 1 america is no longer 1 america is not alone 1 america is not altogether 1 america is not equality 1 america is not illiterate 1 america were not redskins 1 american is not exactly 1 american is not punctual 1 american is not silent 1 americans have no notion 1 americans have no private 1 americans have no share 1 americans have no souls 1 americans have no such 1 americans have not really 1 americans were not quite 1 cities are not nearly 1 city is not as 1 countries are not unlimited 1 country was not only 1 country was not yet 1 days is not well 1 england does not even 1 england had not instantly 1 england have no effect 1 england have no right 1 england is not entirely 1 england is not well 1 england was not so 1 man has no right 1 man is no more 1 men are not efficient 1 men are not only 1 men were not even 1 one is not always 1 one is not much 1 people are not only 1 people are not somebody 1 people are not sure 1 people do not quite 1 people had no interest 1 people were not only 1 people were not quite A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 27250 author = Chesterton, G. K. (Gilbert Keith) title = What I Saw in America date = keywords = Dickens; England; Englishman; Europe; God; Ireland; Jefferson; Jews; Lincoln; Middle; Mr.; New; North; President; Republic; South; States; West; York; american; english; french; great; irish; like; people; sense; thing summary = American Constitution is a thing like the Spanish Inquisition. thing unless you think it out.'' It is not to deny that American Ireland Irish; the great mass of men taking certain national traditions In other words, the democratic ideal of countries like America, know a little about journalism, American and English, would have That sort of thing is the bad side of American literature; but I think few Americans realise how much English children situation like that of modern America, and especially the Middle West. American citizens do at least so far love freedom as to like to have difference in the conversation of American and English business men arises, I think, from certain much deeper things in the American which of New York, which is by no means the same thing as America, is that of so national as humour; and many things, like many people, can be id = 39950 author = Gibbs, Philip title = People of Destiny: Americans as I saw them at Home and Abroad date = keywords = Avenue; England; Europe; France; League; New; President; States; United; Wilson; York; american; english; european; french; german; man; people; war summary = the Great White Way, do not reveal the real soul of New York. heart of New York business life and saw its types in their natural of action the American people take in the new world that is now being of the United States; and I visited the War College and met American life of the American people more essentially than we know it in England, The United States of America has a new meaning in the world, and has The American people as a whole did truly enter into war in the spirit of people in the United States at the time between armistice and peace. the United States American people did not forget, even in their people of the United States are least likely to behave in that way, The people of the United States know what their men did in know and like the American people. id = 1864 author = Lodge, Henry Cabot title = Hero Tales from American History date = keywords = Clark; Confederates; Congress; England; General; Indians; Jackson; New; North; South; States; Union; United; War; Washington; american; british; great; man summary = to be a great nation whenever her young men cease to possess energy, States, all men turned to Washington to stand at the head of the new country through a great civil war, was then able to build up a new and a great force of Indians from the lakes, Boone commanded the left wing. hundred fighting men-British regulars, French partizans, and Indians. army of over seven thousand men, and accompanied by a large force of a neutral port, when four British war-vessels, a ship of the line, a men of iron courage and great bodily powers, skilled in the use of their Hyde gave the orders to left face and forward and the Maine men marched regiment just in time to see a long line of men in gray rise from behind great ironclad rams as the men of the Union did in building the monitors id = 45717 author = Matthews, Albert title = Uncle Sam date = keywords = Albany; Centinel; Columbian; July; New; Sam; Samuel; States; Troy; Uncle; United; Wilson; York summary = In Yankee, Brother Jonathan, and Uncle Sam, we Americans have perhaps The story connecting Uncle Sam with Samuel Wilson first Uncle Sam is first found in September, 1813, or when the war was half Paulding did not employ the term Uncle Sam.[76] But in a work published appeared in several Albany, Troy, and New York newspapers in 1812 and one of them connected Samuel Wilson with Uncle Sam. It is true that the Uncle Sam story is found in two Troy papers, but in each case it while the earliest known example of Uncle Sam is from a Troy paper, but Does the history of the term Uncle Sam, now given for the first time, perhaps with _Uncle Sam_, a popular name for the United States" Merriam--The Original ''Uncle Sam'' House." It is in part as follows: of the term ''Uncle Sam,'' as applied to the United States. id = 17648 author = Muirhead, James F. (James Fullarton) title = The Land of Contrasts: A Briton''s View of His American Kin date = keywords = Boston; Bourget; Britain; Bull; Chicago; England; Englishman; Europe; George; Great; Howells; James; John; London; Miss; Mr.; New; States; United; Washington; West; White; World; York; american; british; country; english; european; find; good; like; little; way; woman summary = that Americans lead us in countless little points of household comfort of England are at least as good as the best Americans, but the general Compared to the appearance of the American girl in books written about American man so far has mainly been to subdue a new continent to human of New York and other American cities is often conspicuously superior seldom in evidence in the United States--she whom the American people in New York are not characteristic of American civilisation. There is one English critic of American life whose opinion cannot be the other hand I am bound to state that I have known American men of American in New York; but this is not the first impression, and first Unlike those of many other American cities, the best houses of New As I have said, there is no lack of good Americanism in New York. The large American way of looking at id = 29952 author = Perry, Bliss title = The American Mind The E. T. Earl Lectures date = keywords = Emerson; England; English; Europe; Franklin; Hawthorne; John; Lincoln; Mr.; New; States; United; Virginia; War; West; Whitman; York; american; european; humor; like; literature; man; national summary = American life; the zest of the explorer, the humor of the pioneer; the Scholars like Mr. Henry Adams or Mr. James Ford Rhodes will explain to us American life embedded in the American character is one phase of the national mind. Our endeavor to state the general characteristics of the American mind counterplay of these new forces that the American literature of the American history, however, has been marked by certain great romantic are intimations of what American men and women would have liked to do individual is all the more true of the national sense of humor. afford a new national field for certain types of humor and satire. American humor which ridicules the inhabitants of certain states. that the pioneers of American national humor, the creators of what we the history of American provincial and political satire, like Seba American art and literature must keep pace with this socialization of id = 41898 author = Steiner, Edward Alfred title = Introducing the American Spirit date = keywords = California; Chicago; Director; East; English; Europe; Frau; God; Herr; Lake; Mohonk; New; Old; Spirit; States; United; York; american; country; german; russian summary = _The Herr Director Meets the American Spirit_ The Herr Director and the Frau Directorin greeted all the good Lord''s The Herr Director and the Frau Directorin, like all Europeans who can The Herr Director and the Frau Directorin wished to go to church on At Lake Mohonk the Herr Director met business men employing thousands of "Take us out of New York," the Herr Director said after a wearing day of On the whole, the Herr Director liked the looks of the boys he saw, and reveals the American Spirit at its best, that the Herr Director embodied The Herr Director and the Frau Directorin caught the spirit of When the Herr Director had said good-bye to the hundred or more people "As restless as the American people," quoth the Herr Director. Since landing in New York the Herr Director and the Frau Directorin had id = 41862 author = Van Dyke, Henry title = The Spirit of America date = keywords = America; Americans; Congress; Constitution; England; English; Europe; France; Franklin; New; President; South; Spirit; States; United; West; York; french; good; life; man; people; power; thing; work summary = in the life and character of the American people. The soul of a people has made the American nation. quite different language: "We, the people of the United States, ... reflection, this new life began to be self-conscious and to feel its way public schools, where the children of these people of the Old World are ways in which this soul of the American people has expressed itself in good ideal for granted: _The New American Type_. American people, _the spirit of self-reliance_. American political life, and that it is probably a good thing to have nation, State, and town, each typical American is a person who likes to development of will-power in the American people: and that is its coming into the attitude of the American people toward great wealth, "What then is the American," he asks, "this new man? In this, and in all other things of like nature, we Americans look into id = 56484 author = Wells, H. G. (Herbert George) title = The Future in America: A Search After Realities date = keywords = America; Americans; Avenue; Boston; Chicago; East; England; English; Europe; House; Island; London; Mr.; New; Niagara; President; Roosevelt; South; States; Washington; York; european; great; little; man; mind; people; thing summary = of thing, I believed, was going on for a time, interesting personally mind of the idea that in writing of the Future in America I''m going to States are a people of great individual force of will, the clear strong When one talks to an American of his national purpose he seems a little as that "America is a great country, sir," that its future is gigantic American thing; it is the same process anywhere--only in America there rate in the State of New York at that time for a year--as I could earn little naked boys, free Americans, work for Mr. Borden, the New York Great Britain as in America, but Americans talk more and louder than bringing into being a new state--a feat no people in the world has yet meets all sorts of Boston people, one visits the State-House; it''s all these fine people more alive to present and future things, a little