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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 42173 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 9 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 3 Mrs. 2 Stevens 2 Reno 2 Nevada 2 Jim 2 Dick 1 skeezuck 1 man 1 look 1 little 1 illustration 1 glory 1 come 1 York 1 West 1 Webber 1 Water 1 Walter 1 Wal 1 Virginia 1 Van 1 University 1 Uncle 1 Tynia 1 Truckee 1 Townsend 1 Tom 1 Toady 1 Tintoretto 1 Thomas 1 Tchassen 1 Tad 1 Tabitha 1 Suvy 1 Susie 1 State 1 Stacy 1 Spring 1 Silver 1 Sergeant 1 Senator 1 Searle 1 Rosslyn 1 Rider 1 Reade 1 Professor 1 Pony 1 Parry 1 Parky Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1402 man 894 time 663 eye 661 hand 630 boy 629 day 616 way 436 camp 401 foot 399 thing 398 face 371 place 371 horse 339 head 330 something 323 night 322 water 317 door 307 nothing 301 girl 296 one 291 moment 288 claim 281 desert 265 side 265 heart 258 house 257 voice 252 life 252 hour 250 woman 248 anything 246 mother 240 room 228 pony 220 arm 219 money 216 word 209 minute 208 case 206 mountain 206 guide 204 morning 202 work 198 gold 198 child 195 year 187 friend 185 mile 183 town Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 741 Van 741 Tom 690 Jim 614 Bill 501 _ 466 Mr. 452 Mrs. 394 Tad 357 Beth 327 Marvin 325 Tabitha 311 Jones 308 Thomas 307 Nevada 290 Reno 280 Reade 261 Harry 259 Dick 248 Bostwick 247 Millie 213 Stacy 205 Ned 192 Miss 169 Hammond 164 Alf 151 Billiard 142 Toady 142 Professor 141 Parry 138 Ferrers 137 Hazelton 136 Gloriana 134 Gage 132 Keno 132 Glen 126 Tchassen 122 Chunky 120 McCoppet 115 Doc 114 Searle 110 Bud 99 Townsend 97 Walter 97 Stevens 93 Susie 92 Gettysburg 91 Harper 88 City 87 Dunlop 87 Dolph Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6706 he 5608 i 5505 you 4409 it 2468 she 2041 him 1878 we 1829 they 1012 me 931 them 793 her 448 us 406 himself 140 herself 103 myself 102 ''em 89 one 73 itself 69 yourself 69 themselves 59 ''s 25 ourselves 24 mine 23 yours 21 em 15 his 12 hers 11 ours 5 you''re 5 theirs 5 oneself 4 i''m 3 you''ll 3 hisself 2 ye 1 whispered,-- 1 wash---- 1 thinkin 1 them----- 1 thee 1 talkee 1 tact 1 shovelmen 1 o 1 it---- 1 ay 1 '' Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15311 be 6491 have 3311 do 1886 go 1854 say 1418 come 1382 get 1204 know 1084 see 1059 make 998 take 813 look 722 think 619 find 553 want 543 tell 497 give 452 ask 426 turn 411 leave 397 stand 374 answer 357 hear 347 feel 345 let 341 seem 331 begin 318 call 313 try 305 keep 301 hold 295 put 294 run 272 mean 268 start 266 bring 249 follow 236 ride 231 sit 223 wait 223 laugh 209 cry 208 reply 198 fall 190 work 190 lose 184 smile 184 add 179 show 179 return Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4480 not 1434 up 1048 then 1042 so 1012 out 983 little 887 here 872 now 829 more 702 down 668 back 601 good 568 only 549 just 528 away 521 old 514 there 509 as 492 all 483 again 470 well 459 long 457 too 438 right 436 never 430 other 428 much 401 first 387 on 385 once 377 off 364 very 350 even 340 in 315 young 311 over 307 still 300 last 287 great 282 enough 277 far 250 ever 247 few 235 big 231 own 230 soon 218 almost 217 most 209 new 204 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 101 good 92 least 57 most 17 bad 16 near 15 slight 14 late 11 fine 11 brief 11 big 10 great 9 high 8 small 8 j 7 young 6 simple 6 Most 5 mere 5 large 4 keen 4 hot 4 happy 4 farth 4 close 3 southw 3 new 3 long 3 handsome 3 green 3 faint 3 easy 3 early 3 deep 2 wild 2 warm 2 sweet 2 sure 2 soft 2 rough 2 pure 2 old 2 low 2 lively 2 grand 2 dark 2 cosy 2 bright 1 weighty 1 vile 1 tough Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 160 most 19 least 6 well 1 near 1 laziest 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/2/0/3/3/20332/20332-h/20332-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/3/3/20332/20332-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 bill did not 8 _ is _ 8 tom went on 5 _ are _ 4 bill looked up 4 marvin went on 4 something was wrong 4 tom went back 3 _ got _ 3 beth had not 3 bill went on 3 days went by 3 jim was not 3 jones did not 3 marvin had not 3 night came on 3 night is dark 3 van was instantly 2 _ did _ 2 _ do n''t 2 _ was _ 2 beth knew not 2 beth was pale 2 beth was soon 2 beth was still 2 bill had not 2 bill was not 2 bill was there 2 boys do n''t 2 door was suddenly 2 eyes took on 2 eyes were red 2 eyes were still 2 face took on 2 horse ''s back 2 jim had once 2 jim was there 2 marvin came up 2 marvin did not 2 men did not 2 men do n''t 2 men were presently 2 tad did not 2 time is precious 2 tom called back 2 tom did n''t 2 van came down 2 van had not 2 van was about 2 van was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 beth had not yet 1 bill had no intention 1 bill had no one 1 bill said no more 1 bill was not especially 1 boy made no reply 1 days was not popular 1 jim had not apparently 1 jim was not yet 1 jones made no response 1 men did not often 1 men made no concealment 1 night had not fully 1 place was no different 1 tad did not even 1 tad had no thought 1 tad made no reply 1 van made no comment 1 van made no complaint 1 van made no reply A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 34280 author = Bacon, Frank title = Lightnin'' After the Play of the Same Name by Winchell Smith and Frank Bacon date = keywords = Bill; Blodgett; Davis; Hammond; Harper; John; Jones; Lightnin; Marvin; Millie; Mr.; Mrs.; Nevada; Thomas; Townsend summary = half-shut eyes, and Marvin would smile to himself and turn his thoughts Mrs. Jones and Millie greeted Townsend cordially and the girl placed a Townsend flushed; he looked appealingly at Mrs. Jones and Millie, his "Come now, you mustn''t mind me," said Thomas, Millie adding her word to "Yes--please set a place for him, Millie!" And Mrs. Jones hastily disappeared into the kitchen to avoid the girl''s rippling he saw Raymond Thomas standing in the center of the room, holding Mrs. Jones in conversation. "I think it is only fair to tell you, Mrs. Jones," Thomas was saying, a "All right, Hammond," said Thomas, deliberately turning his back on old Mrs. Jones and Millie stood by, bewildered, while Thomas, with In the mean time Everett Hammond, escorting Mrs. Jones and Millie Marvin looked him in the eye and said, slowly: At the judge''s question, Thomas got up and looked down upon Marvin, in id = 59458 author = Cox, Irving E. title = The Earthman date = keywords = Briggan; Earth; Sergeant; Tchassen; Tynia summary = Tchassen saw the ship spin out of control as the beam went haywire. "There may be other survivors, Captain Tchassen; they''ll need your "The supply rocket," Sergeant Briggan said slowly, "couldn''t have done When Tchassen reached the communications pillbox, the Sergeant, the Tchassen tapped on Drein''s shoulder and ordered him to stop the sedan. Tchassen couldn''t be sure Drein was not an Earthman; nor, on the other Tynia volunteered to go with Drein; Tchassen felt a pang of envy and Tchassen''s hand shot out and caught the Sergeant''s shoulder. He saw Tchassen, Tynia and the Sergeant standing together. meant that either Briggan or Tynia could be Earth natives. Tchassen wasted very little time looking for the weapon Tynia had lost. Tchassen and Briggan had found food and clothing. Tynia gasped; only then did Tchassen realize what Briggan''s questions Tynia or Briggan might be Earth So Tynia had told the truth, Tchassen thought; she id = 51396 author = Evans, Dean title = Not a Creature Was Stirring date = keywords = Gannett; God; Reno; look summary = Gannett planted his big feet wide apart and frowned sourly around and Gannett didn''t know why the sun looked sick, and he didn''t know why the He went up the steps two at a time, banged through the swinging doors Gannett put both hands flat on the bar and swallowed hard. Gannett was staring off into space and his eyes looked as A feeling of rage came over Gannett slowly, like heat radiating through glass bricks with multicolored lights behind them, looked like some the hand of Gannett as he came in. Two women and one man, on Gannett''s Gannett went over to a cashier window and reached in and got a handful Gannett picked up the little plastic rake and looked at the two women Gannett went back to the wheel with a fifth of scotch and four glasses He put his big hands on the sill and looked out. id = 12777 author = Hancock, H. Irving (Harrie Irving) title = The Young Engineers in Nevada; Or, Seeking Fortune on the Turn of a Pick date = keywords = Alf; Dolph; Drew; Dunlop; Ferrers; Gage; Harry; Hazelton; Jim; Mr.; Reade; Tom summary = "You see," smiled Tom, turning to the boy, "just what men think "Alf," smiled Tom, laying a hand gently on the boy''s shoulder, the fortunes of Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, through all their Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton had gone back east to the good old "What did the men want to know about?" pressed Tom, the look in his the claim is worth anything better than a bad name," laughed Tom. The crucibles were in the furnace now, and a hot flame going. "Come on, Harry!" Tom called, starting away under the trees. jeered Hazelton, "Gage, you know a little more about Tom Reade, now, "My man''s going to sleep, now, Harry!" Tom called, and drove in Harry looked half eagerly at Reade, but Tom shook his head. "Take a good look at the stuff, Harry," called Tom, as soon as Tom, Harry and Jim id = 20332 author = MacArthur, Ruth Brown title = Tabitha''s Vacation date = keywords = Billiard; Bow; Catt; Gloriana; Inez; Irene; Janie; Mercedes; Myra; Rosslyn; Silver; Susie; Tabitha; Toady; Uncle; glory summary = warbled Tabitha Catt, pausing on the doorstep of her little desert home "All right," agreed Glory, who, like Tabitha, was wondering if the seen,--Mercedes, Susie, Inez, Irene, Rosslyn and Janie, all seated on a Impulsively, Tabitha started for the house with Gloriana at her heels; much like the frank, outspoken, bungling Tabitha of old, that Mrs. McKittrick could not refrain from laughing. Tabitha instantly silenced their mirth, and turning to the boy, said Tabitha slipped away to the little room which she shared with Gloriana Susie looked at Tabitha with incredulous eyes, then glanced Toady''s face fell and Billiard looked rebellious, seeing which, Tabitha "Do you think Tabitha knows we did it?" cried Toady in alarm. You and Toady and Irene let Susie and Inez and "Yes," said Billiard mournfully, taking the reins from Tabitha''s hands It was the first time either Tabitha or Gloriana had been on the ocean; id = 16608 author = Mighels, Philip Verrill title = Bruvver Jim''s Baby date = keywords = Bone; Borealis; Christmas; Dennihan; Doc; Field; Jim; Keno; Miss; Parky; Tintoretto; Wal; Webber; come; little; skeezuck summary = "I snum!" said Jim, wiping the wondering little face in a sort of fever "Jim, you said the little feller kin "Why not wait till Christmas and git good and ready?" said Jim. The argument was that Christmas was something more than four weeks away. "Good-bye fer just at present, little Skeezucks," said Field, and, "What would little Skeezucks like old brother Jim to make for "I want my little boy," said Jim. "Jim," he said, "what about poor little Skeezucks? gone, old Jim, little Skeezucks, and the pup were alone. "Don''t you like him any more?" said Jim. A weak little nod was the answer. "Poor little man ain''t well," said Jim, in a gentle way of soothing. "I could bring myself to anything," said Jim, "if only my little boy Old Jim, little Skeezucks, the pup, and Miss Doc, with Mrs. Stowe, came id = 16629 author = Mighels, Philip Verrill title = The Furnace of Gold date = keywords = Algy; Barger; Beth; Bostwick; Buren; Cayuse; Culver; Dave; Dick; Elsa; Gettysburg; Glen; Goldite; Kent; Laughing; Lawrence; Mr.; Mrs.; Napoleon; Searle; Suvy; Van; Water; man summary = "Just for ducks," said Van. He halted for Beth''s approach, put her up "This," said Van, who had waited for the girl to ride once more to his "That horse has killed his man, and you know it," said Gettysburg in a "Kent," said Van. To himself it was "Beth Kent" he was saying. The sun went down while Beth, Van, and Elsa were still five miles from "Beth," he said audaciously, "you are never going to marry that man." Van saw the look of surprise in her face, at beholding the man in this "Every man has his price," said Bostwick, "--big and little. "Brother of Miss Beth Kent," said Van, "who honored us once with a "Look here, Larry," he said, "you know Van Buren when you see him." an outcome such as this, and Bostwick--Beth knew that Barger was Van''s "You see," said Van, "_you_ are my ''Laughing Water'' claim--and just id = 31556 author = Otis, James title = Dick in the Desert date = keywords = Antelope; Dick; Margie; Mason; Mr.; Spring; Stevens summary = Young Dick''s mother gave words to her anxiety several times; but the His mother and Margie had entered the wagon when night was fully come, "I won''t go so far but that I can see the wagon," Dick said, kissing trying to follow father''s trail," Dick said, after looking around in Dick was hungry, but scorned to let his mother know it, and tried to learn to do early in life, Dick saw his father''s rifle twenty feet or "You''re a good boy, Dick," she said, as he stooped over to kiss her; Frightened though he was, Dick knew water was the one thing his father Dick took up his father''s rifle,--his own he had left in the wagon when "The boy has got grit; but the old man must have been way off to come as "Bob Mason," said to Dick, as he laid his hand on the boy''s id = 36423 author = Patchin, Frank Gee title = The Pony Rider Boys in the Alkali; Or, Finding a Key to the Desert Maze date = keywords = Boys; Bud; Chunky; Ned; Parry; Pony; Professor; Rider; Stacy; Stevens; Tad; Walter summary = Diamond Range," replied Tom Parry, who was to guide the Pony Rider Boys not?" questioned Tad. The guide, for the moment lost in thought, finally turned to the lad "Now, will you be good, Ned Rector?" laughed Tad. Even the stolid face of the guide relaxed in a broad smile of amusement. "Salting down horse is not my business," laughed Ned. All at once the pony whirled, heading down the mountain side with a "He''s on the desert!" shouted Tad. Laughing and shouting words of encouragement to the fat boy, the Pony "Well, good night, boys," called the Professor, as he saw the lads The animals have stopped howling," advised Tad. Ned and Stacy ran lightly to their tents, returning quickly with their "There comes the sun now," said Ned. The boys drew out their watches, having halted the ponies and turned id = 5951 author = Stratton, Lilyan title = Reno — a Book of Short Stories and Information date = keywords = California; City; County; Helen; Judge; Lake; Mr.; Mrs.; Nevada; New; Reno; Senator; State; Truckee; University; Virginia; West; York; illustration summary = Washoe County Court House, Reno, Nevada Reno, as well as all Nevada, is proud of the world-famous Wingfield present time Reno enjoys full terminal rates or better for goods Reno the coming year in a new building to house its exchange. Mrs. Smith did her little six months in Reno and the world''s sympathy Fancy my astonishment when ten years later I met the stately Mrs. Beuland in the lobby of my hotel in Reno. keep their divorces from coming to Reno-Nevada does not want them. Nevada law is more moral than that of New York, which permits divorce to your reasons for coming to Reno, Nevada. Q. Where have you been residing since you came to Reno, Nevada? of the city of Reno, County of Washoe, State of the liberal divorce laws of the State: his beautiful home, charming and most modern European hotel in Reno, or in the State of Nevada, for