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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 103206 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Nile 3 Arabs 3 Africa 2 man 2 Zanzibar 2 Kamrasi 2 Grant 2 Bombay 1 king 1 cataract 1 boat 1 White 1 Watuta 1 Warsingali 1 Wanguana 1 Wakungu 1 Wahuma 1 Waganda 1 Usui 1 Unyoro 1 Ujiji 1 Uganda 1 Turks 1 Tokrooris 1 Tanganyika 1 Taher 1 Suwarora 1 Sumunter 1 Sultan 1 Speke 1 Soudan 1 Somali 1 Sherrif 1 Sheikh 1 Sera 1 Saat 1 Rumanika 1 Petherick 1 Musa 1 Mtesa 1 Maula 1 Manua 1 Mahomet 1 Mahamed 1 Lumeresi 1 Lieutenant 1 Lake 1 Kidi 1 Khartoum 1 Kazé Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2107 man 1056 king 916 day 818 country 743 time 538 way 534 river 500 place 462 people 425 water 404 head 398 woman 368 hand 356 order 342 mile 333 lake 327 side 317 one 313 ground 311 village 309 hill 304 chief 303 camp 300 party 300 palace 294 foot 288 gun 281 night 280 officer 277 boat 277 bead 271 morning 269 animal 268 cow 262 cloth 258 tree 250 nothing 238 land 237 present 234 slave 226 elephant 220 thing 219 journey 213 wife 209 year 205 manner 194 yard 188 road 188 number 187 line Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 397 Kamrasi 357 Bombay 342 Nile 293 Arabs 268 Grant 265 Uganda 179 Mtesa 177 Rumanika 170 _ 152 Zanzibar 151 Baraka 149 Waganda 145 Africa 142 Unyoro 139 Karague 136 hut 135 N''yanza 123 Gani 118 Bana 113 Burton 112 Musa 105 Gondokoro 105 Captain 102 march 99 Suwarora 93 Maula 92 Wakungu 86 Aden 81 Wahuma 80 Speke 80 Sheikh 80 England 78 Petherick 74 Somali 73 Lumeresi 70 Mahamed 69 Wanguana 69 Kaze 67 Mahomet 66 Budja 64 Sultan 64 Manua 63 Kamraviona 63 Abban 62 K''yengo 61 Turks 60 Usui 60 Sera 60 Kidi 60 Khartoum Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6580 i 3906 he 2863 it 2812 we 2694 they 2036 me 1963 him 1562 them 1292 us 623 you 419 she 294 her 286 himself 252 myself 214 themselves 74 one 64 ourselves 39 itself 36 herself 21 mine 15 yourself 13 theirs 11 his 10 ours 5 yours 4 yourselves 1 ya 1 thee 1 speke_.--"where 1 my 1 ay 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13757 be 5831 have 1431 do 1413 say 1148 give 1141 see 1102 go 974 take 945 come 820 make 773 send 727 find 552 leave 522 tell 516 bring 513 know 466 get 449 call 434 think 399 arrive 396 return 394 hear 387 wish 381 keep 378 follow 340 carry 337 look 322 show 287 ask 274 turn 262 order 261 reach 257 appear 254 pass 250 pay 250 beg 248 lie 241 sit 240 receive 229 shoot 225 become 214 try 213 feel 209 wait 208 walk 206 run 205 stand 203 live 202 start 201 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2575 not 1170 so 1015 then 936 now 767 up 751 more 721 great 676 very 659 only 637 as 537 other 533 well 530 first 526 again 521 much 519 here 500 out 482 good 460 off 452 large 445 same 437 little 409 long 402 once 396 most 373 away 362 down 352 many 351 small 350 such 346 about 343 never 327 on 316 there 304 also 294 few 288 soon 288 however 277 back 274 in 268 own 268 far 266 last 263 high 261 old 260 still 246 too 241 next 241 even 232 ever Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 127 good 76 great 59 most 45 least 25 slight 21 bad 19 high 18 large 14 eld 11 near 10 Most 9 strong 9 small 8 fine 7 rich 6 l 4 low 4 farth 4 big 3 weak 3 warm 3 old 3 grand 3 early 3 common 2 young 2 sure 2 strange 2 southernmost 2 smart 2 sesamum 2 rude 2 rough 2 narrow 2 hot 2 honest 2 dense 2 cheap 1 wise 1 wild 1 ugly 1 true 1 thin 1 thick 1 straight 1 stiff 1 sleek 1 simple 1 short 1 sad Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 337 most 13 least 12 well 2 near 1 youngest 1 biggest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 king did not 4 men had just 4 men were all 3 country was so 3 day was far 3 day was now 3 king had not 3 king was ready 3 king was very 3 men came in 3 men had now 3 men were absent 3 men were very 3 place was alive 2 bombay had not 2 country was now 2 country was open 2 country was rich 2 kamrasi was afraid 2 king was most 2 king was now 2 king was out 2 men had never 2 men were not 2 men were now 2 men were ready 2 one was able 2 people do not 2 people had just 2 people were very 2 river was navigable 2 river was not 2 time had now 2 water found here 2 water was so 2 women do not 1 arabs are creatures 1 arabs are especially 1 arabs are invariably 1 arabs are nearly 1 arabs are not 1 arabs are tawny 1 arabs are unchanged 1 arabs are very 1 arabs did not 1 arabs do not 1 arabs give grand 1 arabs had not 1 arabs had only 1 arabs had seldom Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 arabs are not much 1 arabs had no hostile 1 arabs had no relations 1 arabs had not only 1 arabs have not only 1 camp was not far 1 chief was not aware 1 country has no king 1 king was not ready 1 lake was no other 1 man had no rich 1 men are not so 1 men have no children 1 men was not distinctly 1 people having no higher 1 people were not over 1 place was no concern 1 river had not only 1 river was not as 1 river was not far 1 villages are not large 1 waters have not power A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 3233 author = Baker, Samuel White, Sir title = In the Heart of Africa date = keywords = Abou; Africa; Arabs; Atbara; CHAPTER; God; Gondokoro; Grant; Ibrahim; Jali; Kamrasi; Khartoum; Mahomet; Nile; Saat; Sherrif; Soudan; Speke; Taher; Tokrooris; Turks; White; man summary = but the great event had occurred; the river had arrived "like a thief in Thus was the great river at work upon our arrival on its bank at the arms, head, legs, hands, appeared like a confused mass of dislocation; forward past the huge body, I fired the left-hand barrel at an elephant miles distant, to engage men, and to procure a slave in place of old Mahomet returned, accompanied by a large party of Hamran Arabs, these Hamran Arabs; the horse and man appeared to be one animal, and Some of our men, who had followed the runaway horses, shortly returned camel, men and others were engaged in cutting up the dead elephants, the On the following morning I sent ten of my men with a party of Ibrahim''s a few men to the bank of the river where we had landed the day before, id = 32995 author = Jackson, Louis title = Our Caughnawagas in Egypt a narrative of what was seen and accomplished by the contingent of North American Indian voyageurs who led the British boat Expedition for the Relief of Khartoum up the Cataracts of the Nile. date = keywords = Alleyne; Col; Dal; Nile; boat; cataract summary = about half an inch of mud off our faces with Nile river water, went to Nile river water of good taste but muddy and we generally left it following morning were ordered to take the light boats up the cataract We walked back the three miles took another boat and tried the channel officers taking a boat each of different numbers, reached Sarras about 5 the river with the lesser current, the boats being such good travellers mile wide, and full of large rocks between which the water came down Dal cataract is said to be five miles long. the river, there being no place for the men to stand and pull, the water well as the cataracts, the sailing qualities of the boats were all Placing a captain in each boat we started, but were charge with my Iroquois in passing boats up the Dal cataract, until the id = 3284 author = Speke, John Hanning title = The Discovery of the Source of the Nile date = keywords = Africa; Arabs; Bana; Baraka; Bombay; Budja; England; Gani; Grant; Kamrasi; Kamraviona; Karague; Kaze; Kidi; Lumeresi; Mahamed; Manua; Maula; Mtesa; Musa; Nile; Petherick; Rumanika; Sera; Suwarora; Uganda; Unyoro; Usui; Waganda; Wahuma; Wakungu; Wanguana; Watuta; Zanzibar; king summary = Having gone to work again, I found that Sheikh Said had brought ten men, slave for each, and told Sheikh said to look out for some men at once, As nearly all the men had now returned, Grant and I spent New Year''s Day men, this time really provoked, said they would fight it out;--a king To do royal honours to the king of this charming land, I ordered my men out of the lake, and said, if I liked to ask the king''s leave to visit even Bombay, should come near me; for the king had caused my men to your dinner." My men n''yanzigged--the king walked away, giving orders Bombay did not return within four days, Kamrasi would send other men men, who came with Bombay, said they would escort us to their country, king''s orders for escorting us to Gani; but now they sent the men, the id = 8417 author = Speke, John Hanning title = What Led to the Discovery of the Source of the Nile date = keywords = A.M.; Abban; Aden; Africa; Arabs; Beluches; Berbera; Bombay; Bunder; Burton; Captain; Dulbahantas; English; Gori; Habr; India; Kazé; Lake; Lieutenant; Nile; Sheikh; Somali; Sultan; Sumunter; Tanganyika; Ujiji; Warsingali; Zanzibar; man summary = country--a large tract of land lying due south of Aden, and separated winds two days, during which time I went on shore and paid my respects me to return; they said the sultan was on his way, and would arrive in the interior journey to the great lake, Captain Burton bethought arrival, came down the hill of which this island is formed, in great succeeding sunny day, and, making good our time, reached the old tree On coming up the lake, we travelled the first half up the east coast, the time in taking notes from the travelled Arabs of all the countries fortunate that the sultan was a good man, and was present at the time the place a day or two on my return from the Lake, as they expressed Mansur has all this time been living, like the slaves of the country,