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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 43466 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Odontoglossum 3 Mr. 3 Cattleya 2 plant 2 orchid 2 flower 2 Sander 2 Indians 2 Europe 1 year 1 white 1 petal 1 lip 1 illustration 1 house 1 find 1 cypripedium 1 crimson 1 Veitch 1 Sphagnum 1 Sam 1 STORY 1 SEPALS 1 Roezl 1 Roebelin 1 Reichenbach 1 PSEUDOBULBS 1 PETALS 1 Oversluys 1 ODONTOGLOSSUM 1 Mrs. 1 Messrs. 1 Measures 1 Loelia 1 Lindley 1 Lindl 1 Laelia 1 LIP 1 L.-C. 1 England 1 Cypripedium 1 Cyp 1 Cura 1 Catt 1 COLUMN 1 Brazil 1 Arnold Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 764 plant 498 flower 434 orchid 410 house 353 specie 347 year 326 time 309 petal 253 lip 249 man 232 × 231 day 194 variety 180 case 173 crimson 170 foot 161 colour 158 inch 151 sepal 145 base 141 side 140 line 137 purple 134 hybrid 127 form 122 spot 120 part 120 collector 119 growth 117 way 117 leave 116 collection 114 thing 112 other 111 name 109 water 109 course 104 season 104 genus 104 condition 103 pot 103 fact 102 dorsal 100 number 99 one 94 specimen 94 edge 92 end 90 length 89 seed Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4305 _ 456 Mr. 239 O. 188 C. 187 Cattleya 167 Catt 156 crimson 144 L. 138 × 130 Odontoglossum 125 Orchids 107 ODONTOGLOSSUM 99 Orchid 93 Sander 80 Roezl 76 Messrs. 76 M. 63 Indians 61 Europe 60 D. 56 white 56 Sir 56 Oversluys 54 brown 52 Cypripedium 50 lip 49 New 48 Roebelin 48 Reichenbach 45 H. 45 Cattleyas 44 St. 44 Lindley 42 Odontoglossums 42 Arnold 41 Measures 41 America 40 Oncidium 39 maroon 39 Veitch 39 V. 39 Sam 39 R. 39 L.-C. 38 Lindl 38 Dendrobium 36 Sanderiana 36 Mexico 36 England 35 Mrs. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1932 it 1017 he 962 they 904 i 489 them 351 we 278 him 205 you 114 me 87 himself 73 us 61 one 61 itself 49 themselves 29 she 28 myself 11 her 6 ourselves 5 yourself 5 mine 4 his 4 herself 4 ''em 3 yours 2 theirs 2 ''s 1 ours 1 l.-c. Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6587 be 1898 have 418 do 366 grow 332 find 289 make 243 see 223 say 216 give 197 know 194 take 174 come 167 go 152 show 138 flower 134 bear 121 get 113 send 111 keep 109 use 104 bring 103 think 101 seem 99 hear 98 tell 97 look 93 rise 92 stand 92 require 91 reach 91 leave 90 call 87 discover 81 place 79 return 78 receive 78 pass 77 carry 77 appear 75 collect 73 spot 73 follow 72 prove 72 begin 71 form 70 become 69 understand 69 describe 68 set 68 pay Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1212 not 551 so 497 very 427 more 386 white 341 long 304 other 272 many 266 large 265 such 258 most 241 good 240 only 233 small 230 great 218 up 217 few 210 well 210 much 205 same 198 as 193 green 188 first 188 even 180 also 178 now 170 yellow 167 out 165 here 158 however 154 little 144 then 141 fine 133 broad 131 still 125 less 125 dark 118 perhaps 116 cool 113 almost 112 too 112 never 111 down 110 high 108 there 106 enough 105 pale 102 yet 99 new 96 far Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 86 good 82 least 62 most 27 large 26 fine 17 high 17 bright 15 great 14 early 14 deep 13 lovely 12 rare 11 Most 10 old 10 late 9 near 8 small 8 showy 8 grand 7 slight 7 rich 7 pure 7 hot 7 faint 7 cool 7 common 6 strong 6 lively 6 dull 6 big 5 easy 5 dark 4 soft 4 safe 4 handsome 4 bad 3 warm 3 tall 3 happy 2 wide 2 trusty 2 strange 2 stately 2 slender 2 shrewd 2 poor 2 pale 2 noble 2 new 2 mean Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 196 most 20 well 11 least 2 largest 1 safest 1 latest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 species are _ 4 _ is not 4 lip is white 4 orchid is so 3 _ are fine 3 _ is almost 3 colour is white 3 lip does not 3 orchids are not 3 petals are white 3 plant is not 3 years went by 2 _ are not 2 _ does not 2 _ is so 2 flowers are not 2 flowers are usually 2 lip is crimson 2 lip is very 2 orchids do not 2 plant has ever 2 plant is still 2 plants are also 2 plants are not 2 species are not 2 species are white 2 time went by 2 time went on 1 _ are almost 1 _ are bright 1 _ are exceedingly 1 _ are free 1 _ are ovate 1 _ are pretty 1 _ are shorter 1 _ are south 1 _ bearing generally 1 _ being evergreen 1 _ being none 1 _ gets serious 1 _ grows _ 1 _ grows well 1 _ grows wild 1 _ had more 1 _ has almost 1 _ has also 1 _ has deep 1 _ has perfume 1 _ has racemes 1 _ has rosy Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had no adventures 1 _ has no bristle 1 _ is not only 1 _ is not pure 1 _ is not scarlet 1 _ was not quite 1 colour is not showy 1 flowers are not satisfactory 1 orchid are not equally 1 orchids are not so 1 petals was no evidence 1 plant have no stronger 1 plant is not always 1 plant is not uncommon 1 plants are not common 1 plants does not readily 1 species are not really 1 species are not so 1 time is not distant 1 varieties are not readily A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 46281 author = Bateman, Jas. (James) title = A Monograph of Odontoglossum date = keywords = COLUMN; LIP; Lindl; Lindley; Mr.; ODONTOGLOSSUM; PETALS; PSEUDOBULBS; Reichenbach; SEPALS; illustration summary = _Odontoglossum nebulosum_ flowers at different seasons of the year, always PSEUDOBULBS _nearly two inches long, ovate, bearing one, than the leaves, bearing from 5 to 10 flowers, usually from 2 to 3 inches This _Odontoglossum_ was originally introduced from Mexico by the late Mr. Barker, of Birmingham, after whose gardener it was named by Dr. Lindley. ODONTOGLOSSUM PESCATOREI, _Lindley, in Paxton''s Flower Garden, iii. flower-stems half an inch thick and fully 6 feet high. [Illustration: Plant of _Odontoglossum grande_ in the collection of Joshua ODONTOGLOSSUM NÆVIUM, _Lindley in Paxton''s Flower Garden_, i. PSEUDOBULBS _about 3 inches long, ovate-oblong, compressed, 2-leaved, This remarkable _Odontoglossum_ was long since discovered in New Granada by The figure is taken from a plant that flowered in Mr. Day''s collection in plant that flowered with me,--but still larger varieties have since coolest part of the "cool Orchid-house," in which it grows and flowers very Nearly all the species flower during the id = 17155 author = Boyle, Frederick title = About Orchids: A Chat date = keywords = Brazil; Cattleya; Cyp; Cypripedium; England; Europe; Indians; Loelia; Messrs.; Mr.; Odontoglossum; Sander; Veitch; find; flower; orchid; plant; year summary = Stevens'' Auction Rooms one day to buy bulbs, I saw a _Cattleya Mossiæ_, "Could I often get an established plant of _Cattleya Mossiæ_ in flower hundred to two thousand species and varieties of orchid in cultivation; fancy of man conceives, have a striking instance in the case of orchids. But such species of orchids as a poor man would think volume that many people utterly ignorant of orchids grow this plant in magnificent species, tall and stately, bearing a great golden flower, against an experiment in orchid-growing because these plants suffer these plants in realms which have their own native orchids. surprised to see such a little plant bearing two flowers on a spike, possess a plant may have Cattleyas in bloom the whole year round--and species that flower from the current year''s growth before resting. Kent, one single plant only; and it has flowered several times. id = 32205 author = Boyle, Frederick title = The Woodlands Orchids, Described and Illustrated With Stories of Orchid-Collecting date = keywords = Arnold; Catt; Cattleya; Cura; Europe; Indians; L.-C.; Laelia; Measures; Mr.; Mrs.; Odontoglossum; Oversluys; Roebelin; Roezl; STORY; Sam; Sander; crimson; cypripedium; lip; petal; white summary = Planting this long word deep and firm in his memory Mr. Measures hurried to the house, looked it out in the multitudinous books on Sander._--A round flower, very dark rose; sepals and petals The crimson lip is edged with a delicate white line, as are white, narrow, square, and deepest crimson, the lip that of Catt. _Hallii._--Crimson-purple sepals--petals darker; the lip approaches petals rose, lined with crimson on either side of the white midrib. inches across; the colour of sepal and petal mauve, with a crimson-purple _Lily Measures._--A very large flower, white of sepal and petal. varieties--purplish rose of sepal and petal, lip large, yellow in the sepals and petals and its superb crimson lip all outlined with white. and petals of a pretty rose colour, lip orange; a flower charming in aureum), bearing white sepals, petals and lip tipped with rosy purple, purple; the white-edged dorsal lined and the petals finely spotted with a id = 33593 author = O''Brien, James title = Orchids date = keywords = Cattleya; Odontoglossum; Sphagnum; flower; house; orchid; plant summary = introduction of the hot-water system of heating Orchid houses, a method the commencement of the Cool-house or Odontoglossum Section of Orchid general collection of plants is desired, that house should be heated as cool-house Orchids can be grown successfully, if arranged in the cooler would say that species which are usually regarded as warm-house Orchids growth, Orchid pans made in the same way as the flower-pot are found to watering-pot and syringe are necessary things in the Orchid house, but of growth from the seedling stage to the flowering plant, there is but epiphytal Orchids, and they should be grown in the intermediate house. The plants should be potted as terrestrial Orchids. These are cool-house plants, and should be potted in Pot the plants in ordinary material for epiphytal Orchids, and All the species are cool-house plants, needing cultivation in Adapting ordinary plant-house for Orchid culture, 19 Plant-houses adapted for Orchids, 12-19