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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 193317 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 7 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 roman 3 Rome 3 Indians 2 time 2 history 2 South 2 North 2 New 2 Mexico 2 Islands 2 Iroquois 2 Great 2 Europe 2 American 2 Africa 1 water 1 tribe 1 stage 1 spanish 1 marriage 1 large 1 jurisprudence 1 greek 1 gentile 1 gen 1 form 1 family 1 english 1 class 1 big 1 Zeitschr 1 York 1 Years 1 Williams 1 Western 1 Westermarck 1 West 1 Wales 1 Voyage 1 Victoria 1 Veda 1 Turcoman 1 Tribes 1 Travels 1 Tongans 1 Tierra 1 Testamentary 1 Testament 1 Tacitus 1 Tables Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 7683 p. 2970 man 2356 op 1674 law 1438 person 1344 footnote 1327 sqq 1313 time 1300 people 1266 case 1237 woman 1136 tribe 999 child 889 death 866 life 862 family 847 history 812 slave 793 right 722 duty 713 part 709 custom 701 animal 695 punishment 689 vol 673 fact 657 act 651 idea 645 rule 633 property 620 form 620 day 591 wife 590 god 580 place 576 father 572 power 546 hand 533 blood 532 marriage 513 society 498 state 494 kind 492 country 487 sacrifice 485 savage 485 body 466 food 460 war 452 instance Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 51945 _ 7410 Footnote 3324 i. 3238 ii 2846 sq 2825 . 2537 cit 1087 London 808 pp 741 de 735 Cf 693 iii 600 vol 578 Law 559 Indians 511 New 461 Ibid 460 Africa 448 von 426 Jour 404 South 393 Mr. 371 India 363 J. 359 des 350 Laws 349 God 344 Die 337 North 334 De 332 iv 316 Central 316 American 310 la 289 Indian 279 Tribes 276 Travels 272 Australia 267 Idem 263 Soc 263 England 256 et 256 America 252 Religion 251 god 247 St. 247 Paris 239 Inst 239 Anthr 233 Islands Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8463 it 4228 he 3886 they 2190 we 2147 them 1571 him 1143 i 672 himself 550 themselves 498 itself 427 us 378 you 319 she 223 her 204 me 96 one 89 ourselves 59 herself 21 thee 20 myself 16 theirs 11 oneself 9 yourself 9 ours 9 his 6 mine 3 ye 3 writes:--"they 2 yours 2 write:--"plus 2 thyself 2 ii 2 afd 1 þe 1 wade,-- 1 them--_argr 1 them,--nails 1 states:--"they 1 sacred--"they 1 pleads:--"i 1 observes:--"they 1 mistaken,[9 1 is:--if 1 indians:--"they 1 igloolik:--"gratitude 1 hv]ammurabi 1 hers 1 heaven;[172 1 forth[79]--who 1 ein Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 34379 be 8299 have 2257 do 1536 say 1295 make 1202 see 1120 take 1014 give 948 regard 937 accord 804 become 799 find 734 kill 702 seem 658 call 643 consider 637 know 517 punish 513 eat 504 hold 494 speak 471 come 453 suppose 451 believe 437 go 433 live 433 die 420 use 417 commit 414 observe 414 appear 370 belong 364 tell 364 bring 361 allow 355 follow 348 look 341 form 339 think 336 show 335 quote 332 leave 317 pass 316 keep 315 put 308 offer 306 bear 305 remain 301 exist 300 require Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5695 not 2124 other 2107 only 1783 more 1580 so 1537 also 1476 even 1262 great 1225 same 1214 moral 1030 most 1027 very 881 such 881 many 862 certain 844 as 816 own 811 first 754 much 658 well 649 human 641 good 631 ancient 622 roman 609 then 607 common 601 long 586 old 577 still 577 however 571 up 556 early 553 often 507 little 507 different 504 thus 495 never 485 generally 481 far 479 less 475 large 455 always 451 high 436 now 428 out 421 various 421 new 408 whole 395 true 381 sometimes Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 240 most 239 least 149 great 117 good 109 high 85 early 62 eld 55 near 46 low 44 slight 32 old 32 bad 26 strong 26 large 23 simple 19 small 19 late 19 Most 11 rude 11 fine 8 young 8 common 7 hard 7 deep 6 pure 6 l 6 dark 5 weak 5 rich 5 narrow 5 grave 5 fit 5 dear 4 tall 4 safe 4 noble 4 manif 3 vile 3 strange 3 short 3 poor 3 long 3 keen 3 hot 3 heavy 3 fair 3 e 3 deadly 3 crude 3 close Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 790 most 35 least 31 well 1 pig,--the 1 near 1 long 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 case is different 12 man is not 9 men are not 7 person is not 6 slave is not 5 _ are _ 5 _ is _ 5 god is not 5 woman is not 5 women are generally 5 women are not 4 _ does _ 4 _ was not 4 children are not 4 law does not 4 people are not 4 persons living closely 3 _ doing _ 3 _ see _ 3 _ were _ 3 case is exactly 3 children are often 3 death is not 3 gods are so 3 law did not 3 law is not 3 law was not 3 life is sacred 3 man is apt 3 man was not 3 men do not 3 men were not 3 people are often 3 people did not 3 person does not 3 woman is always 2 _ is not 2 _ is perhaps 2 _ was probably 2 case was different 2 cases are certainly 2 child was not 2 children are never 2 family are not 2 family did not 2 god is more 2 gods are much 2 law had only 2 law is exceedingly 2 law was formally Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 death is no more 2 man is no more 2 slave is not necessarily 1 _ am no proper 1 _ have no end 1 _ have not _ 1 _ is not classical 1 child are not recognised,"[145 1 child has no right 1 children are not only 1 children are not seldom 1 children have no kind 1 children was not yet 1 children were not only 1 death does not entirely 1 death is not remissible 1 families is not complete 1 family are not supplements 1 family do not at 1 family had not yet 1 god does not very 1 god is not anybody 1 god is not generally 1 god is not so 1 gods have no immediate 1 gods have no need 1 law did not at 1 law did not however 1 law does not generally 1 law had not yet 1 law is not altogether 1 law is not sufficiently 1 law is not yet 1 law makes no difference 1 law was not only 1 law was not so 1 law was not yet 1 life is no longer 1 man has no right 1 man is not altogether 1 man is not bad 1 man is not even 1 man is not necessarily 1 man is not powerful 1 man is not rightly 1 man is not therefore 1 man was not originally 1 men are not accountable 1 men are not inferior 1 men are not necessarily A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33111 author = Engels, Friedrich title = The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State date = keywords = American; Athens; Bachofen; Germans; Greeks; Indians; Iroquois; Marx; Morgan; Punaluan; Rome; Tacitus; class; family; form; gen; gentile; marriage; roman; stage; time; tribe summary = THE ORIGIN OF THE FAMILY PRIVATE PROPERTY AND THE STATE course of time to adapt the old state of society to the new conditions, during this time, the study of primeval forms of the family has made development of a higher form of society than the family can be due only manner that form which Morgan styles the Punaluan family developed from a Punaluan family, only a cruder form of group marriage.[15] of persons who later appear as members of a gens, in the original form Even the later form of exogamy, the maternal law gens, as civilized man, is simply the rule of maternal law and group marriage. (Institutions of German law) is not originally the single family, but Roman society during primeval times in gens, phratry and tribe finds its The form of marriage, as stated above, was the pairing family in gradual id = 22910 author = Maine, Henry Sumner, Sir title = Ancient Law: Its Connection to the History of Early Society date = keywords = Contract; Europe; Family; France; Gentium; Hindoo; Jus; Law; Maine; Natural; Nature; Patria; Potestas; Property; Prætor; Rome; State; Tables; Testament; Testamentary; english; greek; history; jurisprudence; roman summary = important an influence on the early Roman law of adoption and of decide the new cases by pure Roman Civil Law. They refused, no doubt effects of the theory of natural law on modern society, and indicates ought to be equal." The peculiar Roman idea that natural law coexisted In modern Testamentary jurisprudence, as in the later Roman law, the Now in the older theory of Roman Law the individual bore to the family generally in the language of ancient Roman law, it includes all be placed by one generation of Roman lawyers in the Law common to all ancient from the modern conception of Natural Law. The Roman lawyers descended from the Natural Law of the Romans, which differed The history of Roman Property Law is the existence in Roman Law of a form of property--a creation of Equity, it The theory of Natural law is exclusively Roman. id = 60393 author = Phillips, Rog title = Game Preserve date = keywords = Elf; big summary = never getting more than a few feet from It. Elf picked his blackberries with first one then another of the men. Elf clutched his little It closely and moved cautiously downstream few feet--farther than any of the men dared go from the big It. At first he felt secure, then panic overcame him and he ran back, from the little It. Excitement possessed Elf. He ran here and there, clutching It closely again find these creatures that were so like men and yet so different. knuckles were white from clutching It. The creatures were still carrying on their game of making sounds, but It was shaped exactly like the little It Elf was While Elf watched, breathless, the creature reached inside the skin of The way these creatures did things, Elf decided, was very similar to Suddenly Elf heard a new sound from the big It. It was not a voice id = 35911 author = Reid, Mayne title = Odd People: Being a Popular Description of Singular Races of Man date = keywords = Africa; Amazon; America; Andaman; Andes; Bushman; Chaco; Comanche; Digger; Esquimaux; Feegee; Feegeean; Fuegian; Fuego; Great; Indians; Islands; Lake; Laplander; Maracaibo; Mexico; Mundrucu; New; North; Orinoco; Ottomac; Pampas; Patagonian; Sea; South; Straits; Tierra; Tongans; Turcoman; large; spanish; time; water summary = the West-Indian islands, present a great similitude to that of the large tract covered with a single species of trees,--as with pines, South-American rivers; and large fresh-water fish of numerous species. kinds and of many different species, form the staple and daily food of Many other species of fish are taken by the water-Indians, as the dressing himself in the skin of a seal of like species, giving his body American Indians and the savages of the great South Sea. The Mundrucu is rarely ill off in the way of food. In "Prairie-land" every tribe of Indians is in possession of the horse. great plain, are different from the other Pampas Indians in many both islands, Great and Little Andaman, are the same race of people; and navigators of the Great South Sea. Since the time when these people were first seen by Europeans, up to the id = 52106 author = Westermarck, Edward title = The Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas date = keywords = Aborigines; Account; Africa; Ages; American; Ancient; Ann; Archipelago; Australia; British; Bur; Central; China; Chinese; Christian; Christianity; Church; Coast; Code; Customs; Das; Der; Die; Dr.; East; Eastern; Egyptians; Ellis; England; English; Eskimo; Ethics; Europe; Expedition; Folk; Footnote; Frazer; Geschichte; God; Gold; Great; Greece; Greenland; Guinea; Hebrews; Histoire; Ibid; Idem; Indians; Institutes; Interior; Iroquois; Islanders; Islands; Japan; John; Jour; Journal; Laws; Life; London; Lore; Madagascar; Manners; Manu; Mexico; Middle; Migne; Modern; Moral; Morocco; Mr.; Native; New; North; Northern; Pacific; Peoples; Plato; Primitive; Principles; Professor; Races; Rechtsverhältnisse; Religion; Researches; Robertson; Rome; Savage; Sir; Smith; Soc; Society; South; Southern; Spencer; St.; States; Steinmetz; Stephen; Studien; Supra; Travels; Tribes; Veda; Victoria; Voyage; Wales; West; Westermarck; Western; Williams; Years; York; Zeitschr; history; roman summary = Laws which are based on customs naturally express moral ideas [Footnote 122: According to Harris (_Principles of the Criminal Law_, [Footnote 77: Stephen, _History of the Criminal Law of England_, iii. [Footnote 77: Stephen, _History of the Criminal Law of England_, iii. According to Kafir custom or law, the relatives of a murdered man [Footnote 226: Schoolcraft, _Indian Tribes of the United States_, iii. peoples a person who kills a chief is punished with death, though [Footnote 62: _Idem_, _E[(w]e-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, p. [Footnote 58: _Idem_, _Die Sitten und das Recht der Bogos_, p. [Footnote 5: Ellis, _E[(w]e-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, [Footnote 5: Ellis, _E[(w]e-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, [Footnote 5: Ellis, _E[(w]e-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, [Footnote 5: Ellis, _E[(w]e-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, [Footnote 5: Ellis, _E[(w]e-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_,