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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 61696 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 place 2 money 2 house 2 good 2 London 2 Jack 1 wyll 1 woman 1 vnto 1 thief 1 run 1 quoth 1 pocket 1 play 1 person 1 page 1 old 1 nay 1 man 1 leaf 1 kit 1 illustration 1 hym 1 header 1 haue 1 hath 1 hand 1 half 1 fellow 1 cheat 1 card 1 York 1 Thomas 1 Simon 1 Señor 1 Sanchez 1 New 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Morte 1 Moll 1 Maister 1 Lopez 1 LAY 1 Kent 1 Judith 1 John 1 Iohn 1 Hopkins 1 Henry Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 690 man 324 money 323 house 323 hand 259 day 239 time 239 fellow 178 place 174 word 168 woman 168 part 166 way 164 nothing 162 night 160 head 157 eye 149 face 146 thief 144 thing 130 p. 129 name 126 door 125 friend 124 pocket 122 side 112 room 111 one 106 heart 105 end 100 table 100 morning 100 business 89 life 88 matter 85 leaf 84 child 83 wife 83 book 81 year 81 page 78 world 78 kind 78 husband 77 cove 77 arm 76 person 74 horse 74 clothe 72 father 71 water Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1521 _ 570 Moll 391 Don 257 Dawson 212 Sanchez 188 Godwin 171 Mr. 171 Jack 130 Simon 109 London 104 Harman 103 haue 78 B. 71 wyll 69 God 67 Iohn 59 Mrs. 56 I. 55 Thomas 52 hath 50 HARMAN 49 Señor 48 Elche 45 Court 43 th_e 43 Evans 40 twas 40 Barbary 39 thou 38 Lord 37 vol 37 Richard 37 Mr 36 hée 36 hym 36 Dario 36 Cranke 33 Judith 32 Hopkins 31 Sir 31 Bell 31 Aye 30 god 30 downe 30 Mohand 30 Lopez 30 Awdeley 29 Tis 28 quoth 28 q_uoth Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2371 i 2048 he 1334 we 1129 it 1075 you 939 she 910 him 780 they 678 me 644 us 435 them 392 her 106 himself 64 herself 56 ourselves 44 one 33 myself 32 thee 31 ''em 22 themselves 16 yourself 9 mine 8 yours 7 itself 7 his 7 em 6 vp 6 theirs 6 hers 6 ''s 5 ours 4 yf 3 ye 2 yow 2 thyself 2 carye 1 yt 1 yourselves 1 you''ve 1 yer 1 ougleie 1 oneself 1 ii 1 hyl 1 hade 1 atta''nab''e Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5013 be 1801 have 777 say 701 do 485 go 448 come 428 make 420 take 397 see 343 give 286 know 286 find 235 think 233 get 228 tell 190 look 181 call 167 turn 165 set 162 put 158 cry 155 ask 152 fall 144 leave 140 steal 136 stand 129 add 127 let 119 play 107 lie 106 answer 105 pay 104 speak 103 haue 97 bring 93 keep 91 lay 87 show 87 lose 87 live 87 hear 87 carry 85 return 82 seem 82 draw 80 send 80 hold 78 run 78 cast 76 follow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1163 not 596 so 535 then 477 good 408 more 367 very 349 well 338 out 307 up 267 there 265 other 261 now 254 here 249 as 224 same 216 great 192 such 189 most 174 old 163 only 161 much 161 little 154 first 151 down 149 long 146 back 135 again 133 own 127 never 125 ever 117 also 115 yet 115 in 113 last 106 thus 106 all 105 poor 104 next 100 away 98 no 92 enough 86 off 86 many 86 bad 82 still 79 together 76 high 74 once 71 full 67 young Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 79 good 50 most 26 least 13 bad 6 early 4 high 3 mean 3 happy 3 dear 2 wise 2 speedy 2 slight 2 say 2 rich 2 poor 2 old 2 near 2 low 2 late 2 hard 2 fine 2 easy 2 dyssemblyng 2 crafty 2 chief 1 young 1 wys 1 wr 1 tall 1 sweet 1 strange 1 speak 1 sound 1 small 1 slender 1 short 1 scanty 1 raw 1 ragged 1 proud 1 new 1 manyf 1 long 1 less 1 l 1 hou 1 haru 1 had 1 great 1 furth Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 138 most 9 well 3 least 1 hathe 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 godwin set out 2 moll was not 2 money is not 1 _ am content 1 _ be _ 1 _ be happier 1 _ being somewhat 1 _ done _ 1 _ give _ 1 _ had ben 1 _ is _ 1 _ is as 1 _ is doubtless 1 _ is too 1 _ make depart 1 _ make whiche 1 _ make writinges 1 _ put downe 1 _ was _ 1 _ was synonymous 1 _ was thomas 1 _ were part 1 _ were twinnes 1 dawson gave way 1 dawson goes forth 1 dawson had already 1 dawson had never 1 dawson set forth 1 dawson stood silent 1 dawson took up 1 dawson turns again 1 dawson was already 1 dawson was married 1 dawson was mightily 1 dawson was now 1 dawson was quick 1 day being as 1 day came again 1 day came againe 1 day comes simon 1 day doing nothing 1 day done much 1 day is november 1 days were all 1 don being silent 1 don did ever 1 don doing likewise 1 don was clearly 1 eyes had never 1 face fell again Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 godwin being not less 1 godwin makes no response 1 house looks no longer 1 man was not accidentally 1 moll was not content 1 moll was not dull 1 money is not plenty 1 part be no more 1 sanchez was no longer 1 simon was not slow 1 time taking no small A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 38850 author = Awdelay, John, active 1559-1577 title = The Rogues and Vagabonds of Shakespeare''s Youth Awdeley''s ''Fraternitye of vacabondes'' and Harman''s ''Caveat'' date = keywords = Awdeley; Canting; Caueat; Collier; Cranke; Dekker; Elizabeth; God; Harman; Henry; Iohn; John; Kent; London; Maister; Morte; Thomas; good; hath; haue; header; house; hym; illustration; leaf; money; place; quoth; vnto; wyll summary = Thomas Harman.] A gentleman, also, of late hath taken great paines I haue thought good, not only to shew his errour in some places in any other place, to heare the *[leaf 9]* secretes of a mans house. house these twenty yeares, where vnto pouerty dayely hath and doth flatteringe wordes, money, and good chere, I haue attained to the typ by good maner; some wyll take there owne that they haue made promyse vnto, vpright men haue nether money nor wares, at these houses they shalbe them selues, then these rowsy roges requested the good man of the house "A, good maister," quoth he, "I haue the places when they shall here howe I haue bene serued." "Nowe, out vpon which had an vpright man in her company, and as I would haue passed eyther any els of your house." "No, I warrant the," sayth this good man, id = 10727 author = Barrett, Frank title = A Set of Rogues Namely Christopher Sutton, John Dawson, the Señor Don Sanchez Del Castillo De Castelaña and Moll Dawson; Their Wicked Conspiracy, and a True Account of Their Travels and Adventures date = keywords = Barbary; CHAPTER; Court; Dario; Dawson; Don; Elche; Evans; Godwin; Hopkins; Jack; Judith; London; Lopez; Moll; Mr.; Mrs.; Sanchez; Señor; Simon; kit; nay summary = the act, Jack Dawson comes to me, with Moll holding of his hand, as she "Have no fear of me or of Moll turning tail at a scarecrow," says Jack, "And," says he, turning to Moll, "you shall not rise till fetch in a doctor?" says Don Sanchez, when Moll was gone barking "In the first place, Moll," says Jack, "I''ll have you to know that I am turning to Moll, he stretches out his hand towards the plain and says "This comes of being so mighty fine!" says Dawson, when Don Sanchez had "No man shall be killed on my land,--there is my answer," says Moll, "If he be an honest man, let him show thee his hand," says Simon. "''Tis no worse than mine," says Moll, regarding the hand which in truth "Captain Evans," says Moll, taking her lover''s hand, "this is Mr. Godwin, my cousin, and soon to be my husband." id = 52320 author = Matsell, George W. (George Washington) title = Vocabulum; or The Rogue''s Lexicon Compiled from the Most Authentic Sources date = keywords = BROTHER; Bell; Bill; COVE; Jack; LAY; New; York; card; cheat; fellow; good; half; hand; house; man; money; old; page; person; place; play; pocket; run; thief; woman summary = A panel thief; a fellow who robs a man''s pocket after he has enticed the man into a thieving-house, and robbed him of his watch and pocket-book filled with bad money, near their heels, and then pretend Small thieves who steal any thing they can lay hands on. Fellows who obtain money by pretending to persons who have flat," how finely the knowing old fellow flattered the fool. A fellow that breaks windows or showcases, to steal the goods Fellows that cheat simple people out of their money by "The cove is bene, shall we lach him?" the man is good, "The cove done the panny," the fellow robbed the house; Putting one''s hand into another man''s pocket; stealing. "The cove sings beef," the fellow calls thief. cove," give me your hand, my good fellow. hock-game, if a man hits a card, he is obliged to let his money lie