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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 1 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 11314 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 lordship 1 Treves 1 Sayn 1 Roland 1 Rhine 1 Prince 1 Mayence 1 Lord 1 Kurzbold 1 Highness 1 Herr 1 Greusel 1 Goebel 1 Frankfort 1 Father 1 Emperor 1 Ehrenfels 1 Ebearhard 1 Court 1 Countess 1 Cologne 1 Castle 1 Assmannshausen 1 Archbishop 1 Ambrose Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 615 man 171 time 163 night 149 merchant 147 hand 137 money 136 wine 132 river 131 sword 123 way 120 day 119 barge 114 nothing 111 word 108 girl 99 gold 91 head 87 captain 86 door 84 one 82 side 81 moment 81 case 77 thaler 76 city 75 room 75 place 74 boat 72 morning 68 mind 68 company 67 bag 66 friend 63 part 61 table 61 point 61 face 60 water 58 eye 57 life 57 forest 56 lieutenant 55 question 53 lordship 52 guardian 51 woman 51 leader 51 hour 51 castle 50 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 610 Roland 243 Archbishop 231 Frankfort 209 Mayence 201 Greusel 166 Prince 165 Rhine 158 Kurzbold 158 Castle 153 Cologne 131 Herr 129 Ebearhard 126 Lord 117 Countess 109 Emperor 101 Treves 101 Goebel 82 Sayn 81 Archbishops 79 Father 65 Ambrose 55 Ehrenfels 55 Count 52 _ 52 Highness 48 Assmannshausen 46 Hildegunde 45 von 43 Court 41 Furstenberg 40 Baron 39 Empress 36 Palace 32 Pfalz 31 Stolzenfels 31 Palatine 29 Madam 29 Guardian 29 Elector 28 Margrave 26 Coblentz 25 Gensbein 24 Rheinstein 24 Lorch 24 Lieutenant 24 Commander 23 Joseph 22 Pfalzgraf 22 Lordship 21 God Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2299 i 1974 you 1323 he 1010 it 511 me 490 him 449 they 428 we 292 them 234 she 190 us 123 himself 81 her 70 myself 55 yourself 47 themselves 24 itself 14 ourselves 12 herself 11 one 11 mine 10 yours 5 his 3 ours 3 hers 2 theirs 1 yourselves 1 thyself 1 thirsty-- 1 exist-- 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3916 be 1285 have 648 do 587 say 278 come 276 make 275 know 257 see 237 take 191 give 185 think 183 go 167 ask 147 stand 130 cry 122 tell 119 seem 117 speak 117 find 101 wish 95 leave 93 turn 93 return 87 follow 86 call 84 bring 83 reply 81 look 80 keep 79 meet 77 rise 73 set 73 reach 73 put 73 hold 69 allow 67 carry 66 receive 66 hear 65 lead 65 become 62 sit 61 get 60 pass 60 learn 59 place 57 remember 56 prove 55 hope 53 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 951 not 372 so 268 then 266 now 208 up 204 more 181 well 177 very 174 young 169 here 159 own 156 good 148 down 143 out 132 again 131 great 125 as 117 last 112 other 112 much 111 even 109 first 105 there 98 long 95 never 95 most 91 quite 91 only 89 indeed 87 such 87 little 84 once 79 away 78 therefore 75 old 74 all 70 thus 70 far 68 enough 67 back 66 too 64 still 63 rather 63 merely 59 already 58 on 54 perhaps 54 however 53 in 52 together Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 35 least 20 good 16 great 11 high 10 most 8 young 7 large 6 slight 5 rich 4 old 4 low 3 warm 3 deep 3 Most 2 near 2 late 2 hard 2 farth 1 weighty 1 wealthy 1 warlike 1 topmost 1 swift 1 small 1 rearmost 1 quick 1 pure 1 polite 1 noble 1 narrow 1 mild 1 light 1 gentle 1 fine 1 few 1 fast 1 eld 1 dire 1 dark 1 close 1 chief 1 bright 1 brave 1 bland Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 most 7 least 3 well 1 near 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 cologne did not 2 ebearhard did not 2 money is here 2 roland is not 2 words do not 1 archbishop brought up 1 archbishop did not 1 archbishop had originally 1 archbishop had reason 1 archbishop seemed old 1 archbishop turned upon 1 archbishop was angry 1 archbishop went on 1 barge being here 1 barge came gently 1 barge does not 1 barge is empty 1 barge is free 1 barge returned immediately 1 barge returned safely 1 barge was half 1 castle are now 1 castle is bereft 1 castle is unassailable 1 castle is well 1 castle was empty 1 castle was notoriously 1 castle went headlong 1 castle were asleep 1 cologne had actually 1 cologne had so 1 cologne has already 1 cologne is guardian 1 cologne is little 1 cologne spoke so 1 cologne was bitterly 1 cologne was generous 1 cologne was keenly 1 cologne was so 1 countess did not 1 countess is free 1 countess is not 1 countess looked up 1 countess seemed inclined 1 countess stood there 1 countess was unjustly 1 countess were distant 1 ebearhard do not 1 ebearhard had better 1 ebearhard had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 roland made no reply 1 archbishop has no room 1 cologne did not immediately 1 countess is not too 1 countess made no comment 1 countess made no reply 1 emperor has not yet 1 emperor takes no interest 1 greusel made no comment 1 man does not properly 1 men made no reply 1 rhine was not much 1 roland is not here 1 roland is not yet 1 roland made no salutation 1 words do not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14656 author = Barr, Robert title = The Sword Maker date = keywords = Ambrose; Archbishop; Assmannshausen; Castle; Cologne; Countess; Court; Ebearhard; Ehrenfels; Emperor; Father; Frankfort; Goebel; Greusel; Herr; Highness; Kurzbold; Lord; Mayence; Prince; Rhine; Roland; Sayn; Treves; lordship summary = "I am Prince Roland, only son of the Emperor," the young man had said, "Good even to you, Herr Goebel," said the young man, doffing his bonnet. "Good-morning, Sir Roland," cried Herr Goebel cheerfully. "Not at that time in the morning, I hope," said Roland, "for I shall "Herr Kurzbold," said Roland, with some severity, "many penniless nights "Now, Master of the Guild," said Greusel, and Roland took the floor once "No," said Greusel quietly; "I shall carry out Roland''s instructions." "Refuse to marry Prince Roland, and learn," said the Archbishop very "Within a league," said Roland to his men, "stand three pirate castles: "Captain," said Roland, "I inform you in the hearing of these men that Mayence said he would not permit me to marry Prince Roland after the way "Prince Roland," cried the girl, "my kinsman, Father Ambrose, said he "Prince Roland," said the Archbishop gravely, "until your Election is