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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 75764 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Miss 3 Mrs. 2 good 2 William 2 Mr. 2 God 1 time 1 phoebe 1 look 1 little 1 like 1 course 1 come 1 child 1 chapter 1 Wathemah 1 Vigers 1 VALENTINE 1 Thorne 1 Sunday 1 Spinks 1 Shiner 1 SUSAN 1 Roger 1 Reuben 1 Rebecca 1 Potts 1 Percy 1 Penny 1 Patrick 1 PATTY 1 Olivia 1 Murphy 1 Mrs 1 Mellstock 1 Maybold 1 Marsham 1 MISS 1 Louise 1 Lord 1 Livvy 1 Leaf 1 Lambent 1 Kenneth 1 Kelwin 1 John 1 Jean 1 Jack 1 Henry 1 Henrietta Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 755 time 739 man 653 child 640 day 562 hand 556 school 552 eye 551 girl 479 face 457 woman 453 way 419 mother 373 room 365 thing 344 head 343 word 305 one 302 door 292 life 280 voice 261 teacher 260 dear 257 people 257 moment 249 heart 247 year 244 arm 243 boy 242 nothing 241 course 237 night 223 lady 222 sister 215 place 206 house 204 mind 193 letter 193 friend 191 sir 187 work 187 something 185 money 180 morning 179 matter 175 class 171 love 171 hour 153 thought 151 home 150 father Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2119 _ 1450 Miss 1256 Alwynne 1249 Clare 788 Hazel 645 Louise 503 Mr 470 Thorne 442 Elsbeth 432 MISS 418 PHOEBE 387 Burge 378 Esther 371 Roger 355 Dick 351 Hartill 307 Mr. 279 Mrs 277 SUSAN 266 Kenneth 255 Mrs. 244 VALENTINE 227 Fancy 216 Bright 214 William 207 Phoebe 198 Clayton 183 God 178 Lambent 176 Susan 176 Canninge 175 Chute 157 Beatrice 155 John 149 Forth 147 Wathemah 141 Henrietta 119 Percy 116 George 110 Christmas 102 Dewy 100 Bill 99 Potts 98 Hastings 96 Murphy 95 Day 94 Lord 94 Livvy 93 Rebecca 91 Carla Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6951 i 6865 she 5409 you 4669 it 4036 he 2497 her 1550 me 1296 they 1232 him 796 them 765 we 519 herself 254 himself 238 us 119 myself 96 one 91 yourself 81 ''em 70 themselves 67 itself 38 ''s 35 thee 32 hers 25 yours 25 mine 17 ye 15 ourselves 14 em 12 his 6 you''re 6 i''m 5 theirs 5 ours 4 yer 3 oneself 3 hisself 3 ha 2 you''ll 2 o 1 you----but 1 yez''ll 1 wi 1 true?--they 1 too!--i''ll 1 thyself 1 sharply-- 1 p''r''aps 1 i''d 1 horrid-- 1 happy!--at Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15115 be 6024 have 3420 do 3010 say 1434 go 1394 know 1238 come 1116 see 1112 think 912 make 823 look 718 take 656 tell 571 give 551 get 457 ask 438 find 419 feel 410 speak 402 seem 385 turn 383 want 378 leave 377 hear 366 let 342 begin 333 stand 316 cry 301 grow 290 mean 285 call 280 sit 280 like 267 put 253 talk 252 keep 237 wish 229 try 229 laugh 225 smile 210 love 209 bring 209 believe 207 help 205 walk 202 suppose 202 pass 189 forget 188 follow 183 rise Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4590 not 1383 so 1072 then 854 up 825 little 794 now 745 very 722 more 640 good 622 never 611 out 576 well 515 too 510 again 506 only 505 down 467 here 458 as 429 just 403 last 382 much 381 own 374 there 367 old 363 young 362 back 354 on 346 always 340 away 338 dear 329 long 329 first 327 other 325 great 314 all 292 poor 275 quite 275 once 243 off 241 still 240 ever 239 sure 232 right 231 enough 223 new 219 in 214 rather 197 really 194 even 189 most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 119 good 99 least 33 most 20 great 17 high 13 dear 12 bad 11 slight 8 fine 8 eld 8 deep 7 small 7 nice 7 low 6 near 6 Most 5 lovely 4 young 4 late 4 innermost 4 happy 4 faint 3 old 3 j 3 big 2 wise 2 wild 2 true 2 sunny 2 strong 2 stiff 2 rough 2 long 2 large 2 l 2 keen 2 hard 2 easy 1 white 1 vague 1 upp 1 tall 1 sweet 1 stern 1 solemn 1 soft 1 slow 1 simple 1 short 1 said:-- Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 156 most 14 well 11 least 1 soon 1 lest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 clare did not 5 _ is _ 5 alwynne looked up 5 clare was not 5 face was wet 4 _ know _ 4 alwynne was not 4 alwynne was silent 4 alwynne was so 4 clare had not 4 elsbeth was not 4 hartill had not 4 man ''s not 3 _ comes in 3 _ do _ 3 _ do n''t 3 _ does not 3 _ was _ 3 alwynne did not 3 alwynne had never 3 clare was angry 3 clare was pleased 3 clare was still 3 esther did not 3 hartill did not 3 louise was indignant 3 things do n''t 2 _ am _ 2 _ are _ 2 _ is about 2 _ were _ 2 alwynne came back 2 alwynne is so 2 alwynne was interested 2 clare did n''t 2 clare turned away 2 clare was already 2 clare was as 2 clare was interested 2 clare was very 2 clare went on 2 day was over 2 days went by 2 elsbeth did not 2 elsbeth was so 2 esther had not 2 esther spoke again 2 eyes are tired 2 eyes grew big 2 eyes were full Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ am not _ 1 _ does not entirely 1 _ have no compassion 1 _ is not so 1 alwynne got no thanks 1 alwynne had no eye 1 alwynne made no answer 1 alwynne was no better 1 alwynne was no rhadamanthus 1 alwynne was not pleased 1 alwynne was not so 1 burge was not long 1 child was not at 1 clare did not often 1 clare gave no sign 1 clare had no doubt 1 clare had no intention 1 clare made no resistance 1 clare was not aggressively 1 clare was not at 1 clare was not impressed 1 clare was not long 1 clare was not usually 1 elsbeth was not alwynne 1 elsbeth was not at 1 elsbeth was not just 1 face was no more 1 face was not pleasant 1 girls are not yet 1 hand had no connection 1 hazel had no such 1 hazel has no right 1 hazel was not long 1 louise gave no sign 1 louise had no message 1 louise had no one 1 louise made no answer 1 louise was not too 1 men had no wish 1 things are not seemly 1 things do not always 1 thorne has no right 1 thorne was no longer 1 thorne was not sure 1 time ''s not so 1 ways are not respectful 1 ways were not hers A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31266 author = Barrie, J. M. (James Matthew) title = Quality Street: A Comedy date = keywords = Brown; Livvy; MISS; PATTY; SUSAN; VALENTINE; phoebe summary = _The scene is the blue and white room in the house of the Misses Susan (PHOEBE _and_ MISS SUSAN _wish to embrace her, but she is These stirring times, Miss Phoebe--he is but half a man who think of Miss Phoebe''s pretty soul, which is her garden, and shut my PHOEBE (_checking_ MISS SUSAN, _who is about to tell of the loss of the MISS SUSAN _looks forlornly at_ PHOEBE, _who smiles (PHOEBE _shudders, and_ MISS SUSAN _again darts in. But Miss Susan, ''tis Captain Brown. But Miss Susan, ''tis Captain Brown. You have seen Miss Phoebe, sir? (_She looks strangely at_ MISS SUSAN, _and_ MISS PHOEBE _knows that she SUSAN, _who can only call upon_ MISS PHOEBE _by name._) MISS SUSAN (_taking_ PHOEBE _in her arms_). MISS SUSAN (_after she has soothed_ PHOEBE _a little_). Susan nor Miss Phoebe will present her to us. Susan, and I shall ask Miss Phoebe for some wraps. id = 40264 author = Dane, Clemence title = Regiment of Women date = keywords = Agatha; Alicia; Alwynne; Christmas; Clare; Cynthia; Daffy; Dene; Denny; Durand; Elsbeth; God; Hartill; Henrietta; Jean; Louise; Marsham; Miss; Mrs.; Olivia; Roger; Vigers; chapter; child; course; good; like; little; look; time summary = "Miss Vigers ought to know," said Clare. "Are we?" Alwynne looked up so warily that Clare laughed outright. "She can''t do any cooking with that hand," said Alwynne to Clare, more So Alwynne spent her pleasant holidays in and out of Clare Hartill''s they remember is not the Clare that Elsbeth knew, that Alwynne learned She supposed Clare Hartill realised how young Louise "I knew Clare Hartill long before you did, Alwynne. Clare, preceding Louise up the staircase, found Alwynne''s note awaiting And Alwynne''s eyes grew big, and she forgot all about Louise, as Clare''s "Sorry?" said Clare whimsically, as Alwynne bade her good-bye. Miss Hartill said, ''I didn''t do it for her, Alwynne!'' And Daffy got "Clare," said Alwynne uneasily, "you hurt that child." Alwynne had persuaded Clare to leave Louise to her own devices.... Louise a good deal to Alwynne," said Clare regretfully. id = 32924 author = Fenn, George Manville title = The New Mistress: A Tale date = keywords = Beatrice; Betsey; Bill; Burge; Canninge; Chute; Feelier; Forth; George; Hazel; Henry; Lambent; Miss; Mrs; Percy; Potts; Rebecca; Thorne; William summary = "No, no, pray don''t think of such a thing, dear," cried Hazel Thorne Thorne, my dear child," he said; but that failed fast, and as Hazel "Lovely, dear; but do tell me what he said about Miss Thorne." said to Lambent; and I say, Miss Thorne, just a friendly word, you know. "Mother, dear," said Hazel quietly, "I am the mistress of the girls'' "I''m sure you must have worked like a slave, Miss Burge," said Mrs "I am very glad to know you, Miss Thorne," said Mrs Canninge quietly; "I hope you like me as well, Miss Burge," said Hazel, smiling. "You will come and take off your things now, my dear," said Miss Burge "Really, Hazel, I think he has managed on very little," said Mrs Thorne "Yes, Hazel is quite right my dear," said Mrs Thorne. "I think you seem a good deal better, dear," said Hazel, smiling. id = 2662 author = Hardy, Thomas title = Under the Greenwood Tree; Or, The Mellstock Quire A Rural Painting of the Dutch School date = keywords = Day; Dewy; Dick; Fancy; Geoffrey; Leaf; Maybold; Mellstock; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Penny; Reuben; Shiner; Spinks; Sunday; William; come; good summary = The tranter looked a long time before he replied, "I fancy she will; and "Really, Reuben, ''tis quite a disgrace to see such a man," said Mrs. Dewy, with the severity justifiable in a long-tried companion, giving him comely, slender, prettily-dressed prize Fancy Day fell to Dick''s lot, in "''Tis only for want of knowing better, poor gentleman," said the tranter. "I''m afraid Dick''s a lost man," said the tranter. Fancy looked interested, and Dick said, "No?" "Whether or no," said Dick, "I asked her a thing going along the road." "Dick," said his father, coming in from the garden at that moment--in "Well, then," said Dick, coming a little to his senses, "you''ve been "I''ve come to ask for Fancy," said Dick. "Well, really ''tis time Dick was here," said the tranter. "I never can make a show of myself in that way!" said Fancy, looking at id = 37746 author = Marsland, Cora title = The Angel of the Gila: A Tale of Arizona date = keywords = Bible; Bright; Carla; Clayton; Edith; Esther; Gila; God; Harding; Hastings; Jack; John; Kelwin; Kenneth; Lord; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Murphy; Patrick; Wathemah summary = "_Your_ teacher, eh, sonny," said Kenneth Hastings smiling. "Tell me, Wathemah," she said, "what you learned to-day in the Bible "You like to dance, I see," said Esther to one girl. looked first at Esther Bright, and then at Kenneth Hastings. "That is a happy thought, Miss Bright," said Mrs. Clayton in hearty "They want ter know as will yer tell ''em a short story, Miss Bright." Next?" said Esther, looking into the face of the next Away up the mountain road, Esther Bright and Kenneth Hastings drew For many a day, John Clayton, Kenneth Hastings and Esther Bright had "Miss Bright," said John Clayton, from the doorway, "you are asked "No," he said stoutly, "Mrs. Clayton ask Wathemah he Miss Bright "Look out here, young man," said Lord Kelwin, as Wathemah approached "The mountains do great things for us," said Esther, looking up at the