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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 59548 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 illustration 5 end 4 piece 4 cut 3 work 3 wood 3 board 3 Fig 2 tool 2 inch 2 fig 2 fasten 2 edge 2 Square 2 Plane 2 Figs 1 saw 1 sail 1 roman 1 place 1 nail 1 joint 1 italian 1 hole 1 greek 1 furniture 1 french 1 color 1 chapter 1 century 1 boy 1 box 1 Willow 1 Uncle 1 Tenon 1 Steel 1 St. 1 South 1 Screws 1 Scraper 1 Saw 1 Sandpaper 1 Rule 1 Rome 1 Reddy 1 Painting 1 New 1 Nailing 1 Mr. 1 Marking Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2517 illustration 1903 end 1813 piece 1716 wood 1665 side 1504 work 1404 edge 1203 board 1082 inch 996 line 980 joint 977 fig 784 way 726 tool 691 hole 651 foot 642 place 642 frame 621 top 569 case 556 plane 541 surface 540 saw 531 part 528 box 520 nail 507 point 493 time 486 house 485 hand 450 strip 448 door 437 screw 432 angle 426 form 424 chisel 423 use 412 water 393 bottom 382 stock 381 method 381 head 378 position 368 corner 367 stick 360 length 356 size 345 cut 345 block 341 furniture Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6940 _ 2755 Fig 1000 FIG 592 | 191 B 165 C 165 A 153 Bill 148 Plane 144 Part 139 V. 131 Figs 121 Saw 120 Square 115 Joint 103 D 99 Marking 97 CHAPTER 95 Rule 95 Dutchy 94 pp 89 G. 78 Uncle 78 Ed 77 E. 75 � 74 Ã 69 Mr. 68 house 65 Finishing 61 England 60 c. 58 tenon 58 Painting 58 Chapter 56 Scraper 56 Nailing 56 Frame 54 Sandpaper 54 S. 54 Island 54 E 53 C. 52 Reddy 52 New 52 F 51 board 50 b 49 c 48 Dovetail Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4668 it 2232 you 1228 we 1031 them 938 they 459 he 283 i 217 us 174 him 95 itself 48 yourself 37 themselves 36 me 34 one 30 himself 11 ourselves 10 she 5 ours 5 myself 5 em 3 u 2 yourselves 2 hinges.--fig 2 her 2 ''s 1 y 1 x 1 vee''d 1 theirs 1 p 1 frame.--fig 1 done,--you 1 binding=.--they 1 axe.=--this Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19585 be 2782 make 2547 have 1809 use 1622 show 1611 see 1361 cut 1245 do 686 take 660 hold 583 give 567 put 566 fasten 531 fit 528 nail 480 find 463 keep 458 get 454 set 430 work 417 place 410 lay 406 require 380 mark 375 drive 327 turn 326 leave 322 run 301 form 294 draw 287 build 284 glue 268 cover 263 begin 262 come 258 know 242 apply 241 saw 236 prevent 230 go 229 call 226 plane 224 screw 219 finish 218 remove 208 look 206 follow 202 describe 199 paint 198 desire Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1933 not 1121 other 998 then 983 out 903 up 831 long 821 good 807 well 791 more 743 together 683 small 681 very 665 first 632 also 570 so 565 same 557 off 530 such 530 as 516 much 516 large 449 down 445 little 436 only 431 wide 393 great 385 back 340 right 338 many 336 now 334 just 329 too 328 about 324 straight 314 often 310 simple 308 necessary 308 easily 307 enough 298 most 287 thick 283 low 276 sometimes 276 carefully 262 flat 259 hard 257 upper 247 old 242 on 242 however Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 247 good 90 most 42 simple 38 least 31 great 18 Most 16 fine 14 large 14 easy 12 high 11 near 9 wide 8 cheap 7 slight 7 old 7 low 7 hard 7 early 6 strong 6 small 6 bad 5 safe 5 poor 5 heavy 4 short 4 rich 3 weak 3 quick 3 late 2 thick 2 sharp 2 nice 2 narrow 2 mere 2 healthy 2 handy 2 common 2 clean 2 Wagon= 2 Strop= 1 writhe 1 washstand 1 tough 1 thin 1 tall 1 sure 1 strict 1 straight 1 stern 1 steep Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 208 most 53 well 15 least 1 straightest 1 hard 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/15831/15831-h/15831-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/15831/15831-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/8/1/20846/20846-h/20846-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/8/1/20846/20846-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ see _ 7 wood is not 5 _ keep _ 4 edge is straight 4 hole is bored 3 _ is especially 3 _ is much 3 boards are not 3 boards are so 3 edge is not 3 hole was now 3 joint is also 3 pieces are sometimes 3 plane is not 3 top is not 3 wood is best 2 _ are cracks 2 _ are small 2 _ is simply 2 _ is useful 2 _ laying out 2 boards are also 2 boards are first 2 boards are then 2 boards fastened together 2 boards nailed together 2 boards running horizontally 2 edge is _ 2 edge is perpendicular 2 edge is thus 2 edges are not 2 ends are not 2 ends turned up 2 ends were then 2 frame does not 2 holes were just 2 house is now 2 joint is frequently 2 joint is often 2 joint is seldom 2 joint is stronger 2 joints do not 2 pieces are not 2 pieces is very 2 places marked out 2 sides are not 2 sides do not 2 surface does not 2 surface is true 2 tools are often Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 boards are not long 1 boards are not square 1 case is not adjustable 1 edge is not yet 1 edges are not exactly 1 edges are not good 1 ends are not alike 1 ends are not really 1 frame does not quite 1 frame were not unknown 1 illustrations is not as 1 joint are not always 1 joints are not only 1 plane has no advantage 1 plane is not so 1 sides are not equal 1 surface are not quite 1 surface do no harm 1 tool is not so 1 tool requires no description 1 top is not so 1 top is not true 1 wood is not available 1 wood is not quite 1 wood is not so 1 wood is not thoroly 1 wood is not uniform 1 work does not then 1 work is not only A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15831 author = Bond, A. Russell (Alexander Russell) title = The Scientific American Boy; Or, The Camp at Willow Clump Island date = keywords = Bill; Bridge; CHAPTER; Clump; Dutchy; Island; Mr.; Reddy; Uncle; Willow; end; fig; illustration; inch; sail summary = line _m_, Fig. 39, making two lengths 3 feet 8 inches wide. cut in the end of each stick to a depth of 6 inches and measuring wedge-shaped piece measured 2 feet at the outer end of the annex, and cut from the end to a point three feet back along the edge of the board For the end pieces two strips, 4 inches wide our base line and 29 feet 3 inches from the left hand end. In each end a notch 1/2 inch deep was cut to receive the runners and inches from the rear end of each runner an upright post was nailed. At the rear end of the roof a hole was cut, into which we fitted a piece and so we fastened on the cross stick 11 inches from the upper end of 8 feet long and its sides were 12 inches high; but at the ends we had to id = 21531 author = Fairham, William title = Woodwork Joints: How They Are Set Out, How Made and Where Used. date = keywords = Dovetail; Halving; Joint; Tenon; cut; fig; illustration; piece; work summary = Fig. 17 shows timber jointed at right angles to the upright piece, and at [Illustration: Fig. 25.--Method of holding Glued Joints with Iron Dogs.] This joint is used in similar positions to Fig. 31, and has in some cases the disadvantage of showing end grain at the Fig. 36 indicates the "Halved Joint," the pieces at one end showing a Fig. 41 shows a "Tee Halving Joint" with a dovetail cut on the edge. [Illustration: Fig. 44.--Dovetailed Halved Joint with Shoulders.] [Illustration: Fig. 102.--Joint with Single Dovetail Tongue and Groove.] Fig. 120 illustrates the use of a tongued and grooved joint for fixing [Illustration: Fig. 148.--Mitred and Moulded Tenon Joint.] [Illustration: Fig. 159.--Tenon Joint with Mitred Face.] Fig. 170 shows an open slot mortise and tenon joint at the end of a HAMMER HEAD TENONS.--At Fig. 171 is shown the method of jointing framing [Illustration: Fig. 287.--Working a Housed and Mitred Dovetail Joint.] id = 42650 author = Hall, A. Neely (Albert Neely) title = The Boy Craftsman Practical and Profitable Ideas for a Boy''s Leisure Hours date = keywords = Fig; Figs; board; box; boy; chapter; cut; end; fasten; illustration; inch; nail; piece; place; work summary = legs and on to the piece nailed to the wall, as shown in Fig. 1. apron, and, after cutting the ends as shown in Fig. 4, nail it across in cutting the edges of a piece of wood, as shown in Figs. Prepare the two side-pieces the shape and size shown in Fig. 52, and cut inches long should be fastened to one end, as shown in the drawing. be placed as shown in Fig. 151, so that the upper edge of one end is windows, hinge them to the inside edges of the jambs as shown in Fig. 190, and nail a seven-eighths-inch window-stop around the jambs outside bait-stick, notching one end and tapering the other, as shown in Fig. 221, and cut another stick twenty-four inches long and flatten it at two-by-fours _K_ and _L_ to the uprights in the places shown in Fig. 252, with braces set between them and the pieces _H_ and _J_, at _M_, id = 15460 author = Milton, Archie Seldon title = A Course In Wood Turning date = keywords = Cuts; cut; illustration; tool summary = application of cuts in exercises that involve only face-plate work; involving spindle turning, face-plate work and chucking; (V) Spiral 6. Lay the skew chisel on the rest with the cutting edge above the live center end, until it is cut free and the cylinder stops in the Place the chisel square on the tool rest so that the cutting edge is chisel so that the grind, which forms the cutting edge, is at an angle Place the chisel on the rest, with the cutting edge above the cylinder the other off-center points and the second side is cut down to the line. center or cutting point of the tools used, when held parallel to the bed in the same manner as in squaring the ends of Stock in cylinder work. then cut out by hand with a chisel or knife, by working down the wood on id = 20846 author = Noyes, William title = Handwork in Wood date = keywords = Co.; Fig; New; Plane; Square; Steel; board; cut; edge; end; illustration; joint; piece; saw; tool; wood summary = The straight cut, Fig. 63, takes place when the tool is moved into the The knife or sliding cut, Fig. 64, takes place when the tool is moved the end of which is the cutting edge, is the shank, Fig. 65. to be trimmed flat on the cutting board or on a piece of waste wood. piece of wood is to insert it in the vise, Fig. 89, with the broad surface of a very cross-grained piece of wood which cannot be planed used on a piece of wood until all the work with cutting tools is done, insert a plug of wood, which is cut out with a plug-cutter, Fig. 131, _No. 17._ In an _end-lap joint on rabbeted pieces_, Fig. 265, the _No. 33._ In a _mortise-and-tenon joint on rabbeted pieces_, Fig. 266, A slip-joint or end or open mortise-and-tenon_, Fig. 267, is id = 43635 author = Petersen, Louis Christian title = Educational Toys Consisting Chiefly of Coping-Saw Problems for Children in School and the Home date = keywords = Fig; color; end; fasten; hole; illustration; wood summary = him with a place to work, the tools, wood, nails, wire and other is guided in a shallow hole in a piece of wood as shown at H in Fig. 3. The shark is sawed out as shown in the drawing and three holes bored. The two body pieces of the horse with rocker are sawed from 1/4" wood. parts are sawed out, fasten the bottom to the two ends, and then put holes in the two bodies together, saw out the two bars and bore the fasten the lower end of the upright to the middle of the upper bar so sawed out and holes are bored, paint the parts in gay colors. piece by two 1" brads at each end, after the two holes are bored in Hold the two wheels together and bore two holes for the pivot nails. Slip a fine nail thru the hole in the upper end of the connecting rod, id = 54602 author = Pollen, John Hungerford title = Ancient and Modern Furniture and Woodwork date = keywords = England; Europe; France; Italy; Kensington; Rome; South; St.; century; french; furniture; greek; illustration; italian; roman summary = as carved chests and cabinets, decorated with the most finished wood These early pieces of furniture were probably executed in wood, The great period of Greek art began in the fifth century B.C.; but furniture made of wood and kept in use from the days of ancient Rome. England, France, and Germany, oak was the wood employed for furniture. The forms of chairs in use in Italy early in the fifteenth century kinds of wood furniture and decoration of houses delighted in doubling As the general material of furniture in the sixteenth century of remarkable pieces of carved wood furniture belonging to this period tenacious: and the work, like most of the old furniture carving, is chairs usual in the sixteenth century, and which were in general use great pieces of furniture fell into the same character of forms. carved ebony furniture, mainly chairs and cabinets, dating generally id = 43604 author = Wheeler, Charles G. (Charles Gardner) title = Wood-working for Beginners: A Manual for Amateurs date = keywords = Boring; FIG; Figs; Finishing; Illustration; Marking; Nailing; Painting; Plane; Rule; Sandpaper; Saw; Scraper; Screws; Square; board; edge; end; piece; wood; work summary = work of good-sized cultivated farms with live stock, cut and hauled wood lines of what we call the "grain" on the surface of a piece of wood cut pieces the difference is marked in such cases as the block shown in Fig. 27, from which four pins can be sawed, while but one can be split out. metal-work with a piece of stout board or plank (Fig. 82). An easier way and fully as strong is to cut grooves (Fig. 217) with saw and chisel and cover them with thin strips securely In case you use the stem-piece shown in Fig. 423, saw or plane off the this blade in a kerf sawed in the end of a piece of wood (Fig. 465). shown in Fig. 488, always putting pieces of waste wood between the edges To trim a piece of wood, like the edge of a board, down to a line, with