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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 109348 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 3 New 2 illustration 2 Yacht 2 Thames 2 Royal 2 Miss 2 Island 2 George 2 Frank 2 Cup 2 Club 2 Captain 1 rule 1 american 1 York 1 Y.R.A. 1 Wings 1 White 1 Watson 1 Water 1 Vril 1 Vigilant 1 Van 1 Valkyrie 1 Tromp 1 St. 1 Southampton 1 Solent 1 Satanita 1 Sailing 1 Rockland 1 R.Y.S. 1 Queen 1 Preble 1 Phantom 1 Payne 1 Osprey 1 Nicholson 1 Navahoe 1 Mrs. 1 Merry 1 Merriwell 1 Mehitable 1 Mallett 1 Major 1 Madeleine 1 Lord 1 Livonia 1 Lechmere Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2143 yacht 1496 boat 1243 time 1234 man 848 water 777 ton 753 day 720 race 677 wind 640 way 638 sail 589 year 570 sea 553 club 537 vessel 525 rule 502 thing 495 hand 479 place 438 ft 436 racing 428 course 424 class 422 owner 401 deck 380 line 379 island 372 length 367 sailing 365 board 361 foot 346 illustration 334 hour 329 match 324 mile 323 side 305 nothing 303 one 300 weather 297 head 289 end 281 craft 272 crew 268 ship 263 schooner 261 part 261 minute 260 season 257 point 250 something Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2054 _ 1768 | 971 Frank 890 Mr. 542 Club 460 Royal 427 . 415 Yacht 353 Van 309 George 282 Dyck 268 Merriwell 251 New 227 Cup 226 Valkyrie 221 Bertha 211 Greendale 205 Britannia 200 R. 186 L. 183 Mallett 180 Miss 174 Captain 170 Island 168 America 165 Bay 162 York 161 Lady 160 Clyde 158 Cowes 153 Thames 153 Lord 150 Rockland 146 Queen 145 J. 145 Diamond 143 John 141 G. 141 Bonteck 139 Major 139 C. 137 W. 134 Andromeda 131 Satanita 129 Bruce 125 Y.R.A. 124 Jack 119 Egeria 117 Navahoe 117 Goff Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6438 i 5821 it 4161 you 4105 he 2499 we 2299 she 2144 they 1240 him 1204 me 1156 them 1087 her 714 us 197 himself 116 myself 97 one 94 themselves 89 herself 85 itself 77 yourself 36 ''s 34 ourselves 33 mine 24 ''em 22 yours 12 ours 8 his 8 hers 6 em 5 oneself 4 ye 4 thee 2 yourseluf 2 theirs 2 i''m 2 hisself 1 yerself 1 y 1 s''all 1 ft.| 1 f''r 1 d''yer 1 bo''t 1 b.s.c.--to 1 60_l 1 487_l Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 22446 be 7572 have 2904 do 1861 say 1789 go 1504 make 1398 come 1339 get 1232 take 1194 see 1143 know 866 give 771 think 680 find 599 tell 523 keep 515 look 478 sail 478 build 457 seem 453 leave 436 run 424 carry 409 put 350 win 342 turn 342 show 331 want 327 let 325 bring 320 hear 314 ask 313 hold 303 stand 302 follow 296 try 284 feel 283 start 274 pass 274 call 262 become 253 lie 249 race 246 set 235 begin 230 reach 208 use 202 lose 201 believe 199 return Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4391 not 1472 up 1204 so 1131 out 1056 well 1018 more 962 good 899 very 876 then 812 down 794 first 754 as 719 now 697 little 695 only 667 other 653 much 629 long 615 here 572 off 568 small 538 away 503 great 499 again 483 most 483 in 467 old 460 there 456 back 418 just 415 few 410 on 404 many 403 all 402 too 401 large 393 still 369 same 363 never 360 last 349 once 344 enough 331 even 330 soon 319 over 315 far 308 also 305 however 302 right 281 always Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 286 good 131 least 113 most 45 great 28 bad 26 high 25 large 24 near 23 slight 23 fine 23 Most 21 fast 12 sternpost 12 small 11 late 10 early 8 old 7 simple 7 big 6 short 6 safe 6 long 6 j 5 heavy 5 farth 5 deep 4 strong 4 smart 4 light 4 happy 4 grand 4 eld 4 easy 4 Iolanthe 3 young 3 tall 3 new 3 low 3 furth 3 cheap 3 bright 2 wise 2 wild 2 wide 2 slow 2 sharp 2 shallow 2 rough 2 raw 2 pleasant Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 370 most 41 well 22 least 1 sternpost 1 near 1 long 1 handiest 1 fast 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 frank did not 5 frank was not 5 wind was light 4 wind was fresh 4 yacht is not 3 boat is not 3 frank had not 3 frank went ashore 3 frank went on 3 frank went up 3 things were not 3 wind was strong 2 _ are _ 2 boat came alongside 2 boat came off 2 boat is afloat 2 boat is probably 2 boats are not 2 class has not 2 classes had now 2 club took place 2 clubs are most 2 frank said presently 2 frank was surprised 2 frank was well 2 men did not 2 men went ashore 2 men were so 2 race was not 2 things being equal 2 things go right 2 time taken up 2 wind is very 2 wind was not 2 wind was now 2 wind was shy 2 wind was so 2 wind was very 2 winds are fresh 2 yachts do not 2 yachts had quite 2 yachts were all 1 . is ample 1 . is outboard 1 . is then 1 _ came back 1 _ comes back 1 _ did not 1 _ does _ 1 _ get away Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 boat has no business 1 _ had no fire 1 boat made no sound 1 boats is not necessarily 1 class has not as 1 class is not fully 1 clubs were not long 1 frank made no answer 1 frank made no reply 1 frank was not able 1 frank was not certain 1 frank was not long 1 frank was not satisfied 1 man knows no more 1 place had no novelty 1 place is not yet 1 races has not yet 1 racing was not originally 1 rule had not as 1 rule was not far 1 sail is not so 1 sea had not yet 1 sea is no less 1 things are no worse 1 things were not quite 1 tons is not too 1 water is not altogether 1 waters are not so 1 waters was no unusual 1 wind gave no promise 1 wind had no hold 1 wind was not sufficiently 1 wind was not true 1 winds are not steady 1 yacht had no deck 1 yacht is no place 1 yacht is not here 1 yacht is not now 1 yacht was not too A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 41973 author = Dufferin and Ava, Frederick Temple Blackwood, Marquis of title = Yachting, Vol. 2 date = keywords = August; Bay; Britannia; Calluna; Captain; Club; Clyde; Commodore; Cumberland; Cup; Fleet; George; Island; John; July; June; Lord; Mr.; Navahoe; New; Queen; R.Y.S.; Royal; Satanita; Thames; Valkyrie; Vigilant; Water; Yacht; York; american; illustration summary = CHART OF THE ROYAL BOMBAY YACHT CLUB SAILING COURSE CHART OF THE ROYAL IRISH YACHT CLUB, DUBLIN BAY COURSES reported of the new Royal yacht, ''Splendid sea-boat, and rode out the [Illustration: International Gold Cup, Royal Victoria Yacht Club, yachts which sailed in the first match of the club, Monday, June 16, When the year 1867 closed the Clyde Yacht Club''s first racing decade, [Illustration: Royal Forth Yacht Club Courses.] [Illustration: Royal St George''s Yacht Club, Dublin Bay.] [Illustration: Start of 25-tonners, Royal Thames Yacht Club, from at Lowestoft, one meets great numbers of yachts and sailing boats, and small yachts and sailing boats; and as for racing, I really think that sailed twenty-six races in the New York Yacht Club, and won ten yachting clubs wherever a handful of boats could be found with owners fleet of small yachts and of boats for sailing and cruising which from id = 17436 author = Henty, G. A. (George Alfred) title = The Queen''s Cup date = keywords = Anna; Bertha; Captain; Carthew; Dominique; Frank; George; Greendale; Hawkins; Lady; Lechmere; Major; Mallett; Miss; Mr.; Osprey; Phantom summary = "I shall stay two or three days in town," Major Mallett said. these for a short time, Frank went round among the tenants, saying "You come at the right moment, Frank," she said, after they had "I have fixed on the Osprey, Major Mallett," Bertha Greendale said, "Do not think anything more about it, dear," Frank Mallett said, "You will call and see us, of course, Frank?" Lady Greendale said. "Nothing gone wrong in town, I hope, Major?" George said next day, "We could not want a better day, George," Frank said. "Bravo, good start," Frank said, as he looked round for the first "Captain," he said, when Hawkins came aft, "what men went ashore "I think that it is bad rather than good," Frank said. "I think, sir," Hawkins said, "as it is going to be a long voyage, "Good morning, sir," he said, touching his hat as Frank came up. id = 45141 author = Lynde, Francis title = Pirates'' Hope date = keywords = Andromeda; Barclay; Billy; Bonteck; Conetta; Dick; Dupuyster; Dyck; Goff; Grey; Grisdale; Haskell; Ingerson; Jerry; Madeleine; Mehitable; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Preble; Tromp; Van summary = "Mr. Van Dyck''s yacht came up the river to-day. "Heavens!" I said to Van Dyck as we came upon the scene, "I don''t "Well, you wouldn''t let a little thing like that stop you if you wanted wouldn''t you, Dick?" Van Dyck said, breaking the long pause in his own "And not all of the islands are inhabited, I take it," said Van Dyck, "Feeling for an anchorage," said Van Dyck, speaking for the first time between the yacht and some other destination, Van Dyck said: "You''d don''t know how near the running dash came to winding Van Dyck, but when "Let me have that old rifle, Billy," said Van Dyck; this after the "What''s your guess, Dick?" said Van Dyck, as we came up. turns when Van Dyck and Jerry, and Grey and Billy came down to the "We were waiting for you--or rather for that long-boat," said Van Dyck, id = 22265 author = Standish, Burt L. title = Frank Merriwell''s Cruise date = keywords = Browning; Bruce; Camden; Devil; Diamond; Frank; Hans; Hodge; Island; Jack; Merriwell; Merry; Mr.; Rockland; White; Wings summary = "There is no room for trunks on board the _White Wings_," said Frank. "I''d like to have a little time to look Boston over?" said Jack. Field, he said you were fool enough to think Frank Merriwell could beat "Thank you, old man," said Merriwell, as he quickly rose to his feet. "The _White Wings_ sails at nine o''clock," said Frank, turning away. said Frank Merriwell on the fourth day after leaving Boston. "Well, old man," said Frank, "I hate to refuse you anything after what "That''s a hard start for Camden," said Frank Merriwell, feeling his Frank Merriwell and Bruce Browning looked at each other. "I don''t know as we have any right to go in here," said Frank. "It did look something like the Old Boy himself," said Frank. "Now, fellows," said Frank Merriwell, as he faced his four "shipmates" When Frank reached the deck he saw a jolly-looking little man in gray id = 41971 author = Watson. G. L. (George Lennox) title = Yachting, Vol. 1 date = keywords = Aline; America; Channel; Club; Council; Cowes; Cup; Egeria; Freda; Livonia; Mr.; New; Nicholson; Payne; Royal; Sailing; Solent; Southampton; St.; Thames; Vril; Watson; Y.R.A.; Yacht; illustration; rule summary = Racing cutters of 150 to 170 tons are now built to sail at a speed In the early times of schooner racing the yachts were, as a rule, The Royal Yacht Squadron arranged a race without time allowances round There are thirty-two ''sailing rules'' under which yacht racing in The rules have been examined and explained with much ability by Mr. Dixon Kemp, in his book on ''Yacht and Boat Sailing,'' chapter viii. C.Y.C.--To encourage the racing of yachts in the small classes Y.R.A. B.S.C.--To promote the interests of amateur boat-sailing. the Council may think fit, from sailing his yacht in any race held The measurement of a racing-yacht''s _sails_ is left very much in the The year 1887 was a turning point in small yacht racing on the Solent, Measurement, or the late Rule of the Yacht Racing Association, to sail This yacht, designed to sail under either measurement, length on deck,