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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 87897 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 look 1 time 1 man 1 little 1 Zimbabwe 1 Umlimo 1 Tarrant 1 Stanley 1 South 1 Sikumbutana 1 Shiminya 1 Rhodesia 1 Pym 1 Pukele 1 Peter 1 Nidia 1 Nanzicele 1 Mrs 1 Mr. 1 Moseley 1 Miss 1 Meryl 1 Matabele 1 Major 1 Madula 1 Kid 1 Jonemi 1 John 1 Johannesburg 1 Jekyll 1 Inglefield 1 Hollingworth 1 Hert 1 Henry 1 Grenville 1 Government 1 England 1 Emily 1 Diana 1 Commerell 1 Carew 1 CHAPTER 1 Bulawayo 1 Bateman 1 Aunt 1 Ames 1 Ailsa 1 Africa Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 553 man 363 time 348 eye 297 day 274 way 261 face 229 hand 228 life 223 moment 194 thing 190 country 165 something 159 nothing 158 heart 154 night 149 place 148 woman 144 one 131 mind 128 people 120 voice 119 word 108 thought 105 head 105 anything 104 world 99 hour 99 fact 97 year 93 girl 91 side 87 father 86 land 84 end 83 course 80 silence 80 savage 79 friend 79 air 77 sense 77 part 74 sort 74 room 72 boy 71 question 70 wall 70 morning 69 work 68 love 68 child Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 631 _ 395 Meryl 344 Diana 260 Nidia 260 Ames 230 John 230 Carew 105 Pym 95 Stanley 92 Mr. 87 Shiminya 86 Rhodesia 83 Hert 82 Nanzicele 82 Ailsa 80 van 64 hut 62 Major 62 Madula 60 Africa 56 Moseley 56 Inglefield 52 South 52 Matabele 52 Commerell 49 Umlimo 47 Tarrant 47 England 47 Emily 46 Grenville 44 Pukele 44 Miss 44 Aunt 43 Hollingworth 42 Jonemi 41 thou 40 Bulawayo 39 Henry 38 Peter 38 Bateman 37 Jekyll 35 God 33 Mrs 32 English 29 CHAPTER 28 Mr 27 Zimbabwe 27 Johannesburg 27 Government 26 Mrs. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2756 he 2301 it 1825 i 1788 she 1655 you 1005 him 882 they 668 her 526 them 468 we 317 me 221 himself 132 herself 99 us 53 themselves 52 one 42 itself 33 myself 28 thee 24 yourself 22 his 20 hers 14 yours 11 ourselves 10 ''s 7 mine 4 theirs 3 thyself 3 ours 3 ''em 2 yourselves 2 oneself 2 em 1 over--"yours 1 o 1 hollingworth-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6553 be 2961 have 1106 do 643 say 633 go 562 come 508 see 489 know 451 look 392 think 356 make 351 take 294 seem 268 tell 264 get 257 feel 255 give 198 stand 195 want 187 find 186 leave 163 ask 154 sit 153 turn 148 hear 131 let 125 lie 122 speak 113 love 110 begin 106 keep 105 become 100 try 98 like 98 bring 96 call 95 mean 95 grow 94 meet 93 put 92 rise 90 hold 88 show 83 laugh 82 wonder 82 talk 81 fall 77 return 73 pass 73 hope Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1795 not 605 so 559 then 490 now 453 up 440 little 407 very 401 more 355 only 351 out 292 other 287 again 282 just 266 well 247 here 247 good 247 away 237 back 234 there 232 much 230 even 226 too 215 never 205 long 203 great 201 down 198 own 193 still 193 first 181 far 181 ever 167 as 166 perhaps 165 all 148 old 142 on 136 yet 136 once 135 such 134 alone 133 rather 127 in 123 most 123 last 122 quite 119 off 117 same 112 suddenly 110 almost 106 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 51 least 46 good 39 most 9 slight 7 rinderp 7 lovely 7 high 7 Most 6 bad 5 near 5 mere 5 great 4 late 4 grave 4 fine 3 faint 3 deep 2 warm 2 strong 2 small 2 old 2 narrow 2 manif 2 fit 2 dear 2 big 2 acute 1 wise 1 wild 1 wide 1 wealthy 1 weak 1 vague 1 true 1 stout 1 smart 1 rude 1 rough 1 remote 1 plucky 1 nice 1 mad 1 loud 1 light 1 large 1 l 1 keen 1 hard 1 gay 1 fast Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 most 11 least 7 well 1 quick 1 gentlest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ did _ 4 nidia was not 4 people have patience 3 _ am _ 3 _ is _ 3 _ was _ 3 ames was not 3 carew was not 3 diana did not 3 meryl got up 3 meryl said nothing 2 _ do n''t 2 _ doing _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ knew _ 2 _ knows _ 2 _ taken _ 2 carew said nothing 2 day was not 2 diana knew perfectly 2 diana looked straight 2 diana sat up 2 diana was silent 2 diana was still 2 eyes were full 2 life was life 2 meryl had not 2 meryl sat on 2 meryl sat very 2 meryl turned also 2 meryl was not 2 nidia was alone 2 people do n''t 1 _ are _ 1 _ come _ 1 _ did n''t 1 _ did not 1 _ do _ 1 _ does _ 1 _ had n''t 1 _ had not 1 _ is there 1 _ know _ 1 _ said _ 1 _ were responsible 1 _ were tired 1 ames being old 1 ames came near 1 ames come inside 1 ames did not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 ames was not blind 1 carew made no comment 1 carew took no notice 1 carew was not indifferent 1 carew was not subtle 1 country had no use 1 day is not very 1 day was not over 1 day was not quite 1 life had no more 1 meryl had not yet 1 meryl was not enthusiastic 1 nidia was not so 1 one did not positively 1 one does not usually 1 one wanted no trouble 1 ways were no longer 1 women want no recognition 1 words are not words A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 32926 author = Mitford, Bertram title = John Ames, Native Commissioner: A Romance of the Matabele Rising date = keywords = Ames; Bateman; Bulawayo; CHAPTER; Commerell; Government; Hollingworth; Inglefield; Jekyll; John; Jonemi; Madula; Matabele; Miss; Moseley; Mrs; Nanzicele; Nidia; Pukele; Shiminya; Sikumbutana; Tarrant; Umlimo; look; time summary = the camp, and John Ames, having said a few words to the squatting "Why have you--have you all done this thing, Nanzicele?" said John Ames, A look of relief came into Nidia''s face as she knew, by the rising of Nidia, of course, understood not a word of this, but John Ames had let Nidia, at a word from John Ames, having searched in the huts for the "I am now going to kill thee, Shiminya," said John Ames, when he had "This is not the way I came in by," said Nidia. said John Ames, pointing to a great granite cone which rose up from the as he thought of Nidia it seemed to John Ames that he was capable of any like this," said John Ames, thinking it advisable to waive the question "Look here, now," said John Ames, quickly and decidedly. John Ames did look, and so did the other man. id = 27950 author = Page, Gertrude title = The Rhodesian date = keywords = Africa; Ailsa; Aunt; Carew; Diana; Emily; England; Grenville; Henry; Hert; Johannesburg; Kid; Major; Meryl; Mr.; Peter; Pym; Rhodesia; South; Stanley; Zimbabwe; little; look; man summary = liked to look fair in the eyes of Peter Carew, quite indifferent to A cloud flitted for a moment across Meryl''s fair face, which Diana was But Meryl only got up slowly and moved away to her own little bed. "I don''t think I''ve very much," said Diana, "but Meryl has enough for Diana answered, "I don''t know that we do want to go; but Meryl has Then Diana spoke a little in something of an undertone, half to Meryl, "I feel a little like you to-night, Meryl. "You were very good to come so far," said Meryl gently, seeing the Until the blue-grey eyes, so like Meryl''s, looked shyly up, and then suppose He said to Himself, ''I will let Diana and Meryl Pym see one of Meryl''s eyes were less smiling than her lips, turning a little Meryl, with her face turned away, blanched a little in the shadow.