Open cmohge1 opened 3 years ago
HERE is my contribution.
I decided to be interested in stylometry (in which I have zero experience, so why not?). I tried to do a lot of different things (none of which "worked"), much with scatterplot (which I still don't really understand). Instead, I ended up with this very simple plot of the 9 most frequent prepositions between MotF (1860) & SM (1861). OF is used much less in MotF; TO much more; IN very consistently. The preference for the other top prepositions in SM is (in order): FOR--WITH--ON--AT--BY The preference for the other top prepositions in MotF is (in order): WITH--FOR--AT--ON--BY Indication of change in style? HERE is a comparison of these words across the entire corpus.
And here is mine https://voyant-tools.org/?corpus=eed78abb792f5fd5949e57450f9818f1&view=TermsBerry
I am not sure I understand what it is though!
I have no idea what this means or if I did it right, but here goes:
Hi all!
Here you can see my visualisations:
Hi thanks so much for these. I like your work on male/female pronouns smansutti! I've been looking at two verbs (think and feel) across the two works.
I've then looked at think and know for comparison. These examples are obviously restrictive and do not exploit fully the data set - I think I'm a bit intimidated by the corpus as a whole!
I've just been playing with collocates "don't +verb"
Please post your thoughts and sample visualisations below.