Class Blog 1
Test Post
Practice Post
Testing out the WordPress blogging platform and voyant visualization tool.
Click below for a word cloud of a story by Guy de Maupassant.
Word Cloud; Blue Carbuncle
The Blue Carbuncle Word Cloud
post
Oh yeah, I did this right apparently.
Post
Hi my name is sammy and I am a singer, WOOHOO
Check out my song
The facts are these:
You can add me on twitter @buttonsbrookie
Sometimes I can be amusing~
[I found this picture on tumblr. It’s basically untraceable. I will have a better source next time.]
Hi
My name is Richard. This is a post. Hardy har, har.
(incidentally if anybody’s a lvl 26 in Destiny on the PS4 I need someone for Vault of Sand, so, plz join)
Also, here’s a poster for a movie that’s probably gonna be really good.
And here’s a summary of my life!
I’m so hungry
The Blue Carbuncle
The Blue Carbuncle – SH Word Cloud
I used Voyant Tools to make this word cloud and I noticed that goose and geese was used a lot – which makes sense considering the story. Geese – 17, goose – 26. So, this little bird obviously caused a raucous – 43. Also “bird” was used 18 times, so the goose is talked about 61 times. That’s much more than Homes, who came up only 35 times.
I made “said” a stop word because I didn’t think it was relevant…I also almost took out “man” and “holmes” but I realized that the use of ‘man’ says something about the time period and that Holmes, well, he is the main character and there is a lot of focus on his actions and work.
“Man” was used 37 times; the most frequent word. This implies an autonomous feel to the characters described as ‘the man’ – rarely was it used to describe Holmes or another know character. This also shows that woman, women, or female characters are not prominent in The Blue Carbuncle.
“Hat” is also a frequently used word (27) – through the “relative frequencies” tab that charts out the use of the word throughout the story, the graph shows that the word ‘hat’, out of ten sections, was used the most in the second, then first section, and a little bit in the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth but never in the seventh, eighth, ninth, or tenth. If we recall the story, in the beginning Holmes and Watson are trying to figure out who the owner of the hat is. Once they have an idea of whose it is, the hat is unnecessary for the rest of the story.