A Commonplace Book

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BYTE (Kenner)

 

In 1936 a concordance to James Joyce's Ulysses was created on cards and circulated by mimeograph. Harvard's George Kingsley Zipf noticed an interesting thing about the statistical tables generated from this process: an exact inverse correlation between frequency and appearance of words existed. Thus, the commonest word ("the") occurred 16,000 times and--as if to compensate--there are exactly 16,000 words that appear only once! And so on. A log-to-log graph of frequency versus occurrence is a straight slanting line.
-- [noted by Hugh Kenner, BYTE, Oct. 1989, p.362]
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