Interestingly, the only one of those that I recognize as clearly one of my verbal quirks is “clear,” which I use a lot in “it’s not clear to me that …”, but it barely made it onto the list. I participate in most of the discussions on intelligence testing, so it’s no surprise that “sat,” “iq,” and “scores” are high. “Cholesterol” seems likely to be an artifact from a single detailed conversation about it, and then apparently I like words like “because,” “should,” and “much” more than normal, which is not that surprising given my general verbosity. I know I use the word “evidence” more than the general population, but am surprised I use it that much more than LW, and “comments” is unclear. Probably meta-discussion?
Most incidence of “comments” seems to be in the context of moderator actions. There are 44 occurrences in your contribution to the corpus, which is around 50,000 words.
As for “evidence”, there are 70 occurrences in 50,000 words. So on average, every 715th word you say in comments is “evidence”.
Thanks!
Interestingly, the only one of those that I recognize as clearly one of my verbal quirks is “clear,” which I use a lot in “it’s not clear to me that …”, but it barely made it onto the list. I participate in most of the discussions on intelligence testing, so it’s no surprise that “sat,” “iq,” and “scores” are high. “Cholesterol” seems likely to be an artifact from a single detailed conversation about it, and then apparently I like words like “because,” “should,” and “much” more than normal, which is not that surprising given my general verbosity. I know I use the word “evidence” more than the general population, but am surprised I use it that much more than LW, and “comments” is unclear. Probably meta-discussion?
Most incidence of “comments” seems to be in the context of moderator actions. There are 44 occurrences in your contribution to the corpus, which is around 50,000 words.
As for “evidence”, there are 70 occurrences in 50,000 words. So on average, every 715th word you say in comments is “evidence”.