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I would like to get a better picture of a manuscript I've written, especially in regards to word usage patterns and potentially overused terms.

I'm curious whether anyone can recommend a document analysis tool.

Specifically, is there a program that takes a Microsoft Word document and produces a spreadsheet of all the words contained in the document and the number of times the word appears?

e.g.

cat 23

said 15

jumped 12

dog 7

Cliff Hangerson Page
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  • I'll edit to clarify intent. I've seen other discussion regarding writing tools, such as http://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/2050, http://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/1854 and http://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/1970 – Cliff Hangerson Page Mar 18 '11 at 17:50
  • yes, that helps some. A document analysis tool doesn't have to have a writing focus is all I was thinking. – justkt Mar 18 '11 at 17:52
  • I am also interested in upcoming answers. Good question. – Nerevar Mar 18 '11 at 18:05
  • Writing a program to count the instances of words in a text file was a programming project I had in college! Sorry, just had to jump in with that :P. But it should be fairly simple for programmers to implement or write - if none of the programs give you the kind of output you want I'd be happy to try to help? – tryin May 31 '19 at 08:20

4 Answers4

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The writing program yWriter has this function. yWriter is basically a downgraded version of Scrivener for Windows. It allows you to create multiple scenes and rearrange them easily. It will also analyze those scenes or the entire document for word usage, word goal, etc.

Ralph Gallagher
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This isn't precisely what you're looking for, but it's interesting:

http://www.wordle.net/

Lauren-Clear-Monica-Ipsum
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Bing search for word frequency gets these two promising programs. Not for Word documents, but that's not a huge problem since you can save as text or copy-paste.

http://wordfrequencycounter.com/

Another: http://www.primitivezone.com/primitive-word-counter.html

I'm actually writing a writing app for Windows now. It'd be pretty easy to add frequency in as a tool... Hmm.

rianjs
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Scrivener, a program by literature and latte, will help with this. This is just one of the features--it's super-advanced and a complete lifesaver for anyone writing anything. I use it for scripts and novels, and sometimes just for its organization and fullscreen for my papers. It's amazing. Free trial lasts a while, but it's always in beta so you can usually get it w/o paying :) scrivener: www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener.html

newyellowshoes
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