zipf2.jpg The image displays a line graph on a white background with faint gray grid lines. The vertical y-axis on the left is labeled "COUNT" and has numerical markers for 0, 50, 100, 150, 200, and 250. The horizontal x-axis at the bottom is labeled "word" and lists a long sequence of specific words in small text running from left to right. A solid blue line represents the data. It begins near the top left corner at a count of roughly 250 and drops sharply downwards, curving to become nearly flat along the bottom axis as it moves to the right. This shape indicates that a few items have very high counts while most have very low counts. There are green text annotations overlaid on the graph to highlight specific data points. In the upper left area, corresponding to the highest part of the blue line, four words are stacked vertically: "the", "it", "at", and "which". These represent the most frequent words. In the upper right quadrant, there is a block of explanatory text that reads: "We encounter some words very frequently, many more words somewhat infrequently, and there are many, many words that we might never encounter". In the lower right area, corresponding to the flat tail end of the blue line where word counts are near zero, four more words are stacked vertically: "writing", "steps", "proceeded", and "couldn't". These represent words that appear very rarely in the dataset. This description was generated automatically. Please feel free to ask questions if you have further questions about the nature of the image or its meaning within the presentation.