This data provides an interesting look into the most frequently occurring words that function as "ending hooks,"
which appears to refer to common final word segments or short words that often conclude phrases or other words.
Key Observations and Patterns:
Prevalence of Short Words/Syllables: The majority of the words on this list are very short,
often single syllables (e.g., "ba," "na," "da," "la," "ma," "ta"). This suggests that common, brief
linguistic units frequently appear at the end of words or phrases.
Dominance of Vowel-Ending Words: A notable pattern is the high number of words ending with a vowel
or a vowel sound, particularly '-a' (e.g., "ba," "na," "pa," "da," "la," "ma," "ta," "ya"). This indicates
that words concluding with open sounds are very common in this "hook" context.
Recurring Sound/Morpheme Patterns:
"-a": The most frequent ending sound appears to be '-a', seen in "ba," "na," "pa," "da," "la," "ma," "ta," and "ya." This suggests a common ending for words in the dataset.
"-or": "tor" (10) and "war" (9) indicate that words ending with an '-or' sound are also present.
"-ur": "cur" (9) also shows a distinct ending pattern.
Highest and Lowest Frequencies:
The word "ta" is the most frequent ending hook, appearing 16 times.
The lowest frequency of 9 is shared by several words: "ba," "cur," "na," "pa," "pe," "war," "wo," and "ya."
This analysis of "ending hooks" could be valuable for various linguistic studies, including understanding
common suffixes, phonetic patterns in word endings, or for applications in natural language processing such
as text generation or segmentation. The observed patterns highlight the significance of short, often
vowel-ending, and phonetically simple units in concluding linguistic structures.