 Hi it's me again, Samuel your VLC advisor. Sometimes you might just be interested in the frequency or context of words or phrases occurring in a specific section. If this is the case, you can limit your search accordingly. Just click on sections and select the genre, the time period or the subgenre of interest. You can also select two or more at a time. When clicking on the sections, just press shift to select a range of sections. Press control to select individual ones. Furthermore, a second section or set of sections can be selected against which to compare the first. Let's illustrate that. For example, you wonder how frequently I guess is used in spoken language compared to academic writing. In this case, select spoken from the first list and academic from the second. Additionally, you could change sorting from relevance to frequency or alphabetical. Thus, you will only receive one result per section and you don't have to think about the sorting. As a result, the left table displays I guess in spoken texts. The right table displays academic texts. Tokens 1 is therefore the raw frequency in the spoken section and tokens 2 is the academic section. The raw frequencies of the search term are shown in both tables and so are the normalized frequencies abbreviated as PM. Furthermore, the column ratio gives information about the relative frequency in the two sets of sections, which is calculated by dividing PM 1 by PM 2. If you need additional assistance, just look at the help page for further information. Okay, that's it for now. Don't forget to practice and see you again soon.