Sedra-Stats
44th of the 54 sedras - first of 11 in D'varim
Written on 196.5 lines in a Sefer Torah (rank: 26)
5 parshiyot; 1 open, 4 closed
105 p'sukim - ranks 32nd, 6th in D'varim(tied with Chayei Sara, but larger)
1548 words - ranks 26th, 6th in D'varim
5972 letters - ranks 24th, 5th in D'varim(tied with Vayeshev, but smaller)
Jump in rankings from p'sukim to words & letters is a result of relatively
long p'sukim
Mitzvot
2 of the 613 mitzvot in D'varim, both prohibitions
The Book of D'varim is written on 1894 lines in a Sefer Torah, has 956
p'sukim, 14,293 words, 54,892 letters; ranks 4th among the Five Books in all
those categories.
It has 159 parshiyot, 35 open and 124 closed. It's tied for
second with Bamidbar. Its P'tuchot are the fewest in the Torah and its
S'tumot are the most. That indicates a more unified theme than the other
books.
Its sedras average out a bit longer than Vayikra's, even
though the four shortest sedras are in D'varim.
On average, D'varim's p'sukim are the longest of the Five
Books.
200 mitzvot (32.6%), 77 positive (31.0%), 123 prohibitions
(33.7%). Compare with 18.4% of the lines in a SeferTorah and 16.4% of the
Torah's p'sukim.