The python Counter class takes an Iterable object as parameter. As you are giving it a String object:
Counter('like baby baby baby ohhh baby baby like nooo')
it will iterate over each character of the string and generate a count for each of the different letters. Thats why you are receiving
Counter({'b': 10, ' ': 8, 'a': 5, 'y': 5, 'o': 4, 'h': 3, 'l': 2, 'i': 2, 'k': 2, 'e': 2, 'n': 1})
back from the class. One alternative would be to pass a list to Counter. This way the Counter class will iterate each of the list elements and create the count you expect.
Counter(['like', 'baby', 'baby', 'baby', 'ohhh', 'baby', 'baby', 'like', 'nooo'])
That could also be simply achived by splitting the string into words using the split method:
Counter('like baby baby baby ohhh baby baby like nooo'.split())
Output
Counter({'baby': 5, 'like': 2, 'ohhh': 1, 'nooo': 1})
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