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1,700
|
Who owns the High Renaissance palace that is only a few blocks from Sant'Eligio degli Orefici?
|
Italian Republic
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Sant'Eligio degli Orefici",
"Sant'Eligio degli Orefici",
"Palazzo Farnese",
"Palazzo Farnese"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Palazzo dello Strozzino is a Renaissance palace in Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy.",
" The stone Renaissance facade is located on Piazza degli Strozzi, diagonal to the Southeast corner of the imposing Palazzo Strozzi.",
" The Northern façade on Via dei Anselmi houses the entrance to the Cinema Odeon."
],
"title": "Palazzo dello Strozzino"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sant’Eligio Maggiore is a church in Naples, southern Italy.",
" It is located near Piazza Mercato (Market Square), and was built during the reign of Charles of Anjou by the same congregation that built the nearby Sant’Eligio hospital in 1270.",
" It is the first church built in Naples by the Angevin dynasty."
],
"title": "Sant'Eligio Maggiore"
},
{
"sentences": [
"In art history, High Renaissance is the period denoting the apogee of the visual arts in the Italian Renaissance.",
" The High Renaissance period is traditionally taken to begin in the 1490s, with Leonardo's fresco of the Last Supper in Milan and the death of Lorenzo de' Medici in Florence, and to have ended in 1527 with the sacking of Rome by the troops of Emperor Charles V.",
" This term was first used in German (Hochrenaissance) in the early nineteenth century, and has its origins in the \"High Style\" of painting and sculpture described by Johann Joachim Winckelmann.",
" Over the last twenty years, use of the term has been frequently criticized by academic art historians for oversimplifying artistic developments, ignoring historical context, and focusing only on a few iconic works."
],
"title": "High Renaissance"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sant'Eligio degli Orefici is a church in Rome, Italy.",
" It is located in the rione Regola, near via Giulia, on a corner of the via of the same name that ends below the Lungotevere dei Tebaldi, a few blocks northwest of the Palazzo Farnese."
],
"title": "Sant'Eligio degli Orefici"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Palazzo Massimo alle Colonne is a Renaissance palace in Rome, Italy.",
" The palace was designed by Baldassarre Peruzzi in 1532-1536 on a site of three contiguous palaces owned by the old Roman Massimo family and built after arson destroyed the earlier structures during the Sack of Rome (1527).",
" In addition the curved façade was dictated by foundations built upon the stands for the stadium (odeon) of the emperor Domitian.",
" It fronts the now-busy Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, a few hundred yards from the front of the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle."
],
"title": "Palazzo Massimo alle Colonne"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Palazzo Farnese (] ) or Farnese Palace is one of the most important High Renaissance palaces in Rome.",
" Owned by the Italian Republic, it was given to the French government in 1936 for a period of 99 years, and currently serves as the French embassy in Italy."
],
"title": "Palazzo Farnese"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Venus of Urbino is an oil painting by the Italian painter Titian, which seems to have been begun in 1532 or 1534, and was perhaps completed in 1534, but not sold until 1538.",
" It depicts a nude young woman, traditionally identified with the goddess Venus, reclining on a couch or bed in the sumptuous surroundings of a Renaissance palace.",
" It is now in the Galleria degli Uffizi in Florence."
],
"title": "Venus of Urbino"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Alhambra ( ; ] ; Arabic: الْحَمْرَاء ] , \"Al-Ḥamrā\", lit.",
" \"The Red One\"), the complete Arabic form of which was \"Qalat Al-Hamra\", is a palace and fortress complex located in Granada, Andalusia, Spain.",
" It was originally constructed as a small fortress in AD 889 on the remains of Roman fortifications, and then largely ignored until its ruins were renovated and rebuilt in the mid-13th century by the Moorish emir Mohammed ben Al-Ahmar of the Emirate of Granada, who built its current palace and walls.",
" It was converted into a royal palace in 1333 by Yusuf I, Sultan of Granada.",
" After the conclusion of the Christian Reconquista in 1492, the site became the Royal Court of Ferdinand and Isabella (where Christopher Columbus received royal endorsement for his expedition), and the palaces were partially altered to Renaissance tastes.",
" In 1526 Charles I & V commissioned a new Renaissance palace better befitting the Holy Roman Emperor in the revolutionary Mannerist style influenced by Humanist philosophy in direct juxtaposition with the Nasrid Andalusian architecture, but which was ultimately never completed due to Morisco rebellions in Granada."
],
"title": "Alhambra"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Palazzo Mozzi or Palazzo de' Mozzi is an early Renaissance palace, located at the end of the Piazza de' Mozzi that emerges from Ponte alle Grazie and leads straight to the palace where via San Niccolò becomes via de' Bardi in the Quartiere of Santo Spirito (San Niccolò) in the Oltrarno section of Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy.",
" The 13th-century palace housed the gallery of the highly successful antiquarian Stefano Bardini, of which the remnants were left to the commune, where they assembled the Museo Bardini or Mozzi Bardini, displaying Florentine art and artifacts up to the early Renaissance.",
" The gardens elaborated against the hillside behind the palace were added mainly by Bardini."
],
"title": "Palazzo Mozzi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Palazzo della Cancelleria (Palace of the Chancellery, referring to the former Apostolic Chancery of the Pope) is a Renaissance palace in Rome, Italy, situated between the present Corso Vittorio Emanuele II and the Campo de' Fiori, in the rione of Parione.",
" It was built between 1489–1513 by Donato Bramante (1444–1514) as a palace for Cardinal Raffaele Riario, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, and is regarded as the earliest Renaissance palace in Rome.",
" The Palazzo houses the Papal Chancellery, is an extraterritorial property of the Holy See, and is designated as a World Heritage Site."
],
"title": "Palazzo della Cancelleria"
}
] |
[
"Title: Palazzo dello Strozzino\n\nPalazzo dello Strozzino is a Renaissance palace in Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy. The stone Renaissance facade is located on Piazza degli Strozzi, diagonal to the Southeast corner of the imposing Palazzo Strozzi. The Northern façade on Via dei Anselmi houses the entrance to the Cinema Odeon.",
"Title: Sant'Eligio Maggiore\n\nSant’Eligio Maggiore is a church in Naples, southern Italy. It is located near Piazza Mercato (Market Square), and was built during the reign of Charles of Anjou by the same congregation that built the nearby Sant’Eligio hospital in 1270. It is the first church built in Naples by the Angevin dynasty.",
"Title: High Renaissance\n\nIn art history, High Renaissance is the period denoting the apogee of the visual arts in the Italian Renaissance. The High Renaissance period is traditionally taken to begin in the 1490s, with Leonardo's fresco of the Last Supper in Milan and the death of Lorenzo de' Medici in Florence, and to have ended in 1527 with the sacking of Rome by the troops of Emperor Charles V. This term was first used in German (Hochrenaissance) in the early nineteenth century, and has its origins in the \"High Style\" of painting and sculpture described by Johann Joachim Winckelmann. Over the last twenty years, use of the term has been frequently criticized by academic art historians for oversimplifying artistic developments, ignoring historical context, and focusing only on a few iconic works.",
"Title: Sant'Eligio degli Orefici\n\nSant'Eligio degli Orefici is a church in Rome, Italy. It is located in the rione Regola, near via Giulia, on a corner of the via of the same name that ends below the Lungotevere dei Tebaldi, a few blocks northwest of the Palazzo Farnese.",
"Title: Palazzo Massimo alle Colonne\n\nThe Palazzo Massimo alle Colonne is a Renaissance palace in Rome, Italy. The palace was designed by Baldassarre Peruzzi in 1532-1536 on a site of three contiguous palaces owned by the old Roman Massimo family and built after arson destroyed the earlier structures during the Sack of Rome (1527). In addition the curved façade was dictated by foundations built upon the stands for the stadium (odeon) of the emperor Domitian. It fronts the now-busy Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, a few hundred yards from the front of the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle.",
"Title: Palazzo Farnese\n\nPalazzo Farnese (] ) or Farnese Palace is one of the most important High Renaissance palaces in Rome. Owned by the Italian Republic, it was given to the French government in 1936 for a period of 99 years, and currently serves as the French embassy in Italy.",
"Title: Venus of Urbino\n\nThe Venus of Urbino is an oil painting by the Italian painter Titian, which seems to have been begun in 1532 or 1534, and was perhaps completed in 1534, but not sold until 1538. It depicts a nude young woman, traditionally identified with the goddess Venus, reclining on a couch or bed in the sumptuous surroundings of a Renaissance palace. It is now in the Galleria degli Uffizi in Florence.",
"Title: Alhambra\n\nThe Alhambra ( ; ] ; Arabic: الْحَمْرَاء ] , \"Al-Ḥamrā\", lit. \"The Red One\"), the complete Arabic form of which was \"Qalat Al-Hamra\", is a palace and fortress complex located in Granada, Andalusia, Spain. It was originally constructed as a small fortress in AD 889 on the remains of Roman fortifications, and then largely ignored until its ruins were renovated and rebuilt in the mid-13th century by the Moorish emir Mohammed ben Al-Ahmar of the Emirate of Granada, who built its current palace and walls. It was converted into a royal palace in 1333 by Yusuf I, Sultan of Granada. After the conclusion of the Christian Reconquista in 1492, the site became the Royal Court of Ferdinand and Isabella (where Christopher Columbus received royal endorsement for his expedition), and the palaces were partially altered to Renaissance tastes. In 1526 Charles I & V commissioned a new Renaissance palace better befitting the Holy Roman Emperor in the revolutionary Mannerist style influenced by Humanist philosophy in direct juxtaposition with the Nasrid Andalusian architecture, but which was ultimately never completed due to Morisco rebellions in Granada.",
"Title: Palazzo Mozzi\n\nPalazzo Mozzi or Palazzo de' Mozzi is an early Renaissance palace, located at the end of the Piazza de' Mozzi that emerges from Ponte alle Grazie and leads straight to the palace where via San Niccolò becomes via de' Bardi in the Quartiere of Santo Spirito (San Niccolò) in the Oltrarno section of Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy. The 13th-century palace housed the gallery of the highly successful antiquarian Stefano Bardini, of which the remnants were left to the commune, where they assembled the Museo Bardini or Mozzi Bardini, displaying Florentine art and artifacts up to the early Renaissance. The gardens elaborated against the hillside behind the palace were added mainly by Bardini.",
"Title: Palazzo della Cancelleria\n\nThe Palazzo della Cancelleria (Palace of the Chancellery, referring to the former Apostolic Chancery of the Pope) is a Renaissance palace in Rome, Italy, situated between the present Corso Vittorio Emanuele II and the Campo de' Fiori, in the rione of Parione. It was built between 1489–1513 by Donato Bramante (1444–1514) as a palace for Cardinal Raffaele Riario, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, and is regarded as the earliest Renaissance palace in Rome. The Palazzo houses the Papal Chancellery, is an extraterritorial property of the Holy See, and is designated as a World Heritage Site."
] |
1,701
|
Other then Josh Deu and Win butler who else is in Arcade fire?
|
Régine Chassagne and younger brother Will Butler
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Josh Deu",
"Win Butler"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Everything Now is the fifth studio album by the Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire.",
" It was released on July 28, 2017, physically through Sonovox Records and digitally through Columbia Records.",
" The album was produced by Arcade Fire alongside Thomas Bangalter of the electronic-house duo Daft Punk and Pulp bassist Steve Mackey.",
" Previous collaborator Markus Dravs provides co-production, with additional production by Geoff Barrow of Portishead and Eric Heigle."
],
"title": "Everything Now"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Régine Chassagne (] ; born 19 August 1976) is a Canadian singer, songwriter, musician, multi-instrumentalist, and is a founding member of the band Arcade Fire.",
" She is married to co-founder Win Butler."
],
"title": "Régine Chassagne"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Edwin Farnham Butler III (born April 14, 1980) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and multi-instrumentalist of the Montreal-based indie rock band Arcade Fire.",
" His wife Régine Chassagne and younger brother Will Butler are both members of the band."
],
"title": "Win Butler"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Joshua Deu is a film & new media teacher and musician, best known as the co-founding member of Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire.",
" Deu founded the band in 2000, with classmate Win Butler, and departed from the band in late 2003.",
" Since 2007, Deu has taught Film & New Media at one of the top schools in the country Marlborough School in Los Angeles."
],
"title": "Josh Deu"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)\" is a song by Canadian rock band Arcade Fire, and the first track on their debut album \"Funeral\".",
" It is the first of the four-part \"Neighborhood\" series found on \"Funeral\".",
" It was the band's first single, released several months before the album as a 7\" vinyl record on June 20, 2004, to a pressing of 1500 copies.",
" The B-side to the album is a recording of the song \"My Buddy\" by swing musician Alvino Rey.",
" Rey is the maternal grandfather of Arcade Fire members Win and William Butler."
],
"title": "Neighborhood 1 (Tunnels)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Arcade Fire are a Canadian indie rock band based in Montreal, Quebec, consisting of husband and wife Win Butler and Régine Chassagne, along with Win's younger brother William Butler, Richard Reed Parry, Tim Kingsbury and Jeremy Gara.",
" The band's current touring line-up also includes former core member Sarah Neufeld, percussionist, Tiwill Duprate, and saxophonist, Stuart Bogie."
],
"title": "Arcade Fire"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Neighborhood #2 (Laïka)\" is the second single by Canadian rock band Arcade Fire from their debut album \"Funeral\".",
" Released on 28 March 2005, the single reached number 30 on the UK Singles Chart, and was released on the Rough Trade Records record label.",
" The single also contains the song \"My Buddy\" by Alvino Rey, the grandfather of Arcade Fire members Win and William Butler."
],
"title": "Neighborhood 2 (Laïka)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Everything Now\" is a song by Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire.",
" It was released on June 1, 2017, as the first single from the band's fifth studio album, \"Everything Now\" (2017).",
" It was produced by Thomas Bangalter, Steve Mackey and the band itself.",
" The song samples \"The Coffee Cola Song\" by Francis Bebey.",
" \"Everything Now\" is Arcade Fire's first number-one hit on a \"Billboard\" chart."
],
"title": "Everything Now (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"William Pierce Butler (born October 6, 1982) is an American multi-instrumentalist and composer who is best known as a core member of the indie rock band Arcade Fire.",
" Will plays synthesizer, bass, guitar and percussion.",
" He is known for his spontaneity and antics during performances.",
" He is the brother of Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler.",
" Butler received his first Academy Award nomination for his work on the original score of the film \"Her\" in 2014."
],
"title": "William Butler (musician)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Arcade Fire (known unofficially as Us Kids Know) is a self-titled extended play (EP) by the indie rock band Arcade Fire.",
" The EP was recorded in Maine, United States, during the summer of 2002.",
" \"Arcade Fire\" was remastered and repackaged for its 2005 re-release by Merge Records for fans after they had \"grown obsessed\" with the band's debut album, \"Funeral\".",
" It was initially released in 2003 by the band at their shows and website, and then re-released in 2005 by Merge.",
" It received positive reviews from music critics, although some of them noted that it was inferior to their debut album \"Funeral\".",
" Lyrical themes of \"Arcade Fire\" consist of parents, suburbia, new love, dread, and drama.",
" The EP's third track, \"No Cars Go\", was re-recorded for Arcade Fire's second full-length album, \"Neon Bible\".",
" No Cars Go has been played at the majority of live shows since the EP release.",
" Arcade Fire have also played other songs from the EP, live on every tour since.",
" However it has become less frequent.",
" On their most recent tour, for \"Reflektor\", they notably performed Headlights Look Like Diamonds."
],
"title": "Arcade Fire (EP)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Everything Now\n\nEverything Now is the fifth studio album by the Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire. It was released on July 28, 2017, physically through Sonovox Records and digitally through Columbia Records. The album was produced by Arcade Fire alongside Thomas Bangalter of the electronic-house duo Daft Punk and Pulp bassist Steve Mackey. Previous collaborator Markus Dravs provides co-production, with additional production by Geoff Barrow of Portishead and Eric Heigle.",
"Title: Régine Chassagne\n\nRégine Chassagne (] ; born 19 August 1976) is a Canadian singer, songwriter, musician, multi-instrumentalist, and is a founding member of the band Arcade Fire. She is married to co-founder Win Butler.",
"Title: Win Butler\n\nEdwin Farnham Butler III (born April 14, 1980) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and multi-instrumentalist of the Montreal-based indie rock band Arcade Fire. His wife Régine Chassagne and younger brother Will Butler are both members of the band.",
"Title: Josh Deu\n\nJoshua Deu is a film & new media teacher and musician, best known as the co-founding member of Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire. Deu founded the band in 2000, with classmate Win Butler, and departed from the band in late 2003. Since 2007, Deu has taught Film & New Media at one of the top schools in the country Marlborough School in Los Angeles.",
"Title: Neighborhood 1 (Tunnels)\n\n\"Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)\" is a song by Canadian rock band Arcade Fire, and the first track on their debut album \"Funeral\". It is the first of the four-part \"Neighborhood\" series found on \"Funeral\". It was the band's first single, released several months before the album as a 7\" vinyl record on June 20, 2004, to a pressing of 1500 copies. The B-side to the album is a recording of the song \"My Buddy\" by swing musician Alvino Rey. Rey is the maternal grandfather of Arcade Fire members Win and William Butler.",
"Title: Arcade Fire\n\nArcade Fire are a Canadian indie rock band based in Montreal, Quebec, consisting of husband and wife Win Butler and Régine Chassagne, along with Win's younger brother William Butler, Richard Reed Parry, Tim Kingsbury and Jeremy Gara. The band's current touring line-up also includes former core member Sarah Neufeld, percussionist, Tiwill Duprate, and saxophonist, Stuart Bogie.",
"Title: Neighborhood 2 (Laïka)\n\n\"Neighborhood #2 (Laïka)\" is the second single by Canadian rock band Arcade Fire from their debut album \"Funeral\". Released on 28 March 2005, the single reached number 30 on the UK Singles Chart, and was released on the Rough Trade Records record label. The single also contains the song \"My Buddy\" by Alvino Rey, the grandfather of Arcade Fire members Win and William Butler.",
"Title: Everything Now (song)\n\n\"Everything Now\" is a song by Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire. It was released on June 1, 2017, as the first single from the band's fifth studio album, \"Everything Now\" (2017). It was produced by Thomas Bangalter, Steve Mackey and the band itself. The song samples \"The Coffee Cola Song\" by Francis Bebey. \"Everything Now\" is Arcade Fire's first number-one hit on a \"Billboard\" chart.",
"Title: William Butler (musician)\n\nWilliam Pierce Butler (born October 6, 1982) is an American multi-instrumentalist and composer who is best known as a core member of the indie rock band Arcade Fire. Will plays synthesizer, bass, guitar and percussion. He is known for his spontaneity and antics during performances. He is the brother of Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler. Butler received his first Academy Award nomination for his work on the original score of the film \"Her\" in 2014.",
"Title: Arcade Fire (EP)\n\nArcade Fire (known unofficially as Us Kids Know) is a self-titled extended play (EP) by the indie rock band Arcade Fire. The EP was recorded in Maine, United States, during the summer of 2002. \"Arcade Fire\" was remastered and repackaged for its 2005 re-release by Merge Records for fans after they had \"grown obsessed\" with the band's debut album, \"Funeral\". It was initially released in 2003 by the band at their shows and website, and then re-released in 2005 by Merge. It received positive reviews from music critics, although some of them noted that it was inferior to their debut album \"Funeral\". Lyrical themes of \"Arcade Fire\" consist of parents, suburbia, new love, dread, and drama. The EP's third track, \"No Cars Go\", was re-recorded for Arcade Fire's second full-length album, \"Neon Bible\". No Cars Go has been played at the majority of live shows since the EP release. Arcade Fire have also played other songs from the EP, live on every tour since. However it has become less frequent. On their most recent tour, for \"Reflektor\", they notably performed Headlights Look Like Diamonds."
] |
1,702
|
Was 111 Murray Street or the Chrysler Building built first?
|
The Chrysler Building
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"111 Murray Street",
"Chrysler Building",
"Chrysler Building"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Joseph H. Stratton (September 1854 – 1922) was elected mayor of Murray, Utah from 1904 to 1905.",
" He was one of the first candidates for mayor of the new city, but was defeated by Chillion L. Miller.",
" During Stratton’s administration the Progress Company was granted a franchise to set poles and string wire to carry electric current within the limits of Murray city.",
" In 1904, there was a move to bond the city for the purpose of installing a water system and proposed bonding but the matter did not develop into a bond.",
" Murray city set up its water system and the first 21 hydrants were to be in place and ready for use in December 1905.",
" The following streets received names Murray Street, Vine Street, and Atwood Street.",
" During Mayor Stratton’s term the poll tax was discontinued.",
" Murray also began acquiring or constructing public buildings such as a courthouse and jail."
],
"title": "Joseph Stratton"
},
{
"sentences": [
"66th Street was an express station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line.",
" It had two levels.",
" The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms.",
" The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had two track and two side platforms over the lower level local tracks.",
" The station closed on June 11, 1940.",
" The next southbound local stop was 59th Street.",
" The next southbound express stop was 34th Street for Ninth Avenue trains, and 50th Street for IRT Sixth Avenue Line express trains.",
" The next northbound local stop was 72nd Street.",
" The next northbound express stop was 116th Street."
],
"title": "66th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Maplewood Hotel is a historic residential hotel at 328-330 Maple Street in Holyoke, Massachusetts.",
" It consists of two buildings that have become conjoined by internal connections.",
" The 2.5 story brick block at 330 Maple Street was built first, between 1884 and 1889, while the four story building at 328 Maple Street was built c. 1890.",
" The latter was opened as the Maplewood Hotel, providing furnished and unfurnished residences to middle and upper class residents of the city.",
" In 1924 the two buildings were joined by connections through their adjacent walls.",
" It continues to be used for residences."
],
"title": "Maplewood Hotel"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Conabeer Chrysler Building is a historic auto showroom located at Asheville, Buncombe County, North Carolina.",
" It was built in 1928, and is a three-story steel frame building faced in orange brick and limestone.",
" It features a tall decorated parapet.",
" The building was erected as a new home for the Conabeer Motor Company, the local Chrysler agency."
],
"title": "Conabeer Chrysler Building"
},
{
"sentences": [
"34th Street was an express station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line, New York, United States.",
" It was originally built on July 30, 1873 by the New York Elevated Railroad Company, and had two levels.",
" The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms.",
" The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had one track and two side platforms over the lower level local tracks.",
" It closed on June 11, 1940.",
" The next southbound local stop was 30th Street.",
" The next southbound express stop was 14th Street.",
" The next northbound local stop was 42nd Street.",
" The next northbound express stop was 66th Street.",
" This station also serviced Penn Station and was west of the IRT and IND subway stations at Penn Station."
],
"title": "34th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"111 Murray Street (formerly known as 101 Murray Street or 101 Tribeca) is a residential skyscraper under construction developed by Witkoff Group and Fisher Brothers in Tribeca, Manhattan, New York City."
],
"title": "111 Murray Street"
},
{
"sentences": [
"30th Street was a local station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line.",
" It was opened on December 13, 1873 as the replacement for the original northern terminus of the Ninth Avenue Line at 29th Street, which was built in 1868 The station which was originally built by the New York Elevated Railroad Company had two levels.",
" The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms.",
" The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had one track that served express trains that bypassed the station.",
" It closed on June 11, 1940.",
" The next southbound stop was 23rd Street.",
" The next northbound stop was 34th Street."
],
"title": "30th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"89th Street was a local station on the demolished IRT Third Avenue Line.",
" It was originally built on December 9, 1878, and had two levels.",
" The lower level, built first, was served by local trains and had two tracks and two side platforms.",
" The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts, had one track that bypassed the station and served express trains.",
" 89th Street station was the terminus of the IRT Third Avenue Line until it was expanded to 129th Street on December 30, 1878.",
" This station closed on May 12, 1955, with the ending of all service on the Third Avenue El south of 149th Street.",
" North of the station were connecting tracks to the 98th Street Yard."
],
"title": "89th Street (IRT Third Avenue Line)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Chrysler Building is an Art Deco-style skyscraper located on the East Side of Midtown Manhattan, at the intersection of 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue in the Turtle Bay neighborhood.",
" At 318.9 m , the structure was the world's tallest building for 11 months before it was surpassed by the Empire State Building in 1931."
],
"title": "Chrysler Building"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Park Congregational Chapel is a Congregational chapel in the town of Llanelli, Carmarthenshire, Wales.",
" It was built in 1864 and is located at the junction between Murray Street and Inkerman Street.",
" It was designated as a Grade II listed building on 3 December 1992."
],
"title": "Park Congregational Chapel, Llanelli"
}
] |
[
"Title: Joseph Stratton\n\nJoseph H. Stratton (September 1854 – 1922) was elected mayor of Murray, Utah from 1904 to 1905. He was one of the first candidates for mayor of the new city, but was defeated by Chillion L. Miller. During Stratton’s administration the Progress Company was granted a franchise to set poles and string wire to carry electric current within the limits of Murray city. In 1904, there was a move to bond the city for the purpose of installing a water system and proposed bonding but the matter did not develop into a bond. Murray city set up its water system and the first 21 hydrants were to be in place and ready for use in December 1905. The following streets received names Murray Street, Vine Street, and Atwood Street. During Mayor Stratton’s term the poll tax was discontinued. Murray also began acquiring or constructing public buildings such as a courthouse and jail.",
"Title: 66th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)\n\n66th Street was an express station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line. It had two levels. The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms. The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had two track and two side platforms over the lower level local tracks. The station closed on June 11, 1940. The next southbound local stop was 59th Street. The next southbound express stop was 34th Street for Ninth Avenue trains, and 50th Street for IRT Sixth Avenue Line express trains. The next northbound local stop was 72nd Street. The next northbound express stop was 116th Street.",
"Title: Maplewood Hotel\n\nThe Maplewood Hotel is a historic residential hotel at 328-330 Maple Street in Holyoke, Massachusetts. It consists of two buildings that have become conjoined by internal connections. The 2.5 story brick block at 330 Maple Street was built first, between 1884 and 1889, while the four story building at 328 Maple Street was built c. 1890. The latter was opened as the Maplewood Hotel, providing furnished and unfurnished residences to middle and upper class residents of the city. In 1924 the two buildings were joined by connections through their adjacent walls. It continues to be used for residences.",
"Title: Conabeer Chrysler Building\n\nConabeer Chrysler Building is a historic auto showroom located at Asheville, Buncombe County, North Carolina. It was built in 1928, and is a three-story steel frame building faced in orange brick and limestone. It features a tall decorated parapet. The building was erected as a new home for the Conabeer Motor Company, the local Chrysler agency.",
"Title: 34th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)\n\n34th Street was an express station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line, New York, United States. It was originally built on July 30, 1873 by the New York Elevated Railroad Company, and had two levels. The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms. The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had one track and two side platforms over the lower level local tracks. It closed on June 11, 1940. The next southbound local stop was 30th Street. The next southbound express stop was 14th Street. The next northbound local stop was 42nd Street. The next northbound express stop was 66th Street. This station also serviced Penn Station and was west of the IRT and IND subway stations at Penn Station.",
"Title: 111 Murray Street\n\n111 Murray Street (formerly known as 101 Murray Street or 101 Tribeca) is a residential skyscraper under construction developed by Witkoff Group and Fisher Brothers in Tribeca, Manhattan, New York City.",
"Title: 30th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)\n\n30th Street was a local station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line. It was opened on December 13, 1873 as the replacement for the original northern terminus of the Ninth Avenue Line at 29th Street, which was built in 1868 The station which was originally built by the New York Elevated Railroad Company had two levels. The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms. The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had one track that served express trains that bypassed the station. It closed on June 11, 1940. The next southbound stop was 23rd Street. The next northbound stop was 34th Street.",
"Title: 89th Street (IRT Third Avenue Line)\n\n89th Street was a local station on the demolished IRT Third Avenue Line. It was originally built on December 9, 1878, and had two levels. The lower level, built first, was served by local trains and had two tracks and two side platforms. The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts, had one track that bypassed the station and served express trains. 89th Street station was the terminus of the IRT Third Avenue Line until it was expanded to 129th Street on December 30, 1878. This station closed on May 12, 1955, with the ending of all service on the Third Avenue El south of 149th Street. North of the station were connecting tracks to the 98th Street Yard.",
"Title: Chrysler Building\n\nThe Chrysler Building is an Art Deco-style skyscraper located on the East Side of Midtown Manhattan, at the intersection of 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue in the Turtle Bay neighborhood. At 318.9 m , the structure was the world's tallest building for 11 months before it was surpassed by the Empire State Building in 1931.",
"Title: Park Congregational Chapel, Llanelli\n\nPark Congregational Chapel is a Congregational chapel in the town of Llanelli, Carmarthenshire, Wales. It was built in 1864 and is located at the junction between Murray Street and Inkerman Street. It was designated as a Grade II listed building on 3 December 1992."
] |
1,703
|
Which broadcasting company owned the website that premiered "Penelope Princess of Pets" in 2007?
|
Turner Broadcasting
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Penelope Princess of Pets",
"Super Deluxe"
],
"sent_id": [
3,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Lilly Broadcasting, LLC is a privately owned American broadcasting company owned and operated by the Lilly Brothers’ Brian Lilly and Kevin Lilly.",
" The company was founded in September 1999 with the purchase of WENY-TV (ABC) and WENY-FM & AM radio.",
" In 2002, Kevin Lilly purchased WSEE-TV (CBS) in Erie, Pennsylvania and have since added the CBS and The CW affiliates in Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands and ABC in the Virgin Islands."
],
"title": "Lilly Broadcasting"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Super Deluxe is an entertainment company owned by, but operating independently from, Turner Broadcasting.",
" The company's main output is in online video, television series, and documentaries.",
" Super Deluxe is headquartered in downtown Los Angeles."
],
"title": "Super Deluxe"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ames Broadcasting Company, also \"Lake City Broadcasting\" was formed under the owner Betty Baudler Horras, who started out as a bookkeeper before becoming the first woman to own a radio station in Iowa.",
" The small company owned and operated 3 radio stations in West Central Iowa.",
" KCYZ, KASI-AM, KIKD-FM were owned by Ames or Lake City Broadcasting Company, but later sold.",
" KCYZ (then KCCQ), KASI-AM radio stations that were located in Ames, Iowa were sold to Jacor that merged with Clear Channel Communications for an unspecified amount.",
" KIKD-FM radio station located in Lake City, Iowa was sold to Carroll Broadcasting Company.",
" Betty Baudler currently is the owner of Sign Pro and president of Baudler Enterprises."
],
"title": "Ames Broadcasting Company"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kurt Braunohler (born February 22, 1976) is an American comedian and host of \"The K Ohle with Kurt Braunohler\" podcast on the Nerdist network.",
" He was previously the host of IFC's comedy game show \"Bunk\" and has appeared on Comedy Central, \"This American Life\", and \"Radiolab\".",
" Braunohler is a frequent collaborator with Kristen Schaal, with whom he created the web series \"Penelope Princess of Pets\"."
],
"title": "Kurt Braunohler"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Chambers Communications Corporation was a broadcasting company based in Eugene, Oregon.",
" With roots back to 1959, Chambers Communications was founded by Carolyn S. Chambers and owned a chain of ABC affiliates in Western, Central Oregon and Southern Oregon.",
" Chambers also owned a state-of-the-art film and video production company and studios in Eugene, Oregon.",
" Chambers was the former owner of the cable system in Sunriver, Oregon, but on July 25, 2013 announced that it had sold the small system to BendBroadband's Zolo Media, the advertising and broadcast arm of the regional cable and wireless provider in nearby Bend, Oregon.",
" On March 5, 2014, Chambers Communications announced that it would exit broadcasting and sell its stations to Heartland Media, a company owned by former Gray Television executive Bob Prather."
],
"title": "Chambers Communications Corporation"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Swarnavahini (Sinhalese: ස්වර්ණවාහිනී ; literally Golden Channel) is a Sinhala language general entertainment and news television channel in Sri Lanka owned by EAP Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary of EAP Holdings.",
" Launched in 1994 as ETV (Extra Terrestrial Vision), it was one of Sri Lanka's first privately owned television channels.",
" Its sister channel ETV 2 was launched in 1995 when ETV was re-branded ETV 1.",
" The channel's owner Extra Terrestrial Vision (Private) Limited, who had been incorporated on 6 July 1992, changed its name to EAP Network (Private) Limited on 30 April 1996 following the acquisition by EAP.",
" At that time ETV 1 was re-broadcasting BBC.",
" ETV 1 was re-launched as Swarnavahini, a mass market Sinhala language channel, on 16 March 1997.",
" EAP Network (Private) Limited changed its name to EAP Broadcasting Company (Private) Limited on 16 May 2012, EAP Network (Private) Limited on 31 October 2012, EAP Network Limited on 28 August 2013 and EAP Broadcasting Company Limited on 11 September 2013."
],
"title": "Swarnavahini"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Penelope: Princess of Pets is a comedy series by comedy duo Kurt Braunohler and Kristen Schaal, in which Schaal stars as Penelope, a woman who can talk with animals.",
" On a mission to save the world by killing a legislator named Stone before it's too late, Penelope is accompanied on her quest by her pet bird Ruby, and orphan friend Kyle (played by Braunohler).",
" The theme song is written and performed by comedian/musician Reggie Watts.",
" Originally a web series of 3- to 5-minute webisodes for comedy website Super Deluxe, \"Penelope\" premiered online in March 2007, with nine webisodes released before the site was shut down in December 2008.",
" It was picked up soon after to be adapted into a television show for United Kingdom broadcaster Channel 4."
],
"title": "Penelope Princess of Pets"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USA Broadcasting (USAB) was an American television broadcasting company owned by the veteran entertainment industry executive Barry Diller.",
" This company was the over-the-air broadcasting arm of USA Networks."
],
"title": "USA Broadcasting"
},
{
"sentences": [
"WQBE-FM is one of two Charleston, West Virginia Country FM radio stations.",
" WQBE is owned by Bristol Broadcasting Company of Bristol, Virginia, with a \"twin\" radio station WXBQ-FM in that area.",
" WQBE also has another \"twin\" station WKYQ-FM in Paducah, Kentucky, also owned by Bristol Broadcasting.",
" WQBE broadcasts with an ERP of 50,000 watts.",
" WQBE is the leader in the Arbitron rations in the Charleston Metropolitan Statistical Area.",
" According to Bristol Broadcasting Company's website, WQBE's listening audience is strong in the 18 to 49 (male and female), and 25 to 54 (male and female) demographic ranges."
],
"title": "WQBE-FM"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Local TV LLC was a television broadcasting company owned by Oak Hill Capital Partners which operated 20 television stations in the United States.",
" The group was formed in 2006 by the acquisition of nine television stations owned by The New York Times Company, and grew further with the acquisition of eight former Fox owned-and-operated stations from Fox Television Stations, and a wide partnership with Tribune Broadcasting to provide management services for the stations (in turn, Local TV also operated several Tribune stations as well)."
],
"title": "Local TV LLC"
}
] |
[
"Title: Lilly Broadcasting\n\nLilly Broadcasting, LLC is a privately owned American broadcasting company owned and operated by the Lilly Brothers’ Brian Lilly and Kevin Lilly. The company was founded in September 1999 with the purchase of WENY-TV (ABC) and WENY-FM & AM radio. In 2002, Kevin Lilly purchased WSEE-TV (CBS) in Erie, Pennsylvania and have since added the CBS and The CW affiliates in Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands and ABC in the Virgin Islands.",
"Title: Super Deluxe\n\nSuper Deluxe is an entertainment company owned by, but operating independently from, Turner Broadcasting. The company's main output is in online video, television series, and documentaries. Super Deluxe is headquartered in downtown Los Angeles.",
"Title: Ames Broadcasting Company\n\nAmes Broadcasting Company, also \"Lake City Broadcasting\" was formed under the owner Betty Baudler Horras, who started out as a bookkeeper before becoming the first woman to own a radio station in Iowa. The small company owned and operated 3 radio stations in West Central Iowa. KCYZ, KASI-AM, KIKD-FM were owned by Ames or Lake City Broadcasting Company, but later sold. KCYZ (then KCCQ), KASI-AM radio stations that were located in Ames, Iowa were sold to Jacor that merged with Clear Channel Communications for an unspecified amount. KIKD-FM radio station located in Lake City, Iowa was sold to Carroll Broadcasting Company. Betty Baudler currently is the owner of Sign Pro and president of Baudler Enterprises.",
"Title: Kurt Braunohler\n\nKurt Braunohler (born February 22, 1976) is an American comedian and host of \"The K Ohle with Kurt Braunohler\" podcast on the Nerdist network. He was previously the host of IFC's comedy game show \"Bunk\" and has appeared on Comedy Central, \"This American Life\", and \"Radiolab\". Braunohler is a frequent collaborator with Kristen Schaal, with whom he created the web series \"Penelope Princess of Pets\".",
"Title: Chambers Communications Corporation\n\nChambers Communications Corporation was a broadcasting company based in Eugene, Oregon. With roots back to 1959, Chambers Communications was founded by Carolyn S. Chambers and owned a chain of ABC affiliates in Western, Central Oregon and Southern Oregon. Chambers also owned a state-of-the-art film and video production company and studios in Eugene, Oregon. Chambers was the former owner of the cable system in Sunriver, Oregon, but on July 25, 2013 announced that it had sold the small system to BendBroadband's Zolo Media, the advertising and broadcast arm of the regional cable and wireless provider in nearby Bend, Oregon. On March 5, 2014, Chambers Communications announced that it would exit broadcasting and sell its stations to Heartland Media, a company owned by former Gray Television executive Bob Prather.",
"Title: Swarnavahini\n\nSwarnavahini (Sinhalese: ස්වර්ණවාහිනී ; literally Golden Channel) is a Sinhala language general entertainment and news television channel in Sri Lanka owned by EAP Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary of EAP Holdings. Launched in 1994 as ETV (Extra Terrestrial Vision), it was one of Sri Lanka's first privately owned television channels. Its sister channel ETV 2 was launched in 1995 when ETV was re-branded ETV 1. The channel's owner Extra Terrestrial Vision (Private) Limited, who had been incorporated on 6 July 1992, changed its name to EAP Network (Private) Limited on 30 April 1996 following the acquisition by EAP. At that time ETV 1 was re-broadcasting BBC. ETV 1 was re-launched as Swarnavahini, a mass market Sinhala language channel, on 16 March 1997. EAP Network (Private) Limited changed its name to EAP Broadcasting Company (Private) Limited on 16 May 2012, EAP Network (Private) Limited on 31 October 2012, EAP Network Limited on 28 August 2013 and EAP Broadcasting Company Limited on 11 September 2013.",
"Title: Penelope Princess of Pets\n\nPenelope: Princess of Pets is a comedy series by comedy duo Kurt Braunohler and Kristen Schaal, in which Schaal stars as Penelope, a woman who can talk with animals. On a mission to save the world by killing a legislator named Stone before it's too late, Penelope is accompanied on her quest by her pet bird Ruby, and orphan friend Kyle (played by Braunohler). The theme song is written and performed by comedian/musician Reggie Watts. Originally a web series of 3- to 5-minute webisodes for comedy website Super Deluxe, \"Penelope\" premiered online in March 2007, with nine webisodes released before the site was shut down in December 2008. It was picked up soon after to be adapted into a television show for United Kingdom broadcaster Channel 4.",
"Title: USA Broadcasting\n\nUSA Broadcasting (USAB) was an American television broadcasting company owned by the veteran entertainment industry executive Barry Diller. This company was the over-the-air broadcasting arm of USA Networks.",
"Title: WQBE-FM\n\nWQBE-FM is one of two Charleston, West Virginia Country FM radio stations. WQBE is owned by Bristol Broadcasting Company of Bristol, Virginia, with a \"twin\" radio station WXBQ-FM in that area. WQBE also has another \"twin\" station WKYQ-FM in Paducah, Kentucky, also owned by Bristol Broadcasting. WQBE broadcasts with an ERP of 50,000 watts. WQBE is the leader in the Arbitron rations in the Charleston Metropolitan Statistical Area. According to Bristol Broadcasting Company's website, WQBE's listening audience is strong in the 18 to 49 (male and female), and 25 to 54 (male and female) demographic ranges.",
"Title: Local TV LLC\n\nLocal TV LLC was a television broadcasting company owned by Oak Hill Capital Partners which operated 20 television stations in the United States. The group was formed in 2006 by the acquisition of nine television stations owned by The New York Times Company, and grew further with the acquisition of eight former Fox owned-and-operated stations from Fox Television Stations, and a wide partnership with Tribune Broadcasting to provide management services for the stations (in turn, Local TV also operated several Tribune stations as well)."
] |
1,704
|
Which airport is in Alaska, Aberdeen Regional Airport or Ralph Wien Memorial Airport?
|
Ralph Wien Memorial Airport
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Ralph Wien Memorial Airport",
"Aberdeen Regional Airport"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Wiley Post–Will Rogers Memorial Airport, (IATA: BRW, ICAO: PABR, FAA LID: BRW) often referred to as Post/Rogers Memorial is a public airport located in Utqiaġvik, a city in the North Slope Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska.",
" The airport is owned by the state.",
" Situated on the Chukchi Sea at a latitude of 71.29°N, the airport is the farthest north of any in US territory.",
" The airport is named after American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post, both of whom died about 9 mi away at Point Barrow in a 1935 airplane crash."
],
"title": "Wiley Post–Will Rogers Memorial Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John F. Kennedy Memorial Airport (IATA: ASX, ICAO: KASX, FAA LID: ASX) is a city and county owned public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) southwest of the central business district of Ashland, a city in Ashland County, Wisconsin, United States.",
" It is also known as JFK Memorial Airport."
],
"title": "John F. Kennedy Memorial Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elizabeth City Regional Airport (IATA: ECG, ICAO: KECG, FAA LID: ECG) is a joint civil-military public and military use airport located three nautical miles (6 km) southeast of the central business district of Elizabeth City, in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, United States.",
" The airport, on the shore of the Pasquotank River, is also known as Elizabeth City-Pasquotank County Regional Airport or ECG Regional Airport.",
" It is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015, which categorized it as a \"general aviation\" facility."
],
"title": "Elizabeth City Regional Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Norfolk Regional Airport (IATA: OFK, ICAO: KOFK, FAA LID: OFK) (Karl Stefan Memorial Field) is four miles southwest of Norfolk, in Madison County, Nebraska.",
" The airport is named for Karl Stefan, a local newspaper editor and radio announcer who served several terms in the United States Congress.",
" Until March 2011 it was known as Karl Stefan Memorial Airport.",
" The FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 categorized it as a \"general aviation\" facility."
],
"title": "Norfolk Regional Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ralph Wien Memorial Airport (IATA: OTZ, ICAO: PAOT, FAA LID: OTZ) is a state-owned public-use airport located one nautical mile (1.85 km) south of the central business district of Kotzebue, a city on the Baldwin Peninsula in the Northwest Arctic Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska."
],
"title": "Ralph Wien Memorial Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bering Air is an American airline headquartered in Nome, Alaska, USA.",
" It operates domestic scheduled passenger and charter airline services, as well as air ambulance and helicopter services.",
" Its main base is Nome Airport, with hubs at Ralph Wien Memorial Airport (Kotzebue) and Unalakleet Airport"
],
"title": "Bering Air"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Friedman Memorial Airport (IATA: SUN, ICAO: KSUN, FAA LID: SUN) is a city-owned public-use airport in the northwest United States, located one nautical mile (2 km) southeast of the central business district of Hailey, the county seat of Blaine County, Idaho.",
" The airport is operated by the Friedman Memorial Airport Authority under a Joint Powers Agreement between the city of Hailey and Blaine County.",
" It serves the resort communities of Sun Valley and Ketchum, and the surrounding areas in the Wood River Valley."
],
"title": "Friedman Memorial Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Alexander Memorial Airport (FAA LID: GA2) , also known as Peach State Aerodrome or Candler Field, is a public grass strip located 1 mile (1.6 km) west of Williamson, Georgia, in the United States.",
" Alexander Memorial Airport is located in picturesque rural Pike County, 27 nautical miles (50 km) south of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport."
],
"title": "Peach State Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Aberdeen Regional Airport (IATA: ABR, ICAO: KABR, FAA LID: ABR) is a city-owned, public-use airport located two nautical miles (3.7 km) east of the central business district of Aberdeen, a city in Brown County, South Dakota, United States.",
" It is mostly used for general aviation, and is also served by one commercial airline."
],
"title": "Aberdeen Regional Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sedalia Regional Airport (IATA: DMO, ICAO: KDMO, FAA LID: DMO) is a city owned, public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) east of the central business district of Sedalia, a city in Pettis County, Missouri, United States.",
" It was formerly known as Sedalia Memorial Airport.",
" This airport is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015, which categorized it as a \"general aviation\" facility."
],
"title": "Sedalia Regional Airport"
}
] |
[
"Title: Wiley Post–Will Rogers Memorial Airport\n\nWiley Post–Will Rogers Memorial Airport, (IATA: BRW, ICAO: PABR, FAA LID: BRW) often referred to as Post/Rogers Memorial is a public airport located in Utqiaġvik, a city in the North Slope Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska. The airport is owned by the state. Situated on the Chukchi Sea at a latitude of 71.29°N, the airport is the farthest north of any in US territory. The airport is named after American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post, both of whom died about 9 mi away at Point Barrow in a 1935 airplane crash.",
"Title: John F. Kennedy Memorial Airport\n\nJohn F. Kennedy Memorial Airport (IATA: ASX, ICAO: KASX, FAA LID: ASX) is a city and county owned public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) southwest of the central business district of Ashland, a city in Ashland County, Wisconsin, United States. It is also known as JFK Memorial Airport.",
"Title: Elizabeth City Regional Airport\n\nElizabeth City Regional Airport (IATA: ECG, ICAO: KECG, FAA LID: ECG) is a joint civil-military public and military use airport located three nautical miles (6 km) southeast of the central business district of Elizabeth City, in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, United States. The airport, on the shore of the Pasquotank River, is also known as Elizabeth City-Pasquotank County Regional Airport or ECG Regional Airport. It is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015, which categorized it as a \"general aviation\" facility.",
"Title: Norfolk Regional Airport\n\nNorfolk Regional Airport (IATA: OFK, ICAO: KOFK, FAA LID: OFK) (Karl Stefan Memorial Field) is four miles southwest of Norfolk, in Madison County, Nebraska. The airport is named for Karl Stefan, a local newspaper editor and radio announcer who served several terms in the United States Congress. Until March 2011 it was known as Karl Stefan Memorial Airport. The FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 categorized it as a \"general aviation\" facility.",
"Title: Ralph Wien Memorial Airport\n\nRalph Wien Memorial Airport (IATA: OTZ, ICAO: PAOT, FAA LID: OTZ) is a state-owned public-use airport located one nautical mile (1.85 km) south of the central business district of Kotzebue, a city on the Baldwin Peninsula in the Northwest Arctic Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska.",
"Title: Bering Air\n\nBering Air is an American airline headquartered in Nome, Alaska, USA. It operates domestic scheduled passenger and charter airline services, as well as air ambulance and helicopter services. Its main base is Nome Airport, with hubs at Ralph Wien Memorial Airport (Kotzebue) and Unalakleet Airport",
"Title: Friedman Memorial Airport\n\nFriedman Memorial Airport (IATA: SUN, ICAO: KSUN, FAA LID: SUN) is a city-owned public-use airport in the northwest United States, located one nautical mile (2 km) southeast of the central business district of Hailey, the county seat of Blaine County, Idaho. The airport is operated by the Friedman Memorial Airport Authority under a Joint Powers Agreement between the city of Hailey and Blaine County. It serves the resort communities of Sun Valley and Ketchum, and the surrounding areas in the Wood River Valley.",
"Title: Peach State Airport\n\nAlexander Memorial Airport (FAA LID: GA2) , also known as Peach State Aerodrome or Candler Field, is a public grass strip located 1 mile (1.6 km) west of Williamson, Georgia, in the United States. Alexander Memorial Airport is located in picturesque rural Pike County, 27 nautical miles (50 km) south of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.",
"Title: Aberdeen Regional Airport\n\nAberdeen Regional Airport (IATA: ABR, ICAO: KABR, FAA LID: ABR) is a city-owned, public-use airport located two nautical miles (3.7 km) east of the central business district of Aberdeen, a city in Brown County, South Dakota, United States. It is mostly used for general aviation, and is also served by one commercial airline.",
"Title: Sedalia Regional Airport\n\nSedalia Regional Airport (IATA: DMO, ICAO: KDMO, FAA LID: DMO) is a city owned, public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) east of the central business district of Sedalia, a city in Pettis County, Missouri, United States. It was formerly known as Sedalia Memorial Airport. This airport is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015, which categorized it as a \"general aviation\" facility."
] |
1,705
|
Gone To Texas is a concept album by Jessica's Crime inspired by which eight-book cycle by Stephen King?
|
The Dark Tower
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Gone to Texas (album)",
"The Dark Tower (series)"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Storm of the Century, alternatively known as Stephen King's Storm of the Century, is a 1999 horror TV miniseries written by Stephen King and directed by Craig R. Baxley.",
" Unlike many other King mini-series, \"Storm of the Century\" was not based upon a Stephen King novel—King wrote it as a screenplay from the beginning.",
" The screenplay was published in February 1999."
],
"title": "Storm of the Century"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Colorado Kid is a mystery novel written by Stephen King for the Hard Case Crime imprint, published in 2005.",
" The book was issued in one paperback-only edition by the specialty crime and mystery publishing house.",
" The third-person narrative concerns the investigation of the body of an unidentified man found on a tiny island off the coast of Maine.",
" Lacking any identification or obvious clues, the case reaches nothing but repeated dead-ends.",
" Over a year later the man is identified, but all further important questions remain unanswered.",
" The two-person staff of the island newspaper maintain a longstanding fascination with the case, and twenty-five years later use the mysterious tale to ply the friendship and test the investigative mettle of a postgrad intern rookie reporter.",
" A television series loosely inspired by \"The Colorado Kid\", titled \"Haven\", aired on Syfy from July 2010 to December 2015.",
" Stephen King's next novel for Hard Case Crime was \"Joyland\", which was published in June 2013."
],
"title": "The Colorado Kid"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Dark Tower is a series of eight books written by American author Stephen King that incorporates themes from multiple genres, including dark fantasy, science fantasy, horror, and Western.",
" It describes a \"gunslinger\" and his quest toward a tower, the nature of which is both physical and metaphorical.",
" The series, and its use of the Dark Tower, expands upon Stephen King's multiverse and in doing so, links together many of his other novels.",
" King has described the series as his \"magnum opus\".",
" In addition to the eight novels of the series proper that comprise 4,250 pages, many of King's other books relate to the story, introducing concepts and characters that come into play as the series progresses."
],
"title": "The Dark Tower (series)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"According to books by Tyson Blue (\"The Unseen King\"), Stephen J. Spignesi (\"The Lost Work of Stephen King\"), and Rocky Wood \"et al.\" (\"Stephen King: Uncollected, Unpublished\"), there are numerous unpublished works by Stephen King that have come to light throughout King's career.",
" These allegedly include novels and short stories, most of which remain unfinished.",
" Most are stored among Stephen King's papers in the special collections of the Raymond H. Fogler Library at the University of Maine, some of which are freely accessible to the library's visitors.",
" However, others require King's permission to read.",
" Additionally, there are a number of uncollected short stories, published throughout King's long career in various anthologies and periodicals, that have never been published in a King collection."
],
"title": "Unpublished and uncollected works by Stephen King"
},
{
"sentences": [
"No entren al 1408: Antología en español tributo a Stephen King (English: \"Do Not Enter Room 1408: A Spanish Anthology Tribute to Stephen King\") is a collection of horror stories by 22 Spanish-language authors, which aims to pay tribute to the style of the horror master Stephen King.",
" The book was edited by the Ecuadorian writer Jorge Luis Cáceres.",
" These books entitled “No entren al 1408” (Don’t enter the 1408) and “King, tributo al rey del terror” (King, tribute to the king of terror, InterZona, Buenos Aires, 2015), have three editions: Ecuador, 2013; Mexico, 2014 and Argentina, 2015, and are written by 30 writers from: Chile, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Argentina, Uruguay and Spain."
],
"title": "No entren al 1408"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jessica's Crime is a sporadically active American independent rock band.",
" Founding member and lead vocalist Aaron Bishop has cited the band's \"day-jobs in professional academia\" as the primary reason for their occasional, long periods of apparent quiescence.",
" The band formed originally in 1989 as Mistress Christia, morphing into the SpeedKings by the early 90's, before establishing themselves as Jessica's Crime in 1995, following a number of changes in personnel.",
" Originally from Dallas, Texas, the band moved to Philadelphia, PA in 1999.",
" As of the release of their 2006 record \"Gone to Texas\", Jessica's Crime comprises two members: founder J. Aaron Bishop (guitars, vocals, bass, programming, etc.) and Michael P (guitars, vocals, bass, banjo, programming).",
" Their musical style contains elements of punk rock, post-punk industrial music, dance, and older country music, à la Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell.",
" According to their website, they had not performed live since late 1999, though in the spring of 2010 they began to play the occasional show in the Dallas/Ft.",
" Worth area."
],
"title": "Jessica's Crime"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gone to Texas is the fourth album by the American rock band Jessica's Crime.",
" It is a concept album centering on themes of vengeance and retribution, inspired in part by the Forrest Carter novel of the same name and its movie adaptation, starring Clint Eastwood, and in part by the Dark Tower cycle of novels by Stephen King."
],
"title": "Gone to Texas (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Some Like It Hot is a 1959 American romantic comedy film set in 1929, directed and produced by Billy Wilder, starring Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon.",
" The supporting cast includes George Raft, Pat O'Brien, Joe E. Brown, Joan Shawlee, and Nehemiah Persoff.",
" The screenplay by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond is based on a screenplay by Billy Wilder and Michael Logan from the French film \"Fanfare of Love\".",
" The film is about two musicians who dress in drag in order to escape from mafia gangsters whom they witnessed commit a crime inspired by the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre.",
" The film was produced in black and white, even though color films were increasing in popularity."
],
"title": "Some Like It Hot"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Black Ribbons is a dystopian concept album by Shooter Jennings with his band Hierophant.",
" The album features dialogue written by horror author Stephen King, who also narrates the album.",
" The album was released on March 2, 2010."
],
"title": "Black Ribbons"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Night of Hunters is the twelfth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Tori Amos, released on September 20, 2011, in the United States through Deutsche Grammophon.",
" It is a concept album that Amos has described as \"a 21st century song cycle inspired by classical music themes spanning over 400 years.\"",
" She pays tribute to classical composers such as Alkan, Bach, Chopin, Debussy, Granados, Satie and Schubert, taking inspiration from their original compositions to create new, independent songs.",
" Regarding the album's concept, she has described it as the exploration of \"the hunter and the hunted and how both exist within us\" through the story of \"a woman who finds herself in the dying embers of a relationship.\""
],
"title": "Night of Hunters"
}
] |
[
"Title: Storm of the Century\n\nStorm of the Century, alternatively known as Stephen King's Storm of the Century, is a 1999 horror TV miniseries written by Stephen King and directed by Craig R. Baxley. Unlike many other King mini-series, \"Storm of the Century\" was not based upon a Stephen King novel—King wrote it as a screenplay from the beginning. The screenplay was published in February 1999.",
"Title: The Colorado Kid\n\nThe Colorado Kid is a mystery novel written by Stephen King for the Hard Case Crime imprint, published in 2005. The book was issued in one paperback-only edition by the specialty crime and mystery publishing house. The third-person narrative concerns the investigation of the body of an unidentified man found on a tiny island off the coast of Maine. Lacking any identification or obvious clues, the case reaches nothing but repeated dead-ends. Over a year later the man is identified, but all further important questions remain unanswered. The two-person staff of the island newspaper maintain a longstanding fascination with the case, and twenty-five years later use the mysterious tale to ply the friendship and test the investigative mettle of a postgrad intern rookie reporter. A television series loosely inspired by \"The Colorado Kid\", titled \"Haven\", aired on Syfy from July 2010 to December 2015. Stephen King's next novel for Hard Case Crime was \"Joyland\", which was published in June 2013.",
"Title: The Dark Tower (series)\n\nThe Dark Tower is a series of eight books written by American author Stephen King that incorporates themes from multiple genres, including dark fantasy, science fantasy, horror, and Western. It describes a \"gunslinger\" and his quest toward a tower, the nature of which is both physical and metaphorical. The series, and its use of the Dark Tower, expands upon Stephen King's multiverse and in doing so, links together many of his other novels. King has described the series as his \"magnum opus\". In addition to the eight novels of the series proper that comprise 4,250 pages, many of King's other books relate to the story, introducing concepts and characters that come into play as the series progresses.",
"Title: Unpublished and uncollected works by Stephen King\n\nAccording to books by Tyson Blue (\"The Unseen King\"), Stephen J. Spignesi (\"The Lost Work of Stephen King\"), and Rocky Wood \"et al.\" (\"Stephen King: Uncollected, Unpublished\"), there are numerous unpublished works by Stephen King that have come to light throughout King's career. These allegedly include novels and short stories, most of which remain unfinished. Most are stored among Stephen King's papers in the special collections of the Raymond H. Fogler Library at the University of Maine, some of which are freely accessible to the library's visitors. However, others require King's permission to read. Additionally, there are a number of uncollected short stories, published throughout King's long career in various anthologies and periodicals, that have never been published in a King collection.",
"Title: No entren al 1408\n\nNo entren al 1408: Antología en español tributo a Stephen King (English: \"Do Not Enter Room 1408: A Spanish Anthology Tribute to Stephen King\") is a collection of horror stories by 22 Spanish-language authors, which aims to pay tribute to the style of the horror master Stephen King. The book was edited by the Ecuadorian writer Jorge Luis Cáceres. These books entitled “No entren al 1408” (Don’t enter the 1408) and “King, tributo al rey del terror” (King, tribute to the king of terror, InterZona, Buenos Aires, 2015), have three editions: Ecuador, 2013; Mexico, 2014 and Argentina, 2015, and are written by 30 writers from: Chile, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Argentina, Uruguay and Spain.",
"Title: Jessica's Crime\n\nJessica's Crime is a sporadically active American independent rock band. Founding member and lead vocalist Aaron Bishop has cited the band's \"day-jobs in professional academia\" as the primary reason for their occasional, long periods of apparent quiescence. The band formed originally in 1989 as Mistress Christia, morphing into the SpeedKings by the early 90's, before establishing themselves as Jessica's Crime in 1995, following a number of changes in personnel. Originally from Dallas, Texas, the band moved to Philadelphia, PA in 1999. As of the release of their 2006 record \"Gone to Texas\", Jessica's Crime comprises two members: founder J. Aaron Bishop (guitars, vocals, bass, programming, etc.) and Michael P (guitars, vocals, bass, banjo, programming). Their musical style contains elements of punk rock, post-punk industrial music, dance, and older country music, à la Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell. According to their website, they had not performed live since late 1999, though in the spring of 2010 they began to play the occasional show in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area.",
"Title: Gone to Texas (album)\n\nGone to Texas is the fourth album by the American rock band Jessica's Crime. It is a concept album centering on themes of vengeance and retribution, inspired in part by the Forrest Carter novel of the same name and its movie adaptation, starring Clint Eastwood, and in part by the Dark Tower cycle of novels by Stephen King.",
"Title: Some Like It Hot\n\nSome Like It Hot is a 1959 American romantic comedy film set in 1929, directed and produced by Billy Wilder, starring Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon. The supporting cast includes George Raft, Pat O'Brien, Joe E. Brown, Joan Shawlee, and Nehemiah Persoff. The screenplay by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond is based on a screenplay by Billy Wilder and Michael Logan from the French film \"Fanfare of Love\". The film is about two musicians who dress in drag in order to escape from mafia gangsters whom they witnessed commit a crime inspired by the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre. The film was produced in black and white, even though color films were increasing in popularity.",
"Title: Black Ribbons\n\nBlack Ribbons is a dystopian concept album by Shooter Jennings with his band Hierophant. The album features dialogue written by horror author Stephen King, who also narrates the album. The album was released on March 2, 2010.",
"Title: Night of Hunters\n\nNight of Hunters is the twelfth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Tori Amos, released on September 20, 2011, in the United States through Deutsche Grammophon. It is a concept album that Amos has described as \"a 21st century song cycle inspired by classical music themes spanning over 400 years.\" She pays tribute to classical composers such as Alkan, Bach, Chopin, Debussy, Granados, Satie and Schubert, taking inspiration from their original compositions to create new, independent songs. Regarding the album's concept, she has described it as the exploration of \"the hunter and the hunted and how both exist within us\" through the story of \"a woman who finds herself in the dying embers of a relationship.\""
] |
1,706
|
Who was the former wife of the American musician who led the band Kings of Rhythm?
|
Tina Turner
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Kings of Rhythm",
"Ike Turner"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Kings of Rhythm are an American Rhythm and blues and Soul group formed in the late 1940s in Clarksdale, Mississippi and led by Ike Turner through to his death in 2007.",
" Turner would retain the name of the band throughout his career, although the group has undergone considerable lineup changes over time.",
" The group was an offshoot of a large big band ensemble called \"The Tophatters\".",
" By the late 1940s Turner had renamed this group the \"Kings of Rhythm\".",
" Their early stage performances consisted largely of covers of popular jukebox hits of the day.",
" A 1951 lineup of the group recorded the song \"Rocket 88\", which was an early example of Rock and roll.",
" In the 1960s they became the band for the \"Ike & Tina Turner Revue\".",
" For a few years in the early 1970s they were renamed \"The Family Vibes\", and released 2 albums under this name, both produced by, but not featuring Ike Turner.",
" The band have continued, for a time under the leadership of pianist Ernest Lane (himself a childhood friend of Turner's), and continues to tour with vocalist Earl Thomas.",
" The group has been running for at least 64 years."
],
"title": "Kings of Rhythm"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Fans\" is a song by American rock band Kings of Leon.",
" It is the second single released from their 2007 album, \"Because of the Times\", and the ninth track on the album.",
" Lyrically, the song pays homage to the band's fans in the UK, where the band have traditionally enjoyed more success than in their homeland: \"\"All of London sing / 'Cos England swings and they sure love the tales I bring\"\"."
],
"title": "Fans (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Walls (stylized as WALLS) is the seventh studio album by American rock band Kings of Leon.",
" It was released on October 14, 2016, by RCA Records.",
" The album title is an acronym for \"We Are Like Love Songs\", which continues the band's unwritten rule of having five-syllable album titles."
],
"title": "Walls (Kings of Leon album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Izear Luster \"Ike\" Turner, Jr. (November 5, 1931 – December 12, 2007) was an American musician, bandleader, songwriter, arranger, talent scout, and record producer.",
" An early pioneer of fifties rock and roll, he is most popularly known for his work in the 1960s and 1970s with his then-wife Tina Turner in the Ike & Tina Turner Revue."
],
"title": "Ike Turner"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Come Around Sundown World Tour was the second concert tour by American rock band Kings of Leon.",
" Visiting the Americas, Europe, Africa and Australia, the tour supported the band's fifth studio album, \"Come Around Sundown\" (2010).",
" The tour has been praised by both critics and spectators alike, with many dates selling out within minutes.",
" The concerts held in North America (in 2010) grossed over 14 million dollars, becoming the 49th highest-grossing North American tour.",
" The tour ranked 40th in Pollstar's \"Top 50 Worldwide Tour (Mid-Year)\", earning roughly 20 million dollars in 2011."
],
"title": "Come Around Sundown World Tour"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Aha Shake Heartbreak is the sophomore studio album by American rock band Kings of Leon.",
" It was released in November 2004, in the UK and February 2005, in the United States.",
" It is the only album by Kings of Leon to have a Parental Advisory label because of the strong language in \"Taper Jean Girl\", \"Rememo\", \"Soft\", and \"Four Kicks\".",
" The cover is reminiscent of Queen's \"A Night at the Opera\"."
],
"title": "Aha Shake Heartbreak"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Youth & Young Manhood is the debut album from American rock band Kings of Leon, released on July 7, 2003, in the United Kingdom and on August 19, 2003, in the United States.",
" The title was taken from a drawing of the family tree of Moses, found on the inside of one of their Pentecostal preaching father's Bibles.",
" Each branch contained a line that the band was quoted as saying could easily have passed for an album title.",
" \"Youth and Young Manhood\", however, seemed fitting and was quickly agreed upon by all members."
],
"title": "Youth & Young Manhood"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Sex on Fire\" is the first single released from American alternative rock band Kings of Leon's fourth studio album \"Only by the Night\".",
" The song gave Kings of Leon their first number-one single in Australia, Finland, Ireland and the United Kingdom, charting at the top spot on digital downloads alone in the latter country, before its physical release.",
" In September 2009 it was Britain's second most-downloaded digital single ever.",
" The song has sold 1.2 million copies in the United Kingdom as of November 2012.",
" It has also gained significant popularity in the band's native United States, reaching number one on the Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart and number 56 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100, making it their second highest charting song in their homeland on the former chart."
],
"title": "Sex on Fire"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"California Waiting\" is the fourth single taken from the \"Youth and Young Manhood\" album by the American rock band Kings of Leon.",
" An alternate version of the song appears on their debut release, the EP \"Holy Roller Novocaine\".",
" This version was recorded in a rush to finish the record.",
" The band didn't like the outcome, so they recorded a new version, which is found on \"Youth and Young Manhood\".",
" However, on Kings of Leon's VH1 Storytellers performance, Caleb Followill stated before playing California Waiting that \"We kind of sabotaged it on our album, and tried to play it really punk rock.",
" It was better on the EP I think.\""
],
"title": "California Waiting"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Come Around Sundown is the fifth studio album by American rock band Kings of Leon, released in Ireland, Australia and Germany on October 15, 2010, followed by releases in the UK on October 18 and North America on October 19.",
" The official album covers and track list were revealed on September 3.",
" The lead single, \"Radioactive\", along with its accompanying music video, premiered on September 8, on the Kings' official website.",
" The following day, it received its official radio premiere on Australian radio."
],
"title": "Come Around Sundown"
}
] |
[
"Title: Kings of Rhythm\n\nThe Kings of Rhythm are an American Rhythm and blues and Soul group formed in the late 1940s in Clarksdale, Mississippi and led by Ike Turner through to his death in 2007. Turner would retain the name of the band throughout his career, although the group has undergone considerable lineup changes over time. The group was an offshoot of a large big band ensemble called \"The Tophatters\". By the late 1940s Turner had renamed this group the \"Kings of Rhythm\". Their early stage performances consisted largely of covers of popular jukebox hits of the day. A 1951 lineup of the group recorded the song \"Rocket 88\", which was an early example of Rock and roll. In the 1960s they became the band for the \"Ike & Tina Turner Revue\". For a few years in the early 1970s they were renamed \"The Family Vibes\", and released 2 albums under this name, both produced by, but not featuring Ike Turner. The band have continued, for a time under the leadership of pianist Ernest Lane (himself a childhood friend of Turner's), and continues to tour with vocalist Earl Thomas. The group has been running for at least 64 years.",
"Title: Fans (song)\n\n\"Fans\" is a song by American rock band Kings of Leon. It is the second single released from their 2007 album, \"Because of the Times\", and the ninth track on the album. Lyrically, the song pays homage to the band's fans in the UK, where the band have traditionally enjoyed more success than in their homeland: \"\"All of London sing / 'Cos England swings and they sure love the tales I bring\"\".",
"Title: Walls (Kings of Leon album)\n\nWalls (stylized as WALLS) is the seventh studio album by American rock band Kings of Leon. It was released on October 14, 2016, by RCA Records. The album title is an acronym for \"We Are Like Love Songs\", which continues the band's unwritten rule of having five-syllable album titles.",
"Title: Ike Turner\n\nIzear Luster \"Ike\" Turner, Jr. (November 5, 1931 – December 12, 2007) was an American musician, bandleader, songwriter, arranger, talent scout, and record producer. An early pioneer of fifties rock and roll, he is most popularly known for his work in the 1960s and 1970s with his then-wife Tina Turner in the Ike & Tina Turner Revue.",
"Title: Come Around Sundown World Tour\n\nThe Come Around Sundown World Tour was the second concert tour by American rock band Kings of Leon. Visiting the Americas, Europe, Africa and Australia, the tour supported the band's fifth studio album, \"Come Around Sundown\" (2010). The tour has been praised by both critics and spectators alike, with many dates selling out within minutes. The concerts held in North America (in 2010) grossed over 14 million dollars, becoming the 49th highest-grossing North American tour. The tour ranked 40th in Pollstar's \"Top 50 Worldwide Tour (Mid-Year)\", earning roughly 20 million dollars in 2011.",
"Title: Aha Shake Heartbreak\n\nAha Shake Heartbreak is the sophomore studio album by American rock band Kings of Leon. It was released in November 2004, in the UK and February 2005, in the United States. It is the only album by Kings of Leon to have a Parental Advisory label because of the strong language in \"Taper Jean Girl\", \"Rememo\", \"Soft\", and \"Four Kicks\". The cover is reminiscent of Queen's \"A Night at the Opera\".",
"Title: Youth & Young Manhood\n\nYouth & Young Manhood is the debut album from American rock band Kings of Leon, released on July 7, 2003, in the United Kingdom and on August 19, 2003, in the United States. The title was taken from a drawing of the family tree of Moses, found on the inside of one of their Pentecostal preaching father's Bibles. Each branch contained a line that the band was quoted as saying could easily have passed for an album title. \"Youth and Young Manhood\", however, seemed fitting and was quickly agreed upon by all members.",
"Title: Sex on Fire\n\n\"Sex on Fire\" is the first single released from American alternative rock band Kings of Leon's fourth studio album \"Only by the Night\". The song gave Kings of Leon their first number-one single in Australia, Finland, Ireland and the United Kingdom, charting at the top spot on digital downloads alone in the latter country, before its physical release. In September 2009 it was Britain's second most-downloaded digital single ever. The song has sold 1.2 million copies in the United Kingdom as of November 2012. It has also gained significant popularity in the band's native United States, reaching number one on the Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart and number 56 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100, making it their second highest charting song in their homeland on the former chart.",
"Title: California Waiting\n\n\"California Waiting\" is the fourth single taken from the \"Youth and Young Manhood\" album by the American rock band Kings of Leon. An alternate version of the song appears on their debut release, the EP \"Holy Roller Novocaine\". This version was recorded in a rush to finish the record. The band didn't like the outcome, so they recorded a new version, which is found on \"Youth and Young Manhood\". However, on Kings of Leon's VH1 Storytellers performance, Caleb Followill stated before playing California Waiting that \"We kind of sabotaged it on our album, and tried to play it really punk rock. It was better on the EP I think.\"",
"Title: Come Around Sundown\n\nCome Around Sundown is the fifth studio album by American rock band Kings of Leon, released in Ireland, Australia and Germany on October 15, 2010, followed by releases in the UK on October 18 and North America on October 19. The official album covers and track list were revealed on September 3. The lead single, \"Radioactive\", along with its accompanying music video, premiered on September 8, on the Kings' official website. The following day, it received its official radio premiere on Australian radio."
] |
1,707
|
Paul Motian and Don Manoukian, are of which nationality?
|
American
|
comparison
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Paul Motian",
"Don Manoukian"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Stephen Paul Motian (March 25, 1931 – November 22, 2011) was an American jazz drummer, percussionist, and composer.",
" Motian played an important role in freeing jazz drummers from strict time-keeping duties."
],
"title": "Paul Motian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bill Evans is an album by Paul Motian on the German JMT label.",
" It was released in 1990 and features nine compositions by Motian's former employer Bill Evans performed by Motian with Bill Frisell, Joe Lovano and Marc Johnson.",
" The album was reissued in 2002 on the Winter & Winter label."
],
"title": "Bill Evans (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band is an album of bebop jazz standards by American drummer Paul Motian originally released on the German JMT label.",
" It was the first release by the Electric Bebop Band, which featured the veteran drummer working mainly with younger musicians and subsequently became one of Motian's primary groups until the end of his life."
],
"title": "Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Reincarnation of a Love Bird is an album by Paul Motian originally released on the German JMT label in 1994 and featuring performances of bebop jazz standards by Motian with the Electric Bebop Band.",
" The album follows on from the 1992 release \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\" and was rereleased on the Winter & Winter label in 2005."
],
"title": "Reincarnation of a Love Bird"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Flight of the Blue Jay is an album by Paul Motian released on the German Winter & Winter label in 1997 and featuring performances of bebop jazz standards by Motian with the Electric Bebop Band.",
" The album is the group's third release following the 1992 album \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\" and the 1995 album \"Reincarnation of a Love Bird\"."
],
"title": "Flight of the Blue Jay"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bill Frisell, Ron Carter, Paul Motian is the 19th album by Bill Frisell to be released on the Elektra Nonesuch label.",
" It was released in 2006 and features performances by Frisell, Ron Carter and Paul Motian recorded on February 14–15, 2005."
],
"title": "Bill Frisell, Ron Carter, Paul Motian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Europe is an album by Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band released on the German Winter & Winter label in 2000.",
" The album is the group's fifth release, following \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\" (1992), \"Reincarnation of a Love Bird\" (1995), \"Flight of the Blue Jay\" (1997) and \"Play Monk and Powell\" (1998)."
],
"title": "Europe (Paul Motian album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Play Monk and Powell is an album by Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band released on the German Winter & Winter label in 1999 and featuring performances of tunes by Thelonious Monk and Bud Powell.",
" The album is the group's fourth release following the 1992 album \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\", the 1995 album \"Reincarnation of a Love Bird\" and the 1996 release \"Flight of the Blue Jay\"."
],
"title": "Play Monk and Powell"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Donald J. Manoukian (June 9, 1934 – September 23, 2014) was an American football guard and professional wrestler of Armenian descent from Reno, Nevada."
],
"title": "Don Manoukian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Monk in Motian is the first album by Paul Motian to be released on the German JMT label.",
" It was released in 1988 and features ten compositions by Thelonious Monk performed by Motian with Bill Frisell and Joe Lovano.",
" Geri Allen and Dewey Redman make guest appearances.",
" The album was reissued in 2002 on the Winter & Winter label."
],
"title": "Monk in Motian"
}
] |
[
"Title: Paul Motian\n\nStephen Paul Motian (March 25, 1931 – November 22, 2011) was an American jazz drummer, percussionist, and composer. Motian played an important role in freeing jazz drummers from strict time-keeping duties.",
"Title: Bill Evans (album)\n\nBill Evans is an album by Paul Motian on the German JMT label. It was released in 1990 and features nine compositions by Motian's former employer Bill Evans performed by Motian with Bill Frisell, Joe Lovano and Marc Johnson. The album was reissued in 2002 on the Winter & Winter label.",
"Title: Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\n\nPaul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band is an album of bebop jazz standards by American drummer Paul Motian originally released on the German JMT label. It was the first release by the Electric Bebop Band, which featured the veteran drummer working mainly with younger musicians and subsequently became one of Motian's primary groups until the end of his life.",
"Title: Reincarnation of a Love Bird\n\nReincarnation of a Love Bird is an album by Paul Motian originally released on the German JMT label in 1994 and featuring performances of bebop jazz standards by Motian with the Electric Bebop Band. The album follows on from the 1992 release \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\" and was rereleased on the Winter & Winter label in 2005.",
"Title: Flight of the Blue Jay\n\nFlight of the Blue Jay is an album by Paul Motian released on the German Winter & Winter label in 1997 and featuring performances of bebop jazz standards by Motian with the Electric Bebop Band. The album is the group's third release following the 1992 album \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\" and the 1995 album \"Reincarnation of a Love Bird\".",
"Title: Bill Frisell, Ron Carter, Paul Motian\n\nBill Frisell, Ron Carter, Paul Motian is the 19th album by Bill Frisell to be released on the Elektra Nonesuch label. It was released in 2006 and features performances by Frisell, Ron Carter and Paul Motian recorded on February 14–15, 2005.",
"Title: Europe (Paul Motian album)\n\nEurope is an album by Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band released on the German Winter & Winter label in 2000. The album is the group's fifth release, following \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\" (1992), \"Reincarnation of a Love Bird\" (1995), \"Flight of the Blue Jay\" (1997) and \"Play Monk and Powell\" (1998).",
"Title: Play Monk and Powell\n\nPlay Monk and Powell is an album by Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band released on the German Winter & Winter label in 1999 and featuring performances of tunes by Thelonious Monk and Bud Powell. The album is the group's fourth release following the 1992 album \"Paul Motian and the Electric Bebop Band\", the 1995 album \"Reincarnation of a Love Bird\" and the 1996 release \"Flight of the Blue Jay\".",
"Title: Don Manoukian\n\nDonald J. Manoukian (June 9, 1934 – September 23, 2014) was an American football guard and professional wrestler of Armenian descent from Reno, Nevada.",
"Title: Monk in Motian\n\nMonk in Motian is the first album by Paul Motian to be released on the German JMT label. It was released in 1988 and features ten compositions by Thelonious Monk performed by Motian with Bill Frisell and Joe Lovano. Geri Allen and Dewey Redman make guest appearances. The album was reissued in 2002 on the Winter & Winter label."
] |
1,708
|
The Warren Lasch Conservation Center os most notable being used to preserve a submarine which played a part in what?
|
the American Civil War
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Warren Lasch Conservation Center",
"H. L. Hunley (submarine)"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Founded in 1973, the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) is the first non-profit conservation center in the United States to specialize in the preservation of paper-based library and archival materials."
],
"title": "Northeast Document Conservation Center"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Warren Lasch Conservation Center is a building located at 1250 Supply Street at the former Charleston Navy Yard, in North Charleston, South Carolina.",
" Part of the Clemson Restoration Institute, the center is most notably being used to excavate, examine, and preserve the submarine \"H. L. Hunley\".",
" In recent years, the center has expanded research into various metal and architectural conservation topics.",
" The namesake of the building is Warren F. Lasch, who was chairman of Friends of the Hunley during the \"Hunley\"<nowiki>'</nowiki>s recovery."
],
"title": "Warren Lasch Conservation Center"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Litchfield Jazz Festival began in 1996 at the White Memorial Conservation Center in Litchfield Hills in Connecticut.",
" The parent organization that runs the festival is Litchfield Performing Arts, Inc, a not-for-profit founded in 1981.",
" After two years at the White Memorial Conservation Center the festival moved to the Goshen Fairgrounds in Goshen, Connecticut, where it was held until 2008.",
" The festival moved to the grounds of Kent School in Kent, Connecticut in 2009, and was held there until 2011.",
" In 2012 the festival returned to the Goshen Fairgrounds in Goshen, CT."
],
"title": "Litchfield Jazz Festival"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Plains Conservation Center is an outdoor education facility and state-designated natural area in Aurora, Colorado.",
" Its mission is to preserve Colorado's prairies, educate children about Colorado's eco-history, and nurture conservation efforts.",
" The center comprises two sites totaling approximately 8894 acre of land.",
" The main site is located on 1100 acre in Aurora and the second site is south of Strasburg on 7960 acre bisected by West Bijou Creek.",
" The Aurora property is owned by the Aurora Parks, Recreation and Open Space department."
],
"title": "Plains Conservation Center"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Intermuseum Conservation Association (ICA) is a non-profit regional art conservation center located in Cleveland, OH.",
" It was the first such regional conservation laboratory in the United States.",
" The ICA currently offers conservation and preservation treatments for paintings, murals, works on paper, documents, objects of all media, outdoor sculpture, monuments, and textiles.",
" It employs over 20 conservators and staff."
],
"title": "Intermuseum Conservation Association"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The conservation-restoration of the \"H.L. Hunley\" is currently being undertaken by the Warren Lasch Conservation Center, they hope to have the \"Hunley\" project completed by 2020.",
" Since the \"Hunley\" was located in 1995 and recovered from the ocean in 2000, a team of conservators from the Lasch Conservation Center has been working to restore the \"Hunley\".",
" The \"Hunley\", the first combat submarine to successfully complete its mission, has been at the Lasch Conservation Center for over 15 years while scientist and conservators formulate a plan for its restoration.",
" Once the \"Hunley\"s conservation and restoration is complete it will be relocated to a new museum built in its honor on the former Navy base in North Charleston.",
" Currently visitors can tour the conservation center laboratories and can view the \"Hunley\" in its 75,000 gallon tank."
],
"title": "Conservation-restoration of the H.L. Hunley"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Crane Conservation Center and Wildlife Park, Lakki Marwat is a conservation center for the captive breeding of various types of wild birds and animal species.",
" It is located west of Kurram River in Lakki Marwat, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, 250 km south of Peshawar.",
" It was established in 2007.",
" The center is equipped with a total of 15 circular aviaries and 20 cages as well as an education block for visitors.",
" The center is now maintained and operated by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Wildlife Department through the Bannu Wildlife Division, Bannu while its establishment was funded by WWF - Pakistan, GEF, UNDP and Darwin Initiative.",
" A \"Range Officer\" of the wildlife department manages and co-ordinates the activities of the park.",
" A wildlife vet, Dr. Adnan Khan , frequently visits the center in order to maintain healthy stock."
],
"title": "Pakistan Crane Center, Lakki Marwat"
},
{
"sentences": [
"H. L. Hunley, often referred to as Hunley, was a submarine of the Confederate States of America that played a small part in the American Civil War.",
" \"Hunley\" demonstrated the advantages and the dangers of undersea warfare.",
" She was the first combat submarine to sink a warship, although \"Hunley\" was not completely submerged and, following her successful attack, was lost along with her crew before she could return to base.",
" The Confederacy lost 21 crewmen in three sinkings of \"Hunley\" during her short career.",
" She was named for her inventor, Horace Lawson Hunley, shortly after she was taken into government service under the control of the Confederate States Army at Charleston, South Carolina."
],
"title": "H. L. Hunley (submarine)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC), (राष्ट्रिय प्रकृति संरक्षण कोष) previously known as King Mahendra Trust for Nature Conservation is a Nepalese non-governmental organization working in the field of nature conservation.",
"It was established in 1982 as an autonomous non profit organization by legislative law of Nepal.",
" NTNC's mission is to conserve nature and natural resources in Nepal while meeting the needs of the people in sustainable way.",
" Geographically, the Trust activities have spread from the sub-tropical plains of Chitwan, Bardia and Kanchanpur in the lowlands to the Annapurna and Manaslu region of the high Himalayas, including the trans-Himalayan region of Upper Mustang and Manang.",
" Currently, the projects of Trust are divided into three geographical areas - the lowland, the mid-hills (Kathmandu Valley) and the high mountains.",
" The Trust’s activities in the lowlands are based in and around the Chitwan National Park, the Bardia National Park and the Shuklaphanta Wildlife Reserve located in the central, western and far-western development regions of Nepal, through the Biodiversity Conservation Center (BCC) in Chitwan, the Bardia Conservation Program (BCP) in Bardia and the Suklaphanta Conservation Program (SCP) in Kanchanpur.",
" Similarly, the Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP), the Manaslu Conservation Area Project (MCAP) and Gaurishankar Conservation Area Project (GCAP) are three protected areas managed by the Trust in the mountain region.",
" The Central Zoo is the only project of the Trust in Kathmandu Valley.",
" As a new initiative, the Trust has established an Energy and Climate Change Unit to address the emerging issues of climate change through mitigation and adaptation approach and renewable energy technologies.",
" The Trust has also started work on urban environment conservation with the Bagmati River Conservation Project."
],
"title": "National Trust for Nature Conservation"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Victoria Blyth Hill (November 17, 1945 – April 20, 2013) was an American art conservator who lived and worked in the Venice area of Los Angeles.",
" She retired from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art as the Director, Conservation Center in June 2005 when she was honored with an appointment as Senior Conservator Emeritus at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).",
" Subsequently she worked with private clients, including artists, individuals, and museums, and operated an art conservation studio near her home.",
" She was a past president of the Western Association for Art Conservation (1979).",
" Blyth-Hill was elected Fellow of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works (AIC) in 1990."
],
"title": "Victoria Blyth Hill"
}
] |
[
"Title: Northeast Document Conservation Center\n\nFounded in 1973, the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) is the first non-profit conservation center in the United States to specialize in the preservation of paper-based library and archival materials.",
"Title: Warren Lasch Conservation Center\n\nThe Warren Lasch Conservation Center is a building located at 1250 Supply Street at the former Charleston Navy Yard, in North Charleston, South Carolina. Part of the Clemson Restoration Institute, the center is most notably being used to excavate, examine, and preserve the submarine \"H. L. Hunley\". In recent years, the center has expanded research into various metal and architectural conservation topics. The namesake of the building is Warren F. Lasch, who was chairman of Friends of the Hunley during the \"Hunley\"<nowiki>'</nowiki>s recovery.",
"Title: Litchfield Jazz Festival\n\nThe Litchfield Jazz Festival began in 1996 at the White Memorial Conservation Center in Litchfield Hills in Connecticut. The parent organization that runs the festival is Litchfield Performing Arts, Inc, a not-for-profit founded in 1981. After two years at the White Memorial Conservation Center the festival moved to the Goshen Fairgrounds in Goshen, Connecticut, where it was held until 2008. The festival moved to the grounds of Kent School in Kent, Connecticut in 2009, and was held there until 2011. In 2012 the festival returned to the Goshen Fairgrounds in Goshen, CT.",
"Title: Plains Conservation Center\n\nThe Plains Conservation Center is an outdoor education facility and state-designated natural area in Aurora, Colorado. Its mission is to preserve Colorado's prairies, educate children about Colorado's eco-history, and nurture conservation efforts. The center comprises two sites totaling approximately 8894 acre of land. The main site is located on 1100 acre in Aurora and the second site is south of Strasburg on 7960 acre bisected by West Bijou Creek. The Aurora property is owned by the Aurora Parks, Recreation and Open Space department.",
"Title: Intermuseum Conservation Association\n\nThe Intermuseum Conservation Association (ICA) is a non-profit regional art conservation center located in Cleveland, OH. It was the first such regional conservation laboratory in the United States. The ICA currently offers conservation and preservation treatments for paintings, murals, works on paper, documents, objects of all media, outdoor sculpture, monuments, and textiles. It employs over 20 conservators and staff.",
"Title: Conservation-restoration of the H.L. Hunley\n\nThe conservation-restoration of the \"H.L. Hunley\" is currently being undertaken by the Warren Lasch Conservation Center, they hope to have the \"Hunley\" project completed by 2020. Since the \"Hunley\" was located in 1995 and recovered from the ocean in 2000, a team of conservators from the Lasch Conservation Center has been working to restore the \"Hunley\". The \"Hunley\", the first combat submarine to successfully complete its mission, has been at the Lasch Conservation Center for over 15 years while scientist and conservators formulate a plan for its restoration. Once the \"Hunley\"s conservation and restoration is complete it will be relocated to a new museum built in its honor on the former Navy base in North Charleston. Currently visitors can tour the conservation center laboratories and can view the \"Hunley\" in its 75,000 gallon tank.",
"Title: Pakistan Crane Center, Lakki Marwat\n\nCrane Conservation Center and Wildlife Park, Lakki Marwat is a conservation center for the captive breeding of various types of wild birds and animal species. It is located west of Kurram River in Lakki Marwat, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, 250 km south of Peshawar. It was established in 2007. The center is equipped with a total of 15 circular aviaries and 20 cages as well as an education block for visitors. The center is now maintained and operated by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Wildlife Department through the Bannu Wildlife Division, Bannu while its establishment was funded by WWF - Pakistan, GEF, UNDP and Darwin Initiative. A \"Range Officer\" of the wildlife department manages and co-ordinates the activities of the park. A wildlife vet, Dr. Adnan Khan , frequently visits the center in order to maintain healthy stock.",
"Title: H. L. Hunley (submarine)\n\nH. L. Hunley, often referred to as Hunley, was a submarine of the Confederate States of America that played a small part in the American Civil War. \"Hunley\" demonstrated the advantages and the dangers of undersea warfare. She was the first combat submarine to sink a warship, although \"Hunley\" was not completely submerged and, following her successful attack, was lost along with her crew before she could return to base. The Confederacy lost 21 crewmen in three sinkings of \"Hunley\" during her short career. She was named for her inventor, Horace Lawson Hunley, shortly after she was taken into government service under the control of the Confederate States Army at Charleston, South Carolina.",
"Title: National Trust for Nature Conservation\n\nThe National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC), (राष्ट्रिय प्रकृति संरक्षण कोष) previously known as King Mahendra Trust for Nature Conservation is a Nepalese non-governmental organization working in the field of nature conservation. It was established in 1982 as an autonomous non profit organization by legislative law of Nepal. NTNC's mission is to conserve nature and natural resources in Nepal while meeting the needs of the people in sustainable way. Geographically, the Trust activities have spread from the sub-tropical plains of Chitwan, Bardia and Kanchanpur in the lowlands to the Annapurna and Manaslu region of the high Himalayas, including the trans-Himalayan region of Upper Mustang and Manang. Currently, the projects of Trust are divided into three geographical areas - the lowland, the mid-hills (Kathmandu Valley) and the high mountains. The Trust’s activities in the lowlands are based in and around the Chitwan National Park, the Bardia National Park and the Shuklaphanta Wildlife Reserve located in the central, western and far-western development regions of Nepal, through the Biodiversity Conservation Center (BCC) in Chitwan, the Bardia Conservation Program (BCP) in Bardia and the Suklaphanta Conservation Program (SCP) in Kanchanpur. Similarly, the Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP), the Manaslu Conservation Area Project (MCAP) and Gaurishankar Conservation Area Project (GCAP) are three protected areas managed by the Trust in the mountain region. The Central Zoo is the only project of the Trust in Kathmandu Valley. As a new initiative, the Trust has established an Energy and Climate Change Unit to address the emerging issues of climate change through mitigation and adaptation approach and renewable energy technologies. The Trust has also started work on urban environment conservation with the Bagmati River Conservation Project.",
"Title: Victoria Blyth Hill\n\nVictoria Blyth Hill (November 17, 1945 – April 20, 2013) was an American art conservator who lived and worked in the Venice area of Los Angeles. She retired from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art as the Director, Conservation Center in June 2005 when she was honored with an appointment as Senior Conservator Emeritus at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). Subsequently she worked with private clients, including artists, individuals, and museums, and operated an art conservation studio near her home. She was a past president of the Western Association for Art Conservation (1979). Blyth-Hill was elected Fellow of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works (AIC) in 1990."
] |
1,709
|
Alan Schechter is Professor at Wellesley College and supervised what 92-page paper for a former student?
|
There Is Only the Fight . . . : An Analysis of the Alinsky Model
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Alan Schechter",
"Hillary Rodham senior thesis"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"In 1969, Hillary Rodham wrote a 92-page senior thesis for Wellesley College about community organizer Saul Alinsky entitled \"There Is Only the Fight . . . : An Analysis of the Alinsky Model.\"",
" The thesis is now available."
],
"title": "Hillary Rodham senior thesis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Alan Schechter (born 1936) is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Wellesley College in Massachusetts.",
" He was educated at Amherst College, where he received his AB, and at Columbia University, where he earned his PhD.",
" He is a distinguished and award-winning political scientist.",
" He was also Hillary Rodham's advisor during her years at Wellesley College and supervised her senior thesis; Susan Estrich's book \"The Case for Hillary Clinton\" mentions her experience also writing an honors thesis for Professor Schechter (at a different time).",
" He remains involved with the college, running the Wellesley in Washington internship program, in which Rodham participated as a student and which continues to send approximately twenty women to Washington for internships each summer.",
" Professor Schechter is the former Chairman, Vice-Chairman, and member of the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board (Fulbright Program), a Presidential appointment."
],
"title": "Alan Schechter"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wellesley is a town in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States.",
" Wellesley is part of Greater Boston.",
" The population was 27,982 at the time of the 2010 census.",
" Wellesley has the 5th highest median household and family incomes in all of Massachusetts.",
" It is best known as the home of Wellesley College, Babson College, and a campus of Massachusetts Bay Community College."
],
"title": "Wellesley, Massachusetts"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Wellesley College Botanic Gardens (22 acres) are botanical gardens located on the campus of Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts.",
" They are open daily without charge."
],
"title": "Wellesley College Botanic Gardens"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wellesley College is a private women's liberal arts college located west of Boston in the town of Wellesley, Massachusetts, United States.",
" Founded in 1870 by Henry and Pauline Durant, it is a member of the original Seven Sisters Colleges.",
" Wellesley is home to 56 departmental and interdepartmental majors spanning the liberal arts, as well as over 150 student clubs and organizations.",
" The college is also known for allowing its students to cross-register at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Brandeis University, Babson College and Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering.",
" Wellesley athletes compete in the NCAA Division III New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference."
],
"title": "Wellesley College"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Stitchers\" is an American science fiction crime drama series created by Jeffrey Alan Schechter.",
" The series follows Kirsten (Emma Ishta), who has been recruited into a government agency to be \"stitched\" into the memories of people recently deceased to investigate murders and mysteries that otherwise would have gone unsolved.",
" Cameron (Kyle Harris), a brilliant neuroscientist, assists Kirsten in the secret program headed by Maggie (Salli Richardson-Whitfield), a skilled covert operator.",
" The program also includes Linus (Ritesh Rajan) a bioelectrical engineer and communications technician.",
" Camille (Allison Scagliotti), Kirsten's roommate and a computer science graduate student, is also recruited to assist Kirsten as a \"stitcher\"."
],
"title": "List of Stitchers episodes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jeffrey Alan Schechter (usually credited as Jeff Schechter) is a screenwriter whose work has been nominated for two Emmy awards, a Writers Guild of America award, and a Writers Guild of Canada award.",
" His writing credits include \"Strange Days at Blake Holsey High\", \"Overruled!",
"\", the Disney Channel original film \"Brink!",
"\", \"\" and \"Dennis the Menace Strikes Again\".",
" In 2015, he created the ABC Family science fiction crime drama \"Stitchers\"."
],
"title": "Jeffrey Alan Schechter"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Wellesley College Senate bus is a shuttle bus service that connects Wellesley College to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University."
],
"title": "Wellesley College Senate bus"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Davis Degree Program at Wellesley College is a degree program serving women who are older than traditional college-age students.",
" These students are called \"Davis Scholars\" and are fully integrated into the Wellesley community; they take the same classes as traditional students and can choose to live on campus.",
" According to the Wellesley web site, Davis Scholars' \"diverse backgrounds, experiences and perspectives enrich the lives of the whole student body.\""
],
"title": "Davis Scholar"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Whitin Observatory is an astronomical observatory owned and operated by Wellesley College.",
" Built in 1900, with additions in 1906, 1967, and 20102011, it is located in Wellesley, Massachusetts and named after Wellesley College trustee Mrs. John Crane Whitin (Sarah Elizabeth Whitin) of Whitinsville, who donated the funds for the observatory.",
" Astronomer Sarah Frances Whiting was the first director of the new Wellesley College Astronomy Department."
],
"title": "Whitin Observatory"
}
] |
[
"Title: Hillary Rodham senior thesis\n\nIn 1969, Hillary Rodham wrote a 92-page senior thesis for Wellesley College about community organizer Saul Alinsky entitled \"There Is Only the Fight . . . : An Analysis of the Alinsky Model.\" The thesis is now available.",
"Title: Alan Schechter\n\nAlan Schechter (born 1936) is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. He was educated at Amherst College, where he received his AB, and at Columbia University, where he earned his PhD. He is a distinguished and award-winning political scientist. He was also Hillary Rodham's advisor during her years at Wellesley College and supervised her senior thesis; Susan Estrich's book \"The Case for Hillary Clinton\" mentions her experience also writing an honors thesis for Professor Schechter (at a different time). He remains involved with the college, running the Wellesley in Washington internship program, in which Rodham participated as a student and which continues to send approximately twenty women to Washington for internships each summer. Professor Schechter is the former Chairman, Vice-Chairman, and member of the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board (Fulbright Program), a Presidential appointment.",
"Title: Wellesley, Massachusetts\n\nWellesley is a town in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States. Wellesley is part of Greater Boston. The population was 27,982 at the time of the 2010 census. Wellesley has the 5th highest median household and family incomes in all of Massachusetts. It is best known as the home of Wellesley College, Babson College, and a campus of Massachusetts Bay Community College.",
"Title: Wellesley College Botanic Gardens\n\nThe Wellesley College Botanic Gardens (22 acres) are botanical gardens located on the campus of Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. They are open daily without charge.",
"Title: Wellesley College\n\nWellesley College is a private women's liberal arts college located west of Boston in the town of Wellesley, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1870 by Henry and Pauline Durant, it is a member of the original Seven Sisters Colleges. Wellesley is home to 56 departmental and interdepartmental majors spanning the liberal arts, as well as over 150 student clubs and organizations. The college is also known for allowing its students to cross-register at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Brandeis University, Babson College and Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering. Wellesley athletes compete in the NCAA Division III New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference.",
"Title: List of Stitchers episodes\n\n\"Stitchers\" is an American science fiction crime drama series created by Jeffrey Alan Schechter. The series follows Kirsten (Emma Ishta), who has been recruited into a government agency to be \"stitched\" into the memories of people recently deceased to investigate murders and mysteries that otherwise would have gone unsolved. Cameron (Kyle Harris), a brilliant neuroscientist, assists Kirsten in the secret program headed by Maggie (Salli Richardson-Whitfield), a skilled covert operator. The program also includes Linus (Ritesh Rajan) a bioelectrical engineer and communications technician. Camille (Allison Scagliotti), Kirsten's roommate and a computer science graduate student, is also recruited to assist Kirsten as a \"stitcher\".",
"Title: Jeffrey Alan Schechter\n\nJeffrey Alan Schechter (usually credited as Jeff Schechter) is a screenwriter whose work has been nominated for two Emmy awards, a Writers Guild of America award, and a Writers Guild of Canada award. His writing credits include \"Strange Days at Blake Holsey High\", \"Overruled! \", the Disney Channel original film \"Brink! \", \"\" and \"Dennis the Menace Strikes Again\". In 2015, he created the ABC Family science fiction crime drama \"Stitchers\".",
"Title: Wellesley College Senate bus\n\nThe Wellesley College Senate bus is a shuttle bus service that connects Wellesley College to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University.",
"Title: Davis Scholar\n\nThe Davis Degree Program at Wellesley College is a degree program serving women who are older than traditional college-age students. These students are called \"Davis Scholars\" and are fully integrated into the Wellesley community; they take the same classes as traditional students and can choose to live on campus. According to the Wellesley web site, Davis Scholars' \"diverse backgrounds, experiences and perspectives enrich the lives of the whole student body.\"",
"Title: Whitin Observatory\n\nWhitin Observatory is an astronomical observatory owned and operated by Wellesley College. Built in 1900, with additions in 1906, 1967, and 20102011, it is located in Wellesley, Massachusetts and named after Wellesley College trustee Mrs. John Crane Whitin (Sarah Elizabeth Whitin) of Whitinsville, who donated the funds for the observatory. Astronomer Sarah Frances Whiting was the first director of the new Wellesley College Astronomy Department."
] |
1,710
|
What is the year of the event that happened first, When Louis Met originally aired, or Mostyn Hamilton was born?
|
1949
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"When Louis Met...",
"When Louis Met...",
"Neil Hamilton (politician)"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"When Louis Met... is a series of documentary films by Louis Theroux.",
" The series was originally aired on BBC2 from 2000 to 2002.",
" In the series, Theroux accompanied a different British celebrity in each programme as they went about their day-to-day business, interviewing them about their lives and experiences as he did so.",
" His episode about Jimmy Savile \"(When Louis Met... Jimmy)\" was voted one of the top 50 documentaries of all time in a survey by Britain's Channel Four.",
" In another episode \"(\"When Louis Met... the Hamiltons\")\", the Tory MP Neil Hamilton and his wife Christine were arrested during the course of filming following allegations of indecent assault which were subsequently found to be false.",
" The show did not return for a third series; Theroux said that he had difficulty in finding people to appear."
],
"title": "When Louis Met..."
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"The Pineapple Incident\" is the tenth episode in the first season of the television series \"How I Met Your Mother\".",
" It originally aired on November 28, 2005.",
" It is the highest viewed episode in season 1 and the second highest overall episode during the nine seasons of \"How I Met Your Mother\".",
" It is widely considered of the best episodes in the entire series."
],
"title": "The Pineapple Incident"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Deepsky is an electronic music act based in Los Angeles.",
" Originally from Albuquerque, New Mexico, Deepsky formed in 1995 by J. Scott G. and Jason Blum after the dissolution of their first band Q, active from 1992-1995.",
" Its two founding members met originally at the University of New Mexico.",
" Between 1995 and 1996 they concurrently comprised the Dayspring Collective with Shawn Parker, whom together released a CD on the Fragrant Music label titled \"Spark\" in 1997.",
" Giaquinta left the band in November 2006 to focus on solo projects as well as start the group Summer Channel; Blum continues to produce and perform under the Deepsky name."
],
"title": "Deepsky"
},
{
"sentences": [
"WCW Main Event was a televised wrestling program of World Championship Wrestling (WCW) that aired from 1988 to 1998.",
" For most of its run, it was the promotion's secondary show and aired on Sunday evenings on TBS.",
" The show originally aired in 1988 as \"NWA Main Event\".",
" The rights to \"WCW Main Event\" now belong to WWE."
],
"title": "WCW Main Event"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Samson and Delilah is a 1984 television film adaptation of the biblical story of Samson and Delilah, starring Max von Sydow, Belinda Bauer, Antony Hamilton, Daniel Stern and Victor Mature.",
" Mature played Samson in the 1949 film and had a small cameo as the father of Antony Hamilton's Samson.",
" This was his final acting role.",
" Based on the novel \"Husband of Delilah\" by Eric Linklater, \"Samson and Delilah\" originally aired on ABC."
],
"title": "Samson and Delilah (1984 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Four Months Ago...\" is the eighth episode of the second season of the NBC science fiction drama series \"Heroes\".",
" The episode was written by series creator/executive producer Tim Kring and was directed by executive producer Greg Beeman.",
" It originally aired on November 12, 2007.",
" The episode explains what happened during the four months between the first two seasons."
],
"title": "Four Months Ago..."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Losing Gemma is a two-part British television thriller, based on the debut novel by writer Katy Gardner.",
" The screen adaptation was written by Robert Murphy, directed by Maurice Phillips and starred Jonas Armstrong, Alice Eve, Jason Flemyng and Rachel Leskovac.",
" It originally aired on ITV on 18 and 19 December 2006, at 9pm.",
" The plot centres on the disappearance of the eponymous Gemma (Leskovac) after she goes backpacking with friend Esther (Eve) in India.",
" When Eve returns from the trip alone, she is haunted by the belief that Gemma's disappearance is her fault, but mystery surrounds what really happened.",
" Notably, the drama has never been released on DVD."
],
"title": "Losing Gemma"
},
{
"sentences": [
"WWE Superstars, or simply Superstars, is a professional wrestling television program produced by WWE that originally aired on WGN America in the United States and later broadcast on the WWE Network.",
" It debuted on 16, 2009 (2009--) and ended its domestic broadcasting on 7, 2011 (2011--) .",
" After the final domestic TV broadcast, the show moved to an Internet broadcast format while maintaining a traditional television broadcast in international markets.",
" The show featured mid-to-low card WWE Superstars in a format similar to the former shows \"Heat\" and \"Velocity\".",
" which served the same purpose. \"",
"Enhancement talent\" bouts also happened often.",
" Big names such as John Cena, Randy Orton, and Triple H appeared on the show at its beginning."
],
"title": "WWE Superstars"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Jewbilee\" is the ninth episode of the third season and 40th overall episode of the animated television series \"South Park\".",
" The final part of The Meteor Shower Trilogy, the episode described what happened to Kyle and Kenny, who both went to a Jewish Scouting camp, on the night of the meteor shower.",
" The episode satirized Jewish stereotypes and originally aired on July 28, 1999."
],
"title": "Jewbilee"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mostyn Neil Hamilton (born 9 March 1949) is a British politician, non-practising barrister, and former teacher.",
" He has served as a UK Independence Party (UKIP) Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the Mid and West Wales constituency since 2016; he was previously Conservative MP for the Tatton constituency from 1983 to 1997."
],
"title": "Neil Hamilton (politician)"
}
] |
[
"Title: When Louis Met...\n\nWhen Louis Met... is a series of documentary films by Louis Theroux. The series was originally aired on BBC2 from 2000 to 2002. In the series, Theroux accompanied a different British celebrity in each programme as they went about their day-to-day business, interviewing them about their lives and experiences as he did so. His episode about Jimmy Savile \"(When Louis Met... Jimmy)\" was voted one of the top 50 documentaries of all time in a survey by Britain's Channel Four. In another episode \"(\"When Louis Met... the Hamiltons\")\", the Tory MP Neil Hamilton and his wife Christine were arrested during the course of filming following allegations of indecent assault which were subsequently found to be false. The show did not return for a third series; Theroux said that he had difficulty in finding people to appear.",
"Title: The Pineapple Incident\n\n\"The Pineapple Incident\" is the tenth episode in the first season of the television series \"How I Met Your Mother\". It originally aired on November 28, 2005. It is the highest viewed episode in season 1 and the second highest overall episode during the nine seasons of \"How I Met Your Mother\". It is widely considered of the best episodes in the entire series.",
"Title: Deepsky\n\nDeepsky is an electronic music act based in Los Angeles. Originally from Albuquerque, New Mexico, Deepsky formed in 1995 by J. Scott G. and Jason Blum after the dissolution of their first band Q, active from 1992-1995. Its two founding members met originally at the University of New Mexico. Between 1995 and 1996 they concurrently comprised the Dayspring Collective with Shawn Parker, whom together released a CD on the Fragrant Music label titled \"Spark\" in 1997. Giaquinta left the band in November 2006 to focus on solo projects as well as start the group Summer Channel; Blum continues to produce and perform under the Deepsky name.",
"Title: WCW Main Event\n\nWCW Main Event was a televised wrestling program of World Championship Wrestling (WCW) that aired from 1988 to 1998. For most of its run, it was the promotion's secondary show and aired on Sunday evenings on TBS. The show originally aired in 1988 as \"NWA Main Event\". The rights to \"WCW Main Event\" now belong to WWE.",
"Title: Samson and Delilah (1984 film)\n\nSamson and Delilah is a 1984 television film adaptation of the biblical story of Samson and Delilah, starring Max von Sydow, Belinda Bauer, Antony Hamilton, Daniel Stern and Victor Mature. Mature played Samson in the 1949 film and had a small cameo as the father of Antony Hamilton's Samson. This was his final acting role. Based on the novel \"Husband of Delilah\" by Eric Linklater, \"Samson and Delilah\" originally aired on ABC.",
"Title: Four Months Ago...\n\n\"Four Months Ago...\" is the eighth episode of the second season of the NBC science fiction drama series \"Heroes\". The episode was written by series creator/executive producer Tim Kring and was directed by executive producer Greg Beeman. It originally aired on November 12, 2007. The episode explains what happened during the four months between the first two seasons.",
"Title: Losing Gemma\n\nLosing Gemma is a two-part British television thriller, based on the debut novel by writer Katy Gardner. The screen adaptation was written by Robert Murphy, directed by Maurice Phillips and starred Jonas Armstrong, Alice Eve, Jason Flemyng and Rachel Leskovac. It originally aired on ITV on 18 and 19 December 2006, at 9pm. The plot centres on the disappearance of the eponymous Gemma (Leskovac) after she goes backpacking with friend Esther (Eve) in India. When Eve returns from the trip alone, she is haunted by the belief that Gemma's disappearance is her fault, but mystery surrounds what really happened. Notably, the drama has never been released on DVD.",
"Title: WWE Superstars\n\nWWE Superstars, or simply Superstars, is a professional wrestling television program produced by WWE that originally aired on WGN America in the United States and later broadcast on the WWE Network. It debuted on 16, 2009 (2009--) and ended its domestic broadcasting on 7, 2011 (2011--) . After the final domestic TV broadcast, the show moved to an Internet broadcast format while maintaining a traditional television broadcast in international markets. The show featured mid-to-low card WWE Superstars in a format similar to the former shows \"Heat\" and \"Velocity\". which served the same purpose. \" Enhancement talent\" bouts also happened often. Big names such as John Cena, Randy Orton, and Triple H appeared on the show at its beginning.",
"Title: Jewbilee\n\n\"Jewbilee\" is the ninth episode of the third season and 40th overall episode of the animated television series \"South Park\". The final part of The Meteor Shower Trilogy, the episode described what happened to Kyle and Kenny, who both went to a Jewish Scouting camp, on the night of the meteor shower. The episode satirized Jewish stereotypes and originally aired on July 28, 1999.",
"Title: Neil Hamilton (politician)\n\nMostyn Neil Hamilton (born 9 March 1949) is a British politician, non-practising barrister, and former teacher. He has served as a UK Independence Party (UKIP) Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the Mid and West Wales constituency since 2016; he was previously Conservative MP for the Tatton constituency from 1983 to 1997."
] |
1,711
|
Inside was written for the advert in the UK created by the company founded in what year?
|
1853
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Inside (Stiltskin song)",
"Levi Strauss & Co."
],
"sent_id": [
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Red Queen Productions is a Toronto-based, Canadian cinema company founded by filmmakers Maya Gallus and Justine Pimlott, dedicated to creating films about women, social issues, culture and the arts.",
" Their films have screened internationally at Sheffield Doc/Fest, Dok Leipzig, SEOUL International Women’s Film Festival, Women Make Waves (Taiwan), This Human World Film Festival (Vienna), Singapore International Film Festival, Frameline Film Festival (San Francisco), Outfest (LA) and Newfest (New York), among others, and have been broadcast around the world.",
" Their work has won numerous awards, including a Gemini Award for Best Direction for \"Girl Inside\", and has been featured in \"The Guardian\", UK; \"The Independent on Sunday\", UK; \"Ms.\" (Magazine), \"Curve\" (Magazine), \"Bust\" (Magazine), \"Salon\" (Magazine)"
],
"title": "Red Queen Productions"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Let's put the record straight on \"Luton Airport\" it was born out of an advert for Campari featuring Loraine Chase and other 'Celebrity' Actors.",
" It was written off the back of the advert cashing in on its success .",
" It was produced by Dave Dee at WEA records.",
" The lead singer was not Dina Payne but a top TV dancer named Bee Rowley who worked with many of the leading TV choreographers of the 80's including Geoff Richer, Nigel Lithco and Arlene Phillips- Dina along with two other girls in the group supplied the backing vocals.",
" Cats UK with Bee Rowley as lead singer made a follow up cover version of \" Sixteen Looking for Love\" which failed to reach the charts.",
" The group was disbanded.",
" Despite their appearances on \"T.O.P and making revenue from sales none of the 'Group received a penny for their hard work and time fronting and performing the record because as often the song writers (NOT Dave Dee - the producer) took their royalties but didn't the artists.",
" The Cats UK Group sort expensive legal advise out of their own pockets only to find any legal challenge would be both costly and a waste of time because the 'Songs Writers' ??",
" would bankrupt the title company before making payment.",
" Such were the realities and the tricks of the trade in glamorous music industry of that time for four hard working hopeful young girls in their early twenties!",
" ... The Songs Writers ??",
"continued to ... write and have had entries accepted for the Eurovision Song Contest in the past \"Luton Airport\" is a 1979 song by Cats U.K..",
" It made #22 on the UK Singles Chart after being featured in an advert for Campariand not the #9 as Deena Payne, who provided the vocals for the song, would like to believe:"
],
"title": "Luton Airport (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The E. W. Scripps Company is an American broadcasting company founded in 1878 as a chain of daily newspapers by Edward Willis \"E. W.\" Scripps.",
" It was also formerly a media conglomerate.",
" The company is headquartered inside the Scripps Center in Cincinnati, Ohio.",
" Its corporate motto is \"Give light and the people will find their own way.\""
],
"title": "E. W. Scripps Company"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bogle-L’Ouverture Publications (BLP) is a radical London-based publishing company founded in 1968 by Guyanese activists Jessica Huntley (23 February 1927 – 13 October 2013) and Eric Huntley (born 25 September 1929).",
" Named in honour of two outstanding liberation fighters in Caribbean history, Toussaint L'Ouverture and Paul Bogle, the company began operating during a period in the UK when \"books by Black authors or written with a sympathetic view of Black people’s history and culture were rare in mainstream bookshops in the UK.\"",
" Alongside New Beacon Books (founded in 1966) and Allison & Busby (founded in 1967), BLP was one of the first black-owned independent publishing companies in the UK.",
" BLP has been described as \"a small, unorthodox, self-financing venture that brought a radical perspective to non-fiction, fiction, poetry and children's books.\""
],
"title": "Bogle-L'Ouverture Publications"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Do It Our Way (Play)\" is a song performed by British recording artist Alesha Dixon.",
" It was released on 1 January 2012 to digital outlets in the United Kingdom and Ireland.",
" Co-written by Dixon herself, Ray Hedges and Nigel Butler and produced by Hedges and Butler, the song was written and released as a promotional single to complement advertising by weight loss company Weight Watchers.",
" The television advert (doubling as a music video), when aired in full, was one of the longest to ever run on British television.",
" Dixon features alongside over 180 \"success stories\" of the Weight Watchers programme in the video.",
" Despite critics noting comparisons between the song and Jessie J's \"Price Tag\" (2011), it reached number 53 on the UK Singles Chart the week following its release."
],
"title": "Do It Our Way (Play)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Inside\" is a song by rock band Stiltskin, the first single from their first studio album, \"The Mind's Eye\".",
" It was written by Peter Lawlor for the British Levi's advert \"Creek\" and spent one week at number one in the UK Singles Chart in 1994.",
" The song was used as the music for Sky Sports' coverage of the Scottish Premier League between 1998 and 2002.",
" All instruments on this recording were played by Peter Lawlor."
],
"title": "Inside (Stiltskin song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Levi Strauss & Co. is a privately owned American clothing company known worldwide for its Levi's brand of denim jeans.",
" It was founded in May 1853 when Levi Strauss came from Buttenheim, Bavaria, to San Francisco, California to open a west coast branch of his brothers' New York dry goods business.",
" The company's corporate headquarters is located in the Levi's Plaza in San Francisco."
],
"title": "Levi Strauss & Co."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mapesbury Communications Ltd (MCom) is a privately owned UK company founded in October 2002.",
" It operates a mobile network called UK01.",
" The launch of the company coinciding with the time that the UK regulatory authority (Ofcom) began the process of liberalising the UK spectrum regime.",
" In 2006 at Ofcom's first spectrum auction MCom was notable in winning a UK mobile GSM spectrum licence."
],
"title": "Mapesbury Communications Ltd"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Write the Future is an advert made by Nike football for the 2010 World Cup and directed by Mexican filmmaker Alejandro González Iñárritu for the UK based production company, Independent Films Limited.",
" The full version is over three minutes in length and features football players Didier Drogba, Fabio Cannavaro, Wayne Rooney, Franck Ribéry, Ronaldinho, and Cristiano Ronaldo as its main players.",
" All of the players play in a scenario during a World Cup match and after significant events occur, the players usually see a significant ripple effect outside the world of football.",
" The advert aired during the 2010 FIFA World Cup.",
" It features the song \"Hocus Pocus\", by progressive rock band Focus.",
" It was created by Wieden+Kennedy and written by Mark Bernath, Eric Quennoy, Stuart Harkness and Freddie Powell.",
" The Sound design and mix was done by Raja Sehgal working out of Grand Central Recording Studios in London"
],
"title": "Write the Future"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Working time in the United Kingdom is regulated in UK labour law in respect of holidays, daily breaks, night work and the maximum working day under the Working Time Regulations 1998.",
" While the traditional mechanisms for ensuring a \"fair day's wage for a fair day's work\" is by collective agreement, since 1962 the UK created minimum statutory rights for every individual at work.",
" The WTR 1998 follow the requirements of the Working Time Directive, which allowed an \"opt out\" from the maximum working week, set at 48 hours.",
" Other reforms have included the 28 holiday minimum per year, 20 minute breaks for each six hours worked, and a maximum of 8 hours work on any given night."
],
"title": "Working time in the United Kingdom"
}
] |
[
"Title: Red Queen Productions\n\nRed Queen Productions is a Toronto-based, Canadian cinema company founded by filmmakers Maya Gallus and Justine Pimlott, dedicated to creating films about women, social issues, culture and the arts. Their films have screened internationally at Sheffield Doc/Fest, Dok Leipzig, SEOUL International Women’s Film Festival, Women Make Waves (Taiwan), This Human World Film Festival (Vienna), Singapore International Film Festival, Frameline Film Festival (San Francisco), Outfest (LA) and Newfest (New York), among others, and have been broadcast around the world. Their work has won numerous awards, including a Gemini Award for Best Direction for \"Girl Inside\", and has been featured in \"The Guardian\", UK; \"The Independent on Sunday\", UK; \"Ms.\" (Magazine), \"Curve\" (Magazine), \"Bust\" (Magazine), \"Salon\" (Magazine)",
"Title: Luton Airport (song)\n\nLet's put the record straight on \"Luton Airport\" it was born out of an advert for Campari featuring Loraine Chase and other 'Celebrity' Actors. It was written off the back of the advert cashing in on its success . It was produced by Dave Dee at WEA records. The lead singer was not Dina Payne but a top TV dancer named Bee Rowley who worked with many of the leading TV choreographers of the 80's including Geoff Richer, Nigel Lithco and Arlene Phillips- Dina along with two other girls in the group supplied the backing vocals. Cats UK with Bee Rowley as lead singer made a follow up cover version of \" Sixteen Looking for Love\" which failed to reach the charts. The group was disbanded. Despite their appearances on \"T.O.P and making revenue from sales none of the 'Group received a penny for their hard work and time fronting and performing the record because as often the song writers (NOT Dave Dee - the producer) took their royalties but didn't the artists. The Cats UK Group sort expensive legal advise out of their own pockets only to find any legal challenge would be both costly and a waste of time because the 'Songs Writers' ?? would bankrupt the title company before making payment. Such were the realities and the tricks of the trade in glamorous music industry of that time for four hard working hopeful young girls in their early twenties! ... The Songs Writers ?? continued to ... write and have had entries accepted for the Eurovision Song Contest in the past \"Luton Airport\" is a 1979 song by Cats U.K.. It made #22 on the UK Singles Chart after being featured in an advert for Campariand not the #9 as Deena Payne, who provided the vocals for the song, would like to believe:",
"Title: E. W. Scripps Company\n\nThe E. W. Scripps Company is an American broadcasting company founded in 1878 as a chain of daily newspapers by Edward Willis \"E. W.\" Scripps. It was also formerly a media conglomerate. The company is headquartered inside the Scripps Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. Its corporate motto is \"Give light and the people will find their own way.\"",
"Title: Bogle-L'Ouverture Publications\n\nBogle-L’Ouverture Publications (BLP) is a radical London-based publishing company founded in 1968 by Guyanese activists Jessica Huntley (23 February 1927 – 13 October 2013) and Eric Huntley (born 25 September 1929). Named in honour of two outstanding liberation fighters in Caribbean history, Toussaint L'Ouverture and Paul Bogle, the company began operating during a period in the UK when \"books by Black authors or written with a sympathetic view of Black people’s history and culture were rare in mainstream bookshops in the UK.\" Alongside New Beacon Books (founded in 1966) and Allison & Busby (founded in 1967), BLP was one of the first black-owned independent publishing companies in the UK. BLP has been described as \"a small, unorthodox, self-financing venture that brought a radical perspective to non-fiction, fiction, poetry and children's books.\"",
"Title: Do It Our Way (Play)\n\n\"Do It Our Way (Play)\" is a song performed by British recording artist Alesha Dixon. It was released on 1 January 2012 to digital outlets in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Co-written by Dixon herself, Ray Hedges and Nigel Butler and produced by Hedges and Butler, the song was written and released as a promotional single to complement advertising by weight loss company Weight Watchers. The television advert (doubling as a music video), when aired in full, was one of the longest to ever run on British television. Dixon features alongside over 180 \"success stories\" of the Weight Watchers programme in the video. Despite critics noting comparisons between the song and Jessie J's \"Price Tag\" (2011), it reached number 53 on the UK Singles Chart the week following its release.",
"Title: Inside (Stiltskin song)\n\n\"Inside\" is a song by rock band Stiltskin, the first single from their first studio album, \"The Mind's Eye\". It was written by Peter Lawlor for the British Levi's advert \"Creek\" and spent one week at number one in the UK Singles Chart in 1994. The song was used as the music for Sky Sports' coverage of the Scottish Premier League between 1998 and 2002. All instruments on this recording were played by Peter Lawlor.",
"Title: Levi Strauss & Co.\n\nLevi Strauss & Co. is a privately owned American clothing company known worldwide for its Levi's brand of denim jeans. It was founded in May 1853 when Levi Strauss came from Buttenheim, Bavaria, to San Francisco, California to open a west coast branch of his brothers' New York dry goods business. The company's corporate headquarters is located in the Levi's Plaza in San Francisco.",
"Title: Mapesbury Communications Ltd\n\nMapesbury Communications Ltd (MCom) is a privately owned UK company founded in October 2002. It operates a mobile network called UK01. The launch of the company coinciding with the time that the UK regulatory authority (Ofcom) began the process of liberalising the UK spectrum regime. In 2006 at Ofcom's first spectrum auction MCom was notable in winning a UK mobile GSM spectrum licence.",
"Title: Write the Future\n\nWrite the Future is an advert made by Nike football for the 2010 World Cup and directed by Mexican filmmaker Alejandro González Iñárritu for the UK based production company, Independent Films Limited. The full version is over three minutes in length and features football players Didier Drogba, Fabio Cannavaro, Wayne Rooney, Franck Ribéry, Ronaldinho, and Cristiano Ronaldo as its main players. All of the players play in a scenario during a World Cup match and after significant events occur, the players usually see a significant ripple effect outside the world of football. The advert aired during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. It features the song \"Hocus Pocus\", by progressive rock band Focus. It was created by Wieden+Kennedy and written by Mark Bernath, Eric Quennoy, Stuart Harkness and Freddie Powell. The Sound design and mix was done by Raja Sehgal working out of Grand Central Recording Studios in London",
"Title: Working time in the United Kingdom\n\nWorking time in the United Kingdom is regulated in UK labour law in respect of holidays, daily breaks, night work and the maximum working day under the Working Time Regulations 1998. While the traditional mechanisms for ensuring a \"fair day's wage for a fair day's work\" is by collective agreement, since 1962 the UK created minimum statutory rights for every individual at work. The WTR 1998 follow the requirements of the Working Time Directive, which allowed an \"opt out\" from the maximum working week, set at 48 hours. Other reforms have included the 28 holiday minimum per year, 20 minute breaks for each six hours worked, and a maximum of 8 hours work on any given night."
] |
1,712
|
In which county is the mall Tanger Outlets Southaven located ?
|
DeSoto County,
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Tanger Outlets Southaven (Memphis)",
"Southaven, Mississippi"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Stanley K. Tanger (April 13, 1923 – October 23, 2010) was an American businessman, philanthropist and pioneer of the outlet shopping industry.",
" Tanger founded Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, which began with a single location in Burlington, North Carolina in 1981, and now has 45 shopping centers throughout the United States and Canada as of April, 2015.",
" In doing so, he invented \"the very concept of the outlet mall\", according to the \"News & Record\" of Greensboro, North Carolina.",
" Tanger Outlets grossed $270 million in 2009."
],
"title": "Stanley Tanger"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The San Marcos Outlet Malls are two discrete outlet malls, the Premium Outlets and the Tanger Factory Outlet Center.",
" Each is located off Interstate Highway 35 in San Marcos, Texas.",
" Combined, the two adjacent malls have more than 350 stores, and an excess of 1000000 sqft .",
" During peak seasons, shoppers at the malls can reach numbers that effectively triple the population of San Marcos.",
" The outlet malls in San Marcos are one of the top tourist attractions in the state.",
" The outlet malls combined are one of the top employers of San Marcos, and are the top employers of students of nearby Texas State University."
],
"title": "San Marcos Outlet Malls"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tanger Outlets The Walk is a 109-store open-air outlet mall in Atlantic City, New Jersey.",
" It is the only outlet mall in Atlantic County.",
" The mall opened in August 2003 and spans 3 city blocks, featuring a unique layout in outlet mall construction."
],
"title": "Tanger Outlets The Walk"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Farmers Plaza is a shopping mall located in Araneta Center, Cubao, Quezon City.",
" The mall is Araneta Centre’s gateway to EDSA.",
" renovated and expanded in 1999, the five-level complex is the first ever commercial condominium in the Philippines.",
" Farmers Plaza offers 60,400 square metres of retail space occupied by cheap merchandise outlets.",
" The mall consists of 5-levels with a mix of international and local shops, dining outlets and entertainment facilities, The mall features over 230 stores anchored by Rustan’s Xpresslane, National Bookstore, Handyman, Mercury Drug & Value Point.",
" It is directly linked to the MRT-3 station.",
" The mall is located along Metro Manila’s 2 busiest thoroughfares: EDSA and Aurora Boulevard.",
" The mall is connected to the near Araneta Coliseum and Gateway Mall by a footbridge."
],
"title": "Farmers Plaza"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sawgrass Mills is an outlet shopping mall operated by the Simon Property Group, in Sunrise, Florida, a city in Broward County.",
" With 2383906 sqft of retail selling space, it is the tenth largest mall in the United States, the largest single story and outlet mall in the U.S., the largest shopping mall in Broward County, the second largest mall in Florida and Miami Metropolitan Area, and the third largest shopping mall in the southeastern United States.",
" The mall opened in 1990 as the third mall developed by the now-defunct Mills Corporation (now part of Simon Property Group), and has been expanded four times since then, most recently in 2013.",
" There are over 300 retail outlets and name brand discounters, with anchors including Off 5th Saks Fifth Avenue, and Super Target."
],
"title": "Sawgrass Mills"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. ( ) () is a real estate company that owns the chain Tanger Outlets, an outlet mall company headquartered in Greensboro, North Carolina."
],
"title": "Tanger Factory Outlet Centers"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Southaven is a city in DeSoto County, Mississippi, United States.",
" It is a suburb of Memphis, Tennessee, and a principal city in the Memphis metropolitan area.",
" The 2010 census reported a population of 48,982, making Southaven the third largest city in Mississippi.",
" Southaven is traversed from north to south by the I-55/I-69 freeway.",
" The city's name derives from the fact that Southaven is located south of Whitehaven, a neighborhood in Memphis."
],
"title": "Southaven, Mississippi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Great Lakes Crossing Outlets is an enclosed shopping mall, super-regional in size, located in the city of Auburn Hills, a suburb on the northern outskirts of metro Detroit, Michigan, United States.",
" Developed and owned by Taubman Centers, Great Lakes Crossing Outlets features 185 manufacturer's outlets, traditional retail stores and restaurants, a 1,000-seat food court, and a 25-screen AMC Star movie theater.",
" Anchor stores of the mall include Burlington Coat Factory, Bass Pro Shops, The Children's Place Outlet, Lord & Taylor Outlet, Neiman Marcus Last Call, and Saks Fifth Avenue Off 5th.",
" Great Lakes Crossing Outlets is also home to LEGOLAND® Discovery Center Michigan and SEA LIFE Michigan Aquarium."
],
"title": "Great Lakes Crossing Outlets"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tanger Outlets Southaven is an outlet mall in Southaven, Mississippi, just outside Memphis, Tennessee.",
" The mall, located at the intersection of I-55/I-69 and Church Road, began construction in January 2015 and opened in November 2015.",
" Tanger Outlets Southaven is the first outlet mall in the Memphis metro area."
],
"title": "Tanger Outlets Southaven (Memphis)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tanger Outlets Pittsburgh, also called Tanger Outlets Washington is an open-air outlet mall in South Strabane Township in Washington County, Pennsylvania owned by Tanger Factory Outlet Centers.",
" It is within the Pittsburgh Metro Area.",
" It is located on Race Track Road off Interstate 79 in Pennsylvania in a 122 acres development called Victory Center.",
" It was supported by the Redevelopment Authority of the County of Washington."
],
"title": "Tanger Outlets Pittsburgh"
}
] |
[
"Title: Stanley Tanger\n\nStanley K. Tanger (April 13, 1923 – October 23, 2010) was an American businessman, philanthropist and pioneer of the outlet shopping industry. Tanger founded Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, which began with a single location in Burlington, North Carolina in 1981, and now has 45 shopping centers throughout the United States and Canada as of April, 2015. In doing so, he invented \"the very concept of the outlet mall\", according to the \"News & Record\" of Greensboro, North Carolina. Tanger Outlets grossed $270 million in 2009.",
"Title: San Marcos Outlet Malls\n\nThe San Marcos Outlet Malls are two discrete outlet malls, the Premium Outlets and the Tanger Factory Outlet Center. Each is located off Interstate Highway 35 in San Marcos, Texas. Combined, the two adjacent malls have more than 350 stores, and an excess of 1000000 sqft . During peak seasons, shoppers at the malls can reach numbers that effectively triple the population of San Marcos. The outlet malls in San Marcos are one of the top tourist attractions in the state. The outlet malls combined are one of the top employers of San Marcos, and are the top employers of students of nearby Texas State University.",
"Title: Tanger Outlets The Walk\n\nTanger Outlets The Walk is a 109-store open-air outlet mall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. It is the only outlet mall in Atlantic County. The mall opened in August 2003 and spans 3 city blocks, featuring a unique layout in outlet mall construction.",
"Title: Farmers Plaza\n\nFarmers Plaza is a shopping mall located in Araneta Center, Cubao, Quezon City. The mall is Araneta Centre’s gateway to EDSA. renovated and expanded in 1999, the five-level complex is the first ever commercial condominium in the Philippines. Farmers Plaza offers 60,400 square metres of retail space occupied by cheap merchandise outlets. The mall consists of 5-levels with a mix of international and local shops, dining outlets and entertainment facilities, The mall features over 230 stores anchored by Rustan’s Xpresslane, National Bookstore, Handyman, Mercury Drug & Value Point. It is directly linked to the MRT-3 station. The mall is located along Metro Manila’s 2 busiest thoroughfares: EDSA and Aurora Boulevard. The mall is connected to the near Araneta Coliseum and Gateway Mall by a footbridge.",
"Title: Sawgrass Mills\n\nSawgrass Mills is an outlet shopping mall operated by the Simon Property Group, in Sunrise, Florida, a city in Broward County. With 2383906 sqft of retail selling space, it is the tenth largest mall in the United States, the largest single story and outlet mall in the U.S., the largest shopping mall in Broward County, the second largest mall in Florida and Miami Metropolitan Area, and the third largest shopping mall in the southeastern United States. The mall opened in 1990 as the third mall developed by the now-defunct Mills Corporation (now part of Simon Property Group), and has been expanded four times since then, most recently in 2013. There are over 300 retail outlets and name brand discounters, with anchors including Off 5th Saks Fifth Avenue, and Super Target.",
"Title: Tanger Factory Outlet Centers\n\nTanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. ( ) () is a real estate company that owns the chain Tanger Outlets, an outlet mall company headquartered in Greensboro, North Carolina.",
"Title: Southaven, Mississippi\n\nSouthaven is a city in DeSoto County, Mississippi, United States. It is a suburb of Memphis, Tennessee, and a principal city in the Memphis metropolitan area. The 2010 census reported a population of 48,982, making Southaven the third largest city in Mississippi. Southaven is traversed from north to south by the I-55/I-69 freeway. The city's name derives from the fact that Southaven is located south of Whitehaven, a neighborhood in Memphis.",
"Title: Great Lakes Crossing Outlets\n\nGreat Lakes Crossing Outlets is an enclosed shopping mall, super-regional in size, located in the city of Auburn Hills, a suburb on the northern outskirts of metro Detroit, Michigan, United States. Developed and owned by Taubman Centers, Great Lakes Crossing Outlets features 185 manufacturer's outlets, traditional retail stores and restaurants, a 1,000-seat food court, and a 25-screen AMC Star movie theater. Anchor stores of the mall include Burlington Coat Factory, Bass Pro Shops, The Children's Place Outlet, Lord & Taylor Outlet, Neiman Marcus Last Call, and Saks Fifth Avenue Off 5th. Great Lakes Crossing Outlets is also home to LEGOLAND® Discovery Center Michigan and SEA LIFE Michigan Aquarium.",
"Title: Tanger Outlets Southaven (Memphis)\n\nTanger Outlets Southaven is an outlet mall in Southaven, Mississippi, just outside Memphis, Tennessee. The mall, located at the intersection of I-55/I-69 and Church Road, began construction in January 2015 and opened in November 2015. Tanger Outlets Southaven is the first outlet mall in the Memphis metro area.",
"Title: Tanger Outlets Pittsburgh\n\nTanger Outlets Pittsburgh, also called Tanger Outlets Washington is an open-air outlet mall in South Strabane Township in Washington County, Pennsylvania owned by Tanger Factory Outlet Centers. It is within the Pittsburgh Metro Area. It is located on Race Track Road off Interstate 79 in Pennsylvania in a 122 acres development called Victory Center. It was supported by the Redevelopment Authority of the County of Washington."
] |
1,713
|
Did both Robert Lowell and Manuel Puig write?
|
yes
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Robert Lowell",
"Manuel Puig"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Kiss of the Spider Woman is a musical with music by John Kander and Fred Ebb, with the book by Terrence McNally.",
" It is based on the Manuel Puig novel \"El Beso de la Mujer Araña\".",
" The musical had runs in the West End (1992) and Broadway (1993) and won the 1993 Tony Award for Best Musical."
],
"title": "Kiss of the Spider Woman (musical)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Juan Manuel Puig Delledonne (December 28, 1932 – July 22, 1990) was an Argentine author.",
" Among his best-known novels are \"La traición de Rita Hayworth\" (\"Betrayed by Rita Hayworth\", 1968), \"Boquitas pintadas\" (\"Heartbreak Tango\", 1969), and \"El beso de la mujer araña\" (\"Kiss of the Spider Woman\", 1976) which was adapted into the film released in 1985, directed by the Argentine-Brazilian director Héctor Babenco; and a Broadway musical in 1993."
],
"title": "Manuel Puig"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages (Spanish: \"Maldición eterna a quien lea estas páginas\") is a 1980 novel by Argentine novelist Manuel Puig.",
" Originally written in English, it was first published in Spanish in the author's own translation.",
" As in other works by Puig, the story is formally experimental, consisting of mostly unattributed dialogue, digressing into stories within stories.",
" It also bears many of Puig favorite motifs, including sexuality and leftist revolutionary politics."
],
"title": "Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Pubis Angelical is a 1979 novel by acclaimed Argentine novelist Manuel Puig.",
" It is perhaps Puig's work most influenced by pop culture.",
" This can be seen in the montage imitating narrative technique, soap opera and science fiction elements.",
" Also like other Puig works, it deals with psychological and sexual issues."
],
"title": "Pubis Angelical"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Alan Pauls (born 22 April 1959 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentinian writer, literary critic and screenwriter.",
" An early essay he did on Betrayed by Rita Hayworth by Manuel Puig is said to show his interest in him as an \"experimental writer.\"",
" Although Pauls has expressed skepticism about the avant-garde as any form of program, preferring to see it as a \"toolbox.\"",
" Among his own experimental works is \"Wasabi\" from 1994.",
" He also had a longstanding interest in film and his later work \"El pasado\" was adapted to film.",
" Among more recent work he wrote a \"History of\" trilogy with the titles being \"History of crying\", \"History of hair\", and \"History of money\".",
" He has additionally served as a visiting professor at Princeton University."
],
"title": "Alan Pauls"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kiss of the Spider Woman (Spanish: \"El beso de la mujer araña\") is a 1976 novel by Argentine writer Manuel Puig.",
" It depicts the daily conversations between two cellmates in an Argentine prison, Molina and Valentín, and the intimate bond they form in the process.",
" It is generally considered Puig's most successful work."
],
"title": "Kiss of the Spider Woman (novel)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Heartbreak Tango is a novel by Argentine author Manuel Puig."
],
"title": "Heartbreak Tango"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Robert Traill Spence Lowell IV ( ; March 1, 1917 – September 12, 1977) was an American poet.",
" He was born into a Boston Brahmin family that could trace its origins back to the \"Mayflower\".",
" His family, past and present, were important subjects in his poetry.",
" Growing up in Boston also informed his poems, which were frequently set in Boston and the New England region.",
" The literary scholar Paula Hayes believes that Lowell mythologized New England, particularly in his early work."
],
"title": "Robert Lowell"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kiss of the Spider Woman is an 1983 stage adaptation by Manuel Puig's of his \"Kiss of the Spider Woman\" novel."
],
"title": "Kiss of the Spider Woman (play)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Betrayed by Rita Hayworth (Spanish: \"La traición de Rita Hayworth\" ) is a 1968 novel by the Argentine novelist Manuel Puig.",
" It was Puig's first novel."
],
"title": "Betrayed by Rita Hayworth"
}
] |
[
"Title: Kiss of the Spider Woman (musical)\n\nKiss of the Spider Woman is a musical with music by John Kander and Fred Ebb, with the book by Terrence McNally. It is based on the Manuel Puig novel \"El Beso de la Mujer Araña\". The musical had runs in the West End (1992) and Broadway (1993) and won the 1993 Tony Award for Best Musical.",
"Title: Manuel Puig\n\nJuan Manuel Puig Delledonne (December 28, 1932 – July 22, 1990) was an Argentine author. Among his best-known novels are \"La traición de Rita Hayworth\" (\"Betrayed by Rita Hayworth\", 1968), \"Boquitas pintadas\" (\"Heartbreak Tango\", 1969), and \"El beso de la mujer araña\" (\"Kiss of the Spider Woman\", 1976) which was adapted into the film released in 1985, directed by the Argentine-Brazilian director Héctor Babenco; and a Broadway musical in 1993.",
"Title: Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages\n\nEternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages (Spanish: \"Maldición eterna a quien lea estas páginas\") is a 1980 novel by Argentine novelist Manuel Puig. Originally written in English, it was first published in Spanish in the author's own translation. As in other works by Puig, the story is formally experimental, consisting of mostly unattributed dialogue, digressing into stories within stories. It also bears many of Puig favorite motifs, including sexuality and leftist revolutionary politics.",
"Title: Pubis Angelical\n\nPubis Angelical is a 1979 novel by acclaimed Argentine novelist Manuel Puig. It is perhaps Puig's work most influenced by pop culture. This can be seen in the montage imitating narrative technique, soap opera and science fiction elements. Also like other Puig works, it deals with psychological and sexual issues.",
"Title: Alan Pauls\n\nAlan Pauls (born 22 April 1959 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentinian writer, literary critic and screenwriter. An early essay he did on Betrayed by Rita Hayworth by Manuel Puig is said to show his interest in him as an \"experimental writer.\" Although Pauls has expressed skepticism about the avant-garde as any form of program, preferring to see it as a \"toolbox.\" Among his own experimental works is \"Wasabi\" from 1994. He also had a longstanding interest in film and his later work \"El pasado\" was adapted to film. Among more recent work he wrote a \"History of\" trilogy with the titles being \"History of crying\", \"History of hair\", and \"History of money\". He has additionally served as a visiting professor at Princeton University.",
"Title: Kiss of the Spider Woman (novel)\n\nKiss of the Spider Woman (Spanish: \"El beso de la mujer araña\") is a 1976 novel by Argentine writer Manuel Puig. It depicts the daily conversations between two cellmates in an Argentine prison, Molina and Valentín, and the intimate bond they form in the process. It is generally considered Puig's most successful work.",
"Title: Heartbreak Tango\n\nHeartbreak Tango is a novel by Argentine author Manuel Puig.",
"Title: Robert Lowell\n\nRobert Traill Spence Lowell IV ( ; March 1, 1917 – September 12, 1977) was an American poet. He was born into a Boston Brahmin family that could trace its origins back to the \"Mayflower\". His family, past and present, were important subjects in his poetry. Growing up in Boston also informed his poems, which were frequently set in Boston and the New England region. The literary scholar Paula Hayes believes that Lowell mythologized New England, particularly in his early work.",
"Title: Kiss of the Spider Woman (play)\n\nKiss of the Spider Woman is an 1983 stage adaptation by Manuel Puig's of his \"Kiss of the Spider Woman\" novel.",
"Title: Betrayed by Rita Hayworth\n\nBetrayed by Rita Hayworth (Spanish: \"La traición de Rita Hayworth\" ) is a 1968 novel by the Argentine novelist Manuel Puig. It was Puig's first novel."
] |
1,714
|
Which city is closest to Wuzhou City, Macheng or Cenxi?
|
Cenxi
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Macheng",
"Macheng",
"Cenxi"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Cangwu County is a county of Guangxi, China.",
" It is under the administration of Wuzhou city."
],
"title": "Cangwu County"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Macheng NO.1 High School(),of which predecessor is Macheng County Higher Primary School(麻城县立高等小学堂),was rebuilt from Tingzhou the City South Examination Hall(城南亭州试院)in 1905by Qu Zihou(屈子厚,1851─1911),the Qing Dynasty's former Speaker of the Macheng County Counciland Director of Eduction,is a noted and key high school in Hubei Province."
],
"title": "Macheng No. 1 High School"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Teng County or Tengxian () is a county of eastern Guangxi, China.",
" It is under the administration of Wuzhou City.",
" , it had a population of 930,000 residing in an area of 3943 km2 ."
],
"title": "Teng County"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wuzhou Changzhoudao Airport () (IATA: WUZ, ICAO: ZGWZ) is an airport serving the city of Wuzhou in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China.",
" A new airport, Wuzhou Xijiang Airport, is being constructed to replace Changzhoudao Airport.",
" It is expected to open in 2017."
],
"title": "Wuzhou Changzhoudao Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cenxi () is a county-level city under the administration of Wuzhou City, in the east of Guangxi, People's Republic of China."
],
"title": "Cenxi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Changzhou District () is a district of Guangxi, China.",
" It is under the administration of Wuzhou city."
],
"title": "Changzhou District"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wanxiu District is a district of Guangxi, China.",
" It is under the administration of Wuzhou city."
],
"title": "Wanxiu District"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dieshan District is a district of Wuzhou city, Guangxi, China."
],
"title": "Dieshan District"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mengshan County () is a county under the administration of Wuzhou City in northeastern Guangxi, China.",
" Its seat is located in Mengshan Town."
],
"title": "Mengshan County"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Macheng () is a city in northeastern Hubei province, People's Republic of China, bordering the provinces of Henan to the north and Anhui to the northeast.",
" It is a county-level city under the administration of Huanggang City and abuts the south side of the Dabie Mountains.",
" The city's administrative area covers about 3600 km2 , and includes some 700 villages and small towns.",
" Total population was 1.2 million at the last census."
],
"title": "Macheng"
}
] |
[
"Title: Cangwu County\n\nCangwu County is a county of Guangxi, China. It is under the administration of Wuzhou city.",
"Title: Macheng No. 1 High School\n\nThe Macheng NO.1 High School(),of which predecessor is Macheng County Higher Primary School(麻城县立高等小学堂),was rebuilt from Tingzhou the City South Examination Hall(城南亭州试院)in 1905by Qu Zihou(屈子厚,1851─1911),the Qing Dynasty's former Speaker of the Macheng County Counciland Director of Eduction,is a noted and key high school in Hubei Province.",
"Title: Teng County\n\nTeng County or Tengxian () is a county of eastern Guangxi, China. It is under the administration of Wuzhou City. , it had a population of 930,000 residing in an area of 3943 km2 .",
"Title: Wuzhou Changzhoudao Airport\n\nWuzhou Changzhoudao Airport () (IATA: WUZ, ICAO: ZGWZ) is an airport serving the city of Wuzhou in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. A new airport, Wuzhou Xijiang Airport, is being constructed to replace Changzhoudao Airport. It is expected to open in 2017.",
"Title: Cenxi\n\nCenxi () is a county-level city under the administration of Wuzhou City, in the east of Guangxi, People's Republic of China.",
"Title: Changzhou District\n\nChangzhou District () is a district of Guangxi, China. It is under the administration of Wuzhou city.",
"Title: Wanxiu District\n\nWanxiu District is a district of Guangxi, China. It is under the administration of Wuzhou city.",
"Title: Dieshan District\n\nDieshan District is a district of Wuzhou city, Guangxi, China.",
"Title: Mengshan County\n\nMengshan County () is a county under the administration of Wuzhou City in northeastern Guangxi, China. Its seat is located in Mengshan Town.",
"Title: Macheng\n\nMacheng () is a city in northeastern Hubei province, People's Republic of China, bordering the provinces of Henan to the north and Anhui to the northeast. It is a county-level city under the administration of Huanggang City and abuts the south side of the Dabie Mountains. The city's administrative area covers about 3600 km2 , and includes some 700 villages and small towns. Total population was 1.2 million at the last census."
] |
1,715
|
What battle did James Edward Tait fight in that caused the town Jetait, Manitoba to be named after him?
|
The Battle of Amiens
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Jetait, Manitoba",
"Battle of Amiens (1918)"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"A Memoir of Jane Austen is a biography of the novelist Jane Austen (1775–1817) published in 1869 by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh.",
" A second edition was published in 1871 which included previously unpublished Jane Austen writings.",
" A family project, the biography was written by James Edward Austen-Leigh but owed much to the recollections of Jane Austen's many relatives.",
" However, it was the decisions of her close friend and sister, Cassandra Austen, to destroy many of Jane's letters after her death that shaped the material available for the biography."
],
"title": "A Memoir of Jane Austen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Edward James Connery (born July 13, 1933 in St. Vital, Manitoba) is a politician in Manitoba, Canada.",
" He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1986 to 1992, and a cabinet minister in the Progressive Conservative government of Gary Filmon from 1988 to 1991."
],
"title": "Edward Connery"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A Disaffection is a novel written by Scottish writer James Kelman, first published in 1989 by Secker and Warburg.",
" Set in Glasgow, it is written in the Scottish dialect in a stream of consciousness style, centering on a 29-year-old schoolteacher named Patrick Doyle.",
" The novel won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1989, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.",
" In 2012, it was shortlisted for the Best of the James Tait Black."
],
"title": "A Disaffection"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jetait is a locality southwest of Granville Lake.",
" CBGN records (1953) indicated this to be a Canadian National Railway point, named by the CNR after World War I Casualty Captain James Edward Tait who was awarded the Military Cross and the Victoria Cross for his \"consipicuous bravery\" at the Battle of Amiens (1918).",
" He had worked on the original surveys for the Hudson Bay Railway."
],
"title": "Jetait, Manitoba"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Arthur James Edward Child, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (May 19, 1910 – July 30, 1996) was a Canadian businessman and former chairman and chief executive officer of Burns Foods Limited of Calgary.",
" Arthur James Edward Child and his business partner Ron Jackson acquired the food processing and distribution company in a leveraged management buyout in 1986.",
" With sales in excess of $1 billion, Burns Foods was involved in meat processing, dairy, food warehousing and distribution, and vegetable processing businesses.",
" Over a 12-year period, Arthur James Edward Child and his management team built Burns Foods into a leading Canadian food company with over $1 billion in annual sales.",
" Beginning in 1995, a majority of the Burns Foods’ subsidiaries were sold generating an exceptional return to the shareholders."
],
"title": "Arthur Child"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Edward Tait {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (27 May 1888 – 11 August 1918), was a Scottish/Canadian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces."
],
"title": "James Edward Tait"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Battle of Amiens, also known as the Third Battle of Picardy (French: \"3ème Bataille de Picardie\" ), was the opening phase of the Allied offensive which began on 8 August 1918, later known as the Hundred Days Offensive, that ultimately led to the end of the First World War.",
" Allied forces advanced over 11 km on the first day, one of the greatest advances of the war, with Henry Rawlinson's British Fourth Army playing the decisive role.",
" The battle is also notable for its effects on both sides' morale and the large number of surrendering German forces.",
" This led Erich Ludendorff to describe the first day of the battle as \"the black day of the German Army\".",
" Amiens was one of the first major battles involving armoured warfare and marked the end of trench warfare on the Western Front; fighting becoming mobile once again until the armistice was signed on 11 November 1918."
],
"title": "Battle of Amiens (1918)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jason (\"Jay\") Lyon (born May 24, 1986 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is an archer from Canada.",
" He is a member of the Canadian National archery team who has competed in the 2004 World Junior Archery Championships, 2005 World Senior Archery Championships, the 2007 World Senior Archery Championships, the 2007 Pan-American Games and many other events.",
" Lyon was named 2008 Manitoba Male Athlete of the Year.",
" He was also named one of Manitoba's Top 85 Athletes of All Time by friend and host of Hot 103 Radio, Ace Burpee.",
" Lyon currently resides in his home town of Winnipeg where he shoots regularly at his local archery range."
],
"title": "Jason Lyon"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Angel and the Badman is a 1947 American Western film written and directed by James Edward Grant and starring John Wayne, Gail Russell, Harry Carey and Bruce Cabot.",
" The film is about an injured gunfighter who is nursed back to health by a Quaker girl and her family whose way of life influences him and his violent ways.",
" \"Angel and the Badman\" was the first film Wayne produced as well as starred in, and was a departure for this genre at the time it was released.",
" Writer-director James Edward Grant was Wayne's frequent screenwriting collaborator."
],
"title": "Angel and the Badman"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Nan Tait Centre is a Grade II listed building located at Abbey Road in the Hindpool area of Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, England.",
" Designed by architects Woodhouse and Willoughby it was built for the Barrow Corporation as the town's new Technical School.",
" The foundation stone was laid on 26 May 1900 and the school was officially opened three years later on 25 August 1903.",
" The Technical School narrowly escaped Luftwaffe bombing during World War II, although its close neighbour Christ Church was almost completely destroyed in April 1941.",
" In 1970 the technical school was replaced by Thorncliffe School in Hawcoat and as a result was neglected falling into a near dilapidated state, despite this the building was ultimately redeveloped in the early 2000s at a cost of £4 million and was named in honour of Agnes \"Nan\" Tait (Mayor of the Borough of Barrow-in-Furness from 1959 to 1960).",
" The Nan Tait centre is now multifunctional serving as a cultural, exhibition and arts centre as well as a general office building.",
" The Barracudas carnival band, Dare Dance, Capita Symonds, Barrow Borough Sports Council and Barrow Register Office are all tenants of the centre."
],
"title": "Nan Tait Centre"
}
] |
[
"Title: A Memoir of Jane Austen\n\nA Memoir of Jane Austen is a biography of the novelist Jane Austen (1775–1817) published in 1869 by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh. A second edition was published in 1871 which included previously unpublished Jane Austen writings. A family project, the biography was written by James Edward Austen-Leigh but owed much to the recollections of Jane Austen's many relatives. However, it was the decisions of her close friend and sister, Cassandra Austen, to destroy many of Jane's letters after her death that shaped the material available for the biography.",
"Title: Edward Connery\n\nEdward James Connery (born July 13, 1933 in St. Vital, Manitoba) is a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1986 to 1992, and a cabinet minister in the Progressive Conservative government of Gary Filmon from 1988 to 1991.",
"Title: A Disaffection\n\nA Disaffection is a novel written by Scottish writer James Kelman, first published in 1989 by Secker and Warburg. Set in Glasgow, it is written in the Scottish dialect in a stream of consciousness style, centering on a 29-year-old schoolteacher named Patrick Doyle. The novel won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1989, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. In 2012, it was shortlisted for the Best of the James Tait Black.",
"Title: Jetait, Manitoba\n\nJetait is a locality southwest of Granville Lake. CBGN records (1953) indicated this to be a Canadian National Railway point, named by the CNR after World War I Casualty Captain James Edward Tait who was awarded the Military Cross and the Victoria Cross for his \"consipicuous bravery\" at the Battle of Amiens (1918). He had worked on the original surveys for the Hudson Bay Railway.",
"Title: Arthur Child\n\nArthur James Edward Child, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (May 19, 1910 – July 30, 1996) was a Canadian businessman and former chairman and chief executive officer of Burns Foods Limited of Calgary. Arthur James Edward Child and his business partner Ron Jackson acquired the food processing and distribution company in a leveraged management buyout in 1986. With sales in excess of $1 billion, Burns Foods was involved in meat processing, dairy, food warehousing and distribution, and vegetable processing businesses. Over a 12-year period, Arthur James Edward Child and his management team built Burns Foods into a leading Canadian food company with over $1 billion in annual sales. Beginning in 1995, a majority of the Burns Foods’ subsidiaries were sold generating an exceptional return to the shareholders.",
"Title: James Edward Tait\n\nJames Edward Tait {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (27 May 1888 – 11 August 1918), was a Scottish/Canadian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.",
"Title: Battle of Amiens (1918)\n\nThe Battle of Amiens, also known as the Third Battle of Picardy (French: \"3ème Bataille de Picardie\" ), was the opening phase of the Allied offensive which began on 8 August 1918, later known as the Hundred Days Offensive, that ultimately led to the end of the First World War. Allied forces advanced over 11 km on the first day, one of the greatest advances of the war, with Henry Rawlinson's British Fourth Army playing the decisive role. The battle is also notable for its effects on both sides' morale and the large number of surrendering German forces. This led Erich Ludendorff to describe the first day of the battle as \"the black day of the German Army\". Amiens was one of the first major battles involving armoured warfare and marked the end of trench warfare on the Western Front; fighting becoming mobile once again until the armistice was signed on 11 November 1918.",
"Title: Jason Lyon\n\nJason (\"Jay\") Lyon (born May 24, 1986 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is an archer from Canada. He is a member of the Canadian National archery team who has competed in the 2004 World Junior Archery Championships, 2005 World Senior Archery Championships, the 2007 World Senior Archery Championships, the 2007 Pan-American Games and many other events. Lyon was named 2008 Manitoba Male Athlete of the Year. He was also named one of Manitoba's Top 85 Athletes of All Time by friend and host of Hot 103 Radio, Ace Burpee. Lyon currently resides in his home town of Winnipeg where he shoots regularly at his local archery range.",
"Title: Angel and the Badman\n\nAngel and the Badman is a 1947 American Western film written and directed by James Edward Grant and starring John Wayne, Gail Russell, Harry Carey and Bruce Cabot. The film is about an injured gunfighter who is nursed back to health by a Quaker girl and her family whose way of life influences him and his violent ways. \"Angel and the Badman\" was the first film Wayne produced as well as starred in, and was a departure for this genre at the time it was released. Writer-director James Edward Grant was Wayne's frequent screenwriting collaborator.",
"Title: Nan Tait Centre\n\nThe Nan Tait Centre is a Grade II listed building located at Abbey Road in the Hindpool area of Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, England. Designed by architects Woodhouse and Willoughby it was built for the Barrow Corporation as the town's new Technical School. The foundation stone was laid on 26 May 1900 and the school was officially opened three years later on 25 August 1903. The Technical School narrowly escaped Luftwaffe bombing during World War II, although its close neighbour Christ Church was almost completely destroyed in April 1941. In 1970 the technical school was replaced by Thorncliffe School in Hawcoat and as a result was neglected falling into a near dilapidated state, despite this the building was ultimately redeveloped in the early 2000s at a cost of £4 million and was named in honour of Agnes \"Nan\" Tait (Mayor of the Borough of Barrow-in-Furness from 1959 to 1960). The Nan Tait centre is now multifunctional serving as a cultural, exhibition and arts centre as well as a general office building. The Barracudas carnival band, Dare Dance, Capita Symonds, Barrow Borough Sports Council and Barrow Register Office are all tenants of the centre."
] |
1,716
|
Bradford Humes Young, also known as Brad Young, is a professor of Biblical Literature in Judeo Christian Studies at the Graduate Department of which university, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the United States, is an interdenominational, Christian, comprehensive liberal arts university?
|
Oral Roberts University
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Brad H. Young",
"Oral Roberts University"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Azfar Hussain (Bengali: আজফার হোসেন ) is a Bangladeshi theorist, critic, academic, bilingual writer, poet, translator, and activist.",
" He is Associate Professor of Liberal Studies/Interdisciplinary Studies at Grand Valley State University in Michigan, and Vice-President of the Global Center for Advanced Studies (GCAS) and Honorary GCAS Professor of English, World Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies.",
" He taught English, World Literature, Ethnic Studies, and Cultural Studies at Washington State University, Bowling Green State University, and Oklahoma State University; while, in Bangladesh, he taught English at Jahangirnagar University and North South University.",
" He also worked as Scholar-in-Residence at the University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh.",
" He is an advisory editor of \"Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge\".",
" He is also an editorial board member of the Bengali journals \"Natun Diganta\" and \"Sarbajonakotha\"."
],
"title": "Azfar Hussain"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Colorado Christian University (CCU) is a private, interdenominational Christian liberal arts university in Lakewood, Colorado in the United States.",
" CCU was founded in 1914 as the Denver Bible Institute."
],
"title": "Colorado Christian University"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Christian M. M. Brady (born 1968) is an American scholar who specializes in biblical literature, rabbinic literature, and the targumim, especially Targum Lamentations and Targum Ruth.",
" He is the inaugural Dean of the Lewis Honors College at the University of Kentucky (2017) and was Dean of the Schreyer Honors College from 2006-2016.",
" He was formerly Associate Professor of Classical Studies and Jewish Studies at Tulane University.",
" His administrative roles at Tulane included, Associate Director of the Jewish Studies Program (1997-1998), Director of the Jewish Studies Program (1998-2003), and Director of the Honors Program (2004–2006)."
],
"title": "Christian M. M. Brady"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Daniel Patte (born 1939) is a French American biblical scholar and author.",
" Patte has been Professor of Religious Studies and of New Testament & Early Christianity at Vanderbilt University since 1971.",
" He studied in both European and American schools: following his Baccalauréat in Philosophy (Grenoble, 1958) he received a Baccalauréat en Théologie (1960) from the Faculté de Théologie Protestante, Montpellier, France; Licence en Théologie, (équivalent to M.Th, 1964) from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and a Th.D.",
" (1971) from the Jewish Christian Center at Chicago Theological Seminary.",
" Patte is one of the most engaging biblical scholars, calling for an ethics of biblical interpretation that involves acknowledging the contextual character of any interpretation of the Bible, as his numerous books and articles indicate.",
" In the 1970s-1980s Patte pioneered structural criticism in biblical studies, serving as a long time General Editor of \"Semeia\", a journal published by the Society of Biblical Literature (1992–98).",
" Patte also chaired programs of the Society of Biblical Literature, including on Semiotic and Exegesis, Romans Through History and Cultures, and, since 2007, Contextual Biblical Interpretation.",
" With colleagues of the Society of Biblical Literature and of the American Academy of Religion involved in these programs, he envisioned and edited The Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity (2010)."
],
"title": "Daniel Patte"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wikgren earned his Bachelor of Arts degree (in Greek) in 1928, his Master of Arts degree in 1929 and his Ph.D. in 1932, all from the University of Chicago.",
" His doctoral dissertation was entitled \"A Comparative Study of the Theodotionic and Septuagint Versions of Daniel\".",
" An ordained minister in the mainline Northern Baptist Convention, Wikgren then served as a minister at First Baptist Church in Belleville, Kansas and as a professor of New Testament literature at Kansas City Baptist Theological Seminary (now Central Baptist Theological Seminary in Shawnee, Kansas) (1935-1937) and of biblical literature and classics at Ottawa University in Ottawa, Kansas (1937-1940) before returning to Chicago to join the University of Chicago Divinity School as the J. M. Powis Smith Instructor in 1940.",
" At Chicago, Wikgren was a member of the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature in the university's Division of the Humanities, a department which he would later serve as chair.",
" His colleagues in New Testament studies during his long tenure administering the department (1953-1972) included figures such as Norman Perrin, Robert M. Grant and Markus Barth."
],
"title": "Allen Wikgren"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Oklahoma Christian University (OC) is a private comprehensive coeducational Christian liberal arts university founded in 1950 by members of the Churches of Christ.",
" Oklahoma Christian University is located on a 240 acre campus in Oklahoma City, in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.",
" Enrollment for the fall 2014 semester was a record 2,479 students.",
" OC is ranked among the best \"Regional Universities\" in the 16-state West region by U.S. News and World Report and is listed by the Princeton Review as one of the best \"Best Western Colleges.\"",
" The University reported a 45% acceptance rate for fall 2012 applicants."
],
"title": "Oklahoma Christian University"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Reinhardt University is a comprehensive liberal arts university located in Waleska, Georgia, United States, with an off-campus center in Alpharetta.",
" Select programs are also offered in Cartersville, Marietta, and Canton, and online.",
" Reinhardt is affiliated with the United Methodist Church."
],
"title": "Reinhardt University"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lee University is a private University in Cleveland, Tennessee, historically affiliated with the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee), an evangelical Christian denomination.",
" Lee began as the Church of God Bible Training School in 1918, a small Bible institute of twelve students and one teacher.",
" The school grew and became Lee College, with a Bible college and junior college on its current site, in 1948.",
" Twenty years later, Lee received accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools as a four-year liberal arts college.",
" In 1997, Lee made the transition from college to comprehensive liberal arts university granting graduate degrees.",
" The university is divided into five colleges and schools: the College of Arts & Sciences, the Helen DeVos College of Education, the School of Music, the School of Nursing, and the School of Religion.",
" The university also offers online degrees through the Division of Adult Learning.",
" Lee University is named for F.J. Lee, the institution's second president."
],
"title": "Lee University"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bradford Humes Young, also known as Brad Young, is a professor of Biblical Literature in Judeo Christian Studies at the Graduate Department of Oral Roberts University (ORU).",
" He is also founder and president of the Gospel Research Foundation, Inc."
],
"title": "Brad H. Young"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Oral Roberts University (ORU), based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the United States, is an interdenominational, Christian, comprehensive liberal arts university with 4,000 students.",
" Founded in 1963, the university is named after its founder, evangelist Oral Roberts, and accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA)."
],
"title": "Oral Roberts University"
}
] |
[
"Title: Azfar Hussain\n\nAzfar Hussain (Bengali: আজফার হোসেন ) is a Bangladeshi theorist, critic, academic, bilingual writer, poet, translator, and activist. He is Associate Professor of Liberal Studies/Interdisciplinary Studies at Grand Valley State University in Michigan, and Vice-President of the Global Center for Advanced Studies (GCAS) and Honorary GCAS Professor of English, World Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies. He taught English, World Literature, Ethnic Studies, and Cultural Studies at Washington State University, Bowling Green State University, and Oklahoma State University; while, in Bangladesh, he taught English at Jahangirnagar University and North South University. He also worked as Scholar-in-Residence at the University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh. He is an advisory editor of \"Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge\". He is also an editorial board member of the Bengali journals \"Natun Diganta\" and \"Sarbajonakotha\".",
"Title: Colorado Christian University\n\nColorado Christian University (CCU) is a private, interdenominational Christian liberal arts university in Lakewood, Colorado in the United States. CCU was founded in 1914 as the Denver Bible Institute.",
"Title: Christian M. M. Brady\n\nChristian M. M. Brady (born 1968) is an American scholar who specializes in biblical literature, rabbinic literature, and the targumim, especially Targum Lamentations and Targum Ruth. He is the inaugural Dean of the Lewis Honors College at the University of Kentucky (2017) and was Dean of the Schreyer Honors College from 2006-2016. He was formerly Associate Professor of Classical Studies and Jewish Studies at Tulane University. His administrative roles at Tulane included, Associate Director of the Jewish Studies Program (1997-1998), Director of the Jewish Studies Program (1998-2003), and Director of the Honors Program (2004–2006).",
"Title: Daniel Patte\n\nDaniel Patte (born 1939) is a French American biblical scholar and author. Patte has been Professor of Religious Studies and of New Testament & Early Christianity at Vanderbilt University since 1971. He studied in both European and American schools: following his Baccalauréat in Philosophy (Grenoble, 1958) he received a Baccalauréat en Théologie (1960) from the Faculté de Théologie Protestante, Montpellier, France; Licence en Théologie, (équivalent to M.Th, 1964) from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and a Th.D. (1971) from the Jewish Christian Center at Chicago Theological Seminary. Patte is one of the most engaging biblical scholars, calling for an ethics of biblical interpretation that involves acknowledging the contextual character of any interpretation of the Bible, as his numerous books and articles indicate. In the 1970s-1980s Patte pioneered structural criticism in biblical studies, serving as a long time General Editor of \"Semeia\", a journal published by the Society of Biblical Literature (1992–98). Patte also chaired programs of the Society of Biblical Literature, including on Semiotic and Exegesis, Romans Through History and Cultures, and, since 2007, Contextual Biblical Interpretation. With colleagues of the Society of Biblical Literature and of the American Academy of Religion involved in these programs, he envisioned and edited The Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity (2010).",
"Title: Allen Wikgren\n\nWikgren earned his Bachelor of Arts degree (in Greek) in 1928, his Master of Arts degree in 1929 and his Ph.D. in 1932, all from the University of Chicago. His doctoral dissertation was entitled \"A Comparative Study of the Theodotionic and Septuagint Versions of Daniel\". An ordained minister in the mainline Northern Baptist Convention, Wikgren then served as a minister at First Baptist Church in Belleville, Kansas and as a professor of New Testament literature at Kansas City Baptist Theological Seminary (now Central Baptist Theological Seminary in Shawnee, Kansas) (1935-1937) and of biblical literature and classics at Ottawa University in Ottawa, Kansas (1937-1940) before returning to Chicago to join the University of Chicago Divinity School as the J. M. Powis Smith Instructor in 1940. At Chicago, Wikgren was a member of the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature in the university's Division of the Humanities, a department which he would later serve as chair. His colleagues in New Testament studies during his long tenure administering the department (1953-1972) included figures such as Norman Perrin, Robert M. Grant and Markus Barth.",
"Title: Oklahoma Christian University\n\nOklahoma Christian University (OC) is a private comprehensive coeducational Christian liberal arts university founded in 1950 by members of the Churches of Christ. Oklahoma Christian University is located on a 240 acre campus in Oklahoma City, in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Enrollment for the fall 2014 semester was a record 2,479 students. OC is ranked among the best \"Regional Universities\" in the 16-state West region by U.S. News and World Report and is listed by the Princeton Review as one of the best \"Best Western Colleges.\" The University reported a 45% acceptance rate for fall 2012 applicants.",
"Title: Reinhardt University\n\nReinhardt University is a comprehensive liberal arts university located in Waleska, Georgia, United States, with an off-campus center in Alpharetta. Select programs are also offered in Cartersville, Marietta, and Canton, and online. Reinhardt is affiliated with the United Methodist Church.",
"Title: Lee University\n\nLee University is a private University in Cleveland, Tennessee, historically affiliated with the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee), an evangelical Christian denomination. Lee began as the Church of God Bible Training School in 1918, a small Bible institute of twelve students and one teacher. The school grew and became Lee College, with a Bible college and junior college on its current site, in 1948. Twenty years later, Lee received accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools as a four-year liberal arts college. In 1997, Lee made the transition from college to comprehensive liberal arts university granting graduate degrees. The university is divided into five colleges and schools: the College of Arts & Sciences, the Helen DeVos College of Education, the School of Music, the School of Nursing, and the School of Religion. The university also offers online degrees through the Division of Adult Learning. Lee University is named for F.J. Lee, the institution's second president.",
"Title: Brad H. Young\n\nBradford Humes Young, also known as Brad Young, is a professor of Biblical Literature in Judeo Christian Studies at the Graduate Department of Oral Roberts University (ORU). He is also founder and president of the Gospel Research Foundation, Inc.",
"Title: Oral Roberts University\n\nOral Roberts University (ORU), based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the United States, is an interdenominational, Christian, comprehensive liberal arts university with 4,000 students. Founded in 1963, the university is named after its founder, evangelist Oral Roberts, and accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA)."
] |
1,717
|
Midnight Sun is an upcoming American romantic drama film directed by Scott Speer, and is stars which American actor, comedian and retired United States Marine Corps Reserve officer, and is best known for his work as a correspondent on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" from 2006 to 2008?
|
Rob Riggle
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Midnight Sun (2018 film)",
"Rob Riggle"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Marine Fighter Training Squadron 401 (VMFT-401) is a United States Marine Corps Reserve fighter squadron flying the F-5N Tiger II.",
" Known as the \"Snipers\", the squadron is the only adversary squadron in the Marine Corps, also is the first and only reserve squadron in the Marine Corps tasked to act as the opposing force in simulated air combat.",
" They are based at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma and fall under the command of the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing and Marine Aircraft Group 41.",
" VMFT-401 is a non-deployable unit."
],
"title": "VMFT-401"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Blue Book is the commonly used name for a United States Marine Corps document officially known as Marine Corps Bulletin 1400 (MCBul 1400).",
" MCBul 1400 serves to publish lineal precedence and seniority information on officers in the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Marine Corps Reserve.",
" It is published annually by the U.S. Marine Corps' Deputy Commandant, Manpower and Reserve Affairs.",
" In addition to determining seniority among officers, it is also used to determine promotion eligibility."
],
"title": "Blue Book (United States Marine Corps)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wesley R. \"Wes\" Gray is an author, portfolio manager, veteran of the United States Marine Corps, a captain in the United States Marine Corps Reserve and a former assistant professor of finance.",
" He is best known for his book, \"EMBEDDED: A Marine Corps Adviser Inside the Iraqi Army\", an account of his eight-month military assignment in Iraq."
],
"title": "Wesley Gray"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Marine Forces Reserve (MARFORRES or MFR), also known as the United States Marine Corps Reserve (USMCR) and the U.S. Marine Corps Forces Reserve, is the reserve force of the United States Marine Corps.",
" It is the largest command in the U.S. Marine Corps."
],
"title": "United States Marine Corps Reserve"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Donald Nathan Aldrich (24 October 1917 – 3 May 1947) was a United States Marine Corps Reserve captain and World War II flying ace.",
" With 20 victories, Aldrich was the fifth-highest-scoring Marine Corps ace of the war.",
" He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force after the United States Army Air Corps refused him because he was married.",
" Aldrich became an instructor pilot and transferred to the United States Marine Corps in late 1942.",
" He joined VMF-215 in the Solomon Islands campaign in June 1943, flying the Vought F4U Corsair.",
" Aldrich added to his 20 victories in three combat tours with six probables, the highest total number of probables in the Marine Corps.",
" Postwar, Aldrich continued to serve in the Marine Corps and was killed in a 1947 plane crash."
],
"title": "Donald N. Aldrich"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Midnight Sun is an upcoming American romantic drama film directed by Scott Speer and written by Eric Kirsten, based on the 2006 Japanese film of same name.",
" The film stars Bella Thorne, Patrick Schwarzenegger, and Rob Riggle.",
" Principal photography began on October 12, 2015 in Vancouver."
],
"title": "Midnight Sun (2018 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon was a service ribbon of the United States Marine Corps which was issued between the dates of the December 17, 1945, and December 17, 1965.",
" The ribbon was first created by Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal and recognizes those members of the Marine Corps Reserve who performed ten years of honorable reserve service."
],
"title": "Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The United States Marine Corps Women's Reserve (WR) was the World War II women's branch of the United States Marine Corps Reserve.",
" It was authorized by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 30July 1942, yet the Marine Corps delayed the formation of the WR until 13February 1943.",
" The law provided that members of the WR may be commissioned or enlisted in such ranks and ratings equal to the regular Marine Corps, and effective for the duration of the war plus six months.",
" Its purpose was to release officers and men for combat and to replace them with women in shore stations.",
" Ruth Cheney Streeter was appointed the first director of the WR.",
" She was sworn in with the rank of major and later was promoted to a full colonel.",
" After attending Bryn Mawr College, Streeter was involved in health and welfare work.",
" The WR did not have an official nickname as did the other World WarII women's military services although many unofficial and uncomplimentary nicknames were used to describe the women."
],
"title": "United States Marine Corps Women's Reserve"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Robert Allen Riggle Jr. (born April 21, 1970) is an American actor, comedian and retired United States Marine Corps Reserve officer.",
" He is best known for his work as a correspondent on Comedy Central's \"The Daily Show\" from 2006 to 2008, as a cast member on \"Saturday Night Live\" from 2004 to 2005, and for his comedic roles in films such as \"The Hangover\", \"The Other Guys\", \"Let's Be Cops\", \"Dumb & Dumber To\", \"21 Jump Street\", \"22 Jump Street\", \"\", and \"Step Brothers\".",
" He has also co-starred in the Adult Swim comedy-action series \"\".",
" In 2012, Riggle replaced Frank Caliendo for the comedy skit and prognostication portions of \"Fox NFL Sunday\"."
],
"title": "Rob Riggle"
},
{
"sentences": [
"4th Tank Battalion (4th Tanks) is an armored battalion of the United States Marine Corps reserve.",
" Their primary weapon system is the M1A1 Abrams main battle tank and they are part of the 4th Marine Division and Marine Forces Reserve.",
" The unit headquarters is at the Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Center San Diego, California, but other units in the battalion are located throughout the United States.",
" With six lettered companies, 4th Tank Battalion is the largest Marine tank battalion."
],
"title": "4th Tank Battalion"
}
] |
[
"Title: VMFT-401\n\nMarine Fighter Training Squadron 401 (VMFT-401) is a United States Marine Corps Reserve fighter squadron flying the F-5N Tiger II. Known as the \"Snipers\", the squadron is the only adversary squadron in the Marine Corps, also is the first and only reserve squadron in the Marine Corps tasked to act as the opposing force in simulated air combat. They are based at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma and fall under the command of the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing and Marine Aircraft Group 41. VMFT-401 is a non-deployable unit.",
"Title: Blue Book (United States Marine Corps)\n\nBlue Book is the commonly used name for a United States Marine Corps document officially known as Marine Corps Bulletin 1400 (MCBul 1400). MCBul 1400 serves to publish lineal precedence and seniority information on officers in the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Marine Corps Reserve. It is published annually by the U.S. Marine Corps' Deputy Commandant, Manpower and Reserve Affairs. In addition to determining seniority among officers, it is also used to determine promotion eligibility.",
"Title: Wesley Gray\n\nWesley R. \"Wes\" Gray is an author, portfolio manager, veteran of the United States Marine Corps, a captain in the United States Marine Corps Reserve and a former assistant professor of finance. He is best known for his book, \"EMBEDDED: A Marine Corps Adviser Inside the Iraqi Army\", an account of his eight-month military assignment in Iraq.",
"Title: United States Marine Corps Reserve\n\nThe Marine Forces Reserve (MARFORRES or MFR), also known as the United States Marine Corps Reserve (USMCR) and the U.S. Marine Corps Forces Reserve, is the reserve force of the United States Marine Corps. It is the largest command in the U.S. Marine Corps.",
"Title: Donald N. Aldrich\n\nDonald Nathan Aldrich (24 October 1917 – 3 May 1947) was a United States Marine Corps Reserve captain and World War II flying ace. With 20 victories, Aldrich was the fifth-highest-scoring Marine Corps ace of the war. He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force after the United States Army Air Corps refused him because he was married. Aldrich became an instructor pilot and transferred to the United States Marine Corps in late 1942. He joined VMF-215 in the Solomon Islands campaign in June 1943, flying the Vought F4U Corsair. Aldrich added to his 20 victories in three combat tours with six probables, the highest total number of probables in the Marine Corps. Postwar, Aldrich continued to serve in the Marine Corps and was killed in a 1947 plane crash.",
"Title: Midnight Sun (2018 film)\n\nMidnight Sun is an upcoming American romantic drama film directed by Scott Speer and written by Eric Kirsten, based on the 2006 Japanese film of same name. The film stars Bella Thorne, Patrick Schwarzenegger, and Rob Riggle. Principal photography began on October 12, 2015 in Vancouver.",
"Title: Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon\n\nThe Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon was a service ribbon of the United States Marine Corps which was issued between the dates of the December 17, 1945, and December 17, 1965. The ribbon was first created by Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal and recognizes those members of the Marine Corps Reserve who performed ten years of honorable reserve service.",
"Title: United States Marine Corps Women's Reserve\n\nThe United States Marine Corps Women's Reserve (WR) was the World War II women's branch of the United States Marine Corps Reserve. It was authorized by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 30July 1942, yet the Marine Corps delayed the formation of the WR until 13February 1943. The law provided that members of the WR may be commissioned or enlisted in such ranks and ratings equal to the regular Marine Corps, and effective for the duration of the war plus six months. Its purpose was to release officers and men for combat and to replace them with women in shore stations. Ruth Cheney Streeter was appointed the first director of the WR. She was sworn in with the rank of major and later was promoted to a full colonel. After attending Bryn Mawr College, Streeter was involved in health and welfare work. The WR did not have an official nickname as did the other World WarII women's military services although many unofficial and uncomplimentary nicknames were used to describe the women.",
"Title: Rob Riggle\n\nRobert Allen Riggle Jr. (born April 21, 1970) is an American actor, comedian and retired United States Marine Corps Reserve officer. He is best known for his work as a correspondent on Comedy Central's \"The Daily Show\" from 2006 to 2008, as a cast member on \"Saturday Night Live\" from 2004 to 2005, and for his comedic roles in films such as \"The Hangover\", \"The Other Guys\", \"Let's Be Cops\", \"Dumb & Dumber To\", \"21 Jump Street\", \"22 Jump Street\", \"\", and \"Step Brothers\". He has also co-starred in the Adult Swim comedy-action series \"\". In 2012, Riggle replaced Frank Caliendo for the comedy skit and prognostication portions of \"Fox NFL Sunday\".",
"Title: 4th Tank Battalion\n\n4th Tank Battalion (4th Tanks) is an armored battalion of the United States Marine Corps reserve. Their primary weapon system is the M1A1 Abrams main battle tank and they are part of the 4th Marine Division and Marine Forces Reserve. The unit headquarters is at the Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Center San Diego, California, but other units in the battalion are located throughout the United States. With six lettered companies, 4th Tank Battalion is the largest Marine tank battalion."
] |
1,718
|
Tainy Sledstviya, is a Russian television series filmed from 2000 through 2013, the television series follows the work of a Chief Detective Maria Shvetsova, played by Anna Kovalchuk, a Russian actress, and the winner of the prize for the presentation of the image of "good character" in which international legal Festival. for the title role in the television series "Tainy Sledstviya"?
|
Law and Society
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Tainy Sledstviya",
"Anna Kovalchuk"
],
"sent_id": [
2,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Greh njene majke (\"The sin of her mother\") is a Serbian television series filmed in 2009 based on the novel by Mir-Jam.",
" It has been shown at Radio Television of Serbia from 20 November 2009 to 12 March 2010.",
" The series is set in the time before the Second World War in Serbia.",
" The series follows Neda, a young girl who remained tragically orphaned.",
" Alone in the world, she begins to fight for a place in society and life trying to figure out what was her mother once did and why she has to pay her \"sin\"."
],
"title": "Greh njene majke"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tainy Sledstviya Russian: (\"Secrets of Investigation\" or \"Confidentiality of Investigation\") is a Russian television series filmed from 2000 through 2013.",
" The format of the series features 2 to 4 50 minutes episodes arranged into story clusters.",
" The television series follows the work of a Chief Detective Maria Shvetsova (played by Anna Kovalchuk)of a St.Petersburg Saint Petersburg District IC Investigative Committee of Russia.",
" For the end of 2013 the series contains 94 episodes (in 13 seasons)."
],
"title": "Tainy Sledstviya"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Charles \"Charlie\" Slater is a fictional character from the British soap opera \"EastEnders\", played by actor Derek Martin, making his first appearance on 4 September 2000.",
" He is played by Jason McGregor in flashbacks broadcast in 2001.",
" He also makes a cameo appearance in the second series of the spin-off \"\".",
" In April 2010, the character was axed among five others by new executive producer Bryan Kirkwood as part of a plan to \"breathe new life into the show\".",
" The reaction to Charlie's axing was negative with Stuart Heritage from \"The Guardian\" saying that it \"should be a national day of mourning\" and Phil Daniels, who had previously played Kevin Wicks, also criticised the axings, stating that Charlie was a \"good character\".",
" He departed from \"EastEnders\" on 13 January 2011.",
" Martin returned for a two episode stint in April; his return saw 10.31 million people watch on 19 April and 8.43 million on 21 April.",
" On 3 November 2013, it was announced that Martin would return again, this time on 24 and 25 December 2013.",
" It was announced in October 2015 that Charlie would make another guest appearance in 2016, appearing in 5 episodes from 4 to 7 January.",
" It was confirmed that Charlie would die from a heart attack during this stint."
],
"title": "Charlie Slater"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"The Fall\" is a British-Irish crime drama television series filmed and set in Northern Ireland.",
" The series is produced by Artists Studio and created by Allan Cubitt.",
" It premiered in the Republic of Ireland on RTÉ at 9:30 pm on 12 May 2013, and in the United Kingdom on BBC Two at 9:00 pm on 13 May 2013.",
" The series stars Gillian Anderson as DSI Stella Gibson, a senior Metropolitan Police Detective and Jamie Dornan as serial killer Paul Spector."
],
"title": "List of The Fall episodes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gia Skova (born July 13, 1991) is a Russian actress and model, now living in the United States.",
" She has appeared on numerous fashion magazine covers around the world, adorned the runway for designers such as Stella McCartney and Marc Jacobs, been featured in print and commercial advertisements for internationally recognized brands such as L'Oreal and Red Bull, and been cast in television series, films and theatrical productions.",
" In 2012 she was noted in a celebrity magazine as the most recognized Russian actress in Hollywood."
],
"title": "Gia Skova"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elena Yuryevna Korikova (Russian: Еле́на Ю́рьевна Ко́рикова ; born 12 April 1972) is a Russian actress and theater, television.",
" She is perhaps the best known for her role of Anna Platonova in television series \"Bednaya Nastya\"."
],
"title": "Elena Korikova"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wedding Ring (Russian: Обручальное кольцо ) is a Russian television series filmed from 2008 to 2011.",
" The series was awarded the TEFI-2011 in the nomination \"The TV feature series\"."
],
"title": "Wedding Ring (Russian TV series)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Anna Leonidovna Kovalchuk (Russian: А́нна Леони́довна Ковальчу́к ; born 15 June 1977) is a Russian actress.",
" The winner of the prize for the presentation of the image of \"good character\" in the international legal Festival \"Law and Society\" for the title role in the television series \"Tainy Sledstviya\"."
],
"title": "Anna Kovalchuk"
},
{
"sentences": [
"This article lists magical beings in the U.S. television series \"Charmed\" (1998-2006), broadcast on the now-defunct TV network The WB.",
" In its eight-year run, the writing staff led by show runner, head writer, and executive producer Brad Kern adapted fantasy, horror, and folklore into a fictional universe that was recognizable as being like contemporary society, but with a hidden group of magical users altering between good and evil practitioners.",
" The forces of good are called \"witches\" in the \"Charmed\" universe, and there are a number of allied good character types and three main evil types of character races.",
" The magical beings are described, below, using in-universe tone."
],
"title": "List of magical beings in Charmed"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Paulina Olegovna Andreeva (Russian: Паулина Олеговна Андреева ; born 12 October 1988) is a Russian actress.",
" Her notable roles have included the Russian television series \"The Method\" which debuted in 2015.",
" Her previous appearance include the series \"Ottepel\" (The Thaw)."
],
"title": "Paulina Andreeva"
}
] |
[
"Title: Greh njene majke\n\nGreh njene majke (\"The sin of her mother\") is a Serbian television series filmed in 2009 based on the novel by Mir-Jam. It has been shown at Radio Television of Serbia from 20 November 2009 to 12 March 2010. The series is set in the time before the Second World War in Serbia. The series follows Neda, a young girl who remained tragically orphaned. Alone in the world, she begins to fight for a place in society and life trying to figure out what was her mother once did and why she has to pay her \"sin\".",
"Title: Tainy Sledstviya\n\nTainy Sledstviya Russian: (\"Secrets of Investigation\" or \"Confidentiality of Investigation\") is a Russian television series filmed from 2000 through 2013. The format of the series features 2 to 4 50 minutes episodes arranged into story clusters. The television series follows the work of a Chief Detective Maria Shvetsova (played by Anna Kovalchuk)of a St.Petersburg Saint Petersburg District IC Investigative Committee of Russia. For the end of 2013 the series contains 94 episodes (in 13 seasons).",
"Title: Charlie Slater\n\nCharles \"Charlie\" Slater is a fictional character from the British soap opera \"EastEnders\", played by actor Derek Martin, making his first appearance on 4 September 2000. He is played by Jason McGregor in flashbacks broadcast in 2001. He also makes a cameo appearance in the second series of the spin-off \"\". In April 2010, the character was axed among five others by new executive producer Bryan Kirkwood as part of a plan to \"breathe new life into the show\". The reaction to Charlie's axing was negative with Stuart Heritage from \"The Guardian\" saying that it \"should be a national day of mourning\" and Phil Daniels, who had previously played Kevin Wicks, also criticised the axings, stating that Charlie was a \"good character\". He departed from \"EastEnders\" on 13 January 2011. Martin returned for a two episode stint in April; his return saw 10.31 million people watch on 19 April and 8.43 million on 21 April. On 3 November 2013, it was announced that Martin would return again, this time on 24 and 25 December 2013. It was announced in October 2015 that Charlie would make another guest appearance in 2016, appearing in 5 episodes from 4 to 7 January. It was confirmed that Charlie would die from a heart attack during this stint.",
"Title: List of The Fall episodes\n\n\"The Fall\" is a British-Irish crime drama television series filmed and set in Northern Ireland. The series is produced by Artists Studio and created by Allan Cubitt. It premiered in the Republic of Ireland on RTÉ at 9:30 pm on 12 May 2013, and in the United Kingdom on BBC Two at 9:00 pm on 13 May 2013. The series stars Gillian Anderson as DSI Stella Gibson, a senior Metropolitan Police Detective and Jamie Dornan as serial killer Paul Spector.",
"Title: Gia Skova\n\nGia Skova (born July 13, 1991) is a Russian actress and model, now living in the United States. She has appeared on numerous fashion magazine covers around the world, adorned the runway for designers such as Stella McCartney and Marc Jacobs, been featured in print and commercial advertisements for internationally recognized brands such as L'Oreal and Red Bull, and been cast in television series, films and theatrical productions. In 2012 she was noted in a celebrity magazine as the most recognized Russian actress in Hollywood.",
"Title: Elena Korikova\n\nElena Yuryevna Korikova (Russian: Еле́на Ю́рьевна Ко́рикова ; born 12 April 1972) is a Russian actress and theater, television. She is perhaps the best known for her role of Anna Platonova in television series \"Bednaya Nastya\".",
"Title: Wedding Ring (Russian TV series)\n\nWedding Ring (Russian: Обручальное кольцо ) is a Russian television series filmed from 2008 to 2011. The series was awarded the TEFI-2011 in the nomination \"The TV feature series\".",
"Title: Anna Kovalchuk\n\nAnna Leonidovna Kovalchuk (Russian: А́нна Леони́довна Ковальчу́к ; born 15 June 1977) is a Russian actress. The winner of the prize for the presentation of the image of \"good character\" in the international legal Festival \"Law and Society\" for the title role in the television series \"Tainy Sledstviya\".",
"Title: List of magical beings in Charmed\n\nThis article lists magical beings in the U.S. television series \"Charmed\" (1998-2006), broadcast on the now-defunct TV network The WB. In its eight-year run, the writing staff led by show runner, head writer, and executive producer Brad Kern adapted fantasy, horror, and folklore into a fictional universe that was recognizable as being like contemporary society, but with a hidden group of magical users altering between good and evil practitioners. The forces of good are called \"witches\" in the \"Charmed\" universe, and there are a number of allied good character types and three main evil types of character races. The magical beings are described, below, using in-universe tone.",
"Title: Paulina Andreeva\n\nPaulina Olegovna Andreeva (Russian: Паулина Олеговна Андреева ; born 12 October 1988) is a Russian actress. Her notable roles have included the Russian television series \"The Method\" which debuted in 2015. Her previous appearance include the series \"Ottepel\" (The Thaw)."
] |
1,719
|
Between Lana Del Rey and Soul Coughing, which has a sound that includes jazz grooves?
|
Soul Coughing
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Lana Del Rey",
"Soul Coughing"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"\"Yayo\" is a song by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey.",
" It appears on her first extended play, \"Kill Kill\", her debut album, \"Lana Del Ray\", and her third EP, \"Paradise\".",
" After the release of her third EP, the song charted in France.",
" Before signing to a major record label, Del Rey released a self-produced music video for \"Yayo\".",
" Ubiquitously, the song garnered acclaim, many reviewers saying the song was one of the best songs Del Rey has ever written and praising Del Rey's voice.",
" Appearing on three of Del Rey's albums to date, the song is one of few that was authored solely by her.",
" The original version of the song was released through 5 Point Records and produced by David Kahne, later being remastered by Emile Haynie and Dan Heath."
],
"title": "Yayo (Lana Del Rey song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"American singer and occasional actress Lana Del Rey has appeared in three films as an actress, eighteen television shows, and three commercials, along with offering her talents to five films as singer.",
" Del Rey's first appearance was in the independent film \"Poolside\" (2010), which features Del Rey playing Lisa, a rich girl who spends her days smoking cigarettes by the pool.",
" She received top billing for the project.",
" Del Rey's next appearance was in a less-than-one-minute long short art film titled \"Lana Del Rey\" which was produced by Interview magazine and features noir-ish style and cinematic themes.",
" Del Rey's breakout appearance was in an Anthony Mandler directed film, which Del Rey wrote, titled \"Tropico\" (2013).",
" The film features Del Rey as a fictionalized version of Eve while also playing the Virgin Mary.",
" \"Tropico\" received positive reviews and was Del Rey's second film that gave her top billing.",
" Along with appearing in a handful of short films, Del Rey has appeared in 18 television shows and specials as herself along with appearing in campaign commercials for companies including Keds and H&M."
],
"title": "Lana Del Rey videography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"High by the Beach\" is a song recorded by American singer Lana Del Rey and the first single from her fourth studio album, \"Honeymoon\" (2015).",
" Written by Lana Del Rey, Rick Nowels and Kieron Menzies.",
" A synth-led trap-pop ballad, it is more uptempo and pop-indebted than Del Rey's previous releases, but prominently recalls the hip hop and trip hop influences of her 2012 album, \"Born to Die\".",
" The song is based around electronic production, a trap beat and an orchestral organ arrangement."
],
"title": "High by the Beach"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elizabeth Woolridge Grant (born June 21, 1985), known professionally as Lana Del Rey, is an American singer, songwriter, and model.",
" Her music has been noted by critics for its stylized cinematic quality, its preoccupation with themes of tragic romance, glamour, and melancholia, and its references to pop culture, particularly 1950s and 1960s Americana."
],
"title": "Lana Del Rey"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Kill Kill\" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Elizabeth Grant released originally under the stage name \"Lizzy Grant\" in 2008 and \"Lana Del Ray in 2010.",
" Grant is widely known now as Lana Del Rey.",
" Kill Kill was first released on October 21, 2008, on Grant's three-track extended play of the same name.",
" It was then later included on her first album under the name Lana Del Ray, \"\"Lana Del Ray A.K.A. Lizzy Grant\"\" also alternatively titled simply \"\"Lana Del Rey\"\"."
],
"title": "Kill Kill (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kill Kill is the first extended play (EP) by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey.",
" It was released on October 21, 2008 in the United States through 5 Points Records under Del Rey's real name, Lizzy Grant.",
" The three songs on the EP would later be included on the 2010 album \"Lana Del Ray\". \"",
"Yayo\" would later be re-recorded and released a third time, on Del Rey's 2012 EP, \"Paradise\".",
" \"Kill Kill\" was the EP's only single.",
" A music video accompanied the track and was published in 2008."
],
"title": "Kill Kill"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lana Del Rey is the second EP by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey.",
" It was released on January 10, 2012 in the United States and Canada through Interscope Records.",
" After publishing two unsuccessful works, an EP, \"Kill Kill\" (2008) and a studio album, \"Lana Del Ray\" (2010), the four-track EP was released in anticipation of Del Rey's major label debut \"Born to Die\" (2012).",
" The tracks are influenced by several genres, including indie pop, hip hop, and alternative music.",
" The lyrics and melody were written primarily by Del Rey, Patrik Berger, and Justin Parker.",
" Production of the album was led by Emile Haynie, who also co-wrote \"Blue Jeans\"."
],
"title": "Lana Del Rey (EP)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey has released five studio albums, four extended plays, 20 singles, and 16 music videos. Lana Del Rey signed a record deal with 5 Points Records in 2007 and the following year, she released her debut EP, \"Kill Kill\", under the stage name Lizzy Grant.",
" Her debut studio album, \"Lana Del Ray\", was shelved initially and was released in January 2010 under the name Lana Del Ray.",
" However, the record was pulled three months later."
],
"title": "Lana Del Rey discography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Soul Coughing was an American alternative rock group, comprising vocalist/guitarist Mike Doughty, keyboardist Mark de Gli Antoni, bassist Sebastian Steinberg and drummer Yuval Gabay, Soul Coughing developed a devout fanbase and have garnered largely positive response from critics.",
" Steve Huey in AllMusic describes the band as \"one of the most unusual cult bands of the 1990s...driven by frontman Mike Doughty's stream-of-consciousness poetry, Soul Coughing's sound was a willfully idiosyncratic mix of improvisational jazz grooves, oddball samples, hip-hop, electronics, and noisy experimentalism (described by Doughty as 'deep slacker jazz').\"",
" The inventive sampling and keyboard artistry of Mark Degli Antoni undergirded the band's distinct sound."
],
"title": "Soul Coughing"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lana Del Ray (alternatively written as Lana Del Ray a.k.a. Lizzy Grant) is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey.",
" The album was released digitally via the iTunes Store by 5 Points Records on January 4, 2010 when she was known as Lana Del \"Ray\".",
" However, the record was eventually pulled from retailers soon afterwards because, according to Del Rey, the label was unable to fund it.",
" Del Rey ultimately bought back the rights to the album, whose title uses an alternate spelling of the singer's stage name, \"Del Rey\" being spelled \"Del Ray\" instead.",
" After releasing \"Born to Die\" (2012) under her stage name Lana Del Rey, she expressed her wish to re-release the album."
],
"title": "Lana Del Ray (album)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Yayo (Lana Del Rey song)\n\n\"Yayo\" is a song by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey. It appears on her first extended play, \"Kill Kill\", her debut album, \"Lana Del Ray\", and her third EP, \"Paradise\". After the release of her third EP, the song charted in France. Before signing to a major record label, Del Rey released a self-produced music video for \"Yayo\". Ubiquitously, the song garnered acclaim, many reviewers saying the song was one of the best songs Del Rey has ever written and praising Del Rey's voice. Appearing on three of Del Rey's albums to date, the song is one of few that was authored solely by her. The original version of the song was released through 5 Point Records and produced by David Kahne, later being remastered by Emile Haynie and Dan Heath.",
"Title: Lana Del Rey videography\n\nAmerican singer and occasional actress Lana Del Rey has appeared in three films as an actress, eighteen television shows, and three commercials, along with offering her talents to five films as singer. Del Rey's first appearance was in the independent film \"Poolside\" (2010), which features Del Rey playing Lisa, a rich girl who spends her days smoking cigarettes by the pool. She received top billing for the project. Del Rey's next appearance was in a less-than-one-minute long short art film titled \"Lana Del Rey\" which was produced by Interview magazine and features noir-ish style and cinematic themes. Del Rey's breakout appearance was in an Anthony Mandler directed film, which Del Rey wrote, titled \"Tropico\" (2013). The film features Del Rey as a fictionalized version of Eve while also playing the Virgin Mary. \"Tropico\" received positive reviews and was Del Rey's second film that gave her top billing. Along with appearing in a handful of short films, Del Rey has appeared in 18 television shows and specials as herself along with appearing in campaign commercials for companies including Keds and H&M.",
"Title: High by the Beach\n\n\"High by the Beach\" is a song recorded by American singer Lana Del Rey and the first single from her fourth studio album, \"Honeymoon\" (2015). Written by Lana Del Rey, Rick Nowels and Kieron Menzies. A synth-led trap-pop ballad, it is more uptempo and pop-indebted than Del Rey's previous releases, but prominently recalls the hip hop and trip hop influences of her 2012 album, \"Born to Die\". The song is based around electronic production, a trap beat and an orchestral organ arrangement.",
"Title: Lana Del Rey\n\nElizabeth Woolridge Grant (born June 21, 1985), known professionally as Lana Del Rey, is an American singer, songwriter, and model. Her music has been noted by critics for its stylized cinematic quality, its preoccupation with themes of tragic romance, glamour, and melancholia, and its references to pop culture, particularly 1950s and 1960s Americana.",
"Title: Kill Kill (song)\n\n\"Kill Kill\" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Elizabeth Grant released originally under the stage name \"Lizzy Grant\" in 2008 and \"Lana Del Ray in 2010. Grant is widely known now as Lana Del Rey. Kill Kill was first released on October 21, 2008, on Grant's three-track extended play of the same name. It was then later included on her first album under the name Lana Del Ray, \"\"Lana Del Ray A.K.A. Lizzy Grant\"\" also alternatively titled simply \"\"Lana Del Rey\"\".",
"Title: Kill Kill\n\nKill Kill is the first extended play (EP) by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey. It was released on October 21, 2008 in the United States through 5 Points Records under Del Rey's real name, Lizzy Grant. The three songs on the EP would later be included on the 2010 album \"Lana Del Ray\". \" Yayo\" would later be re-recorded and released a third time, on Del Rey's 2012 EP, \"Paradise\". \"Kill Kill\" was the EP's only single. A music video accompanied the track and was published in 2008.",
"Title: Lana Del Rey (EP)\n\nLana Del Rey is the second EP by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey. It was released on January 10, 2012 in the United States and Canada through Interscope Records. After publishing two unsuccessful works, an EP, \"Kill Kill\" (2008) and a studio album, \"Lana Del Ray\" (2010), the four-track EP was released in anticipation of Del Rey's major label debut \"Born to Die\" (2012). The tracks are influenced by several genres, including indie pop, hip hop, and alternative music. The lyrics and melody were written primarily by Del Rey, Patrik Berger, and Justin Parker. Production of the album was led by Emile Haynie, who also co-wrote \"Blue Jeans\".",
"Title: Lana Del Rey discography\n\nAmerican singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey has released five studio albums, four extended plays, 20 singles, and 16 music videos. Lana Del Rey signed a record deal with 5 Points Records in 2007 and the following year, she released her debut EP, \"Kill Kill\", under the stage name Lizzy Grant. Her debut studio album, \"Lana Del Ray\", was shelved initially and was released in January 2010 under the name Lana Del Ray. However, the record was pulled three months later.",
"Title: Soul Coughing\n\nSoul Coughing was an American alternative rock group, comprising vocalist/guitarist Mike Doughty, keyboardist Mark de Gli Antoni, bassist Sebastian Steinberg and drummer Yuval Gabay, Soul Coughing developed a devout fanbase and have garnered largely positive response from critics. Steve Huey in AllMusic describes the band as \"one of the most unusual cult bands of the 1990s...driven by frontman Mike Doughty's stream-of-consciousness poetry, Soul Coughing's sound was a willfully idiosyncratic mix of improvisational jazz grooves, oddball samples, hip-hop, electronics, and noisy experimentalism (described by Doughty as 'deep slacker jazz').\" The inventive sampling and keyboard artistry of Mark Degli Antoni undergirded the band's distinct sound.",
"Title: Lana Del Ray (album)\n\nLana Del Ray (alternatively written as Lana Del Ray a.k.a. Lizzy Grant) is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey. The album was released digitally via the iTunes Store by 5 Points Records on January 4, 2010 when she was known as Lana Del \"Ray\". However, the record was eventually pulled from retailers soon afterwards because, according to Del Rey, the label was unable to fund it. Del Rey ultimately bought back the rights to the album, whose title uses an alternate spelling of the singer's stage name, \"Del Rey\" being spelled \"Del Ray\" instead. After releasing \"Born to Die\" (2012) under her stage name Lana Del Rey, she expressed her wish to re-release the album."
] |
1,720
|
Do Interstate 90 in Pennsylvania and U.S. Route 20 intersect or are they parallel?
|
parallels that of Interstate 90 (I-90
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Interstate 90 in Pennsylvania",
"U.S. Route 20"
],
"sent_id": [
2,
2
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Calpella is a census-designated place in Mendocino County, California.",
" It is located on the Russian River 6 mi north of Ukiah, at an elevation of 682 feet (208 m).",
" It is within the Ukiah Valley where U.S. Route 101 and State Route 20 intersect.",
" The population was 679 at the 2010 census.",
" The small town is the site of the Mendocino Redwood Company mill and offices, which controls ten percent of the private land in the county."
],
"title": "Calpella, California"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Route 181 is a 9.43 mi long north–south state highway in Massachusetts starting at an intersection with U.S. Route 20 in Palmer, located in Hampden County.",
" The route crosses the Mass Pike (Interstate 90), but does not intersect.",
" The route crosses through the Bondsville section of Palmer, crossing into Hampshire County, where it enters Belchertown.",
" In Belchertown, Route 181 comes to an end at a junction with the concurrent U.S. Route 202 and Route 21."
],
"title": "Massachusetts Route 181"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Interstate 40 (I-40) is a major east-west Interstate Highway running through the south-central portion of the United States generally north of Interstate 10 and Interstate 20 but south of Interstate 70.",
" The western end is at Interstate 15 in Barstow, California; its eastern end is at a concurrency of U.S. Route 117 and North Carolina Highway 132 in Wilmington, North Carolina.",
" It is the third longest interstate in the United States, behind Interstate 80 and Interstate 90.",
" Much of the western part of I-40, from Oklahoma City to Barstow, parallels or overlays the historic U.S. Route 66, east of Oklahoma City the route generally parallels U.S. Route 64 and U.S. Route 70.",
" I-40 runs through many major cities including Albuquerque, New Mexico; Amarillo, Texas; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Little Rock, Arkansas; Memphis, Tennessee; Nashville, Tennessee; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Raleigh, North Carolina."
],
"title": "Interstate 40"
},
{
"sentences": [
"U.S. Route 20 (US 20) is an east–west United States highway that stretches from the Pacific Northwest all the way to New England.",
" The \"0\" in its route number indicates that US 20 is a coast-to-coast route.",
" Spanning 3365 mi , it is the longest road in the United States, and the route roughly parallels that of Interstate 90 (I-90).",
" There is a discontinuity in the official designation of US 20 through Yellowstone National Park, with unnumbered roads used to traverse the park."
],
"title": "U.S. Route 20"
},
{
"sentences": [
"U.S. Route 20 is an east-west U.S. Highway in Pennsylvania, which clips the northwestern corner of the state, running entirely in Erie County.",
" While it is part of the nation's longest road, it features the shortest segment of any two-digit U.S. route in the commonwealth.",
" Although bypassed by Interstate 90 as the primary through route in the area, heavy traffic has led to nearly the entire highway being upgraded to four lanes in width."
],
"title": "U.S. Route 20 in Pennsylvania"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Magic Waters is a Rockford Park District waterpark in Cherry Valley, Winnebago County, Illinois.",
" It is located next to the interchange between Interstate 39/U.S. Route 51 and Interstate 90 near U.S. Route 20."
],
"title": "Magic Waters"
},
{
"sentences": [
"U.S. Route 6N (US 6N) is a 28 mi auxiliary route of U.S. Route 6 located in Erie County, Pennsylvania.",
" The western terminus is at U.S. Route 20 in West Springfield a half-mile north of Interstate 90 exit 3.",
" Its eastern terminus is at U.S. Route 6 and U.S. Route 19 west of Mill Village."
],
"title": "U.S. Route 6N"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Pennsylvania Route 832 (PA 832), known locally as Sterrettania Road and Peninsula Drive, is a state highway located in Erie County, Pennsylvania.",
" Its northern terminus is at the entrance to Presque Isle State Park in Erie.",
" The southern terminus is at PA 98, two miles (3 km) west of Sterrettania in Fairview Township.",
" PA 832 has junctions with U.S. Route 20 (US 20), PA 5 and PA 5 Alternate (PA 5 Alt.)",
".",
" PA 832 is exit 18 off Interstate 90 (I-90).",
" PA 832 was designated in 1928 between PA 99 (now PA 5 Alt.)",
" and Presque Isle.",
" The route was extended south to US 20 by 1940.",
" PA 832 was further extended to I-90 by 1959 and PA 98 by 1970."
],
"title": "Pennsylvania Route 832"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Within the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, Interstate 90 spans 46.297 mi , all within Erie County, from the Ohio border near West Springfield to the New York border near North East.",
" I-90 is the primary west–east highway in the Erie area, passing south of downtown and interchanging with Interstate 79, which connects downtown Erie to southern Pennsylvania and beyond, and Interstate 86, linking Erie to the Southern Tier of New York.",
" U.S. Route 20, which interchanges with I-90 near the New York-Pennsylvania border, parallels I-90 across the county."
],
"title": "Interstate 90 in Pennsylvania"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Interstate 90 (I-90) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Seattle, Washington, to Boston, Massachusetts.",
" In the U.S. state of New York, I-90 extends 385.88 mi from the Pennsylvania state line at Ripley to the Massachusetts state line at Canaan, and is the second-longest highway in the state after NY 17.",
" Although most of the route is part of the tolled New York State Thruway, two non-tolled sections exist along I-90 (the first, situated outside of Buffalo, is included in the Thruway system; the second, situated in the Capital District, is not part of the Thruway system and links Albany and its eastern suburbs).",
" Within New York, I-90 has a complete set of auxiliary Interstates, which means that there are interstates numbered I-190 through I-990 in the state, with no gaps in between.",
" For most of its length in New York, I-90 runs parallel to the former Erie Canal route, New York State Route 5 (NY 5), U.S. Route 20 (US 20) and the CSX railroad mainline that traverses the state."
],
"title": "Interstate 90 in New York"
}
] |
[
"Title: Calpella, California\n\nCalpella is a census-designated place in Mendocino County, California. It is located on the Russian River 6 mi north of Ukiah, at an elevation of 682 feet (208 m). It is within the Ukiah Valley where U.S. Route 101 and State Route 20 intersect. The population was 679 at the 2010 census. The small town is the site of the Mendocino Redwood Company mill and offices, which controls ten percent of the private land in the county.",
"Title: Massachusetts Route 181\n\nRoute 181 is a 9.43 mi long north–south state highway in Massachusetts starting at an intersection with U.S. Route 20 in Palmer, located in Hampden County. The route crosses the Mass Pike (Interstate 90), but does not intersect. The route crosses through the Bondsville section of Palmer, crossing into Hampshire County, where it enters Belchertown. In Belchertown, Route 181 comes to an end at a junction with the concurrent U.S. Route 202 and Route 21.",
"Title: Interstate 40\n\nInterstate 40 (I-40) is a major east-west Interstate Highway running through the south-central portion of the United States generally north of Interstate 10 and Interstate 20 but south of Interstate 70. The western end is at Interstate 15 in Barstow, California; its eastern end is at a concurrency of U.S. Route 117 and North Carolina Highway 132 in Wilmington, North Carolina. It is the third longest interstate in the United States, behind Interstate 80 and Interstate 90. Much of the western part of I-40, from Oklahoma City to Barstow, parallels or overlays the historic U.S. Route 66, east of Oklahoma City the route generally parallels U.S. Route 64 and U.S. Route 70. I-40 runs through many major cities including Albuquerque, New Mexico; Amarillo, Texas; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Little Rock, Arkansas; Memphis, Tennessee; Nashville, Tennessee; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Raleigh, North Carolina.",
"Title: U.S. Route 20\n\nU.S. Route 20 (US 20) is an east–west United States highway that stretches from the Pacific Northwest all the way to New England. The \"0\" in its route number indicates that US 20 is a coast-to-coast route. Spanning 3365 mi , it is the longest road in the United States, and the route roughly parallels that of Interstate 90 (I-90). There is a discontinuity in the official designation of US 20 through Yellowstone National Park, with unnumbered roads used to traverse the park.",
"Title: U.S. Route 20 in Pennsylvania\n\nU.S. Route 20 is an east-west U.S. Highway in Pennsylvania, which clips the northwestern corner of the state, running entirely in Erie County. While it is part of the nation's longest road, it features the shortest segment of any two-digit U.S. route in the commonwealth. Although bypassed by Interstate 90 as the primary through route in the area, heavy traffic has led to nearly the entire highway being upgraded to four lanes in width.",
"Title: Magic Waters\n\nMagic Waters is a Rockford Park District waterpark in Cherry Valley, Winnebago County, Illinois. It is located next to the interchange between Interstate 39/U.S. Route 51 and Interstate 90 near U.S. Route 20.",
"Title: U.S. Route 6N\n\nU.S. Route 6N (US 6N) is a 28 mi auxiliary route of U.S. Route 6 located in Erie County, Pennsylvania. The western terminus is at U.S. Route 20 in West Springfield a half-mile north of Interstate 90 exit 3. Its eastern terminus is at U.S. Route 6 and U.S. Route 19 west of Mill Village.",
"Title: Pennsylvania Route 832\n\nPennsylvania Route 832 (PA 832), known locally as Sterrettania Road and Peninsula Drive, is a state highway located in Erie County, Pennsylvania. Its northern terminus is at the entrance to Presque Isle State Park in Erie. The southern terminus is at PA 98, two miles (3 km) west of Sterrettania in Fairview Township. PA 832 has junctions with U.S. Route 20 (US 20), PA 5 and PA 5 Alternate (PA 5 Alt.) . PA 832 is exit 18 off Interstate 90 (I-90). PA 832 was designated in 1928 between PA 99 (now PA 5 Alt.) and Presque Isle. The route was extended south to US 20 by 1940. PA 832 was further extended to I-90 by 1959 and PA 98 by 1970.",
"Title: Interstate 90 in Pennsylvania\n\nWithin the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, Interstate 90 spans 46.297 mi , all within Erie County, from the Ohio border near West Springfield to the New York border near North East. I-90 is the primary west–east highway in the Erie area, passing south of downtown and interchanging with Interstate 79, which connects downtown Erie to southern Pennsylvania and beyond, and Interstate 86, linking Erie to the Southern Tier of New York. U.S. Route 20, which interchanges with I-90 near the New York-Pennsylvania border, parallels I-90 across the county.",
"Title: Interstate 90 in New York\n\nInterstate 90 (I-90) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Seattle, Washington, to Boston, Massachusetts. In the U.S. state of New York, I-90 extends 385.88 mi from the Pennsylvania state line at Ripley to the Massachusetts state line at Canaan, and is the second-longest highway in the state after NY 17. Although most of the route is part of the tolled New York State Thruway, two non-tolled sections exist along I-90 (the first, situated outside of Buffalo, is included in the Thruway system; the second, situated in the Capital District, is not part of the Thruway system and links Albany and its eastern suburbs). Within New York, I-90 has a complete set of auxiliary Interstates, which means that there are interstates numbered I-190 through I-990 in the state, with no gaps in between. For most of its length in New York, I-90 runs parallel to the former Erie Canal route, New York State Route 5 (NY 5), U.S. Route 20 (US 20) and the CSX railroad mainline that traverses the state."
] |
1,721
|
Who is Cormac McCarthy?
|
American
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"The Stonemason",
"Cormac McCarthy"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Sunset Limited is a play by American writer Cormac McCarthy.",
" McCarthy's second published play, it was first produced by the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago on May 18, 2006, and it traveled to New York City later that same year.",
" The play was published in a paperback edition about the same time that it opened in New York.",
" Some consider it to be more a novel than a true play, partly because of its subtitle, \"A Novel in Dramatic Form\"."
],
"title": "The Sunset Limited"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Blood Meridian or the Evening Redness in the West is a 1985 epic Western (or anti-Western) novel by American author Cormac McCarthy.",
" McCarthy's fifth book, it was published by Random House."
],
"title": "Blood Meridian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Suttree is a semi-autobiographical novel by Cormac McCarthy, published in 1979.",
" Set in 1951 in Knoxville, Tennessee, the novel follows Cornelius Suttree, who has repudiated his former life of privilege to become a fisherman on the Tennessee River.",
" The novel has a fragmented structure with many flashbacks and shifts in grammatical person.",
" \"Suttree\" has been compared to James Joyce's \"Ulysses\", John Steinbeck's \"Cannery Row\", and called \"a doomed version\" of Mark Twain's \"Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\".",
" \"Suttree\" was written over a 20-year span and is a departure from McCarthy's previous novels, being much longer, more sprawling in structure, and perhaps his most humorous."
],
"title": "Suttree"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The kid is a nameless central character in the 1985 historical novel \"Blood Meridian\", by Cormac McCarthy.",
" The first sentence of the novel opens with \"see the child\", which tells the reader the significance of this character.",
" These words also serve to advise the reader of the dissimilar nature of the kid in relation to the novel's antagonist, Judge Holden, and the members of John Joel Glanton's gang.",
" When viewing the novel as a bildungsroman, the story follows the maturation of the kid who had developed distinct values just before the end of the book."
],
"title": "The kid (Blood Meridian)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Child of God is a 2013 American crime drama film co-written and directed by James Franco, and starring Scott Haze, based on the novel of the same name by Cormac McCarthy.",
" It was selected to be screened in the official competition at the 70th Venice International Film Festival and was an official selection of the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.",
" The film made its United States premiere at the 51st New York Film Festival and then was screened at the 2013 Austin Film Festival."
],
"title": "Child of God (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cormac McCarthy (born Charles McCarthy; July 20, 1933) is an American novelist, playwright, and screenwriter.",
" He has written ten novels, spanning the Southern Gothic, Western, and post-apocalyptic genres."
],
"title": "Cormac McCarthy"
},
{
"sentences": [
"All the Pretty Horses is a novel by American author Cormac McCarthy published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1992.",
" Its romanticism (in contrast to the bleakness of McCarthy's earlier work) brought the writer much public attention.",
" It was a bestseller, and it won both the U.S. National Book Award"
],
"title": "All the Pretty Horses (novel)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Gardener’s Son is a screenplay by American writer Cormac McCarthy.",
" It is the first published screenplay written by McCarthy, who primarily writes novels but has also written two plays and had four of his novels adapted into feature-length films.",
" The story is based around a strange murder in Graniteville, South Carolina in 1876 that is without many details.",
" At the request of director Richard Pearce, McCarthy wrote the screenplay for a two-hour episode of the television series \"Visions\", which was broadcast by PBS on January 6, 1977.",
" The story focuses on a young man embittered by the changes in his community due to the capitalist ways of the owner of the town's cotton mill.",
" His anger grows until his rage consumes both himself and the families caught up in it.",
" The episode was nominated for two Emmy awards and the screenplay has gone on to be published in book form."
],
"title": "The Gardener's Son"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Stonemason is a play in five acts by American writer Cormac McCarthy, first performed in 1995.",
" It concerns an African-American family.",
" The play is rarely produced."
],
"title": "The Stonemason"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Crossing (ISBN ) is a novel by prize-winning American author Cormac McCarthy, published in 1994 by Alfred A. Knopf.",
" The story is the second installment of McCarthy's \"Border Trilogy\"."
],
"title": "The Crossing (McCarthy novel)"
}
] |
[
"Title: The Sunset Limited\n\nThe Sunset Limited is a play by American writer Cormac McCarthy. McCarthy's second published play, it was first produced by the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago on May 18, 2006, and it traveled to New York City later that same year. The play was published in a paperback edition about the same time that it opened in New York. Some consider it to be more a novel than a true play, partly because of its subtitle, \"A Novel in Dramatic Form\".",
"Title: Blood Meridian\n\nBlood Meridian or the Evening Redness in the West is a 1985 epic Western (or anti-Western) novel by American author Cormac McCarthy. McCarthy's fifth book, it was published by Random House.",
"Title: Suttree\n\nSuttree is a semi-autobiographical novel by Cormac McCarthy, published in 1979. Set in 1951 in Knoxville, Tennessee, the novel follows Cornelius Suttree, who has repudiated his former life of privilege to become a fisherman on the Tennessee River. The novel has a fragmented structure with many flashbacks and shifts in grammatical person. \"Suttree\" has been compared to James Joyce's \"Ulysses\", John Steinbeck's \"Cannery Row\", and called \"a doomed version\" of Mark Twain's \"Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\". \"Suttree\" was written over a 20-year span and is a departure from McCarthy's previous novels, being much longer, more sprawling in structure, and perhaps his most humorous.",
"Title: The kid (Blood Meridian)\n\nThe kid is a nameless central character in the 1985 historical novel \"Blood Meridian\", by Cormac McCarthy. The first sentence of the novel opens with \"see the child\", which tells the reader the significance of this character. These words also serve to advise the reader of the dissimilar nature of the kid in relation to the novel's antagonist, Judge Holden, and the members of John Joel Glanton's gang. When viewing the novel as a bildungsroman, the story follows the maturation of the kid who had developed distinct values just before the end of the book.",
"Title: Child of God (film)\n\nChild of God is a 2013 American crime drama film co-written and directed by James Franco, and starring Scott Haze, based on the novel of the same name by Cormac McCarthy. It was selected to be screened in the official competition at the 70th Venice International Film Festival and was an official selection of the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. The film made its United States premiere at the 51st New York Film Festival and then was screened at the 2013 Austin Film Festival.",
"Title: Cormac McCarthy\n\nCormac McCarthy (born Charles McCarthy; July 20, 1933) is an American novelist, playwright, and screenwriter. He has written ten novels, spanning the Southern Gothic, Western, and post-apocalyptic genres.",
"Title: All the Pretty Horses (novel)\n\nAll the Pretty Horses is a novel by American author Cormac McCarthy published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1992. Its romanticism (in contrast to the bleakness of McCarthy's earlier work) brought the writer much public attention. It was a bestseller, and it won both the U.S. National Book Award",
"Title: The Gardener's Son\n\nThe Gardener’s Son is a screenplay by American writer Cormac McCarthy. It is the first published screenplay written by McCarthy, who primarily writes novels but has also written two plays and had four of his novels adapted into feature-length films. The story is based around a strange murder in Graniteville, South Carolina in 1876 that is without many details. At the request of director Richard Pearce, McCarthy wrote the screenplay for a two-hour episode of the television series \"Visions\", which was broadcast by PBS on January 6, 1977. The story focuses on a young man embittered by the changes in his community due to the capitalist ways of the owner of the town's cotton mill. His anger grows until his rage consumes both himself and the families caught up in it. The episode was nominated for two Emmy awards and the screenplay has gone on to be published in book form.",
"Title: The Stonemason\n\nThe Stonemason is a play in five acts by American writer Cormac McCarthy, first performed in 1995. It concerns an African-American family. The play is rarely produced.",
"Title: The Crossing (McCarthy novel)\n\nThe Crossing (ISBN ) is a novel by prize-winning American author Cormac McCarthy, published in 1994 by Alfred A. Knopf. The story is the second installment of McCarthy's \"Border Trilogy\"."
] |
1,722
|
What is the birthdate of this King of Denmark and Norway, of whom Mogens Gaye was the Royal councillor?
|
7 October 1471
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Mogens Gøye",
"Mogens Gøye",
"Frederick I of Denmark"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Thomas Westbrook Waldron, a captain in the 1745 expedition against the Fortress of Louisbourg, afterwards a commissioner at Albany, New York, a Royal councillor in 1782 and later described as a Colonel, abandoned a close friendship with the last royal governor of colonial New Hampshire, John Wentworth (governor), for the role of a cautious patriot of the new United States."
],
"title": "Thomas Westbrook Waldron"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mogens Gøye (surname also spelled Gøje or Gjøe) (ca. 1470 – 6 April 1544) was a Danish statesman and Steward of the Realm, whose enormous wealth earned him the derogatory nickname \"the King of Northern Jutland\".",
" Gøye was the Royal councillor of Danish Kings John I, the feuding Christian II and Frederick I, and Christian III.",
" He was a key supporter of the Reformation in Denmark-Norway and Holstein.",
" Often lauded by elder Danish historians as a knightly, social liberal upper-class idealist, Gøye is today viewed as a realist statesman understanding the need of a government and a moderate political attitude of the nobility."
],
"title": "Mogens Gøye"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ramon d'Abella (fl.",
" 1389–1401) was a Catalan military leader and royal councillor under John I and Martin of the Crown of Aragon."
],
"title": "Ramon d'Abella"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Joseph Ritter von Spaun (after 1859 Joseph Freiherr von Spaun) (November 11, 1788November 25, 1865) was an Austrian nobleman, an Imperial and Royal Councillor, lottery director, and honorary citizen of Vienna and Cieszyn.",
" He is best known for his friendship with the composer Franz Schubert."
],
"title": "Joseph von Spaun"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Robert Bloet (sometimes Robert Bloett; died 1123) was Bishop of Lincoln 1093-1123 and Chancellor of England.",
" Born into a noble Norman family, he became a royal clerk under King William I.",
" Under William I's son and successor King William II, Bloet was first named chancellor then appointed to the See of Lincoln.",
" Continuing to serve the king while bishop, Bloet remained a close royal councillor to William II's successor, King Henry I.",
" He did much to embellish Lincoln Cathedral, and gave generously to his cathedral and other religious houses.",
" He educated a number of noblemen, including illegitimate children of Henry I.",
" He also was the patron of the medieval chronicler Henry of Huntingdon, and was an early patron of Gilbert of Sempringham, the founder of the Gilbertine monastic order."
],
"title": "Robert Bloet"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Eric Bielke (died 1511), also known as \"Eerikki Tuurenpoika\" and \"Eric Tureson\", royal councillor of Sweden, knighted, feudal fiefholder or margrave of Vyborg Castle."
],
"title": "Eric Bielke"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Georg Leib (9 March 1846 in Wallerstein – 1910 in Munich) was the Royal Councillor of Commerce and ran a very successful real-estate company in Munich."
],
"title": "Georg Leib"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Baron Farkas Esterházy de Galántha (1614 – 2 September 1670) was a Hungarian noble from the House of Esterházy, son of royal councillor Baron Gábor Esterházy and his first wife, Anna Ujfalussy de Divékujfalu.",
" Farkas served as Chief Justice (Latin: \"personalis\" , Hungarian: \"személynök\" ) of Hungary between 1 June 1667 and 2 September 1670."
],
"title": "Farkas Esterházy"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jeanette Abadie (or l'Abadie) (born c. 1593) was a young woman of the village of Ciboure in Gascony, France, who was supposedly lured into witchcraft and was one of the principal witnesses concerning the supposed practices of the witches' Sabbath.",
" Her account of the Sabbath was contained in the narrative of Pierre de Lancre, a royal councillor of Bordeaux, who made an exhaustive study of witchcraft after being appointed in 1609 to a commission to try people accused of it, apparently including the then sixteen-year-old Jeanette."
],
"title": "Jeanette Abadie"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Frederick I (7 October 1471 – 10 April 1533) was the King of Denmark and Norway.",
" His name is also spelled \"Friedrich\" in German, \"Frederik\" in Danish and Norwegian and \"Fredrik\" in Swedish.",
" He was the penultimate Roman Catholic monarch to reign over Denmark, when subsequent monarchs embraced Lutheranism after the Protestant Reformation.",
" As King of Norway, Frederick is most remarkable in never having visited the country and was never being crowned King of Norway.",
" Therefore he was styled \"King of Denmark, the Vends and the Goths, elected King of Norway\"."
],
"title": "Frederick I of Denmark"
}
] |
[
"Title: Thomas Westbrook Waldron\n\nThomas Westbrook Waldron, a captain in the 1745 expedition against the Fortress of Louisbourg, afterwards a commissioner at Albany, New York, a Royal councillor in 1782 and later described as a Colonel, abandoned a close friendship with the last royal governor of colonial New Hampshire, John Wentworth (governor), for the role of a cautious patriot of the new United States.",
"Title: Mogens Gøye\n\nMogens Gøye (surname also spelled Gøje or Gjøe) (ca. 1470 – 6 April 1544) was a Danish statesman and Steward of the Realm, whose enormous wealth earned him the derogatory nickname \"the King of Northern Jutland\". Gøye was the Royal councillor of Danish Kings John I, the feuding Christian II and Frederick I, and Christian III. He was a key supporter of the Reformation in Denmark-Norway and Holstein. Often lauded by elder Danish historians as a knightly, social liberal upper-class idealist, Gøye is today viewed as a realist statesman understanding the need of a government and a moderate political attitude of the nobility.",
"Title: Ramon d'Abella\n\nRamon d'Abella (fl. 1389–1401) was a Catalan military leader and royal councillor under John I and Martin of the Crown of Aragon.",
"Title: Joseph von Spaun\n\nJoseph Ritter von Spaun (after 1859 Joseph Freiherr von Spaun) (November 11, 1788November 25, 1865) was an Austrian nobleman, an Imperial and Royal Councillor, lottery director, and honorary citizen of Vienna and Cieszyn. He is best known for his friendship with the composer Franz Schubert.",
"Title: Robert Bloet\n\nRobert Bloet (sometimes Robert Bloett; died 1123) was Bishop of Lincoln 1093-1123 and Chancellor of England. Born into a noble Norman family, he became a royal clerk under King William I. Under William I's son and successor King William II, Bloet was first named chancellor then appointed to the See of Lincoln. Continuing to serve the king while bishop, Bloet remained a close royal councillor to William II's successor, King Henry I. He did much to embellish Lincoln Cathedral, and gave generously to his cathedral and other religious houses. He educated a number of noblemen, including illegitimate children of Henry I. He also was the patron of the medieval chronicler Henry of Huntingdon, and was an early patron of Gilbert of Sempringham, the founder of the Gilbertine monastic order.",
"Title: Eric Bielke\n\nEric Bielke (died 1511), also known as \"Eerikki Tuurenpoika\" and \"Eric Tureson\", royal councillor of Sweden, knighted, feudal fiefholder or margrave of Vyborg Castle.",
"Title: Georg Leib\n\nGeorg Leib (9 March 1846 in Wallerstein – 1910 in Munich) was the Royal Councillor of Commerce and ran a very successful real-estate company in Munich.",
"Title: Farkas Esterházy\n\nBaron Farkas Esterházy de Galántha (1614 – 2 September 1670) was a Hungarian noble from the House of Esterházy, son of royal councillor Baron Gábor Esterházy and his first wife, Anna Ujfalussy de Divékujfalu. Farkas served as Chief Justice (Latin: \"personalis\" , Hungarian: \"személynök\" ) of Hungary between 1 June 1667 and 2 September 1670.",
"Title: Jeanette Abadie\n\nJeanette Abadie (or l'Abadie) (born c. 1593) was a young woman of the village of Ciboure in Gascony, France, who was supposedly lured into witchcraft and was one of the principal witnesses concerning the supposed practices of the witches' Sabbath. Her account of the Sabbath was contained in the narrative of Pierre de Lancre, a royal councillor of Bordeaux, who made an exhaustive study of witchcraft after being appointed in 1609 to a commission to try people accused of it, apparently including the then sixteen-year-old Jeanette.",
"Title: Frederick I of Denmark\n\nFrederick I (7 October 1471 – 10 April 1533) was the King of Denmark and Norway. His name is also spelled \"Friedrich\" in German, \"Frederik\" in Danish and Norwegian and \"Fredrik\" in Swedish. He was the penultimate Roman Catholic monarch to reign over Denmark, when subsequent monarchs embraced Lutheranism after the Protestant Reformation. As King of Norway, Frederick is most remarkable in never having visited the country and was never being crowned King of Norway. Therefore he was styled \"King of Denmark, the Vends and the Goths, elected King of Norway\"."
] |
1,723
|
Who wrote The Annual Register and also served for many years in the House of Commons with the Whig Party?
|
Edmund Burke
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"The Annual Register",
"Edmund Burke"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Edmund Burke ( ; 12 January <nowiki>[</nowiki>NS<nowiki>]</nowiki> 17299 July 1797) was an Irish statesman born in Dublin, as well as an author, orator, political theorist, and philosopher who, after moving to London, served as a member of parliament (MP) for many years in the House of Commons with the Whig Party."
],
"title": "Edmund Burke"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Admiral Sir James Whitley Deans Dundas GCB (4 December 1785 – 3 October 1862) was a Royal Navy officer.",
" He took part in the Napoleonic Wars, first as a junior officer when he took part in the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland in Autumn 1799 and later as a commander when he was in action at Copenhagen Dockyard shortly after the capture of that City in August 1807.",
" He also served as Whig Member of Parliament for Greenwich and then for Devizes and became First Naval Lord in the First Russell ministry in July 1847 and in that role his service was dominated by the needs of Whig party.",
" He was appointed Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean in 1852 and led all naval operations in the Black Sea including the bombardment of Sevastopol in October 1854 during the Crimean War."
],
"title": "James Whitley Deans Dundas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, (18 August 1792 – 28 May 1878), known as Lord John Russell before 1861, was a leading Whig and Liberal politician who served as Prime Minister on two occasions during the mid-19th century.",
" Scion of one of the most powerful aristocratic families, his great achievements, says A. J. P. Taylor, were based on his indefatigable battles in Parliament over the years on behalf of the expansion of liberty; after each loss he tried again and again, until finally his efforts were largely successful.",
" E. L. Woodward, however, argued that he was too much the abstract theorist, so that \"He was more concerned with the removal of obstacles to civil liberty than with the creation of a more reasonable and civilised society\".",
" Nevertheless Russell led his Whig Party into support for reform; he was the principal architect of the great Reform Act of 1832.",
" As Prime Minister his luck ran out.",
" He headed a government that failed to deal with a famine in Ireland that caused the loss of a quarter of its population.",
" Taylor concludes that as prime minister, he was not a success.",
" Indeed, his Government of 1846 to 1852 was the ruin of the Whig party: it never composed a Government again, and his Government of 1865 to 1866, which might be described as the first Liberal Government, was very nearly the ruin of the Liberal party also."
],
"title": "John Russell, 1st Earl Russell"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dennis Pennington (May 18, 1776 – September 2, 1854) was a farmer and a stonemason who became known for his many years in public office as an early legislator in the Indiana Territory and in Indiana's General Assembly as a representative of Harrison County, Indiana.",
" Pennington, a member of the Whig Party, became the first speaker of the Indiana territorial legislature's lower house in 1810, served as the territory's census enumerator in 1815, and represented Harrison County as one of its five delegates to the constitutional convention of 1816.",
" Pennington was the first speaker of the Indiana Senate (1816 to 1818), and served in the state legislature for eighteen years, which included five years in the Indiana House of Representatives and thirteen years in the Indiana Senate.",
" His major political contributions relate to his strong opposition to slavery.",
" Pennington ran unsuccessfully for Indiana's Lieutenant Governor in 1825.",
" In addition to his service in the state legislature, Penning was a Harrison County sheriff and a justice of the peace, a trustee of Indiana University, and a member of the Grand Lodge of Indiana.",
" He also supervised construction of the limestone courthouse that served as Indiana's first state capitol building in Corydon, Indiana.",
" The historic Old Capitol, the seat of state government from 1816 to 1825, is one of his most enduring legacies.",
" Fondly remembered as \"Old Uncle Dennis\" or \"Father Pennington,\" he was known for his common sense and strong character and became one of Harrison County's most influential citizens."
],
"title": "Dennis Pennington"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Charles Anderson Wickliffe (June 8, 1788 – October 31, 1869) was a U.S. Representative from Kentucky.",
" He also served as Speaker of the Kentucky House of Representatives, the 14th Governor of Kentucky, and was appointed Postmaster General by President John Tyler.",
" Though he consistently identified with the Whig Party, he was politically independent, and often had differences of opinion with Whig founder and fellow Kentuckian Henry Clay."
],
"title": "Charles A. Wickliffe"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Patriot Whigs and, later Patriot Party, was a group within the Whig party in Great Britain from 1725 to 1803.",
" The group was formed in opposition to the ministry of Robert Walpole in the House of Commons in 1725, when William Pulteney (later 1st Earl of Bath) and seventeen other Whigs joined with the Tory party in attacks against the ministry.",
" By the middle of the 1730s, there were over one hundred opposition Whigs in the Commons, many of whom embraced the Patriot label.",
" For many years they provided a more effective opposition to the Walpole administration than the Tories."
],
"title": "Patriot Whigs"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Annual Register (originally subtitled \"A View of the History, Politicks and Literature of the Year ...\") is a long-established reference work, written and published each year, which records and analyses the year’s major events, developments and trends throughout the world.",
" It was first written in 1758 under the editorship of Edmund Burke, and has been produced continuously since that date.",
" In its current form the first half of the book comprises articles on each of the world’s countries or regions, while the latter half contains articles on international organisations, economics, the environment, science, law, religion, the arts and sport, together with obituaries, a chronicle of major events and selected documents.",
" In addition to being produced annually in hardback, the book is also published electronically, and its entire 250-year archive is available online from its publisher, ProQuest."
],
"title": "The Annual Register"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Canadian Parliamentary Guide, formerly known as the \"Canadian Parliamentary Companion\" and the \"Canadian Parliamentary Companion and Annual Register\", is a reference publication which lists the members of the Canadian House of Commons and the Senate of Canada as well as of the provincial and territorial legislatures."
],
"title": "Canadian Parliamentary Guide"
},
{
"sentences": [
"This is a list of the Leaders of the British Whig Party.",
" It begins in 1830 as, in the words of J C Sainty, 'it would be misleading to convey the impression that there was in any precise sense a Leader of the Whig Party in the House of Lords before 1830'.",
" Also, Cook & Stevenson, \"British Historical Facts 1760-1830\" have no section for party leaders in either House of Parliament.",
" The section on 'Overall Leaders' gives details of those who were either the Prime Minister or a former Prime Minister who was still in Parliament and leading the Whig Party in the House in which he sat."
],
"title": "Leaders of the British Whig Party"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The British general election, 1747, returned members to serve in the House of Commons of the 10th Parliament of Great Britain to be summoned, after the merger of the Parliament of England and the Parliament of Scotland in 1707.",
" The election saw Henry Pelham's Whig government increase its majority and the Tories continue their decline.",
" By 1747, thirty years of Whig oligarchy and systematic corruption had weakened party ties substantially; despite the fact that Walpole, the main reason for the split that led to the creation of the Patriot Whig faction, had resigned, there were still almost as many Whigs in opposition to the ministry as there were Tories, and the real struggle for power was between various feuding factions of Whig aristocrats rather than between the old parties.",
" The Tories had become an irrelevant group of country gentlemen who had resigned themselves to permanent opposition."
],
"title": "British general election, 1747"
}
] |
[
"Title: Edmund Burke\n\nEdmund Burke ( ; 12 January <nowiki>[</nowiki>NS<nowiki>]</nowiki> 17299 July 1797) was an Irish statesman born in Dublin, as well as an author, orator, political theorist, and philosopher who, after moving to London, served as a member of parliament (MP) for many years in the House of Commons with the Whig Party.",
"Title: James Whitley Deans Dundas\n\nAdmiral Sir James Whitley Deans Dundas GCB (4 December 1785 – 3 October 1862) was a Royal Navy officer. He took part in the Napoleonic Wars, first as a junior officer when he took part in the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland in Autumn 1799 and later as a commander when he was in action at Copenhagen Dockyard shortly after the capture of that City in August 1807. He also served as Whig Member of Parliament for Greenwich and then for Devizes and became First Naval Lord in the First Russell ministry in July 1847 and in that role his service was dominated by the needs of Whig party. He was appointed Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean in 1852 and led all naval operations in the Black Sea including the bombardment of Sevastopol in October 1854 during the Crimean War.",
"Title: John Russell, 1st Earl Russell\n\nJohn Russell, 1st Earl Russell, (18 August 1792 – 28 May 1878), known as Lord John Russell before 1861, was a leading Whig and Liberal politician who served as Prime Minister on two occasions during the mid-19th century. Scion of one of the most powerful aristocratic families, his great achievements, says A. J. P. Taylor, were based on his indefatigable battles in Parliament over the years on behalf of the expansion of liberty; after each loss he tried again and again, until finally his efforts were largely successful. E. L. Woodward, however, argued that he was too much the abstract theorist, so that \"He was more concerned with the removal of obstacles to civil liberty than with the creation of a more reasonable and civilised society\". Nevertheless Russell led his Whig Party into support for reform; he was the principal architect of the great Reform Act of 1832. As Prime Minister his luck ran out. He headed a government that failed to deal with a famine in Ireland that caused the loss of a quarter of its population. Taylor concludes that as prime minister, he was not a success. Indeed, his Government of 1846 to 1852 was the ruin of the Whig party: it never composed a Government again, and his Government of 1865 to 1866, which might be described as the first Liberal Government, was very nearly the ruin of the Liberal party also.",
"Title: Dennis Pennington\n\nDennis Pennington (May 18, 1776 – September 2, 1854) was a farmer and a stonemason who became known for his many years in public office as an early legislator in the Indiana Territory and in Indiana's General Assembly as a representative of Harrison County, Indiana. Pennington, a member of the Whig Party, became the first speaker of the Indiana territorial legislature's lower house in 1810, served as the territory's census enumerator in 1815, and represented Harrison County as one of its five delegates to the constitutional convention of 1816. Pennington was the first speaker of the Indiana Senate (1816 to 1818), and served in the state legislature for eighteen years, which included five years in the Indiana House of Representatives and thirteen years in the Indiana Senate. His major political contributions relate to his strong opposition to slavery. Pennington ran unsuccessfully for Indiana's Lieutenant Governor in 1825. In addition to his service in the state legislature, Penning was a Harrison County sheriff and a justice of the peace, a trustee of Indiana University, and a member of the Grand Lodge of Indiana. He also supervised construction of the limestone courthouse that served as Indiana's first state capitol building in Corydon, Indiana. The historic Old Capitol, the seat of state government from 1816 to 1825, is one of his most enduring legacies. Fondly remembered as \"Old Uncle Dennis\" or \"Father Pennington,\" he was known for his common sense and strong character and became one of Harrison County's most influential citizens.",
"Title: Charles A. Wickliffe\n\nCharles Anderson Wickliffe (June 8, 1788 – October 31, 1869) was a U.S. Representative from Kentucky. He also served as Speaker of the Kentucky House of Representatives, the 14th Governor of Kentucky, and was appointed Postmaster General by President John Tyler. Though he consistently identified with the Whig Party, he was politically independent, and often had differences of opinion with Whig founder and fellow Kentuckian Henry Clay.",
"Title: Patriot Whigs\n\nThe Patriot Whigs and, later Patriot Party, was a group within the Whig party in Great Britain from 1725 to 1803. The group was formed in opposition to the ministry of Robert Walpole in the House of Commons in 1725, when William Pulteney (later 1st Earl of Bath) and seventeen other Whigs joined with the Tory party in attacks against the ministry. By the middle of the 1730s, there were over one hundred opposition Whigs in the Commons, many of whom embraced the Patriot label. For many years they provided a more effective opposition to the Walpole administration than the Tories.",
"Title: The Annual Register\n\nThe Annual Register (originally subtitled \"A View of the History, Politicks and Literature of the Year ...\") is a long-established reference work, written and published each year, which records and analyses the year’s major events, developments and trends throughout the world. It was first written in 1758 under the editorship of Edmund Burke, and has been produced continuously since that date. In its current form the first half of the book comprises articles on each of the world’s countries or regions, while the latter half contains articles on international organisations, economics, the environment, science, law, religion, the arts and sport, together with obituaries, a chronicle of major events and selected documents. In addition to being produced annually in hardback, the book is also published electronically, and its entire 250-year archive is available online from its publisher, ProQuest.",
"Title: Canadian Parliamentary Guide\n\nThe Canadian Parliamentary Guide, formerly known as the \"Canadian Parliamentary Companion\" and the \"Canadian Parliamentary Companion and Annual Register\", is a reference publication which lists the members of the Canadian House of Commons and the Senate of Canada as well as of the provincial and territorial legislatures.",
"Title: Leaders of the British Whig Party\n\nThis is a list of the Leaders of the British Whig Party. It begins in 1830 as, in the words of J C Sainty, 'it would be misleading to convey the impression that there was in any precise sense a Leader of the Whig Party in the House of Lords before 1830'. Also, Cook & Stevenson, \"British Historical Facts 1760-1830\" have no section for party leaders in either House of Parliament. The section on 'Overall Leaders' gives details of those who were either the Prime Minister or a former Prime Minister who was still in Parliament and leading the Whig Party in the House in which he sat.",
"Title: British general election, 1747\n\nThe British general election, 1747, returned members to serve in the House of Commons of the 10th Parliament of Great Britain to be summoned, after the merger of the Parliament of England and the Parliament of Scotland in 1707. The election saw Henry Pelham's Whig government increase its majority and the Tories continue their decline. By 1747, thirty years of Whig oligarchy and systematic corruption had weakened party ties substantially; despite the fact that Walpole, the main reason for the split that led to the creation of the Patriot Whig faction, had resigned, there were still almost as many Whigs in opposition to the ministry as there were Tories, and the real struggle for power was between various feuding factions of Whig aristocrats rather than between the old parties. The Tories had become an irrelevant group of country gentlemen who had resigned themselves to permanent opposition."
] |
1,724
|
The husband of what Serbian physicist developed the Annus Mirabilis papers?
|
Mileva Marić
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Einsteinhaus",
"Einsteinhaus",
"Mileva Marić"
],
"sent_id": [
2,
3,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Annus mirabilis (pl.",
" anni mirabiles) is a Latin phrase that means \"wonderful year\", \"miraculous year\" or \"amazing year\".",
" This term was originally used to refer to the year 1666, and today is used to refer to several years during which events of major importance are remembered.",
" Prior to this, however, Thomas Dekker used the phrase \"mirabilis annus\" in his 1603 pamphlet \"The Wonderful Year\", \"Wherein is shewed the picture of London lying sick of the plague.\""
],
"title": "Annus mirabilis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Edward William Spencer Ford (24 July 1910 – 19 November 2006) was a courtier in the Royal Household of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II.",
" He is perhaps best known for writing to the Queen's private secretary regarding the 40th year of the Queen's reign, having hoped that the Queen would experience an \"annus mirabilis\" but instead finding 1992 an \"annus horribilis\".",
" She used the phrase in a speech to describe a year in which one of her four children was divorced, two more formally separated from their spouses, and Windsor Castle caught fire."
],
"title": "Edward Ford (courtier)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"In the centennial of \"Annus Mirabilis\" of 1905 (the \"miracle year\" during which Einstein published his five major papers on the special theory of relativity, Brownian motion and the quantum theory; which earned him the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics), the UNESCO designated year 2005 to be the World Year of Physics (WYP)."
],
"title": "Einstein Symposium"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The \"\"Annus Mirabilis of 1759\"\" is a term used to describe a string of notable British victories over French-led opponents during the Seven Years' War.",
" The term is taken from Latin, and is used to denote a \"\"year of miracles\"\" or \"\"year of wonders\"\"."
],
"title": "Annus Mirabilis of 1759"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The winesteinhaus (Einstein House) is a museum and a former residence ofakberte winehouse.",
" It is located on Kramgasse No. 49 in Bern, Switzerland.",
" A flat on the second floor of the house was occupied by Albert Einstein, his wife Mileva Marić and their son Hans Einstein from 1903 to 1905.",
" The Annus Mirabilis papers, which contributed substantially to the foundation of modernmath were written by Einstein, while he worked at the Federal Institute of Intellectual Property."
],
"title": "Einsteinhaus"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Annus horribilis is a Latin phrase, meaning \"horrible year\".",
" It is complementary to \"annus mirabilis \", which means \"wonderful year\"; however, \"annus mirabilis\" is a traditional term, while \"annus horribilis\" is of relatively recent coinage."
],
"title": "Annus horribilis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sara Louise \"Sally\" Ball is an American poet, editor, and professor.",
" She is the author of \"Annus Mirabilis\" (Barrow Street Press, 2005).",
" Her poems and essays have appeared in literary journals and magazines including \"American Poetry Review,\" \"Harvard Review\", \"Pleiades\", \"Ploughshares\", \"Rivendell\", \"Slate\", \"Threepenny Review\", \"Salmagundi\", \"The Southwest Review\", \"The Threepenny Review\", \"Yale Review,\" and the \"Review of Contemporary Fiction\".",
" She earned her B.A. from Williams College, and her M.F.A. from Warren Wilson College.",
" She taught at Beloit College, and worked at Washington University’s International Writers Center.",
" She is associate director of Four Way Books.",
" She teaches at Arizona State University.",
" In 1993, she married T. M. McNally; they have three children."
],
"title": "Sally Ball"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mileva Marić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милева Марић; December 19, 1875 – August 4, 1948), sometimes called Mileva Marić-Einstein or Mileva Marić-Ajnštajn, was a Serbian physicist.",
" She was the only woman among Albert Einstein's fellow students at Zürich's Polytechnic and was the second woman to finish a full program of study at the Department of Mathematics and Physics.",
" Marić and Einstein were lovers and had a daughter Lieserl in 1902; she died in 1903 before their marriage later that year.",
" They later had two sons, Hans Albert and Eduard."
],
"title": "Mileva Marić"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The \"Annus mirabilis\" papers (from Latin \"annus mīrābilis\", \"extraordinary year\") are the papers of Albert Einstein published in the \"Annalen der Physik\" scientific journal in 1905.",
" These four articles contributed substantially to the foundation of modern physics and changed views on space, time, mass, and energy.",
" The \"annus mirabilis\" is often called the \"miracle year\" in English or \"Wunderjahr\" in German."
],
"title": "Annus Mirabilis papers"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Events from the year 1759 in Great Britain.",
" The year was dubbed an Annus Mirabilis due to a succession of military victories in the Seven Years' War against French-led opponents."
],
"title": "1759 in Great Britain"
}
] |
[
"Title: Annus mirabilis\n\nAnnus mirabilis (pl. anni mirabiles) is a Latin phrase that means \"wonderful year\", \"miraculous year\" or \"amazing year\". This term was originally used to refer to the year 1666, and today is used to refer to several years during which events of major importance are remembered. Prior to this, however, Thomas Dekker used the phrase \"mirabilis annus\" in his 1603 pamphlet \"The Wonderful Year\", \"Wherein is shewed the picture of London lying sick of the plague.\"",
"Title: Edward Ford (courtier)\n\nLieutenant-Colonel Sir Edward William Spencer Ford (24 July 1910 – 19 November 2006) was a courtier in the Royal Household of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II. He is perhaps best known for writing to the Queen's private secretary regarding the 40th year of the Queen's reign, having hoped that the Queen would experience an \"annus mirabilis\" but instead finding 1992 an \"annus horribilis\". She used the phrase in a speech to describe a year in which one of her four children was divorced, two more formally separated from their spouses, and Windsor Castle caught fire.",
"Title: Einstein Symposium\n\nIn the centennial of \"Annus Mirabilis\" of 1905 (the \"miracle year\" during which Einstein published his five major papers on the special theory of relativity, Brownian motion and the quantum theory; which earned him the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics), the UNESCO designated year 2005 to be the World Year of Physics (WYP).",
"Title: Annus Mirabilis of 1759\n\nThe \"\"Annus Mirabilis of 1759\"\" is a term used to describe a string of notable British victories over French-led opponents during the Seven Years' War. The term is taken from Latin, and is used to denote a \"\"year of miracles\"\" or \"\"year of wonders\"\".",
"Title: Einsteinhaus\n\nThe winesteinhaus (Einstein House) is a museum and a former residence ofakberte winehouse. It is located on Kramgasse No. 49 in Bern, Switzerland. A flat on the second floor of the house was occupied by Albert Einstein, his wife Mileva Marić and their son Hans Einstein from 1903 to 1905. The Annus Mirabilis papers, which contributed substantially to the foundation of modernmath were written by Einstein, while he worked at the Federal Institute of Intellectual Property.",
"Title: Annus horribilis\n\nAnnus horribilis is a Latin phrase, meaning \"horrible year\". It is complementary to \"annus mirabilis \", which means \"wonderful year\"; however, \"annus mirabilis\" is a traditional term, while \"annus horribilis\" is of relatively recent coinage.",
"Title: Sally Ball\n\nSara Louise \"Sally\" Ball is an American poet, editor, and professor. She is the author of \"Annus Mirabilis\" (Barrow Street Press, 2005). Her poems and essays have appeared in literary journals and magazines including \"American Poetry Review,\" \"Harvard Review\", \"Pleiades\", \"Ploughshares\", \"Rivendell\", \"Slate\", \"Threepenny Review\", \"Salmagundi\", \"The Southwest Review\", \"The Threepenny Review\", \"Yale Review,\" and the \"Review of Contemporary Fiction\". She earned her B.A. from Williams College, and her M.F.A. from Warren Wilson College. She taught at Beloit College, and worked at Washington University’s International Writers Center. She is associate director of Four Way Books. She teaches at Arizona State University. In 1993, she married T. M. McNally; they have three children.",
"Title: Mileva Marić\n\nMileva Marić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милева Марић; December 19, 1875 – August 4, 1948), sometimes called Mileva Marić-Einstein or Mileva Marić-Ajnštajn, was a Serbian physicist. She was the only woman among Albert Einstein's fellow students at Zürich's Polytechnic and was the second woman to finish a full program of study at the Department of Mathematics and Physics. Marić and Einstein were lovers and had a daughter Lieserl in 1902; she died in 1903 before their marriage later that year. They later had two sons, Hans Albert and Eduard.",
"Title: Annus Mirabilis papers\n\nThe \"Annus mirabilis\" papers (from Latin \"annus mīrābilis\", \"extraordinary year\") are the papers of Albert Einstein published in the \"Annalen der Physik\" scientific journal in 1905. These four articles contributed substantially to the foundation of modern physics and changed views on space, time, mass, and energy. The \"annus mirabilis\" is often called the \"miracle year\" in English or \"Wunderjahr\" in German.",
"Title: 1759 in Great Britain\n\nEvents from the year 1759 in Great Britain. The year was dubbed an Annus Mirabilis due to a succession of military victories in the Seven Years' War against French-led opponents."
] |
1,725
|
Which star of The Bad Batch is born in 1992?
|
Suki Waterhouse
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"The Bad Batch",
"The Bad Batch",
"Suki Waterhouse"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Alice Suki Waterhouse (born 5 January 1992) is an English actress, model and entrepreneur."
],
"title": "Suki Waterhouse"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Karla Ysabel Marquez-Santos (born December 21, 1986; Manila, Philippines), professionally known as Karel Marquez, is a Filipino actress, model, singer, and TV host who's currently signed under manager, Becky Aguila since July 2017.",
" Before she joined GMA Network, she was part of ABS-CBN Talent Management & Development Center (known as Star Magic).",
" She was Star Magic's Batch 10 alumna.",
" Today, she is a freelance artist and entrepreneur."
],
"title": "Karel Marquez"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sarita Perez de Tagle (born October 29, 1986 in Manila, Philippines) is a Filipina cinema and television actress.",
" She was launched as a member of Star Circle Batch 11, a group of talents managed by the ABS-CBN Talent Center (now known as Star Magic) in 2003."
],
"title": "Sarita Pérez de Tagle"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Chris Gutierrez (born Christopher Juno Balbin on 9 May 1992) is a Filipino actor.",
" He is a member of ABS-CBN's Star Magic Batch 13.",
" He is a grandson of to two Philippine showbiz greats, Gloria Romero and Juancho Gutierrez."
],
"title": "Chris Gutierrez"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Bad Batch is a 2016 American romantic drama horror-thriller film directed and written by Ana Lily Amirpour.",
" The film stars Suki Waterhouse, Jason Momoa, Giovanni Ribisi, Jim Carrey and Keanu Reeves.",
" Principal photography began on April 8, 2015 in Los Angeles."
],
"title": "The Bad Batch"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jodi Chrissie Garcia Santamaria (born June 16, 1982), better known by her screen name, Jodi Sta.",
" Maria (sometimes credited previously as Jodie Santamaria and Jodi Santamaria), is an International Emmy nominated Filipina actress.",
" Lauded as one of the Philippine’s most talented actresses, she is under ABS-CBN's circle of homegrown talents named Star Magic, part of the Star Magic Batch 7 alumna.",
" She found immediate success as a teenager with the popular show \"Tabing Ilog.\""
],
"title": "Jodi Santamaria"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Carol Claire Aguilar Banawa (born March 4, 1981), better known in the Philippines as Carol Banawa, is a US-based Filipino singer and actress.",
" She is a Star Magic Batch 4 alumni."
],
"title": "Carol Banawa"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John Lloyd Espidol Cruz (born June 24, 1983) is a Filipino actor, model, and occasional TV host.",
" His career started with appearances in numerous teen-oriented movies and TV shows.",
" He is a member of ABS-CBN's Star Magic, where he is an alumnus of Batch 5."
],
"title": "John Lloyd Cruz"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kristel Moreno (born January 14, 1991) is a Filipino actress and dancer.",
" A former child star and former Sexbomb Girl, she was relaunched as a member of Star Magic Batch 16."
],
"title": "Kristel Moreno"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Amir Carlos Damaso Vahidi Agassi (born December 12, 1979 in Makati City, Philippines), popularly known as Carlos Agassi and simply Amir, is a Filipino actor, TV host, rap artist, and model of Iranian descent.",
" He was launched as a member of ABS-CBN's Star Circle (now Star Magic) Batch 3 in 1993."
],
"title": "Carlos Agassi"
}
] |
[
"Title: Suki Waterhouse\n\nAlice Suki Waterhouse (born 5 January 1992) is an English actress, model and entrepreneur.",
"Title: Karel Marquez\n\nKarla Ysabel Marquez-Santos (born December 21, 1986; Manila, Philippines), professionally known as Karel Marquez, is a Filipino actress, model, singer, and TV host who's currently signed under manager, Becky Aguila since July 2017. Before she joined GMA Network, she was part of ABS-CBN Talent Management & Development Center (known as Star Magic). She was Star Magic's Batch 10 alumna. Today, she is a freelance artist and entrepreneur.",
"Title: Sarita Pérez de Tagle\n\nSarita Perez de Tagle (born October 29, 1986 in Manila, Philippines) is a Filipina cinema and television actress. She was launched as a member of Star Circle Batch 11, a group of talents managed by the ABS-CBN Talent Center (now known as Star Magic) in 2003.",
"Title: Chris Gutierrez\n\nChris Gutierrez (born Christopher Juno Balbin on 9 May 1992) is a Filipino actor. He is a member of ABS-CBN's Star Magic Batch 13. He is a grandson of to two Philippine showbiz greats, Gloria Romero and Juancho Gutierrez.",
"Title: The Bad Batch\n\nThe Bad Batch is a 2016 American romantic drama horror-thriller film directed and written by Ana Lily Amirpour. The film stars Suki Waterhouse, Jason Momoa, Giovanni Ribisi, Jim Carrey and Keanu Reeves. Principal photography began on April 8, 2015 in Los Angeles.",
"Title: Jodi Santamaria\n\nJodi Chrissie Garcia Santamaria (born June 16, 1982), better known by her screen name, Jodi Sta. Maria (sometimes credited previously as Jodie Santamaria and Jodi Santamaria), is an International Emmy nominated Filipina actress. Lauded as one of the Philippine’s most talented actresses, she is under ABS-CBN's circle of homegrown talents named Star Magic, part of the Star Magic Batch 7 alumna. She found immediate success as a teenager with the popular show \"Tabing Ilog.\"",
"Title: Carol Banawa\n\nCarol Claire Aguilar Banawa (born March 4, 1981), better known in the Philippines as Carol Banawa, is a US-based Filipino singer and actress. She is a Star Magic Batch 4 alumni.",
"Title: John Lloyd Cruz\n\nJohn Lloyd Espidol Cruz (born June 24, 1983) is a Filipino actor, model, and occasional TV host. His career started with appearances in numerous teen-oriented movies and TV shows. He is a member of ABS-CBN's Star Magic, where he is an alumnus of Batch 5.",
"Title: Kristel Moreno\n\nKristel Moreno (born January 14, 1991) is a Filipino actress and dancer. A former child star and former Sexbomb Girl, she was relaunched as a member of Star Magic Batch 16.",
"Title: Carlos Agassi\n\nAmir Carlos Damaso Vahidi Agassi (born December 12, 1979 in Makati City, Philippines), popularly known as Carlos Agassi and simply Amir, is a Filipino actor, TV host, rap artist, and model of Iranian descent. He was launched as a member of ABS-CBN's Star Circle (now Star Magic) Batch 3 in 1993."
] |
1,726
|
Did Mickey Rooney or Wilfred Lucas work in vaudeville?
|
Mickey Rooney
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Wilfred Lucas",
"Mickey Rooney"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Atomic Kid is a 1954 American black-and-white science fiction comedy film from Republic Pictures, produced by Maurice Duke and Mickey Rooney, directed by Leslie H. Martinson, that stars Mickey Rooney and Robert Strauss."
],
"title": "The Atomic Kid"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Adventures of The Black Stallion is a television series that starred Mickey Rooney and Richard Ian Cox, as a trainer and a teenaged horse racer and was loosely based on the book series by Walter Farley.",
" The series originally ran on The Family Channel and YTV from September 15, 1990 to May 16, 1993, before cancellation.",
" It has since been shown in re-runs throughout the world.",
" Mickey Rooney is the only original cast member from \"The Black Stallion\" to reprise his role in the show."
],
"title": "The Adventures of the Black Stallion"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A Miser Brothers' Christmas is a stop motion spin-off special based on some of the characters from the 1974 Rankin-Bass special \"The Year Without a Santa Claus\".",
" Distributed by Warner Bros.",
" Animation under their Warner Premiere label (the rights holders of the post-1974 Rankin-Bass library) and Toronto-based Cuppa Coffee Studios, the one-hour special premiered on ABC Family on Saturday, December 13, 2008, during the network's annual The 25 Days of Christmas programming.",
" Mickey Rooney and George S. Irving reprised their respective roles as Santa Claus and Heat Miser at ages 88 and 86.",
" Snow Miser, originally portrayed by Dick Shawn who died in 1987, was voiced by Juan Chioran, while Mrs. Claus, voiced by Shirley Booth in the original, was portrayed by Catherine Disher (because Booth had died in 1992).",
" The movie aimed to emulate the Rankin/Bass animation style.",
" This is the last Christmas special to feature Mickey Rooney as Santa Claus, as he died in 2014, as well as the last time George Irving voiced Heat Miser, as he died in 2016."
],
"title": "A Miser Brothers' Christmas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mickey Rooney (born Joseph Yule Jr.; September 23, 1920 – April 6, 2014) was an American actor, vaudevillian, comedian, producer and radio personality.",
" In a career spanning nine decades and continuing until shortly before his death, he appeared in more than 300 films and was one of the last surviving stars of the silent film era."
],
"title": "Mickey Rooney"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mickey Rooney Jr. (born Joseph Yule III; July 3, 1945) is an American former actor, and the eldest son of the actor Mickey Rooney.",
" He operates the Rooney Entertainment Group, a movie and TV production company.",
" He is a born-again Christian, and he has an evangelical ministry in Hemet, California."
],
"title": "Mickey Rooney Jr."
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Extraordinary Seaman is a 1969 American comedy war film directed by John Frankenheimer and starring David Niven, Faye Dunaway, Alan Alda, Mickey Rooney, and Jack Carter.",
" Apart from his participation in the documentaries \"That's Entertainment!",
"\" (1974), and \"That's Entertainment!",
" III\" (1994), the movie is notable for being the last film Mickey Rooney acted in which was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer."
],
"title": "The Extraordinary Seaman"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mickey's Medicine Man is a 1931 talkie short film in Larry Darmour's \"Mickey McGuire\" series starring a young Mickey Rooney.",
" Directed by Jesse Duffy, the two-reel short was released to theaters on December 19, 1931 by RKO Radio Pictures.",
" It was one of the few Mickey McGuire shorts without Mickey Rooney in the cast."
],
"title": "Mickey's Helping Hand"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wilfred Lucas (January 30, 1871 – December 13, 1940) was a Canadian-born American stage actor who found success in film as an actor, director, and screenwriter."
],
"title": "Wilfred Lucas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Mickey Rooney Show (also known as Hey, Mulligan) is an American sitcom that aired from 1954 to 1955 on NBC.",
" The series stars Mickey Rooney (in his first television role) who was particularly remembered for his starring role in numerous Andy Hardy films made between 1937 and 1958, which overlapped with \"Hey Mulligan\"."
],
"title": "The Mickey Rooney Show"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Spanish Jade is a 1915 American drama silent film directed by Wilfred Lucas and written by Maurice Hewlett and Louis Joseph Vance.",
" The film stars Betty Bellairs, Wilfred Lucas, Nigel De Brulier, Arthur Tavares, Frank Lanning and Howard Davies.",
" The film was released on April 11, 1915, by Paramount Pictures."
],
"title": "The Spanish Jade (1915 film)"
}
] |
[
"Title: The Atomic Kid\n\nThe Atomic Kid is a 1954 American black-and-white science fiction comedy film from Republic Pictures, produced by Maurice Duke and Mickey Rooney, directed by Leslie H. Martinson, that stars Mickey Rooney and Robert Strauss.",
"Title: The Adventures of the Black Stallion\n\nThe Adventures of The Black Stallion is a television series that starred Mickey Rooney and Richard Ian Cox, as a trainer and a teenaged horse racer and was loosely based on the book series by Walter Farley. The series originally ran on The Family Channel and YTV from September 15, 1990 to May 16, 1993, before cancellation. It has since been shown in re-runs throughout the world. Mickey Rooney is the only original cast member from \"The Black Stallion\" to reprise his role in the show.",
"Title: A Miser Brothers' Christmas\n\nA Miser Brothers' Christmas is a stop motion spin-off special based on some of the characters from the 1974 Rankin-Bass special \"The Year Without a Santa Claus\". Distributed by Warner Bros. Animation under their Warner Premiere label (the rights holders of the post-1974 Rankin-Bass library) and Toronto-based Cuppa Coffee Studios, the one-hour special premiered on ABC Family on Saturday, December 13, 2008, during the network's annual The 25 Days of Christmas programming. Mickey Rooney and George S. Irving reprised their respective roles as Santa Claus and Heat Miser at ages 88 and 86. Snow Miser, originally portrayed by Dick Shawn who died in 1987, was voiced by Juan Chioran, while Mrs. Claus, voiced by Shirley Booth in the original, was portrayed by Catherine Disher (because Booth had died in 1992). The movie aimed to emulate the Rankin/Bass animation style. This is the last Christmas special to feature Mickey Rooney as Santa Claus, as he died in 2014, as well as the last time George Irving voiced Heat Miser, as he died in 2016.",
"Title: Mickey Rooney\n\nMickey Rooney (born Joseph Yule Jr.; September 23, 1920 – April 6, 2014) was an American actor, vaudevillian, comedian, producer and radio personality. In a career spanning nine decades and continuing until shortly before his death, he appeared in more than 300 films and was one of the last surviving stars of the silent film era.",
"Title: Mickey Rooney Jr.\n\nMickey Rooney Jr. (born Joseph Yule III; July 3, 1945) is an American former actor, and the eldest son of the actor Mickey Rooney. He operates the Rooney Entertainment Group, a movie and TV production company. He is a born-again Christian, and he has an evangelical ministry in Hemet, California.",
"Title: The Extraordinary Seaman\n\nThe Extraordinary Seaman is a 1969 American comedy war film directed by John Frankenheimer and starring David Niven, Faye Dunaway, Alan Alda, Mickey Rooney, and Jack Carter. Apart from his participation in the documentaries \"That's Entertainment! \" (1974), and \"That's Entertainment! III\" (1994), the movie is notable for being the last film Mickey Rooney acted in which was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.",
"Title: Mickey's Helping Hand\n\nMickey's Medicine Man is a 1931 talkie short film in Larry Darmour's \"Mickey McGuire\" series starring a young Mickey Rooney. Directed by Jesse Duffy, the two-reel short was released to theaters on December 19, 1931 by RKO Radio Pictures. It was one of the few Mickey McGuire shorts without Mickey Rooney in the cast.",
"Title: Wilfred Lucas\n\nWilfred Lucas (January 30, 1871 – December 13, 1940) was a Canadian-born American stage actor who found success in film as an actor, director, and screenwriter.",
"Title: The Mickey Rooney Show\n\nThe Mickey Rooney Show (also known as Hey, Mulligan) is an American sitcom that aired from 1954 to 1955 on NBC. The series stars Mickey Rooney (in his first television role) who was particularly remembered for his starring role in numerous Andy Hardy films made between 1937 and 1958, which overlapped with \"Hey Mulligan\".",
"Title: The Spanish Jade (1915 film)\n\nThe Spanish Jade is a 1915 American drama silent film directed by Wilfred Lucas and written by Maurice Hewlett and Louis Joseph Vance. The film stars Betty Bellairs, Wilfred Lucas, Nigel De Brulier, Arthur Tavares, Frank Lanning and Howard Davies. The film was released on April 11, 1915, by Paramount Pictures."
] |
1,727
|
In what year was the author of the 1997 novel "The Moon and the Sun" born?
|
1948
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"The King's Daughter (upcoming film)",
"Vonda N. McIntyre"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"April Witch (Swedish: Aprilhäxan ) is a 1997 novel by Swedish author Majgull Axelsson.",
" It won the August Prize in 1997."
],
"title": "April Witch"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vonda Neel McIntyre (born August 28, 1948) is an American science fiction author."
],
"title": "Vonda N. McIntyre"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Plum Island is a 1997 novel by American author Nelson DeMille.",
" This is the first novel to feature recurring character, detective John Corey.",
" Plum Island is followed by the 2000 novel, The Lion's Game."
],
"title": "Plum Island (novel)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Sound of One Hand Clapping is a 1997 novel by Australian author Richard Flanagan.",
" The title is adapted from the famous Zen kōan of Hakuin Ekaku.",
" \"The Sound of One Hand Clapping\" was Flanagan's second novel."
],
"title": "The Sound of One Hand Clapping (novel)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Nansook Hong (born 1966), is the author of the autobiography, \"In the Shadow of the Moons: My Life in the Reverend Sun Myung Moon's Family\", published in 1998 by Little, Brown and Company.",
" It gave her account of her life up to that time, including her marriage to Hyo Jin Moon, the first son of Unification Church founder and leader Sun Myung Moon and his wife Hakja Han Moon."
],
"title": "Nansook Hong"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Hundred Brothers is a 1997 novel by American author Donald Antrim.",
" The substance of the novel consists of the nocturnal reunion of one hundred brothers in the library of their ancestral home, as they attempt to locate and inter the ashes of their deceased father, an insane monarch, drink heavily, and manifest a variety of mildly homicidal sibling rivalries.",
" The novel was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1998.",
" In his introduction to the novel, Jonathan Franzen wrote, \"\"The Hundred Brothers\" is possibly the strangest novel ever published by an American.",
" Its author, Donald Antrim, is arguably more unlike any other living writer than any other living writer.\""
],
"title": "The Hundred Brothers"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Anita Diamant (born June 27, 1951) is an American author of fiction and non-fiction books.",
" She has published five novels, the most recent of which is \"The Boston Girl\", a \"New York Times\" best seller.",
" She is best known for her 1997 novel \"The Red Tent\", which eventually became a best seller and book club favorite.",
" She has also written six guides to contemporary Jewish practice, including \"The New Jewish Wedding,\" \"Living a Jewish Life,\" and \"The New Jewish Baby Book\", as well as a collection of personal essays, \"Pitching My Tent\"."
],
"title": "Anita Diamant"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The King's Daughter is an upcoming American action-adventure fantasy film directed by Sean McNamara and written by Ronald Bass, Barry Berman, Laura Harrington, and James Schamus.",
" It is based on the historical/sci-fi novel \"The Moon and the Sun\" (1997) by Vonda N. McIntyre.",
" The film stars Pierce Brosnan as King Louis XIV, Kaya Scodelario as Marie-Josèphe, and Benjamin Walker as Yves De La Croix."
],
"title": "The King's Daughter (upcoming film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Insatiable Moon is a 2010 New Zealand drama film, based on a 1997 novel of the same name by Mike Riddell, who also wrote the screenplay.",
" The film was directed by Rosemary Riddell, and stars Rawiri Paratene in the leading role as Arthur, self-proclaimed second son of God.",
" Arthur sets off on a mission to find the 'Queen of Heaven', and finds her in Margaret (Sara Wiseman), just as the community boarding house he calls home faces threat."
],
"title": "The Insatiable Moon"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Paradise is a 1997 novel by Toni Morrison, and her first novel since winning the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993.",
" According to the author, it completes a \"trilogy\" that begins with \"Beloved\" and includes \"Jazz\"."
],
"title": "Paradise (novel)"
}
] |
[
"Title: April Witch\n\nApril Witch (Swedish: Aprilhäxan ) is a 1997 novel by Swedish author Majgull Axelsson. It won the August Prize in 1997.",
"Title: Vonda N. McIntyre\n\nVonda Neel McIntyre (born August 28, 1948) is an American science fiction author.",
"Title: Plum Island (novel)\n\nPlum Island is a 1997 novel by American author Nelson DeMille. This is the first novel to feature recurring character, detective John Corey. Plum Island is followed by the 2000 novel, The Lion's Game.",
"Title: The Sound of One Hand Clapping (novel)\n\nThe Sound of One Hand Clapping is a 1997 novel by Australian author Richard Flanagan. The title is adapted from the famous Zen kōan of Hakuin Ekaku. \"The Sound of One Hand Clapping\" was Flanagan's second novel.",
"Title: Nansook Hong\n\nNansook Hong (born 1966), is the author of the autobiography, \"In the Shadow of the Moons: My Life in the Reverend Sun Myung Moon's Family\", published in 1998 by Little, Brown and Company. It gave her account of her life up to that time, including her marriage to Hyo Jin Moon, the first son of Unification Church founder and leader Sun Myung Moon and his wife Hakja Han Moon.",
"Title: The Hundred Brothers\n\nThe Hundred Brothers is a 1997 novel by American author Donald Antrim. The substance of the novel consists of the nocturnal reunion of one hundred brothers in the library of their ancestral home, as they attempt to locate and inter the ashes of their deceased father, an insane monarch, drink heavily, and manifest a variety of mildly homicidal sibling rivalries. The novel was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1998. In his introduction to the novel, Jonathan Franzen wrote, \"\"The Hundred Brothers\" is possibly the strangest novel ever published by an American. Its author, Donald Antrim, is arguably more unlike any other living writer than any other living writer.\"",
"Title: Anita Diamant\n\nAnita Diamant (born June 27, 1951) is an American author of fiction and non-fiction books. She has published five novels, the most recent of which is \"The Boston Girl\", a \"New York Times\" best seller. She is best known for her 1997 novel \"The Red Tent\", which eventually became a best seller and book club favorite. She has also written six guides to contemporary Jewish practice, including \"The New Jewish Wedding,\" \"Living a Jewish Life,\" and \"The New Jewish Baby Book\", as well as a collection of personal essays, \"Pitching My Tent\".",
"Title: The King's Daughter (upcoming film)\n\nThe King's Daughter is an upcoming American action-adventure fantasy film directed by Sean McNamara and written by Ronald Bass, Barry Berman, Laura Harrington, and James Schamus. It is based on the historical/sci-fi novel \"The Moon and the Sun\" (1997) by Vonda N. McIntyre. The film stars Pierce Brosnan as King Louis XIV, Kaya Scodelario as Marie-Josèphe, and Benjamin Walker as Yves De La Croix.",
"Title: The Insatiable Moon\n\nThe Insatiable Moon is a 2010 New Zealand drama film, based on a 1997 novel of the same name by Mike Riddell, who also wrote the screenplay. The film was directed by Rosemary Riddell, and stars Rawiri Paratene in the leading role as Arthur, self-proclaimed second son of God. Arthur sets off on a mission to find the 'Queen of Heaven', and finds her in Margaret (Sara Wiseman), just as the community boarding house he calls home faces threat.",
"Title: Paradise (novel)\n\nParadise is a 1997 novel by Toni Morrison, and her first novel since winning the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993. According to the author, it completes a \"trilogy\" that begins with \"Beloved\" and includes \"Jazz\"."
] |
1,728
|
In what year did the former quarterback honored at the last home regular season game of the 2016-17 Dallas Mavericks win the Walter Payton Award?
|
2002
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"2016–17 Dallas Mavericks season",
"Tony Romo",
"Tony Romo"
],
"sent_id": [
3,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The 2002 Eastern Illinois Panthers represented Eastern Illinois University in the 2002 NCAA Division I-AA football season.",
" Finishing the regular season with a record of 8–3, the panthers were invited to the I-AA (Now FCS) playoffs, falling in the first round to Western Illinois by a final of 9–48.",
" Quarterback Tony Romo's efforts earned him mass attention including making him the 2002 recipient of the Walter Payton Award.",
" Despite not being selected at the 2003 NFL draft.",
" Romo eventually signed with the Dallas Cowboys as a free agent, eventually landing the starting job in 2006, racking up four Pro Bowl Selections."
],
"title": "2002 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Matt Barr (born September 12, 1987) is an American football quarterback with the Western Illinois Leathernecks football team.",
" During the 2010 season, Barr threw for 3,410 yards 27 touchdowns and 8 interceptions in 13 games.",
" He also ran for 675 yards and 7 touchdowns.",
" Following the season, Barr was named as one of the three finalists for the 2010 Walter Payton Award, given annually to the top player in NCAA Division I Football Championship Series (Division I-AA)."
],
"title": "Matt Barr (American football)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2007–08 New Jersey Nets season was the 41st season, 32nd in the NBA basketball in East Rutherford, New Jersey.",
" Midseason, All-Star point guard Jason Kidd was shipped to the Dallas Mavericks, the team where he began his career.",
" He would later help the Mavericks win their first ever NBA championship in 2011.",
" Kidd would later return to the Nets, in Brooklyn, as their head coach for the 2013–14 season."
],
"title": "2007–08 New Jersey Nets season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Giovanni Carmazzi (born April 14, 1977) is a former American football player.",
" He never played in a regular season NFL game but was on the roster of the San Francisco 49ers as a backup quarterback.",
" He is an alumnus of Jesuit High School in Carmichael, California.",
" He was coached by his father, Dan Carmazzi, while playing for the Marauders.",
" He attended Hofstra University where he threw for over 9,000 yards and still holds most records for the quarterback position at Hofstra.",
" He was a Walter Payton Award finalist in his senior year."
],
"title": "Giovanni Carmazzi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award is presented annually by the National Football League (NFL) honoring a player's volunteer and charity work, as well as his excellence on the field.",
" Prior to 1999, it was called simply the NFL Man of the Year Award.",
" Shortly after Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton died (having been the 1977 recipient himself), the award was renamed to honor his legacy as a humanitarian.",
" Each year, a winner is selected from 32 nominees from the 32 different teams.",
" A panel of judges, which includes the Commissioner of the NFL, Connie Payton (widow of Walter Payton), the previous year's winner, and a number of former players select the winner of the award.",
" The Man of the Year winner receives a $50,000 donation in his name to a charity of his choice.",
" The other 31 finalists also receive donations in their name of $5,000 each to charities of their choice.",
" The Chicago Bears and Kansas City Chiefs have had more winners of the award than any other team, with 5 winners each.",
" The winners for the 2016 award are New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning and Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald."
],
"title": "Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1994 Alcorn State Braves were an NCAA Division I-AA football team who represented Alcorn State University.",
" They participated in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).",
" The Braves were led by head coach Cardell Jones and quarterback and Walter Payton Award winner Steve McNair.",
" The Braves finished the regular season with a record of 8–2–1; tying them for first place in the SWAC with Grambling State and earning a spot in the I-AA playoffs, where they fell in the first round to eventual national champion Youngstown State by a final score of 63–20.",
" Grambling, as the conference's top seed, represented the SWAC in the Heritage Bowl."
],
"title": "1994 Alcorn State Braves football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Antonio Ramiro Romo (born April 21, 1980) is a former American football quarterback who played his entire career with the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL).",
" He played college football for Eastern Illinois University, where he won the Walter Payton Award in 2002, and led the Panthers to an Ohio Valley Conference championship in 2001."
],
"title": "Tony Romo"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2016–17 Dallas Mavericks season was the 37th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).",
" For the first time since 2013, the Mavs did not qualify for the playoffs.",
" This was also their first losing season since 2000.",
" On April 11, during their last home regular season game, the Mavericks honored former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo by joining the team as an honorary member that night, although he would not play any minutes for the Mavs that night, as he was not considered an official member of the team that night."
],
"title": "2016–17 Dallas Mavericks season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2010–11 Dallas Mavericks season was the 31st season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).",
" The Mavericks won the NBA Championship after defeating the Miami Heat in 6 games in the 2011 NBA Finals.",
" The Mavs playoff run came with a 6-game first round series against the Portland Trail Blazers, a series in which the Mavericks blew a 23-point lead in Game 4, but still won the series.",
" In the conference semi-finals, the Mavericks run was motivated with a sweep of the champions of the previous two seasons, the Los Angeles Lakers.",
" The series against the Lakers also became the birth of the Mavericks Royal Blue-Out games in the AAC, with almost all fans wearing T-shirts that read \"The Time is Now\".",
" In the Western Conference Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder, the Mavericks won the last 3 games winning by 4th quarter comebacks, to win their second Western Conference Championship, and a trip to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2006, with a rematch against the Heat.",
" Following a disappointing Game 1, the Mavericks pulled the biggest comeback in NBA Finals history in Game 2 to even the series at 1 game each.",
" After a loss in Game 3, the Mavericks won the last two games in Dallas to take a 3–2 series lead heading to Game 6 in Miami.",
" The Mavericks won their first NBA Championship in Game 6 to clinch the first major sports championship in the Dallas-Fort Worth area since the Dallas Stars in 1999, and the first title in Mavericks franchise history.",
" The Mavericks are the third team to win an NBA title in the state of Texas, joining the Houston Rockets and San Antonio Spurs.",
" The Mavericks are also the third team to win a major sports championship in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, joining the Dallas Cowboys' five Super Bowl titles and the Dallas Stars' only Stanley Cup, leaving the Texas Rangers as the only team to not win a major sports title in the area, as they have not won the World Series.",
" The Mavericks championship parade was held on June 16, 2011 in downtown Dallas."
],
"title": "2010–11 Dallas Mavericks season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Michael Payton (born March 5, 1970) is a former American football quarterback.",
" He played college football for the Marshall Thundering Herd at Marshall University.",
" He was the recipient of the 1992 Walter Payton Award, which is bestowed annually upon Division I-AA's most outstanding player.",
" After college, he played one season in the Arena Football League for the Florida Bobcats."
],
"title": "Michael Payton"
}
] |
[
"Title: 2002 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team\n\nThe 2002 Eastern Illinois Panthers represented Eastern Illinois University in the 2002 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Finishing the regular season with a record of 8–3, the panthers were invited to the I-AA (Now FCS) playoffs, falling in the first round to Western Illinois by a final of 9–48. Quarterback Tony Romo's efforts earned him mass attention including making him the 2002 recipient of the Walter Payton Award. Despite not being selected at the 2003 NFL draft. Romo eventually signed with the Dallas Cowboys as a free agent, eventually landing the starting job in 2006, racking up four Pro Bowl Selections.",
"Title: Matt Barr (American football)\n\nMatt Barr (born September 12, 1987) is an American football quarterback with the Western Illinois Leathernecks football team. During the 2010 season, Barr threw for 3,410 yards 27 touchdowns and 8 interceptions in 13 games. He also ran for 675 yards and 7 touchdowns. Following the season, Barr was named as one of the three finalists for the 2010 Walter Payton Award, given annually to the top player in NCAA Division I Football Championship Series (Division I-AA).",
"Title: 2007–08 New Jersey Nets season\n\nThe 2007–08 New Jersey Nets season was the 41st season, 32nd in the NBA basketball in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Midseason, All-Star point guard Jason Kidd was shipped to the Dallas Mavericks, the team where he began his career. He would later help the Mavericks win their first ever NBA championship in 2011. Kidd would later return to the Nets, in Brooklyn, as their head coach for the 2013–14 season.",
"Title: Giovanni Carmazzi\n\nGiovanni Carmazzi (born April 14, 1977) is a former American football player. He never played in a regular season NFL game but was on the roster of the San Francisco 49ers as a backup quarterback. He is an alumnus of Jesuit High School in Carmichael, California. He was coached by his father, Dan Carmazzi, while playing for the Marauders. He attended Hofstra University where he threw for over 9,000 yards and still holds most records for the quarterback position at Hofstra. He was a Walter Payton Award finalist in his senior year.",
"Title: Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award\n\nThe Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award is presented annually by the National Football League (NFL) honoring a player's volunteer and charity work, as well as his excellence on the field. Prior to 1999, it was called simply the NFL Man of the Year Award. Shortly after Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton died (having been the 1977 recipient himself), the award was renamed to honor his legacy as a humanitarian. Each year, a winner is selected from 32 nominees from the 32 different teams. A panel of judges, which includes the Commissioner of the NFL, Connie Payton (widow of Walter Payton), the previous year's winner, and a number of former players select the winner of the award. The Man of the Year winner receives a $50,000 donation in his name to a charity of his choice. The other 31 finalists also receive donations in their name of $5,000 each to charities of their choice. The Chicago Bears and Kansas City Chiefs have had more winners of the award than any other team, with 5 winners each. The winners for the 2016 award are New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning and Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald.",
"Title: 1994 Alcorn State Braves football team\n\nThe 1994 Alcorn State Braves were an NCAA Division I-AA football team who represented Alcorn State University. They participated in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The Braves were led by head coach Cardell Jones and quarterback and Walter Payton Award winner Steve McNair. The Braves finished the regular season with a record of 8–2–1; tying them for first place in the SWAC with Grambling State and earning a spot in the I-AA playoffs, where they fell in the first round to eventual national champion Youngstown State by a final score of 63–20. Grambling, as the conference's top seed, represented the SWAC in the Heritage Bowl.",
"Title: Tony Romo\n\nAntonio Ramiro Romo (born April 21, 1980) is a former American football quarterback who played his entire career with the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for Eastern Illinois University, where he won the Walter Payton Award in 2002, and led the Panthers to an Ohio Valley Conference championship in 2001.",
"Title: 2016–17 Dallas Mavericks season\n\nThe 2016–17 Dallas Mavericks season was the 37th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). For the first time since 2013, the Mavs did not qualify for the playoffs. This was also their first losing season since 2000. On April 11, during their last home regular season game, the Mavericks honored former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo by joining the team as an honorary member that night, although he would not play any minutes for the Mavs that night, as he was not considered an official member of the team that night.",
"Title: 2010–11 Dallas Mavericks season\n\nThe 2010–11 Dallas Mavericks season was the 31st season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Mavericks won the NBA Championship after defeating the Miami Heat in 6 games in the 2011 NBA Finals. The Mavs playoff run came with a 6-game first round series against the Portland Trail Blazers, a series in which the Mavericks blew a 23-point lead in Game 4, but still won the series. In the conference semi-finals, the Mavericks run was motivated with a sweep of the champions of the previous two seasons, the Los Angeles Lakers. The series against the Lakers also became the birth of the Mavericks Royal Blue-Out games in the AAC, with almost all fans wearing T-shirts that read \"The Time is Now\". In the Western Conference Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder, the Mavericks won the last 3 games winning by 4th quarter comebacks, to win their second Western Conference Championship, and a trip to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2006, with a rematch against the Heat. Following a disappointing Game 1, the Mavericks pulled the biggest comeback in NBA Finals history in Game 2 to even the series at 1 game each. After a loss in Game 3, the Mavericks won the last two games in Dallas to take a 3–2 series lead heading to Game 6 in Miami. The Mavericks won their first NBA Championship in Game 6 to clinch the first major sports championship in the Dallas-Fort Worth area since the Dallas Stars in 1999, and the first title in Mavericks franchise history. The Mavericks are the third team to win an NBA title in the state of Texas, joining the Houston Rockets and San Antonio Spurs. The Mavericks are also the third team to win a major sports championship in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, joining the Dallas Cowboys' five Super Bowl titles and the Dallas Stars' only Stanley Cup, leaving the Texas Rangers as the only team to not win a major sports title in the area, as they have not won the World Series. The Mavericks championship parade was held on June 16, 2011 in downtown Dallas.",
"Title: Michael Payton\n\nMichael Payton (born March 5, 1970) is a former American football quarterback. He played college football for the Marshall Thundering Herd at Marshall University. He was the recipient of the 1992 Walter Payton Award, which is bestowed annually upon Division I-AA's most outstanding player. After college, he played one season in the Arena Football League for the Florida Bobcats."
] |
1,729
|
MedStar Washington Hospital Center and Howard University Hospital are both located in what city?
|
Washington, D.C.,
|
comparison
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"MedStar Washington Hospital Center",
"Howard University Hospital"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"University Hospital is a non-profit 581-bed private hospital located in downtown Augusta, Georgia.",
" Established in 1818, it is the second-oldest hospital in Georgia.",
" Although University Hospital is considered a teaching institution, it does not currently sponsor an academic program resulting in a degree.",
" University Hospital is no longer directly affiliated with the Medical College of Georgia or Augusta University.",
" University Hospital is a fully private hospital receiving no local or state funding."
],
"title": "University Hospital (Augusta, Georgia)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (also known as Southend University Hospital and commonly referred to as Southend Hospital) is an NHS hospital located in Westcliff-on-Sea, Southend-on-Sea, Essex, England.",
" Southend University Hospital has 157 consultants providing various services, and serves a catchment area with a population of about 350,000.",
" It has officially been designated cancer centre status, and has also gained NHS Foundation Trust status under the name Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.",
" More importantly Southend University Hospital is home to Funky Towers, broadcasting across Southend and surrounding areas, 103.7 on your dial, keep it real, keep it funky."
],
"title": "Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Howard University Hospital, previously known as Freedmen's Hospital, is a major hospital lcated in Washington, D.C., built on the site of the previous Griffith Stadium.",
" The hospital has served the African American community in the area for over 150 years, having been established in 1862 to cater for the medical needs of the thousands of African Americans who came to Washington during the Civil War, seeking their freedom.",
" The first hospital of its kind to provide medical treatment for former slaves, it later became the major hospital for the area's African-American community.",
" Following the closure of D.C. General Hospital, As of 2016, the hospital has the highest rate of wrongful death lawsuits of any health facility in Washington D.C. over the previous decade."
],
"title": "Howard University Hospital"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Georgetown University School of Medicine, a medical school opened in 1851, is one of Georgetown University's five graduate schools.",
" It is located on Reservoir Road in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC, adjacent to the University's main campus.",
" The School of Medicine works in association with the 609-bed Georgetown University Hospital, Washington Hospital Center, and nine other affiliated federal and community hospitals in the Washington metropolitan area.",
" Georgetown is the oldest Catholic medical school in the United States."
],
"title": "Georgetown University School of Medicine"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Brad Robert Wenstrup (born June 17, 1958) is an American politician, Army Reserve officer, and Doctor of Podiatric Medicine, who has been the U.S. Representative for Ohio 's 2 congressional district since 2013.",
" A Republican, he defeated U.S. Representative Jean Schmidt in the 2012 Republican primary election and Democrat William R. Smith in the 2012 general election.",
" Wenstrup is a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve and an Iraq War veteran.",
" After the shooting of Congressman Steve Scalise on the morning of June 14, 2017, Wenstrup attended to the wounded congressman until he was transported to MedStar Washington Hospital Center."
],
"title": "Brad Wenstrup"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis or Triboro Tuberculosis Hospital, later simply Triboro Hospital and now known as \"Building T\" or the \"T Building\", is a former municipal tuberculosis sanatorium and later a general hospital located on the campus of Queens Hospital Center in Jamaica, Queens, New York City.",
" Completed in 1941, it was merged with the adjacent Queens General Hospital to form Queens Hospital Center in the 1950s, and converted into a general hospital by the 1970s.",
" Now primarily used for administrative purposes, several plans have been proposed to reuse the site, or to preserve the building as a historic landmark."
],
"title": "Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Children’s National Medical Center (formerly DC Children’s Hospital) is ranked among the top 10 children’s hospitals in the country by \"U.S. News & World Report.\"",
" Located just north of the McMillan Reservoir and Howard University, it shares grounds with Washington Hospital Center, National Rehabilitation Hospital, and the DC Veterans Affairs Medical Center.",
" Kurt Newman, M.D., has served as the president and chief executive officer of Children’s National since 2011.",
" Children's National is a not-for-profit institution that performs more than 450,000 visits each year.",
" Featuring 303 beds and a Level IV NICU, Children's National is the regional referral center for pediatric emergency, trauma, cancer, cardiac and critical care as well as neonatology, orthopaedic surgery, neurology and neurosurgery."
],
"title": "Children's National Medical Center"
},
{
"sentences": [
"MedStar Washington Hospital Center is the largest private hospital in Washington, D.C. A member of MedStar Health, the not-for-profit Hospital Center is licensed for 926 beds.",
" Health services in primary, secondary and tertiary care are offered to adult and neonatal patients.",
" It also serves as a teaching hospital for Georgetown University School of Medicine."
],
"title": "MedStar Washington Hospital Center"
},
{
"sentences": [
"MedStar Georgetown University Hospital is one of the national capital area's oldest academic teaching hospitals.",
" It is a not-for-profit, acute care teaching and research facility located in the Georgetown neighborhood of the Northwest Quadrant of Washington, D.C.",
" MedStar Georgetown is co-located with the Georgetown University Medical Center and is affiliated with the Georgetown University School of Medicine.",
" Its clinical services represent one of the largest, most geographically diverse, and fully integrated healthcare and delivery networks in the area.",
" MedStar Georgetown is home to the internationally known Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, as well as centers of excellence in the neurology, neurosurgery, psychiatry, gastroenterology, transplant and vascular surgery.",
" Originally named Georgetown University Hospital, it became part of the MedStar Health network in 2000."
],
"title": "MedStar Georgetown University Hospital"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The New Freedmen's Clinic (first opened in the summer of 2009) is a free student-run health care clinic affiliated with Howard University Hospital (HUH) and Howard University College of Medicine (HUCM).",
" It gets its name from HUH's original name - Freedmen's Hospital.",
" It is currently located in the heart of Washington, DC, within HUH."
],
"title": "The New Freedmen's Clinic"
}
] |
[
"Title: University Hospital (Augusta, Georgia)\n\nUniversity Hospital is a non-profit 581-bed private hospital located in downtown Augusta, Georgia. Established in 1818, it is the second-oldest hospital in Georgia. Although University Hospital is considered a teaching institution, it does not currently sponsor an academic program resulting in a degree. University Hospital is no longer directly affiliated with the Medical College of Georgia or Augusta University. University Hospital is a fully private hospital receiving no local or state funding.",
"Title: Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust\n\nSouthend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (also known as Southend University Hospital and commonly referred to as Southend Hospital) is an NHS hospital located in Westcliff-on-Sea, Southend-on-Sea, Essex, England. Southend University Hospital has 157 consultants providing various services, and serves a catchment area with a population of about 350,000. It has officially been designated cancer centre status, and has also gained NHS Foundation Trust status under the name Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. More importantly Southend University Hospital is home to Funky Towers, broadcasting across Southend and surrounding areas, 103.7 on your dial, keep it real, keep it funky.",
"Title: Howard University Hospital\n\nHoward University Hospital, previously known as Freedmen's Hospital, is a major hospital lcated in Washington, D.C., built on the site of the previous Griffith Stadium. The hospital has served the African American community in the area for over 150 years, having been established in 1862 to cater for the medical needs of the thousands of African Americans who came to Washington during the Civil War, seeking their freedom. The first hospital of its kind to provide medical treatment for former slaves, it later became the major hospital for the area's African-American community. Following the closure of D.C. General Hospital, As of 2016, the hospital has the highest rate of wrongful death lawsuits of any health facility in Washington D.C. over the previous decade.",
"Title: Georgetown University School of Medicine\n\nGeorgetown University School of Medicine, a medical school opened in 1851, is one of Georgetown University's five graduate schools. It is located on Reservoir Road in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC, adjacent to the University's main campus. The School of Medicine works in association with the 609-bed Georgetown University Hospital, Washington Hospital Center, and nine other affiliated federal and community hospitals in the Washington metropolitan area. Georgetown is the oldest Catholic medical school in the United States.",
"Title: Brad Wenstrup\n\nBrad Robert Wenstrup (born June 17, 1958) is an American politician, Army Reserve officer, and Doctor of Podiatric Medicine, who has been the U.S. Representative for Ohio 's 2 congressional district since 2013. A Republican, he defeated U.S. Representative Jean Schmidt in the 2012 Republican primary election and Democrat William R. Smith in the 2012 general election. Wenstrup is a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve and an Iraq War veteran. After the shooting of Congressman Steve Scalise on the morning of June 14, 2017, Wenstrup attended to the wounded congressman until he was transported to MedStar Washington Hospital Center.",
"Title: Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis\n\nTriboro Hospital for Tuberculosis or Triboro Tuberculosis Hospital, later simply Triboro Hospital and now known as \"Building T\" or the \"T Building\", is a former municipal tuberculosis sanatorium and later a general hospital located on the campus of Queens Hospital Center in Jamaica, Queens, New York City. Completed in 1941, it was merged with the adjacent Queens General Hospital to form Queens Hospital Center in the 1950s, and converted into a general hospital by the 1970s. Now primarily used for administrative purposes, several plans have been proposed to reuse the site, or to preserve the building as a historic landmark.",
"Title: Children's National Medical Center\n\nChildren’s National Medical Center (formerly DC Children’s Hospital) is ranked among the top 10 children’s hospitals in the country by \"U.S. News & World Report.\" Located just north of the McMillan Reservoir and Howard University, it shares grounds with Washington Hospital Center, National Rehabilitation Hospital, and the DC Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Kurt Newman, M.D., has served as the president and chief executive officer of Children’s National since 2011. Children's National is a not-for-profit institution that performs more than 450,000 visits each year. Featuring 303 beds and a Level IV NICU, Children's National is the regional referral center for pediatric emergency, trauma, cancer, cardiac and critical care as well as neonatology, orthopaedic surgery, neurology and neurosurgery.",
"Title: MedStar Washington Hospital Center\n\nMedStar Washington Hospital Center is the largest private hospital in Washington, D.C. A member of MedStar Health, the not-for-profit Hospital Center is licensed for 926 beds. Health services in primary, secondary and tertiary care are offered to adult and neonatal patients. It also serves as a teaching hospital for Georgetown University School of Medicine.",
"Title: MedStar Georgetown University Hospital\n\nMedStar Georgetown University Hospital is one of the national capital area's oldest academic teaching hospitals. It is a not-for-profit, acute care teaching and research facility located in the Georgetown neighborhood of the Northwest Quadrant of Washington, D.C. MedStar Georgetown is co-located with the Georgetown University Medical Center and is affiliated with the Georgetown University School of Medicine. Its clinical services represent one of the largest, most geographically diverse, and fully integrated healthcare and delivery networks in the area. MedStar Georgetown is home to the internationally known Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, as well as centers of excellence in the neurology, neurosurgery, psychiatry, gastroenterology, transplant and vascular surgery. Originally named Georgetown University Hospital, it became part of the MedStar Health network in 2000.",
"Title: The New Freedmen's Clinic\n\nThe New Freedmen's Clinic (first opened in the summer of 2009) is a free student-run health care clinic affiliated with Howard University Hospital (HUH) and Howard University College of Medicine (HUCM). It gets its name from HUH's original name - Freedmen's Hospital. It is currently located in the heart of Washington, DC, within HUH."
] |
1,730
|
Spetz' writer, producer, director, and star, is a Russian mobster and crime boss in what area?
|
Vladivostok area
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Spets",
"Vitali Dyomochka"
],
"sent_id": [
2,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Still at Large is the third and final album released by Crime Boss.",
" Following the release of his successful second album, \"Conflicts & Confusion\", Crime Boss left Suave House Records and formed his own independent label called Crime Lab Records and released \"Still at Large\" through it.",
" Though his previous two albums were produced by Suave House's T-Mix, Crime Boss himself handled a majority of the album's production. '"
],
"title": "Still at Large"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vitali Dyomochka, also known as \"Bondar\", is a Russian mobster and crime boss in the Vladivostok area.",
" He is notable for writing, directing, producing and starring in a short TV series called \"Spets\", which aimed to show viewers the reality of the Russian underworld."
],
"title": "Vitali Dyomochka"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Alphonse Gabriel Capone ( ; ] ; January 17, 1899 – January 25, 1947), sometimes known by the nickname Scarface, was an American mobster, crime boss and businessman who attained fame during the Prohibition era as the co-founder and boss of the Chicago Outfit.",
" His seven-year reign as crime boss ended when he was 33 years old."
],
"title": "Al Capone"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Peter Magaddino (February 25, 1917 - August 1976) was a mobster in the Magaddino crime family of Buffalo, New York.",
" The son of crime boss Stefano \"The Undertaker\" Magaddino, Magaddino was a caporegime in the family and possibly an underboss."
],
"title": "Peter Magaddino"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Felice Maniero (born September 2, 1954) is a former Italian crime boss who was the head of the Mala del Brenta, a criminal organisation based in the region of Veneto throughout the 1980s and 1990s.",
" His nickname is \"Faccia d'Angelo\" (\"Angel Face\"), which he shares with the Milanese mobster Francis Turatello and Camorra boss Edoardo Contini.",
" He was born at Campolongo Maggiore, in the province of Venice.",
" Originally the leader of a small band of thieves, through connections with Sicilian mafiosi in exile in Veneto he was able to expand and enlarge his organization and modeled it after the mafia.",
" He was a prolific drug trafficker and was particularly notorious for taking part in many armed robberies, some with extremely high loots."
],
"title": "Felice Maniero"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Charles \"Lucky\" Luciano ( ; born Salvatore Lucania November 24, 1897 – January 26, 1962) was an Italian-American mobster and crime boss.",
" Luciano is considered the father of modern organized crime in the United States for the establishment of the first Commission.",
" He was also the first official boss of the modern Genovese crime family.",
" He was, along with his associates, instrumental in the development of the National Crime Syndicate."
],
"title": "Lucky Luciano"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Frank \"Chee-Chee\" DeMayo (born Franco DeMaio) (April 6, 1885- August 12, 1949?)",
" was a Kansas City, Missouri mobster who became the crime boss of the Kansas City crime family during the later years of Prohibition."
],
"title": "Frank DeMayo"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Semion Yudkovich Mogilevich (Ukrainian: Семен Ю́дкович Могиле́вич , tr: \"Semen Yudkovych Mohylevych\", ] ; born June 30, 1946) is a Ukrainian-born, alleged Russian organized crime boss, believed by European and United States federal law enforcement agencies to be the \"boss of bosses\" of most Russian Mafia syndicates in the world.",
" Mogilevich is believed to direct a vast criminal empire and is described by the FBI as \"the most dangerous mobster in the world.\"",
" He has been accused by the FBI of \"weapons trafficking, contract murders, extortion, drug trafficking, and prostitution on an international scale.\""
],
"title": "Semion Mogilevich"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tony Lip (born Frank Anthony Vallelonga; July 30, 1930January 4, 2013) was an American actor and occasional author, best known for his portrayal of crime boss Carmine Lupertazzi in the HBO series \"The Sopranos\".",
" He portrayed real-life Bonanno crime family mobster Philip Giaccone, in \"Donnie Brasco\", and real-life Lucchese crime family mobster Francesco Manzo, in \"Goodfellas\".",
" It was at the Copacabana Nightclub where he first met Francis Ford Coppola and Louis DiGiamo, leading to his film debut in \"The Godfather\" but in a very small role.",
" He also co-wrote his own book in 2005 named \"Shut Up And Eat!\""
],
"title": "Tony Lip"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Spets was a seven-part Russian TV series that aired on Ussuriysk T.V.",
" It chronicled the day-to-day activities of a group of gangsters in a Far East Russian town.",
" The show's writer, producer, director and star, Vitali Dyomochka, was a real life Russian mafia boss and the head of a podstava group.",
" A lot of the events depicted on the show were based on Dyomochka's real life experiences, such as an incident where a blackmail victim turns out to be a judge."
],
"title": "Spets"
}
] |
[
"Title: Still at Large\n\nStill at Large is the third and final album released by Crime Boss. Following the release of his successful second album, \"Conflicts & Confusion\", Crime Boss left Suave House Records and formed his own independent label called Crime Lab Records and released \"Still at Large\" through it. Though his previous two albums were produced by Suave House's T-Mix, Crime Boss himself handled a majority of the album's production. '",
"Title: Vitali Dyomochka\n\nVitali Dyomochka, also known as \"Bondar\", is a Russian mobster and crime boss in the Vladivostok area. He is notable for writing, directing, producing and starring in a short TV series called \"Spets\", which aimed to show viewers the reality of the Russian underworld.",
"Title: Al Capone\n\nAlphonse Gabriel Capone ( ; ] ; January 17, 1899 – January 25, 1947), sometimes known by the nickname Scarface, was an American mobster, crime boss and businessman who attained fame during the Prohibition era as the co-founder and boss of the Chicago Outfit. His seven-year reign as crime boss ended when he was 33 years old.",
"Title: Peter Magaddino\n\nPeter Magaddino (February 25, 1917 - August 1976) was a mobster in the Magaddino crime family of Buffalo, New York. The son of crime boss Stefano \"The Undertaker\" Magaddino, Magaddino was a caporegime in the family and possibly an underboss.",
"Title: Felice Maniero\n\nFelice Maniero (born September 2, 1954) is a former Italian crime boss who was the head of the Mala del Brenta, a criminal organisation based in the region of Veneto throughout the 1980s and 1990s. His nickname is \"Faccia d'Angelo\" (\"Angel Face\"), which he shares with the Milanese mobster Francis Turatello and Camorra boss Edoardo Contini. He was born at Campolongo Maggiore, in the province of Venice. Originally the leader of a small band of thieves, through connections with Sicilian mafiosi in exile in Veneto he was able to expand and enlarge his organization and modeled it after the mafia. He was a prolific drug trafficker and was particularly notorious for taking part in many armed robberies, some with extremely high loots.",
"Title: Lucky Luciano\n\nCharles \"Lucky\" Luciano ( ; born Salvatore Lucania November 24, 1897 – January 26, 1962) was an Italian-American mobster and crime boss. Luciano is considered the father of modern organized crime in the United States for the establishment of the first Commission. He was also the first official boss of the modern Genovese crime family. He was, along with his associates, instrumental in the development of the National Crime Syndicate.",
"Title: Frank DeMayo\n\nFrank \"Chee-Chee\" DeMayo (born Franco DeMaio) (April 6, 1885- August 12, 1949?) was a Kansas City, Missouri mobster who became the crime boss of the Kansas City crime family during the later years of Prohibition.",
"Title: Semion Mogilevich\n\nSemion Yudkovich Mogilevich (Ukrainian: Семен Ю́дкович Могиле́вич , tr: \"Semen Yudkovych Mohylevych\", ] ; born June 30, 1946) is a Ukrainian-born, alleged Russian organized crime boss, believed by European and United States federal law enforcement agencies to be the \"boss of bosses\" of most Russian Mafia syndicates in the world. Mogilevich is believed to direct a vast criminal empire and is described by the FBI as \"the most dangerous mobster in the world.\" He has been accused by the FBI of \"weapons trafficking, contract murders, extortion, drug trafficking, and prostitution on an international scale.\"",
"Title: Tony Lip\n\nTony Lip (born Frank Anthony Vallelonga; July 30, 1930January 4, 2013) was an American actor and occasional author, best known for his portrayal of crime boss Carmine Lupertazzi in the HBO series \"The Sopranos\". He portrayed real-life Bonanno crime family mobster Philip Giaccone, in \"Donnie Brasco\", and real-life Lucchese crime family mobster Francesco Manzo, in \"Goodfellas\". It was at the Copacabana Nightclub where he first met Francis Ford Coppola and Louis DiGiamo, leading to his film debut in \"The Godfather\" but in a very small role. He also co-wrote his own book in 2005 named \"Shut Up And Eat!\"",
"Title: Spets\n\nSpets was a seven-part Russian TV series that aired on Ussuriysk T.V. It chronicled the day-to-day activities of a group of gangsters in a Far East Russian town. The show's writer, producer, director and star, Vitali Dyomochka, was a real life Russian mafia boss and the head of a podstava group. A lot of the events depicted on the show were based on Dyomochka's real life experiences, such as an incident where a blackmail victim turns out to be a judge."
] |
1,731
|
Who wrote the short story that the 1995 cable television movie film loosely adapted from?
|
Kurt Vonnegut
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Harrison Bergeron (film)",
"Kurt Vonnegut"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Kurt Vonnegut Jr. ( ; November 11, 1922April 11, 2007) was an American writer.",
" In a career spanning over 50 years, Vonnegut published 14 novels, three short story collections, five plays, and five works of non-fiction.",
" He is most famous for his darkly satirical, best-selling novel \"Slaughterhouse-Five\" (1969)."
],
"title": "Kurt Vonnegut"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (codified at ) was an act of Congress passed on October 30, 1984 to promote competition and deregulate the cable television industry.",
" The act established a national policy for the regulation of cable television communications by federal, state, and local authorities.",
" Conservative Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona wrote and supported the act, which amended the Communications Act of 1934 with the insertion of \"Title VI—Cable Communications\".",
" After more than three years of debate, six provisions were enacted to represent the intricate compromise between cable operators and municipalities."
],
"title": "Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Madhu Rye (Gujarati: મધુ રાય ) is a Gujarati playwright, novelist and story writer.",
" Born in Gujarat and educated at Calcutta, he started writing in the 1960s and became known for his stories and plays.",
" His experience at the University of Hawaii introduced him to experimental writing and improvisations as writing aid, which later lead to a movement against absurd theatre.",
" He moved to the US in 1974 and has been since living there.",
" He chiefly wrote novels, short stories and plays.",
" His plays were successful and have been adapted into several languages and media.",
" He has adapted his novels into plays and some plays into novels.",
" The most notable is \"Kimble Ravenswood\" which later was loosely adapted into a Hindi TV series and a Hindi film, \"What's Your Rashee?",
"\"."
],
"title": "Madhu Rye"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Man in the Iron Mask is a 1977 television film loosely adapted from \"The Vicomte de Bragelonne\" by Alexandre Dumas and presenting several plot similarities with the 1939 film version.",
" It was produced by Norman Rosemont for ITC Entertainment, and starred Richard Chamberlain as King Louis XIV and his twin Philippe, Patrick McGoohan as Nicolas Fouquet, Ralph Richardson as Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Louis Jourdan as D'Artagnan, and Ian Holm as the Chevalier Duval.",
" Jenny Agutter plays Louis XIV's mistress, Louise de la Vallière and Vivien Merchant appears as Queen Marie-Therese.",
" It was directed by Mike Newell."
],
"title": "The Man in the Iron Mask (1977 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Time Machine is a 2002 American science fiction film loosely adapted from the 1895 novel of the same name by H. G. Wells and the screenplay of the 1960 film of the same name by David Duncan.",
" Arnold Leibovit served as executive producer and Simon Wells served as director, the great-grandson of the original author.",
" The film stars Guy Pearce, Jeremy Irons, Orlando Jones, Samantha Mumba, Mark Addy, Sienna Guillory and Phyllida Law, and includes a cameo by Alan Young, who also appeared in the 1960 film adaptation.",
" The film is set in New York City instead of London, and contains new story elements not present in the original novel, including a romantic backstory, a new scenario about how civilization was destroyed, and several new characters, such as an artificially intelligent hologram played by Orlando Jones, and a Morlock leader played by Jeremy Irons.",
" It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Makeup (John M. Elliot, Jr. and Barbara Lorenz) at the 75th Academy Awards, but lost to \"Frida\"."
],
"title": "The Time Machine (2002 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Usher is a 2004 film written and directed by Roger Leatherwood.",
" It is loosely adapted from the short story \"The Fall of the House of Usher\" by Edgar Allan Poe.",
" It tells the story of a young hitman who falls on hard times and gets a job in a movie theatre.",
" The theatre seems to have a personality of its own and the hitman, named Ash, finds himself losing his personality as he falls into a day-to-day work routine."
],
"title": "Usher (2004 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Dragon Knight is a series of fantasy novels begun in 1976 by American writer Gordon R. Dickson.",
" The first book, based on the short story \"St. Dragon and the George\", was loosely adapted in the 1982 animated movie \"The Flight of Dragons\" by Rankin/Bass.",
" The title here refers in part to an in-universe nomenclature, wherein the story's dragons use the name \"george\" as a synonym or substitute of \"human\", after 'St. George the Dragon-Slayer', and in part a reference to the latter."
],
"title": "Dragon Knight"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Harrison Bergeron is a 1995 cable television movie film loosely adapted from Kurt Vonnegut's 1961 short story of the same name.",
" It was produced for Showtime and first screened on August 13, 1995.",
" It was released to VHS in 1998."
],
"title": "Harrison Bergeron (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Wool Cap is a 2004 American cable television movie, an updated and Americanized version of the 1962 feature film \"Gigot\" starring Jackie Gleason, who wrote the original story."
],
"title": "The Wool Cap"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Access Communications Co-operative, Limited.",
" is a Canadian cable television provider, operating in Regina, Saskatchewan and several other communities in Saskatchewan.",
" It was previously known as Regina Cablevision Co-operative Ltd. but operated as Cable Regina from commencement of service in Regina in 1978 until April 2000, after acquisitions of cable television operations in Weyburn, Estevan and Yorkton and surrounding communities.",
" Dial-up Internet service was first offered in September 1995.",
" Cable modem broadband service followed in 1997.",
" On February 7, 2007, Access Communications launched its primary line telephone service in Regina in direct competition with Saskatchewan's government-owned ILEC, SaskTel.",
" On July 1, 2009, Access became Saskatchewan's largest cable provider with the purchase of Persona Cable's operations in Saskatchewan."
],
"title": "Access Communications"
}
] |
[
"Title: Kurt Vonnegut\n\nKurt Vonnegut Jr. ( ; November 11, 1922April 11, 2007) was an American writer. In a career spanning over 50 years, Vonnegut published 14 novels, three short story collections, five plays, and five works of non-fiction. He is most famous for his darkly satirical, best-selling novel \"Slaughterhouse-Five\" (1969).",
"Title: Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984\n\nThe Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (codified at ) was an act of Congress passed on October 30, 1984 to promote competition and deregulate the cable television industry. The act established a national policy for the regulation of cable television communications by federal, state, and local authorities. Conservative Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona wrote and supported the act, which amended the Communications Act of 1934 with the insertion of \"Title VI—Cable Communications\". After more than three years of debate, six provisions were enacted to represent the intricate compromise between cable operators and municipalities.",
"Title: Madhu Rye\n\nMadhu Rye (Gujarati: મધુ રાય ) is a Gujarati playwright, novelist and story writer. Born in Gujarat and educated at Calcutta, he started writing in the 1960s and became known for his stories and plays. His experience at the University of Hawaii introduced him to experimental writing and improvisations as writing aid, which later lead to a movement against absurd theatre. He moved to the US in 1974 and has been since living there. He chiefly wrote novels, short stories and plays. His plays were successful and have been adapted into several languages and media. He has adapted his novels into plays and some plays into novels. The most notable is \"Kimble Ravenswood\" which later was loosely adapted into a Hindi TV series and a Hindi film, \"What's Your Rashee? \".",
"Title: The Man in the Iron Mask (1977 film)\n\nThe Man in the Iron Mask is a 1977 television film loosely adapted from \"The Vicomte de Bragelonne\" by Alexandre Dumas and presenting several plot similarities with the 1939 film version. It was produced by Norman Rosemont for ITC Entertainment, and starred Richard Chamberlain as King Louis XIV and his twin Philippe, Patrick McGoohan as Nicolas Fouquet, Ralph Richardson as Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Louis Jourdan as D'Artagnan, and Ian Holm as the Chevalier Duval. Jenny Agutter plays Louis XIV's mistress, Louise de la Vallière and Vivien Merchant appears as Queen Marie-Therese. It was directed by Mike Newell.",
"Title: The Time Machine (2002 film)\n\nThe Time Machine is a 2002 American science fiction film loosely adapted from the 1895 novel of the same name by H. G. Wells and the screenplay of the 1960 film of the same name by David Duncan. Arnold Leibovit served as executive producer and Simon Wells served as director, the great-grandson of the original author. The film stars Guy Pearce, Jeremy Irons, Orlando Jones, Samantha Mumba, Mark Addy, Sienna Guillory and Phyllida Law, and includes a cameo by Alan Young, who also appeared in the 1960 film adaptation. The film is set in New York City instead of London, and contains new story elements not present in the original novel, including a romantic backstory, a new scenario about how civilization was destroyed, and several new characters, such as an artificially intelligent hologram played by Orlando Jones, and a Morlock leader played by Jeremy Irons. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Makeup (John M. Elliot, Jr. and Barbara Lorenz) at the 75th Academy Awards, but lost to \"Frida\".",
"Title: Usher (2004 film)\n\nUsher is a 2004 film written and directed by Roger Leatherwood. It is loosely adapted from the short story \"The Fall of the House of Usher\" by Edgar Allan Poe. It tells the story of a young hitman who falls on hard times and gets a job in a movie theatre. The theatre seems to have a personality of its own and the hitman, named Ash, finds himself losing his personality as he falls into a day-to-day work routine.",
"Title: Dragon Knight\n\nThe Dragon Knight is a series of fantasy novels begun in 1976 by American writer Gordon R. Dickson. The first book, based on the short story \"St. Dragon and the George\", was loosely adapted in the 1982 animated movie \"The Flight of Dragons\" by Rankin/Bass. The title here refers in part to an in-universe nomenclature, wherein the story's dragons use the name \"george\" as a synonym or substitute of \"human\", after 'St. George the Dragon-Slayer', and in part a reference to the latter.",
"Title: Harrison Bergeron (film)\n\nHarrison Bergeron is a 1995 cable television movie film loosely adapted from Kurt Vonnegut's 1961 short story of the same name. It was produced for Showtime and first screened on August 13, 1995. It was released to VHS in 1998.",
"Title: The Wool Cap\n\nThe Wool Cap is a 2004 American cable television movie, an updated and Americanized version of the 1962 feature film \"Gigot\" starring Jackie Gleason, who wrote the original story.",
"Title: Access Communications\n\nAccess Communications Co-operative, Limited. is a Canadian cable television provider, operating in Regina, Saskatchewan and several other communities in Saskatchewan. It was previously known as Regina Cablevision Co-operative Ltd. but operated as Cable Regina from commencement of service in Regina in 1978 until April 2000, after acquisitions of cable television operations in Weyburn, Estevan and Yorkton and surrounding communities. Dial-up Internet service was first offered in September 1995. Cable modem broadband service followed in 1997. On February 7, 2007, Access Communications launched its primary line telephone service in Regina in direct competition with Saskatchewan's government-owned ILEC, SaskTel. On July 1, 2009, Access became Saskatchewan's largest cable provider with the purchase of Persona Cable's operations in Saskatchewan."
] |
1,732
|
In what month was the Rihanna song that Mikky Ekko is best known for being featured on released?
|
January
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Mikky Ekko",
"Stay (Rihanna song)"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Mikky Ekko (born John Stephen Sudduth; December 17, 1984) is an American recording artist and record producer from Louisiana, signed to RCA Records.",
" He is best known for being featured on Rihanna's 2013 single \"Stay\", which has charted in multiple countries worldwide, becoming Ekko's first-charting material.",
" Ekko released his debut studio album, \"Time\" in January 2015 through RCA Records."
],
"title": "Mikky Ekko"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dimitri Tikovoï is a French record producer and DJ who has worked with bands including Placebo, The Horrors, Charli XCX, Mikky Ekko, Marianne Faithfull, and Nicola Roberts.",
" In 2002, Tikovoi released an album under the name \"Trash Palace\" (\"Positions\", featuring Brian Molko, John Cale, Marc Almond, Asia Argento and others)."
],
"title": "Dimitri Tikovoï"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"We Remain\" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera, taken from \"\", the soundtrack to the 2013 American science-fiction adventure film \"\".",
" It was released as the third single from the soundtrack on October 1, 2013, following Coldplay's \"Atlas\" and Sia's \"Elastic Heart\".",
" Composed by Ryan Tedder, Brent Kutzle and Mikky Ekko, \"We Remain\" is an arena pop power ballad about perseverance.",
" Contemporary music critics lauded the song for its sound and picked it as one of the highlights from the soundtrack.",
" The single appeared on a few national record charts including Belgium and South Korea."
],
"title": "We Remain"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Stay\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her seventh studio album, \"Unapologetic\" (2012).",
" It features guest vocals by Mikky Ekko, and was released as the second single from the album on January 7, 2013.",
" \"Stay\" was co-written by Ekko and Justin Parker.",
" The song's lyrical content speaks of temptation and the inability to resist true love.",
" Music critics were generally positive in their opinion regarding the balladry, with most describing it as a standout track on the album, though a few labeled it as boring.",
" The song was featured on the third-season finale of the TV Show Younger."
],
"title": "Stay (Rihanna song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"32 Levels is the debut studio album by American record producer Clams Casino.",
" It was released on July 15, 2016, by Columbia Records.",
" The album contains guest appearances from Lil B, A$AP Rocky, Vince Staples, Sam Dew, Mikky Ekko, Kelela, and Samuel T. Herring, among others."
],
"title": "32 Levels"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Rapor is an EP from Active Child released on October 22, 2013.",
" The first single for the EP was \"Evening Ceremony\", which was featured in the movie The Host.",
" The second single, \"She Cut Me\" was released on August 12, 2013.",
" The third single, \"Subtle\" featuring Mikky Ekko, was released on September 10, 2013."
],
"title": "Rapor"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kingdom is the upcoming second studio album by English electronic music production duo Gorgon City.",
" It is scheduled to be released in 2017, through Virgin EMI Records.",
" The album is set to feature the likes of Vaults, Tink, Mikky Ekko, Wyclef Jean and Elderbrook."
],
"title": "Kingdom (Gorgon City album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Déjà Vu is the fourteenth studio album by Italian DJ Giorgio Moroder, his first album, after a 23-years hiatus, since \"Forever Dancing\" (1992).",
" It was released on 12 June 2015, and features collaborations with: Britney Spears, Kylie Minogue, Kelis, Sia, Charli XCX, Mikky Ekko, Foxes and Matthew Koma, among others.",
" On 20 January 2015, the collaboration with Kylie Minogue, \"Right Here, Right Now\", was officially released, along with a video teaser."
],
"title": "Déjà Vu (Giorgio Moroder album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Summertime '06 is the debut studio double album by American rapper Vince Staples.",
" It was released on June 30, 2015, by ARTium Recordings, Blacksmith Records and Def Jam Recordings.",
" The album was primarily produced by No I.D., alongside a variety of high-profile record producers, including DJ Dahi, Clams Casino, Brian Kidd, Christian Rich and Mikky Ekko.",
" The album was supported by three singles: \"Señorita\", \"Get Paid\" and \"Norf Norf\"."
],
"title": "Summertime '06"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Time is the debut studio album by American recording artist Mikky Ekko.",
" The album was released worldwide on January 16, 2015 by RCA Records, except for the United States where it was released on January 20."
],
"title": "Time (Mikky Ekko album)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Mikky Ekko\n\nMikky Ekko (born John Stephen Sudduth; December 17, 1984) is an American recording artist and record producer from Louisiana, signed to RCA Records. He is best known for being featured on Rihanna's 2013 single \"Stay\", which has charted in multiple countries worldwide, becoming Ekko's first-charting material. Ekko released his debut studio album, \"Time\" in January 2015 through RCA Records.",
"Title: Dimitri Tikovoï\n\nDimitri Tikovoï is a French record producer and DJ who has worked with bands including Placebo, The Horrors, Charli XCX, Mikky Ekko, Marianne Faithfull, and Nicola Roberts. In 2002, Tikovoi released an album under the name \"Trash Palace\" (\"Positions\", featuring Brian Molko, John Cale, Marc Almond, Asia Argento and others).",
"Title: We Remain\n\n\"We Remain\" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera, taken from \"\", the soundtrack to the 2013 American science-fiction adventure film \"\". It was released as the third single from the soundtrack on October 1, 2013, following Coldplay's \"Atlas\" and Sia's \"Elastic Heart\". Composed by Ryan Tedder, Brent Kutzle and Mikky Ekko, \"We Remain\" is an arena pop power ballad about perseverance. Contemporary music critics lauded the song for its sound and picked it as one of the highlights from the soundtrack. The single appeared on a few national record charts including Belgium and South Korea.",
"Title: Stay (Rihanna song)\n\n\"Stay\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her seventh studio album, \"Unapologetic\" (2012). It features guest vocals by Mikky Ekko, and was released as the second single from the album on January 7, 2013. \"Stay\" was co-written by Ekko and Justin Parker. The song's lyrical content speaks of temptation and the inability to resist true love. Music critics were generally positive in their opinion regarding the balladry, with most describing it as a standout track on the album, though a few labeled it as boring. The song was featured on the third-season finale of the TV Show Younger.",
"Title: 32 Levels\n\n32 Levels is the debut studio album by American record producer Clams Casino. It was released on July 15, 2016, by Columbia Records. The album contains guest appearances from Lil B, A$AP Rocky, Vince Staples, Sam Dew, Mikky Ekko, Kelela, and Samuel T. Herring, among others.",
"Title: Rapor\n\nRapor is an EP from Active Child released on October 22, 2013. The first single for the EP was \"Evening Ceremony\", which was featured in the movie The Host. The second single, \"She Cut Me\" was released on August 12, 2013. The third single, \"Subtle\" featuring Mikky Ekko, was released on September 10, 2013.",
"Title: Kingdom (Gorgon City album)\n\nKingdom is the upcoming second studio album by English electronic music production duo Gorgon City. It is scheduled to be released in 2017, through Virgin EMI Records. The album is set to feature the likes of Vaults, Tink, Mikky Ekko, Wyclef Jean and Elderbrook.",
"Title: Déjà Vu (Giorgio Moroder album)\n\nDéjà Vu is the fourteenth studio album by Italian DJ Giorgio Moroder, his first album, after a 23-years hiatus, since \"Forever Dancing\" (1992). It was released on 12 June 2015, and features collaborations with: Britney Spears, Kylie Minogue, Kelis, Sia, Charli XCX, Mikky Ekko, Foxes and Matthew Koma, among others. On 20 January 2015, the collaboration with Kylie Minogue, \"Right Here, Right Now\", was officially released, along with a video teaser.",
"Title: Summertime '06\n\nSummertime '06 is the debut studio double album by American rapper Vince Staples. It was released on June 30, 2015, by ARTium Recordings, Blacksmith Records and Def Jam Recordings. The album was primarily produced by No I.D., alongside a variety of high-profile record producers, including DJ Dahi, Clams Casino, Brian Kidd, Christian Rich and Mikky Ekko. The album was supported by three singles: \"Señorita\", \"Get Paid\" and \"Norf Norf\".",
"Title: Time (Mikky Ekko album)\n\nTime is the debut studio album by American recording artist Mikky Ekko. The album was released worldwide on January 16, 2015 by RCA Records, except for the United States where it was released on January 20."
] |
1,733
|
Which band band released their first album in 2009, Starflyer 59 or Fun?
|
Fun
|
comparison
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Starflyer 59",
"Fun (band)"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
3
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"I Am the Portuguese Blues is the eighth full-length album released by Starflyer 59.",
" With this album, the band returned to its past in multiple ways.",
" The band's earlier albums had been characterized by loud guitars, but later albums saw the band progress to a softer sound, incorporating keyboards.",
" \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\" saw the return of the sound from earlier albums, as the band was stripped just to Jeff Cloud on bass, Frank Lenz on drums, and Jason Martin, the only person to perform on all of Starflyer 59's albums, handling guitar and vocal duties.",
" In addition, the album has a monochromatic cover, similar to those of Starflyer 59's first three albums (\"Silver\", \"Gold\", and \"Americana\").",
" Many of the songs on \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\" were written years earlier as demos for an album to follow \"Americana\".",
" They were eventually scrapped, as the band decided to take a different musical direction for \"The Fashion Focus\".",
" The old demos were refined and combined with several new songs for \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\".",
" In regards to the title of the album, Martin, the band's frontman said,"
],
"title": "I Am the Portuguese Blues"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Fashion Focus was the fourth full-length album released by Starflyer 59.",
" This release marked a significant change in the band's sound.",
" Where previous albums had focused on loud guitars in the style of shoegazer bands such as My Bloody Valentine and Ride, \"The Fashion Focus\" had a softer sound, with keyboards playing a larger role.",
" This album was also the first Starflyer 59 album not to feature a monochromatic cover."
],
"title": "The Fashion Focus"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jeff Cloud is a former bass guitar player for rock band Starflyer 59.",
" He joined the band after the album \"Americana\" had been recorded, and remained a member until after the recording of the album \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\".",
" From 1996 until 2002, Cloud was member of the electropop/synthpop group Joy Electric.",
" Cloud currently fronts his own band called Pony Express and has owned and operated an independent label called Velvet Blue Music since 1996, touting bands such as Fine China, Map, and Frank Lenz."
],
"title": "Jeff Cloud"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gold is the second album by Starflyer 59.",
" Just like their first album, the title of the second album was based on the gold cover chosen for the album's cover.",
" It was originally released in 1995.",
" In 2005, it was reissued with five bonus tracks from the band's Goodbyes Are Sad 7 inch single and Le Vainqueur EP."
],
"title": "Gold (Starflyer 59 album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Fell in Love at 22 is an EP released by the band Starflyer 59 after the release of the band's fourth album, \"The Fashion Focus\".",
" It contains the title track, which appeared on \"The Fashion Focus\", and four other songs, which were recorded at the same time but not included on the album."
],
"title": "Fell in Love at 22"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Old, the seventh full-length album released by Starflyer 59, was released on Tooth & Nail Records in 2003.",
" It is often considered one of the best albums by Starflyer 59 , as it reintroduces the band's rock oriented sound.",
" Many of the lyrics of the songs on this album revolve around the theme of growing older."
],
"title": "Old (Starflyer 59 album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Fun (stylized as fun.)",
" is an American pop rock band based in New York City.",
" The band was formed by Nate Ruess (former lead singer of The Format), with Andrew Dost (of Anathallo), and Jack Antonoff (of Steel Train and Bleachers).",
" Fun has released two albums: \"Aim and Ignite\" in August 2009 and \"Some Nights\" in February 2012."
],
"title": "Fun (band)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Starflyer 59 is an alternative rock band from Riverside, California that was founded in 1993 by Jason Martin, brother of Ronnie Martin of Joy Electric.",
" While Jason Martin has written nearly all of Starflyer 59's songs, the band has included a number of different musicians over the years, including Jeff Cloud, Frank Lenz, and Richard Swift.",
" The band's sound was initially identified as an outgrowth of the shoegaze movement of the early 1990s, but the band's music has gradually evolved to the point of little resemblance to that of its early days."
],
"title": "Starflyer 59"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Starflyer 59, usually known as Silver, is the self-titled debut album of rock band Starflyer 59, released in 1994 on Tooth & Nail Records.",
" It has acquired the name \"Silver\" due to its cover art."
],
"title": "Silver (Starflyer 59 album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Calico Sunset is a Bakersfield, California-based electropop band, comprising Joseph and Jenny.",
" Calico Sunset is signed to Jeff Cloud's (Starflyer 59 and Joy Electric) Velvet Blue Music.",
" Calico Sunset's debut album on VBM, \"Deep Deep Paranoia,\" was produced by and featured Frank Lenz (Starflyer 59, Pedro the Lion, headphones) and featured Josh Dooley (MAP, Starflyer 59) on guitar.",
" Shortly after the release of \"Deep Deep Paranoia,\" Calico Sunset joined Joy Electric on a national tour.",
" Calico Sunset has also shared the stage with such bands as Moving Units, The Fever, Starflyer 59, Freezepop, Broken Spindles (Joel from The Faint's solo project)."
],
"title": "Calico Sunset"
}
] |
[
"Title: I Am the Portuguese Blues\n\nI Am the Portuguese Blues is the eighth full-length album released by Starflyer 59. With this album, the band returned to its past in multiple ways. The band's earlier albums had been characterized by loud guitars, but later albums saw the band progress to a softer sound, incorporating keyboards. \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\" saw the return of the sound from earlier albums, as the band was stripped just to Jeff Cloud on bass, Frank Lenz on drums, and Jason Martin, the only person to perform on all of Starflyer 59's albums, handling guitar and vocal duties. In addition, the album has a monochromatic cover, similar to those of Starflyer 59's first three albums (\"Silver\", \"Gold\", and \"Americana\"). Many of the songs on \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\" were written years earlier as demos for an album to follow \"Americana\". They were eventually scrapped, as the band decided to take a different musical direction for \"The Fashion Focus\". The old demos were refined and combined with several new songs for \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\". In regards to the title of the album, Martin, the band's frontman said,",
"Title: The Fashion Focus\n\nThe Fashion Focus was the fourth full-length album released by Starflyer 59. This release marked a significant change in the band's sound. Where previous albums had focused on loud guitars in the style of shoegazer bands such as My Bloody Valentine and Ride, \"The Fashion Focus\" had a softer sound, with keyboards playing a larger role. This album was also the first Starflyer 59 album not to feature a monochromatic cover.",
"Title: Jeff Cloud\n\nJeff Cloud is a former bass guitar player for rock band Starflyer 59. He joined the band after the album \"Americana\" had been recorded, and remained a member until after the recording of the album \"I Am the Portuguese Blues\". From 1996 until 2002, Cloud was member of the electropop/synthpop group Joy Electric. Cloud currently fronts his own band called Pony Express and has owned and operated an independent label called Velvet Blue Music since 1996, touting bands such as Fine China, Map, and Frank Lenz.",
"Title: Gold (Starflyer 59 album)\n\nGold is the second album by Starflyer 59. Just like their first album, the title of the second album was based on the gold cover chosen for the album's cover. It was originally released in 1995. In 2005, it was reissued with five bonus tracks from the band's Goodbyes Are Sad 7 inch single and Le Vainqueur EP.",
"Title: Fell in Love at 22\n\nFell in Love at 22 is an EP released by the band Starflyer 59 after the release of the band's fourth album, \"The Fashion Focus\". It contains the title track, which appeared on \"The Fashion Focus\", and four other songs, which were recorded at the same time but not included on the album.",
"Title: Old (Starflyer 59 album)\n\nOld, the seventh full-length album released by Starflyer 59, was released on Tooth & Nail Records in 2003. It is often considered one of the best albums by Starflyer 59 , as it reintroduces the band's rock oriented sound. Many of the lyrics of the songs on this album revolve around the theme of growing older.",
"Title: Fun (band)\n\nFun (stylized as fun.) is an American pop rock band based in New York City. The band was formed by Nate Ruess (former lead singer of The Format), with Andrew Dost (of Anathallo), and Jack Antonoff (of Steel Train and Bleachers). Fun has released two albums: \"Aim and Ignite\" in August 2009 and \"Some Nights\" in February 2012.",
"Title: Starflyer 59\n\nStarflyer 59 is an alternative rock band from Riverside, California that was founded in 1993 by Jason Martin, brother of Ronnie Martin of Joy Electric. While Jason Martin has written nearly all of Starflyer 59's songs, the band has included a number of different musicians over the years, including Jeff Cloud, Frank Lenz, and Richard Swift. The band's sound was initially identified as an outgrowth of the shoegaze movement of the early 1990s, but the band's music has gradually evolved to the point of little resemblance to that of its early days.",
"Title: Silver (Starflyer 59 album)\n\nStarflyer 59, usually known as Silver, is the self-titled debut album of rock band Starflyer 59, released in 1994 on Tooth & Nail Records. It has acquired the name \"Silver\" due to its cover art.",
"Title: Calico Sunset\n\nCalico Sunset is a Bakersfield, California-based electropop band, comprising Joseph and Jenny. Calico Sunset is signed to Jeff Cloud's (Starflyer 59 and Joy Electric) Velvet Blue Music. Calico Sunset's debut album on VBM, \"Deep Deep Paranoia,\" was produced by and featured Frank Lenz (Starflyer 59, Pedro the Lion, headphones) and featured Josh Dooley (MAP, Starflyer 59) on guitar. Shortly after the release of \"Deep Deep Paranoia,\" Calico Sunset joined Joy Electric on a national tour. Calico Sunset has also shared the stage with such bands as Moving Units, The Fever, Starflyer 59, Freezepop, Broken Spindles (Joel from The Faint's solo project)."
] |
1,734
|
Lalla Miranda played the title role in this opera in three acts, written by whom?
|
Léo Delibes
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Lalla Miranda",
"Lakmé"
],
"sent_id": [
9,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Akhnaten is an opera in three acts based on the life and religious convictions of the pharaoh Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV), written by the American minimalist composer Philip Glass in 1983.",
" \"Akhnaten\" had its world premiere on March 24, 1984, at the Stuttgart State Theatre, under the German title \"Echnaton\".",
" Paul Esswood sang the title role, German director Achim Freyer staged the opera in an abstract style with highly ritualistic movements.",
" The American premiere was held on October 12, 1984, at the Houston Grand Opera, where Glass's opera \"The Making of the Representative for Planet 8\" also premiered."
],
"title": "Akhnaten (opera)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Singing Lesson is a chamber opera in three acts with music and libretto by Matthew Davidson.",
" Based on three short stories (\"The Garden Party\", \"The Singing Lesson\", and \"The Doll’s House\") by New Zealand author Katherine Mansfield, the opera is very unusual in several respects.",
" For instance, the three acts are not connected by a conventional plot, but instead by literary themes.",
" Those themes are class conflict (Acts 1 and 3) and a marriage of convenience (Act 2).",
" However, the overall literary theme for all three acts is delusion."
],
"title": "The Singing Lesson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Roque Centurión Miranda (August 15, 1900 in Carapeguá-January 31, 1960 in Asunción) was a Paraguayan playwright, theater director and stage, radio and film actor.",
" Enriched by a creative and enthusiastic group of young actors and playwrights including Luis Ruffinelli, Miguel Pecci Saavedra, Francisco Martín Barrios, Facundo Recalde, Benigno Villa and Arturo Alsina, Centurión Miranda is remembered as one of the true creators of the Paraguayan theatre.",
" He began working as an actor.",
" In 1926 he wrote his first play, \"Cupido sudando\", a comedy in three acts, earning him critical acclaim after it was performed.",
" Later, in 1932, in collaboration with Josefina Pla he wrote \"Episodios chaqueños\".",
" His 1933 Guaraní language drama \"Tuyú\" in three acts which dealt with young Chaco blood spilled by Paraguayan soldiers was a major success and is considered by critics to be the cornerstone of the Guaraní theatre."
],
"title": "Roque Centurión Miranda"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lalla Miranda (1874-1944) was an Australian coloratura soprano who was primarily active in Belgium, France, and Great Britain.",
" Born in Melbourne, she was the daughter of opera singers David Miranda and Annetta Hirst and the older sister of opera singer Beatrice Miranda.",
" After studies in London and Paris, she made her professional opera debut in The Hague in 1898.",
" She then appeared in numerous operas in Amsterdam in successive years.",
" In 1899 she was a resident artist at La Monnaie.",
" She made several appearances at the Palais Garnier in Paris and at theatres in the French Provences during the first two decades of the 20th century.",
" In 1900-1901 and from 1907-1911 she was committed the Royal Opera House on London.",
" In 1910 she was committed to both the Manhattan Opera Company and the Philadelphia Opera Company.",
" She notably opened the 1910 season at the Manhattan Opera House in the title role of Donizetti's \"Lucia di Lammermoor\", a role for which she was famous.",
" In New York and Philadelphia she also sang Gilda in \"Rigoletto\", Olympia in \"The Tales of Hoffmann\", and the title role in \"Lakmé\".",
" After 1918 she was primarily active with the Carl Rosa Opera Company.",
" She retired in the early 1920s.",
" She made only a few recordings on the Pathé Records label."
],
"title": "Lalla Miranda"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gloria is a tragic opera in three acts by Francesco Cilea with an Italian libretto by Arturo Colautti.",
" A variation on the Romeo and Juliet story and set in 14th century Siena, the libretto is based on Victorien Sardou's 1874 play \"La Haine\" (\"Hatred\").",
" The opera premiered on 15 April 1907 at La Scala conducted by Arturo Toscanini with Salomea Krusceniski in the title role.",
" \"Gloria\" was a failure at its premiere when it was withdrawn after two performances and fared little better in the 1932 revised version, although there have been two late 20th century revivals.",
" It proved to be Cilea's last staged opera.",
" In the 43 years following the premiere of \"Gloria\" he worked on two or three further operas which were never performed and continued to compose chamber and orchestral music."
],
"title": "Gloria (opera)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Macbeth is an opera in three acts, with music by Ernest Bloch to a libretto by Edmond Fleg, after the eponymous play of William Shakespeare.",
" Bloch composed the opera between 1904 and 1906, but it did not receive its first performance until 30 November 1910 by the Opéra-Comique in Paris with Henri Albers in the title role and conducted by François Ruhlmann.",
" Alex Cohen has written of quarrels within the cast that contributed to the opera's poorly received premiere."
],
"title": "Macbeth (Bloch)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lakmé is an opera in three acts by Léo Delibes to a French libretto by Edmond Gondinet and Philippe Gille."
],
"title": "Lakmé"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Titon et l'Aurore (English: \"Tithonus and Aurora\") is an opera in three acts and a prologue by the French composer Jean-Joseph de Mondonville which was first performed at the Académie royale de musique, Paris on 9 January 1753.",
" The authorship of the libretto has been subject to debate; Mondonville's contemporaries ascribed the prologue to Antoine Houdar de la Motte and the three acts of the opera to the Abbé de La Marre.",
" \"Titon et l'Aurore\" belongs to the genre known as the \"pastorale héroïque\".",
" The work played an important role in the so-called Querelle des Bouffons, a dispute over the relative merits of the French and Italian operatic traditions which dominated the intellectual life of Paris in the early 1750s.",
" The tremendous success of Mondonville's opera at its premiere was an important victory for the French camp (although their Italian rivals claimed that this was because they had been excluded from their seats by members of the army).",
" \"Titon\" was one of Mondonville's most popular works and went on to enjoy several revivals during his lifetime."
],
"title": "Titon et l'Aurore"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Thaïs (] ) is an opera, a \"comédie lyrique\" in three acts and seven tableaux, by Jules Massenet to a French libretto by Louis Gallet, based on the novel \"Thaïs\" by Anatole France.",
" It was first performed at the Opéra Garnier in Paris on 16 March 1894, starring the American soprano Sibyl Sanderson, for whom Massenet had written the title role.",
" The original production was directed by Alexandre Lapissida, with costumes designed by Charles Bianchini and sets by Marcel Jambon (act 1, scene 1; act 3) and Eugène Carpezat (act 1, scene 2; act 2).",
" The opera was later revised by the composer and was premiered at the same opera house on 13 April 1898."
],
"title": "Thaïs (opera)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Orlando paladino (English: \"The Paladin Orlando\"), Hob.",
" 28/11, is an opera in three acts by Joseph Haydn which was first performed at Eszterháza on 6 December 1782.",
" The libretto by Nunziano Porta is based on another libretto, \"Le pazzie d'Orlando\", by Carlo Francesco Badini (set by the composer P.A. Guglielmi in 1771), itself inspired by Ariosto's epic poem \"Orlando furioso\".",
" The opera was described as a \"dramma eroicomico\" and the plot mixes heroic and comic elements.",
" It was Haydn's most popular opera during his lifetime.",
" The Pennsylvania Opera Theater presented the United States premiere of the work at the Trocadero Theater, Philadelphia in March 1982 with John Gilmore in the title role."
],
"title": "Orlando paladino"
}
] |
[
"Title: Akhnaten (opera)\n\nAkhnaten is an opera in three acts based on the life and religious convictions of the pharaoh Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV), written by the American minimalist composer Philip Glass in 1983. \"Akhnaten\" had its world premiere on March 24, 1984, at the Stuttgart State Theatre, under the German title \"Echnaton\". Paul Esswood sang the title role, German director Achim Freyer staged the opera in an abstract style with highly ritualistic movements. The American premiere was held on October 12, 1984, at the Houston Grand Opera, where Glass's opera \"The Making of the Representative for Planet 8\" also premiered.",
"Title: The Singing Lesson\n\nThe Singing Lesson is a chamber opera in three acts with music and libretto by Matthew Davidson. Based on three short stories (\"The Garden Party\", \"The Singing Lesson\", and \"The Doll’s House\") by New Zealand author Katherine Mansfield, the opera is very unusual in several respects. For instance, the three acts are not connected by a conventional plot, but instead by literary themes. Those themes are class conflict (Acts 1 and 3) and a marriage of convenience (Act 2). However, the overall literary theme for all three acts is delusion.",
"Title: Roque Centurión Miranda\n\nRoque Centurión Miranda (August 15, 1900 in Carapeguá-January 31, 1960 in Asunción) was a Paraguayan playwright, theater director and stage, radio and film actor. Enriched by a creative and enthusiastic group of young actors and playwrights including Luis Ruffinelli, Miguel Pecci Saavedra, Francisco Martín Barrios, Facundo Recalde, Benigno Villa and Arturo Alsina, Centurión Miranda is remembered as one of the true creators of the Paraguayan theatre. He began working as an actor. In 1926 he wrote his first play, \"Cupido sudando\", a comedy in three acts, earning him critical acclaim after it was performed. Later, in 1932, in collaboration with Josefina Pla he wrote \"Episodios chaqueños\". His 1933 Guaraní language drama \"Tuyú\" in three acts which dealt with young Chaco blood spilled by Paraguayan soldiers was a major success and is considered by critics to be the cornerstone of the Guaraní theatre.",
"Title: Lalla Miranda\n\nLalla Miranda (1874-1944) was an Australian coloratura soprano who was primarily active in Belgium, France, and Great Britain. Born in Melbourne, she was the daughter of opera singers David Miranda and Annetta Hirst and the older sister of opera singer Beatrice Miranda. After studies in London and Paris, she made her professional opera debut in The Hague in 1898. She then appeared in numerous operas in Amsterdam in successive years. In 1899 she was a resident artist at La Monnaie. She made several appearances at the Palais Garnier in Paris and at theatres in the French Provences during the first two decades of the 20th century. In 1900-1901 and from 1907-1911 she was committed the Royal Opera House on London. In 1910 she was committed to both the Manhattan Opera Company and the Philadelphia Opera Company. She notably opened the 1910 season at the Manhattan Opera House in the title role of Donizetti's \"Lucia di Lammermoor\", a role for which she was famous. In New York and Philadelphia she also sang Gilda in \"Rigoletto\", Olympia in \"The Tales of Hoffmann\", and the title role in \"Lakmé\". After 1918 she was primarily active with the Carl Rosa Opera Company. She retired in the early 1920s. She made only a few recordings on the Pathé Records label.",
"Title: Gloria (opera)\n\nGloria is a tragic opera in three acts by Francesco Cilea with an Italian libretto by Arturo Colautti. A variation on the Romeo and Juliet story and set in 14th century Siena, the libretto is based on Victorien Sardou's 1874 play \"La Haine\" (\"Hatred\"). The opera premiered on 15 April 1907 at La Scala conducted by Arturo Toscanini with Salomea Krusceniski in the title role. \"Gloria\" was a failure at its premiere when it was withdrawn after two performances and fared little better in the 1932 revised version, although there have been two late 20th century revivals. It proved to be Cilea's last staged opera. In the 43 years following the premiere of \"Gloria\" he worked on two or three further operas which were never performed and continued to compose chamber and orchestral music.",
"Title: Macbeth (Bloch)\n\nMacbeth is an opera in three acts, with music by Ernest Bloch to a libretto by Edmond Fleg, after the eponymous play of William Shakespeare. Bloch composed the opera between 1904 and 1906, but it did not receive its first performance until 30 November 1910 by the Opéra-Comique in Paris with Henri Albers in the title role and conducted by François Ruhlmann. Alex Cohen has written of quarrels within the cast that contributed to the opera's poorly received premiere.",
"Title: Lakmé\n\nLakmé is an opera in three acts by Léo Delibes to a French libretto by Edmond Gondinet and Philippe Gille.",
"Title: Titon et l'Aurore\n\nTiton et l'Aurore (English: \"Tithonus and Aurora\") is an opera in three acts and a prologue by the French composer Jean-Joseph de Mondonville which was first performed at the Académie royale de musique, Paris on 9 January 1753. The authorship of the libretto has been subject to debate; Mondonville's contemporaries ascribed the prologue to Antoine Houdar de la Motte and the three acts of the opera to the Abbé de La Marre. \"Titon et l'Aurore\" belongs to the genre known as the \"pastorale héroïque\". The work played an important role in the so-called Querelle des Bouffons, a dispute over the relative merits of the French and Italian operatic traditions which dominated the intellectual life of Paris in the early 1750s. The tremendous success of Mondonville's opera at its premiere was an important victory for the French camp (although their Italian rivals claimed that this was because they had been excluded from their seats by members of the army). \"Titon\" was one of Mondonville's most popular works and went on to enjoy several revivals during his lifetime.",
"Title: Thaïs (opera)\n\nThaïs (] ) is an opera, a \"comédie lyrique\" in three acts and seven tableaux, by Jules Massenet to a French libretto by Louis Gallet, based on the novel \"Thaïs\" by Anatole France. It was first performed at the Opéra Garnier in Paris on 16 March 1894, starring the American soprano Sibyl Sanderson, for whom Massenet had written the title role. The original production was directed by Alexandre Lapissida, with costumes designed by Charles Bianchini and sets by Marcel Jambon (act 1, scene 1; act 3) and Eugène Carpezat (act 1, scene 2; act 2). The opera was later revised by the composer and was premiered at the same opera house on 13 April 1898.",
"Title: Orlando paladino\n\nOrlando paladino (English: \"The Paladin Orlando\"), Hob. 28/11, is an opera in three acts by Joseph Haydn which was first performed at Eszterháza on 6 December 1782. The libretto by Nunziano Porta is based on another libretto, \"Le pazzie d'Orlando\", by Carlo Francesco Badini (set by the composer P.A. Guglielmi in 1771), itself inspired by Ariosto's epic poem \"Orlando furioso\". The opera was described as a \"dramma eroicomico\" and the plot mixes heroic and comic elements. It was Haydn's most popular opera during his lifetime. The Pennsylvania Opera Theater presented the United States premiere of the work at the Trocadero Theater, Philadelphia in March 1982 with John Gilmore in the title role."
] |
1,735
|
Did Colour Genie and NEC PC-100 both originate in the same country?
|
no
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Colour Genie",
"NEC PC-100"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The AY-3-8910 is a 3-voice programmable sound generator (PSG) designed by General Instrument in 1978, initially for use with their 16-bit CP1610 or one of the PIC1650 series of 8-bit microcomputers.",
" The AY-3-8910 and its variants became popular chips in many arcade games and pinball machines, and were used on, among others, the Intellivision and Vectrex video game consoles, Amstrad CPC, Oric 1, Colour Genie, Elektor TV Games Computer, MSX and Sinclair ZX Spectrum 128/+2/+3 home computers as well as the Mockingboard and Cricket sound cards for the Apple II family."
],
"title": "General Instrument AY-3-8910"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Tereshchenko Diamond, sometimes known as the Tereshchenko Blue, is a 42.92 carat diamond of blue colour that is cut in the pear shape.",
" The diamond is rare, belonging to the Type IIb diamond, and believed to originate from India.",
" The Tereshchenko diamond is the second biggest blue diamond in the world.",
" Shaped by Cartier for a private order by the Tereshchenko family.",
" The diamond is in the rare Type IIb diamond."
],
"title": "Tereshchenko diamond"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The New England Conservatory of Music (NEC) in Boston, Massachusetts, is the oldest independent school of music in the United States, and it is widely recognized as one of the country's most distinguished music schools.",
" NEC is especially known for its strings, piano, woodwinds, and brass departments, and its prestigious chamber music program."
],
"title": "New England Conservatory of Music"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Belgium is a source, destination, and transit country for men, women, and children subjected to trafficking in persons, specifically forced labor and forced prostitution.",
" Victims originate in Eastern Europe, Africa, East Asia, as well as Brazil and India.",
" Some victims are smuggled through Belgium to other European countries, where they are subjected to forced labor and forced prostitution.",
" Male victims are subjected to forced labor and exploitation in restaurants, bars, sweatshops, horticulture sites, fruit farms, construction sites, and retail shops.",
" There were reportedly seven Belgian women subjected to forced prostitution in Luxembourg in 2009.",
" According to a 2009 ECPAT Report, the majority of girls and children subjected to forced prostitution in Belgium originate from Eastern Europe and Nigeria; some young foreign boys are exploited in prostitution in major cities in the country.",
" Local observers also report that a large portion of children trafficked in Belgium are unaccompanied, vulnerable asylum seekers and refugees.",
" According to the Belgian immigration office, the government identified eight children between January and June 2009 as trafficked.",
" Foreign workers continued to be subjected to involuntary domestic servitude in Belgium, some involving members of the international diplomatic community posted in Belgium."
],
"title": "Human trafficking in Belgium"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Political colours are colours used to represent a political party, either officially or unofficially.",
" Parties in different countries with similar ideologies sometimes use similar colours.",
" For example, the colour red symbolises left-wing ideologies in many countries (\"cf.\" Red Flag, Red Army, Red Scare), while the colour orange symbolizes Christian democratic political ideology.",
" However, the political associations of a given colour vary from country to country; for example, red is also the colour associated with the conservative Republican Party in the United States.",
" Politicians making public appearances will often identify themselves by wearing rosettes, flowers or ties in the colour of their political party."
],
"title": "Political colour"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The inclusion of sex and nudity in video games has been a controversial topic since the early days of the industry.",
" While many video games have used scantily clad images or characters to sell or enhance games, some go further, using sex acts or nudity as a character motivation, in-game reward, or simply as a gameplay element.",
" These games originate worldwide, on most platforms and can be of any video game genre.",
" While releases in Europe and North America have been sporadic and often unlicensed, Japan has seen the emergence of a pornographic video game subgenre—eroge, first appearing on the NEC PC-88 computer platform in the 1980s.",
" In the 1990s NEC (on the PC Engine series and PC-FX) and Sega (on Saturn) were the only companies who officially allowed sexual content on their consoles in Japan, but eroge was more prevalent on the NEC PC-98 and FM Towns computer platforms."
],
"title": "Sex and nudity in video games"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Republic of the Congo (ROC) is a destination and transit country for children subjected to trafficking in persons for the purposes of forced labor and forced prostitution.",
" Most sources agree that up to 80 percent of all trafficked children originate from Benin, with girls comprising 90 percent of that group.",
" Togo, Mali, Guinea, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Senegal are also sources of victims found in the Congolese republic.",
" Internally trafficked children represent 10 percent of all child victims, the majority of which originate from the Pool region.",
" Many child victims are subjected to forced labor, including in domestic work, market vending and fishing; girls are also exploited in the sex trade.",
" Child victims generally experience harsh treatment, long work hours, and almost no access to education or health services; they receive little or no remuneration for their work.",
" Other village children, however, live voluntarily with extended relatives in cities, attend school, and do housework in exchange for food, in a traditional cultural and familial pattern that does not entail abuse."
],
"title": "Human trafficking in the Republic of the Congo"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The NEC PC-100 was a Japanese home computer available on October 13, 1983.",
" It operated on 8086 CPU 7 MHz, 128KB RAM, 128KB VRAM, a Japanese language capable keyboard and a two button mouse.",
" It had three models and its color monitor, \"PC-KD651\", which could be used vertically or horizontally, had the price tag of 198,000 yen.",
" Its biggest advantage over other computers of that time was its high graphical capability of 720 by 512 with a selection of 16 color out of 512 color available on its high end \"model30\".",
" Its OS was MS-DOS and was also equipped with a spreadsheet program \"Maruchipuran\" (Multiplan) and a text editor \"JS-WORD\" as well as the game Lode Runner."
],
"title": "NEC PC-100"
},
{
"sentences": [
"PAL-M is the analog TV system used in Brazil since February 19, 1972.",
" At that time, Brazil was the first South American country to broadcast in colour.",
" Colour TV broadcast began on September 1972 when the TV networks Globo, Tupi and Bandeirantes TV transmitted the Caxias do Sul Grape Festival.",
" Transition from black and white to colour was not complete until 1977.",
" Two years later, in 1979 colour broadcast nationwide in Brazil was commonplace."
],
"title": "PAL-M"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The EACA EG2000 Colour Genie was a computer produced by Hong Kong-based manufacturer EACA and introduced in Germany in August 1982.",
" It followed their earlier Video Genie I and II computers and was released around the same time as the business-oriented Video Genie III."
],
"title": "Colour Genie"
}
] |
[
"Title: General Instrument AY-3-8910\n\nThe AY-3-8910 is a 3-voice programmable sound generator (PSG) designed by General Instrument in 1978, initially for use with their 16-bit CP1610 or one of the PIC1650 series of 8-bit microcomputers. The AY-3-8910 and its variants became popular chips in many arcade games and pinball machines, and were used on, among others, the Intellivision and Vectrex video game consoles, Amstrad CPC, Oric 1, Colour Genie, Elektor TV Games Computer, MSX and Sinclair ZX Spectrum 128/+2/+3 home computers as well as the Mockingboard and Cricket sound cards for the Apple II family.",
"Title: Tereshchenko diamond\n\nThe Tereshchenko Diamond, sometimes known as the Tereshchenko Blue, is a 42.92 carat diamond of blue colour that is cut in the pear shape. The diamond is rare, belonging to the Type IIb diamond, and believed to originate from India. The Tereshchenko diamond is the second biggest blue diamond in the world. Shaped by Cartier for a private order by the Tereshchenko family. The diamond is in the rare Type IIb diamond.",
"Title: New England Conservatory of Music\n\nThe New England Conservatory of Music (NEC) in Boston, Massachusetts, is the oldest independent school of music in the United States, and it is widely recognized as one of the country's most distinguished music schools. NEC is especially known for its strings, piano, woodwinds, and brass departments, and its prestigious chamber music program.",
"Title: Human trafficking in Belgium\n\nBelgium is a source, destination, and transit country for men, women, and children subjected to trafficking in persons, specifically forced labor and forced prostitution. Victims originate in Eastern Europe, Africa, East Asia, as well as Brazil and India. Some victims are smuggled through Belgium to other European countries, where they are subjected to forced labor and forced prostitution. Male victims are subjected to forced labor and exploitation in restaurants, bars, sweatshops, horticulture sites, fruit farms, construction sites, and retail shops. There were reportedly seven Belgian women subjected to forced prostitution in Luxembourg in 2009. According to a 2009 ECPAT Report, the majority of girls and children subjected to forced prostitution in Belgium originate from Eastern Europe and Nigeria; some young foreign boys are exploited in prostitution in major cities in the country. Local observers also report that a large portion of children trafficked in Belgium are unaccompanied, vulnerable asylum seekers and refugees. According to the Belgian immigration office, the government identified eight children between January and June 2009 as trafficked. Foreign workers continued to be subjected to involuntary domestic servitude in Belgium, some involving members of the international diplomatic community posted in Belgium.",
"Title: Political colour\n\nPolitical colours are colours used to represent a political party, either officially or unofficially. Parties in different countries with similar ideologies sometimes use similar colours. For example, the colour red symbolises left-wing ideologies in many countries (\"cf.\" Red Flag, Red Army, Red Scare), while the colour orange symbolizes Christian democratic political ideology. However, the political associations of a given colour vary from country to country; for example, red is also the colour associated with the conservative Republican Party in the United States. Politicians making public appearances will often identify themselves by wearing rosettes, flowers or ties in the colour of their political party.",
"Title: Sex and nudity in video games\n\nThe inclusion of sex and nudity in video games has been a controversial topic since the early days of the industry. While many video games have used scantily clad images or characters to sell or enhance games, some go further, using sex acts or nudity as a character motivation, in-game reward, or simply as a gameplay element. These games originate worldwide, on most platforms and can be of any video game genre. While releases in Europe and North America have been sporadic and often unlicensed, Japan has seen the emergence of a pornographic video game subgenre—eroge, first appearing on the NEC PC-88 computer platform in the 1980s. In the 1990s NEC (on the PC Engine series and PC-FX) and Sega (on Saturn) were the only companies who officially allowed sexual content on their consoles in Japan, but eroge was more prevalent on the NEC PC-98 and FM Towns computer platforms.",
"Title: Human trafficking in the Republic of the Congo\n\nThe Republic of the Congo (ROC) is a destination and transit country for children subjected to trafficking in persons for the purposes of forced labor and forced prostitution. Most sources agree that up to 80 percent of all trafficked children originate from Benin, with girls comprising 90 percent of that group. Togo, Mali, Guinea, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Senegal are also sources of victims found in the Congolese republic. Internally trafficked children represent 10 percent of all child victims, the majority of which originate from the Pool region. Many child victims are subjected to forced labor, including in domestic work, market vending and fishing; girls are also exploited in the sex trade. Child victims generally experience harsh treatment, long work hours, and almost no access to education or health services; they receive little or no remuneration for their work. Other village children, however, live voluntarily with extended relatives in cities, attend school, and do housework in exchange for food, in a traditional cultural and familial pattern that does not entail abuse.",
"Title: NEC PC-100\n\nThe NEC PC-100 was a Japanese home computer available on October 13, 1983. It operated on 8086 CPU 7 MHz, 128KB RAM, 128KB VRAM, a Japanese language capable keyboard and a two button mouse. It had three models and its color monitor, \"PC-KD651\", which could be used vertically or horizontally, had the price tag of 198,000 yen. Its biggest advantage over other computers of that time was its high graphical capability of 720 by 512 with a selection of 16 color out of 512 color available on its high end \"model30\". Its OS was MS-DOS and was also equipped with a spreadsheet program \"Maruchipuran\" (Multiplan) and a text editor \"JS-WORD\" as well as the game Lode Runner.",
"Title: PAL-M\n\nPAL-M is the analog TV system used in Brazil since February 19, 1972. At that time, Brazil was the first South American country to broadcast in colour. Colour TV broadcast began on September 1972 when the TV networks Globo, Tupi and Bandeirantes TV transmitted the Caxias do Sul Grape Festival. Transition from black and white to colour was not complete until 1977. Two years later, in 1979 colour broadcast nationwide in Brazil was commonplace.",
"Title: Colour Genie\n\nThe EACA EG2000 Colour Genie was a computer produced by Hong Kong-based manufacturer EACA and introduced in Germany in August 1982. It followed their earlier Video Genie I and II computers and was released around the same time as the business-oriented Video Genie III."
] |
1,736
|
Who hired professional developer Lee Hammock to design a science fiction role-playing game?
|
Blue Devil Games
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Lee Hammock",
"Lee Hammock",
"Dawning Star"
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0,
2,
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{
"sentences": [
"Space Opera is a science-fiction role-playing game created by Edward E. Simbalist, A. Mark Ratner, and Phil McGregor in 1980 for Fantasy Games Unlimited.",
" While the system is applicable to the whole genre of science fiction, \"Space Opera\" had a default setting intended to be used as generic science fiction role-playing game rules, the focus being on creating space opera themed adventures."
],
"title": "Space Opera (role-playing game)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Shining (シャイニング , \"Shainingu\" ) is a series of fantasy video games developed by Sega.",
" The series is Sega's main venture into the role-playing genre, along with the science fiction role-playing series \"Phantasy Star\".",
" The first game, \"Shining in the Darkness\", was a first-person dungeon crawler with randomly encountered, turn-based battles (comparable to \"Wizardry\" and \"Might and Magic\").",
" The next game released in the series was \"Shining Force\", which were turn-based strategy style tactical role-playing games with battle scenes acted out with sprites (comparable to the Kure Software Koubou games and \"Fire Emblem\").",
" Other spin-offs include \"Shining Soul\", a dungeon crawl action role-playing game with roguelike elements."
],
"title": "Shining (series)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Bond 007: Role-Playing In Her Majesty's Secret Service is a spy fiction role-playing game based on the James Bond books and films.",
" The game was designed by Gerard Christopher Klug and published by Victory Games (a branch of Avalon Hill).",
" The game and its supplements were published from 1983 until 1987, when the license lapsed.",
" At that time, it was the most popular espionage role-playing game.",
" \"James Bond 007: Role-Playing In Her Majesty's Secret Service\" won an Origins Award in 1983 and a Strategists' Club Award as Outstanding Role-Playing Game in 1984."
],
"title": "James Bond 007 (role-playing game)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Metamorphosis Alpha is a science fiction role-playing game.",
" It was created by James M. Ward and originally produced by TSR, the publisher of \"Dungeons & Dragons\".",
" It was the first science fiction role-playing game, published in July 1976."
],
"title": "Metamorphosis Alpha"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lee Hammock is a professional writer and game designer.",
" Hammock has worked on numerous products for numerous companies, including \"\" RPG by Louis Porter Jr.",
" Design, \"The Halo Graphic Novel\" and the \"Dawning Star Campaign Setting\" by Blue Devil Games."
],
"title": "Lee Hammock"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Firefly Role-Playing Game is a science fiction role-playing game released in 2014 and set in the universe of the Joss Whedon television show \"Firefly\".",
" It was produced by Margaret Weis Productions, Ltd, and uses the \"Cortex Action\" variant of Margaret Weis Production's proprietary Cortex Plus game system."
],
"title": "Firefly Role-Playing Game"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Universe: The Role-Playing Game of the Future is a science fiction role-playing game published by Simulation Publications, Inc (SPI) from 1981 to 1983.",
" It was praised for its innovative and tightly organized rules for such sci-fi RPG concerns as generating planets, applying character skills to in-game situations, and resolving the initial moments of alien encounters; however, it was also criticized for its cumbersome encounter/combat system and its lack of compelling background material.",
" \"Universe\" was also noted for its \"striking\" Interstellar Display, a poster-sized, astronomically accurate map of all stars within 30 light-years of Earth."
],
"title": "Universe (role-playing game)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dawning Star (abbreviated \"DS\") is a science fiction role-playing game by Blue Devil Games built on \"d20 Modern\" and powered by \"d20 Future\" by Wizards of the Coast.",
" It is the first full-scale campaign setting using the \"d20 Future\" ruleset.",
" It is published under the Open Game License."
],
"title": "Dawning Star"
},
{
"sentences": [
"2300 AD is a hard science fiction tabletop role-playing game created by Game Designers Workshop, originally offered as an alternative to the space opera portrayed by the company's leading science fiction role-playing game, \"Traveller\".",
" In fact it was originally titled \"Traveller: 2300\", but this caused confusion as the game used neither the rules system nor the setting of the original \"Traveller\".",
" The game was therefore renamed in its 2nd edition."
],
"title": "2300 AD"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Corporation is a science fiction role-playing game created by Brutal Games.",
" It has been inspired by many Science fiction films and books, including \"The Fifth Element\", \"Gattaca\", \"Johnny Mnemonic\", and \"Total Recall\".",
" It has a small, but growing, fan base worldwide.",
" The game makers have also set up a forum for players to ask questions relating to the fictional world the game is set in, the rules, and even to discuss scenarios."
],
"title": "Corporation (role playing game)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Space Opera (role-playing game)\n\nSpace Opera is a science-fiction role-playing game created by Edward E. Simbalist, A. Mark Ratner, and Phil McGregor in 1980 for Fantasy Games Unlimited. While the system is applicable to the whole genre of science fiction, \"Space Opera\" had a default setting intended to be used as generic science fiction role-playing game rules, the focus being on creating space opera themed adventures.",
"Title: Shining (series)\n\nShining (シャイニング , \"Shainingu\" ) is a series of fantasy video games developed by Sega. The series is Sega's main venture into the role-playing genre, along with the science fiction role-playing series \"Phantasy Star\". The first game, \"Shining in the Darkness\", was a first-person dungeon crawler with randomly encountered, turn-based battles (comparable to \"Wizardry\" and \"Might and Magic\"). The next game released in the series was \"Shining Force\", which were turn-based strategy style tactical role-playing games with battle scenes acted out with sprites (comparable to the Kure Software Koubou games and \"Fire Emblem\"). Other spin-offs include \"Shining Soul\", a dungeon crawl action role-playing game with roguelike elements.",
"Title: James Bond 007 (role-playing game)\n\nJames Bond 007: Role-Playing In Her Majesty's Secret Service is a spy fiction role-playing game based on the James Bond books and films. The game was designed by Gerard Christopher Klug and published by Victory Games (a branch of Avalon Hill). The game and its supplements were published from 1983 until 1987, when the license lapsed. At that time, it was the most popular espionage role-playing game. \"James Bond 007: Role-Playing In Her Majesty's Secret Service\" won an Origins Award in 1983 and a Strategists' Club Award as Outstanding Role-Playing Game in 1984.",
"Title: Metamorphosis Alpha\n\nMetamorphosis Alpha is a science fiction role-playing game. It was created by James M. Ward and originally produced by TSR, the publisher of \"Dungeons & Dragons\". It was the first science fiction role-playing game, published in July 1976.",
"Title: Lee Hammock\n\nLee Hammock is a professional writer and game designer. Hammock has worked on numerous products for numerous companies, including \"\" RPG by Louis Porter Jr. Design, \"The Halo Graphic Novel\" and the \"Dawning Star Campaign Setting\" by Blue Devil Games.",
"Title: Firefly Role-Playing Game\n\nThe Firefly Role-Playing Game is a science fiction role-playing game released in 2014 and set in the universe of the Joss Whedon television show \"Firefly\". It was produced by Margaret Weis Productions, Ltd, and uses the \"Cortex Action\" variant of Margaret Weis Production's proprietary Cortex Plus game system.",
"Title: Universe (role-playing game)\n\nUniverse: The Role-Playing Game of the Future is a science fiction role-playing game published by Simulation Publications, Inc (SPI) from 1981 to 1983. It was praised for its innovative and tightly organized rules for such sci-fi RPG concerns as generating planets, applying character skills to in-game situations, and resolving the initial moments of alien encounters; however, it was also criticized for its cumbersome encounter/combat system and its lack of compelling background material. \"Universe\" was also noted for its \"striking\" Interstellar Display, a poster-sized, astronomically accurate map of all stars within 30 light-years of Earth.",
"Title: Dawning Star\n\nDawning Star (abbreviated \"DS\") is a science fiction role-playing game by Blue Devil Games built on \"d20 Modern\" and powered by \"d20 Future\" by Wizards of the Coast. It is the first full-scale campaign setting using the \"d20 Future\" ruleset. It is published under the Open Game License.",
"Title: 2300 AD\n\n2300 AD is a hard science fiction tabletop role-playing game created by Game Designers Workshop, originally offered as an alternative to the space opera portrayed by the company's leading science fiction role-playing game, \"Traveller\". In fact it was originally titled \"Traveller: 2300\", but this caused confusion as the game used neither the rules system nor the setting of the original \"Traveller\". The game was therefore renamed in its 2nd edition.",
"Title: Corporation (role playing game)\n\nCorporation is a science fiction role-playing game created by Brutal Games. It has been inspired by many Science fiction films and books, including \"The Fifth Element\", \"Gattaca\", \"Johnny Mnemonic\", and \"Total Recall\". It has a small, but growing, fan base worldwide. The game makers have also set up a forum for players to ask questions relating to the fictional world the game is set in, the rules, and even to discuss scenarios."
] |
1,737
|
How many separate organizations are there in the organization that presented Elimination Chamber?
|
54
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Elimination Chamber (2011)",
"National Guard of the United States"
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[
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber (2011) (also known as No Escape (2011) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and presented by the National Guard, which took place on February 20, 2011 at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, California."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber (2011)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber (2013) (also known as No Escape (2013) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE.",
" It took place on February 17, 2013, at the New Orleans Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana.",
" The pay-per-view was the fourth annual Elimination Chamber event.",
" This year's event was headlined by The Rock defending the WWE Championship against CM Punk."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber (2013)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"No Way Out is a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event, produced by WWE, a professional wrestling promotion based in Connecticut.",
" The event was created in 1998 as an In Your House event in February of that year and in 2000 was made an annual pay-per-view event for WWE.",
" After the brand extension, the event was made exclusive to the SmackDown brand in 2004, being produced every February.",
" In April 2007, following WrestleMania 23, brand-exclusive pay-per-view events ceased being held, with the last of which being the SmackDown-exclusive No Way Out 2007.",
" After the event included two Elimination Chamber matches in 2008 and 2009, No Way Out was replaced by WWE Elimination Chamber the following year.",
" The name was revived for the June 2012 pay-per-view event."
],
"title": "WWE No Way Out"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber (2010) (also known as No Way Out (2010) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), which took place on February 21, 2010 at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri.",
" It was the first event in the Elimination Chamber series.",
" Six matches were aired on the broadcast and one dark match occurred prior to the live broadcast."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber (2010)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The National Guard of the United States, part of the reserve components of the United States Armed Forces, is a reserve military force, composed of National Guard military members or units of each state and the territories of Guam, of the Virgin Islands, and of Puerto Rico, as well as of the District of Columbia, for a total of 54 separate organizations.",
" All members of the National Guard of the United States are also members of the militia of the United States as defined by /246 § 246 .",
" National Guard units are under the dual control of the state and the federal government."
],
"title": "National Guard of the United States"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber is a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event, produced by WWE, a professional wrestling promotion based in Connecticut.",
" The event was created in 2010, with its inaugural event taking place on February 21, 2010, replacing No Way Out.",
" Elimination Chamber is a pay-per-view (PPV) event consisting of a main event and undercard that features championship matches and other various matches.",
" The concept of the show was that the two main event matches were contested inside the Elimination Chamber; one of these matches typically featured the WWE Championship being defended, while the other was usually contested for the World Heavyweight Championship (the two titles were unified in December 2013).",
" The first Elimination Chamber event took place on February 21, 2010 and aired live on PPV.",
" The event's name was selected after WWE allowed fans to provide input via a survey on their official website and was chosen over Heavy Metal, Battle Chamber, Chamber of Conflict, and the original No Way Out name.",
" Since its origin, each event has been held in an indoor arena, with all five taking place in the United States.",
" In 2015, the event was replaced by Fastlane in the February pay-per-view slot.",
" However, the 2015 event was later announced to be streamed exclusively on the WWE Network in the United States on May 31 and was also available on PPV elsewhere.",
" WWE also confirmed that the newly vacant WWE Intercontinental Championship was being decided inside the Elimination Chamber.",
" The event did not occur in 2016, but returned in 2017 as a SmackDown branded event."
],
"title": "WWE Elimination Chamber"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Elimination Chamber is a professional wrestling elimination-based match and held in the WWE promotion.",
" The match was created by Triple H and was introduced by Eric Bischoff in November 2002.",
" It features a large chain-linked circular steel structure, which encloses the ring.",
" The chamber's floor is platformed over the ringside area which elevates it to ring level.",
" Within the chamber are four inner enclosures outside each ring corner.",
" While similar in profile and nature to WWE's original large scale steel-structured match, Hell in a Cell, the Elimination Chamber match is strictly a six participant match, wherein two participants begin the match in the ring as the remaining four are held within each inner enclosure and are released into the match at five-minute intervals.",
" The objective is to eliminate each opponent from the match via pinfall or submission.",
" The winner is the last remaining participant after all others have been eliminated.",
" As in the Hell in a Cell match, disqualifications do not apply.",
" The original structure was 16 ft high, 36 ft in diameter, weighed over 10 ST , and comprised 2 mi and 6 ST of chain.",
" There have been twenty Elimination Chamber matches in WWE since the concept's inception in November 2002."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber (2015) (known as No Escape (2015) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE.",
" It took place on May 31, 2015, at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, Texas.",
" The sixth Elimination Chamber event, it was the first and only to be held in May; previous incarnations had taken place in February.",
" Although advertised as being exclusive to the WWE Network, the event ultimately aired via traditional pay-per-view outlets in various territories."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber (2015)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber (2012) (also known as No Escape (2012) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE.",
" The third event under the Elimination Chamber chronology, it took place on February 19, 2012 at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber (2012)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elimination Chamber (2014) (known as No Escape (2014) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE.",
" The fifth Elimination Chamber event took place on February 23, 2014, at the Target Center in Minneapolis."
],
"title": "Elimination Chamber (2014)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Elimination Chamber (2011)\n\nElimination Chamber (2011) (also known as No Escape (2011) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and presented by the National Guard, which took place on February 20, 2011 at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, California.",
"Title: Elimination Chamber (2013)\n\nElimination Chamber (2013) (also known as No Escape (2013) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE. It took place on February 17, 2013, at the New Orleans Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana. The pay-per-view was the fourth annual Elimination Chamber event. This year's event was headlined by The Rock defending the WWE Championship against CM Punk.",
"Title: WWE No Way Out\n\nNo Way Out is a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event, produced by WWE, a professional wrestling promotion based in Connecticut. The event was created in 1998 as an In Your House event in February of that year and in 2000 was made an annual pay-per-view event for WWE. After the brand extension, the event was made exclusive to the SmackDown brand in 2004, being produced every February. In April 2007, following WrestleMania 23, brand-exclusive pay-per-view events ceased being held, with the last of which being the SmackDown-exclusive No Way Out 2007. After the event included two Elimination Chamber matches in 2008 and 2009, No Way Out was replaced by WWE Elimination Chamber the following year. The name was revived for the June 2012 pay-per-view event.",
"Title: Elimination Chamber (2010)\n\nElimination Chamber (2010) (also known as No Way Out (2010) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), which took place on February 21, 2010 at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the first event in the Elimination Chamber series. Six matches were aired on the broadcast and one dark match occurred prior to the live broadcast.",
"Title: National Guard of the United States\n\nThe National Guard of the United States, part of the reserve components of the United States Armed Forces, is a reserve military force, composed of National Guard military members or units of each state and the territories of Guam, of the Virgin Islands, and of Puerto Rico, as well as of the District of Columbia, for a total of 54 separate organizations. All members of the National Guard of the United States are also members of the militia of the United States as defined by /246 § 246 . National Guard units are under the dual control of the state and the federal government.",
"Title: WWE Elimination Chamber\n\nElimination Chamber is a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event, produced by WWE, a professional wrestling promotion based in Connecticut. The event was created in 2010, with its inaugural event taking place on February 21, 2010, replacing No Way Out. Elimination Chamber is a pay-per-view (PPV) event consisting of a main event and undercard that features championship matches and other various matches. The concept of the show was that the two main event matches were contested inside the Elimination Chamber; one of these matches typically featured the WWE Championship being defended, while the other was usually contested for the World Heavyweight Championship (the two titles were unified in December 2013). The first Elimination Chamber event took place on February 21, 2010 and aired live on PPV. The event's name was selected after WWE allowed fans to provide input via a survey on their official website and was chosen over Heavy Metal, Battle Chamber, Chamber of Conflict, and the original No Way Out name. Since its origin, each event has been held in an indoor arena, with all five taking place in the United States. In 2015, the event was replaced by Fastlane in the February pay-per-view slot. However, the 2015 event was later announced to be streamed exclusively on the WWE Network in the United States on May 31 and was also available on PPV elsewhere. WWE also confirmed that the newly vacant WWE Intercontinental Championship was being decided inside the Elimination Chamber. The event did not occur in 2016, but returned in 2017 as a SmackDown branded event.",
"Title: Elimination Chamber\n\nThe Elimination Chamber is a professional wrestling elimination-based match and held in the WWE promotion. The match was created by Triple H and was introduced by Eric Bischoff in November 2002. It features a large chain-linked circular steel structure, which encloses the ring. The chamber's floor is platformed over the ringside area which elevates it to ring level. Within the chamber are four inner enclosures outside each ring corner. While similar in profile and nature to WWE's original large scale steel-structured match, Hell in a Cell, the Elimination Chamber match is strictly a six participant match, wherein two participants begin the match in the ring as the remaining four are held within each inner enclosure and are released into the match at five-minute intervals. The objective is to eliminate each opponent from the match via pinfall or submission. The winner is the last remaining participant after all others have been eliminated. As in the Hell in a Cell match, disqualifications do not apply. The original structure was 16 ft high, 36 ft in diameter, weighed over 10 ST , and comprised 2 mi and 6 ST of chain. There have been twenty Elimination Chamber matches in WWE since the concept's inception in November 2002.",
"Title: Elimination Chamber (2015)\n\nElimination Chamber (2015) (known as No Escape (2015) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE. It took place on May 31, 2015, at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, Texas. The sixth Elimination Chamber event, it was the first and only to be held in May; previous incarnations had taken place in February. Although advertised as being exclusive to the WWE Network, the event ultimately aired via traditional pay-per-view outlets in various territories.",
"Title: Elimination Chamber (2012)\n\nElimination Chamber (2012) (also known as No Escape (2012) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE. The third event under the Elimination Chamber chronology, it took place on February 19, 2012 at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.",
"Title: Elimination Chamber (2014)\n\nElimination Chamber (2014) (known as No Escape (2014) in Germany) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE. The fifth Elimination Chamber event took place on February 23, 2014, at the Target Center in Minneapolis."
] |
1,738
|
The artist that released the album Stevie at the Beach was signed to what label at the age of 11?
|
Motown's Tamla label
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Stevie at the Beach",
"Stevie Wonder"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
2
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Stevie at the Beach is the fourth album by American singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder released on the Tamla (Motown) label on June 23, 1964.",
" With the exception of the mild hit, \"Hey Harmonica Man\", it was a concept album of sorts, focusing on beach and surfer anthems as an attempt to get Wonder to now sing surf tunes.",
" However, much like the label's attempts to first make him the teenage version of Ray Charles and then for one album as a lounge singer, it failed to connect with audiences.",
" Wonder would not have another hit until 1965 when he was finally allowed to showcase his musical talents more."
],
"title": "Stevie at the Beach"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie is the debut studio album by Stevie Wonder (then billed as \"\"Little\" Stevie Wonder\") released in September 1962 on the Tamla Motown label."
],
"title": "The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Allido Records is a record label and production company.",
" The company was started by DJ and producer Mark Ronson and Rich Kleiman, a television, internet and music businessman.",
" The label got its name \"Allido\" from the Stevie Wonder song \"All I Do\".",
" Rapper Saigon was the first artist signed to Allido Records, but left soon after, and is now signed to Just Blaze's Fort Knox Entertainment.",
" In conjunction with Clive Davis’ J Records, Allido signed Chicago-based rapper Rhymefest, who is best known as the co-writer for Kanye West's \"Jesus Walks\".",
" Rhymefest's first album, under Allido, was released July 11, 2006, under the title of \"Blue Collar\".",
" Allido has also signed Australian-born soul singer Daniel Merriweather.",
" Other projects in the works from Ronson and Kleiman are the soundtrack to Gap's latest ad campaign as well as Jay-Z's movie, \"Fade to Black\".",
" Allido's most recent signing is Washington, D.C. hip hop artist Wale."
],
"title": "Allido Records"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jaya was the first album by Filipino-Jamaican singer actress and tv host Jaya.",
" The album was produced by Stevie B and Don Glenn Gutierrez under LMR Records.",
" She was offered an opportunity to finish an album that had already been started by another artist.",
" In February 1989, she signed a record deal with LMR Records (New York).",
" Later that year, her first self-titled debut album was released in the U.S.",
" The first single, \"If You Leave Me Now\", was a hit in the dance clubs and was subsequently released to Top 40 radio.",
" The single entered the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart in October 1989.",
" It eventually peaked at number 44 in February 1990 and remained in the Top 100 pop singles chart for 26 weeks, an unusually long chart run for a single that peaked outside the Top 40.",
" According to playlists submitted to \"Billboard\" magazine by American radio stations at the time, the song was a top 20 hit on dance-pop stations in various large markets, such as New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco.",
" The song features a strong vocal performance by Jaya as well as many elements associated with freestyle music, which in the late 1980s was beginning to reach a wider audience in the U.S. \"If You Leave Me Now\" also gave Jaya the opportunity to work across the US with top artists like Stevie B, MC Hammer, Milli Vanilli, James Ingram, The Jets, and many more."
],
"title": "Jaya (1989 album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Stevland Hardaway Morris (born Stevland Hardaway Judkins; May 13, 1950), known by his stage name Stevie Wonder, is an American musician, singer, songwriter, record producer, and multi-instrumentalist.",
" A child prodigy, he is considered to be one of the most critically and commercially successful musical performers of the late 20th century.",
" Wonder signed with Motown's Tamla label at the age of 11, and he continued performing and recording for Motown into the 2010s.",
" He has been blind since shortly after birth."
],
"title": "Stevie Wonder"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Recorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius is the first live album by Stevie Wonder.",
" The album was released on the Tamla record label (catalog #240) in May 1963, the same month as the single release of \"Fingertips\" (catalog #54080).",
" \"Fingertips\" topped both the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and the R&B Singles chart, and \"Recorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius\" topped the \"Billboard\" 200, all of which happened in 1963.",
" This is the last album to use the \"Little\" in Stevie Wonder's name.",
" Starting with the next album, his name goes by just \"Stevie Wonder.\""
],
"title": "Recorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mental Overdrive is the primary solo moniker of Per Martinsen (born 31 July 1966), one of Norway's most prolific and influential techno musicians.",
" His tracks have ranged from hardcore rave techno to vibrant space-disco, and he's always maintained a healthy balance of humor and braininess.",
" Active since 1990, he began his career releasing several 12\" EPs of aggressive, rave-ready hardcore techno on revered Belgian label R&S, including 12000 AD (1990), The Second Coming (1991), Move!",
" (as Confusion Club, 1991), and The Love EP (1992).",
" In 1994, Martinsen began releasing atmospheric techno singles as part of Illumination, his duo with Nicholas Sillitoe.",
" The next year, Mental Overdrive released the single \"Disto Disco,\" which featured a B-side (\"Faith\") co-written by R&S artist Outlander, best known for the 1991 classic \"Vamp.\"",
" The A-side appeared on Mental Overdrive's full-length debut Plugged, released on Martinsen's own Love OD Communications.",
" The album showed a notable progression in his music, maintaining its rough, distorted hardcore techno sound while adding more cerebral elements, placing it closer to Warp's Artificial Intelligence series.",
" Martinsen displayed his sense of humor with 1996's Unplugged, a limited conceptual release containing silent \"versions\" of the tracks on Plugged.",
" 083 In 1997, Mental Overdrive signed to Virgin and released About Jazz, a significantly more house/disco-influenced EP than his previous work.",
" This was followed by full-length Ad Absurdum, which continued in a more light-hearted and funky direction than his previous releases.",
" He took a few years off from releasing Mental Overdrive recordings, instead devoting time to Frost (his more pop-focused electronic duo with his wife Aggie Peterson) and Illumination, which released two albums on RCA.",
" Following the 2003 release of Mental Overdrive's Me EP on Love OD, he signed to Norwegian label Smalltown Supersound and released full-length 083, which featured the single \"Diskodans.\"",
" In 2005, the label compiled his early R&S material on CD as The Phuture That Never Happened.",
" Two years later, Mental Overdrive's single \"Spooks\" appeared on Prins Thomas' Full Pupp label.",
" The song appeared on his next Smalltown full-length, You Are Being Manipulated, which was released in 2008.",
" The album was perfectly at home with the label's other left-field dance artists like Bjørn Torske and Kim Hiorthøy, while maintaining the unique Mental Overdrive sound.",
" Martinsen continued releasing Mental Overdrive singles on Full Pupp and Love OD, and contributed to Rune Lindbæk's Meanderthals project.",
" In 2012, he released Man with a Movie Camera, an EP featuring music he'd composed for a 1996 screening of the Russian silent film of the same name, which also featured pieces by Biosphere which would later appear on the 2001 remaster of his classic album Substrata.",
" Mental Overdrive returned to his Love OD label for 2013 full-length Cycls, as well as 2014's Everything Is Connected, which compiled a few previously released EPs.",
" In 2016, Full Pupp sublabel Rett I Fletta released a new version of Plugged consisting of alternate takes sourced from the original DAT tapes.",
" (Paul Simpson for allmusic.com)"
],
"title": "Mental Overdrive"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tribute to Uncle Ray is the second studio album by Stevie Wonder.",
" Released by Motown in October 1962 shortly after \"The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie\", it had been recorded first, when Wonder was just 11 years old.",
" The album was an attempt by Berry Gordy and Motown to associate the young \"Little Stevie Wonder\" with the successful and popular Ray Charles who was also a blind African American musician.",
" Like his debut, this album failed to generate hit singles as Motown struggled to find a sound to fit Wonder, who was just 12 when this album was released."
],
"title": "Tribute to Uncle Ray"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The following is a discography for the American singer-songwriter Raven-Symoné.",
" Raven began her career on \"The Cosby Show\", and following the series' finale she signed a record deal with MCA Records at the age of seven.",
" In 1993 she released her debut album \"Here's to New Dreams\", which was preceded by her debut single \"That's What Little Girls Are Made Of\".",
" The single charted at No. 68 on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100.",
" The album also produced the single \"Raven Is the Flavour\"; however, the album failed to chart and led to Raven being dropped from MCA.",
" In 1996, Raven-Symoné and her father founded RayBlaze Records, in which she signed a distribution deal with Crash Records for her second album \"Undeniable\", which was released in May 1999.",
" The album sold over 2,000 in US.",
" The album yielded one single: a cover of Stevie Wonder's \"With a Child's Heart\".",
" To support the album \"Undeniable\", she went on tour as the opening act for fellow Jive artist 'N Sync's The 'N Sync Tour in 1998/1999."
],
"title": "Raven-Symoné discography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A vanity label (see related topic on vanity press) is an informal name given sometimes to a record label founded as a wholly or partially owned subsidiary of another, larger and better established (at least at the time of the vanity label's founding) record label, where the subsidiary label is (at least nominally) controlled by a successful recording artist, designed to allow this artist to release music by other artists they admire.",
" The parent label handles the production and distribution and funding of the vanity label, but the album is usually released with the vanity label brand name prominent.",
" Usually, the artist/head of the vanity label is signed to the parent label, and this artist's own recordings will be released under the vanity label's brand name.",
" Creating a vanity label can be an attractive idea for the parent label primarily as a \"perk\" to keep a successful artist on the label's roster happy and a venue to bring fellow artists to the public's attention."
],
"title": "Vanity label"
}
] |
[
"Title: Stevie at the Beach\n\nStevie at the Beach is the fourth album by American singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder released on the Tamla (Motown) label on June 23, 1964. With the exception of the mild hit, \"Hey Harmonica Man\", it was a concept album of sorts, focusing on beach and surfer anthems as an attempt to get Wonder to now sing surf tunes. However, much like the label's attempts to first make him the teenage version of Ray Charles and then for one album as a lounge singer, it failed to connect with audiences. Wonder would not have another hit until 1965 when he was finally allowed to showcase his musical talents more.",
"Title: The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie\n\nThe Jazz Soul of Little Stevie is the debut studio album by Stevie Wonder (then billed as \"\"Little\" Stevie Wonder\") released in September 1962 on the Tamla Motown label.",
"Title: Allido Records\n\nAllido Records is a record label and production company. The company was started by DJ and producer Mark Ronson and Rich Kleiman, a television, internet and music businessman. The label got its name \"Allido\" from the Stevie Wonder song \"All I Do\". Rapper Saigon was the first artist signed to Allido Records, but left soon after, and is now signed to Just Blaze's Fort Knox Entertainment. In conjunction with Clive Davis’ J Records, Allido signed Chicago-based rapper Rhymefest, who is best known as the co-writer for Kanye West's \"Jesus Walks\". Rhymefest's first album, under Allido, was released July 11, 2006, under the title of \"Blue Collar\". Allido has also signed Australian-born soul singer Daniel Merriweather. Other projects in the works from Ronson and Kleiman are the soundtrack to Gap's latest ad campaign as well as Jay-Z's movie, \"Fade to Black\". Allido's most recent signing is Washington, D.C. hip hop artist Wale.",
"Title: Jaya (1989 album)\n\nJaya was the first album by Filipino-Jamaican singer actress and tv host Jaya. The album was produced by Stevie B and Don Glenn Gutierrez under LMR Records. She was offered an opportunity to finish an album that had already been started by another artist. In February 1989, she signed a record deal with LMR Records (New York). Later that year, her first self-titled debut album was released in the U.S. The first single, \"If You Leave Me Now\", was a hit in the dance clubs and was subsequently released to Top 40 radio. The single entered the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart in October 1989. It eventually peaked at number 44 in February 1990 and remained in the Top 100 pop singles chart for 26 weeks, an unusually long chart run for a single that peaked outside the Top 40. According to playlists submitted to \"Billboard\" magazine by American radio stations at the time, the song was a top 20 hit on dance-pop stations in various large markets, such as New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco. The song features a strong vocal performance by Jaya as well as many elements associated with freestyle music, which in the late 1980s was beginning to reach a wider audience in the U.S. \"If You Leave Me Now\" also gave Jaya the opportunity to work across the US with top artists like Stevie B, MC Hammer, Milli Vanilli, James Ingram, The Jets, and many more.",
"Title: Stevie Wonder\n\nStevland Hardaway Morris (born Stevland Hardaway Judkins; May 13, 1950), known by his stage name Stevie Wonder, is an American musician, singer, songwriter, record producer, and multi-instrumentalist. A child prodigy, he is considered to be one of the most critically and commercially successful musical performers of the late 20th century. Wonder signed with Motown's Tamla label at the age of 11, and he continued performing and recording for Motown into the 2010s. He has been blind since shortly after birth.",
"Title: Recorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius\n\nRecorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius is the first live album by Stevie Wonder. The album was released on the Tamla record label (catalog #240) in May 1963, the same month as the single release of \"Fingertips\" (catalog #54080). \"Fingertips\" topped both the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and the R&B Singles chart, and \"Recorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius\" topped the \"Billboard\" 200, all of which happened in 1963. This is the last album to use the \"Little\" in Stevie Wonder's name. Starting with the next album, his name goes by just \"Stevie Wonder.\"",
"Title: Mental Overdrive\n\nMental Overdrive is the primary solo moniker of Per Martinsen (born 31 July 1966), one of Norway's most prolific and influential techno musicians. His tracks have ranged from hardcore rave techno to vibrant space-disco, and he's always maintained a healthy balance of humor and braininess. Active since 1990, he began his career releasing several 12\" EPs of aggressive, rave-ready hardcore techno on revered Belgian label R&S, including 12000 AD (1990), The Second Coming (1991), Move! (as Confusion Club, 1991), and The Love EP (1992). In 1994, Martinsen began releasing atmospheric techno singles as part of Illumination, his duo with Nicholas Sillitoe. The next year, Mental Overdrive released the single \"Disto Disco,\" which featured a B-side (\"Faith\") co-written by R&S artist Outlander, best known for the 1991 classic \"Vamp.\" The A-side appeared on Mental Overdrive's full-length debut Plugged, released on Martinsen's own Love OD Communications. The album showed a notable progression in his music, maintaining its rough, distorted hardcore techno sound while adding more cerebral elements, placing it closer to Warp's Artificial Intelligence series. Martinsen displayed his sense of humor with 1996's Unplugged, a limited conceptual release containing silent \"versions\" of the tracks on Plugged. 083 In 1997, Mental Overdrive signed to Virgin and released About Jazz, a significantly more house/disco-influenced EP than his previous work. This was followed by full-length Ad Absurdum, which continued in a more light-hearted and funky direction than his previous releases. He took a few years off from releasing Mental Overdrive recordings, instead devoting time to Frost (his more pop-focused electronic duo with his wife Aggie Peterson) and Illumination, which released two albums on RCA. Following the 2003 release of Mental Overdrive's Me EP on Love OD, he signed to Norwegian label Smalltown Supersound and released full-length 083, which featured the single \"Diskodans.\" In 2005, the label compiled his early R&S material on CD as The Phuture That Never Happened. Two years later, Mental Overdrive's single \"Spooks\" appeared on Prins Thomas' Full Pupp label. The song appeared on his next Smalltown full-length, You Are Being Manipulated, which was released in 2008. The album was perfectly at home with the label's other left-field dance artists like Bjørn Torske and Kim Hiorthøy, while maintaining the unique Mental Overdrive sound. Martinsen continued releasing Mental Overdrive singles on Full Pupp and Love OD, and contributed to Rune Lindbæk's Meanderthals project. In 2012, he released Man with a Movie Camera, an EP featuring music he'd composed for a 1996 screening of the Russian silent film of the same name, which also featured pieces by Biosphere which would later appear on the 2001 remaster of his classic album Substrata. Mental Overdrive returned to his Love OD label for 2013 full-length Cycls, as well as 2014's Everything Is Connected, which compiled a few previously released EPs. In 2016, Full Pupp sublabel Rett I Fletta released a new version of Plugged consisting of alternate takes sourced from the original DAT tapes. (Paul Simpson for allmusic.com)",
"Title: Tribute to Uncle Ray\n\nTribute to Uncle Ray is the second studio album by Stevie Wonder. Released by Motown in October 1962 shortly after \"The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie\", it had been recorded first, when Wonder was just 11 years old. The album was an attempt by Berry Gordy and Motown to associate the young \"Little Stevie Wonder\" with the successful and popular Ray Charles who was also a blind African American musician. Like his debut, this album failed to generate hit singles as Motown struggled to find a sound to fit Wonder, who was just 12 when this album was released.",
"Title: Raven-Symoné discography\n\nThe following is a discography for the American singer-songwriter Raven-Symoné. Raven began her career on \"The Cosby Show\", and following the series' finale she signed a record deal with MCA Records at the age of seven. In 1993 she released her debut album \"Here's to New Dreams\", which was preceded by her debut single \"That's What Little Girls Are Made Of\". The single charted at No. 68 on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100. The album also produced the single \"Raven Is the Flavour\"; however, the album failed to chart and led to Raven being dropped from MCA. In 1996, Raven-Symoné and her father founded RayBlaze Records, in which she signed a distribution deal with Crash Records for her second album \"Undeniable\", which was released in May 1999. The album sold over 2,000 in US. The album yielded one single: a cover of Stevie Wonder's \"With a Child's Heart\". To support the album \"Undeniable\", she went on tour as the opening act for fellow Jive artist 'N Sync's The 'N Sync Tour in 1998/1999.",
"Title: Vanity label\n\nA vanity label (see related topic on vanity press) is an informal name given sometimes to a record label founded as a wholly or partially owned subsidiary of another, larger and better established (at least at the time of the vanity label's founding) record label, where the subsidiary label is (at least nominally) controlled by a successful recording artist, designed to allow this artist to release music by other artists they admire. The parent label handles the production and distribution and funding of the vanity label, but the album is usually released with the vanity label brand name prominent. Usually, the artist/head of the vanity label is signed to the parent label, and this artist's own recordings will be released under the vanity label's brand name. Creating a vanity label can be an attractive idea for the parent label primarily as a \"perk\" to keep a successful artist on the label's roster happy and a venue to bring fellow artists to the public's attention."
] |
1,739
|
Platée and La straniera are what?
|
opera
|
comparison
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Platée",
"La straniera"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"La straniera (\"The Foreign Woman\") is an opera in two acts with music by Vincenzo Bellini to an Italian libretto by Felice Romani, based on the novel \"L'Étrangère\" (2 vols, 1825) by Charles-Victor Prévot, vicomte d'Arlincourt, although writer Herbert Weinstock also adds that it is \"more likely [based on] a dramatization of [that novel] in Italian by Giovan Carlo, barone di Cosenza\" since he then quotes a letter from Bellini to his friend Francesco Florimo in which he says that Romani \"certainly will not follow the play\" [suggesting then that they were aware of its existence.]"
],
"title": "La straniera"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Rameau's first attempt at comic opera, the plot concerns an ugly water nymph who believes that Jupiter, the king of the gods, is in love with her.",
" The work was initially called a \"ballet bouffon\", though it was later styled a \"comédie lyrique\", putting it in the same category as Rameau's \"Les Paladins\".",
" It was written for the celebrations of the wedding of Louis, Dauphin of France, son of King Louis XV of France, to the Infanta Maria Theresa of Spain, who, according to contemporary sources, like the title character was no beauty.",
" Instead of getting the composer into trouble, the entertainment at Versailles seems to have been well received, and Rameau was appointed a few months later to the position of Composer of the King's Chamber Music with a sizable annual pension."
],
"title": "Platée"
}
] |
[
"Title: La straniera\n\nLa straniera (\"The Foreign Woman\") is an opera in two acts with music by Vincenzo Bellini to an Italian libretto by Felice Romani, based on the novel \"L'Étrangère\" (2 vols, 1825) by Charles-Victor Prévot, vicomte d'Arlincourt, although writer Herbert Weinstock also adds that it is \"more likely [based on] a dramatization of [that novel] in Italian by Giovan Carlo, barone di Cosenza\" since he then quotes a letter from Bellini to his friend Francesco Florimo in which he says that Romani \"certainly will not follow the play\" [suggesting then that they were aware of its existence.]",
"Title: Platée\n\nRameau's first attempt at comic opera, the plot concerns an ugly water nymph who believes that Jupiter, the king of the gods, is in love with her. The work was initially called a \"ballet bouffon\", though it was later styled a \"comédie lyrique\", putting it in the same category as Rameau's \"Les Paladins\". It was written for the celebrations of the wedding of Louis, Dauphin of France, son of King Louis XV of France, to the Infanta Maria Theresa of Spain, who, according to contemporary sources, like the title character was no beauty. Instead of getting the composer into trouble, the entertainment at Versailles seems to have been well received, and Rameau was appointed a few months later to the position of Composer of the King's Chamber Music with a sizable annual pension."
] |
1,740
|
Where was the company that sponsored the 95-96 Premier League founded?
|
London, Ontario, Canada
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"1995–96 FA Premier League",
"Carling brewery"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Lancashire Combination was a football league founded in the North West of England in 1891–92.",
" It absorbed the Lancashire League in 1903.",
" In 1968 the Combination lost five of its clubs to the newly formed Northern Premier League.",
" In 1982 it was finally merged with the Cheshire County League to form the North West Counties League."
],
"title": "Lancashire Combination"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1995–96 FA Premier League (known as the FA Carling Premiership due to the competition's sponsorship by the Carling brewery) was the fourth season of the competition, since its formation in 1992.",
" Due to the decision to reduce the number of clubs in the Premier League from 22 to 20, only two clubs were promoted instead of the usual three, Middlesbrough and Bolton Wanderers."
],
"title": "1995–96 FA Premier League"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1994–95 Football League season was Birmingham City Football Club's 92nd in the Football League and their fourth in the third tier of English football, Division Two, to which they were relegated in 1993–94.",
" They finished in first position in the 24-team division, so were promoted straight back to Division One for 1995–96.",
" They entered the 1994–95 FA Cup in the first round, losing in the third round to Premier League club Liverpool in a penalty shootout in which they failed to convert a single penalty.",
" They entered the League Cup in the first round and lost to Blackburn Rovers in the second.",
" They won the Football League Trophy for the second time in four attempts, defeating Carlisle United at Wembley in front of a crowd of 76,663 with the first golden goal to determine a major English competition."
],
"title": "1994–95 Birmingham City F.C. season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2014–15 season was Arsenal's 23rd season in the Premier League and 95th consecutive season in the top flight of English football.",
" This season Arsenal participated in the Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup, Community Shield and the UEFA Champions League.",
" An inconsistent start to the league season ended any realistic hopes for the Premier League title as Arsenal only won two out of their first eight games.",
" Inconsistency plagued Arsenal throughout the first half of the campaign, not helped by numerous injuries to important players.",
" At one stage, Arsenal were as low as eighth heading into early December.",
" This would later haunt them as they mounted a superb recovery during the second half of the season where they won eight league games in a row, becoming the in-form side of the division.",
" Ultimately, however, the gap between themselves and leaders Chelsea was too much, the points dropped during the inconsistent first half of the season proving too much to recover.",
" Old habits were hard to eradicate in Europe as yet again, Arsenal were their own worst enemies.",
" Despite being widely expected to reach the quarter-finals, having been given a favourable draw in the Round of 16 against AS Monaco, Arsenal self-destructed at home, where panic led to Monaco winning the first leg 1–3, a scoreline which ultimately proved fatal over the course of the tie.",
" Arsenal, with their 0–2 away win proving useless, bowed out yet again in the round of sixteen for the fifth consecutive year.",
" However, Arsenal reclaimed the FA Cup, thus becoming the most successful club in the history of the competition with twelve wins, comfortably beating Aston Villa 4–0 in the final.",
" Arsenal finished the league season in third, thereby qualifying directly to Champions league group stage and avoiding the Champions League qualifier, something Arsène Wenger was keen to avoid as he felt it had a negative impact on competing for the Premier League title, which was the primary target set by the players, manager and coaching staff, going into the next season."
],
"title": "2014–15 Arsenal F.C. season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Northwich Victoria Football Club are an English football club based in Northwich, Cheshire.",
" They are currently competing in the Northern Premier League Premier Division.",
" The club was founded in 1874, playing challenge matches organised on an ad hoc basis until the 1877 season, when they entered the Welsh Cup for the first time.",
" The club entered two other competitions (The Cheshire Senior Cup in 1879 and the FA Cup in 1882) before finally playing league football in The Combination in 1890, for which they were founding members.",
" They became founding members of the Football League Second Division in 1892, where the club remained for two seasons, and are the only two seasons in the club's history where they have played professionally and in the Football League.",
" In the 1894 season, they returned to amateur, regional football when they rejoined the Combination.",
" Two season in the Cheshire League followed until the turn of the century, when Northwich joined the Manchester League in 1900, when they finished as runners-up.",
" Two seasons later, for the first time, they won a league trophy as winners of the Manchester League in 1902.",
" They departed the Manchester League in 1912 when they joined the second division of the Lancashire Combination, finishing 4th in the first season, which ensured their promotion to the first division.",
" In 1919, they became founder members of the Cheshire County League, where they remained until the 1968 season, winning the league just once in the 1956–57 season.",
" Following their departure from the Cheshire County League, they became founder members of the Northern Premier League.",
" In 1979, they founded yet another league, the Alliance Premier League (now known as the Football Conference, where they remained until their relegation in the 2004–05 season.",
" During their time in the Conference, they won the FA Trophy in the 1983–84 season, and finished runners-up twice in 1982 and 1995.",
" They returned to the Conference National at their first attempt when they won the Conference North in the 2005–06 season.",
" However, ongoing financial issues in the latter part of the 2000s saw them relegated twice in two season; in 2009 they were relegated back to the Conference North and then again the following season to the Northern Premier League Premier Division, where they are competing for the current season."
],
"title": "List of Northwich Victoria F.C. seasons"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1996 FA Charity Shield (also known as the Littlewoods FA Charity Shield for sponsorship reasons) was the 74th FA Charity Shield, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Premier League and FA Cup competitions.",
" The match was played on 11 August 1996 at Wembley Stadium and contested by Manchester United, who had won the Double of Premier League and FA Cup in 1995–96, and Newcastle United, who had finished as runners-up in the Premier League.",
" Manchester United won the match 4–0 with goals from Eric Cantona, Nicky Butt, David Beckham and Roy Keane."
],
"title": "1996 FA Charity Shield"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bangladesh Premier League is the top-tier association football league of Bangladesh run by the country's football federation.",
" It is the country's most popular sports league after the BPL.",
" It was previously known as the B. League that began in 2007.",
" The league was renamed Bangladesh League in 2009.",
" In 2012 it was given its current name.",
" It marked the start of the professional era and an open wide national league.",
" It was sponsored by Manyavar for the 2015 season, thus known as Manyavar Bangladesh Premier League.",
" In the following season, 2016, it is sponsored by the JB Group.",
" The Dhaka Derby is one of the most popular matches in the league."
],
"title": "Bangladesh Football Premier League"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Since the inception of the Premier League, England's highest level of association football annual league tournament, 58 football stadiums have been used to host matches.",
" The inaugural round of Premier League matches took place on 15 August 1992 with eleven clubs hosting the opening fixtures.",
" Following the Hillsborough Disaster in 1989, the Taylor Report recommended the abolition of standing terraces by the start of the 1994–95 season, to be replaced by all-seater stadiums. However, following Fulham's promotion from Division 1 in the 2000–01 season, terraces returned temporarily to the Premier League as The Football Association allowed the club extra time to complete renovations.",
" The club were forced to play at Loftus Road after inadequate progress was made in converting Craven Cottage, but they returned to their home ground after building work was completed in time for the 2004–05 season."
],
"title": "List of Premier League stadiums"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Masvingo United is a Zimbabwean football club based in Masvingo.",
" They used to play in the top division in Zimbabwean football, but were for the third time relegated to Division one at the end of the 2011 season.",
" The club used to be bankrolled by Mr. Tanda Tavaruva & sons, whose mainstay is provision of transport services.",
" He used to own one of the largest fleet of buses in Zimbabwe.",
" Masvingo United was established in the year 1997.",
" The club bought a franchise from Zimex, a then Cold Storage Commission sponsored club in Masvingo & changed the name to Masvingo United.",
" In the 1998/1999, season, whilst playing 1st division soccer in the Southern zone, Masvingo United came out tops and gained promotion to the Premier league.",
" At the end of the 2002 season, the club was relegated for the first time, but rebound to the premier league the following season.",
" They played in the premier league & had their best season in year 2005.",
" The club was relegated for the second time at the end of the year 2008 season, and only got promoted back to the premier league at the beginning of the year 2011 season, to be relegated again for the 3rd time at the end of the year 2011 season."
],
"title": "Masvingo United F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Carling brewery was founded in London, Ontario, Canada in 1818.",
" In 1952 Carling lager was first sold in the United Kingdom; in the early 1980s it became the UK's most popular beer brand (by volume sold).",
" The company changed hands numerous times; it was acquired by Canadian Breweries Limited, which was eventually renamed Carling O'Keefe, which merged with Molson, which then merged with Coors to form Molson Coors Brewing Company.",
" In South Africa the Carling brands are distributed by SABMiller."
],
"title": "Carling brewery"
}
] |
[
"Title: Lancashire Combination\n\nThe Lancashire Combination was a football league founded in the North West of England in 1891–92. It absorbed the Lancashire League in 1903. In 1968 the Combination lost five of its clubs to the newly formed Northern Premier League. In 1982 it was finally merged with the Cheshire County League to form the North West Counties League.",
"Title: 1995–96 FA Premier League\n\nThe 1995–96 FA Premier League (known as the FA Carling Premiership due to the competition's sponsorship by the Carling brewery) was the fourth season of the competition, since its formation in 1992. Due to the decision to reduce the number of clubs in the Premier League from 22 to 20, only two clubs were promoted instead of the usual three, Middlesbrough and Bolton Wanderers.",
"Title: 1994–95 Birmingham City F.C. season\n\nThe 1994–95 Football League season was Birmingham City Football Club's 92nd in the Football League and their fourth in the third tier of English football, Division Two, to which they were relegated in 1993–94. They finished in first position in the 24-team division, so were promoted straight back to Division One for 1995–96. They entered the 1994–95 FA Cup in the first round, losing in the third round to Premier League club Liverpool in a penalty shootout in which they failed to convert a single penalty. They entered the League Cup in the first round and lost to Blackburn Rovers in the second. They won the Football League Trophy for the second time in four attempts, defeating Carlisle United at Wembley in front of a crowd of 76,663 with the first golden goal to determine a major English competition.",
"Title: 2014–15 Arsenal F.C. season\n\nThe 2014–15 season was Arsenal's 23rd season in the Premier League and 95th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. This season Arsenal participated in the Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup, Community Shield and the UEFA Champions League. An inconsistent start to the league season ended any realistic hopes for the Premier League title as Arsenal only won two out of their first eight games. Inconsistency plagued Arsenal throughout the first half of the campaign, not helped by numerous injuries to important players. At one stage, Arsenal were as low as eighth heading into early December. This would later haunt them as they mounted a superb recovery during the second half of the season where they won eight league games in a row, becoming the in-form side of the division. Ultimately, however, the gap between themselves and leaders Chelsea was too much, the points dropped during the inconsistent first half of the season proving too much to recover. Old habits were hard to eradicate in Europe as yet again, Arsenal were their own worst enemies. Despite being widely expected to reach the quarter-finals, having been given a favourable draw in the Round of 16 against AS Monaco, Arsenal self-destructed at home, where panic led to Monaco winning the first leg 1–3, a scoreline which ultimately proved fatal over the course of the tie. Arsenal, with their 0–2 away win proving useless, bowed out yet again in the round of sixteen for the fifth consecutive year. However, Arsenal reclaimed the FA Cup, thus becoming the most successful club in the history of the competition with twelve wins, comfortably beating Aston Villa 4–0 in the final. Arsenal finished the league season in third, thereby qualifying directly to Champions league group stage and avoiding the Champions League qualifier, something Arsène Wenger was keen to avoid as he felt it had a negative impact on competing for the Premier League title, which was the primary target set by the players, manager and coaching staff, going into the next season.",
"Title: List of Northwich Victoria F.C. seasons\n\nNorthwich Victoria Football Club are an English football club based in Northwich, Cheshire. They are currently competing in the Northern Premier League Premier Division. The club was founded in 1874, playing challenge matches organised on an ad hoc basis until the 1877 season, when they entered the Welsh Cup for the first time. The club entered two other competitions (The Cheshire Senior Cup in 1879 and the FA Cup in 1882) before finally playing league football in The Combination in 1890, for which they were founding members. They became founding members of the Football League Second Division in 1892, where the club remained for two seasons, and are the only two seasons in the club's history where they have played professionally and in the Football League. In the 1894 season, they returned to amateur, regional football when they rejoined the Combination. Two season in the Cheshire League followed until the turn of the century, when Northwich joined the Manchester League in 1900, when they finished as runners-up. Two seasons later, for the first time, they won a league trophy as winners of the Manchester League in 1902. They departed the Manchester League in 1912 when they joined the second division of the Lancashire Combination, finishing 4th in the first season, which ensured their promotion to the first division. In 1919, they became founder members of the Cheshire County League, where they remained until the 1968 season, winning the league just once in the 1956–57 season. Following their departure from the Cheshire County League, they became founder members of the Northern Premier League. In 1979, they founded yet another league, the Alliance Premier League (now known as the Football Conference, where they remained until their relegation in the 2004–05 season. During their time in the Conference, they won the FA Trophy in the 1983–84 season, and finished runners-up twice in 1982 and 1995. They returned to the Conference National at their first attempt when they won the Conference North in the 2005–06 season. However, ongoing financial issues in the latter part of the 2000s saw them relegated twice in two season; in 2009 they were relegated back to the Conference North and then again the following season to the Northern Premier League Premier Division, where they are competing for the current season.",
"Title: 1996 FA Charity Shield\n\nThe 1996 FA Charity Shield (also known as the Littlewoods FA Charity Shield for sponsorship reasons) was the 74th FA Charity Shield, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Premier League and FA Cup competitions. The match was played on 11 August 1996 at Wembley Stadium and contested by Manchester United, who had won the Double of Premier League and FA Cup in 1995–96, and Newcastle United, who had finished as runners-up in the Premier League. Manchester United won the match 4–0 with goals from Eric Cantona, Nicky Butt, David Beckham and Roy Keane.",
"Title: Bangladesh Football Premier League\n\nBangladesh Premier League is the top-tier association football league of Bangladesh run by the country's football federation. It is the country's most popular sports league after the BPL. It was previously known as the B. League that began in 2007. The league was renamed Bangladesh League in 2009. In 2012 it was given its current name. It marked the start of the professional era and an open wide national league. It was sponsored by Manyavar for the 2015 season, thus known as Manyavar Bangladesh Premier League. In the following season, 2016, it is sponsored by the JB Group. The Dhaka Derby is one of the most popular matches in the league.",
"Title: List of Premier League stadiums\n\nSince the inception of the Premier League, England's highest level of association football annual league tournament, 58 football stadiums have been used to host matches. The inaugural round of Premier League matches took place on 15 August 1992 with eleven clubs hosting the opening fixtures. Following the Hillsborough Disaster in 1989, the Taylor Report recommended the abolition of standing terraces by the start of the 1994–95 season, to be replaced by all-seater stadiums. However, following Fulham's promotion from Division 1 in the 2000–01 season, terraces returned temporarily to the Premier League as The Football Association allowed the club extra time to complete renovations. The club were forced to play at Loftus Road after inadequate progress was made in converting Craven Cottage, but they returned to their home ground after building work was completed in time for the 2004–05 season.",
"Title: Masvingo United F.C.\n\nMasvingo United is a Zimbabwean football club based in Masvingo. They used to play in the top division in Zimbabwean football, but were for the third time relegated to Division one at the end of the 2011 season. The club used to be bankrolled by Mr. Tanda Tavaruva & sons, whose mainstay is provision of transport services. He used to own one of the largest fleet of buses in Zimbabwe. Masvingo United was established in the year 1997. The club bought a franchise from Zimex, a then Cold Storage Commission sponsored club in Masvingo & changed the name to Masvingo United. In the 1998/1999, season, whilst playing 1st division soccer in the Southern zone, Masvingo United came out tops and gained promotion to the Premier league. At the end of the 2002 season, the club was relegated for the first time, but rebound to the premier league the following season. They played in the premier league & had their best season in year 2005. The club was relegated for the second time at the end of the year 2008 season, and only got promoted back to the premier league at the beginning of the year 2011 season, to be relegated again for the 3rd time at the end of the year 2011 season.",
"Title: Carling brewery\n\nCarling brewery was founded in London, Ontario, Canada in 1818. In 1952 Carling lager was first sold in the United Kingdom; in the early 1980s it became the UK's most popular beer brand (by volume sold). The company changed hands numerous times; it was acquired by Canadian Breweries Limited, which was eventually renamed Carling O'Keefe, which merged with Molson, which then merged with Coors to form Molson Coors Brewing Company. In South Africa the Carling brands are distributed by SABMiller."
] |
1,741
|
Raúl Bernao played 15 times with which football team represents Argentina in football and is controlled by the Argentine Football Association (AFA), the governing body for football in Argentina?
|
Argentina national football team
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Raúl Bernao",
"Argentina national football team"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
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|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Argentina national football team (Spanish: \"Selección de fútbol de Argentina\" ) represents Argentina in football and is controlled by the Argentine Football Association (AFA), the governing body for football in Argentina.",
" Argentina's home stadium is Estadio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti in Buenos Aires."
],
"title": "Argentina national football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The American Football Association (AFA) was the first attempt in the United States to form an organizing soccer body.",
" It is best known for being the second oldest sports league to form, behind the National League of baseball in 1876, as well as being the oldest soccer league in the United States.",
" The Association was formed in 1884 in an attempt to standardize rules and procedures.",
" It was allied with The Football Association, becoming a member on February 22, 1909 at an FA meeting chaired by John Charles Clegg, and drew on that organization's approach to the game.",
" As part of its efforts, the AFA directly organized both league and cup competitions as well as overseeing the operations of member leagues.",
" In 1884, it established the American Cup, which for several decades was the highest competitive soccer competition in the United States.",
" The weakness of the AFA lay in its refusal to expand outside the southern New England region.",
" When a movement began to create a national governing body in 1911, the AFA found itself confronting the newly established American Amateur Football Association (AAFA), a body which quickly became national.",
" The AFA argued that it should be recognized by FIFA.",
" However, several member organizations defected from the AFA to the AAFA in 1912.",
" The AAFA quickly moved to reform itself as the United States Football Association, receiving FIFA recognition in 1913.",
" The AFA continued to run the American Cup until 1925, but by that time it had been superseded by the National Challenge Cup and National Amateur Cup."
],
"title": "American Football Association"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Northern Mariana Islands national football team represents the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in international men's football.",
" The team is controlled by the governing body for football in the Northern Mariana Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands Football Association, which is a member of the East Asian Football Federation (EAFF) and an associate member of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).",
" The federation is not a member of the world governing body FIFA and so whilst the national team is eligible to enter AFC and EAFF-run competitions, they are currently ineligible for global competitions such as the FIFA World Cup and FIFA Confederations Cup.",
" As such, they do not have an official FIFA ranking.",
" However, the team have been consistently ranked as one of the worst teams in the world on the Elo ratings and are in fact, at July 2016 rated as the worst men's senior international team in the world in a ratings system that also includes a number of other non-FIFA teams.",
" Following the completion of the preliminary qualifying round for the 2017 EAFF East Asian Cup the team have won only one official competitive match against international opposition and have a goal difference of −78 in official matches.",
" The team have never qualified for the finals of a major tournament and beyond friendlies and qualifying matches, their only official competition has been in an exhibition tournament in the regional Micronesian Games in 1998, which they won, to date their only tournament success."
],
"title": "Northern Mariana Islands national football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Argentina Olympic football team represents Argentina in international football competitions in the Olympic Games.",
" The selection is limited to players under the age of 23, except three overage players.",
" The team is controlled by the Argentine Football Association (AFA)."
],
"title": "Argentina national under-23 football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Supercopa Argentina (English: Argentine Super Cup) is an official National association football cup of Argentina organized by the Argentine Football Association (AFA).",
" The annual football match was played for the first time in 2012, being contested by the reigning champions of Primera División and Copa Argentina respectively."
],
"title": "Supercopa Argentina"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Argentine Football Association (Spanish: \"Asociación del Fútbol Argentino\" , ] ) is the governing body of football in Argentina.",
" It organises the Primera División and lower divisions (from Primera B Nacional to Torneo Argentino C), the Argentine Cup, Supercopa Argentina and the Argentina national football team."
],
"title": "Argentine Football Association"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Raúl Bernao (4 November 1941 – 26 December 2007) was an Argentine footballer.",
" He played most of his career for Club Atlético Independiente winning a number of major titles, he also played for the Argentina national football team 15 times."
],
"title": "Raúl Bernao"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Federico Sacchi (born September 4, 1936 in Rosario) is a former Argentine football defender who played 15 times for the Argentina national team between 1960 and 1965.",
" He is included in the Argentine Football Association Hall of Fame."
],
"title": "Federico Sacchi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Torneo Argentino C (officially Torneo del Interior) was one of the two leagues that form the regionalised fifth level of the Argentine football league system.",
" The competition was organized by the Federal Council (\"Consejo Federal\"), an internal organ of the Argentine Football Association (AFA), and was contested by clubs indirectly affiliated to the Association.",
" In other words, the clubs that played in the tournament are affiliated to their local leagues, that in turn are affiliated to AFA."
],
"title": "Torneo Argentino C"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Argentina national beach soccer team represents Argentina in international beach soccer competitions and is controlled by the AFA, the governing body for football in Argentina."
],
"title": "Argentina national beach soccer team"
}
] |
[
"Title: Argentina national football team\n\nThe Argentina national football team (Spanish: \"Selección de fútbol de Argentina\" ) represents Argentina in football and is controlled by the Argentine Football Association (AFA), the governing body for football in Argentina. Argentina's home stadium is Estadio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti in Buenos Aires.",
"Title: American Football Association\n\nThe American Football Association (AFA) was the first attempt in the United States to form an organizing soccer body. It is best known for being the second oldest sports league to form, behind the National League of baseball in 1876, as well as being the oldest soccer league in the United States. The Association was formed in 1884 in an attempt to standardize rules and procedures. It was allied with The Football Association, becoming a member on February 22, 1909 at an FA meeting chaired by John Charles Clegg, and drew on that organization's approach to the game. As part of its efforts, the AFA directly organized both league and cup competitions as well as overseeing the operations of member leagues. In 1884, it established the American Cup, which for several decades was the highest competitive soccer competition in the United States. The weakness of the AFA lay in its refusal to expand outside the southern New England region. When a movement began to create a national governing body in 1911, the AFA found itself confronting the newly established American Amateur Football Association (AAFA), a body which quickly became national. The AFA argued that it should be recognized by FIFA. However, several member organizations defected from the AFA to the AAFA in 1912. The AAFA quickly moved to reform itself as the United States Football Association, receiving FIFA recognition in 1913. The AFA continued to run the American Cup until 1925, but by that time it had been superseded by the National Challenge Cup and National Amateur Cup.",
"Title: Northern Mariana Islands national football team\n\nThe Northern Mariana Islands national football team represents the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in international men's football. The team is controlled by the governing body for football in the Northern Mariana Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands Football Association, which is a member of the East Asian Football Federation (EAFF) and an associate member of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). The federation is not a member of the world governing body FIFA and so whilst the national team is eligible to enter AFC and EAFF-run competitions, they are currently ineligible for global competitions such as the FIFA World Cup and FIFA Confederations Cup. As such, they do not have an official FIFA ranking. However, the team have been consistently ranked as one of the worst teams in the world on the Elo ratings and are in fact, at July 2016 rated as the worst men's senior international team in the world in a ratings system that also includes a number of other non-FIFA teams. Following the completion of the preliminary qualifying round for the 2017 EAFF East Asian Cup the team have won only one official competitive match against international opposition and have a goal difference of −78 in official matches. The team have never qualified for the finals of a major tournament and beyond friendlies and qualifying matches, their only official competition has been in an exhibition tournament in the regional Micronesian Games in 1998, which they won, to date their only tournament success.",
"Title: Argentina national under-23 football team\n\nThe Argentina Olympic football team represents Argentina in international football competitions in the Olympic Games. The selection is limited to players under the age of 23, except three overage players. The team is controlled by the Argentine Football Association (AFA).",
"Title: Supercopa Argentina\n\nThe Supercopa Argentina (English: Argentine Super Cup) is an official National association football cup of Argentina organized by the Argentine Football Association (AFA). The annual football match was played for the first time in 2012, being contested by the reigning champions of Primera División and Copa Argentina respectively.",
"Title: Argentine Football Association\n\nThe Argentine Football Association (Spanish: \"Asociación del Fútbol Argentino\" , ] ) is the governing body of football in Argentina. It organises the Primera División and lower divisions (from Primera B Nacional to Torneo Argentino C), the Argentine Cup, Supercopa Argentina and the Argentina national football team.",
"Title: Raúl Bernao\n\nRaúl Bernao (4 November 1941 – 26 December 2007) was an Argentine footballer. He played most of his career for Club Atlético Independiente winning a number of major titles, he also played for the Argentina national football team 15 times.",
"Title: Federico Sacchi\n\nFederico Sacchi (born September 4, 1936 in Rosario) is a former Argentine football defender who played 15 times for the Argentina national team between 1960 and 1965. He is included in the Argentine Football Association Hall of Fame.",
"Title: Torneo Argentino C\n\nThe Torneo Argentino C (officially Torneo del Interior) was one of the two leagues that form the regionalised fifth level of the Argentine football league system. The competition was organized by the Federal Council (\"Consejo Federal\"), an internal organ of the Argentine Football Association (AFA), and was contested by clubs indirectly affiliated to the Association. In other words, the clubs that played in the tournament are affiliated to their local leagues, that in turn are affiliated to AFA.",
"Title: Argentina national beach soccer team\n\nThe Argentina national beach soccer team represents Argentina in international beach soccer competitions and is controlled by the AFA, the governing body for football in Argentina."
] |
1,742
|
Who committed suicide in 1963, David Malouf or Sylvia Plath?
|
Sylvia Plath
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"David Malouf",
"Sylvia Plath",
"Sylvia Plath"
],
"sent_id": [
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[
{
"sentences": [
"\"Ennui\" is a sonnet by Sylvia Plath published for the first time in November 2006 in the online literary journal \"Blackbird\" .",
" Sylvia Plath wrote the Petrarchan sonnet “Ennui” during her undergraduate years at Smith College."
],
"title": "Ennui (sonnet)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Otto Emil Plath (April 13, 1885 – November 5, 1940) was a German American author, a professor of biology and German at Boston University, and an entomologist, with a specific expertise on bees.",
" He was the father of American poet Sylvia Plath, Warren Plath, and the husband of Aurelia Plath.",
" He wrote the 1934 book, \"Bumblebees and Their Ways\".",
" He is notable for being the probable subject of one of his daughter's most well-known poems, \"Daddy\"."
],
"title": "Otto Plath"
},
{
"sentences": [
"David George Joseph Malouf (born 20 March 1934) is an Australian writer.",
" He was awarded the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 2000, his 1993 novel \"Remembering Babylon\" won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award in 1996, he won the inaugural Australia-Asia Literary Award in 2008, and he was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.",
" In 2016, he received the Australia Council Award for Lifetime Achievement in Literature."
],
"title": "David Malouf"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sylvia Plath ( ; October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) was an American poet, novelist, and short story writer.",
" Born in Boston, she studied at Smith College and Newnham College at the University of Cambridge before receiving acclaim as a poet and writer.",
" She married fellow poet Ted Hughes in 1956, and they lived together in the United States and then in England.",
" They had two children, Frieda and Nicholas, before separating in 1962.",
" Plath was clinically depressed for most of her adult life, and was treated multiple times with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).",
" She committed suicide in 1963."
],
"title": "Sylvia Plath"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sylvia is a 2003 British biographical drama film directed by Christine Jeffs and starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Daniel Craig, Jared Harris, and Michael Gambon.",
" It tells the true story of the romance between prominent poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes.",
" The film begins with their meeting at Cambridge in 1956 and ends with Sylvia Plath's suicide in 1963."
],
"title": "Sylvia (2003 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Bell Jar is the only novel written by the American writer and poet Sylvia Plath.",
" Originally published under the pseudonym \"Victoria Lucas\" in 1963, the novel is semi-autobiographical, with the names of places and people changed.",
" The book is often regarded as a \"roman à clef\" since the protagonist's descent into mental illness parallels Plath's own experiences with what may have been clinical depression.",
" Plath died by suicide a month after its first UK publication.",
" The novel was published under Plath's name for the first time in 1967 and was not published in the United States until 1971, in accordance with the wishes of both Plath's husband, Ted Hughes, and her mother.",
" The novel has been translated into nearly a dozen languages.",
" The novel, though dark, is often read in high school English classes."
],
"title": "The Bell Jar"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Sylvia Plath effect is the phenomenon that poets are more susceptible to mental illness than other creative writers.",
" The term was coined in 2001 by psychologist James C. Kaufman.",
" Although many studies (e.g., Andreasen, 1987; Jamison, 1989; Ludwig, 1995) have demonstrated that creative writers are prone to experience mental illness, this relationship has not been examined in depth.",
" This early finding has been dubbed \"the Sylvia Plath effect\", and implications and possibilities for future research are discussed.",
" Kaufman's work further demonstrated that female poets were more likely to experience mental illness than any other class of writers.",
" In addition, female poets were more likely to be mentally ill than other eminent women, such as politicians, actresses, and artists."
],
"title": "Sylvia Plath effect"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Winter Trees is a 1971 posthumous collection of poetry by Sylvia Plath, published by her husband Ted Hughes.",
" Along with \"Crossing the Water\" it provides the remainder of the poems that Plath had written during her state of elevated creativity prior to her suicide."
],
"title": "Winter Trees"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Johnno is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Australian author David Malouf and was first published in 1975.",
" It was Malouf's first novel."
],
"title": "Johnno"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Assia Wevill (15 May 1927 – 23 March 1969) was a German-born woman who escaped the Nazis at the beginning of World War II and emigrated to Mandate Palestine, then later the United Kingdom, where she had a relationship with the English poet Ted Hughes.",
" She killed herself and her four-year-old daughter Alexandra Tatiana Elise (nicknamed \"Shura\") in a fashion similar to that of Sylvia Plath, well-known writer and Hughes's first wife, who six years earlier had also committed suicide, by use of a gas oven."
],
"title": "Assia Wevill"
}
] |
[
"Title: Ennui (sonnet)\n\n\"Ennui\" is a sonnet by Sylvia Plath published for the first time in November 2006 in the online literary journal \"Blackbird\" . Sylvia Plath wrote the Petrarchan sonnet “Ennui” during her undergraduate years at Smith College.",
"Title: Otto Plath\n\nOtto Emil Plath (April 13, 1885 – November 5, 1940) was a German American author, a professor of biology and German at Boston University, and an entomologist, with a specific expertise on bees. He was the father of American poet Sylvia Plath, Warren Plath, and the husband of Aurelia Plath. He wrote the 1934 book, \"Bumblebees and Their Ways\". He is notable for being the probable subject of one of his daughter's most well-known poems, \"Daddy\".",
"Title: David Malouf\n\nDavid George Joseph Malouf (born 20 March 1934) is an Australian writer. He was awarded the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 2000, his 1993 novel \"Remembering Babylon\" won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award in 1996, he won the inaugural Australia-Asia Literary Award in 2008, and he was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. In 2016, he received the Australia Council Award for Lifetime Achievement in Literature.",
"Title: Sylvia Plath\n\nSylvia Plath ( ; October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) was an American poet, novelist, and short story writer. Born in Boston, she studied at Smith College and Newnham College at the University of Cambridge before receiving acclaim as a poet and writer. She married fellow poet Ted Hughes in 1956, and they lived together in the United States and then in England. They had two children, Frieda and Nicholas, before separating in 1962. Plath was clinically depressed for most of her adult life, and was treated multiple times with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). She committed suicide in 1963.",
"Title: Sylvia (2003 film)\n\nSylvia is a 2003 British biographical drama film directed by Christine Jeffs and starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Daniel Craig, Jared Harris, and Michael Gambon. It tells the true story of the romance between prominent poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes. The film begins with their meeting at Cambridge in 1956 and ends with Sylvia Plath's suicide in 1963.",
"Title: The Bell Jar\n\nThe Bell Jar is the only novel written by the American writer and poet Sylvia Plath. Originally published under the pseudonym \"Victoria Lucas\" in 1963, the novel is semi-autobiographical, with the names of places and people changed. The book is often regarded as a \"roman à clef\" since the protagonist's descent into mental illness parallels Plath's own experiences with what may have been clinical depression. Plath died by suicide a month after its first UK publication. The novel was published under Plath's name for the first time in 1967 and was not published in the United States until 1971, in accordance with the wishes of both Plath's husband, Ted Hughes, and her mother. The novel has been translated into nearly a dozen languages. The novel, though dark, is often read in high school English classes.",
"Title: Sylvia Plath effect\n\nThe Sylvia Plath effect is the phenomenon that poets are more susceptible to mental illness than other creative writers. The term was coined in 2001 by psychologist James C. Kaufman. Although many studies (e.g., Andreasen, 1987; Jamison, 1989; Ludwig, 1995) have demonstrated that creative writers are prone to experience mental illness, this relationship has not been examined in depth. This early finding has been dubbed \"the Sylvia Plath effect\", and implications and possibilities for future research are discussed. Kaufman's work further demonstrated that female poets were more likely to experience mental illness than any other class of writers. In addition, female poets were more likely to be mentally ill than other eminent women, such as politicians, actresses, and artists.",
"Title: Winter Trees\n\nWinter Trees is a 1971 posthumous collection of poetry by Sylvia Plath, published by her husband Ted Hughes. Along with \"Crossing the Water\" it provides the remainder of the poems that Plath had written during her state of elevated creativity prior to her suicide.",
"Title: Johnno\n\nJohnno is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Australian author David Malouf and was first published in 1975. It was Malouf's first novel.",
"Title: Assia Wevill\n\nAssia Wevill (15 May 1927 – 23 March 1969) was a German-born woman who escaped the Nazis at the beginning of World War II and emigrated to Mandate Palestine, then later the United Kingdom, where she had a relationship with the English poet Ted Hughes. She killed herself and her four-year-old daughter Alexandra Tatiana Elise (nicknamed \"Shura\") in a fashion similar to that of Sylvia Plath, well-known writer and Hughes's first wife, who six years earlier had also committed suicide, by use of a gas oven."
] |
1,743
|
As a film editor, Jim Clark worked on the British biographical drama film, The Killing Fields, that was released when?
|
1984
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Jim Clark (film editor)",
"Jim Clark (film editor)",
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{
"sentences": [
"George Clark (1888-1946) was a British film actor and film producer during the silent era.",
" For many years Clark worked with the British star Guy Newall, who he had met during the First World War.",
" Together they founded Lucky Cat Films and later George Clark Productions, securing a distribution arrangement with the larger Stoll Pictures."
],
"title": "George Clark (producer)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Killing Fields is a 1984 British biographical drama film about the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia, which is based on the experiences of two journalists: Cambodian Dith Pran and American Sydney Schanberg.",
" It was directed by Roland Joffé and produced by David Puttnam for his company Goldcrest Films.",
" Sam Waterston stars as Schanberg, Haing S. Ngor as Pran, Julian Sands as Jon Swain, and John Malkovich as Al Rockoff.",
" The adaptation for the screen was written by Bruce Robinson; the musical score was written by Mike Oldfield and orchestrated by David Bedford."
],
"title": "The Killing Fields (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Creation is a 2009 British biographical drama film about Charles Darwin's relationship with his wife Emma and his memory of their eldest daughter Annie, as he struggles to write \"On the Origin of Species\".",
" The film, directed by Jon Amiel and starring real life couple Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connelly as Charles and Emma Darwin, is a partly biographical, partly fictionalised account, based on Randal Keynes's Darwin biography \"Annie's Box\"."
],
"title": "Creation (2009 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A Man for All Seasons is a 1966 British biographical drama film in Technicolor based on Robert Bolt's play of the same name and adapted for the big screen by Bolt himself.",
" It was released on 12 December 1966.",
" It was directed by Fred Zinnemann, who had previously directed the films \"High Noon\" and \"From Here to Eternity\"."
],
"title": "A Man for All Seasons (1966 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Killing of John Lennon is a 2006 British biographical drama film about Mark Chapman's plot to kill musician John Lennon.",
" The film was written and directed by Andrew Piddington, and stars Jonas Ball, Robert C. Kirk and Thomas A. McMahon."
],
"title": "The Killing of John Lennon"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished was an investigatory documentary about the final weeks of the Sri Lankan Civil War broadcast by the British TV station Channel 4 on 14 March 2012.",
" It was a sequel to the award-winning \"Sri Lanka's Killing Fields\" which was broadcast by Channel 4 in June 2011.",
" Made by film maker Callum Macrae, this documentary focused on four specific cases and investigated who was responsible for them.",
" Using amateur video from the conflict zone filmed by civilians and Sri Lankan soldiers, photographs and statements by civilians, soldiers and United Nations workers, the documentary traced ultimate responsibility for the cases to Sri Lanka's political and military leaders.",
" The documentary was made by ITN Productions and presented by Jon Snow, the main anchor on Channel 4 News.",
" The Sri Lankan government has denied all the allegations in the documentary."
],
"title": "Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Killing Fields is the 10th record album by Mike Oldfield, released in 1984 on Virgin Records.",
" It was the soundtrack album for the British drama film of the same name based on the experiences of two journalists in the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia.",
" It is the only full-length film score written by Oldfield."
],
"title": "The Killing Fields (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Invisible Woman is a 2013 British biographical drama film directed by Ralph Fiennes and starring Fiennes, Felicity Jones, Kristin Scott Thomas and Tom Hollander.",
" Written by Abi Morgan, and based on the book \"The Invisible Woman\" by Claire Tomalin, the film is about the secret love affair between Charles Dickens and Nelly Ternan, which lasted for thirteen years until his death in 1870.",
" The film premiered at the Telluride Film Festival on 31 August 2013, and was released in the United Kingdom on 7 February 2014.",
" The film received a Best Costume Design nomination (Michael O'Connor) at the 86th Academy Awards."
],
"title": "The Invisible Woman (2013 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A Street Cat Named Bob is a 2016 British biographical drama film directed by Roger Spottiswoode and written by Tim John and Maria Nation.",
" It is based on the book of same name by James Bowen.",
" The film stars Luke Treadaway, Ruta Gedmintas, Joanne Froggatt, Anthony Head and Bob the Cat as himself.",
" The film premiered in London on 3 November 2016, followed by a general release the next day."
],
"title": "A Street Cat Named Bob (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jim Clark (24 May 1931 – 25 February 2016) was a British film editor with more than forty feature film credits from 1956–2008.",
" Clark has also directed eight features and short films.",
" Among his most recognized films are \"Midnight Cowboy\" (as creative consultant-1969), \"Marathon Man\" (1976), \"The Killing Fields\" (1984), and \"Vera Drake\" (2004).",
" In 2011, Clark published \"Dream Repairman: Adventures in Film Editing\", which is a memoir of his career."
],
"title": "Jim Clark (film editor)"
}
] |
[
"Title: George Clark (producer)\n\nGeorge Clark (1888-1946) was a British film actor and film producer during the silent era. For many years Clark worked with the British star Guy Newall, who he had met during the First World War. Together they founded Lucky Cat Films and later George Clark Productions, securing a distribution arrangement with the larger Stoll Pictures.",
"Title: The Killing Fields (film)\n\nThe Killing Fields is a 1984 British biographical drama film about the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia, which is based on the experiences of two journalists: Cambodian Dith Pran and American Sydney Schanberg. It was directed by Roland Joffé and produced by David Puttnam for his company Goldcrest Films. Sam Waterston stars as Schanberg, Haing S. Ngor as Pran, Julian Sands as Jon Swain, and John Malkovich as Al Rockoff. The adaptation for the screen was written by Bruce Robinson; the musical score was written by Mike Oldfield and orchestrated by David Bedford.",
"Title: Creation (2009 film)\n\nCreation is a 2009 British biographical drama film about Charles Darwin's relationship with his wife Emma and his memory of their eldest daughter Annie, as he struggles to write \"On the Origin of Species\". The film, directed by Jon Amiel and starring real life couple Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connelly as Charles and Emma Darwin, is a partly biographical, partly fictionalised account, based on Randal Keynes's Darwin biography \"Annie's Box\".",
"Title: A Man for All Seasons (1966 film)\n\nA Man for All Seasons is a 1966 British biographical drama film in Technicolor based on Robert Bolt's play of the same name and adapted for the big screen by Bolt himself. It was released on 12 December 1966. It was directed by Fred Zinnemann, who had previously directed the films \"High Noon\" and \"From Here to Eternity\".",
"Title: The Killing of John Lennon\n\nThe Killing of John Lennon is a 2006 British biographical drama film about Mark Chapman's plot to kill musician John Lennon. The film was written and directed by Andrew Piddington, and stars Jonas Ball, Robert C. Kirk and Thomas A. McMahon.",
"Title: Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished\n\nSri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished was an investigatory documentary about the final weeks of the Sri Lankan Civil War broadcast by the British TV station Channel 4 on 14 March 2012. It was a sequel to the award-winning \"Sri Lanka's Killing Fields\" which was broadcast by Channel 4 in June 2011. Made by film maker Callum Macrae, this documentary focused on four specific cases and investigated who was responsible for them. Using amateur video from the conflict zone filmed by civilians and Sri Lankan soldiers, photographs and statements by civilians, soldiers and United Nations workers, the documentary traced ultimate responsibility for the cases to Sri Lanka's political and military leaders. The documentary was made by ITN Productions and presented by Jon Snow, the main anchor on Channel 4 News. The Sri Lankan government has denied all the allegations in the documentary.",
"Title: The Killing Fields (album)\n\nThe Killing Fields is the 10th record album by Mike Oldfield, released in 1984 on Virgin Records. It was the soundtrack album for the British drama film of the same name based on the experiences of two journalists in the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia. It is the only full-length film score written by Oldfield.",
"Title: The Invisible Woman (2013 film)\n\nThe Invisible Woman is a 2013 British biographical drama film directed by Ralph Fiennes and starring Fiennes, Felicity Jones, Kristin Scott Thomas and Tom Hollander. Written by Abi Morgan, and based on the book \"The Invisible Woman\" by Claire Tomalin, the film is about the secret love affair between Charles Dickens and Nelly Ternan, which lasted for thirteen years until his death in 1870. The film premiered at the Telluride Film Festival on 31 August 2013, and was released in the United Kingdom on 7 February 2014. The film received a Best Costume Design nomination (Michael O'Connor) at the 86th Academy Awards.",
"Title: A Street Cat Named Bob (film)\n\nA Street Cat Named Bob is a 2016 British biographical drama film directed by Roger Spottiswoode and written by Tim John and Maria Nation. It is based on the book of same name by James Bowen. The film stars Luke Treadaway, Ruta Gedmintas, Joanne Froggatt, Anthony Head and Bob the Cat as himself. The film premiered in London on 3 November 2016, followed by a general release the next day.",
"Title: Jim Clark (film editor)\n\nJim Clark (24 May 1931 – 25 February 2016) was a British film editor with more than forty feature film credits from 1956–2008. Clark has also directed eight features and short films. Among his most recognized films are \"Midnight Cowboy\" (as creative consultant-1969), \"Marathon Man\" (1976), \"The Killing Fields\" (1984), and \"Vera Drake\" (2004). In 2011, Clark published \"Dream Repairman: Adventures in Film Editing\", which is a memoir of his career."
] |
1,744
|
The actor who had the role of Bruce Banner played Henry VIII in what movie?
|
"The Other Boleyn Girl"
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Hulk (video game)",
"Eric Bana"
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2,
3
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[
{
"sentences": [
"Lady Jane Seymour (c.1541 – 19 March 1561) was an influential writer during the sixteenth century in England, along with her sisters, Lady Margaret Seymour and Anne Seymour, Countess of Warwick.",
" Their brother was Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford.",
" They were the children of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, who from 1547 was the Lord Protector of England after the death of King Henry VIII and during the minority of Jane's first cousin, King Edward VI.",
" She was baptised 22 February 1541, and her godparents were Thomas Cromwell (the King's chief minister), Lady Mary (the King's daughter, at the time declared illegitimate but later to become queen) and Katherine Howard, the fifth wife of Henry VIII, and queen at the time.",
" Jane was thus the niece of Henry VIII's third wife, Queen Jane, whom she was probably named after.",
" She was the sole witness to the secret marriage of her brother Edward to Lady Catherine Grey (a potential heir to Queen Elizabeth I) in 1560.",
" She died a year later, aged 20, probably of tuberculosis."
],
"title": "Lady Jane Seymour"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Grimston Manor was a manor house in Norfolk, England.",
" In 1524, it was given to George Boleyn, the first grant King Henry VIII made to Boleyn.",
" It is assumed that this was given on the wedding of George to Jane Parker.",
" Henry VIII was around this time involved in a relationship with George's sister, Mary, and within two years would be pursuing George's other sister, Anne, who became Henry VIII's second wife."
],
"title": "Grimston Manor"
},
{
"sentences": [
"In addition to his mainstream incarnation, the Hulk has also been depicted in other fictional universes, in which Bruce Banner's transformation, behavior, or circumstances vary from the mainstream setting.",
" In some stories, someone other than Bruce Banner is the Hulk."
],
"title": "Alternative versions of the Hulk"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Eric Banadinović (born 9 August 1968), known professionally as Eric Bana, is an Australian actor and comedian.",
" He began his career in the sketch comedy series \"Full Frontal\" before gaining critical recognition in the biographical crime film \"Chopper\" (2000).",
" After a decade of roles in Australian TV shows and films, Bana gained Hollywood's attention for his performance in the war film \"Black Hawk Down\" (2001) and the title character in the Ang Lee's Marvel Comics film \"Hulk\" (2003).",
" He has since played Hector in the movie \"Troy\" (2004), the lead in Steven Spielberg's historical drama and political thriller \"Munich\" (2005), Henry VIII in \"The Other Boleyn Girl\" (2008), and the villain Nero in the science-fiction film \"Star Trek\" (2009).",
" Bana also played Henry De Tamble in \"The Time Traveler's Wife\" (2009).",
" In 2013, he played Lt. Cmdr. Erik S. Kristensen in the war film \"Lone Survivor\" and in the following year he played police sergeant Ralph Sarchie in the horror film \"Deliver Us from Evil\"."
],
"title": "Eric Bana"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sir Frederick Tilney (died 1445) Lord of Ashwellthorpe, Norfolk, and Boston, Lincolnshire, England, was the husband of Elizabeth Cheney, Lady Say and father of Elizabeth Tilney, Countess of Surrey.",
" He is a great-grandfather of Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, and Catherine Howard, three of the wives of King Henry VIII of England, and a great-great-grandfather to King Edward VI, the son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour, and Queen Elizabeth I, the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn."
],
"title": "Frederick Tilney"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Henry VIII and His Six Wives is a 1972 British film adaptation, directed by Waris Hussein, of the BBC 1970 six-part miniseries \"The Six Wives of Henry VIII\".",
" Keith Michell, who plays Henry VIII in the TV series, also portrays the king in the film.",
" His six wives are portrayed by different actresses, among them Charlotte Rampling as Anne Boleyn, and Jane Asher as Jane Seymour.",
" Donald Pleasence portrays Thomas Cromwell and Bernard Hepton portrays Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, a role he had also played in the miniseries and briefly in its follow-up \"Elizabeth R\"."
],
"title": "Henry VIII and His Six Wives"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Elizabeth Cheney (April 1422 – 25 September 1473) was a member of the English gentry, who, by dint of her two marriages, was the great-grandmother of Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, and Catherine Howard, three of the wives of King Henry VIII of England, thus making her great-great-grandmother to King Edward VI, the son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour, and Elizabeth I, the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn.",
" Her first husband was Sir Frederick Tilney, and her second husband was Sir John Say, Speaker of the House of Commons.",
" She produced a total of eight children from both marriages."
],
"title": "Elizabeth Cheney (1422–1473)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Henry VIII is a collaborative history play, written by William Shakespeare and John Fletcher, based on the life of King Henry VIII of England.",
" An alternative title, All Is True, is recorded in contemporary documents, the title Henry VIII not appearing until the play's publication in the First Folio of 1623.",
" Stylistic evidence indicates that individual scenes were written by either Shakespeare or his collaborator and successor, John Fletcher.",
" It is also somewhat characteristic of the late romances in its structure.",
" It is noted for having more stage directions than any of Shakespeare's other plays."
],
"title": "Henry VIII (play)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hulk is a 2003 video game sequel based on the movie of the same name.",
" It was developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Vivendi Universal Games and Universal Interactive.",
" A signature feature has Eric Bana reprise his role of Bruce Banner.",
" It was released on May 27, 2003 for all game consoles, and also released for Game Boy Advance as The Incredible Hulk."
],
"title": "Hulk (video game)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hulk is a 2003 American superhero drama film based on the fictional Marvel Comics character of the same name.",
" Ang Lee directed the film, which stars Eric Bana as Dr. Bruce Banner, as well as Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott, Josh Lucas, and Nick Nolte.",
" The film explores the origins of Bruce Banner, who after a lab accident involving gamma radiation finds himself able to turn into a huge green-skinned monster whenever he gets angry, while he is pursued by the United States military and comes into a conflict with his father."
],
"title": "Hulk (film)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Lady Jane Seymour\n\nLady Jane Seymour (c.1541 – 19 March 1561) was an influential writer during the sixteenth century in England, along with her sisters, Lady Margaret Seymour and Anne Seymour, Countess of Warwick. Their brother was Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford. They were the children of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, who from 1547 was the Lord Protector of England after the death of King Henry VIII and during the minority of Jane's first cousin, King Edward VI. She was baptised 22 February 1541, and her godparents were Thomas Cromwell (the King's chief minister), Lady Mary (the King's daughter, at the time declared illegitimate but later to become queen) and Katherine Howard, the fifth wife of Henry VIII, and queen at the time. Jane was thus the niece of Henry VIII's third wife, Queen Jane, whom she was probably named after. She was the sole witness to the secret marriage of her brother Edward to Lady Catherine Grey (a potential heir to Queen Elizabeth I) in 1560. She died a year later, aged 20, probably of tuberculosis.",
"Title: Grimston Manor\n\nGrimston Manor was a manor house in Norfolk, England. In 1524, it was given to George Boleyn, the first grant King Henry VIII made to Boleyn. It is assumed that this was given on the wedding of George to Jane Parker. Henry VIII was around this time involved in a relationship with George's sister, Mary, and within two years would be pursuing George's other sister, Anne, who became Henry VIII's second wife.",
"Title: Alternative versions of the Hulk\n\nIn addition to his mainstream incarnation, the Hulk has also been depicted in other fictional universes, in which Bruce Banner's transformation, behavior, or circumstances vary from the mainstream setting. In some stories, someone other than Bruce Banner is the Hulk.",
"Title: Eric Bana\n\nEric Banadinović (born 9 August 1968), known professionally as Eric Bana, is an Australian actor and comedian. He began his career in the sketch comedy series \"Full Frontal\" before gaining critical recognition in the biographical crime film \"Chopper\" (2000). After a decade of roles in Australian TV shows and films, Bana gained Hollywood's attention for his performance in the war film \"Black Hawk Down\" (2001) and the title character in the Ang Lee's Marvel Comics film \"Hulk\" (2003). He has since played Hector in the movie \"Troy\" (2004), the lead in Steven Spielberg's historical drama and political thriller \"Munich\" (2005), Henry VIII in \"The Other Boleyn Girl\" (2008), and the villain Nero in the science-fiction film \"Star Trek\" (2009). Bana also played Henry De Tamble in \"The Time Traveler's Wife\" (2009). In 2013, he played Lt. Cmdr. Erik S. Kristensen in the war film \"Lone Survivor\" and in the following year he played police sergeant Ralph Sarchie in the horror film \"Deliver Us from Evil\".",
"Title: Frederick Tilney\n\nSir Frederick Tilney (died 1445) Lord of Ashwellthorpe, Norfolk, and Boston, Lincolnshire, England, was the husband of Elizabeth Cheney, Lady Say and father of Elizabeth Tilney, Countess of Surrey. He is a great-grandfather of Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, and Catherine Howard, three of the wives of King Henry VIII of England, and a great-great-grandfather to King Edward VI, the son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour, and Queen Elizabeth I, the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn.",
"Title: Henry VIII and His Six Wives\n\nHenry VIII and His Six Wives is a 1972 British film adaptation, directed by Waris Hussein, of the BBC 1970 six-part miniseries \"The Six Wives of Henry VIII\". Keith Michell, who plays Henry VIII in the TV series, also portrays the king in the film. His six wives are portrayed by different actresses, among them Charlotte Rampling as Anne Boleyn, and Jane Asher as Jane Seymour. Donald Pleasence portrays Thomas Cromwell and Bernard Hepton portrays Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, a role he had also played in the miniseries and briefly in its follow-up \"Elizabeth R\".",
"Title: Elizabeth Cheney (1422–1473)\n\nElizabeth Cheney (April 1422 – 25 September 1473) was a member of the English gentry, who, by dint of her two marriages, was the great-grandmother of Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, and Catherine Howard, three of the wives of King Henry VIII of England, thus making her great-great-grandmother to King Edward VI, the son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour, and Elizabeth I, the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. Her first husband was Sir Frederick Tilney, and her second husband was Sir John Say, Speaker of the House of Commons. She produced a total of eight children from both marriages.",
"Title: Henry VIII (play)\n\nHenry VIII is a collaborative history play, written by William Shakespeare and John Fletcher, based on the life of King Henry VIII of England. An alternative title, All Is True, is recorded in contemporary documents, the title Henry VIII not appearing until the play's publication in the First Folio of 1623. Stylistic evidence indicates that individual scenes were written by either Shakespeare or his collaborator and successor, John Fletcher. It is also somewhat characteristic of the late romances in its structure. It is noted for having more stage directions than any of Shakespeare's other plays.",
"Title: Hulk (video game)\n\nHulk is a 2003 video game sequel based on the movie of the same name. It was developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Vivendi Universal Games and Universal Interactive. A signature feature has Eric Bana reprise his role of Bruce Banner. It was released on May 27, 2003 for all game consoles, and also released for Game Boy Advance as The Incredible Hulk.",
"Title: Hulk (film)\n\nHulk is a 2003 American superhero drama film based on the fictional Marvel Comics character of the same name. Ang Lee directed the film, which stars Eric Bana as Dr. Bruce Banner, as well as Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott, Josh Lucas, and Nick Nolte. The film explores the origins of Bruce Banner, who after a lab accident involving gamma radiation finds himself able to turn into a huge green-skinned monster whenever he gets angry, while he is pursued by the United States military and comes into a conflict with his father."
] |
1,745
|
Jordan Mark Chapell plays for a team that plays at which stadium ?
|
Deva Stadium
|
bridge
|
medium
|
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"title": [
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"Chester F.C."
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0,
1
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{
"sentences": [
"Jordan–Hare Stadium ( ) is the playing venue for Auburn University's football team located on campus in Auburn, Alabama.",
" The stadium is named for Ralph \"Shug\" Jordan, who has the most wins as head coach of the University's football team, and Cliff Hare, a member of Auburn's first football team as well as Dean of the Auburn University School of Chemistry and President of the Southern Conference."
],
"title": "Jordan–Hare Stadium"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Amman International Stadium (Arabic: ستاد عمان الدولي ) is a stadium in Al Hussein Youth City in Amman, Jordan.",
" It is the largest stadium in Jordan.",
" The stadium was built on 1964 and opened on 1968, it is owned by The Jordanian government and operated by The higher council of youth.",
" It is also the home stadium of Jordan national football team and Al-Faisaly.",
" It has a current capacity of 17,619 spectators."
],
"title": "Amman International Stadium"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Chester Football Club is an association football club based in Chester, Cheshire, England.",
" They are currently members of and play at the Deva Stadium."
],
"title": "Chester F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"The California Golden Bears football team is the college football team of the University of California, Berkeley.",
" The team plays its home games at California Memorial Stadium.",
" Memorial Stadium was built to honor Berkeley alumni, students, and other Californians who died in World War I and modeled after the Colosseum in Rome.",
" Memorial Stadium was named one of the 40 best college football stadiums by the \"Sporting News\".",
" The team also has produced two of the oddest and most memorable plays in college football: Roy \"Wrong Way\" Riegels' fumble recovery and run toward the California goal line in the 1929 Rose Bowl, and The Play in the 1982 Big Game with the last play five lateral winning kickoff return."
],
"title": "California Golden Bears football"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tenth Street Stadium was a stadium in Bloomington, Indiana.",
" Originally named Memorial Stadium, it was primarily used for college football, and was the home field of the Indiana University football team between 1925 and 1959, prior to the opening of the new Memorial Stadium.",
" The stadium held 20,000 people and was built in 1925.",
" The stadium replaced Jordan Field which had served as the home field for the program since 1887.",
" The stadium was renamed Tenth Street Stadium in 1971.",
" It was later used to host the Little 500 and was featured in the 1979 movie \"Breaking Away\".",
" The stadium was demolished in 1982 and the site it once stood on now serves as a green space and recreation fields in the center of campus known as The Arboretum."
],
"title": "Tenth Street Stadium"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Jordan national football team (Arabic: المنتخب الأردني لكرة القدم ), known by its fans as Al-Nashama (\"The Chivalrous\"), is the national team of Jordan and is controlled by the Jordan Football Association, the governing body for football in Jordan.",
" Jordan's home ground/stadium is the Amman International Stadium.",
" Jordan have never qualified for the World Cup finals, but have appeared three times in the Asian Cup and reached its quarter-final stage in the 2004 and 2011 editions."
],
"title": "Jordan national football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jordan Mark Witzigreuter (born November 14, 1989), known professionally as The Ready Set, is an American singer-songwriter from Fort Wayne, Indiana.",
" He is the lead vocalist and sole member of the act, using a backup band while on tour.",
" Witzigreuter created The Ready Set in the basement of his childhood home in Fort Wayne, Indiana.",
" He has released four studio albums \"Tantrum Castle\", \"I'm Alive, I'm Dreaming,\" \"The Bad & The Better\", and \"I Will Be Nothing Without Your Love,\" four extended plays and seven singles.",
" Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz signed The Ready Set to his label Decaydance Records, in 2009.",
" He is currently with Hopeless Records."
],
"title": "The Ready Set"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jordan Mark Chapell (born 8 September 1991) is an English professional footballer who plays for Chester as a forward.",
" Born in Sheffield, England, he started his career with his hometown club Sheffield United from where he had loan spells at Burton Albion and Torquay United, who he subsequently joined on a permanent basis."
],
"title": "Jordan Chapell"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jordan Mark Comadena (born November 16, 1985), nicknamed Funky, is an American professional baseball player who is currently a bullpen catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates of Major League Baseball."
],
"title": "Jordan Comadena"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jordan Mark Edward James Shipley (born 26 September 1997) is an English footballer who plays for Coventry City."
],
"title": "Jordan Shipley (footballer)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Jordan–Hare Stadium\n\nJordan–Hare Stadium ( ) is the playing venue for Auburn University's football team located on campus in Auburn, Alabama. The stadium is named for Ralph \"Shug\" Jordan, who has the most wins as head coach of the University's football team, and Cliff Hare, a member of Auburn's first football team as well as Dean of the Auburn University School of Chemistry and President of the Southern Conference.",
"Title: Amman International Stadium\n\nThe Amman International Stadium (Arabic: ستاد عمان الدولي ) is a stadium in Al Hussein Youth City in Amman, Jordan. It is the largest stadium in Jordan. The stadium was built on 1964 and opened on 1968, it is owned by The Jordanian government and operated by The higher council of youth. It is also the home stadium of Jordan national football team and Al-Faisaly. It has a current capacity of 17,619 spectators.",
"Title: Chester F.C.\n\nChester Football Club is an association football club based in Chester, Cheshire, England. They are currently members of and play at the Deva Stadium.",
"Title: California Golden Bears football\n\nThe California Golden Bears football team is the college football team of the University of California, Berkeley. The team plays its home games at California Memorial Stadium. Memorial Stadium was built to honor Berkeley alumni, students, and other Californians who died in World War I and modeled after the Colosseum in Rome. Memorial Stadium was named one of the 40 best college football stadiums by the \"Sporting News\". The team also has produced two of the oddest and most memorable plays in college football: Roy \"Wrong Way\" Riegels' fumble recovery and run toward the California goal line in the 1929 Rose Bowl, and The Play in the 1982 Big Game with the last play five lateral winning kickoff return.",
"Title: Tenth Street Stadium\n\nTenth Street Stadium was a stadium in Bloomington, Indiana. Originally named Memorial Stadium, it was primarily used for college football, and was the home field of the Indiana University football team between 1925 and 1959, prior to the opening of the new Memorial Stadium. The stadium held 20,000 people and was built in 1925. The stadium replaced Jordan Field which had served as the home field for the program since 1887. The stadium was renamed Tenth Street Stadium in 1971. It was later used to host the Little 500 and was featured in the 1979 movie \"Breaking Away\". The stadium was demolished in 1982 and the site it once stood on now serves as a green space and recreation fields in the center of campus known as The Arboretum.",
"Title: Jordan national football team\n\nThe Jordan national football team (Arabic: المنتخب الأردني لكرة القدم ), known by its fans as Al-Nashama (\"The Chivalrous\"), is the national team of Jordan and is controlled by the Jordan Football Association, the governing body for football in Jordan. Jordan's home ground/stadium is the Amman International Stadium. Jordan have never qualified for the World Cup finals, but have appeared three times in the Asian Cup and reached its quarter-final stage in the 2004 and 2011 editions.",
"Title: The Ready Set\n\nJordan Mark Witzigreuter (born November 14, 1989), known professionally as The Ready Set, is an American singer-songwriter from Fort Wayne, Indiana. He is the lead vocalist and sole member of the act, using a backup band while on tour. Witzigreuter created The Ready Set in the basement of his childhood home in Fort Wayne, Indiana. He has released four studio albums \"Tantrum Castle\", \"I'm Alive, I'm Dreaming,\" \"The Bad & The Better\", and \"I Will Be Nothing Without Your Love,\" four extended plays and seven singles. Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz signed The Ready Set to his label Decaydance Records, in 2009. He is currently with Hopeless Records.",
"Title: Jordan Chapell\n\nJordan Mark Chapell (born 8 September 1991) is an English professional footballer who plays for Chester as a forward. Born in Sheffield, England, he started his career with his hometown club Sheffield United from where he had loan spells at Burton Albion and Torquay United, who he subsequently joined on a permanent basis.",
"Title: Jordan Comadena\n\nJordan Mark Comadena (born November 16, 1985), nicknamed Funky, is an American professional baseball player who is currently a bullpen catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates of Major League Baseball.",
"Title: Jordan Shipley (footballer)\n\nJordan Mark Edward James Shipley (born 26 September 1997) is an English footballer who plays for Coventry City."
] |
1,746
|
Which Kentucky town is larger, Gray or Corbin?
|
Corbin
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Gray, Kentucky",
"Corbin, Kentucky"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Kentucky Route 312 (KY 312) is a 11.365 mi state highway in Kentucky that runs from Kentucky Route 192 northwest of Corbin to U.S. Route 25E and World Drive in eastern Corbin via Corbin."
],
"title": "Kentucky Route 312"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Saint Camillus Academy was a Catholic school located in Corbin, Kentucky, established in 1908 by the Sisters of Divine Providence with the help of the Diocese of Covington.",
" The school originally served students in grades 1-12 and included boarding facilities for girls, but in 2012 was closed and in 2013 sold its building to Corbin Schools System.",
" For the 2013-14 and the first semester of the 2014-15 school year it was home to the Corbin Educational Center.",
" The Corbin Educational Center, or CEC, is a Day Treatment school under the Corbin Independent School District.",
" It provides day treatment services for students from Corbin, Williamsburg, and Whitley County.",
" Over Christmas break of the 2014-15 school year CEC returned to the former Corbin City Utilities building.",
" The former Saint Camillus site will now be home to the new Corbin Middle School.",
" Demolition of the current building is set to begin in early 2016 with the construction of the new CMS to follow soon after."
],
"title": "Saint Camillus Academy"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Corbin is a ghost town in British Columbia.",
" It is located in a secluded valley in the Rocky Mountains in the East Kootenay Country of southeastern British Columbia.",
" It was founded in 1908 by Daniel Chase Corbin, president of Nelson and Fort Sheppard Railway.",
" Between 1908 and 1935 Corbin supported the miners of a huge strip mining operation.",
" The operation was called \"Big Showing.\"",
" Corbin once boasted a population of 600.",
" The town had its own railway, company store, and a hotel called the Flathead.",
" In the spring of 1935 labour troubles began between Corbin Collieries and a local union.",
" The trouble turned into a bloody riot.",
" During the riot special policemen, company officials and miners were injured.",
" Later the Corbin Collieries closed down their operation.",
" Many attempts were made to revive the town and work the \"Big Showing.\"",
" These ventures were not successful.",
" In 1951 the town was abandoned.",
" In 1973 remnants of the town could still be seen."
],
"title": "Corbin, British Columbia"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Forcht Group of Kentucky \"(pronounced \"fork\")\" is a group of companies principally owned by Terry E. Forcht, with corporate headquarters in Lexington, Kentucky and Corbin, Kentucky.",
" The corporation employs more than 2,100 people in many companies specializing in banking and financial services, insurance, nursing homes and health care, broadcasting and print media, retail, data and Web design services, real estate and construction.",
" Forcht Group of Kentucky officially changed its name from First Corbin Financial Corporation on November 10, 2007.",
" The company also sponsors \"The Forcht Group of Kentucky Center for Excellence in Leadership\" lecture series which began in 2005 at University of the Cumberlands, where Terry Forcht formerly taught business."
],
"title": "Forcht Group of Kentucky"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gray is an unincorporated community in Knox County, Kentucky, United States.",
" The community is located along U.S. Route 25E 4.9 mi west of Corbin.",
" Gray has a post office with ZIP code 40734, which opened on January 25, 1888."
],
"title": "Gray, Kentucky"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tunney Morgan Hunsaker (September 1, 1930 – April 27, 2005) was an American professional boxer who also served as the police chief of Fayetteville, West Virginia.",
" He was born in the western Kentucky town of Princeton, in Caldwell County."
],
"title": "Tunney Hunsaker"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Corbin Terminal Subdivision is a railroad/yard that is owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. State of Kentucky.",
" The yard is located in Corbin, Kentucky.",
" The KD Subdivision runs from the north and south of the Corbin Terminal Subdivision."
],
"title": "Corbin Terminal Subdivision"
},
{
"sentences": [
"WSTO (96.1 FM, \"Hot 96\") is a heritage Top-40 radio station that serves the Evansville, Indiana, Owensboro, Kentucky, and Henderson, Kentucky markets.",
" It is licensed to Owensboro and broadcasts from a 1,000-foot tower strategically located midway between these cities in the Kentucky town of Hebbardsville.",
" WSTO's studio is located inside South Central Communications' headquarters on Mount Auburn Road in Evansville, Indiana, near the studios of WFIE-TV."
],
"title": "WSTO"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Daniel Matthew Langhi (born November 28, 1977) is an American former professional basketball player.",
" Born in Chicago, Illinois, he was raised in the small western Kentucky town of Benton.",
" In addition to his high school basketball career, where he finish as the runner-up for Kentucky's prestigious \"Mr. Basketball\" award, Langhi won regional titles as a member of Marshall County's soccer teams.",
" After growing six inches during his sophomore year of high school, he joined his two older brothers in playing college basketball, signing to play college basketball at Vanderbilt, and was drafted 31st overall by the Dallas Mavericks in the second round of the 2000 NBA Draft.",
" Langhi played for the Houston Rockets, the Phoenix Suns, the Golden State Warriors and the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA."
],
"title": "Dan Langhi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Corbin is a home rule-class city in Whitley and Knox counties in the southeastern portion of the U.S. state of Kentucky.",
" The urbanized area around Corbin extends into Laurel County; this area is not incorporated into the city limits due to a state law prohibiting cities from being in more than two counties.",
" However, this area is served by some of the city's public services.",
" As of the 2010 census, the city population was 7,304, with 21,132 living in the \"urban cluster\" that includes Corbin and North Corbin."
],
"title": "Corbin, Kentucky"
}
] |
[
"Title: Kentucky Route 312\n\nKentucky Route 312 (KY 312) is a 11.365 mi state highway in Kentucky that runs from Kentucky Route 192 northwest of Corbin to U.S. Route 25E and World Drive in eastern Corbin via Corbin.",
"Title: Saint Camillus Academy\n\nSaint Camillus Academy was a Catholic school located in Corbin, Kentucky, established in 1908 by the Sisters of Divine Providence with the help of the Diocese of Covington. The school originally served students in grades 1-12 and included boarding facilities for girls, but in 2012 was closed and in 2013 sold its building to Corbin Schools System. For the 2013-14 and the first semester of the 2014-15 school year it was home to the Corbin Educational Center. The Corbin Educational Center, or CEC, is a Day Treatment school under the Corbin Independent School District. It provides day treatment services for students from Corbin, Williamsburg, and Whitley County. Over Christmas break of the 2014-15 school year CEC returned to the former Corbin City Utilities building. The former Saint Camillus site will now be home to the new Corbin Middle School. Demolition of the current building is set to begin in early 2016 with the construction of the new CMS to follow soon after.",
"Title: Corbin, British Columbia\n\nCorbin is a ghost town in British Columbia. It is located in a secluded valley in the Rocky Mountains in the East Kootenay Country of southeastern British Columbia. It was founded in 1908 by Daniel Chase Corbin, president of Nelson and Fort Sheppard Railway. Between 1908 and 1935 Corbin supported the miners of a huge strip mining operation. The operation was called \"Big Showing.\" Corbin once boasted a population of 600. The town had its own railway, company store, and a hotel called the Flathead. In the spring of 1935 labour troubles began between Corbin Collieries and a local union. The trouble turned into a bloody riot. During the riot special policemen, company officials and miners were injured. Later the Corbin Collieries closed down their operation. Many attempts were made to revive the town and work the \"Big Showing.\" These ventures were not successful. In 1951 the town was abandoned. In 1973 remnants of the town could still be seen.",
"Title: Forcht Group of Kentucky\n\nForcht Group of Kentucky \"(pronounced \"fork\")\" is a group of companies principally owned by Terry E. Forcht, with corporate headquarters in Lexington, Kentucky and Corbin, Kentucky. The corporation employs more than 2,100 people in many companies specializing in banking and financial services, insurance, nursing homes and health care, broadcasting and print media, retail, data and Web design services, real estate and construction. Forcht Group of Kentucky officially changed its name from First Corbin Financial Corporation on November 10, 2007. The company also sponsors \"The Forcht Group of Kentucky Center for Excellence in Leadership\" lecture series which began in 2005 at University of the Cumberlands, where Terry Forcht formerly taught business.",
"Title: Gray, Kentucky\n\nGray is an unincorporated community in Knox County, Kentucky, United States. The community is located along U.S. Route 25E 4.9 mi west of Corbin. Gray has a post office with ZIP code 40734, which opened on January 25, 1888.",
"Title: Tunney Hunsaker\n\nTunney Morgan Hunsaker (September 1, 1930 – April 27, 2005) was an American professional boxer who also served as the police chief of Fayetteville, West Virginia. He was born in the western Kentucky town of Princeton, in Caldwell County.",
"Title: Corbin Terminal Subdivision\n\nThe Corbin Terminal Subdivision is a railroad/yard that is owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. State of Kentucky. The yard is located in Corbin, Kentucky. The KD Subdivision runs from the north and south of the Corbin Terminal Subdivision.",
"Title: WSTO\n\nWSTO (96.1 FM, \"Hot 96\") is a heritage Top-40 radio station that serves the Evansville, Indiana, Owensboro, Kentucky, and Henderson, Kentucky markets. It is licensed to Owensboro and broadcasts from a 1,000-foot tower strategically located midway between these cities in the Kentucky town of Hebbardsville. WSTO's studio is located inside South Central Communications' headquarters on Mount Auburn Road in Evansville, Indiana, near the studios of WFIE-TV.",
"Title: Dan Langhi\n\nDaniel Matthew Langhi (born November 28, 1977) is an American former professional basketball player. Born in Chicago, Illinois, he was raised in the small western Kentucky town of Benton. In addition to his high school basketball career, where he finish as the runner-up for Kentucky's prestigious \"Mr. Basketball\" award, Langhi won regional titles as a member of Marshall County's soccer teams. After growing six inches during his sophomore year of high school, he joined his two older brothers in playing college basketball, signing to play college basketball at Vanderbilt, and was drafted 31st overall by the Dallas Mavericks in the second round of the 2000 NBA Draft. Langhi played for the Houston Rockets, the Phoenix Suns, the Golden State Warriors and the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA.",
"Title: Corbin, Kentucky\n\nCorbin is a home rule-class city in Whitley and Knox counties in the southeastern portion of the U.S. state of Kentucky. The urbanized area around Corbin extends into Laurel County; this area is not incorporated into the city limits due to a state law prohibiting cities from being in more than two counties. However, this area is served by some of the city's public services. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 7,304, with 21,132 living in the \"urban cluster\" that includes Corbin and North Corbin."
] |
1,747
|
Johnny Cash did a cover of "In the Jailhouse Now," which was composed by a musician who was born in what year?
|
1897
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"The Sound of Johnny Cash",
"The Sound of Johnny Cash",
"Jimmie Rodgers (country singer)"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Roadshow Revival is a Johnny Cash Tribute Festival held at Mission Park in Ventura, California in June.",
" The location of the Event is in close proximity to Johnny Cash's home and office in Casitas Springs and Ventura.",
" It is produced by Ross Emery and Johnny Cash's daughter, Cindy Cash and features Outlaw Country acts, Rockabilly bands, a Johnny Cash Memorabilia Gallery, Pin-Up Girl Pageant, and a car and bike show."
],
"title": "Roadshow Revival"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Charles Rodgers (September 8, 1897 – May 26, 1933), professionally Jimmie Rodgers, was an American country, blues and folk singer, songwriter and musician in the early 20th century, known most widely for his rhythmic yodeling.",
" Rodgers, along with his contemporaries the Carter Family, was among one of the the first country music superstars and pioneers, cited as an inspiration of many artists and an inductee into numerous Hall's of Fame.",
" Rodgers was also known as \"The Singing Brakeman\", \"The Blue Yodeler\", and \"The Father of Country Music\"."
],
"title": "Jimmie Rodgers (country singer)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The discography of Rosanne Cash, an American singer-songwriter, consists of thirteen studio albums, six compilation albums, one tribute album, and 39 singles.",
" The daughter of Johnny Cash, Rosanne Cash recorded her self-titled debut album in 1978 under the German label Ariola.",
" After signing with Columbia Records in 1979, Cash's second studio album \"Right or Wrong\" was released.",
" Its lead single \"No Memories Hangin' Around\" (a duet with Bobby Bare) reached the Top 20 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Songs chart.",
" Cash's third studio release, \"Seven Year Ache\" (1981) gained major success when the title track peaked at number one on the \"Billboard\" Country chart, followed by \"My Baby Thinks He's a Train\" and \"Blue Moon with a Heartache,\" which also reached the top spot.",
" The album's follow-up effort, \"Somewhere in the Stars\" (1982) produced two Top 10 hits on the \"Billboard\" chart.",
" After a 3-year hiatus, Cash issued \"Rhythm & Romance\" in 1985, which reached #1 on the \"Billboard\" Top Country Albums list.",
" It spawned four Top 10 singles.",
" This included the number one single, \"I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me,\" which won the Grammy Award for Best Female Country Vocal Performance in 1986.",
" Her sixth album, \"King's Record Shop\" was released in 1987.",
" The album peaked at number six on the country albums chart and certified gold in the United States.",
" The four singles released from \"King's Record Shop\" all reached number one on the \"Billboard\" Country chart between 1987 and 1988, including a cover of Johnny Cash's \"Tennessee Flat-Top Box.\""
],
"title": "Rosanne Cash discography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash is the 33rd album by American country singer Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in 1970 (see 1970 in music).",
" \"If I Were a Carpenter\", a famous duet with Cash's wife, June Carter Cash, earned the couple a Grammy Award for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal in 1971 (see Grammy Awards of 1971); the song also reached No. 2 on the Country charts.",
" This album also includes \"To Beat the Devil\", the first Kris Kristofferson song covered by Cash; the two would later collaborate numerous times, most famously on \"Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down\".",
" \"See Ruby Fall\" and \"Blistered\" were also released as singles, and the album itself reached No. 1 on the country charts and No. 6 on the pop charts.",
" It was certified Gold on 1/29/1970 by the R.I.A.A.",
" The album has been released on CD (Sony Music, Original Album Classics, along with \"The Johnny Cash Show\" and \"Man In Black\") and it has been made available on official download sites.",
" This album is not to be confused with a best-of cd that has the same name."
],
"title": "Hello, I'm Johnny Cash"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kenneth Jones (1952–1969), was the son of Helen Myrl Carter (of country music's Carter Family) and of Glenn Jones.",
" He is best remembered for a song he wrote called \"Sing A Traveling Song\" which appeared on Johnny Cash's albums \"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash\" and \"Johnny Cash at Madison Square Garden\".",
" Kenneth was Cash's nephew-in-law.",
" Cash's second wife, June Carter Cash, was Helen's sister.",
" Kenneth, or Kenny as he was also known, wrote many songs and was a talented musician.",
" At the time of his death he was under contract with Monument Records and appeared destined for a highly successful career.",
" Following his death the Carter Family recorded one of his songs, \"2001 Ballad to the Future\".",
" A few have noted the lyrics as being eerily prophetic of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States which took place more than thirty years after the song was written."
],
"title": "Kenneth Jones (songwriter)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Forty Shades of Green\" is a song about Ireland, written and first performed by American country singer Johnny Cash.",
" Cash wrote the song in 1959 while on a trip to Ireland; it was first released as a B-side of the song \"The Rebel–Johnny Yuma\" in 1961.",
" It is also included in two of Cash's albums: \"Ring of Fire: The Best of Johnny Cash\", released on Columbia Records in 1963, and \"Johnny Cash: The Great Lost Performance – Live at the Paramount Theatre, Asbury Park, New Jersey\", recorded live in 1990 and released in 2007."
],
"title": "Forty Shades of Green"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Johnny Cash Country Christmas is a Christmas album and 78th overall album by American country singer Johnny Cash, released on Delta Records in 1991 (see 1991 in music), in-between Cash's contracts with Mercury Records and American Recordings.",
" It came out in two different Versions with different cover art.",
" It contains 15 or 13 songs, all Christmas classics and traditional holiday songs.",
" A number of songs (such as \"Blue Christmas\", \"Silent Night\" and \"Joy to the World\") had previously been recorded by Cash - multiple times, in the case of \"Silent Night\" - for previous Christmas albums.",
" It was also released on the LaserLight label in 1992.",
" The 15-track version includes two additional Christmas songs, \"White Christmas\" and \"I'll Be Home for Christmas\".",
" Four tracks do not feature Cash but instead feature vocals by his wife, June Carter Cash and the Carter Family.",
" This was the last Johnny Cash release within his lifetime to feature the Carters, who had been a staple of his live show and studio recordings since the early 1960s, as the sisters would not participate in his subsequent work for American Recordings; nor would June Carter Cash, though a 2000 private release, \"Return to the Promised Land\", would feature her alongside her husband."
],
"title": "Johnny Cash Country Christmas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Sound of Johnny Cash is the twelfth album by American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash, released in 1962 (see 1962 in music).",
" Among other songs, it contains \"In the Jailhouse Now\", a Jimmie Rodgers cover which reached No. 8 on the Country charts, and \"Delia's Gone\", which Cash would re-record years later, on \"American Recordings\", in 1994.",
" Cash would also go on to record a significantly slower, more ballad-like version of \"I'm Free from the Chain Gang Now\", which was ultimately released in 2006 on \"\" as the last track on the album."
],
"title": "The Sound of Johnny Cash"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wildwood Flower is the last solo album from June Carter Cash.",
" It was released in 2003 on the Dualtone record label, four months after her death and only a few days before the death of Johnny Cash, who provides backing vocals, making this the final release of his lifetime.",
" It was produced by their son, John Carter Cash.",
" The album's opening track, \"Keep on the Sunny Side\" was a Carter Family anthem that June Carter Cash had previously recorded twice with Johnny Cash: for the 1964 Carter Family album of the same title, and for the 1974 Johnny Cash album \"The Junkie and the Juicehead Minus Me\".",
" \"The Road to Kaintuck\", written by June, had previously been recorded by her husband on several occasions for Columbia Records.",
" The medley of \"Church in the Wildwood\"/\"Lonesome Valley\" had been a regular part of Johnny Cash concerts in the 1970s."
],
"title": "Wildwood Flower (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Johnny Cash Family Christmas is the 41st overall and second Christmas album by country singer Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in 1972).",
" It is his second Christmas album, the first one being the 1963 release entitled \"The Christmas Spirit\".",
" The album includes less original Cash material than its predecessor and contains narrations and dialogue featuring his family and friends, between tracks.",
" In all, three songs were written or co-written by Cash, while two, \"Christmas as I Knew It\" and \"Silent Night\", had been featured on \"The Christmas Spirit\" (\"Silent Night\" would, in fact, be featured on all four Johnny Cash Christmas albums).",
" June Carter Cash, Marshall Grant, Tommy Cash, Harold Reid, Larry Butler (who was both Cash's piano player and record producer at this time), Maybelle Carter, Anita Carter, Carl Perkins and Lew DeWitt are among those featured on the album."
],
"title": "The Johnny Cash Family Christmas"
}
] |
[
"Title: Roadshow Revival\n\nThe Roadshow Revival is a Johnny Cash Tribute Festival held at Mission Park in Ventura, California in June. The location of the Event is in close proximity to Johnny Cash's home and office in Casitas Springs and Ventura. It is produced by Ross Emery and Johnny Cash's daughter, Cindy Cash and features Outlaw Country acts, Rockabilly bands, a Johnny Cash Memorabilia Gallery, Pin-Up Girl Pageant, and a car and bike show.",
"Title: Jimmie Rodgers (country singer)\n\nJames Charles Rodgers (September 8, 1897 – May 26, 1933), professionally Jimmie Rodgers, was an American country, blues and folk singer, songwriter and musician in the early 20th century, known most widely for his rhythmic yodeling. Rodgers, along with his contemporaries the Carter Family, was among one of the the first country music superstars and pioneers, cited as an inspiration of many artists and an inductee into numerous Hall's of Fame. Rodgers was also known as \"The Singing Brakeman\", \"The Blue Yodeler\", and \"The Father of Country Music\".",
"Title: Rosanne Cash discography\n\nThe discography of Rosanne Cash, an American singer-songwriter, consists of thirteen studio albums, six compilation albums, one tribute album, and 39 singles. The daughter of Johnny Cash, Rosanne Cash recorded her self-titled debut album in 1978 under the German label Ariola. After signing with Columbia Records in 1979, Cash's second studio album \"Right or Wrong\" was released. Its lead single \"No Memories Hangin' Around\" (a duet with Bobby Bare) reached the Top 20 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Songs chart. Cash's third studio release, \"Seven Year Ache\" (1981) gained major success when the title track peaked at number one on the \"Billboard\" Country chart, followed by \"My Baby Thinks He's a Train\" and \"Blue Moon with a Heartache,\" which also reached the top spot. The album's follow-up effort, \"Somewhere in the Stars\" (1982) produced two Top 10 hits on the \"Billboard\" chart. After a 3-year hiatus, Cash issued \"Rhythm & Romance\" in 1985, which reached #1 on the \"Billboard\" Top Country Albums list. It spawned four Top 10 singles. This included the number one single, \"I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me,\" which won the Grammy Award for Best Female Country Vocal Performance in 1986. Her sixth album, \"King's Record Shop\" was released in 1987. The album peaked at number six on the country albums chart and certified gold in the United States. The four singles released from \"King's Record Shop\" all reached number one on the \"Billboard\" Country chart between 1987 and 1988, including a cover of Johnny Cash's \"Tennessee Flat-Top Box.\"",
"Title: Hello, I'm Johnny Cash\n\nHello, I'm Johnny Cash is the 33rd album by American country singer Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in 1970 (see 1970 in music). \"If I Were a Carpenter\", a famous duet with Cash's wife, June Carter Cash, earned the couple a Grammy Award for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal in 1971 (see Grammy Awards of 1971); the song also reached No. 2 on the Country charts. This album also includes \"To Beat the Devil\", the first Kris Kristofferson song covered by Cash; the two would later collaborate numerous times, most famously on \"Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down\". \"See Ruby Fall\" and \"Blistered\" were also released as singles, and the album itself reached No. 1 on the country charts and No. 6 on the pop charts. It was certified Gold on 1/29/1970 by the R.I.A.A. The album has been released on CD (Sony Music, Original Album Classics, along with \"The Johnny Cash Show\" and \"Man In Black\") and it has been made available on official download sites. This album is not to be confused with a best-of cd that has the same name.",
"Title: Kenneth Jones (songwriter)\n\nKenneth Jones (1952–1969), was the son of Helen Myrl Carter (of country music's Carter Family) and of Glenn Jones. He is best remembered for a song he wrote called \"Sing A Traveling Song\" which appeared on Johnny Cash's albums \"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash\" and \"Johnny Cash at Madison Square Garden\". Kenneth was Cash's nephew-in-law. Cash's second wife, June Carter Cash, was Helen's sister. Kenneth, or Kenny as he was also known, wrote many songs and was a talented musician. At the time of his death he was under contract with Monument Records and appeared destined for a highly successful career. Following his death the Carter Family recorded one of his songs, \"2001 Ballad to the Future\". A few have noted the lyrics as being eerily prophetic of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States which took place more than thirty years after the song was written.",
"Title: Forty Shades of Green\n\n\"Forty Shades of Green\" is a song about Ireland, written and first performed by American country singer Johnny Cash. Cash wrote the song in 1959 while on a trip to Ireland; it was first released as a B-side of the song \"The Rebel–Johnny Yuma\" in 1961. It is also included in two of Cash's albums: \"Ring of Fire: The Best of Johnny Cash\", released on Columbia Records in 1963, and \"Johnny Cash: The Great Lost Performance – Live at the Paramount Theatre, Asbury Park, New Jersey\", recorded live in 1990 and released in 2007.",
"Title: Johnny Cash Country Christmas\n\nJohnny Cash Country Christmas is a Christmas album and 78th overall album by American country singer Johnny Cash, released on Delta Records in 1991 (see 1991 in music), in-between Cash's contracts with Mercury Records and American Recordings. It came out in two different Versions with different cover art. It contains 15 or 13 songs, all Christmas classics and traditional holiday songs. A number of songs (such as \"Blue Christmas\", \"Silent Night\" and \"Joy to the World\") had previously been recorded by Cash - multiple times, in the case of \"Silent Night\" - for previous Christmas albums. It was also released on the LaserLight label in 1992. The 15-track version includes two additional Christmas songs, \"White Christmas\" and \"I'll Be Home for Christmas\". Four tracks do not feature Cash but instead feature vocals by his wife, June Carter Cash and the Carter Family. This was the last Johnny Cash release within his lifetime to feature the Carters, who had been a staple of his live show and studio recordings since the early 1960s, as the sisters would not participate in his subsequent work for American Recordings; nor would June Carter Cash, though a 2000 private release, \"Return to the Promised Land\", would feature her alongside her husband.",
"Title: The Sound of Johnny Cash\n\nThe Sound of Johnny Cash is the twelfth album by American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash, released in 1962 (see 1962 in music). Among other songs, it contains \"In the Jailhouse Now\", a Jimmie Rodgers cover which reached No. 8 on the Country charts, and \"Delia's Gone\", which Cash would re-record years later, on \"American Recordings\", in 1994. Cash would also go on to record a significantly slower, more ballad-like version of \"I'm Free from the Chain Gang Now\", which was ultimately released in 2006 on \"\" as the last track on the album.",
"Title: Wildwood Flower (album)\n\nWildwood Flower is the last solo album from June Carter Cash. It was released in 2003 on the Dualtone record label, four months after her death and only a few days before the death of Johnny Cash, who provides backing vocals, making this the final release of his lifetime. It was produced by their son, John Carter Cash. The album's opening track, \"Keep on the Sunny Side\" was a Carter Family anthem that June Carter Cash had previously recorded twice with Johnny Cash: for the 1964 Carter Family album of the same title, and for the 1974 Johnny Cash album \"The Junkie and the Juicehead Minus Me\". \"The Road to Kaintuck\", written by June, had previously been recorded by her husband on several occasions for Columbia Records. The medley of \"Church in the Wildwood\"/\"Lonesome Valley\" had been a regular part of Johnny Cash concerts in the 1970s.",
"Title: The Johnny Cash Family Christmas\n\nThe Johnny Cash Family Christmas is the 41st overall and second Christmas album by country singer Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in 1972). It is his second Christmas album, the first one being the 1963 release entitled \"The Christmas Spirit\". The album includes less original Cash material than its predecessor and contains narrations and dialogue featuring his family and friends, between tracks. In all, three songs were written or co-written by Cash, while two, \"Christmas as I Knew It\" and \"Silent Night\", had been featured on \"The Christmas Spirit\" (\"Silent Night\" would, in fact, be featured on all four Johnny Cash Christmas albums). June Carter Cash, Marshall Grant, Tommy Cash, Harold Reid, Larry Butler (who was both Cash's piano player and record producer at this time), Maybelle Carter, Anita Carter, Carl Perkins and Lew DeWitt are among those featured on the album."
] |
1,748
|
Iğdır Airport is located in what transcontinental country in Eurasia?
|
Turkey
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Iğdır Airport",
"Turkey"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Colombia is a transcontinental country largely situated in the northwest of South America, with territories in Central America.",
" Colombia shares a border to the northwest with Panama, to the east with Venezuela and Brazil and to the south with Ecuador and Peru.",
" It shares its maritime limits with Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and Haiti.",
" It is a unitary, constitutional republic comprising thirty-two departments."
],
"title": "List of companies of Colombia"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kazakhstan is a transcontinental country in northern Central Asia and Eastern Europe.",
" Kazakhstan is the world's largest landlocked country, and the ninth largest in the world, with an area of 2,724,900 km² .",
" Kazakhstan is the dominant nation of Central Asia economically, generating 60% of the region's GDP, primarily through its oil/gas industry.",
" It also has vast mineral resources."
],
"title": "List of companies of Kazakhstan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Iğdır Airport (IATA: IGD, ICAO: LTCT) (Turkish: \"Iğdır Havalimanı\" ) is a public airport in Iğdır, located in Iğdır Province, Turkey.",
" Opened to civil air traffic in July 2012, the airport is 16 km away from Iğdır city centre."
],
"title": "Iğdır Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Republic of Colombia is a transcontinental country largely situated in the northwest of South America, with territories in North America.",
" Colombia is bordered to the northwest by Panama; to the east by Venezuela and Brazil; to the south by Ecuador and Peru; and it shares maritime limits with Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti.",
" Colombia is the 26th largest nation in the world and the fourth-largest country in South America after Brazil, Argentina, and Peru.",
" Despite its large territory, Colombia's population is not evenly distributed, with most Colombians living in the mountainous western portion of the country as well as the northern coastline, most living in or near the capital city of Bogotá.",
" The southern and eastern portions of the country are mostly sparsely inhabited tropical rainforest, and inland tropical plains containing large estates or large livestock farms, oil and gas production facilities, small farming communities and indigenous tribes."
],
"title": "Geography of Colombia"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Turkey ( ; Turkish: \"Türkiye\" ] ), officially the Republic of Turkey (Turkish: ; ] ), is a transcontinental country in Eurasia, mainly in Anatolia in Western Asia, with a smaller portion on the Balkan peninsula in Southeast Europe.",
" Turkey is bordered by eight countries: Greece and Bulgaria to the northwest; Georgia to the northeast; Armenia, the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan and Iran to the east; Iraq and Syria to the south.",
" The country is encircled by seas on three sides: the Aegean Sea is to the west, the Black Sea to the north, and the Mediterranean Sea to the south.",
" The Bosphorus, the Sea of Marmara, and the Dardanelles, which together form the Turkish Straits, divide Thrace and Anatolia; they also separate Europe and Asia.",
" Ankara is the capital while Istanbul is the country's largest city and main cultural and commercial centre.",
" Approximately 70–80% of the country's citizens identify themselves as ethnic Turks.",
" Other ethnic groups include legally recognised (Armenians, Greeks, Jews) and unrecognised (Kurds, Arabs, Circassians, Albanians, Bosniaks, Georgians, etc.) minorities.",
" Kurds are the largest ethnic minority group, making up approximately 20% of the population."
],
"title": "Turkey"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Pluricontinentalism (Portuguese: \"Pluricontinentalismo\") was a geopolitical concept, positing that Portugal was a transcontinental country unitary nation-state consisting of continental Portugal and its overseas provinces."
],
"title": "Pluricontinentalism"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Indonesia ( or ; Indonesian: ), officially the Republic of Indonesia (Indonesian: \"Republik Indonesia\" ), is a unitary sovereign state and transcontinental country located mainly in Southeast Asia, with some territories in Oceania.",
" Situated between the Indian and Pacific oceans, it is the world's largest island country, with more than seventeen thousand islands.",
" At 1,904,569 km2 , Indonesia is the world's 14th-largest country in terms of land area and world's 7th-largest country in terms of combined sea and land area.",
" It has an estimated population of over floor( /1e6) million people and is the world's fourth most populous country, the most populous Austronesian nation, as well as the most populous Muslim-majority country.",
" The world's most populous island, Java, contains more than half of the country's population."
],
"title": "Indonesia"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Indonesia is a unitary sovereign state and transcontinental country located mainly in Southeast Asia with some territories in Oceania.",
" Situated between the Indian and Pacific oceans, it is the world's largest island country, with more than seventeen thousand islands.",
" At 1,904,569 km2 , Indonesia is the world's 14th-largest country in terms of land area and world's 7th-largest country in terms of combined sea and land area.",
" It has an estimated population of over 260 million people and is the world's fourth most populous country, the most populous Austronesian nation, as well as the most populous Muslim-majority country."
],
"title": "List of companies of Indonesia"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Egypt ( ; Arabic: مِصر \"Miṣr \", Egyptian Arabic: مَصر \"Maṣr\" , Coptic: \"Kimi\"), officially the Arab Republic of Egypt, is a transcontinental country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia by a land bridge formed by the Sinai Peninsula.",
" Egypt is a Mediterranean country bordered by the Gaza Strip and Israel to the northeast, the Gulf of Aqaba to the east, the Red Sea to the east and south, Sudan to the south, and Libya to the west.",
" Across the Gulf of Aqaba lies Jordan, and across from the Sinai Peninsula lies Saudi Arabia, although Jordan and Saudi Arabia do not share a land border with Egypt."
],
"title": "Egypt"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Egypt is a transcontinental country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia by a land bridge formed by the Sinai Peninsula.",
" Egypt is a Mediterranean country bordered by the Gaza Strip and Israel to the northeast, the Gulf of Aqaba to the east, the Red Sea to the east and south, Sudan to the south, and Libya to the west.",
" Across the Gulf of Aqaba lies Jordan, and across from the Sinai Peninsula lies Saudi Arabia, although Jordan and Saudi Arabia do not share a land border with Egypt.",
" It is the world's only contiguous Afrasian nation."
],
"title": "List of companies of Egypt"
}
] |
[
"Title: List of companies of Colombia\n\nColombia is a transcontinental country largely situated in the northwest of South America, with territories in Central America. Colombia shares a border to the northwest with Panama, to the east with Venezuela and Brazil and to the south with Ecuador and Peru. It shares its maritime limits with Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and Haiti. It is a unitary, constitutional republic comprising thirty-two departments.",
"Title: List of companies of Kazakhstan\n\nKazakhstan is a transcontinental country in northern Central Asia and Eastern Europe. Kazakhstan is the world's largest landlocked country, and the ninth largest in the world, with an area of 2,724,900 km² . Kazakhstan is the dominant nation of Central Asia economically, generating 60% of the region's GDP, primarily through its oil/gas industry. It also has vast mineral resources.",
"Title: Iğdır Airport\n\nIğdır Airport (IATA: IGD, ICAO: LTCT) (Turkish: \"Iğdır Havalimanı\" ) is a public airport in Iğdır, located in Iğdır Province, Turkey. Opened to civil air traffic in July 2012, the airport is 16 km away from Iğdır city centre.",
"Title: Geography of Colombia\n\nThe Republic of Colombia is a transcontinental country largely situated in the northwest of South America, with territories in North America. Colombia is bordered to the northwest by Panama; to the east by Venezuela and Brazil; to the south by Ecuador and Peru; and it shares maritime limits with Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti. Colombia is the 26th largest nation in the world and the fourth-largest country in South America after Brazil, Argentina, and Peru. Despite its large territory, Colombia's population is not evenly distributed, with most Colombians living in the mountainous western portion of the country as well as the northern coastline, most living in or near the capital city of Bogotá. The southern and eastern portions of the country are mostly sparsely inhabited tropical rainforest, and inland tropical plains containing large estates or large livestock farms, oil and gas production facilities, small farming communities and indigenous tribes.",
"Title: Turkey\n\nTurkey ( ; Turkish: \"Türkiye\" ] ), officially the Republic of Turkey (Turkish: ; ] ), is a transcontinental country in Eurasia, mainly in Anatolia in Western Asia, with a smaller portion on the Balkan peninsula in Southeast Europe. Turkey is bordered by eight countries: Greece and Bulgaria to the northwest; Georgia to the northeast; Armenia, the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan and Iran to the east; Iraq and Syria to the south. The country is encircled by seas on three sides: the Aegean Sea is to the west, the Black Sea to the north, and the Mediterranean Sea to the south. The Bosphorus, the Sea of Marmara, and the Dardanelles, which together form the Turkish Straits, divide Thrace and Anatolia; they also separate Europe and Asia. Ankara is the capital while Istanbul is the country's largest city and main cultural and commercial centre. Approximately 70–80% of the country's citizens identify themselves as ethnic Turks. Other ethnic groups include legally recognised (Armenians, Greeks, Jews) and unrecognised (Kurds, Arabs, Circassians, Albanians, Bosniaks, Georgians, etc.) minorities. Kurds are the largest ethnic minority group, making up approximately 20% of the population.",
"Title: Pluricontinentalism\n\nPluricontinentalism (Portuguese: \"Pluricontinentalismo\") was a geopolitical concept, positing that Portugal was a transcontinental country unitary nation-state consisting of continental Portugal and its overseas provinces.",
"Title: Indonesia\n\nIndonesia ( or ; Indonesian: ), officially the Republic of Indonesia (Indonesian: \"Republik Indonesia\" ), is a unitary sovereign state and transcontinental country located mainly in Southeast Asia, with some territories in Oceania. Situated between the Indian and Pacific oceans, it is the world's largest island country, with more than seventeen thousand islands. At 1,904,569 km2 , Indonesia is the world's 14th-largest country in terms of land area and world's 7th-largest country in terms of combined sea and land area. It has an estimated population of over floor( /1e6) million people and is the world's fourth most populous country, the most populous Austronesian nation, as well as the most populous Muslim-majority country. The world's most populous island, Java, contains more than half of the country's population.",
"Title: List of companies of Indonesia\n\nIndonesia is a unitary sovereign state and transcontinental country located mainly in Southeast Asia with some territories in Oceania. Situated between the Indian and Pacific oceans, it is the world's largest island country, with more than seventeen thousand islands. At 1,904,569 km2 , Indonesia is the world's 14th-largest country in terms of land area and world's 7th-largest country in terms of combined sea and land area. It has an estimated population of over 260 million people and is the world's fourth most populous country, the most populous Austronesian nation, as well as the most populous Muslim-majority country.",
"Title: Egypt\n\nEgypt ( ; Arabic: مِصر \"Miṣr \", Egyptian Arabic: مَصر \"Maṣr\" , Coptic: \"Kimi\"), officially the Arab Republic of Egypt, is a transcontinental country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia by a land bridge formed by the Sinai Peninsula. Egypt is a Mediterranean country bordered by the Gaza Strip and Israel to the northeast, the Gulf of Aqaba to the east, the Red Sea to the east and south, Sudan to the south, and Libya to the west. Across the Gulf of Aqaba lies Jordan, and across from the Sinai Peninsula lies Saudi Arabia, although Jordan and Saudi Arabia do not share a land border with Egypt.",
"Title: List of companies of Egypt\n\nEgypt is a transcontinental country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia by a land bridge formed by the Sinai Peninsula. Egypt is a Mediterranean country bordered by the Gaza Strip and Israel to the northeast, the Gulf of Aqaba to the east, the Red Sea to the east and south, Sudan to the south, and Libya to the west. Across the Gulf of Aqaba lies Jordan, and across from the Sinai Peninsula lies Saudi Arabia, although Jordan and Saudi Arabia do not share a land border with Egypt. It is the world's only contiguous Afrasian nation."
] |
1,749
|
What 1994 EP was recorded by a singer born in 1969?
|
Faye Disc
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Faye Disc",
"Faye Wong"
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0,
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[
{
"sentences": [
"Red Raw & Sore is a 1994 EP released by Raymond Watts (as PIG).",
" Released exclusively in Japan, \"Red Raw & Sore\" contains two original tracks, \"Red Raw & Sore\" and \"One Meatball\", as well as three remixes of songs from \"The Swining\", \"Rope\", \"Blades\" and \"The Fountain of Miracles\".",
" \"Red Raw & Sore\" was re-released in the United States in 1999 by Cleopatra Records as part of \"The Swining/Red Raw & Sore\"."
],
"title": "Red Raw & Sore"
},
{
"sentences": [
"I Can't Wait is a 1994 EP released by Yngwie J. Malmsteen only in Japan.",
" It contains three studio tracks and two live tracks from the 1994 Budokan concert."
],
"title": "I Can't Wait (EP)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Faye Disc is a 1994 EP recorded by Chinese Cantopop singer Faye Wong when she was based in Hong Kong."
],
"title": "Faye Disc"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Pretzel Nugget is a 1994 EP by the Beastie Boys, released on the Grand Royal records label.",
" Almost every song on the EP is from the contemporary album, \"Ill Communication\", with the exception of \"Mullet Head\", which first appeared only on Japanese versions as a bonus track, then worldwide on the 2009 remaster."
],
"title": "Pretzel Nugget"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Big Bright Cherry is a 1994 EP by Magnapop released promotionally in the United States by Play It Again Sam Records on Compact Disc (catalogue number DPRO 50803) and 10\" gramophone record red vinyl (SPRO 50803.)",
" Several of these songs also appear on the studio album \"Hot Boxing\"."
],
"title": "Big Bright Cherry"
},
{
"sentences": [
"eepee was a 1994 EP by Weeping Tile.",
" It was the band's first recording."
],
"title": "Eepee"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Satan's Little Helpers is a 1994 EP by The Electric Hellfire Club.",
" This release features remixes of previously released material from their debut CD \"Burn, Baby, Burn!",
"\"; Psychedelic Sacrifice, The Electric Hellfire Acid Test, Mr. 44 twice (Sam Speaks Mix and Sean Sellers mix) and a remix of a previously unreleased track Night of the Buck Knives.",
" In addition the release featured two new original songs, the title track and an ambient instrumental track.",
" Satan's Little Helpers features the band's trademark theme of Satanism, sex and drugs the lyrical concept also focuses on the crimes of infamous murderers, such as Charles Manson, David Berkowitz, Richard Ramirez, Jack The Ripper, and Sean Sellers.",
" The EP like all other EHC releases features numerous samples from films, news reports and most notably David Berkowitz and Charles Manson."
],
"title": "Satan's Little Helpers"
},
{
"sentences": [
"I Am a Scientist is a 1994 EP released by Guided by Voices.",
" The title track originally appeared in a stripped down, four track version on the band's celebrated 1994 LP \"Bee Thousand\"; a music video was also made.",
" The song appears here in a live-in-studio full-band arrangement recorded by Andy Shernoff, along with 3 other songs."
],
"title": "I Am a Scientist"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ping Pong is a 1994 EP by the post-rock band Stereolab which served as the lead single from their third full-length album \"Mars Audiac Quintet\".",
" Three limited 7\" runs were released in green, black, and pink colors.",
" It was also released on CD and 10\" vinyl."
],
"title": "Ping Pong (EP)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Faye Wong (born 8 August 1969) is a Chinese singer-songwriter and actress, often referred to as a \"diva\" () in Chinese-language media.",
" Early in her career she briefly used the stage name Shirley Wong.",
" Born in Beijing, she moved to British Hong Kong in 1987 and came to public attention in the early 1990s by singing ballads in Cantonese.",
" Since 1997 she has recorded mostly in her native Mandarin, often combining alternative music with mainstream Chinese pop.",
" In 2000 she was recognised by Guinness World Records as the \"Best Selling Canto-Pop Female\".",
" Following her second marriage in 2005 she withdrew from the limelight, but returned to the stage in 2010 amidst immense interest in the Sinophone world."
],
"title": "Faye Wong"
}
] |
[
"Title: Red Raw & Sore\n\nRed Raw & Sore is a 1994 EP released by Raymond Watts (as PIG). Released exclusively in Japan, \"Red Raw & Sore\" contains two original tracks, \"Red Raw & Sore\" and \"One Meatball\", as well as three remixes of songs from \"The Swining\", \"Rope\", \"Blades\" and \"The Fountain of Miracles\". \"Red Raw & Sore\" was re-released in the United States in 1999 by Cleopatra Records as part of \"The Swining/Red Raw & Sore\".",
"Title: I Can't Wait (EP)\n\nI Can't Wait is a 1994 EP released by Yngwie J. Malmsteen only in Japan. It contains three studio tracks and two live tracks from the 1994 Budokan concert.",
"Title: Faye Disc\n\nFaye Disc is a 1994 EP recorded by Chinese Cantopop singer Faye Wong when she was based in Hong Kong.",
"Title: Pretzel Nugget\n\nPretzel Nugget is a 1994 EP by the Beastie Boys, released on the Grand Royal records label. Almost every song on the EP is from the contemporary album, \"Ill Communication\", with the exception of \"Mullet Head\", which first appeared only on Japanese versions as a bonus track, then worldwide on the 2009 remaster.",
"Title: Big Bright Cherry\n\nBig Bright Cherry is a 1994 EP by Magnapop released promotionally in the United States by Play It Again Sam Records on Compact Disc (catalogue number DPRO 50803) and 10\" gramophone record red vinyl (SPRO 50803.) Several of these songs also appear on the studio album \"Hot Boxing\".",
"Title: Eepee\n\neepee was a 1994 EP by Weeping Tile. It was the band's first recording.",
"Title: Satan's Little Helpers\n\nSatan's Little Helpers is a 1994 EP by The Electric Hellfire Club. This release features remixes of previously released material from their debut CD \"Burn, Baby, Burn! \"; Psychedelic Sacrifice, The Electric Hellfire Acid Test, Mr. 44 twice (Sam Speaks Mix and Sean Sellers mix) and a remix of a previously unreleased track Night of the Buck Knives. In addition the release featured two new original songs, the title track and an ambient instrumental track. Satan's Little Helpers features the band's trademark theme of Satanism, sex and drugs the lyrical concept also focuses on the crimes of infamous murderers, such as Charles Manson, David Berkowitz, Richard Ramirez, Jack The Ripper, and Sean Sellers. The EP like all other EHC releases features numerous samples from films, news reports and most notably David Berkowitz and Charles Manson.",
"Title: I Am a Scientist\n\nI Am a Scientist is a 1994 EP released by Guided by Voices. The title track originally appeared in a stripped down, four track version on the band's celebrated 1994 LP \"Bee Thousand\"; a music video was also made. The song appears here in a live-in-studio full-band arrangement recorded by Andy Shernoff, along with 3 other songs.",
"Title: Ping Pong (EP)\n\nPing Pong is a 1994 EP by the post-rock band Stereolab which served as the lead single from their third full-length album \"Mars Audiac Quintet\". Three limited 7\" runs were released in green, black, and pink colors. It was also released on CD and 10\" vinyl.",
"Title: Faye Wong\n\nFaye Wong (born 8 August 1969) is a Chinese singer-songwriter and actress, often referred to as a \"diva\" () in Chinese-language media. Early in her career she briefly used the stage name Shirley Wong. Born in Beijing, she moved to British Hong Kong in 1987 and came to public attention in the early 1990s by singing ballads in Cantonese. Since 1997 she has recorded mostly in her native Mandarin, often combining alternative music with mainstream Chinese pop. In 2000 she was recognised by Guinness World Records as the \"Best Selling Canto-Pop Female\". Following her second marriage in 2005 she withdrew from the limelight, but returned to the stage in 2010 amidst immense interest in the Sinophone world."
] |
1,750
|
Which wife of Harold Godwinson was the subject of the film Edith Walks?
|
Edith the Fair
|
bridge
|
medium
|
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"Edith Walks",
"Edith the Fair"
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"sentences": [
"Godwin of Wessex (Old English: \"Godƿin\" ; 100115 April 1053) was one of the most powerful earls in England under the Danish king Cnut the Great and his successors.",
" Cnut made him the first Earl of Wessex.",
" Godwin was the father of King Harold Godwinson and Edith of Wessex, wife of King Edward the Confessor."
],
"title": "Godwin, Earl of Wessex"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gytha Thorkelsdóttir (Old English: \"Gȳða Þorkelsdōttir\" , 997 – c. 1069), also called Githa, was a Danish noblewoman.",
" She was the mother of King Harold Godwinson and of Edith of Wessex, queen consort of King Edward the Confessor of England."
],
"title": "Gytha Thorkelsdóttir"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Leofwine Godwinson (c. 1035 – 14 October 1066) was a younger brother of King Harold Godwinson, the fifth son of Earl Godwin."
],
"title": "Leofwine Godwinson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Gyrth Godwinson (Old English: Gyrð Godƿinson) ( 1032 – 14 October 1066) was the fourth son of Earl Godwin, and thus a younger brother of Harold Godwinson.",
" He went with his eldest brother Swegen into exile to Flanders in 1051, but unlike Swegen he was able to return with the rest of the clan the following year.",
" Along with his brothers Harold and Tostig, Gyrth was present at his father's death-bed."
],
"title": "Gyrth Godwinson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Edith the Fair (Old English: \"Ealdgȳð Swann hnesce\" , \"Edyth the Gentle Swan\"; c. 1025 – c. 1086), also known as Edith Swanneck, was the first wife of King Harold Godwinson.",
" \"Swanneck\" (or Swan-Neck) comes from the folk etymology which made her in Old English as \"swann hnecca\", \"swan neck\", which was actually most likely a corrupted form of \"swann hnesce, \"\"Gentle Swan\"\" \".",
" She is sometimes confused with Ealdgyth, daughter of Earl Ælfgar of Mercia, who was queen during Harold's reign."
],
"title": "Edith the Fair"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Battle of Stamford Bridge took place at the village of Stamford Bridge, East Riding of Yorkshire, in England on 25 September 1066, between an English army under King Harold Godwinson and an invading Norwegian force led by King Harald Hardrada and the English king's brother Tostig Godwinson.",
" After a bloody battle, both Hardrada and Tostig along with most of the Norwegians were killed.",
" Although Harold Godwinson repelled the Norwegian invaders, his army was defeated by the Normans at Hastings less than three weeks later.",
" The battle has traditionally been presented as symbolising the end of the Viking Age, although major Scandinavian campaigns in Britain and Ireland occurred in the following decades, such as those of King Sweyn Estrithson of Denmark in 1069–1070 and King Magnus Barefoot of Norway in 1098 and 1102–1103."
],
"title": "Battle of Stamford Bridge"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Fictional accounts based on the events surrounding Harold Godwinson's brief reign as king of England have been published, notably the play \"Harold\", by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, in 1876; and the novel \"Last of the Saxon Kings\", by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, in 1848.",
" Rudyard Kipling wrote a short story, included in his 1910 collection, \"Rewards and Fairies\", where an aged King Harold meets Henry I and dies in the arms of a Saxon knight."
],
"title": "Cultural depictions of Harold Godwinson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Edith Walks is a 2017 documentary film directed by Andrew Kötting which imagines a journey by Edith the Fair, wife of English king Harold Godwinson, from Waltham Abbey where he is buried to near the site of the Battle of Hastings and the invasion of England by William the Conqueror in 1066.",
" It includes contributions from the writers Alan Moore and Iain Sinclair, the torch singer Claudia Barton, and the musician Jem Finer."
],
"title": "Edith Walks"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Edith Weston is a village and civil parish in the county of Rutland in the East Midlands of England.",
" The population of the civil parish was 1,042 at the 2001 census, including Normanton and increasing to 1,359 at the 2011 census.",
" It is on the south-eastern shore of Rutland Water and is home of the main sailing club and a fishing lodge.",
" The village is named after Edith of Wessex (1029–1075), the queen of Edward the Confessor and sister of Harold Godwinson."
],
"title": "Edith Weston"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tostig Godwinson ( 1026 – 25 September 1066) was an Anglo-Saxon Earl of Northumbria and brother of King Harold Godwinson.",
" After being exiled by his brother, Tostig supported the Norwegian king Harald Hardrada's invasion of England, and was killed at the Battle of Stamford Bridge."
],
"title": "Tostig Godwinson"
}
] |
[
"Title: Godwin, Earl of Wessex\n\nGodwin of Wessex (Old English: \"Godƿin\" ; 100115 April 1053) was one of the most powerful earls in England under the Danish king Cnut the Great and his successors. Cnut made him the first Earl of Wessex. Godwin was the father of King Harold Godwinson and Edith of Wessex, wife of King Edward the Confessor.",
"Title: Gytha Thorkelsdóttir\n\nGytha Thorkelsdóttir (Old English: \"Gȳða Þorkelsdōttir\" , 997 – c. 1069), also called Githa, was a Danish noblewoman. She was the mother of King Harold Godwinson and of Edith of Wessex, queen consort of King Edward the Confessor of England.",
"Title: Leofwine Godwinson\n\nLeofwine Godwinson (c. 1035 – 14 October 1066) was a younger brother of King Harold Godwinson, the fifth son of Earl Godwin.",
"Title: Gyrth Godwinson\n\nGyrth Godwinson (Old English: Gyrð Godƿinson) ( 1032 – 14 October 1066) was the fourth son of Earl Godwin, and thus a younger brother of Harold Godwinson. He went with his eldest brother Swegen into exile to Flanders in 1051, but unlike Swegen he was able to return with the rest of the clan the following year. Along with his brothers Harold and Tostig, Gyrth was present at his father's death-bed.",
"Title: Edith the Fair\n\nEdith the Fair (Old English: \"Ealdgȳð Swann hnesce\" , \"Edyth the Gentle Swan\"; c. 1025 – c. 1086), also known as Edith Swanneck, was the first wife of King Harold Godwinson. \"Swanneck\" (or Swan-Neck) comes from the folk etymology which made her in Old English as \"swann hnecca\", \"swan neck\", which was actually most likely a corrupted form of \"swann hnesce, \"\"Gentle Swan\"\" \". She is sometimes confused with Ealdgyth, daughter of Earl Ælfgar of Mercia, who was queen during Harold's reign.",
"Title: Battle of Stamford Bridge\n\nThe Battle of Stamford Bridge took place at the village of Stamford Bridge, East Riding of Yorkshire, in England on 25 September 1066, between an English army under King Harold Godwinson and an invading Norwegian force led by King Harald Hardrada and the English king's brother Tostig Godwinson. After a bloody battle, both Hardrada and Tostig along with most of the Norwegians were killed. Although Harold Godwinson repelled the Norwegian invaders, his army was defeated by the Normans at Hastings less than three weeks later. The battle has traditionally been presented as symbolising the end of the Viking Age, although major Scandinavian campaigns in Britain and Ireland occurred in the following decades, such as those of King Sweyn Estrithson of Denmark in 1069–1070 and King Magnus Barefoot of Norway in 1098 and 1102–1103.",
"Title: Cultural depictions of Harold Godwinson\n\nFictional accounts based on the events surrounding Harold Godwinson's brief reign as king of England have been published, notably the play \"Harold\", by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, in 1876; and the novel \"Last of the Saxon Kings\", by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, in 1848. Rudyard Kipling wrote a short story, included in his 1910 collection, \"Rewards and Fairies\", where an aged King Harold meets Henry I and dies in the arms of a Saxon knight.",
"Title: Edith Walks\n\nEdith Walks is a 2017 documentary film directed by Andrew Kötting which imagines a journey by Edith the Fair, wife of English king Harold Godwinson, from Waltham Abbey where he is buried to near the site of the Battle of Hastings and the invasion of England by William the Conqueror in 1066. It includes contributions from the writers Alan Moore and Iain Sinclair, the torch singer Claudia Barton, and the musician Jem Finer.",
"Title: Edith Weston\n\nEdith Weston is a village and civil parish in the county of Rutland in the East Midlands of England. The population of the civil parish was 1,042 at the 2001 census, including Normanton and increasing to 1,359 at the 2011 census. It is on the south-eastern shore of Rutland Water and is home of the main sailing club and a fishing lodge. The village is named after Edith of Wessex (1029–1075), the queen of Edward the Confessor and sister of Harold Godwinson.",
"Title: Tostig Godwinson\n\nTostig Godwinson ( 1026 – 25 September 1066) was an Anglo-Saxon Earl of Northumbria and brother of King Harold Godwinson. After being exiled by his brother, Tostig supported the Norwegian king Harald Hardrada's invasion of England, and was killed at the Battle of Stamford Bridge."
] |
1,751
|
Did Brown v. Board of Education or Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins deal with racism?
|
Brown v. Board of Education
|
comparison
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Brown v. Board of Education",
"Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Berwind-White Coal Mining Co. v. Chicago & Erie Railroad Co."
],
"title": "Berwind-White Coal Mining Co. v. Chicago & Erie Railroad Co."
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Rochester and Genesee Valley Railroad Museum (RGVRRM) is an operating railroad museum located in Industry, New York.",
" The museum started in 1971 with the purchase of a former Erie Railroad Depot from the Erie Lackawanna Railroad.",
" Since then the museum has grown to include a one-mile demonstration railroad, making it one of the only operating railroad museums in New York State.",
" The museum was formerly an operation of the Rochester Chapter National Railway Historical Society until 2011.",
" The organization rosters more than 40 pieces of historic railroad equipment, including diesel and steam locomotives, electric trolley and multiple-unit cars, freight cars, cabooses, passenger cars, and work equipment.",
" The museum campus includes a number of preserved railroad structures, including the 1909 Industry Depot built by the Erie Railroad, a waiting shelter from the Rochester, Lockport & Buffalo Railroad, and a crossing watchman's shanty from the New York Central.",
" Train rides are operated and the museum is open to the public on select weekends from June through October, and is staffed entirely by volunteers."
],
"title": "Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum"
},
{
"sentences": [
"An additur (Latin: \"it is added to\") is a legal term referring to the practice of a trial judge adding damages additional to the original amount awarded by the jury.",
" It is not allowed in U.S. federal courts, as held by \"Dimick vs. Schiedt\", 293 U.S. 474 (1935).",
" However, \"Dimick\" was decided before \"Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins\" (1938), which given the rarity of additur makes it unclear whether federal courts are bound by this rule when applying state law in diversity cases."
],
"title": "Additur"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Erie Railroad (reporting mark ERIE) was a railroad that operated in the northeastern United States, originally connecting New York City — more specifically Jersey City, New Jersey, where Erie's former terminal, long demolished, used to stand — with Lake Erie.",
" It expanded west to Chicago with its 1941 merger with the former Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, also known as the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad (NYPANO RR).",
" Its mainline route proved influential in the development and economic growth of the Southern Tier, including cities such as Binghamton, Elmira, and Hornell.",
" The Erie Railroad repair shops were located in Hornell, and were Hornell's largest employer.",
" Hornell was also where Erie's main line split into two routes, one north to Buffalo and the other west to Cleveland."
],
"title": "Erie Railroad"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Erie Railroad Depot, Erie Railroad Station or Erie Depot was the terminal station for the Erie Railroad in Rochester, New York, designed by George E. Archer, the railroad's architect.",
" The station opened in 1887 between the Genesee River and Exchange Street on the south side of Court St. The station was one of the Erie's few electrified railroad stations, and was one of the first stations to provide electric commuter services in 1907.",
" In 1905 the Lehigh Valley Railroad Station opened directly across the Genesee River from the Erie Depot."
],
"title": "Erie Railroad Depot (Rochester, New York)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Erie War was a 19th-century conflict between American financiers for control of the \"Erie Railway Company\", which owned and operated the Erie Railroad.",
" Built with public funds raised by taxation and on land donated by public officials and private developers, by the middle of the 1850s the railroad was mismanaged and heavily in debt.",
" A cattle drover turned Wall Street banker and broker Daniel Drew at first loaned $2 million to the railroad, and then acquired control over it.",
" He amassed fortune by skilfully manipulating the Erie railroad shares on the New York Stock Exchange.",
" Cornelius Vanderbilt, who set his mind on building a railroad empire, saw multiple business and financial opportunities in railways and decided in 1866 to \"corner the market on Erie\" by silently scooping the Erie railroad stock.",
" After succeeding, Vanderbilt permitted Drew to stay on the board of directors in his former capacity as a treasurer."
],
"title": "Erie War"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Guaranty Trust Co. v. York, 326 U.S. 99 (1945), was a United States Supreme Court case that described how federal courts were to follow state law.",
" Justice Frankfurter delivered the majority opinion further refining the doctrine set forth in \"Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins\"."
],
"title": "Guaranty Trust Co. v. York"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483 (1954) , was a landmark United States Supreme Court case in which the Court declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students to be unconstitutional.",
" The decision overturned the \"Plessy v. Ferguson\" decision of 1896, which allowed state-sponsored segregation, insofar as it applied to public education.",
" Handed down on May 17, 1954, the Warren Court's unanimous (9–0) decision stated that \"separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.\"",
" As a result, \"de jure\" racial segregation was ruled a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.",
" This ruling paved the way for integration and was a major victory of the Civil Rights Movement, and a model for many future impact litigation cases.",
" However, the decision's fourteen pages did not spell out any sort of method for ending racial segregation in schools, and the Court's second decision in \"Brown II\", 349 U.S. 294 (1955) only ordered states to desegregate \"with all deliberate speed\"."
],
"title": "Brown v. Board of Education"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938) , is a landmark decision by the Supreme Court of the United States in which the Court held that federal courts did not have the judicial power to create general federal common law when hearing state law claims under diversity jurisdiction.",
" In reaching this holding, the Court overturned almost a century of federal civil procedure case law, and established the foundation of what remains the modern law of diversity jurisdiction as it applies to United States federal courts."
],
"title": "Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Cliffs Erie Railroad (reporting mark LTVX) was a railroad that operated from Hoyt Lakes to Taconite Harbor, Minnesota.",
" The railroad opened in 1956 by Erie Mining Company to transport taconite from Hoyt Lakes to Taconite Harbor.",
" In 1989, LTV Steel purchased Erie Mining and the railroad was renamed LTV Mining Railroad.",
" The railroad closed in early 2001 when the LTV company ended the operations of the harbor.",
" In 2002 Cleveland Cliffs bought the plant, and again renamed the railroad The Cliffs Erie Railroad (combining the names Erie Mining and Cleveland Cliffs).",
" In 2004 Cliffs Erie hired a contractor to claim leftover chips and pellets from the mine due to the high iron prices.",
" They used the only unsold locomotives, EMD F9s (borrowing one from Lake Superior Railroad Museum).",
" The cleanup trains ran until 2008 when the last train ran.",
" In 2014, the F9s were sold off.",
" The railroad is now sitting, unlikely to ever see activity again."
],
"title": "Cliffs Erie Railroad"
}
] |
[
"Title: Berwind-White Coal Mining Co. v. Chicago & Erie Railroad Co.\n\nBerwind-White Coal Mining Co. v. Chicago & Erie Railroad Co.",
"Title: Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum\n\nThe Rochester and Genesee Valley Railroad Museum (RGVRRM) is an operating railroad museum located in Industry, New York. The museum started in 1971 with the purchase of a former Erie Railroad Depot from the Erie Lackawanna Railroad. Since then the museum has grown to include a one-mile demonstration railroad, making it one of the only operating railroad museums in New York State. The museum was formerly an operation of the Rochester Chapter National Railway Historical Society until 2011. The organization rosters more than 40 pieces of historic railroad equipment, including diesel and steam locomotives, electric trolley and multiple-unit cars, freight cars, cabooses, passenger cars, and work equipment. The museum campus includes a number of preserved railroad structures, including the 1909 Industry Depot built by the Erie Railroad, a waiting shelter from the Rochester, Lockport & Buffalo Railroad, and a crossing watchman's shanty from the New York Central. Train rides are operated and the museum is open to the public on select weekends from June through October, and is staffed entirely by volunteers.",
"Title: Additur\n\nAn additur (Latin: \"it is added to\") is a legal term referring to the practice of a trial judge adding damages additional to the original amount awarded by the jury. It is not allowed in U.S. federal courts, as held by \"Dimick vs. Schiedt\", 293 U.S. 474 (1935). However, \"Dimick\" was decided before \"Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins\" (1938), which given the rarity of additur makes it unclear whether federal courts are bound by this rule when applying state law in diversity cases.",
"Title: Erie Railroad\n\nThe Erie Railroad (reporting mark ERIE) was a railroad that operated in the northeastern United States, originally connecting New York City — more specifically Jersey City, New Jersey, where Erie's former terminal, long demolished, used to stand — with Lake Erie. It expanded west to Chicago with its 1941 merger with the former Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, also known as the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad (NYPANO RR). Its mainline route proved influential in the development and economic growth of the Southern Tier, including cities such as Binghamton, Elmira, and Hornell. The Erie Railroad repair shops were located in Hornell, and were Hornell's largest employer. Hornell was also where Erie's main line split into two routes, one north to Buffalo and the other west to Cleveland.",
"Title: Erie Railroad Depot (Rochester, New York)\n\nErie Railroad Depot, Erie Railroad Station or Erie Depot was the terminal station for the Erie Railroad in Rochester, New York, designed by George E. Archer, the railroad's architect. The station opened in 1887 between the Genesee River and Exchange Street on the south side of Court St. The station was one of the Erie's few electrified railroad stations, and was one of the first stations to provide electric commuter services in 1907. In 1905 the Lehigh Valley Railroad Station opened directly across the Genesee River from the Erie Depot.",
"Title: Erie War\n\nThe Erie War was a 19th-century conflict between American financiers for control of the \"Erie Railway Company\", which owned and operated the Erie Railroad. Built with public funds raised by taxation and on land donated by public officials and private developers, by the middle of the 1850s the railroad was mismanaged and heavily in debt. A cattle drover turned Wall Street banker and broker Daniel Drew at first loaned $2 million to the railroad, and then acquired control over it. He amassed fortune by skilfully manipulating the Erie railroad shares on the New York Stock Exchange. Cornelius Vanderbilt, who set his mind on building a railroad empire, saw multiple business and financial opportunities in railways and decided in 1866 to \"corner the market on Erie\" by silently scooping the Erie railroad stock. After succeeding, Vanderbilt permitted Drew to stay on the board of directors in his former capacity as a treasurer.",
"Title: Guaranty Trust Co. v. York\n\nGuaranty Trust Co. v. York, 326 U.S. 99 (1945), was a United States Supreme Court case that described how federal courts were to follow state law. Justice Frankfurter delivered the majority opinion further refining the doctrine set forth in \"Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins\".",
"Title: Brown v. Board of Education\n\nBrown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483 (1954) , was a landmark United States Supreme Court case in which the Court declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students to be unconstitutional. The decision overturned the \"Plessy v. Ferguson\" decision of 1896, which allowed state-sponsored segregation, insofar as it applied to public education. Handed down on May 17, 1954, the Warren Court's unanimous (9–0) decision stated that \"separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.\" As a result, \"de jure\" racial segregation was ruled a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. This ruling paved the way for integration and was a major victory of the Civil Rights Movement, and a model for many future impact litigation cases. However, the decision's fourteen pages did not spell out any sort of method for ending racial segregation in schools, and the Court's second decision in \"Brown II\", 349 U.S. 294 (1955) only ordered states to desegregate \"with all deliberate speed\".",
"Title: Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins\n\nErie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938) , is a landmark decision by the Supreme Court of the United States in which the Court held that federal courts did not have the judicial power to create general federal common law when hearing state law claims under diversity jurisdiction. In reaching this holding, the Court overturned almost a century of federal civil procedure case law, and established the foundation of what remains the modern law of diversity jurisdiction as it applies to United States federal courts.",
"Title: Cliffs Erie Railroad\n\nThe Cliffs Erie Railroad (reporting mark LTVX) was a railroad that operated from Hoyt Lakes to Taconite Harbor, Minnesota. The railroad opened in 1956 by Erie Mining Company to transport taconite from Hoyt Lakes to Taconite Harbor. In 1989, LTV Steel purchased Erie Mining and the railroad was renamed LTV Mining Railroad. The railroad closed in early 2001 when the LTV company ended the operations of the harbor. In 2002 Cleveland Cliffs bought the plant, and again renamed the railroad The Cliffs Erie Railroad (combining the names Erie Mining and Cleveland Cliffs). In 2004 Cliffs Erie hired a contractor to claim leftover chips and pellets from the mine due to the high iron prices. They used the only unsold locomotives, EMD F9s (borrowing one from Lake Superior Railroad Museum). The cleanup trains ran until 2008 when the last train ran. In 2014, the F9s were sold off. The railroad is now sitting, unlikely to ever see activity again."
] |
1,752
|
Which singer is better known for his work with a former band than as a soloist, Alex Band or Jonny Craig?
|
Alexander Max "Alex" Band
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Alex Band",
"Jonny Craig",
"Jonny Craig",
"Jonny Craig"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
2,
3
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Emarosa is the second studio album by the alternative rock band Emarosa.",
" It was released in June 2010 through Rise Records.",
" The album was produced by Brian McTernan, and it is also the last album to feature vocalist Jonny Craig."
],
"title": "Emarosa (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Slaves (stylized as SL▲VES) is an American post-hardcore group formed in Sacramento, California.",
" The band currently consists of lead vocalist Jonny Craig, formerly of Emarosa and Dance Gavin Dance, bassist Colin Vieira of Musical Charis and guitarist Weston Richmond.",
" The band released their debut album, \"Through Art We Are All Equals\" on June 24, 2014.",
" Their second studio album, \"Routine Breathing\", was released on August 21, 2015.",
" The band released the single \"I'd Rather See Your Star Explode\" on January 20, 2017, the lead single off their upcoming third studio album: \"Beautiful Death\", set to be released in September 2017."
],
"title": "Slaves (American band)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Relativity is the debut album by American post-hardcore band Emarosa released on July 8, 2008 through Rise Records.",
" \"Relativity\" was produced by Kris Crummett, producer of other bands such as Drop Dead, Gorgeous and Fear Before, whom Jonny Craig worked with on Dance Gavin Dance's debut album the year before."
],
"title": "Relativity (Emarosa album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"We've All Been There is the debut solo album by American singer-songwriter Alex Band, best known for being the former lead vocalist and songwriter of rock band The Calling.",
" The album was released on June 29, 2010 through Band's own label, AMB Records, in a distribution deal with EMI Records."
],
"title": "We've All Been There"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Downtown Battle Mountain is the debut studio album by American post-hardcore band Dance Gavin Dance, released on May 15, 2007.",
" According to an interview with vocalist Jonathan Mess, the album took its name from Battle Mountain, Nevada which the band visited while the album was being written.",
" It was produced by Kris Crummett, who mastered their EP \"Whatever I Say Is Royal Ocean\".",
" This was the last Dance Gavin Dance album to have Sean O'Sullivan on guitar, and the only full-length album to have Jonny Craig on vocals, until his rejoining in 2010."
],
"title": "Downtown Battle Mountain"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Alexander Max \"Alex\" Band (born June 8, 1981) is an American musician and singer-songwriter, best known for his work in his former band The Calling and their hit song \"Wherever You Will Go\", which topped the Adult Top 40 for 23 weeks."
],
"title": "Alex Band"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Greatest of All Lost Arts is the second album by the American post-hardcore band Lower Definition.",
" The album was recorded in early 2008 with producer Kris Crummett and was released on July 8.",
" The album contains 11 tracks, with Jonny Craig providing guest vocals on \"Pueblo Cicada\".",
" The band hand-picked Kris Crummett as their producer.",
" This album marks the last appearance by bassist Stefan Toler and founding member/drummer Valentino Arteaga."
],
"title": "The Greatest of All Lost Arts"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jonathan Monroe \"Jonny\" Craig (born March 26, 1986) is a Canadian-American singer and songwriter.",
" He is currently working as a solo musician.",
" He has been the lead vocalist for the bands Dance Gavin Dance, Emarosa, Ghost Runner on Third, Slaves, and westerHALTS.",
" As a solo artist, he has released one studio album, two EPs and a live album to date.",
" He was also a part of the supergroup Isles & Glaciers.",
" Craig possesses the vocal range of a baritenor and his distinct type of soul-based singing has earned him considerable acclaim."
],
"title": "Jonny Craig"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Live at Bamboozle 2010 is the first live album released by the post-hardcore band Dance Gavin Dance.",
" The album was released on October 18, 2010 and features a live recording of the band's performance at the 2010 Bamboozle Left in Angel Stadium on March 27, 2010.",
" The live performances reunites former vocalist at the time, Jonny Craig and Jon Mess."
],
"title": "Live at Bamboozle 2010 (Dance Gavin Dance album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dance Gavin Dance is an American post-hardcore band from Sacramento, California, and formed in 2005.",
" The band currently consists of Tilian Pearson (clean vocals), Jon Mess (unclean vocals), Will Swan (lead guitar), Tim Feerick (bass guitar), and Matthew Mingus (drums, percussion).",
" The band formerly included lead vocalists Jonny Craig and Kurt Travis.",
" Swan and Mingus are the only band members who have appeared on every studio album."
],
"title": "Dance Gavin Dance"
}
] |
[
"Title: Emarosa (album)\n\nEmarosa is the second studio album by the alternative rock band Emarosa. It was released in June 2010 through Rise Records. The album was produced by Brian McTernan, and it is also the last album to feature vocalist Jonny Craig.",
"Title: Slaves (American band)\n\nSlaves (stylized as SL▲VES) is an American post-hardcore group formed in Sacramento, California. The band currently consists of lead vocalist Jonny Craig, formerly of Emarosa and Dance Gavin Dance, bassist Colin Vieira of Musical Charis and guitarist Weston Richmond. The band released their debut album, \"Through Art We Are All Equals\" on June 24, 2014. Their second studio album, \"Routine Breathing\", was released on August 21, 2015. The band released the single \"I'd Rather See Your Star Explode\" on January 20, 2017, the lead single off their upcoming third studio album: \"Beautiful Death\", set to be released in September 2017.",
"Title: Relativity (Emarosa album)\n\nRelativity is the debut album by American post-hardcore band Emarosa released on July 8, 2008 through Rise Records. \"Relativity\" was produced by Kris Crummett, producer of other bands such as Drop Dead, Gorgeous and Fear Before, whom Jonny Craig worked with on Dance Gavin Dance's debut album the year before.",
"Title: We've All Been There\n\nWe've All Been There is the debut solo album by American singer-songwriter Alex Band, best known for being the former lead vocalist and songwriter of rock band The Calling. The album was released on June 29, 2010 through Band's own label, AMB Records, in a distribution deal with EMI Records.",
"Title: Downtown Battle Mountain\n\nDowntown Battle Mountain is the debut studio album by American post-hardcore band Dance Gavin Dance, released on May 15, 2007. According to an interview with vocalist Jonathan Mess, the album took its name from Battle Mountain, Nevada which the band visited while the album was being written. It was produced by Kris Crummett, who mastered their EP \"Whatever I Say Is Royal Ocean\". This was the last Dance Gavin Dance album to have Sean O'Sullivan on guitar, and the only full-length album to have Jonny Craig on vocals, until his rejoining in 2010.",
"Title: Alex Band\n\nAlexander Max \"Alex\" Band (born June 8, 1981) is an American musician and singer-songwriter, best known for his work in his former band The Calling and their hit song \"Wherever You Will Go\", which topped the Adult Top 40 for 23 weeks.",
"Title: The Greatest of All Lost Arts\n\nThe Greatest of All Lost Arts is the second album by the American post-hardcore band Lower Definition. The album was recorded in early 2008 with producer Kris Crummett and was released on July 8. The album contains 11 tracks, with Jonny Craig providing guest vocals on \"Pueblo Cicada\". The band hand-picked Kris Crummett as their producer. This album marks the last appearance by bassist Stefan Toler and founding member/drummer Valentino Arteaga.",
"Title: Jonny Craig\n\nJonathan Monroe \"Jonny\" Craig (born March 26, 1986) is a Canadian-American singer and songwriter. He is currently working as a solo musician. He has been the lead vocalist for the bands Dance Gavin Dance, Emarosa, Ghost Runner on Third, Slaves, and westerHALTS. As a solo artist, he has released one studio album, two EPs and a live album to date. He was also a part of the supergroup Isles & Glaciers. Craig possesses the vocal range of a baritenor and his distinct type of soul-based singing has earned him considerable acclaim.",
"Title: Live at Bamboozle 2010 (Dance Gavin Dance album)\n\nLive at Bamboozle 2010 is the first live album released by the post-hardcore band Dance Gavin Dance. The album was released on October 18, 2010 and features a live recording of the band's performance at the 2010 Bamboozle Left in Angel Stadium on March 27, 2010. The live performances reunites former vocalist at the time, Jonny Craig and Jon Mess.",
"Title: Dance Gavin Dance\n\nDance Gavin Dance is an American post-hardcore band from Sacramento, California, and formed in 2005. The band currently consists of Tilian Pearson (clean vocals), Jon Mess (unclean vocals), Will Swan (lead guitar), Tim Feerick (bass guitar), and Matthew Mingus (drums, percussion). The band formerly included lead vocalists Jonny Craig and Kurt Travis. Swan and Mingus are the only band members who have appeared on every studio album."
] |
1,753
|
The Public Eye features an actor with the last name Tucci of what nationality?
|
American
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"The Public Eye (film)",
"The Public Eye (film)",
"Stanley Tucci"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Public Eye Magazine is published by Political Research Associates in Somerville, Massachusetts.",
" The Magazine was founded in 1977 by the Public Eye Network.",
" It currently contains investigative articles about \"movements, institutions, and ideologies that undermine human rights.\"",
" Its primary focus is on right-wing groups in the United States."
],
"title": "Public Eye Magazine"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sheena Shirley Easton (née Orr; born 27 April 1959) is a Scottish singer, recording artist and stage and screen actress with dual British-American nationality.",
" Easton first came into the public eye as the focus of an episode in the first British musical reality television programme \"The Big Time: Pop Singer\", which recorded her attempts to gain a record contract and her eventual signing with EMI Records."
],
"title": "Sheena Easton"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Petrović (or Petrovich) is a Slavic last and second name, found in countries with Slavic populations.",
" Examples of such countries are: Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Macedonia and Russia.",
" This surname or last name is not tied to any nationality.",
" It is normal Slavic surname deriving from \"Petar\", which is equivalent to Peter in English.",
" The part \"ov\" designates possession: \"Petrov\" means \"Peter's\".",
" The suffix \"ić\" is a diminutive designation, or descendant designation.",
" So, the last name can be translated as \"Peter's son\", equivalent to the English last name of Peterson."
],
"title": "Petrović"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Public Eye Network is a group of progressive investigative reporters, licensed investigators, paralegal investigators, attorneys, and activists who share information about political repression and right-wing movements that undermine civil liberties and civil rights.",
" It was formed in the 1970s from three pre-existing groups, the editors of the \"Public Eye Magazine,\" the magazine sponsoring organization, the Repression Information Project (RIP), and the Guild Investigative Group.",
" Several people who worked as editors or volunteer staff at \"CounterSpy Magazine\" joined the network."
],
"title": "Public Eye Network"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Public Eye is a 1992 neo-noir film produced by Sue Baden-Powell and written and directed by Howard Franklin, starring Joe Pesci and Barbara Hershey.",
" Stanley Tucci and Richard Schiff appear in supporting roles."
],
"title": "The Public Eye (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Agranov (Russian: Агранов ; masculine) or Agranova (Агранова ; feminine) is a Russian last name.",
" It derives from the Russian first name Gran (from the Latin word meaning \"grain\"), which transformed into the last name Granov.",
" That last name transformed into \"Agranov\", as the latter is easier to pronounce."
],
"title": "Agranov"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Death Note 2: The Last Name (デスノート the Last name , Desu Nōto the Last name ) a 2006 Japanese detective supernatural psychological horror thriller film directed by Shūsuke Kaneko.",
" The film is the second in a series of live-action Japanese films released in 2006 based on the \"Death Note\" manga and anime series by Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata.",
" The film primarily centers on a university student named Light Yagami who decides to rid the world of evil with the help of a supernatural notebook that kills anyone whose name is written in it.",
" The film was produced by Nippon Television, and distributed by Warner Bros.",
" Pictures Japan.",
" It was licensed by VIZ Pictures.",
" A spin-off, \"\", was released in 2008.",
" A sequel, \"\", was released in 2016."
],
"title": "Death Note 2: The Last Name"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Joia Jefferson Nuri is a communications strategist and human rights activist from the United States.",
" She is an expert in human rights advocacy.",
" She is the Director and founder of In The Public Eye Communications.",
" She is a consultant and senior adviser for human rights organizations and political activists.",
" In the past, she has worked as a Technical Director and Senior Producer for news agencies such as NBC, CBS, NPR, and C-SPAN.",
" Her topics of interest include racism, perceptions of minorities, sports and emerging democracies in West Africa.",
" Today she is a contributor to political television and radio talk shows and is the author of a video blog on how cultural and historical images shape current politics and policy.",
" Her client list includes Harry Belafonte, TransAfrica, the Calvert Foundation, Truly Living Well Center for Natural Urban Agriculture and SNV USA.",
" Her company, In The Public Eye Communications, has served as event strategists for two Presidential Inaugural galas (2009 and 2013), Smithsonian Institution fundraisers, embassy celebrations, annual conferences, seminars and press events."
],
"title": "Joia Jefferson Nuri"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Those with the last name Nanduri are said to hail from the village of Nanduru which is located near Bapatla and Ponnur (small towns in the Guntur District of Andhra Pradesh).",
" There is a village called Nanduru in East Godavari District of Andhra Pradesh as well which leads to some ambiguity.",
" Those with this last name could be Niyogi Brahmins or Sri Vaishnava Brahmins or they could also be from a caste other than the Brahmin caste.",
" One of the other known caste is Bhatraju.",
" For the most part, those with this last name are predominantly Brahmins.",
" Many have migrated from Nanduru and they have settled in various part of Andhra Pradesh.",
" Some are known to have settled in a village known as Lingala, which in located in the Khammam District of Andhra Pradesh.",
" Lingala is said to have been ruled by kings with the last name Nanduri hundreds of years ago."
],
"title": "Nanduri"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Stanley Tucci ( ; ] ; born November 11, 1960) is an American character actor, writer, producer and film director."
],
"title": "Stanley Tucci"
}
] |
[
"Title: Public Eye Magazine\n\nThe Public Eye Magazine is published by Political Research Associates in Somerville, Massachusetts. The Magazine was founded in 1977 by the Public Eye Network. It currently contains investigative articles about \"movements, institutions, and ideologies that undermine human rights.\" Its primary focus is on right-wing groups in the United States.",
"Title: Sheena Easton\n\nSheena Shirley Easton (née Orr; born 27 April 1959) is a Scottish singer, recording artist and stage and screen actress with dual British-American nationality. Easton first came into the public eye as the focus of an episode in the first British musical reality television programme \"The Big Time: Pop Singer\", which recorded her attempts to gain a record contract and her eventual signing with EMI Records.",
"Title: Petrović\n\nPetrović (or Petrovich) is a Slavic last and second name, found in countries with Slavic populations. Examples of such countries are: Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Macedonia and Russia. This surname or last name is not tied to any nationality. It is normal Slavic surname deriving from \"Petar\", which is equivalent to Peter in English. The part \"ov\" designates possession: \"Petrov\" means \"Peter's\". The suffix \"ić\" is a diminutive designation, or descendant designation. So, the last name can be translated as \"Peter's son\", equivalent to the English last name of Peterson.",
"Title: Public Eye Network\n\nThe Public Eye Network is a group of progressive investigative reporters, licensed investigators, paralegal investigators, attorneys, and activists who share information about political repression and right-wing movements that undermine civil liberties and civil rights. It was formed in the 1970s from three pre-existing groups, the editors of the \"Public Eye Magazine,\" the magazine sponsoring organization, the Repression Information Project (RIP), and the Guild Investigative Group. Several people who worked as editors or volunteer staff at \"CounterSpy Magazine\" joined the network.",
"Title: The Public Eye (film)\n\nThe Public Eye is a 1992 neo-noir film produced by Sue Baden-Powell and written and directed by Howard Franklin, starring Joe Pesci and Barbara Hershey. Stanley Tucci and Richard Schiff appear in supporting roles.",
"Title: Agranov\n\nAgranov (Russian: Агранов ; masculine) or Agranova (Агранова ; feminine) is a Russian last name. It derives from the Russian first name Gran (from the Latin word meaning \"grain\"), which transformed into the last name Granov. That last name transformed into \"Agranov\", as the latter is easier to pronounce.",
"Title: Death Note 2: The Last Name\n\nDeath Note 2: The Last Name (デスノート the Last name , Desu Nōto the Last name ) a 2006 Japanese detective supernatural psychological horror thriller film directed by Shūsuke Kaneko. The film is the second in a series of live-action Japanese films released in 2006 based on the \"Death Note\" manga and anime series by Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata. The film primarily centers on a university student named Light Yagami who decides to rid the world of evil with the help of a supernatural notebook that kills anyone whose name is written in it. The film was produced by Nippon Television, and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures Japan. It was licensed by VIZ Pictures. A spin-off, \"\", was released in 2008. A sequel, \"\", was released in 2016.",
"Title: Joia Jefferson Nuri\n\nJoia Jefferson Nuri is a communications strategist and human rights activist from the United States. She is an expert in human rights advocacy. She is the Director and founder of In The Public Eye Communications. She is a consultant and senior adviser for human rights organizations and political activists. In the past, she has worked as a Technical Director and Senior Producer for news agencies such as NBC, CBS, NPR, and C-SPAN. Her topics of interest include racism, perceptions of minorities, sports and emerging democracies in West Africa. Today she is a contributor to political television and radio talk shows and is the author of a video blog on how cultural and historical images shape current politics and policy. Her client list includes Harry Belafonte, TransAfrica, the Calvert Foundation, Truly Living Well Center for Natural Urban Agriculture and SNV USA. Her company, In The Public Eye Communications, has served as event strategists for two Presidential Inaugural galas (2009 and 2013), Smithsonian Institution fundraisers, embassy celebrations, annual conferences, seminars and press events.",
"Title: Nanduri\n\nThose with the last name Nanduri are said to hail from the village of Nanduru which is located near Bapatla and Ponnur (small towns in the Guntur District of Andhra Pradesh). There is a village called Nanduru in East Godavari District of Andhra Pradesh as well which leads to some ambiguity. Those with this last name could be Niyogi Brahmins or Sri Vaishnava Brahmins or they could also be from a caste other than the Brahmin caste. One of the other known caste is Bhatraju. For the most part, those with this last name are predominantly Brahmins. Many have migrated from Nanduru and they have settled in various part of Andhra Pradesh. Some are known to have settled in a village known as Lingala, which in located in the Khammam District of Andhra Pradesh. Lingala is said to have been ruled by kings with the last name Nanduri hundreds of years ago.",
"Title: Stanley Tucci\n\nStanley Tucci ( ; ] ; born November 11, 1960) is an American character actor, writer, producer and film director."
] |
1,754
|
Hayato Arakaki plays for a baseball team that competes in what Nippon Professional Baseball league?
|
Pacific League
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Hayato Arakaki",
"Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters"
],
"sent_id": [
2,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Japan Championship Series (日本選手権シリーズ , Nippon Senshuken Shiriizu ) , or Japan Series (日本シリーズ , Nippon Shiriizu ) is the annual championship series in Nippon Professional Baseball, the top baseball league in Japan.",
" It is a seven-game series between the winning clubs of the league's two circuits, the Central League and the Pacific League.",
" The Series is the highest level of play in professional baseball in Japan.",
" It is usually played in October or November.",
" As in all of the best-of-seven series, the first team to win four games is the overall winner and is declared the Japan Series Champion (日本一 , Nippon Ichi , number one in Japan) each year.",
" The winner of the Japan Series also goes on to be the Japanese representative team in the annual Asia Series."
],
"title": "Japan Series"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kensuke Tanaka (田中 賢介, born May 20, 1981) is a Japanese professional baseball left fielder who plays for the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters of the Nippon Professional Baseball League.",
" He has played for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of Nippon Professional Baseball and the San Francisco Giants of Major League Baseball."
],
"title": "Kensuke Tanaka"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Yomiuri Giants are a professional baseball team based in Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan.",
" The Giants are members of the Central League (CL) in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).",
" In baseball, the head coach of a team is called the manager, or more formally, the field manager.",
" The duties of the team manager include team strategy and leadership on and off the field.",
" The team has employed 11 different managers since the formation of a professional baseball league in Japan.",
" The current Giants manager is Tatsunori Hara."
],
"title": "List of Yomiuri Giants managers"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Asia Series was an international club baseball competition, contested by the champions of all four of the professional leagues that are associated with the World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) — Australian Baseball League (ABL), Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL), Korea Baseball Organization League (KBO League), and Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) — along with the CEB European Champion Cup holder and the host city, to bring the number of teams up to six."
],
"title": "Asia Series"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Nagisa Arakaki (新垣 渚 , \"Arakaki Nagisa\" , born May 9, 1980 in Naha, Okinawa) is a former Japanese professional baseball player.",
" He is currently with the Tokyo Yakult Swallows in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball.",
" Despite having one of the best fastballs and sliders of anyone in the league, Arakaki has battled control problems and injuries throughout his career.",
" In 2007, Arakaki set the NPB record for most wild pitches in a season with 21, breaking Kazuhisa Ishii's record."
],
"title": "Nagisa Arakaki"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hayato Arakaki (新垣 勇人 , Arakaki Hayato ) is a Japanese professional baseball player.",
" He was born on October 21, 1985.",
" He debuted in 2013 for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters."
],
"title": "Hayato Arakaki"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2008 Asia Series was contested on November 13–16 by the champions of Nippon Professional Baseball's Japan Series, the Korea Baseball Organization's Korean Series, Chinese Professional Baseball League's Taiwan Series, and the championship of the China Baseball League of the People's Republic of China.",
" In 2008, it was the first time that the champion of the China Baseball League participates in instead of the all-star team China Stars.",
" The winning team will receive ¥50 million yen ($0.5 million), the second place team will receive ¥30 million yen, and the other teams will receive ¥10 million yen each.",
" All games were held in Tokyo Dome, Tokyo, Japan.",
" The Saitama Seibu Lions defeated the Uni-President 7-Eleven Lions in the title game to win the championship for Japan.",
" Outfielder Tomoaki Satoh was named the MVP of the series."
],
"title": "2008 Asia Series"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Chinese Taipei baseball team () is the national team of the Republic of China (ROC).",
" It is governed by the Chinese Taipei Baseball Association.",
" The team is ranked fourth in the world by the International Baseball Federation, behind the United States, Japan, and South Korea respectively.",
" They have consistently maintained top positions in international baseball competitions.",
" The team is usually made of professionals from Taiwan's Chinese Professional Baseball League, Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball, and Major League Baseball or Minor League Baseball from the United States."
],
"title": "Chinese Taipei national baseball team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (北海道日本ハムファイターズ , Hokkaidō Nippon-Hamu Faitāzu ) are a Japanese professional baseball team based in Sapporo, Hokkaidō.",
" They compete in the Pacific League of Nippon Professional Baseball, playing the majority of their home games at the Sapporo Dome.",
" The Fighters also host a select number of regional home games in cities across Hokkaidō, including Hakodate, Asahikawa, Kushiro, and Obihiro.",
" The team's name comes from its parent organization, Nippon Ham, a major Japanese food processing company."
],
"title": "Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lin En-yu, (; born March 25, 1981 in Tainan City, Taiwan, Republic of China), is a Taiwanese professional baseball pitcher.",
" After serving in Chinese Taipei's National Training Team in 2003 and 2004, he was drafted by the Macoto Cobras of the Chinese Professional Baseball League in Republic of China in early 2005 and stayed with the team until the end of 2006.",
" He later played for Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles of the Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan since 2007, under the introduction of former Cobras manager Kuo Tai-yuan and followed his teammate Lin Ying-Chieh.",
" Lin throws a variety of different pitches and has a fastball speed up to 151 km/h (94 mph), and has been a frequent member of the Chinese Taipei national baseball team since 2003."
],
"title": "Lin En-yu"
}
] |
[
"Title: Japan Series\n\nThe Japan Championship Series (日本選手権シリーズ , Nippon Senshuken Shiriizu ) , or Japan Series (日本シリーズ , Nippon Shiriizu ) is the annual championship series in Nippon Professional Baseball, the top baseball league in Japan. It is a seven-game series between the winning clubs of the league's two circuits, the Central League and the Pacific League. The Series is the highest level of play in professional baseball in Japan. It is usually played in October or November. As in all of the best-of-seven series, the first team to win four games is the overall winner and is declared the Japan Series Champion (日本一 , Nippon Ichi , number one in Japan) each year. The winner of the Japan Series also goes on to be the Japanese representative team in the annual Asia Series.",
"Title: Kensuke Tanaka\n\nKensuke Tanaka (田中 賢介, born May 20, 1981) is a Japanese professional baseball left fielder who plays for the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters of the Nippon Professional Baseball League. He has played for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of Nippon Professional Baseball and the San Francisco Giants of Major League Baseball.",
"Title: List of Yomiuri Giants managers\n\nThe Yomiuri Giants are a professional baseball team based in Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan. The Giants are members of the Central League (CL) in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). In baseball, the head coach of a team is called the manager, or more formally, the field manager. The duties of the team manager include team strategy and leadership on and off the field. The team has employed 11 different managers since the formation of a professional baseball league in Japan. The current Giants manager is Tatsunori Hara.",
"Title: Asia Series\n\nThe Asia Series was an international club baseball competition, contested by the champions of all four of the professional leagues that are associated with the World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) — Australian Baseball League (ABL), Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL), Korea Baseball Organization League (KBO League), and Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) — along with the CEB European Champion Cup holder and the host city, to bring the number of teams up to six.",
"Title: Nagisa Arakaki\n\nNagisa Arakaki (新垣 渚 , \"Arakaki Nagisa\" , born May 9, 1980 in Naha, Okinawa) is a former Japanese professional baseball player. He is currently with the Tokyo Yakult Swallows in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball. Despite having one of the best fastballs and sliders of anyone in the league, Arakaki has battled control problems and injuries throughout his career. In 2007, Arakaki set the NPB record for most wild pitches in a season with 21, breaking Kazuhisa Ishii's record.",
"Title: Hayato Arakaki\n\nHayato Arakaki (新垣 勇人 , Arakaki Hayato ) is a Japanese professional baseball player. He was born on October 21, 1985. He debuted in 2013 for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters.",
"Title: 2008 Asia Series\n\nThe 2008 Asia Series was contested on November 13–16 by the champions of Nippon Professional Baseball's Japan Series, the Korea Baseball Organization's Korean Series, Chinese Professional Baseball League's Taiwan Series, and the championship of the China Baseball League of the People's Republic of China. In 2008, it was the first time that the champion of the China Baseball League participates in instead of the all-star team China Stars. The winning team will receive ¥50 million yen ($0.5 million), the second place team will receive ¥30 million yen, and the other teams will receive ¥10 million yen each. All games were held in Tokyo Dome, Tokyo, Japan. The Saitama Seibu Lions defeated the Uni-President 7-Eleven Lions in the title game to win the championship for Japan. Outfielder Tomoaki Satoh was named the MVP of the series.",
"Title: Chinese Taipei national baseball team\n\nThe Chinese Taipei baseball team () is the national team of the Republic of China (ROC). It is governed by the Chinese Taipei Baseball Association. The team is ranked fourth in the world by the International Baseball Federation, behind the United States, Japan, and South Korea respectively. They have consistently maintained top positions in international baseball competitions. The team is usually made of professionals from Taiwan's Chinese Professional Baseball League, Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball, and Major League Baseball or Minor League Baseball from the United States.",
"Title: Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters\n\nThe Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (北海道日本ハムファイターズ , Hokkaidō Nippon-Hamu Faitāzu ) are a Japanese professional baseball team based in Sapporo, Hokkaidō. They compete in the Pacific League of Nippon Professional Baseball, playing the majority of their home games at the Sapporo Dome. The Fighters also host a select number of regional home games in cities across Hokkaidō, including Hakodate, Asahikawa, Kushiro, and Obihiro. The team's name comes from its parent organization, Nippon Ham, a major Japanese food processing company.",
"Title: Lin En-yu\n\nLin En-yu, (; born March 25, 1981 in Tainan City, Taiwan, Republic of China), is a Taiwanese professional baseball pitcher. After serving in Chinese Taipei's National Training Team in 2003 and 2004, he was drafted by the Macoto Cobras of the Chinese Professional Baseball League in Republic of China in early 2005 and stayed with the team until the end of 2006. He later played for Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles of the Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan since 2007, under the introduction of former Cobras manager Kuo Tai-yuan and followed his teammate Lin Ying-Chieh. Lin throws a variety of different pitches and has a fastball speed up to 151 km/h (94 mph), and has been a frequent member of the Chinese Taipei national baseball team since 2003."
] |
1,755
|
Are Radio Iodine and Talk Talk both from the United States?
|
no
|
comparison
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Radio Iodine",
"Talk Talk"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Sixx Sense is a nationally syndicated rock radio show based in Dallas, Texas and is heard on over 115 radio stations.",
" It is also available on iHeartRadio in The United States and Canada.",
" The iHeartRadio channel intersperses active rock and alternative rock with talk from hosts Nikki Sixx and Jenn Marino.",
" Sixx Sense was one of eleven channels produced by Clear Channel for broadcast on XM Satellite Radio.",
" Other Clear Channel XM stations include: America's Talk, Extreme Talk, ReachMD, and Talk Radio; as well as simulcasts of Fox Sports Radio, KIIS-FM, WGCI-FM, WHTZ, WLTW, and WSIX-FM.",
" Advertising sales are handled by Premiere Networks."
],
"title": "Sixx Sense"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"It's My Life\" is a song by the English new wave band Talk Talk.",
" Written by Mark Hollis and Tim Friese-Greene, it was the title track on the band's second album and released as its first single in January 1984.",
" It reached #46 in the UK charts, but did better in several other countries, reaching #33 in Germany, #32 in New Zealand, #25 in France and #7 in Italy.",
" It was also a success in North America, entering the Top 40 in both the United States (#31) and Canada (#30).",
" (Notably, it peaked at #1 on the U.S. Hot Dance Club Play chart.)"
],
"title": "It's My Life (Talk Talk song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Talk Talk\" is a 1982 song by the British band Talk Talk.",
" The second single from their debut album, \"The Party's Over\" (1982), it topped at no. 52 in the United Kingdom upon initial release.",
" A remix of the song was released later in the same year where it peaked at no. 23 in the UK and number 75 in the United States.",
" The single also reached no. 1 in South Africa in 1983.",
" Influential modern rock radio station KROQ-FM in Los Angeles included this song in its regular rotation of current releases from July–August 1982."
],
"title": "Talk Talk (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Talkers Magazine is a trade-industry publication related to talk radio in the United States.",
" Its slogan is \"The Bible of Talk Radio and the New Talk Media\".",
" In addition to radio, it covers talk shows on broadcast and cable television, as well as Internet-only shows and podcasting.",
" The magazine advocates the advancement of conservative, progressive, and apolitical talk radio.",
" Ratings for talk shows are based upon \"the opinion of the TALKERS editorial board\" and are \"non-scientific projections... and do not represent exact Nielsen Audio or any other ratings service totals.\""
],
"title": "Talkers Magazine"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Conservative talk radio (or right talk) is a talk radio format in the United States and other countries devoted to expressing conservative viewpoints of issues, as opposed to progressive talk radio.",
" The definition of conservative talk is generally broad enough that libertarian talk show hosts are also included in the definition.",
" The format has become the dominant form of talk radio in the United States since the 1987 abandonment of the Fairness Doctrine."
],
"title": "Conservative talk radio"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Justin Time is a Canadian animated television series for pre-school aged children, created by Brandon James Scott.",
" The show was developed for television and executive produced by Frank Falcone and Mary Bredin.",
" Justin Time airs on Family Jr. in English and Télémagino in French in Canada, the Sprout channel in the United States, Tiny Pop in the United Kingdom, and Kids Talk Talk Plus in South Korea.",
" The series premiered on September 22, 2011 and the series finale on June 24, 2016."
],
"title": "Justin Time (TV series)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Out of Season is a studio album by Portishead frontwoman Beth Gibbons and former Talk Talk bassist Paul Webb (under the pseudonym Rustin Man).",
" It was released on 28 October 2002 in the United Kingdom and on 7 October 2003 in the United States.",
" \"Out of Season\" is largely a folk album with jazz leanings, with Gibbons and Webb drawing more directly on the influences of Nina Simone, Billie Holiday, and Nick Drake, at which Portishead's work in trip hop only hinted.",
" \"Out of Season\" also features contributions from Gibbons' fellow Portishead bandmate Adrian Utley and Webb's former bandmate Lee Harris.",
" The first track of the album, \"Mysteries\", appears on the original soundtrack of the French movie \"Les Poupées Russes\" (\"The Russian Dolls\") and in \"Wim Wenders\"' \"Palermo Shooting\" from 2008.",
" The album achieved a silver certification from the BPI."
],
"title": "Out of Season (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Radio Iodine was an alternative rock band from St. Louis, Missouri.",
" It was formed in 1993 as 9 Days Wonder by Tony Persyn and his wife, Ellen.",
" After another band threatened to sue over the name, the band changed its name to Radio Iodine.",
" It signed to Radioactive Records, which released a self-titled EP in 1996.",
" Radioactive Records chairman Gary Kurfirst moved the band to his new subsidiary label Radiouniverse, and the band's 1997 album \"Tiny Warnings\" was the label's inaugural release."
],
"title": "Radio Iodine"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Talk Talk were an English rock band, active from 1981 until their breakup in 1992.",
" Their early hit singles include \"Today\", \"Talk Talk\" (both 1982), \"It's My Life\" and \"Such a Shame\" (both 1984).",
" Although the band only experienced moderate success in their native country, they established some international success.",
" Talk Talk moved away from synth-pop towards more experimental music in the mid-1980s, helping to pioneer what became known as post-rock.",
" They achieved moderate success in Europe and the UK with the subsequent singles \"Life's What You Make It\" (1985) and \"Living in Another World\" (1986), and in 1988 they released their fourth album \"Spirit of Eden\", which was commercially less successful."
],
"title": "Talk Talk"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Into You Like a Train\" is the sixth episode of the second season of the American television medical drama \"Grey's Anatomy\", and the show's fifteenth episode overall.",
" The episode, which would have originally served as the season two premiere, was written by Krista Vernoff and directed by Jeff Melman.",
" The episode was originally broadcast on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the United States on October 30, 2005.",
" Vernoff received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series.",
" The episode's title refers to a song by The Psychedelic Furs from their Talk Talk Talk album.",
" The track was also covered by the band Jawbreaker as bonus track for their Dear You album 2004 reissue."
],
"title": "Into You Like a Train"
}
] |
[
"Title: Sixx Sense\n\nSixx Sense is a nationally syndicated rock radio show based in Dallas, Texas and is heard on over 115 radio stations. It is also available on iHeartRadio in The United States and Canada. The iHeartRadio channel intersperses active rock and alternative rock with talk from hosts Nikki Sixx and Jenn Marino. Sixx Sense was one of eleven channels produced by Clear Channel for broadcast on XM Satellite Radio. Other Clear Channel XM stations include: America's Talk, Extreme Talk, ReachMD, and Talk Radio; as well as simulcasts of Fox Sports Radio, KIIS-FM, WGCI-FM, WHTZ, WLTW, and WSIX-FM. Advertising sales are handled by Premiere Networks.",
"Title: It's My Life (Talk Talk song)\n\n\"It's My Life\" is a song by the English new wave band Talk Talk. Written by Mark Hollis and Tim Friese-Greene, it was the title track on the band's second album and released as its first single in January 1984. It reached #46 in the UK charts, but did better in several other countries, reaching #33 in Germany, #32 in New Zealand, #25 in France and #7 in Italy. It was also a success in North America, entering the Top 40 in both the United States (#31) and Canada (#30). (Notably, it peaked at #1 on the U.S. Hot Dance Club Play chart.)",
"Title: Talk Talk (song)\n\n\"Talk Talk\" is a 1982 song by the British band Talk Talk. The second single from their debut album, \"The Party's Over\" (1982), it topped at no. 52 in the United Kingdom upon initial release. A remix of the song was released later in the same year where it peaked at no. 23 in the UK and number 75 in the United States. The single also reached no. 1 in South Africa in 1983. Influential modern rock radio station KROQ-FM in Los Angeles included this song in its regular rotation of current releases from July–August 1982.",
"Title: Talkers Magazine\n\nTalkers Magazine is a trade-industry publication related to talk radio in the United States. Its slogan is \"The Bible of Talk Radio and the New Talk Media\". In addition to radio, it covers talk shows on broadcast and cable television, as well as Internet-only shows and podcasting. The magazine advocates the advancement of conservative, progressive, and apolitical talk radio. Ratings for talk shows are based upon \"the opinion of the TALKERS editorial board\" and are \"non-scientific projections... and do not represent exact Nielsen Audio or any other ratings service totals.\"",
"Title: Conservative talk radio\n\nConservative talk radio (or right talk) is a talk radio format in the United States and other countries devoted to expressing conservative viewpoints of issues, as opposed to progressive talk radio. The definition of conservative talk is generally broad enough that libertarian talk show hosts are also included in the definition. The format has become the dominant form of talk radio in the United States since the 1987 abandonment of the Fairness Doctrine.",
"Title: Justin Time (TV series)\n\nJustin Time is a Canadian animated television series for pre-school aged children, created by Brandon James Scott. The show was developed for television and executive produced by Frank Falcone and Mary Bredin. Justin Time airs on Family Jr. in English and Télémagino in French in Canada, the Sprout channel in the United States, Tiny Pop in the United Kingdom, and Kids Talk Talk Plus in South Korea. The series premiered on September 22, 2011 and the series finale on June 24, 2016.",
"Title: Out of Season (album)\n\nOut of Season is a studio album by Portishead frontwoman Beth Gibbons and former Talk Talk bassist Paul Webb (under the pseudonym Rustin Man). It was released on 28 October 2002 in the United Kingdom and on 7 October 2003 in the United States. \"Out of Season\" is largely a folk album with jazz leanings, with Gibbons and Webb drawing more directly on the influences of Nina Simone, Billie Holiday, and Nick Drake, at which Portishead's work in trip hop only hinted. \"Out of Season\" also features contributions from Gibbons' fellow Portishead bandmate Adrian Utley and Webb's former bandmate Lee Harris. The first track of the album, \"Mysteries\", appears on the original soundtrack of the French movie \"Les Poupées Russes\" (\"The Russian Dolls\") and in \"Wim Wenders\"' \"Palermo Shooting\" from 2008. The album achieved a silver certification from the BPI.",
"Title: Radio Iodine\n\nRadio Iodine was an alternative rock band from St. Louis, Missouri. It was formed in 1993 as 9 Days Wonder by Tony Persyn and his wife, Ellen. After another band threatened to sue over the name, the band changed its name to Radio Iodine. It signed to Radioactive Records, which released a self-titled EP in 1996. Radioactive Records chairman Gary Kurfirst moved the band to his new subsidiary label Radiouniverse, and the band's 1997 album \"Tiny Warnings\" was the label's inaugural release.",
"Title: Talk Talk\n\nTalk Talk were an English rock band, active from 1981 until their breakup in 1992. Their early hit singles include \"Today\", \"Talk Talk\" (both 1982), \"It's My Life\" and \"Such a Shame\" (both 1984). Although the band only experienced moderate success in their native country, they established some international success. Talk Talk moved away from synth-pop towards more experimental music in the mid-1980s, helping to pioneer what became known as post-rock. They achieved moderate success in Europe and the UK with the subsequent singles \"Life's What You Make It\" (1985) and \"Living in Another World\" (1986), and in 1988 they released their fourth album \"Spirit of Eden\", which was commercially less successful.",
"Title: Into You Like a Train\n\n\"Into You Like a Train\" is the sixth episode of the second season of the American television medical drama \"Grey's Anatomy\", and the show's fifteenth episode overall. The episode, which would have originally served as the season two premiere, was written by Krista Vernoff and directed by Jeff Melman. The episode was originally broadcast on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the United States on October 30, 2005. Vernoff received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series. The episode's title refers to a song by The Psychedelic Furs from their Talk Talk Talk album. The track was also covered by the band Jawbreaker as bonus track for their Dear You album 2004 reissue."
] |
1,756
|
Who in the Celtic in the 1977 Scottish League Cup Final was a Swedish football coach and former professional player?
|
Henrik Larsson
|
bridge
|
medium
|
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{
"sentences": [
"The 1997 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 30 November 1997, at Ibrox Stadium in Glasgow and was the final of the 52nd Scottish League Cup competition.",
" The final was contested by Celtic and Dundee United.",
" Celtic won the match 3–0 thanks to goals by Marc Rieper, Henrik Larsson and Craig Burley."
],
"title": "1997 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1955 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 22 October 1955, at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 10th Scottish League Cup competition.",
" The final was contested by Aberdeen and St Mirren.",
" Aberdeen won the match 2–1, thanks to a goal by Graham Leggat and an own goal by Jim Mallan.",
" The winning goal, scored 11 minutes from the end, was a \"wind-assisted cross\".",
" Aberdeen manager Davie Shaw later admitted that they had been \"damn lucky\" to win the Cup.",
" The match proved to be St Mirren's last appearance in a Scottish League Cup Final until 2010."
],
"title": "1955 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1967 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 28 October 1967 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 22nd Scottish League Cup competition.",
" The final was contested by Dundee and Celtic, with Dundee becoming the first side from outside the Old Firm to reach a League Cup Final since the 1963 Final.",
" Celtic won a high-scoring match by 5–3, with Stevie Chalmers, John Hughes, Bobby Lennox and Willie Wallace all scoring for Celtic.",
" George McLean and Jim McLean scored Dundee's goals."
],
"title": "1967 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2009 Scottish League Cup Final was the final match of the 2008–09 Scottish League Cup, the 62nd season of the Scottish League Cup.",
" The match was played at Hampden Park, Glasgow on 15 March 2009, and was won by Celtic, who beat Old Firm rivals and Cup holders, Rangers, 2-0 after extra time."
],
"title": "2009 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2006 Scottish League Cup Final was a football match played on 19 March 2006 at Hampden Park in Glasgow.",
" It was the final match of the 2005–06 Scottish League Cup and the 59th Scottish League Cup Final.",
" The final was contested by Dunfermline Athletic and Celtic.",
" Celtic won the match 3–0, thanks to goals from Maciej Zurawski, Shaun Maloney and Dion Dublin."
],
"title": "2006 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2012 Scottish League Cup Final was the 66th final of the Scottish League Cup.",
"The final took place on 18 March 2012 at Hampden Park in Glasgow, in front of a crowd of 49,572.",
" The clubs contesting the 2012 final were SPL clubs Celtic and Kilmarnock.",
" The match was Celtic's twenty-ninth League Cup final, and Kilmarnock's sixth."
],
"title": "2012 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2011 Scottish League Cup Final was the final match of the 2010–11 Scottish League Cup, the 64th season of the Scottish League Cup.",
" It was played by Old Firm rivals Celtic and Rangers.",
" Rangers won the trophy after extra time 2–1."
],
"title": "2011 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1966 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 29 October 1966 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and it was the final of the 21st Scottish League Cup competition.",
" The final was contested by the Old Firm rivals Rangers and Celtic for a third consecutive year.",
" Celtic won the match 1–0, with Bobby Lennox scoring the only goal.",
" This meant that Celtic completed the first leg of the Quadruple in 1966–67, as they won all three major Scottish domestic honours and the 1967 European Cup Final."
],
"title": "1966 Scottish League Cup Final"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The second 1969 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 25 October 1969 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 24th Scottish League Cup competition.",
" The final was contested by St Johnstone, which was contesting its first major national cup final, and cup holder Celtic.",
" Celtic retained the cup for another year by winning the match 1–0, with Bertie Auld scoring the only goal."
],
"title": "1969 Scottish League Cup Final (October)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Henrik Edward Larsson (] ; born 20 September 1971) is a Swedish football coach and former professional player.",
" He was known as a striker whose main attributes were his goal scoring prowess and on-field intelligence."
],
"title": "Henrik Larsson"
}
] |
[
"Title: 1997 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 1997 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 30 November 1997, at Ibrox Stadium in Glasgow and was the final of the 52nd Scottish League Cup competition. The final was contested by Celtic and Dundee United. Celtic won the match 3–0 thanks to goals by Marc Rieper, Henrik Larsson and Craig Burley.",
"Title: 1955 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 1955 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 22 October 1955, at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 10th Scottish League Cup competition. The final was contested by Aberdeen and St Mirren. Aberdeen won the match 2–1, thanks to a goal by Graham Leggat and an own goal by Jim Mallan. The winning goal, scored 11 minutes from the end, was a \"wind-assisted cross\". Aberdeen manager Davie Shaw later admitted that they had been \"damn lucky\" to win the Cup. The match proved to be St Mirren's last appearance in a Scottish League Cup Final until 2010.",
"Title: 1967 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 1967 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 28 October 1967 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 22nd Scottish League Cup competition. The final was contested by Dundee and Celtic, with Dundee becoming the first side from outside the Old Firm to reach a League Cup Final since the 1963 Final. Celtic won a high-scoring match by 5–3, with Stevie Chalmers, John Hughes, Bobby Lennox and Willie Wallace all scoring for Celtic. George McLean and Jim McLean scored Dundee's goals.",
"Title: 2009 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 2009 Scottish League Cup Final was the final match of the 2008–09 Scottish League Cup, the 62nd season of the Scottish League Cup. The match was played at Hampden Park, Glasgow on 15 March 2009, and was won by Celtic, who beat Old Firm rivals and Cup holders, Rangers, 2-0 after extra time.",
"Title: 2006 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 2006 Scottish League Cup Final was a football match played on 19 March 2006 at Hampden Park in Glasgow. It was the final match of the 2005–06 Scottish League Cup and the 59th Scottish League Cup Final. The final was contested by Dunfermline Athletic and Celtic. Celtic won the match 3–0, thanks to goals from Maciej Zurawski, Shaun Maloney and Dion Dublin.",
"Title: 2012 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 2012 Scottish League Cup Final was the 66th final of the Scottish League Cup. The final took place on 18 March 2012 at Hampden Park in Glasgow, in front of a crowd of 49,572. The clubs contesting the 2012 final were SPL clubs Celtic and Kilmarnock. The match was Celtic's twenty-ninth League Cup final, and Kilmarnock's sixth.",
"Title: 2011 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 2011 Scottish League Cup Final was the final match of the 2010–11 Scottish League Cup, the 64th season of the Scottish League Cup. It was played by Old Firm rivals Celtic and Rangers. Rangers won the trophy after extra time 2–1.",
"Title: 1966 Scottish League Cup Final\n\nThe 1966 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 29 October 1966 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and it was the final of the 21st Scottish League Cup competition. The final was contested by the Old Firm rivals Rangers and Celtic for a third consecutive year. Celtic won the match 1–0, with Bobby Lennox scoring the only goal. This meant that Celtic completed the first leg of the Quadruple in 1966–67, as they won all three major Scottish domestic honours and the 1967 European Cup Final.",
"Title: 1969 Scottish League Cup Final (October)\n\nThe second 1969 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 25 October 1969 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 24th Scottish League Cup competition. The final was contested by St Johnstone, which was contesting its first major national cup final, and cup holder Celtic. Celtic retained the cup for another year by winning the match 1–0, with Bertie Auld scoring the only goal.",
"Title: Henrik Larsson\n\nHenrik Edward Larsson (] ; born 20 September 1971) is a Swedish football coach and former professional player. He was known as a striker whose main attributes were his goal scoring prowess and on-field intelligence."
] |
1,757
|
Olivia Olson played the character Joanna in which 2017 sequel?
|
Red Nose Day Actually
|
bridge
|
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|
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"Red Nose Day Actually"
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1,
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[
{
"sentences": [
"Marceline the Vampire Queen is a character in the American animated television series \"Adventure Time\" created by Pendleton Ward.",
" She is voiced by Olivia Olson in most appearances, by Ava Acres as a child and by Cloris Leachman as an old woman.",
" Marceline is a fun-loving 1,000-year-old vampire queen.",
" The name \"Marceline\" is based on the middle name of a childhood friend of Ward's, Marie.",
" The artistic design for Marceline was created by Ward, with small changes and additions added by Phil Rynda, former lead-character designer and prop designer for \"Adventure Time\".",
" Unlike a traditional vampire, Marceline does not need to drink blood to survive; rather, she eats the color red.",
" Marceline is a musician who plays an electric bass that she made from her family's heirloom battle-axe."
],
"title": "Marceline the Vampire Queen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Edward F. Olson (January 1, 1922 – February 10, 1995) was an American ice hockey player, born in Hancock, Michigan.",
" One of nine brothers from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, all of whom played college, amateur, pro or Olympic hockey.",
" Eddie started his hockey career playing amateur for the Marquette Sentinels.",
" He soon moved to the Coast Guard Cutters, playing two seasons with other hockey stars John Mariucci and Frank Brimsek before being shipped out in 1944.",
" Olson played professionally in the American Hockey League for the St. Louis Flyers (1946–1951) and the Cleveland Barons (1951–1955).",
" He was the first American-born player to win the league scoring title in 1953, as well as earning MVP that same year.",
" His final season was as a player–coach, winning the league championship with the Victoria Cougars (1955–1956), as the first American to coach a Canadian team.",
" After his playing career he went on to coach many different amateur and high school teams, and never had a losing season.",
" He was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1977 and the St. Louis Amateur Hockey Hall of Fame in March 2008."
],
"title": "Eddie Olson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Olivia Rose Olson (born May 21, 1992) is an American actress and singer-songwriter, mostly known for her voice roles as Vanessa Doofenshmirtz in \"Phineas and Ferb\" and Marceline the Vampire Queen in \"Adventure Time\".",
" She also played the character of Joanna in the 2003 film \"Love Actually\" and its 2017 short sequel \"Red Nose Day Actually\"."
],
"title": "Olivia Olson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kirsten Olson (born October 20, 1991) is an American former figure skater and actress.",
" As an actress, Olson played the role of Nikki Fletcher, the 'Jumping Shrimp,' in the Disney movie \"Ice Princess\" (2005).",
" As a figure skater, Olson placed fifth on the novice level at the 2005 United States Figure Skating Championships and came in ninth at the junior level at the 2007 Nationals.",
" She represents the Starlight Ice Dance Club in the Twin Cities, Minnesota and is coached by Page Lipe.",
" Though she no longer skates competitively, Olson has been coaching for the last few years.",
" Olson graduated from Burnsville High School in 2010 and UW-LaCrosse in 2014."
],
"title": "Kirsten Olson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Red Nose Day Actually is a 2017 British romantic comedy television short film, acting as both a sequel to the 2003 feature film \"Love Actually\", and a part of the fund-raising event Red Nose Day 2017.",
" \"Love Actually\" writer and director Richard Curtis returns alongside cast members Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Colin Firth, Andrew Lincoln, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Keira Knightley, Martine McCutcheon, Bill Nighy, Thomas Sangster, Lúcia Moniz, Olivia Olson, Marcus Brigstocke, and Rowan Atkinson."
],
"title": "Red Nose Day Actually"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Princess Bonnibel Bubblegum of the Candy Kingdom (voiced by Hynden Walch) is a fictional character in the \"Adventure Time\" animated series on the Cartoon Network.",
" She is the current incarnation of the Candy Elemental, comparable to the inhabitants of the Candy Kingdom, who are all composed of types of desserts and candies.",
" In the season 7 episode \"Elemental,\" Princess Bubblegum was revealed to be the current Candy Elemental (in the \"Adventure Time\" universe, the Elementals are the embodiments of the four main elements that make up the world: ice, fire, candy and slime.",
" They have existed since the beginning of life, living, dying and reincarnating for eons and millennia).",
" She rules over the Candy Kingdom, but in the Season 6 episode \"Hot Diggity Doom\" (the first part of the season's finale), an election was held and she lost to the King of Ooo by a landslide.",
" As a result, she no longer ruled the Candy Kingdom and the King of Ooo replaced her as the new ruler, until a rebellion against King of Ooo allowed her to reclaim the throne in \"The Dark Cloud\".",
" Her proficiency in science and fluency in Korean and German are a testament to her high intelligence.",
" In 2014, Olivia Olson (the voice actress of Marceline the Vampire Queen) alleged at a book signing that the show's creator Ward had confirmed that Marceline and Princess Bubblegum dated but were unable to put any official confirmation in the show due to controversy.",
" However, Olsen seemed to redact the statement in a Tweet that same day by stating \"I like to make things up at panels.",
" Ya'll take my stories way too seriously\"."
],
"title": "Princess Bubblegum"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Timothy Lane Olson (born August 1, 1978) is a former American professional baseball player who was an infielder for two Major League Baseball teams in the 2000s.",
" Olson played college baseball for the University of Florida, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies."
],
"title": "Tim Olson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Greg Olson (born September 6, 1960) is a former Major League Baseball catcher who played with the Minnesota Twins and Atlanta Braves from 1989 to 1993.",
" Olson was selected to the National League All-Star team in 1990 and appeared in the 1991 World Series with the Braves.",
" In 1992, Olson was having a career year until a collision with Ken Caminiti of the Houston Astros broke his right leg.",
" Olson played one more year for Atlanta before being released in the off season to make room for rising prospect Javy López.",
" Olson signed with the New York Mets for the 1994 season but was released following spring training, leading to his retirement.",
" Olson now resides in Eden Prairie, Minnesota in a mansion with his golden retriever, Remington."
],
"title": "Greg Olson (baseball)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Evicted!\"",
" is the twelfth episode of the first season of the American animated television series \"Adventure Time\".",
" The episode was written and storyboarded by Bert Youn and Sean Jimenez, from a story by Adam Muto.",
" It originally aired on Cartoon Network on March 18, 2010 as a preview for the series; it later officially aired on May 17, 2010.",
" The episode guest stars Erik Estrada as King Worm.",
" The episode marks the first appearance of Marceline the Vampire Queen (voiced by Olivia Olson), who would go on to play a larger role in the series as a friend and companion to Finn and Jake."
],
"title": "Evicted!"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Martin Olson is an American comedy writer, television producer, author and composer.",
" He is known for his unusual subject matter, and is an original member of the Boston Comedy Scene.",
" He is the adoptive father of actress Olivia Olson."
],
"title": "Martin Olson"
}
] |
[
"Title: Marceline the Vampire Queen\n\nMarceline the Vampire Queen is a character in the American animated television series \"Adventure Time\" created by Pendleton Ward. She is voiced by Olivia Olson in most appearances, by Ava Acres as a child and by Cloris Leachman as an old woman. Marceline is a fun-loving 1,000-year-old vampire queen. The name \"Marceline\" is based on the middle name of a childhood friend of Ward's, Marie. The artistic design for Marceline was created by Ward, with small changes and additions added by Phil Rynda, former lead-character designer and prop designer for \"Adventure Time\". Unlike a traditional vampire, Marceline does not need to drink blood to survive; rather, she eats the color red. Marceline is a musician who plays an electric bass that she made from her family's heirloom battle-axe.",
"Title: Eddie Olson\n\nEdward F. Olson (January 1, 1922 – February 10, 1995) was an American ice hockey player, born in Hancock, Michigan. One of nine brothers from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, all of whom played college, amateur, pro or Olympic hockey. Eddie started his hockey career playing amateur for the Marquette Sentinels. He soon moved to the Coast Guard Cutters, playing two seasons with other hockey stars John Mariucci and Frank Brimsek before being shipped out in 1944. Olson played professionally in the American Hockey League for the St. Louis Flyers (1946–1951) and the Cleveland Barons (1951–1955). He was the first American-born player to win the league scoring title in 1953, as well as earning MVP that same year. His final season was as a player–coach, winning the league championship with the Victoria Cougars (1955–1956), as the first American to coach a Canadian team. After his playing career he went on to coach many different amateur and high school teams, and never had a losing season. He was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1977 and the St. Louis Amateur Hockey Hall of Fame in March 2008.",
"Title: Olivia Olson\n\nOlivia Rose Olson (born May 21, 1992) is an American actress and singer-songwriter, mostly known for her voice roles as Vanessa Doofenshmirtz in \"Phineas and Ferb\" and Marceline the Vampire Queen in \"Adventure Time\". She also played the character of Joanna in the 2003 film \"Love Actually\" and its 2017 short sequel \"Red Nose Day Actually\".",
"Title: Kirsten Olson\n\nKirsten Olson (born October 20, 1991) is an American former figure skater and actress. As an actress, Olson played the role of Nikki Fletcher, the 'Jumping Shrimp,' in the Disney movie \"Ice Princess\" (2005). As a figure skater, Olson placed fifth on the novice level at the 2005 United States Figure Skating Championships and came in ninth at the junior level at the 2007 Nationals. She represents the Starlight Ice Dance Club in the Twin Cities, Minnesota and is coached by Page Lipe. Though she no longer skates competitively, Olson has been coaching for the last few years. Olson graduated from Burnsville High School in 2010 and UW-LaCrosse in 2014.",
"Title: Red Nose Day Actually\n\nRed Nose Day Actually is a 2017 British romantic comedy television short film, acting as both a sequel to the 2003 feature film \"Love Actually\", and a part of the fund-raising event Red Nose Day 2017. \"Love Actually\" writer and director Richard Curtis returns alongside cast members Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Colin Firth, Andrew Lincoln, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Keira Knightley, Martine McCutcheon, Bill Nighy, Thomas Sangster, Lúcia Moniz, Olivia Olson, Marcus Brigstocke, and Rowan Atkinson.",
"Title: Princess Bubblegum\n\nPrincess Bonnibel Bubblegum of the Candy Kingdom (voiced by Hynden Walch) is a fictional character in the \"Adventure Time\" animated series on the Cartoon Network. She is the current incarnation of the Candy Elemental, comparable to the inhabitants of the Candy Kingdom, who are all composed of types of desserts and candies. In the season 7 episode \"Elemental,\" Princess Bubblegum was revealed to be the current Candy Elemental (in the \"Adventure Time\" universe, the Elementals are the embodiments of the four main elements that make up the world: ice, fire, candy and slime. They have existed since the beginning of life, living, dying and reincarnating for eons and millennia). She rules over the Candy Kingdom, but in the Season 6 episode \"Hot Diggity Doom\" (the first part of the season's finale), an election was held and she lost to the King of Ooo by a landslide. As a result, she no longer ruled the Candy Kingdom and the King of Ooo replaced her as the new ruler, until a rebellion against King of Ooo allowed her to reclaim the throne in \"The Dark Cloud\". Her proficiency in science and fluency in Korean and German are a testament to her high intelligence. In 2014, Olivia Olson (the voice actress of Marceline the Vampire Queen) alleged at a book signing that the show's creator Ward had confirmed that Marceline and Princess Bubblegum dated but were unable to put any official confirmation in the show due to controversy. However, Olsen seemed to redact the statement in a Tweet that same day by stating \"I like to make things up at panels. Ya'll take my stories way too seriously\".",
"Title: Tim Olson\n\nTimothy Lane Olson (born August 1, 1978) is a former American professional baseball player who was an infielder for two Major League Baseball teams in the 2000s. Olson played college baseball for the University of Florida, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies.",
"Title: Greg Olson (baseball)\n\nGreg Olson (born September 6, 1960) is a former Major League Baseball catcher who played with the Minnesota Twins and Atlanta Braves from 1989 to 1993. Olson was selected to the National League All-Star team in 1990 and appeared in the 1991 World Series with the Braves. In 1992, Olson was having a career year until a collision with Ken Caminiti of the Houston Astros broke his right leg. Olson played one more year for Atlanta before being released in the off season to make room for rising prospect Javy López. Olson signed with the New York Mets for the 1994 season but was released following spring training, leading to his retirement. Olson now resides in Eden Prairie, Minnesota in a mansion with his golden retriever, Remington.",
"Title: Evicted!\n\n\"Evicted!\" is the twelfth episode of the first season of the American animated television series \"Adventure Time\". The episode was written and storyboarded by Bert Youn and Sean Jimenez, from a story by Adam Muto. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on March 18, 2010 as a preview for the series; it later officially aired on May 17, 2010. The episode guest stars Erik Estrada as King Worm. The episode marks the first appearance of Marceline the Vampire Queen (voiced by Olivia Olson), who would go on to play a larger role in the series as a friend and companion to Finn and Jake.",
"Title: Martin Olson\n\nMartin Olson is an American comedy writer, television producer, author and composer. He is known for his unusual subject matter, and is an original member of the Boston Comedy Scene. He is the adoptive father of actress Olivia Olson."
] |
1,758
|
What American astronaut from Hawaii has a United States Air force Test Pilot Scool award named after him?
|
Ellison Onizuka
|
bridge
|
medium
|
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"Onizuka Prop Wash Award",
"Ellison Onizuka"
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2,
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{
"sentences": [
"The Air Force Test Center (AFTC) is a development and test organization of the United States Air Force.",
" It conducts research, development, test, and evaluation of aerospace systems from concept to deployment.",
" It has test flown every aircraft in the Army Air Force's and the Air Force's inventory since World War II.",
" The center employs nearly 13,000 people and controls the second largest base in the Air Force."
],
"title": "Air Force Test Center"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Royal Australian Air Force's Aircraft Research and Development Unit (ARDU) plans, conducts and analyses the results of ground and flight tests of existing and new Air Force aircraft.",
" ARDU consists of four flights located at RAAF Bases Edinburgh, Amberley, Richmond and Williamtown, staffed by qualified test pilots, flight test engineers and flight test system specialists.",
" Up until 2016 the Squadron also conducted flight test for the Australian Army with Army personnel also working within the unit.",
" The flight test crew are long course trained at test pilot schools including the United States Air Force Test Pilot School, the United States Naval Test Pilot School, the Empire Test Pilots' School, the École du personnel navigant d'essais et de réception and the National Test Pilot School."
],
"title": "Aircraft Research and Development Unit RAAF"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Benson \"Jim\" Irwin (March 17, 1930 – August 8, 1991) (Col, USAF) was an American astronaut, aeronautical engineer, test pilot, and a United States Air Force pilot.",
" He served as lunar module pilot for Apollo 15, the fourth human lunar landing.",
" He was the eighth person to walk on the Moon and the first, and youngest, of those astronauts to die."
],
"title": "James Irwin"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Robert Anderson \"Bob\" Hoover (January 24, 1922 – October 25, 2016) was an air show pilot, United States Air Force test pilot, and fighter pilot.",
" Known as the \"pilot's pilot\", Hoover revolutionized modern aerobatic flying and has been referred to in many aviation circles as one of the greatest pilots ever to have lived."
],
"title": "Bob Hoover"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Right Stuff is a 1983 American epic historical drama film.",
" It was adapted from Tom Wolfe's best-selling 1979 book of the same name about the Navy, Marine and Air Force test pilots who were involved in aeronautical research at Edwards Air Force Base, California, as well as the Mercury Seven, the seven military pilots who were selected to be the astronauts for Project Mercury, the first manned spaceflight by the United States.",
" \"The Right Stuff\" was written and directed by Philip Kaufman and stars Ed Harris, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid and Barbara Hershey.",
" Levon Helm is the narrator in the introduction and elsewhere in the film, as well as having a co-starring role as Air Force test pilot Jack Ridley."
],
"title": "The Right Stuff (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Onizuka Prop Wash Award recognizes the student at the United States Air Force Test Pilot School (USAF TPS) who contributed most to class spirit and morale.",
" The honoree from each class is selected by his or her fellow students rather than by school faculty.",
" The award is named in memory of TPS graduate Ellison Onizuka who perished in the explosion of the Space Shuttle \"Challenger\" in 1986."
],
"title": "Onizuka Prop Wash Award"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kenneth O. \"K.O.\" Chilstrom (born April 20, 1921) is a retired United States Air Force officer, combat veteran, test pilot, and author.",
" He was the first USAF pilot to fly the XP-86 Sabre, chief of fighter test at Wright Field, commandant of the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School, and program manager for the XF-108 Rapier.",
" Chilstrom was a pilot in the first jet air race and delivered the first air mail by jet.",
" He flew over eighty combat missions in the Italian Campaign of World War II and tested over twenty foreign models of German and Japanese fighters and bombers to evaluate their strengths and weaknesses."
],
"title": "Kenneth O. Chilstrom"
},
{
"sentences": [
"This is a list of United States Air Force test squadrons.",
" It covers units considered to be part of the Air Force and serves as a break out of the comprehensive List of United States Air Force squadrons.",
" Most units in this list are assigned to Air Force Materiel Command, however, a few reside in other Major Commands of the United States Air Force."
],
"title": "List of United States Air Force test squadrons"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Charles Arthur \"Charlie\" Bassett II (December 30, 1931 – February 28, 1966), (Capt, USAF), was an American electrical engineer and United States Air Force test pilot.",
" He was selected as a NASA astronaut in 1963 and assigned to \"Gemini 9\", but died in an airplane crash during training for his first spaceflight."
],
"title": "Charles Bassett"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ellison Shoji Onizuka (June 24, 1946 – January 28, 1986 ) was an American astronaut from Kealakekua, Hawaii, who successfully flew into space with the Space Shuttle \"Discovery\" on STS-51-C.",
" He died in the destruction of the Space Shuttle \"Challenger\", on which he was serving as Mission Specialist for mission STS-51-L.",
" He was the first Asian American and the first person of Japanese ancestry to reach space."
],
"title": "Ellison Onizuka"
}
] |
[
"Title: Air Force Test Center\n\nThe Air Force Test Center (AFTC) is a development and test organization of the United States Air Force. It conducts research, development, test, and evaluation of aerospace systems from concept to deployment. It has test flown every aircraft in the Army Air Force's and the Air Force's inventory since World War II. The center employs nearly 13,000 people and controls the second largest base in the Air Force.",
"Title: Aircraft Research and Development Unit RAAF\n\nThe Royal Australian Air Force's Aircraft Research and Development Unit (ARDU) plans, conducts and analyses the results of ground and flight tests of existing and new Air Force aircraft. ARDU consists of four flights located at RAAF Bases Edinburgh, Amberley, Richmond and Williamtown, staffed by qualified test pilots, flight test engineers and flight test system specialists. Up until 2016 the Squadron also conducted flight test for the Australian Army with Army personnel also working within the unit. The flight test crew are long course trained at test pilot schools including the United States Air Force Test Pilot School, the United States Naval Test Pilot School, the Empire Test Pilots' School, the École du personnel navigant d'essais et de réception and the National Test Pilot School.",
"Title: James Irwin\n\nJames Benson \"Jim\" Irwin (March 17, 1930 – August 8, 1991) (Col, USAF) was an American astronaut, aeronautical engineer, test pilot, and a United States Air Force pilot. He served as lunar module pilot for Apollo 15, the fourth human lunar landing. He was the eighth person to walk on the Moon and the first, and youngest, of those astronauts to die.",
"Title: Bob Hoover\n\nRobert Anderson \"Bob\" Hoover (January 24, 1922 – October 25, 2016) was an air show pilot, United States Air Force test pilot, and fighter pilot. Known as the \"pilot's pilot\", Hoover revolutionized modern aerobatic flying and has been referred to in many aviation circles as one of the greatest pilots ever to have lived.",
"Title: The Right Stuff (film)\n\nThe Right Stuff is a 1983 American epic historical drama film. It was adapted from Tom Wolfe's best-selling 1979 book of the same name about the Navy, Marine and Air Force test pilots who were involved in aeronautical research at Edwards Air Force Base, California, as well as the Mercury Seven, the seven military pilots who were selected to be the astronauts for Project Mercury, the first manned spaceflight by the United States. \"The Right Stuff\" was written and directed by Philip Kaufman and stars Ed Harris, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid and Barbara Hershey. Levon Helm is the narrator in the introduction and elsewhere in the film, as well as having a co-starring role as Air Force test pilot Jack Ridley.",
"Title: Onizuka Prop Wash Award\n\nThe Onizuka Prop Wash Award recognizes the student at the United States Air Force Test Pilot School (USAF TPS) who contributed most to class spirit and morale. The honoree from each class is selected by his or her fellow students rather than by school faculty. The award is named in memory of TPS graduate Ellison Onizuka who perished in the explosion of the Space Shuttle \"Challenger\" in 1986.",
"Title: Kenneth O. Chilstrom\n\nKenneth O. \"K.O.\" Chilstrom (born April 20, 1921) is a retired United States Air Force officer, combat veteran, test pilot, and author. He was the first USAF pilot to fly the XP-86 Sabre, chief of fighter test at Wright Field, commandant of the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School, and program manager for the XF-108 Rapier. Chilstrom was a pilot in the first jet air race and delivered the first air mail by jet. He flew over eighty combat missions in the Italian Campaign of World War II and tested over twenty foreign models of German and Japanese fighters and bombers to evaluate their strengths and weaknesses.",
"Title: List of United States Air Force test squadrons\n\nThis is a list of United States Air Force test squadrons. It covers units considered to be part of the Air Force and serves as a break out of the comprehensive List of United States Air Force squadrons. Most units in this list are assigned to Air Force Materiel Command, however, a few reside in other Major Commands of the United States Air Force.",
"Title: Charles Bassett\n\nCharles Arthur \"Charlie\" Bassett II (December 30, 1931 – February 28, 1966), (Capt, USAF), was an American electrical engineer and United States Air Force test pilot. He was selected as a NASA astronaut in 1963 and assigned to \"Gemini 9\", but died in an airplane crash during training for his first spaceflight.",
"Title: Ellison Onizuka\n\nEllison Shoji Onizuka (June 24, 1946 – January 28, 1986 ) was an American astronaut from Kealakekua, Hawaii, who successfully flew into space with the Space Shuttle \"Discovery\" on STS-51-C. He died in the destruction of the Space Shuttle \"Challenger\", on which he was serving as Mission Specialist for mission STS-51-L. He was the first Asian American and the first person of Japanese ancestry to reach space."
] |
1,759
|
What is the stage name of Richard Colson Baker, the American rapper and actor from Cleveland, Ohio and with whom Derek Luh, the American hip-hop artist from Valencia has toured, who also has the acronym MGK?
|
Machine Gun Kelly
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Derek Luh",
"Derek Luh",
"Machine Gun Kelly (rapper)"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Uzi (pronounced as \"Uji\") is a popular Japanese hip-hop artist.",
" He has released four major albums, most recently his “Natural 9” album released in March 2008.",
" Uzi is one of the rappers to incorporate more overt elements of Japanese culture into his music and videos, specifically aspects referring to the samurai (to which he claims direct ancestry).",
" He is a great example of an artist who maintains the localization of hip-hop music through his dependence on the incorporation of Japanese themes into his work.",
" Such non-Americanization of his hip-hop music has been met with varying opinions; some view this as disrespectful of the origins of hip-hop culture, while there are those who appreciate Uzi’s apparent embracing of Japanese culture.",
" Still others believe that though his music is more heavily influenced by Japan’s society, it is less authentic since Uzi is so dissimilar from the original American hip-hop artists who are credited with creating the music genre."
],
"title": "Uzi (hip hop artist)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"This is the discography of American hip-hop artist DJ Drama.",
" His first album, \"\", was released in December 2007.",
" It contained two singles: \"5000 Ones\", featuring Nelly, T.I., Yung Joc, Willie the Kid, Young Jeezy, Diddy and Twista, and \"The Art of Storytellin' Part 4\", featuring OutKast and Marsha Ambrosius.",
" His second album was released two years later.",
" On \"\" there were again two singles.",
" The first single is \"Day Dreaming\", featuring Akon, Snoop Dogg and T.I..",
" The second single of the album is \"Ridiculous\", featuring Gucci Mane, Yo Gotti, Lonnie Mac and OJ da Juiceman.",
" Both singles weren't as successful as \"5000 Ones\" in the United States, but \"Day Dreaming\" did peak at #33 on the New Zealander RIANZ singles chart and at #59 on the Swedish Sverigetopplistan singles chart.",
" In 2011 DJ Drama released his third studio album, \"Third Power\".",
" It was his first album not to be released in the Gangsta Grillz series.",
" The lead single of the album is \"Oh My\", featuring Fabolous, Roscoe Dash and Wiz Khalifa.",
" It was Drama's first song in the Hot 100.",
" It peaked at #95.",
" Besides it peaked at #18 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and #12 on the Hot Rap Songs.",
" On March 1, 2012 DJ Drama announced the release of his fourth album: \"Quality Street Music\".",
" For the album DJ Drama released a new single: \"We in This Bitch\", featuring Young Jeezy, T.I., Ludacris and Future.",
" It peaked at #68 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.",
" The next single, \"My Moment, featuring 2 Chainz, Meek Mill, & Jeremih, peaked at #89 on the Hot 100 Singles chart, #24 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and #16 on the Hot Rap Songs.",
" It becomes DJ Drama's most successful single to date."
],
"title": "DJ Drama discography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cameron Rodriguez (born September 2, 1981), best known by his stage name CAM, is a Spanish American hip-hop artist songwriter and producer from Los Angeles, California.",
" He has been working on his debut album \"LOST\" since the end of 2010.",
" He released his first single \"Conspiracy Theories\" as a promo (not for sale) with great success.",
" He was first associated with the group The Profe$$sionalz consisting of himself and Lujuanimus (Aaron Lujan) and Reebdog (Amit Jain).",
" The group was formed while at school at Loyola Marymount University.",
" CAM has been associated with singer/song writers like Kevyn and Kande who also feature on several of CAM's tracks.",
" CAM is now recording his album \"LOST\" at Plaza Productions Studio (Thousand Oaks, California) with sound engineer Stephen Tackett."
],
"title": "CaliCam"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Daryon Martice Simmons (born August 15, 1995), better known by his stage name, iAmDLOW, is an American hip-hop dancer, rapper, and choreographer from Chicago, Illinois.",
" \"DLOW\" is an acronym that stands for \"Determined, Loyal, Optimistic, and Willing to Learn\".",
" He became known through his bopping, a type of dance.",
" He has been a regular collaborator of fellow hip-hop dancer and rapper, Lil Kemo (also known as \"King Kemo\"), since 2013 when they made their first video together.",
" His single, \"Bet You Can't Do It Like Me\" charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2015."
],
"title": "DLow"
},
{
"sentences": [
"David Aaron Shayman (September 21, 1980 – January 23, 2007), better known by his stage name Disco D, was an American record producer and composer.",
" He started as a teenage DJ in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he helped DJ Godfather popularize the Detroit electronic music called \"Ghettotech\".",
" Disco D produced the track \"Ski Mask Way\" on American hip-hop artist 50 Cent's \"The Massacre\" album.",
" He committed suicide in Washington, D.C. on January 23, 2007."
],
"title": "Disco D"
},
{
"sentences": [
"David Appolon (born March 8, 1992), best known by his stage name Gio Dee, is an American hip-hop artist/songwriter from Boston, Massachusetts.",
" He is the leader of the Chef Boyz, a music group based out of the greater Boston Area.",
" Appolon's success thus far can be attributed to his \"Mind Yo Business\" EP which was released in December 2015 featuring Metro Boomin, Madeintyo, Iamsu, and TM88.",
" Not only is \"Gio Dee\" and play on words with GOD, similar to \"Eminem\" is with Marshal Mathers, it also means means God is Gracious in Italian (Gio).",
" David in the bible means beloved musician.",
" So he put the two together and it means “God's Gracious Beloved musician.”"
],
"title": "Gio Dee"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Derek Luh (born on June 24, 1992) is an American hip-hop artist and songwriter from Valencia, CA.",
" Luh has been an up-and-coming artist with past success on Mark Battle's label, Fly America, tours with Machine Gun Kelly, and collaborations with big names like French Montana and Dizzy Wright."
],
"title": "Derek Luh"
},
{
"sentences": [
"This is the discography of DJ Quik, an American hip-hop artist and Record producer.",
" This list includes all of the official album and single releases, including his albums, \"Quik Is the Name\", which debuted at No. 29 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 9 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1991. \"",
"Way 2 Fonky\", which debuted at No. 10 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1992. \"",
"Safe + Sound\", which debuted at No. 14 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 1 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1995. \"",
"Rhythm-al-ism\", which debuted at No. 63 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1995. \"",
"Balance & Options\", which was his first album not to chart and not to receive a RIAA certification in 2000. \"",
"Under tha Influence\", which debuted at No. 27 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 7 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 2002. \"",
"Trauma\", which debuted at No. 43 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, No. 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, No. 9 on the Rap Albums, and No. 1 on the Independent Albums in 2005."
],
"title": "DJ Quik discography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Richard Colson Baker (born April 22, 1990), better known by his stage names MGK and Machine Gun Kelly, is an American rapper and actor, from Cleveland, Ohio.",
" MGK embarked on a musical career as a teenager, releasing a mixtape in 2006.",
" He went on to release four more mixtapes."
],
"title": "Machine Gun Kelly (rapper)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Victor Mercer (born November 16), better known by his stage name Celph Titled, is an American hip-hop artist and record producer and a member of the hip-hop supergroup Army of the Pharaohs, as well as the Demigodz along with Connecticut rapper Apathy, Ryu from Get Busy Committee, and rapper Blacastan and Esoteric."
],
"title": "Celph Titled"
}
] |
[
"Title: Uzi (hip hop artist)\n\nUzi (pronounced as \"Uji\") is a popular Japanese hip-hop artist. He has released four major albums, most recently his “Natural 9” album released in March 2008. Uzi is one of the rappers to incorporate more overt elements of Japanese culture into his music and videos, specifically aspects referring to the samurai (to which he claims direct ancestry). He is a great example of an artist who maintains the localization of hip-hop music through his dependence on the incorporation of Japanese themes into his work. Such non-Americanization of his hip-hop music has been met with varying opinions; some view this as disrespectful of the origins of hip-hop culture, while there are those who appreciate Uzi’s apparent embracing of Japanese culture. Still others believe that though his music is more heavily influenced by Japan’s society, it is less authentic since Uzi is so dissimilar from the original American hip-hop artists who are credited with creating the music genre.",
"Title: DJ Drama discography\n\nThis is the discography of American hip-hop artist DJ Drama. His first album, \"\", was released in December 2007. It contained two singles: \"5000 Ones\", featuring Nelly, T.I., Yung Joc, Willie the Kid, Young Jeezy, Diddy and Twista, and \"The Art of Storytellin' Part 4\", featuring OutKast and Marsha Ambrosius. His second album was released two years later. On \"\" there were again two singles. The first single is \"Day Dreaming\", featuring Akon, Snoop Dogg and T.I.. The second single of the album is \"Ridiculous\", featuring Gucci Mane, Yo Gotti, Lonnie Mac and OJ da Juiceman. Both singles weren't as successful as \"5000 Ones\" in the United States, but \"Day Dreaming\" did peak at #33 on the New Zealander RIANZ singles chart and at #59 on the Swedish Sverigetopplistan singles chart. In 2011 DJ Drama released his third studio album, \"Third Power\". It was his first album not to be released in the Gangsta Grillz series. The lead single of the album is \"Oh My\", featuring Fabolous, Roscoe Dash and Wiz Khalifa. It was Drama's first song in the Hot 100. It peaked at #95. Besides it peaked at #18 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and #12 on the Hot Rap Songs. On March 1, 2012 DJ Drama announced the release of his fourth album: \"Quality Street Music\". For the album DJ Drama released a new single: \"We in This Bitch\", featuring Young Jeezy, T.I., Ludacris and Future. It peaked at #68 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. The next single, \"My Moment, featuring 2 Chainz, Meek Mill, & Jeremih, peaked at #89 on the Hot 100 Singles chart, #24 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and #16 on the Hot Rap Songs. It becomes DJ Drama's most successful single to date.",
"Title: CaliCam\n\nCameron Rodriguez (born September 2, 1981), best known by his stage name CAM, is a Spanish American hip-hop artist songwriter and producer from Los Angeles, California. He has been working on his debut album \"LOST\" since the end of 2010. He released his first single \"Conspiracy Theories\" as a promo (not for sale) with great success. He was first associated with the group The Profe$$sionalz consisting of himself and Lujuanimus (Aaron Lujan) and Reebdog (Amit Jain). The group was formed while at school at Loyola Marymount University. CAM has been associated with singer/song writers like Kevyn and Kande who also feature on several of CAM's tracks. CAM is now recording his album \"LOST\" at Plaza Productions Studio (Thousand Oaks, California) with sound engineer Stephen Tackett.",
"Title: DLow\n\nDaryon Martice Simmons (born August 15, 1995), better known by his stage name, iAmDLOW, is an American hip-hop dancer, rapper, and choreographer from Chicago, Illinois. \"DLOW\" is an acronym that stands for \"Determined, Loyal, Optimistic, and Willing to Learn\". He became known through his bopping, a type of dance. He has been a regular collaborator of fellow hip-hop dancer and rapper, Lil Kemo (also known as \"King Kemo\"), since 2013 when they made their first video together. His single, \"Bet You Can't Do It Like Me\" charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2015.",
"Title: Disco D\n\nDavid Aaron Shayman (September 21, 1980 – January 23, 2007), better known by his stage name Disco D, was an American record producer and composer. He started as a teenage DJ in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he helped DJ Godfather popularize the Detroit electronic music called \"Ghettotech\". Disco D produced the track \"Ski Mask Way\" on American hip-hop artist 50 Cent's \"The Massacre\" album. He committed suicide in Washington, D.C. on January 23, 2007.",
"Title: Gio Dee\n\nDavid Appolon (born March 8, 1992), best known by his stage name Gio Dee, is an American hip-hop artist/songwriter from Boston, Massachusetts. He is the leader of the Chef Boyz, a music group based out of the greater Boston Area. Appolon's success thus far can be attributed to his \"Mind Yo Business\" EP which was released in December 2015 featuring Metro Boomin, Madeintyo, Iamsu, and TM88. Not only is \"Gio Dee\" and play on words with GOD, similar to \"Eminem\" is with Marshal Mathers, it also means means God is Gracious in Italian (Gio). David in the bible means beloved musician. So he put the two together and it means “God's Gracious Beloved musician.”",
"Title: Derek Luh\n\nDerek Luh (born on June 24, 1992) is an American hip-hop artist and songwriter from Valencia, CA. Luh has been an up-and-coming artist with past success on Mark Battle's label, Fly America, tours with Machine Gun Kelly, and collaborations with big names like French Montana and Dizzy Wright.",
"Title: DJ Quik discography\n\nThis is the discography of DJ Quik, an American hip-hop artist and Record producer. This list includes all of the official album and single releases, including his albums, \"Quik Is the Name\", which debuted at No. 29 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 9 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1991. \" Way 2 Fonky\", which debuted at No. 10 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1992. \" Safe + Sound\", which debuted at No. 14 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 1 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1995. \" Rhythm-al-ism\", which debuted at No. 63 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 1995. \" Balance & Options\", which was his first album not to chart and not to receive a RIAA certification in 2000. \" Under tha Influence\", which debuted at No. 27 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, and No. 7 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in 2002. \" Trauma\", which debuted at No. 43 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart, No. 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, No. 9 on the Rap Albums, and No. 1 on the Independent Albums in 2005.",
"Title: Machine Gun Kelly (rapper)\n\nRichard Colson Baker (born April 22, 1990), better known by his stage names MGK and Machine Gun Kelly, is an American rapper and actor, from Cleveland, Ohio. MGK embarked on a musical career as a teenager, releasing a mixtape in 2006. He went on to release four more mixtapes.",
"Title: Celph Titled\n\nVictor Mercer (born November 16), better known by his stage name Celph Titled, is an American hip-hop artist and record producer and a member of the hip-hop supergroup Army of the Pharaohs, as well as the Demigodz along with Connecticut rapper Apathy, Ryu from Get Busy Committee, and rapper Blacastan and Esoteric."
] |
1,760
|
What genre of film do "Bicycle Dreams" and "Youth in Crisis" share?
|
documentary
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Bicycle Dreams",
"Youth in Crisis"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"David Clinton (born January 2, 1960 in Sun Valley, California) is an \"Old School\" former professional Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer whose prime competitive years were from 1973 to 1979.",
" Nicknamed \"Dynamite\" early in his career David Clinton could be truthfully said to be the sport's first true superstar.",
" He was the first racer to win an official National No.1 plate of any kind when the first BMX sanctioning body, the National Bicycle Association (NBA), introduced the title in 1975.",
" During the previous year he won the junior class division of a series of what could be called proto Nationals, a part of the first major BMX series, when he took first place in the Junior class at the Yamaha Bicycle Gold Cup which decided the California State Champion.",
" Clinton along with Scot Breithaupt and John \"Snaggletooth\" Palfryman participated in the first true National sanctioned by the NBA in Phoenix, Arizona in 1975 and became the first official pro in BMX in 1977 (although Thom Lund could be considered the first BMXer to race for money.",
" He raced for a share of the US$200 purse and won the Scot Breithaupt sponsored Saddleback Park race in Irvine, California in 1975)."
],
"title": "David Clinton"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Morgul-Bismark Loop is a popular cycling route or stage south of Boulder, Colorado.",
" It was featured in the bygone Red Zinger Bicycle Classic and Coors International Bicycle Classic, and is still commonly ridden today.",
" Riders who have traversed the stage include Greg LeMond and Davis Phinney.",
" The course was also used by the Red Zinger Mini Classics youth road bicycle racing series from 1981-1992."
],
"title": "Morgul-Bismark"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ruthie Matthes (born November 11, 1965) is an American professional bicycle racer who won the World Cross-Country Mountain Bike Championship in 1991.",
" She is also a road cyclist, having twice finished in 2nd place in the Women's Challenge bicycle stage race.",
" Ruthie is one of a series of professional riders who got their start in cycling through the Red Zinger Mini Classics youth bicycle race series in Colorado."
],
"title": "Ruthie Matthes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Silicon Dreams Studio Limited was a British video game developer based in Adderbury, England, founded by Geoff Brown in March 1994 as the in-house development team for video game publisher U.S. Gold, also founded by Brown, and became part of the CentreGold umbrella.",
" In April 1996, the entirety of CentreGold (including Silicon Dreams) was acquired by Eidos Interactive for GB£ .",
" However, in December 1996, Brown re-acquired a 75% share in the Silicon Dreams label for at least GB£ , and merged it into a new, legally incorporated entity, Silicon Dreams Studio, which became a subsidiary of Geoff Brown Holdings (later renamed Kaboom Studios).",
" In August 2003, Kaboom Studios, facing financial difficulties, closed down sister studio, Attention to Detail, which led media to expect similar to happen to Silicon Dreams Studio.",
" Silicon Dreams Studio entered liquidation on 3 September 2003, laying off all of its 55 employees.",
" A successor to the company, Gusto Games, made up from eleven former Silicon Dreams Studio staff, was announced in October 2003.",
" Gusto Games went on to finish work on \"Urban Freestyle Soccer\", which was released in December 2003."
],
"title": "Silicon Dreams Studio"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bicycle Dreams is a 2009 documentary film by director Stephen Auerbach about the Race Across America, a 3000-mile cross-country bicycle race.",
" The film has won numerous film festival awards and had a successful screening tour."
],
"title": "Bicycle Dreams"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Youth Outreach (Chinese: 協青社) is a non-profit organizationibasedn Hong Kong established in November 1991 as a crisis intervention center for youth.",
" In the years since its establishment, the organization has been devoting its services to help youth in critical condition or those who face major crisis in their life.",
" The Chinese name of Youth Outreach are special in that, the first word “Qing”, meaning “green”, symbolizes youthfulness and liveliness, and its character position between “協”, meaning aid, and “社”, meaning society, creates the picture of youth being supported and cared for."
],
"title": "Youth Outreach"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cycling in Munich accounts for 17% of all traffic in the German city of Munich.",
" This makes Munich the leader in bicycle modal share amongst the large German cities; as a result, Munich named itself Germany's \"Radlhauptstadt\" (bicycle capital) in the summer of 2010.",
" Around 80% of the population of Munich own a bicycle."
],
"title": "Cycling in Munich"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vélo'v is a bicycle sharing system run by the city of Lyon, France, in conjunction with the advertising company JCDecaux.",
" It has been the pioneer smart bicycle sharing system, previous systems being more ad hoc and run similar to a charity.",
" The relationship with JCDecaux allows the city to provide the service on a cost neutral basis for the city, and at very low cost to users, in return for providing exclusive advertising access on bus shelters and the like.",
" The primary aim is to reduce vehicle traffic within the city.",
" The scheme also aims to reduce pollution, create a convivial atmosphere within the city, and encourage the health benefits of increased activity.",
" Its name is a portmanteau of French \"vélo\" (\"bike\") and English \"love\".",
" The first bicycle sharing system to open in France, after the pioneering 1974 scheme in La Rochelle, its thundering success inspired similar systems in major French and European cities, including Paris' Velib' in 2007.",
" With the success of these two high profile smart bicycle sharing systems a new paradigm of government supporting bike sharing as a part of a public transportation network emerged.",
" It is still the bike share scheme with the second highest market penetration (1 bike per 121 residents) in the world, after the Velib'."
],
"title": "Vélo'v"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Youth in Crisis is a 1943 American short documentary film produced by Louis De Rochemont as part of \"The March of Time\" series.",
" It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short."
],
"title": "Youth in Crisis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cycling is a ubiquitous mode of transport in the Netherlands, with 36% of the people listing the bicycle as their most frequent mode of transport on a typical day as opposed to the car by 45% and public transport by 11%.",
" Cycling has a modal share of 27% of all trips (urban and rural) nationwide.",
" In cities this is even higher, such as Amsterdam which has 38%, though the smaller Dutch cities well exceed that: for instance Zwolle (pop.",
" ~123,000) has 46% and the university town of Groningen (pop.",
" ~198,000) has 31%.",
" This high modal share for bicycle travel is enabled by excellent cycling infrastructure such as cycle paths, cycle tracks, protected intersections, ubiquitous bicycle parking and by making cycling routes shorter, quicker and more direct than car routes."
],
"title": "Cycling in the Netherlands"
}
] |
[
"Title: David Clinton\n\nDavid Clinton (born January 2, 1960 in Sun Valley, California) is an \"Old School\" former professional Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer whose prime competitive years were from 1973 to 1979. Nicknamed \"Dynamite\" early in his career David Clinton could be truthfully said to be the sport's first true superstar. He was the first racer to win an official National No.1 plate of any kind when the first BMX sanctioning body, the National Bicycle Association (NBA), introduced the title in 1975. During the previous year he won the junior class division of a series of what could be called proto Nationals, a part of the first major BMX series, when he took first place in the Junior class at the Yamaha Bicycle Gold Cup which decided the California State Champion. Clinton along with Scot Breithaupt and John \"Snaggletooth\" Palfryman participated in the first true National sanctioned by the NBA in Phoenix, Arizona in 1975 and became the first official pro in BMX in 1977 (although Thom Lund could be considered the first BMXer to race for money. He raced for a share of the US$200 purse and won the Scot Breithaupt sponsored Saddleback Park race in Irvine, California in 1975).",
"Title: Morgul-Bismark\n\nThe Morgul-Bismark Loop is a popular cycling route or stage south of Boulder, Colorado. It was featured in the bygone Red Zinger Bicycle Classic and Coors International Bicycle Classic, and is still commonly ridden today. Riders who have traversed the stage include Greg LeMond and Davis Phinney. The course was also used by the Red Zinger Mini Classics youth road bicycle racing series from 1981-1992.",
"Title: Ruthie Matthes\n\nRuthie Matthes (born November 11, 1965) is an American professional bicycle racer who won the World Cross-Country Mountain Bike Championship in 1991. She is also a road cyclist, having twice finished in 2nd place in the Women's Challenge bicycle stage race. Ruthie is one of a series of professional riders who got their start in cycling through the Red Zinger Mini Classics youth bicycle race series in Colorado.",
"Title: Silicon Dreams Studio\n\nSilicon Dreams Studio Limited was a British video game developer based in Adderbury, England, founded by Geoff Brown in March 1994 as the in-house development team for video game publisher U.S. Gold, also founded by Brown, and became part of the CentreGold umbrella. In April 1996, the entirety of CentreGold (including Silicon Dreams) was acquired by Eidos Interactive for GB£ . However, in December 1996, Brown re-acquired a 75% share in the Silicon Dreams label for at least GB£ , and merged it into a new, legally incorporated entity, Silicon Dreams Studio, which became a subsidiary of Geoff Brown Holdings (later renamed Kaboom Studios). In August 2003, Kaboom Studios, facing financial difficulties, closed down sister studio, Attention to Detail, which led media to expect similar to happen to Silicon Dreams Studio. Silicon Dreams Studio entered liquidation on 3 September 2003, laying off all of its 55 employees. A successor to the company, Gusto Games, made up from eleven former Silicon Dreams Studio staff, was announced in October 2003. Gusto Games went on to finish work on \"Urban Freestyle Soccer\", which was released in December 2003.",
"Title: Bicycle Dreams\n\nBicycle Dreams is a 2009 documentary film by director Stephen Auerbach about the Race Across America, a 3000-mile cross-country bicycle race. The film has won numerous film festival awards and had a successful screening tour.",
"Title: Youth Outreach\n\nYouth Outreach (Chinese: 協青社) is a non-profit organizationibasedn Hong Kong established in November 1991 as a crisis intervention center for youth. In the years since its establishment, the organization has been devoting its services to help youth in critical condition or those who face major crisis in their life. The Chinese name of Youth Outreach are special in that, the first word “Qing”, meaning “green”, symbolizes youthfulness and liveliness, and its character position between “協”, meaning aid, and “社”, meaning society, creates the picture of youth being supported and cared for.",
"Title: Cycling in Munich\n\nCycling in Munich accounts for 17% of all traffic in the German city of Munich. This makes Munich the leader in bicycle modal share amongst the large German cities; as a result, Munich named itself Germany's \"Radlhauptstadt\" (bicycle capital) in the summer of 2010. Around 80% of the population of Munich own a bicycle.",
"Title: Vélo'v\n\nVélo'v is a bicycle sharing system run by the city of Lyon, France, in conjunction with the advertising company JCDecaux. It has been the pioneer smart bicycle sharing system, previous systems being more ad hoc and run similar to a charity. The relationship with JCDecaux allows the city to provide the service on a cost neutral basis for the city, and at very low cost to users, in return for providing exclusive advertising access on bus shelters and the like. The primary aim is to reduce vehicle traffic within the city. The scheme also aims to reduce pollution, create a convivial atmosphere within the city, and encourage the health benefits of increased activity. Its name is a portmanteau of French \"vélo\" (\"bike\") and English \"love\". The first bicycle sharing system to open in France, after the pioneering 1974 scheme in La Rochelle, its thundering success inspired similar systems in major French and European cities, including Paris' Velib' in 2007. With the success of these two high profile smart bicycle sharing systems a new paradigm of government supporting bike sharing as a part of a public transportation network emerged. It is still the bike share scheme with the second highest market penetration (1 bike per 121 residents) in the world, after the Velib'.",
"Title: Youth in Crisis\n\nYouth in Crisis is a 1943 American short documentary film produced by Louis De Rochemont as part of \"The March of Time\" series. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.",
"Title: Cycling in the Netherlands\n\nCycling is a ubiquitous mode of transport in the Netherlands, with 36% of the people listing the bicycle as their most frequent mode of transport on a typical day as opposed to the car by 45% and public transport by 11%. Cycling has a modal share of 27% of all trips (urban and rural) nationwide. In cities this is even higher, such as Amsterdam which has 38%, though the smaller Dutch cities well exceed that: for instance Zwolle (pop. ~123,000) has 46% and the university town of Groningen (pop. ~198,000) has 31%. This high modal share for bicycle travel is enabled by excellent cycling infrastructure such as cycle paths, cycle tracks, protected intersections, ubiquitous bicycle parking and by making cycling routes shorter, quicker and more direct than car routes."
] |
1,761
|
Who was the film editor for the movie that was a loose adaptation of the novel "Q&A"?
|
Chris Dickens
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Chris Dickens",
"Chris Dickens",
"Slumdog Millionaire"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Dracula 3D is a 2012 vampire horror film co-written and directed by Dario Argento and starring Thomas Kretschmann, Rutger Hauer, Marta Gastini, and Unax Ugalde.",
" An Italian-Spanish-French co-production, the film is Argento's first 3D film.",
" While nominally a loose adaptation of Bram Stoker's original novel, it also carries over many stylistic elements from the 1958 Hammer Films adaptation, \"Horror of Dracula\".",
" Kretschmann took the role of Dracula; he later played Abraham van Helsing in the Budapest-shot television series Dracula (TV series)."
],
"title": "Dracula 3D"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Union Street is the first novel by English author Pat Barker, published by Virago Press in 1982.",
" It describes the lives of seven working class women living on Union Street and how they respond to the changes brought about by deindustrialisation.",
" It is set in northeastern England during the 1970s.",
" The 1990 movie \"Stanley & Iris\" is a loose adaptation of the novel."
],
"title": "Union Street (novel)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Chris Dickens is a British film and television editor.",
" His work on \"Slumdog Millionaire\" (2008), directed by Danny Boyle, won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing, BAFTA Award for Best Editing, and the American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic."
],
"title": "Chris Dickens"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Slumdog Millionaire is a 2008 British drama film directed by Danny Boyle, written by Simon Beaufoy, and produced by Christian Colson.",
" Set and filmed in India, it is a loose adaptation of the novel \"Q & A\" (2005) by Indian author and diplomat Vikas Swarup, telling the story of Jamal Malik, age 18, from the Juhu slums of Mumbai.",
" As a contestant on the Indian version of \"Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?",
" who is able to answer every stage correctly, he is accused of cheating.",
" Jamal recounts his history, illustrating how he is able to answer each question."
],
"title": "Slumdog Millionaire"
},
{
"sentences": [
"War of the Worlds is a Canadian/American science-fiction television series that ran for two seasons, from October 7, 1988 to May 14, 1990.",
" The series is a sequel to the 1953 film \"The War of the Worlds\", a loose adaptation of the novel of the same title by H. G. Wells, using the same war machine designs and often incorporating aspects from the film, radio adaptation, and the original novel into its mythology."
],
"title": "War of the Worlds (TV series)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Trishna is a 2011 British-Swedish-Indian drama film, written and directed by Michael Winterbottom, and starring Freida Pinto and Riz Ahmed.",
" The story is a loose adaptation of Thomas Hardy's novel \"Tess of the d'Urbervilles\".",
" It is Winterbottom's third Hardy adaptation, after \"Jude\" and \"The Claim\".",
" The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September 2011, and after some further festival appearances it saw its first cinema release in the United Kingdom and Ireland on 9 March 2012."
],
"title": "Trishna (2011 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Laughing Policeman (1968), by Sjöwall and Wahlöö, is the fourth of ten novels featuring Detective Martin Beck.",
" Originally published in Sweden in 1968 as \"Den skrattande polisen\", it is the first novel in the series to criticize the shortcomings of the Swedish welfare state.",
" In 1971, \"The Laughing Policeman\" earned a 'Best Novel' Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America.",
" The American police procedural film, \"The Laughing Policeman\" (1973), is a loose adaptation of the novel."
],
"title": "The Laughing Policeman (novel)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie, known as Street Fighter II Movie (ストリートファイター II MOVIE , Sutorīto Faitā Tsū Mūbī , not to be confused with the live-action version) in Japan and Australia, is a 1994 anime film adaptation of the \"Street Fighter II\" fighting game written by Kenichi Imai, directed by Gisaburō Sugii and animated by Group TAC.",
" The film, originally released in Japan on August 8, 1994, was released theatrically in the United Kingdom, France, and Spain, and was adapted into English in dubbed and subtitled format by Animaze for Manga Entertainment.",
" It was also distributed by 20th Century Fox in other countries.",
" Following the film's release, Group TAC later produced a loose adaptation of the \"Street Fighter II\" game, the anime series \"Street Fighter II V\"."
],
"title": "Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Slumdog Millionaire\" is a 2008 British romantic drama film directed by Danny Boyle and written by Simon Beaufoy.",
" The film is a loose adaptation of Vikas Swarup's 2005 novel \"Q & A\".",
" \"Slumdog Millionaire\" premièred on 30 August 2008 at the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado, before being shown at the Toronto International Film Festival on 7 September 2008.",
" The film opened nationwide in the United States on 26 December 2008, earning over $4,000,000 in its first weekend in wide release.",
" Over its entire theatrical run, the film earned over $141,000,000 over 29 weeks in the United States and Canada, $52,000,000 in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and an additional $184,000,000 in other international markets."
],
"title": "List of accolades received by Slumdog Millionaire"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Motocrossed is a 2001 Disney Channel Original Movie about a girl named Andrea Carson who loves motocross, despite the fact that her father finds her unsuited for the sport, being that she is \"just a girl\".",
" When her twin brother Andrew dislocates his knee just before a big race, their father is forced to go to Europe to find a replacement rider.",
" In the meantime, Andrea secretly races in Andrew's place with her mother's help.",
" The movie is a loose adaptation of William Shakespeare's \"Twelfth Night\"."
],
"title": "Motocrossed"
}
] |
[
"Title: Dracula 3D\n\nDracula 3D is a 2012 vampire horror film co-written and directed by Dario Argento and starring Thomas Kretschmann, Rutger Hauer, Marta Gastini, and Unax Ugalde. An Italian-Spanish-French co-production, the film is Argento's first 3D film. While nominally a loose adaptation of Bram Stoker's original novel, it also carries over many stylistic elements from the 1958 Hammer Films adaptation, \"Horror of Dracula\". Kretschmann took the role of Dracula; he later played Abraham van Helsing in the Budapest-shot television series Dracula (TV series).",
"Title: Union Street (novel)\n\nUnion Street is the first novel by English author Pat Barker, published by Virago Press in 1982. It describes the lives of seven working class women living on Union Street and how they respond to the changes brought about by deindustrialisation. It is set in northeastern England during the 1970s. The 1990 movie \"Stanley & Iris\" is a loose adaptation of the novel.",
"Title: Chris Dickens\n\nChris Dickens is a British film and television editor. His work on \"Slumdog Millionaire\" (2008), directed by Danny Boyle, won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing, BAFTA Award for Best Editing, and the American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic.",
"Title: Slumdog Millionaire\n\nSlumdog Millionaire is a 2008 British drama film directed by Danny Boyle, written by Simon Beaufoy, and produced by Christian Colson. Set and filmed in India, it is a loose adaptation of the novel \"Q & A\" (2005) by Indian author and diplomat Vikas Swarup, telling the story of Jamal Malik, age 18, from the Juhu slums of Mumbai. As a contestant on the Indian version of \"Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? who is able to answer every stage correctly, he is accused of cheating. Jamal recounts his history, illustrating how he is able to answer each question.",
"Title: War of the Worlds (TV series)\n\nWar of the Worlds is a Canadian/American science-fiction television series that ran for two seasons, from October 7, 1988 to May 14, 1990. The series is a sequel to the 1953 film \"The War of the Worlds\", a loose adaptation of the novel of the same title by H. G. Wells, using the same war machine designs and often incorporating aspects from the film, radio adaptation, and the original novel into its mythology.",
"Title: Trishna (2011 film)\n\nTrishna is a 2011 British-Swedish-Indian drama film, written and directed by Michael Winterbottom, and starring Freida Pinto and Riz Ahmed. The story is a loose adaptation of Thomas Hardy's novel \"Tess of the d'Urbervilles\". It is Winterbottom's third Hardy adaptation, after \"Jude\" and \"The Claim\". The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September 2011, and after some further festival appearances it saw its first cinema release in the United Kingdom and Ireland on 9 March 2012.",
"Title: The Laughing Policeman (novel)\n\nThe Laughing Policeman (1968), by Sjöwall and Wahlöö, is the fourth of ten novels featuring Detective Martin Beck. Originally published in Sweden in 1968 as \"Den skrattande polisen\", it is the first novel in the series to criticize the shortcomings of the Swedish welfare state. In 1971, \"The Laughing Policeman\" earned a 'Best Novel' Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. The American police procedural film, \"The Laughing Policeman\" (1973), is a loose adaptation of the novel.",
"Title: Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie\n\nStreet Fighter II: The Animated Movie, known as Street Fighter II Movie (ストリートファイター II MOVIE , Sutorīto Faitā Tsū Mūbī , not to be confused with the live-action version) in Japan and Australia, is a 1994 anime film adaptation of the \"Street Fighter II\" fighting game written by Kenichi Imai, directed by Gisaburō Sugii and animated by Group TAC. The film, originally released in Japan on August 8, 1994, was released theatrically in the United Kingdom, France, and Spain, and was adapted into English in dubbed and subtitled format by Animaze for Manga Entertainment. It was also distributed by 20th Century Fox in other countries. Following the film's release, Group TAC later produced a loose adaptation of the \"Street Fighter II\" game, the anime series \"Street Fighter II V\".",
"Title: List of accolades received by Slumdog Millionaire\n\n\"Slumdog Millionaire\" is a 2008 British romantic drama film directed by Danny Boyle and written by Simon Beaufoy. The film is a loose adaptation of Vikas Swarup's 2005 novel \"Q & A\". \"Slumdog Millionaire\" premièred on 30 August 2008 at the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado, before being shown at the Toronto International Film Festival on 7 September 2008. The film opened nationwide in the United States on 26 December 2008, earning over $4,000,000 in its first weekend in wide release. Over its entire theatrical run, the film earned over $141,000,000 over 29 weeks in the United States and Canada, $52,000,000 in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and an additional $184,000,000 in other international markets.",
"Title: Motocrossed\n\nMotocrossed is a 2001 Disney Channel Original Movie about a girl named Andrea Carson who loves motocross, despite the fact that her father finds her unsuited for the sport, being that she is \"just a girl\". When her twin brother Andrew dislocates his knee just before a big race, their father is forced to go to Europe to find a replacement rider. In the meantime, Andrea secretly races in Andrew's place with her mother's help. The movie is a loose adaptation of William Shakespeare's \"Twelfth Night\"."
] |
1,762
|
Des O'Hagan was a founding member of what organisation that campaigned for civil rights for the Catholic minority in Northern Ireland during the late 1960s and early 1970s?
|
Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Des O'Hagan",
"Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Bob Kunst (a.k.a. Robert Kunst) is one of America's leading human rights and civil rights activists, he is also known as an anti-Nazi and anti-KKK activist.",
" Born in 1941, a native of Miami Beach, Florida, Kunst spent much of his adult life since the early 1960s in civil rights activism for African-Americans, Women, LGBT people, especially in the 1976 Miami-Dade County Ordinance for Gay Rights which was passed to protect the civil rights of Lesbians and Gays, and Bisexuals, and later Kunst was involved in activism for people with AIDS.",
" Kunst was active to opposed Save Our Children, a Dade County, Florida voter-approved county initiative supported by singer Anita Bryant and her then-husband Bob Green, the initiative repealed the previous anti-discrimination ordinances Kunst fought for in employment, especially in public education teaching, and housing based on Sexual Orientation, but this law was eventually repealed by the state Supreme Court of Florida in 2010.",
" Kunst later became more involved in Gay Rights activism in the United States ever since.",
" As a Democratic Party politician, Kunst unsuccessfully campaigned against Republican Bob Graham in the 1986 United States Senate elections in Florida.",
" Kunst also ran unsuccessfully in the 2010 United States House of Representatives Election, this time as an unaffiliated independent, against incumbent Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Democrat, in the State of Florida.",
" Kunst volunteered for the Hillary Rodham Clinton 2008 U.S. presidential campaign in his hometown of Miami, Florida.",
" Kunst was president (1991-2001) of Shalom International, a Jewish group combating global Neo-Nazism and Neo-fascism movements.",
" And he was a co-founder of the Oral Majority in 1982, the Liberal and secular counter-protest group of the Religious Right organizations Moral Majority and later the Christian Coalition.",
" Outside of political causes, Kunst worked in marketing for the Miami Toros professional soccer team in the 1970s."
],
"title": "Bob Kunst"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ) was an organisation based in Northern Ireland which campaigned for civil rights in that region."
],
"title": "Campaign for Social Justice"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Northern Ireland civil rights movement dates to the early 1960s, when a number of initiatives emerged which challenged inequality and discrimination in Northern Ireland.",
" The Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ) was founded by Conn McCluskey and his wife, Patricia.",
" Conn was a doctor, and Patricia was a social worker who had worked in Glasgow for a period, and who had a background in housing activism.",
" Both were involved in the Homeless Citizens League, an organisation founded after Catholic women occupied disused social housing.",
" The HCL evolved into the CSJ, focusing on lobbying, research and publicising discrimination.",
" The campaign for Derry University was another mid-1960s campaign."
],
"title": "Northern Ireland civil rights movement"
},
{
"sentences": [
"People's Democracy (PD) was a political organisation that, while supporting the campaign for civil rights for Northern Ireland's Catholic minority, stated that such rights could only be achieved through the establishment of a socialist republic for all of Ireland.",
" It demanded more radical reforms of the government of Northern Ireland than the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association it came from."
],
"title": "People's Democracy (Ireland)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Mexican American Youth Organization (acronym MAYO, also described as the Mexican Youth Organization) is a civil rights organization formed in 1967 in San Antonio, Texas, USA to fight for Mexican-American rights.",
" The creators of MAYO, Los Cinco (meaning \"the five\"), consisted of José Ángel Gutiérrez, Willie Velásquez, Mario Compean, Ignacio Pérez, and Juan Patlán.",
" MAYO and its political organization, Raza Unida Party, played an important part in Texas history during the late 1960s and early 1970s.",
" They were a part of the larger Chicano movement in the United States, and played a role in bringing about civil rights for Mexican-Americans."
],
"title": "Mexican American Youth Organization"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Rainbow Coalition was a coalition active in the late 1960s and early 1970s, founded in Chicago, Illinois by Fred Hampton of the activist Black Panther Party, along with William \"Preacherman\" Fesperman, Jack (Junebug) Boykin, Bobby Joe Mcginnis and Hy Thurman of the Young Patriots Organization and the founder of the Young Lords as a civil and human rights movement Jose Cha Cha Jimenez.",
" It later expanded to include various radical socialist groups and community groups like the Lincoln Park Poor People's Coalition.",
" It was associated with the rising Black Power movement, which mobilized some African-American discontent and activism by other ethnic minority groups after the passage of the mid-1960s civil rights legislation under Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson."
],
"title": "Rainbow Coalition (Fred Hampton)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Des O'Hagan (29 March 1934 - 5 May 2015) was a prominent member of the Workers' Party of Ireland and was a founding member of the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association."
],
"title": "Des O'Hagan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Fergus O'Hare (aka Fergus Ó hÍr) was involved in the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland as a member of People's Democracy in the late 1960s and early 1970s.",
" Later he became a founding member and executive member of the Northern Resistance Movement, which continued to campaign for civil rights in Northern Ireland."
],
"title": "Fergus O'Hare"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association was an organisation which campaigned for civil rights for the Catholic minority in Northern Ireland during the late 1960s and early 1970s.",
" Formed in Belfast on 9 April 1967, the civil rights campaign attempted to achieve reform by publicising, documenting, and lobbying for an end to discrimination in areas such as elections (which were subject to gerrymandering and property requirements), discrimination in employment, in public housing and alleged abuses of the Special Powers Act.",
" The genesis of the organisation lay in a meeting in Maghera in August 1966 between the Wolfe Tone Societies which was attended by Cathal Goulding, then chief of staff of the IRA."
],
"title": "Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Since 1998, Northern Ireland has devolved government within the United Kingdom.",
" The government and Parliament of the United Kingdom are responsible for reserved and excepted matters.",
" Reserved matters are a list of policy area (such as civil aviation, units of measurement, and human genetics), which the Westminster Parliament may devolve to the Northern Ireland Assembly at some time in future.",
" Excepted matters (such as international relations, taxation and elections) are never expected to be considered for devolution.",
" On all other matters, the Northern Ireland Executive together with the 108-member Northern Ireland Assembly may legislate and govern for Northern Ireland.",
" Additionally, devolution in Northern Ireland is dependent upon participation by members of the Northern Ireland Executive in the North/South Ministerial Council, which co-ordinates areas of co-operation (such as agriculture, education and health) between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland."
],
"title": "Politics of Northern Ireland"
}
] |
[
"Title: Bob Kunst\n\nBob Kunst (a.k.a. Robert Kunst) is one of America's leading human rights and civil rights activists, he is also known as an anti-Nazi and anti-KKK activist. Born in 1941, a native of Miami Beach, Florida, Kunst spent much of his adult life since the early 1960s in civil rights activism for African-Americans, Women, LGBT people, especially in the 1976 Miami-Dade County Ordinance for Gay Rights which was passed to protect the civil rights of Lesbians and Gays, and Bisexuals, and later Kunst was involved in activism for people with AIDS. Kunst was active to opposed Save Our Children, a Dade County, Florida voter-approved county initiative supported by singer Anita Bryant and her then-husband Bob Green, the initiative repealed the previous anti-discrimination ordinances Kunst fought for in employment, especially in public education teaching, and housing based on Sexual Orientation, but this law was eventually repealed by the state Supreme Court of Florida in 2010. Kunst later became more involved in Gay Rights activism in the United States ever since. As a Democratic Party politician, Kunst unsuccessfully campaigned against Republican Bob Graham in the 1986 United States Senate elections in Florida. Kunst also ran unsuccessfully in the 2010 United States House of Representatives Election, this time as an unaffiliated independent, against incumbent Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Democrat, in the State of Florida. Kunst volunteered for the Hillary Rodham Clinton 2008 U.S. presidential campaign in his hometown of Miami, Florida. Kunst was president (1991-2001) of Shalom International, a Jewish group combating global Neo-Nazism and Neo-fascism movements. And he was a co-founder of the Oral Majority in 1982, the Liberal and secular counter-protest group of the Religious Right organizations Moral Majority and later the Christian Coalition. Outside of political causes, Kunst worked in marketing for the Miami Toros professional soccer team in the 1970s.",
"Title: Campaign for Social Justice\n\nThe Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ) was an organisation based in Northern Ireland which campaigned for civil rights in that region.",
"Title: Northern Ireland civil rights movement\n\nThe Northern Ireland civil rights movement dates to the early 1960s, when a number of initiatives emerged which challenged inequality and discrimination in Northern Ireland. The Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ) was founded by Conn McCluskey and his wife, Patricia. Conn was a doctor, and Patricia was a social worker who had worked in Glasgow for a period, and who had a background in housing activism. Both were involved in the Homeless Citizens League, an organisation founded after Catholic women occupied disused social housing. The HCL evolved into the CSJ, focusing on lobbying, research and publicising discrimination. The campaign for Derry University was another mid-1960s campaign.",
"Title: People's Democracy (Ireland)\n\nPeople's Democracy (PD) was a political organisation that, while supporting the campaign for civil rights for Northern Ireland's Catholic minority, stated that such rights could only be achieved through the establishment of a socialist republic for all of Ireland. It demanded more radical reforms of the government of Northern Ireland than the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association it came from.",
"Title: Mexican American Youth Organization\n\nThe Mexican American Youth Organization (acronym MAYO, also described as the Mexican Youth Organization) is a civil rights organization formed in 1967 in San Antonio, Texas, USA to fight for Mexican-American rights. The creators of MAYO, Los Cinco (meaning \"the five\"), consisted of José Ángel Gutiérrez, Willie Velásquez, Mario Compean, Ignacio Pérez, and Juan Patlán. MAYO and its political organization, Raza Unida Party, played an important part in Texas history during the late 1960s and early 1970s. They were a part of the larger Chicano movement in the United States, and played a role in bringing about civil rights for Mexican-Americans.",
"Title: Rainbow Coalition (Fred Hampton)\n\nThe Rainbow Coalition was a coalition active in the late 1960s and early 1970s, founded in Chicago, Illinois by Fred Hampton of the activist Black Panther Party, along with William \"Preacherman\" Fesperman, Jack (Junebug) Boykin, Bobby Joe Mcginnis and Hy Thurman of the Young Patriots Organization and the founder of the Young Lords as a civil and human rights movement Jose Cha Cha Jimenez. It later expanded to include various radical socialist groups and community groups like the Lincoln Park Poor People's Coalition. It was associated with the rising Black Power movement, which mobilized some African-American discontent and activism by other ethnic minority groups after the passage of the mid-1960s civil rights legislation under Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson.",
"Title: Des O'Hagan\n\nDes O'Hagan (29 March 1934 - 5 May 2015) was a prominent member of the Workers' Party of Ireland and was a founding member of the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association.",
"Title: Fergus O'Hare\n\nFergus O'Hare (aka Fergus Ó hÍr) was involved in the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland as a member of People's Democracy in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Later he became a founding member and executive member of the Northern Resistance Movement, which continued to campaign for civil rights in Northern Ireland.",
"Title: Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association\n\nThe Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association was an organisation which campaigned for civil rights for the Catholic minority in Northern Ireland during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Formed in Belfast on 9 April 1967, the civil rights campaign attempted to achieve reform by publicising, documenting, and lobbying for an end to discrimination in areas such as elections (which were subject to gerrymandering and property requirements), discrimination in employment, in public housing and alleged abuses of the Special Powers Act. The genesis of the organisation lay in a meeting in Maghera in August 1966 between the Wolfe Tone Societies which was attended by Cathal Goulding, then chief of staff of the IRA.",
"Title: Politics of Northern Ireland\n\nSince 1998, Northern Ireland has devolved government within the United Kingdom. The government and Parliament of the United Kingdom are responsible for reserved and excepted matters. Reserved matters are a list of policy area (such as civil aviation, units of measurement, and human genetics), which the Westminster Parliament may devolve to the Northern Ireland Assembly at some time in future. Excepted matters (such as international relations, taxation and elections) are never expected to be considered for devolution. On all other matters, the Northern Ireland Executive together with the 108-member Northern Ireland Assembly may legislate and govern for Northern Ireland. Additionally, devolution in Northern Ireland is dependent upon participation by members of the Northern Ireland Executive in the North/South Ministerial Council, which co-ordinates areas of co-operation (such as agriculture, education and health) between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland."
] |
1,763
|
What icefield is named after a scandalous former President of the United States?
|
Harding Icefield
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Harding Icefield",
"Harding Icefield",
"Warren G. Harding"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
2,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The inauguration of Herbert Hoover as the 31st President of the United States was held on Monday, March 4, 1929, at the east portico of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C..",
" The inauguration marked the commencement of the only four-year term of Herbert Hoover as President and of Charles Curtis as Vice President.",
" Chief Justice and former President William H. Taft administered the presidential oath of office to Hoover.",
" This was the first time a Presidential inauguration to be recorded by sound newsreels.",
" It was also the second (and most recent) time that a former president administered the oath of office to a new President."
],
"title": "Inauguration of Herbert Hoover"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USS \"Jimmy Carter\" (SSN-23) is the third and last \"Seawolf\"-class submarine in the United States Navy.",
" She is named for Jimmy Carter, the 39th President of the United States; Carter is the only President who had qualified in submarines, having served as a Communications Officer, Sonar Officer, Electronics Officer, Weapons Officer, and Supply Officer while on board USS \"Pomfret\" .",
" \"Jimmy Carter\" is one of the few ships of the United States Navy (and only the third submarine) to have been named for a person who was alive at the time of the ship's naming, and the only submarine to be named for a living former president."
],
"title": "USS Jimmy Carter"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Justin Cooper was an adviser to Bill Clinton, former President of the United States.",
" Justin Cooper first worked within the Office of Science and Technology before later becoming an aide for former President of the United States Bill Clinton."
],
"title": "Justin Cooper (aide)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mount Blachnitzky is a mountain in the city and borough of Juneau, Alaska, United States.",
" It is a part of the Boundary Ranges of the Coast Mountains in western North America.",
" It is located between Gilkey Glacier and Avalanch Canyon; it is named after Klaus Blachnitzky, a surveyor, geodesist, and explorer of the Juneau Icefield."
],
"title": "Mount Blachnitzky"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Warren Gamaliel Harding (November 2, 1865 – August 2, 1923) was the 29th President of the United States, serving from March 4, 1921, until his death in 1923.",
" At the time of his death, he was one of the most popular presidents, but the subsequent exposure of scandals that took place under his administration, such as Teapot Dome, eroded his popular regard, as did revelations of an affair by Nan Britton, one of his mistresses.",
" In historical rankings of the U.S. presidents, Harding is often rated among the worst."
],
"title": "Warren G. Harding"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Regina (Blakely) Hopper is the former President and CEO of the Intelligent Transportation Society of America.",
" She is also the former President and CEO of America's Natural Gas Alliance, a Washington, DC-based advocacy group, and she was previously the executive vice president of the United States Telecom Association.",
" Immediately prior to joining the Telecom Association, Hopper was senior vice president of litigation communications at Weber McGinn."
],
"title": "Regina Hopper"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Alexander \"Hap\" Ellis III (born January 1, 1949), formerly an executive with alternative energy companies, and now a partner in the venture-capital firm Rockport Capital Partners.",
" He is a nephew of former President of the United States George H. W. Bush and a first cousin of former President George W. Bush and the former Governor of Florida John Ellis \"Jeb\" Bush."
],
"title": "Alexander Ellis III"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kenai Fjords National Park is a United States National Park established in 1980 by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act.",
" The park covers an area of 669,984 acre on the Kenai Peninsula in southcentral Alaska, near the town of Seward.",
" The park contains the Harding Icefield, one of the largest ice fields in the United States.",
" The park is named for the numerous fjords carved by glaciers moving down the mountains from the ice field.",
" The field is the source of at least 38 glaciers, the largest of which is Bear Glacier.",
" The park lies just to the west of Seward, a popular port for cruise ships.",
" Exit Glacier is reachable by road and is a popular tour destination.",
" The remainder of the park is primarily accessible by boat.",
" The fjords are glacial valleys that have been submerged below sea level by a combination of rising sea levels and land subsidence."
],
"title": "Kenai Fjords National Park"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John Prescott Ellis (born February 3, 1953) is a former American journalist and media consultant, and is now a partner in the venture-capital firm Sand Hills Partners.",
" He is a nephew of former President of the United States George H. W. Bush and a first cousin of former President George W. Bush and former Governor of Florida John Ellis \"Jeb\" Bush."
],
"title": "John Prescott Ellis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Harding Icefield is an expansive icefield located in the Kenai Mountains of the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska.",
" It is also partially located in Kenai Fjords National Park.",
" It is named for United States President Warren G. Harding."
],
"title": "Harding Icefield"
}
] |
[
"Title: Inauguration of Herbert Hoover\n\nThe inauguration of Herbert Hoover as the 31st President of the United States was held on Monday, March 4, 1929, at the east portico of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C.. The inauguration marked the commencement of the only four-year term of Herbert Hoover as President and of Charles Curtis as Vice President. Chief Justice and former President William H. Taft administered the presidential oath of office to Hoover. This was the first time a Presidential inauguration to be recorded by sound newsreels. It was also the second (and most recent) time that a former president administered the oath of office to a new President.",
"Title: USS Jimmy Carter\n\nUSS \"Jimmy Carter\" (SSN-23) is the third and last \"Seawolf\"-class submarine in the United States Navy. She is named for Jimmy Carter, the 39th President of the United States; Carter is the only President who had qualified in submarines, having served as a Communications Officer, Sonar Officer, Electronics Officer, Weapons Officer, and Supply Officer while on board USS \"Pomfret\" . \"Jimmy Carter\" is one of the few ships of the United States Navy (and only the third submarine) to have been named for a person who was alive at the time of the ship's naming, and the only submarine to be named for a living former president.",
"Title: Justin Cooper (aide)\n\nJustin Cooper was an adviser to Bill Clinton, former President of the United States. Justin Cooper first worked within the Office of Science and Technology before later becoming an aide for former President of the United States Bill Clinton.",
"Title: Mount Blachnitzky\n\nMount Blachnitzky is a mountain in the city and borough of Juneau, Alaska, United States. It is a part of the Boundary Ranges of the Coast Mountains in western North America. It is located between Gilkey Glacier and Avalanch Canyon; it is named after Klaus Blachnitzky, a surveyor, geodesist, and explorer of the Juneau Icefield.",
"Title: Warren G. Harding\n\nWarren Gamaliel Harding (November 2, 1865 – August 2, 1923) was the 29th President of the United States, serving from March 4, 1921, until his death in 1923. At the time of his death, he was one of the most popular presidents, but the subsequent exposure of scandals that took place under his administration, such as Teapot Dome, eroded his popular regard, as did revelations of an affair by Nan Britton, one of his mistresses. In historical rankings of the U.S. presidents, Harding is often rated among the worst.",
"Title: Regina Hopper\n\nRegina (Blakely) Hopper is the former President and CEO of the Intelligent Transportation Society of America. She is also the former President and CEO of America's Natural Gas Alliance, a Washington, DC-based advocacy group, and she was previously the executive vice president of the United States Telecom Association. Immediately prior to joining the Telecom Association, Hopper was senior vice president of litigation communications at Weber McGinn.",
"Title: Alexander Ellis III\n\nAlexander \"Hap\" Ellis III (born January 1, 1949), formerly an executive with alternative energy companies, and now a partner in the venture-capital firm Rockport Capital Partners. He is a nephew of former President of the United States George H. W. Bush and a first cousin of former President George W. Bush and the former Governor of Florida John Ellis \"Jeb\" Bush.",
"Title: Kenai Fjords National Park\n\nKenai Fjords National Park is a United States National Park established in 1980 by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act. The park covers an area of 669,984 acre on the Kenai Peninsula in southcentral Alaska, near the town of Seward. The park contains the Harding Icefield, one of the largest ice fields in the United States. The park is named for the numerous fjords carved by glaciers moving down the mountains from the ice field. The field is the source of at least 38 glaciers, the largest of which is Bear Glacier. The park lies just to the west of Seward, a popular port for cruise ships. Exit Glacier is reachable by road and is a popular tour destination. The remainder of the park is primarily accessible by boat. The fjords are glacial valleys that have been submerged below sea level by a combination of rising sea levels and land subsidence.",
"Title: John Prescott Ellis\n\nJohn Prescott Ellis (born February 3, 1953) is a former American journalist and media consultant, and is now a partner in the venture-capital firm Sand Hills Partners. He is a nephew of former President of the United States George H. W. Bush and a first cousin of former President George W. Bush and former Governor of Florida John Ellis \"Jeb\" Bush.",
"Title: Harding Icefield\n\nThe Harding Icefield is an expansive icefield located in the Kenai Mountains of the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska. It is also partially located in Kenai Fjords National Park. It is named for United States President Warren G. Harding."
] |
1,764
|
Interstate 70 in Kansas extends from the Colorado border near a town of what population as of the 2010 census?
|
153
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Interstate 70 in Kansas",
"Kanorado, Kansas"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
2
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}
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[
{
"sentences": [
"Peyton is a census-designated place and a U.S. Post Office in El Paso County, Colorado, United States.",
" The population as of the 2010 Census was 250.",
" The nearby unincorporated area of Falcon also uses zip code 80831.",
" Peyton and towns such as Falcon, Calhan, Ramah, Simla, and Matheson straddle U.S. Highway 24 between Colorado Springs and Limon, Colorado where US 24 intersects with Interstate 70."
],
"title": "Peyton, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lawrence is the county seat of Douglas County and sixth largest city in Kansas.",
" It is located in the northeastern sector of the state, next to Interstate 70, between the Kansas and Wakarusa Rivers.",
" As of the 2010 census, the city's population was 87,643.",
" Lawrence is a college town and the home to the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University."
],
"title": "Lawrence, Kansas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The City of Rifle is a Home Rule Municipality in Garfield County, Colorado, United States.",
" The population was 9,172 at the 2010 census, up from 6,784 at the 2000 census.",
" Rifle is a regional center of the cattle ranching industry located along Interstate 70 and the Colorado River just east of the Roan Plateau, which dominates the western skyline of the town.",
" The town was founded in 1882 by Abram Maxfield, and was incorporated in 1904 along Rifle Creek, near its mouth on the Colorado.",
" The community takes its name from the creek."
],
"title": "Rifle, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"In the U.S. state of Kansas, Interstate 70 contains the first segment to start being paved and to be completed in the Interstate Highway System.",
" It extends from the Colorado border near the town of Kanorado to the Missouri border in Kansas City.",
" The route covers 424 mi and passes through several of the state's principal cities in the process including Kansas City, Topeka, and Salina.",
" The route also passes through the cities of Lawrence, Junction City, and Abilene."
],
"title": "Interstate 70 in Kansas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tipp City is a city in Miami County, Ohio, United States just outside Dayton.",
" The population was 9,689 at the 2010 census.",
" Formerly known as Tippecanoe, and then Tippecanoe City, this town was renamed to Tipp City in 1938 because another town in Ohio was likewise named Tippecanoe.",
" The city lies in the Miami Valley and sits along Interstate 75 near the Interstate 70 interchange."
],
"title": "Tipp City, Ohio"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Interstate 29 (I-29) is an Interstate Highway in the Midwestern United States.",
" I-29 runs from Kansas City, Missouri, at a junction with Interstate 35 and Interstate 70, to the Canada–US border near Pembina, North Dakota, where it connects with Manitoba Highway 75."
],
"title": "Interstate 29"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Town of Erie is a Statutory Town in Boulder and Weld counties in the U.S. state of Colorado.",
" The population as of the 2010 census was 18,135, up from 6,291 at the 2000 census.",
" Erie is located just west of Interstate 25, with easy access to Interstate 70, Denver International Airport and Colorado's entire Front Range.",
" Erie's Planning Area spans 48 sqmi , extending from the north side of State Highway 52 south to State Highway 7, and between US 287 on the west and Interstate 25 to the east.",
" Erie is approximately 35 minutes from Denver International Airport, 25 minutes from Denver and 20 minutes from Boulder."
],
"title": "Erie, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Town of Limon is the Statutory Town that is the most populous municipality in Lincoln County, Colorado, United States.",
" Limon is located immediately east of Elbert County.",
" The population was 1880 at the 2010 United States Census.",
" Limon has been called the \"Hub City\" of Eastern Colorado because Interstate 70, U.S. Highways 24, 40, and 287, and State Highways 71 and 94 all pass through the town.",
" The Limon Correctional Facility is part of the Colorado Department of Corrections system and is a major employer in the area with employment of roughly 350."
],
"title": "Limon, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kanorado is a city in Sherman County, Kansas, United States.",
" The name is a portmanteau of Kansas and Colorado.",
" As of the 2010 census, the city population was 153."
],
"title": "Kanorado, Kansas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dotsero is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in western Eagle County, Colorado, in the United States.",
" The population as of the 2010 Census was 705.",
" The town originated as a railroad junction and is located at the confluence of the Eagle River with the Colorado River, along U.S. Highway 6 and Interstate 70, near the head of Glenwood Canyon, approximately 5 mi west of Gypsum.",
" The town consists mostly of a cluster of houses and trailers on both sides of the Eagle River."
],
"title": "Dotsero, Colorado"
}
] |
[
"Title: Peyton, Colorado\n\nPeyton is a census-designated place and a U.S. Post Office in El Paso County, Colorado, United States. The population as of the 2010 Census was 250. The nearby unincorporated area of Falcon also uses zip code 80831. Peyton and towns such as Falcon, Calhan, Ramah, Simla, and Matheson straddle U.S. Highway 24 between Colorado Springs and Limon, Colorado where US 24 intersects with Interstate 70.",
"Title: Lawrence, Kansas\n\nLawrence is the county seat of Douglas County and sixth largest city in Kansas. It is located in the northeastern sector of the state, next to Interstate 70, between the Kansas and Wakarusa Rivers. As of the 2010 census, the city's population was 87,643. Lawrence is a college town and the home to the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University.",
"Title: Rifle, Colorado\n\nThe City of Rifle is a Home Rule Municipality in Garfield County, Colorado, United States. The population was 9,172 at the 2010 census, up from 6,784 at the 2000 census. Rifle is a regional center of the cattle ranching industry located along Interstate 70 and the Colorado River just east of the Roan Plateau, which dominates the western skyline of the town. The town was founded in 1882 by Abram Maxfield, and was incorporated in 1904 along Rifle Creek, near its mouth on the Colorado. The community takes its name from the creek.",
"Title: Interstate 70 in Kansas\n\nIn the U.S. state of Kansas, Interstate 70 contains the first segment to start being paved and to be completed in the Interstate Highway System. It extends from the Colorado border near the town of Kanorado to the Missouri border in Kansas City. The route covers 424 mi and passes through several of the state's principal cities in the process including Kansas City, Topeka, and Salina. The route also passes through the cities of Lawrence, Junction City, and Abilene.",
"Title: Tipp City, Ohio\n\nTipp City is a city in Miami County, Ohio, United States just outside Dayton. The population was 9,689 at the 2010 census. Formerly known as Tippecanoe, and then Tippecanoe City, this town was renamed to Tipp City in 1938 because another town in Ohio was likewise named Tippecanoe. The city lies in the Miami Valley and sits along Interstate 75 near the Interstate 70 interchange.",
"Title: Interstate 29\n\nInterstate 29 (I-29) is an Interstate Highway in the Midwestern United States. I-29 runs from Kansas City, Missouri, at a junction with Interstate 35 and Interstate 70, to the Canada–US border near Pembina, North Dakota, where it connects with Manitoba Highway 75.",
"Title: Erie, Colorado\n\nThe Town of Erie is a Statutory Town in Boulder and Weld counties in the U.S. state of Colorado. The population as of the 2010 census was 18,135, up from 6,291 at the 2000 census. Erie is located just west of Interstate 25, with easy access to Interstate 70, Denver International Airport and Colorado's entire Front Range. Erie's Planning Area spans 48 sqmi , extending from the north side of State Highway 52 south to State Highway 7, and between US 287 on the west and Interstate 25 to the east. Erie is approximately 35 minutes from Denver International Airport, 25 minutes from Denver and 20 minutes from Boulder.",
"Title: Limon, Colorado\n\nThe Town of Limon is the Statutory Town that is the most populous municipality in Lincoln County, Colorado, United States. Limon is located immediately east of Elbert County. The population was 1880 at the 2010 United States Census. Limon has been called the \"Hub City\" of Eastern Colorado because Interstate 70, U.S. Highways 24, 40, and 287, and State Highways 71 and 94 all pass through the town. The Limon Correctional Facility is part of the Colorado Department of Corrections system and is a major employer in the area with employment of roughly 350.",
"Title: Kanorado, Kansas\n\nKanorado is a city in Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The name is a portmanteau of Kansas and Colorado. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 153.",
"Title: Dotsero, Colorado\n\nDotsero is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in western Eagle County, Colorado, in the United States. The population as of the 2010 Census was 705. The town originated as a railroad junction and is located at the confluence of the Eagle River with the Colorado River, along U.S. Highway 6 and Interstate 70, near the head of Glenwood Canyon, approximately 5 mi west of Gypsum. The town consists mostly of a cluster of houses and trailers on both sides of the Eagle River."
] |
1,765
|
In what year was the actor who portrayed "Bottom" in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" born?
|
1974
|
bridge
|
medium
|
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"A Midsummer Night's Dream (2016 film)",
"A Midsummer Night's Dream (2016 film)",
"Matt Lucas"
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[
{
"sentences": [
"A Midsummer Night's Dream is a two-act ballet choreographed by George Balanchine to Felix Mendelssohn's music to Shakespeare's play of the same name.",
" In addition to the incidental music, Balanchine incorporated other Mendelssohn works into the ballet, including the Overtures to \"Athalie\", \"Son and Stranger\", and \"The Fair Melusine\", the \"String Symphony No. 9 in C minor\" and \"The First Walpurgis Night\".",
" \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", Balanchine's first completely original full-length ballet, premiered at New York City Ballet on 17 January 1962, with Edward Villella in the role of Oberon, Melissa Hayden in the role of Titania, and Arthur Mitchell in the role of Puck.",
" The ballet employs a large children's corps de ballet.",
" Act I tells Shakespeare's familiar story of lovers and fairies while Act II presents a strictly classical dance wedding celebration.",
" The ballet dispenses with Shakespeare's play-within-a-play finale.",
" \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" opened The New York City Ballet's first season at the New York State Theater in April, 1964."
],
"title": "A Midsummer Night's Dream (ballet)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A Midsummer Night's Dream is a 2016 British television film based on the William Shakespeare play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\".",
" It was adapted by Russell T Davies, directed by David Kerr and produced by Nikki Wilson.",
" It stars Maxine Peake as Titania, Matt Lucas as Bottom, John Hannah as Theseus and Nonso Anozie as Oberon.",
" The film was first broadcast on 30 May 2016 on BBC One."
],
"title": "A Midsummer Night's Dream (2016 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Donkey Show: A Midsummer Night's Disco is a theatrical adaptation of Shakespeare's \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\".",
" The production, created in a disco-era style, was written by Diane Paulus and her husband Randy Weiner and the members of Project 400, Emily Hellstrom, Jordin Ruderman, Rachel Murdy and Anna Wilson.",
" It first appeared Off-Broadway, opening August 18, 1999.",
" The show subsequently ran for six years including venues in England, Scotland, France and Spain.",
" After a successful run at the Edinburgh Festival the Donkey Show show came to London for a 8 month run in Londons West End (Hanover Grand).",
" The London show was produced by David Babani and Graham Kentsley.",
" Rob Goodmonson (NYC) played the part of the DJ in the UK production.",
" In 2009, the show was revived by the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for which Paulus is Artistic Director.",
" The club/theater space used in Cambridge is called OBERON, after the king of the fairies in \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\"."
],
"title": "The Donkey Show (musical)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A Midsummer Night's Dream is a 1999 romantic comedy fantasy film based on the play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" by William Shakespeare.",
" It was directed by Michael Hoffman.",
" The ensemble cast features Kevin Kline as Bottom, Michelle Pfeiffer and Rupert Everett as Titania and Oberon, Stanley Tucci as Puck, and Calista Flockhart, Anna Friel, Christian Bale, and Dominic West as the four lovers."
],
"title": "A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Le songe d'une nuit d'été (\"A Midsummer Night's Dream\") is an opéra-comique in three acts composed by Ambroise Thomas to a French libretto by Joseph-Bernard Rosier and Adolphe de Leuven.",
" Although it shares the French title for Shakespeare's play, \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", its plot is not based on the play.",
" Shakespeare himself is a character in the opera as are Elizabeth I and Falstaff."
],
"title": "Le songe d'une nuit d'été"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Nick Bottom is a character in Shakespeare's \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" who provides comic relief throughout the play.",
" A weaver by trade, he is famously known for getting his head transformed into that of a donkey by the elusive Puck.",
" Bottom and Puck are the only two characters who converse with and progress the three central stories in the whole play.",
" Puck is first introduced in the fairies' story and creates the drama of the lovers' story by messing up who loves whom, and places the donkey head on Bottom's in his story.",
" Similarly, Bottom is performing in a play in his story intending it to be presented in the lovers' story, as well as interacting with Titania in the fairies' story."
],
"title": "Nick Bottom"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Midsummer Dream (Spanish: El Sueño de una noche de San Juan , meaning \"A Dream of a Night of Saint John\", the feast of Saint John, celebrated on the night of June 23, being the traditional midsummer feast in Spain and Portugal) is a 2005 computer-animated film from Dygra Films, the creators of \"The Living Forest\".",
" Made in Spain and Portugal, the film is loosely based on William Shakespeare's play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\"."
],
"title": "Midsummer Dream"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Cinq grimaces pour Le songe d'une nuit d'été (\"Five Grimaces for A Midsummer Night's Dream\") is a set of incidental music pieces for orchestra by Erik Satie.",
" Composed in 1915 for a planned circus-style staging of Shakespeare's play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", it marked the composer's first collaboration with author Jean Cocteau.",
" The production failed to materialize and Satie's music went unperformed in his lifetime.",
" His score was published posthumously in 1929."
],
"title": "Cinq grimaces pour Le songe d'une nuit d'été"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Matthew Richard Lucas (born 5 March 1974) is an English comedian, screenwriter, actor and singer, best known for his work with David Walliams in the television show \"Little Britain\", as well as for his portrayals of the scorekeeping baby Georgie Dawes in the comedy panel game \"Shooting Stars\" and both Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee in \"Alice in Wonderland\" and its sequel, \"Alice Through the Looking Glass\"."
],
"title": "Matt Lucas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream.",
" Titania and Bottom is an 1851 oil-on-canvas painting by British artist Edwin Landseer.",
" Landseer was mainly known for his paintings of animals: this is his only painting of a fairy scene.",
" The painting depicts a scene from the third act of William Shakespeare's play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\".",
" It has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia since 1932."
],
"title": "Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream"
}
] |
[
"Title: A Midsummer Night's Dream (ballet)\n\nA Midsummer Night's Dream is a two-act ballet choreographed by George Balanchine to Felix Mendelssohn's music to Shakespeare's play of the same name. In addition to the incidental music, Balanchine incorporated other Mendelssohn works into the ballet, including the Overtures to \"Athalie\", \"Son and Stranger\", and \"The Fair Melusine\", the \"String Symphony No. 9 in C minor\" and \"The First Walpurgis Night\". \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", Balanchine's first completely original full-length ballet, premiered at New York City Ballet on 17 January 1962, with Edward Villella in the role of Oberon, Melissa Hayden in the role of Titania, and Arthur Mitchell in the role of Puck. The ballet employs a large children's corps de ballet. Act I tells Shakespeare's familiar story of lovers and fairies while Act II presents a strictly classical dance wedding celebration. The ballet dispenses with Shakespeare's play-within-a-play finale. \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" opened The New York City Ballet's first season at the New York State Theater in April, 1964.",
"Title: A Midsummer Night's Dream (2016 film)\n\nA Midsummer Night's Dream is a 2016 British television film based on the William Shakespeare play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\". It was adapted by Russell T Davies, directed by David Kerr and produced by Nikki Wilson. It stars Maxine Peake as Titania, Matt Lucas as Bottom, John Hannah as Theseus and Nonso Anozie as Oberon. The film was first broadcast on 30 May 2016 on BBC One.",
"Title: The Donkey Show (musical)\n\nThe Donkey Show: A Midsummer Night's Disco is a theatrical adaptation of Shakespeare's \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\". The production, created in a disco-era style, was written by Diane Paulus and her husband Randy Weiner and the members of Project 400, Emily Hellstrom, Jordin Ruderman, Rachel Murdy and Anna Wilson. It first appeared Off-Broadway, opening August 18, 1999. The show subsequently ran for six years including venues in England, Scotland, France and Spain. After a successful run at the Edinburgh Festival the Donkey Show show came to London for a 8 month run in Londons West End (Hanover Grand). The London show was produced by David Babani and Graham Kentsley. Rob Goodmonson (NYC) played the part of the DJ in the UK production. In 2009, the show was revived by the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for which Paulus is Artistic Director. The club/theater space used in Cambridge is called OBERON, after the king of the fairies in \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\".",
"Title: A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999 film)\n\nA Midsummer Night's Dream is a 1999 romantic comedy fantasy film based on the play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" by William Shakespeare. It was directed by Michael Hoffman. The ensemble cast features Kevin Kline as Bottom, Michelle Pfeiffer and Rupert Everett as Titania and Oberon, Stanley Tucci as Puck, and Calista Flockhart, Anna Friel, Christian Bale, and Dominic West as the four lovers.",
"Title: Le songe d'une nuit d'été\n\nLe songe d'une nuit d'été (\"A Midsummer Night's Dream\") is an opéra-comique in three acts composed by Ambroise Thomas to a French libretto by Joseph-Bernard Rosier and Adolphe de Leuven. Although it shares the French title for Shakespeare's play, \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", its plot is not based on the play. Shakespeare himself is a character in the opera as are Elizabeth I and Falstaff.",
"Title: Nick Bottom\n\nNick Bottom is a character in Shakespeare's \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" who provides comic relief throughout the play. A weaver by trade, he is famously known for getting his head transformed into that of a donkey by the elusive Puck. Bottom and Puck are the only two characters who converse with and progress the three central stories in the whole play. Puck is first introduced in the fairies' story and creates the drama of the lovers' story by messing up who loves whom, and places the donkey head on Bottom's in his story. Similarly, Bottom is performing in a play in his story intending it to be presented in the lovers' story, as well as interacting with Titania in the fairies' story.",
"Title: Midsummer Dream\n\nMidsummer Dream (Spanish: El Sueño de una noche de San Juan , meaning \"A Dream of a Night of Saint John\", the feast of Saint John, celebrated on the night of June 23, being the traditional midsummer feast in Spain and Portugal) is a 2005 computer-animated film from Dygra Films, the creators of \"The Living Forest\". Made in Spain and Portugal, the film is loosely based on William Shakespeare's play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\".",
"Title: Cinq grimaces pour Le songe d'une nuit d'été\n\nThe Cinq grimaces pour Le songe d'une nuit d'été (\"Five Grimaces for A Midsummer Night's Dream\") is a set of incidental music pieces for orchestra by Erik Satie. Composed in 1915 for a planned circus-style staging of Shakespeare's play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", it marked the composer's first collaboration with author Jean Cocteau. The production failed to materialize and Satie's music went unperformed in his lifetime. His score was published posthumously in 1929.",
"Title: Matt Lucas\n\nMatthew Richard Lucas (born 5 March 1974) is an English comedian, screenwriter, actor and singer, best known for his work with David Walliams in the television show \"Little Britain\", as well as for his portrayals of the scorekeeping baby Georgie Dawes in the comedy panel game \"Shooting Stars\" and both Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee in \"Alice in Wonderland\" and its sequel, \"Alice Through the Looking Glass\".",
"Title: Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream\n\nScene from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Titania and Bottom is an 1851 oil-on-canvas painting by British artist Edwin Landseer. Landseer was mainly known for his paintings of animals: this is his only painting of a fairy scene. The painting depicts a scene from the third act of William Shakespeare's play \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\". It has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia since 1932."
] |
1,766
|
The High Mountain Institute (HMI) is a non-profit educational organization located in Leadville, the statutory city that is the county seat, and only incorporated municipality, in Lake County, Colorado, in which country?
|
United States
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"High Mountain Institute",
"Leadville, Colorado"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Las Animas is the Statutory City that is the county seat and the only incorporated municipality in Bent County, Colorado, United States.",
" The city population was 2,410 at the 2010 United States Census.",
" Las Animas is located in southeast Colorado east of Pueblo, near the historic Bent's Fort."
],
"title": "Las Animas, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Horseshoe Mountain is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America.",
" The 13905 ft thirteener is located 11.5 km southeast by east (bearing 126°) of the City of Leadville, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Lake County from Pike National Forest and Park County."
],
"title": "Horseshoe Mountain (Colorado)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The High Mountain Institute (HMI) is a non-profit educational organization located in Leadville, Colorado.",
" Founded in 1998 by Molly and Christopher Barnes, HMI focuses on educating teenagers through interaction with the natural world.",
" The school offers semester and summer programs for high-school students and programs for middle-schoolers and adults."
],
"title": "High Mountain Institute"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dyer Mountain is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America.",
" The 13862 ft thirteener is located 9.5 km east (bearing 95°) of the City of Leadville, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Lake County from Pike National Forest and Park County.",
" The mountain was named in honor of frontier preacher John Lewis Dyer."
],
"title": "Dyer Mountain"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mount Sherman is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America.",
" The 14043 ft fourteener is located 11.0 km east by south (bearing 103°) of the City of Leadville, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Lake County from Pike National Forest and Park County.",
" The mountain was named in honor of General William Tecumseh Sherman."
],
"title": "Mount Sherman"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Leadville is the statutory city that is the county seat and only incorporated municipality in Lake County, Colorado, United States.",
" The city population was 2,602 at the 2010 United States Census.",
" Situated at an elevation of 10152 ft , Leadville is the highest incorporated city and the second highest incorporated municipality in the United States.",
" A former silver mining town that lies near the headwaters of the Arkansas River in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, the Leadville Historic District contains many historic structures and sites from its dynamic mining era.",
" In the late 19th century, Leadville was the second most populous city in Colorado, after Denver."
],
"title": "Leadville, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Lake County is one of the 64 counties in the U.S. state of Colorado.",
" As of the 2010 census, the population was 7,310.",
" The county seat and the only municipality in the county is Leadville.",
" The highest natural point in Colorado and the entire Rocky Mountains is the summit of Mount Elbert in Lake County at 14,440 feet (4401.2 meters) elevation."
],
"title": "Lake County, Colorado"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The HMI Semester is a semester-long educational program for high school juniors located at the High Mountain Institute's campus in Leadville, Colorado.",
" HMI Semester welcomed its first class in 1998 with Molly and Christopher Barnes as its first directors.",
" Since its inception, the HMI Semester has served as a unique opportunity for talented high school juniors to spend a semester living, traveling, and studying in the mountains of central Colorado and the canyons of southeastern Utah, combining the academic program of a rigorous college preparatory boarding school with the adventure of a summer backpacking expedition.",
" Students spend five weeks over the course of the semester on three wilderness expeditions that focus on leadership and community-building and twelve weeks on campus completing a standard junior year curriculum.",
" Admission for HMI Semester's forty-eight spots is highly competitive, with the applicant pool centered on a group of customary \"sending schools\" that have supported the Institute from its start.",
" In June 2013, the HMI Semester celebrated its fifteen-year reunion on campus where alumni from all semesters were invited to reconnect and appreciate the HMI community."
],
"title": "HMI Semester"
},
{
"sentences": [
"French Mountain is a high mountain summit in the Sawatch Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America.",
" The 13966 ft thirteener is located on the Elbert Massif in San Isabel National Forest, 20.9 km southwest by west (bearing 231°) of the City of Leadville in Lake County, Colorado, United States."
],
"title": "French Mountain"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Tibetan Language Institute is a private, non-profit educational organization located in Hamilton, Montana.",
" Its mission is to present classes, seminars, workshops, and public lectures on Tibetan language, literature, and philosophy for the purpose of preserving Tibetan culture and enriching one's study of the Dharma."
],
"title": "Tibetan Language Institute"
}
] |
[
"Title: Las Animas, Colorado\n\nLas Animas is the Statutory City that is the county seat and the only incorporated municipality in Bent County, Colorado, United States. The city population was 2,410 at the 2010 United States Census. Las Animas is located in southeast Colorado east of Pueblo, near the historic Bent's Fort.",
"Title: Horseshoe Mountain (Colorado)\n\nHorseshoe Mountain is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The 13905 ft thirteener is located 11.5 km southeast by east (bearing 126°) of the City of Leadville, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Lake County from Pike National Forest and Park County.",
"Title: High Mountain Institute\n\nThe High Mountain Institute (HMI) is a non-profit educational organization located in Leadville, Colorado. Founded in 1998 by Molly and Christopher Barnes, HMI focuses on educating teenagers through interaction with the natural world. The school offers semester and summer programs for high-school students and programs for middle-schoolers and adults.",
"Title: Dyer Mountain\n\nDyer Mountain is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The 13862 ft thirteener is located 9.5 km east (bearing 95°) of the City of Leadville, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Lake County from Pike National Forest and Park County. The mountain was named in honor of frontier preacher John Lewis Dyer.",
"Title: Mount Sherman\n\nMount Sherman is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The 14043 ft fourteener is located 11.0 km east by south (bearing 103°) of the City of Leadville, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Lake County from Pike National Forest and Park County. The mountain was named in honor of General William Tecumseh Sherman.",
"Title: Leadville, Colorado\n\nLeadville is the statutory city that is the county seat and only incorporated municipality in Lake County, Colorado, United States. The city population was 2,602 at the 2010 United States Census. Situated at an elevation of 10152 ft , Leadville is the highest incorporated city and the second highest incorporated municipality in the United States. A former silver mining town that lies near the headwaters of the Arkansas River in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, the Leadville Historic District contains many historic structures and sites from its dynamic mining era. In the late 19th century, Leadville was the second most populous city in Colorado, after Denver.",
"Title: Lake County, Colorado\n\nLake County is one of the 64 counties in the U.S. state of Colorado. As of the 2010 census, the population was 7,310. The county seat and the only municipality in the county is Leadville. The highest natural point in Colorado and the entire Rocky Mountains is the summit of Mount Elbert in Lake County at 14,440 feet (4401.2 meters) elevation.",
"Title: HMI Semester\n\nThe HMI Semester is a semester-long educational program for high school juniors located at the High Mountain Institute's campus in Leadville, Colorado. HMI Semester welcomed its first class in 1998 with Molly and Christopher Barnes as its first directors. Since its inception, the HMI Semester has served as a unique opportunity for talented high school juniors to spend a semester living, traveling, and studying in the mountains of central Colorado and the canyons of southeastern Utah, combining the academic program of a rigorous college preparatory boarding school with the adventure of a summer backpacking expedition. Students spend five weeks over the course of the semester on three wilderness expeditions that focus on leadership and community-building and twelve weeks on campus completing a standard junior year curriculum. Admission for HMI Semester's forty-eight spots is highly competitive, with the applicant pool centered on a group of customary \"sending schools\" that have supported the Institute from its start. In June 2013, the HMI Semester celebrated its fifteen-year reunion on campus where alumni from all semesters were invited to reconnect and appreciate the HMI community.",
"Title: French Mountain\n\nFrench Mountain is a high mountain summit in the Sawatch Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The 13966 ft thirteener is located on the Elbert Massif in San Isabel National Forest, 20.9 km southwest by west (bearing 231°) of the City of Leadville in Lake County, Colorado, United States.",
"Title: Tibetan Language Institute\n\nThe Tibetan Language Institute is a private, non-profit educational organization located in Hamilton, Montana. Its mission is to present classes, seminars, workshops, and public lectures on Tibetan language, literature, and philosophy for the purpose of preserving Tibetan culture and enriching one's study of the Dharma."
] |
1,767
|
"Do I Wanna Know?" was released as a single by Arctic Monkeys in June 2013, in advance of which album?
|
AM
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Do I Wanna Know?",
"AM (Arctic Monkeys album)"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"\"I Heard I Had\" is the second single from Canadian indie rock band Dear Rouge.",
" The song has been considered the band's breakout hit, climbing to #3 on the Canadian alternative rock chart without any label or release backing it.",
" In a press release, lead singer Danielle McTaggart said \"The lyrics of the song are about a person who has 'fires' (corruption, crimes, etc.) all around them, yet do not want to put them out.",
" They know that they will be caught eventually, but enjoy it so much that they do not want to put them out.\"",
".",
" The band has also said that the song was partly inspired by the TV series Breaking Bad.",
" For 2014 it was the most played alternative rock song of the year in Canada behind only Kongos and Arctic Monkeys."
],
"title": "I Heard I Had"
},
{
"sentences": [
"AM is the fifth studio album by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys.",
" It was produced by James Ford and co-produced by Ross Orton at Sage & Sound Recording in Los Angeles and Rancho De La Luna in Joshua Tree, California, and released in September 2013 through Domino.",
" The album was promoted by the singles \"R U Mine?",
"\", \"Do I Wanna Know?",
"\", \"Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High?",
"\", \"One for the Road\", \"Arabella\", and \"Snap Out of It\".",
" It features guest appearances by Josh Homme, Bill Ryder-Jones, and Pete Thomas."
],
"title": "AM (Arctic Monkeys album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys?",
" was the second EP by the Sheffield indie rock band Arctic Monkeys, first released on 24 April 2006 (see 2006 in British music).",
" The EP includes \"The View from the Afternoon\", the opening track of their first album \"Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not\", and four other songs."
],
"title": "Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys?"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"I Just Wanna Know\" is the debut single written & produced by British R&B singer-songwriter Taio Cruz, and the first from his debut album \"Departure\", which would be released a year and a half after this single.",
" The single was released on 4 November 2006, via digital download, and two days later physically.",
" It charted on the UK Singles Chart at #29.",
" Despite having a lower peak position than his second single, \"Moving On\", \"I Just Wanna Know\" managed six weeks inside the UK top 75 compared to the four weeks \"Moving On\" charted for.",
" The single is the only of Cruz's releases to be made available on two physical single formats.",
" The B-side, \"Backseat Love\", features rapper Erick Sermon."
],
"title": "I Just Wanna Know"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Do I Wanna Know?\"",
" is a song recorded by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys for their fifth studio album \"AM\" (2013).",
" The song was released as a single on 18 June 2013 together with an accompanying music video, and afterwards became available for digital download via iTunes.",
" A 7\" vinyl edition of the single was released on 22 July 2013, with a B-side titled \"2013\"."
],
"title": "Do I Wanna Know?"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Five Minutes with Arctic Monkeys\" is the debut single by Sheffield band Arctic Monkeys.",
" Released on 30 May 2005, it featured a re-recording of fan favourite \"Fake Tales of San Francisco\" and new song and B-side \"From the Ritz to the Rubble\".",
" It was a limited release by Bang Bang Recordings – a label created by the band for the sole purpose of releasing the single.",
" The name, Bang Bang, was mooted as a replacement band name, on the basis that the name Arctic Monkeys sounded \"silly\"."
],
"title": "Five Minutes with Arctic Monkeys"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Don't Forget Who You Are\" is a song by the English musician Miles Kane from his second studio album \"Don't Forget Who You Are\" It was released on 3 June 2013 as a Digital download in the United Kingdom.",
" I's B-side \"Get Right\" was co-written by Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner, who plays bass guitar on the song.",
" The song is featured on the EA Sports video game \"FIFA 14\"."
],
"title": "Don't Forget Who You Are (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wheels Are Turnin' is the eleventh studio album by REO Speedwagon, released in late 1984 (see 1984 in music).",
" It is their second best-selling album, tied with \"Good Trouble\", reaching No. 7 on the \"Billboard\" 200.",
" The lead single was \"I Do' Wanna Know,\" which stalled at #29 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100.",
" But the second single, \"Can't Fight This Feeling,\" was REO's second and longest-running number one single.",
" Other singles released were \"One Lonely Night\" and \"Live Every Moment\".",
" These singles also reached the Top 40 of the \"Billboard\" Hot 100, reaching #19 and #34, respectively.",
" The singles from the album also had success on other \"Billboard\" charts: \"Can't Fight This Feeling\" and \"I Do' Wanna Know\" each reached #5 on the Mainstream Rock chart, with \"One Lonely Night reaching #17, and \"Can't Fight This Feeling\" and \"One Lonely Night\" reached #3 and #10, respectively on the Adult Contemporary chart."
],
"title": "Wheels Are Turnin'"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Fake Tales of San Francisco\" is a song by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys originally released on the band's first EP \"Five Minutes with Arctic Monkeys\" in May 2005.",
" After being featured on the band's debut album \"Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not\", the song was released as a radio only single in the United States instead of \"Leave Before the Lights Come On\", which was released there at the end of October.",
" The song was also released in the Netherlands, where it reached number 31 on the Dutch Singles Chart.",
" The song was popular on alternative rock radio in the U.S. in late 2006, but ultimately did not chart on the \"Billboard\" Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart."
],
"title": "Fake Tales of San Francisco"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"The View from the Afternoon\" is a song by Arctic Monkeys originally released as the opening track on the band's first album \"Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not\" in January 2006.",
" It was also the lead track on the \"Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys?",
"\" EP.",
" This release had an accompanying video.",
" Although never released as a single the song is a staple of live concerts by the band."
],
"title": "The View from the Afternoon"
}
] |
[
"Title: I Heard I Had\n\n\"I Heard I Had\" is the second single from Canadian indie rock band Dear Rouge. The song has been considered the band's breakout hit, climbing to #3 on the Canadian alternative rock chart without any label or release backing it. In a press release, lead singer Danielle McTaggart said \"The lyrics of the song are about a person who has 'fires' (corruption, crimes, etc.) all around them, yet do not want to put them out. They know that they will be caught eventually, but enjoy it so much that they do not want to put them out.\" . The band has also said that the song was partly inspired by the TV series Breaking Bad. For 2014 it was the most played alternative rock song of the year in Canada behind only Kongos and Arctic Monkeys.",
"Title: AM (Arctic Monkeys album)\n\nAM is the fifth studio album by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys. It was produced by James Ford and co-produced by Ross Orton at Sage & Sound Recording in Los Angeles and Rancho De La Luna in Joshua Tree, California, and released in September 2013 through Domino. The album was promoted by the singles \"R U Mine? \", \"Do I Wanna Know? \", \"Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High? \", \"One for the Road\", \"Arabella\", and \"Snap Out of It\". It features guest appearances by Josh Homme, Bill Ryder-Jones, and Pete Thomas.",
"Title: Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys?\n\nWho the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys? was the second EP by the Sheffield indie rock band Arctic Monkeys, first released on 24 April 2006 (see 2006 in British music). The EP includes \"The View from the Afternoon\", the opening track of their first album \"Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not\", and four other songs.",
"Title: I Just Wanna Know\n\n\"I Just Wanna Know\" is the debut single written & produced by British R&B singer-songwriter Taio Cruz, and the first from his debut album \"Departure\", which would be released a year and a half after this single. The single was released on 4 November 2006, via digital download, and two days later physically. It charted on the UK Singles Chart at #29. Despite having a lower peak position than his second single, \"Moving On\", \"I Just Wanna Know\" managed six weeks inside the UK top 75 compared to the four weeks \"Moving On\" charted for. The single is the only of Cruz's releases to be made available on two physical single formats. The B-side, \"Backseat Love\", features rapper Erick Sermon.",
"Title: Do I Wanna Know?\n\n\"Do I Wanna Know?\" is a song recorded by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys for their fifth studio album \"AM\" (2013). The song was released as a single on 18 June 2013 together with an accompanying music video, and afterwards became available for digital download via iTunes. A 7\" vinyl edition of the single was released on 22 July 2013, with a B-side titled \"2013\".",
"Title: Five Minutes with Arctic Monkeys\n\n\"Five Minutes with Arctic Monkeys\" is the debut single by Sheffield band Arctic Monkeys. Released on 30 May 2005, it featured a re-recording of fan favourite \"Fake Tales of San Francisco\" and new song and B-side \"From the Ritz to the Rubble\". It was a limited release by Bang Bang Recordings – a label created by the band for the sole purpose of releasing the single. The name, Bang Bang, was mooted as a replacement band name, on the basis that the name Arctic Monkeys sounded \"silly\".",
"Title: Don't Forget Who You Are (song)\n\n\"Don't Forget Who You Are\" is a song by the English musician Miles Kane from his second studio album \"Don't Forget Who You Are\" It was released on 3 June 2013 as a Digital download in the United Kingdom. I's B-side \"Get Right\" was co-written by Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner, who plays bass guitar on the song. The song is featured on the EA Sports video game \"FIFA 14\".",
"Title: Wheels Are Turnin'\n\nWheels Are Turnin' is the eleventh studio album by REO Speedwagon, released in late 1984 (see 1984 in music). It is their second best-selling album, tied with \"Good Trouble\", reaching No. 7 on the \"Billboard\" 200. The lead single was \"I Do' Wanna Know,\" which stalled at #29 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. But the second single, \"Can't Fight This Feeling,\" was REO's second and longest-running number one single. Other singles released were \"One Lonely Night\" and \"Live Every Moment\". These singles also reached the Top 40 of the \"Billboard\" Hot 100, reaching #19 and #34, respectively. The singles from the album also had success on other \"Billboard\" charts: \"Can't Fight This Feeling\" and \"I Do' Wanna Know\" each reached #5 on the Mainstream Rock chart, with \"One Lonely Night reaching #17, and \"Can't Fight This Feeling\" and \"One Lonely Night\" reached #3 and #10, respectively on the Adult Contemporary chart.",
"Title: Fake Tales of San Francisco\n\n\"Fake Tales of San Francisco\" is a song by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys originally released on the band's first EP \"Five Minutes with Arctic Monkeys\" in May 2005. After being featured on the band's debut album \"Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not\", the song was released as a radio only single in the United States instead of \"Leave Before the Lights Come On\", which was released there at the end of October. The song was also released in the Netherlands, where it reached number 31 on the Dutch Singles Chart. The song was popular on alternative rock radio in the U.S. in late 2006, but ultimately did not chart on the \"Billboard\" Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart.",
"Title: The View from the Afternoon\n\n\"The View from the Afternoon\" is a song by Arctic Monkeys originally released as the opening track on the band's first album \"Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not\" in January 2006. It was also the lead track on the \"Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys? \" EP. This release had an accompanying video. Although never released as a single the song is a staple of live concerts by the band."
] |
1,768
|
What ethnicity is the person James Newton Howard scored nine of his films for?
|
Indian American
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"James Newton Howard",
"M. Night Shyamalan"
],
"sent_id": [
3,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Gaili Schoen (born Susan Gaili Schoen, in Venice, California) is an American film composer, orchestrator, and pianist.",
" She is best known for her scores for the films \"Festival in Cannes\" starring Maximilian Schell, Anouk Aimée, Ron Silver, and Greta Scacchi, and \"Déjà Vu\", starring Stephen Dillane and Vanessa Redgrave, both directed by Henry Jaglom.",
" Her television work includes the score for the 2007 PBS documentary \"Annie Leibovitz: A Life Through A Lens\" which she composed with score producer James Newton Howard.",
" Schoen composed a 52-piece orchestral score for the 2008 feature film \"Noble Things\" starring Michael Parks, Ryan Hurst, and country singer Lee Ann Womack, and scored the 2011 documentary \"The Ghost of War\", about the RMS Queen Mary."
],
"title": "Gaili Schoen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Where the Dream Takes You\" is a song by American recording artist Mýa, written by songwriter Diane Warren and composer James Newton Howard to promote Walt Disney Pictures' 41st animated feature film \"\" (2001).",
" Produced by Jay Selvester, Robbie Buchanan and Ron Fair, the song was released as the only promotional single from the film's on June 5, 2001."
],
"title": "Where the Dream Takes You"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Lady Love Me (One More Time)\" is a single recorded and released by George Benson.",
" It was written by David Paich and James Newton Howard, both of whom were associated with rock band Toto, Paich being a member and Howard a frequent collaborator.",
" The song was produced by Arif Mardin.",
" While the single was moderately successful in the United States, charting at #30 on the Billboard Hot 100, #21 on the Soul singles chart and #4 on the Adult Contemporary chart, it was markedly more successful in the United Kingdom.",
" The single entered the UK Singles Chart on 21 May 1983.",
" It reached a peak position of number 11, and remained in the chart for 10 weeks."
],
"title": "Lady Love Me (One More Time)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Green Lantern: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is a soundtrack to the film of the same name, and it was released in stores on June 14, 2011.",
" The soundtrack was composed by James Newton Howard, who also worked on the other Warner Bros/DC Comics based films \"Batman Begins\" and \"The Dark Knight\" with Hans Zimmer.",
" The soundtrack was published by WaterTower Music."
],
"title": "Green Lantern (soundtrack)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jeff Atmajian (born 1960 in Fresno, California) is an arranger and orchestrator for films.",
" His steady clientele are composers such as James Newton Howard, Marc Shaiman, Rachel Portman, Mark Watters, John Debney and Gabriel Yared.",
" In the past two years Jeff has been pursuing a more high-profile composing career.",
" Recently he scored the 90-minute documentary about the Armenian Genocide called \"Screamers\"."
],
"title": "Jeff Atmajian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Conrad Pope is an American film composer and orchestrator.",
" He has worked on numerous films and has collaborated with composers such as John Williams, James Newton Howard, Alan Silvestri, Danny Elfman, Mark Isham, James Horner, John Powell, Alexandre Desplat, and Howard Shore."
],
"title": "Conrad Pope"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Newton Howard (born June 9, 1951) is an American composer, conductor, music producer and musician.",
" He has scored over 100 films and is the recipient of a Grammy Award, Emmy Award, and eight Academy Award nominations.",
" His film scores include \"Pretty Woman\" (1990), \"The Prince of Tides\" (1991), \"The Fugitive\" (1993), \"The Devil's Advocate\" (1997), \"The Sixth Sense\" (1999), \"Dinosaur\" (2000), \"\" (2001), \"Treasure Planet\" (2002), \"Signs\" (2002), \"The Village\" (2004), \"King Kong\" (2005), \"Batman Begins\" (2005), \"I Am Legend\" (2007), \"Blood Diamond\" (2006), \"The Dark Knight\" (2008), \"The Bourne Legacy\" (2012), \"The Hunger Games\" series (2012–2015), \"Nightcrawler\" (2014) and \"Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them\" (2016).",
" He has collaborated with directors M. Night Shyamalan, having scored nine of his films since \"The Sixth Sense,\" and Francis Lawrence, having scored all of his films since \"I Am Legend\"."
],
"title": "James Newton Howard"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang (released in the United States and Canada as Nanny McPhee Returns) is a 2010 fantasy comedy family film directed by Susanna White, produced by Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner and Lindsay Doran with music by James Newton Howard and co-produced by StudioCanal, Relativity Media, Working Title Films and Three Strange Angels.",
" It is a sequel to the 2005 film \"Nanny McPhee\".",
" It was adapted by Emma Thompson from Christianna Brand's \"Nurse Matilda\" books.",
" Thompson reprises her role as Nanny McPhee, and the film also stars Maggie Gyllenhaal, Ralph Fiennes, Rhys Ifans, Ewan McGregor, Asa Butterfield and Dame Maggie Smith.",
" The film was theatrically released on August 20, 2010 by Universal Pictures."
],
"title": "Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Happening is the soundtrack to the 2008 film of the same name, composed by James Newton Howard.",
" It was released on June 3, 2008.",
" This album is the sixth collaboration between composer James Newton Howard and M. Night Shyamalan.",
" The main theme is a simple rhythmic motif of three notes followed by a grace note to the fourth note, sometimes played as a minor second and sometimes as a minor third.",
" The soundtrack was recorded at the Sony Scoring Stage."
],
"title": "The Happening (2008 soundtrack)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Manoj Nelliyattu \"M. Night\" Shyamalan ( ; ; \"Maṉōj Nelliyāṭṭu Śyāmaḷaṉ\"; Tamil: மனோஜ் நெல்லியட்டு ஷியாமளன் ; Malayalam: മനോജ് നെല്ലിയാട്ട് ശ്യാമളന് born 6 August 1970) is an Indian American film director, screenwriter, author, producer, and actor known for making movies with contemporary supernatural plots and surprise endings.",
" His most well-received films include the supernatural horror thriller \"The Sixth Sense\" (1999), the superhero drama thriller \"Unbreakable\" (2000), and the science fiction thriller \"Signs\" (2002).",
" Afterwards, Shyamalan released a series of poorly received but sometimes financially successful movies, including the historical drama-horror film \"The Village\" (2004), the fantasy film \"Lady in the Water\" (2006), the disaster film \"The Happening\" (2008), the film adaptation of \"The Last Airbender\" (2010), and the science-fiction film \"After Earth\" (2013).",
" Following the financial failure of \"After Earth,\" Shyalaman's career was revived with the release of the found footage horror \"The Visit\" (2015) and the psychological horror \"Split\" (2016), the latter of which is set in the same universe as his previous film \"Unbreakable\".",
" He is also known for producing \"Devil\" (2010), as well as being instrumental in the creation of the Fox science fiction series \"Wayward Pines."
],
"title": "M. Night Shyamalan"
}
] |
[
"Title: Gaili Schoen\n\nGaili Schoen (born Susan Gaili Schoen, in Venice, California) is an American film composer, orchestrator, and pianist. She is best known for her scores for the films \"Festival in Cannes\" starring Maximilian Schell, Anouk Aimée, Ron Silver, and Greta Scacchi, and \"Déjà Vu\", starring Stephen Dillane and Vanessa Redgrave, both directed by Henry Jaglom. Her television work includes the score for the 2007 PBS documentary \"Annie Leibovitz: A Life Through A Lens\" which she composed with score producer James Newton Howard. Schoen composed a 52-piece orchestral score for the 2008 feature film \"Noble Things\" starring Michael Parks, Ryan Hurst, and country singer Lee Ann Womack, and scored the 2011 documentary \"The Ghost of War\", about the RMS Queen Mary.",
"Title: Where the Dream Takes You\n\n\"Where the Dream Takes You\" is a song by American recording artist Mýa, written by songwriter Diane Warren and composer James Newton Howard to promote Walt Disney Pictures' 41st animated feature film \"\" (2001). Produced by Jay Selvester, Robbie Buchanan and Ron Fair, the song was released as the only promotional single from the film's on June 5, 2001.",
"Title: Lady Love Me (One More Time)\n\n\"Lady Love Me (One More Time)\" is a single recorded and released by George Benson. It was written by David Paich and James Newton Howard, both of whom were associated with rock band Toto, Paich being a member and Howard a frequent collaborator. The song was produced by Arif Mardin. While the single was moderately successful in the United States, charting at #30 on the Billboard Hot 100, #21 on the Soul singles chart and #4 on the Adult Contemporary chart, it was markedly more successful in the United Kingdom. The single entered the UK Singles Chart on 21 May 1983. It reached a peak position of number 11, and remained in the chart for 10 weeks.",
"Title: Green Lantern (soundtrack)\n\nGreen Lantern: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is a soundtrack to the film of the same name, and it was released in stores on June 14, 2011. The soundtrack was composed by James Newton Howard, who also worked on the other Warner Bros/DC Comics based films \"Batman Begins\" and \"The Dark Knight\" with Hans Zimmer. The soundtrack was published by WaterTower Music.",
"Title: Jeff Atmajian\n\nJeff Atmajian (born 1960 in Fresno, California) is an arranger and orchestrator for films. His steady clientele are composers such as James Newton Howard, Marc Shaiman, Rachel Portman, Mark Watters, John Debney and Gabriel Yared. In the past two years Jeff has been pursuing a more high-profile composing career. Recently he scored the 90-minute documentary about the Armenian Genocide called \"Screamers\".",
"Title: Conrad Pope\n\nConrad Pope is an American film composer and orchestrator. He has worked on numerous films and has collaborated with composers such as John Williams, James Newton Howard, Alan Silvestri, Danny Elfman, Mark Isham, James Horner, John Powell, Alexandre Desplat, and Howard Shore.",
"Title: James Newton Howard\n\nJames Newton Howard (born June 9, 1951) is an American composer, conductor, music producer and musician. He has scored over 100 films and is the recipient of a Grammy Award, Emmy Award, and eight Academy Award nominations. His film scores include \"Pretty Woman\" (1990), \"The Prince of Tides\" (1991), \"The Fugitive\" (1993), \"The Devil's Advocate\" (1997), \"The Sixth Sense\" (1999), \"Dinosaur\" (2000), \"\" (2001), \"Treasure Planet\" (2002), \"Signs\" (2002), \"The Village\" (2004), \"King Kong\" (2005), \"Batman Begins\" (2005), \"I Am Legend\" (2007), \"Blood Diamond\" (2006), \"The Dark Knight\" (2008), \"The Bourne Legacy\" (2012), \"The Hunger Games\" series (2012–2015), \"Nightcrawler\" (2014) and \"Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them\" (2016). He has collaborated with directors M. Night Shyamalan, having scored nine of his films since \"The Sixth Sense,\" and Francis Lawrence, having scored all of his films since \"I Am Legend\".",
"Title: Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang\n\nNanny McPhee and the Big Bang (released in the United States and Canada as Nanny McPhee Returns) is a 2010 fantasy comedy family film directed by Susanna White, produced by Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner and Lindsay Doran with music by James Newton Howard and co-produced by StudioCanal, Relativity Media, Working Title Films and Three Strange Angels. It is a sequel to the 2005 film \"Nanny McPhee\". It was adapted by Emma Thompson from Christianna Brand's \"Nurse Matilda\" books. Thompson reprises her role as Nanny McPhee, and the film also stars Maggie Gyllenhaal, Ralph Fiennes, Rhys Ifans, Ewan McGregor, Asa Butterfield and Dame Maggie Smith. The film was theatrically released on August 20, 2010 by Universal Pictures.",
"Title: The Happening (2008 soundtrack)\n\nThe Happening is the soundtrack to the 2008 film of the same name, composed by James Newton Howard. It was released on June 3, 2008. This album is the sixth collaboration between composer James Newton Howard and M. Night Shyamalan. The main theme is a simple rhythmic motif of three notes followed by a grace note to the fourth note, sometimes played as a minor second and sometimes as a minor third. The soundtrack was recorded at the Sony Scoring Stage.",
"Title: M. Night Shyamalan\n\nManoj Nelliyattu \"M. Night\" Shyamalan ( ; ; \"Maṉōj Nelliyāṭṭu Śyāmaḷaṉ\"; Tamil: மனோஜ் நெல்லியட்டு ஷியாமளன் ; Malayalam: മനോജ് നെല്ലിയാട്ട് ശ്യാമളന് born 6 August 1970) is an Indian American film director, screenwriter, author, producer, and actor known for making movies with contemporary supernatural plots and surprise endings. His most well-received films include the supernatural horror thriller \"The Sixth Sense\" (1999), the superhero drama thriller \"Unbreakable\" (2000), and the science fiction thriller \"Signs\" (2002). Afterwards, Shyamalan released a series of poorly received but sometimes financially successful movies, including the historical drama-horror film \"The Village\" (2004), the fantasy film \"Lady in the Water\" (2006), the disaster film \"The Happening\" (2008), the film adaptation of \"The Last Airbender\" (2010), and the science-fiction film \"After Earth\" (2013). Following the financial failure of \"After Earth,\" Shyalaman's career was revived with the release of the found footage horror \"The Visit\" (2015) and the psychological horror \"Split\" (2016), the latter of which is set in the same universe as his previous film \"Unbreakable\". He is also known for producing \"Devil\" (2010), as well as being instrumental in the creation of the Fox science fiction series \"Wayward Pines."
] |
1,769
|
Which of the following is known for his works of fiction especially "The Screwtape Letters": Storm Jameson or C. S. Lewis?
|
Clive Staples Lewis
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Storm Jameson",
"C. S. Lewis",
"C. S. Lewis"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0,
2
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The World's Last Night and Other Essays is a collection of essays by C. S. Lewis published in the United States in 1960.",
" The title essay is about the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.",
" The volume also contains a follow-up to his \"The Screwtape Letters\" in the form of \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast.\"",
" The second, fourth and fifth pieces were published in the U.K. in a volume called \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast and other pieces\" (1965); the first, sixth and seventh were published in the U.K. in \"Fern-seed and Elephants and other essays on Christianity\" (1975).",
" All the pieces were later collected in the comprehensive \"Essay Collection and Other Short Pieces\" (2000)."
],
"title": "The World's Last Night and Other Essays"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Farinata degli Uberti (Florence, 1212 – Florence, 11 November 1264), real name Manente degli Uberti, was an Italian aristocrat and military leader, considered by some of his contemporaries to be a heretic.",
" He is remembered mostly for his appearance in Dante Alighieri's \"Inferno\" and is mentioned in C.S. Lewis's short \"sequel\" to \"The Screwtape Letters,\" \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast.\""
],
"title": "Farinata degli Uberti"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Clive Staples Lewis (29 November 1898 – 22 November 1963) was a British novelist, poet, academic, medievalist, literary critic, essayist, lay theologian, broadcaster, lecturer, and Christian apologist.",
" He held academic positions at both Oxford University (Magdalen College, 1925–1954) and Cambridge University (Magdalene College, 1954–1963).",
" He is best known for his works of fiction, especially \"The Screwtape Letters\", \"The Chronicles of Narnia\", and \"The Space Trilogy\", and for his non-fiction Christian apologetics, such as \"Mere Christianity\", \"Miracles\", and \"The Problem of Pain\"."
],
"title": "C. S. Lewis"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Max McLean is the founder and artistic director of Fellowship for Performing Arts, a New York City-based producer of live theater from a Christian worldview.",
" McLean conceived, adapted, produced and starred in \"The Screwtape Letters\", a play based on the book by Oxford and Cambridge scholar, author and fantasy writer C.S. Lewis.",
" His stage adaptation of Lewis’ \"The Great Divorce\" launched its national tour in late 2013.",
" McLean adapted, co-directed and starred in \"C.S. Lewis Onstage: The Most Reluctant Convert\", and co-wrote and produced \"Martin Luther on Trial\".",
" McLean also is the narrator of The Listener's Bible."
],
"title": "Max McLean"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Peters Fraser and Dunlop (PFD) is a talent and literary agency based in London, England.",
" One of the oldest agencies in Britain, and a co-founder of the Association of Authors' Agents, it is home to a distinguished and varied client list, including Jeanette Winterson, Ruby Wax, Steve Peters, Helen Rappaport, Simon Schama, William Hague, Sarah Raven, Twiggy, Sir Max Hastings, Chris Patten, Bear Grylls, Valentine Warner, Philip Norman and such estates as V.S. Pritchett, E.M. Forster, Georges Simenon, Margery Allingham C.S. Forester, Robert Bolt, Edmund Crispin and Storm Jameson."
],
"title": "Peters, Fraser & Dunlop"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Margaret Storm Jameson (8 January 1891 – 30 September 1986) was an English journalist and author, known for her novels and reviews."
],
"title": "Storm Jameson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Called to Arms is a progressive metal band started in Raleigh, North Carolina in 2003.",
" They are currently signed to Tragic Hero Records and they recorded their most recent album with Jamie King, which was released digitally August 10, 2010.",
" The album is based on \"The Screwtape Letters\" written by C. S. Lewis."
],
"title": "Called to Arms"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Malcolm Routh Jameson (December 21, 1891 – April 16, 1945), commonly known as Malcolm Jameson, was an American science fiction author.",
" An officer in the US Navy, he was active in American pulp magazines during the Golden Age of Science Fiction.",
" His writing career began when complications of throat cancer limited his activity.",
" According to John W. Campbell Jr., Jameson \"had much to do with the development of modern [c.1945] naval ordnance.\""
],
"title": "Malcolm Jameson"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Screwtape appears as a fictional devil in the book \"The Screwtape Letters\" (1942) and in its sequel short story \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast\" (1959), both written by the Christian author C. S. Lewis.",
" Screwtape is also the title of the stage adaptation of the \"Letters\" by James Forsyth (originally \"Dear Wormwood\", 1961)."
],
"title": "Screwtape"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Screwtape Letters is a Christian apologetic novel by C. S. Lewis.",
" It is written in a satirical, epistolary style and while it is fictional in format, the plot and characters are used to address Christian theological issues, primarily those to do with temptation and resistance to it.",
" First published in February 1942, the story takes the form of a series of letters from a senior Demon Screwtape to his nephew Wormwood, a Junior Tempter.",
" The uncle's mentorship pertains to the nephew's responsibility in securing the damnation of a British man known only as \"the Patient\"."
],
"title": "The Screwtape Letters"
}
] |
[
"Title: The World's Last Night and Other Essays\n\nThe World's Last Night and Other Essays is a collection of essays by C. S. Lewis published in the United States in 1960. The title essay is about the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. The volume also contains a follow-up to his \"The Screwtape Letters\" in the form of \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast.\" The second, fourth and fifth pieces were published in the U.K. in a volume called \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast and other pieces\" (1965); the first, sixth and seventh were published in the U.K. in \"Fern-seed and Elephants and other essays on Christianity\" (1975). All the pieces were later collected in the comprehensive \"Essay Collection and Other Short Pieces\" (2000).",
"Title: Farinata degli Uberti\n\nFarinata degli Uberti (Florence, 1212 – Florence, 11 November 1264), real name Manente degli Uberti, was an Italian aristocrat and military leader, considered by some of his contemporaries to be a heretic. He is remembered mostly for his appearance in Dante Alighieri's \"Inferno\" and is mentioned in C.S. Lewis's short \"sequel\" to \"The Screwtape Letters,\" \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast.\"",
"Title: C. S. Lewis\n\nClive Staples Lewis (29 November 1898 – 22 November 1963) was a British novelist, poet, academic, medievalist, literary critic, essayist, lay theologian, broadcaster, lecturer, and Christian apologist. He held academic positions at both Oxford University (Magdalen College, 1925–1954) and Cambridge University (Magdalene College, 1954–1963). He is best known for his works of fiction, especially \"The Screwtape Letters\", \"The Chronicles of Narnia\", and \"The Space Trilogy\", and for his non-fiction Christian apologetics, such as \"Mere Christianity\", \"Miracles\", and \"The Problem of Pain\".",
"Title: Max McLean\n\nMax McLean is the founder and artistic director of Fellowship for Performing Arts, a New York City-based producer of live theater from a Christian worldview. McLean conceived, adapted, produced and starred in \"The Screwtape Letters\", a play based on the book by Oxford and Cambridge scholar, author and fantasy writer C.S. Lewis. His stage adaptation of Lewis’ \"The Great Divorce\" launched its national tour in late 2013. McLean adapted, co-directed and starred in \"C.S. Lewis Onstage: The Most Reluctant Convert\", and co-wrote and produced \"Martin Luther on Trial\". McLean also is the narrator of The Listener's Bible.",
"Title: Peters, Fraser & Dunlop\n\nPeters Fraser and Dunlop (PFD) is a talent and literary agency based in London, England. One of the oldest agencies in Britain, and a co-founder of the Association of Authors' Agents, it is home to a distinguished and varied client list, including Jeanette Winterson, Ruby Wax, Steve Peters, Helen Rappaport, Simon Schama, William Hague, Sarah Raven, Twiggy, Sir Max Hastings, Chris Patten, Bear Grylls, Valentine Warner, Philip Norman and such estates as V.S. Pritchett, E.M. Forster, Georges Simenon, Margery Allingham C.S. Forester, Robert Bolt, Edmund Crispin and Storm Jameson.",
"Title: Storm Jameson\n\nMargaret Storm Jameson (8 January 1891 – 30 September 1986) was an English journalist and author, known for her novels and reviews.",
"Title: Called to Arms\n\nCalled to Arms is a progressive metal band started in Raleigh, North Carolina in 2003. They are currently signed to Tragic Hero Records and they recorded their most recent album with Jamie King, which was released digitally August 10, 2010. The album is based on \"The Screwtape Letters\" written by C. S. Lewis.",
"Title: Malcolm Jameson\n\nMalcolm Routh Jameson (December 21, 1891 – April 16, 1945), commonly known as Malcolm Jameson, was an American science fiction author. An officer in the US Navy, he was active in American pulp magazines during the Golden Age of Science Fiction. His writing career began when complications of throat cancer limited his activity. According to John W. Campbell Jr., Jameson \"had much to do with the development of modern [c.1945] naval ordnance.\"",
"Title: Screwtape\n\nScrewtape appears as a fictional devil in the book \"The Screwtape Letters\" (1942) and in its sequel short story \"Screwtape Proposes a Toast\" (1959), both written by the Christian author C. S. Lewis. Screwtape is also the title of the stage adaptation of the \"Letters\" by James Forsyth (originally \"Dear Wormwood\", 1961).",
"Title: The Screwtape Letters\n\nThe Screwtape Letters is a Christian apologetic novel by C. S. Lewis. It is written in a satirical, epistolary style and while it is fictional in format, the plot and characters are used to address Christian theological issues, primarily those to do with temptation and resistance to it. First published in February 1942, the story takes the form of a series of letters from a senior Demon Screwtape to his nephew Wormwood, a Junior Tempter. The uncle's mentorship pertains to the nephew's responsibility in securing the damnation of a British man known only as \"the Patient\"."
] |
1,770
|
Who is older, tennis player Roger Taylor or Kathy Jordan?
|
Roger Taylor
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Roger Taylor (tennis)",
"Kathy Jordan"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"First-seeded Martina Navratilova defeated ninth-seeded Kathy Jordan 6–2, 7–6 in the final to win the Women's Singles title at the 1983 Australian Open tennis tournament.",
" The tournament was played on grass courts at the Kooyong Stadium in Melbourne from 29 November through 11 December 1983.",
" Navratilova earned $75,000 prize money for winning the title, her 8th career Grand Slam singles title and her 2nd title at the Australian Open after 1981.",
" She improved her year record to 86 wins and 1 loss.",
" This tournament was also notable for being the first Australian Open in which Steffi Graf appeared in the main draw, and the last time that Billie Jean King appeared in the main singles draw of a grand slam."
],
"title": "1983 Australian Open – Women's Singles"
},
{
"sentences": [
"This is a list of the main career statistics of Swiss professional tennis player Roger Federer.",
" All statistics are according to the ATP World Tour website.",
" To date, Federer has won ninety-three ATP singles titles including a record nineteen Grand Slam singles titles, twenty-six ATP Masters 1000 titles and a record six Year-End Championships.",
" Federer was also a Gold Medalist in men's doubles with Stan Wawrinka at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and a Silver Medalist in men's singles at the 2012 London Olympics.",
" Representing Switzerland, Federer also won the 2001 Hopman Cup and the 2014 Davis Cup."
],
"title": "Roger Federer career statistics"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1982 Avon Championships of Boston was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the Boston University Walter Brown Arena in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States that was part of the 1982 Avon Championships circuit.",
" It was the ninth edition of the tournament and was held from March 15 through March 21, 1982.",
" Unseeded Kathy Jordan won the singles title and earned $30,000 first-prize money."
],
"title": "1982 Avon Championships of Boston"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Roger Taylor MBE (born 14 October 1941) is a British former tennis player.",
" Born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, he won 6 singles titles and 10 doubles titles during his career.",
" He achieved success at several Grand Slam tournaments, reaching the quarter-finals of the French Open in 1973, the semi-finals of Wimbledon during the same year and winning back to back US Open Men's Doubles titles in 1971 and 1972.",
" He also enjoyed particular success in 1970, again reaching the semi-finals of Wimbledon, where he achieved a big upset win over defending champion Rod Laver en route, and the semi-finals of the Australian Open.",
" Taylor also reached the semi-finals at Wimbledon in 1967.",
" His career-high ATP singles ranking was World No. 11, though Taylor was ranked World No. 8 in 1970 before the ATP rankings began."
],
"title": "Roger Taylor (tennis)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kathryn \"Kathy\" Jordan (born December 3, 1959) is a former American tennis player.",
" During her career, she won seven Grand Slam titles, five of them in women's doubles and two in mixed doubles.",
" She also was the 1983 Australian Open women's singles runner-up and won three singles titles and 42 doubles titles."
],
"title": "Kathy Jordan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Swiss tennis player Roger Federer's main accomplishments as a junior player came at Wimbledon, where, in 1998, he won both the singles tournament over Irakli Labadze, in straight sets, and the doubles with Olivier Rochus, over the team of Michaël Llodra and Andy Ram, also in straight sets.",
" In addition, Federer was a runner-up at the US Open Junior tournament in 1998, losing the final to David Nalbandian.",
" Federer would go on to win four other junior singles tournaments in his career."
],
"title": "Roger Federer junior years"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ismail El-Shafei (Arabic: إسماعيل الشافعي ) (born 15 November 1947) is a former Head of the Egyptian Tennis Federation and a member of the International Tennis Federation.",
" El Shafei is the only Egyptian player to make the Top 40 in Grand Prix/ATP ranking history.",
" He had the distinction of being one of only four players to beat Björn Borg at Wimbledon, knocking him out in the third round in 1974 (the other three were John McEnroe, Roger Taylor and Arthur Ashe.)"
],
"title": "Ismail El Shafei"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tennis player Roger Federer won his first Grand Slam title in the 2003 Wimbledon Championships, which he won it over Mark Philippoussis, 7–6, 6–2, 7–6.",
" Federer won his first and only doubles Masters Series 1000 Event in Miami with Max Mirnyi, and made it to one singles Masters Series 1000 final in Rome on clay, which he lost.",
" Federer made it to nine finals on the ATP Tour, of which he won seven, including the 500 series events at Dubai and Vienna.",
" Lastly, Federer won the Year-End Championships over Andre Agassi."
],
"title": "2003 Roger Federer tennis season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Miroslava \"Mirka\" Federer (born Miroslava Vavrincová on 1 April 1978, later Miroslava Vavrinec) is a Slovak-born Swiss former professional tennis player.",
" She reached her career-high WTA singles ranking of World No. 76 on 10 September 2001 and a doubles ranking of World No. 215 on 24 August 1998.",
" She is the wife of professional tennis player Roger Federer, having first met him at the 2000 Summer Olympics.",
" She retired from the game in 2002 due to a persistent foot injury.",
" She has since always been seen on the ATP circuit attending her husband's matches."
],
"title": "Mirka Federer"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Timothy Henry Henman (born 6 September 1974) is a retired British professional tennis player.",
" Henman played a serve-and-volley style of tennis.",
" He was the first male player from the United Kingdom since Roger Taylor in the 1970s to reach the semi-finals of the Wimbledon Men's Singles Championship.",
" Henman never reached the finals of any Grand Slam but reached six Grand Slam semifinals and won 15 career ATP titles (11 in singles and four in doubles), including the Paris Masters in 2003.",
" Also, he scored 40 wins and 14 losses with the Great Britain Davis Cup team."
],
"title": "Tim Henman"
}
] |
[
"Title: 1983 Australian Open – Women's Singles\n\nFirst-seeded Martina Navratilova defeated ninth-seeded Kathy Jordan 6–2, 7–6 in the final to win the Women's Singles title at the 1983 Australian Open tennis tournament. The tournament was played on grass courts at the Kooyong Stadium in Melbourne from 29 November through 11 December 1983. Navratilova earned $75,000 prize money for winning the title, her 8th career Grand Slam singles title and her 2nd title at the Australian Open after 1981. She improved her year record to 86 wins and 1 loss. This tournament was also notable for being the first Australian Open in which Steffi Graf appeared in the main draw, and the last time that Billie Jean King appeared in the main singles draw of a grand slam.",
"Title: Roger Federer career statistics\n\nThis is a list of the main career statistics of Swiss professional tennis player Roger Federer. All statistics are according to the ATP World Tour website. To date, Federer has won ninety-three ATP singles titles including a record nineteen Grand Slam singles titles, twenty-six ATP Masters 1000 titles and a record six Year-End Championships. Federer was also a Gold Medalist in men's doubles with Stan Wawrinka at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and a Silver Medalist in men's singles at the 2012 London Olympics. Representing Switzerland, Federer also won the 2001 Hopman Cup and the 2014 Davis Cup.",
"Title: 1982 Avon Championships of Boston\n\nThe 1982 Avon Championships of Boston was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the Boston University Walter Brown Arena in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States that was part of the 1982 Avon Championships circuit. It was the ninth edition of the tournament and was held from March 15 through March 21, 1982. Unseeded Kathy Jordan won the singles title and earned $30,000 first-prize money.",
"Title: Roger Taylor (tennis)\n\nRoger Taylor MBE (born 14 October 1941) is a British former tennis player. Born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, he won 6 singles titles and 10 doubles titles during his career. He achieved success at several Grand Slam tournaments, reaching the quarter-finals of the French Open in 1973, the semi-finals of Wimbledon during the same year and winning back to back US Open Men's Doubles titles in 1971 and 1972. He also enjoyed particular success in 1970, again reaching the semi-finals of Wimbledon, where he achieved a big upset win over defending champion Rod Laver en route, and the semi-finals of the Australian Open. Taylor also reached the semi-finals at Wimbledon in 1967. His career-high ATP singles ranking was World No. 11, though Taylor was ranked World No. 8 in 1970 before the ATP rankings began.",
"Title: Kathy Jordan\n\nKathryn \"Kathy\" Jordan (born December 3, 1959) is a former American tennis player. During her career, she won seven Grand Slam titles, five of them in women's doubles and two in mixed doubles. She also was the 1983 Australian Open women's singles runner-up and won three singles titles and 42 doubles titles.",
"Title: Roger Federer junior years\n\nSwiss tennis player Roger Federer's main accomplishments as a junior player came at Wimbledon, where, in 1998, he won both the singles tournament over Irakli Labadze, in straight sets, and the doubles with Olivier Rochus, over the team of Michaël Llodra and Andy Ram, also in straight sets. In addition, Federer was a runner-up at the US Open Junior tournament in 1998, losing the final to David Nalbandian. Federer would go on to win four other junior singles tournaments in his career.",
"Title: Ismail El Shafei\n\nIsmail El-Shafei (Arabic: إسماعيل الشافعي ) (born 15 November 1947) is a former Head of the Egyptian Tennis Federation and a member of the International Tennis Federation. El Shafei is the only Egyptian player to make the Top 40 in Grand Prix/ATP ranking history. He had the distinction of being one of only four players to beat Björn Borg at Wimbledon, knocking him out in the third round in 1974 (the other three were John McEnroe, Roger Taylor and Arthur Ashe.)",
"Title: 2003 Roger Federer tennis season\n\nTennis player Roger Federer won his first Grand Slam title in the 2003 Wimbledon Championships, which he won it over Mark Philippoussis, 7–6, 6–2, 7–6. Federer won his first and only doubles Masters Series 1000 Event in Miami with Max Mirnyi, and made it to one singles Masters Series 1000 final in Rome on clay, which he lost. Federer made it to nine finals on the ATP Tour, of which he won seven, including the 500 series events at Dubai and Vienna. Lastly, Federer won the Year-End Championships over Andre Agassi.",
"Title: Mirka Federer\n\nMiroslava \"Mirka\" Federer (born Miroslava Vavrincová on 1 April 1978, later Miroslava Vavrinec) is a Slovak-born Swiss former professional tennis player. She reached her career-high WTA singles ranking of World No. 76 on 10 September 2001 and a doubles ranking of World No. 215 on 24 August 1998. She is the wife of professional tennis player Roger Federer, having first met him at the 2000 Summer Olympics. She retired from the game in 2002 due to a persistent foot injury. She has since always been seen on the ATP circuit attending her husband's matches.",
"Title: Tim Henman\n\nTimothy Henry Henman (born 6 September 1974) is a retired British professional tennis player. Henman played a serve-and-volley style of tennis. He was the first male player from the United Kingdom since Roger Taylor in the 1970s to reach the semi-finals of the Wimbledon Men's Singles Championship. Henman never reached the finals of any Grand Slam but reached six Grand Slam semifinals and won 15 career ATP titles (11 in singles and four in doubles), including the Paris Masters in 2003. Also, he scored 40 wins and 14 losses with the Great Britain Davis Cup team."
] |
1,771
|
Ted Cain is a former football coach who coached in the college football ranks for over 30 years and coached American football quarterback for the Miami Dolphins and was traded to what team in 2009?
|
Chicago Bears
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Ted Cain",
"Ted Cain",
"Jay Cutler (American football)",
"Jay Cutler (American football)",
"Jay Cutler (American football)"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
3,
0,
1,
2
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"George William Wilson, Jr. (May 29, 1943 – August 6, 2011) was an American football player.",
" He played college football at Xavier University and professionally for the American Football League's (AFL) 1966 expansion team, the Miami Dolphins.",
" In 1965, Wilson was selected in the 20th round of the National Football League draft by the Detroit Lions, with the overall 277th pick.",
" However, he eventually signed with the AFL's Buffalo Bills, who drafted him as the 96th pick in the 12th round of the Red Shirt draft.",
" In 1966, Wilson was traded to the Miami Dolphins in exchange for a 13th round 1967 draft pick.",
" At the time, the Dolphins' head coach was his father, George Wilson, Sr."
],
"title": "George Wilson (quarterback)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dennis Fryzel (February 21, 1942 – July 6, 2009) was the last head football coach at the University of Tampa.",
" He was the captain of the football team at Garfield Heights High School, where he lost his teeth to on-the-field injuries.",
" He attended Denison University, where he played football and ran track.",
" Although offered a tryout by the Boston Patriots, he was unable to bulk up enough to accept.",
" He entered the coaching ranks with jobs at his former high school, Columbia University, and Williams College, before being offered the defensive coordinator position by Tampa head coach Earle Bruce.",
" Fryzel took over the head coaching position when Bruce was offered a job at Iowa State University the next year.",
" Fryzel coached for two years at the University of Tampa, before the program was disbanded.",
" Ironically, Fryzel, who had become the fourth UT head coach in as many years, had given assurances on his hiring that he intended to serve out his three-year contract, and not use it to serve as a springboard to a higher-profile job.",
" Fryzel then took the position of special teams coordinator with the expansion NFL Tampa Bay Buccaneers.",
" After one year, he returned to the college ranks and served as defensive coordinator at Syracuse University and Air Force, before rejoining Bruce at Ohio State University.",
" After being fired (along with Nick Saban and Steve Szabo) following the 1981 Liberty Bowl, Fryzel retired from coaching.",
" Saban, who calls Fryzel a \"great mentor\" and included him on the sideline at Alabama games, credits him with helping him to make up his mind to leave the Miami Dolphins and take the University of Alabama coaching job.",
" He died in July 2009 of renal cancer."
],
"title": "Dennis Fryzel"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bryan Keith Cox (born February 17, 1968) is an American football coach and former player.",
" His most recent position was as the defensive line coach for the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League (NFL).",
" He played college football for Western Illinois University, a small college football program, but received attention for his aggressive style of play.",
" Although Cox was a relatively late fifth-round pick by the Miami Dolphins in the 1991 NFL Draft, he rose to prominence as a standout linebacker during his twelve NFL seasons from 1991 through 2002.",
" He was a three-time pro bowler with the Miami Dolphins, and was also a member of the New England Patriots club that won Super Bowl XXXVI."
],
"title": "Bryan Cox"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kyle Erickson Mackey (born March 2, 1962) is an American Football coach and former American football quarterback who played for the New York Jets, St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Eagles, and the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League.",
" He was also an Arena Football League player, who played quarterback for the Albany Firebirds and the Fort Worth Cavalry.",
" He played college football at Texas A&M University-Commerce from 1980-1983 where he was an All-American and led the Lions to the 1983 Lone Star Conference Championship.",
" His father was Dee Mackey, a former tight end for the New York Jets."
],
"title": "Kyle Mackey"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Errick Lynne \"Ricky\" Williams Jr. (born May 21, 1977) is a retired American football running back who played twelve seasons in the National Football League (NFL) and one season in the Canadian Football League (CFL).",
" He played college football for the University of Texas, where he was a two-time All-American and won the Heisman Trophy.",
" Williams was drafted by the New Orleans Saints fifth overall in the 1999 NFL Draft and spent three seasons with the team before he was traded to the Miami Dolphins in 2002.",
" He played for the Dolphins for two seasons, and retired for the first time from football in 2004.",
" Due to his suspension from the NFL in 2006, he played for the Toronto Argonauts that year.",
" Williams re-joined the Dolphins in 2007 and played with them until 2010, and spent the 2011 season with the Baltimore Ravens.",
" He was formerly an assistant football coach at the University of the Incarnate Word and is currently a football analyst for ESPN's Longhorn Network.",
" In 2015, Williams was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame."
],
"title": "Ricky Williams"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Coley (born April 14, 1973) is an American football coach.",
" He is the wide receivers coach at the University of Georgia and the former offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at the University of Miami.",
" Coley, a Miami native who played quarterback at Miami Senior High School and worked in the National Football League (NFL) as an offensive assistant and quality control coach with the Miami Dolphins, has coached some of the top talent in college football at the high school, college and pro levels.",
" His coaching resumé includes stops at 2003 National Champion Louisiana State University and 2002 Florida 6A State Champion Miami Norland Senior High School, in addition to his experiences with the Miami Dolphins.",
" Coley was labelled and considered the ACC top recruiter by ESPN recruiting.",
" Coley is considered to be an ace recruiter in the talent-rich South Florida area.",
" He was also named the top recruiter in the conference."
],
"title": "James Coley"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Stephen Spence Clark (born August 2, 1960) is a former professional American football player who played [[defensive tackle]and offensive guard ] for five seasons for the [[Miami Dolphins]].",
" He also played on two state championship teams in high school which were a combined (25-1) over two years and was a five team all-American including \"Parade Magazine\", he was also named Most Valuable Player of the state of Utah.",
" At the University of Utah he was named two time All-WAC defensive tackle, Defensive Most Valuable Player of the Western Athletic Conference and First Team All-American.",
" He also played in the East-West Shrine Game and was named MVP of the Senior Bowl.",
" After the Senior Bowl he was drafted by Don Shula and The Miami Dolphins, his second year in the NFL he played both ways in a pre-season game and Coach Shula knew he had a guy that could back up every position on the offensive and defensive line as well as long snap.",
" He earned a starting position at right guard and played against [[William Perry (American football)|the Fridge]] when the Dolphins beat the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football to help keep the undefeated Dolphin record intact.",
" In the NFL, he also played on two Super Bowl teams with the Miami Dolphins and was the starting right guard before being injured.",
" Just recently Steve was named to the top 100 greatest players in the history of the University of Utah actually being named 9th best of All-Time."
],
"title": "Steve Clark (American football)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ted Cain (born c. 1952) is a former American football coach who coached in the college football ranks for over 30 years.",
" He is the former offensive coordinator, former special teams coordinator, and former tight-ends coach at Vanderbilt.",
" He was at Vanderbilt as offensive coordinator and tight ends coach for 9 years under head coach Bobby Johnson whom he followed to Nashville from Furman, his alma mater, and later as tight-ends coach and special teams coordinator under head coach Robbie Caldwell.",
" He coached standouts Jay Cutler and Earl Bennett, both of whom were voted All-SEC during their time in Nashville.",
" Cain started his career in 1977 at Furman and remained there until the 1986 season, where he took over as North Carolina State's offensive coordinator and tight ends coach.",
" He served as offensive coordinator until the 1997 season, when he was hired as the head coach at the Virginia Military Institute."
],
"title": "Ted Cain"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Steven Kent Crosby (born July 3, 1950) is an American football coach and former National Football League (NFL) running back.",
" He last coached special teams for the San Diego Chargers in 2010.",
" Crosby was named the NFL Special Teams Coach of the Year in 2007, and he has spent 33 years in the NFL—3 as a player, 4 as a scout and 26 as a coach.",
" He played for the New York Giants from 1974–1976.",
" Afterwards he scouted or coached in the NFL for the Miami Dolphins, Atlanta Falcons, Cleveland Browns, New England Patriots and the Philadelphia Eagles.",
" He then coached college football for three years at Vanderbilt University before joining the Chargers in 2002."
],
"title": "Steve Crosby"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jay Christopher Cutler (born April 29, 1983) is an American football quarterback for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL).",
" He played college football at Vanderbilt and was drafted by the Denver Broncos in the first round of the 2006 NFL Draft, for whom he played for three seasons.",
" In 2009, he was traded to the Chicago Bears, where he played for eight seasons."
],
"title": "Jay Cutler (American football)"
}
] |
[
"Title: George Wilson (quarterback)\n\nGeorge William Wilson, Jr. (May 29, 1943 – August 6, 2011) was an American football player. He played college football at Xavier University and professionally for the American Football League's (AFL) 1966 expansion team, the Miami Dolphins. In 1965, Wilson was selected in the 20th round of the National Football League draft by the Detroit Lions, with the overall 277th pick. However, he eventually signed with the AFL's Buffalo Bills, who drafted him as the 96th pick in the 12th round of the Red Shirt draft. In 1966, Wilson was traded to the Miami Dolphins in exchange for a 13th round 1967 draft pick. At the time, the Dolphins' head coach was his father, George Wilson, Sr.",
"Title: Dennis Fryzel\n\nDennis Fryzel (February 21, 1942 – July 6, 2009) was the last head football coach at the University of Tampa. He was the captain of the football team at Garfield Heights High School, where he lost his teeth to on-the-field injuries. He attended Denison University, where he played football and ran track. Although offered a tryout by the Boston Patriots, he was unable to bulk up enough to accept. He entered the coaching ranks with jobs at his former high school, Columbia University, and Williams College, before being offered the defensive coordinator position by Tampa head coach Earle Bruce. Fryzel took over the head coaching position when Bruce was offered a job at Iowa State University the next year. Fryzel coached for two years at the University of Tampa, before the program was disbanded. Ironically, Fryzel, who had become the fourth UT head coach in as many years, had given assurances on his hiring that he intended to serve out his three-year contract, and not use it to serve as a springboard to a higher-profile job. Fryzel then took the position of special teams coordinator with the expansion NFL Tampa Bay Buccaneers. After one year, he returned to the college ranks and served as defensive coordinator at Syracuse University and Air Force, before rejoining Bruce at Ohio State University. After being fired (along with Nick Saban and Steve Szabo) following the 1981 Liberty Bowl, Fryzel retired from coaching. Saban, who calls Fryzel a \"great mentor\" and included him on the sideline at Alabama games, credits him with helping him to make up his mind to leave the Miami Dolphins and take the University of Alabama coaching job. He died in July 2009 of renal cancer.",
"Title: Bryan Cox\n\nBryan Keith Cox (born February 17, 1968) is an American football coach and former player. His most recent position was as the defensive line coach for the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for Western Illinois University, a small college football program, but received attention for his aggressive style of play. Although Cox was a relatively late fifth-round pick by the Miami Dolphins in the 1991 NFL Draft, he rose to prominence as a standout linebacker during his twelve NFL seasons from 1991 through 2002. He was a three-time pro bowler with the Miami Dolphins, and was also a member of the New England Patriots club that won Super Bowl XXXVI.",
"Title: Kyle Mackey\n\nKyle Erickson Mackey (born March 2, 1962) is an American Football coach and former American football quarterback who played for the New York Jets, St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Eagles, and the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League. He was also an Arena Football League player, who played quarterback for the Albany Firebirds and the Fort Worth Cavalry. He played college football at Texas A&M University-Commerce from 1980-1983 where he was an All-American and led the Lions to the 1983 Lone Star Conference Championship. His father was Dee Mackey, a former tight end for the New York Jets.",
"Title: Ricky Williams\n\nErrick Lynne \"Ricky\" Williams Jr. (born May 21, 1977) is a retired American football running back who played twelve seasons in the National Football League (NFL) and one season in the Canadian Football League (CFL). He played college football for the University of Texas, where he was a two-time All-American and won the Heisman Trophy. Williams was drafted by the New Orleans Saints fifth overall in the 1999 NFL Draft and spent three seasons with the team before he was traded to the Miami Dolphins in 2002. He played for the Dolphins for two seasons, and retired for the first time from football in 2004. Due to his suspension from the NFL in 2006, he played for the Toronto Argonauts that year. Williams re-joined the Dolphins in 2007 and played with them until 2010, and spent the 2011 season with the Baltimore Ravens. He was formerly an assistant football coach at the University of the Incarnate Word and is currently a football analyst for ESPN's Longhorn Network. In 2015, Williams was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.",
"Title: James Coley\n\nJames Coley (born April 14, 1973) is an American football coach. He is the wide receivers coach at the University of Georgia and the former offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at the University of Miami. Coley, a Miami native who played quarterback at Miami Senior High School and worked in the National Football League (NFL) as an offensive assistant and quality control coach with the Miami Dolphins, has coached some of the top talent in college football at the high school, college and pro levels. His coaching resumé includes stops at 2003 National Champion Louisiana State University and 2002 Florida 6A State Champion Miami Norland Senior High School, in addition to his experiences with the Miami Dolphins. Coley was labelled and considered the ACC top recruiter by ESPN recruiting. Coley is considered to be an ace recruiter in the talent-rich South Florida area. He was also named the top recruiter in the conference.",
"Title: Steve Clark (American football)\n\nStephen Spence Clark (born August 2, 1960) is a former professional American football player who played [[defensive tackle]and offensive guard ] for five seasons for the [[Miami Dolphins]]. He also played on two state championship teams in high school which were a combined (25-1) over two years and was a five team all-American including \"Parade Magazine\", he was also named Most Valuable Player of the state of Utah. At the University of Utah he was named two time All-WAC defensive tackle, Defensive Most Valuable Player of the Western Athletic Conference and First Team All-American. He also played in the East-West Shrine Game and was named MVP of the Senior Bowl. After the Senior Bowl he was drafted by Don Shula and The Miami Dolphins, his second year in the NFL he played both ways in a pre-season game and Coach Shula knew he had a guy that could back up every position on the offensive and defensive line as well as long snap. He earned a starting position at right guard and played against [[William Perry (American football)|the Fridge]] when the Dolphins beat the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football to help keep the undefeated Dolphin record intact. In the NFL, he also played on two Super Bowl teams with the Miami Dolphins and was the starting right guard before being injured. Just recently Steve was named to the top 100 greatest players in the history of the University of Utah actually being named 9th best of All-Time.",
"Title: Ted Cain\n\nTed Cain (born c. 1952) is a former American football coach who coached in the college football ranks for over 30 years. He is the former offensive coordinator, former special teams coordinator, and former tight-ends coach at Vanderbilt. He was at Vanderbilt as offensive coordinator and tight ends coach for 9 years under head coach Bobby Johnson whom he followed to Nashville from Furman, his alma mater, and later as tight-ends coach and special teams coordinator under head coach Robbie Caldwell. He coached standouts Jay Cutler and Earl Bennett, both of whom were voted All-SEC during their time in Nashville. Cain started his career in 1977 at Furman and remained there until the 1986 season, where he took over as North Carolina State's offensive coordinator and tight ends coach. He served as offensive coordinator until the 1997 season, when he was hired as the head coach at the Virginia Military Institute.",
"Title: Steve Crosby\n\nSteven Kent Crosby (born July 3, 1950) is an American football coach and former National Football League (NFL) running back. He last coached special teams for the San Diego Chargers in 2010. Crosby was named the NFL Special Teams Coach of the Year in 2007, and he has spent 33 years in the NFL—3 as a player, 4 as a scout and 26 as a coach. He played for the New York Giants from 1974–1976. Afterwards he scouted or coached in the NFL for the Miami Dolphins, Atlanta Falcons, Cleveland Browns, New England Patriots and the Philadelphia Eagles. He then coached college football for three years at Vanderbilt University before joining the Chargers in 2002.",
"Title: Jay Cutler (American football)\n\nJay Christopher Cutler (born April 29, 1983) is an American football quarterback for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Vanderbilt and was drafted by the Denver Broncos in the first round of the 2006 NFL Draft, for whom he played for three seasons. In 2009, he was traded to the Chicago Bears, where he played for eight seasons."
] |
1,772
|
What is the name of the class guided missile destroyer named for the female who was a pioneer of computer programming responsible for inventing one of the first compiler related tools?
|
USS "Hopper"
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"USS Hopper",
"Grace Hopper"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Isaac Campbell Kidd (March 26, 1884 – December 7, 1941) was an American Rear Admiral in the United States Navy.",
" Kidd was killed on the bridge of USS \"Arizona\" during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.",
" He was the father of Admiral Isaac C. Kidd, Jr. He was a posthumous recipient of his nation's highest military honor—the Medal of Honor.",
" The highest ranking casualty at Pearl Harbor, he became the first U.S. Navy flag officer killed in action in World War II as well as the first killed in action against any foreign enemy.",
" A \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer , \"Kidd\" (DD-661) , was commissioned in his honor on April 23, 1943.",
" The second ship named after him, \"Kidd\" (DDG-993) , lead ship of four \"Kidd\"-class destroyer s, was commissioned on March 27, 1981.",
" An \"Arleigh Burke\"-class guided missile destroyer, \"Kidd\" (DDG-100) , was the third ship named after him and was commissioned on June 9, 2007."
],
"title": "Isaac C. Kidd"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USS \"Cole\" (DDG-67) is an \"Arleigh Burke\"-class Aegis-equipped guided missile destroyer homeported in Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia.",
" \"Cole\" is named in honor of Marine Sergeant Darrell S. Cole, a machine-gunner killed in action on Iwo Jima on 19 February 1945, during World War II.",
" \"Cole\" is one of 62 authorized \"Arleigh Burke\"-class guided missile destroyers, and one of 21 members of the Flight I-class that utilized the 5 in /54 caliber gun mounts found on the earliest of the \"Arleigh Burke\"-class destroyers.",
" The ship was built by Ingalls Shipbuilding and was delivered to the Navy on 11 March 1996."
],
"title": "USS Cole (DDG-67)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USS \"Hopper\" (DDG-70) is an \"Arleigh Burke\"-class guided missile destroyer of the United States Navy, named for the pioneering computer scientist Rear Admiral \"Amazing\" Grace Hopper."
],
"title": "USS Hopper"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (; December 9, 1906 – January 1, 1992) was an American computer scientist and United States Navy rear admiral.",
" One of the first programmers of the Harvard Mark I computer, she was a pioneer of computer programming who invented one of the first compiler related tools.",
" She popularized the idea of machine-independent programming languages, which led to the development of COBOL, an early high-level programming language still in use today."
],
"title": "Grace Hopper"
},
{
"sentences": [
"HMS \"Hampshire\" was a County-class destroyer of the Royal Navy.",
" Laid down, in March 1959 a couple of weeks behind the class leader \"Devonshire\" , she was classified as a guided missile destroyer, as the Sea Lords regarded the concept of the cruiser and big gun ship as discredited by the perceived failure of the \"Tiger\" class and the obsolescence of the heavy gun.",
" The description of guided missile destroyer seemed more likely to win approval from the Treasury and Government for an adequate number of warships the size of small cruisers, which could play many traditional cruiser flagship and command functions, but had no armour around its gun and missile magazine."
],
"title": "HMS Hampshire (D06)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USS \"Dahlgren\" (DLG-12/DDG-43) was the 7th ship in the \"Farragut\"-class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy.",
" She was launched on 16 March 1960 by Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and sponsored by Mrs. Katharine D. Cromwell, granddaughter of Rear Admiral John Adolphus Dahlgren.",
" She was commissioned on 8 April 1961, Commander C. E. Landis in command.",
" It was the third ship in the Navy to bear the name.",
" Commissioned as DLG-12, \"Dahlgren\" was reclassified a guided missile destroyer on July 1, 1975 and given the new hull number DDG-43.",
" The ship saw service until 1992, when she was placed in reserve.",
" She was sold for scrapping three times, the first time in 1994, but was repossessed twice as the ship breaking companies failed.",
" The ship was finally dismantled in 2006."
],
"title": "USS Dahlgren (DDG-43)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USS \"Mahan\" (DDG-42), was a \"Farragut\"-class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy.",
" She was named for Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan USN (1840–1914).",
" The ship was Laid down as DLG-11 by the San Francisco Naval Shipyard on 31 July 1957 and launched on 7 October 1959.",
" \"Mahan\" was sponsored by Mrs. H. P. Smith, wife of Vice Adm. Harold Page Smith, and commissioned on 25 December 1960.",
" \"Mahan\" was reclassified as a guided missile destroyer on 30 June 1975 and designated DDG-42.",
" USS \"Mahan\" was decommissioned on 15 June 1993 and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on the same day."
],
"title": "USS Mahan (DDG-42)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Holly Ann Graf is a retired Captain in the United States Navy.",
" Until January 2010 she was commanding officer of the \"Ticonderoga\"-class guided missile cruiser USS \"Cowpens\" (CG-63), a major surface combatant vessel of the fleet.",
" She was the first woman to command a cruiser in the history of the U.S. Navy.",
" Earlier, she had been the first woman in the U.S. Navy to command a destroyer when she served as skipper of the guided missile destroyer USS \"Winston S. Churchill\" (DDG-81).",
" Her personal decorations include the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star, among others.",
" Graf was relieved of command for abusive behavior unbecoming of an officer and was featured in Time magazine that characterized her as a modern-day female \"Captain Bligh.\"",
" The US Navy forced Graf into early retirement in 2012, but allowed her to do so at her current rank of Captain and under \"honorable circumstances.\""
],
"title": "Holly Graf"
},
{
"sentences": [
"USS \"Bainbridge\" (DLGN-25/CGN-25) was a nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser in the United States Navy, the only ship of her class.",
" Named in honor of Commodore William Bainbridge, she was the fourth US Navy ship to bear the name.",
" With her original hull classification symbol of DLGN (nuclear-powered guided missile destroyer leader, called a \"frigate\" at the time), she was the first nuclear-powered destroyer-type ship in the US Navy, and shared her name with the lead ship of the first US Navy destroyer class, the \"Bainbridge\"-class destroyer s."
],
"title": "USS Bainbridge (CGN-25)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 18 \"Forrest Sherman\"-class destroyers were the first US post-war destroyers (DD-927 to DD-930 were completed as destroyer leader configurations).",
" Commissioned beginning in 1955, these ships served until the late 1980s.",
" Their weaponry underwent considerable modification during their years of service.",
" Four were converted to guided missile destroyers.",
" This class also served as the basis for the \"Charles F. Adams\"-class guided missile destroyer."
],
"title": "Forrest Sherman-class destroyer"
}
] |
[
"Title: Isaac C. Kidd\n\nIsaac Campbell Kidd (March 26, 1884 – December 7, 1941) was an American Rear Admiral in the United States Navy. Kidd was killed on the bridge of USS \"Arizona\" during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. He was the father of Admiral Isaac C. Kidd, Jr. He was a posthumous recipient of his nation's highest military honor—the Medal of Honor. The highest ranking casualty at Pearl Harbor, he became the first U.S. Navy flag officer killed in action in World War II as well as the first killed in action against any foreign enemy. A \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer , \"Kidd\" (DD-661) , was commissioned in his honor on April 23, 1943. The second ship named after him, \"Kidd\" (DDG-993) , lead ship of four \"Kidd\"-class destroyer s, was commissioned on March 27, 1981. An \"Arleigh Burke\"-class guided missile destroyer, \"Kidd\" (DDG-100) , was the third ship named after him and was commissioned on June 9, 2007.",
"Title: USS Cole (DDG-67)\n\nUSS \"Cole\" (DDG-67) is an \"Arleigh Burke\"-class Aegis-equipped guided missile destroyer homeported in Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia. \"Cole\" is named in honor of Marine Sergeant Darrell S. Cole, a machine-gunner killed in action on Iwo Jima on 19 February 1945, during World War II. \"Cole\" is one of 62 authorized \"Arleigh Burke\"-class guided missile destroyers, and one of 21 members of the Flight I-class that utilized the 5 in /54 caliber gun mounts found on the earliest of the \"Arleigh Burke\"-class destroyers. The ship was built by Ingalls Shipbuilding and was delivered to the Navy on 11 March 1996.",
"Title: USS Hopper\n\nUSS \"Hopper\" (DDG-70) is an \"Arleigh Burke\"-class guided missile destroyer of the United States Navy, named for the pioneering computer scientist Rear Admiral \"Amazing\" Grace Hopper.",
"Title: Grace Hopper\n\nGrace Brewster Murray Hopper (; December 9, 1906 – January 1, 1992) was an American computer scientist and United States Navy rear admiral. One of the first programmers of the Harvard Mark I computer, she was a pioneer of computer programming who invented one of the first compiler related tools. She popularized the idea of machine-independent programming languages, which led to the development of COBOL, an early high-level programming language still in use today.",
"Title: HMS Hampshire (D06)\n\nHMS \"Hampshire\" was a County-class destroyer of the Royal Navy. Laid down, in March 1959 a couple of weeks behind the class leader \"Devonshire\" , she was classified as a guided missile destroyer, as the Sea Lords regarded the concept of the cruiser and big gun ship as discredited by the perceived failure of the \"Tiger\" class and the obsolescence of the heavy gun. The description of guided missile destroyer seemed more likely to win approval from the Treasury and Government for an adequate number of warships the size of small cruisers, which could play many traditional cruiser flagship and command functions, but had no armour around its gun and missile magazine.",
"Title: USS Dahlgren (DDG-43)\n\nUSS \"Dahlgren\" (DLG-12/DDG-43) was the 7th ship in the \"Farragut\"-class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy. She was launched on 16 March 1960 by Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and sponsored by Mrs. Katharine D. Cromwell, granddaughter of Rear Admiral John Adolphus Dahlgren. She was commissioned on 8 April 1961, Commander C. E. Landis in command. It was the third ship in the Navy to bear the name. Commissioned as DLG-12, \"Dahlgren\" was reclassified a guided missile destroyer on July 1, 1975 and given the new hull number DDG-43. The ship saw service until 1992, when she was placed in reserve. She was sold for scrapping three times, the first time in 1994, but was repossessed twice as the ship breaking companies failed. The ship was finally dismantled in 2006.",
"Title: USS Mahan (DDG-42)\n\nUSS \"Mahan\" (DDG-42), was a \"Farragut\"-class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy. She was named for Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan USN (1840–1914). The ship was Laid down as DLG-11 by the San Francisco Naval Shipyard on 31 July 1957 and launched on 7 October 1959. \"Mahan\" was sponsored by Mrs. H. P. Smith, wife of Vice Adm. Harold Page Smith, and commissioned on 25 December 1960. \"Mahan\" was reclassified as a guided missile destroyer on 30 June 1975 and designated DDG-42. USS \"Mahan\" was decommissioned on 15 June 1993 and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on the same day.",
"Title: Holly Graf\n\nHolly Ann Graf is a retired Captain in the United States Navy. Until January 2010 she was commanding officer of the \"Ticonderoga\"-class guided missile cruiser USS \"Cowpens\" (CG-63), a major surface combatant vessel of the fleet. She was the first woman to command a cruiser in the history of the U.S. Navy. Earlier, she had been the first woman in the U.S. Navy to command a destroyer when she served as skipper of the guided missile destroyer USS \"Winston S. Churchill\" (DDG-81). Her personal decorations include the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star, among others. Graf was relieved of command for abusive behavior unbecoming of an officer and was featured in Time magazine that characterized her as a modern-day female \"Captain Bligh.\" The US Navy forced Graf into early retirement in 2012, but allowed her to do so at her current rank of Captain and under \"honorable circumstances.\"",
"Title: USS Bainbridge (CGN-25)\n\nUSS \"Bainbridge\" (DLGN-25/CGN-25) was a nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser in the United States Navy, the only ship of her class. Named in honor of Commodore William Bainbridge, she was the fourth US Navy ship to bear the name. With her original hull classification symbol of DLGN (nuclear-powered guided missile destroyer leader, called a \"frigate\" at the time), she was the first nuclear-powered destroyer-type ship in the US Navy, and shared her name with the lead ship of the first US Navy destroyer class, the \"Bainbridge\"-class destroyer s.",
"Title: Forrest Sherman-class destroyer\n\nThe 18 \"Forrest Sherman\"-class destroyers were the first US post-war destroyers (DD-927 to DD-930 were completed as destroyer leader configurations). Commissioned beginning in 1955, these ships served until the late 1980s. Their weaponry underwent considerable modification during their years of service. Four were converted to guided missile destroyers. This class also served as the basis for the \"Charles F. Adams\"-class guided missile destroyer."
] |
1,773
|
Which American Major League Basball team did Joe Kennedy play for that plays at the Rogers Centre?
|
The Toronto Blue Jays
|
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|
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|
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"The 2017 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 41st season of the franchise in the American League East division of Major League Baseball, and the 27th full season of play (28th overall) at Rogers Centre.",
" For the first time since the 2014 season, the Blue Jays failed to make it to the postseason, finishing fourth in the AL East with a 76–86 record."
],
"title": "2017 Toronto Blue Jays season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2007 CFL season was the 54th season of modern Canadian professional football.",
" Officially, it was the 50th season of the league, and many special events were held to commemorate the event.",
" Regular-season play began on June 28, 2007 at the Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario and concluded on Saturday, November 3, 2007.",
" The playoffs began on Sunday, November 11, 2007, and ended with the championship game, the 95th Grey Cup, at the Rogers Centre in Toronto, on November 25, 2007, with the Saskatchewan Roughriders as champion."
],
"title": "2007 CFL season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Joseph Darley Kennedy (May 24, 1979 – November 23, 2007) was an American Major League Baseball left-handed pitcher.",
" He pitched from 2001 to 2007 for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Colorado Rockies, Oakland Athletics, Arizona Diamondbacks, and the Toronto Blue Jays."
],
"title": "Joe Kennedy (baseball)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2018 Toronto Blue Jays season will be the 42nd season of the franchise in the American League East division of Major League Baseball (MLB), and the 28th full season of play (29th overall) at Rogers Centre."
],
"title": "2018 Toronto Blue Jays season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2016 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 40th season of the franchise in the American League East division of Major League Baseball, and the 27th full season of play (28th overall) at Rogers Centre.",
" They advanced to the playoffs where they defeated the Baltimore Orioles in the Wild Card Game and the Texas Rangers in the Division Series, before losing to the Cleveland Indians in five games in the American League Championship Series."
],
"title": "2016 Toronto Blue Jays season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2011 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 35th season of Major League Baseball's Toronto Blue Jays franchise, and the 22nd full season of play (23rd overall) at the Rogers Centre.",
" It was also the first season with John Farrell as the team's manager.",
" The Blue Jays had an up-and-down season, finishing with an 81–81 record, in fourth place in the American League East."
],
"title": "2011 Toronto Blue Jays season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2009 Toronto Blue Jays season was the franchise's 33rd in Major League Baseball, and the 20th full season of play at the Rogers Centre.",
" The team was managed by Cito Gaston, who was hired by the team midway through the 2008 season.",
" General Manager J. P. Ricciardi was fired on the penultimate day of the season, as the team again failed to make the playoffs.",
" He was replaced by Assistant General Manager Alex Anthopoulos."
],
"title": "2009 Toronto Blue Jays season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Toronto Blue Jays are a Canadian professional baseball team based in Toronto, Ontario.",
" The Blue Jays compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) East division.",
" The team plays its home games at the Rogers Centre."
],
"title": "Toronto Blue Jays"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2010 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 34th season of Major League Baseball's Toronto Blue Jays franchise, and the team's 21st full season of play (22nd overall) at the Rogers Centre.",
" The 2010 season was the first under general manager Alex Anthopoulos, who replaced J. P. Ricciardi after the 2009 season."
],
"title": "2010 Toronto Blue Jays season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2012 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 36th season of Major League Baseball's Toronto Blue Jays franchise, and the 23rd full season of play (24th overall) at the Rogers Centre.",
" Their opening game was played on April 5 against the Cleveland Indians in Cleveland.",
" The Blue Jays finished 73–89, in fourth place in the American League East."
],
"title": "2012 Toronto Blue Jays season"
}
] |
[
"Title: 2017 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2017 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 41st season of the franchise in the American League East division of Major League Baseball, and the 27th full season of play (28th overall) at Rogers Centre. For the first time since the 2014 season, the Blue Jays failed to make it to the postseason, finishing fourth in the AL East with a 76–86 record.",
"Title: 2007 CFL season\n\nThe 2007 CFL season was the 54th season of modern Canadian professional football. Officially, it was the 50th season of the league, and many special events were held to commemorate the event. Regular-season play began on June 28, 2007 at the Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario and concluded on Saturday, November 3, 2007. The playoffs began on Sunday, November 11, 2007, and ended with the championship game, the 95th Grey Cup, at the Rogers Centre in Toronto, on November 25, 2007, with the Saskatchewan Roughriders as champion.",
"Title: Joe Kennedy (baseball)\n\nJoseph Darley Kennedy (May 24, 1979 – November 23, 2007) was an American Major League Baseball left-handed pitcher. He pitched from 2001 to 2007 for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Colorado Rockies, Oakland Athletics, Arizona Diamondbacks, and the Toronto Blue Jays.",
"Title: 2018 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2018 Toronto Blue Jays season will be the 42nd season of the franchise in the American League East division of Major League Baseball (MLB), and the 28th full season of play (29th overall) at Rogers Centre.",
"Title: 2016 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2016 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 40th season of the franchise in the American League East division of Major League Baseball, and the 27th full season of play (28th overall) at Rogers Centre. They advanced to the playoffs where they defeated the Baltimore Orioles in the Wild Card Game and the Texas Rangers in the Division Series, before losing to the Cleveland Indians in five games in the American League Championship Series.",
"Title: 2011 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2011 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 35th season of Major League Baseball's Toronto Blue Jays franchise, and the 22nd full season of play (23rd overall) at the Rogers Centre. It was also the first season with John Farrell as the team's manager. The Blue Jays had an up-and-down season, finishing with an 81–81 record, in fourth place in the American League East.",
"Title: 2009 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2009 Toronto Blue Jays season was the franchise's 33rd in Major League Baseball, and the 20th full season of play at the Rogers Centre. The team was managed by Cito Gaston, who was hired by the team midway through the 2008 season. General Manager J. P. Ricciardi was fired on the penultimate day of the season, as the team again failed to make the playoffs. He was replaced by Assistant General Manager Alex Anthopoulos.",
"Title: Toronto Blue Jays\n\nThe Toronto Blue Jays are a Canadian professional baseball team based in Toronto, Ontario. The Blue Jays compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) East division. The team plays its home games at the Rogers Centre.",
"Title: 2010 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2010 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 34th season of Major League Baseball's Toronto Blue Jays franchise, and the team's 21st full season of play (22nd overall) at the Rogers Centre. The 2010 season was the first under general manager Alex Anthopoulos, who replaced J. P. Ricciardi after the 2009 season.",
"Title: 2012 Toronto Blue Jays season\n\nThe 2012 Toronto Blue Jays season was the 36th season of Major League Baseball's Toronto Blue Jays franchise, and the 23rd full season of play (24th overall) at the Rogers Centre. Their opening game was played on April 5 against the Cleveland Indians in Cleveland. The Blue Jays finished 73–89, in fourth place in the American League East."
] |
1,774
|
In what year was the university where Taede A. Smedes received his Ph.D founded?
|
1614
|
bridge
|
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|
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"Taede A. Smedes",
"University of Groningen"
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[
{
"sentences": [
"Dr. Hossein Sadri (born October 9, 1979) is an Iranian architect, critic and activist.",
" He is currently working as an associate professor of architecture at Girne American University where he was holding the position of the dean of the Faculty of Architecture, Design & Fine Arts between 2012-2016 He studied architecture and received his Master of Science degree at Islamic Azad University of Tabriz in 2005.",
" He completed his Ph.D. studies at Gazi University in 2010 with a TUBITAK Ph.D.",
" Fellowship., His Ph.D. dissertation entitled Architecture and Human Rights was an interdisciplinary studies and the first thesis which introduced the main motivation of human rights in the field of architecture.",
" He is one of the founding members of AUMME (Architecture and Urbanism in the Mediterranean and the Middle East), the regional academic and professional network in the field of architecture and the chair of its 2nd conference in 2014.",
" As the chair of the second CAUMME-Contemporary Architecture and Urbanism in the Mediterranean and the Middle-East International Conference, he introduced the concept of Post-Professionalism in the field of architecture."
],
"title": "Hossein Sadri"
},
{
"sentences": [
"He topped Quaid-i-Azam University by setting an all-time Computer Science Department record of a cumulative grade point average (CGPA) of 4.9 on a scale of 5.0.",
" In result, he was awarded the Quaid-e-Azam Scholarship for higher studies abroad, which he used to receive his Master of Science (M.Sc) degree and his Ph.D. in computer science in the United States.",
" He completed his M.Sc.",
" in just one year at the University of Pennsylvania by securing a CGPA of 3.9 on a scale of 4.0.",
" He taught in Australia for around three years during his Ph.D.",
" He came back to Pakistan after fully completing his Ph.D., where he taught at Quaid-e-Azam University, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), and then Mohammad Ali Jinnah University."
],
"title": "M. Jaffar-ur-Rehman"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Very Right Reverend Monsignor John L. McNulty, Ph.D., (b. 1898) was an American Roman Catholic Domestic prelate and the 13th President of Seton Hall University.",
" McNulty received an A.B. (1921) and an M.A. (1922) from Seton Hall.",
" He received his Ph.D. from NYU in 1935 and a Dipl.",
" from d’ Écoles Supérieures at the Lille Catholic University in 1937.",
" McNulty was ordained a priest of the Roman Catholic Church in 1925.",
" He was an educator at Seton Hall University from 1928 and its president from 1949 - 1959.",
" McNulty was invested as a Domestic Prelate of His Holiness Pius XII in 1950.",
" Seton Hall University’s McNulty Hall, which is the University’s Technology and Research Center containing the famed “Atomic Wall” artwork depicting the gift of scientific knowledge from man to god, is named for the Right Reverend Dr. John McNulty.",
" Monsignor John Laurence McNulty established Seton Hall University’s Institute of Far Eastern Studies in 1951 in the midst of the Korean War."
],
"title": "John L. McNulty"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Li Feng (; born 1962), or Feng Li, is a professor of Early Chinese History and Archaeology at Columbia University, where he is director of graduate studies for the Department of East Asian Languages and Culture.",
" He received his MA in 1986 from the Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and his Ph.D. in 2000 from the University of Chicago.",
" He also did Ph.D. work in the University of Tokyo (1991).",
" He is both a field archaeologist and an historian of Early China with primary interest in bronze inscriptions of the Shang-Zhou period.",
" Li founded the Columbia Early China Seminar in 2002, and directed Columbia’s first archaeological field project in China, in the Shandong Peninsula, in 2006-2011."
],
"title": "Li Feng (sinologist)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Taede Anne Smedes (born July 3, 1973 in Drachten) is a Dutch philosopher of religion.",
" He received a Ph.D degree from the University of Groningen in 2004 for a thesis on \"Avoiding Balaam's Mistake: Exploring Divine Action in an Age of Scientism\"."
],
"title": "Taede A. Smedes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The University of Groningen (abbreviated as UG; Dutch: \"Rijksuniversiteit Groningen\" , abbreviated as \"RUG\") is a public research university in the city of Groningen in the Netherlands.",
" The university was founded in 1614 and is one of the oldest universities in the Netherlands as well as one of its largest.",
" Since its inception more than 200,000 students have graduated.",
" It is a member of the distinguished international Coimbra Group of European universities."
],
"title": "University of Groningen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Herman C. Quirmbach, Ph.D. (born October 6, 1950) is the Iowa State Senator from the 23rd District.",
" A Democrat, he has served in the Iowa Senate since 2003 and served on the Ames City Council from 1995 to 2003.",
" He received his B.A. from Harvard College and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton University, the Ph.D. in 1983, and is an associate professor of economics at Iowa State University.",
" "
],
"title": "Herman Quirmbach"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Anil Nerode (born 1932) is an American mathematician.",
" He received his undergraduate education and a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Chicago, the latter under the directions of Saunders Mac Lane.",
" He enrolled in the Hutchins College at the University of Chicago in 1947 at the age of 15, and received his Ph.D. in 1956.",
" His Ph.D. thesis was on an algebraic abstract formulation of substitution in many-sorted free algebras and its relation to equational definitions of the partial recursive functions."
],
"title": "Anil Nerode"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Anna Krylov is the Gabilan Distinguished Professor in Science and Engineering and a Professor of Chemistry at the University of Southern California (USC) working in the area of theoretical and computational quantum chemistry.",
" Born in Donetsk, Ukraine (May 6, 1967), Krylov received her M.Sc.",
" (with honors) in Chemistry from Moscow State University and later her Ph.D. (summa cum laude) from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, working under the supervision of Professor Robert Benny Gerber.",
" Her Ph.D. research at the Fritz Haber Center focused on molecular dynamics in rare gas clusters and matrices.",
" Upon completing her Ph.D. in 1996, she joined the group of Prof. Martin Head-Gordon at the University of California, Berkeley as a postdoctoral research associate, where she became involved with electronic structure method development.",
" In 1998, she joined the Department of Chemistry at USC."
],
"title": "Anna Krylov"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Levette J. Davidson was a nationally acclaimed expert in folklore, especially that of Colorado and the West.",
" He was born in Eureka, Illinois May 16, 1894, one of four children.",
" Because his grand uncle was past-President of Eureka College, a Christian seminary, Davidson was \"reared in the school's shadow\" with the option of becoming \"either a teacher or a preacher.\"",
" He chose teaching and was awarded his B.A. from Eureka in 1915.",
" A year later he received his A.M. degree from the University of Illinois where he received Phi Beta Kappa honors.",
" In 1917 he earned his M.A. in social science and history at Harvard University.",
" __During World War I, he served with the Tenth Infantry of the Forty-Sixth Division and also served as an army sergeant in Intelligence.",
" Davidson and his wife Mary, also a graduate of Eureka, were married in 1918.",
" At the end of the war, Davidson simultaneously taught and studied at the University of Michigan where he earned a Ph.D. in languages and literatures in 1922.",
" He arrived in Denver later that year and began teaching at the University of Denver.",
" Before arriving in Colorado, his academic specialty was eighteenth century England.",
" Once in Denver, he realized that Western literature and folklore would be his life work.",
" Davidson taught at the University of Denver until his death in 1957.",
" His course topics ranged from studies of Shakespeare and other English literature, to folklore in the West.",
" He began teaching news writing and eventually founded the journalism department at the University as well as the board of publications and the press club.",
" He was the first faculty member elected to serve as president of the University Senate.",
" In 1940 he became head of the English Department and from March to August 1953 he served as interim Chancellor.",
" At the time of assuming his post, he remarked: \"There is hardly an organization on campus that I have not been connected with at one time or another.\"",
" Davidson was named University Lecturer for 1956.",
" Davidson was a director of the Colorado State Historical Society, the Modern Languages Association, the American Folklore Society, and the American Dialect Society.",
" He was a charter member of the Denver Posse of the Westerners, an organization devoted to western folklore.",
" In spare moments, Davidson conducted research, wrote outlines for plays, and authored a large number of articles.",
" He contributed to a wide range of magazines from \"Western American\" to \"Shakespeare Quarterly\".",
" Additionally, Davidson authored several books on folklore.",
" The most widely recognized is \"Rocky Mountain Tales\", which presents regional folklore as well as true accounts of early events in the area.",
" Levette Davidson died May 14, 1957."
],
"title": "Levette J. Davidson"
}
] |
[
"Title: Hossein Sadri\n\nDr. Hossein Sadri (born October 9, 1979) is an Iranian architect, critic and activist. He is currently working as an associate professor of architecture at Girne American University where he was holding the position of the dean of the Faculty of Architecture, Design & Fine Arts between 2012-2016 He studied architecture and received his Master of Science degree at Islamic Azad University of Tabriz in 2005. He completed his Ph.D. studies at Gazi University in 2010 with a TUBITAK Ph.D. Fellowship., His Ph.D. dissertation entitled Architecture and Human Rights was an interdisciplinary studies and the first thesis which introduced the main motivation of human rights in the field of architecture. He is one of the founding members of AUMME (Architecture and Urbanism in the Mediterranean and the Middle East), the regional academic and professional network in the field of architecture and the chair of its 2nd conference in 2014. As the chair of the second CAUMME-Contemporary Architecture and Urbanism in the Mediterranean and the Middle-East International Conference, he introduced the concept of Post-Professionalism in the field of architecture.",
"Title: M. Jaffar-ur-Rehman\n\nHe topped Quaid-i-Azam University by setting an all-time Computer Science Department record of a cumulative grade point average (CGPA) of 4.9 on a scale of 5.0. In result, he was awarded the Quaid-e-Azam Scholarship for higher studies abroad, which he used to receive his Master of Science (M.Sc) degree and his Ph.D. in computer science in the United States. He completed his M.Sc. in just one year at the University of Pennsylvania by securing a CGPA of 3.9 on a scale of 4.0. He taught in Australia for around three years during his Ph.D. He came back to Pakistan after fully completing his Ph.D., where he taught at Quaid-e-Azam University, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), and then Mohammad Ali Jinnah University.",
"Title: John L. McNulty\n\nThe Very Right Reverend Monsignor John L. McNulty, Ph.D., (b. 1898) was an American Roman Catholic Domestic prelate and the 13th President of Seton Hall University. McNulty received an A.B. (1921) and an M.A. (1922) from Seton Hall. He received his Ph.D. from NYU in 1935 and a Dipl. from d’ Écoles Supérieures at the Lille Catholic University in 1937. McNulty was ordained a priest of the Roman Catholic Church in 1925. He was an educator at Seton Hall University from 1928 and its president from 1949 - 1959. McNulty was invested as a Domestic Prelate of His Holiness Pius XII in 1950. Seton Hall University’s McNulty Hall, which is the University’s Technology and Research Center containing the famed “Atomic Wall” artwork depicting the gift of scientific knowledge from man to god, is named for the Right Reverend Dr. John McNulty. Monsignor John Laurence McNulty established Seton Hall University’s Institute of Far Eastern Studies in 1951 in the midst of the Korean War.",
"Title: Li Feng (sinologist)\n\nLi Feng (; born 1962), or Feng Li, is a professor of Early Chinese History and Archaeology at Columbia University, where he is director of graduate studies for the Department of East Asian Languages and Culture. He received his MA in 1986 from the Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and his Ph.D. in 2000 from the University of Chicago. He also did Ph.D. work in the University of Tokyo (1991). He is both a field archaeologist and an historian of Early China with primary interest in bronze inscriptions of the Shang-Zhou period. Li founded the Columbia Early China Seminar in 2002, and directed Columbia’s first archaeological field project in China, in the Shandong Peninsula, in 2006-2011.",
"Title: Taede A. Smedes\n\nTaede Anne Smedes (born July 3, 1973 in Drachten) is a Dutch philosopher of religion. He received a Ph.D degree from the University of Groningen in 2004 for a thesis on \"Avoiding Balaam's Mistake: Exploring Divine Action in an Age of Scientism\".",
"Title: University of Groningen\n\nThe University of Groningen (abbreviated as UG; Dutch: \"Rijksuniversiteit Groningen\" , abbreviated as \"RUG\") is a public research university in the city of Groningen in the Netherlands. The university was founded in 1614 and is one of the oldest universities in the Netherlands as well as one of its largest. Since its inception more than 200,000 students have graduated. It is a member of the distinguished international Coimbra Group of European universities.",
"Title: Herman Quirmbach\n\nHerman C. Quirmbach, Ph.D. (born October 6, 1950) is the Iowa State Senator from the 23rd District. A Democrat, he has served in the Iowa Senate since 2003 and served on the Ames City Council from 1995 to 2003. He received his B.A. from Harvard College and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton University, the Ph.D. in 1983, and is an associate professor of economics at Iowa State University. ",
"Title: Anil Nerode\n\nAnil Nerode (born 1932) is an American mathematician. He received his undergraduate education and a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Chicago, the latter under the directions of Saunders Mac Lane. He enrolled in the Hutchins College at the University of Chicago in 1947 at the age of 15, and received his Ph.D. in 1956. His Ph.D. thesis was on an algebraic abstract formulation of substitution in many-sorted free algebras and its relation to equational definitions of the partial recursive functions.",
"Title: Anna Krylov\n\nAnna Krylov is the Gabilan Distinguished Professor in Science and Engineering and a Professor of Chemistry at the University of Southern California (USC) working in the area of theoretical and computational quantum chemistry. Born in Donetsk, Ukraine (May 6, 1967), Krylov received her M.Sc. (with honors) in Chemistry from Moscow State University and later her Ph.D. (summa cum laude) from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, working under the supervision of Professor Robert Benny Gerber. Her Ph.D. research at the Fritz Haber Center focused on molecular dynamics in rare gas clusters and matrices. Upon completing her Ph.D. in 1996, she joined the group of Prof. Martin Head-Gordon at the University of California, Berkeley as a postdoctoral research associate, where she became involved with electronic structure method development. In 1998, she joined the Department of Chemistry at USC.",
"Title: Levette J. Davidson\n\nLevette J. Davidson was a nationally acclaimed expert in folklore, especially that of Colorado and the West. He was born in Eureka, Illinois May 16, 1894, one of four children. Because his grand uncle was past-President of Eureka College, a Christian seminary, Davidson was \"reared in the school's shadow\" with the option of becoming \"either a teacher or a preacher.\" He chose teaching and was awarded his B.A. from Eureka in 1915. A year later he received his A.M. degree from the University of Illinois where he received Phi Beta Kappa honors. In 1917 he earned his M.A. in social science and history at Harvard University. __During World War I, he served with the Tenth Infantry of the Forty-Sixth Division and also served as an army sergeant in Intelligence. Davidson and his wife Mary, also a graduate of Eureka, were married in 1918. At the end of the war, Davidson simultaneously taught and studied at the University of Michigan where he earned a Ph.D. in languages and literatures in 1922. He arrived in Denver later that year and began teaching at the University of Denver. Before arriving in Colorado, his academic specialty was eighteenth century England. Once in Denver, he realized that Western literature and folklore would be his life work. Davidson taught at the University of Denver until his death in 1957. His course topics ranged from studies of Shakespeare and other English literature, to folklore in the West. He began teaching news writing and eventually founded the journalism department at the University as well as the board of publications and the press club. He was the first faculty member elected to serve as president of the University Senate. In 1940 he became head of the English Department and from March to August 1953 he served as interim Chancellor. At the time of assuming his post, he remarked: \"There is hardly an organization on campus that I have not been connected with at one time or another.\" Davidson was named University Lecturer for 1956. Davidson was a director of the Colorado State Historical Society, the Modern Languages Association, the American Folklore Society, and the American Dialect Society. He was a charter member of the Denver Posse of the Westerners, an organization devoted to western folklore. In spare moments, Davidson conducted research, wrote outlines for plays, and authored a large number of articles. He contributed to a wide range of magazines from \"Western American\" to \"Shakespeare Quarterly\". Additionally, Davidson authored several books on folklore. The most widely recognized is \"Rocky Mountain Tales\", which presents regional folklore as well as true accounts of early events in the area. Levette Davidson died May 14, 1957."
] |
1,775
|
What North Lincolnshire, England village contains the Humber Ferry?
|
New Holland
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Humber Ferry",
"New Holland, Lincolnshire"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Worlaby is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England, 6 mi south-west from Barton-Upon-Humber and 5 mi north-east from Brigg.",
" The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 547.",
" It lies on the B1204, and to the east of the River Ancholme.",
" It is one of the five \"Low Villages\" – South Ferriby, Horkstow, Saxby All Saints, Bonby, and Worlaby – between Brigg and the River Humber, named so because of their position below the northern edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds.",
" Worlaby was previously part of South Humberside administrative district, and before that, the North Lindsey division of Lindsey, Lincolnshire."
],
"title": "Worlaby"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Corporation Pier station was the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's booking office for their ferry service between Corporation Pier, Hull and New Holland Pier in Lincolnshire.",
" It was not rail connected, but served as a ticket office and waiting room for the Humber Ferry."
],
"title": "Hull Victoria Pier railway station"
},
{
"sentences": [
"South Ferriby is a village in North Lincolnshire, England.",
" It is situated on the south bank of the Humber Estuary and 3 mi west from the Humber Bridge.",
" North Ferriby is directly opposite on the Estuary’s north bank.",
" Village population was 651 in 2011."
],
"title": "South Ferriby"
},
{
"sentences": [
"West Halton is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England.",
" It is situated 2.5 mi north-west from Winterton, approximately 7 mi north from Scunthorpe, and 2 mi south from the Humber Estuary.",
" The parish contains part of Coleby, a hamlet south of the village."
],
"title": "West Halton"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Horkstow is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England, 4 mi south-west from Barton-Upon-Humber, 1 mi south from South Ferriby and 9 mi north from Brigg.",
" It lies on the B1204, and 1 mi east from the navigable River Ancholme.",
" It is one of the five \"Low Villages\" - Worlaby, Bonby, Saxby All Saints, Horkstow and South Ferriby - between Brigg and the River Humber, so-called because of their position below the northern edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds.",
" Horkstow was previously part of South Humberside administrative district, and before that, the North Lindsey division of Lindsey, Lincolnshire."
],
"title": "Horkstow"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Barrow Haven is a hamlet and small port in North Lincolnshire, England.",
" It was the site of a former ferry crossing that spanned from the Humber estuary to Hull, serving as a place for ships and boats crossing the Humber to moor away from the tidal flow.",
" A port continues to exist nearby and the area's rail access is based at the Barrow Haven railway station, a stop on the Barton Line."
],
"title": "Barrow Haven"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ruskington is a large village and civil parish in the North Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England, located on the north-south B1188 road and slightly north of the A153 road.",
" The village contains approximately 2,200 dwellings and is approximately 1 mi in length, measured from east to west.",
" The population of the civil parish was 5,169 at the 2001 census, increasing to 5,637 at the 2011 census."
],
"title": "Ruskington"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Humber Ferry was a ferry service on the Humber between Kingston upon Hull and New Holland in Lincolnshire which operated until the completion of the Humber Bridge in 1981."
],
"title": "Humber Ferry"
},
{
"sentences": [
"North East Lincolnshire is a unitary authority area in the Yorkshire and the Humber region of England, bordering the unitary authority of North Lincolnshire and the non-metropolitan county of Lincolnshire.",
" The population of the Unitary Authority at the 2011 Census was 159,616.",
" These three administrative units make up the ceremonial county of Lincolnshire."
],
"title": "North East Lincolnshire"
},
{
"sentences": [
"New Holland is a small village, civil parish and port on the Humber estuary in North Lincolnshire, England.",
" In 2001 it had a population of 955, increasing marginally to 970 at the 2011 census."
],
"title": "New Holland, Lincolnshire"
}
] |
[
"Title: Worlaby\n\nWorlaby is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England, 6 mi south-west from Barton-Upon-Humber and 5 mi north-east from Brigg. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 547. It lies on the B1204, and to the east of the River Ancholme. It is one of the five \"Low Villages\" – South Ferriby, Horkstow, Saxby All Saints, Bonby, and Worlaby – between Brigg and the River Humber, named so because of their position below the northern edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds. Worlaby was previously part of South Humberside administrative district, and before that, the North Lindsey division of Lindsey, Lincolnshire.",
"Title: Hull Victoria Pier railway station\n\nCorporation Pier station was the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's booking office for their ferry service between Corporation Pier, Hull and New Holland Pier in Lincolnshire. It was not rail connected, but served as a ticket office and waiting room for the Humber Ferry.",
"Title: South Ferriby\n\nSouth Ferriby is a village in North Lincolnshire, England. It is situated on the south bank of the Humber Estuary and 3 mi west from the Humber Bridge. North Ferriby is directly opposite on the Estuary’s north bank. Village population was 651 in 2011.",
"Title: West Halton\n\nWest Halton is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England. It is situated 2.5 mi north-west from Winterton, approximately 7 mi north from Scunthorpe, and 2 mi south from the Humber Estuary. The parish contains part of Coleby, a hamlet south of the village.",
"Title: Horkstow\n\nHorkstow is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England, 4 mi south-west from Barton-Upon-Humber, 1 mi south from South Ferriby and 9 mi north from Brigg. It lies on the B1204, and 1 mi east from the navigable River Ancholme. It is one of the five \"Low Villages\" - Worlaby, Bonby, Saxby All Saints, Horkstow and South Ferriby - between Brigg and the River Humber, so-called because of their position below the northern edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds. Horkstow was previously part of South Humberside administrative district, and before that, the North Lindsey division of Lindsey, Lincolnshire.",
"Title: Barrow Haven\n\nBarrow Haven is a hamlet and small port in North Lincolnshire, England. It was the site of a former ferry crossing that spanned from the Humber estuary to Hull, serving as a place for ships and boats crossing the Humber to moor away from the tidal flow. A port continues to exist nearby and the area's rail access is based at the Barrow Haven railway station, a stop on the Barton Line.",
"Title: Ruskington\n\nRuskington is a large village and civil parish in the North Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England, located on the north-south B1188 road and slightly north of the A153 road. The village contains approximately 2,200 dwellings and is approximately 1 mi in length, measured from east to west. The population of the civil parish was 5,169 at the 2001 census, increasing to 5,637 at the 2011 census.",
"Title: Humber Ferry\n\nThe Humber Ferry was a ferry service on the Humber between Kingston upon Hull and New Holland in Lincolnshire which operated until the completion of the Humber Bridge in 1981.",
"Title: North East Lincolnshire\n\nNorth East Lincolnshire is a unitary authority area in the Yorkshire and the Humber region of England, bordering the unitary authority of North Lincolnshire and the non-metropolitan county of Lincolnshire. The population of the Unitary Authority at the 2011 Census was 159,616. These three administrative units make up the ceremonial county of Lincolnshire.",
"Title: New Holland, Lincolnshire\n\nNew Holland is a small village, civil parish and port on the Humber estuary in North Lincolnshire, England. In 2001 it had a population of 955, increasing marginally to 970 at the 2011 census."
] |
1,776
|
Where is the person who created the Wicked Awesome Records label currently most highly sought after for work?
|
Europe
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Crada (producer)",
"Crada (producer)",
"Crada (producer)",
"Kid Cudi",
"Kid Cudi"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
2,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Dark Adapted Eye is a compilation album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician, formerly of The Lemon Kittens.",
" Released in 1988 on Sire Records on LP, cassette and CD, it consisted of material from albums and singles released on her own label, Awesome Records, and was the first release of her material in North America.",
" After being out of print for years, the CD was reissued in the U.S. by the Noble Rot label in 2008.",
" All tracks were produced by Dax and co-written by David Knight."
],
"title": "Dark Adapted Eye"
},
{
"sentences": [
"WZRD is the eponymously titled debut studio album by American alternative rock duo WZRD.",
" It was released on February 28, 2012, via Universal Republic Records, as well as Cudi's newly found label imprint, Wicked Awesome Records.",
" The album was supported by the singles \"Brake\" and \"Teleport 2 Me, Jamie\"."
],
"title": "WZRD (album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven is the fifth studio album by American recording artist Kid Cudi.",
" The album was released on December 4, 2015, through Republic Records and Cudi's Wicked Awesome Records imprint.",
" The album is a complete departure from his previous projects, excluding \"WZRD\", a 2012 collaborative effort which was his first venture into rock music.",
" Inspired by the 1990's indie music scene, Cudi included commissioned skits featuring Mike Judge voicing the title characters of his 90's animated sitcom, \"Beavis and Butt-Head\"."
],
"title": "Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin' is the sixth studio album by American rapper Kid Cudi.",
" The album was released on December 16, 2016, by Wicked Awesome Records and Republic Records.",
" It succeeds Cudi's alternative rock album \"Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven\" (2015).",
" The album features guest appearances from André \"3000\" Benjamin, Pharrell Williams, Travis Scott and Willow Smith.",
" The production on the album was handled by Cudi himself, alongside Plain Pat, Mike Dean, Dot da Genius, Anthony Kilhoffer, Mike Will Made It and Pharrell Williams, among others."
],
"title": "Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin'"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Christian 'Crada' Kalla is a Grammy-nominated and multi platinum award-winning producer, instrumentalist, mix engineer and songwriter from Marktleuthen, Germany.",
" He has produced and written for artists and groups such as Drake, Alicia Keys, Kid Cudi, Kendrick Lamar, Emeli Sande, Tinie Tempah, Conor Maynard, Clare Maguire, Jay Rock, Talib Kweli, The Lox, La Fouine, Tim Bendzko among others.",
" He is currently one of the most sought-after producers in Europe."
],
"title": "Crada (producer)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Satellite Flight: The Journey to Mother Moon (stylized as KiD CuDi presents SATELLITE FLIGHT: The Journey to Mother Moon) is the fourth studio album by American rapper Kid Cudi.",
" The album was issued on February 25, 2014, with only few hours' notice, was first released to digital retailers such as iTunes and Google Play, by Wicked Awesome Records and Republic Records."
],
"title": "Satellite Flight: The Journey to Mother Moon"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Scott Ramon Seguro Mescudi (born January 30, 1984), better known by his stage name Kid Cudi ( , often stylized KiD CuDi), is an American recording artist and actor from Cleveland, Ohio.",
" Cudi first gained major recognition following the release of his first official full-length project, a mixtape titled \"A Kid Named Cudi\" (2008).",
" The mixtape caught the attention of American rapper-producer Kanye West, who subsequently signed Cudi to his GOOD Music label imprint in late 2008.",
" Cudi has since gone on to launch his own record label imprints, the now-dissolved Dream On and current independent label, Wicked Awesome Records.",
" Initially a rapper, Cudi has since added singer, songwriter, record producer, guitarist, music video director and film composer to his repertoire."
],
"title": "Kid Cudi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Inky Bloaters is the third solo album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician and former member of The Lemon Kittens.",
" It was originally recorded between 1985 & 1987, and released in 1987 on the Awesome Records label.",
" This was the last album by Dax released on the Awesome label before signing with Sire.",
" The album was re-released in 1993 on the Biter Of Thorpe label (BOT131-04CD) and distributed through World Serpent Distribution."
],
"title": "Inky Bloaters"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Pop-Eyes is the first solo album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician and former member of The Lemon Kittens.",
" It was originally recorded in the fall of 1982 and released on 22 April 1983 on the Awesome Records label.",
" The album was re-released in 1992 on the Biter Of Thorpe label (BOT131-01CD) and distributed through World Serpent Distribution."
],
"title": "Pop-Eyes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jesus Egg That Wept is the second solo album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician and former member of The Lemon Kittens.",
" It was originally recorded and released in 1984 on the Awesome Records label.",
" The album was re-released in 1993 on the Biter Of Thorpe label (BOT131-02CD) and distributed through World Serpent Distribution."
],
"title": "Jesus Egg That Wept"
}
] |
[
"Title: Dark Adapted Eye\n\nDark Adapted Eye is a compilation album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician, formerly of The Lemon Kittens. Released in 1988 on Sire Records on LP, cassette and CD, it consisted of material from albums and singles released on her own label, Awesome Records, and was the first release of her material in North America. After being out of print for years, the CD was reissued in the U.S. by the Noble Rot label in 2008. All tracks were produced by Dax and co-written by David Knight.",
"Title: WZRD (album)\n\nWZRD is the eponymously titled debut studio album by American alternative rock duo WZRD. It was released on February 28, 2012, via Universal Republic Records, as well as Cudi's newly found label imprint, Wicked Awesome Records. The album was supported by the singles \"Brake\" and \"Teleport 2 Me, Jamie\".",
"Title: Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven\n\nSpeedin' Bullet 2 Heaven is the fifth studio album by American recording artist Kid Cudi. The album was released on December 4, 2015, through Republic Records and Cudi's Wicked Awesome Records imprint. The album is a complete departure from his previous projects, excluding \"WZRD\", a 2012 collaborative effort which was his first venture into rock music. Inspired by the 1990's indie music scene, Cudi included commissioned skits featuring Mike Judge voicing the title characters of his 90's animated sitcom, \"Beavis and Butt-Head\".",
"Title: Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin'\n\nPassion, Pain & Demon Slayin' is the sixth studio album by American rapper Kid Cudi. The album was released on December 16, 2016, by Wicked Awesome Records and Republic Records. It succeeds Cudi's alternative rock album \"Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven\" (2015). The album features guest appearances from André \"3000\" Benjamin, Pharrell Williams, Travis Scott and Willow Smith. The production on the album was handled by Cudi himself, alongside Plain Pat, Mike Dean, Dot da Genius, Anthony Kilhoffer, Mike Will Made It and Pharrell Williams, among others.",
"Title: Crada (producer)\n\nChristian 'Crada' Kalla is a Grammy-nominated and multi platinum award-winning producer, instrumentalist, mix engineer and songwriter from Marktleuthen, Germany. He has produced and written for artists and groups such as Drake, Alicia Keys, Kid Cudi, Kendrick Lamar, Emeli Sande, Tinie Tempah, Conor Maynard, Clare Maguire, Jay Rock, Talib Kweli, The Lox, La Fouine, Tim Bendzko among others. He is currently one of the most sought-after producers in Europe.",
"Title: Satellite Flight: The Journey to Mother Moon\n\nSatellite Flight: The Journey to Mother Moon (stylized as KiD CuDi presents SATELLITE FLIGHT: The Journey to Mother Moon) is the fourth studio album by American rapper Kid Cudi. The album was issued on February 25, 2014, with only few hours' notice, was first released to digital retailers such as iTunes and Google Play, by Wicked Awesome Records and Republic Records.",
"Title: Kid Cudi\n\nScott Ramon Seguro Mescudi (born January 30, 1984), better known by his stage name Kid Cudi ( , often stylized KiD CuDi), is an American recording artist and actor from Cleveland, Ohio. Cudi first gained major recognition following the release of his first official full-length project, a mixtape titled \"A Kid Named Cudi\" (2008). The mixtape caught the attention of American rapper-producer Kanye West, who subsequently signed Cudi to his GOOD Music label imprint in late 2008. Cudi has since gone on to launch his own record label imprints, the now-dissolved Dream On and current independent label, Wicked Awesome Records. Initially a rapper, Cudi has since added singer, songwriter, record producer, guitarist, music video director and film composer to his repertoire.",
"Title: Inky Bloaters\n\nInky Bloaters is the third solo album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician and former member of The Lemon Kittens. It was originally recorded between 1985 & 1987, and released in 1987 on the Awesome Records label. This was the last album by Dax released on the Awesome label before signing with Sire. The album was re-released in 1993 on the Biter Of Thorpe label (BOT131-04CD) and distributed through World Serpent Distribution.",
"Title: Pop-Eyes\n\nPop-Eyes is the first solo album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician and former member of The Lemon Kittens. It was originally recorded in the fall of 1982 and released on 22 April 1983 on the Awesome Records label. The album was re-released in 1992 on the Biter Of Thorpe label (BOT131-01CD) and distributed through World Serpent Distribution.",
"Title: Jesus Egg That Wept\n\nJesus Egg That Wept is the second solo album by Danielle Dax, an English experimental musician and former member of The Lemon Kittens. It was originally recorded and released in 1984 on the Awesome Records label. The album was re-released in 1993 on the Biter Of Thorpe label (BOT131-02CD) and distributed through World Serpent Distribution."
] |
1,777
|
In what year was the actor who played Nathan Appleby in The Living and the Dead born?
|
1986
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"The Living and the Dead (TV series)",
"Colin Morgan"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Nicholas Burns (born 1977, Derbyshire) is an English actor, best known for his comic performance as the title character in \"Nathan Barley\".",
" He played Martin in \"Benidorm\" and Alex in \"No Heroics\", as well as making appearances alongside various \"Nathan Barley\" co-stars in \"The Mighty Boosh\" and \"The IT Crowd\"."
],
"title": "Nicholas Burns (actor)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Nathan Scherrer, born 1988 in Northport, Michigan, is an American music video and commercial executive producer and creative producer who has been nominated for several Grammy Awards, including Pharrell William's Freedom and Dead Weather's I Feel Love, and in 2016 won the Grammy for Best Music Video for Beyonce’s Formation video which was directed by Melina Matsoukas.",
" The video also won the Cannes Gran Prix Best Music Video award and the best music video of year award at the BET Awards.",
" It also won the video of year at the VMAs in 2017.",
" He was also among several producers who were nominated for Beyonces music film, Lemonade, which won the best long form music video award at the 2017 VMAs."
],
"title": "Nathan Scherrer"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John A. Russo (born February 2, 1939), sometimes credited as Jack Russo or John Russo, is an American screenwriter and film director most commonly associated with the 1968 horror classic film \"Night of the Living Dead\".",
" As a screenwriter, his credits include \"Night of the Living Dead\", \"The Majorettes\", \"Midnight\", and \"Santa Claws\".",
" The latter two, he also directed.",
" He has performed small roles as an actor, most notably the first ghoul who is stabbed in the head in \"Night of the Living Dead\", as well as cameos in \"There's Always Vanilla\" and \"House of Frankenstein 1997\".",
" John Russo is also the founder and one of the co-mentors along with Russell Streiner of the John Russo Movie Making Program at DuBois Business College in DuBois, Pennsylvania.",
" Movie Emporium Inc. will released Russo's CD John Russo's Movie Music, his CD is filled with Songs from his films."
],
"title": "John A. Russo"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Schechter made his Broadway debut in 2009 as \"Boy\" in the revival of Waiting for Godot.",
" He performed alongside Nathan Lane, Bill Irwin, John Goodman, and John Glover.",
" The production was nominated for three Tony Awards and became one of Roundabout Theatre Company's greatest successes.",
" Months later, Schechter appeared as \"Michael Banks\" in Disney's 2006 production of Mary Poppins.",
" After one year of work as \"Michael Banks\", Schechter joined a cast led by Sebastian Arcelus in the original production of .",
" There, Schechter stood-by for the role of \"Michael\" and performed nightly as \"Boy\".",
" The production received mixed reviews, but was revived on Broadway in 2012.",
" Approximately one year after the closing of Elf: The Musical, Schechter originated \"Les\" in Newsies (2012), receiving exceptional reviews for his work.",
" Ben Brantley of The New York Times described Schechter as a \"wisecracking, deadpan child prodigy.\"",
" After over a year of performance, Schechter left the show shortly after the departure of star Jeremy Jordan.",
" Subsequently, Schechter joined the 2013 cast of Richard III, where he played \"Prince Edward\" among fellow actors Samuel Barnett and Mark Rylance.",
" The play, brought to New York City by the Globe Theatre, was a sold-out success.",
" Immediately after Richard III had concluded, Schechter created the roles of \"Moss Hart\" and \"Bernie Hart\" in director James Lapine's Act One (2014).",
" The show was praised by Ben Brantley; Schechter received excellent reviews.",
" The New York Times again heralded Schechter as \"a very fine\" actor.",
" The play's cast included Tony Shalhoub, Andrea Martin, and Santino Fontana."
],
"title": "Matthew Schechter"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wesley Theodore \"Moose\" Englehorn (January 21, 1890 – September 3, 1993) was an American football player and coach.",
" Born in Helena, Montana, Englehorn first gained fame as a football player for Spokane High School.",
" While he was a junior in high school, he was reportedly recruited by Princeton University to come east to play football for the school.",
" A newspaper account in 1907 reported: \"It is expected that Wesley Englehorn, the giant left tackle of the high school team, will also enter the Eastern college.",
" If this materializes the Spokane high school will be weakened next year by the loss of two of its greatest players.",
" ... Englehorn is also a strong basket ball player and track athlete.\"",
" Englehorn did not enroll at Princeton and instead played for two years on the All Star Pacific Northwest football and basketball teams.",
" He began his collegiate career at Washington State College.",
" After playing one year of football at Washington State, Englehorn enrolled at Dartmouth College, where he played two years at the tackle position.",
" He was elected team captain for the 1913 season, but he was declared ineligible under \"the so-called three-year rule\" because of his year at Washington State.",
" Though ineligible to play, Englehorn served as the team's assistant coach in 1913 and was elected class president.",
" He was selected as a first-team All-American in 1912.",
" He graduated from Dartmouth in 1914 and worked as a football coach for several years thereafter.",
" From 1914 to 1916, he was the football coach at Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland, Ohio.",
" In 1917, he was hired as the line coach and first assistant football coach at Colgate University.",
" In 1920, he was an assistant coach under Frank Cavanaugh at Boston College.",
" In 1921, he was hired as the head football coach at Amherst College.",
" In January 1922, Englehorn announced his retirement from coaching.",
" Shortly before his death at age 103, Englehorn said, \"It's the football I remember best ... the teammates .",
".",
" the teamwork.\"",
" Prior to his death in 1993, he was living at Stapeley Hall, a home for the elderly in the Germantown section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was the oldest living All-American football player."
],
"title": "Wesley Englehorn"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Oscar Isaac (born Óscar Isaac Hernández Estrada; March 9, 1979) is a Guatemalan-American actor and musician.",
" He played lead film roles in the comedy-drama \"Inside Llewyn Davis\" (2013), for which he received a Golden Globe Award nomination, the crime drama \"A Most Violent Year\" (2014), the science fiction thriller \"Ex Machina\" (2015), in which he played Nathan Hamlet Bateman, and Poe Dameron in \"\".",
" In 2006, he portrayed Saint Joseph, husband of Mary, in \"The Nativity Story\".",
" He also portrayed José Ramos-Horta, former president of East Timor, in the Australian film \"Balibo\" for which he won the AACTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.",
" He has portrayed characters of many different nationalities and ethnicities, such as mixed European, American, Egyptian, Polish, English, French, Mexican, East Timorese, Italian, Welsh, Indonesian, Greek, Cuban, Israeli, and Armenian."
],
"title": "Oscar Isaac"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Colin Morgan (born 1 January, 1986) is a British/Irish film, television, theatre and radio actor best known for playing the title character in the BBC fantasy series \"Merlin\", the lead in \"The Living and the Dead\", and main roles in \"Humans\" and \"The Fall\"; his stage role as Ariel in \"The Tempest\"; and film roles in \"Testament of Youth\", \"Legend\" and \"\"."
],
"title": "Colin Morgan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Living and the Dead is a British supernatural horror television miniseries created by Ashley Pharoah and Matthew Graham.",
" The plot revolves around Nathan Appleby (played by Colin Morgan) and his wife, Charlotte Appleby (played by Charlotte Spencer), whose farm is believed to be at the centre of numerous supernatural occurrences."
],
"title": "The Living and the Dead (TV series)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Marcus Hutton (born 1 April 1964 in Limavady, Northern Ireland) is an actor and voice over artist who trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.",
" Hutton played Nathan Cuddington in Channel 4's soap opera \"Brookside\" from 1998 - 2000.",
" He has also voiced hundreds of radio and TV commercials in the UK and around the world.",
" He has guest starred in the \"Doctor Who\" audio dramas \"The Church and the Crown\" (2002) and \"The Kingmaker\" (2006)."
],
"title": "Marcus Hutton"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Richard James Lumsden (born 24 June 1965) is an English actor, writer, composer and musician.",
" He played Nathan in Channel 4's drama \"Sugar Rush\" and on radio he plays Ray in \"Clare in the Community\"."
],
"title": "Richard Lumsden"
}
] |
[
"Title: Nicholas Burns (actor)\n\nNicholas Burns (born 1977, Derbyshire) is an English actor, best known for his comic performance as the title character in \"Nathan Barley\". He played Martin in \"Benidorm\" and Alex in \"No Heroics\", as well as making appearances alongside various \"Nathan Barley\" co-stars in \"The Mighty Boosh\" and \"The IT Crowd\".",
"Title: Nathan Scherrer\n\nNathan Scherrer, born 1988 in Northport, Michigan, is an American music video and commercial executive producer and creative producer who has been nominated for several Grammy Awards, including Pharrell William's Freedom and Dead Weather's I Feel Love, and in 2016 won the Grammy for Best Music Video for Beyonce’s Formation video which was directed by Melina Matsoukas. The video also won the Cannes Gran Prix Best Music Video award and the best music video of year award at the BET Awards. It also won the video of year at the VMAs in 2017. He was also among several producers who were nominated for Beyonces music film, Lemonade, which won the best long form music video award at the 2017 VMAs.",
"Title: John A. Russo\n\nJohn A. Russo (born February 2, 1939), sometimes credited as Jack Russo or John Russo, is an American screenwriter and film director most commonly associated with the 1968 horror classic film \"Night of the Living Dead\". As a screenwriter, his credits include \"Night of the Living Dead\", \"The Majorettes\", \"Midnight\", and \"Santa Claws\". The latter two, he also directed. He has performed small roles as an actor, most notably the first ghoul who is stabbed in the head in \"Night of the Living Dead\", as well as cameos in \"There's Always Vanilla\" and \"House of Frankenstein 1997\". John Russo is also the founder and one of the co-mentors along with Russell Streiner of the John Russo Movie Making Program at DuBois Business College in DuBois, Pennsylvania. Movie Emporium Inc. will released Russo's CD John Russo's Movie Music, his CD is filled with Songs from his films.",
"Title: Matthew Schechter\n\nSchechter made his Broadway debut in 2009 as \"Boy\" in the revival of Waiting for Godot. He performed alongside Nathan Lane, Bill Irwin, John Goodman, and John Glover. The production was nominated for three Tony Awards and became one of Roundabout Theatre Company's greatest successes. Months later, Schechter appeared as \"Michael Banks\" in Disney's 2006 production of Mary Poppins. After one year of work as \"Michael Banks\", Schechter joined a cast led by Sebastian Arcelus in the original production of . There, Schechter stood-by for the role of \"Michael\" and performed nightly as \"Boy\". The production received mixed reviews, but was revived on Broadway in 2012. Approximately one year after the closing of Elf: The Musical, Schechter originated \"Les\" in Newsies (2012), receiving exceptional reviews for his work. Ben Brantley of The New York Times described Schechter as a \"wisecracking, deadpan child prodigy.\" After over a year of performance, Schechter left the show shortly after the departure of star Jeremy Jordan. Subsequently, Schechter joined the 2013 cast of Richard III, where he played \"Prince Edward\" among fellow actors Samuel Barnett and Mark Rylance. The play, brought to New York City by the Globe Theatre, was a sold-out success. Immediately after Richard III had concluded, Schechter created the roles of \"Moss Hart\" and \"Bernie Hart\" in director James Lapine's Act One (2014). The show was praised by Ben Brantley; Schechter received excellent reviews. The New York Times again heralded Schechter as \"a very fine\" actor. The play's cast included Tony Shalhoub, Andrea Martin, and Santino Fontana.",
"Title: Wesley Englehorn\n\nWesley Theodore \"Moose\" Englehorn (January 21, 1890 – September 3, 1993) was an American football player and coach. Born in Helena, Montana, Englehorn first gained fame as a football player for Spokane High School. While he was a junior in high school, he was reportedly recruited by Princeton University to come east to play football for the school. A newspaper account in 1907 reported: \"It is expected that Wesley Englehorn, the giant left tackle of the high school team, will also enter the Eastern college. If this materializes the Spokane high school will be weakened next year by the loss of two of its greatest players. ... Englehorn is also a strong basket ball player and track athlete.\" Englehorn did not enroll at Princeton and instead played for two years on the All Star Pacific Northwest football and basketball teams. He began his collegiate career at Washington State College. After playing one year of football at Washington State, Englehorn enrolled at Dartmouth College, where he played two years at the tackle position. He was elected team captain for the 1913 season, but he was declared ineligible under \"the so-called three-year rule\" because of his year at Washington State. Though ineligible to play, Englehorn served as the team's assistant coach in 1913 and was elected class president. He was selected as a first-team All-American in 1912. He graduated from Dartmouth in 1914 and worked as a football coach for several years thereafter. From 1914 to 1916, he was the football coach at Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1917, he was hired as the line coach and first assistant football coach at Colgate University. In 1920, he was an assistant coach under Frank Cavanaugh at Boston College. In 1921, he was hired as the head football coach at Amherst College. In January 1922, Englehorn announced his retirement from coaching. Shortly before his death at age 103, Englehorn said, \"It's the football I remember best ... the teammates . . the teamwork.\" Prior to his death in 1993, he was living at Stapeley Hall, a home for the elderly in the Germantown section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was the oldest living All-American football player.",
"Title: Oscar Isaac\n\nOscar Isaac (born Óscar Isaac Hernández Estrada; March 9, 1979) is a Guatemalan-American actor and musician. He played lead film roles in the comedy-drama \"Inside Llewyn Davis\" (2013), for which he received a Golden Globe Award nomination, the crime drama \"A Most Violent Year\" (2014), the science fiction thriller \"Ex Machina\" (2015), in which he played Nathan Hamlet Bateman, and Poe Dameron in \"\". In 2006, he portrayed Saint Joseph, husband of Mary, in \"The Nativity Story\". He also portrayed José Ramos-Horta, former president of East Timor, in the Australian film \"Balibo\" for which he won the AACTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role. He has portrayed characters of many different nationalities and ethnicities, such as mixed European, American, Egyptian, Polish, English, French, Mexican, East Timorese, Italian, Welsh, Indonesian, Greek, Cuban, Israeli, and Armenian.",
"Title: Colin Morgan\n\nColin Morgan (born 1 January, 1986) is a British/Irish film, television, theatre and radio actor best known for playing the title character in the BBC fantasy series \"Merlin\", the lead in \"The Living and the Dead\", and main roles in \"Humans\" and \"The Fall\"; his stage role as Ariel in \"The Tempest\"; and film roles in \"Testament of Youth\", \"Legend\" and \"\".",
"Title: The Living and the Dead (TV series)\n\nThe Living and the Dead is a British supernatural horror television miniseries created by Ashley Pharoah and Matthew Graham. The plot revolves around Nathan Appleby (played by Colin Morgan) and his wife, Charlotte Appleby (played by Charlotte Spencer), whose farm is believed to be at the centre of numerous supernatural occurrences.",
"Title: Marcus Hutton\n\nMarcus Hutton (born 1 April 1964 in Limavady, Northern Ireland) is an actor and voice over artist who trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. Hutton played Nathan Cuddington in Channel 4's soap opera \"Brookside\" from 1998 - 2000. He has also voiced hundreds of radio and TV commercials in the UK and around the world. He has guest starred in the \"Doctor Who\" audio dramas \"The Church and the Crown\" (2002) and \"The Kingmaker\" (2006).",
"Title: Richard Lumsden\n\nRichard James Lumsden (born 24 June 1965) is an English actor, writer, composer and musician. He played Nathan in Channel 4's drama \"Sugar Rush\" and on radio he plays Ray in \"Clare in the Community\"."
] |
1,778
|
When was the Norwegian professional footballer born who began his career with Norwegian club Tromsø and a member of The Players?
|
8 September 1981
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"The Players (Norwegian band)",
"Morten Gamst Pedersen"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Magnus Wolff Eikrem (born 8 August 1990) is a Norwegian professional footballer who currently is playing for Allsvenskan side Malmö FF.",
" His regular playing position is in attacking midfield, though he can play anywhere across the midfield.",
" Eikrem was born in Molde in the Norwegian county of Møre og Romsdal, and began his football career with his local club, Molde FK, before joining Manchester United at the age of 16 in 2006.",
" Eikrem transferred back to Molde in January 2011, where Ole Gunnar Solskjær had become the new manager.",
" Solskjær had also been Eikrem's manager at the Manchester United reserve team.",
" He joined Dutch club Heerenveen in June 2013, but only stayed for just over six months before making the move to Cardiff City in January 2014.",
" Eikrem departed Cardiff City on 19 December 2014 after playing a total of only 173 minutes for Cardiff in 11 months."
],
"title": "Magnus Wolff Eikrem"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Morten Gamst Pedersen (born 8 September 1981) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Norwegian club Tromsø, the club with which he began his career."
],
"title": "Morten Gamst Pedersen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mushagalusa Bakenga Joar Namugunga (born 8 August 1992 in Trondheim, Norway), commonly known as Mushaga \"Mush\" Bakenga, is a Norwegian professional footballer of Congolese descent, who currently plays as a striker for Tromsø."
],
"title": "Mushaga Bakenga"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vegar Eggen Hedenstad (born 26 June 1991) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays for Norwegian club Rosenborg, as a defender.",
" Hedenstad has been capped at international level for Norway"
],
"title": "Vegar Eggen Hedenstad"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vegard Båtnes Braaten (born 30 June 1987 in Tromsø) is a Norwegian professional footballer playing for PostNord-ligaen club Alta."
],
"title": "Vegard Braaten"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tobias Henanger (born 3 December 1992) is an Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Norwegian club Arendal."
],
"title": "Tobias Henanger"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tobias Holmen Johansen (born 29 August 1990) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Norwegian club Kongsvinger.",
" He joined the club from Manchester City in 2010, where he played together with his younger brother Eirik.",
" Johansen has represented Norway at youth international level."
],
"title": "Tobias Holmen Johansen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sven Fredrik Stray (born 29 January 1985) is an Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Norwegian club Arendal."
],
"title": "Sven Fredrik Stray"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Players is a Norwegian musical project consisting of five professional footballers: Freddy dos Santos, Morten Gamst Pedersen, Raymond Kvisvik, Kristofer Hæstad and Øyvind Svenning."
],
"title": "The Players (Norwegian band)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Anders Ågnes Konradsen (born 18 July 1990) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Rosenborg in the Norwegian Tippeligaen.",
" He has previously played for the Norwegian clubs Bodø/Glimt and Strømsgodset, and the French club Rennes.",
" He was a part of the Norwegian team that played in the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, and has also been capped for Norway at senior level."
],
"title": "Anders Konradsen"
}
] |
[
"Title: Magnus Wolff Eikrem\n\nMagnus Wolff Eikrem (born 8 August 1990) is a Norwegian professional footballer who currently is playing for Allsvenskan side Malmö FF. His regular playing position is in attacking midfield, though he can play anywhere across the midfield. Eikrem was born in Molde in the Norwegian county of Møre og Romsdal, and began his football career with his local club, Molde FK, before joining Manchester United at the age of 16 in 2006. Eikrem transferred back to Molde in January 2011, where Ole Gunnar Solskjær had become the new manager. Solskjær had also been Eikrem's manager at the Manchester United reserve team. He joined Dutch club Heerenveen in June 2013, but only stayed for just over six months before making the move to Cardiff City in January 2014. Eikrem departed Cardiff City on 19 December 2014 after playing a total of only 173 minutes for Cardiff in 11 months.",
"Title: Morten Gamst Pedersen\n\nMorten Gamst Pedersen (born 8 September 1981) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Norwegian club Tromsø, the club with which he began his career.",
"Title: Mushaga Bakenga\n\nMushagalusa Bakenga Joar Namugunga (born 8 August 1992 in Trondheim, Norway), commonly known as Mushaga \"Mush\" Bakenga, is a Norwegian professional footballer of Congolese descent, who currently plays as a striker for Tromsø.",
"Title: Vegar Eggen Hedenstad\n\nVegar Eggen Hedenstad (born 26 June 1991) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays for Norwegian club Rosenborg, as a defender. Hedenstad has been capped at international level for Norway",
"Title: Vegard Braaten\n\nVegard Båtnes Braaten (born 30 June 1987 in Tromsø) is a Norwegian professional footballer playing for PostNord-ligaen club Alta.",
"Title: Tobias Henanger\n\nTobias Henanger (born 3 December 1992) is an Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Norwegian club Arendal.",
"Title: Tobias Holmen Johansen\n\nTobias Holmen Johansen (born 29 August 1990) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Norwegian club Kongsvinger. He joined the club from Manchester City in 2010, where he played together with his younger brother Eirik. Johansen has represented Norway at youth international level.",
"Title: Sven Fredrik Stray\n\nSven Fredrik Stray (born 29 January 1985) is an Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Norwegian club Arendal.",
"Title: The Players (Norwegian band)\n\nThe Players is a Norwegian musical project consisting of five professional footballers: Freddy dos Santos, Morten Gamst Pedersen, Raymond Kvisvik, Kristofer Hæstad and Øyvind Svenning.",
"Title: Anders Konradsen\n\nAnders Ågnes Konradsen (born 18 July 1990) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Rosenborg in the Norwegian Tippeligaen. He has previously played for the Norwegian clubs Bodø/Glimt and Strømsgodset, and the French club Rennes. He was a part of the Norwegian team that played in the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, and has also been capped for Norway at senior level."
] |
1,779
|
Are Trevor McNevan and Leslie West both citizens on the same country?
|
no
|
comparison
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Trevor McNevan",
"Leslie West"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Hawk Nelson Is My Friend, stylized on the album cover as Hawk Nelson... Is My Friend!",
", is the third full-length studio album from Christian rock band Hawk Nelson.",
" It was released on April 1, 2008, debuting at No. 34 on the \"Billboard\" 200.",
" In the first week of its release the album sold a little over 30,000 copies.",
" Hawk Nelson wrote the songs, as usual together with Trevor McNevan, but this time also with Richard Marx and Raine Maida.",
" The album was produced by award-winning David Bendeth (Paramore, The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus)."
],
"title": "Hawk Nelson Is My Friend"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Nine Lashes is an American Christian rock band from Birmingham, Alabama formed in 2006.",
" They independently released their first album, \"Escape\", in 2009 before Trevor McNevan of Thousand Foot Krutch brought them to the attention of Tooth & Nail Records.",
" Upon signing to the label, the band recorded their second album \"World We View\" and released it on February 14, 2012.",
" The album sold well, making several \"Billboard\" charts.",
" The band released their third album, \"From Water to War\" on January 21, 2014.",
" After a change in direction, the band released their fourth album, the Pop/Electric/Worship styled \"Ascend\" on March 11, 2016."
],
"title": "Nine Lashes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Thousand Foot Krutch (often abbreviated TFK) is a Canadian Christian rock band formed in 1995.",
" They have released eight albums.",
" They have also released one live album and three remix albums.",
" Singer Trevor McNevan and drummer Steve Augustine are also members of their own side project band called FM Static and Joel Bruyere started his own solo project called \"The Drawing Room\" in 2009.",
" The band has sold a million albums as of February 2014."
],
"title": "Thousand Foot Krutch"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Welcome to the Masquerade is the fifth studio album by Canadian Christian hard rock band Thousand Foot Krutch.",
" It was released on September 8, 2009.",
" Trevor McNevan, the band's frontman, has stated, \"Yeah, I think the new record is definitely more aggressive.",
" In some areas, it's the heaviest we've ever been.\"",
" The album entered the Billboard top 200 at No. 35 and the Christian Album charts at No. 2."
],
"title": "Welcome to the Masquerade"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Trevor McNevan (born July 17, 1978), also known as Teerawk, is a Canadian musician and lead singer/songwriter of Thousand Foot Krutch and pop punk side project FM Static along with Steve Augustine (the third Thousand Foot Krutch drummer).",
" His first band, Oddball, included former Thousand Foot Krutch members Dave Smith (guitar) and Tim Baxter (bass), as well as Three Days Grace drummer Neil Sanderson.",
" Oddball released the 27-song record \"Shutterbug\", in 1995, featuring half hip-hop and half rock songs."
],
"title": "Trevor McNevan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"World We View is the second studio album by the American Christian rock band Nine Lashes, released on February 14, 2012 through Tooth & Nail Records.",
" It is the follow-up to their independent debut album \"Escape\" and was co-produced by Aaron Sprinkle and Trevor McNevan, the latter of whom was instrumental in getting the group signed and contributes guest vocals to the song \"Adrenaline\"."
],
"title": "World We View"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Collaborations is rapper KJ-52's second studio album, and his first distributed by BEC Recordings.",
" It features his most known song, \"Dear Slim\" which was shown on Total Request Live and described his aspirations such as \"Rise Up\" featuring Rob Beckley of Pillar and Trevor McNevan of Thousand Foot Krutch as well as \"Revenge of the Nerds\" featuring Pigeon John."
],
"title": "Collaborations (KJ-52 album)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Leslie West (born Leslie Weinstein; October 22, 1945) is an American rock guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter.",
" He is best known as a founding member of the hard rock band Mountain."
],
"title": "Leslie West"
},
{
"sentences": [
"FM Static is a Canadian Christian pop punk duo based in Toronto, Ontario.",
" The band was formed in 2003 as a side project for Thousand Foot Krutch.",
" The band consists of Trevor McNevan and Steve Augustine.",
" The original lineup included John Bunner on guitar and Justin Smith on bass.",
" As of 2013, the band has released four studio albums, most recently \"My Brain Says Stop, But My Heart Says Go!",
"\" (2011)."
],
"title": "FM Static"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The End Is Where We Begin is the sixth studio album by Canadian rock band Thousand Foot Krutch.",
" It was released on April 17, 2012 in the United States, and was released in Canada on May 8, 2012.",
" Vocalist Trevor McNevan has stated \"the record is some of the heaviest stuff we've done and some of the lightest\"."
],
"title": "The End Is Where We Begin (album)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Hawk Nelson Is My Friend\n\nHawk Nelson Is My Friend, stylized on the album cover as Hawk Nelson... Is My Friend! , is the third full-length studio album from Christian rock band Hawk Nelson. It was released on April 1, 2008, debuting at No. 34 on the \"Billboard\" 200. In the first week of its release the album sold a little over 30,000 copies. Hawk Nelson wrote the songs, as usual together with Trevor McNevan, but this time also with Richard Marx and Raine Maida. The album was produced by award-winning David Bendeth (Paramore, The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus).",
"Title: Nine Lashes\n\nNine Lashes is an American Christian rock band from Birmingham, Alabama formed in 2006. They independently released their first album, \"Escape\", in 2009 before Trevor McNevan of Thousand Foot Krutch brought them to the attention of Tooth & Nail Records. Upon signing to the label, the band recorded their second album \"World We View\" and released it on February 14, 2012. The album sold well, making several \"Billboard\" charts. The band released their third album, \"From Water to War\" on January 21, 2014. After a change in direction, the band released their fourth album, the Pop/Electric/Worship styled \"Ascend\" on March 11, 2016.",
"Title: Thousand Foot Krutch\n\nThousand Foot Krutch (often abbreviated TFK) is a Canadian Christian rock band formed in 1995. They have released eight albums. They have also released one live album and three remix albums. Singer Trevor McNevan and drummer Steve Augustine are also members of their own side project band called FM Static and Joel Bruyere started his own solo project called \"The Drawing Room\" in 2009. The band has sold a million albums as of February 2014.",
"Title: Welcome to the Masquerade\n\nWelcome to the Masquerade is the fifth studio album by Canadian Christian hard rock band Thousand Foot Krutch. It was released on September 8, 2009. Trevor McNevan, the band's frontman, has stated, \"Yeah, I think the new record is definitely more aggressive. In some areas, it's the heaviest we've ever been.\" The album entered the Billboard top 200 at No. 35 and the Christian Album charts at No. 2.",
"Title: Trevor McNevan\n\nTrevor McNevan (born July 17, 1978), also known as Teerawk, is a Canadian musician and lead singer/songwriter of Thousand Foot Krutch and pop punk side project FM Static along with Steve Augustine (the third Thousand Foot Krutch drummer). His first band, Oddball, included former Thousand Foot Krutch members Dave Smith (guitar) and Tim Baxter (bass), as well as Three Days Grace drummer Neil Sanderson. Oddball released the 27-song record \"Shutterbug\", in 1995, featuring half hip-hop and half rock songs.",
"Title: World We View\n\nWorld We View is the second studio album by the American Christian rock band Nine Lashes, released on February 14, 2012 through Tooth & Nail Records. It is the follow-up to their independent debut album \"Escape\" and was co-produced by Aaron Sprinkle and Trevor McNevan, the latter of whom was instrumental in getting the group signed and contributes guest vocals to the song \"Adrenaline\".",
"Title: Collaborations (KJ-52 album)\n\nCollaborations is rapper KJ-52's second studio album, and his first distributed by BEC Recordings. It features his most known song, \"Dear Slim\" which was shown on Total Request Live and described his aspirations such as \"Rise Up\" featuring Rob Beckley of Pillar and Trevor McNevan of Thousand Foot Krutch as well as \"Revenge of the Nerds\" featuring Pigeon John.",
"Title: Leslie West\n\nLeslie West (born Leslie Weinstein; October 22, 1945) is an American rock guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter. He is best known as a founding member of the hard rock band Mountain.",
"Title: FM Static\n\nFM Static is a Canadian Christian pop punk duo based in Toronto, Ontario. The band was formed in 2003 as a side project for Thousand Foot Krutch. The band consists of Trevor McNevan and Steve Augustine. The original lineup included John Bunner on guitar and Justin Smith on bass. As of 2013, the band has released four studio albums, most recently \"My Brain Says Stop, But My Heart Says Go! \" (2011).",
"Title: The End Is Where We Begin (album)\n\nThe End Is Where We Begin is the sixth studio album by Canadian rock band Thousand Foot Krutch. It was released on April 17, 2012 in the United States, and was released in Canada on May 8, 2012. Vocalist Trevor McNevan has stated \"the record is some of the heaviest stuff we've done and some of the lightest\"."
] |
1,780
|
In which city was this theatre built in 1599, for which Matthew Browne was involved in legal and financial transactions?
|
London
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Matthew Browne",
"Globe Theatre",
"Globe Theatre"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988 is an Act of the Parliament of India that prohibits certain types of financial transactions.",
" The act defines a 'benami' transaction as any transaction in which property is transferred to one person for a consideration paid by another person.",
" Such transactions were a feature of the Indian economy, usually relating to the purchase of property (real estate), and were thought to contribute to the Indian black money problem.",
" The act bans all benami transactions and gives the government the right to recover property held benami without paying any compensation."
],
"title": "Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988"
},
{
"sentences": [
"ISO/TC 68 is a technical committee formed within the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), of Geneva, Switzerland, tasked with developing and maintaining international standards covering the areas of banking, securities, and other financial services.",
" As the standards organization under ISO responsible for the development of all international financial services standards, ISO/TC 68 plays a key role in the development and adoption of new technologies in the banking, brokerage and insurance industries.",
" Many of its current work projects involve developing ecommerce standards such as better online security for financial transactions, XML standards for financial transactions and standards to reduce the cost and delays of international financial transactions.",
" The membership of ISO/TC 68, consists of more than 30 organizations assigned by participating national standards bodies plus additional international standards development organizations that work collaboratively toward global financial services standards development."
],
"title": "ISO/TC 68"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Globe Theatre was a theatre in London associated with William Shakespeare.",
" It was built in 1599 by Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, on land owned by Thomas Brend and inherited by his son, Nicholas Brend and grandson Sir Matthew Brend, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613.",
" A second Globe Theatre was built on the same site by June 1614 and closed by an Ordinance issued on 6 September 1642."
],
"title": "Globe Theatre"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sir Matthew Browne (1563 – 1 August 1603) of Betchworth Castle, Surrey, MP, was the only son of Sir Thomas Browne and Mabel Fitzwilliam.",
" He was involved in legal and financial transactions concerning the Globe Theatre in 1601.",
" He was killed in a duel with his kinsman, Sir John Townshend, on 1 August 1603."
],
"title": "Matthew Browne"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Reference data is a catch all term used in the finance industry to describe counterparty and security identifiers used when making a trade.",
" As opposed to market data the reference data is used to complete financial transactions and settle those transactions.",
" The financial service industry and regulatory agencies have pursued a policy of standardizing the reference data that define and describe such transactions."
],
"title": "Reference data (financial markets)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bookkeeping is the recording of financial transactions, and is part of the process of accounting in business.",
" Transactions include purchases, sales, receipts, and payments by an individual person or an organization/corporation.",
" There are several standard methods of bookkeeping, such as the single-entry bookkeeping system and the double-entry bookkeeping system, but, while they may be thought of as \"real\" bookkeeping, any process that involves the recording of financial transactions is a bookkeeping process."
],
"title": "Bookkeeping"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sir Matthew Brend (6 February 1600 – 1659) inherited from his father, Nicholas Brend, the land on which the first and second Globe Theatres were built, and which Nicholas Brend had leased on 21 February 1599 for a 31-year term to Cuthbert Burbage, Richard Burbage, William Shakespeare, Augustine Phillips, Thomas Pope, John Heminges, and William Kempe.",
" During much of the time he was the legal owner of the Globe, Matthew Brend was underage, and his properties were managed for him by Sir Matthew Browne, John Collet, Sir John Bodley, and Sir Sigismund Zinzan.",
" In 1623 Brend conveyed the property on which the Globe was built to his wife, Frances, as part of her jointure.",
" In 1632 he was sued in the Court of Requests by the remaining original lessee, Cuthbert Burbage, and others, for an extension of their original lease."
],
"title": "Matthew Brend"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Collaborative finance is a category of financial transaction that occurs directly between individuals without the intermediation of a traditional financial institution.",
" This new way to manage informal financial transactions has been enabled by advances in social media and peer-to-peer online platforms.",
" The wide variety of collaborative finance resources may vary not only in their organizational and operational aspects, but also by geographical region, share of the financial market etc.",
" It is precisely this heterogeneity that enables the informal savings and credit activity to profitably reach those income-groups not served by commercial banks and other financial institutions.",
" It is their informality, adaptability and flexibility of operations – characteristics which reduce their transactions costs and confers upon them their comparative advantage and economic rationale.",
" Collaborative Finance is characterized by highly personalized loan transactions entailing face-to-face dealings with borrowers and flexibility in respect of loan purpose, interest rates, collateral requirements, maturity periods and debt rescheduling."
],
"title": "Collaborative finance"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Legal tender is a medium of payment recognized by a legal system to be valid for meeting a financial obligation.",
" Paper currency and coins are common forms of legal tender in many countries.",
" Legal tender is variously defined in different jurisdictions. Formally, it is anything which when offered in payment extinguishes the debt.",
" Thus, personal cheques, credit cards, and similar non-cash methods of payment are not usually legal tender.",
" The law does not relieve the debt obligation until payment is tendered.",
" Coins and banknotes are usually defined as legal tender.",
" Some jurisdictions may forbid or restrict payment made other than by legal tender.",
" For example, such a law might outlaw the use of foreign coins and bank notes or require a license to perform financial transactions in a foreign currency."
],
"title": "Legal tender"
},
{
"sentences": [
"A cashless society describes an economic state whereby financial transactions are not conducted with money in the form of physical banknotes or coins, but rather through the transfer of digital information (usually an electronic representation of money) between the transacting parties.",
" Cashless societies have existed, based on barter and other methods of exchange, and cashless transactions have also become possible using digital currencies such as bitcoin.",
" However this article discusses and focuses on the term \"cashless society\" in the sense of a move towards, and implications of, a society where cash is replaced by its digital equivalent - in other words, legal tender (money) exists, is recorded, and is exchanged only in electronic digital form."
],
"title": "Cashless society"
}
] |
[
"Title: Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988\n\nBenami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988 is an Act of the Parliament of India that prohibits certain types of financial transactions. The act defines a 'benami' transaction as any transaction in which property is transferred to one person for a consideration paid by another person. Such transactions were a feature of the Indian economy, usually relating to the purchase of property (real estate), and were thought to contribute to the Indian black money problem. The act bans all benami transactions and gives the government the right to recover property held benami without paying any compensation.",
"Title: ISO/TC 68\n\nISO/TC 68 is a technical committee formed within the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), of Geneva, Switzerland, tasked with developing and maintaining international standards covering the areas of banking, securities, and other financial services. As the standards organization under ISO responsible for the development of all international financial services standards, ISO/TC 68 plays a key role in the development and adoption of new technologies in the banking, brokerage and insurance industries. Many of its current work projects involve developing ecommerce standards such as better online security for financial transactions, XML standards for financial transactions and standards to reduce the cost and delays of international financial transactions. The membership of ISO/TC 68, consists of more than 30 organizations assigned by participating national standards bodies plus additional international standards development organizations that work collaboratively toward global financial services standards development.",
"Title: Globe Theatre\n\nThe Globe Theatre was a theatre in London associated with William Shakespeare. It was built in 1599 by Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, on land owned by Thomas Brend and inherited by his son, Nicholas Brend and grandson Sir Matthew Brend, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613. A second Globe Theatre was built on the same site by June 1614 and closed by an Ordinance issued on 6 September 1642.",
"Title: Matthew Browne\n\nSir Matthew Browne (1563 – 1 August 1603) of Betchworth Castle, Surrey, MP, was the only son of Sir Thomas Browne and Mabel Fitzwilliam. He was involved in legal and financial transactions concerning the Globe Theatre in 1601. He was killed in a duel with his kinsman, Sir John Townshend, on 1 August 1603.",
"Title: Reference data (financial markets)\n\nReference data is a catch all term used in the finance industry to describe counterparty and security identifiers used when making a trade. As opposed to market data the reference data is used to complete financial transactions and settle those transactions. The financial service industry and regulatory agencies have pursued a policy of standardizing the reference data that define and describe such transactions.",
"Title: Bookkeeping\n\nBookkeeping is the recording of financial transactions, and is part of the process of accounting in business. Transactions include purchases, sales, receipts, and payments by an individual person or an organization/corporation. There are several standard methods of bookkeeping, such as the single-entry bookkeeping system and the double-entry bookkeeping system, but, while they may be thought of as \"real\" bookkeeping, any process that involves the recording of financial transactions is a bookkeeping process.",
"Title: Matthew Brend\n\nSir Matthew Brend (6 February 1600 – 1659) inherited from his father, Nicholas Brend, the land on which the first and second Globe Theatres were built, and which Nicholas Brend had leased on 21 February 1599 for a 31-year term to Cuthbert Burbage, Richard Burbage, William Shakespeare, Augustine Phillips, Thomas Pope, John Heminges, and William Kempe. During much of the time he was the legal owner of the Globe, Matthew Brend was underage, and his properties were managed for him by Sir Matthew Browne, John Collet, Sir John Bodley, and Sir Sigismund Zinzan. In 1623 Brend conveyed the property on which the Globe was built to his wife, Frances, as part of her jointure. In 1632 he was sued in the Court of Requests by the remaining original lessee, Cuthbert Burbage, and others, for an extension of their original lease.",
"Title: Collaborative finance\n\nCollaborative finance is a category of financial transaction that occurs directly between individuals without the intermediation of a traditional financial institution. This new way to manage informal financial transactions has been enabled by advances in social media and peer-to-peer online platforms. The wide variety of collaborative finance resources may vary not only in their organizational and operational aspects, but also by geographical region, share of the financial market etc. It is precisely this heterogeneity that enables the informal savings and credit activity to profitably reach those income-groups not served by commercial banks and other financial institutions. It is their informality, adaptability and flexibility of operations – characteristics which reduce their transactions costs and confers upon them their comparative advantage and economic rationale. Collaborative Finance is characterized by highly personalized loan transactions entailing face-to-face dealings with borrowers and flexibility in respect of loan purpose, interest rates, collateral requirements, maturity periods and debt rescheduling.",
"Title: Legal tender\n\nLegal tender is a medium of payment recognized by a legal system to be valid for meeting a financial obligation. Paper currency and coins are common forms of legal tender in many countries. Legal tender is variously defined in different jurisdictions. Formally, it is anything which when offered in payment extinguishes the debt. Thus, personal cheques, credit cards, and similar non-cash methods of payment are not usually legal tender. The law does not relieve the debt obligation until payment is tendered. Coins and banknotes are usually defined as legal tender. Some jurisdictions may forbid or restrict payment made other than by legal tender. For example, such a law might outlaw the use of foreign coins and bank notes or require a license to perform financial transactions in a foreign currency.",
"Title: Cashless society\n\nA cashless society describes an economic state whereby financial transactions are not conducted with money in the form of physical banknotes or coins, but rather through the transfer of digital information (usually an electronic representation of money) between the transacting parties. Cashless societies have existed, based on barter and other methods of exchange, and cashless transactions have also become possible using digital currencies such as bitcoin. However this article discusses and focuses on the term \"cashless society\" in the sense of a move towards, and implications of, a society where cash is replaced by its digital equivalent - in other words, legal tender (money) exists, is recorded, and is exchanged only in electronic digital form."
] |
1,781
|
Crown for Christmas stars which English actor, best known for his roles as Adam Carter in the BBC One spy drama series "Spooks"?
|
Rupert Penry-Jones
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Crown for Christmas",
"Rupert Penry-Jones"
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"sent_id": [
0,
0
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|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The third series of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" (known as MI-5 in the United States) began broadcasting on 11 October 2004 on BBC One, before ending on 13 December 2004.",
" It consists of ten episodes which continue to follow the actions of Section B, a counter-terrorism division of the British Security Services (MI5).",
" It also sees the departure of three principal characters: Tom Quinn (Matthew Macfadyen) is decommissioned in the second episode, Zoe Reynolds (Keeley Hawes) is exiled to Chile in the sixth episode, and Danny Hunter (David Oyelowo) is killed in the series finale.",
" In addition to Macfadyen, Hawes and Oyelowo, Peter Firth, Rupert Penry-Jones, Nicola Walker, Hugh Simon, Shauna Macdonald and Rory MacGregor are listed as the main cast."
],
"title": "Spooks (series 3)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The series ten finale of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" was originally broadcast on BBC One on 23 October 2011.",
" It is the show's sixth episode of the tenth series and the 86th and final episode of \"Spooks\".",
" The episode was written by Jonathan Brackley and Sam Vincent, and directed by Bharat Nalluri.",
" The series finale concludes the \"Tourmeline\" story-arc that ran through the final series.",
" Section D tries to prevent a terrorist attack from a Russian ultranationalist that will disrupt a partnership between Russia and the United Kingdom, and push both nations into war."
],
"title": "Series 10, Episode 6 (Spooks)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Spooks\" (known as \"MI-5\" in certain countries) is a BAFTA-winning British spy drama television series, created by David Wolstencroft.",
" It debuted on BBC One on 13 May 2002.",
" The series follows the activities of the intelligence officers of Section D in MI5."
],
"title": "List of Spooks episodes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Robert Lewis Glenister (born 11th March 1960) is an English actor known for his roles as con man Ash \"Three Socks\" Morgan in the BBC television series \"Hustle\" and Nicholas Blake in the BBC spy drama \"Spooks\"."
],
"title": "Robert Glenister"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Crown for Christmas is a 2015 American made-for-television romantic comedy film starring Danica McKellar, Rupert Penry-Jones.",
" The film premiered on Hallmark Channel on November 27, 2015."
],
"title": "Crown for Christmas"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Rupert William Penry-Jones (born 22 September 1970) is an English actor, best known for his roles as Adam Carter in the BBC One spy drama series \"Spooks\", Clive Reader QC in the BBC One legal drama \"Silk\", policeman DI Joseph Chandler in the ITV murder mystery series \"Whitechapel\", and Mr. Quinlan in the FX horror series \"The Strain\"."
],
"title": "Rupert Penry-Jones"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Craig Dougall McLachlan (born 1 September 1965) is a Gold Logie award-winning Australian actor, musician, singer and composer.",
" He has been involved in film, television and music theatre for 25 years.",
" He is best known for appearing in the soap operas \"Neighbours\" and \"Home and Away\" and the BBC One spy drama \"Bugs\".",
" He has portrayed the title role in \"The Doctor Blake Mysteries\", for which he is nominated for a Logie Award in 2016 for Logie Award for Most Popular Actor; he has previously won the award in this category three times."
],
"title": "Craig McLachlan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Raza Jaffrey (born 28 May 1975) is a British actor and singer, who starred as Dr. Neal Hudson on the CBS TV medical drama \"Code Black\".",
" He is best known for playing Zafar Younis on the BBC One spy drama series \"Spooks\".",
" In 2014, he played Pakistani Lieutenant Colonel Aasar Khan in season 4 of the Showtime series \"Homeland\"."
],
"title": "Raza Jaffrey"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The first series of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" (known as MI-5 in the United States) began broadcasting on 13 May 2002 on BBC One, before ending on 17 June 2002.",
" It consists of six episodes.",
" \"Spooks\" follows the actions of Section D, a counter-terrorism division of the British Security Services (MI5).",
" Among the storylines, main character Tom Quinn faces dilemmas living a double life with his girlfriend, who at first does not know he is really a spy, and Tessa Phillips is running phantom agents for monetary gain.",
" Matthew Macfadyen, Keeley Hawes, David Oyelowo, Peter Firth, Jenny Agutter, Lisa Faulkner, Esther Hall, Heather Cave, Hugh Simon and Greame Mearns are listed as the main cast."
],
"title": "Spooks (series 1)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The second series of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" (known as MI-5 in the United States) began broadcasting on 2 June 2003 on BBC One, before ending on 11 August 2003.",
" It consists of ten episodes.",
" \"Spooks\" centres on the actions of Section D, a counter-terrorism division of the British Security Services (MI5).",
" Matthew Macfadyen, Keeley Hawes, David Oyelowo, Peter Firth, Hugh Simon, Shauna Macdonald, Rory MacGregor, Natasha Little, Nicola Walker, Megan Dodds, Jenny Agutter and Enzo Cilenti are listed as the main cast."
],
"title": "Spooks (series 2)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Spooks (series 3)\n\nThe third series of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" (known as MI-5 in the United States) began broadcasting on 11 October 2004 on BBC One, before ending on 13 December 2004. It consists of ten episodes which continue to follow the actions of Section B, a counter-terrorism division of the British Security Services (MI5). It also sees the departure of three principal characters: Tom Quinn (Matthew Macfadyen) is decommissioned in the second episode, Zoe Reynolds (Keeley Hawes) is exiled to Chile in the sixth episode, and Danny Hunter (David Oyelowo) is killed in the series finale. In addition to Macfadyen, Hawes and Oyelowo, Peter Firth, Rupert Penry-Jones, Nicola Walker, Hugh Simon, Shauna Macdonald and Rory MacGregor are listed as the main cast.",
"Title: Series 10, Episode 6 (Spooks)\n\nThe series ten finale of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" was originally broadcast on BBC One on 23 October 2011. It is the show's sixth episode of the tenth series and the 86th and final episode of \"Spooks\". The episode was written by Jonathan Brackley and Sam Vincent, and directed by Bharat Nalluri. The series finale concludes the \"Tourmeline\" story-arc that ran through the final series. Section D tries to prevent a terrorist attack from a Russian ultranationalist that will disrupt a partnership between Russia and the United Kingdom, and push both nations into war.",
"Title: List of Spooks episodes\n\n\"Spooks\" (known as \"MI-5\" in certain countries) is a BAFTA-winning British spy drama television series, created by David Wolstencroft. It debuted on BBC One on 13 May 2002. The series follows the activities of the intelligence officers of Section D in MI5.",
"Title: Robert Glenister\n\nRobert Lewis Glenister (born 11th March 1960) is an English actor known for his roles as con man Ash \"Three Socks\" Morgan in the BBC television series \"Hustle\" and Nicholas Blake in the BBC spy drama \"Spooks\".",
"Title: Crown for Christmas\n\nCrown for Christmas is a 2015 American made-for-television romantic comedy film starring Danica McKellar, Rupert Penry-Jones. The film premiered on Hallmark Channel on November 27, 2015.",
"Title: Rupert Penry-Jones\n\nRupert William Penry-Jones (born 22 September 1970) is an English actor, best known for his roles as Adam Carter in the BBC One spy drama series \"Spooks\", Clive Reader QC in the BBC One legal drama \"Silk\", policeman DI Joseph Chandler in the ITV murder mystery series \"Whitechapel\", and Mr. Quinlan in the FX horror series \"The Strain\".",
"Title: Craig McLachlan\n\nCraig Dougall McLachlan (born 1 September 1965) is a Gold Logie award-winning Australian actor, musician, singer and composer. He has been involved in film, television and music theatre for 25 years. He is best known for appearing in the soap operas \"Neighbours\" and \"Home and Away\" and the BBC One spy drama \"Bugs\". He has portrayed the title role in \"The Doctor Blake Mysteries\", for which he is nominated for a Logie Award in 2016 for Logie Award for Most Popular Actor; he has previously won the award in this category three times.",
"Title: Raza Jaffrey\n\nRaza Jaffrey (born 28 May 1975) is a British actor and singer, who starred as Dr. Neal Hudson on the CBS TV medical drama \"Code Black\". He is best known for playing Zafar Younis on the BBC One spy drama series \"Spooks\". In 2014, he played Pakistani Lieutenant Colonel Aasar Khan in season 4 of the Showtime series \"Homeland\".",
"Title: Spooks (series 1)\n\nThe first series of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" (known as MI-5 in the United States) began broadcasting on 13 May 2002 on BBC One, before ending on 17 June 2002. It consists of six episodes. \"Spooks\" follows the actions of Section D, a counter-terrorism division of the British Security Services (MI5). Among the storylines, main character Tom Quinn faces dilemmas living a double life with his girlfriend, who at first does not know he is really a spy, and Tessa Phillips is running phantom agents for monetary gain. Matthew Macfadyen, Keeley Hawes, David Oyelowo, Peter Firth, Jenny Agutter, Lisa Faulkner, Esther Hall, Heather Cave, Hugh Simon and Greame Mearns are listed as the main cast.",
"Title: Spooks (series 2)\n\nThe second series of the British spy drama television series \"Spooks\" (known as MI-5 in the United States) began broadcasting on 2 June 2003 on BBC One, before ending on 11 August 2003. It consists of ten episodes. \"Spooks\" centres on the actions of Section D, a counter-terrorism division of the British Security Services (MI5). Matthew Macfadyen, Keeley Hawes, David Oyelowo, Peter Firth, Hugh Simon, Shauna Macdonald, Rory MacGregor, Natasha Little, Nicola Walker, Megan Dodds, Jenny Agutter and Enzo Cilenti are listed as the main cast."
] |
1,782
|
What foortball league does Harry Fearnley play in?
|
Premier League
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Harry Fearnley (footballer, born 1935)",
"Huddersfield Town A.F.C."
],
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0,
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|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Henry Ross (4 April 1881 – 1953) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a full back.",
" Harry Ross, who had been born in Brechin in 1881, had moved from Junior football in Brechin to play for Burnley but his major triumphs were with Fulham, then a Southern League club, which he joined in 1904.",
" He played ninety eight games, mainly at right back, for Fulham between 1904 and 1909 and scored a total of nine goals.",
" Fulham had appointed Harry Bradshaw as manager in 1904 and “Bradshaw's teams were built around a wonderful defence in which the consistent and highly regarded Fryer was supported by two Harrys at full back, Ross and Thorpe.\"",
" He was described in 1905 as “one of those players who can play equally well at right or left back.",
" Physically he is the man for the place.",
" Twenty four years of age, he weighs over thirteen stone and stands a trifle more than five feet ten.",
" He is a vigorous tackler and a powerful kick, and possesses all the attributes of mind and temper that go to make a first class player.”",
".",
" Fulham had entered the Football League in 1907.",
" Ross had played for the Anglo-Scots in an international trial in 1905-06 and had captained Fulham in 1907-08.",
" In that season he had been carried shoulder high from the field, the hero of the hour, after Fulham had defeated Manchester United in a cup tie.",
" From Fulham he moved to St Mirren and thence signed for Brechin, playing his first game on 29 October 1910 against Aberdeen A. Ross played seven games for Brechin City in season 1910-11."
],
"title": "Harry Ross"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Born in Newtown, New South Wales, Harry Flower learnt to play rugby league at a young age and was also a great runner, running marathons with the Redfern and St.George Harriers clubs.",
" Originally a South Sydney junior and prop-forward, Harry Flower played eight seasons with St George Dragons during their foundation years between 1922 and 1930.",
" He scored a try in the infamous Earl Park Riot match in 1928.",
" His last game was the 1930 Grand Final against Western Suburbs Magpies."
],
"title": "Harry Flower"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Albert Fearnley (10 March 1924 – 4 May 1999) was an English rugby league footballer and coach who played as a second-row.",
" Born in Bradford, Yorkshire, Fearnley started his career at Rochdale Hornets and went on to play for Oldham, Halifax, Featherstone Rovers, and Batley.",
" After retiring as a player, he coached Halifax, Bradford Northern, Batley and Blackpool Borough."
],
"title": "Albert Fearnley"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Henry \"Harry\" Fearnley (16 June 1935 – 12 January 2013) was a former professional footballer born in Penistone, near Barnsley, Yorkshire, who played as a goalkeeper for Huddersfield Town, Oxford United and Doncaster Rovers."
],
"title": "Harry Fearnley (footballer, born 1935)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Harry H. Raymond (born as \"Harry H. Truman\" February 20, 1862 in Utica, New York – March 21, 1925 in San Diego, California), nicknamed \"Jack\", was a Major League Baseball player who played infielder from 1888 -1892 .",
" He would play for the Louisville Colonels, Washington Senators, and Pittsburgh Pirates."
],
"title": "Harry Raymond (baseball)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Watford Football Club are an association football team from the county of Hertfordshire, England.",
" The 1914–15 season was their nineteenth season of league football, since joining the Southern League as West Hertfordshire for the 1896–97 season.",
" Watford finished the season as champions of the Southern League First Division, winning 22 and drawing 8 of their 38 league matches.",
" In other competitions, Watford were eliminated from the FA Cup in the sixth qualifying round by Rochdale, and from the Southern Charity Cup by fellow Southern League team Luton Town.",
" The club's manager was Harry Kent, and its top scorer George Edmonds, with 17 goals from 35 appearances.",
" Other notable players included Skilly Williams, who began what would be a 13-year period as the club's first choice goalkeeper, and Fred Gregory, whose goal against Gillingham sealed the title for Watford.",
" Gregory and Williams were also the only two men to play in all 40 of Watford's games."
],
"title": "1914–15 Watford F.C. season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1977 New York Jets season was the 18th season for the team and the 8th in the National Football League.",
" It began with the team trying to improve upon its 3–11 record from 1976 under new head coach Walt Michaels and beginning the post-Joe Namath era.",
" However, the Jets struggled with their third consecutive 3-11 season.",
" They won a major off the field court decision.",
" As per the memorandum of understanding signed in late 1961 by team original owner (as the New York Titans) Harry Wismer, Shea Stadium's co-tenants, the New York Mets, would have exclusive use of the stadium until they had completed their season.",
" The Jets were, in most years, required to open the season with several road games, a problem made worse in 1969 and 1973 when the Mets had long playoff runs.",
" Feeling that this arrangement was a disadvantage, the team announced in 1977 that they would play two home games a year during the month of September at the Giants' new home in New Jersey, Giants Stadium.",
" Litigation began between New York City and the Jets over the issue, and in the lawsuit's settlement, the city agreed to allow the Jets to play two September home games a season at Shea beginning in 1978 for the remaining six years in the Jets' lease.",
" In 1977, the Jets were to play one September game at Giants Stadium and an October 2 game at Shea.",
" From 1967 through this season—a span of 11 seasons—the Jets did not play a home game at Shea Stadium in the month of September.",
" As of 2017, the Jets are the first (and so far, only) team in NFL history to finish 3 straight seasons with only 3 wins.",
" Since the NFL schedule expanded to 16 games in 1978, no team has finished 3-13 3 years in a row."
],
"title": "1977 New York Jets season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Huddersfield Town Association Football Club is a professional football club based in the town of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England.",
" The team competes in the Premier League, the highest tier of English football, having been promoted by winning the 2017 Championship play-off final."
],
"title": "Huddersfield Town A.F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kurt Harry Fearnley, OAM (born 23 March 1981) is an Australian wheelchair racer, who has won gold medals at the Paralympic Games and 'crawled' the Kokoda Track.",
" He has a congenital disorder called sacral agenesis which prevented fetal development of certain parts of his lower spine and all of his sacrum.",
" In Paralympic events he is classified in the T54 classification.",
" He focuses on long and middle-distance wheelchair races, and has also won medals in sprint relays.",
" He participated in the 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 Games.",
" Fearnley finished his Paralympic career with silver and bronze medals at the 2016 Rio Paralympics."
],
"title": "Kurt Fearnley"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Saint Peter's Singers (SPS) is a chamber choir associated with Leeds Minster, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England celebrating in 2017 the fortieth anniversary of the choir's formation by Harry Fearnley in 1977.",
" A special anniversary concert takes place at Leeds Minster on Sunday 25 June at 5.30 pm with the National Festival Orchestra, soloists Kristina James, Joanna Gamble, Paul Dutton and Quentin Brown; the programme includes Bach's Cantatas 118 and 11, the Palestrina \"Missa Brevis\", E. J. Moeran's \"Songs of Springtime\" and \"All Wisdom Cometh from the Lord\" by Philip Moore.",
" Admission is free and a retiring collection will be taken."
],
"title": "Saint Peter's Singers of Leeds"
}
] |
[
"Title: Harry Ross\n\nHenry Ross (4 April 1881 – 1953) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a full back. Harry Ross, who had been born in Brechin in 1881, had moved from Junior football in Brechin to play for Burnley but his major triumphs were with Fulham, then a Southern League club, which he joined in 1904. He played ninety eight games, mainly at right back, for Fulham between 1904 and 1909 and scored a total of nine goals. Fulham had appointed Harry Bradshaw as manager in 1904 and “Bradshaw's teams were built around a wonderful defence in which the consistent and highly regarded Fryer was supported by two Harrys at full back, Ross and Thorpe.\" He was described in 1905 as “one of those players who can play equally well at right or left back. Physically he is the man for the place. Twenty four years of age, he weighs over thirteen stone and stands a trifle more than five feet ten. He is a vigorous tackler and a powerful kick, and possesses all the attributes of mind and temper that go to make a first class player.” . Fulham had entered the Football League in 1907. Ross had played for the Anglo-Scots in an international trial in 1905-06 and had captained Fulham in 1907-08. In that season he had been carried shoulder high from the field, the hero of the hour, after Fulham had defeated Manchester United in a cup tie. From Fulham he moved to St Mirren and thence signed for Brechin, playing his first game on 29 October 1910 against Aberdeen A. Ross played seven games for Brechin City in season 1910-11.",
"Title: Harry Flower\n\nBorn in Newtown, New South Wales, Harry Flower learnt to play rugby league at a young age and was also a great runner, running marathons with the Redfern and St.George Harriers clubs. Originally a South Sydney junior and prop-forward, Harry Flower played eight seasons with St George Dragons during their foundation years between 1922 and 1930. He scored a try in the infamous Earl Park Riot match in 1928. His last game was the 1930 Grand Final against Western Suburbs Magpies.",
"Title: Albert Fearnley\n\nAlbert Fearnley (10 March 1924 – 4 May 1999) was an English rugby league footballer and coach who played as a second-row. Born in Bradford, Yorkshire, Fearnley started his career at Rochdale Hornets and went on to play for Oldham, Halifax, Featherstone Rovers, and Batley. After retiring as a player, he coached Halifax, Bradford Northern, Batley and Blackpool Borough.",
"Title: Harry Fearnley (footballer, born 1935)\n\nHenry \"Harry\" Fearnley (16 June 1935 – 12 January 2013) was a former professional footballer born in Penistone, near Barnsley, Yorkshire, who played as a goalkeeper for Huddersfield Town, Oxford United and Doncaster Rovers.",
"Title: Harry Raymond (baseball)\n\nHarry H. Raymond (born as \"Harry H. Truman\" February 20, 1862 in Utica, New York – March 21, 1925 in San Diego, California), nicknamed \"Jack\", was a Major League Baseball player who played infielder from 1888 -1892 . He would play for the Louisville Colonels, Washington Senators, and Pittsburgh Pirates.",
"Title: 1914–15 Watford F.C. season\n\nWatford Football Club are an association football team from the county of Hertfordshire, England. The 1914–15 season was their nineteenth season of league football, since joining the Southern League as West Hertfordshire for the 1896–97 season. Watford finished the season as champions of the Southern League First Division, winning 22 and drawing 8 of their 38 league matches. In other competitions, Watford were eliminated from the FA Cup in the sixth qualifying round by Rochdale, and from the Southern Charity Cup by fellow Southern League team Luton Town. The club's manager was Harry Kent, and its top scorer George Edmonds, with 17 goals from 35 appearances. Other notable players included Skilly Williams, who began what would be a 13-year period as the club's first choice goalkeeper, and Fred Gregory, whose goal against Gillingham sealed the title for Watford. Gregory and Williams were also the only two men to play in all 40 of Watford's games.",
"Title: 1977 New York Jets season\n\nThe 1977 New York Jets season was the 18th season for the team and the 8th in the National Football League. It began with the team trying to improve upon its 3–11 record from 1976 under new head coach Walt Michaels and beginning the post-Joe Namath era. However, the Jets struggled with their third consecutive 3-11 season. They won a major off the field court decision. As per the memorandum of understanding signed in late 1961 by team original owner (as the New York Titans) Harry Wismer, Shea Stadium's co-tenants, the New York Mets, would have exclusive use of the stadium until they had completed their season. The Jets were, in most years, required to open the season with several road games, a problem made worse in 1969 and 1973 when the Mets had long playoff runs. Feeling that this arrangement was a disadvantage, the team announced in 1977 that they would play two home games a year during the month of September at the Giants' new home in New Jersey, Giants Stadium. Litigation began between New York City and the Jets over the issue, and in the lawsuit's settlement, the city agreed to allow the Jets to play two September home games a season at Shea beginning in 1978 for the remaining six years in the Jets' lease. In 1977, the Jets were to play one September game at Giants Stadium and an October 2 game at Shea. From 1967 through this season—a span of 11 seasons—the Jets did not play a home game at Shea Stadium in the month of September. As of 2017, the Jets are the first (and so far, only) team in NFL history to finish 3 straight seasons with only 3 wins. Since the NFL schedule expanded to 16 games in 1978, no team has finished 3-13 3 years in a row.",
"Title: Huddersfield Town A.F.C.\n\nHuddersfield Town Association Football Club is a professional football club based in the town of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England. The team competes in the Premier League, the highest tier of English football, having been promoted by winning the 2017 Championship play-off final.",
"Title: Kurt Fearnley\n\nKurt Harry Fearnley, OAM (born 23 March 1981) is an Australian wheelchair racer, who has won gold medals at the Paralympic Games and 'crawled' the Kokoda Track. He has a congenital disorder called sacral agenesis which prevented fetal development of certain parts of his lower spine and all of his sacrum. In Paralympic events he is classified in the T54 classification. He focuses on long and middle-distance wheelchair races, and has also won medals in sprint relays. He participated in the 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 Games. Fearnley finished his Paralympic career with silver and bronze medals at the 2016 Rio Paralympics.",
"Title: Saint Peter's Singers of Leeds\n\nSaint Peter's Singers (SPS) is a chamber choir associated with Leeds Minster, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England celebrating in 2017 the fortieth anniversary of the choir's formation by Harry Fearnley in 1977. A special anniversary concert takes place at Leeds Minster on Sunday 25 June at 5.30 pm with the National Festival Orchestra, soloists Kristina James, Joanna Gamble, Paul Dutton and Quentin Brown; the programme includes Bach's Cantatas 118 and 11, the Palestrina \"Missa Brevis\", E. J. Moeran's \"Songs of Springtime\" and \"All Wisdom Cometh from the Lord\" by Philip Moore. Admission is free and a retiring collection will be taken."
] |
1,783
|
David Long's style of playing was influenced by the bluegrass musician of what nationality?
|
American
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"David Long (mandolin player)",
"Curly Seckler"
],
"sent_id": [
5,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Peter \"Pete\" Van Kuykendall (January 15, 1938 – August 24, 2017) also known as Pete Roberts, was an American bluegrass musician, songwriter, discographer and a magazine and music publisher.",
" He was a co-founder of \"Bluegrass Unlimited\" magazine and its editor since 1970.",
" He was instrumental in the formation of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) in 1985 and the International Bluegrass Music Museum (IBMM) in 1991.",
" In 1996, he was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame."
],
"title": "Pete Kuykendall"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kym Warner is an Australian musician and record producer, and a founding member of the American bluegrass band The Greencards.",
" Warner was an aspiring bluegrass musician (which was unusual in Australia at the time) after inheriting the music from his father, an early Australian bluegrass pioneer.",
" The winner of the Australian National Bluegrass Mandolin Championship for four consecutive years, Warner had toured with country music artists Gina Jeffreys, and with Young again in Kasey Chambers's band.",
" Before the band formed, Carol Young and Warner both knew each other, and according to Warner had been drawn to bluegrass and American roots music through an appreciation of George Jones and Merle Haggard.",
" After meeting, Warner and Young made the decision to emigrate to America, to pursue musical careers there.",
" Later, Young and Warner were living together in Sydney, and trying to find work in the moribund Australian bluegrass scene.",
" After leaving Australia, they spent time in West Texas before relocating to Austin."
],
"title": "Kym Warner"
},
{
"sentences": [
"David Long is a mandolin player from Nashville, Tennessee.",
" He was born in the winter of 1975.",
" Long has been described as a next generation musician with traditional sounds of bluegrass.",
" Long's music career started in 1996.",
" He plays Rural Country Blues, Old Time Bluegrass,and Early Black String Band.",
" David’s style of playing was influenced by Curly Seckler.",
" David has played with the Wildwood Valley Boys for about two years, and with Karl Shiflett and his Big Show.",
" Famously used explicit language on the stage of the World Famous Station Inn.",
" This act merely brings the new generation to old time music ad infinitum."
],
"title": "David Long (mandolin player)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dr. Michael (Mike) Derrington Murphy (born July 19, 1940) is a chemistry professor, bluegrass musician, and educator who founded the \"Bama Bluegrass\" Show in 1983.",
" \"Bama Bluegrass\" is the first and longest running bluegrass show on Alabama public radio."
],
"title": "Michael Derrington Murphy"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Eric Uglum (born November 22, 1961) is an American folk and bluegrass musician, vocalist, producer, and audio engineer.",
" He has had a productive career in bluegrass and folk music as a solo artist, a member of many bands and has been featured in \"Flatpicking Guitar Magazine\", \"Bluegrass Today\", \"Bluegrass Unlimited\" and \"Bluegrass Now\" magazine.",
" He is owner-operator of New Wine Sound Studio and Mastering Lab in Southern California and has worked with many artists including: Ralph Stanley, Alison Krauss, Sean Watkins, Sara Watkins, Stuart Duncan, Ron Block, Rob Ickes, Neal Casal, Sierra Hull, The Black Market Trust and Gonzalo Bergara.",
" In addition to working independently through his New Wine Sound Studio and Mastering Lab, Uglum is also a staff engineer at Blue Night Records."
],
"title": "Eric Uglum"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Corbitt was born in Tifton, Georgia.",
" He began his career in Cambridge, Massachusetts at the beginning of the 1960s as a bluegrass musician, then was known as a folk singer.",
" In mid-1960s, Corbitt met Jesse Colin Young, a Queens, New York City-born moderately successful folk singer.",
" In January 1965, the two began touring in Canada as a duo, eventually naming themselves \"The Youngbloods\".",
" Young played bass, and Corbitt played piano, harmonica and lead guitar.",
" Later on, they were joined by Corbitt's friend, a bluegrass musician Lowell \"Banana\" Levinger, and drummer Joe Bauer."
],
"title": "Jerry Corbitt"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mark Austin (born 1958) is a New Zealand composer and musical director who has written scores for many films, television programmes and commercials.",
" Much of his work has received critical acclaim.",
" Besides writing alone, he has collaborated with David Long, Don McGlashan and Neill Duncan, among others.",
" He has also worked in dance and theatre and was particularly active in this area in Auckland in the 1990s, where he was involved in several productions at the now defunct Watershed Theatre.",
" (A notable example is Braindead the Musical, on which he collaborated with Neill Duncan as co-composer and Musical Director in 1995, the libretto having been written by Fran Walsh and Stephen Sinclair, with props created by Weta Workshop and the production directed by Michael Hurst.)",
" With David Long, Austin has collaborated with dance choreographers Douglas Wright, Ann Dewey, Daniel Belton, and Mary Jane O’Reilly, and, on his own, with Josie Thompson.",
" In 2002 he moved to his home town of Wellington (where he was well known in the early 1980s as leader of The Tin Syndrome (band)).",
" He continues to write soundtracks, in between commissions and other projects."
],
"title": "Mark Austin (composer)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tony Rice (born David Anthony Rice, June 8, 1951, Danville, Virginia, United States) is an American guitarist and bluegrass musician.",
" He is perhaps the most influential living acoustic guitar player in bluegrass, progressive bluegrass, newgrass and flattop acoustic jazz.",
" He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2013."
],
"title": "Tony Rice"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Don Wayne Reno (born February 8, 1963 in Roanoke, Virginia) is a bluegrass musician and banjo player, and also an ordained minister.",
" He is a son of famed bluegrass musician Don Reno.",
" Reno was for several years a mainstay of Hayseed Dixie with his brother Dale Reno as the mandolinist.",
" He currently works with his brother and Mitch Harrell in the band Reno and Harrell."
],
"title": "Don Wayne Reno"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John Ray Sechler, known as Curly Seckler, (born December 25, 1919), is an American bluegrass musician."
],
"title": "Curly Seckler"
}
] |
[
"Title: Pete Kuykendall\n\nPeter \"Pete\" Van Kuykendall (January 15, 1938 – August 24, 2017) also known as Pete Roberts, was an American bluegrass musician, songwriter, discographer and a magazine and music publisher. He was a co-founder of \"Bluegrass Unlimited\" magazine and its editor since 1970. He was instrumental in the formation of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) in 1985 and the International Bluegrass Music Museum (IBMM) in 1991. In 1996, he was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.",
"Title: Kym Warner\n\nKym Warner is an Australian musician and record producer, and a founding member of the American bluegrass band The Greencards. Warner was an aspiring bluegrass musician (which was unusual in Australia at the time) after inheriting the music from his father, an early Australian bluegrass pioneer. The winner of the Australian National Bluegrass Mandolin Championship for four consecutive years, Warner had toured with country music artists Gina Jeffreys, and with Young again in Kasey Chambers's band. Before the band formed, Carol Young and Warner both knew each other, and according to Warner had been drawn to bluegrass and American roots music through an appreciation of George Jones and Merle Haggard. After meeting, Warner and Young made the decision to emigrate to America, to pursue musical careers there. Later, Young and Warner were living together in Sydney, and trying to find work in the moribund Australian bluegrass scene. After leaving Australia, they spent time in West Texas before relocating to Austin.",
"Title: David Long (mandolin player)\n\nDavid Long is a mandolin player from Nashville, Tennessee. He was born in the winter of 1975. Long has been described as a next generation musician with traditional sounds of bluegrass. Long's music career started in 1996. He plays Rural Country Blues, Old Time Bluegrass,and Early Black String Band. David’s style of playing was influenced by Curly Seckler. David has played with the Wildwood Valley Boys for about two years, and with Karl Shiflett and his Big Show. Famously used explicit language on the stage of the World Famous Station Inn. This act merely brings the new generation to old time music ad infinitum.",
"Title: Michael Derrington Murphy\n\nDr. Michael (Mike) Derrington Murphy (born July 19, 1940) is a chemistry professor, bluegrass musician, and educator who founded the \"Bama Bluegrass\" Show in 1983. \"Bama Bluegrass\" is the first and longest running bluegrass show on Alabama public radio.",
"Title: Eric Uglum\n\nEric Uglum (born November 22, 1961) is an American folk and bluegrass musician, vocalist, producer, and audio engineer. He has had a productive career in bluegrass and folk music as a solo artist, a member of many bands and has been featured in \"Flatpicking Guitar Magazine\", \"Bluegrass Today\", \"Bluegrass Unlimited\" and \"Bluegrass Now\" magazine. He is owner-operator of New Wine Sound Studio and Mastering Lab in Southern California and has worked with many artists including: Ralph Stanley, Alison Krauss, Sean Watkins, Sara Watkins, Stuart Duncan, Ron Block, Rob Ickes, Neal Casal, Sierra Hull, The Black Market Trust and Gonzalo Bergara. In addition to working independently through his New Wine Sound Studio and Mastering Lab, Uglum is also a staff engineer at Blue Night Records.",
"Title: Jerry Corbitt\n\nCorbitt was born in Tifton, Georgia. He began his career in Cambridge, Massachusetts at the beginning of the 1960s as a bluegrass musician, then was known as a folk singer. In mid-1960s, Corbitt met Jesse Colin Young, a Queens, New York City-born moderately successful folk singer. In January 1965, the two began touring in Canada as a duo, eventually naming themselves \"The Youngbloods\". Young played bass, and Corbitt played piano, harmonica and lead guitar. Later on, they were joined by Corbitt's friend, a bluegrass musician Lowell \"Banana\" Levinger, and drummer Joe Bauer.",
"Title: Mark Austin (composer)\n\nMark Austin (born 1958) is a New Zealand composer and musical director who has written scores for many films, television programmes and commercials. Much of his work has received critical acclaim. Besides writing alone, he has collaborated with David Long, Don McGlashan and Neill Duncan, among others. He has also worked in dance and theatre and was particularly active in this area in Auckland in the 1990s, where he was involved in several productions at the now defunct Watershed Theatre. (A notable example is Braindead the Musical, on which he collaborated with Neill Duncan as co-composer and Musical Director in 1995, the libretto having been written by Fran Walsh and Stephen Sinclair, with props created by Weta Workshop and the production directed by Michael Hurst.) With David Long, Austin has collaborated with dance choreographers Douglas Wright, Ann Dewey, Daniel Belton, and Mary Jane O’Reilly, and, on his own, with Josie Thompson. In 2002 he moved to his home town of Wellington (where he was well known in the early 1980s as leader of The Tin Syndrome (band)). He continues to write soundtracks, in between commissions and other projects.",
"Title: Tony Rice\n\nTony Rice (born David Anthony Rice, June 8, 1951, Danville, Virginia, United States) is an American guitarist and bluegrass musician. He is perhaps the most influential living acoustic guitar player in bluegrass, progressive bluegrass, newgrass and flattop acoustic jazz. He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2013.",
"Title: Don Wayne Reno\n\nDon Wayne Reno (born February 8, 1963 in Roanoke, Virginia) is a bluegrass musician and banjo player, and also an ordained minister. He is a son of famed bluegrass musician Don Reno. Reno was for several years a mainstay of Hayseed Dixie with his brother Dale Reno as the mandolinist. He currently works with his brother and Mitch Harrell in the band Reno and Harrell.",
"Title: Curly Seckler\n\nJohn Ray Sechler, known as Curly Seckler, (born December 25, 1919), is an American bluegrass musician."
] |
1,784
|
which primary airport serving the city of Melbourne dealt with an "accident" named Emirates Flight 407?
|
Melbourne Airport
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Emirates Flight 407",
"Emirates Flight 407",
"Melbourne Airport"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
2,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (IATA: CLE, ICAO: KCLE, FAA LID: CLE) is a public airport located nine miles (14 km) southwest of the central business district of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States.",
" It is the primary airport serving Northeast Ohio and is the largest and busiest airport in the state of Ohio.",
" The metropolitan area is also served by Burke Lakefront Airport and by Akron-Canton Regional Airport.",
" Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport together comprise the Cleveland Airport System, operated by the City of Cleveland's Department of Port Control."
],
"title": "Cleveland Hopkins International Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Melbourne Airport (IATA: MEL, ICAO: YMML) , colloquially known as Tullamarine Airport, is the primary airport serving the city of Melbourne, and the second busiest airport in Australia.",
" It was opened in 1970 to replace the nearby Essendon Airport.",
" Melbourne Airport is the sole international airport of the four airports serving the Melbourne metropolitan area."
],
"title": "Melbourne Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cape Town International Airport (IATA: CPT, ICAO: FACT) is the primary airport serving the city of Cape Town, and is the second-busiest airport in South Africa and third-busiest in Africa.",
" Located approximately 20 km from the city centre, the airport was opened in 1954 to replace Cape Town's previous airport, Wingfield Aerodrome.",
" Cape Town International Airport is the only airport in the Cape Town metropolitan area that offers scheduled passenger services.",
" The airport has domestic and international terminals, linked by a common central terminal."
],
"title": "Cape Town International Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Coimbatore International Airport (IATA: CJB, ICAO: VOCB) is the primary airport serving the city of Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu.",
" It is located at Peelamedu, about 13 km from the center of the city.",
" Previously known as Peelamedu Civil Aerodrome, it is the 19th busiest airport in India in terms of passengers handled, 16th busiest in terms of total aircraft movement and 14th busiest in terms of cargo handled.",
" The airport is the second largest airport in terms of passenger traffic and cargo after Chennai International Airport In Tamil Nadu.",
" About five domestic and three international airlines serve the airport.",
" The Airport also serves as a growing hub for Cargo transportation."
],
"title": "Coimbatore International Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Emirates Flight Catering (Arabic: الإمارات لتموين الطائرات ) (EKFC) is an in-flight catering service based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, which provides catering and support services for Emirates Airline and all other airlines based at Dubai International Airport.",
" It is a subsidiary of The Emirates Group."
],
"title": "Emirates Flight Catering"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Birsa Munda Airport (IATA: IXR, ICAO: VERC) also known as Ranchi Airport is the primary airport serving the city of Ranchi, the capital city of Indian state Jharkhand.",
" It is named after an Indian tribal freedom fighter Birsa Munda and currently it is managed by Airports Authority of India.",
" The airport is located in Hinoo, approximately 7 km from the center of the city.",
" The airport recently crossed 1 million passenger mark annually and is the 35th busiest airport in India."
],
"title": "Birsa Munda Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Soekarno–Hatta International Airport (Indonesian: \"Bandar Udara Internasional Soekarno–Hatta\" ) (IATA: CGK, ICAO: WIII) , abbreviated SHIA or Soetta, is the primary airport serving the Greater Jakarta area on the island of Java in Indonesia.",
" Named after the first president and vice-president of Indonesia, Soekarno and Mohammad Hatta, the airport is located at Benda, Tangerang, approximately 20 km northwest of central Jakarta.",
" Due to its proximity to the neighbourhood of Cengkareng in West Jakarta, the airport is also known as Cengkareng Airport, with the assigned three-letter IATA designator \"CGK\".",
" The airport is the busiest and the largest airport in Indonesia, as well as being the busiest in the southern hemisphere.",
" According to air travel intelligence company OAG, the airport ranked as the 7th most connected airport in the world & ranked 1st as 'megahub' airport in Asia-Pacific region as per connectivity index, ahead of Japan's Tokyo Haneda Airport and Australia's Sydney Airport ."
],
"title": "Soekarno–Hatta International Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport (colloquially Mascot Airport, Kingsford Smith Airport, or Sydney Airport; IATA: SYD, ICAO: YSSY ; ) is an international airport in Sydney, Australia located 8 km (5 mi) south of Sydney city centre, in the suburb of Mascot.",
" It is the primary airport serving Sydney, and is a primary hub for Qantas, as well as a secondary hub for Virgin Australia and Jetstar Airways.",
" Situated next to Botany Bay, the airport has three runways, colloquially known as the east–west, north–south and third runways."
],
"title": "Sydney Airport"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Emirates Flight 521 is a scheduled international passenger flight from Thiruvananthapuram, India, to Dubai, United Arab Emirates, operated by Emirates using a Boeing 777-300.",
" On 3 August 2016, the aircraft carrying 282 passengers and 18 crew crashed while landing at Dubai International Airport, at approximately 12:45 local time."
],
"title": "Emirates Flight 521"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Emirates Flight 407 was an Emirates flight flying from Melbourne to Dubai using the Airbus A340-500.",
" On 20 March 2009, the flight failed to take off properly at Melbourne Airport, hitting several structures at the end of the runway before eventually climbing enough to return to the airport for a safe landing.",
" Although no fatalities or injuries resulted, damage to the aircraft was severe enough for the event to be classified by Australian Transport Safety Bureau as an \"accident\".",
" It has been described \"as close as we have ever come to a major aviation catastrophe in Australia\" by aviation officials."
],
"title": "Emirates Flight 407"
}
] |
[
"Title: Cleveland Hopkins International Airport\n\nCleveland Hopkins International Airport (IATA: CLE, ICAO: KCLE, FAA LID: CLE) is a public airport located nine miles (14 km) southwest of the central business district of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States. It is the primary airport serving Northeast Ohio and is the largest and busiest airport in the state of Ohio. The metropolitan area is also served by Burke Lakefront Airport and by Akron-Canton Regional Airport. Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport together comprise the Cleveland Airport System, operated by the City of Cleveland's Department of Port Control.",
"Title: Melbourne Airport\n\nMelbourne Airport (IATA: MEL, ICAO: YMML) , colloquially known as Tullamarine Airport, is the primary airport serving the city of Melbourne, and the second busiest airport in Australia. It was opened in 1970 to replace the nearby Essendon Airport. Melbourne Airport is the sole international airport of the four airports serving the Melbourne metropolitan area.",
"Title: Cape Town International Airport\n\nCape Town International Airport (IATA: CPT, ICAO: FACT) is the primary airport serving the city of Cape Town, and is the second-busiest airport in South Africa and third-busiest in Africa. Located approximately 20 km from the city centre, the airport was opened in 1954 to replace Cape Town's previous airport, Wingfield Aerodrome. Cape Town International Airport is the only airport in the Cape Town metropolitan area that offers scheduled passenger services. The airport has domestic and international terminals, linked by a common central terminal.",
"Title: Coimbatore International Airport\n\nCoimbatore International Airport (IATA: CJB, ICAO: VOCB) is the primary airport serving the city of Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu. It is located at Peelamedu, about 13 km from the center of the city. Previously known as Peelamedu Civil Aerodrome, it is the 19th busiest airport in India in terms of passengers handled, 16th busiest in terms of total aircraft movement and 14th busiest in terms of cargo handled. The airport is the second largest airport in terms of passenger traffic and cargo after Chennai International Airport In Tamil Nadu. About five domestic and three international airlines serve the airport. The Airport also serves as a growing hub for Cargo transportation.",
"Title: Emirates Flight Catering\n\nEmirates Flight Catering (Arabic: الإمارات لتموين الطائرات ) (EKFC) is an in-flight catering service based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, which provides catering and support services for Emirates Airline and all other airlines based at Dubai International Airport. It is a subsidiary of The Emirates Group.",
"Title: Birsa Munda Airport\n\nBirsa Munda Airport (IATA: IXR, ICAO: VERC) also known as Ranchi Airport is the primary airport serving the city of Ranchi, the capital city of Indian state Jharkhand. It is named after an Indian tribal freedom fighter Birsa Munda and currently it is managed by Airports Authority of India. The airport is located in Hinoo, approximately 7 km from the center of the city. The airport recently crossed 1 million passenger mark annually and is the 35th busiest airport in India.",
"Title: Soekarno–Hatta International Airport\n\nSoekarno–Hatta International Airport (Indonesian: \"Bandar Udara Internasional Soekarno–Hatta\" ) (IATA: CGK, ICAO: WIII) , abbreviated SHIA or Soetta, is the primary airport serving the Greater Jakarta area on the island of Java in Indonesia. Named after the first president and vice-president of Indonesia, Soekarno and Mohammad Hatta, the airport is located at Benda, Tangerang, approximately 20 km northwest of central Jakarta. Due to its proximity to the neighbourhood of Cengkareng in West Jakarta, the airport is also known as Cengkareng Airport, with the assigned three-letter IATA designator \"CGK\". The airport is the busiest and the largest airport in Indonesia, as well as being the busiest in the southern hemisphere. According to air travel intelligence company OAG, the airport ranked as the 7th most connected airport in the world & ranked 1st as 'megahub' airport in Asia-Pacific region as per connectivity index, ahead of Japan's Tokyo Haneda Airport and Australia's Sydney Airport .",
"Title: Sydney Airport\n\nSydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport (colloquially Mascot Airport, Kingsford Smith Airport, or Sydney Airport; IATA: SYD, ICAO: YSSY ; ) is an international airport in Sydney, Australia located 8 km (5 mi) south of Sydney city centre, in the suburb of Mascot. It is the primary airport serving Sydney, and is a primary hub for Qantas, as well as a secondary hub for Virgin Australia and Jetstar Airways. Situated next to Botany Bay, the airport has three runways, colloquially known as the east–west, north–south and third runways.",
"Title: Emirates Flight 521\n\nEmirates Flight 521 is a scheduled international passenger flight from Thiruvananthapuram, India, to Dubai, United Arab Emirates, operated by Emirates using a Boeing 777-300. On 3 August 2016, the aircraft carrying 282 passengers and 18 crew crashed while landing at Dubai International Airport, at approximately 12:45 local time.",
"Title: Emirates Flight 407\n\nEmirates Flight 407 was an Emirates flight flying from Melbourne to Dubai using the Airbus A340-500. On 20 March 2009, the flight failed to take off properly at Melbourne Airport, hitting several structures at the end of the runway before eventually climbing enough to return to the airport for a safe landing. Although no fatalities or injuries resulted, damage to the aircraft was severe enough for the event to be classified by Australian Transport Safety Bureau as an \"accident\". It has been described \"as close as we have ever come to a major aviation catastrophe in Australia\" by aviation officials."
] |
1,785
|
What is the name of the quadrennial international men's football championship that the 2018-19 UEFA Nations League is a qualifier for?
|
2020 UEFA European Football Championship
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"2018–19 UEFA Nations League",
"2018–19 UEFA Nations League",
"UEFA Euro 2020"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying tournament is an upcoming football competition that will be played from March 2019 to March 2020 to determine the 24 UEFA member men's national teams that will enter into the UEFA Euro 2020 final tournament.",
" The competition will be linked with the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, giving countries a secondary route to qualify for the final tournament.",
" For the first time since 1976, no team will automatically qualify for the UEFA European Championship as the host country."
],
"title": "UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The UEFA Nations League is an international association football competition, to be contested by the senior men's national teams of the member associations of UEFA, the sport's European governing body.",
" The first tournament is due to commence in September 2018, after the 2018 FIFA World Cup, and the winner will be decided in June 2019.",
" The competition will largely replace international friendly matches currently played on the FIFA International Match Calendar."
],
"title": "UEFA Nations League"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A will be the top division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.",
" League A will culminate with the Nations League Finals in June 2019 to crown the inaugural champions of the UEFA Nations League."
],
"title": "2018–19 UEFA Nations League A"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2018–19 UEFA Nations League B will be the second division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA."
],
"title": "2018–19 UEFA Nations League B"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2020 UEFA European Football Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2020 or simply Euro 2020, will be the 16th edition of the UEFA European Championship, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Europe organized by UEFA."
],
"title": "UEFA Euro 2020"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2018–19 UEFA Nations League will be the inaugural season of the UEFA Nations League, a planned international association football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.",
" The competition, which will be held from September to November 2018 (pool stage) and June 2019 (Nations League Finals), will also serve as part of the qualification process for UEFA Euro 2020, awarding berths in the play-offs which will decide four of the twenty-four final tournament slots."
],
"title": "2018–19 UEFA Nations League"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2018–19 UEFA Nations League C will be the third division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA."
],
"title": "2018–19 UEFA Nations League C"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2016 UEFA European Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2016 or simply Euro 2016, was the 15th UEFA European Championship, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Europe organised by UEFA.",
" It was held in France from 10 June to 10 July 2016.",
" Spain were the two-time defending champions, having won the 2008 and 2012 tournaments, but were eliminated in the round of 16 by Italy.",
" Portugal won the tournament for the first time, following a 1–0 victory after extra time over the host team, France, in the final played at the Stade de France."
],
"title": "UEFA Euro 2016"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2018–19 UEFA Nations League D will be the fourth and lowest division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA."
],
"title": "2018–19 UEFA Nations League D"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2024 UEFA European Football Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2024 or simply Euro 2024, will be the 17th edition of the UEFA European Championship, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Europe organized by UEFA."
],
"title": "UEFA Euro 2024"
}
] |
[
"Title: UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\n\nThe UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying tournament is an upcoming football competition that will be played from March 2019 to March 2020 to determine the 24 UEFA member men's national teams that will enter into the UEFA Euro 2020 final tournament. The competition will be linked with the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, giving countries a secondary route to qualify for the final tournament. For the first time since 1976, no team will automatically qualify for the UEFA European Championship as the host country.",
"Title: UEFA Nations League\n\nThe UEFA Nations League is an international association football competition, to be contested by the senior men's national teams of the member associations of UEFA, the sport's European governing body. The first tournament is due to commence in September 2018, after the 2018 FIFA World Cup, and the winner will be decided in June 2019. The competition will largely replace international friendly matches currently played on the FIFA International Match Calendar.",
"Title: 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A\n\nThe 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A will be the top division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA. League A will culminate with the Nations League Finals in June 2019 to crown the inaugural champions of the UEFA Nations League.",
"Title: 2018–19 UEFA Nations League B\n\nThe 2018–19 UEFA Nations League B will be the second division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.",
"Title: UEFA Euro 2020\n\nThe 2020 UEFA European Football Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2020 or simply Euro 2020, will be the 16th edition of the UEFA European Championship, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Europe organized by UEFA.",
"Title: 2018–19 UEFA Nations League\n\nThe 2018–19 UEFA Nations League will be the inaugural season of the UEFA Nations League, a planned international association football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA. The competition, which will be held from September to November 2018 (pool stage) and June 2019 (Nations League Finals), will also serve as part of the qualification process for UEFA Euro 2020, awarding berths in the play-offs which will decide four of the twenty-four final tournament slots.",
"Title: 2018–19 UEFA Nations League C\n\nThe 2018–19 UEFA Nations League C will be the third division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.",
"Title: UEFA Euro 2016\n\nThe 2016 UEFA European Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2016 or simply Euro 2016, was the 15th UEFA European Championship, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Europe organised by UEFA. It was held in France from 10 June to 10 July 2016. Spain were the two-time defending champions, having won the 2008 and 2012 tournaments, but were eliminated in the round of 16 by Italy. Portugal won the tournament for the first time, following a 1–0 victory after extra time over the host team, France, in the final played at the Stade de France.",
"Title: 2018–19 UEFA Nations League D\n\nThe 2018–19 UEFA Nations League D will be the fourth and lowest division of the 2018–19 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.",
"Title: UEFA Euro 2024\n\nThe 2024 UEFA European Football Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2024 or simply Euro 2024, will be the 17th edition of the UEFA European Championship, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Europe organized by UEFA."
] |
1,786
|
Hurricane Keith weakened to a tropical storm, before another landfall occurred near a city with a population of what?
|
57,169
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Hurricane Keith",
"Hurricane Keith",
"Belize City",
"Belize City"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
8,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Hurricane Eugene was the only tropical cyclone to make landfall in Mexico during the 1987 Pacific hurricane season.",
" The eighth tropical cyclone, fifth named storm, and first hurricane of the season, Eugene developed on July 22 from a tropical disturbance centered well offshore of Mexico.",
" Later that day, the system intensified into a tropical storm while moving northwestward.",
" Eugene reached hurricane status on July 24; it briefly peaked as a Category 2 hurricane two days later.",
" Hurricane Eugene weakened back to a Category 1 hurricane; subsequently, the hurricane made landfall near Manzanillo.",
" Shortly after landfall, Eugene rapidly weakened inland, and was only a tropical storm when it re-emerged into open water, where it quickly dissipated.",
" Throughout Mexico, the storm produced high winds, especially in the southwestern portion of the country.",
" The hurricane deluged the southwest Mexican coastline, resulting in the highest rainfall totals from a tropical cyclone in five Mexican states.",
" Over 5,000 people were left homeless, including 60 in Manzanillo.",
" The cities airport control tower was also damaged, thus requiring closure.",
" Elsewhere, 200 to 300 houses were destroyed in Colima.",
" In all, Eugene injured 18 people and caused three fatalities and $142.12 million (1987 USD) in damage."
],
"title": "Hurricane Eugene (1987)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hurricane Agnes was, at the time, the costliest hurricane to hit the United States in recorded history.",
" The second tropical cyclone and first named storm of the 1972 Atlantic hurricane season, Agnes developed on June 14 from the interaction of a polar front and an upper trough over the Yucatán Peninsula.",
" Initially forming as a tropical depression, the storm headed slowly eastward and emerged into the western Caribbean Sea on June 15.",
" Once in the Caribbean, the depression began to strengthen, and by the following day, it became Tropical Storm Agnes.",
" Thereafter, Agnes slowly curved northward and passed just west of Cuba on June 17.",
" Early on June 18, the storm intensified enough to be upgraded to Hurricane Agnes.",
" Heading northward, the hurricane eventually made landfall near Panama City, Florida late on June 19.",
" After moving inland, Agnes rapidly weakened and was only a tropical depression when it entered Georgia.",
" The weakening trend halted as the storm crossed over Georgia and into South Carolina.",
" While over eastern North Carolina, Agnes re-strengthened into a tropical storm on June 21, as a result of baroclinic activity.",
" Early the following day, the storm emerged into the Atlantic Ocean before re-curving northwestward and making landfall near New York City as a strong tropical storm.",
" Agnes quickly became an extratropical cyclone on June 23, and tracked to the northwest of Great Britain before becoming absorbed by another cyclone on July 6."
],
"title": "Hurricane Agnes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hurricane Keith was an Atlantic hurricane in October 2000 that caused extensive damage in Central America, especially in Mexico and Belize.",
" It was the fifteenth tropical cyclone, eleventh named storm, and seventh hurricane of the that year's Atlantic hurricane season.",
" Keith developed as a tropical depression from a tropical wave in the western Caribbean Sea on September 28.",
" The depression gradually strengthened, and became Tropical Storm Keith on the following day.",
" As the storm tracked westward, it continued to intensify and was upgraded to a hurricane on September 30.",
" Shortly thereafter, Keith began to rapidly deepen, and peaked as a Category 4 hurricane less than 24 hours later.",
" Keith then began to meander erratically offshore of Belize, which significantly weakened the storm due to land interaction.",
" By late on October 2, Keith made landfall in Ambergris Caye, Belize as a minimal hurricane.",
" It quickly weakened to a tropical storm, before another landfall occurred near Belize City early on the following day.",
" While moving inland over the Yucatán Peninsula, Keith weakened further, and was downgraded to a tropical depression before emerging into the Gulf of Mexico on October 4.",
" Once in the Gulf of Mexico, Keith began to re-strengthen and was upgraded to a tropical storm later that day, and a hurricane on the following day.",
" By late on October 5, Keith made its third and final landfall near Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico as a moderately strong Category 1 hurricane.",
" The storm quickly weakened inland and dissipated as a tropical cyclone by 24 hours after landfall."
],
"title": "Hurricane Keith"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hurricane Hernan was fourth and final tropical cyclone to strike Mexico at hurricane intensity during the 1996 Pacific hurricane season.",
" The thirteenth tropical cyclone, eighth named storm, and fifth hurricane of the season, Hernan developed as a tropical depression from a tropical wave to the south of Mexico on September 30.",
" The depression quickly strengthened, and became Tropical Storm Hernan later that day.",
" Hernan curved north-northwestward the following day, before eventually turning north-northeastward.",
" Still offshore of the Mexican coast on October 2, Hernan intensified into a hurricane.",
" Six hours later, Hernan attained its peak as an 85 mph (140 km/h) Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale (SSHWS).",
" After weakening somewhat, on 1000 UTC October 3, Hurricane Hernan made landfall near Barra de Navidad, Jalisco, with winds of 75 mph (120 km/h).",
" Only two hours after landfall, Hernan weakened to a tropical storm.",
" By October 4, Tropical Storm Hernan had weakened into a tropical depression, and dissipated over Nayarit on the following day."
],
"title": "Hurricane Hernan (1996)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1922 Atlantic hurricane season ran through the summer and the first half of fall in 1922.",
" The season was a quiet one, with only five tropical cyclones forming during the course of the season.",
" The first was a tropical storm that passed over the Yucatán Peninsula and later made another landfall in rural northeast Mexico.",
" The second was a hurricane, the strongest one of the season.",
" It formed near Cape Verde and curved out into the Atlantic.",
" It grazed the Leeward Islands and battered Bermuda, passing just offshore as a Category 3.",
" The hurricane became extratropical soon after it passed Bermuda.",
" The third was a tropical storm that passed over Cuba and made landfall near Pensacola, Florida.",
" The last storm of the season was a Category 2 hurricane that made landfall near Cancún, Mexico.",
" The hurricane weakened in the Bay of Campeche and dissipated just offshore.",
" A fifth storm was found in reanalysis in 2009."
],
"title": "1922 Atlantic hurricane season"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hurricane Norman was the most recent tropical system to make landfall in California.",
" The 14th named storm, 11th hurricane, and 6th major hurricane of the 1978 Pacific hurricane season, Norman evolved from a tropical disturbance noted 400 mi southeast of Acapulco on the afternoon of August 29, 1978.",
" The system moved westward and developed into a tropical depression on August 30.",
" Modest strengthening ensued, and the cyclone became a tropical storm that evening and a hurricane on the evening of August 31 as it turned to the west-northwest.",
" Late on the night of September 1, Norman became a major hurricane with an eye 40 mi wide, and a nearby ship reported seas of 41 ft .",
" The center grazed the northeast side of Socorro Island on the afternoon of September 2.",
" Moving over cooler waters west of Baja California, the cyclone slowly weakened.",
" By early on September 4, moisture from the hurricane spread north into California initiating rains in the Golden State.",
" A developing trough to its west caused the initial influx of moisture and Norman's turn to the north as a weakening tropical storm.",
" Eventually turning north-northeast towards southern California, the cyclone did eventually turn north-northeast towards southern California, and the cyclone weakened to a tropical depression as it passed the 30th parallel.",
" Hurricane Norman made landfall in California on September 5, as a minimal tropical depression.",
" The tropical cyclone became a remnant low shortly after California landfall, and the final advisory was issued at 00:00 GMT, on September 6.",
" Over 7.01 in of rain occurred in the Sierra Nevada range.",
" Rare snowfall was also reported."
],
"title": "Hurricane Norman (1978)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1928 Haiti hurricane was considered the worst tropical cyclone in Haiti since the 1886 Indianola hurricane.",
" The second tropical cyclone and second hurricane of the season, the storm developed from a tropical wave near Tobago on August 7.",
" Steadily intensifying as it moved northwestward, the system passed through the southern Windward Islands.",
" Upon entering the Caribbean Sea early on August 8, the tropical depression strengthened into a tropical storm.",
" On August 9, the storm strengthened to the equivalent of a Category 1 hurricane.",
" The next day, the hurricane peaked with winds of 90 mph (150 km/h).",
" After striking the Tiburon Peninsula of Haiti, the cyclone began weakening and fell to tropical storm intensity on August 12.",
" By midday on the following day, the storm made landfall near Cienfuegos, Cuba.",
" Upon emerging into the Straits of Florida, the storm began to re-strengthen.",
" Early on August 13, it struck Big Pine Key, Florida, as a strong tropical storm.",
" Weakening slowly while moving north-northwestward, the system made another landfall near St. George Island.",
" After moving inland, the tropical storm slowly deteriorated and dissipated over West Virginia on August 17."
],
"title": "1928 Haiti hurricane"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Belize City is the largest city in Belize and was once the capital of the former British Honduras.",
" According to the 2010 census, Belize City has a population of 57,169 people in 16,162 households.",
" It is located at the mouth of the Haulover Creek, which is a tributary of the Belize River.",
" The Belize River empties into the Caribbean Sea 5 miles from Belize City on the Philip Goldson Highway on the coast of the Caribbean.",
" The city is the country's principal port and its financial and industrial hub.",
" Several cruise ships drop anchor outside the port and are tendered by local citizens.",
" The city was almost entirely destroyed in 1961 when Hurricane Hattie swept ashore on October 31.",
" It was the capital of British Honduras (as Belize was then named) until the government was moved to the new capital of Belmopan in 1970."
],
"title": "Belize City"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hurricane Calvin was one of three Pacific hurricanes on record to make landfall along the Mexican coast during the month of July.",
" The fourth tropical cyclone, third named storm, and second hurricane of the 1993 Pacific hurricane season, Calvin developed from an area of convection to the south of Mexico on July 4.",
" The following day, the system intensified into a tropical storm, which was named Calvin.",
" Continued strengthening ensued as Calvin curved from its initial westward track northward, and was upgraded to a hurricane on July 6 Calvin eventually turned northwest, and became a Category 2 hurricane on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS).",
" By July 7, Hurricane Calvin made landfall near Manzanillo at peak strength.",
" Calvin rapidly weakened after landfall, and was a tropical storm when it reemerged into the Pacific Ocean on early on July 8.",
" Despite this, the hurricane did not reintensify, and continued to weaken as it headed rapidly northwestward.",
" As Calvin made a second Mexican landfall near the southern tip of Baja California peninsula late on July 8, it weakened to a tropical depression.",
" Early on July 9, the depression dissipated shortly after entering the Pacific Ocean for a third time."
],
"title": "Hurricane Calvin (1993)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The September 1948 Florida hurricane was the most intense tropical cyclone to make landfall in the state since the 1935 Labor Day hurricane.",
" The fourth hurricane and third major hurricane of the season, this storm developed from a tropical wave over the Caribbean Sea on September 18.",
" Early the next day, the system strengthened into a hurricane while moving westward.",
" Thereafter, it curved northwestward and continued to deepen.",
" By September 20, the system turned northward and later that day made landfall in Zapata Peninsula, Cuba as a Category 3 hurricane on the modern day Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale.",
" Another landfall occurred in Cuba early the next day to the south of Güines.",
" Severe destruction was reported on the island, with winds up to 90 mph observed in Havana.",
" Over 700 buildings were destroyed.",
" Ten deaths occurred and damage totaled at least $2 million (1948 USD), while other sources estimate \"several million dollars.\""
],
"title": "September 1948 Florida hurricane"
}
] |
[
"Title: Hurricane Eugene (1987)\n\nHurricane Eugene was the only tropical cyclone to make landfall in Mexico during the 1987 Pacific hurricane season. The eighth tropical cyclone, fifth named storm, and first hurricane of the season, Eugene developed on July 22 from a tropical disturbance centered well offshore of Mexico. Later that day, the system intensified into a tropical storm while moving northwestward. Eugene reached hurricane status on July 24; it briefly peaked as a Category 2 hurricane two days later. Hurricane Eugene weakened back to a Category 1 hurricane; subsequently, the hurricane made landfall near Manzanillo. Shortly after landfall, Eugene rapidly weakened inland, and was only a tropical storm when it re-emerged into open water, where it quickly dissipated. Throughout Mexico, the storm produced high winds, especially in the southwestern portion of the country. The hurricane deluged the southwest Mexican coastline, resulting in the highest rainfall totals from a tropical cyclone in five Mexican states. Over 5,000 people were left homeless, including 60 in Manzanillo. The cities airport control tower was also damaged, thus requiring closure. Elsewhere, 200 to 300 houses were destroyed in Colima. In all, Eugene injured 18 people and caused three fatalities and $142.12 million (1987 USD) in damage.",
"Title: Hurricane Agnes\n\nHurricane Agnes was, at the time, the costliest hurricane to hit the United States in recorded history. The second tropical cyclone and first named storm of the 1972 Atlantic hurricane season, Agnes developed on June 14 from the interaction of a polar front and an upper trough over the Yucatán Peninsula. Initially forming as a tropical depression, the storm headed slowly eastward and emerged into the western Caribbean Sea on June 15. Once in the Caribbean, the depression began to strengthen, and by the following day, it became Tropical Storm Agnes. Thereafter, Agnes slowly curved northward and passed just west of Cuba on June 17. Early on June 18, the storm intensified enough to be upgraded to Hurricane Agnes. Heading northward, the hurricane eventually made landfall near Panama City, Florida late on June 19. After moving inland, Agnes rapidly weakened and was only a tropical depression when it entered Georgia. The weakening trend halted as the storm crossed over Georgia and into South Carolina. While over eastern North Carolina, Agnes re-strengthened into a tropical storm on June 21, as a result of baroclinic activity. Early the following day, the storm emerged into the Atlantic Ocean before re-curving northwestward and making landfall near New York City as a strong tropical storm. Agnes quickly became an extratropical cyclone on June 23, and tracked to the northwest of Great Britain before becoming absorbed by another cyclone on July 6.",
"Title: Hurricane Keith\n\nHurricane Keith was an Atlantic hurricane in October 2000 that caused extensive damage in Central America, especially in Mexico and Belize. It was the fifteenth tropical cyclone, eleventh named storm, and seventh hurricane of the that year's Atlantic hurricane season. Keith developed as a tropical depression from a tropical wave in the western Caribbean Sea on September 28. The depression gradually strengthened, and became Tropical Storm Keith on the following day. As the storm tracked westward, it continued to intensify and was upgraded to a hurricane on September 30. Shortly thereafter, Keith began to rapidly deepen, and peaked as a Category 4 hurricane less than 24 hours later. Keith then began to meander erratically offshore of Belize, which significantly weakened the storm due to land interaction. By late on October 2, Keith made landfall in Ambergris Caye, Belize as a minimal hurricane. It quickly weakened to a tropical storm, before another landfall occurred near Belize City early on the following day. While moving inland over the Yucatán Peninsula, Keith weakened further, and was downgraded to a tropical depression before emerging into the Gulf of Mexico on October 4. Once in the Gulf of Mexico, Keith began to re-strengthen and was upgraded to a tropical storm later that day, and a hurricane on the following day. By late on October 5, Keith made its third and final landfall near Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico as a moderately strong Category 1 hurricane. The storm quickly weakened inland and dissipated as a tropical cyclone by 24 hours after landfall.",
"Title: Hurricane Hernan (1996)\n\nHurricane Hernan was fourth and final tropical cyclone to strike Mexico at hurricane intensity during the 1996 Pacific hurricane season. The thirteenth tropical cyclone, eighth named storm, and fifth hurricane of the season, Hernan developed as a tropical depression from a tropical wave to the south of Mexico on September 30. The depression quickly strengthened, and became Tropical Storm Hernan later that day. Hernan curved north-northwestward the following day, before eventually turning north-northeastward. Still offshore of the Mexican coast on October 2, Hernan intensified into a hurricane. Six hours later, Hernan attained its peak as an 85 mph (140 km/h) Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale (SSHWS). After weakening somewhat, on 1000 UTC October 3, Hurricane Hernan made landfall near Barra de Navidad, Jalisco, with winds of 75 mph (120 km/h). Only two hours after landfall, Hernan weakened to a tropical storm. By October 4, Tropical Storm Hernan had weakened into a tropical depression, and dissipated over Nayarit on the following day.",
"Title: 1922 Atlantic hurricane season\n\nThe 1922 Atlantic hurricane season ran through the summer and the first half of fall in 1922. The season was a quiet one, with only five tropical cyclones forming during the course of the season. The first was a tropical storm that passed over the Yucatán Peninsula and later made another landfall in rural northeast Mexico. The second was a hurricane, the strongest one of the season. It formed near Cape Verde and curved out into the Atlantic. It grazed the Leeward Islands and battered Bermuda, passing just offshore as a Category 3. The hurricane became extratropical soon after it passed Bermuda. The third was a tropical storm that passed over Cuba and made landfall near Pensacola, Florida. The last storm of the season was a Category 2 hurricane that made landfall near Cancún, Mexico. The hurricane weakened in the Bay of Campeche and dissipated just offshore. A fifth storm was found in reanalysis in 2009.",
"Title: Hurricane Norman (1978)\n\nHurricane Norman was the most recent tropical system to make landfall in California. The 14th named storm, 11th hurricane, and 6th major hurricane of the 1978 Pacific hurricane season, Norman evolved from a tropical disturbance noted 400 mi southeast of Acapulco on the afternoon of August 29, 1978. The system moved westward and developed into a tropical depression on August 30. Modest strengthening ensued, and the cyclone became a tropical storm that evening and a hurricane on the evening of August 31 as it turned to the west-northwest. Late on the night of September 1, Norman became a major hurricane with an eye 40 mi wide, and a nearby ship reported seas of 41 ft . The center grazed the northeast side of Socorro Island on the afternoon of September 2. Moving over cooler waters west of Baja California, the cyclone slowly weakened. By early on September 4, moisture from the hurricane spread north into California initiating rains in the Golden State. A developing trough to its west caused the initial influx of moisture and Norman's turn to the north as a weakening tropical storm. Eventually turning north-northeast towards southern California, the cyclone did eventually turn north-northeast towards southern California, and the cyclone weakened to a tropical depression as it passed the 30th parallel. Hurricane Norman made landfall in California on September 5, as a minimal tropical depression. The tropical cyclone became a remnant low shortly after California landfall, and the final advisory was issued at 00:00 GMT, on September 6. Over 7.01 in of rain occurred in the Sierra Nevada range. Rare snowfall was also reported.",
"Title: 1928 Haiti hurricane\n\nThe 1928 Haiti hurricane was considered the worst tropical cyclone in Haiti since the 1886 Indianola hurricane. The second tropical cyclone and second hurricane of the season, the storm developed from a tropical wave near Tobago on August 7. Steadily intensifying as it moved northwestward, the system passed through the southern Windward Islands. Upon entering the Caribbean Sea early on August 8, the tropical depression strengthened into a tropical storm. On August 9, the storm strengthened to the equivalent of a Category 1 hurricane. The next day, the hurricane peaked with winds of 90 mph (150 km/h). After striking the Tiburon Peninsula of Haiti, the cyclone began weakening and fell to tropical storm intensity on August 12. By midday on the following day, the storm made landfall near Cienfuegos, Cuba. Upon emerging into the Straits of Florida, the storm began to re-strengthen. Early on August 13, it struck Big Pine Key, Florida, as a strong tropical storm. Weakening slowly while moving north-northwestward, the system made another landfall near St. George Island. After moving inland, the tropical storm slowly deteriorated and dissipated over West Virginia on August 17.",
"Title: Belize City\n\nBelize City is the largest city in Belize and was once the capital of the former British Honduras. According to the 2010 census, Belize City has a population of 57,169 people in 16,162 households. It is located at the mouth of the Haulover Creek, which is a tributary of the Belize River. The Belize River empties into the Caribbean Sea 5 miles from Belize City on the Philip Goldson Highway on the coast of the Caribbean. The city is the country's principal port and its financial and industrial hub. Several cruise ships drop anchor outside the port and are tendered by local citizens. The city was almost entirely destroyed in 1961 when Hurricane Hattie swept ashore on October 31. It was the capital of British Honduras (as Belize was then named) until the government was moved to the new capital of Belmopan in 1970.",
"Title: Hurricane Calvin (1993)\n\nHurricane Calvin was one of three Pacific hurricanes on record to make landfall along the Mexican coast during the month of July. The fourth tropical cyclone, third named storm, and second hurricane of the 1993 Pacific hurricane season, Calvin developed from an area of convection to the south of Mexico on July 4. The following day, the system intensified into a tropical storm, which was named Calvin. Continued strengthening ensued as Calvin curved from its initial westward track northward, and was upgraded to a hurricane on July 6 Calvin eventually turned northwest, and became a Category 2 hurricane on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS). By July 7, Hurricane Calvin made landfall near Manzanillo at peak strength. Calvin rapidly weakened after landfall, and was a tropical storm when it reemerged into the Pacific Ocean on early on July 8. Despite this, the hurricane did not reintensify, and continued to weaken as it headed rapidly northwestward. As Calvin made a second Mexican landfall near the southern tip of Baja California peninsula late on July 8, it weakened to a tropical depression. Early on July 9, the depression dissipated shortly after entering the Pacific Ocean for a third time.",
"Title: September 1948 Florida hurricane\n\nThe September 1948 Florida hurricane was the most intense tropical cyclone to make landfall in the state since the 1935 Labor Day hurricane. The fourth hurricane and third major hurricane of the season, this storm developed from a tropical wave over the Caribbean Sea on September 18. Early the next day, the system strengthened into a hurricane while moving westward. Thereafter, it curved northwestward and continued to deepen. By September 20, the system turned northward and later that day made landfall in Zapata Peninsula, Cuba as a Category 3 hurricane on the modern day Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale. Another landfall occurred in Cuba early the next day to the south of Güines. Severe destruction was reported on the island, with winds up to 90 mph observed in Havana. Over 700 buildings were destroyed. Ten deaths occurred and damage totaled at least $2 million (1948 USD), while other sources estimate \"several million dollars.\""
] |
1,787
|
What was the nickname of the younger brother in the Zerilli crime family?
|
Tony Jack
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Vito Giacalone",
"Detroit Partnership"
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Hugh (1057 – October 18, 1101), called the Great (Latin \"Hugo Magnus\"), was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I.",
" He was Count of Vermandois in right of his wife (\"jure uxoris\").",
" His nickname \"Magnus\" (greater or elder) is probably a bad translation into Latin of a French nickname, \"le Maisné\", meaning \"the younger\", referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France."
],
"title": "Hugh, Count of Vermandois"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vincent \"Little Vince\" Meli (January 2, 1921 – January 7, 2008) was a Detroit mobster and acting underboss of the Detroit crime family.",
" The nephew of Angelo Meli, he succeeded longtime crime boss Anthony Zerilli following his imprisonment."
],
"title": "Vincent Meli"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Milwaukee crime family or Balistrieri crime family is an American Mafia crime family based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.",
" The crime family was considered a branch of the Chicago Outfit.",
" The family's most influential boss was Frank \"Mr. Big\" Balistrieri, who was greatly involved in the Las Vegas skimming casinos. Today, the crime family is nearly extinct, since Balistrieri died in 1993, with the \"Chicago Outfit\" gaining control over some of the illegal rackets in the area."
],
"title": "Milwaukee crime family"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Joseph Zerilli (December 10, 1897 – October 30, 1977) was a Prohibition-era Detroit gangster who led the crime family known as the Detroit Partnership from the 1930s through the 1970s."
],
"title": "Joseph Zerilli"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Patriarca crime family (pronounced ] ) is also known as the New England crime family, the Providence crime family, the Boston crime family, the Boston Mafia, the Providence Mafia, the New England Mafia, or The Office and is an Italian-American Mafia crime family based in New England.",
" The crime family has two distinct factions, one active in Providence, Rhode Island and the other in Boston, Massachusetts."
],
"title": "Patriarca crime family"
},
{
"sentences": [
"William \"Wild Guy\" Grasso was an Italian-American gangster from East Haven, Connecticut who served as underboss to Raymond Patriarca, Jr. (a.k.a. \"Junior\") in the Patriarca crime family, also known as the New England crime family, the Providence crime family or the Boston crime family.",
" The Patriarca family is a Mafia crime family based in New England.",
" Succeeding his father Raymond L.S. Patriarca as boss after his father's death in 1984, Junior was considered a weak leader.",
" He managed to keep the peace in his crime family due to the support of the Gambino crime family of New York.",
" When Junior's original underboss Ilario \"Larry Baione\" Maria Antonio Zannino was sentenced to thirty years in prison in 1987, it further weakened Junior's position.",
" With Zannino in jail, Grasso became underboss."
],
"title": "William Grasso"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vito William \"Billy Jack\" Giacalone (April 16, 1923 – February 19, 2012) was an American organized crime figure in Detroit, serving as a capo in the Detroit Partnership.",
" He was the younger brother of Anthony \"Tony Jack\" Giacalone, also a capo in the Detroit Partnership."
],
"title": "Vito Giacalone"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Genovese crime family's New Jersey faction is a group of mobsters within the Genovese crime family that control the family's interests in organized crime activities in the state of New Jersey.",
" The New Jersey faction of the Genovese crime family has maintained a strong presence in the Northern New Jersey area since the prohibition era.",
" The faction is divided into multiple crews and has increased in power over the years with members controlling illegal activities in labor racketeering, loansharking, extortion, and illegal gambling.",
" Members within the faction have held top leadership position in the Genovese crime family dating back to the 1930s with underboss Guarino \"Willie\" Moretti.",
" From the 1990s until his death in 2010, Tino \"the Greek\" Fiumara had been in control of the New Jersey faction."
],
"title": "Genovese crime family New Jersey faction"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The DeCavalcante crime family is an Italian-American organized crime family that operates in Elizabeth, New Jersey and surrounding areas in the state and is part of the nationwide criminal phenomenon known as the American Mafia (or Cosa Nostra).",
" It operates on the other side of the Hudson River from the Five Families of New York, but it maintains strong relations with many of them, as well as with the Philadelphia crime family and the Patriarca crime family of New England.",
" Its illicit activities include bookmaking, building, cement, and construction violations, bootlegging, corruption, drug trafficking, extortion, fencing, fraud, hijacking, illegal gambling, loan-sharking, money laundering, murder, pier thefts, pornography, prostitution, racketeering, and waste management violations.",
" The DeCavalcantes are, in part, the inspiration for the fictional DiMeo crime family of HBO's dramatic series \"The Sopranos\".",
" The DeCavalcante family was the subject of the CNBC program \"Mob Money\", which aired on June 23, 2010 and \"The Real Sopranos\" TV documentary (first airdate April 26, 2006) directed by Thomas Viner for the UK production company Class Films."
],
"title": "DeCavalcante crime family"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Detroit Partnership, also known as the Detroit crime family, Detroit Combination, Detroit Mafia, or Zerilli crime family (pronounced ] ) is an American Mafia crime family based in Detroit, Michigan."
],
"title": "Detroit Partnership"
}
] |
[
"Title: Hugh, Count of Vermandois\n\nHugh (1057 – October 18, 1101), called the Great (Latin \"Hugo Magnus\"), was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was Count of Vermandois in right of his wife (\"jure uxoris\"). His nickname \"Magnus\" (greater or elder) is probably a bad translation into Latin of a French nickname, \"le Maisné\", meaning \"the younger\", referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.",
"Title: Vincent Meli\n\nVincent \"Little Vince\" Meli (January 2, 1921 – January 7, 2008) was a Detroit mobster and acting underboss of the Detroit crime family. The nephew of Angelo Meli, he succeeded longtime crime boss Anthony Zerilli following his imprisonment.",
"Title: Milwaukee crime family\n\nThe Milwaukee crime family or Balistrieri crime family is an American Mafia crime family based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The crime family was considered a branch of the Chicago Outfit. The family's most influential boss was Frank \"Mr. Big\" Balistrieri, who was greatly involved in the Las Vegas skimming casinos. Today, the crime family is nearly extinct, since Balistrieri died in 1993, with the \"Chicago Outfit\" gaining control over some of the illegal rackets in the area.",
"Title: Joseph Zerilli\n\nJoseph Zerilli (December 10, 1897 – October 30, 1977) was a Prohibition-era Detroit gangster who led the crime family known as the Detroit Partnership from the 1930s through the 1970s.",
"Title: Patriarca crime family\n\nThe Patriarca crime family (pronounced ] ) is also known as the New England crime family, the Providence crime family, the Boston crime family, the Boston Mafia, the Providence Mafia, the New England Mafia, or The Office and is an Italian-American Mafia crime family based in New England. The crime family has two distinct factions, one active in Providence, Rhode Island and the other in Boston, Massachusetts.",
"Title: William Grasso\n\nWilliam \"Wild Guy\" Grasso was an Italian-American gangster from East Haven, Connecticut who served as underboss to Raymond Patriarca, Jr. (a.k.a. \"Junior\") in the Patriarca crime family, also known as the New England crime family, the Providence crime family or the Boston crime family. The Patriarca family is a Mafia crime family based in New England. Succeeding his father Raymond L.S. Patriarca as boss after his father's death in 1984, Junior was considered a weak leader. He managed to keep the peace in his crime family due to the support of the Gambino crime family of New York. When Junior's original underboss Ilario \"Larry Baione\" Maria Antonio Zannino was sentenced to thirty years in prison in 1987, it further weakened Junior's position. With Zannino in jail, Grasso became underboss.",
"Title: Vito Giacalone\n\nVito William \"Billy Jack\" Giacalone (April 16, 1923 – February 19, 2012) was an American organized crime figure in Detroit, serving as a capo in the Detroit Partnership. He was the younger brother of Anthony \"Tony Jack\" Giacalone, also a capo in the Detroit Partnership.",
"Title: Genovese crime family New Jersey faction\n\nThe Genovese crime family's New Jersey faction is a group of mobsters within the Genovese crime family that control the family's interests in organized crime activities in the state of New Jersey. The New Jersey faction of the Genovese crime family has maintained a strong presence in the Northern New Jersey area since the prohibition era. The faction is divided into multiple crews and has increased in power over the years with members controlling illegal activities in labor racketeering, loansharking, extortion, and illegal gambling. Members within the faction have held top leadership position in the Genovese crime family dating back to the 1930s with underboss Guarino \"Willie\" Moretti. From the 1990s until his death in 2010, Tino \"the Greek\" Fiumara had been in control of the New Jersey faction.",
"Title: DeCavalcante crime family\n\nThe DeCavalcante crime family is an Italian-American organized crime family that operates in Elizabeth, New Jersey and surrounding areas in the state and is part of the nationwide criminal phenomenon known as the American Mafia (or Cosa Nostra). It operates on the other side of the Hudson River from the Five Families of New York, but it maintains strong relations with many of them, as well as with the Philadelphia crime family and the Patriarca crime family of New England. Its illicit activities include bookmaking, building, cement, and construction violations, bootlegging, corruption, drug trafficking, extortion, fencing, fraud, hijacking, illegal gambling, loan-sharking, money laundering, murder, pier thefts, pornography, prostitution, racketeering, and waste management violations. The DeCavalcantes are, in part, the inspiration for the fictional DiMeo crime family of HBO's dramatic series \"The Sopranos\". The DeCavalcante family was the subject of the CNBC program \"Mob Money\", which aired on June 23, 2010 and \"The Real Sopranos\" TV documentary (first airdate April 26, 2006) directed by Thomas Viner for the UK production company Class Films.",
"Title: Detroit Partnership\n\nThe Detroit Partnership, also known as the Detroit crime family, Detroit Combination, Detroit Mafia, or Zerilli crime family (pronounced ] ) is an American Mafia crime family based in Detroit, Michigan."
] |
1,788
|
Red Voodoo had a song that was a vehicle for the sales of items from the nightclub and restaurant located in which city?
|
Cabo San Lucas
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"Red Voodoo",
"Cabo Wabo"
],
"sent_id": [
3,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"\"The Yeats Room\" of Ballymaloe House is a restaurant located in Shanagarry in County Cork, Ireland.",
" It is a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star for eacht year in the period 1975-1980.",
" The Michelin Guide awarded the restaurant the \"Red M\", indicating 'good food at a reasonable price', in the period 1981-1994.",
" The Egon Ronay Guide awarded the restaurant one star in the periods 1975-1981, 1983-1984 and 1987-1988."
],
"title": "Ballymaloe House"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Red Voodoo is a Sammy Hagar and The Waboritas album.",
" When Hagar finished touring in support of his \"Marching To Mars\" album, he recorded this record.",
" \"Red Voodoo\" is really an extension of the party atmosphere that permeated Hagar's concerts on that tour and this album has that whimsical party vibe.",
" \"Mas Tequila\" was the lead single and it almost served as a commercial for Hagar's other career endeavor, as his Cabo Wabo tequila was being distributed throughout the United States.",
" The cover of this album even features a glass of Waborita that Hagar spent a portion of his concerts creating on stage during his last tour."
],
"title": "Red Voodoo"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Vivo Italian Kitchen is a restaurant located at Universal Orlando Resort's CityWalk.",
" It is an Italian restaurant located between NBC Sports Grill & Brew Restaurant and Emeril's Restaurant.",
" This is also in front of The Cowfish restaurant.",
" Vivo serves moderately priced traditional Italian food and has an array of wines and beers to choose from.",
" The restaurant opened in 2015."
],
"title": "Vivo Italian Kitchen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sylvia's Restaurant of Harlem (often called \"Sylvia's Soul Food\" or just \"Sylvia's\") is a soul food restaurant located at 328 Lenox Avenue, between 126th and 127th Streets, in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City.",
" It was founded in 1962 by Sylvia Woods.",
" It has since expanded to a much larger space at its present location, and an adjacent building.",
" The restaurant also sells a line of prepared foods, beauty and skin care items, cookbooks, and a children's book written by Woods.",
" Woods purchased the original luncheonette by borrowing money from her mother, who had to mortgage her farm to provide it."
],
"title": "Sylvia's Restaurant of Harlem"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Franklin Barbecue is a barbecue restaurant located in Austin, Texas.",
" In 2009, Aaron Franklin launched the restaurant in a trailer.",
" The restaurant has sold out of brisket every day since its establishment.",
" Franklin Barbecue moved to a brick and mortar location in 2011.",
" The restaurant appeared on \"\" in September 2012.",
" In 2014, \"Texas Monthly\" listed the restaurant on its list of \"the 50 Best BBQ Joints in the World.\"",
" That July, President Barack Obama visited the restaurant and bought lunch for those in line behind him.",
" The restaurant is prominently featured in a scene from the 2014 Jon Favreau film \"Chef\", with speaking cameos by owner Aaron Franklin and general manager Benji Jacob."
],
"title": "Franklin Barbecue"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Central Restaurante is a restaurant located in the Miraflores District, Lima, Peru.",
" Central Restaurante is the flagship restaurant of Peruvian chef, Virgilio Martínez Véliz, and serves as his workshop in the investigation and integration of indigenous Peruvian ingredients into the restaurant's menu.",
" The restaurant is known for its contemporary interpretation and presentation of Peruvian cuisine.",
" GQ Latinoamérica calls Central Restaurante \"the heart of his [Virgilio Martínez Véliz] gastronomic philosophy.\"",
" In 2012, Central Restaurante was named Best Restaurant of Peru by the Peruvian dining guide, SUMMUM.",
" In 2013, Central Restaurante entered as number 50 in The World's 50 Best Restaurants as awarded by the British magazine \"Restaurant\".",
", and in 2014 jumped 35 places receiving \"Highest Climber\" recognition and ranking as number 15 in the world.",
" On August 21, 2014, Central Restaurante for the third consecutive year was awarded Best Restaurant of Peru by the Peruvian Dining Guide, SUMMUM, and additionally received awards for Best Contemporary Peruvian cuisine and Best Sommelier."
],
"title": "Central Restaurante"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bono's Restaurant and Deli is a historic restaurant located at 15395 Foothill Boulevard in Fontana, California.",
" The restaurant opened in 1936 to serve travelers on U.S. Route 66, which then passed in front of the site; it originally operated as a produce stand.",
" In 1943, increased traffic on the highway prompted the owners to expand their operations, and the current building was constructed as a full-service restaurant.",
" The restaurant building has a Streamline Moderne design and features red and green stripes promoting its Italian cuisine as well as painted grapevines promoting its wine.",
" As Fontana's Italian immigrant community grew in the 1940s, the restaurant also became a local source of Italian foods previously unavailable in the area."
],
"title": "Bono's Restaurant and Deli"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Cabo Wabo is a nightclub and restaurant located in Cabo San Lucas, BCS, Mexico.",
" Franchises exist in Harvey's Lake Tahoe in Stateline, Nevada, the Las Vegas Strip, and on Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.",
" It is also a popular brand of tequila.",
" All were founded by rock musician Sammy Hagar."
],
"title": "Cabo Wabo"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Mama Dip's is a traditional country cooking restaurant located at 408 W. Rosemary Street in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.",
" They serve breakfast, lunch, and dinner, seven days a week.",
" Mama Dip’s also offers an extensive take home menu.",
" They also sells some distinctive items such as: barbecue sauce, poppy seed dressing, pecan pie, tee shirts, aprons, caps, mugs, and gift certificates at the general store located within the restaurant.",
" Mama Dip makes, bottles, and distributes her own special barbecue sauce and dressings to many local specialty foods shops as well."
],
"title": "Mama Dip's"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Old Ebbitt Grill is a historic bar and restaurant located at 675 15th Street NW in Washington, D.C., in the United States.",
" It is Washington's oldest bar and restaurant, and as of 2012 was owned by Clyde's Restaurant Group.",
" It opened as an unnamed restaurant in the Ebbitt House Hotel.",
" The Hotel distinguished itself as the first hotel in Washington to remain open all summer instead of closing when Congress adjourned.",
" In 1827 the Hotel was razed and rebuilt in the same location.",
" Ebbitt House Hotel was razed in 1925 to make way for the National Press Building, built in 1926.",
" The restaurant was incorporated by Anders Lofstrand, Sr., as a stand-alone business.",
" It moved into new quarters at 1427 F Street NW.",
" After Lofstrand's death in 1955, the restaurant was purchased by Peter Bechas in 1961.",
" The restaurant was sold at a tax sale in June 1970, and was purchased by Clyde's Restaurant Group.",
" The 1427 F Street NW location was demolished in 1983 during redevelopment, and Old Ebbitt Grill moved into its current quarters at 675 15th Street NW."
],
"title": "Old Ebbitt Grill"
}
] |
[
"Title: Ballymaloe House\n\n\"The Yeats Room\" of Ballymaloe House is a restaurant located in Shanagarry in County Cork, Ireland. It is a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star for eacht year in the period 1975-1980. The Michelin Guide awarded the restaurant the \"Red M\", indicating 'good food at a reasonable price', in the period 1981-1994. The Egon Ronay Guide awarded the restaurant one star in the periods 1975-1981, 1983-1984 and 1987-1988.",
"Title: Red Voodoo\n\nRed Voodoo is a Sammy Hagar and The Waboritas album. When Hagar finished touring in support of his \"Marching To Mars\" album, he recorded this record. \"Red Voodoo\" is really an extension of the party atmosphere that permeated Hagar's concerts on that tour and this album has that whimsical party vibe. \"Mas Tequila\" was the lead single and it almost served as a commercial for Hagar's other career endeavor, as his Cabo Wabo tequila was being distributed throughout the United States. The cover of this album even features a glass of Waborita that Hagar spent a portion of his concerts creating on stage during his last tour.",
"Title: Vivo Italian Kitchen\n\nVivo Italian Kitchen is a restaurant located at Universal Orlando Resort's CityWalk. It is an Italian restaurant located between NBC Sports Grill & Brew Restaurant and Emeril's Restaurant. This is also in front of The Cowfish restaurant. Vivo serves moderately priced traditional Italian food and has an array of wines and beers to choose from. The restaurant opened in 2015.",
"Title: Sylvia's Restaurant of Harlem\n\nSylvia's Restaurant of Harlem (often called \"Sylvia's Soul Food\" or just \"Sylvia's\") is a soul food restaurant located at 328 Lenox Avenue, between 126th and 127th Streets, in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City. It was founded in 1962 by Sylvia Woods. It has since expanded to a much larger space at its present location, and an adjacent building. The restaurant also sells a line of prepared foods, beauty and skin care items, cookbooks, and a children's book written by Woods. Woods purchased the original luncheonette by borrowing money from her mother, who had to mortgage her farm to provide it.",
"Title: Franklin Barbecue\n\nFranklin Barbecue is a barbecue restaurant located in Austin, Texas. In 2009, Aaron Franklin launched the restaurant in a trailer. The restaurant has sold out of brisket every day since its establishment. Franklin Barbecue moved to a brick and mortar location in 2011. The restaurant appeared on \"\" in September 2012. In 2014, \"Texas Monthly\" listed the restaurant on its list of \"the 50 Best BBQ Joints in the World.\" That July, President Barack Obama visited the restaurant and bought lunch for those in line behind him. The restaurant is prominently featured in a scene from the 2014 Jon Favreau film \"Chef\", with speaking cameos by owner Aaron Franklin and general manager Benji Jacob.",
"Title: Central Restaurante\n\nCentral Restaurante is a restaurant located in the Miraflores District, Lima, Peru. Central Restaurante is the flagship restaurant of Peruvian chef, Virgilio Martínez Véliz, and serves as his workshop in the investigation and integration of indigenous Peruvian ingredients into the restaurant's menu. The restaurant is known for its contemporary interpretation and presentation of Peruvian cuisine. GQ Latinoamérica calls Central Restaurante \"the heart of his [Virgilio Martínez Véliz] gastronomic philosophy.\" In 2012, Central Restaurante was named Best Restaurant of Peru by the Peruvian dining guide, SUMMUM. In 2013, Central Restaurante entered as number 50 in The World's 50 Best Restaurants as awarded by the British magazine \"Restaurant\". , and in 2014 jumped 35 places receiving \"Highest Climber\" recognition and ranking as number 15 in the world. On August 21, 2014, Central Restaurante for the third consecutive year was awarded Best Restaurant of Peru by the Peruvian Dining Guide, SUMMUM, and additionally received awards for Best Contemporary Peruvian cuisine and Best Sommelier.",
"Title: Bono's Restaurant and Deli\n\nBono's Restaurant and Deli is a historic restaurant located at 15395 Foothill Boulevard in Fontana, California. The restaurant opened in 1936 to serve travelers on U.S. Route 66, which then passed in front of the site; it originally operated as a produce stand. In 1943, increased traffic on the highway prompted the owners to expand their operations, and the current building was constructed as a full-service restaurant. The restaurant building has a Streamline Moderne design and features red and green stripes promoting its Italian cuisine as well as painted grapevines promoting its wine. As Fontana's Italian immigrant community grew in the 1940s, the restaurant also became a local source of Italian foods previously unavailable in the area.",
"Title: Cabo Wabo\n\nCabo Wabo is a nightclub and restaurant located in Cabo San Lucas, BCS, Mexico. Franchises exist in Harvey's Lake Tahoe in Stateline, Nevada, the Las Vegas Strip, and on Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California. It is also a popular brand of tequila. All were founded by rock musician Sammy Hagar.",
"Title: Mama Dip's\n\nMama Dip's is a traditional country cooking restaurant located at 408 W. Rosemary Street in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. They serve breakfast, lunch, and dinner, seven days a week. Mama Dip’s also offers an extensive take home menu. They also sells some distinctive items such as: barbecue sauce, poppy seed dressing, pecan pie, tee shirts, aprons, caps, mugs, and gift certificates at the general store located within the restaurant. Mama Dip makes, bottles, and distributes her own special barbecue sauce and dressings to many local specialty foods shops as well.",
"Title: Old Ebbitt Grill\n\nOld Ebbitt Grill is a historic bar and restaurant located at 675 15th Street NW in Washington, D.C., in the United States. It is Washington's oldest bar and restaurant, and as of 2012 was owned by Clyde's Restaurant Group. It opened as an unnamed restaurant in the Ebbitt House Hotel. The Hotel distinguished itself as the first hotel in Washington to remain open all summer instead of closing when Congress adjourned. In 1827 the Hotel was razed and rebuilt in the same location. Ebbitt House Hotel was razed in 1925 to make way for the National Press Building, built in 1926. The restaurant was incorporated by Anders Lofstrand, Sr., as a stand-alone business. It moved into new quarters at 1427 F Street NW. After Lofstrand's death in 1955, the restaurant was purchased by Peter Bechas in 1961. The restaurant was sold at a tax sale in June 1970, and was purchased by Clyde's Restaurant Group. The 1427 F Street NW location was demolished in 1983 during redevelopment, and Old Ebbitt Grill moved into its current quarters at 675 15th Street NW."
] |
1,789
|
What is the name of the college of law at the university for which Tom Lovat was head coach in 1975?
|
S.J. Quinney College of Law
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"1975 Utah Utes football team",
"1975 Utah Utes football team",
"University of Utah",
"University of Utah"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
1,
0,
4
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Ernest Edward Hefferle (January 12, 1915 – August 8, 2000) was an American football player and coach.",
" He served as head football coach at Boston College from 1960 to 1961 and as the interim head coach for the New Orleans Saints of the National Football League (NFL) in 1975.",
" A football star at Duquesne University, Hefferle pulled in a fourth quarter bomb from Boyd Brombaugh to win the 1937 Orange Bowl for the Dukes.",
" He served as a high school coach in South Huntingdon, Pennsylvania and Tarentum, Pennsylvania from 1947 to 1950.",
" From 1951 to 1958, he was assistant coach at the University of Pittsburgh.",
" In 1959, he was an assistant under Mike Nixon with the Washington Redskins.",
" He was head coach of the Boston College Eagles from 1960 to 1961, where he had a 7–12–1 record.",
" On December 21, 1961 he resigned his position as head coach.",
" From 1962 to 1964 and from 1966 to 1971, he was again and assistant at the University of Pittsburgh.",
" In 1965, he served under former boss Mike Nixon on the Pittsburgh Steelers coaching staff.",
" In 1975 Hefferle, then the Saints' director of pro personnel was hired as interim head after the firing of John North.",
" He had a record 1–7 in his one half season as the Saints interim head coach."
],
"title": "Ernie Hefferle"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tim Cohane (born May 22, 1942) is a highly decorated Vietnam Veteran, American college basketball coach, Wall Street entrepreneur and sports lawyer.",
" After graduating from the U.S. Naval Academy, Tim volunteered for duty in Vietnam on the rivers of the Mekong Delta.",
" For his service, he was awarded two bronze stars, a purple heart and a dozen other commendations.",
" Cohane served as the head basketball coach at Manhattanville College, Dartmouth College, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and the University at Buffalo, compiling an overall record of 223-236.",
" Cohane resigned as head coach at Buffalo five games into the 1999–2000 season, as the result of an NCAA investigation in which he was alleged to have violated NCAA rules.",
" He was replaced by Reggie Witherspoon as head coach of the Bulls.",
" Since 2004, Cohane has been involved in a long-running lawsuit against the NCAA, the University at Buffalo, and the Mid-American Conference, accusing them of conspiring to remove him as coach.",
" On May 15, 2015, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled in favor of the NCAA in the case.",
" Cohane is also a 2005 graduate of the Roger Williams School of Law, and has developed a law practice specializing in assuring due-process and related protections to coaches and student-athletes alike."
],
"title": "Tim Cohane"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1976 Utah Utes football team was an American football team that represented the University of Utah during the 1976 NCAA Division I football season.",
" Head coach Tom Lovat led the team to a 3–3 mark in the WAC and 3–8 overall."
],
"title": "1976 Utah Utes football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1975 Utah Utes football team was an American football team that represented the University of Utah during the 1975 NCAA Division I football season.",
" Head coach Tom Lovat led the team to a 1–4 mark in the WAC and 1–10 overall."
],
"title": "1975 Utah Utes football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1974 Utah Utes football team was an American football team that represented the University of Utah during the 1974 NCAA Division I football season.",
" Head coach Tom Lovat led the team to a 1–5 mark in the WAC and 1–10 overall."
],
"title": "1974 Utah Utes football team"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Tom Holliday is an American college baseball coach.",
" He was the head coach at Oklahoma State University from 1997 to 2003.",
" He was an assistant coach at the University of Miami in 1976 and Arizona State University in 1977.",
" He was then an assistant at Oklahoma State University from 1978 to 1996.",
" He was the pitching coach at the University of Texas from 2004 to 2006, and has been pitching coach and associate head coach at North Carolina State University since 2007.",
" On June 20, 2014 it was announced that Holliday would leave NC State and had accepted a position at Auburn as associate head coach and pitching coach."
],
"title": "Tom Holliday (baseball)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The University of Utah (also referred to as the U, U of U, or Utah) is a public coeducational space-grant research university in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States.",
" As the state's flagship university, the university offers more than 100 undergraduate majors and more than 92 graduate degree programs.",
" The university is classified in the highest ranking: \"R-1: Doctoral Universities – Highest Research Activity\" by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education.",
" The Carnegie Classification also considers the university as \"selective\", which is its second most selective admissions category.",
" Graduate studies include the S.J. Quinney College of Law and the School of Medicine, Utah's only medical school.",
" As of Fall 2015, there are 23,909 undergraduate students and 7,764 graduate students, for an enrollment total of 31,673."
],
"title": "University of Utah"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Weldon Drew (born April 22, 1935) was the head men's basketball coach at New Mexico State University from 1979 to 1985.",
" He was named to the position in 1979 as the successor to Ken Hayes who left to become head coach at Oral Roberts University.",
" Drew was previously an assistant coach for New Mexico State University from 1975 to 1979.",
" Drew came to NMSU after coaching high school basketball for Houston's Kashmere High School (485-135 record in 18 seasons), where he left with a 78-game winning streak after winning two consecutive Texas 4A state championships and the high school national championship.",
" Drew also won national coach of the year in 1975.",
" The NMSU job was Drew's first head coaching position at the college level.",
" Drew was the 20th person to hold the head coaching position in the Aggie basketball history.",
" After a dismal 1984-85 season, Drew was fired.",
" He then went to be an assistant coach at Oklahoma State for two seasons.",
" In 1987 Drew became the head coach at traditionally-black Langston University in Oklahoma.",
" Drew graduated from Fisk University in 1957 after a standout career playing basketball.",
" Drew graduated high school and played basketball at Wheatley High School in Houston."
],
"title": "Weldon Drew"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Utah Utes football program is a college football team that represents the University of Utah.",
" The team has had 23 head coaches since organized football began in 1892.",
" Harvey Holmes was the first paid head coach, and the Utes have had 17 paid, professional head coaches.",
" The Utes have played in more than 1,000 games during its 116 seasons.",
" In those seasons, 5 coaches have led the Utes to postseason bowl games: Ike Armstrong, Ray Nagel, Ron McBride, Urban Meyer, and Kyle Whittingham.",
" 7 coaches have won conference championships with the Utes: Thomas Fitzpatrick, Armstrong, Jack \"Cactus Jack\" Curtice, Nagel, McBride, Meyer, and Whittingham.",
" Armstrong is the all-time leader in number of games coached with 211, years coached with 25, and total wins with 141.",
" Meyer is the all-time leader in winning percentage with a percentage of .917 in his two seasons at Utah.",
" Tom Lovat is, in terms of winning percentage, the worst coach the Utes have had with a percentage of .152 during his three seasons as head coach (with the exception of Walter Shoup who only coached one game in 1895.)"
],
"title": "List of Utah Utes head football coaches"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Greg White (born 1959 in Mullens, West Virginia) is an American basketball coach best known, as the head coach at Marshall University and assistant coach for the UCLA Bruins.",
" He is also a well known motivational speaker on the speakers circuit in both the university and business world.",
" He has spoken to major corporations such as Mercedes, BMW, Subway, State Farm, Chevrolet, AT&T, Timken and Nisource to name a few.",
" On the college speakers circuit he has spoken at University of Alabama, Ohio State University, University of Kentucky, UCLA, Kansas State University, University of South Carolina, University of Louisville, Wake Forest University, University of Tennessee, University of Maryland, Iowa State University, Catholic University of America and University of Denver to name a few.",
" He graduated from the (now closed) Mullens High School in Mullens, WV and went on to play at NCAA Division I Marshall University, where he is a member of the school's Hall of Fame.",
" He was a record setting point guard, starting 113 consecutive games from 1977-81 and still holds numerous records at Marshall.",
" His legendary ball handling skills are world famous as he has traveled the globe performing as motivational speaker, exhibitionist and clinician.",
" His 115 wins as Marshall's head coach rank him as the 3rd winningest coach in Marshall Basketball history (29 coaches).",
" His teams amazed a 87-17 home record in Marshall's Cam Henderson Center.",
" Additionally, his teams at Marshall had a record setting 27 game home win streak and were 34-3 in home games against non conference teams beating foes like Wake Forest University, University of Georgia, University of Detroit and The University of Massachusetts.",
" In 2002, Greg's Marshall team lead all Division I basketball teams in 3 point field goal shooting percentage at 44% and he had 18 all conference players during his time as Marshall's head coach.",
" He had one player, Keith Veney, who hit 15 3's in a game which still stands as an NCAA record.",
" He has written several books with his most popular book being \"The Winning Edge\", a book about the importance of goal setting and time management.",
" In 2016, he published \"Success: Attitude is Everything,\" a book focused on having a great attitude and strong mindset.",
" His basketball camps are the largest sports camps in the history of West Virginia at Marshall University and the University of Charleston attracting over 1000 per summer at their peak."
],
"title": "Greg White (basketball)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Ernie Hefferle\n\nErnest Edward Hefferle (January 12, 1915 – August 8, 2000) was an American football player and coach. He served as head football coach at Boston College from 1960 to 1961 and as the interim head coach for the New Orleans Saints of the National Football League (NFL) in 1975. A football star at Duquesne University, Hefferle pulled in a fourth quarter bomb from Boyd Brombaugh to win the 1937 Orange Bowl for the Dukes. He served as a high school coach in South Huntingdon, Pennsylvania and Tarentum, Pennsylvania from 1947 to 1950. From 1951 to 1958, he was assistant coach at the University of Pittsburgh. In 1959, he was an assistant under Mike Nixon with the Washington Redskins. He was head coach of the Boston College Eagles from 1960 to 1961, where he had a 7–12–1 record. On December 21, 1961 he resigned his position as head coach. From 1962 to 1964 and from 1966 to 1971, he was again and assistant at the University of Pittsburgh. In 1965, he served under former boss Mike Nixon on the Pittsburgh Steelers coaching staff. In 1975 Hefferle, then the Saints' director of pro personnel was hired as interim head after the firing of John North. He had a record 1–7 in his one half season as the Saints interim head coach.",
"Title: Tim Cohane\n\nTim Cohane (born May 22, 1942) is a highly decorated Vietnam Veteran, American college basketball coach, Wall Street entrepreneur and sports lawyer. After graduating from the U.S. Naval Academy, Tim volunteered for duty in Vietnam on the rivers of the Mekong Delta. For his service, he was awarded two bronze stars, a purple heart and a dozen other commendations. Cohane served as the head basketball coach at Manhattanville College, Dartmouth College, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and the University at Buffalo, compiling an overall record of 223-236. Cohane resigned as head coach at Buffalo five games into the 1999–2000 season, as the result of an NCAA investigation in which he was alleged to have violated NCAA rules. He was replaced by Reggie Witherspoon as head coach of the Bulls. Since 2004, Cohane has been involved in a long-running lawsuit against the NCAA, the University at Buffalo, and the Mid-American Conference, accusing them of conspiring to remove him as coach. On May 15, 2015, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled in favor of the NCAA in the case. Cohane is also a 2005 graduate of the Roger Williams School of Law, and has developed a law practice specializing in assuring due-process and related protections to coaches and student-athletes alike.",
"Title: 1976 Utah Utes football team\n\nThe 1976 Utah Utes football team was an American football team that represented the University of Utah during the 1976 NCAA Division I football season. Head coach Tom Lovat led the team to a 3–3 mark in the WAC and 3–8 overall.",
"Title: 1975 Utah Utes football team\n\nThe 1975 Utah Utes football team was an American football team that represented the University of Utah during the 1975 NCAA Division I football season. Head coach Tom Lovat led the team to a 1–4 mark in the WAC and 1–10 overall.",
"Title: 1974 Utah Utes football team\n\nThe 1974 Utah Utes football team was an American football team that represented the University of Utah during the 1974 NCAA Division I football season. Head coach Tom Lovat led the team to a 1–5 mark in the WAC and 1–10 overall.",
"Title: Tom Holliday (baseball)\n\nTom Holliday is an American college baseball coach. He was the head coach at Oklahoma State University from 1997 to 2003. He was an assistant coach at the University of Miami in 1976 and Arizona State University in 1977. He was then an assistant at Oklahoma State University from 1978 to 1996. He was the pitching coach at the University of Texas from 2004 to 2006, and has been pitching coach and associate head coach at North Carolina State University since 2007. On June 20, 2014 it was announced that Holliday would leave NC State and had accepted a position at Auburn as associate head coach and pitching coach.",
"Title: University of Utah\n\nThe University of Utah (also referred to as the U, U of U, or Utah) is a public coeducational space-grant research university in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. As the state's flagship university, the university offers more than 100 undergraduate majors and more than 92 graduate degree programs. The university is classified in the highest ranking: \"R-1: Doctoral Universities – Highest Research Activity\" by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. The Carnegie Classification also considers the university as \"selective\", which is its second most selective admissions category. Graduate studies include the S.J. Quinney College of Law and the School of Medicine, Utah's only medical school. As of Fall 2015, there are 23,909 undergraduate students and 7,764 graduate students, for an enrollment total of 31,673.",
"Title: Weldon Drew\n\nWeldon Drew (born April 22, 1935) was the head men's basketball coach at New Mexico State University from 1979 to 1985. He was named to the position in 1979 as the successor to Ken Hayes who left to become head coach at Oral Roberts University. Drew was previously an assistant coach for New Mexico State University from 1975 to 1979. Drew came to NMSU after coaching high school basketball for Houston's Kashmere High School (485-135 record in 18 seasons), where he left with a 78-game winning streak after winning two consecutive Texas 4A state championships and the high school national championship. Drew also won national coach of the year in 1975. The NMSU job was Drew's first head coaching position at the college level. Drew was the 20th person to hold the head coaching position in the Aggie basketball history. After a dismal 1984-85 season, Drew was fired. He then went to be an assistant coach at Oklahoma State for two seasons. In 1987 Drew became the head coach at traditionally-black Langston University in Oklahoma. Drew graduated from Fisk University in 1957 after a standout career playing basketball. Drew graduated high school and played basketball at Wheatley High School in Houston.",
"Title: List of Utah Utes head football coaches\n\nThe Utah Utes football program is a college football team that represents the University of Utah. The team has had 23 head coaches since organized football began in 1892. Harvey Holmes was the first paid head coach, and the Utes have had 17 paid, professional head coaches. The Utes have played in more than 1,000 games during its 116 seasons. In those seasons, 5 coaches have led the Utes to postseason bowl games: Ike Armstrong, Ray Nagel, Ron McBride, Urban Meyer, and Kyle Whittingham. 7 coaches have won conference championships with the Utes: Thomas Fitzpatrick, Armstrong, Jack \"Cactus Jack\" Curtice, Nagel, McBride, Meyer, and Whittingham. Armstrong is the all-time leader in number of games coached with 211, years coached with 25, and total wins with 141. Meyer is the all-time leader in winning percentage with a percentage of .917 in his two seasons at Utah. Tom Lovat is, in terms of winning percentage, the worst coach the Utes have had with a percentage of .152 during his three seasons as head coach (with the exception of Walter Shoup who only coached one game in 1895.)",
"Title: Greg White (basketball)\n\nGreg White (born 1959 in Mullens, West Virginia) is an American basketball coach best known, as the head coach at Marshall University and assistant coach for the UCLA Bruins. He is also a well known motivational speaker on the speakers circuit in both the university and business world. He has spoken to major corporations such as Mercedes, BMW, Subway, State Farm, Chevrolet, AT&T, Timken and Nisource to name a few. On the college speakers circuit he has spoken at University of Alabama, Ohio State University, University of Kentucky, UCLA, Kansas State University, University of South Carolina, University of Louisville, Wake Forest University, University of Tennessee, University of Maryland, Iowa State University, Catholic University of America and University of Denver to name a few. He graduated from the (now closed) Mullens High School in Mullens, WV and went on to play at NCAA Division I Marshall University, where he is a member of the school's Hall of Fame. He was a record setting point guard, starting 113 consecutive games from 1977-81 and still holds numerous records at Marshall. His legendary ball handling skills are world famous as he has traveled the globe performing as motivational speaker, exhibitionist and clinician. His 115 wins as Marshall's head coach rank him as the 3rd winningest coach in Marshall Basketball history (29 coaches). His teams amazed a 87-17 home record in Marshall's Cam Henderson Center. Additionally, his teams at Marshall had a record setting 27 game home win streak and were 34-3 in home games against non conference teams beating foes like Wake Forest University, University of Georgia, University of Detroit and The University of Massachusetts. In 2002, Greg's Marshall team lead all Division I basketball teams in 3 point field goal shooting percentage at 44% and he had 18 all conference players during his time as Marshall's head coach. He had one player, Keith Veney, who hit 15 3's in a game which still stands as an NCAA record. He has written several books with his most popular book being \"The Winning Edge\", a book about the importance of goal setting and time management. In 2016, he published \"Success: Attitude is Everything,\" a book focused on having a great attitude and strong mindset. His basketball camps are the largest sports camps in the history of West Virginia at Marshall University and the University of Charleston attracting over 1000 per summer at their peak."
] |
1,790
|
Who does the 2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament MVP currently play for?
|
the Buffalo Sabres
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament",
"2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament",
"Jack Eichel",
"Jack Eichel"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
2,
0,
1
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The 2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 6 and March 21, 2015 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.",
" The Boston University Terriers defeated the UMass Lowell River Hawks by a score of 5–3 to earn their 8th Hockey East championship in school history.",
" Jack Eichel was named tournament MVP."
],
"title": "2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1986 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 2nd Tournament in the history of the conference.",
" It was played between March 7 and March 15, 1986.",
" Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were, for the first time, played at the Providence Civic Center in Providence, Rhode Island.",
" This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a venue outside of the state of Massachusetts .",
" By winning the tournament, Boston University received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1986 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "1986 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 14 and March 13, 2013 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.",
" The UMass Lowell River Hawks won their first Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1988 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 4th Tournament in the history of the conference.",
" It was played between March 3 and March 11, 1989.",
" Quarterfinal and semifinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final game was played at the Boston Garden in Boston, Massachusetts, the home venue of the NHL's Boston Bruins.",
" This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a home venue to one of its member teams .",
" By winning the tournament, Northeastern received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1988 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "1988 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2011 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 11 and March 19, 2011 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.",
" The Boston College Eagles won their tenth Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2011 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "2011 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Jack Robert Eichel (born October 28, 1996) is an American professional ice hockey centre.",
" He currently plays for the Buffalo Sabres of the National Hockey League.",
" Eichel was selected second overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft by the Buffalo Sabres.",
" Described at the age of 17 as \"the new face of American hockey,\" Eichel is considered a member of a rising class of generational talents in the sport, along with Connor McDavid."
],
"title": "Jack Eichel"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1989 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 5th Tournament in the history of the conference.",
" It was played between March 3 and March 11, 1989.",
" Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the newly opened Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, the home venue of the Boston College Eagles.",
" This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a home venue to one of its member teams .",
" By winning the tournament, Maine received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1989 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "1989 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2012 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 8 and March 17, 2012 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.",
" The Boston College Eagles won their eleventh Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "2012 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 2009 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 13 and March 21, 2009 at campus locations and at the TD Banknorth Garden in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.",
" Boston University won their seventh Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament and the Lamoriello Trophy and received Hockey East's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "2009 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The 1990 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 6th Tournament in the history of the conference.",
" It was played between March 1 and March 11, 1990.",
" Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, the home venue of the Boston College Eagles.",
" This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a home venue to one of its member teams .",
" By winning the tournament, Boston College received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1990 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
],
"title": "1990 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament"
}
] |
[
"Title: 2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 2015 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 6 and March 21, 2015 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston University Terriers defeated the UMass Lowell River Hawks by a score of 5–3 to earn their 8th Hockey East championship in school history. Jack Eichel was named tournament MVP.",
"Title: 1986 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 1986 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 2nd Tournament in the history of the conference. It was played between March 7 and March 15, 1986. Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were, for the first time, played at the Providence Civic Center in Providence, Rhode Island. This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a venue outside of the state of Massachusetts . By winning the tournament, Boston University received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1986 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: 2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 14 and March 13, 2013 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The UMass Lowell River Hawks won their first Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: 1988 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 1988 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 4th Tournament in the history of the conference. It was played between March 3 and March 11, 1989. Quarterfinal and semifinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final game was played at the Boston Garden in Boston, Massachusetts, the home venue of the NHL's Boston Bruins. This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a home venue to one of its member teams . By winning the tournament, Northeastern received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1988 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: 2011 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 2011 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 11 and March 19, 2011 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston College Eagles won their tenth Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2011 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: Jack Eichel\n\nJack Robert Eichel (born October 28, 1996) is an American professional ice hockey centre. He currently plays for the Buffalo Sabres of the National Hockey League. Eichel was selected second overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft by the Buffalo Sabres. Described at the age of 17 as \"the new face of American hockey,\" Eichel is considered a member of a rising class of generational talents in the sport, along with Connor McDavid.",
"Title: 1989 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 1989 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 5th Tournament in the history of the conference. It was played between March 3 and March 11, 1989. Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the newly opened Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, the home venue of the Boston College Eagles. This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a home venue to one of its member teams . By winning the tournament, Maine received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1989 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: 2012 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 2012 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 8 and March 17, 2012 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston College Eagles won their eleventh Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: 2009 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 2009 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 13 and March 21, 2009 at campus locations and at the TD Banknorth Garden in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Boston University won their seventh Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament and the Lamoriello Trophy and received Hockey East's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.",
"Title: 1990 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\n\nThe 1990 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 6th Tournament in the history of the conference. It was played between March 1 and March 11, 1990. Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, the home venue of the Boston College Eagles. This was the final year the Hockey East championship was decided at a home venue to one of its member teams . By winning the tournament, Boston College received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 1990 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament."
] |
1,791
|
Kim Kashkashian and Dennis Agajanian, have which industry in common?
|
musician
|
comparison
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Kim Kashkashian",
"Dennis Agajanian"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"General Kim Kyong-hui (Hangul: 김경희 ; Hanja: 金敬姬 ; born 30 May 1946) is the aunt of current North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un.",
" She is the daughter of the founding North Korean leader Kim Il-sung and the sister of the late leader Kim Jong-il.",
" She currently serves as Secretary for Organization of the Workers' Party of Korea.",
" An important member of Kim Jong-il's inner circle of trusted friends and advisors, she was director of the WPK Light Industry Department from 1988 to 2012.",
" Her husband was Jang Sung-taek, who was executed in December 2013 in Pyongyang, after being charged with treason and corruption.",
" There have been many unconfirmed reports that she is suffering from poor health, has died of illness, or has been killed."
],
"title": "Kim Kyong-hui"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Diemut Poppen (born in Münster, Germany) began violin lessons at the age of seven, but changed to the viola having been exposed to it through playing chamber music.",
" She has been taught by leading players such as Kim Kashkashian, Bruno Giuranna, Yuri Bashmet, Hariolf Schlichtig, Georges Janzer and the Amadeus Quartet."
],
"title": "Diemut Poppen"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dennis Agajanian is a Christian musician, of Armenian descent, from the U.S. who has recorded over 20 albums.",
" Dennis Agajanian has played at churches around the world in 120 countries, having also been featured at the Harvest Crusades and Billy Graham's crusades since 1974."
],
"title": "Dennis Agajanian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Roni Lee (born Rhonda Lee Ryckman, November 15, 1956 in Los Angeles,California) is an American guitarist, and singer-songwriter.",
" She is most associated with her affiliation with Kim Fowley's first mixed gender punk rock band Venus and the Razorblades as the female lead guitarist and vocalist.",
" Her relationship with producer and creator Kim Fowley led to co-writing The Runaways hit \"I Wanna Be Where The Boys Are\" released on the \"Live In Japan\" album in 1977 winning the Recording Industry Association of Japan Gold Record.",
" Roni Lee, Kim Fowley, and the members of the Runaways Joan Jett, Lita Ford are all part of a movement that led the way in the music industry for women in rock.",
" The Woman's International Music Network founded by Laura B. Whitmore gives credit to these pioneers, a genre that was once dominated mostly by men."
],
"title": "Roni Lee"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The discography of Common, an American hip hop recording artist, consists of eleven studio albums, two compilation albums, forty-nine singles (including fifteen as a featured artist) and twenty-nine music videos.",
" It also contains the list of Common songs.",
" Common sold more than 2.8 million albums in the United States.",
" Common released his first album, \"Can I Borrow a Dollar?",
"\" (1992), and follow suit with his second album, \"Resurrection\", which met with critical acclaim, calling the album as one of the classic of the 90s.",
" Common released his third album, \"One Day It'll All Make Sense\", which was a little commercial success, follow suit with his fourth album, \"Like Water for Chocolate\", which was met with critical acclaim from music critics, calling it the best rap album of the year.",
" The album was also a commercial success certifying it gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).",
" His fifth studio album \"Electric Circus\" was met with acclaim from music critics.",
" However, it failed to meet the commercial succes with \"Like Water for Chocolate\", which only peaked at number 47 on the US \"Billboard\" 200.",
" In 2005, he was helped by Kanye West to release his 6th album \"Be\".",
" Kanye produced the whole album and was featured on it a few times.",
" The album helped Common to get back into the spotlight and sold 185,000 copies in its first week debuting at number 2 on the charts and also it was Common's first album to have commercial succes outside the US, peaking in several territories.",
" The album was met with unniversal acclaim and it was described to be Common's best album.",
" The album was certified gold by the RIAA.",
" His next album \"Finding Forever\" peaked at number one on the \"Billboard\" 200 being his first chart-topper.",
" His next album \"Universal Mind Control\"l sold 81,663 in its first week debuting only at number 12.",
" The album was promoted by the successful single \"Universal Mind Control\" which peaked at number 62 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100.",
" The album was met with mixed reviews.",
" His next album \"The Dreamer/The Believer\" was met with positive reviews from music critics and debuted at number 18 on the charts, selling 70,000 copies in its first week and was promoted by five singles.",
" In 2014 Common released his 10th album \"Nobody's Smiling\" which peaked at number 6 on the charts and had features from Big Sean and Vince Staples and others.",
" In 2015 he collaborated with John Legend on the single \"Glory\" which peaked at number 49 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100.",
" The single was from the film \"Selma\"."
],
"title": "Common discography"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Air 500 Limited was a Canadian airline.",
" Founded in 1985 by Dennis Chadala, former Captain, director of marketing and assistant to Carl Millard, of the defunct Millardair.",
" The company commenced operations with 1 Super Beech 18 Model E, registered C-FTAE that was purchased from Bradley First Air where it had retired from flying the dew line in Northern Canada.",
" The Beech18 was originally purchased new by Timmins Aviation.",
" The founder had extensive knowledge of the emergency freight business and the operation of DC3s, Super DCs and DC4 aircraft due to his position within the inner circle at Millardair.",
" Dennis Chadala created Air 500 Limited on a shoe string, without financing and was the first airline to receive licensing and an operating certificate at Toronto's Pearson International Airport following deregulation of the aviation industry in Canada in 1985.",
" The airline grew rapidly adding an aircraft at the pace of 1 every six months.",
" By 1989 it had acquired almost all of the business flying ad hock charter out of Toronto for Chrysler, Ford, GM and many others formerly serviced by his former place of employment at Millardair.",
" The young owner's extensive knowledge of this niche area of aviation enabled him to expand rapidly and capture that market segment.",
" At the time, Air 500 was an exceptional success story operating 3 Super Beech 18 aircraft, 2 Cessna 310s, 1 DC3, 1 Super DC(C117), 1 Piper Cheyenne and 1 Mitsubishi MU2 Marquise.",
" In the early nineties, the fleet continued to grow adding 2 more Mitsubishi MU2 aircraft, 2 Citation 500 business jets and 1 Citation 2 business jet.",
" In 1995 the airport was privatized and came under the direction and control of the GTAA (Greater Toronto Airport Authority) and Dennis Chadala simultaneously acquired Hangar #7, the newest hangar facility at the north end of the Pearson Airport off Derry Road with 40 years remaining on the current land lease.",
" Air 500 had contracts in the courier industry, Air Ambulance Services and Aircraft Management as well as a base of operations at the Esso Avitat in Ottawa where 2 Mitsubishi Marquise MU2 aircraft were stationed.",
" One was flying an exclusive long term contract for Nordion (formerly Atomic Energy of Canada) flying radio active isotopes to numerous destinations in the United States for medical purposes as a well a designated charter aircraft.",
" Hangar #7 was large enough to lease out one half the facility to Air 500 Limited and the other half to Execaire/Innotech Aviation and they remained tenants of the hangar owned by Dennis Chadala until November 1998, at which time Execaire/Innotech owned by the IMP Group out of Halifax Nova Scotia struct a deal with Dennis Chadala to purchase his hangar facility, all his aircraft and the operating airline Air 500 Limited.",
" Dennis Chadala stayed on with the company during a short transition period that ended in February 1999.",
" Air 500 was amalgamated into Execaire and became part of that operating group taking advantage of the synergies available to them."
],
"title": "Air 500"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dennis Village Cemetery, also known as the Common Burying Ground and East Yarmouth Churchyard, is a historic cemetery at Massachusetts Route 6A and Old Bass River Road in the center of Dennis, Massachusetts.",
" The oldest portion, a 2 acre parcel, has grave markers dating to 1728, and may contain even older burials.",
" It was established when Dennis was still part of neighboring Yarmouth.",
" Among its notable burials are those of Rev. Josiah Dennis, the namesake of the town, and his wife."
],
"title": "Dennis Village Cemetery"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kim Ki-duk (29 September 1934 – 7 September 2017) was a South Korean film director and professor.",
" Best known outside of Korea for his 1967 giant monster film \"\", Kim Ki-duk directed 66 movies in total from his directorial debut in 1961 until his retirement from the film industry in 1977.",
" Along with Kim Soo-yong and Lee Man-hee, Kim was one of the leading young directors of the Korean cinematic wave of the 1960s.",
" The most distinctive and successful genre of this period was the melodrama (청춘영화 - \"cheongchun yeonghwa\").",
" He is not related to Kim Ki-duk, the South Korean director of \"3-Iron\"."
],
"title": "Kim Ki-duk (director, born 1934)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kim Kashkashian (Armenian: Քիմ Քաշքաշյան , born August 31, 1952 in Detroit, Michigan) is a Grammy-award winning Armenian-American violist."
],
"title": "Kim Kashkashian"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dennis Culp (born April 23, 1970 in Denver, Colorado) is an American trombonist and singer/songwriter best known for his work with the bands Brave Saint Saturn and Five Iron Frenzy.",
" He currently resides in New Jersey with his wife Melinda, and has released one solo album, \"Ascents\", under the name Dennis Bayne.",
" Dennis Culp is a member of the band Roam which began in 2010, they have released one EP.",
" He is also the CFO, owner, and Executive Producer at Singing Serpent, a firm providing music for the television advertising industry.",
" Their clients include Toshiba, Sprint, McDonald's, and many other major companies."
],
"title": "Dennis Culp"
}
] |
[
"Title: Kim Kyong-hui\n\nGeneral Kim Kyong-hui (Hangul: 김경희 ; Hanja: 金敬姬 ; born 30 May 1946) is the aunt of current North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un. She is the daughter of the founding North Korean leader Kim Il-sung and the sister of the late leader Kim Jong-il. She currently serves as Secretary for Organization of the Workers' Party of Korea. An important member of Kim Jong-il's inner circle of trusted friends and advisors, she was director of the WPK Light Industry Department from 1988 to 2012. Her husband was Jang Sung-taek, who was executed in December 2013 in Pyongyang, after being charged with treason and corruption. There have been many unconfirmed reports that she is suffering from poor health, has died of illness, or has been killed.",
"Title: Diemut Poppen\n\nDiemut Poppen (born in Münster, Germany) began violin lessons at the age of seven, but changed to the viola having been exposed to it through playing chamber music. She has been taught by leading players such as Kim Kashkashian, Bruno Giuranna, Yuri Bashmet, Hariolf Schlichtig, Georges Janzer and the Amadeus Quartet.",
"Title: Dennis Agajanian\n\nDennis Agajanian is a Christian musician, of Armenian descent, from the U.S. who has recorded over 20 albums. Dennis Agajanian has played at churches around the world in 120 countries, having also been featured at the Harvest Crusades and Billy Graham's crusades since 1974.",
"Title: Roni Lee\n\nRoni Lee (born Rhonda Lee Ryckman, November 15, 1956 in Los Angeles,California) is an American guitarist, and singer-songwriter. She is most associated with her affiliation with Kim Fowley's first mixed gender punk rock band Venus and the Razorblades as the female lead guitarist and vocalist. Her relationship with producer and creator Kim Fowley led to co-writing The Runaways hit \"I Wanna Be Where The Boys Are\" released on the \"Live In Japan\" album in 1977 winning the Recording Industry Association of Japan Gold Record. Roni Lee, Kim Fowley, and the members of the Runaways Joan Jett, Lita Ford are all part of a movement that led the way in the music industry for women in rock. The Woman's International Music Network founded by Laura B. Whitmore gives credit to these pioneers, a genre that was once dominated mostly by men.",
"Title: Common discography\n\nThe discography of Common, an American hip hop recording artist, consists of eleven studio albums, two compilation albums, forty-nine singles (including fifteen as a featured artist) and twenty-nine music videos. It also contains the list of Common songs. Common sold more than 2.8 million albums in the United States. Common released his first album, \"Can I Borrow a Dollar? \" (1992), and follow suit with his second album, \"Resurrection\", which met with critical acclaim, calling the album as one of the classic of the 90s. Common released his third album, \"One Day It'll All Make Sense\", which was a little commercial success, follow suit with his fourth album, \"Like Water for Chocolate\", which was met with critical acclaim from music critics, calling it the best rap album of the year. The album was also a commercial success certifying it gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). His fifth studio album \"Electric Circus\" was met with acclaim from music critics. However, it failed to meet the commercial succes with \"Like Water for Chocolate\", which only peaked at number 47 on the US \"Billboard\" 200. In 2005, he was helped by Kanye West to release his 6th album \"Be\". Kanye produced the whole album and was featured on it a few times. The album helped Common to get back into the spotlight and sold 185,000 copies in its first week debuting at number 2 on the charts and also it was Common's first album to have commercial succes outside the US, peaking in several territories. The album was met with unniversal acclaim and it was described to be Common's best album. The album was certified gold by the RIAA. His next album \"Finding Forever\" peaked at number one on the \"Billboard\" 200 being his first chart-topper. His next album \"Universal Mind Control\"l sold 81,663 in its first week debuting only at number 12. The album was promoted by the successful single \"Universal Mind Control\" which peaked at number 62 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. The album was met with mixed reviews. His next album \"The Dreamer/The Believer\" was met with positive reviews from music critics and debuted at number 18 on the charts, selling 70,000 copies in its first week and was promoted by five singles. In 2014 Common released his 10th album \"Nobody's Smiling\" which peaked at number 6 on the charts and had features from Big Sean and Vince Staples and others. In 2015 he collaborated with John Legend on the single \"Glory\" which peaked at number 49 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. The single was from the film \"Selma\".",
"Title: Air 500\n\nAir 500 Limited was a Canadian airline. Founded in 1985 by Dennis Chadala, former Captain, director of marketing and assistant to Carl Millard, of the defunct Millardair. The company commenced operations with 1 Super Beech 18 Model E, registered C-FTAE that was purchased from Bradley First Air where it had retired from flying the dew line in Northern Canada. The Beech18 was originally purchased new by Timmins Aviation. The founder had extensive knowledge of the emergency freight business and the operation of DC3s, Super DCs and DC4 aircraft due to his position within the inner circle at Millardair. Dennis Chadala created Air 500 Limited on a shoe string, without financing and was the first airline to receive licensing and an operating certificate at Toronto's Pearson International Airport following deregulation of the aviation industry in Canada in 1985. The airline grew rapidly adding an aircraft at the pace of 1 every six months. By 1989 it had acquired almost all of the business flying ad hock charter out of Toronto for Chrysler, Ford, GM and many others formerly serviced by his former place of employment at Millardair. The young owner's extensive knowledge of this niche area of aviation enabled him to expand rapidly and capture that market segment. At the time, Air 500 was an exceptional success story operating 3 Super Beech 18 aircraft, 2 Cessna 310s, 1 DC3, 1 Super DC(C117), 1 Piper Cheyenne and 1 Mitsubishi MU2 Marquise. In the early nineties, the fleet continued to grow adding 2 more Mitsubishi MU2 aircraft, 2 Citation 500 business jets and 1 Citation 2 business jet. In 1995 the airport was privatized and came under the direction and control of the GTAA (Greater Toronto Airport Authority) and Dennis Chadala simultaneously acquired Hangar #7, the newest hangar facility at the north end of the Pearson Airport off Derry Road with 40 years remaining on the current land lease. Air 500 had contracts in the courier industry, Air Ambulance Services and Aircraft Management as well as a base of operations at the Esso Avitat in Ottawa where 2 Mitsubishi Marquise MU2 aircraft were stationed. One was flying an exclusive long term contract for Nordion (formerly Atomic Energy of Canada) flying radio active isotopes to numerous destinations in the United States for medical purposes as a well a designated charter aircraft. Hangar #7 was large enough to lease out one half the facility to Air 500 Limited and the other half to Execaire/Innotech Aviation and they remained tenants of the hangar owned by Dennis Chadala until November 1998, at which time Execaire/Innotech owned by the IMP Group out of Halifax Nova Scotia struct a deal with Dennis Chadala to purchase his hangar facility, all his aircraft and the operating airline Air 500 Limited. Dennis Chadala stayed on with the company during a short transition period that ended in February 1999. Air 500 was amalgamated into Execaire and became part of that operating group taking advantage of the synergies available to them.",
"Title: Dennis Village Cemetery\n\nDennis Village Cemetery, also known as the Common Burying Ground and East Yarmouth Churchyard, is a historic cemetery at Massachusetts Route 6A and Old Bass River Road in the center of Dennis, Massachusetts. The oldest portion, a 2 acre parcel, has grave markers dating to 1728, and may contain even older burials. It was established when Dennis was still part of neighboring Yarmouth. Among its notable burials are those of Rev. Josiah Dennis, the namesake of the town, and his wife.",
"Title: Kim Ki-duk (director, born 1934)\n\nKim Ki-duk (29 September 1934 – 7 September 2017) was a South Korean film director and professor. Best known outside of Korea for his 1967 giant monster film \"\", Kim Ki-duk directed 66 movies in total from his directorial debut in 1961 until his retirement from the film industry in 1977. Along with Kim Soo-yong and Lee Man-hee, Kim was one of the leading young directors of the Korean cinematic wave of the 1960s. The most distinctive and successful genre of this period was the melodrama (청춘영화 - \"cheongchun yeonghwa\"). He is not related to Kim Ki-duk, the South Korean director of \"3-Iron\".",
"Title: Kim Kashkashian\n\nKim Kashkashian (Armenian: Քիմ Քաշքաշյան , born August 31, 1952 in Detroit, Michigan) is a Grammy-award winning Armenian-American violist.",
"Title: Dennis Culp\n\nDennis Culp (born April 23, 1970 in Denver, Colorado) is an American trombonist and singer/songwriter best known for his work with the bands Brave Saint Saturn and Five Iron Frenzy. He currently resides in New Jersey with his wife Melinda, and has released one solo album, \"Ascents\", under the name Dennis Bayne. Dennis Culp is a member of the band Roam which began in 2010, they have released one EP. He is also the CFO, owner, and Executive Producer at Singing Serpent, a firm providing music for the television advertising industry. Their clients include Toshiba, Sprint, McDonald's, and many other major companies."
] |
1,792
|
Aladdin's Problem is a 1983 novella by a highly decorated German soldier who became famous for what World War I memoir?
|
Storm of Steel
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Aladdin's Problem",
"Ernst Jünger"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
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|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Ernst Jünger (29 March 1895 – 17 February 1998) was a highly decorated German soldier, author, and entomologist who became famous for his World War I memoir \"Storm of Steel\".",
" The son of a successful businessman and chemist, Jünger rebelled against an affluent upbringing and sought adventure in the Wandervogel, before running away to briefly serve in the French Foreign Legion, an illegal act.",
" Because he escaped prosecution in Germany due to his father's efforts, Jünger was able to enlist on the outbreak of war.",
" During an ill-fated German offensive in 1918 Jünger's World War I career ended with the last and most serious of his many woundings, and he was awarded the Pour le Mérite, a rare decoration for one of his rank."
],
"title": "Ernst Jünger"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Charles Hazlitt Upham, (21 September 1908 – 22 November 1994) was a New Zealand soldier who earned the Victoria Cross (VC) twice during the Second World War; in Crete in May 1941, and at Ruweisat Ridge, Egypt, in July 1942.",
" He was the most recent of only three people to receive the VC twice, the only one to receive two VCs during the Second World War and the only combat soldier to receive the award twice.",
" As a result, Upham is often described as the most highly decorated Commonwealth soldier of that war, as the VC is the Commonwealth's highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy."
],
"title": "Charles Upham"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Commander Waldemar Kophamel (August 16, 1880 – November 4, 1934) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I.",
" Kophamel joined the Imperial German Navy on 12 April 1898 and started his military education on a ship named ."
],
"title": "Waldemar Kophamel"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Aladdin's Problem (German: Aladins Problem ) is a 1983 novella by the German writer Ernst Jünger.",
" It tells the story of an East German former army officer who battles with the problem that man is alone in the world.",
" An English translation by Hilary Barr was published in 1992."
],
"title": "Aladdin's Problem"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Artur Schmitt (20 July 1888 – 15 January 1972) was a highly decorated German soldier during World War I and World War II."
],
"title": "Artur Schmitt"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hans Rose was one of the most successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the \"Kaiserliche Marine\" during World War I ."
],
"title": "Hans Rose"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Franz Bäke (28 February 1898 – 12 December 1978) was a German officer and tank commander during World War II.",
" He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords of Nazi Germany.",
" In the post-war popular culture, Bäke is one of the \"panzer aces\", that is, a highly decorated German tank commanders popularised in the English-language translations of the German author Franz Kurowski's \"Panzer Aces\" series."
],
"title": "Franz Bäke"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hans Howaldt (12 November 1888, Kiel – 6 September 1970) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I and also active in World War II.",
" By the end of World War I he was promoted Kapitänleutnant."
],
"title": "Hans Howaldt"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Oberleutnant zur See\" Reinhold Saltzwedel (23 November 1889 – 2 December 1917) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the \"Kaiserliche Marine\" during World War I."
],
"title": "Reinhold Saltzwedel"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Johannes Lohs (24 June 1889 – 14 August 1918) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I."
],
"title": "Johannes Lohs"
}
] |
[
"Title: Ernst Jünger\n\nErnst Jünger (29 March 1895 – 17 February 1998) was a highly decorated German soldier, author, and entomologist who became famous for his World War I memoir \"Storm of Steel\". The son of a successful businessman and chemist, Jünger rebelled against an affluent upbringing and sought adventure in the Wandervogel, before running away to briefly serve in the French Foreign Legion, an illegal act. Because he escaped prosecution in Germany due to his father's efforts, Jünger was able to enlist on the outbreak of war. During an ill-fated German offensive in 1918 Jünger's World War I career ended with the last and most serious of his many woundings, and he was awarded the Pour le Mérite, a rare decoration for one of his rank.",
"Title: Charles Upham\n\nCharles Hazlitt Upham, (21 September 1908 – 22 November 1994) was a New Zealand soldier who earned the Victoria Cross (VC) twice during the Second World War; in Crete in May 1941, and at Ruweisat Ridge, Egypt, in July 1942. He was the most recent of only three people to receive the VC twice, the only one to receive two VCs during the Second World War and the only combat soldier to receive the award twice. As a result, Upham is often described as the most highly decorated Commonwealth soldier of that war, as the VC is the Commonwealth's highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy.",
"Title: Waldemar Kophamel\n\nCommander Waldemar Kophamel (August 16, 1880 – November 4, 1934) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I. Kophamel joined the Imperial German Navy on 12 April 1898 and started his military education on a ship named .",
"Title: Aladdin's Problem\n\nAladdin's Problem (German: Aladins Problem ) is a 1983 novella by the German writer Ernst Jünger. It tells the story of an East German former army officer who battles with the problem that man is alone in the world. An English translation by Hilary Barr was published in 1992.",
"Title: Artur Schmitt\n\nArtur Schmitt (20 July 1888 – 15 January 1972) was a highly decorated German soldier during World War I and World War II.",
"Title: Hans Rose\n\nHans Rose was one of the most successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the \"Kaiserliche Marine\" during World War I .",
"Title: Franz Bäke\n\nFranz Bäke (28 February 1898 – 12 December 1978) was a German officer and tank commander during World War II. He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords of Nazi Germany. In the post-war popular culture, Bäke is one of the \"panzer aces\", that is, a highly decorated German tank commanders popularised in the English-language translations of the German author Franz Kurowski's \"Panzer Aces\" series.",
"Title: Hans Howaldt\n\nHans Howaldt (12 November 1888, Kiel – 6 September 1970) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I and also active in World War II. By the end of World War I he was promoted Kapitänleutnant.",
"Title: Reinhold Saltzwedel\n\n\"Oberleutnant zur See\" Reinhold Saltzwedel (23 November 1889 – 2 December 1917) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the \"Kaiserliche Marine\" during World War I.",
"Title: Johannes Lohs\n\nJohannes Lohs (24 June 1889 – 14 August 1918) was a successful and highly decorated German U-boat commander in the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I."
] |
1,793
|
What country of origin does Big Miracle and John Krasinski have in common?
|
American
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Big Miracle",
"John Krasinski"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"A Quiet Place is an upcoming American supernatural horror film directed by John Krasinski.",
" The film stars Emily Blunt and John Krasinski.",
" The film will be produced by Michael Bay through his Platinum Dunes banner."
],
"title": "A Quiet Place (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Hollars is a 2016 American comedy-drama film directed by John Krasinski and written by James C. Strouse.",
" The film stars an ensemble cast led by Krasinski, starring Sharlto Copley, Charlie Day, Richard Jenkins, Anna Kendrick and Margo Martindale.",
" The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 24, 2016.",
" The film was released on August 26, 2016, by Sony Pictures Classics."
],
"title": "The Hollars"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Detroit is a 2017 American period crime drama film directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal.",
" Based on the Algiers Motel incident during Detroit's 1967 12th Street Riot, the film's release commemorated the 50th anniversary of the event.",
" The film stars John Boyega, Will Poulter, Algee Smith, Jason Mitchell, John Krasinski and Anthony Mackie."
],
"title": "Detroit (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Promised Land is a 2012 American drama film directed by Gus Van Sant and starring Matt Damon, John Krasinski, Frances McDormand and Hal Holbrook.",
" The screenplay is written by Damon and Krasinski based on a story by Dave Eggers.",
" \"Promised Land\" follows two corporate salespeople who visit a rural town in an attempt to buy drilling rights from the local residents."
],
"title": "Promised Land (2012 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"John Burke Krasinski ( ; born October 20, 1979) is an American actor and filmmaker.",
" He is widely known for his role as Jim Halpert on the NBC sitcom \"The Office\" (2005–2013), for which he received critical acclaim and won numerous awards.",
" He also served as a producer and occasional director of the show."
],
"title": "John Krasinski"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Lip Sync Battle\" is an American musical reality competition series which premiered on April 2, 2015, on the Spike cable network.",
" The show is based on an idea initially introduced to \"Late Night with Jimmy Fallon\" by John Krasinski.",
" In each episode, two celebrities compete against each other using lip sync, and after two rounds, the audience decides the winner of the night.",
" The show is hosted by rapper LL Cool J, while model Chrissy Teigen serves as color commentator.",
" Several broadcasters opted to pass on the game show before it was eventually picked up by the American cable channel Spike, which was in the middle of rebranding.",
" The show has been a big success for the network and well received by both the critics and the audiences.",
" In April 2015, \"Lip Sync Battle\" was renewed for a second season, which premiered on January 7, 2016.",
" In January 2016, the show was renewed for a third season."
],
"title": "List of Lip Sync Battle episodes"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Aloha is a 2015 American romantic comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Cameron Crowe.",
" The film, starring Bradley Cooper, Emma Stone, Rachel McAdams, Bill Murray, John Krasinski, Danny McBride and Alec Baldwin, was released on May 29, 2015.",
" The film received negative reviews from critics and has grossed only $26 million against a budget of $37 million, making the film a box office bomb."
],
"title": "Aloha (film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Born in China (我們誕生在中國) is a 2016 nature documentary film directed by Lu Chuan.",
" A co-production between Disneynature and Shanghai Media Group, the film was released in China on August 12, 2016 and in the United States on April 21, 2017, one day before Earth Day.",
" The film focuses on a female snow leopard named Dawa and her cubs, a young golden snub-nosed monkey named Tao Tao, a female giant panda named Ya Ya along with her daughter Mei Mei, and a herd of chiru.",
" The American release of the film is narrated by John Krasinski and the Chinese release is narrated by Zhou Xun."
],
"title": "Born in China"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Big Miracle is a 2012 British-American drama film directed by Ken Kwapis, and stars Drew Barrymore and John Krasinski.",
" The film is based on Tom Rose's 1989 book \"Freeing the Whales\", which covers Operation Breakthrough, the 1988 international effort to rescue gray whales trapped in ice near Point Barrow, Alaska."
],
"title": "Big Miracle"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Big Miracle tells the true story of three gray whales trapped beneath Arctic ice in the fall of 1988, and of Operation Breakthrough, the collaborative efforts to free them by oil company executives, activists, Inupiat people, the U.S. military, and Soviet ice-breakers.",
" Written by journalist Tom Rose (who covered the event for a Japanese news channel at the time), the book was originally published in 1989, titled \"Freeing the Whales: How the Media Created the World's Greatest Non-Event\".",
" It was re-released under its current title by St. Martin’s Press in 2011."
],
"title": "Big Miracle (book)"
}
] |
[
"Title: A Quiet Place (film)\n\nA Quiet Place is an upcoming American supernatural horror film directed by John Krasinski. The film stars Emily Blunt and John Krasinski. The film will be produced by Michael Bay through his Platinum Dunes banner.",
"Title: The Hollars\n\nThe Hollars is a 2016 American comedy-drama film directed by John Krasinski and written by James C. Strouse. The film stars an ensemble cast led by Krasinski, starring Sharlto Copley, Charlie Day, Richard Jenkins, Anna Kendrick and Margo Martindale. The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 24, 2016. The film was released on August 26, 2016, by Sony Pictures Classics.",
"Title: Detroit (film)\n\nDetroit is a 2017 American period crime drama film directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal. Based on the Algiers Motel incident during Detroit's 1967 12th Street Riot, the film's release commemorated the 50th anniversary of the event. The film stars John Boyega, Will Poulter, Algee Smith, Jason Mitchell, John Krasinski and Anthony Mackie.",
"Title: Promised Land (2012 film)\n\nPromised Land is a 2012 American drama film directed by Gus Van Sant and starring Matt Damon, John Krasinski, Frances McDormand and Hal Holbrook. The screenplay is written by Damon and Krasinski based on a story by Dave Eggers. \"Promised Land\" follows two corporate salespeople who visit a rural town in an attempt to buy drilling rights from the local residents.",
"Title: John Krasinski\n\nJohn Burke Krasinski ( ; born October 20, 1979) is an American actor and filmmaker. He is widely known for his role as Jim Halpert on the NBC sitcom \"The Office\" (2005–2013), for which he received critical acclaim and won numerous awards. He also served as a producer and occasional director of the show.",
"Title: List of Lip Sync Battle episodes\n\n\"Lip Sync Battle\" is an American musical reality competition series which premiered on April 2, 2015, on the Spike cable network. The show is based on an idea initially introduced to \"Late Night with Jimmy Fallon\" by John Krasinski. In each episode, two celebrities compete against each other using lip sync, and after two rounds, the audience decides the winner of the night. The show is hosted by rapper LL Cool J, while model Chrissy Teigen serves as color commentator. Several broadcasters opted to pass on the game show before it was eventually picked up by the American cable channel Spike, which was in the middle of rebranding. The show has been a big success for the network and well received by both the critics and the audiences. In April 2015, \"Lip Sync Battle\" was renewed for a second season, which premiered on January 7, 2016. In January 2016, the show was renewed for a third season.",
"Title: Aloha (film)\n\nAloha is a 2015 American romantic comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Cameron Crowe. The film, starring Bradley Cooper, Emma Stone, Rachel McAdams, Bill Murray, John Krasinski, Danny McBride and Alec Baldwin, was released on May 29, 2015. The film received negative reviews from critics and has grossed only $26 million against a budget of $37 million, making the film a box office bomb.",
"Title: Born in China\n\nBorn in China (我們誕生在中國) is a 2016 nature documentary film directed by Lu Chuan. A co-production between Disneynature and Shanghai Media Group, the film was released in China on August 12, 2016 and in the United States on April 21, 2017, one day before Earth Day. The film focuses on a female snow leopard named Dawa and her cubs, a young golden snub-nosed monkey named Tao Tao, a female giant panda named Ya Ya along with her daughter Mei Mei, and a herd of chiru. The American release of the film is narrated by John Krasinski and the Chinese release is narrated by Zhou Xun.",
"Title: Big Miracle\n\nBig Miracle is a 2012 British-American drama film directed by Ken Kwapis, and stars Drew Barrymore and John Krasinski. The film is based on Tom Rose's 1989 book \"Freeing the Whales\", which covers Operation Breakthrough, the 1988 international effort to rescue gray whales trapped in ice near Point Barrow, Alaska.",
"Title: Big Miracle (book)\n\nBig Miracle tells the true story of three gray whales trapped beneath Arctic ice in the fall of 1988, and of Operation Breakthrough, the collaborative efforts to free them by oil company executives, activists, Inupiat people, the U.S. military, and Soviet ice-breakers. Written by journalist Tom Rose (who covered the event for a Japanese news channel at the time), the book was originally published in 1989, titled \"Freeing the Whales: How the Media Created the World's Greatest Non-Event\". It was re-released under its current title by St. Martin’s Press in 2011."
] |
1,794
|
Wolfgang Pree teaches at a university in what state?
|
State of Salzburg
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Wolfgang Pree",
"University of Salzburg"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
3
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|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Jeffrey Sippel is an American printmaker.",
" He graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire in 1976 and studied at the Tamarind Institute from 1977 to 1979.",
" Upon the completion of his studies at the Tamarind Institute he was certified as a master printer.",
" He later received an MFA at Arizona State University.",
" Sippel has taught at Druckhaus EA Quensen, worked as Master Printer at Ocean Works LEL and has taught at Ohio State University.",
" Sippel currently teaches at the University of Missouri, St. Louis.",
" Specializing in waterless lithography, \"his work is included in many renowned collections, including the Smithsonian Institution.\"",
" Additionally, Sippel's \"many presentations include lecturing in the Soviet Union, Finland, South Africa, Chile, Belgium, Poland, Germany, Bulgaria, Mexico, Canada and a long list of venues in the United States of America.\"",
" Sippel has exhibited his work in over 200 venues including the Lalit Kala Academy, the Cecille R. Hunt Gallery, Webster University, the Haggar Gallery, the University of Dallas, the Steinberg Gallery of Art, Washington University, St. Louis, the Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, the Knoxville Museum of Art, the Grunwald Center for the Arts and the University of California, Los Angeles."
],
"title": "Jeffrey Sippel"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Avital Ronell ( ; born 15 April 1952) is an American philosopher who contributes to the fields of continental philosophy, literary studies, psychoanalysis, feminist philosophy, political philosophy, and ethics.",
" She is a University Professor in the Humanities and in the Departments of Germanic Languages and Literature and Comparative Literature at New York University where she co-directs the Trauma and Violence Transdisciplinary Studies Program.",
" As Jacques Derrida Professor of Philosophy, she teaches regularly at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee.",
" As a student of Stanley Corngold, Ronell received her Doctorate of Philosophy in German Studies from Princeton University in 1979 for a dissertation written on self-reflection in Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Hölderlin, and Franz Kafka, but subsequently disclosed in interviews she had wanted \"Dictations: On Haunted Writing\" to serve as her dissertation."
],
"title": "Avital Ronell"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Herta Däubler-Gmelin (] ; born 12 August 1943) is a German lawyer, academic and politician of the Social Democratic Party.",
" She served as Federal Minister of Justice from 1998 to 2002, and as a Member of the Bundestag from 1972 to 2009.",
" She currently teaches as an honorary professor of political science at the Free University of Berlin, particularly on international relations and human rights, and was the Hemmerle Professor at RWTH Aachen University in 2011.",
" She is married to the legal scholar Wolfgang Däubler."
],
"title": "Herta Däubler-Gmelin"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wolfgang Pree (* 27 June 1964 in Linz, Austria) is a computer scientist and professor at the University of Salzburg, Austria."
],
"title": "Wolfgang Pree"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dr. Ross H. Cordy was the branch chief of archaeology in the State of Hawaii's Historic Preservation Division, having headed that office and program for 16 years.",
" He is currently the Humanities Division Chair at the University of Hawaii-West Oahu where he teaches Hawaiian and Pacific Islands studies courses and a few archeology courses.",
" Dr. Cordy is a volunteer archeology instructor for the Waianae High School - Hawaiian Studies Program where he teaches hands on archeology, history and historic preservation issues."
],
"title": "Ross Cordy"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Peter S. Wenz (born 1945) is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Illinois at Springfield, University Scholar of the University of Illinois, and Adjunct Professor of Medical Humanities at the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine.",
" He received his B.A. in philosophy in 1967 from Harpur College of the State University of New York at Binghamton (now Binghamton University) and his Ph.D. in philosophy in 1971 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.",
" He taught at the University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point from 1971 to 1976 before moving to Springfield.",
" He has also taught at Polytechnic of the South Bank (now South Bank University) in London, England (1980–81); at Aberdeen University in Scotland (1986–87); at Oxford University in England (fall 2003) and at The University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand (2007).",
" He teaches regularly at the Chautauqua Institution in New York State.",
" He is best known for work in environmental justice, being among those who simultaneously coined the term in the mid-1980s.",
" His most widely reprinted articles are \"Just Garbage\" and \"Minimal Moderate and Extreme Moral Pluralism.\"",
" His specialties include environmental ethics, political remedial philosophy, and medical ethics."
],
"title": "Peter Wenz"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The University of Salzburg, also known as Paris Lodron University (German: \"Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg\" , PLUS) named after its founder, Prince-Archbishop , is a public university located in the Austrian city of Salzburg.",
" It is divided into four faculties: Catholic theology, law, cultural and social science, as well as natural science.",
" Established in 1622, the university was closed in 1810 and re-established in 1962.",
" Today, it has around 18,000 students and 2,800 employees and is the largest educational institution in the State of Salzburg."
],
"title": "University of Salzburg"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less is a 15-week adult weight management program that uses strategies based on evidence for weight loss and/or weight maintenance.",
" The Eat Smart Move More Weigh Less classes focus on the 12 evidence-based eating and physical activity behaviors for weight management.",
" The program does not provide a prescriptive diet plan, it teaches small lifetime changes.",
" The program teaches mindfulness as a strategy to become more aware of eating and physical activity.",
" Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less includes methods for planning and tracking healthy eating and physical activity behaviors.",
" In 2007, Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less curriculum was developed by a writing team from NC State University and NC Division of Public Health.",
" A complete listing of authors and their respective affiliations can be found on the program website.",
" The 15-lesson curriculum was peer reviewed by state and local nutrition and physical activity professionals, representatives from the medical community, and a CDC project officer."
],
"title": "Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Greg Keeler is a Montana songwriter, poet, writer, artist, humorist, and professor.",
" He also plays the guitar, harmonica, and kazoo.",
" Keeler was born in the flatlands of Oklahoma with his one brother.",
" Keeler is currently a professor at Montana State University where he teaches creative writing and contemporary literature.",
" Keeler has taught at Montana State University since 1975.",
" He graduated with a master's degree from Oklahoma State University and later went on to earn his D.A. from Idaho State University.",
" He has published three books, written collections of poetry, has produced six plays, recorded ten tapes and CDs, and has published many articles in magazines and journals.",
" His paintings have gone up for display in exhibits at MSU and in Butte.",
" Keeler is the father of two sons and is married to Judy Keeler, a retired adjunct professor of English at MSU."
],
"title": "Greg Keeler"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Wolfgang Behringer (born July 17, 1956 in Munich) is a German historian specialising in the witchcraft beliefs of Early Modern Europe.",
" He has worked at both the University of Munich and the University of Bonn as well as published multiple books.",
" He is the author of the book \"Shaman of Oberstdorf\".",
" He also authored \"A Cultural History of Climate\".",
" First published in German in 2000, it was translated into English in 2009.",
" Since 2003 Behringer teaches at Saarland University."
],
"title": "Wolfgang Behringer"
}
] |
[
"Title: Jeffrey Sippel\n\nJeffrey Sippel is an American printmaker. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire in 1976 and studied at the Tamarind Institute from 1977 to 1979. Upon the completion of his studies at the Tamarind Institute he was certified as a master printer. He later received an MFA at Arizona State University. Sippel has taught at Druckhaus EA Quensen, worked as Master Printer at Ocean Works LEL and has taught at Ohio State University. Sippel currently teaches at the University of Missouri, St. Louis. Specializing in waterless lithography, \"his work is included in many renowned collections, including the Smithsonian Institution.\" Additionally, Sippel's \"many presentations include lecturing in the Soviet Union, Finland, South Africa, Chile, Belgium, Poland, Germany, Bulgaria, Mexico, Canada and a long list of venues in the United States of America.\" Sippel has exhibited his work in over 200 venues including the Lalit Kala Academy, the Cecille R. Hunt Gallery, Webster University, the Haggar Gallery, the University of Dallas, the Steinberg Gallery of Art, Washington University, St. Louis, the Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, the Knoxville Museum of Art, the Grunwald Center for the Arts and the University of California, Los Angeles.",
"Title: Avital Ronell\n\nAvital Ronell ( ; born 15 April 1952) is an American philosopher who contributes to the fields of continental philosophy, literary studies, psychoanalysis, feminist philosophy, political philosophy, and ethics. She is a University Professor in the Humanities and in the Departments of Germanic Languages and Literature and Comparative Literature at New York University where she co-directs the Trauma and Violence Transdisciplinary Studies Program. As Jacques Derrida Professor of Philosophy, she teaches regularly at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee. As a student of Stanley Corngold, Ronell received her Doctorate of Philosophy in German Studies from Princeton University in 1979 for a dissertation written on self-reflection in Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Hölderlin, and Franz Kafka, but subsequently disclosed in interviews she had wanted \"Dictations: On Haunted Writing\" to serve as her dissertation.",
"Title: Herta Däubler-Gmelin\n\nHerta Däubler-Gmelin (] ; born 12 August 1943) is a German lawyer, academic and politician of the Social Democratic Party. She served as Federal Minister of Justice from 1998 to 2002, and as a Member of the Bundestag from 1972 to 2009. She currently teaches as an honorary professor of political science at the Free University of Berlin, particularly on international relations and human rights, and was the Hemmerle Professor at RWTH Aachen University in 2011. She is married to the legal scholar Wolfgang Däubler.",
"Title: Wolfgang Pree\n\nWolfgang Pree (* 27 June 1964 in Linz, Austria) is a computer scientist and professor at the University of Salzburg, Austria.",
"Title: Ross Cordy\n\nDr. Ross H. Cordy was the branch chief of archaeology in the State of Hawaii's Historic Preservation Division, having headed that office and program for 16 years. He is currently the Humanities Division Chair at the University of Hawaii-West Oahu where he teaches Hawaiian and Pacific Islands studies courses and a few archeology courses. Dr. Cordy is a volunteer archeology instructor for the Waianae High School - Hawaiian Studies Program where he teaches hands on archeology, history and historic preservation issues.",
"Title: Peter Wenz\n\nPeter S. Wenz (born 1945) is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Illinois at Springfield, University Scholar of the University of Illinois, and Adjunct Professor of Medical Humanities at the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine. He received his B.A. in philosophy in 1967 from Harpur College of the State University of New York at Binghamton (now Binghamton University) and his Ph.D. in philosophy in 1971 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He taught at the University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point from 1971 to 1976 before moving to Springfield. He has also taught at Polytechnic of the South Bank (now South Bank University) in London, England (1980–81); at Aberdeen University in Scotland (1986–87); at Oxford University in England (fall 2003) and at The University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand (2007). He teaches regularly at the Chautauqua Institution in New York State. He is best known for work in environmental justice, being among those who simultaneously coined the term in the mid-1980s. His most widely reprinted articles are \"Just Garbage\" and \"Minimal Moderate and Extreme Moral Pluralism.\" His specialties include environmental ethics, political remedial philosophy, and medical ethics.",
"Title: University of Salzburg\n\nThe University of Salzburg, also known as Paris Lodron University (German: \"Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg\" , PLUS) named after its founder, Prince-Archbishop , is a public university located in the Austrian city of Salzburg. It is divided into four faculties: Catholic theology, law, cultural and social science, as well as natural science. Established in 1622, the university was closed in 1810 and re-established in 1962. Today, it has around 18,000 students and 2,800 employees and is the largest educational institution in the State of Salzburg.",
"Title: Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less\n\nEat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less is a 15-week adult weight management program that uses strategies based on evidence for weight loss and/or weight maintenance. The Eat Smart Move More Weigh Less classes focus on the 12 evidence-based eating and physical activity behaviors for weight management. The program does not provide a prescriptive diet plan, it teaches small lifetime changes. The program teaches mindfulness as a strategy to become more aware of eating and physical activity. Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less includes methods for planning and tracking healthy eating and physical activity behaviors. In 2007, Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less curriculum was developed by a writing team from NC State University and NC Division of Public Health. A complete listing of authors and their respective affiliations can be found on the program website. The 15-lesson curriculum was peer reviewed by state and local nutrition and physical activity professionals, representatives from the medical community, and a CDC project officer.",
"Title: Greg Keeler\n\nGreg Keeler is a Montana songwriter, poet, writer, artist, humorist, and professor. He also plays the guitar, harmonica, and kazoo. Keeler was born in the flatlands of Oklahoma with his one brother. Keeler is currently a professor at Montana State University where he teaches creative writing and contemporary literature. Keeler has taught at Montana State University since 1975. He graduated with a master's degree from Oklahoma State University and later went on to earn his D.A. from Idaho State University. He has published three books, written collections of poetry, has produced six plays, recorded ten tapes and CDs, and has published many articles in magazines and journals. His paintings have gone up for display in exhibits at MSU and in Butte. Keeler is the father of two sons and is married to Judy Keeler, a retired adjunct professor of English at MSU.",
"Title: Wolfgang Behringer\n\nWolfgang Behringer (born July 17, 1956 in Munich) is a German historian specialising in the witchcraft beliefs of Early Modern Europe. He has worked at both the University of Munich and the University of Bonn as well as published multiple books. He is the author of the book \"Shaman of Oberstdorf\". He also authored \"A Cultural History of Climate\". First published in German in 2000, it was translated into English in 2009. Since 2003 Behringer teaches at Saarland University."
] |
1,795
|
What profession was the father of the percussionist who has been accompanied by E .M. Subramaniam and who was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2001?
|
medical doctor
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"E. M. Subramaniam",
"Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman"
],
"sent_id": [
2,
3
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Mangalampalli Balamuralikrishna (6 July 1930 – 22 November 2016) was an Indian Carnatic vocalist, musician, multi-instrumentalist, playback singer, composer, and character actor.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1978.",
" He has garnered two National Film Awards (1976, 1987), the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1975, the Padma Vibhushan, India's second-highest civilian honor in 1991, for his contribution towards arts, the Mahatma Gandhi Silver Medal from UNESCO in 1995, the Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government in 2005, the Sangeetha Kalanidhi by Madras Music Academy, and the Sangeetha Kalasikhamani in 1991, by \"the Fine Arts Society\", Chennai to name a few."
],
"title": "M. Balamuralikrishna"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Palghat T. S. Mani Iyer (1912–1981) was one of the leading mridangists in the field of Carnatic music.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1966.",
" Mani Iyer was the first mridangist to win the Sangeetha Kalanidhi and Padmabhushan awards of the Government of India.",
" He received the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1956."
],
"title": "Palghat Mani Iyer"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sangeetha Kalanidhi Maharajapuram Santhanam (Tamil: மகாராஜபுரம் ஸந்தானம் ), (December 3, 1928-June 24, 1992) was one of the greatest Carnatic music vocalists of the 20th century.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1989.",
" He was born in Sirunangur, a village in the state of Tamil Nadu.",
" He followed the footsteps of his father Maharajapuram Viswanatha Iyer who was also a Carnatic singer."
],
"title": "Maharajapuram Santhanam"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Trichur V. Ramachandran(born 1940) is a Carnatic music vocalist.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2012.",
" This is the prestigious award from the Madras Music Academy."
],
"title": "Trichur V. Ramachandran"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Umayalpuram Kasiviswanatha Sivaraman (born 17 December 1935) is a Carnatic mridanga vidwan.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2001.",
" He is the son of Sri P. Kasiviswanatha Iyer and Srimati Kamalambal.",
" His father was a medical doctor by profession but encouraged his musical pursuits."
],
"title": "Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sangita Kalanidhi Dr. M. Chandrasekaran is an eminent Carnatic classical violinist from Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2005.",
" Sri M. Chandrasekharan's connection with music was firmly established over 65 years ago, when he began playing the violin at the age of 11, after which he went on to accompany many stalwarts in the field of Carnatic music.",
" Having lost his eyesight at the age of two, he overcame his difficulty by music.",
" Deeply appreciative of the importance of not just the lyrics, but also its melody and bhava, the prolific violinist is known for his success in bringing out the subtlest of musical nuances.",
" He is also considered an expert in the laya aspects, recognizing and adapting to intricate rhythmic patterns with ease and grace.",
" Sri Chandrasekharan also presents vocal concerts, and sometimes sings along during his solo violin recitals.",
" He has composed various musical forms in different languages, and has travelled the world performing, enthralling audiences all over.",
" He often performs violin duet concerts with his daughter Smt.",
" G. Bharathi.",
" He has accompanied several stalwarts and doyens of Carnatic music."
],
"title": "M. Chandrasekaran"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Valayapatti A. R. Subramaniam is an Indian classical musician and percussionist, considered by many as one of prominent exponents of Thavil, a traditional percussion instrument from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2009.",
" He is a recipient of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award.",
" The Government of India awarded him the fourth highest civilian honour of the Padma Shri, in 2007, for his contributions to Music."
],
"title": "Valayapatti A. R. Subramaniam"
},
{
"sentences": [
"M.S. Gopalakrishnan, a.k.a. MSG, (10 June 1931 – 3 January 2013) was a violinist in the field of Carnatic music.",
" He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1997.",
" He was a recipient of the Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri, Kalaimamani, Sangeetha Kalanidhi and Sangeet Natak Akademi awards, and is commonly grouped with Lalgudi Jayaraman and T.N.Krishnan as part of the violin-trinity of Carnatic Music."
],
"title": "M. S. Gopalakrishnan"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Sangeetha Kalanidhi or Sangita Kalanidhi (Sanskrit: saṅgītakalānidhi ) (\"sangeetha\" = music, \"kala\" = art, \"nidhi\" = treasure) is the title awarded yearly to an expert Carnatic Musician by the Madras Music Academy.",
" It is often considered to be the most prestigious award in the field of Carnatic Music."
],
"title": "Sangeetha Kalanidhi"
},
{
"sentences": [
"E. M. Subramaniam (died 23 April 2015) was an Indian Carnatic classical percussionist.",
" Subramaniam was instructed in ghatam under the tutelage of his father.",
" He has accompanied master percussionists including mridangam players such as Palghat Mani Iyer, Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman, and T. K. Murthy, and tabla players such as Alla Rakha Khan, Kishan Maharaj, and Zakir Hussain.",
" He has been a grade A ghatam artist of All India Radio for the past 40 years.",
" Subramaniam was awarded the title of \"Kalaimamani\" in 2000 and recognized with a Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in ghatam in 2011.",
" His style of playing is compact with great tonal quality."
],
"title": "E. M. Subramaniam"
}
] |
[
"Title: M. Balamuralikrishna\n\nMangalampalli Balamuralikrishna (6 July 1930 – 22 November 2016) was an Indian Carnatic vocalist, musician, multi-instrumentalist, playback singer, composer, and character actor. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1978. He has garnered two National Film Awards (1976, 1987), the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1975, the Padma Vibhushan, India's second-highest civilian honor in 1991, for his contribution towards arts, the Mahatma Gandhi Silver Medal from UNESCO in 1995, the Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government in 2005, the Sangeetha Kalanidhi by Madras Music Academy, and the Sangeetha Kalasikhamani in 1991, by \"the Fine Arts Society\", Chennai to name a few.",
"Title: Palghat Mani Iyer\n\nPalghat T. S. Mani Iyer (1912–1981) was one of the leading mridangists in the field of Carnatic music. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1966. Mani Iyer was the first mridangist to win the Sangeetha Kalanidhi and Padmabhushan awards of the Government of India. He received the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1956.",
"Title: Maharajapuram Santhanam\n\nSangeetha Kalanidhi Maharajapuram Santhanam (Tamil: மகாராஜபுரம் ஸந்தானம் ), (December 3, 1928-June 24, 1992) was one of the greatest Carnatic music vocalists of the 20th century. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1989. He was born in Sirunangur, a village in the state of Tamil Nadu. He followed the footsteps of his father Maharajapuram Viswanatha Iyer who was also a Carnatic singer.",
"Title: Trichur V. Ramachandran\n\nTrichur V. Ramachandran(born 1940) is a Carnatic music vocalist. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2012. This is the prestigious award from the Madras Music Academy.",
"Title: Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman\n\nUmayalpuram Kasiviswanatha Sivaraman (born 17 December 1935) is a Carnatic mridanga vidwan. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2001. He is the son of Sri P. Kasiviswanatha Iyer and Srimati Kamalambal. His father was a medical doctor by profession but encouraged his musical pursuits.",
"Title: M. Chandrasekaran\n\nSangita Kalanidhi Dr. M. Chandrasekaran is an eminent Carnatic classical violinist from Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2005. Sri M. Chandrasekharan's connection with music was firmly established over 65 years ago, when he began playing the violin at the age of 11, after which he went on to accompany many stalwarts in the field of Carnatic music. Having lost his eyesight at the age of two, he overcame his difficulty by music. Deeply appreciative of the importance of not just the lyrics, but also its melody and bhava, the prolific violinist is known for his success in bringing out the subtlest of musical nuances. He is also considered an expert in the laya aspects, recognizing and adapting to intricate rhythmic patterns with ease and grace. Sri Chandrasekharan also presents vocal concerts, and sometimes sings along during his solo violin recitals. He has composed various musical forms in different languages, and has travelled the world performing, enthralling audiences all over. He often performs violin duet concerts with his daughter Smt. G. Bharathi. He has accompanied several stalwarts and doyens of Carnatic music.",
"Title: Valayapatti A. R. Subramaniam\n\nValayapatti A. R. Subramaniam is an Indian classical musician and percussionist, considered by many as one of prominent exponents of Thavil, a traditional percussion instrument from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 2009. He is a recipient of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award. The Government of India awarded him the fourth highest civilian honour of the Padma Shri, in 2007, for his contributions to Music.",
"Title: M. S. Gopalakrishnan\n\nM.S. Gopalakrishnan, a.k.a. MSG, (10 June 1931 – 3 January 2013) was a violinist in the field of Carnatic music. He was awarded the Madras Music Academy's Sangeetha Kalanidhi in 1997. He was a recipient of the Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri, Kalaimamani, Sangeetha Kalanidhi and Sangeet Natak Akademi awards, and is commonly grouped with Lalgudi Jayaraman and T.N.Krishnan as part of the violin-trinity of Carnatic Music.",
"Title: Sangeetha Kalanidhi\n\nSangeetha Kalanidhi or Sangita Kalanidhi (Sanskrit: saṅgītakalānidhi ) (\"sangeetha\" = music, \"kala\" = art, \"nidhi\" = treasure) is the title awarded yearly to an expert Carnatic Musician by the Madras Music Academy. It is often considered to be the most prestigious award in the field of Carnatic Music.",
"Title: E. M. Subramaniam\n\nE. M. Subramaniam (died 23 April 2015) was an Indian Carnatic classical percussionist. Subramaniam was instructed in ghatam under the tutelage of his father. He has accompanied master percussionists including mridangam players such as Palghat Mani Iyer, Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman, and T. K. Murthy, and tabla players such as Alla Rakha Khan, Kishan Maharaj, and Zakir Hussain. He has been a grade A ghatam artist of All India Radio for the past 40 years. Subramaniam was awarded the title of \"Kalaimamani\" in 2000 and recognized with a Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in ghatam in 2011. His style of playing is compact with great tonal quality."
] |
1,796
|
Which Queens rapper from the "Product of the 80's" compilation album became one the most successful rap duos in hip hop, having sold over three million records,Mobb Deep, Big Twins or Un Pacino?
|
Mobb Deep
|
bridge
|
easy
|
{
"title": [
"Product of the 80's",
"Mobb Deep"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
3
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Mobb Deep was an American hip hop duo from the Queensbridge Houses in New York City.",
" The group consisted of Havoc and Prodigy, and were a hardcore East Coast Hip-Hop group.",
" They were known for their dark, hardcore delivery as exemplified in \"Shook Ones (Part II).\"",
" Mobb Deep became one of the most successful rap duos in hip hop, having sold over three million records."
],
"title": "Mobb Deep"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Dunn language or Dunn lingo is a style of East Coast hip hop slang popularized in the mid-1990s by rappers such as Queensbridge's Mobb Deep, Tragedy Khadafi, Capone-N-Noreaga, Nas and AZ, and to a lesser extent Raekwon and Ghostface Killah of the Wu-Tang Clan.",
" While much of the slang had already been introduced by this point, the term \"Dunn language\" was first recorded in Mobb Deep's 1999 single \"Quiet Storm\", in which Prodigy raps: \"you's a dick blower, [you] tryin' to speak the Dunn Language?",
"/ \"what's the drilly\" with that though?",
" \"It aint bangin\"/ you hooked on Mobb phonics, Infamous 'bonics.\""
],
"title": "Dunn language (slang)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Episodes of a Hustla is the debut album by American rapper Big Noyd, released on September 16, 1996, by Tommy Boy Records.",
" He recorded the album after making his name as a rapper on Mobb Deep's \"The Infamous\" and \"Hell on Earth\" albums.",
" Most of the album was produced by Mobb Deep's Havoc and features guest appearances by Prodigy.",
" Big Noyd's lyrics use violent, disturbing imagery to boast his rapping skills.",
" \"Episodes of a Hustla\" charted at number 59 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.",
"The album is now out of print."
],
"title": "Episodes of a Hustla"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Product of the 80<nowiki>'</nowiki>s is compilation album by Queens rappers Prodigy of Mobb Deep, Big Twins & Un Pacino.",
" The album was released on October 21, 2008."
],
"title": "Product of the 80's"
},
{
"sentences": [
"H.N.I.C. Pt. 2 is the second solo album by American rapper Prodigy of Mobb Deep.",
" The album was released on April 22, 2008.",
" It is a sequel to \"H.N.I.C.\", released in 2000.",
" The album features production by The Alchemist, Sid Roams, Havoc and Apex.",
" The album features guest appearances from artists that frequently work with Prodigy, including Havoc, Un Pacino, Nyce, Big Noyd, Twin Gambino and Cormega.",
" According to Prodigy, the album sold over 60,000 copies in the first week."
],
"title": "H.N.I.C. Pt. 2"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Infamous Mobb Deep is the eighth and final studio album by American hip hop duo Mobb Deep, which is composed of Havoc and Prodigy.",
" The album was released on April 1, 2014, by Prodigy's Infamous Records and Sony's RED Distribution.",
" \"The Infamous Mobb Deep\" is a double album that consists of one disc of new original music and another of unreleased tracks from the recording sessions from their second studio album \"The Infamous\" (1995).",
" The album has been in development since 2011, but was delayed by a feud that occurred between Havoc and Prodigy during 2012.",
" However, they shortly reconciled."
],
"title": "The Infamous Mobb Deep"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Infamous (stylized as The Infamous...) is the second studio album by the American hip hop duo Mobb Deep.",
" It was released on April 25, 1995, by Loud Records.",
" The album features guest appearances by Nas, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, and Q-Tip, who also contributed to the production and mixing of the album.",
" Embedded with hyper-visual lyricism, dark soundscapes, gritty narratives, and hard beats, it marked Mobb Deep's transition from a relatively unknown rap duo to an influential and commercially successful one.",
" Most of the left-over songs from the album became bonus tracks for Mobb Deep's \"The Infamous Mobb Deep\" album (2014)."
],
"title": "The Infamous"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Bone Box thugs-for-life is a 2007 2-disc Box set Compilation album released by Cleopatra Records imprint X-Ray Records.",
" Although the artists are predominantly Bone Thugs-N-Harmony members and affiliates, Some artists who have no affiliation with Bone Thugs are also included such as Mobb Deep, Nas, Method Man, and several others.",
" The majority of the songs on this compilation come from previously released Hip Hop albums on X-Ray Records.",
" Due to being released with virtually no promotion, this compilation has never charted on any \"Billboard\" charts and is a very obscure release."
],
"title": "The Bone Box thugs-for-life"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Infamous Mobb, also known as IM3, is a hip hop group from Queensbridge, Queens, New York, United States, composed of members Ty Nitty, Twin Gambino, Godfather Pt.III, and Ron Gotti.",
" They are an integral part of the Queensbridge hip hop scene, which includes rappers like Nas, Cormega and Mobb Deep, and began with the Juice Crew.",
" Friends since childhood, the Infamous Mobb members all grew up on Queensbridge's 41st side 12th Street.",
" Gambino and Scarface were twin brothers; Twin Scarface died in a car crash in late 1996.",
" The only known track released that Scarface appeared on is \"All Pro\" on Big Noyd's debut album Episodes of a Hustla.",
" Gotti briefly rapped with them but decided to become a Producer and Manager for the group."
],
"title": "Infamous Mobb"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hell on Earth is the third studio album by East Coast hip hop group Mobb Deep, which was first released on November 19, 1996, on Loud/RCA/BMG Records.",
" The album is largely a continuation of Mobb Deep's previous album, the critically acclaimed \"The Infamous\".",
" The album is produced by Mobb Deep and also features guest appearances by emcees Nas, Raekwon, Method Man, and frequent collaborator Big Noyd.",
" The album stands out for its acclaimed singles \"G.O.D. Pt.",
" III\" and \"Hell on Earth (Front Lines),\" as well as \"Drop a Gem on 'Em,\" a response to 2Pac's diss track \"Hit 'Em Up.\"",
" A promotional single, \"Still Shinin'\", was released earlier that year and later added to the album.",
" The album, one of the earliest enhanced CDs, also contains an additional track (\"In the Long Run\") that at the time, had to be unlocked with the use of a computer."
],
"title": "Hell on Earth (Mobb Deep album)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Mobb Deep\n\nMobb Deep was an American hip hop duo from the Queensbridge Houses in New York City. The group consisted of Havoc and Prodigy, and were a hardcore East Coast Hip-Hop group. They were known for their dark, hardcore delivery as exemplified in \"Shook Ones (Part II).\" Mobb Deep became one of the most successful rap duos in hip hop, having sold over three million records.",
"Title: Dunn language (slang)\n\nThe Dunn language or Dunn lingo is a style of East Coast hip hop slang popularized in the mid-1990s by rappers such as Queensbridge's Mobb Deep, Tragedy Khadafi, Capone-N-Noreaga, Nas and AZ, and to a lesser extent Raekwon and Ghostface Killah of the Wu-Tang Clan. While much of the slang had already been introduced by this point, the term \"Dunn language\" was first recorded in Mobb Deep's 1999 single \"Quiet Storm\", in which Prodigy raps: \"you's a dick blower, [you] tryin' to speak the Dunn Language? / \"what's the drilly\" with that though? \"It aint bangin\"/ you hooked on Mobb phonics, Infamous 'bonics.\"",
"Title: Episodes of a Hustla\n\nEpisodes of a Hustla is the debut album by American rapper Big Noyd, released on September 16, 1996, by Tommy Boy Records. He recorded the album after making his name as a rapper on Mobb Deep's \"The Infamous\" and \"Hell on Earth\" albums. Most of the album was produced by Mobb Deep's Havoc and features guest appearances by Prodigy. Big Noyd's lyrics use violent, disturbing imagery to boast his rapping skills. \"Episodes of a Hustla\" charted at number 59 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. The album is now out of print.",
"Title: Product of the 80's\n\nProduct of the 80<nowiki>'</nowiki>s is compilation album by Queens rappers Prodigy of Mobb Deep, Big Twins & Un Pacino. The album was released on October 21, 2008.",
"Title: H.N.I.C. Pt. 2\n\nH.N.I.C. Pt. 2 is the second solo album by American rapper Prodigy of Mobb Deep. The album was released on April 22, 2008. It is a sequel to \"H.N.I.C.\", released in 2000. The album features production by The Alchemist, Sid Roams, Havoc and Apex. The album features guest appearances from artists that frequently work with Prodigy, including Havoc, Un Pacino, Nyce, Big Noyd, Twin Gambino and Cormega. According to Prodigy, the album sold over 60,000 copies in the first week.",
"Title: The Infamous Mobb Deep\n\nThe Infamous Mobb Deep is the eighth and final studio album by American hip hop duo Mobb Deep, which is composed of Havoc and Prodigy. The album was released on April 1, 2014, by Prodigy's Infamous Records and Sony's RED Distribution. \"The Infamous Mobb Deep\" is a double album that consists of one disc of new original music and another of unreleased tracks from the recording sessions from their second studio album \"The Infamous\" (1995). The album has been in development since 2011, but was delayed by a feud that occurred between Havoc and Prodigy during 2012. However, they shortly reconciled.",
"Title: The Infamous\n\nThe Infamous (stylized as The Infamous...) is the second studio album by the American hip hop duo Mobb Deep. It was released on April 25, 1995, by Loud Records. The album features guest appearances by Nas, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, and Q-Tip, who also contributed to the production and mixing of the album. Embedded with hyper-visual lyricism, dark soundscapes, gritty narratives, and hard beats, it marked Mobb Deep's transition from a relatively unknown rap duo to an influential and commercially successful one. Most of the left-over songs from the album became bonus tracks for Mobb Deep's \"The Infamous Mobb Deep\" album (2014).",
"Title: The Bone Box thugs-for-life\n\nBone Box thugs-for-life is a 2007 2-disc Box set Compilation album released by Cleopatra Records imprint X-Ray Records. Although the artists are predominantly Bone Thugs-N-Harmony members and affiliates, Some artists who have no affiliation with Bone Thugs are also included such as Mobb Deep, Nas, Method Man, and several others. The majority of the songs on this compilation come from previously released Hip Hop albums on X-Ray Records. Due to being released with virtually no promotion, this compilation has never charted on any \"Billboard\" charts and is a very obscure release.",
"Title: Infamous Mobb\n\nInfamous Mobb, also known as IM3, is a hip hop group from Queensbridge, Queens, New York, United States, composed of members Ty Nitty, Twin Gambino, Godfather Pt.III, and Ron Gotti. They are an integral part of the Queensbridge hip hop scene, which includes rappers like Nas, Cormega and Mobb Deep, and began with the Juice Crew. Friends since childhood, the Infamous Mobb members all grew up on Queensbridge's 41st side 12th Street. Gambino and Scarface were twin brothers; Twin Scarface died in a car crash in late 1996. The only known track released that Scarface appeared on is \"All Pro\" on Big Noyd's debut album Episodes of a Hustla. Gotti briefly rapped with them but decided to become a Producer and Manager for the group.",
"Title: Hell on Earth (Mobb Deep album)\n\nHell on Earth is the third studio album by East Coast hip hop group Mobb Deep, which was first released on November 19, 1996, on Loud/RCA/BMG Records. The album is largely a continuation of Mobb Deep's previous album, the critically acclaimed \"The Infamous\". The album is produced by Mobb Deep and also features guest appearances by emcees Nas, Raekwon, Method Man, and frequent collaborator Big Noyd. The album stands out for its acclaimed singles \"G.O.D. Pt. III\" and \"Hell on Earth (Front Lines),\" as well as \"Drop a Gem on 'Em,\" a response to 2Pac's diss track \"Hit 'Em Up.\" A promotional single, \"Still Shinin'\", was released earlier that year and later added to the album. The album, one of the earliest enhanced CDs, also contains an additional track (\"In the Long Run\") that at the time, had to be unlocked with the use of a computer."
] |
1,797
|
Who is the current manager of the semi-professional football club from Northern Ireland that once had Paul McAreavey as a player?
|
David Jeffrey
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Paul McAreavey",
"Ballymena United F.C.",
"Ballymena United F.C."
],
"sent_id": [
1,
0,
2
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Tatung Football Club () is a Taiwanese semi-professional football club based in Taipei, Taiwan.",
" The club, affiliated with the Tatung electronics company, was founded in 1969 by a group of Tatung employees favoring football activities.",
" It is the oldest and the only (semi-professional) football club owned by private enterprise in Taiwan.",
" Many of the players work for the company in the daytime and train in the evening."
],
"title": "Tatung F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ballymena United Football Club is a semi-professional football club from Northern Ireland.",
" Based in Ballymena, County Antrim, the team competes in the NIFL Premiership and plays home matches at the Ballymena Showgrounds.",
"The club is managed by iconic Irish League player/manager David Jeffrey."
],
"title": "Ballymena United F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Linfield Football Club is a semi-professional football club based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.",
" The club was founded in 1886 as Linfield Athletic Club and in 1905 moved into the current home of Windsor Park, which is also the home of the Northern Ireland national team.",
" The club plays in the NIFL Premiership – the highest level of the Northern Ireland Football League.",
" Linfield's main rival is Glentoran – the other half of Belfast's Big Two.",
" This rivalry traditionally includes a league derby played on Boxing Day each year, which usually attracts the largest league attendance of the season.",
" Linfield's average league home attendance is approximately 2,500 the highest in the division and more than double the league's overall average of about 1,000."
],
"title": "Linfield F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Crusaders Football Club is a Northern Irish semi-professional football club, playing in the NIFL Premiership.",
" The club, founded in 1898, hails from Belfast and plays its home matches at Seaview.",
" Club colours are red and black.",
" The current manager is former player Stephen Baxter, who is the club's longest serving manager, having been appointed in 2005.",
" Crusaders played intermediate football until 1949, and during that time they were one of the top non-league teams in the country.",
" The withdrawal of Belfast Celtic from the senior ranks in 1949 resulted in Crusaders being elected in their place in time for the start of the 1949–50 season."
],
"title": "Crusaders F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Andrew William Smith (born 25 September 1980) is a former Northern Ireland international footballer.",
" He had a 16-year career playing professional and semi-professional football in Northern Ireland, England, Scotland, Belgium, and Portugal.",
" He also won 18 caps for Northern Ireland between 2003 and 2005 and one cap for the Northern Ireland B team in 2003."
],
"title": "Andy Smith (footballer, born 1980)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Dungannon Swifts Football Club is a Northern Irish, semi-professional football club playing in the NIFL Premiership.",
" The club, founded in 1949, has risen from the Mid-Ulster league to the top tier in Northern Ireland since its election to the Irish League First Division in 1997.",
" Dungannon earned promotion from Irish League First Division to the Premier Division in the 2002–03 season."
],
"title": "Dungannon Swifts F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Glentoran Football Club is a semi-professional football club that plays in the NIFL Premiership.",
" The club was founded in 1882 and plays its home games at the Oval in east Belfast.",
" Club colours are red, green and black.",
" Linfield and Glentoran are nicknamed Belfast's \"Big Two\", as they have traditionally dominated local football in Northern Ireland since the demise of Belfast Celtic.",
" The two play a league match on Boxing Day each year, which regularly attracts the largest attendance of the Irish League season."
],
"title": "Glentoran F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Paul McAreavey (born 3 December 1980) is a Northern Irish football manager and former player.",
" He previously played for Swindon Town, Linfield, Dundalk, Ballymena United and Donegal Celtic."
],
"title": "Paul McAreavey"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Ballymoney United Football Club is an intermediate, Northern Irish football club playing in the Northern Ireland Intermediate League.",
" The club, founded in 1944, hails from Ballymoney, County Antrim and currently plays its home matches at the Ballymoney Showgrounds.",
" Before relegation from the Northern Ireland Football League in 2015, the club played at the Riada Stadium in Ballymoney, which is shared with Glebe Rangers.",
" Club colours are all blue with a white and black away kit.",
" The current manager is Peter Cairns and is one of the youngest managers to take charge of Ballymoney but has yet to win them any silverware."
],
"title": "Ballymoney United F.C."
},
{
"sentences": [
"Coleraine Football Club is a Northern Irish semi-professional football club, playing in the NIFL Premiership.",
" The club, founded in 1927, hails from Coleraine, County Londonderry and plays its home matches at The Showgrounds.",
" Club colours are blue and white.",
" The current manager is Oran Kearney.The Bannsiders won the Irish League title once (in 1973–74) and the Irish Cup on five occasions, most recently in 2002–03.",
" They are also the only Irish League club to have won two successive all-Ireland competitions, lifting the Blaxnit Cup in 1969 and 1970.",
"The club is bitter rivals with Ballymena United with their matches being known as the \"North West Derby\""
],
"title": "Coleraine F.C."
}
] |
[
"Title: Tatung F.C.\n\nTatung Football Club () is a Taiwanese semi-professional football club based in Taipei, Taiwan. The club, affiliated with the Tatung electronics company, was founded in 1969 by a group of Tatung employees favoring football activities. It is the oldest and the only (semi-professional) football club owned by private enterprise in Taiwan. Many of the players work for the company in the daytime and train in the evening.",
"Title: Ballymena United F.C.\n\nBallymena United Football Club is a semi-professional football club from Northern Ireland. Based in Ballymena, County Antrim, the team competes in the NIFL Premiership and plays home matches at the Ballymena Showgrounds. The club is managed by iconic Irish League player/manager David Jeffrey.",
"Title: Linfield F.C.\n\nLinfield Football Club is a semi-professional football club based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The club was founded in 1886 as Linfield Athletic Club and in 1905 moved into the current home of Windsor Park, which is also the home of the Northern Ireland national team. The club plays in the NIFL Premiership – the highest level of the Northern Ireland Football League. Linfield's main rival is Glentoran – the other half of Belfast's Big Two. This rivalry traditionally includes a league derby played on Boxing Day each year, which usually attracts the largest league attendance of the season. Linfield's average league home attendance is approximately 2,500 the highest in the division and more than double the league's overall average of about 1,000.",
"Title: Crusaders F.C.\n\nCrusaders Football Club is a Northern Irish semi-professional football club, playing in the NIFL Premiership. The club, founded in 1898, hails from Belfast and plays its home matches at Seaview. Club colours are red and black. The current manager is former player Stephen Baxter, who is the club's longest serving manager, having been appointed in 2005. Crusaders played intermediate football until 1949, and during that time they were one of the top non-league teams in the country. The withdrawal of Belfast Celtic from the senior ranks in 1949 resulted in Crusaders being elected in their place in time for the start of the 1949–50 season.",
"Title: Andy Smith (footballer, born 1980)\n\nAndrew William Smith (born 25 September 1980) is a former Northern Ireland international footballer. He had a 16-year career playing professional and semi-professional football in Northern Ireland, England, Scotland, Belgium, and Portugal. He also won 18 caps for Northern Ireland between 2003 and 2005 and one cap for the Northern Ireland B team in 2003.",
"Title: Dungannon Swifts F.C.\n\nDungannon Swifts Football Club is a Northern Irish, semi-professional football club playing in the NIFL Premiership. The club, founded in 1949, has risen from the Mid-Ulster league to the top tier in Northern Ireland since its election to the Irish League First Division in 1997. Dungannon earned promotion from Irish League First Division to the Premier Division in the 2002–03 season.",
"Title: Glentoran F.C.\n\nGlentoran Football Club is a semi-professional football club that plays in the NIFL Premiership. The club was founded in 1882 and plays its home games at the Oval in east Belfast. Club colours are red, green and black. Linfield and Glentoran are nicknamed Belfast's \"Big Two\", as they have traditionally dominated local football in Northern Ireland since the demise of Belfast Celtic. The two play a league match on Boxing Day each year, which regularly attracts the largest attendance of the Irish League season.",
"Title: Paul McAreavey\n\nPaul McAreavey (born 3 December 1980) is a Northern Irish football manager and former player. He previously played for Swindon Town, Linfield, Dundalk, Ballymena United and Donegal Celtic.",
"Title: Ballymoney United F.C.\n\nBallymoney United Football Club is an intermediate, Northern Irish football club playing in the Northern Ireland Intermediate League. The club, founded in 1944, hails from Ballymoney, County Antrim and currently plays its home matches at the Ballymoney Showgrounds. Before relegation from the Northern Ireland Football League in 2015, the club played at the Riada Stadium in Ballymoney, which is shared with Glebe Rangers. Club colours are all blue with a white and black away kit. The current manager is Peter Cairns and is one of the youngest managers to take charge of Ballymoney but has yet to win them any silverware.",
"Title: Coleraine F.C.\n\nColeraine Football Club is a Northern Irish semi-professional football club, playing in the NIFL Premiership. The club, founded in 1927, hails from Coleraine, County Londonderry and plays its home matches at The Showgrounds. Club colours are blue and white. The current manager is Oran Kearney.The Bannsiders won the Irish League title once (in 1973–74) and the Irish Cup on five occasions, most recently in 2002–03. They are also the only Irish League club to have won two successive all-Ireland competitions, lifting the Blaxnit Cup in 1969 and 1970. The club is bitter rivals with Ballymena United with their matches being known as the \"North West Derby\""
] |
1,798
|
Whenever God Shines His Light is a duet between Van Morrison and a pop singer born in which year ?
|
1940
|
bridge
|
medium
|
{
"title": [
"Whenever God Shines His Light",
"Cliff Richard"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"Sir Cliff Richard {'1': \", '2': \", '3': 'OBE', '4': \"} (born Harry Rodger Webb, 14 October 1940) is a British pop singer, musician, performer, actor and philanthropist.",
" Richard has sold more than 250 million records worldwide.",
" He has total sales of over 21 million singles in the United Kingdom and is the third-top-selling artist in UK Singles Chart history, behind the Beatles and Elvis Presley."
],
"title": "Cliff Richard"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Hymns to the Silence: Inside the Words and Music of Van Morrison is a book published via Continuum Books in June 2010, written by English academic Peter Mills.",
" The book is the first full-length study of Van Morrison's work which does not claim to be a biography.",
" Mills focusses completely on the music, and also casts light on parts of Morrison's songbook that are usually skipped over in career-overviews and synopses."
],
"title": "Hymns to the Silence (book)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Whenever God Shines His Light\" is a song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and released on his 1989 album \"Avalon Sunset\" as a duet with Cliff Richard.",
" Although the album was released in June 1989, this song was released as a single in November 1989 for the Christmas sales market.",
" Morrison and Richard performed the duet on the British music chart television show, \"Top of the Pops\".",
" The single charted at #20 on the UK Singles Chart and #3 on the Irish Singles Chart.",
" Allmusic critic Jason Ankeny describes it as a \"standout opener\" to \"Avalon Sunset\".",
" Critic Patrick Humphries describes it as \"the most manifest example of Morrison's Christian commitment,\" claiming that although it \"is not one of Morrison's most outstanding songs\" it works as \"a testament of faith.\""
],
"title": "Whenever God Shines His Light"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Coney Island\" is a spoken-word song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and included on his 1989 album, \"Avalon Sunset\".",
" The narrative is accompanied by lush instrumentation which contrasts with Morrison's thick Ulster brogue.",
" The singer revisits his youthful trips with his mother to the seaside at Coney Island, in County Down, Northern Ireland.",
" The trip from Belfast in the song names the localities of Downpatrick, St. John's Point, Strangford Lough, Shrigley, Killyleagh, Lecale District and Ardglass.",
" The narrative vividly pictures a bright Autumn day of birdwatching, stopping for Sunday papers, and for \"a couple of jars of mussels and some potted herrings in case we get famished before dinner.\"",
" A reviewer noted: \"You get a great rush of satisfaction here; in knowing that Van Morrison, despite his long, painful progress towards spiritual election, is still a ravenous foodie at heart.\""
],
"title": "Coney Island (song)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Van Morrison: The Concert is the second video released by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, first released in 1990.",
" Recorded in New York City the previous year, the concert featured two special guests and long-time friends Mose Allison and John Lee Hooker, each of whom performed some of their own songs.",
" This video mainly consisted of Morrison's work from his last two albums; including four songs from both \"Avalon Sunset\" and \"Irish Heartbeat\".",
" The video also features jazz singer Georgie Fame on Hammond organ.",
" Some reviewers have stated that Van Morrison was not in best shape during the concert, his voice was probably strained by a cold."
],
"title": "Van Morrison: The Concert"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Best of Van Morrison Volume 3 is a compilation album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, that was released on 11 June 2007 in the UK with a digital version released in the U.S. on iTunes Store, on 12 June 2007.",
" Manhattan/EMI Music Catalog Marketing released the CD version of the album on 19 June 2007 in the United States.",
" This new two-disc collection of 31 tracks has been compiled by Morrison himself.",
" It offers an overview of his large volume of material since the release of \"The Best of Van Morrison Volume Two\" in 1993.",
" The album's thirty-one tracks include previously unreleased collaborations with Tom Jones (\"Cry For Home\") and Bobby Bland (\"Tupelo Honey\") as well as duets with John Lee Hooker, B.B. King and Ray Charles.",
" The 2003 duet with Ray Charles is \"Crazy Love\" a song originally recorded on Morrison's 1970 album \"Moondance\".",
" \"Blue and Green\" was previously donated to be used on the charity album \"\", which raised money for relief efforts intended for Gulf Coast victims devastated by hurricane Katrina.",
" The duet with Tom Jones, \"Cry For Home\" was taken from the same recording sessions that produced the \"Sometimes We Cry\" duet between the two artists, which featured on Jones' successful album \"Reload\".",
" \"Cry for Home\" was released as a single on 4 June 2007 in the UK, and was followed by \"Blue and Green\" on 27 August."
],
"title": "The Best of Van Morrison Volume 3"
},
{
"sentences": [
"\"Brown Eyed Girl\" is a song by Northern Irish singer and songwriter Van Morrison.",
" Written by Morrison and recorded in March 1967 for Bang Records owner and producer Bert Berns, it was released as a single in June 1967 on the Bang label, peaking at No. 10 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100.",
" It featured The Sweet Inspirations singing back-up vocals and is considered to be Van Morrison's signature song.",
" \"Brown Eyed Girl\" has remained a staple on classic rock radio, and has been covered by hundreds of bands over the decades."
],
"title": "Brown Eyed Girl"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Duets: Re-working the Catalogue is the 35th studio album recorded by Northern Irish singer/songwriter Van Morrison.",
" It was released on 13 March 2015 on RCA Records.",
" Produced by Van Morrison along with Don Was and Bob Rock, it consists of songs previously recorded by Morrison this time recorded as duets.",
" Performances include the artists Bobby Womack, Steve Winwood, Mark Knopfler, Taj Mahal, Mavis Staples, Michael Bublé, Natalie Cole, George Benson, Gregory Porter, Clare Teal, P.J. Proby, Joss Stone, Georgie Fame, Mick Hucknall, Chris Farlowe, and Morrison’s daughter Shana Morrison."
],
"title": "Duets: Re-working the Catalogue"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Idan Yaniv (Hebrew: עידן יניב ; born October 18, 1986) is an Israeli singer born in Tel Aviv to Bukharan Jewish parents.",
" He has successfully recorded two albums with many popular singles from both albums.",
" His debut single was \"Hoshev Aleha\" and it was a hit that generated a lot of attention in Israel and in other Jewish communities in the world.",
" Also, he recorded a duet with famous pop singer Dana International named \"Seret Hodi\" (\"Movie from India\"), and its video reached the top video charts, making it the most requested videoclip in the history of Israel so far.",
" Idan Yaniv became the 2007 Artist of the Year in Israel."
],
"title": "Idan Yaniv"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Don't Look Back is an album released by Blues singer-songwriter John Lee Hooker in 1997 that was co-produced by Van Morrison and Mike Kappus.",
" Van Morrison also performed duets with Hooker on four of the tracks.",
" The album was the Grammy winner in the Best Traditional Blues Album category in 1998.",
" The title duet by Hooker and Morrison also won a Grammy for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals."
],
"title": "Don't Look Back (John Lee Hooker album)"
}
] |
[
"Title: Cliff Richard\n\nSir Cliff Richard {'1': \", '2': \", '3': 'OBE', '4': \"} (born Harry Rodger Webb, 14 October 1940) is a British pop singer, musician, performer, actor and philanthropist. Richard has sold more than 250 million records worldwide. He has total sales of over 21 million singles in the United Kingdom and is the third-top-selling artist in UK Singles Chart history, behind the Beatles and Elvis Presley.",
"Title: Hymns to the Silence (book)\n\nHymns to the Silence: Inside the Words and Music of Van Morrison is a book published via Continuum Books in June 2010, written by English academic Peter Mills. The book is the first full-length study of Van Morrison's work which does not claim to be a biography. Mills focusses completely on the music, and also casts light on parts of Morrison's songbook that are usually skipped over in career-overviews and synopses.",
"Title: Whenever God Shines His Light\n\n\"Whenever God Shines His Light\" is a song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and released on his 1989 album \"Avalon Sunset\" as a duet with Cliff Richard. Although the album was released in June 1989, this song was released as a single in November 1989 for the Christmas sales market. Morrison and Richard performed the duet on the British music chart television show, \"Top of the Pops\". The single charted at #20 on the UK Singles Chart and #3 on the Irish Singles Chart. Allmusic critic Jason Ankeny describes it as a \"standout opener\" to \"Avalon Sunset\". Critic Patrick Humphries describes it as \"the most manifest example of Morrison's Christian commitment,\" claiming that although it \"is not one of Morrison's most outstanding songs\" it works as \"a testament of faith.\"",
"Title: Coney Island (song)\n\n\"Coney Island\" is a spoken-word song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and included on his 1989 album, \"Avalon Sunset\". The narrative is accompanied by lush instrumentation which contrasts with Morrison's thick Ulster brogue. The singer revisits his youthful trips with his mother to the seaside at Coney Island, in County Down, Northern Ireland. The trip from Belfast in the song names the localities of Downpatrick, St. John's Point, Strangford Lough, Shrigley, Killyleagh, Lecale District and Ardglass. The narrative vividly pictures a bright Autumn day of birdwatching, stopping for Sunday papers, and for \"a couple of jars of mussels and some potted herrings in case we get famished before dinner.\" A reviewer noted: \"You get a great rush of satisfaction here; in knowing that Van Morrison, despite his long, painful progress towards spiritual election, is still a ravenous foodie at heart.\"",
"Title: Van Morrison: The Concert\n\nVan Morrison: The Concert is the second video released by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, first released in 1990. Recorded in New York City the previous year, the concert featured two special guests and long-time friends Mose Allison and John Lee Hooker, each of whom performed some of their own songs. This video mainly consisted of Morrison's work from his last two albums; including four songs from both \"Avalon Sunset\" and \"Irish Heartbeat\". The video also features jazz singer Georgie Fame on Hammond organ. Some reviewers have stated that Van Morrison was not in best shape during the concert, his voice was probably strained by a cold.",
"Title: The Best of Van Morrison Volume 3\n\nThe Best of Van Morrison Volume 3 is a compilation album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, that was released on 11 June 2007 in the UK with a digital version released in the U.S. on iTunes Store, on 12 June 2007. Manhattan/EMI Music Catalog Marketing released the CD version of the album on 19 June 2007 in the United States. This new two-disc collection of 31 tracks has been compiled by Morrison himself. It offers an overview of his large volume of material since the release of \"The Best of Van Morrison Volume Two\" in 1993. The album's thirty-one tracks include previously unreleased collaborations with Tom Jones (\"Cry For Home\") and Bobby Bland (\"Tupelo Honey\") as well as duets with John Lee Hooker, B.B. King and Ray Charles. The 2003 duet with Ray Charles is \"Crazy Love\" a song originally recorded on Morrison's 1970 album \"Moondance\". \"Blue and Green\" was previously donated to be used on the charity album \"\", which raised money for relief efforts intended for Gulf Coast victims devastated by hurricane Katrina. The duet with Tom Jones, \"Cry For Home\" was taken from the same recording sessions that produced the \"Sometimes We Cry\" duet between the two artists, which featured on Jones' successful album \"Reload\". \"Cry for Home\" was released as a single on 4 June 2007 in the UK, and was followed by \"Blue and Green\" on 27 August.",
"Title: Brown Eyed Girl\n\n\"Brown Eyed Girl\" is a song by Northern Irish singer and songwriter Van Morrison. Written by Morrison and recorded in March 1967 for Bang Records owner and producer Bert Berns, it was released as a single in June 1967 on the Bang label, peaking at No. 10 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. It featured The Sweet Inspirations singing back-up vocals and is considered to be Van Morrison's signature song. \"Brown Eyed Girl\" has remained a staple on classic rock radio, and has been covered by hundreds of bands over the decades.",
"Title: Duets: Re-working the Catalogue\n\nDuets: Re-working the Catalogue is the 35th studio album recorded by Northern Irish singer/songwriter Van Morrison. It was released on 13 March 2015 on RCA Records. Produced by Van Morrison along with Don Was and Bob Rock, it consists of songs previously recorded by Morrison this time recorded as duets. Performances include the artists Bobby Womack, Steve Winwood, Mark Knopfler, Taj Mahal, Mavis Staples, Michael Bublé, Natalie Cole, George Benson, Gregory Porter, Clare Teal, P.J. Proby, Joss Stone, Georgie Fame, Mick Hucknall, Chris Farlowe, and Morrison’s daughter Shana Morrison.",
"Title: Idan Yaniv\n\nIdan Yaniv (Hebrew: עידן יניב ; born October 18, 1986) is an Israeli singer born in Tel Aviv to Bukharan Jewish parents. He has successfully recorded two albums with many popular singles from both albums. His debut single was \"Hoshev Aleha\" and it was a hit that generated a lot of attention in Israel and in other Jewish communities in the world. Also, he recorded a duet with famous pop singer Dana International named \"Seret Hodi\" (\"Movie from India\"), and its video reached the top video charts, making it the most requested videoclip in the history of Israel so far. Idan Yaniv became the 2007 Artist of the Year in Israel.",
"Title: Don't Look Back (John Lee Hooker album)\n\nDon't Look Back is an album released by Blues singer-songwriter John Lee Hooker in 1997 that was co-produced by Van Morrison and Mike Kappus. Van Morrison also performed duets with Hooker on four of the tracks. The album was the Grammy winner in the Best Traditional Blues Album category in 1998. The title duet by Hooker and Morrison also won a Grammy for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals."
] |
1,799
|
The Worst Journey in the World is based on a memoir by an English explorer that was born in what year?
|
1886
|
bridge
|
hard
|
{
"title": [
"The Worst Journey in the World (docudrama)",
"Apsley Cherry-Garrard"
],
"sent_id": [
0,
0
]
}
|
[
{
"sentences": [
"The Worst Journey in the World is a 2007 BBC Television docudrama based on the memoir of the same name by polar explorer Apsley Cherry-Garrard.",
" The narrator Barry Letts, best known for his tenure as the producer of \"Doctor Who\", played Cherry-Garrard in the 1948 film \"Scott of the Antarctic\"."
],
"title": "The Worst Journey in the World (docudrama)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Douglas Scott Botting (born 22 February 1934) is an English explorer, author, biographer and TV presenter and producer.",
" He wrote biographies of naturalists Gavin Maxwell and Gerald Durrell (the former also being a personal friend).",
" He was the inspiration behind and writer of the 1972 BBC comedy show \"The Black Safari\", a role-reversal comedy show with Africans touring England.",
" He has also featured in numerous other BBC programming, including \"Under London Expedition\" exploring the London sewerage system, as part of the BBC2 nature series \"The World About Us\".",
" He has written numerous World War II and early aviation books for Time Life Books.",
" Botting took part in the first balloon flight over Africa, with Anthony Smith."
],
"title": "Douglas Botting"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The First Men in the Moon, also promoted as H.G. Wells' The First Men in the Moon, is a 2010 made for TV drama written by Mark Gatiss, directed by Damon Thomas, that stars Gatiss as Cavor and Rory Kinnear as Bedford, with Alex Riddell, Peter Forbes, Katherine Jakeways, Lee Ingleby and Julia Deakin.",
" \"The First Men on the Moon\" was first broadcast on 19 October 2010 on BBC Four.",
" It is an adaptation of H. G. Wells' science fiction novel of the same name.",
" This is the third collaboration between Thomas and Gatiss (after \"The Worst Journey In The World\" and \"Crooked House\"), and the first film to be produced by their production company Can Do Productions."
],
"title": "The First Men in the Moon (2010 film)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Captain John Smith (bapt.",
" 6 January 1580 – 21 June 1631), Admiral of New England, was an English soldier, explorer, and author.",
" He was knighted for his services to Sigismund Báthory, Prince of Transylvania, and his friend Mózes Székely .",
" He was considered to have played an important part in the establishment of Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in North America.",
" He was a leader of the Virginia Colony (based at Jamestown) between September 1608 and August 1609, and led an exploration along the rivers of Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay.",
" He was the first English explorer to map the Chesapeake Bay area and New England."
],
"title": "John Smith (explorer)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Apsley George Benet Cherry-Garrard (2 January 1886 – 18 May 1959) was an English explorer of Antarctica.",
" He was a member of the Terra Nova Expedition and is acclaimed for his historical account of this expedition, \"The Worst Journey in the World\"."
],
"title": "Apsley Cherry-Garrard"
},
{
"sentences": [
"James Rosier (1573-1609) was an English explorer who is notable for his account of a 1605 expedition to America in which describes native peoples and fauna of northern New England.",
" He describes a journey along a \"great river\", but the identity of the river is not known for certain."
],
"title": "James Rosier"
},
{
"sentences": [
"On radio, Meadows has appeared in \"Lost Souls\" and \"The Worst Journey in the World\", both first broadcast in 2008 and directed by Kate McAll for BBC Radio 4."
],
"title": "Mark Meadows (actor)"
},
{
"sentences": [
"The Worst Journey in the World is a memoir of the 1910–1913 British Antarctic Expedition led by Robert Falcon Scott.",
" It was written and published in 1922 by a member of the expedition, Apsley Cherry-Garrard, and has earned wide praise for its frank treatment of the difficulties of the expedition, the causes of its disastrous outcome, and the meaning (if any) of human suffering under extreme conditions."
],
"title": "The Worst Journey in the World"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Kate McAll is Executive Producer, Radio Drama at BBC Wales.",
" There she is a radio director and producer for BBC Radio 3 and Radio 4.",
" Her credits include \"How I Live Now\" (Radio 3) and \"The Worst Journey in the World\" (Radio 4), along with seven Torchwood radio episodes."
],
"title": "Kate McAll"
},
{
"sentences": [
"Richard Hore () was an English explorer who conducted an early voyage to the coast of what is now Newfoundland, where his passengers allegedly engaged in cannibalism in order to survive.",
" His travels are attested in the writings of Richard Hakluyt, who documented the ill-fated expedition.",
" Apart from his famous journey and its immediate aftermath, little is known about the life of Richard Hore."
],
"title": "Richard Hore"
}
] |
[
"Title: The Worst Journey in the World (docudrama)\n\nThe Worst Journey in the World is a 2007 BBC Television docudrama based on the memoir of the same name by polar explorer Apsley Cherry-Garrard. The narrator Barry Letts, best known for his tenure as the producer of \"Doctor Who\", played Cherry-Garrard in the 1948 film \"Scott of the Antarctic\".",
"Title: Douglas Botting\n\nDouglas Scott Botting (born 22 February 1934) is an English explorer, author, biographer and TV presenter and producer. He wrote biographies of naturalists Gavin Maxwell and Gerald Durrell (the former also being a personal friend). He was the inspiration behind and writer of the 1972 BBC comedy show \"The Black Safari\", a role-reversal comedy show with Africans touring England. He has also featured in numerous other BBC programming, including \"Under London Expedition\" exploring the London sewerage system, as part of the BBC2 nature series \"The World About Us\". He has written numerous World War II and early aviation books for Time Life Books. Botting took part in the first balloon flight over Africa, with Anthony Smith.",
"Title: The First Men in the Moon (2010 film)\n\nThe First Men in the Moon, also promoted as H.G. Wells' The First Men in the Moon, is a 2010 made for TV drama written by Mark Gatiss, directed by Damon Thomas, that stars Gatiss as Cavor and Rory Kinnear as Bedford, with Alex Riddell, Peter Forbes, Katherine Jakeways, Lee Ingleby and Julia Deakin. \"The First Men on the Moon\" was first broadcast on 19 October 2010 on BBC Four. It is an adaptation of H. G. Wells' science fiction novel of the same name. This is the third collaboration between Thomas and Gatiss (after \"The Worst Journey In The World\" and \"Crooked House\"), and the first film to be produced by their production company Can Do Productions.",
"Title: John Smith (explorer)\n\nCaptain John Smith (bapt. 6 January 1580 – 21 June 1631), Admiral of New England, was an English soldier, explorer, and author. He was knighted for his services to Sigismund Báthory, Prince of Transylvania, and his friend Mózes Székely . He was considered to have played an important part in the establishment of Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in North America. He was a leader of the Virginia Colony (based at Jamestown) between September 1608 and August 1609, and led an exploration along the rivers of Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay. He was the first English explorer to map the Chesapeake Bay area and New England.",
"Title: Apsley Cherry-Garrard\n\nApsley George Benet Cherry-Garrard (2 January 1886 – 18 May 1959) was an English explorer of Antarctica. He was a member of the Terra Nova Expedition and is acclaimed for his historical account of this expedition, \"The Worst Journey in the World\".",
"Title: James Rosier\n\nJames Rosier (1573-1609) was an English explorer who is notable for his account of a 1605 expedition to America in which describes native peoples and fauna of northern New England. He describes a journey along a \"great river\", but the identity of the river is not known for certain.",
"Title: Mark Meadows (actor)\n\nOn radio, Meadows has appeared in \"Lost Souls\" and \"The Worst Journey in the World\", both first broadcast in 2008 and directed by Kate McAll for BBC Radio 4.",
"Title: The Worst Journey in the World\n\nThe Worst Journey in the World is a memoir of the 1910–1913 British Antarctic Expedition led by Robert Falcon Scott. It was written and published in 1922 by a member of the expedition, Apsley Cherry-Garrard, and has earned wide praise for its frank treatment of the difficulties of the expedition, the causes of its disastrous outcome, and the meaning (if any) of human suffering under extreme conditions.",
"Title: Kate McAll\n\nKate McAll is Executive Producer, Radio Drama at BBC Wales. There she is a radio director and producer for BBC Radio 3 and Radio 4. Her credits include \"How I Live Now\" (Radio 3) and \"The Worst Journey in the World\" (Radio 4), along with seven Torchwood radio episodes.",
"Title: Richard Hore\n\nRichard Hore () was an English explorer who conducted an early voyage to the coast of what is now Newfoundland, where his passengers allegedly engaged in cannibalism in order to survive. His travels are attested in the writings of Richard Hakluyt, who documented the ill-fated expedition. Apart from his famous journey and its immediate aftermath, little is known about the life of Richard Hore."
] |
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