{"wikidata_id": "Q47543816", "label": "Ayios Nikolaos Station", "source": "Ayios Nikolaos Station (also spelled Agios Nikolaos; Greek: Άγιος Νικόλαος, lit. \"Saint Nicholas\") is a British military station and part of in the British Sovereign Base Area of Dhekelia in Cyprus. It is a former village (Ayios Nikolaos, SBA) connected by a road to the main area of the Dhekelia Garrison. The Joint Service Signal Unit (Cyprus) (JSSU(Cyp)), formerly 9th Signal Regiment and the Royal Air Force's 33 Signals Unit, is based at Ayios Nikolaos. This unit is a British Armed Forces run electronic intelligence gathering station.The current superior body to JSSU (Cyp) appears to be the Joint Service Signal Organisation. The JSSO, as of 2012, was located at RAF Digby in Lincolnshire, under the command of a Group Captain of the RAF Operations Support Branch and had 1,600 staff which are drawn from all three services.", "target": "British Army station and part of in the British Sovereign Base Area of Dhekelia in Cyprus", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1883376", "label": "Ferryville", "source": "Ferryville is a village in Crawford County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 176 at the 2010 census. It is located on Wisconsin Highway 35 along the Great River Road.", "target": "village in Crawford County, Wisconsin", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet", "village of Wisconsin"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24635032", "label": "Daienne Lima", "source": "Daienne Cardoso Lima (born 9 June 1993) is a Brazilian individual trampolinist, representing her nation at international competitions. She competed at world championships, including at the 2010, 2011, 2015 Trampoline World Championships.She has also competed at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics.", "target": "Brazilian trampoline gymnast", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3852297", "label": "Mattia Aversa", "source": "Mattia Aversa (born 23 July 1986) is an Italian backstroke swimmer who competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Italian swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q635952", "label": "Beetzsee", "source": "The Beetzsee is a lake in the state of Brandenburg, Germany. It is situated to the north and east of the city of Brandenburg an der Havel. It consists of four lake separate lake basins, which are connected by narrow channels. The uppermost of these basins is also known as the Riewendsee. The lake is 22 kilometres (14 mi) long, and has a maximum depth of 9 metres (30 ft), with an average depth of 3 metres (9.8 ft). The lake is navigable and connects, at its southern end, to the River Havel and the Silo Canal. Navigation is administered as part of the Untere Havel–Wasserstraße.", "target": "lake in Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["lake", "tunnel valley"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2629826", "label": "Auðr", "source": "In Norse mythology, Auðr (Old Norse \"prosperity\") is the son of the personified night, Nótt, fathered by Naglfari, and uncle of Thor. Auðr is attested in the Prose Edda, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson, and in the poetry of skalds.", "target": "Character in Norse mythology", "baseline_candidates": ["mythical character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1191215", "label": "Tales of Phantasia", "source": "Tales of Phantasia is an action role-playing game originally developed by Wolf Team. It is the first title in Namco's Tales series. Initially released for the Super Famicom in December 1995, it was later ported to a number of other platforms, including a Japan-exclusive version for the PlayStation in December 1998 and a Game Boy Advance version published by Namco in Japan in August 2003 and later published by Nintendo in North America and Europe in March 2006, which marked the first time the game was officially available in English. A PlayStation Portable remake known as Tales of Phantasia Full Voice Edition (テイルズ オブ ファンタジア-フルボイスエディション-, Teiruzu Obu Fantajia -Furu Boisu Edishon-) followed in September 2006, featuring full voice acting during story scenes, which was later included with further enhancements as part of Tales of Phantasia: Narikiri Dungeon X in June 2010. The game's producers have given it the characteristic genre name Legendary RPG (伝説のRPG, Densetsu no RPG) beginning with the PlayStation version, with the Full Voice Edition given the moniker Legendary RPG Embellished with Voices (声が彩る、伝説のRPG, Koe ga irodoru, densetsu no RPG). An unofficial fan translation of the original Super Famicom version was released on February 12, 2001 by Dejap. The game takes place in a fantasy world of Aselia and follows Cress Albane, a highly-trained swordsman who is driven by vengeance after his hometown is destroyed. But after discovering his identity as being the descendent of one of the four warriors, he quickly becomes entangled in a conflict concerning the war-mongering Dhaos, the games main.", "target": "1995 Super NES game in the role-playing video game genre", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q207044", "label": "Ziyarid dynasty", "source": "The Ziyarid dynasty (Persian: زیاریان) was an Iranian dynasty of Gilaki origin that ruled Tabaristan from 931 to 1090 during the Iranian Intermezzo period. The empire rose to prominence during the leadership of Mardavij. After his death, his brother Vushmgir and his Samanid allies led the dynasty in wrestling for control over territory against the Buyids in the early- to mid-10th century. When Vushmgir died, his sons Bisutun and Qabus fought for influence. Qabus would eventually outlive his brother and ruled the kingdom. However, Qabus was placed in exile from 980 to 998 by the Buyid ruler, Adud al-Dawla who would then dominate Tabaristan, the heartland of Ziyarid power. A succession of other rulers came to rule the kingdom with Ghaznavid support in the early 11th century. The Nizari Ismaili state invaded and ended Ziyarid rule in 1090. At its greatest extent, it ruled much of present-day western and northern Iran. During the turn of the century, the kingdom attracted many scholars, with the most notable being al-Biruni.", "target": "iranian dynasty", "baseline_candidates": ["dynasty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3171114", "label": "Jean Capdouze", "source": "Jean Capdouze (1942-1999) was a French rugby union and rugby league footballer who played in the 1960s and 1970s. He first played rugby union, representing his country in several test matches before turning professional and playing to rugby league, playing for the XIII Catalan club and for France's national team in the 1968 and 1970 World Cups.", "target": "French rugby league footballer, and rugby union footballer and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65164361", "label": "dextropropoxyphene", "source": "Dextropropoxyphene is an analgesic in the opioid category, patented in 1955 and manufactured by Eli Lilly and Company. It is an optical isomer of levopropoxyphene. It is intended to treat mild pain and also has antitussive (cough suppressant) and local anaesthetic effects. The drug has been taken off the market in Europe and the US due to concerns of fatal overdoses and heart arrhythmias. It is still available in Australia, albeit with restrictions after an application by its manufacturer to review its proposed banning. Its onset of analgesia (pain relief) is said to be 20–30 minutes and peak effects are seen about 1.5–2.0 hours after oral administration.Dextropropoxyphene is sometimes combined with acetaminophen. Trade names include Darvocet-N, Di-Gesic, and Darvon with APAP (for dextropropoxyphene and paracetamol). The British approved name (i.e. the generic name of the active ingredient) of the paracetamol/dextropropoxyphene preparation is co-proxamol (sold under a variety of brand names); however, it has been withdrawn since 2007, and is no longer available to new patients, with exceptions. The paracetamol combination(s) are known as Capadex or Di-Gesic in Australia, Lentogesic in South Africa, and Di-Antalvic in France (unlike co-proxamol, which is an approved name, these are all brand names). Dextropropoxyphene is known under several synonyms, including: Alpha-d-4-dimethylamino-3-methyl-1,2-diphenyl-2-butanol propionate [(2S,3R)-4-(Dimethylamino)-3- methyl-1,2-diphenylbutan-2-yl] propanoate (+)-1,2-Diphenyl-2-propionoxy- 3-methyl-4-di-methylaminobutane Desoxypropiophen.", "target": "opioid medication", "baseline_candidates": ["medication", "chemical compound", "DL-propoxyphene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11843913", "label": "Hemiandrus bilobatus", "source": "Hemiandrus bilobatus, the wine wētā (or Cook Strait ground weta), is a species of ground weta endemic to New Zealand. Being a ground weta, they are often found in burrows in the ground during the daytime (as they are nocturnal). The species is found in Wellington, on Mana Island and northern South Island and is classified as \"Not Threatened\". This species of weta is unusual for an insect in that the female shows maternal care. She lays about 50 eggs in the same burrow she uses during the day and looks after her eggs until they hatch.", "target": "species of wētā endemic to New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13570001", "label": "Kaaoksen Kuningas", "source": "Kaaoksen Kuningas is the third album from the Finnish hard rock band Kilpi.", "target": "album by Kilpi", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64009771", "label": "Penomeco", "source": "Jeong Dong-uk (Korean: 정동욱; born October 7, 1992), better known by his stage name, Penomeco (Korean: 페노메코), is a South Korean rapper and singer-songwriter. He released his debut single \"Right There\" on October 16, 2014. He also released his first extended play, Garden, on December 20, 2018. In June that same year, he was crowned the final winner of the Mnet music battle show Breakers. He is a member of the hip-hop crew Fanxy Child with Zico, Crush, Dean, Millic and Staytuned.On June 28, 2020, Penomeco announced that he has parted ways with Million Market, following the end of his 4-year contract. On April 20, 2021, it was revealed that he signed with P Nation and released his second extended play, Dry Flower, on the same day.", "target": "South Korean rapper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q924090", "label": "Operation Crossbow", "source": "Operation Crossbow (later re-released as The Great Spy Mission) is a 1965 British spy thriller drama set during Second World War that concerns Operation Crossbow (1943−1945). It was directed by Michael Anderson and stars Sophia Loren, George Peppard, Trevor Howard, John Mills, Richard Johnson, and Tom Courtenay. The screenplay was written by Emeric Pressburger (under the pseudonym \"Richard Imrie\"), and by Derry Quinn and Ray Rigby, from a story from Duilio Coletti and Vittoriano Petrilli. It was filmed in Panavision at MGM-British Studios.The film is a fictionalised account of the real-life Operation Crossbow and made with a large cast of popular film stars of the era. It does touch on the main aspects of the operation, which embraced all tactics which were tried to thwart the German long-range weapons programme in the final years of World War II. The scenes alternate between Nazi Germany’s development of the V-1 flying bomb and V-2 rocket, and the efforts of British Intelligence and its agents to counter those threats. All characters speak in the appropriate language, with English subtitles for those speaking German or Dutch.", "target": "1965 film by Michael Anderson", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17082110", "label": "Multicultural Broadcasting", "source": "Multicultural Broadcasting is a media company based in New York City founded by Chinese-American businessman Arthur Liu. It caters mostly to the Asian American community and owns television and radio stations in several of the top markets in multiple languages. The company was founded as Multicultural Radio Broadcasting Inc. (MRBI) in 1982 with an initial business in United States radio broadcasting industry. To this day, it remains the largest Asian American owned media group in the U.S.", "target": "American ethnic radio broadcaster", "baseline_candidates": ["privately held company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6315998", "label": "Just Fred", "source": "Just Fred is the second solo album by the American musician Fred Schneider, released in 1996. Its first single was \"Bulldozer\". Schneider promoted the album by playing shows with his band, the Slobs.", "target": "album by Fred Schneider", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1382799", "label": "Rik Daems", "source": "Hendrik Jules Joseph \"Rik\" Daems (born 18 August 1959) is a Belgian painter, wine trader and politician who is currently serving as the President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, a 70-year-old body bringing together parliamentarians from 47 nations of the Council of Europe. [1] He is a former member of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives for the Flemish Liberals and Democrats (VLD) and member of the city council of Leuven.", "target": "Belgian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55613657", "label": "Herbert L. Hart", "source": "Herbert Lybrook Hart (February 20, 1897 – May 6, 1988) was an American football and basketball player and coach and college athletics adminsiator. He served as the head football coach at Mount Morris College from 1922 to 1923, Monmouth College from 1924 to 1928 and 1932 to 1937, and at Humboldt State University from 1938 to 1940.Hart attended Purdue University, where he played football and basketball and ran track. He later earned a master's degree from the University of Chicago. Hart died on May 6, 1988 at Napa Nursing Center in Napa, California.", "target": "American college football player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35829192", "label": "Rory Cameron", "source": "Roderick William \"Rory\" Cameron (1913 – 18 September 1985) was an American travel writer. He wrote a number of travel books and also contributed to Life and Horizon magazines. For several years he was contributing editor of L'Oeil.", "target": "US travel writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15642168", "label": "Odonthalitus poas", "source": "Odonthalitus poas is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Costa Rica. The length of the forewings is 5-5.5 mm for males and 6 mm for females. The forewings are white with brown transverse striae. The hindwings are dingy white with pale grey-brown mottling.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98066394", "label": "Pedro Alves", "source": "Pedro Conceição Alves (born 3 December 1999) also known as Cuadrado or Pedrinho is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a defender.", "target": "Brazilian footballer (born 1999)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7645371", "label": "Suran, Ardabil", "source": "Suran (Persian: سوران, also Romanized as Sūrān) is a village in Khanandabil-e Gharbi Rural District, in the Central District of Khalkhal County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 29, in 11 families.", "target": "village in Ardabil, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q99633", "label": "Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe", "source": "The Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (German: 'Berlin Transport Company') is the main public transport company of Berlin, the capital city of Germany. It manages the city's U-Bahn underground railway, tram, bus, replacement services (Ersatzverkehr, EV) and ferry networks, but not the S-Bahn urban rail system. The generally used abbreviation, BVG, has been retained from the company's original name, Berliner Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft (Berlin Transportation Stock Company). Subsequently, the company was renamed Berliner Verkehrs-Betriebe. During the division of Berlin, the BVG was split between BVG (Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe Gesellschaft in West Berlin) and BVB (Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe in East Berlin, also known as the Volkseigenes Kombinat Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe, BVB). After reunification, the current formal name was adopted.", "target": "public transport agency in Berlin", "baseline_candidates": ["transport company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3609454", "label": "Porlieria chilensis", "source": "Porlieria chilensis is a plant that occurs in South America. In fact, all genus members are small trees or shrubs found on the South American continent. An example occurrence of P. chilensis is in the arid forested area of central Chile, where it occurs in association with the endangered Chilean wine palm, Jubaea chilensis.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6930968", "label": "Much Too Much", "source": "\"Much Too Much\" is the fourth release from electronica duo Andain, and the second promotional single taken from the subsequent studio album, You Once Told Me.", "target": "single by Andain", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q767761", "label": "The Greens", "source": "The Greens (Luxembourgish: Déi Gréng, French: Les Verts, German: Die Grünen) is a green political party in Luxembourg.", "target": "political party in Luxembourg", "baseline_candidates": ["Green party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7131877", "label": "Pantoja, Guanajuato", "source": "Pantoja is a village in the Mexican state of Guanajuato. It was here that Augustín de Iturbide and Anastasio Bustamante proclaimed the independence of Mexico on 19 March 1821. It is also known as Charco de Pantoja and is in the Valle de Santiago municipality. According to a recent population count it had 1777 inhabitants.", "target": "human settlement in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12313051", "label": "voluntary association", "source": "A voluntary group or union (also sometimes called a voluntary organization, common-interest association,: 266 association, or society) is a group of individuals who enter into an agreement, usually as volunteers, to form a body (or organization) to accomplish a purpose. Common examples include trade associations, trade unions, learned societies, professional associations, and environmental groups. All such associations reflect freedom of association in ultimate terms (members may choose whether to join or leave), although membership is not necessarily voluntary in the sense that one's employment may effectively require it via occupational closure. For example, in order for particular associations to function effectively, they might need to be mandatory or at least strongly encouraged, as is true of trade unions. Because of this, some people prefer the term common-interest association to describe groups which form out of a common interest, although this term is not widely used or understood.Voluntary associations may be incorporated or unincorporated; for example, in the US, unions gained additional powers by incorporating. In the UK, the terms voluntary association or voluntary organisation cover every type of group from a small local residents' association to large associations (often registered charities) with multimillion-pound turnover that run large-scale business operations (often providing some kind of public service as subcontractors to government departments or local authorities).Voluntary association is also used to refer to political reforms, especially in the context of urbanization, granting individuals greater freedoms to associate in civil society as they wished, or not at all.", "target": "group of people with shared interests or aims", "baseline_candidates": ["organization", "non-governmental organization", "legal form", "association", "Wikipedia article covering multiple topics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4765166", "label": "Anime Weekend Atlanta", "source": "Anime Weekend Atlanta (AWA) is an annual four-day anime convention held during September/October at the Renaissance Waverly Hotel, Cobb Galleria Centre, and Sheraton Suites Galleria in Atlanta, Georgia. The convention is the largest Southeastern anime convention.", "target": "annual anime convention in Georgia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["anime convention"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2989805", "label": "Iron Ore Company of Canada", "source": "Iron Ore Company of Canada (often abbreviated to IOC) (French: Compagnie Minière IOC) is a Canadian-based producer of iron ore. The company was founded in 1949 from a partnership of Canadian and American M.A. Hanna Company. It is now owned by a new consortium, including the Mitsubishi and Rio Tinto corporations. Rio Tinto is the majority shareholder in the venture, with 58.7% of the joint stock as of October 2013. Mitsubishi controlled 26.2% of the investment as of March 2013.Based in Montreal, Quebec, IOC currently has mining and concentrator operations in Labrador City, and operates the Quebec North Shore and Labrador Railway to ship ore concentrate from the mines, such as Wabush, to the port of Sept-Îles, Quebec. Currently, this railway (along with the TSH, CFAQ, and WABL lines) form an isolated railroad network, as it does not interchange with any other rail lines on the North American network. During 1977 to 1983, the president of the company was Brian Mulroney, who later served as the 18th Prime Minister of Canada from 1984 to 1993.", "target": "Canadian mining company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4802584", "label": "Arya Central School", "source": "Arya Central school, is at Pattom, Thiruvananthapuram, an English Medium school affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education. It was founded in 1965 by Sri. Sreekrishnanand Acharya.", "target": "private school, co-education school in India", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21085933", "label": "loveringite", "source": "Loveringite is a rare metallic oxide mineral of the crichtonite group with the chemical formula (Ca,Ce)(Ti,Fe,Cr,Mg)21O38. It is a late-stage magmatic mineral, formed in the residual melt of mafic layered intrusions in either the olivine-chromite, pyroxene, or plagioclase-rich layers.", "target": "oxide mineral", "baseline_candidates": ["crichtonite mineral group", "mineral species"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55625379", "label": "Norah Head Lightstation Precinct", "source": "Norah Head Lightstation Precinct is a heritage-listed former lighthouse precinct located at Bush Street, Norah Head in the Central Coast local government area of New South Wales, Australia. The Norah Head lighthouse and associated buildings were designed by Cecil W. Darley and built in 1903. The precinct was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 13 April 2007.", "target": "Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["heritage site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3129203", "label": "Hector", "source": "Jean-Pierre Kalfon, known professionally as Hector (20 October 1946 – 19 February 2020) was a French singer.", "target": "French singer (1946-2020)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1145116", "label": "Middle", "source": "Middle (Manx: Medall) is one of the six sheadings of the Isle of Man. It is located on the east of the island (part of the traditional South Side division) and consists of the four historic parishes of Braddan, Marown, Onchan and Santon. Historically, from 1796 until 1986 Marown was in the sheading of Glenfaba, and before 1796 Onchan was in the sheading of Garff.In addition to the current districts listed above, the sheading of Middle also includes the borough of Douglas, the capital and largest town of the Isle of Man. Other settlements in the sheading include Port Soderick, Strang, Tromode and Union Mills (all in the parish of Braddan), Braaid, Crosby and Glen Vine (all in the parish of Marown), and Newtown in the parish of Santon.", "target": "one of the six sheadings of the Isle of Man", "baseline_candidates": ["sheading"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7732501", "label": "The Essential Poco", "source": "The Essential Poco is a compilation album of recordings by the band Poco released in 2005 as part of Sony BMG's Essential series.", "target": "2005 compilation album by Poco", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56580402", "label": "Brett Sargon", "source": "Brett Sargon (born 3 December 1991 in Auckland, New Zealand) is a New Zealand curler.At the national level, he is a three-time New Zealand men's champion curler (2014, 2016, 2020) and two-time New Zealand mixed champion curler (2016, 2017).", "target": "New Zealand male curler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62605146", "label": "Alice Stewart Hill", "source": "Alice Stewart Hill (pen name, AAS, ASH; born Alice Amelia Stewart; 1851–January 10, 1896) was an American artist who created paintings and illustrations. Her specialty was creating works of art based upon the flowers of Colorado. Her work was of interest to noted botanist Asa Gray of Harvard College because Colorado has flowers that were different than their eastern varieties, as well as flowers that grow above the timberline on Pikes Peak.", "target": "American painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7863186", "label": "U.S. Games Systems, Inc.", "source": "U.S. Games Systems, Inc. (USGS) is a publisher of playing cards, tarot cards, and games located in Stamford, Connecticut. Founded in 1968 by Stuart R. Kaplan, it has published hundreds of different card sets, and about 20 new titles are released annually. The company's product line includes children's card games, museum products, educational cards, motivational cards, tarot cards, and other fortune telling card decks. These are marketed through a network of retailers, including bookstores, museum gift shops, metaphysical shops, greeting card stores; toy and game stores; hobby shops, and mail order catalogs.The company started as a U.S. distributor of European tarot decks. The tarot decks sold well in bookstores and Kaplan decided to begin publishing tarot decks himself. In 1971, the company acquired the rights to publish the Rider-Waite Tarot deck. The deck was extremely popular and served as the basis for the company's early success.Other tarot sets published by U.S. Games include a traditional Tarot of Marseilles, two Visconti-Sforza tarot decks, an Oswald Wirth tarot, and the Thoth Tarot designed by Aleister Crowley and drawn by Lady Frieda Harris. The company is also known for its commitment to novel interpretations of the tarot, featuring new artwork in a variety of styles and formats. Some of the best known of these are the hippie-influenced Aquarian tarot, the borderless Morgan-Greer tarot, the circular Motherpeace tarot, and the Tarot of the Witches by Fergus Hall, which was featured in the James Bond movie Live and Let Die. Popular playing card games published by U.S. Games include the Wizard.", "target": "card game publishing company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96279102", "label": "Intuition", "source": "Intuition (Spanish: La corazonada) is a 2020 Argentine crime-thriller film written and directed by Alejandro Montiel and starring Luisana Lopilato and Joaquín Furriel. Based on the novel La Vírgen en tus Ojos (Spanish: The Virgin in your Eyes) by Florencia Etcheves, the film serves as a prequel to the 2018 film Perdida. It is Netflix's first Argentine original movie.", "target": "2020 film directed by Alejandro Montiel", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q684422", "label": "Kalverdijk", "source": "Kalverdijk (West Frisian: Kalveredìk) is a hamlet in the Dutch province of North Holland. It is a part of the municipality of Schagen, and lies about 8 km north of Heerhugowaard. The hamlet was first mentioned in 1575 as Caluerdyck, and is a combination of dike and calf. Kalverdijk has place name signs. It is considered part of Tuitjenhorn, and consists of about 105 houses and 70 holiday homes.", "target": "buurtschap", "baseline_candidates": ["buurtschap"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1942429", "label": "Jazzurekcja", "source": "Jazzurekcja (Polish pronunciation: [ˌd͡ʐɛzuˈrɛkt͡sja], a word play consisting of \"Jazz\" and \"Resurekcja\" (resurrection)) is an album released by O.S.T.R. in 2004.", "target": "album by O.S.T.R.", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60785359", "label": "Logos High School", "source": "Logos High School is an independent private high school located in Olivette, Missouri. It is accredited through the Independent Schools Association of the Central States (ISACS).", "target": "private school in Olivette, Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6850081", "label": "Mikorzyn, Kępno County", "source": "Mikorzyn [miˈkɔʐɨn] (German: Gabelsbach) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kępno, within Kępno County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) north of Kępno and 138 km (86 mi) south-east of the regional capital Poznań.", "target": "village in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6032617", "label": "Inglesham", "source": "Inglesham is a small village and civil parish in the Borough of Swindon, Wiltshire, England, notable for the Grade-I listed St John the Baptist Church. The village is just off the A361 road about 1 mile (1.6 km) south-west of Lechlade in Gloucestershire. Most of the population lives in the hamlet of Upper Inglesham, which is on the main road about 1.3 miles (2 km) south of the village. The parish forms the extreme north-east corner of the Borough of Swindon and County of Wiltshire, and is bounded to the west and north by the River Thames (which also forms the county boundary with Gloucestershire), and to the east by the county boundary with Oxfordshire (Berkshire until the 1974 boundary changes). The River Cole forms part of the eastern boundary. As the parish's population is small it has a parish meeting instead of a parish council.The Round House, Inglesham is often used by boaters as a landmark to denote the westernmost point most cabin cruisers and narrowboats can travel along the Thames, as beyond Inglesham the river becomes too clogged with vegetation and too shallow to effectively navigate.", "target": "village and civil parish in Wiltshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49474381", "label": "Benjamin Rush State Park", "source": "Benjamin Rush State Park is a 275-acre (111 ha) Pennsylvania state park in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The park is undeveloped and is the site of community gardens, believed to be one of the largest in the world. The park is home to the Northeast Radio Controlled Airplane Club. Benjamin Rush State Park is in Northeast Philadelphia at the intersection of Southampton Road and Roosevelt Boulevard (U.S. Route 1). The northern boundary of the park is formed by Poquessing Creek. There are several acres of woodlands along the creek bank. A proposal map show plans to connect the park with Fairmount Park. Other proposed improvements included hiking trails, parking facilities, and a reforestation project. The community gardens and airfield for the radio-controlled aircraft would remain.", "target": "State park in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["Pennsylvania state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q757914", "label": "Attawapiskat River", "source": "The Attawapiskat River () is a river in Kenora District in northwestern Ontario, Canada, that flows east from Attawapiskat Lake to James Bay.", "target": "river in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16214134", "label": "Colin Pocock", "source": "Colin Eric Innes Pocock (born 11 June 1972) was a South African beach volleyball player. He is the current owner of Pococks Indoor Beach Volleyball.", "target": "South African beach volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5233913", "label": "David G. Armstrong", "source": "David G. Armstrong (born February 18, 1969) is an American podiatric surgeon and researcher most widely known for his work in amputation prevention, the diabetic foot, and wound healing. He and his frequent collaborators, Lawrence A. Lavery and Andrew J.M. Boulton, have together produced many key works in the taxonomy, classification and treatment of the diabetic foot. He is Professor of Surgery with Tenure and director of the Southwestern Academic Limb Salvage Alliance (SALSA) at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California and has produced more than 600 peer reviewed manuscripts and more than 100 book chapters.", "target": "American podiatric surgeon and researcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q84754568", "label": "Jamaica at the 2019 Parapan American Games", "source": "Jamaica competed at the 2019 Parapan American Games held from August 23 to September 1, 2019 in Lima, Peru. In total athletes representing Jamaica won two silver medals and two bronze medals. The country finished in 20th place in the medal table.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23688934", "label": "Raymond Steth", "source": "Raymond Steth (1917 - 1997), born Raymond Ryles, was a Philadelphia-based graphic artist recognized for his paintings and lithographs on the African-American condition in the mid-20th century, often through scenes of rural life and poverty. Working under the Works Progress Administration's graphics division in the 1930s and 1940s, Steth's art covered a range of topics and emotions from pleasurable farm life to protest and despair.", "target": "African American artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7254688", "label": "Pseudocomotis", "source": "Pseudocomotis is a genus of moths belonging to the family Tortricidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12254305", "label": "Assiniboine people", "source": "The Assiniboine or Assiniboin people ( when singular, Assiniboines / Assiniboins when plural; Ojibwe: Asiniibwaan, \"stone Sioux\"; also in plural Assiniboine or Assiniboin), also known as the Hohe and known by the endonym Nakota (or Nakoda or Nakona), are a First Nations/Native American people originally from the Northern Great Plains of North America. Today, they are centered in present-day Saskatchewan. They have also populated parts of Alberta and southwestern Manitoba in Canada, and northern Montana and western North Dakota in the United States. They were well known throughout much of the late 18th and early 19th century, and were members of the Iron Confederacy with the Cree. Images of Assiniboine people were painted by such 19th-century artists as Karl Bodmer and George Catlin.", "target": "group of indigenous people in northern Montana", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7948057", "label": "WCRL", "source": "WCRL (1570 AM) is a radio station licensed to serve Oneonta, Alabama. The station is owned by Our Town Radio, Inc. and began operation on July 29, 1952. WCRL airs a classic hits music format.", "target": "radio station in Oneonta, Alabama", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24807739", "label": "Welcome to Fantasy Island", "source": "Welcome to Fantasy Island, is the second album from American R&B singer/songwriter Adina Howard. The album was due for release on July 29, 1997, but the album was then shelved. It later received an unofficial release (excluding \"T-Shirt & Panties\" and \"Crank Me Up\" which were included on her The Second Coming release under Rufftown Records) on May 19, 2013 through the mixtape site DatPiff.com. Despite the album never being originally released in 1997, it did however spawn two hit singles, \"(Freak) And U Know It\" and \"T-Shirt & Panties.\" In January 2021, it was announced that Rhino Records had acquired the rights to the album and it was finally released onto digital audio platforms on February 19, 2021.", "target": "album by Adina Howard", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1681365", "label": "consumables", "source": "Consumables (also known as consumable goods, non-durable goods, or soft goods) are goods that are intended to be consumed. People have, for example, always consumed food and water. Consumables are in contrast to durable goods. Disposable products are a particular, extreme case of consumables, because their end-of-life is reached after a single use. Consumables are products that consumers use recurrently, i.e., items which \"get used up\" or discarded. For example consumable office supplies are such products as paper, pens, file folders, Post-it notes, and toner or ink cartridges. This is in contrast to capital goods or durable goods in the office, such as computers, fax machines, and other business machines or office furniture. Sometimes a company sells a durable good at an attractively low price in the hopes that the consumer will then buy the consumables that go with it at a price providing a higher margin. Printers and ink cartridges are an example, as are cameras and film as well as razors and blades, which gave this business model its usual name (the razor and blades model). For arc welding one uses a consumable electrode. This is an electrode that conducts electricity to the arc but also melts into the weld as a filler metal.Consumable goods are often excluded from warranty policies, as it is considered that covering them would excessively increase the cost of the premium.", "target": "good with short durability", "baseline_candidates": ["product", "good"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60791516", "label": "Autorickshaw", "source": "Autorickshaw is a Canadian world music band that performs a blend of Indian Carnatic and Hindustani music with Western pop, funk, and jazz. Formed in 2003 in Toronto, the group consists of vocalist Suba Sankaran, tabla player Ed Hanley, and bassist and beatboxer Dylan Bell.They are three-time Juno Award nominees for World Music Album of the Year, receiving nominations at the Juno Awards of 2005 for Four Higher, at the Juno Awards of 2008 for So the Journey Goes, and at the Juno Awards of 2018 for Meter.The band has regularly toured both Canada and India.", "target": "Canadian world music band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2020085", "label": "Oliver Bimber", "source": "Oliver Bimber (born 1973 in Bad Marienberg, Germany) is a German computer scientist. He is professor for computer graphics at the Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria where he heads the Institute of Computer Graphics.", "target": "German computer scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15990201", "label": "William Davidson Niven", "source": "Sir William Davidson Niven (24 March 1842 – 29 May 1917) was a Scottish mathematician and electrical engineer. After an early teaching career at Cambridge, Niven was Director of Studies at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, for thirty years.", "target": "Scottish mathematician and electrical engineer (1842-1917)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47007228", "label": "Sunnyside", "source": "Sunnyside is a rural locality in the local government area (LGA) of Kentish in the North-west and west LGA region of Tasmania. The locality is about 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) east of the town of Sheffield. The 2016 census recorded a population of 104 for the state suburb of Sunnyside.", "target": "locality in Tasmania, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb/locality of Tasmania", "locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60775462", "label": "Iran at the 2018 Asian Para Games", "source": "Iran participated at the 2018 Asian Para Games which was held in Jakarta, Indonesia from 6 to 13 October 2018. In July 2019, Iran had a bronze medal upgraded to silver due to doping violation of an Uzbek athlete.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2654648", "label": "Dzbądzek", "source": "Dzbądzek [ˈd͡zbɔnd͡zɛk] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Goworowo, within Ostrołęka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 kilometres (6 mi) south-west of Goworowo, 26 km (16 mi) south of Ostrołęka, and 77 km (48 mi) north-east of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5345177", "label": "Edward S. Miller", "source": "Edward Samuel Miller (November 11, 1923 – July 1, 2013) was the deputy assistant director of the Inspections Division under Mark Felt with the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation. He was known for the 1980 trial for conspiracy of injuring and oppressing the citizens of the United States and his investigation of the Weather Underground group.", "target": "FBI agent", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7180588", "label": "Phantom Reporter", "source": "The Phantom Reporter (Richard \"Dick\" Jones) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He had no known superpowers.", "target": "comics character", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6033848", "label": "Şehzade Abdullah", "source": "Şehzade Abdullah (c. 1523–1526) was an Ottoman prince (şehzade), as the son of Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. He is generally understood to be the son of Hurrem Sultan, as Suleiman and Hurrem were in a monogamous relationship by the time of his birth. He was born in either 1523 or 1526 in Topkapi Palace, the Ottoman Empire and died due to a disease, possibly smallpox, in Istanbul. His date of death is not recorded, however he is believed by historians to have died while still a toddler.Although sometimes popularly considered, current historians believe he was not Mihrimah Sultan's twin as it is likely their births happened years apart.", "target": "Ottoman şehzade (prince)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q373281", "label": "Groveland", "source": "Groveland is a census-designated place in Bingham County, Idaho, United States. Its population was 877 as of the 2010 census.The community was named for the groves of trees near the original town site.", "target": "census designated place in Bingham County, Idaho, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q172376", "label": "Graham Whitehead", "source": "Alfred Graham Whitehead (born in Harrogate, 15 April 1922 – died in Lower Basildon, Berkshire, 15 January 1981) was a British racing driver from England. He participated in one Formula One World Championship Grand Prix, on 19 July 1952. He finished 12th, scoring no championship points. He also competed in several non-Championship Formula One races. He began racing his half-brother Peter's ERA, in 1951 and then drove his Formula Two Alta in the 1952 British Grand Prix. He finished second at 1958 24 Hours of Le Mans only weeks before the accident on the Tour de France in which Peter was killed. Graham escaped serious injury and later raced again with an Aston Martin and Ferrari 250GT before stopping at the end of 1961.Graham finished second in the first Goodwood Nine Hours race in 1952 co driving American Tom Cole's Ferrari.", "target": "British racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13046333", "label": "St. Louis County", "source": "St. Louis County is a county located in the Arrowhead Region of the U.S. state of Minnesota. As of the 2020 census, the population was 200,231. Its county seat is Duluth. It is the largest county in Minnesota by land area, and the largest in the United States by total area east of the Mississippi River, ahead of Aroostook County, Maine.St. Louis County is included in the Duluth, MN-Superior WI Metropolitan Statistical Area. Major industries include pulpwood production and tourism. Open pit mining of taconite and processing it into high grade iron ore remains an important part of the economy of the Iron Range. Parts of the federally recognized Bois Forte and Fond du Lac Indian reservations are in the county.", "target": "county in Minnesota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Minnesota"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5732559", "label": "Topór, Węgrów County", "source": "Topór [ˈtɔpur] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Stoczek, within Węgrów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) west of Stoczek, 23 km (14 mi) north-west of Węgrów, and 69 km (43 mi) north-east of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5090735", "label": "Takydromus wolteri", "source": "Takydromus wolteri, also known commonly as the mountain grass lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Lacertidae. The species is native to East Asia.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43921630", "label": "Complement factor D", "source": "Factor D (EC 3.4.21.46, C3 proactivator convertase, properdin factor D esterase, factor D (complement), complement factor D, CFD, adipsin) is a protein which in humans is encoded by the CFD gene. Factor D is involved in the alternative complement pathway of the complement system where it cleaves factor B.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["Peptidase S1A, chymotrypsin family", "serine endopeptidase", "group or class of enzymes", "protein family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14928131", "label": "2009 Internazionali BNL d'Italia – men's singles", "source": "Rafael Nadal defeated the defending champion Novak Djokovic in the final, 7–6(7–2), 6–2 to win the men's singles title at the 2009 Italian Open. It was his record fourth Italian Open title.", "target": "2009 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6173579", "label": "Ángel de Andrés López", "source": "Ángel de Andrés López (23 October 1951 – 4 May 2016) was a Spanish actor. He appeared in more than 60 films and television shows between 1977 and 2015. He died at his home in Miraflores de la Sierra from natural causes.", "target": "Spanish actor (1951-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q502263", "label": "Jim Henson's Muppet Babies", "source": "Jim Henson's Muppet Babies, commonly known by the shortened title Muppet Babies, is an American animated television series that aired from September 15, 1984, to November 2, 1991, on CBS. The show portrays childhood versions of the Muppets living together in a nursery under the care of a human woman identified only as Nanny (the whereabouts of their parents are never addressed), who appears in almost every episode, but her face is never visible; only the babies' view of her pink skirt, purple sweater, and distinctive green and white striped socks is shown. The idea of presenting the Muppets as children first appeared in a dream sequence in The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984), released two months before Muppet Babies debuted, in which Miss Piggy imagined what it would be like if she and Kermit the Frog had grown up together. Muppet Babies was produced by Henson Associates and Marvel Productions. The rights are now held by The Walt Disney Company which separately acquired both the Muppets characters and Marvel. Although the episodes were 30 minutes (including commercials), it was typically shown in 60 and even 90-minute blocks during the peak of its popularity. Outside the United States, the show was distributed by Walt Disney Television. A reboot of the series premiered on Disney Junior on March 23, 2018.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1153388", "label": "Pietrzyk", "source": "Pietrzyk [ˈpjɛtʂɨk] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lutocin, within Żuromin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 12 kilometres (7 mi) west of Żuromin and 126 km (78 mi) north-west of Warsaw.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15251269", "label": "Euphorbia peplus", "source": "Euphorbia peplus (petty spurge, radium weed, cancer weed, or milkweed), is a species of Euphorbia, native to most of Europe, northern Africa and western Asia, where it typically grows in cultivated arable land, gardens and other disturbed land.Outside of its native range it is very widely naturalised and often invasive, including in Australia, New Zealand, North America and other countries in temperate and sub-tropical regions.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4537816", "label": "Yang Cheng", "source": "Yang Cheng (simplified Chinese: 杨程; traditional Chinese: 楊程; pinyin: Yáng Chéng; born 11 October 1985) is a Chinese football goalkeeper who currently plays for Hebei China Fortune in the Chinese Super League.", "target": "Chinese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1677123", "label": "Jack McDuff", "source": "Eugene McDuff (September 17, 1926 – January 23, 2001), known professionally as \"Brother\" Jack McDuff or \"Captain\" Jack McDuff, was an American jazz organist and organ trio bandleader who was most prominent during the hard bop and soul jazz era of the 1960s, often performing with an organ trio. He is also credited with giving guitarist George Benson his first break.", "target": "American jazz organist and organ trio bandleader (1926-2001)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q117038", "label": "Błażejów", "source": "Błażejów [bwaˈʐɛjuf] (German: Taunengrund) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lubawka, within Kamienna Góra County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) south-east of Lubawka, 17 kilometres (11 mi) south of Kamienna Góra, and 87 kilometres (54 mi) south-west of the regional capital Wrocław.", "target": "village in Poland, in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q500220", "label": "Andreas Reyher", "source": "Andreas Reyher (4 May 1601Julian - 12 April 1673Gregorian) was a German teacher, education reformer and lexicographer.", "target": "German educationist (1601-1673)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5213049", "label": "Smagów", "source": "Smagów [ˈsmaɡuf] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Borkowice, within Przysucha County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) east of Borkowice, 13 km (8 mi) south-east of Przysucha, and 103 km (64 mi) south of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10526932", "label": "Hugueninia J.L.Bezerra & T.T.Barros (1970) non Rchb. (1832)", "source": "Hugueninia is a genus of fungi in the Microthyriaceae family; according to the 2007 Outline of Ascomycota, the placement in this family is uncertain. This is a monotypic genus, containing the single species Hugueninia freycinetiae.", "target": "later homonym (do not use)", "baseline_candidates": ["later homonym", "Ascomycota"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q110589", "label": "Emmy Damerius-Koenen", "source": "Emmy Damerius-Koenen (15 March 1903 – 21 May 1987) was an East German politician. She was married to Helmut Damerius from 1922 to 1927 and later, was married to Wilhelm Koenen. She was a member of the Communist Party of Germany and spent most of the Nazi era outside Germany, in the Soviet Union and other countries. She returned to Germany in December 1945, where she was active in East German women's organizations.", "target": "German politician and journalist, member of the East German Volkskammer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4805557", "label": "Ashley Prescott", "source": "Ashley Prescott (born 11 September 1972) is a former Australian rules footballer. He played with the Richmond and Fremantle Football Clubs in the Australian Football League (AFL) between 1993 and 2001, was senior coachof the Claremont Football Club in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) from 2004 to 2007 and is currently an assistant coach with the Gold Coast Football Club in the AFL.Prescott made his debut in 1993 for Richmond, being recruited from Mount Waverley. He struggled to cement a place in the side, only playing 12 games in his first two seasons, but in 1995 he found his spot in the side as a midfield tagger, playing 21 games. He then played every game of the 1996 season until he broke his collarbone in round 16, which sidelined him for the remainder of the year. After returning to the Richmond side in round 3 of the 1997 he played in 41 of Richmonds next 42 games, but at the end of the 1998 season he did not renew his contract and entered the pre-season draft. He was selected by Fremantle with the second selection in the 1999 pre-season draft. His first year with the Dockers saw him place eighth in the 1999 best and fairest and his leadership and experience at the still-young club saw him awarded the best clubman. Hamstring injuries however restricted him to 17 games over the next two seasons and he announced his retirement from AFL football at the end of the 2001 season. He had ambitions to become a.", "target": "Australian footballer and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12232019", "label": "Integration by substitution", "source": "In calculus, integration by substitution, also known as u-substitution, reverse chain rule or change of variables, is a method for evaluating integrals and antiderivatives. It is the counterpart to the chain rule for differentiation, and can loosely be thought of as using the chain rule \"backwards\".", "target": "method of integration", "baseline_candidates": ["change of variables", "method for evaluating integrals"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18389088", "label": "theSkyNet", "source": "TheSkyNet (stylized theSkyNet) was an astronomy research project which used volunteer Internet-connected computers to carry out research in astronomy. It was an initiative of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), a joint venture of Curtin University and the University of Western Australia. TheSkyNet had two projects, Sourcefinder and POGS. Both projects have completed. TheSkyNet Sourcefinder aimed to test and refine automatic radio sourcefinding algorithms in preparation for radio galaxy surveys using the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder and the Square Kilometre Array. TheSkyNet POGS used Spectral Energy Distribution fitting to calculate characteristics of many galaxies using images taken by the Pan-STARRS PS1 optical telescope in Hawaii.", "target": "citizen science project", "baseline_candidates": ["citizen science project"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27926131", "label": "Academia", "source": "Academia (named after Platonic Academy) was a Soviet publishing house prior to the merger with Goslitizdat. The publishing house employed many prominent Russian graphic artists (Nikolai Akimov, Veniamin Belkin, Leonid Khizhinsky, Vladimir Konashevich, Mark Kirnarsky, Dmitry Mitrokhin, Leo Mülhaupt, Sergei Pozharsky, Pavel Shillingovsky, etc.) and issued over one thousand books during its existence (1922–1937). Academia, in particular, published the first translation of One Thousand and One Nights into Russian directly from the Arabic source, made by Mikhail Salye.", "target": "Soviet publishing house", "baseline_candidates": ["publisher"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5263213", "label": "Derry Township", "source": "Derry Township is a township in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 24,679 at the 2010 census, up from 21,273 at the 2000 census. Hershey, the site of the well-known Hershey's chocolate factory and its affiliated amusement park, are located within the township. Pennsylvania State University's Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and the Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital are also located on a large tract of land in the township.", "target": "township in southern Dauphin County, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12164637", "label": "University of Valencia", "source": "The University of Valencia (Valencian: Universitat de València [univeɾsiˈtad de vaˈlensia]; also known as UV) is a public research university located in the city of Valencia, Spain. It is one of the oldest surviving universities in Spain, and the oldest in the Valencian Community. It is regarded as one of Spain's leading academic institutions. The University was founded in 1499, and currently has around 55,000 students. Most of the courses are given through the medium of Spanish, but the university has promised to increase the number of courses available in Valencian. Moreover, in some degrees part of the teaching is in English. It is located in the Mediterranean Spanish baseline, in the city of Valencia which is the capital and most populous city of the autonomous community of Valencia and the third largest city in Spain, with a population of 829,705 in 2014. One of its campuses is located in the metropolitan area of Valencia, in the municipalities of Burjassot and Paterna. The current chancellor is Esteban Morcillo Sánchez.", "target": "university in Valencia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["public university", "open-access publisher"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q80281640", "label": "Pien Dicke", "source": "Pien Dicke (born 28 August 1999) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who plays as a forward.", "target": "Dutch field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24896328", "label": "Patricia Degener", "source": "Patricia “Patsy” Degener (1924–2008) was an American artist who specialized in ceramics. She helped found Craft Alliance, a St. Louis-based gallery and crafts cooperative, in 1964.", "target": "American ceramist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61679300", "label": "Ruby Middleton Forsythe", "source": "Ruby Middleton Forsythe (1905-1992) was an elementary school teacher in South Carolina. She was known for providing education to the African-American community during the \"Jim Crow\" era. She was the recipient of four honorary doctorates, with a career that spanned more than six decades.", "target": "Educator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12411856", "label": "Shimon Amsalem", "source": "Shimon Yaakov Amsalem (שמעון אמסלם; born November 10, 1966) is an Israeli former basketball player. He played the forward and center positions. He played in the Israeli Premier Basketball League and for the Israeli National Basketball Team.", "target": "Israeli basketball player (1966-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3108470", "label": "Mohammed al-Ifrani", "source": "Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Ifrani al-Susi al-Marrakushi (Arabic: محمد الصغير الإفراني) (1669/1670–c. 1742/1743), called al-Saghir, was a Moroccan historian and biographer.", "target": "Moroccan historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q375228", "label": "Astryna", "source": "Astryna (Belarusian: Астрына) or Ostrino (in Russian: Острино; in Polish: Ostryna; in Yiddish: אַסטרין) is a town in Grodno Region in Belarus. In 2015, its population was 1,847 inhabitants.The village is located 19km north-east of Shchuchyn and 47km east of Grodno.", "target": "urban-type settlement in Belarus", "baseline_candidates": ["urban settlement in Belarus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12457054", "label": "Sido Kanhu Murmu University", "source": "Sido Kanhu Murmu University (SKMU), formerly Siddhu Kanhu University, is a public university situated in the Santhal Parganas region of Jharkhand state in eastern India. It has its headquarters at Dumka, the second capital of Jharkhand.", "target": "public university in Dumka, Jharkhand", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q540779", "label": "Obermarchtal", "source": "Obermarchtal is a town in the district of Alb-Donau in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.", "target": "municipality in Baden-Württemberg, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16313577", "label": "Nardana Pureeswarar Temple", "source": "Nardana Pureeswarar Temple (நர்த்தனபுரீஸ்வரர் கோயில்) is a Hindu temple located at Thalayalangadu in the Tiruvarur district of Tamil Nadu, India. The temple is dedicated to Shiva.", "target": "temple in India", "baseline_candidates": ["Hindu temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q708703", "label": "Gerolf of Holland", "source": "Gerolf or Gerulf (c. 850 – 895/896) was the second count of this name who is attested in the area of Friesland (which also included Holland at the time). Gerolf's main area of power seems to have been in Kennemerland. Count Gerolf is often regarded as the founder of the County of Holland, although the actual name \"Holland\" is from a later time. His ancestry is unclear, but he may have been a son or, more likely, a grandson of the earlier Gerolf, who was a count in the area of Frisia at the time of the reign of Emperor Louis the Pious (fl. 833) and who later joined a monastery. The earlier Gerolf died in 855. There is some limited and vague evidence that this earlier Gerolf was a son of a certain Theodoric, who in turn supposedly descended from the Frisian king Redbad (d. 719). Count Gerolf is often identified as the father of Count Dirk I and seen as the founder of the first house of the Counts of Holland, which ruled the county until it was inherited by John II of Hainaut in 1299.", "target": "Count of Holland (850-898)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q545610", "label": "Mikael Gustafsson", "source": "Mikael Gustafsson is a Finnish-born Swedish politician, who from 2011 until 2014, was a Member of the European Parliament, representing Sweden. He is a member of the Left PartyHe served as Chair of the Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality from 2011 to 2014.", "target": "Finnish-born Swedish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15516821", "label": "Lyman Wight", "source": "Lyman Wight (May 9, 1796 – March 31, 1858) was an early leader in the Latter Day Saint movement. He was the leader of the Latter Day Saints in Daviess County, Missouri, in 1838. In 1841, he was ordained a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. After the death of Joseph Smith resulted in a succession crisis, Wight led his own break-off group of Latter Day Saints to Texas, where they created a settlement. While in Texas, Wight broke with the main body of the group led by Brigham Young. Wight was ordained president of his own church, but he later sided with the claims of William Smith, and eventually of Joseph Smith III. After his death, most of the \"Wightites\" (as members of this church were called) joined with the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS Church).", "target": "Apostle in the Latter Day Saint movement (1796-1858)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q504779", "label": "kasaya", "source": "Kāṣāya (Sanskrit: काषाय, kāṣāya; Pali: kāsāva/kāsāya; Sinhala: කසාවත; Chinese: 袈裟; pinyin: jiāshā; Japanese: けさ kesa; Korean: 가사 gasa; Vietnamese: cà-sa, Tibetan: ཆོས་གོས, THL: chögö) are the robes of fully ordained Buddhist monks and nuns, named after a brown or saffron dye. In Sanskrit and Pali, these robes are also given the more general term cīvara, which references the robes without regard to color.", "target": "robe worn by fully-ordained Buddhist monks and nuns, pieced out of discarded clothing", "baseline_candidates": ["religious clothing", "Chinese clothing"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12203156", "label": "Taldara", "source": "Tall ad Dirrah (Arabic: تل الدرة, also spelled Tell Dirrah, Tall Derah, Talldarra or Tell ad-Dura) is a Syrian village in the Salamiyah Subdistrict in Salamiyah District, located southeast of Hama. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Taldara had a population of 5,986 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Ismailis.", "target": "village in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3534718", "label": "1993 Virginia Slims of Florida", "source": "The 1993 Virginia Slims of Florida was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the Delray Beach Tennis Center in Delray Beach, Florida in the United States that was part of Tier II of the 1993 WTA Tour. It was the 15th edition of the tournament and was held from March 1 through March 7, 1993. First-seeded Steffi Graf won the singles title, her fourth at the event, and earned $75,000 first-prize money as well as 300 ranking points.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition", "Virginia Slims of Florida"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1686043", "label": "The Lark", "source": "The Lark (French: L'Alouette) is a 1952 play about Joan of Arc by the French playwright Jean Anouilh. It was presented on Broadway in English in 1955, starring Julie Harris as Joan and Boris Karloff as Pierre Cauchon. It was produced by Kermit Bloomgarden. Lillian Hellman made the English adaptation and Leonard Bernstein composed the incidental music. The two stars of the play reprised their roles in a 1957 television production of the play, as part of the anthology series Hallmark Hall of Fame. A different television adaptation aired in 1958 in Australia. There is another English translation by Christopher Fry.", "target": "1953 play written by Jean Anouilh", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5946617", "label": "Hurleston", "source": "Hurleston is a civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England, which lies to the north west of Nantwich. The parish is predominantly rural with scattered farms and buildings and no settlements. Nearby villages include Barbridge, Burland, Radmore Green, Rease Heath and Stoke Bank. According to the 2001 census, the parish had a population of 64. At the 2011 Census the population remained less than 100. Details are included in the civil parish of Stoke, Cheshire East.", "target": "civil parish in Cheshire East, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28220169", "label": "Algeria at the 1967 Mediterranean Games", "source": "Algeria (ALG) competed at the 1967 Mediterranean Games in Tunis, Tunisia.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at the Mediterranean Games"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21913344", "label": "Crowdy Head", "source": "Crowdy Head is a headland on the coast of New South Wales, Australia, 7km from Harrington between Forster and Port Macquarie. The head is mostly cleared and was quarried between 1895 and 1901 for the Manning River training wall.Crowdy Head is the site of Crowdy Head Light, a 24 feet (7.3 m) tall lighthouse built in 1878. And has a small harbour with a dedicated Marine Rescue NSW rescue boat, It is also home to Crowdy Head Surf Life Saving Club.", "target": "locality in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["headland", "locality", "suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65048771", "label": "Cornelius Kok II", "source": "Corneli(u)s Kok II (1778 in Kamiesberg – 1858 in Campbell) was a leader (\"captain\") of the Griqua people in South Africa.", "target": "South African politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5207501", "label": "Dabney", "source": "Dabney is an unincorporated community in Pulaski County, Kentucky, United States. Dabney is located on Kentucky Route 39 7 miles (11 km) north-northeast of Somerset. The Dabney Post Office, which closed in the 1960s, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.", "target": "township in Pulaski County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1019548", "label": "Bílá", "source": "Bílá is a municipality and village in Liberec District in the Liberec Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,000 inhabitants.", "target": "village in Liberec District of Liberec region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5974495", "label": "ISSOW", "source": "Integrated safe system of work (ISSOW) is used in hazardous industry to request, review, approve and document tasks to be carried out by frontline workers. It integrates permit-to-work, risk assessment and isolation management under a single electronic system, providing safety improvements to the user. Thought to have originated in the North Sea upstream oil industry it was actually used several years before within the Power Industry, ISSoW software now forms a significant segment of the enterprise software market.", "target": "standard in the Petroleum industry", "baseline_candidates": ["technical standard"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3409267", "label": "Conviction Kitchen", "source": "Conviction Kitchen is a Canadian documentary/reality television series that premiered September 13, 2009, on Citytv. Starring chef Marc Thuet and his wife Biana Zorich, the series documents the process of launching a restaurant, Conviction, in Toronto, to be staffed by rehabilitated ex-convicts.A second series of Conviction Kitchen was recorded in Vancouver, British Columbia during the summer of 2010. The renowned but rundown restaurant Delilah's, located at 1789 Comox Street at Denman St, was temporarily rebranded as the Vancouver-based Conviction Kitchen. An Australian version of the show was aired in 2011.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16319282", "label": "Tartus", "source": "Tartus (Arabic: طَرْطُوس / ALA-LC: Ṭarṭūs; known in the County of Tripoli as Tortosa and also transliterated Tartous) is a city on the Mediterranean coast of Syria. It is the second largest port city in Syria (after Latakia), and the largest city in Tartus Governorate. Until the 1970s, Tartus was under the governance of 'Latakia' governor, then it became a separate governorate. The population is 115,769 (2004 census). In the summer it is a vacation spot for many Syrians. Many vacation compounds and resorts are located in the region. The port holds a small Russian naval facility.", "target": "city in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["city", "big city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20383955", "label": "Bader bin Saud bin Mohammed Al Saud", "source": "Bader bin Saud bin Mohammed bin Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Faisal bin Turki Al Saud (Arabic: بدر بن سعود بن محمد بن عبدالعزيز بن سعود بن فيصل بن تركي آل سعود) (born 27 November 1969), is a Saudi Public Affairs Writer under the nom de plume Bader bin Saud, Paratrooper Brigadier General of the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Interior, Assistant Professor, and previously president of the Saudi Students Clubs in the United Kingdom and Ireland. He was the Deputy Commander of the Special Forces for the Hajj and Umrah And the Assistant Commander for Special Force Security at Makkah’s Grand Mosque. His father is Prince Saud bin Mohammed Al Saud, and his mother Princess Alanoud bint Abdullah bin Abdulmohsen Alfirm. Two of his siblings are known poets, Prince Saad Al Saud, known as \"Munadi,\" (the caller). The other is Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud Al Saud, known as \"Alsamir\", (the one who stays up all night) Prince Bader has nine children – Prince Faisal, Prince Khalid, Prince Saud, Prince Fahad, Prince Mohammed, Prince Salman, Prince Abdulaziz, Princess Reem and Princess Aljohara.", "target": "Saudi Arabian Writer, Researcher and Officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7923421", "label": "Vestergrenopsis", "source": "Vestergrenopsis is a lichenized genus of fungi within the Placynthiaceae family.", "target": "genus of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17381314", "label": "Farewell, Mr. President", "source": "Farewell, Mr. President (or Goodbye, Mr. President; Finnish: Jäähyväiset presidentille) is a 1987 Finnish thriller and action film directed by Matti Kassila and starring Hannu Lauri. It tells the story of a bitter waiter planning to assassinate the president. The film is based on a 1979 thriller novel of the same name by Pentti Kirstilä. Unlike contemporary Finnish films, the film is a thrilling film strongly influenced by post-classic Hollywood films.With a budget of more than FIM 3 million, the film once received little attention from viewers and its reception were mostly mixed. However, Hannu Lauri, who played the lead, was awarded the Jussi Award for his chilling performance.", "target": "1987 film directed by Matti Kassila", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49452944", "label": "Sphenophorus pontederiae", "source": "Sphenophorus pontederiae is a species of snout or bark beetle in the family Curculionidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17017045", "label": "Philophobia", "source": "Philophobia is the second studio album by Scottish indie rock band Arab Strap. It was released on 20 April 1998 on Chemikal Underground.Philophobia peaked at number 37 on the UK Albums Chart, as well as number 3 on the UK Independent Albums Chart.The 2010 reissue edition of the album comes with an additional bonus disc.", "target": "album by Arab Strap", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1009276", "label": "Trelew", "source": "Trelew (Spanish pronunciation: [tɾeˈlew], from Welsh: tref \"town\" and the name of the founder, Lewis Jones) is a city in the eastern part of the Chubut Province of Argentina. Located in Patagonia, the city is the largest and most populous in the low valley of the Chubut River, with 97,915 inhabitants as of 2010. The Trelew municipality is part of the Rawson Department, whose capital, Rawson, is also the provincial capital. Trelew is an important commercial and industrial centre for the region and is the main hub for wool processing, accounting for 90 percent of activity in Argentina. The produce of this industry is mainly shipped and exported through Puerto Madryn and Puerto Deseado. Trelew is home to the Museum of Paleontology Egidio Feruglio, showcasing the paleontological heritage of the Patagonic region, and considered one of the most important of its kind in South America and the Astronomic and Planetary Observatory. The city is served by the Almirante Marcos A. Zar Airport, of both civilian and military use. The airport's runway is shared with the Almirante Zar Naval Base, home of the Lockheed P-3 Orion squadron of the Argentine Naval Aviation.", "target": "city", "baseline_candidates": ["big city", "city", "municipality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18644639", "label": "Miha Kralj", "source": "Miha Kralj (Slovene: [míha králj]; born 22 August 1949) is a Slovene composer, singer, performer and record producer. He is a pioneer in the electronic, ambient and new-age musical genres in Slovenia and former SFR Yugoslavia. He is also called \"Yugoslavian Jean-Michel Jarre\".", "target": "Slovene musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7149318", "label": "Paul Bennett", "source": "Paul Bennett (born 30 January 1961) is an English former footballer who played in the Football League for Port Vale.", "target": "British footballer (born 1961)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2917445", "label": "Green Lantern: Rebirth", "source": "Green Lantern: Rebirth was a six-issue monthly American comic book limited series written by Geoff Johns and illustrated by Ethan Van Sciver. Published by DC Comics between October 2004 and May 2005, the series featured characters from throughout the sixty-year history of Green Lantern comics. The storyline follows the \"rebirth\" of the Silver Age Green Lantern Hal Jordan as he overcomes fear itself in the form of the cosmic entity Parallax. The series starred various members of the intergalactic police force known as the Green Lantern Corps, Kyle Rayner, John Stewart and Guy Gardner. It revived elements of the Green Lantern mythos including the Guardians of the Universe, Kilowog and the villain Sinestro, while introducing new concepts such as the emotional spectrum. In addition, the GLC power ring's flaw of being unable to directly affect the color yellow is significantly weakened, allowing experienced Corps members to overcome it if they can conquer their fear.", "target": "DC comic book series", "baseline_candidates": ["limited series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1980970", "label": "México Posible", "source": "México Posible (English: Possible Mexico) was a Mexican political party of brief existence which took part in the midterm 2003 Mexican legislative election. The party was led by Patricia Mercado. Due to its not achieving 2.0% of the national vote the party lost its national registration before the Federal Electoral Institute and thus the party was disbanded. This political group was the main cell for the new Alternativa Social y Campesina.", "target": "Defunct political party in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7174658", "label": "Peter Hibbs", "source": "Peter Kenney Hibbs (c. 1757 – 12 September 1847) was an English mariner and a member of the First Fleet to Australia in 1788. An able seaman on HMS Sirius, Hibbs was also one of few non-convict First Fleet members known to have settled in the new Colony of New South Wales in 1788.Hibbs also claimed to have come earlier to Australia in 1770 as a crewman on board HMS Endeavour with Captain James Cook, and to have stepped ashore at Botany Bay with Joseph Banks. However no primary independent evidence exists to verify these claims.Remaining in Australia after 1788, Hibbs played a significant role in the exploration of Tasmania and the eastern seaboard of Australia. In 1798-99, as master (captain) of the colonial built Norfolk, and chosen by his previous master (captain) of HMS Sirius, John Hunter, who was now governor of New South Wales, Hibbs commanded the first vessel to circumnavigate Van Dieman’s Land (Tasmania). This voyage proved that Tasmania was an island and proved the existence of Bass Strait. The discovery of the Bass Straight shortened the travel distance from England to Sydney, as previously the ships had sailed to the south of Tasmania. In 1799, as master of the colonial built Norfolk, and chosen by his previous master of HMS Sirius, John Hunter, who was now governor of New South Wales, Hibbs commanded the first vessel to sail north from Port Jackson (Sydney) to explore and chart Moreton Bay and Hervey Bay.In the 1798-99 voyage around Tasmania, Hibbs had been carrying Matthew.", "target": "Australian settler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4620141", "label": "2010–2011 ISU Junior Grand Prix", "source": "The 2010–11 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the 14th season of the ISU Junior Grand Prix, a series of international junior level competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the 2010–11 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, which was for senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. Skaters earned points towards qualifying for the Junior Grand Prix Final at each of the seven Junior Grand Prix events. The top eight skaters/teams in the series from each discipline met at the 2010–11 Junior Grand Prix Final, which was held concurrently with the senior Grand Prix Final.", "target": "figure skating series", "baseline_candidates": ["figure skating series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4747180", "label": "Ammar Bilal", "source": "Ammar Bilal (Arabic: عمار بلال; born 17 May 1993) is a Saudi Arabian footballer who currently plays as a striker for Al-Taraji.", "target": "Saudi Arabian soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17403843", "label": "Harlon Carter", "source": "Harlon Bronson Carter (August 10, 1913 – November 19, 1991) was an advocate for gun rights in the United States and a leader of the National Rifle Association. Carter's 1977 election as NRA Executive Vice President marked a turning point for the organization. During his tenure, from 1977 to 1985, he shifted the organization's focus from promoting marksmanship and sports shooting towards strident advocacy for less restrictive gun laws. Under Carter's leadership, the NRA became less compromising on gun rights issues. It also tripled its membership and gained considerable political influence.Carter killed 15-year-old Ramón Casiano in his youth and was convicted of Casiano's murder, although this conviction was later overturned. This incident was not generally known during most of Carter's leadership of the NRA, but rose to greater prominence and infamy later.", "target": "American activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3520573", "label": "The Delta", "source": "The Delta is an American dramatic LGBT film directed by Ira Sachs. It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 1996. The 85 minute film was shot with 16mm film. It won the \"Outstanding Emerging Talent\" award at Outfest in 1997, and was also nominated for the \"Producer's Award\" (for producer Margot Bridger) at the 1997 and 1998 Independent Spirit Awards.", "target": "1996 film by Ira Sachs", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5294549", "label": "Donald Ivey", "source": "Donald G. Ivey (6 February 1922 - 25 June 2018) was the principal of the University of Toronto's New College from 1963 to 1974.", "target": "Principal of the New College, University of Toronto, 1963 to 1974", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18511742", "label": "The Visit", "source": "Merry company with two men and two women, also known as The Visit, is an oil-on-panel painting by the Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch. It is an example of a Merry Company, a popular form of genre painting in Dutch Golden Age painting showing a group of figures, who are not meant to be identified as portraits, enjoying each other's company. It is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. The painting was documented by Hofstede de Groot in 1910, who wrote:192. TWO LADIES AND TWO GENTLEMEN IN AN INTERIOR. Sm. 34. The party are assembled in the left-hand corner of a room, beside a large window, the upper part of which is fastened back. At the left corner of the table stands a girl, pouring out wine; she wears a red jacket trimmed with white fur, a blue skirt, and a large white apron. A young gentleman, wearing a white costume, with a broad collar and a slouch hat, stands behind the table looking at the girl; he leans with his right hand on a chair-back, and holds a pipe in his left. To the right of the table sits a gentleman in a black cape with long curls which conceal his profile; he takes the arm of a girl, who sits beside him and regards him with a watchful and mischievous look. In the right foreground lies his slouch hat. In the background to the right is a bed with curtains; above it hangs a portrait of a man, on the left.", "target": "painting by Pieter de Hooch", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q882998", "label": "Virginia Holocaust Museum", "source": "The Virginia Holocaust Museum (VHM) is a public history museum located in Richmond, Virginia, United States. The museum is dedicated to depicting the Holocaust through the personal stories of its victims.", "target": "museum", "baseline_candidates": ["Holocaust museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54944087", "label": "Lynton Richards Kistler", "source": "Lynton Richards Kistler (1897–1993) was an American master printmaker, small book publisher, and author. He became known as the best stone lithographer in the United States, at the peak of his career in 1950s. He owned and operated the lithography press, Kistler of Los Angeles.", "target": "American lithographer, (1897–1993)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7462503", "label": "Shaj", "source": "Shaj (Persian: شاج, also Romanized as Shāj, Shāch, and Shāsh) is a village in Afin Rural District, Zohan District, Zirkuh County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 187, in 56 families.", "target": "village in South Khorasan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q70763", "label": "Sophie von Dönhoff", "source": "Countess Sophie Friederike Juliane von Dönhoff (17 October 1768 – 28 January 1838) was a German lady-in-waiting and a morganatic spouse by bigamy to King Frederick William II of Prussia.", "target": "morganatic wife of Frederick William II of Prussia", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6259684", "label": "John Surman Carden", "source": "Admiral John Surman Carden (15 August 1771 – 22 April 1858) was an officer of the British Royal Navy in the early nineteenth century. Although the majority of his service was against the French during the Napoleonic Wars, he is best remembered for the action of 25 October 1812, an engagement against a larger American frigate during the War of 1812 in which his ship HMS Macedonian was captured. Carden was criticised for the loss of his ship, specifically his handling of the vessel during the action. Following his defeat in October 1812 he never served again in an active capacity, but he remained in the Navy and continued to gradually rise though the ranks in retirement, eventually becoming a full admiral before his death in 1858.", "target": "British Royal Navy officer (1771-1858)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65168394", "label": "vinbarbital", "source": "Vinbarbital is a hypnotic drug which is a barbiturate derivative. It was developed by Sharp and Dohme in 1939.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11315697", "label": "Tygem", "source": "Tygem (Korean: 타이젬바둑) is an internet go server owned by South Korean company TongYang Online. Popular in Asia, their website states that over 500 professional Go players use their service.Tygem was founded as ICBL by Cho Hun-hyun in 2000, and renamed to Tygem in 2001, invested by Tongyang Group and JoongAng Ilbo.In October 2015, AlphaGo from DeepMind beat the European Go champion Fan Hui five to zero. Eight million positions from human games on the Tygem server were used to train AlphaGo.", "target": "South Korean Go server", "baseline_candidates": ["game server", "website"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3905149", "label": "Pinched", "source": "Pinched is a 1917 American short comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. A print of the film is held by the Museum of Modern Art, and it has been released on DVD. Like many American films of the time, Pinched was subject to cuts by city and state film censorship boards. The Chicago Board of Censors required a cut of scene with a man thumbing his nose.", "target": "1917 film", "baseline_candidates": ["short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10787360", "label": "Patagonian weasel", "source": "The Patagonian weasel (Lyncodon patagonicus) is a small mustelid that is the only member of the genus Lyncodon. Its geographic range is the Pampas of western Argentina and sections of Chile. An early mention of the animal is in the Journal of Syms Covington, who sailed with Charles Darwin on his epic voyage aboard HMS Beagle.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2750423", "label": "1595 in literature", "source": "This article is a summary of the literary events and publications of 1595.", "target": "literature-related events during 1595", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78268", "label": "Christian Wilhelm Niedner", "source": "Christian Wilhelm Niedner (9 August 1797 – 13 August 1865) was a German church historian and theologian born in Oberwinkel, which today is part of the town of Waldenburg, Saxony. He studied theology at the University of Leipzig, where in 1826 he received his habilitation. In 1829 he was appointed associate professor, and in 1838 became a full professor of theology at Leipzig. From 1845 onward, he was head of the Leipzig Historical and Theological Society. In 1850 he resigned his professorship and moved to Wittenberg, where he focused on private studies. In 1859 Niedner was appointed professor of historical theology at Berlin, and was also Consistorialrath to the Province of Brandenburg. His best written effort was the highly regarded Geschichte der christlichen Kirche (\"History of the Christian Church\"); (1846, second edition 1866). In 1829 he edited and published Heinrich Gottlieb Tzschirner's Der Fall des Heidenthums (\"The Fall of Paganism\"). From 1845 to 1865 he was editor of the journal Zeitschrift für historische Theologie (\"Journal of Historical Theology\").", "target": "German historian and theologian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2110334", "label": "Theridion gabardi", "source": "Theridion gabardi, is a species of spider of the genus Theridion. It is endemic to Sri Lanka.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23771352", "label": "Paul McLachlan", "source": "Major General Paul David McLachlan, is a retired senior Australian Army officer. He commanded the 1st Division from November 2015 to December 2018.", "target": "Australian military officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1853493", "label": "Plagiotremus spilistius", "source": "Plagiotremus spilistius is a species of combtooth blenny found in the western Pacific ocean. This species reaches a length of 17.4 centimetres (6.9 in) SL. It is the type species of the genus Plagiotremus.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3979297", "label": "Sérékalé", "source": "Sérékalé is a town and arrondissement in the Borgou Department of Benin. It is an administrative division under the jurisdiction of the commune of Nikki. According to the population census conducted by the Institut National de la Statistique Benin on February 15, 2002, the arrondissement had a total population of 10,818.", "target": "arrondissement and town in Borgou Department, Benin", "baseline_candidates": ["arrondissement of Benin"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2040477", "label": "Ivan Privalov", "source": "Ivan Vasilyevich Privalov (Russian: Иван Васильевич Привалов) (born in 1902 in Kharkiv; died in 1974 in Kharkiv) was a Ukrainian football player.", "target": "Soviet footballer (1902-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1982815", "label": "Eva Dyrberg", "source": "Eva Dyrberg (born 17 February 1980) is a Danish former tennis player. As a junior player, she won 1998 Wimbledon Championships with Jelena Kostanić and 1998 US Open with Kim Clijsters. In 1998, Dyrberg was also ranked World No. 1 in junior doubles and was named ITF Junior Girls Doubles World Champion. During her professional career, she won four singles and five doubles events organized by the International Tennis Federation, defeating players such as Magdalena Maleeva, Tathiana Garbin, Maria Elena Camerin, Nicole Pratt, and reaching one doubles final at WTA Tour, at Sanex Trophy in 2000. She retired from professional tennis after the 2003 Australian Open.", "target": "Danish tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6524886", "label": "Leon Serafim", "source": "Leon Angelo Serafim (born May 23, 1945) is an American academic. He is a Japanologist, linguistic historian and professor emeritus of the University of Hawaii. The widely accepted linguistics term \"Japonic languages\" was coined by Serafim to identify and characterise the Japanese which is spoken on the main islands of Japan and the Ryukyuan spoken on the island of Okinawa and the Ryukyu Islands.", "target": "American linguist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23020967", "label": "captain 2nd rank", "source": "Captain 2nd rank (Russian: Капитан 2-го ранга, romanized: Kapitan 2-go ranga, lit. 'Captain of the 2nd rank') is a rank used by the Russian Navy and a number of former communist states. The rank is the middle rank in the staff officer's career group. The rank is equivalent to Lieutenant colonel in armies and air forces. Within NATO forces, the rank is rated as OF-4 and is equivalent to Commander in English speaking navies.", "target": "Russian military rank", "baseline_candidates": ["military rank"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23820861", "label": "Dobřany", "source": "Dobřany (German: Dobschan) is a village and municipality in Rychnov nad Kněžnou District in the Hradec Králové Region of the Czech Republic.", "target": "village in Rychnov nad Kněžnou District of Hradec Králové region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28509244", "label": "Ust-Mil", "source": "Ust-Mil (Russian: Усть-Миль) is a rural locality (a selo), the only inhabited locality, and the administrative center of Milsky Rural Okrug in Ust-Maysky District of the Sakha Republic, Russia, located 131 kilometers (81 mi) from Ust-Maya, the administrative center of the district. Its population as of the 2010 Census was 292, down from 405 recorded during the 2002 Census.", "target": "human settlement in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4547256", "label": "110 Grant Apartments", "source": "110 Grant Apartments is a 303-ft (101 m) tall skyscraper in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was constructed from 1983–1985 and has 34 floors. It is the 28th tallest building in Minneapolis.", "target": "skyscraper in Minneapolis", "baseline_candidates": ["skyscraper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2031450", "label": "Orosh", "source": "Orosh (or Albanian: Oroshi) is a small village in Mirditë within the county of Lezhë in the northwest of the Republic of Albania. Geographically, it is located inside the mountainous region of northern Albania in the Valley of Fan. The seat of the former municipality was the town of Reps. The former Orosh Abbey was located in the municipality. Terenzio Tocci gathered the Mirdita chieftains on April 26, 1911, in Orosh, proclaimed the independence of Albania, raised the flag of Albania and established the provisional government.", "target": "Municipal unit in Lezhë County, Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["Administrative unit", "municipality of Albania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3051317", "label": "Szczecin Dąbie", "source": "Szczecin Dąbie (Polish: stacja kolejowa Szczecin Dąbie) is a railway station in the city of Szczecin, West Pomeranian, Poland. The train services are operated by PKP and Przewozy Regionalne.", "target": "railway station in Szczecin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7384483", "label": "Ryan Sadowski", "source": "Ryan Keith Sadowski (born October 4, 1982) is a retired American professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the San Francisco Giants and in Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) for the Lotte Giants. He is currently the Director of International Scouting for the Lotte Giants.", "target": "American college baseball player, minor league baseball player, Major League Baseball player, pitcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q544449", "label": "Tanya Atwater", "source": "Tanya Atwater (born 1942) is an American geophysicist and marine geologist who specializes in plate tectonics. She is particularly renowned for her early research on the plate tectonic history of western North America.", "target": "American geophysicist and marine geologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6176101", "label": "Jeffrey Klein", "source": "Jeffrey David Klein (born July 10, 1960) is an American politician and a member of the Democratic Party. He represented the New York State Senate's 34th District, serving parts of Bronx and Westchester Counties from 2005 to 2018. Klein also served as Deputy Democratic Conference Leader.Klein served in the New York State Assembly from 1994 until 2004, when he was elected to the New York State Senate. From January 2011 to April 2018, Klein led the Independent Democratic Conference (IDC), a group of Democratic state senators who formed a separate conference and allied themselves with Senate Republicans. Klein and his IDC colleagues rejoined the Senate Democratic Conference in April 2018.In the September 2018 Democratic primary election, Klein was defeated by lawyer and first-time candidate Alessandra Biaggi in what amounted to a major upset for Klein and his former IDC colleagues. Klein remained on the general election ballot on a minor party line and was defeated by Biaggi again.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3825486", "label": "Cairani", "source": "Cairani (Hispanicized spelling of Aymara K'ayrani, k'ayra frog, -ni a suffix, \"the one with the frog (or frogs)\") is one of six districts of the Candarave Province in Peru.", "target": "district of Candarave, Tacna, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56367310", "label": "Sarwar Sarkhosh", "source": "Sarwar Sarkhosh (Dari-Persian: سرور سرخوش) was a singer and one of the Hazara nationalists in Afghanistan. He is the elder brother of Dawood Sarkhosh, a famous singer of the Hazara people.", "target": "Hazara nationalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5813862", "label": "Kach", "source": "Kach (Persian: كچ; also known as Kūchū-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Talang Rural District, Talang District, Qasr-e Qand County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 376, in 89 families.", "target": "village in Talang Rural District, Talang District, Qasr-e Qand County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25565747", "label": "Aotus", "source": "Night monkeys, also known as owl monkeys or douroucoulis (), are nocturnal New World monkeys of the genus Aotus, the only member of the family Aotidae (). The genus comprises eleven species which are found across Panama and much of South America in primary and secondary forests, tropical rainforests and cloud forests up to 2,400 metres (7,900 ft). Night monkeys have large eyes which improve their vision at night, while their ears are mostly hidden, giving them their name Aotus, meaning \"earless\". Night monkeys are the only truly nocturnal monkeys with the exception of some cathemeral populations of Azara's night monkey, who have irregular bursts of activity during day and night. They have a varied repertoire of vocalisations and live in small family groups of a mated pair and their immature offspring. Night monkeys have monochromatic vision which improves their ability to detect visual cues at night. Night monkeys are threatened by habitat loss, the pet trade, hunting for bushmeat, and by biomedical research. They constitute one of the few monkey species that are affected by the often deadly human malaria protozoan Plasmodium falciparum, making them useful as non-human primate experimental subjects in malaria research. The Peruvian night monkey is classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as an Endangered species, while four are Vulnerable species, four are Least-concern species, and two are data deficient. The name “Night Monkey” is briefly used by Peter Parker (aka Spider-Man) in the 2019 film Spider-Man: Far From Home.", "target": "genus of mammals", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18141184", "label": "Acanthoderes amplitoris", "source": "Acanthoderes amplitoris is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Chemsak and Hovore in 2002.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18975403", "label": "Ovarian cystadenoma", "source": "Ovarian cystadenoma is a cystic benign tumor of the ovary. Two types are recognized: serous and mucinous.", "target": "Human disease", "baseline_candidates": ["disease (class)", "ovarian benign neoplasm", "benign epithelial neoplasm", "disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3315686", "label": "Eudendrium rameum", "source": "Eudendrium rameum is a marine species of cnidaria, a hydroid (Hydrozoa) in the family Eudendriidae.", "target": "species of cnidarian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6135618", "label": "Sunshine After the Rain", "source": "\"Sunshine After the Rain\" is a song by German recording artist Alexander Klaws. The song was written by Svein Finneide, Aslak Johnsen, Ken Ingwersen, and Jon Rydningen, with production helmed by the latter, and recorded for Klaws's second album Here I Am (2004). Released as the album's third single, it reached the top five of the German Singles Chart and entered the top twenty in Austria.", "target": "Alexander Klaws song", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5000093", "label": "Burns United Methodist Church", "source": "Burns United Methodist Church is located in Des Moines, Iowa, United States. Its previous building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.", "target": "church building in Iowa, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["protestant church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50912251", "label": "Asteropsis", "source": "Asteropsis is a genus of South American plant in the tribe Astereae within the family Asteraceae. SpeciesAsteropsis macrocephala Less. - Uruguay, Rio Grande do Sul Asteropsis megapotamica (Spreng.) Marchesi & al. - Rio Grande do Sul.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5797584", "label": "superior anastomotic vein", "source": "The superior anastomotic vein, also known as the vein of Trolard, is a superficial cerebral vein grouped with the superior cerebral veins. The vein was eponymously named after the 18th century anatomist Jean Baptiste Paulin Trolard. The vein anastomoses with the middle cerebral vein and the superior sagittal sinus.", "target": "also known as the vein of Trolard", "baseline_candidates": ["vein", "superficial cerebral vein"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64010418", "label": "Marcus Velado-Tsegaye", "source": "Marcus Velado-Tsegaye (born 1 July 2001) is a professional soccer player who plays as a forward.", "target": "Canadian association footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85664344", "label": "United Nations Security Council Resolution 800", "source": "United Nations Security Council resolution 800, adopted without a vote on 8 January 1993, after examining the application of the Slovak Republic for membership in the United Nations, the Council recommended to the General Assembly that Slovakia be admitted.", "target": "United Nations Security Council resolution", "baseline_candidates": ["United Nations Security Council resolution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q601918", "label": "Antonio Faraò", "source": "Antonio Faraò (born January 19, 1965) is an Italian jazz pianist.", "target": "Italian musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6811146", "label": "Melampus", "source": "Melampus is a genus of small air-breathing salt marsh snails, pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Ellobiidae.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6246908", "label": "John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law", "source": "The John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law is a student-run law review covering legal scholarship in the field of intellectual property, established in 2001 at the John Marshall Law School (Chicago). The journal publishes four issues per year, which are available on LexisNexis and Westlaw. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has cited the journal as a source.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["periodical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6222921", "label": "John Bramblitt", "source": "John Bramblitt (born 1971) is a blind painter of American origin. He is currently the only blind muralist in the world with murals in New York and Dallas. Bramblitt is known for his bright colors and a style that is a mixture of impressionism combined with the modern feel of pop art. Bramblitt's art has gone to over 120 countries around the world, and he is known for his interactive speaking events, lectures, and free art workshops where everyone paints together no matter their ability or disability.Bramblitt was born in 1971, El Paso, Texas, United States. He began painting after losing his sight in 2001 after a series of severe seizures. He fell into a deep depression until he found painting. He managed to distinguish two different colours by feeling their textures. He also feels his subjects in order to paint them. He has been the subject of numerous media stories including a documentary that won several short film awards and a video that was voted Most Inspirational Video of 2008 for YouTube. He was awarded three U.S. presidential service awards in 2005, 2006, and 2007 for his creation of a series of free art workshops designed to bring art to people and neighborhoods which lack access to art instruction. He is also the author of book Shouting in the dark. He now still paints and lives with his wife and son. While he was a student at the University of North Texas, Bramblitt was featured on Bob Phillips' syndicated television anthology series, Texas Country Reporter.", "target": "American artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27733834", "label": "Odilio Marín", "source": "Odilio Marín is a Colombian businessman and the chairman of Alianza Petrolera of the Categoría Primera A. He is a construction firm owner and contractor that has proposed running for mayor of Barrancabermeja on repeated occasions.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q570233", "label": "Knud Andersen", "source": "Knud Andersen (5 January 1922 – 14 November 1997) was a Danish cyclist. He competed at the 1948 and 1952 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Danish cyclist (1922-1997)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95709123", "label": "Elizabeth Yake", "source": "Elizabeth Yake is a Canadian film producer, who is the founder and president of True West Films. She is most noted for the films Everything's Gone Green and It's All Gone Pete Tong, the latter of which won the Toronto International Film Festival Award for Best Canadian Film in 2004 and was a Genie Award nominee for Canadian Screen Award for Best Motion Picture at the 26th Genie Awards in 2006.", "target": "Canadian film producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56239", "label": "Bade", "source": "Bade (also spelled Bede, Bedde, or Bode) is a West Chadic language spoken by the Bade people in Yobe State and Jigawa State, Nigeria. Their traditional ruler is the Emir of Bade. Similar to many other Western African languages, Bade is a vulnerable language at great risk of extinction. With 250,000 speakers, the language and the culture of the Bade people have suffered over the last several years. As the language continues to fade, the culture and historic value associated with the language perishes as well. The local dialect is shifting from Bade to Hausa. Across West Africa, the impact on local communities through the loss of the indigenous tongues will be significant. The endangerment of the Bade language represents the worldwide language diversity that is at risk. Many African languages have only received little linguistic attention, impacting these African languages.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "West Chadic", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5534952", "label": "Geoffrey Wainwright", "source": "Geoffrey Wainwright (1939 – 17 March 2020) was an English theologian. He spent much of his career in the United States and taught at Duke Divinity School. Wainwright made major contributions to modern Methodist theology and Christian liturgy, and played a significant role on producing the text Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry, as a member of the Faith and Order Commission of the World Council of Churches (WCC).", "target": "British theologian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16891", "label": "Lanthes", "source": "Lanthes (French pronunciation: ​[lɑ̃t]) is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France.", "target": "commune in Côte-d'Or, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3272102", "label": "Melissandre Fuentes", "source": "Melissandre Fuentes (born March 1, 1988 in Canillo) is an Andorran figure skater. She is the 2004 and 2005 Andorran national champion. Her younger sister Lydia Fuentes competes internationally on the junior level.Fuentes is the first lady skater to represent Andorra at an ISU Championship, which she accomplished at the 2002 World Junior Figure Skating Championships.", "target": "figure skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q305082", "label": "Marianki, Rypin County", "source": "Marianki [maˈrjaŋki] (German: Marienkaten) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rypin, within Rypin County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) north-west of Rypin and 53 km (33 mi) east of Toruń.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12254213", "label": "Arthrosaura kockii", "source": "Arthrosaura kockii is a species of lizard in the family Gymnophthalmidae. It is found in Suriname, French Guiana, and Brazil.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1191360", "label": "Malagasy hippopotamus", "source": "Lemerle's dwarf hippopotamus (Hippopotamus lemerlei) is an extinct species of Malagasy hippopotamus.", "target": "species of mammal (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7251177", "label": "Protapamea", "source": "Protapamea is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2642071", "label": "Aougrout", "source": "Aougrout (Arabic: أوﻗﺮت) is a commune in Aougrout District, Adrar Province, in south-central Algeria. According to the 2008 census it has a population of 11,784, up from 9,878 in 1998, with an annual growth rate of 1.8%.", "target": "Commune in Adrar Province, Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Algeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55702446", "label": "Nerkin Chaylu", "source": "Nerkin Chaylu (also, Nerk’in Chaylu, Ch’aylu, Getk, Nerkin Chailou, and Nerkin Chayly) is a village in the Tartar Rayon of Azerbaijan.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5262570", "label": "Derick Brownell", "source": "Derick Brownell is a retired American soccer defender who played professionally in the USISL and World Indoor Soccer League.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18670936", "label": "Constance Maynard", "source": "Constance Louisa Maynard (9 February 1849 – 26 March 1935) was the first principal of Westfield College (1882–1913) and a pioneer of women's education. She was the first woman to read Moral Sciences (philosophy) at the University of Cambridge.", "target": "British College head", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3304591", "label": "Manastirsko Dolenci", "source": "Manastirsko Dolenci (Macedonian: Манастирско Доленци) is a village in the municipality of Kičevo, North Macedonia. It used to be part of the former Drugovo Municipality. It is home to the 14th-century Kičevo Monastery.", "target": "village in Southwestern, North Macedonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16152044", "label": "Rob Wilson", "source": "Rob Wilson (born 6 September 1952, in Auckland) is a former racing driver from New Zealand. Wilson raced in various formula racing and endurance racing series.", "target": "New Zealand racing drive", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4643569", "label": "777 – The Desanctification", "source": "777 – The Desanctification is the ninth full-length album by French black metal band Blut Aus Nord. It was released on November 11, 2011 through Debemor Morti Productions. It is the second album of the '777 Trilogy'. The album was recorded, mixed, and mastered at Earthbound Studios, and the artwork was created by Valnoir of Metastazis.", "target": "ninth full length album by French black metal band Blut Aus Nord", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11902503", "label": "World Federation of Chiropractic", "source": "The World Federation of Chiropractic (WFC) (French: La Fédération Mondiale de Chiropratique (FMC); Spanish: La Federación Mundial de Quiropráctica (FMQ)) is an international consulting body representing chiropractic to the international health care community.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6486340", "label": "Langmaid Terrace", "source": "Langmaid Terrace is a historic apartment complex at 359—365 Broadway in the Winter Hill neighborhood of Somerville, Massachusetts. The architecturally eclectic brick building was built in 1891 by the heirs of Samuel P. Langmaid, a local landowner. The Langmaid family was also responsible for the Langmaid Building on Highland Avenue. The architect was J. Pickering Putnam of Boston. The building is Queen Anne in inspiration with multiple roof lines, gables, and towers of varying heights and styles. Dormers project from the mansard roof, faced with stepped brick.The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.Since 2009, the end unit at 365 Broadway has received notice as the residence of Barack Obama from 1988 to 1991 while he attended Harvard Law School.In 2021, a granite marker commemorating Obama's residency was placed in the front garden area, deemed the President Obama Rose Garden At Winter Hill, MA.", "target": "building in Massachusetts, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10730694", "label": "Adamharmanı", "source": "Adamharmanı is a village in the Kale District of Denizli Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2685382", "label": "Marie-Laure de Lorenzi", "source": "Marie-Laure de Lorenzi (born 21 January 1961, in Biarritz) is a French professional golfer. She is also known by her married name Marie-Laure Taya, and competed using that name until midway through 1989 when she reverted to her maiden name.De Lorenzi joined the Ladies European Tour in 1987 and is now a life member of the tour, having accumulated 19 tournament victories on it. She played for Europe in the first Solheim Cup, which took place in 1990, and was also a member of the European team in 1996 and 1998. She was assistant captain of the European Solheim Cup team in 2007. She retired from tournament golf in 2004.", "target": "professional golfer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17828799", "label": "Tormiston Mill", "source": "Tormiston Mill is a Category B listed watermill located on the Mainland of Orkney, in Scotland, adjacent to Maeshowe. It is a fine example of a water wheel that was probably built in the 1880s, and the mechanisms have been preserved as a museum. The mill is a large, rectangular building with three floors. It was powered by three pairs of grinding stones driven by a cast iron waterwheel Because of the building's close proximity to Maeshowe, the building is used as the ticket office and gift shop of Maeshowe. While visitors wait for Maeshowe, via the timed ticket tours, they can explore and look at the museum at Tormiston Mill. The mill also has some exhibits about the mill and the area. It is owned by Historic Scotland.", "target": "watermill in Orkney Islands, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["watermill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10290385", "label": "Gold", "source": "Gold is a crater in the Oxia Palus quadrangle of Mars. It was named after a town in Potter County, Pennsylvania in 1976.Gold is famous as being one of several craters showing clear evidence that it was affected by floods of water from Ares Vallis on Mars.", "target": "crater on Mars", "baseline_candidates": ["Mars crater", "impact crater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6115423", "label": "Jack Taggart", "source": "Jack Taggart, Jr. (born February 3, 1950) Died - May 2022 is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey defenceman. Taggart was selected by the St. Louis Blues in the seventh round (85th overall) of the 1970 NHL Entry Draft.Born in 1950 in Calgary, Alberta, Taggart played with the Canada men's national ice hockey team during the 1968-69 season, and then attended the University of Denver where he played with the Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey team. In January 1970, Taggart suffered serious injuries to his head and jaw as a result of a car accident.Taggart began his professional career in 1970, and played the 1970–71 season with the St. Louis Blues' top farm team, the Kansas City Blues of the Central Hockey League. The following season and a half was spent in the American Hockey League with the Cincinnati Swords, and he concluded his playing career with the Charlotte Checkers of the EHL following the 1972-73 season.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey defenceman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2711434", "label": "Nubian spitting cobra", "source": "The Nubian spitting cobra (Naja nubiae) is a species of spitting cobra native to Africa.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5231437", "label": "Owls' Castle", "source": "Owls' Castle (梟の城, Fukurō no Shiro) is a 1999 Japanese ninja-themed jidaigeki film directed by Masahiro Shinoda. It was co-written by Shinoda and Katsuo Naruse, and stars Kiichi Nakai It is the second adaptation of Ryōtarō Shiba's 1959 novel Fukurō no Shiro, the first being the 1963 film Castle of Owls.", "target": "1999 film directed by Masahiro Shinoda", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q834788", "label": "Lili Bordán", "source": "Lili Bordán (born March 12, 1982) is a Hungarian-American film and television actress.", "target": "Hungarian-American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1280655", "label": "Shote Galica", "source": "Shote Galica (10 November 1895 – 1 July 1927), born as Qerime Radisheva, was a Kachak Albanian insurgent. She has been declared a People's Heroine of Albania.", "target": "Hero of Albania (1895-1927)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q578360", "label": "René Gateaux", "source": "René Eugène Gateaux (French: [ʁəne øʒɛn ɡɑto]; 5 May 1889 – 3 October 1914) was a French mathematician. He is principally known for the Gateaux derivative, used in the calculus of variations and in the theory of optimal control. He died in combat during World War I. Paul Lévy produced a posthumous edition of his works, extending them considerably, in his Leçons d'analyse fonctionnelle of 1922.", "target": "French mathematician (1889-1914)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1174271", "label": "David E. Bonior", "source": "David Edward Bonior (born June 6, 1945) is an American politician from the U.S. state of Michigan. First elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1976, Bonior served as Democratic whip in the House from 1991 to 2002, during which time Democrats were in both the majority (1991–1995) and minority (1995–2002), making Bonior the third and second highest-ranking Democrat in the House, respectively. During his tenure in office, Bonior was the public face of Democratic opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and was known for his tenacity in opposing Republican Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, against whom Bonior filed more than seventy-five ethics charges.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5151392", "label": "Comedia", "source": "Comedia (Comedy) is the third solo album by Héctor Lavoe. It was released on 1978 under the label of Fania Records. It is notable for the song \"El Cantante\", which was written by Rubén Blades.", "target": "album by Héctor Lavoe", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5085779", "label": "Pachydactylus formosus", "source": "Pachydactylus formosus, also known as Smith's thick-toed gecko, southern rough gecko or Karoo gecko, is a species of lizard in the family Gekkonidae. It is found in South Africa, Namibia, and Botswana.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16193993", "label": "Dominique Cerutti", "source": "Dominique Cerutti (born 3 January 1961, in Manosque, France) is a French businessman and has been chairman and CEO of the Altran group since June 2015.", "target": "French businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2031500", "label": "2010 FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship", "source": "The FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship 2010 is the 2010 edition of the FIBA Asia's youth championship for basketball. The games were held at Sana'a, Yemen between 22 September and 1 October 2010. The top 3 teams qualified for the FIBA Under-19 World Championship 2011 in Latvia.", "target": "Youth basketball tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28962325", "label": "Sumner Gerard", "source": "Sumner Gerard Jr. MBE (July 15, 1916 – February 24, 2005) was an American businessman, politician, and diplomat. Born in New York to a prominent family, Gerard attended Groton School and Trinity College, Cambridge. After serving in the army, navy, and Marine Corps during World War II, he moved to Montana and became involved in business, including mining and ranching, and politics. During the 1950s and 1960s, he was a member of both the Montana House of Representatives and the Montana Senate, serving as Republican minority leader in both. In 1974, President Richard Nixon appointed him United States Ambassador to Jamaica, a position he held through the administration of President Gerald Ford, leaving in 1977. He then moved to Florida, serving as an adjunct professor of marine archaeology at the University of Miami and sponsoring and participating in underwater archaeology expeditions. He died in 2005 in Vero Beach, Florida, aged 88.", "target": "American politician and diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q982081", "label": "Zavalla", "source": "Zavalla is a city in Angelina County, Texas, United States. The population was 603 at the 2020 census. The town is named for Lorenzo de Zavala, a Mexican rancher, politician, and signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence who served as the first Vice-President of the Republic of Texas. Its city limits stretch several miles south of town into a heavily wooded area.", "target": "city in Angelina County, Texas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7773059", "label": "The Voices of Glory", "source": "The Voices of Glory is a 1962 novel by American author Davis Grubb.", "target": "book by Davis Grubb", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1961281", "label": "Pseudocordulia", "source": "Pseudocordulia is a small genus of dragonflies that are endemic to tropical northeastern Australia. They are medium-sized, bronze-black dragonflies with clear wings. Its taxonomic placement has varied, with some authors placing it in the monotypic family Pseudocorduliidae, while others include it in Corduliidae or Synthemistidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31713761", "label": "The Remarkables", "source": "The Remarkables (Māori: Kawarau) are a mountain range and skifield in Otago in the South Island of New Zealand. Located on the southeastern shore of Lake Wakatipu, the range lives up to its name by rising sharply to create a remarkable backdrop for the waters. The range is clearly visible from the nearby town of Queenstown. The highest point in the range is Single Cone (2319 metres). The adjacent Tapuae-o-Uenuku / Hector Mountains southeast of the Remarkables culminate in Mount Tūwhakarōria (2307 m).There are a number of small lakes on the mountains including Lake Alta which forms part of the Remarkables Skifield.", "target": "mountain range in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64536648", "label": "Donald Duck talk", "source": "Donald Duck talk, formally called buccal speech, is an alaryngeal form of vocalization which uses the inner cheek to produce sound rather than the larynx. The speech is most closely associated with the Disney cartoon character Donald Duck whose voice was created by Clarence Nash, who performed it from 1934 to 1984.Nash discovered buccal speech while trying to mimic his pet goat Mary. In his days before Disney, Nash performed in vaudeville shows where he often spoke in his \"nervous baby goat\" voice. Later when he auditioned at Walt Disney Productions, Walt Disney interpreted Nash's voice as that of a duck, at which point the idea for Donald Duck came about. Buccal speech was also used by voice actor Red Coffey for the character Quacker in MGM cartoons, and by Jimmy Weldon for the character Yakky Doodle in Hanna-Barbera cartoons.", "target": "Alaryngeal form of vocalization", "baseline_candidates": ["alaryngeal speech", "vocal technique"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3873438", "label": "Navia Nguyen", "source": "Navia Nguyen (born 1973) is a Vietnamese American model and actress.", "target": "American actress and model", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2333616", "label": "Willem Molkenboer", "source": "Wilhelmus Bernardus Gerardus Molkenboer, known as Willem (8 June 1844, Leiden - 9 December 1915, Amsterdam) was a Dutch sculptor and art educator.", "target": "Dutch sculptor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7781680", "label": "Theodore Augustine Mann", "source": "Theodore Augustine Mann, known as the Abbé Mann (22 June 1735–23 February 1809), was an English naturalist and historian, and a Carthusian monk.", "target": "English naturalist, historian, and Carthusian monk (1735-1809)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56248714", "label": "Batata", "source": "Baltazar Costa Rodrigues de Oliveira (born 6 May 2000), better known as Batata, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for the Swiss club FC Sion.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50814880", "label": "Journal of Spatial Information Science", "source": "Journal of Spatial Information Science is a peer-reviewed open access academic journal covering geographical information science. It is published by the University of Maine and the editors-in-chief are Ross Purves, Benjamin Adams, and Somayeh Dodge. Mike Worboys, Matt Duckham, and Jörg-Rüdiger Sack were the founding editors of the journal when it was established in 2010.", "target": "Academic journal published by University of Maine , covering the subjects: Geography. Anthropology. Recreation: Geography (General)", "baseline_candidates": ["academic journal", "open-access journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56109", "label": "Quillón", "source": "Quillón is a Chilean city and commune and Diguillín Province, Ñuble Region.", "target": "commune of Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Chile", "city in Chile"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65720569", "label": "Adriaan Ludick", "source": "Adriaan Ludick (born (1998-07-22)22 July 1998) is a Namibian rugby union player for South African side the Boland Cavaliers in the Currie Cup and the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is lock.Ludick made his international debut for Namibia in 2018, in their end-of-year match against Russia in Krasnodar.", "target": "Namibian rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5478770", "label": "Frances Kazan", "source": "Frances Kazan (born 1946) is an English-born American author, best known for her 2002 historical novel Halide’s Gift.", "target": "writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12250270", "label": "The Mahdi Servants Union", "source": "The Mahdi Servants Union (Arabic: إتحاد خدام المهدي), previously Khoddam Al-Mahdi Organization (Arabic: هيئة خدام المهدي, lit. 'The Servants of al-Mahdi') is a Twelver Shia religious group based in London, England, led by Kuwaiti cleric Yasser Al-Habib.", "target": "international non-governmental organization", "baseline_candidates": ["Islamic organization", "supranational union", "Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs)", "religious organization", "international organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95190706", "label": "Martina Wagner-Egelhaaf", "source": "Martina Wagner-Egelhaaf (born 1957) is a Professor of German Literature at the University of Münster, Germany, and holds a chair in German Literary History with special focus on Modernity and Contemporary Literature. Her fields of research include Autobiography/Autofiction, Literary Theory, Rhetoric, Literary and Cultural Studies, Gender Studies, the relation of Religion, Politics and Literature as well as Law and Literature.", "target": "Professor of German Literature", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19414899", "label": "2015 NBA Playoffs", "source": "The 2015 NBA playoffs was the postseason tournament of the National Basketball Association's 2014–15 season. The tournament concluded with the Western Conference champion Golden State Warriors defeating the Eastern Conference champion Cleveland Cavaliers 4 games to 2 in the NBA Finals. Andre Iguodala was named NBA Finals MVP.", "target": "postseason tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["playoffs"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7262717", "label": "Puñihuil", "source": "Puñihuil is a cove with a small community on the northwestern coast of the Isla Grande de Chiloe, which lies near the coast of Northern Patagonia in Chile. The Islotes de Puñihuil Natural Monument, three small islands, lie to the west and north of the cove. The monument is the only known shared breeding site for Humboldt and Magellanic penguins. It is also a breeding area for other species including the red-legged cormorant and kelp gull. The Alfaguara project, a marine life conservation project operates from Puñihuil. The focus of the project is on preservation of endangered blue whales[1], for which the waters to the northwest are an important feeding area.", "target": "location near Pumillahue, Chiloé, Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["geographical feature"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14709650", "label": "Tarboro", "source": "Tarboro is an unincorporated community located in Jasper County, South Carolina, United States. It is near the southern terminus of U.S. 601 at its junction with U.S. 321.", "target": "human settlement in South Carolina, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29098145", "label": "1989–90 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team", "source": "The 1989–90 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team represented Drexel University during the 1989–90 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dragons, led by 13th year head coach Eddie Burke, played their home games at the Daskalakis Athletic Center and were members of the East Coast Conference (ECC). The team finished the season 13–15, and finished in 4th place in the ECC in the regular season. On February 5, 1990, Todd Lehmann set the Drexel team record for most assists in a single game, recording 19 assists against Liberty.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2299871", "label": "Benin at the 2008 Summer Paralympics", "source": "Benin sent a delegation to compete at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, China. They were represented by one athlete, powerlifter Blandine Sahenou.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Paralympics delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21775882", "label": "See Me", "source": "See Me is the nineteenth novel by American novelist Nicholas Sparks. It was published on October 13, 2015, by Grand Central Publishing.", "target": "book by Nicholas Sparks", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98057120", "label": "Anna Simková", "source": "Anna Simková (28 February 1931 – 28 July 2020) was a Slovak stage actress.She was born in Medzilaborce. She played at the Ukrainian National Theater in Prešov from 1946. She also worked for the Alexander Duchnovič Theatre. She retired in 1991.Simková died on 28 July 2020, aged 89.", "target": "actress (1931-2020)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19945103", "label": "canton of Issy-les-Moulineaux", "source": "The canton of Issy-les-Moulineaux is an administrative division of the Hauts-de-Seine department, in northern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Issy-les-Moulineaux.It consists of the following communes: Issy-les-Moulineaux.", "target": "canton of France", "baseline_candidates": ["canton of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7931573", "label": "Vince O'Sullivan", "source": "Vincent (\"Vince\") John O'Sullivan (born February 23, 1957 in London, Greater London) is a retired male racewalker from the United States, who competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics for Team USA. He was fifth at the 1979 Pan American Games and also took part in the IAAF World Race Walking Cup.", "target": "Olympic racewalker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7973383", "label": "Water Street", "source": "Water Street is located in downtown St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It became a commercial trading outpost for the Basques, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and English. The street now boasts many souvenir shops, restaurants, pubs, and high-end boutiques, as well as other commercial ventures. To this day the street remains the hub of commercial activity in the city and in 2020 the city implemented a seasonal pedestrian-only section of the road.", "target": "street in St. John's, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["street"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7407671", "label": "Sam Hunt", "source": "Samuel William Hunt (born December 9, 1942) is an American politician and educator serving as a member of the Washington State Senate from the 22nd district.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6357027", "label": "Kames, Argyll", "source": "Kames (Scottish Gaelic: Camas nam Muclach) is a small village on the Cowal peninsula in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, on the shore of the west arm of the Kyles of Bute.Kames is now part of a continuous coastal strip of housing that joins onto Tighnabruaich. Kames has a grocery shop (containing a post office, and relaunched under new management as the \"Kames Village Store\" in late 2016), a church and a hotel.The Kames Hotel has views over the west arm of the Kyles of Bute.", "target": "village in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52274681", "label": "Chloe Dewe Mathews", "source": "Chloe Dewe Mathews (born 1982) is a British documentary photographer, based in St Leonards-on-Sea, UK. She is \"best known for ambitious documentary projects that can take years of preparation.\" Dewe Mathews has said \"I am exploring ways in which to project the past on to the present\".Her series Shot at Dawn records sites where British, French and Belgian soldiers were executed for cowardice or desertion during the first world war. It was published as a book in 2014 and exhibited at Tate Modern and at the Irish Museum of Modern Art. In Search of Frankenstein was exhibited at the British Library in 2018. Dewe Mathews' work is held in the collections of the British Council, Herbert Art Gallery and Museum and Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust.", "target": "British documentary photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6879635", "label": "Aşağıçavuş", "source": "Aşağıçavuş is a village in the Yenice district of Çanakkale Province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in Yenice, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6397817", "label": "Kevin and Bean's Christmastime in the LBC", "source": "Christmastime in the LBC is the seventh Christmas album released by KROQ-FM show Kevin and Bean. The album was released only on audio cassette, and was the very last of the Kevin and Bean Christmas albums to be released on that format. The album is currently out of print and has not been reissued on CD as of February 2021.", "target": "compilation album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6767873", "label": "Mark Haddock", "source": "Mark Haddock (born 1968) is an Ulster loyalist paramilitary leader and RUC Special Branch informer in Northern Ireland, who has been named by various sources in connection with more than twenty-one killings. He is a member of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), and was that organisation's North Belfast commander before his arrest by police in 2005.", "target": "Northern irish loyalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86520613", "label": "Independent Chip Model", "source": "In poker, the Independent Chip Model (ICM) is a mathematical model used to approximately calculate a player's overall equity in a tournament. The model uses stack sizes alone to determine how often a player will finish in each position (1st, 2nd, etc.). A player's probability of finishing in each position is then multiplied by the prize amount for that position and those numbers are added together to determine the player's overall equity.The ICM is also known as the Malmuth-Harville method. In 1973 David Harville published a method to calculate the probability for a horse to finish 1st, 2nd, etc. in a horse race. In 1987 Mason Malmuth, independent of Harville, used this method to calculate the probability for a tournament player to finish 1st, 2nd, etc.The term ICM is often misunderstood to mean a simulator that helps a player make decisions in a tournament. Such simulators often make use of the Independent Chip Model but are not strictly speaking ICM calculators. A true ICM calculator will have the chip counts of all players, as well as the payout structure of the tournament, as input and each player's equity as output.The ICM can be applied to answer specific questions, such as: The range of hands that a player can move all in with, considering the action so far and the stack sizes of the other players still in the hand The range of hands that a player can call another player's all in with, and recommends either calling or moving all in over the top, considering all.", "target": "mathematical model in poker", "baseline_candidates": ["mathematical model", "poker"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7011672", "label": "New South Wales Breakers", "source": "The New South Wales Women cricket team, also known as the New South Wales Breakers, is the women's representative cricket team for the Australian State of New South Wales. They play most of their home games at North Sydney Oval and they also use Hurstville Oval, Sydney and Blacktown ISP Oval, Sydney. They compete in the Women's National Cricket League (WNCL), the premier 50-over women's cricket tournament in Australia, and are by far its most successful team, having won 20 titles. They previously played in the now-defunct Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup and Australian Women's Cricket Championships.", "target": "Women's cricket team", "baseline_candidates": ["cricket team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7052122", "label": "Norman Croucher", "source": "Norman Croucher (born 1941) is a British mountain climber, a double amputee with two prosthetic legs below the knee.", "target": "British mountain climber", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18167883", "label": "Sully Glasser", "source": "John Sullivan \"Sully\" Glasser (October 25, 1922 – August 1, 1986) was a Canadian football player who played for the Saskatchewan Roughriders.", "target": "Canadian football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33121122", "label": "Paris Institute for Advanced Study", "source": "The Paris Institute for Advanced Study (Paris IAS, or Institut d'études avancées de Paris) is an international research center that offers fellowships to researchers from all over the world in the field of humanities and social sciences. It is also open to other disciplines, in particular the life sciences, for projects in dialogue with the humanities and social sciences. The institute was designed to foster high level research, international and interdisciplinary exchanges and the development of new methods and research objects. The Paris IAS hosts yearly an average of twenty five researchers for stays of five to ten months.", "target": "education organization in Paris, France", "baseline_candidates": ["educational institution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q535038", "label": "François Hugues", "source": "François Hugues (13 August 1896 – 13 December 1965) was a France international football player mostly known for his international career and his time at Red Star FC, which included two stints spanning over 14 years. With Red Star, Hugues won two Coupe de France titles in 1921 and 1923. He also played for Rennes, FC Lyon, and Suisse Paris. During his time as an international, Hugues was considered one of the best French players of his generation.", "target": "French footballer (1896-1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97361523", "label": "Sołdek", "source": "SS Sołdek is a retired Polish coal and ore freighter. She was the first ship built in Gdańsk (Poland) after World War II and the first seagoing ship completed in Poland. She was the first of 29 ships classed as Project B30, built between 1949 and 1954 in Stocznia Gdańska (Gdańsk Shipyard). The name was given in honour of Stanisław Sołdek, one of the shipyard's shock workers.Sołdek is oftently mistaken with the SS Oliwa (a former unfinished Hansa A type cargo ship), which was commissioned after Sołdek, however which's hull was already constructed in 1944. It was abandoned by the Germans on a slipway in Szczecin, and seized by Poland. Following this the hull was completed and the ship launched as Oliwa. Later she was renamed and entered service in 1951 as Marchlewski, serving the Polish Ocean Lines. Many sources incorrectly state that Oliwa was Sołdek's makeshift name during her launch, and that she was later relaunched again as Sołdek. The ship is currently preserved as a museum ship in Gdańsk, as a part of National Maritime Museum collection.The ship was used in the movie Persona Non Grata as a Japanese steamer transporting Jews from Vladivostok to Tsuraga.", "target": "Retired Polish freighter", "baseline_candidates": ["mixed cargo ship", "ship", "museum ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5631644", "label": "HMS Boyne", "source": "HMS Boyne was an 80-gun third-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched at Deptford Dockyard on 21 May 1692.She was rebuilt to the 1706 Establishment at Blackwall Yard, mounting her guns on three instead of her original two gundecks, though she was still classified as a third rate. She was relaunched from Blackwall on 26 March 1708. Her second rebuild took place at Deptford, where she was reconstructed according to the 1733 proposals of the 1719 Establishment, and relaunched on 28 May 1739.The Boyne was part of Vice-Admiral Edward Vernon's fleet and took part in the expedition to Cartagena de Indias during the War of Jenkins' Ear. Boyne was broken up in 1763.", "target": "Royal Navy third-rate ship of the line", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2121335", "label": "Bualli Pass", "source": "The Bualli Pass (Albanian: Qafa e Buallit, Buffalo Pass) is an 842 metre high mountain pass in Albania. It is part of the National Road 6, which links the Albanian coast to Mat District and the Dibër valley. The west end of the pass is in the watershed of the Mat river and the eastern part is in the watershed of the Drin. Immediately east of the highest point of the pass is the town of Bulqizë. As of 2011, a new road through the pass was being built, the so-called Rruga e Arbërit. Between Bulqizë and the Drin, National Road 6 was expanded into a wider, two-lane highway, a by-pass was built around Bulqizë itself and then work continued further west. The pass itself was crossed by a short tunnel. The west approach to Klos received a new route. Eventually, the Rruga e Arbërit is intended to provide a direct connection between Tirana and the Macedonian border, instead of the current route which requires a detour through Milot and Burrel. For the direct route through the mountains another tunnel and large bridges are necessary between Tirana and Klos. These plans were modified over time. From the top of the pass, a road splits off towards Krastë in the Martanesh region to the southwest. The Qafa e Buallit is located in region with many mines, for which the city of Bulqizë serves as a centre. A large tunnel links these mines to the pass at an altitude of over 700 metres.", "target": "Mountain pass in Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["valley", "mountain pass"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4757683", "label": "Andrew Lambert", "source": "Andrew Lambert (born 11 August 1976) is a former professional rugby league footballer who played as a centre in the 1990s and 2000s. He played at representative level for Scotland, and at club level for Workington Town and the York Wasps.", "target": "Scottish rugby league player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6424172", "label": "Ko Shan Road Park", "source": "Ko Shan Road Park (Chinese: 高山道公園) is a small park located in the Lo Lung Hang area of Kowloon, Hong Kong. Perched on a cut slope of Quarry Hill, the park is home to the Ko Shan Theatre (高山劇場).", "target": "A park in Kowloon", "baseline_candidates": ["urban park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27907190", "label": "Qin Wenjun", "source": "Qin Wenjun (秦文君; born 1954) is an author of children's literature. She writes in Chinese.", "target": "b. 1954, Shanghai", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5090842", "label": "Chen Lili", "source": "Chen Lili (or Lili Chen, simplified Chinese: 陈莉莉; traditional Chinese: 陳莉莉; pinyin: Chén Lìlì; born February, 1980) is a transgender singer, model, and actress from People's Republic of China. She became widely known in 2004 when she competed and attempted to compete in beauty pageants as a woman. She was born into a peasant family at Yilong County, Nanchong City of Sichuan Province, she received sex reassignment surgery in Qingdao in November 2003. On February 11, 2004, she was issued an ID card establishing her female identity by the Public Security Bureau of Nanchong.Chen attempted to compete in the Miss Universe contest in early 2004. Although the Miss Universe China committee initially announced, on February 23, that she would be allowed to participate, on February 25, they retracted their original decision, stating that she would not be allowed to participate because she was not a \"natural female.\" Despite being barred from the competition, Chen was nonetheless given the opportunity to perform at the event. It is believed that Lili is the first transsexual woman to attempt to compete in the Miss Universe contest.In late 2004, Chen competed in China's first Miss Artificial Beauty pageant. She finished as second runner up.In 2005, she appeared in the motion picture The Secret (simplified Chinese: 隐私; traditional Chinese: 隱私; pinyin: yǐnsī).", "target": "Chinese singer, model, and actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16228506", "label": "Mark Mitchell", "source": "Mark Mitchell is a Canadian ice dancer who competed with Michelle McDonald of British Columbia. The two placed sixth at the 1988 Skate America, won silver at the 1989 Canadian Championships, and finished 11th at the 1989 World Championships in Paris. The following season, they won silver at the 1989 Skate Canada International, repeated as national silver medalists, and placed 9th at the 1990 World Championships in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. They parted ways after the 1990 Goodwill Games, where they finished fifth.", "target": "Canadian ice dancer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14325349", "label": "Scylla olivacea", "source": "Scylla olivacea, commonly known as the orange mud crab, is a commercially important species of mangrove crab in the genus Scylla. It is one of several crabs known as the mud crab and is found in mangrove areas from Southeast Asia to Pakistan, and from Japan to northern Australia. Along with other species in the genus Scylla, it is widely farmed in aquaculture using wild-caught stocks. They can be differentiated from other species of Scylla by having blunted spines on the dorsal distal corner of the palm (propodus) of the claw, and by the rounded frontal lobe spines with shallow separations in between the eyes.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5500954", "label": "Freeland Foundation", "source": "The Freeland Foundation (rendered FREELAND Foundation by the foundation) is an international NGO headquartered in Bangkok which works in Asia on environmental conservation and on human rights. The organization intends to stop wildlife and human trafficking. The organization combats the illegal wildlife trade and habitat destruction. Its environmental conservation programs address threats to endangered flora and fauna. This includes poaching and logging in protected areas, smuggling, and the subsequent sale and consumption of wildlife. With funding from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Freeland Foundation provides expertise and support to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network), a regional inter-governmental initiative to combat wildlife smuggling.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16859172", "label": "Louis Lhéritier", "source": "Louis Lhéritier (17 June 1747 – 15 December 1823) was a French Navy officer. He most notably took part in the Glorious First of June and the Battle of the Raz de Sein.", "target": "French admiral (1747-1823)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q72176385", "label": "Gaetano Vitelli", "source": "Gaetano Vitelli is an Italian cartoonist who, along with Giove Toppi and Antonio Burattini, was one of the first to make Mickey Mouse comic strip in Italy.", "target": "Italian cartoonist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q501893", "label": "Osterbruch", "source": "Osterbruch is a municipality in the district of Cuxhaven, in Lower Saxony, Germany.", "target": "Municipality in the joint municipality of Land Hadeln in the district of Cuxhaven, Lower Saxony, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q289715", "label": "Lyonia maestrensis", "source": "Lyonia maestrensis is a species of plant in the family Ericaceae. It is endemic to Cuba.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2943222", "label": "Polish cavalry", "source": "The Polish cavalry (Polish: jazda, kawaleria, konnica) can trace its origins back to the days of medieval cavalry knights. Poland is mostly a country of flatlands and fields and mounted forces operate well in this environment. The knights and heavy cavalry gradually evolved into many different types of specialised mounted military formations, some of which heavily influenced western warfare and military science. This article details the evolution of Polish cavalry tactics, traditions and arms from the times of mounted knights and heavy winged hussars, through the times of light uhlans to mounted infantry equipped with ranged and mêlée weapons.", "target": "Cavalry branch of the Polish Army", "baseline_candidates": ["combat arm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1359894", "label": "Reunion", "source": "Reunion is the sixth studio album by the American psychedelic rock group Country Joe and the Fish, released in 1977. It constituted a reunion of the members of the 1967 band. It was produced by Sam Charters for Fantasy Records and recorded between January and April 1977. The music is not as psychedelic, and several tracks are country rock.", "target": "album by Country Joe and the Fish", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13848131", "label": "Argentina at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics", "source": "Argentina competed at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics, in Nanjing, China from 16 August to 28 August 2014.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6867810", "label": "Mink River", "source": "The Mink River is a 1.4-mile-long (2.3 km) lacustuary, or freshwater estuary, near the northern tip of the Door Peninsula of Wisconsin, in the United States. It is noted for its excellent bass fishing, and the area boasts more than 200 species of birds. The river flows in a southeasterly direction into the estuary on Rowleys Bay, Lake Michigan, 4 miles (6 km) southeast of the village of Ellison Bay. In 1989, 35 species of birds were found in two habitats in the Mink River Estuary.", "target": "river in Door County, Wisconsin", "baseline_candidates": ["landform"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3754467", "label": "Stresa–Alpino–Mottarone Cable Car", "source": "The Stresa-Alpino-Mottarone Cable Car (Italian: Funivia Stresa-Alpino-Mottarone) is an aerial tramway cable transport located in the commune of Stresa in the Piedmont region of Italy. First opened in 1970, the aerial tramway connects Stresa, located on the shores of Lake Maggiore, to the summit of the Mottarone mountain. The Stresa-Alpino-Mottarone Cable Car transported approximately 100,000 passengers per year, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy. The aerial tramway was a major regional tourist attraction until the Stresa-Mottarone cable car disaster on 23 May 2021.", "target": "2-stage cableway in Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["aerial lift"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q504969", "label": "Alessandro Moreschi", "source": "Alessandro Moreschi (11 November 1858 – 21 April 1922) was an Italian opera singer of the late 19th century and the only castrato to make solo recordings.", "target": "Italian castrato singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1235233", "label": "Lorenzo Sumulong", "source": "Lorenzo Sumulong Sumulong Sr. (September 5, 1905 – October 21, 1997) was a Filipino politician who served in the Philippine Senate for four decades, and as a delegate of his country to the United Nations. He was noted for having engaged in a debate with Nikita Khrushchev at the United Nations General Assembly that allegedly provoked the Soviet Union Premier to bang his shoe on a desk.", "target": "Filipino politician (1905-1997)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20579", "label": "Todi", "source": "Todi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈtɔːdi]) is a town and comune (municipality) of the province of Perugia (region of Umbria) in central Italy. It is perched on a tall two-crested hill overlooking the east bank of the river Tiber, commanding distant views in every direction. In the 1990s, Richard S. Levine, a professor of Architecture at the University of Kentucky, described Todi as the model sustainable city, because of its scale and its ability to reinvent itself over time. After that, the Italian press reported on Todi as the world's most livable city.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q347947", "label": "Iron Man: Armored Adventures", "source": "Iron Man: Armored Adventures (also known in early promotional materials as Iron Man: The Animated Series) is a 3D CGI-animated series based on the Marvel Comics superhero Iron Man. It debuted in the United States on Nicktoons on April 24, 2009, and it aired on Teletoon in Canada. The series is story edited by showrunner Christopher Yost, who also worked on Wolverine and the X-Men, and numerous other Marvel Animation projects. The television show is not related to the 2007 animated film The Invincible Iron Man; it has a different voice cast, but some story elements are similar and the show uses the same musical score as the film in some instances. It is the first Iron Man television series since Iron Man from 1994 to 1996, and started airing after the success of the live action Iron Man film. The series follows the adventures of a younger version of Tony Stark and his alter ego of Iron Man. As Iron Man, he uses his technological inventions to fight other similarly technologically advanced threats. His friends James \"Rhodey\" Rhodes and Pepper Potts help him on his courageous and dangerous adventures. The second season of this series premiered on July 13, 2011, running concurrently with the English dub of the completely separate Marvel Anime: Iron Man anime series, which had already finished airing on Japan's Animax in 2010.On August 25, 2012, it was revealed that Iron Man: Armored Adventures would air as part of The CW's new Saturday morning children's block Vortexx. After November 24, 2012, Vortexx.", "target": "2009 French animated series", "baseline_candidates": ["animated series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48979881", "label": "Seagrim", "source": "Seagrim is a surname which may refer to: Derek Seagrim (1903–1943), British soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross Hugh Seagrim (1909–1944), British soldier, recipient of the George Cross Molly \"Moll\" Seagrim, fictional character in English novel The History of Tom Jones (1749).", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16191176", "label": "Northern White-breasted hedgehog", "source": "The northern white-breasted hedgehog (Erinaceus roumanicus) is a species of hedgehog.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6657204", "label": "Live from Austin", "source": "Live from Austin is the first live recording by Ian Moore, released in 1994 (see 1994 in music).", "target": "1994 album by Ian Moore on Capricorn Records", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2357072", "label": "Tyrants of the Rising Sun", "source": "Tyrants of the Rising Sun is a DVD+CD set of Arch Enemy, released in Europe on 23 November 2008 and in North America on 25 November 2008 via Century Media. The DVD contains a live show filmed in Tokyo in early 2008, an in-depth 40 minute road-movie feature, and all promotional videos that have been shot for the band's seventh studio album, Rise of the Tyrant.The DVD is available in the following versions: Deluxe edition DVD+2CDs, Standard DVD, Standard 2CDs, ltd EPs.", "target": "2008 live album by Arch Enemy", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65073534", "label": "1921–22 Rochdale A.F.C. season", "source": "The 1921–22 season saw Rochdale compete in the newly formed Football League Third Division North, where they finished in 20th and last position with 26 points.", "target": "Rochdale 1921–22 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3345805", "label": "Noël Deschamps", "source": "Noël St. Clair Deschamps (25 December 1908 – 12 May 2005) was an Australian public servant and diplomat.", "target": "Australian diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18191829", "label": "Fifty-Fifty", "source": "Fifty Fifty (Hebrew: חצי חצי) is an Israeli comedy film directed by Boaz Davidson and produced by Assi Dayan and Moshe Golan.", "target": "1971 film directed by Boaz Davidson", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17049424", "label": "Attakulangara School", "source": "Government Central High School or Attakulangara Central School was founded in 1889. It is located in Trivandrum, the capital of Kerala province in India. The school's curriculum is in the Malayalam and Tamil languages. As of 2019, the school had just 100 students and was in a dilapidated state, with planned renovations halted amidst reports of disagreements over payments and construction details.In 2020, the government began housing 223 homeless people on the school's campus. They have been active since, clearing and grubbing the grounds and cultivating vegetables.", "target": "public school in Trivandrum, Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4818502", "label": "Attiliosa nodulifera", "source": "Attiliosa nodulifera is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8025361", "label": "Winifred Bambrick", "source": "Winifred Estella Bambrick (February 21, 1892 – April 11, 1969) was a Canadian classical musician and novelist. She won the Governor General's Award for English-language fiction in 1946 for her book Continental Revue.", "target": "Canadian harpist and novelist (1892-1969)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q738761", "label": "Total Football", "source": "Total Football (Dutch: totaalvoetbal) is a tactical system in association football in which any outfield player can take over the role of any other player in a team. Although Dutch club Ajax and the Netherlands national football team are generally credited with creating this system during the 1970s, there were other sides who had played a similar style before, such as the Austrian Wunderteam of the 1930s, the Argentine side \"La Maquina\" of River Plate in the 1940s, the Golden Team of Hungary in the 1950s, English team Burnley in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and Brazilian side Santos in the 1960s. In Total Football, a player who moves out of his position is replaced by another from his team, thus retaining the team's intended organisational structure. In this fluid system, no outfield player is fixed in a predetermined role; anyone can successively play as an attacker, a midfielder and a defender. The only player who must stay in a specified position is the goalkeeper. Total Football's tactical success depends largely on the adaptability of each footballer within the team, in particular the ability to quickly switch positions depending on the on-field situation. The theory requires players to be comfortable in multiple positions; hence, it requires intelligent and technically diverse players. During the 1970s, Ajax played some of their finest football ever, achieving a perfect home record (46–0–0) for two full seasons (1971–72 and 1972–73), just one defeat in the whole of the 1971–72 season, and celebrating four titles in 1972 (the Netherlands national league,.", "target": "theory of football in which any outfield player can take over the role of any other player in a team", "baseline_candidates": ["game mechanics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15057805", "label": "Mademoiselle Zhivago", "source": "Mademoiselle Zhivago is an album by pop singer Lara Fabian. The whole set of songs composed by Fabian with Igor Krutoy is in English, French, Italian, Spanish and also in Russian.", "target": "2010 studio album by Lara Fabian", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1770082", "label": "Oecomys cleberi", "source": "Oecomys cleberi, also known as Cleber's oecomys or Cleber's arboreal rice rat, is a species of rodent in the genus Oecomys of family Cricetidae. Known only from the Federal District of Brazil, its taxonomic status relative to O. concolor and O. paricola is unresolved.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19036679", "label": "Alexander Robertson", "source": "Sir Alexander Robertson (3 February 1908 – 5 September 1990) was a Scottish veterinarian and administrator.", "target": "Scottish veterinary scientist and university administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57881508", "label": "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad", "source": "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad: A Pseudoclassical Tragifarce in a Bastard French Tradition was the first play written by Arthur Kopit.", "target": "Play", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2567178", "label": "Shorewood", "source": "Shorewood is a city nestled in the woods along on the shores of Lake Minnetonka in Hennepin County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 7,307 at the 2010 census. The city was incorporated in 1956. Its area was originally part of the former Excelsior Township. State Highway 7 serves as a main route. In 2016, Shorewood was reported to be the richest town in Minnesota, with a median household income of $113,719.", "target": "city in Hennepin County, Minnesota", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3653244", "label": "2009 World Amateur Boxing Championships – lightweight", "source": "The Lightweight competition was the five-lowest weight featured at the 2009 World Amateur Boxing Championships, and was held at the Mediolanum Forum. Lightweights were limited to a maximum of 60 kilograms in body mass.", "target": "Boxing competitions", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6917121", "label": "Motamarri", "source": "Motamarri is a village in Khammam district of the Indian state of Telangana. It is located in Bonakal mandal, on the bank of the Wyra River.", "target": "village in Telangana, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25661612", "label": "St Bathans", "source": "The former gold and coal mining town of St Bathans, formerly named Dunstan Creek, lies deep in the heart of the Maniototo in New Zealand's Otago region. The settlement was a centre of the Otago Gold Rush, but mining has since long ceased and it is now a tranquil holiday retreat. The preservation of many of its historic buildings makes it one of the region's more picturesque tourist venues. St Bathans is well known for its scenic man-made lake with beautiful looking clay cliffs that attract many tourists. It is currently a camping spot, and swimming is allowed in the lake. The town was named for the Scottish Borders village of Abbey St Bathans by early surveyor John Turnbull Thomson; the Scottish village was the birthplace of Thomson's maternal grandfather. The area had previously been known as Dunstan Creek. It is 40 kilometres northwest of Ranfurly and 60 kilometres northeast of Alexandra, near the Dunstan Creek, beneath the Saint Bathans Range and Dunstan mountains. Prominent features include the historic Vulcan Hotel and the Blue Lake, a small lake formed during gold-sluicing, which gives it a distinctive turquoise colour. The area attracts many visitors intent on gold-prospecting.", "target": "locality in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7822868", "label": "Tony Manning", "source": "Tony Manning (born 9 January 1943) is a former track and field athlete from Coolah in New South Wales, Australia, who competed in the middle-distance running events. He was born in New South Wales.At the 1970 Commonwealth Games, Manning won the gold medal ahead of Ben Jipcho and Amos Biwott of Kenya after an eventful race in which his teammate Kerry O'Brien fell at the second last water-jump, while leading, and failed to finish the race. In interviews afterwards he stated that his race plan was to stick close to Kerry O’Brien, who had a steady style and good pace judgment, and decided to \"go for it\" when O’Brien fell.Controversially, he was not selected for the 1968 Olympics. A tumour operation prevented his participation in the 1972 Olympics. Other achievements include victory over Kerry O’Brien and Ron Clarke in the 5,000m at the 1970 Australian Championship in 13–56. He won nine consecutive New South Wales state steeplechase championships. With his brother Peter, later a successful junior middle/long-distance running coach in Coolah, he dead-heated in the 10,000 state cross-country championship and a fortnight later beat Bob Vagg over ten miles at Randwick racecourse, running on bare feet, an unofficial Australian record at the time. He was described by fellow-athlete Ron Clarke as \"the original and perhaps the only remaining Australian bushwhacker\". He travelled six hours twice a week from his home in Coolah to train and compete for Randwick Botany Harriers in the eastern suburbs of Sydney.In 2002 he was listed at number seven in the top.", "target": "Australian steeplechase runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28125093", "label": "Corbett's/Eby's Mill Bridge", "source": "Corbett's/Eby's Mill Bridge is a historic structure located northeast of Scotch Grove, Iowa, United States. It spans the Maquoketa River for 128 feet (39 m). James S. Applegate established a gristmill near this location in 1858. He was joined by John Corbett, who obtained ownership by 1868 and expanded the operation and added a sawmill. He petitioned the Jones County Board of Supervisors for an iron bridge at this location in 1870. They agreed to pay two-thirds of the construction costs with the final third paid for by local subscriptions. The contract to construct this bridge and a similar span in Monticello was made with Miller, Jamison & Company of Cleveland. Both are single span bowstring truss bridges that were completed in November 1871. This bridge has always been identified with the mill. Samuel Eby acquired it in 1875, and it remained in the family until 1913. The bridge was originally on a loop road that circled behind the mill pond. When County Road X73 was created in 1958 it bypassed the bridge to the south. The bridge has been under private ownership ever since. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.", "target": "bridge in Jones County, Iowa", "baseline_candidates": ["road bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3045456", "label": "neurogenesis", "source": "Neurogenesis is the process by which nervous system cells, the neurons, are produced by neural stem cells (NSCs). It occurs in all species of animals except the porifera (sponges) and placozoans. Types of NSCs include neuroepithelial cells (NECs), radial glial cells (RGCs), basal progenitors (BPs), intermediate neuronal precursors (INPs), subventricular zone astrocytes, and subgranular zone radial astrocytes, among others.Neurogenesis is most active during embryonic development and is responsible for producing all the various types of neurons of the organism, but it continues throughout adult life in a variety of organisms. Once born, neurons do not divide (see mitosis), and many will live the lifespan of the animal.", "target": "generation of cells within the nervous system", "baseline_candidates": ["cell differentiation", "biological process"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55616250", "label": "Krishnadevipeta", "source": "Krishnadevipeta popularly known by its abbreviated form K.D.Peta, is a village in Golugonda mandal of Anakapalli district in the state of Andhra Pradesh, India. It lies 111 km west of Visakhapatnam city. This village is known for the location of tomb of freedom fighter Alluri Sitarama Raju.", "target": "village in Golugonda mandal of Visakhapatnam district in the state of Andhra Pradesh, India.", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q926636", "label": "Cristina Lasvignes", "source": "Cristina Lasvignes Martín (born 9 January 1978) is a Spanish television presenter, radio broadcaster, journalist and businessperson. A journalism graduate of the Complutense University of Madrid, she began her broadcasting career in local television before directing the Cadena SER radio show To Talk For The Sake Of Talking that she would go on to present from September 2006 to March 2009. Lasvignes presented the weekday afternoon current affairs and entertainment magazine Tal cual lo contamos on Antena 3 from October 2008 to June 2010. She was a co-host of the Kiss FM breakfast programme Las Mañanas Kiss from 2011 to 2014 and the entertainment magazine programme Esto es vida on RTVE's La 1 between 2015 and 2016.", "target": "Spanish journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7258807", "label": "Puerto Rico at the 2007 Pan American Games", "source": "The 15th Pan American Games were held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil from 13 July to 29 July 2007.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2057044", "label": "Slaviša Stojanovič", "source": "Slaviša Stojanović (born 6 December 1969) is a Slovenian professional football manager and former player. As manager, Stojanović has won the Slovenian PrvaLiga twice, with Domžale, and the Serbian SuperLiga once, with Red Star Belgrade.", "target": "former Slovenian footballer and manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63303218", "label": "Aleksandr Ivankov", "source": "Aleksandr Alekseyevich Ivankov (Russian: Александр Алексеевич Иваньков; born 12 January 2000) is a Russian football player. He plays for FC Metallurg Lipetsk.", "target": "Russian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7616010", "label": "William Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart", "source": "William John Manners Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart DL (3 March 1859 – 22 November 1935) in the Peerage of Scotland, was also a Baronet (cr.1793) in the Baronetage of Great Britain, Lord Lieutenant of Rutland (1881–1906), and Justice of the Peace for Leicestershire and Lincolnshire.", "target": "British Baron (1859-1935)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9732", "label": "Le Mont-Dore", "source": "Le Mont-Dore is a commune in the suburbs of Nouméa in the South Province of New Caledonia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean.", "target": "commune in New Caledonia, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of New Caledonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7694626", "label": "Tefft", "source": "Tefft is an unincorporated community in Kankakee Township, Jasper County, Indiana, United States.", "target": "unincorporated community in Jasper County, Indiana", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16345715", "label": "Nirmal Jibon Ghosh", "source": "Nirmal Jibon Ghosh (5 January 1916 – 26 October 1934) was an Indian revolutionary and member of the Bengal Volunteers. He was hanged on 26 October 1934 for the charge of assassination of Magistrate Burge.", "target": "Bengali revolitionary", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4235288", "label": "Louisa Stuart Costello", "source": "Louisa Stuart Costello (9 October 1799 – 24 April 1870) was an Anglo-Irish writer on travel and French history, said to have been born either in Ireland or Sussex.", "target": "British miniature painter and author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14742632", "label": "Pterolophia matsushitai", "source": "Pterolophia matsushitai is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1938.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18207398", "label": "Santa Maria Lacrimosa degli Alemanni, Bologna", "source": "Santa Maria Lacrimosa degli Alemanni is a small church and sanctuary, built during the Renaissance era, and located on Via Mazzini number 65 in central Bologna, Italy.", "target": "building in Bologna, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "historic building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q760906", "label": "Oppurg", "source": "Oppurg is a Verwaltungsgemeinschaft (\"collective municipality\") in the district Saale-Orla-Kreis, in Thuringia, Germany. The seat of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft is in Oppurg. The Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Oppurg consists of the following municipalities:.", "target": "municipal association in Thuringia, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["administrative community of Thuringia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17173640", "label": "Silver Oriole", "source": "The silver oriole (Oriolus mellianus) is a species of bird in the family Oriolidae. It breeds in southern China and winters in mainland Southeast Asia. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest and subtropical or tropical moist montane forest where it is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8078201", "label": "Éliane Duthoit", "source": "Éliane Duthoit (born 1946 in Brittany), a French citizen, is a senior United Nations official at the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).", "target": "French UN official", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16418632", "label": "Zangilan", "source": "Zəngilan (Zangilan, formerly known as İçəri (Ichari)) is a village in the Zangilan District of Azerbaijan.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63246638", "label": "Gina Crampton", "source": "Gina Crampton (born 7 December 1991) is a New Zealand netball international. She was a member of the New Zealand teams that won the 2019 Netball World Cup and the 2021 Constellation Cup. Crampton was also a member of the Southern Steel teams that won the 2017 and 2018 ANZ Premierships. She was named the 2016 New Zealand ANZ Championship Player of the Year and the 2019 ANZ Premiership Player of the Year. Crampton has captained both Southern Steel and New Zealand. Since 2021 she has played for Northern Stars.", "target": "New Zealand netball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25553280", "label": "Chatham Township", "source": "Chatham Township is a suburban township located in Morris County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the township's population was 10,452, reflecting an increase of 366 (+3.6%) from the 10,086 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 725 (+7.7%) from the 9,361 counted in the 1990 Census. The long-established hamlet of Green Village (also within Harding Township) is located in Chatham Township. The presence of the Chatham station along the Morris and Essex Lines in neighboring Chatham Borough proved a vital role in population increases in Chatham Township, which began to be developed for residential use due to its easy commute to nearby Manhattan.New Jersey Monthly magazine ranked Chatham Township first in the state in its 2008 rankings of the \"Best Places to Live\" in New Jersey.The township has been one of the state's highest-income communities. Based on data from the 2013–2017 ACS, township residents had a median household income of $176,364, ranked 3rd in the state among municipalities with more than 10,000 residents, more than double the statewide median of $76,475. In March 2018, Bloomberg ranked Chatham as the 64th highest-income place in the United States and as having the 8th-highest income in New Jersey.In 2012, Forbes.com listed Chatham as 375th in its listing of \"America's Most Expensive ZIP Codes\", with a median home price of $776,703.", "target": "township in Morris County, New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["township of New Jersey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13558200", "label": "Pseudocoremia cineracia", "source": "Pseudocoremia cineracia is a species of moth in the family Geometridae. It is endemic to New Zealand. It is classified as Nationally Vulnerable by the Department of Conservation.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1124703", "label": "The Cub Reporter's Temptation", "source": "The Cub Reporter's Temptation is a 1913 American short silent film drama. The film starred Earle Foxe and Alice Joyce and Tom Moore in the lead roles.", "target": "1913 film", "baseline_candidates": ["short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21982966", "label": "Nippo-Vini Fantini 2016", "source": "The 2016 season for the Nippo–Vini Fantini cycling team began in January at the Tour de San Luis. The team participated in UCI Continental Circuits and UCI World Tour events when given a wildcard invitation.", "target": "2016 Nippo-Vini Fantini", "baseline_candidates": ["cycling team season", "UCI Professional Continental Team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22056760", "label": "Makeba", "source": "\"Makeba\" is a song by French singer-songwriter Jain released on 6 November 2015 from her debut studio album Zanaka (2015). Written by herself, the song was produced by her long-time collaborator Maxim Nucci. The song peaked at number seven on the French Singles Chart. The song references Miriam Makeba also known as \"Mama Africa\", a South African singer and activist.", "target": "2015 single by Jain", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56065617", "label": "Severino Lucini", "source": "Severino Lucini (born 21 October 1929) is an Italian rower. He competed in the men's double sculls event at the 1960 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Italian rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1076946", "label": "Puymangou", "source": "Puymangou (French pronunciation: ​[pɥimɑ̃ɡu]; Occitan: Pueimangor) is a former commune in the Dordogne department in southwestern France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune Saint-Aulaye-Puymangou.", "target": "former commune in Dordogne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France", "delegated commune"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16992457", "label": "Schileykula", "source": "Schileykula is a genus of air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Orculidae. All of the species and subspecies in this genus inhabit Turkey, with the exception of the subspecies Schileykula scyphus crass (Pilsbry, 1922), which lives in Iran. Species belonging to the genera Schileykula and Orculella are indistinguishable based on shell characters only. They differ however in the genitalia, primarily in the presence (Orculella) or absence (Schileykula) of a penial appendix. In Sch. batumensis and Sch. trapezensis the reproductive isolation is incomplete.", "target": "genus of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13100457", "label": "Acts 21", "source": "Acts 21 is the twenty-first chapter of the Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It records the end of Paul's third missionary journey and his arrival and reception in Jerusalem. The book containing this chapter is anonymous, but early Christian tradition uniformly affirmed that Luke composed this book as well as the Gospel of Luke.", "target": "Acts of the Apostles, chapter 21", "baseline_candidates": ["chapter of the Bible"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7078071", "label": "Odostomia boteroi", "source": "Megastomia boteroi is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6442898", "label": "Kuldscha", "source": "Kuldscha is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae described by Sergei Alphéraky in 1883.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7094186", "label": "Only God Can Judge Me", "source": "Only God Can Judge Me is a mixtape by rapper Young Buck, Hosted by Freeway Ricky Ross and Bigga Rankin. The mixtape features exclusive tracks and freestyles from Young Buck with appearances by All Star Cashville Prince, 8Ball & MJG, Lupe Fiasco, Yo Gotti, and more. It was released for digital download on September 16, 2009. Due to contract issues with G-Unit Records and a feud with label head 50 Cent, Young Buck couldn't release a new album, so through his own label Cashville Records and Strong Family Entertainment he released an official mixtape for his fans.", "target": "album by Young Buck", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21731283", "label": "Ziros, Lasithi", "source": "Ziros (Greek: Ζίρος) is a village in the municipality Sitia, Lasithi regional unit, Crete, Greece. It was the seat of government for the former municipality Lefki. The village of Ziros is 30 kilometers south of Sitia on the Sitia - Piskokefalo - Epano Episkopi - Chandras - Ziros road. There are a number of Byzantine churches in the area.", "target": "human settlement in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16991970", "label": "The Door Is Still Open to My Heart", "source": "The Door Is Still Open to My Heart is a 1964 studio album by Dean Martin, produced by Jimmy Bowen and featuring arrangements by Ernie Freeman, Gus Levene and Marty Paich.Three of the songs from the album, (\"I'm Gonna Change Everything,\" \"The Middle of the Night Is My Cryin' Time,\" and \"My Sugar's Gone\") had previously featured on Martin's 1963 album Dean \"Tex\" Martin Rides Again.The Door Is Still Open to My Heart peaked at number 9 on the Billboard 200. \"Send Me the Pillow You Dream On,\" which went into the Top 20 of the pop charts and the Top 5 of the easy listening chart. \"You're Nobody till Somebody Loves You\" was released as a single from the album and was a Top 40 hit for Martin, and his third song to top the Easy Listening charts.", "target": "album by Dean Martin", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18041145", "label": "UGT1A4", "source": "UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 1-4 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the UGT1A4 gene.This gene encodes a UDP-glucuronosyltransferase, an enzyme of the glucuronidation pathway that transforms small lipophilic molecules, such as steroids, bilirubin, hormones, and drugs, into water-soluble, excretable metabolites. This gene is part of a complex locus that encodes several UDP-glucuronosyltransferases. The locus includes thirteen unique alternate first exons followed by four common exons. Four of the alternate first exons are considered pseudogenes. Each of the remaining nine 5′ exons may be spliced to the four common exons, resulting in nine proteins with different N-termini and identical C-termini. Each first exon encodes the substrate binding site, and is regulated by its own promoter. This enzyme has some glucuronidase activity towards bilirubin, although it is more active on amines, steroids, and sapogenins.It is the main enzyme responsible for glucuronidation of the anticonvulsant lamotrigine.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12692602", "label": "Espinho Airport", "source": "Espinho Airport (ICAO: LPIN) is an airport serving Espinho in northern Portugal. The main airport and runway are closed/ built-over, however the Aero Clube da Costa Verde (Portuguese language) operates a flying club and school for light aircraft, marking off 420 metres (1,378 ft) of the original runway's south end for use.", "target": "airport in Portugal", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47387054", "label": "Battle of Hanoi", "source": "On December 19, 1946, Viet Minh soldiers detonated explosives in Hanoi, and the ensuing battle, known as the Battle of Hanoi marked the opening salvo of the First Indochina War.", "target": "Hanoi during 60 Days and Nights of Blood and Flowers", "baseline_candidates": ["battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42790362", "label": "Julian Eastoe", "source": "Julian Grahame Eastoe (born January 1965) is Professor of Chemistry at the University of Bristol.His research interests span colloid and interface science, surfactant chemistry and applications of neutron scattering. He was educated at Solihull Sixth Form College and the University of East Anglia (BSc Chemistry, 1986; PhD, 1990).He was awarded the Rideal Medal from the Royal Society of Chemistry and Society for Chemical Industry in 2007 for \"distinction in colloid or interface science\", and the 2015 ECIS-Solvay medal from the European Colloid and Interface Society “for original scientific work of outstanding quality\". He is a Co-Editor of the Journal of Colloid and Interface Science.He has an h-index of 71 according to Google Scholar.", "target": "British chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17217018", "label": "Musan Kwangsan Line", "source": "The Musan Kwangsan Line, or Musan Mining Line is a non-electrified freight-only railway line of the Korean State Railway in Musan County, North Hamgyŏng Province, North Korea, running from Ch'ŏlsong on the Musan Line to Musan Kwangsan.", "target": "railway line in North Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5149708", "label": "Columbia Heights", "source": "Columbia Heights is a mountain in Umatilla County in the U.S. state of Oregon, near the city of Milton-Freewater. The summit is at an elevation of 1,322 feet (403 m).", "target": "mountain in Oregon", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6948139", "label": "Myrcene synthase", "source": "In enzymology, a myrcene synthase (EC 4.2.3.15) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction geranyl diphosphate ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } myrcene + diphosphateHence, this enzyme has one substrate, geranyl diphosphate, and two products, myrcene and diphosphate. This enzyme belongs to the family of lyases, specifically those carbon-oxygen lyases acting on phosphates. The systematic name of this enzyme class is geranyl-diphosphate diphosphate-lyase (myrcene-forming). This enzyme participates in monoterpenoid biosynthesis.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["lyase", "group or class of enzymes", "terpene synthase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q493528", "label": "NHN Japan", "source": "NHN Japan Corporation is the Japanese subsidiary of NHN Entertainment Corporation. Not to be confused with the previous NHN Japan Corporation which was later renamed Line Corporation.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7735292", "label": "The Fridge", "source": "The Fridge was a nightclub in the Brixton area of South London, England, founded, in 1981, by Andrew Czezowski and Susan Carrington, who had run the Roxy during punk music's heyday in 1977. The Fridge closed on 17 March 2010 and has no link with Electric Brixton which opened in September 2011 and now occupies the building.", "target": "nightclub in Brixton, Lambeth, London, England, formerly a cinema", "baseline_candidates": ["nightclub", "movie theater", "venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3969113", "label": "Boyle railway station", "source": "_NOTC_ Boyle railway station serves the town of Boyle in County Roscommon, Ireland.", "target": "railway station in County Roscommon, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7493006", "label": "Sheila Bender", "source": "Sheila Bender is an American poet and essayist, best known for her popular books on writing instruction. She hosts a show on KPTZ in Port Townsend, WA.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67225455", "label": "South Fire", "source": "The South Fire was a wildfire that burned on the southeast side of Tomhead Mountain in Shasta-Trinity National Forest in Tehama County, California in the United States. The fire was started by a lightning strike, making it one of 26 reported fires in the area due to thunderstorm. On October 17, the fire had burned 5,332 acres (2,158 ha) and was 75 percent contained. Select trails and roads in the fire area were closed.", "target": "wildfire in California", "baseline_candidates": ["wildfire"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20615733", "label": "Konar", "source": "Konar is a settlement in Tsivilsky District, the center of Konarskoe Rural Settlement, in the Chuvash Republic, Russia. Located at the distance of 57 km to Cheboksary, 20 km to Tsivilsk, the settlement was founded on November 18, 1961 on the basis of the Tingovatovo oil pumping station. Konar is a constituent entity of the Tsivilsky District since 1961.", "target": "Settlement in Tsivilsk District of Chuvashia of Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["posyolok"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6774956", "label": "Martin Baumgarten", "source": "Martin von Baumgarten (Latin: Marinus à Baumgarten) was a German explorer who wrote the book Peregrinatio in Aegyptum, Arabiam, Palaestinam, & Syriam, published in 1594. It was the first modern account of the ruins at Baalbek and was mentioned by John Locke.", "target": "German explorer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15880685", "label": "Philiscus of Abydos", "source": "Philiscus or Philiskos (Greek: Φιλίσκος) was a 4th-century Greek tyrant of the city of Abydos, on the Asian side of the Hellespont, and a hyparch (\"vice-regent\") and military commander of the Achaemenid satrap Ariobarzanes. He was sent by Ariobarzanes in 368 BCE as an Achaemenid emissary to Delphi, where the Greek cities at war between themselves had assembled for peace negotiations. Philiscus had probably been sent at the request of either Athens or Sparta, to help solve the conflicts between the Greek city-states.", "target": "tyrant of Abydus", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q352203", "label": "Bob Gunton", "source": "Robert Patrick Gunton Jr. (born November 15, 1945) is an American character actor of stage and screen. He is known for playing strict, authoritarian characters, including Warden Samuel Norton in the 1994 prison drama The Shawshank Redemption, Chief George Earle in 1993's Demolition Man, Dr. Walcott, the domineering dean of Virginia Medical School in Patch Adams, and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in Argo. He also played Leland Owlsley in the Daredevil television series, Secretary of Defense Ethan Kanin in 24, and Noah Taylor in Desperate Housewives. In addition to his film and television career, Gunton is a prolific theatre actor. He originated the role of Juan Perón in the Broadway premiere of Evita and the titular character in the 1989 revival of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, roles for which he received Tony Award nominations. He is the recipient of a Drama Desk Award, an Obie Award, and a Clarence Derwent Award.", "target": "American film and television actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50379565", "label": "Nathan W. Allen", "source": "Nathan Allen is a travel writer and photographer from The United States. He is the creator of the lifestyle and travel website \"I Dreamed Of This\". In November 2013 he finished up a year living around and exploring the Philippines, then wrote an article about his observations. It was originally titled \"What I REALLY The article on November 30, 2013, retitling it \"A year in the PHL: Honest observations from a Westerner on his way home”.In January 2016, Nathan ended up on the No. 2 spot of HuffPost UK's \"World's Top Male Travel Bloggers\".", "target": "American travel writer and photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14684705", "label": "KDGO", "source": "KDGO (1240 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a News Talk Information format. Licensed to Durango, Colorado, United States, the station serves the Four Corners area. The station is currently owned by Winton Road Broadcasting Co., LLC and features programming from ABC Radio and Premiere Radio Networks.", "target": "news/talk radio station in Durango, Colorado, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16895329", "label": "Monumental Methodist Church", "source": "Monumental United Methodist Church, formerly known as Dinwiddie Street Methodist Church, is a historic Methodist church located in Portsmouth, Virginia. It is a five-bay brick and stucco, Victorian Gothic style church. It is features a 182 feet tall, two part central tower. The church was built between 1871 and 1876 on the foundations of an earlier 1831 building that had burned in 1864.The church was heavily damaged by fire on January 3, 2018. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. It is located in the Portsmouth Olde Towne Historic District.", "target": "church building in Portsmouth, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["protestant church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16029996", "label": "John Abbott", "source": "John Abbott (1874 – 1947) was a fisherman and political figure in Newfoundland. He represented Bonavista Bay in the Newfoundland House of Assembly from 1913 to 1923. He was born in Bonavista and educated at the Methodist School there. After completing his education, Abbott became a fisherman like his father. In 1909, he joined the Fishermen's Protective Union. In 1913, he became manager of the Union Trading Company store in Bonavista. Abbott retired from politics in 1923 and was named a customs collector. In 1930, he became a justice of the peace. He was widowed after his first marriage, and later remarried. He had children with both wives. Abbott died of stomach cancer in 1947, and left behind a large family. Descendants of Abbott still live in Newfoundland, and his daughter Mona Abbott Kesting has chronicled much of his work.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q607149", "label": "Hervé Flandin", "source": "Hervé Flandin (born 4 June 1965 in Modane) is a former French biathlete. At the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, he won a bronze medal with the French relay team, in 4 × 7.5 km relay.", "target": "French biathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13463640", "label": "Chionothremma marginata", "source": "Chionothremma marginata is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in New Guinea.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3544849", "label": "Blekinge-class submarine", "source": "The Blekinge-class submarine is the next generation of submarines developed by Kockums for the Swedish Navy, also known as the A26 type. First planned at the beginning of the 1990s, the project was called \"U-båt 2000\" and was intended to be ready by the late 1990s or early 2000. With the end of the Cold War the naval threat from the Soviet Union disappeared and the new submarine class was deemed unnecessary. The project lay dormant for years until the mid-2000s when the need for a replacement for the Södermanland class became apparent. Originally the Scandinavian countries had intended to collaborate on the Viking class, but Denmark's withdrawal from submarine operations meant that Kockums proceeded on their own. In February 2014 the project was cancelled because of disagreements between Kockums's new German owners, ThyssenKrupp, and the Swedish government. ThyssenKrupp refused to send a complete offer to any potential buyer, and demanded that each one buyer pay for the entire development rather than sharing the cost. The cancellation resulted in the Kockums equipment repossession incident on 8 April 2014. As per protocol, The Swedish government repossessed all equipment belonging to Defence Materiel Administration (Sweden), as well as all secret blueprints and images, using an armed escort. By orders from a manager, Kockums staff tried to sabotage the repossession by locking the gates with the repossession crew and escort still inside.Maritime Today on 18 March 2015 reported that the project was restarted after the Swedish government placed a formal order for two A26 submarines for a maximum total.", "target": "submarine class", "baseline_candidates": ["ship project", "submarine", "submarine class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2906565", "label": "Vilna Edition Shas", "source": "The Vilna Edition of the Talmud, printed in Vilna (now Vilnius), Lithuania, is by far the most common printed edition of the Talmud still in use today as the basic text for Torah study in yeshivas and by all scholars of Judaism. It was typeset by the Widow Romm and Brothers of Vilna. This edition comprises 37 volumes and contains the entire Babylonian Talmud. In its entirety there are 2,711 double sided folio pages. It follows the typical pagination due to Bomberg of printing with the Gemara and/or Mishnah centered with Rashi's commentary on the inner margin and Tosafot on the outer margin. It is also flanked by other various marginal notations from various prominent Talmudists. This edition was first printed in the 1870s and 1880s, but it continues to be reproduced photomechanically all around the world.", "target": "Most common printed edition of the Talmud", "baseline_candidates": ["version, edition, or translation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47462807", "label": "Dion Leonard", "source": "Dion Leonard (born Sydney, Australia, 2 January 1975) is an Australian/British endurance athlete and ultramarathon runner, Motivational speaker, and author of New York Times Bestseller 'Finding Gobi', the non fiction memoir of his story of his dog, Gobi, who ran 77 miles of a 155-mile race across the Gobi Desert. Leonard who grew up in Warwick, Queensland before moving to the U.K. started running in 2013 and has already achieved numerous top 10 finishes (including wins) in ultra races around the world in the most extreme conditions. Leonard has not only competed in but completed some of the world's toughest ultra running races across the most inhospitable landscapes. In 2021, Leonard finished 6th in what is regarded as the 'World's Toughest Race' the Badwater Ultramarathon in 30 hours and 12 seconds. In 2019, Leonard won the inaugural Delirious West 200 mile race in a time of 61 hours and 24 minutes. Leonard also became the first male in a single year to complete the Grand Slam of Ultrarunning and the Leadville Leadman series which includes Leadville Trail 100, Leadville Trail 100 MTB, Silver Rush Trail Run 50 miles, Leadville Marathon and Leadville 10 km. In 2018, Leonard completed the Triple Crown of 200 mile races, finishing the series in 2nd place overall in 220:10:44. In 2017, Leonard won the 250 km Kalahari Augrabies Extreme Marathon in 26 hours and 22 minutes. In 2016, Leonard finished 2nd at the Gobi Desert 250 km race in 29 hours and 32 minutes. In 2015, Leonard finished 3rd at the.", "target": "Australian/British ultramarathon runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19796783", "label": "2015 Torneo Internacional Challenger León", "source": "The 2015 Torneo Internacional Challenger León was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the thirteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2015 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in León, Mexico between 6 April and 12 April 2015.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition", "Torneo Internacional AGT"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21517117", "label": "Thomas Rupert Jones", "source": "Thomas Rupert Jones FRS (1 October 1819 – 13 April 1911) was a British geologist and palaeontologist.", "target": "British geologist and paleontologist (1819-1911)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5074231", "label": "Charford", "source": "Charford is a small village located close to the town centre of Bromsgrove in Worcestershire, England.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9704234", "label": "Greenan Castle", "source": "Greenan Castle is a 16th-century ruined tower house, around 2+1⁄2 miles (4 kilometres) southwest of Ayr in South Ayrshire, Scotland. Situated at the top of a sea cliff, it was originally a promontory fort converted into a motte-and-bailey in the 12th century. In the 15th century a tower house was built by the Lords of the Isles, which later passed into the hands of the Kennedy family.", "target": "castle in South Ayrshire, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["promontory fort", "castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57903351", "label": "Amy Allen", "source": "Amy Allen is an American songwriter, record producer, and singer. She is primarily known as a songwriter for artists such as Rosé, Harry Styles, Halsey, Shawn Mendes, Selena Gomez, Camila Cabello, and Pink Sweat$.", "target": "American songwriter, record producer, and singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3121113", "label": "Gustave Biéler", "source": "Gustave Biéler DSO MBE CdeG (26 March 1904 – 5 September 1944) was a Canadian Special Operations Executive agent during World War II.", "target": "SOE agent (1904-1944)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96778127", "label": "Luka Kebara", "source": "Luka Kebara (Serbian Cyrillic: Лука Кебара; born 1994) is a Serbian politician. He was elected to the National Assembly of Serbia in the 2020 parliamentary election a member of the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS).", "target": "Serbian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4590827", "label": "1995 in British music", "source": "This is a summary of 1995 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year.", "target": "music-related events in the United Kingdom during the year of 1995", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48804286", "label": "El Mariachi", "source": "El Mariachi is a Spanish-language crime drama television series created by Darío Vanegas and Lina Uribe based on the 1993 American film of the same name directed by Robert Rodriguez. It is a production between Teleset Colombia and Sony Pictures Television recorded in Mexico. The series is stars Iván Arana and Martha Higareda as main characters.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94686", "label": "Kiki", "source": "Kiki is a 1931 American Pre-Code romantic comedy, starring Mary Pickford and Reginald Denny, which was directed by Sam Taylor. It was based upon the David Belasco play of the same name. The film is a remake of the 1926 version starring Norma Talmadge.", "target": "1931 film by Sam Taylor", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5665644", "label": "Hajjiabad", "source": "Hajjiabad (Persian: حاجي اباد, also Romanized as Ḩājjīābād) is a village in Charuymaq-e Jonubegharbi Rural District, in the Central District of Charuymaq County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 41, in 9 families.", "target": "village in the Central District of Charuymaq County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q259357", "label": "Halloweentown II: Kalabar's Revenge", "source": "Halloweentown II: Kalabar's Revenge is a 2001 Disney Channel Original Movie released for the Halloween season. It is the second installment in the Halloweentown series.", "target": "2001 film directed by Mary Lambert", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q482410", "label": "Hyundai Accent", "source": "The Hyundai Accent (Korean: 현대 엑센트), or Hyundai Verna (현대 베르나) is a subcompact car produced by Hyundai. In Australia, the first generation models carried over the Hyundai Excel name used by the Accent's predecessor. The Accent was replaced in 2000 by the Hyundai Verna in South Korea, although most international markets, including the US, retained the \"Accent\" name. The \"Accent\" name is an abbreviation of Advanced Compact Car of Epoch-making New Technology.The Accent is produced for the Chinese market by Beijing Hyundai Co., a joint venture with Beijing Automotive Industry Corp. For the Russian market it was assembled by the TagAZ plant in Taganrog until 2011, and since 2011 it is assembled by the HMMR plant in Saint Petersburg and sold under the new name Hyundai Solaris. In Mexico, the Accent was marketed until 2014 by Chrysler as the Dodge Attitude, previously known as the Verna by Dodge. In Venezuela, Chrysler marketed these models as the Dodge Brisa until 2006. The Brisa was assembled by Mitsubishi Motors at its plant in Barcelona, Venezuela. Since 2002, the Accent had been the longest-running small family car sold in North America. In Puerto Rico, it was sold as the Hyundai Brio. In 2008, Hyundai Accent was named the most dependable subcompact car by J.D. Power and Associates.", "target": "car model made by Hyundai", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model series", "supermini"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2442652", "label": "Tony Johannot", "source": "Antoine Johannot, known commonly as Tony Johannot (9 November 1803 – 4 August 1852), was a French engraver, illustrator and painter.", "target": "French painter (1803-1852)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54337775", "label": "Cameron MacPherson", "source": "Cameron MacPherson (born 29 December 1998) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for St Johnstone.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16740060", "label": "Insult To Injury", "source": "Insult to Injury is the sixth studio album by British band The Nightingales. The album was recorded in March 2008 at the Faust Studio, Scheer, Germany.", "target": "album by The Nightingales", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q99749", "label": "U10", "source": "The unbuilt U10 line, of the Berlin U-Bahn, was part of East Berlin's \"200-km-plan\" of 1953 – 1955 (through 1977). It would have been a metro line from Falkenberg, in the northeastern part of the city, to Alexanderplatz, and up to Steglitz then terminating at Drakestraße in Lichterfelde. The designated letter name of the line was \"F\" until 1 July 1972, when it was changed to \"Line 10\". Because a number of tunnels and stations were constructed to accommodate the proposed line with elements visible at transfer stations and elsewhere, the line is popularly known as the \"Phantomlinie\" (Phantom line).", "target": "metro line", "baseline_candidates": ["proposed railway line", "rapid transit railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16886084", "label": "Howard J. Thelin", "source": "Howard James Thelin (February 7, 1921 – March 25, 2011) served in the California State Assembly for the 43rd district from 1957 to 1966 and as a Superior Court Justice. During World War II he served in the United States Army.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7962222", "label": "Walker Bleakney", "source": "Walker Bleakney (February 8, 1901 – January 15, 1992) was an American physicist, one of inventors of mass spectrometers, and widely noted for his research in the fields of atomic physics, molecular physics, fluid dynamics, the ionization of gases, and blast waves. Bleakney was the chair of the department of physics at Princeton University. He was the head of the Princeton Ballistic Project during World War II.", "target": "American physicist (1901-1992)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5242596", "label": "Dawon Kahng", "source": "Dawon Kahng (Korean: 강대원; May 4, 1931 – May 13, 1992) was a Korean-American electrical engineer and inventor, known for his work in solid-state electronics. He is best known for inventing the MOSFET (metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor, or MOS transistor), along with his colleague Mohamed Atalla, in 1959. Kahng and Atalla developed both the PMOS and NMOS processes for MOSFET semiconductor device fabrication. The MOSFET is the most widely used type of transistor, and the basic element in most modern electronic equipment. Kahng and Atalla later proposed the concept of the MOS integrated circuit, and they did pioneering work on Schottky diodes and nanolayer-base transistors in the early 1960s. Kahng then invented the floating-gate MOSFET (FGMOS) with Simon Min Sze in 1967. Kahng and Sze proposed that FGMOS could be used as floating-gate memory cells for non-volatile memory (NVM) and reprogrammable read-only memory (ROM), which became the basis for EPROM (erasable programmable ROM), EEPROM (electrically erasable programmable ROM) and flash memory technologies. Kahng was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2009.", "target": "South Korean engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16559275", "label": "1989–90 Polska Liga Hokejowa season", "source": "The 1989–90 Polska Liga Hokejowa season was the 55th season of the Polska Liga Hokejowa, the top level of ice hockey in Poland. 10 teams participated in the league, and Polonia Bytom won the championship.", "target": "Polish ice hockey league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5439707", "label": "febarbamate", "source": "Febarbamate (INN; Solium, Tymium), also known as phenobamate, is an anxiolytic and tranquilizer of the barbiturate and carbamate families which is used in Europe by itself and as part of a combination drug formulation called tetrabamate.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8937589", "label": "Chang Chun-Yen", "source": "Chang Chun-yen (12 October 1937 – 12 October 2018) was a Taiwanese electrical engineer and professor who served as President of National Chiao Tung University (NCTU). He was a member of Academia Sinica. He was also elected an international member of the US National Academy of Engineering in 2000 for contributions to Taiwanese electronics industry, education, and materials technology. Chang is considered a founder of Taiwan's semiconductor industry, he was awarded the TWAS Prize for Engineering Sciences in 2006 and the Nikkei Asia Prize for Science in 2007.", "target": "Taiwanese engineer, president of NCTU", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18150726", "label": "Home", "source": "Home was an American daytime television program hosted by Arlene Francis. Intended for an audience of women, it debuted in 1954 as one of NBC's three major non-primetime shows. While the other two shows—Today and Tonight—are still being produced 60 years later, Home was cancelled in 1957.", "target": "1950s American television program", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8986185", "label": "Li Xingcan", "source": "Li Xingcan (Chinese: 李星灿; born 23 July 1986 in Tianjin) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for Zibo Qisheng in the CMCL.", "target": "Chinese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6846699", "label": "Mike Enich", "source": "Mike Enich (September 20, 1918 – January 9, 1978) was a college football player for the University of Iowa. He was a member of Iowa's 1939 \"Ironmen\" team and a first team All-American in 1940.", "target": "Recipient of the Purple Heart medal (1918-1978)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6488909", "label": "Laredo–Nuevo Laredo", "source": "Laredo–Nuevo Laredo (UN/LOCODE: USLRD & MXNLD) is one of six transborder agglomerations along the U.S.-Mexican border. The city of Laredo is situated in the U.S. state of Texas on the northern bank of the Rio Grande and Nuevo Laredo is located in the Mexican State of Tamaulipas in the southern bank of the river. This area is also known as the Two Laredos or the Laredo Borderplex. The area is made up of one county: Webb County in Texas and three municipalities: Nuevo Laredo Municipality in Tamaulipas, Hidalgo Municipality in Coahuila, Anáhuac Municipality in Nuevo León in Mexico. Two urban areas: the Laredo Metropolitan Statistical Area and the Zona Metropolitana Nuevo Laredo (Nuevo Laredo Metropolitan Zone) three cities and 12 towns make the Laredo–Nuevo Laredo Metropolitan area which has a total of 636,516 inhabitants according to the INEGI Census of 2010 and the United States Census estimate of 2010. The Laredo–Nuevo Laredo is connected by four International Bridges and an International Railway Bridge. According to World Gazetteer this urban agglomeration ranked 157th largest in North and South America in 2010 with an estimated population of 775,481. This area ranks 66th in the United States and 23rd in Mexico.", "target": "international transborder agglomeration in southern Texas and northwestern Tamaulipas", "baseline_candidates": ["Metropolitan areas of Mexico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7848070", "label": "Truski", "source": "Truski [ˈtruski] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bielsk Podlaski, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 14 kilometres (9 mi) west of Bielsk Podlaski and 44 km (27 mi) south of the regional capital Białystok.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3509191", "label": "Sportpark Hazelaarweg", "source": "The Hazelaarweg Stadion is a multi-use stadium in Rotterdam, Netherlands, run by the biggest field hockey club in the Netherlands, HC Rotterdam. It is close to the international cricket ground occupied by VOC Rotterdam.", "target": "sports stadium", "baseline_candidates": ["sports park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7299889", "label": "Rb 05", "source": "Rb 05 (Robot 05) was a short-range air-to-surface missile that was developed in the 1960s by the Swedish company Saab-Scania, Missiles and Electronics.", "target": "air-to-surface missile by Saab", "baseline_candidates": ["air-to-surface missile"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33699545", "label": "Gmina Olszyna", "source": "Gmina Olszyna is an urban-rural gmina (administrative district) in Lubań County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Its seat is the town of Olszyna, which lies approximately 9 kilometres (6 mi) south-east of Lubań, and 116 kilometres (72 mi) west of the regional capital Wrocław. The gmina covers an area of 47.16 square kilometres (18.2 sq mi), and as of 2019 its total population is 6,504.", "target": "urban-rural gmina of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["urban-rural municipality of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25673119", "label": "Traditional Tibetan medicine", "source": "Traditional Tibetan medicine (Tibetan: བོད་ཀྱི་གསོ་བ་རིག་པ་, Wylie: bod kyi gso ba rig pa), also known as Sowa-Rigpa medicine, is a centuries-old traditional medical system that employs a complex approach to diagnosis, incorporating techniques such as pulse analysis and urinalysis, and utilizes behavior and dietary modification, medicines composed of natural materials (e.g., herbs and minerals) and physical therapies (e.g. Tibetan acupuncture, moxabustion, etc.) to treat illness. The Tibetan medical system is based upon Indian Buddhist literature (for example Abhidharma and Vajrayana tantras) and Ayurveda. It continues to be practiced in Tibet, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Ladakh, Siberia, China and Mongolia, as well as more recently in parts of Europe and North America. It embraces the traditional Buddhist belief that all illness ultimately results from the three poisons: delusion, greed and aversion. Tibetan medicine follows the Buddha's Four Noble Truths which apply medical diagnostic logic to suffering.", "target": "traditional medical system", "baseline_candidates": ["traditional medicine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12942187", "label": "Louann", "source": "Louann is a town in Ouachita County, Arkansas, United States. The population was 195 at the 2000 census, which fell to 164 in the 2010 census. It is part of the Camden Micropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "human settlement in Ouachita County, Arkansas, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97186828", "label": "BM Babak-Matveev", "source": "BM Babak-Matveev is an art-duo of Ukrainian artists Mykola Babak and Evgene Matveev, created in 2014. Before working together, they were successfully realized as independent artists and won the highest state title, becoming People's Artists of Ukraine and winners of the Taras Shevchenko National Prize. Mykola Babak in 2005 represented Ukraine at the Venice Biennale with the national project \"Your Children, Ukraine\". Evgene Matveev was a participant of the Autumn Salon in Paris in 1990. Both artists have participated in many exhibitions, competitions, biennials in Ukraine and abroad. They have created dozens of large-scale art projects and won national and international awards and prizes. The first collaboration between Babak and Matveev took place within the framework of the implementation of unique art publishing projects. The artists created their first art project called \"Sacrifice\" in 2014. It consists of six epic compositions measuring 3 by 6 metres (9.8 ft × 19.7 ft) each. Since 2017, BM has been collaborating with the New York Gallery AGCA and its owner Alexandre Gertsman. In 2018, the first personal exhibition of artists took place in the United States. In 2021, BM was twice successfully presented at the American auction ShapiroAuctions, where their works \"Bon Appetites\" and \"I'll be back\" were purchased for private collections. BM works in almost all types and genres of contemporary art. For seven years of existence in the baggage of the art tandem more than a dozen large art projects and series, numbering several hundred works. To date, the artists' latest project is the polyptych \"13 Covid.", "target": "Ukranian artists", "baseline_candidates": ["artistic duo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12331906", "label": "Piper Cub", "source": "The Piper J-3 Cub is an American light aircraft that was built between 1938 and 1947 by Piper Aircraft. The aircraft has a simple, lightweight design which gives it good low-speed handling properties and short-field performance. The Cub is Piper Aircraft's most-produced model, with nearly 20,000 built in the United States. Its simplicity, affordability and popularity invokes comparisons to the Ford Model T automobile. The aircraft is a high-wing, strut-braced monoplane with a large-area rectangular wing. It is most often powered by an air-cooled, flat-4 piston engine driving a fixed-pitch propeller. Its fuselage is a welded steel frame covered in fabric, seating two people in tandem. The Cub was designed as a trainer. It had great popularity in this role and as a general aviation aircraft. Due to its performance, it was well suited for a variety of military uses such as reconnaissance, liaison and ground control. It was produced in large numbers during World War II as the L-4 Grasshopper. Many Cubs are still flying today. Cubs are highly prized as bush aircraft. The aircraft's standard chrome yellow paint came to be known as \"Cub Yellow\" or \"Lock Haven Yellow\".", "target": "family of light aircraft", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft family", "utility aircraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5180379", "label": "Crackers", "source": "Crackers is a Christmas-themed Australian comedy film starring Daniel Kellie, Susan Lyons and Peter Rowsthorn. It was released on 9 July 1998 by Beyond Films. It was written and directed by David Swann.", "target": "1998 film by David Swann", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3410720", "label": "Pulaski", "source": "Pulaski is a station on the Chicago 'L' system, serving the Blue Line's Forest Park branch. The station is located in the median of the Eisenhower Expressway and serves the West Garfield Park neighborhood. A long ramp connects the platform to the station house on the Pulaski Road overpass. There was originally a similar entrance from the Keeler Avenue overpass; the entrance from Keeler was closed to cut costs on January 15, 1973, but retained as an exit, and the exit was fully closed on December 28, 1978. The structure for this exit still stands but it is closed to the public.", "target": "CTA Blue Line station", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6950440", "label": "Mücühəftəran", "source": "Mücühəftəran (also, Myudzhukhefteran, Myudzhyugaftaran, and Myudzhyukhefteran) is a village and municipality in the Ismailli Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 255.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98142455", "label": "Palakkad Sreeram", "source": "Palakkad Sreeram (born 16 February 1972) is an Indian film singer, who has worked predominantly in Tamil movie industry. Vetri Kodi Kattu in Padayappa and Liquid Dance in Slumdog Millionaire are some of his notable works.", "target": "Indian film singer (born 1972)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25529745", "label": "Saturn", "source": "Saturn (Latin: Sāturnus [saːˈtʊrnʊs]) was a god in ancient Roman religion, and a character in Roman mythology. He was described as a god of time, generation, dissolution, abundance, wealth, agriculture, periodic renewal and liberation. Saturn's mythological reign was depicted as a Golden Age of abundance and peace. After the Roman conquest of Greece, he was conflated with the Greek Titan Cronus. Saturn's consort was his sister Ops, with whom he fathered Jupiter, Neptune, Pluto, Juno, Ceres and Vesta. Saturn was especially celebrated during the festival of Saturnalia each December, perhaps the most famous of the Roman festivals, a time of feasting, role reversals, free speech, gift-giving and revelry. The Temple of Saturn in the Roman Forum housed the state treasury and archives (aerarium) of the Roman Republic and the early Roman Empire. The planet Saturn and the day of the week Saturday are both named after and were associated with him.", "target": "god in ancient Roman mythology", "baseline_candidates": ["time and fate deity", "agricultural deity", "Roman deity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7406852", "label": "Salvia omeiana", "source": "Salvia omeiana is a perennial plant that is native to forest edges and hillsides in Sichuan province in China, growing at 1,400 to 3,100 m (4,600 to 10,200 ft) elevation. It is a robust erect-growing plant reaching .4 to 1 m (1.3 to 3.3 ft), with broad cordate-ovate to hastate-ovate leaves that are 10 to 16 cm (3.9 to 6.3 in) long and 6.5 to 14.5 cm (2.6 to 5.7 in) wide. Inflorescences are raceme-panicles, with a 2.5 to 3.5 cm (0.98 to 1.38 in) yellow corolla. There are two varieties: Salvia omeiana var. omeiana has an ovate shaped bract, and no hairs inside the corolla tube. Salvia omeiana var. grandibracteata has a more lanceolate bract, and is slightly hairy inside the corolla tube.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1971953", "label": "Chitty Bang Bang", "source": "Chitty Bang Bang was the informal name of a number of celebrated British racing cars, built and raced by Count Louis Zborowski and his engineer Clive Gallop in the 1920s, which inspired the book, film and stage musical Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang. The Chittys were built in Canterbury, Kent and stored at Higham Park, Zborowski's country house at Bridge near Canterbury. The cars were so loud that Canterbury reportedly passed a by-law prohibiting them from entering within the city walls. The origin of the name \"Chitty Bang Bang\" is disputed, but may have been inspired by aeronautical engineer Letitia Chitty, the sound of an idling aeroplane engine or from a salacious World War I song.", "target": "informal name of a number of celebrated English racing cars", "baseline_candidates": ["motor car"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16235801", "label": "James Saltonstall", "source": "James Saltonstall (born (1993-09-27)27 September 1993) is an Italian international rugby league footballer who plays on the wing or as a fullback for Halifax (UK) in the Betfred Championship. He represented Italy in the 2013 World Cup.", "target": "English rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2421528", "label": "This Way Up", "source": "This Way Up is a 2008 short film directed by Alan Smith and Adam Foulkes. It follows the story of two undertakers trying to deliver a body to a graveyard. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 81st Academy Awards, but lost to Japanese film La Maison en Petits Cubes.", "target": "2008 short film", "baseline_candidates": ["short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2463431", "label": "Tyshawn Sorey", "source": "Tyshawn Sorey (born July 8, 1980) is an American composer, multi-instrumentalist, and professor of contemporary music.Sorey has received accolades for performances, recordings, and compositions ranging from improvised solo percussion to opera, with work in best-of lists for both classical and jazz music. The New Yorker included Sorey in their annual \"Notable Performances and Recordings\" lists for 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020; the pandemic-era entry was for premieres \"cast in unconventional concerto form\". His prolific output during a time of heavy restrictions on live performance led a New York Times critic to call him 2020's \"composer of the year\".Sorey was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2017, a United States Artists Fellow in 2018, and in 2019 his song cycle for Josephine Baker, Perle Noire: Meditations for Josephine, was performed on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His life and work have been the subject of features in publications including The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, NPR Music, and The Brooklyn Rail.Sorey has recorded or performed with Wadada Leo Smith, Steve Coleman, Anthony Braxton, John Zorn, Steve Lehman, Joey Baron, Muhal Richard Abrams, Pete Robbins, Cory Smythe, Kris Davis, Vijay Iyer, Myra Melford, Dave Douglas, Butch Morris, and Sylvie Courvoisier. In 2020, Sorey joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania as Presidential Assistant Professor of Music.", "target": "American composer and multi-instrumentalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q660", "label": "magnesium", "source": "Magnesium is a chemical element with the symbol Mg and atomic number 12. It is a shiny gray solid which shares many physical and chemical properties with the other five alkaline earth metals (group 2 of the periodic table). This element is produced in large, aging stars from the sequential addition of three helium nuclei to a carbon nucleus. When such stars explode as supernovas, much of the magnesium is expelled into the interstellar medium where it may recycle into new star systems. Magnesium is the eighth most abundant element in the Earth's crust and the fourth most common element in the Earth (after iron, oxygen and silicon), making up 13% of the planet's mass and a large fraction of the planet's mantle. It is the third most abundant element dissolved in seawater, after sodium and chlorine.Magnesium occurs naturally only in combination with other elements, where it almost always has a +2 oxidation state. The free element (metal) can be produced artificially, and is highly reactive (though in the atmosphere it is soon coated in a thin layer of oxide that partly inhibits reactivity – see passivation). The free metal burns with a characteristic brilliant-white light. The metal is now obtained mainly by electrolysis of magnesium salts obtained from brine, and is used primarily as a component in aluminium-magnesium alloys, sometimes called magnalium or magnelium. Magnesium is less dense than aluminium, and the alloy of the two is prized for its combination of lightness and strength. This element is the eleventh most abundant element by mass.", "target": "chemical element with symbol Mg and atomic number 12", "baseline_candidates": ["period 3", "alkaline earth metal", "chemical element"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20712736", "label": "Carnspindle", "source": "Carnspindle (from Irish: Carn Spinnil, meaning 'cairn of the sandbank') is a townland of 217 acres in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It is situated in the civil parish of Islandmagee and the historic barony of Belfast Lower.The small village of Mill Bay is within the townland.", "target": "human settlement in Northern Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["townland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7588398", "label": "St. James' Episcopal Church", "source": "St. James' Episcopal Church, named for James the Greater, is a historic Episcopal church located in Manitowoc, Wisconsin. The only Episcopal church in Manitowoc County, St. James' is a \"broad church\" parish in the Diocese of Fond du Lac. It is the oldest continually operating congregation in Manitowoc County, first meeting in 1841. and organizing in 1848. The current church building, an example of Gothic Revival architecture, was consecrated in 1902. The congregation is active in community service and social justice ministries.", "target": "church building in Wisconsin, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6654764", "label": "Live", "source": "Live is the second live album by The Northern Pikes released in 2000. The album was released independently. In 1999, Virgin Records asked the band members for their input on a \"greatest hits\" package. The band decided to do a short promotional tour following the release of Hits and Assorted Secrets 1984-1993, but found themselves enjoying the more relaxed independence of making their own schedule that they continued touring. The album Live was recorded on this tour over three nights in April 2000 in North Bay, ON, Wakefield, PQ, and Toronto, ON. It featured the song \"Out of Love\" which was unreleased at the time but would appear on their next studio album, Truest Inspiration.", "target": "live album by The Northern Pikes", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2563605", "label": "June deportation", "source": "The June deportation (Estonian: juuniküüditamine, Latvian: jūnija deportācijas, Lithuanian: birželio trėmimai) was a mass deportation by the Soviet Union of tens of thousands of people from the territories occupied in 1940–1941: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, occupied Poland (mostly present-day western Belarus and western Ukraine), and Moldavia. This mass deportation was organized following the guidelines set by the NKVD and KGB, with the USSR Interior People's Commissar Lavrentiy Beria as the senior executor. The official name of the top secret operation was “Resolution On the Eviction of the Socially Foreign Elements from the Baltic Republics, Western Ukraine, Western Belarus and Moldova”. The Soviet police, called \"militsya\", carried out the arrests with the collaboration of local Communist Party members.", "target": "mass deportation by the Soviet Union of tens of thousands of people from the occupied Baltic states, occupied Poland, and Moldavia", "baseline_candidates": ["forced displacement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1466793", "label": "Fritz Huber", "source": "Fritz Huber (born 6 April 1949 in Bad Reichenhall) is a German former wrestler who competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Olympic wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1369590", "label": "Joan Lino Martínez", "source": "Joan Lino Martínez Armenteros (born January 11, 1978 in Havana, Cuba) is a Spanish athlete. He competes in the long jump.", "target": "athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5489853", "label": "Frank Szymanski", "source": "Frank Szymanski (July 6, 1923 – April 26, 1987) was an American football player and probate judge in Wayne County, MI. He played college football at the University of Notre Dame and played for three teams in the National Football League, winning an NFL Championship with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1948. Szymanski was of Polish descent.", "target": "American football player (1923-1987)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q917592", "label": "Kubikenborgs IF", "source": "Kubikenborgs IF is a Swedish football club located in Kubikenborg, Sundsvall.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65945811", "label": "Tuur Dens", "source": "Tuur Dens (born 26 June 2000) is a Belgian racing cyclist. He won the silver medal in the scratch event at the 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships.", "target": "Belgian cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7178640", "label": "Petra Klosová", "source": "Petra Klosová (born 16 April 1986) is a Czech swimmer who specialized in freestyle and backstroke events. She is a two-time Olympian and a multiple-time national champion and record holder for the freestyle and backstroke events (50, 100, and 200 m).Klosová made her first Czech team, as an eighteen-year-old, at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where she competed in the women's 4 × 100 m freestyle relay, along with her fellow swimmers Jana Myšková, Sandra Kazíková, and Ilona Hlaváčková. Swimming the second leg, Klosová recorded a split of 56.49 seconds, and the Czech team went to finish heat one in seventh place, and thirteenth overall, for a total time of 3:46.83.At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Klosová competed as an individual swimmer in the 100 m backstroke. Leading up to her second Games, she cleared a FINA B-cut of 1:02.98 at the Missouri Grand Prix in Columbia, Missouri. She challenged seven other swimmers in the third heat, including 14-year-old Sarah Sjöström of Sweden, and three-time Olympian Sherry Tsai of Hong Kong. She raced to sixth place by six tenths of a second (0.6) behind Mexico's Fernanda González, with a time of 1:02.76. Klosová failed to advance into the semifinals, as she placed thirty-ninth overall in the preliminaries.Klosová was also a member of the SMU Mustangs swimming and diving team, and a graduate of international studies at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.", "target": "Czech swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97244506", "label": "Labuan Bajo", "source": "Labuan Bajo is a fishing town located at the western end of the large island of Flores in the Nusa Tenggara region of east Indonesia. It is the capital of the West Manggarai Regency (Kabupaten Manggarai Barat), one of the eight regencies which are the major administrative divisions of Flores.", "target": "village in Manggarai Barat, East Nusa Tenggara Province, Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["fourth-level administrative division in Indonesia", "kelurahan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1698693", "label": "Johannes Zwijsen", "source": "Johannes Zwijsen (28 August 1794, Kerkdriel, Gelderland – 16 October 1877, 's-Hertogenbosch, Brabant) was the first Roman Catholic Archbishop of Utrecht after the reestablishment of the episcopal hierarchy in the Netherlands in 1853.", "target": "Archbishop of Utrecht", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60827986", "label": "Gerrit van Doesburgh", "source": "Gerrit Roelof Diederik van Doesburgh (26 October 1900 – 24 April 1966) was a Dutch chess player, Dutch Chess Championship silver medalist (1936).", "target": "Dutch chess player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12316105", "label": "Helleruplund Church", "source": "Helleruplund Church (Danish: Helleruplund Kirke) is a Church of Denmark parish church situated at Bernstorffsvej 73 in Hellerup. Gentofte Municipality, Greater Copenhagen, Denmark. With just over 600 seats, it is the second largest church in the Diocese of Helsingør.", "target": "church building in Gentofte Municipality, Denmark", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3021048", "label": "Decticus", "source": "Decticus is a genus of bush-cricket in the subfamily Tettigoniinae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7136208", "label": "Paratrissocladius", "source": "Paratrichocladius is a genus of European non-biting midges in the subfamily Orthocladiinae of the bloodworm family (Chironomidae).", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q448740", "label": "Timi Yuro", "source": "Rosemary Timothy Yuro (August 4, 1940 – March 30, 2004), known professionally as Timi Yuro, was an American singer-songwriter. Sometimes called \"the little girl with the big voice,\" she is considered to be one of the first blue-eyed soul stylists of the rock era. According to one critic, \"her deep, strident, almost masculine voice, staggered delivery and the occasional sob created a compelling musical presence.\" Yuro possessed a contralto vocal range.", "target": "American singer (1940-2004)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21872461", "label": "Phil Chesters", "source": "Phil Chesters (born 29 October 1987) is an English rugby union player who is currently playing for Chinnor in National League 1 having signed for the club for the 2017-18 season. Prior to that he had made his name at Ealing Trailfinders where he had also been part of the medical staff. His best position is winger and over his career he has proved to be a tremendous try scorer who has set multiple records in lower division English rugby with Ealing, notably all-time records of 42 tries in a season in tier 3 (National League 1) and an amazing 70 tries in a season in tier 4 (National League 2 South) – a record that is unlikely to ever be beaten. As of the end of the 2017-18 he has also become the National League 2 South all-time try scorer with 117 tries.Surprisingly, despite all the records he has set Phil has been relatively unheralded by the English mainstream press and he has not played at the highest level of English rugby in the Premiership. As well as appearing for Ealing, Phil has also represented his county side Devon as well as Barbarians and England Counties XV.", "target": "English rugby union footballer (1987-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6537438", "label": "Lewistown Township", "source": "Lewistown Township is one of twenty-six townships in Fulton County, Illinois, USA. As of the 2010 census, its population was 3,039 and it contained 1,444 housing units.", "target": "township in Fulton County, Illinois", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Illinois"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4960909", "label": "Brendan Guilfoyle", "source": "Brendan Guilfoyle (born (1984-07-16) 16 July 1984) is an Irish rugby league footballer who plays for the Treaty City Titans in the Irish Elite League. He is an Ireland international.", "target": "Irish rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20090265", "label": "Ray Bell", "source": "Raymond Henry \"Ray\" Bell (31 December 1925 – 19 July 2016) was a New Zealand rugby union player. A wing and fullback, Bell represented Otago at a provincial level, and was a member of the New Zealand national side, the All Blacks, from 1951 to 1952. He played nine matches for the All Blacks including three internationals. He later served as an Otago selector from 1968 to 1971.Bell served with J Force, the New Zealand occupying force in Japan, from 1946 to 1948. He died in Dunedin on 19 July 2016.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union player (1925-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19884411", "label": "Vezhbolovo", "source": "Vezhbolovo (Russian: Вежболово) is a rural locality (a village) in Kurilovskoye Rural Settlement, Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 5 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5277281", "label": "Dimensions", "source": "Dimensions is a 1984 album by jazz pianist McCoy Tyner released on the Elektra label. It features performances by Tyner with alto saxophonist Gary Bartz, violinist John Blake, bassist John Lee and drummer Wilby Fletcher. The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow states \"McCoy Tyner is featured in one of his strongest groups... A transitional set between Tyner's adventurous Milestone albums and his current repertoire... Excellent music\".", "target": "album by McCoy Tyner", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11609509", "label": "cluster headache", "source": "Cluster headache (CH) is a neurological disorder characterized by recurrent severe headaches on one side of the head, typically around the eye(s). There is often accompanying eye watering, nasal congestion, or swelling around the eye on the affected side. These symptoms typically last 15 minutes to 3 hours. Attacks often occur in clusters which typically last for weeks or months and occasionally more than a year.The cause is unknown. Risk factors include a history of exposure to tobacco smoke and a family history of the condition. Exposures which may trigger attacks include alcohol, nitroglycerin, and histamine. They are a primary headache disorder of the trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias type. Diagnosis is based on symptoms.Recommended management includes lifestyle adaptations such as avoiding potential triggers. Treatments for acute attacks include oxygen or a fast-acting triptan. Measures recommended to decrease the frequency of attacks include steroid injections, civamide, or verapamil. Nerve stimulation or surgery may occasionally be used if other measures are not effective.The condition affects about 0.1% of the general population at some point in their life and 0.05% in any given year. The condition usually first occurs between 20 and 40 years of age. Men are affected about four times more often than women. Cluster headaches are named for the occurrence of groups of headache attacks (clusters). They have also been referred to as \"suicide headaches\".", "target": "neurological disorder", "baseline_candidates": ["headache", "trigeminal autonomic cephalalgia", "disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20983419", "label": "Richard L. McKenzie", "source": "Richard Lawrence McKenzie (8 January 1883 – 13 June 1959) was an Australian politician who represented the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Murray from 1938 to 1953. Elected as an independent, he joined Labor in 1943.He was one of 14 of 39 lower house MPs at the 1938 election to be elected as an independent, which as a grouping won 40 percent of the primary vote, more than either of the major parties. Tom Stott was the de facto leader of the independent caucus within parliament.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19604194", "label": "Mimosa rubicaulis", "source": "Mimosa rubicaulis is a shrub belonging to the family Fabaceae and subfamily Mimosoideae. It is bipinnately compound, each leaf having 8–12 pairs of pinnae, each with 16–20 pairs of pinnules, unlike Mimosa pudica which has at most two prickly pairs of leaflets. It is found across India.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4829558", "label": "Avula Sambasiva Rao", "source": "Justice Avula Sambasiva Rao (16 March 1917 in Mulpuru, Guntur district - 27 July 2003) was an Indian judge who was a Lok Ayukta and Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh; and also a Vice-chancellor of Andhra University.Rao was educated at Guntur, Madras and Calcutta and was an Arts and Law graduate from Madras University. Enrolled as an Advocate in Madras High Court on 7 April 1941, he practised in that Court as well as in High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Guntur and at Hyderabad until 21 April 1967. On 14 July 1966, he was appointed the 2nd Government Pleader of Andhra Pradesh. Rao was appointed permanent judge of the Andhra Pradesh High Court on 22 April 1967. He acted as Chief Justice of High Court of Andhra Pradesh from 25 January 1975 to 10 January 1976. Appointed permanent Chief Justice on 9 April 1978, Rao retired on 16 March 1979. He was also Vice-Chancellor of Andhra University, Waltair.", "target": "Indian judge, Lokayukta, Vice chancellor, writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4904491", "label": "House of Capet", "source": "The House of Capet (French: Maison capétienne) or the Direct Capetians (Capétiens directs), also called the House of France (la maison de France), or simply the Capets, ruled the Kingdom of France from 987 to 1328. It was the most senior line of the Capetian dynasty – itself a derivative dynasty from the Robertians. Historians in the 19th century came to apply the name \"Capetian\" to both the ruling house of France and to the wider-spread male-line descendants of Hugh Capet (c. 939 – 996). Contemporaries did not use the name \"Capetian\" (see House of France). The Capets were sometimes called \"the third race of kings\" (following the Merovingians and the Carolingians). The name \"Capet\" derives from the nickname (of uncertain meaning) given to Hugh, the first Capetian king.The direct line of the House of Capet came to an end in 1328, when the three sons of Philip IV (reigned 1285–1314) all failed to produce surviving male heirs to the French throne. With the death of Charles IV (reigned 1322–1328), the throne passed to the House of Valois, descended from a younger brother of Philip IV. Royal power would later pass (1589) to another Capetian branch, the House of Bourbon, descended from the youngest son of Louis IX (reigned 1226–1270), and (from 1830) to a Bourbon cadet branch, the House of Orléans, always remaining in the hands of agnatic descendants of Hugh Capet, except for the 10-year reign of Emperor Napoleon.", "target": "rulers of the Kingdom of France from 987 to 1328, was the most senior line of the Capetian dynasty – itself a derivative dynasty from the Robertians", "baseline_candidates": ["dynasty", "noble family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6876456", "label": "Miss District of Columbia USA", "source": "The Miss District of Columbia USA competition is the pageant that selects the representative for the District of Columbia in the Miss USA pageant. Four District of Columbia representatives have won the Miss USA title. Of those two, Deshauna Barber and Kára McCullough won successive Miss USA titles in 2016 and 2017. The most recent placement was Cierra Jackson in 2020, placing Top 16. Two Miss District of Columbia USA titleholders previously held the Miss District of Columbia Teen USA title and three have competed at Miss America. Faith Porter of Bowie, Maryland is crowned Miss District of Columbia USA 2022 on June 5, 2022 at the Renaissance Washington, DC Downtown Hotel in Washington, D.C.. She will now represent District of Columbia for the title of Miss USA 2022.", "target": "beauty contest", "baseline_candidates": ["female beauty pageant"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14704387", "label": "KQYX", "source": "KQYX (\"1450 The Dove\") is a gospel formatted AM radio station licensed to Galena, Kansas and serving the Joplin, Missouri area. It is currently owned by American Media Investment. Dating back to its initial broadcasts in 1927 under its original call sign of WMBH, KQYX is the longest continually operating station in the Joplin area.", "target": "radio station in Galena, Kansas", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3200063", "label": "Austroaeschna atrata", "source": "Austroaeschna atrata is a species of Australian dragonfly in the family Telephlebiidae, known as the mountain darner. It inhabits the upper reaches of mountain streams, generally above an altitude of 400m, in New South Wales and Victoria.Austroaeschna atrata is a medium-sized to large dragonfly with a very dark colouring and dull markings.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q456439", "label": "Anna Sidorova", "source": "Anna Vladimirovna Sidorova (Russian: А́нна Влади́мировна Си́дорова; born 6 February 1991) is a Russian curler. She currently skips her own team on the World Curling Tour. Sidorova was the skip of the Russian team that won bronze medals at the World Women's Curling Championships from 2014–2016 and the silver medal at the 2017 World Women's Curling Championship.", "target": "Russian curler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18805557", "label": "Khvostovo, Kursk Oblast", "source": "Khvostovo (Russian: Хвостово) is a rural locality (Russian: деревня, lit. 'village') in Polevskoy Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Kursky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population: 105 (2010 Census); 116 (2002 Census);.", "target": "human settlement in Kursky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3013577", "label": "Portrait of an American Family", "source": "The Portrait of an American Family Tour was Marilyn Manson's first headlining tour. It was launched in support of the band's first full-length debut album, Portrait of an American Family, which was released on July 19, 1994, five months before the tour began. The tour began on December 27, 1994, in Jacksonville, Florida, at Club 5. After this show, the first night of the tour, frontman Marilyn Manson was arrested and taken into custody for violating the Adult Entertainment Code by allegedly donning a strap-on dildo on stage. In spite of this, Manson was freed and the band appeared in Orlando the following night as scheduled. The tour concluded on March 11, 1995, after the band had played 43 shows. The last show was played in Columbia, South Carolina, at the Alcatrazz venue.", "target": "1994–95 concert tour by Marilyn Manson", "baseline_candidates": ["concert tour"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65040858", "label": "Climate change in New York", "source": "Climate change in New York encompasses the effects of climate change, attributed to man-made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, in the U.S. state of New York. It is of concern due to its impact on the people, ecosystem, and economy of the state. Many parts of the state are already experiencing weather changes, and sea-level rise, and threatening local communities. New York State ranks 46th among the 50 states in the amount of greenhouse gases generated per person. This relative efficient energy usage is primarily due to the dense, compact settlement in the New York City metropolitan area, and the high rate of mass transit use in this area and between major cities. The main sources of greenhouse gases per the state government are transportation, buildings, electricity generation, waste, refrigerants, and agriculture. In 2019 the state pledged to eliminate net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. In 2021, New York experienced areas of extreme flooding due to Hurricane Ida, which was noted as having characteristics that are probably more common in a warmer climate: the intensity, the rapid intensification, and the amount of rainfall over land.", "target": "climate change in the US state of New York", "baseline_candidates": ["climate change by subnational entity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q564117", "label": "Interstate TDR", "source": "The Interstate TDR was an early unmanned combat aerial vehicle — referred to at the time as an \"assault drone\" — developed by the Interstate Aircraft and Engineering Corporation during the Second World War for use by the United States Navy. Capable of being armed with bombs or torpedoes, 2000 aircraft were ordered, but only around 200 were built. The type saw some service in the Pacific Theater against the Japanese, but continuing developmental issues affecting the aircraft, along with the success of operations using more conventional weapons, led to the decision being made to cancel the assault drone program in October 1944.", "target": "assault drone (UCAV), U.S. Navy, 1942", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6424612", "label": "Kobylin, Grójec County", "source": "Kobylin [kɔˈbɨlin] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Grójec, within Grójec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) north-east of Grójec and 38 km (24 mi) south of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6875546", "label": "Ehime Prefectural Mishima High School", "source": "Ehime Prefectural Mishima High School (愛媛県立三島高等学校, Ehime Kenritsu Mishima Kōtōgakkō) is a public high school located in Mishimachūō, Shikokuchūō, Ehime, Shikoku, Japan opened in 1923 as the Ehime Prefectural Mishima Middle School (愛媛県立三島中学校, Ehime Kenritsu Mishima Chūgakkō).", "target": "Public high school located in Mishimachūō Shikokuchūō, Ehime, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19878169", "label": "The Farmer's Daughter", "source": "The Farmer's Daughter is a 1940 American comedy film directed by James P. Hogan and written by Lewis R. Foster. The film stars Martha Raye, Charlie Ruggles, Richard Denning, Gertrude Michael, William Frawley, Inez Courtney and William Demarest. The film was released on March 26, 1940, by Paramount Pictures.", "target": "1940 film by James P. Hogan", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6397224", "label": "Kevin Pearce", "source": "Kevin Pearce (born Dartford, Kent, 4 March 1964) is a music journalist and author . He is best known for the cult music book, Something Beginning With O, published by Heavenly Records in May 1993.", "target": "British writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5438010", "label": "fatty aldehyde", "source": "Fatty aldehydes are aliphatic, long-chain aldehydes which may be mono- or polyunsaturated. The fatty aldehydes include compounds such as octanal, nonanal, decanal or dodecanal. The nomenclature is derived from the nomenclature of the alkanes, the ending -al is added to indicate the aldehyde group.", "target": "class of chemical compounds", "baseline_candidates": ["structural class of chemical compounds", "aldehydes"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6819675", "label": "Merle Dixon", "source": "Merle Dixon is a fictional character from the horror drama television series The Walking Dead, which airs on AMC in the United States. He was created by series developer Frank Darabont and was portrayed by Michael Rooker. The character was first introduced in the first season as a Southern redneck hunter who has a younger brother, Daryl. He is misogynistic and racist, which causes tensions between him and his group of survivors. Following an encounter with series protagonist Rick Grimes, Merle disappears and joins the community of Woodbury, Georgia, where he becomes the right-hand man of The Governor. He becomes caught in the conflict between the Governor and Rick, especially when nobody in Rick's group wants him in the group, except for Daryl. The character's introduction garnered negative reviews from professional critics, but fan response was positive. When the character reappears in the third season, reviewers began to have more favorable views towards him. Merle is an original character in the television series and shares no counterpart in the comic books. He is also a main character in the 2013 video game The Walking Dead: Survival Instinct, which focuses on him and Daryl during the early days of the zombie apocalypse. Rooker made guest appearances as Merle in the series' first and second seasons, before he was upgraded to a series regular for the third season, where he lost a significant amount of weight in preparation for the role. Rooker was among the cast members who were awarded the Satellite Award for Best Cast – Television.", "target": "fictional character", "baseline_candidates": ["television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2660409", "label": "flag of Macedonia (Greece)", "source": "The flag of Macedonia (Greek: Σημαία της Μακεδονίας) represents a Vergina Sun with 16 rays in the centre of a blue field. This flag, as well as the Vergina Sun, is commonly used as an unofficial symbol of the Greek region of Macedonia and its subdivisions. It is also used by organisations of the Greek Macedonian diaspora, such as the Pan-Macedonian Association chapters of the United States and Australia, as well as numerous commercial enterprises and private citizens. The Vergina Sun is an official state emblem of Greece, and the Greek government proceeded to lodge a copyright claim as a state symbol at the World Intellectual Property Organization in 1995. No such provisions have been made for the flag of Macedonia however, which remains unofficial. It is unclear when the flag was adopted, but it was most likely in use by the late 1980s after the archaeological discovery of the star by Manolis Andronikos in Vergina. The similarity of the first flag of North Macedonia, then the Republic of Macedonia, following its independence from Yugoslavia 1992 had the same design as the flag of Greek Macedonia, but on a red background with proportions 1:2. This caused controversy in Greece, which was already using that symbol for its own province of Macedonia, and the then Republic of Macedonia changed its flag to the current design in 1995.", "target": "flag of the Greek region of Macedonia", "baseline_candidates": ["flag of a country subdivision"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1234022", "label": "Yvré-l'Évêque", "source": "Yvré-l'Évêque (French pronunciation: ​[ivʁe levɛk]) is a commune in the Sarthe department in the region of Pays de la Loire in north-western France.", "target": "commune in Sarthe, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5108104", "label": "Chris Smith", "source": "Christopher Smith (born September 4, 1966) is a former American racing driver from Palos Verdes Estates, California. He competed in the Toyota Atlantic series beginning in 1991 and captured 3 wins on his way to the 1992 championship, he was unable to move up the ladder the following year though and only competed in a single Atlantics race that year. He found a ride in Indy Lights in 1994, in eight starts, Smith only managed a best finish of 8th place and finished a disappointing 19th in series points. After his Indy Lights experience, Smith participated in a single Indy Lights race in 1995 and partial Atlantics seasons in 1995, 1996, and 1997 with few notable results.", "target": "racing driver from the United States, born 1966", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6465305", "label": "La Sombra", "source": "La Sombra de Chicago or La Sombra de Tony Guerrero or even the Windy City Boys is a Tejano band founded by Tony Guerrero. Originally from the Chicago suburb of Aurora, Illinois, the group gained national acclaim and success after moving to Corpus Christi, Texas, the headquarters of their label, Freddie Records.", "target": "band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30898779", "label": "pseudolymphoma", "source": "Pseudolymphoma is a benign lymphocytic infiltrate that resembles cutaneous lymphoma histologically, clinically, or both. Lymphoma cutis is the most important type of pseudolymphoma.", "target": "benign nepolasm that resembles a malignant lymphoma", "baseline_candidates": ["benign neoplasm", "disease", "lymphoma and pseudolymphoma"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3525467", "label": "Thomas P. Hughes", "source": "Thomas Parke Hughes (September 13, 1923 – February 3, 2014) was an American historian of technology. He was an emeritus professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania and a visiting professor at MIT and Stanford.He received his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia in 1953. Hughes, along with John B. Rae, Carl W. Condit, and Melvin Kranzberg, were responsible for the establishment of the Society for the History of Technology and he was a recipient of its highest honor, the Leonardo da Vinci Medal in 1985.He contributed to the concepts of technological momentum, technological determinism, large technical systems, social construction of technology, and introduced systems theory into the history of technology. His book American Genesis was shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize. He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2003.", "target": "American historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6789121", "label": "Matt Nettheim", "source": "Matthew Nettheim (born 26 June 1969) is an Australian photographer specialising in on-set feature film stills photography. In 2005 The Australian newspaper counted Nettheim, along with Mark Rogers and Elise Lockwood, as one of approximately one dozen regular film stills photographers in the Australian market.Nettheim took the period still shots of recreated crime scenes used in ABC's 2006 television drama The Silence.", "target": "Australian photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1680297", "label": "James D. Conley", "source": "James Douglas Conley (born March 19, 1955) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who has been serving as bishop of the Diocese of Lincoln in Nebraska since 2012. He served as an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Denver from 2008 to 2012.", "target": "bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2328873", "label": "Abelardo Olivier", "source": "Abelardo Olivier (9 November 1877 – 24 January 1951) was an Italian fencer. He won a silver medal at the 1908 Summer Olympics and two golds at the 1920 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Italian fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7788576", "label": "Thomas Contee", "source": "Thomas Contee (c. 1729–1811) of \"Brookefield\", near Nottingham, Prince George's County, Maryland, was an American patriot who held the rank of colonel, militia man, politician, planter.", "target": "American politician (1729–1811)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15985363", "label": "Daebonggyo Station", "source": "Daebonggyo Station is a station of the Daegu Metro Line 3 in Daebong-dong, Seo District, Daegu, South Korea.", "target": "Metro station on Daegu, South Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7309465", "label": "Regius Professor of Law", "source": "The Regius Chair of Law at the University of Glasgow was founded in December 1713 with an endowment by Queen Anne. (Its foundation is sometimes incorrectly dated to 1712, due to an error in Glasgow's Munimenta, published in 1854. ) It is one of twelve Regius Professorships within the University of Glasgow. The first holder of the chair, William Forbes, was appointed in 1714. The current holder, James Chalmers, was appointed in 2012.", "target": "Professorship of Law at the University of Glasgow", "baseline_candidates": ["Regius Professor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6333548", "label": "KMGO", "source": "KMGO (98.7 MHz) is a radio station licensed to serve Centerville, Iowa, United States. KMGO broadcasts a locally programmed New Country format and is the Iowa affiliate for AccuWeather, FOX News Radio, FOX Business Network, and FOX Sports Radio.", "target": "radio station in Centerville, Iowa", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q907919", "label": "durene", "source": "Durene, or 1,2,4,5-tetramethylbenzene, is an organic compound with the formula C6H2(CH3)4. It is a colourless solid with a sweet odor. The compound is classified as an alkylbenzene. It is one of three isomers of tetramethylbenzene, the other two being prehnitene (1,2,3,4-tetramethylbenzene) and isodurene (1,2,3,5-tetramethylbenzene). Durene has an unusually high melting point (79.2 °C), reflecting its high molecular symmetry.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7339828", "label": "Roar Hoff", "source": "Roar Hoff (born 21 May 1965) is a retired Norwegian shot putter. He finished twelfth at the 1994 European Championships and eleventh at the 1995 IAAF World Indoor Championships. He became Norwegian champion in 1992 and 1999.His personal best throw was 19.52 metres, achieved in June 1994 in Drammen. This places him eighth among Norwegian shot putters through all time.", "target": "Norwegian shot putter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1328570", "label": "International Karate", "source": "International Karate is a fighting game developed and published by System 3 for various home computers in 1985. Epyx licensed and released the game in the United States as World Karate Championship in 1986.It was the first European-developed game to become a major hit in the United States, where it sold over 1.5 million copies. However, it drew controversy for its similarities to Karate Champ (1984), which led to Data East filing a lawsuit against Epyx. International Karate +, a successor which expanded the gameplay, was released in 1987.", "target": "1985 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5637209", "label": "Poison Canyon stickseed", "source": "Hackelia brevicula is a species of flowering plant in the borage family known by the common name Poison Canyon stickseed.", "target": "species of flowering plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27797408", "label": "San Francisco Tlapancingo Municipality", "source": "San Francisco Tlapancingo is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. The municipality covers an area of 114.82 km2. It is part of the Silacayoapam District in the Mixteca Region. As of 2005, the municipality had a total population of 1235.", "target": "human settlement in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Mexico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16968179", "label": "Yangchengphug College", "source": "Yangchengphug College was a football club from Bhutan, based at Changlimithang, who played in the inaugural Bhutan A-Division, then the top level of football in Bhutan, but since replaced by a full national league.", "target": "Bhutanese football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4279627", "label": "Bachelor Party 2: The Last Temptation", "source": "Bachelor Party 2: The Last Temptation is a 2008 sex comedy directed by James Ryan. The film, a sequel-in-name-only to a comedy made 24 years earlier (Bachelor Party), stars Josh Cooke as the bachelor and Sara Foster as his fiancée.", "target": "2008 film by James Ryan", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5791560", "label": "Keshlii", "source": "Keshlii (Persian: کشلی, also Kashliid as Keshlii; also known as Kashlii and Keshlii) is a village in Keshlii Rural District, Kargan Rud District, Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 273, in 67 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64706424", "label": "Adeline Blancquaert", "source": "Adeline Blancquaert (born 24 May 1996) is a Belgian-Flemish politician for Vlaams Belang who has been a member of the Flemish Parliament since 2019. Blancquaert studied languages as the University of Ghent became involved Vlaams Belang Jongeren as a student. In the Belgian elections of 26 May 2019, she was elected to the Flemish Parliament for Vlaams Belang representing the East Flanders electoral district. She was also delegated by her party to the Senate as state senator.", "target": "Belgian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62857523", "label": "Paeniglutamicibacter psychrophenolicus", "source": "Paeniglutamicibacter psychrophenolicus is a Gram-positive, non-spore-forming, aerobic, rod-coccus, facultatively psychrophilic and non-motile bacterium from the genus Paeniglutamicibacter which has been isolated from an alpine ice cave in Salzburg, Austria.", "target": "species of bacterium", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25241756", "label": "1972 Bulgarian Cup Final", "source": "The 1972 Bulgarian Cup Final was the 32nd final of the Bulgarian Cup (in this period the tournament was named Cup of the Soviet Army), and was contested between CSKA Sofia and Slavia Sofia on 12 July 1972 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. CSKA won the final 3–0.", "target": "football match", "baseline_candidates": ["association football match of club teams", "association football final"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10503955", "label": "Geocoris floridanus", "source": "Geocoris floridanus, the Florida big-eyed bug, is a species of big-eyed bug in the family Geocoridae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2912754", "label": "Delta Galil", "source": "Delta Galil Industries (Hebrew: דלתא גליל תעשיות) is an Israeli textile firm headquartered in Tel Aviv, with plants around the world. The owner is Isaac Dabah. Delta Galil Industries had an annual turnover of over $1,079 million (in 2015).", "target": "Israeli textile firm", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1186851", "label": "Atari Age", "source": "Atari Age was a magazine distributed to Atari Club members from 1982 until 1984. It was published by The Atari Club, Inc., a subsidiary of Atari, Inc. The magazine only covered Atari products and events, offering exclusive deals to its readers, and serving as an advertising and merchandise outlet for the company. Atari used the magazine to build brand loyalty, promoting Atari products in a non-objective manner. The magazine was based in Philadelphia.", "target": "magazine published by Atari", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4779366", "label": "Apericallia", "source": "Apericallia is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2723533", "label": "Jud Buechler", "source": "Judson Donald Buechler (born June 19, 1968) is an American professional basketball coach and former player who is an assistant coach for the New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He was part of the Chicago Bulls during their three consecutive championship seasons between 1996 and 1998.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13114655", "label": "V. Adimurthy", "source": "Vipparthi Adimurthy (born 5 May 1946) is the ISRO Honorary Distinguished Professor, VSSC. He was the former Satish Dhawan Professor and Dean of Research at the Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology (IIST). Prior to joining IIST, Adimurthy held the post of associate director at the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, a major facility center of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). He is known for his contributions to the rocket technology and space dynamics. He is a recipient of Padma Shri from the Government of India. Murthy is the Mission Concept Designer, for India's Mars Orbiter Mission.", "target": "Rocket scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4775452", "label": "Antoine Cipriani", "source": "Antoine Cipriani (born August 11, 1954) is a French sprint canoer who competed in the late 1970s. At the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, he was eliminated in the semifinals of the K-2 500 m event.", "target": "French canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7005470", "label": "New Bedford Whalers", "source": "New Bedford Whalers was the name of three American soccer teams based in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The first Whalers played in the Southern New England Soccer League between 1914 and 1918. The second Whalers played in the American Soccer League between 1924 and 1931 before merging into Fall River F.C. The third Whalers were then formed when Fall River merged with New York Yankees. They played in the ASL between 1931 and 1932.", "target": "name of three US soccer teams", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikipedia article covering multiple topics", "association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76123260", "label": "Sir Thomas Peyton, 2nd Baronet", "source": "Sir Thomas Peyton, 2nd Baronet (18 August 1613 – 11 February 1684) of Knowlton Court, Kent was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1640 to 1644 and from 1661 to 1679. He supported the Royalist side in the English Civil War. Peyton was the son of Sir Samuel Peyton, 1st Baronet, of Knowlton, and his wife Mary Aston, daughter of Sir Roger Aston. He inherited the baronetcy and Knowlton Court on the death of his father in 1623.In November 1640, Peyton was elected Member of Parliament for Sandwich in the Long Parliament. He was disabled from sitting in 1644 for supporting the king and was subsequently a member of The Action Party, a group of radicals dedicated to bringing down the Protectorate government. At some point around 1655, he was imprisoned in the Tower of London; on 7th August that year, Oliver Cromwell ordered John Barkstead, Lieutenant of the Tower of London, to allow Sir Thomas 'a prisoner in the Tower' leave 'for thirty-six days to take the waters at Tunbridge Wells'. (Beloe Papers catalogue, MS3273, Lambeth Palace Library, accessed via National Archives website, 4 May 2021.) After the Restoration, Peyton was elected MP for Kent from 1661 to 1679 in the Cavalier Parliament.Peyton died aged 70 in financial difficulty. Peyton had married three times; firstly a daughter of Sir Peter Osborne, secondly Cecilia Swan, widow of Sir William Swan, and thirdly Jane Monins, daughter of Sir William Monins. He left four daughters, who sold Knowlton Court to Admiral Sir John.", "target": "English politician (1613-1684)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19884502", "label": "Zherekhovo", "source": "Zherekhovo (Russian: Жерехово) is a rural locality (a selo) in Tolpukhovskoye Rural Settlement, Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 357 as of 2010. There are 6 streets.", "target": "village in Sobinsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5145208", "label": "Colin Holt", "source": "Roland Colin Holt, known as Colin Holt (1945–2006) was a Yorkshire activist who was a founder member of the Yorkshire Ridings Society, serving as its chairman for many years until his death. A determined opponent of the Local Government Act 1972 and an advocate for Yorkshire's traditional Ridings, he was responsible for the adoption of Yorkshire Day.Colin Holt lived in Fenwick near Doncaster. He was a lecturer at Doncaster College. Though best known for vocally championing the cause of Yorkshire, Colin Holt was also a dedicated member of Moss and District Parish Council and a vintage vehicle enthusiast.He also served on the committee of the Association of British Counties, to which the YRS is affiliated.", "target": "former Chairman of the Yorkshire Ridings Society", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33862601", "label": "Furileusauria", "source": "Furileusauria (\"stiff back lizards\") is an extinct clade of derived abelisaurid dinosaurs only known from South American fossil remains. They represent some of the largest members of the Abelisauridae, with an average length of 7.1 ± 2.1 m (23.3 ± 6.9 ft). The clade is defined as the most inclusive clade containing Carnotaurus sastrei but not Ilokelesia aguadagrandensis, Skorpiovenator bustingorryi, or Majungasaurus crenatissimus.", "target": "taxon of reptiles (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["clade"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7855396", "label": "2014 Turkish presidential election", "source": "Presidential elections were held in Turkey on 10 August 2014 in order to elect the 12th President. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was elected outright with an absolute majority of the vote in the first round, making a scheduled run-off for 24 August unnecessary. The election took place under reforms resulting from the 2007 constitutional referendum, which introduced a direct national vote, rather than election by members of the parliament. Over 55 million people were eligible to vote, both within Turkey and abroad. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, leader of the AKP, first elected Prime Minister in 2002, won with 51.79% of the vote. Former Organisation of Islamic Cooperation General Secretary Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu, who ran as the joint candidate of 13 opposition parties including the Republican People's Party (CHP) and Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), came second with 38.44%. The co-leader of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) Selahattin Demirtaş, who received the backing of 8 left-wing parties, came third with 9.76%.Erdoğan took over as president from Abdullah Gül on 28 August, while Ahmet Davutoğlu, who was elected leader of the AKP, succeeded Erdoğan as Prime Minister on the same date. It has been speculated that Erdoğan will continue to pursue his political agenda as president while Davutoğlu takes a docile approach as Prime Minister, breaking away from the ceremonial and neutral functions of the Presidency and potentially pursuing constitutional changes to turn Turkey into a presidential or semi-presidential system.The election was criticised by both the political opposition and international observers for alleged media bias in favour of Recep Tayyip.", "target": "Turkish presidential election in 2014", "baseline_candidates": ["presidential election in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3176706", "label": "Ziba flammea", "source": "Imbricaria flammea is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mitridae, the miters or miter snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16647849", "label": "Weddell Settlement", "source": "Weddell Settlement is the only settlement on Weddell Island in the Falkland Islands, situated on the east coast of the island at the head of the sheltered Gull Harbour (formerly Great Harbour. ), part of Queen Charlotte Bay. It is located at 51°53′46″S 60°54′27″W, which is 12.15 kilometres (7.55 mi) northeast of Race Point, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) south by west of Swan Point, 212 kilometres (132 mi) west-southwest of Stanley and 56.6 kilometres (35.2 mi) west of Fox Bay on West Falkland.", "target": "settlement on Weddell Island, Falkland Islands", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1632369", "label": "Mamblas", "source": "Mamblas is a municipality located in the province of Ávila, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2006 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 252 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29937067", "label": "Fabrizio Varano", "source": "Fabrizio Varano (died 1508) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Camerino (1482–1508).", "target": "Roman Catholic bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7172502", "label": "Peter Allibond", "source": "Peter Allibond (1560 – 6 March 1629), was an English translator of theological treatises from the French and Latin. He was the father of Dr John Allibond. Allibond was born in 1560 at Wardington, near Banbury, where many generations of his family had resided. Becoming a student of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, in 1578, he proceeded to his bachelor's degree in 1581 and to his master's in 1585. After some years spent in foreign travel, he entered into holy orders, and subsequently became rector of Chenies in Buckinghamshire, \"where,\" says Anthony à Wood, \"continuing many years, he did much improve the ignorant with his sound doctrine.\" It was while holding this benefice that he undertook his literary work. In 1591 he published a book entitled Comfort for an Afflicted Conscience, wherein is contained both Consolation and Instruction for the Sicke, against the fearfull apprehension of their sinnes, of death and the devill, of the curse of the law, and of the anger and iust iudgment of God. Written by John de l'Espine, and translated by Peter Allibond. Allibond died on 6 March 1628–9, and was buried in the chancel of his parish church. Anthony à Wood describes him as \"an ingenious man in the opinion of all that knew him.\" Three sons survived him, of whom Job, the youngest, became a convert to the Catholic Church.", "target": "English translator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1552404", "label": "Grünwinkel", "source": "Grünwinkel is a borough in the southwest of Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, in the southwest of Germany.", "target": "quarter of Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97421", "label": "Ludwig Ross", "source": "Ludwig Ross (22 July 1806, Bornhöved – 6 August 1859, Halle an der Saale) was a German classical archaeologist. His family came from northern Scotland, and his father, Colin Ross, married Juliane Auguste Remin and managed the Gut Altekoppel in Bornhöved; their many children included Ludwig's younger brother the painter Karl Ross.", "target": "German classical Archaeologist and university professor (1806-1859)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18371195", "label": "UK Trade & Investment", "source": "UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) was a UK Government department working with businesses based in the United Kingdom to assist their success in international markets, and with overseas investors looking to the UK as an investment destination. It was replaced in July 2016 by the Department for International Trade.", "target": "United Kingdom government non-ministerial department", "baseline_candidates": ["non-ministerial government department"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31465195", "label": "Amadeo", "source": "Amadeo, officially the Municipality of Amadeo (Tagalog: Bayan ng Amadeo), is a 4th class municipality in the province of Cavite, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 41,901 people.", "target": "municipality of the Philippines in the province of Cavite", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Philippines"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18461359", "label": "Granieri", "source": "Granieri is a southern Italian village and hamlet (frazione) of Caltagirone (18 km far), a municipality in the province of Catania, Sicily. It has an altitude of 351 metres above sea level and a population of 400.", "target": "human settlement in Caltagirone, Metropolitan City of Catania, Sicily, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["frazione"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25339815", "label": "SPOT", "source": "BDA (which stands for Behavior Detection and Analysis), until 2016 called SPOT (which stood for Screening of Passengers by Observation Techniques), is a program launched in the United States by the Transportation Security Administration to identify potential terrorists among people at an airport by a set of 94 objective criteria, all of which are signs for either stress, fear, or deception. Passengers meeting enough of the criteria are, under the program, referred for a patdown and additional screening. The criteria were initially secret, but in March 2015, The Intercept published them after obtaining the information from an anonymous source.", "target": "US Transportation Security Administration terrorist identification program", "baseline_candidates": ["government program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89642704", "label": "Islam in Wales", "source": "Islam is the largest non-Christian faith in Wales, with about 46,000 adherents recorded in the country in the 2011 Census. The earliest recorded connections between Wales and the Muslim world dates back to the early 12th Century. There has been a Somali and Yemeni Islamic community in Cardiff since the mid-19th century, founded by seafarers to Cardiff Docks. The first purpose-built mosque was erected in Cardiff in 1947.Today, Wales has about 40 mosques, most of which are in Cardiff, with others in Aberystwyth, Bangor, Barry, Haverfordwest, Lampeter, Neath, Newport, Port Talbot, Swansea and Wrexham.", "target": "religious community in Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["religion of an area", "Islam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64010028", "label": "Bruno Tubarão", "source": "Bruno Nunes de Barros (born 5 March 1995), known as Bruno Tubarão, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Red Bull Bragantino.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6022915", "label": "Teatro Monumental", "source": "The Teatro Monumental (Monumental Theatre) is a concert hall in Madrid. The theatre, designed by Teodoro Anasagasti Algan, was built between 1922 and 1923 as a movie theatre (Teatro Cinema Monumental) and later was transformed to house concerts of different genres, from pop to classical, and jazz to folk.The theatre is the concert venue of the RTVE Symphony Orchestra.", "target": "concert hall in Madrid, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["concert hall", "movie theater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q882986", "label": "Wilmersdorf power station", "source": "The power station Berlin-Wilmersdorf was a power plant in Berlin-Schmargendorf, which went into service in 1977, and has been shut down in 2021. Construction of the facility, which belongs to the BEWAG, started in 1973. At the time of construction, the three power engines are MS9001B gas turbines, manufactured in Belfort (France) by a cooperation between Alsthom and General Electric. It has three blocks with a power of 110 megawatts, each equipped with a 102-metre-high (335 ft) chimney. This very striking facility received an architectural prize in the 1980s. It is not located nearby a river and therefore must take its cooling water from underground. There was an explosion on January 2, 1992, in one of the blocks. It is run by Vattenfall Europe, a subdivision of Vattenfall.", "target": "power plant in Berlin", "baseline_candidates": ["thermal power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1434158", "label": "fluctuation-dissipation theorem", "source": "The fluctuation–dissipation theorem (FDT) or fluctuation–dissipation relation (FDR) is a powerful tool in statistical physics for predicting the behavior of systems that obey detailed balance. Given that a system obeys detailed balance, the theorem is a proof that thermodynamic fluctuations in a physical variable predict the response quantified by the admittance or impedance (to be intended in their general sense, not only in electromagnetic terms) of the same physical variable (like voltage, temperature difference, etc. ), and vice versa. The fluctuation–dissipation theorem applies both to classical and quantum mechanical systems. The fluctuation–dissipation theorem was proven by Herbert Callen and Theodore Welton in 1951 and expanded by Ryogo Kubo. There are antecedents to the general theorem, including Einstein's explanation of Brownian motion during his annus mirabilis and Harry Nyquist's explanation in 1928 of Johnson noise in electrical resistors.", "target": "theorem", "baseline_candidates": ["theorem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65230165", "label": "Sebastian Jørgensen", "source": "Sebastian Vinther Jørgensen (born 8 June 2000) is a Danish professional footballer who plays for Silkeborg IF.", "target": "Danish association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97172141", "label": "Instant Gratification", "source": "Instant Gratification is the sixth studio album by American rock band Dance Gavin Dance, released on April 14, 2015, on Rise Records. The album serves as a follow-up to the group's fifth studio album, Acceptance Speech (2013), and is the first release since the departure of guitarist Josh Benton, who joined as a session member in 2013 and left the following year. The album also sees the return of producer Kris Crummett, who produced all of the band's previous studio albums except for Acceptance Speech. The album was promoted by the lead single \"On the Run\", which was released on February 12, 2015. \"We Own the Night\" was released as the second single on March 12. The third single, \"Stroke God, Millionaire\", was released on April 2. The fourth and final single, \"Eagle vs. Crows\", was released on April 7. The band toured on the Instant Gratification Tour in North America, Australia and Europe, and toured as support with other bands such as Memphis May Fire in support of the album. On July 26, 2019, the band released an instrumental version of the album to streaming and digital download platforms.", "target": "album by Dance Gavin Dance", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q315122", "label": "Karl Höller", "source": "Karl Höller (25 July 1907 – 14 April 1987) was a German composer of the late Romantic tradition.", "target": "German composer (1907-1987)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1530483", "label": "William Henry Frederick Fiedler", "source": "William Henry Frederick Fiedler (August 25, 1847 – January 1, 1919) was an American Democratic Party politician who represented New Jersey's 6th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives for one term from 1883 to 1885.", "target": "American politician (1847-1919)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16205919", "label": "Tim Wilson", "source": "Timothy Robert Wilson (born 12 March 1980) is a former Australian politician and a member of the Liberal Party of Australia who served as the Federal Member for Goldstein in the Australian House of Representatives from 2016 to 2022. Wilson served as the Chair of the Standing Committee on Economics from 2018 to 2021 and as the Assistant Minister to the Minister for Industry, Energy and Emissions Reduction from 2021 to 2022. In the 2022 Australian federal election, Wilson lost his seat to independent candidate Zoe Daniel.Before entering politics, Wilson was a policy director at the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) from 2007 to 2013 and Australia's Human Rights Commissioner from 2014 to 2016.", "target": "Australian politician, policy analyst and human rights commissioner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5065329", "label": "Zagra", "source": "Zagra (Hungarian: Zágra) is a commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of five villages: Alunișul (until 1960 Găureni; Gaurény), Perișor (Bethlenkörtvélyes), Poienile Zagrei (Pojény), Suplai (Ciblesfalva) and Zagra.", "target": "commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26923575", "label": "Sudharshana Muthuthanthri", "source": "Sudharshana Muthuthanthri or Sudarshana Muthuthanthri (born 25 August 1991) is a Sri Lankan rugby player and the current captain of the Sri Lanka national rugby union team. He replaced former captain, Fazil Marija as the new skipper of the Sri Lankan rugby union team in 2015.He played schoolboy rugby at S. Thomas' College, Mount Lavinia between 2009-2010 as a flanker. He then went on to play for Havelock Sports Club where he became vice captain in 2012 under Henry Terrance when Havelocks won the Dialog Rugby League. Muthuthanthri took over the captaincy of the club in 2013 where the team finished runner-up. In 2014 under his leadership Havelocks ended up third. He currently plays for Colombo Hockey and Football Club in the Dialog Rugby League. His usual position is Flanker, but can also switch to Number 8. In 2018, he became the first Sri Lankan to be selected to play at the Top-level Provincial Rugby tournament in New Zealand representing Auckland.Muthuthanthri was named to Sri Lanka's 2018 Commonwealth Games team in March 2018.", "target": "Sri Lankan rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q46518424", "label": "Poesia Bernesca", "source": "Bernesque poetry is a genre of satirical poetry that flourished during the Italian Renaissance. The style is named after Francesco Berni, an early pioneer of the style who popularized it across Europe.", "target": "genre of ludicrous and seriocomic poetry named after Francesco Berni (c.1497–1536)", "baseline_candidates": ["literary genre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2902161", "label": "Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack", "source": "Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack was a special series of Celebrity Big Brother, a spin-off series of the British reality television programme Big Brother. It was broadcast on E4 from 3–28 January 2008. A number of closely associated programmes also aired on the same channel. Dermot O'Leary – who had hosted Big Brother's Little Brother since 2001 – was the main host of Celebrity Hijack, and it was his final series of Big Brother. The series was announced on 8 October 2007 by Channel 4 and that it would be replacing Celebrity Big Brother in January 2008, due to the widely publicised racism controversy in Celebrity Big Brother 5. In 2009, Celebrity Big Brother returned to Channel 4 and no further series of Celebrity Hijack were produced. The premise of the series saw one celebrity a day taking control, with the help of Big Brother; organising their own tasks, making their own rules and talking to the housemates in the Diary Room. They were in charge of a set of housemates, ranging in age from 18- to 21-years-old and all having a special talent. The housemates competed to be the last to leave the house for a £50,000 prize. The series ended on 28 January with John Loughton being voted as the winner.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11768009", "label": "Marek Batkiewicz", "source": "Marek Rafał Batkiewicz (born 14 August 1969), is a Polish former ice hockey player. He played for several teams during his career, most notably with Podhale Nowy Targ. He also played for the Polish national team at the 1992 Winter Olympics and several World Championships.", "target": "Polish ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7892824", "label": "1824 United States presidential election in Maryland", "source": "The 1824 United States presidential election in Maryland took place between October 26 and December 2, 1824, as part of the 1824 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President. During this election, the Democratic-Republican Party was the only major national party, and four different candidates from this party sought the Presidency. Although Maryland voted for John Quincy Adams over Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford and Henry Clay, only three electoral votes were assigned to Adams, while Jackson received seven and Crawford received one. Adams won Maryland by a very narrow margin of 0.32%. This was also the first time in which the winner of the election didn't carry the state of Maryland.", "target": "election in Maryland", "baseline_candidates": ["United States presidential election in Maryland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5514792", "label": "Stag Radio", "source": "Stag Radio is the radio station run by the students of the University of Surrey in Guildford, Surrey, England, which broadcasts on 1350AM during term-time. It is a long term Restricted Service Licensed broadcaster operating under a Low-power AM licence.", "target": "student radio station at the University of Surrey", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7733953", "label": "The Final Winter", "source": "The Final Winter is an Australian drama film released in 2007. It was directed by Brian Andrews and Jane Forrest and produced by Anthony Coffee, and Michelle Russell, while independently produced it is being distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was written by Matthew Nable who also starred as the lead role 'Grub' Henderson. The film, which earned praise from critics, focuses around Grub, who is the captain of the Newtown Jets rugby league team in the early 1980s, and his determination to stand for what rugby league traditionally stood for while dealing with his own identity crisis.The Final Winter was adapted to the stage in 2015 by Justin Brice Performed in Albury–Wodonga for four nights starting on 15 July to sold-out crowds. Justin Brice is an Albury–Wodonga local performer and stage writer who dedicated three years to crafting the script to fit on a theatre stage.", "target": "2007 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1781660", "label": "Douglas Morton Dunlop", "source": "Douglas Morton Dunlop (1909–1987) was a renowned British orientalist and scholar of Islamic and Eurasian history.", "target": "British orientalist (1909-1987)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q324126", "label": "Rudolf Ernst", "source": "Rudolf Ernst (14 February 1854, Vienna – 1932, Fontenay-aux-Roses) was an Austro-French painter, printmaker and ceramics painter who is best known for his orientalist motifs. He exhibited in Paris under the name \"Rodolphe Ernst\".", "target": "Austro-French painter (1854-1932)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q88290967", "label": "near-close near-back rounded vowel", "source": "The near-close near-back rounded vowel, or near-high near-back rounded vowel, is a type of vowel sound, used in some vocal languages. The IPA symbol that represents this sound is ⟨ʊ⟩. It is informally called \"horseshoe u\". Prior to 1989, there was an alternative IPA symbol for this sound, ⟨ɷ⟩, called \"closed omega\"; use of this symbol is no longer sanctioned by the IPA. In Americanist phonetic notation, the symbol ⟨ᴜ⟩ (a small capital U) is used. Sometimes, especially in broad transcription, this vowel is transcribed with a simpler symbol ⟨u⟩, which technically represents the close back rounded vowel. Handbook of the International Phonetic Association defines [ʊ] as a mid-centralized (lowered and centralized) close back rounded vowel (transcribed [u̽] or [ü̞]), and the current official IPA name of the vowel transcribed with the symbol ⟨ʊ⟩ is near-close near-back rounded vowel. However, some languages have the close-mid near-back rounded vowel, a vowel that is somewhat lower than the canonical value of [ʊ], though it still fits the definition of a mid-centralized [u]. It occurs in some dialects of English (such as General American and Geordie) as well as some other languages (such as Maastrichtian Limburgish). It can be transcribed with the symbol ⟨ʊ̞⟩ (a lowered ⟨ʊ⟩) in narrow transcription. For the close-mid (near-)back rounded vowel that is not usually transcribed with the symbol ⟨ʊ⟩ (or ⟨u⟩), see close-mid back rounded vowel. In some other languages (such as Bengali and Luxembourgish) as well as some dialects of English (such as Scottish) there is a fully back near-close rounded vowel.", "target": "vowel sound like \"oo\" in English \"hook\" or \"good\"", "baseline_candidates": ["rounded vowel", "near-close vowel", "near-back vowel", "term"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4552055", "label": "16 Camelopardalis", "source": "16 Camelopardalis is a single star in the northern circumpolar constellation Camelopardalis, located 348 light years away from the Sun as determined from parallax measurements. It is visible to the naked eye as a faint, white-hued star with an apparent visual magnitude of 5.28. This object is moving further from the Earth with a heliocentric radial velocity of around 12 km/s.This is an A-type main-sequence star with a stellar classification of A0 Vn, where the 'n' notation indicates \"nebulous\" lines due to rapid rotation. In the past it was misidentified as a Lambda Boötis star. It is around 400 million years old and is spinning with a projected rotational velocity of 217 km/s. The star has 2.8 times the mass of the Sun and 3.3 times the Sun's radius. It is radiating 97 times the Sun's luminosity from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 9,748 K.An infrared excess indicates it has a dusty debris disk with a mean temperature of 120 K orbiting at a distance of 52 AU from the star. This disk has a combined mass equal to 2.1% the mass of the Earth.", "target": "star in the constellation Camelopardalis", "baseline_candidates": ["binary star", "star", "high proper-motion star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7205951", "label": "Pneuma", "source": "Pneuma is the debut full-length album released by the New York band Moving Mountains. It was originally self-released in 2007 but was eventually reissued with Deep Elm Records. The album was the creative product of multi-instrumentalist Gregory Dunn and drummer Nicholas Pizzolato, and was produced, mixed, and mastered by Dunn during their late high school years. At the time of its release, Moving Mountains was only considered to be a studio project by Dunn and Pizzolato, with no future intentions of forming a full band or playing the songs in a live format. It was not until a few months later, when Pneuma started to gain positive acclaim throughout the internet, that the band decided to go in a full-band direction with the addition of bassist Mitchell Lee and guitarist/vocalist Frank Graniero.", "target": "album by Moving Mountains", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21064451", "label": "Nathan Power", "source": "Nathan Power (born 13 February 1993) is an Australian water polo player. Power was picked in the water polo Sharks squad to compete in the men's water polo tournament at the 2020 Summer Olympics. Coached by Elvis Fatović, the team finished joint fourth on points in their pool but their inferior goal average meant they finished fifth overall and out of medal contention. They were able to upset Croatia in a group stage match 11–8. Australia at the 2020 Summer Olympics details the results in depth.", "target": "Australian water polo player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1724474", "label": "Marceau Somerlinck", "source": "Marceau Somerlinck (4 January 1922 – 9 November 2005) was a French football player who played with Lille OSC. He won the Coupe de France a total of five times.", "target": "French footballer (1922-2005)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2861059", "label": "California Agriculture", "source": "California Agriculture is a quarterly peer-reviewed, scientific journal reporting news and research on agricultural, natural, and human resources that is published by the University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources. The journal was established in December 1946.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal", "academic journal", "open-access journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4073182", "label": "Catholicosate of Aghtamar", "source": "Catholicosate of Aghtamar (Armenian: Աղթամարի կաթողիկոսութիւն, Aġt’amari kat’oġikosut’iun) was an independent see of the Armenian Apostolic Church that existed for almost eight centuries, from 1113 to 1895 and was based in the Cathedral of the Holy Cross on the Aghtamar Island (Turkish: Akdamar) near Van, in present-day Turkey. The catholicosate was established by Archbishop Davit, who was related to the Artsrunis, the ruling dynasty of the independent Armenian Kingdom of Vaspurakan. Davit reasoned Catholicos Grigor III Pahlavuni's young age for the division. Archbishops related to the Artsruni family succeeded each other as Catholicos of Aghtamar until 1272, when the Sefedinian family took it over until the 16th century. Subsequently, the Catholicosate came under direct jurisdiction of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin. By the late 19th century, the Catholicosate of Aghtamar ruled over the southern shores of Lake Van: Shatakh, Khizan, etc. The catholicosate was largely discredited and dissolved in 1895, amid the Hamidian massacres due to disputes with Etchmiadzin and corruption. The two dioceses that formed the catholicosate were transformed to the jurisdiction of the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople. The catholicoaste remained vacant until the Armenian genocide and was formally abolished by the Turkish government in 1916.", "target": "independent see of the Armenian Apostolic Church, 1113 to 1895", "baseline_candidates": ["Catholicate"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4062502", "label": "Alkino", "source": "Alkino (Russian: Алкино) is a rural locality (a village) in Alkinsky Selsoviet, Chishminsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 261 as of 2010. There are 20 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Chishminsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22401701", "label": "Rivière à la Chute", "source": "The rivière à la Chute (English: River of the Fall) is a tributary of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, flowing in the municipality of L'Île-d'Anticosti, in the Minganie Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Côte-Nord, in province of Quebec, in Canada. A forest road (north–south direction) serves the west side of this valley, connecting the Pointe-Sud-Ouest of the island, the place called Tour-de-Jupiter (located on the watershed) and the main road passing on the northern slope of the island. A branch of this road descends towards the south-east to join the forest road along the southern coast of the island.", "target": "river in Côte-Nord, Quebec, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12410637", "label": "Fania Bergstein", "source": "Fania Bergstein (Hebrew: פניה ברגשטיין; April 11, 1908 – September 18, 1950) was an Israeli poet, lyricist and author who wrote and published for children and adults. Bergstein made a major contribution to the development of Modern Hebrew poetry for children. A number of her poems for both children and adults have become Israeli classics and are recognized as touchstones of Israel's literary and cultural heritage; many have been set to music. Several of her books, including prose and poetry for children and adults, were published posthumously.", "target": "Israeli poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16105845", "label": "Peter Bartlett", "source": "Peter Bartlett (born August 28, 1942) is an American actor. With appearances on shows such as Law & Order and films such as Meet the Parents, Bartlett portrayed Nigel Bartholomew-Smythe on the ABC soap opera, One Life to Live. He had portrayed this role from 1991 until the soap's cancellation in 2012. In 2009, he began portraying Nigel's English cousin Neville. In 2004 he appeared on Broadway playing the role of Pluto in The Frogs, the Stephen Sondheim-Burt Shevelove-Nathan Lane adaptation which played at the Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center. His lively performance was well received by critics and audiences, and Stephen Sondheim has stated that Mr. Bartlett's delivery of the line, \"Get out of town!\" (preserved on the original cast recording by PS Classics) was a highlight of the show. He also starred in the 2009 Disney film The Princess and the Frog as a valet named Lawrence. He starred on Broadway in The Drowsy Chaperone as Underling, the butler. He opened to highly favorable reviews in the Broadway revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella on March 3, 2013, playing the Prince's calculating Regent, Sebastian. He later played several roles in the hit Broadway musical Something Rotten!, and appeared as the flabbergasted \"Head Waiter\" in the Roundabout revival of She Loves Me in 2016. Since 1993, the openly gay Bartlett has been frequently associated with the plays of gay playwright Paul Rudnick, beginning with the latter's Off-Broadway success Jeffrey in circa 1993–1994 and continuing through The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told (1998) and The.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9358424", "label": "Thiago Gomes", "source": "Thiago Gomes (born 11 January 1979) is a Brazilian rower. He competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics and the 2008 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Brazilian rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4775806", "label": "Anton Hrušecký", "source": "Anton Hrušecký (2 January 1942 – 18 June 2019) was a former Slovak footballer, who played for FC Spartak Trnava. He earned 3 caps for the Czechoslovakia national football team.", "target": "Czechoslovak soccer player (1942-2019)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7615564", "label": "Stevie \"Keys\" Roseman", "source": "Stevie \"Keys\" Roseman (born Steve Roseman; January 29, 1951) is a keyboardist and performer born in Oakland, California. He has worked as a session and live musician since the late 1960s, most notably with the rock band Journey. In between the departure of original keyboardist Gregg Rolie from Santana and the arrival of Jonathan Cain from The Babys he was invited to play keyboards on the track \"The Party's Over (Hopelessly In Love)\" on the 1981 live Journey release Captured. This same track appears on the package set Time³ and the 2001 compilation The Essential Journey. He recorded several tracks with Journey guitarist Neal Schon on the 1999 \"Piranha Blues\" release and stayed close to the Journey family co-writing and recording the 2005 release VTR (Valory-Tickner-Roseman) with founders Ross Valory and George Tickner. He also co-wrote the No Nation \"Illumine\" project in 2007 which includes guest artists such as vocalist Jon Anderson of Yes, bassist Ross Valory and keyboardist Mike Pinder of The Moody Blues.Stevie continues to live and work in the Northern California Bay Area as an artist and performer.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5170376", "label": "Corey Hulsey", "source": "Corey Spear Hulsey (born July 26, 1977) is a former American football guard. He was originally signed by the Buffalo Bills as an undrafted free agent in 1999. After the 2008 preseason, he was waived by the Lions during final cuts on August 31, 2008. He played college football at Clemson. Hulsey also played for the Oakland Raiders.", "target": "American football guard who is currently a free agent.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7313645", "label": "René-Bernard Chapuy", "source": "René-Bernard Chapuy (known as Chapuis) was a French soldier and general who served in the Caribbean, American War of Independence and Wars of the French Revolution.", "target": "French soldier and general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7675080", "label": "tag", "source": "In barbershop music, a tag is a dramatic variation put in the last section of the song. It is roughly analogical to a coda in classical music. Tags are characterized by heightening the dramatic tension of the song, frequently including a hanger or sustained note against which the other singers carry the rhythm. In addition, good tags can be sung as short, stand-alone works. Tags may be soft and tender but are typically characterized by loud, \"paint-peeling\", ringing chords. According to the competition rules of the Barbershop Harmony Society, every song entered for a competition must have a tag.", "target": "last line(s) of a song's chorus", "baseline_candidates": ["musical term", "conclusion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2857254", "label": "Antonio Cuevas", "source": "Antonio Cuevas Delgado (Puente Ganil, Spain, 7 May 1949) is a Spanish politician and member of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). Married with three children, he studied at the University of Seville and became a technical architect. In the late 1960s he was a Trade Union activist for the Unión General de Trabajadores, which at that time was illegal under the Francoist State. In 1986 he was elected to the Spanish Congress representing Seville and was re-elected at all subsequent elections in 1989, 1993, 1996, 2000, 2004 and 2008.Cuevas was one of the earliest members of the reformist pro-capitalist \"New Way\" (nueva via) current within the PSOE which propelled leading member José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero to power. He is a strong supporter of a single energy market for Europe.", "target": "Spanish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50528988", "label": "Manuel García", "source": "Manuel Alejandro García (born 25 April 1985) is a Chilean footballer who plays as a midfielder. He is currently a free agent.", "target": "Chilean footballer (born 1985)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12203834", "label": "culture of Turkey", "source": "The culture of Turkey (Turkish: Türkiye Kültürü) combines a heavily diverse and heterogeneous set of elements that have been derived from the various cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean, Eastern Europe, Caucasia, Central Asia and Middle East traditions. Many of these traditions were initially brought together by the Ottoman Empire, a multi-ethnic and multi-religious state. During the early years of the Republic of Turkey, the government invested a large amount of resources into fine arts such as paintings, sculpture and architecture. This was done as both a process of modernization and of creating a cultural identity.", "target": "pattern of human activity and symbolism associated with Turkey and its people", "baseline_candidates": ["culture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5415833", "label": "Evangelize China Fellowship", "source": "The Evangelize China Fellowship (ECF; Chinese: 基督敎中國佈道會) is an American non-profit 501(c) organization, founded in 1947 by 20th-century Chinese revivalist Andrew Gih. The fellowship consists of churches, missionaries, and affiliated organizations that attempt to bring Christian beliefs to China and persons of Chinese descent. ECF carries out programs of evangelism, education, and relief work in Hong Kong, Macau, Thailand, Burma, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Vietnam, the United States, People's Republic of China, and Republic of China (Taiwan). Programs are primarily conducted in schools, orphanages, and churches; with the educational programs focused on providing middle- and high-school English teachers training.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12100328", "label": "Absent Without Leave", "source": "Absent Without Leave is a 1992 New Zealand drama film directed by John Laing and starring Craig McLachlan. It was entered into the 18th Moscow International Film Festival.", "target": "1992 film by John Laing", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10908534", "label": "Gliricidia sepium", "source": "Gliricidia sepium, often simply referred to as its genus name Gliricidia, is a medium size leguminous tree belonging to the family Fabaceae. Common names include quickstick, mata ratón; cacao de nance, cachanance; balo in Panama; piñon Cubano in the Dominican Republic; madreado in Honduras; kakawate in the Philippines; madre xacao, madre cacao, or madre de cacao in the Philippines and Guatemala; madero negro in Nicaragua; undirmari in Marathi and wetahiriya in Sinhala). It is an important multi-purpose legume tree, with a native range from Mexico to Colombia, but now widely introduced to other tropical zones.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5496105", "label": "Fred Quine", "source": "Frederick \"Fred\" Quine (born 4 January 1941) is a retired field hockey player from Australia, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. He attended Brisbane State High School and played grade hockey for Northern Suburbs Hockey Club. Fred.", "target": "Australian field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7679704", "label": "Talk to Me", "source": "\"Talk to Me\" is an electroclash song written by Peaches and her longtime collaborator and friend Gonzales, and produced by Soulwax. It is the first single from the album I Feel Cream. The song was released as part of a double A-side, along with the song \"More\".", "target": "2009 song by Peaches", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21284884", "label": "Chris Daniels", "source": "Robert Christopher Daniels (born April 19, 1984) is an American professional basketball player who last played for the Rivers Hoopers of the Basketball Africa League (BAL). He played college basketball for Texas A&M–Corpus Christi.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18115219", "label": "Tetradonia", "source": "Tetradonia is a genus of rove beetles in the family Staphylinidae. There are at least three described species in Tetradonia.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2041122", "label": "Philip Walsingham Sergeant", "source": "Philip Walsingham Sergeant (27 January 1872, Notting Hill, London – 20 October 1952) was a British professional writer on chess and popular historical subjects. He collaborated on the fifth (1933), sixth (1939), and seventh (1946) editions of Modern Chess Openings, an important reference work on the chess openings. He also wrote biographical game collections of Paul Morphy (Morphy's Games of Chess (1916) and Morphy Gleanings (1932)), Rudolf Charousek (Charousek's Games of Chess (1919)), and Harry Nelson Pillsbury (Pillsbury's Chess Career, with W. H. Watts, 1922), and other important books such as A Century of British Chess (1934) and Championship Chess (1938).Harry Golombek writes that, \"Without any pretensions to mastership, he represented Oxford University in the years 1892-5\". Golombek considers A Century of British Chess probably Sergeant's best chess book, but opines that although Sergeant's chess books are lucidly written, they suffer from the defect that, as a non-master, he was not competent to deal with the annotational aspect of his work.He was a second cousin of Edward Guthlac Sergeant.", "target": "British chess player (1872-1952)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5174222", "label": "Cosmisoma scopipes", "source": "Cosmisoma scopipes is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Johann Christoph Friedrich Klug in 1852.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1953437", "label": "One Way...Or Another", "source": "One Way... or Another is the second album by American hard rock band Cactus, released in 1971 under the Atco label. It includes several original songs as well as two cover versions: Little Richard's 1956 big hit \"Long Tall Sally\" (also recorded by Elvis Presley) and Chuck Willis' \"I Feel So Bad\" as \"Feel So Bad\".. [Their first album contained the opposite song \"Feel So Good\"].", "target": "album by Cactus", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q919835", "label": "Eric Linklater", "source": "Eric Robert Russell Linklater CBE (8 March 1899 – 7 November 1974) was a Welsh-born Scottish poet, fiction writer, military historian, and travel writer. For The Wind on the Moon, a children's fantasy novel, he won the 1944 Carnegie Medal from the Library Association for the year's best children's book by a British subject.", "target": "Scottish fiction, history and travel writer (1899–1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2885908", "label": "Barta'a", "source": "Barta'a (Arabic: برطعة, Hebrew: בַּרְטַּעָה) is a town in Israel and the Palestinian territories that straddles both sides of the Green Line in the Wadi Ara (or Nahal 'Iron) region. Western Barta'a is in the Haifa District of Israel, and forms part of the Basma local council. Its 4,700 residents are Arab citizens of Israel.Eastern Barta'a is in the Palestinian territories in the northern part of the Jenin Governorate of the West Bank in what was designated under the Oslo Accords as Area C. It has 3,600 residents, of whom 30-40 percent carry Israeli identity cards and the rest of whom carry Palestinian identity cards.", "target": "human settlement in Israel", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "town divided by border"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60059098", "label": "Jody Kreiman", "source": "Jody Kreiman is an American linguist and professor in residence of head and neck surgery at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is known for her works on phonetics and laboratory phonology. She is an elected fellow of the Acoustical Society of America.", "target": "American linguist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7259655", "label": "Pulse Asia", "source": "Pulse Asia Research Inc. is a public opinion polling body in the Philippines. It was founded by Professor Emeritus Felipe B. Miranda (M.A. Political Science, University of Chicago) of the University of the Philippines Diliman. Pulse Asia Inc. was founded in 1999 as a for-profit private company. In 2013, the company re-formed into a nonprofit organization and changed their name to Pulse Asia Research Inc.", "target": "Polling survey company in the Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48817895", "label": "Brodie Chapman", "source": "Brodie Mai Chapman (born 9 April 1991) is an Australian road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Women's WorldTeam FDJ Nouvelle-Aquitaine Futuroscope.", "target": "Australian cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11008409", "label": "Saath Saath", "source": "Saath Saath (together) is a 1982 Indian Hindi language written and directed by Raman Kumar and produced by Dilip Dhawan. It stars Farooque Shaikh and Deepti Naval in the lead roles, and was first released in India on 4 March 1982.", "target": "1982 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21931", "label": "Launstroff", "source": "Launstroff (German: Launsdorf) is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. Launstroff is a small agricultural community consisting of 50-60 houses, with few exceptions over fifty years old.", "target": "commune in Moselle, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12631271", "label": "Fuller Acres", "source": "Fuller Acres (formerly, Hilltop) is a census-designated place in Kern County, California. It is located 7.25 miles (12 km) southeast of downtown Bakersfield, at an elevation of 420 feet (128.02 m). The population was 991 at the 2010 census.", "target": "census-designated place in Kern County, California", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7289843", "label": "Ramon Lugo III", "source": "Ramon \"Ray\" Lugo III is an American aerospace engineer who served as the Director of NASA's Glenn Research Center. He currently serves as the Director of the Florida Space Institute at the University of Central Florida. He previously served as Glenn's Deputy Director from 2007 to 2010.", "target": "American aerospace engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4356835", "label": "Jan Håkan Åberg", "source": "Jan Håkan Åberg (10 March 1916 – 8 January 2012) was a Swedish organist and composer.Born in Dalarna, Åberg worked as a cathedral organist in Härnösand. He is represented in the current Swedish Book of Psalms (1986) with two songs: In dulci jubilo and Så älskade Gud världen all.", "target": "Organist, composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14217152", "label": "Guadalupe", "source": "Guadalupe is a town in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States and part of the great Phoenix metropolitan area. The town motto, \"where three cultures flourish\", recognizes the town's roots in the Yaquis, Mexicans and descendants of the original farmers. Since its founding, Guadalupe has been known as a center of Yaqui culture, and it is home to many religious festivals. Nestled between Phoenix and Tempe, the 2020 census listed the population of the town as 5,322. Guadalupe was founded around 1900 by Yaqui Indians, who fled their homeland in Sonora to avoid oppression by the Mexican government of Porfirio Díaz. The cemetery of Guadalupe was established in 1904, in the original townsite. The cemetery is now officially located in Tempe, due to that city's annexation of the land surrounding the cemetery; however, it is still administered by the Guadalupe Clerk's Office. Guadalupe is primarily a residential area; most residents commute to other parts of the Phoenix area to work.", "target": "town in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5532344", "label": "General feature format", "source": "In bioinformatics, the general feature format (gene-finding format, generic feature format, GFF) is a file format used for describing genes and other features of DNA, RNA and protein sequences.", "target": "file format for genomic data", "baseline_candidates": ["file format"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3712295", "label": "Dluthach mac Fithcheallach", "source": "Dluthach mac Fithcheallach (died 738) was the 18th King of Uí Maine.", "target": "8th-century Irish monarch", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6929818", "label": "Mrs. Medwin", "source": "Mrs. Medwin is a short story by Henry James, first published in Punch in 1900. The story slyly satirizes fashionable society in fin-de-siècle England. The central characters are an American brother and sister who both entertain and live off this society, which has grown bland and bored and almost exhausted.", "target": "book by Henry James", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3497913", "label": "Survivor: Cook Islands", "source": "Survivor: Cook Islands is the thirteenth season of the American competitive reality television series, Survivor. The season was filmed from June 26 to August 3, 2006, and premiered on September 14 of that year. Filmed in the Cook Islands, it was broadcast by CBS. The season had 20 contestants who were initially divided into four \"tribes\" by ethnicity: African American, Asian American, Hispanic American, and Caucasian. The tribes were named after some of the Cook Islands: Manihiki, Puka Puka, Aitutaki, and Rarotonga. They were later merged into a single tribe, Aitutonga. The season was the first with a final consisting of three participants, rather than two. Yul Kwon defeated Ozzy Lusth and Becky Lee by a jury vote of 5–4–0 and was named the Sole Survivor, winning $1,000,000.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q887637", "label": "Nevada State Route 530", "source": "State Route 530 (SR 530) was a 1.464-mile-long (2.356 km) state highway in Carson City, Nevada. It followed a portion of William Street and was formerly signed as part of U.S. Route 50 (and U.S. Route 395 temporarily). The route was turned over to local control in 2010.", "target": "highway in Nevada", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2966386", "label": "Christophe Meneau", "source": "Christophe Meneau (born (1968-01-31)31 January 1968) is a former French male volleyball player. He was part of the France men's national volleyball team at the 1988 Summer Olympics and 1992 Summer Olympics. He also played at the 1990 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship in Brazil. He played for GUC Grenoble.", "target": "French volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96370883", "label": "2020–21 Super Smash", "source": "The 2020–21 Dream11 Super Smash (named after the competition's sponsor Dream11) was the sixteenth season of the Men's Super Smash Twenty20 cricket tournament played in New Zealand. It started on 24 December 2020, and finished on 13 February 2021. The Wellington Firebirds were the defending champions.On 15 June 2020, New Zealand Cricket announced the first round of contracts for domestic teams ahead of the 2020–21 season. The full schedule for the tournament was confirmed on 29 September 2020.The Wellington Firebirds topped the group, advancing directly to the final. By the end of January 2021, the Canterbury Kings had secured their place in the Preliminary Final. On 5 February 2021, the Central Stags became the third and final team to reach the knock-out stage of the tournament, advancing to the Preliminary Final. In the Preliminary Final, the Canterbury Kings beat the Central Stags by four wickets to join the Wellington Firebirds in the final. In the final, the Wellington Firebirds beat the Canterbury Kings by five wickets to win the tournament.", "target": "cricket tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13139218", "label": "Ransial", "source": "Rangsial is a village in the Punjab province of Pakistan. It is located at 32°43'0N 72°41'0E with an altitude of 811 metres (2664 feet).", "target": "human settlement in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11528183", "label": "Higashi-Yūki Station", "source": "Higashi-Yūki Station (東結城駅, Higashi-Yūki-eki) is a passenger railway station in the city of Yūki, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "target": "railway station in Yuki, Ibaraki prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24997834", "label": "German submarine U-3040", "source": "German submarine U-3040 was a Type XXI U-boat (one of the \"Elektroboote\") of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine, built for service in World War II. She was ordered on 6 November 1943, and was laid down on 9 December 1944 at AG Weser, Bremen, as yard number 1199. She was launched on 10 February 1945, and commissioned under the command of Oberleutnant zur See Heinz Robbert on 8 March 1945.", "target": "German World War II submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18812106", "label": "Donashano Malama", "source": "Donashano Malama (born 1 September 1991) is a Zambian association football defender who plays for ZESCO United F.C. and the Zambia national football team.", "target": "Zambian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13546733", "label": "Xanthorhoe alticolata", "source": "Xanthorhoe alticolata is a species of moth in the family Geometridae first described by William Barnes and James Halliday McDunnough in 1916. It is found in North America.The MONA or Hodges number for Xanthorhoe alticolata is 7385.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5857683", "label": "Khoshkabad, Hormozgan", "source": "Khoshkabad (Persian: خشك اباد, also Romanized as Khoshkābād) is a village in Band-e Zarak Rural District, in the Central District of Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 177, in 31 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16988144", "label": "Pipistrellus bat coronavirus HKU5", "source": "Pipistrellus bat coronavirus HKU5 (Bat-CoV HKU5) is an enveloped, positive-sense single-stranded RNA mammalian Group 2 Betacoronavirus discovered in Japanese Pipistrellus in Hong Kong. This strain of coronavirus is closely related to the newly identified novel MERS-CoV that is responsible for the 2012 Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus outbreaks in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy.", "target": "species of virus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17986778", "label": "Aquostic (Stripped Bare)", "source": "Aquostic (Stripped Bare) is the thirty-first studio album by English rock band Status Quo, first released on 17 October 2014. Produced by Mike Paxman, this is the band's first completely acoustic album and the first recorded with drummer Leon Cave. Its cover features a photograph by Canadian singer Bryan Adams. The album earned a Gold certification in January 2015.", "target": "album by Status Quo", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6229246", "label": "John Derringer", "source": "John Derringer (born John Hayes on September 21, 1962) was once a Canadian radio personality for CILQ-FM (Q107) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Derringer lives in nearby Aurora. He hosted a weekday morning show, Derringer In The Morning, until it was suspended in May 2022. Throughout the early 2000s, Derringer's opinions also appeared in the form of a regular column in the Toronto Sun. As of 2016, Derringer has been named \"Radio Personality of the Year\" by Canadian Music Week 10 times, and has been named \"Favourite Toronto Radio Personality\" by the Sun, Eye Weekly, \"Now Magazine\" and Top Choice Awards.In March 2012, Derringer received the Allan Waters Lifetime Achievement Award and was inducted into the Canadian Broadcast Industry Hall of Fame at Canadian Music Week in Toronto.In 2012, he received the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Medal for his work with the Canadian Centre for Abuse Awareness. In May 2022, Derringer was suspended from Q107 pending an investigation after several former employees of the station had accused him of misconduct and gender discrimination.", "target": "Canadian radio personality", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7125384", "label": "Pak Singhar", "source": "Pak Singhar is a town and union council of Tando Allahyar District in the Sindh Province of Pakistan. It is part of Tando Allahyar Taluka and is located to the south-east of the capital. The Union Council has a population of 43,473.", "target": "union council in Sindh, Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["union council of Pakistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6264790", "label": "John Woodall", "source": "Lieutenant General Sir John (Dane) Woodall KCMG KBE CB MC (1897 – 7 May 1985) was General Officer Commanding Northern Ireland District.", "target": "British Army general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1441733", "label": "Remedios", "source": "Remedios is a town and municipality in the Colombian department of Antioquia. Part of the subregion of Northeastern Antioquia.", "target": "Colombian municipality of the department of Antioquia", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Colombia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5209696", "label": "Daisy Cocco De Filippis", "source": "Daisy Cocco DeFilippis (born 25 February 1949) is a Dominican-American academic administrator and author. She is the current president at Hostos Community College in The Bronx, making her the first person born in the Dominican Republic to serve as President of a college of the City University of New York. From 2008 to 1 August 2020 she was president of Naugatuck Valley Community College (NVCC) in Waterbury, Connecticut. She is the author of works of fiction and non-fiction dealing with Dominican and Dominican-American women.", "target": "American community college president", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60733915", "label": "Phil Sharp", "source": "Phil Sharp (born 11 May 1981) is a British yachtsman. He was born in Jersey (Channel Islands), educated at Victoria College Jersey and qualified from Imperial College London with an MSc in Mechanical Engineering. Sharp holds World Speed Sailing Records. and Guinness World Records for the Cowes-to-Dinard monohull under 60 ft singlehanded (set in 2016), and crewed around Britain and Ireland under 40 ft (set in 2018).", "target": "British professional offshore yacht racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5932959", "label": "H. V. McKay", "source": "Hugh Victor McKay (21 August 1865 – 21 May 1926) was an Australian industrialist who is known for heading the company that developed the Sunshine Harvester, arguably the first commercially viable combine harvester. He subsequently established the Sunshine Harvester Works, which became one of Australia's largest manufacturers of agricultural equipment.", "target": "Australian inventor and industrialist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1426375", "label": "WizKids", "source": "NECA/WizKids, LLC, or simply WizKids, is an American company based in New Jersey that produces tabletop games. WizKids is best known for its collectible miniatures games (CMGs) Mage Knight, HeroClix, MechWarrior, and HorrorClix, all of which make use of the company's Clix system, in which the changing combat statistics and abilities of each figure were indicated by a turnable dial inside the base underneath the figure. The company was founded in 2000 by Jordan Weisman, a veteran of the game company FASA. It was purchased by sports-card manufacturer Topps, Inc. in 2003.WizKids was acquired by NECA in September 2009.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q966256", "label": "Serbia women's national football team", "source": "The Serbia women's national football team represents Serbia in international women's football competitions and is controlled by the Football Association of Serbia. It was previously known as the Yugoslavia women's national football team from 15 January 1992 until 4 February 2003, and then as the Serbia and Montenegro women's national football team until 3 June 2006 when Serbia declared independence as the successor state to the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. It was officially renamed the Serbia women's national football team on 28 June 2006, while the Montenegro women's national football team was created to represent the new state of Montenegro.Both FIFA and UEFA consider the Serbia national team the direct descendant of the Serbia and Montenegro national team.Between 1921 and 1992, this team did not exist as we know it today, since Serbia was part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1918–1943) and later on, the Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia (1945–1991). The Serbia national team existed from 1919 to 1921, and then ceased to exist following the creation of the first Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The new national team formed in 1992 was considered the direct descendant of the Yugoslavia national team, as it kept Yugoslavia's former status, which was not the case for any other country resulting from the breakup of Yugoslavia.", "target": "women's national association football team representing Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["women's national association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3049896", "label": "El Guerdane", "source": "El Guerdane is a town in Taroudant Province, Souss-Massa, Morocco. According to the 2004 census it has a population of 9,222.", "target": "town in Souss-Massa, Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["urban commune of Morocco"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5454107", "label": "First You Build A Cloud", "source": "First You Build a Cloud is an album by guitarists Andy Summers and Ben Verdery on the Rare Recordings label. The album consists of twelve guitar duets, with Verdery on acoustic and Summers on electric.", "target": "album by Andy Summers", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16756632", "label": "Ozyptila perplexa", "source": "Ozyptila perplexa is a crab spider species found in Spain, France and Algeria.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28230204", "label": "Early College High School", "source": "Harlingen Colligate High School (HCH) is a public high school in Harlingen, Texas. It is a specialized dual enrollment school (part of the ECHS initiative by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) which offers students the ability to earn up to 2 years of college credit at no cost at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV), focusing in 5 general areas: education, engineering, computer science, medical sciences, and college academic core curriculum requirements. Each class is capped at 100 students each (for a max total student population of 400), which encourages a small learning community to support educational success. It is an open-enrollment campus available to all who live in the Rio Grande Valley, with a special focus in recruiting at-risk students and historically underrepresented minorities. The application process for rising freshmen places special consideration on the student's personal goals, college preparedness, academic success, and demographic background. In 2018, 92% of students were Hispanic, 57% were female, and 61% were economically disadvantaged.Harlingen HCH offers a challenging academic program in grades 9th and 10th geared toward college readiness and project based learning, with full college transition and immersion for respective 11th and 12th grade levels. HCH does not offer school team sports (football, cheerleading, marching band, soccer, etc. ); however, it does offer physical education (PE) classes. Students interested in joining high school team sports are allowed to join teams at Harlingen High School or Harlingen High School South.In February 2019, UTRGV, the city of Harlingen, and Harlingen Consolidated Independent School District (HCISD) signed a.", "target": "high school part of the Harlingen Consolidated Independent School District in Texas", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5372892", "label": "Emma Lou Thornbrough", "source": "Emma Lou Thornbrough (January 24, 1913 – December 19, 1994) was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. She was a pioneer among professional historians in African-American history, a lifelong civil-rights activist in Indiana, a professor of history at Butler University from 1946 until her retirement in 1983, and an Indiana historian and author. Thornbrough's major scholarly contributions include several publications devoted to black history, such as The Negro in Indiana before 1900; Booker T. Washington; T. Thomas Fortune, Militant Journalist; Since Emancipation: A Short History of Indiana Negroes, 1863–1963; and Indiana Blacks in the Twentieth Century (published posthumously in 2000). She also wrote Indiana in the Civil War Era, 1850–1880, among other scholarly publications. In addition to her writing and research, Thornbrough was well known as a social activist and was especially active in Indianapolis civil rights groups, including the Indianapolis Human Relations Council, which she helped organize; the Indiana Civil Liberties Union; and the Indianapolis National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.", "target": "American historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7893516", "label": "United States v. Wheeler", "source": "United States v. Wheeler, 254 U.S. 281 (1920), was an 8-to-1 landmark decision of the US Supreme Court that held that the Constitution alone does not grant the federal government the power to prosecute kidnappers, even if moving abductees across state lines on federally-regulated railroads at the behest of local law enforcement officials, and only the states have the authority to punish a private citizen's unlawful violation of another's freedom of movement. The case was a landmark interpretation of the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the Constitution, and contains a classic legal statement of the right to travel which continues to undergird American jurisprudence.", "target": "1920 United States Supreme Court case", "baseline_candidates": ["United States Supreme Court decision"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50321981", "label": "Anatoli Strokatov", "source": "Anatoli Viktorovich Strokatov (born 1955), is a male former international table tennis player from the USSR.He won a silver medal at the 1973 World Table Tennis Championships in the mixed doubles with Asta Gedraitite.He also won three English Open titles.", "target": "table tennis player from the USSR", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5951853", "label": "Jan-Olov Liljenzin", "source": "Jan-Olov Liljenzin (1936-2019) was a Swedish chemist and professor in nuclear chemistry. Liljenzin was professor at University of Oslo, Nuclear Chemistry, Norway 1986-1989, and at Chalmers University of Technology, Nuclear Chemistry, Gothenburg, Sweden, between 1989 and 2001.Liljenzin made early contributions to the understanding of the influence of chemistry on core melt accidents and participated in international research about iodine chemistry and how to mitigate radioactive releases from nuclear accidents. He also investigated various methods of treatment and separation of spent radioactive fuel as well as chemical aspects of final repository for radioactive waste.Liljenzin was a co-author to Radiochemistry and nuclear chemistry which 2013 was issued in its 4:th edition. He was a co-author to a number of scientific papers about nuclear chemistry with applications to separation of nuclear waste and chemical processes during severe nuclear accidents. His publications has an h-index impact of 20.", "target": "Swedish chemist and professor (1936–2019)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13016635", "label": "history of Israel", "source": "The Land of Israel, also known as the Holy Land or Palestine, is the birthplace of the Jewish people, the place where the final form of the Hebrew Bible is thought to have been compiled, and the birthplace of Judaism and Christianity. It contains sites that are sacred to many Abrahamic religions, including Judaism, Samaritanism, Christianity, Islam, Druzism, and the Baháʼí Faith. The region has come under the sway of various empires and, as a result, has historically hosted a wide variety of ethnic groups. The adoption of Christianity by the Greco-Roman world under the Roman Empire in the 4th century led to a Christian majority in the Levant, which remained largely unchallenged until the Arab conquest of the region following the rise of Islam in the 7th century. It persisted for another six centuries as Muslim rule was consolidated despite various Christian military expeditions; by the end of the Crusader period in 1291, the Levant had shifted towards a Muslim majority. By the 13th century, Arabic had become the region's clear dominant language. It was individually first a part of the Mamluk Sultanate, and after 1516, a Syria-region province of the Ottoman Empire. Muslim rule over the Land of Israel ended during World War I, with the successful Sinai and Palestine campaign of the Allies leading to the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire and the establishment of British rule. The late 19th century saw the widespread consolidation of a Jewish nationalist movement known as Zionism, as part of which aliyah (Jewish return to the Land.", "target": "history of ancient Israel and Judah as well as modern State of Israel", "baseline_candidates": ["history of the Middle East", "history of a country or state"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4964790", "label": "Brian Mitsoda", "source": "Brian Mitsoda (also credited as B. Mitsoda and b mitsoda) is an American video game designer and writer best known for his work on the 2004 game Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines. He is the founder of DoubleBear Productions.", "target": "American video game writer and designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2294251", "label": "One Thousand Voices", "source": "\"One Thousand Voices\" is a single by the coaches of the Dutch television programme The Voice of Holland. The song was released on 16 September 2011. The song was written by Tjeerd Oosterhuis, Klaus Derendorf, Hiten Bharadia and Alfred Tuohey and was produced by Oosterhuis and Derendorf.It reached the peak position in both the Dutch Top 40 and the Mega Single Top 100. It also reached the peak position in the 3FM Megatop 50, the iTunes Top 30 and the Download Top 50. The song stayed only for one week at the peak position in all five charts. The first performance of \"One Thousand Voices\" was at the first episode of the second season of The Voice of Holland. It was performed by the coaches: Angela Groothuizen, Marco Borsato, VanVelzen and Nick & Simon (Nick Schilder and Simon Keizer). \"One Thousand Voices\" can be seen as the theme song of the second season of The Voice of Holland.", "target": "single by The Voice of Holland", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1614567", "label": "Yvette Amice", "source": "Yvette Amice (June 4, 1936 – July 4, 1993) was a French mathematician whose research concerned number theory and p-adic analysis. She was president of the Société mathématique de France.", "target": "French mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6802818", "label": "Mcluskyism", "source": "Mcluskyism is the final release by Welsh rock band Mclusky. A singles and rarities package, it is released in two formats, a one disc singles only package, and a three disc format. On April 18, 2015 it was released as a one disc vinyl edition that was limited to 2000 pressings.", "target": "compilation album by Mclusky", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17403086", "label": "Ben Shaoul", "source": "Ben Shaoul is a New York City-based real estate owner and developer. He is the president of Magnum Real Estate Group, a residential real estate development and management company headquartered in New York City. Shaoul is best known as a prominent developer in the Manhattan borough of New York City.", "target": "American real estate developer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18358784", "label": "silver sulfite", "source": "Silver sulfite is the chemical compound with the formula Ag2SO3. This unstable silver compound when heated and/or in light it decomposes to silver dithionate and silver sulfate.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["inorganic sulfite salt", "chemical compound", "silver compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q868994", "label": "Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport", "source": "Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport (IATA: LIT, ICAO: KLIT, FAA LID: LIT), also known as Adams Field, is a joint civil-military airport on the east side of Little Rock, Arkansas. It is operated by the Little Rock Municipal Airport Commission.The largest commercial airport in Arkansas, it served more than 2.1 million passengers in the year spanning from March 2009 through to February 2010. While Clinton National Airport does not have direct international passenger flights, more than 50 flights arrive or depart at Little Rock each day, with nonstop service to 14 cities. The airport is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2019–2023, in which it is categorized as a small-hub primary commercial service facility.", "target": "municipal airport in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1078794", "label": "Christian Archibald Herter", "source": "Christian Archibald Herter (September 3, 1865 – December 5, 1910) was an American physician and pathologist noted for his work on diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. He was co-founder of the Journal of Biological Chemistry.", "target": "American physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7976303", "label": "Wayne Harmes", "source": "Wayne Harmes (born 9 February 1960) is a retired Australian rules footballer in the Victorian Football League.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6467431", "label": "Labour Inspectorates (Non-Metropolitan Territories) Convention, 1947", "source": "Labour Inspectorates (Non-Metropolitan Territories) Convention, 1947 is an International Labour Organization Convention. It was established in 1947 with the preamble stating: Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals concerning labour inspectorates in non-metropolitan territories,...", "target": "International Labour Organization Convention", "baseline_candidates": ["International Labour Organization Convention"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12416900", "label": "N. Chandra", "source": "Chandrashekhar Narvekar (born 4 April 1952) is an Indian producer, writer and director, known for gritty realism, in his early dark and loud films. His most successful commercial films are Ankush, Pratighaat, Tezaab and Narsimha. Chandra also made moderately successful but critically scorned Style and its sequel Xcuse Me.", "target": "Indian producer, writer and director born 1952", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q694814", "label": "Laffrey", "source": "Laffrey (French pronunciation: ​[lafʁɛ]) is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France. It stands at the top of the Rampe de Laffrey, which is known for a large number of deadly automobile accidents.", "target": "commune in Isère, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15527920", "label": "Kolgrov", "source": "Kolgrov is a village in Solund Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. The village is located on the western coast of the island of Ytre Sula, and it is one of the largest population centres on the island. The village sits about 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) directly southwest of the municipal centre of Hardbakke and about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) northwest of the village of Byrknes in Gulen (across the Sognesjøen). Husøy Church is located on the north side of Kolgrov. Historically, the church was located on the island of Utvær until 1719. It was then moved to the small island of Husøy (just off the coast of Kolgrov). In 1896, the church was moved to its present site.", "target": "village in Western Norway, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q804669", "label": "Balbala", "source": "Balbala (Arabic: بلبالا) is a southern suburb of Djibouti City, located west of the river Ambouli. The name is from the \"Flashing\" (on Somali bal-bal be derived) from the nearby lighthouse. The suburb has formed since 1966 when access to the city was restricted. At first a shanty town, it is now a suburb with schools and a hospital, and a population estimated at 80,000.", "target": "place in Djibouti Region, Djibouti", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q483086", "label": "Song Yoo-geun", "source": "Song Yoo-geun (born November 27, 1997) is a South Korean person who gained recognition as a child prodigy in South Korea since 2004. After graduating college in 2009, he was involved in a number of controversies during his ultimately unsuccessful doctorate program at Korean University of Science and Technology (UST), including one involving his paper in October 2015 written with his advisor, Park Seok-jae. The paper, entitled \"Axisymmetric, Nonstationary Black Hole Magnetospheres: Revisited\" appeared in the Astrophysical Journal (ApJ). However, the paper was soon retracted due to concerns that it plagiarized a 2002 book chapter.", "target": "South Korean academic prodigy", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7748055", "label": "The London Look", "source": "The London Look EP by Herman's Hermits was the band's seventh and last EP and was released in the United Kingdom (catalogue number SLE 15.) It was a promo only issue sponsored by Yardley cosmetics.", "target": "extended play by Herman's Hermits", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6496676", "label": "Latirulus", "source": "Latirulus is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Fasciolariidae, the spindle snails, the tulip snails and their allies.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60528492", "label": "Japanese ship Ōshio", "source": "At least two warships of Japan have been named Ōshio: Japanese destroyer Ōshio, an Asashio-class destroyer launched in 1937 and sunk in 1943. JDS Ōshio, a submarine launched in 1964 and struck in 1981.", "target": "list of ships with the same or similar names", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia disambiguation page"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17339286", "label": "Sint-Lodewijkskerk", "source": "The Heilige Lodewijkkerk, also called the St. Louis Church, is a Roman Catholic church at the Steenschuur in Leiden.", "target": "church in Leiden", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23760707", "label": "William Singe", "source": "Liam Anthony \"William\" Singe (born 2 July 1992) is an Australian YouTuber, singer, songwriter, and producer. He is most notable for his online videos on YouTube and Facebook. Singe started his career as a member of The Collective, an Australian boy band which was formed during the fourth season of The X Factor Australia in 2012, finishing in third place. The Collective subsequently signed with Sony Music Australia and released seven singles and a self-titled album. They disbanded after Singe left the group in 2015. In 2014 and 2015, Singe recorded numerous R&B, pop, reggae, hip-hop and rap covers in his bedroom. In less than a year, he accumulated over two million Facebook fans, reached a number one position on Spotify, 20 million Spotify streams, and earned more than 500 million video views and 2.6 million subscribers on YouTube.", "target": "Australian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14729200", "label": "Anastrepha consobrina", "source": "Anastrepha consobrina is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Anastrepha of the family Tephritidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18164190", "label": "Henry McLean House", "source": "Henry McLean House is a historic home located at Fayetteville, Cumberland County, North Carolina. The original section was built about 1840, and is a two-story, side-hall plan, vernacular Greek Revival style frame dwelling. A Victorian style two-story, four room wing was added between about 1875 and 1880. Additional rooms were added in the early-20th century.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.", "target": "historic house in North Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69965869", "label": "Brian Barone", "source": "Brian Barone is the head coach or the men's basketball team at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE), an NCAA Division I program competing in the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC).", "target": "American basketball coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7157018", "label": "Pazinotus bodarti", "source": "Pazinotus bodarti is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2620831", "label": "Branko Skroče", "source": "Branko Skroče (born 17 May 1955 in Zadar) is a former Croatian basketball player who competed for Yugoslavia in the 1980 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Croatian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20273766", "label": "Túxpan", "source": "Tuxpan (or Túxpam, fully Túxpam de Rodríguez Cano) is both a municipality and city located in the Mexican state of Veracruz. The population of the city was 78,523 and of the municipality was 134,394 inhabitants, according to the INEGI census of 2005, residing in a total area of 1,051.89 km2 (406.14 sq mi). The municipality includes many smaller outlying communities, the largest of which are Alto Lucero and Santiago de la Peña. A local beachside community is also nearby.", "target": "human settlement in Veracruz, Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16960484", "label": "Dhamkee", "source": "Dhamkee is a 1973 Bollywood drama film directed by Kalpataru. The film stars Vinod Khanna & Kumkum in lead roles.", "target": "1973 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3814016", "label": "Katyna Ranieri", "source": "Caterina Ranieri (31 August 1925 – 3 September 2018), known professionally as Katyna Ranieri, was an Italian actress and singer.", "target": "Italian actress, singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6529983", "label": "Les Sille", "source": "Les Sille (12 April 1928 – 7 April 2007) was an English footballer, who played as a winger in the Football League for Tranmere Rovers.", "target": "Footballer (1928-2007)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10674489", "label": "Spartocera", "source": "Spartocera is a genus of leaf-footed bugs in the family Coreidae. There are about 18 described species in Spartocera.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2820063", "label": "Aaron Kampman", "source": "Aaron Allan Kampman (; born November 30, 1979) is a former American football defensive end who played ten seasons in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the University of Iowa. He was drafted by Green Bay Packers in the fifth round of the 2002 NFL Draft, and also played for the Jacksonville Jaguars.", "target": "American football player, defensive end, linebacker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1493064", "label": "human-based computation game", "source": "A human-based computation game or game with a purpose (GWAP) is a human-based computation technique of outsourcing steps within a computational process to humans in an entertaining way (gamification).Luis von Ahn first proposed the idea of \"human algorithm games\", or games with a purpose (GWAPs), in order to harness human time and energy for addressing problems that computers cannot yet tackle on their own. He believes that human intellect is an important resource and contribution to the enhancement of computer processing and human computer interaction. He argues that games constitute a general mechanism for using brainpower to solve open computational problems. In this technique, human brains are compared to processors in a distributed system, each performing a small task of a massive computation. However, humans require an incentive to become part of a collective computation. Online games are used as a means to encourage participation in the process.The tasks presented in these games are usually trivial for humans, but difficult for computers. These tasks include labeling images, transcribing ancient texts, common sense or human experience based activities, and more. Human-based computation games motivate people through entertainment rather than an interest in solving computation problems. This makes GWAPs more appealing to a larger audience. GWAPs can be used to help build the semantic web, annotate and classify collected data, crowdsource general knowledge, and improving other general computer processes. GWAPs have a vast range of applications in variety of areas such as security, computer vision, Internet accessibility, adult content filtering, and Internet search. In applications such as these,.", "target": "video game genre", "baseline_candidates": ["video game genre", "human-based computation", "video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1999017", "label": "Roncador Bank", "source": "Roncador Bank is a mostly-submerged atoll with several sandy cays. It lies in the west Caribbean Sea off the coast of Central America.", "target": "Colombian atoll in the western Caribbean Sea", "baseline_candidates": ["island group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4837893", "label": "Babin Potok, Prokuplje", "source": "Babin Potok is a village in the municipality of Prokuplje, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 674 people.", "target": "village in Toplica District, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25247964", "label": "Sacred Heart School", "source": "Sacred Heart School is a Catholic elementary school located in Lombard, Illinois. It was established in 1912, with the first class of 30 students being taught in a barn owned by local resident Martin Hogan. : 158 In 1913, the school's first elementary school building was built. : 160 The school was originally run by the School Sisters of St. Francis, and had a total enrollment of 66 in 1921.The school is part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Joliet in Illinois.The school holds many activities for students, including an annual runathon and spelling bee.", "target": "Catholic elementary school in Lombard, Illinois, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school", "Catholic school", "primary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q130614", "label": "Roman Senate", "source": "The Roman Senate (Latin: Senātus Rōmānus) was a governing and advisory assembly in ancient Rome. It was one of the most enduring institutions in Roman history, being established in the first days of the city of Rome (traditionally founded in 753 BC). It survived the overthrow of the Roman monarchy in 509 BC; the fall of the Roman Republic in the 1st century BC; the division of the Roman Empire in AD 395; and the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476; Justinian's attempted reconquest of the west in the 6th century, and lasted well into the Eastern Roman Empire's history. During the days of the Roman Kingdom, most of the time the Senate was little more than an advisory council to the king, but it also elected new Roman kings. The last king of Rome, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, was overthrown following a coup d'état led by Lucius Junius Brutus, who founded the Roman Republic. During the early Republic, the Senate was politically weak, while the various executive magistrates were quite powerful. Since the transition from monarchy to constitutional rule was most likely gradual, it took several generations before the Senate was able to assert itself over the executive magistrates. By the middle Republic, the Senate had reached the apex of its republican power. The late Republic saw a decline in the Senate's power, which began following the reforms of the tribunes Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus. After the transition of the Republic into the Principate, the Senate lost much of its political power as well.", "target": "political institution in ancient Rome", "baseline_candidates": ["organ", "aristocracy", "legislature", "political institution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q712450", "label": "Ralph Waite", "source": "Ralph Waite (June 22, 1928 – February 13, 2014) was an American actor and political activist, best known for his lead role as John Walton Sr. on The Waltons (1972–1981), which he occasionally directed. He also had recurring roles in NCIS as Jackson Gibbs, the father of Leroy Jethro Gibbs, and Bones, as Seeley Booth's grandfather. Waite had supporting roles in movies such as Cool Hand Luke (1967), Five Easy Pieces (1970), The Grissom Gang (1971), The Bodyguard (1992), and Cliffhanger (1993).", "target": "American actor (1928-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65553171", "label": "Intrigo: Samaria", "source": "Intrigo: Samaria is a 2019 German-Swedish-American mystery crime drama film directed by Daniel Alfredson and starring Phoebe Fox, Andrew Buchan and Jeff Fahey. It is the third of a trilogy preceded by Intrigo: Death of an Author (2018) and Intrigo: Dear Agnes (2019).", "target": "2019 film directed by Daniel Alfredson", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2789398", "label": "Sawin, Lublin Voivodeship", "source": "Sawin [ˈsavin] is a settlement in Chełm County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Sawin. It lies approximately 14 kilometres (9 mi) north of Chełm and 61 km (38 mi) east of the regional capital Lublin. The settlement has a population of 2,181.", "target": "settlement in Lublin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3906942", "label": "Poems, Prayers & Promises", "source": "Poems, Prayers & Promises is the fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter John Denver, released on April 6, 1971 through RCA Records. The album was recorded in New York City, and produced by Milton Okun and Susan Ruskin. Poems, Prayers & Promises was Denver's commercial breakthrough, and contained several of his most popular songs, such as \"Poems, Prayers, and Promises\", \"My Sweet Lady\", \"I Guess He'd Rather Be in Colorado\", \"Sunshine on My Shoulders\", and \"Take Me Home, Country Roads\", which would become one of Denver's signature songs. \"The Box\", which concludes the album, is a poem by Kendrew Lascelles illustrating the futility of war. The album peaked at number 15 on the Billboard 200.", "target": "1971 studio album by John Denver", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3158500", "label": "Jacques Chapiro", "source": "Jacques (Ya'akov) Chapiro (1887–1972), a Jewish painter of the School of Paris, was born in Dinaburg, Russian Empire (now Daugavpils, Latvia) and died in Paris in 1972.", "target": "Jewish painter (1887-1972)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66317395", "label": "Okera Bascome", "source": "Okera Bascome (born 2 February 1994) is a Bermudian cricketer. He played in six matches for Bermuda in the 2018 ICC World Cricket League Division Four tournament in Malaysia.In August 2019, he was named in Bermuda's squad for the Regional Finals of the 2018–19 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier tournament. He made his Twenty20 International (T20I) debut for Bermuda against the United States on 18 August 2019. In September 2019, he was named in Bermuda's squad for the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier tournament in the United Arab Emirates. In November 2019, he was named in Bermuda's squad for the Cricket World Cup Challenge League B tournament in Oman. He made his List A debut, for Bermuda against Hong Kong, on 3 December 2019.In October 2021, he was named in Bermuda's squad for the 2021 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier tournament in Antigua.", "target": "Bermudian cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22105", "label": "Borgolavezzaro", "source": "Borgolavezzaro (Piedmontese: Borghlavzar, Lombard: Burglavsàr) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Novara in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 80 kilometres (50 mi) northeast of Turin and about 15 kilometres (9 mi) southeast of Novara. Borgolavezzaro borders the following municipalities: Albonese, Cilavegna, Nicorvo, Robbio, Tornaco, Vespolate. Borgolavezzaro was founded in 1200. It was the birthplace of illustrious figures like the war's minister and Alpine group's founder Cesare Magnani Ricotti, the italian writers Luigi Gramegna and Gaudenzio Merula, and Luigi Tornielli, politician and founder of BPN one of the most important bank of northern Italy.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q655118", "label": "2005 Tour de France", "source": "The 2005 Tour de France was the 92nd edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. It took place between 2–24 July, with 21 stages covering a distance 3,593 km (2,233 mi). It has no overall winner—although American cyclist Lance Armstrong originally won the event, the United States Anti-Doping Agency announced on 24 August 2012 that they had disqualified Armstrong from all his results since 1 August 1998, including his seven Tour de France wins from 1999 to 2005. The verdict was subsequently confirmed by the UCI. The first stages were held in the département of the Vendée, for the third time in 12 years. The 2005 Tour was announced on 28 October 2004. It was a clockwise route, visiting the Alps before the Pyrenees. Armstrong took the top step on the podium, for what was then the seventh consecutive time. He was accompanied on the podium by Ivan Basso and Jan Ullrich, but in 2012 Ullrich's results were annulled. The points classification was won by Thor Hushovd, and the mountains classification by Michael Rasmussen. The race was seen by 15 million spectators along the road, and by 2 billion viewers on TV.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour de France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56887353", "label": "Lauterach railway station", "source": "Lauterach railway station (German: Bahnhof Lauterach) is a railway station in the town of Lauterach in the district of Bregenz in the Austrian state of Vorarlberg. It sits at the junction of the standard gauge Vorarlberg and St. Margrethen–Lauterach lines of Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB).", "target": "railway station in Austria", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50036610", "label": "Holy Family Memorial Hospital", "source": "Holy Family Memorial is a non-profit healthcare system headquartered in Manitowoc, Wisconsin. The system operates a hospital and other healthcare facilities throughout Manitowoc and Sheboygan counties in the state of Wisconsin. Holy Family Memorial is recognized as the largest provider of healthcare services in Manitowoc County.", "target": "healthcare organization in Manitowoc, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital", "medical organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18880265", "label": "Sophie O'Brien", "source": "Sophie Raffalovich O'Brien (1860–1960), was a writer and Irish nationalist.", "target": "O'Brien [née Raffalovich], Sophie (1860–1960), author and Irish nationalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7537909", "label": "Skyline High School", "source": "Skyline High School is a public high school in the eastern part of Mesa, Arizona.Skyline is the youngest of the six high schools located in the Mesa Unified School District. Skyline opened its doors in 1999 and houses students in grades 9–12. Skyline High School is a four-year, public, comprehensive high school with an estimated enrollment of 2,400 students. The school is accredited by the North Central Association.", "target": "high school in Mesa, Arizona, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["state school", "high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33505548", "label": "Märwil railway station", "source": "Märwil railway station (German: Bahnhof Märwil) is a railway station in the village of Märwil, within the municipality of Affeltrangen, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau. It is an intermediate stop on the standard gauge Wil–Kreuzlingen line of THURBO.", "target": "train station in Switzerland", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4946464", "label": "Elisabeth Magdalena of Pomerania", "source": "Elisabeth Magdalena of Pomerania (14 June 1580 – 23 February 1649), was a Duchess consort of Courland by marriage to Friedrich Kettler. Elisabeth Magdalena was the daughter of Ernst Ludwig, Duke of Pomerania and of Princess Sophie Hedwig of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. She married the Duke of Courland, Friedrich Kettler, on 14 March 1600. She participated in the politics of the Duchy as the adviser to her spouse during the difficult times when Courland was at war with Sweden and Poland and when there was unrest among the nobility in Courland against the ducal reign. In 1616, her brother-in-law was deposed by the local nobility, and her husband was elected sole ruler of Courland the following year. Elisabeth Magdalena actively participated in this affair. She negotiated with her German relatives to have her brother-in-law rehabilitated, and in 1619, she visited the Sejm in Warsaw to that effect. During the war with Sweden, she became known for her charity, and protected schools and hospitals. She was childless, and became the foster mother of her brother-in-law's son Jacob Kettler. She actively worked for Jacob to be appointed the successor and heir to the Duchy, an effort which proved to be successful when he succeeded her spouse in 1642. As a widow, she settled at Dobele Castle, where she died.", "target": "German duchess consort of Courland", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5819617", "label": "Kalateh-ye Torkha", "source": "Kalateh-ye Torkha (Persian: كلاته تركها, also Romanized as Kalāteh-ye Torkhā) is a village in Darband Rural District, Jolgeh Sankhvast District, Jajrom County, North Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 318, in 71 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4813996", "label": "athletics at the 1960 Summer Olympics – women's high jump", "source": "The women's high jump field event at the 1960 Olympic Games took place on September 8.", "target": "women's high jump events at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5989030", "label": "Idiots Behind the Wheel", "source": "Idiots Behind the Wheel is the debut studio album by English electronic music producer Ils. It was released by Fuel Records on 9 August 1999 on CD and vinyl.", "target": "album by Ils", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6966934", "label": "Nashville", "source": "Nashville is an American reality television/soap opera series featuring several aspiring country music artists. The show, which was based in Nashville, Tennessee, aired on Fox Broadcasting Company for two episodes prior to its cancellation.", "target": "2007 television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20984403", "label": "Willie Box", "source": "William Gray Box (25 December 1927 – 2013) was a Scottish footballer who played for Arbroath and Dumbarton.", "target": "Scottish footballer (born 1927)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5954506", "label": "hydrazinophthalazine", "source": "Hydrazinophthalazines are a class of antihypertensive drugs including: Hydralazine Dihydralazine Cadralazine EndralazineChemically, the latter two aren't phthalazines; but they are classified as such in the World Health Organization's Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System.", "target": "drug class", "baseline_candidates": ["antihypertensive drug", "drug class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16536448", "label": "Davit Benidze", "source": "Davit Benidze (Georgian: დავით ბენიძე; born 15 February 1991) is a Georgian chess player who received the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM) in October 2013.", "target": "Georgian chess player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7084557", "label": "Old Moor Wetland Centre RSPB reserve", "source": "RSPB Dearne Valley Old Moor is an 89-hectare (220-acre) wetlands nature reserve in the Dearne Valley near Barnsley, South Yorkshire, run by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB). It lies on the junction of the A633 and A6195 roads and is bordered by the Trans Pennine Trail long-distance path. Following the end of coal mining locally, the Dearne Valley had become a derelict post-industrial area, and the removal of soil to cover an adjacent polluted site enabled the creation of the wetlands at Old Moor. Old Moor is managed to benefit bitterns, breeding waders such as lapwings, redshanks and avocets, and wintering golden plovers. A calling male little bittern was present in the summers of 2015 and 2016. Passerine birds include a small colony of tree sparrows and good numbers of willow tits, thriving here despite a steep decline elsewhere in the UK. Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council created the reserve, which opened in 1998, but the RSPB took over management of the site in 2003 and developed it further, with funding from several sources including the National Lottery Heritage Fund. The reserve, along with others nearby, forms part of a landscape-scale project to create wildlife habitat in the Dearne Valley. It is an 'Urban Gateway' site with facilities intended to attract visitors, particularly families. In 2018, the reserve had about 100,000 visits. The reserve may benefit in the future from new habitat creation beyond the reserve and improved accessibility, although there is also a potential threat to the reserve from climate change and.", "target": "English wetlands nature reserve", "baseline_candidates": ["protected area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31827205", "label": "European Otter", "source": "The Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra), also known as the European otter, Eurasian river otter, common otter, and Old World otter, is a semiaquatic mammal native to Eurasia. The most widely distributed member of the otter subfamily (Lutrinae) of the weasel family (Mustelidae), it is found in the waterways and coasts of Europe, many parts of Asia, and parts of northern Africa. The Eurasian otter has a diet mainly of fish, and is strongly territorial. It is endangered in some parts of its range, but is recovering in others.", "target": "species of otter", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6680082", "label": "Lord of Lorne", "source": "For the Child ballad, see The Lord of Lorn and the False Steward. Lord of Lorne is a title in the Peerage of Scotland that has been created twice. First CreationThe title was first created for Robert Stewart of Durisdeer (died 1403), son of John Stewart of Innermeath (died 1421). Robert's mother was Isabel MacDougall, daughter of John Gallda MacDougall, Lord of Lorne (died 1371×1377). The MacDougalls, formerly exiled from their Argyll lands in the reign of Robert I, King of Scotland (died 1329), had been restored to their Lorne lands in the reign of David II, King of Scotland. The close association between John Gallda and David meant that the former was out of favour in the succeeding Stewart regime under Robert II, King of Scotland (died 1390). When John Gallda died without a male heir his two legitimate daughters, including Isabel, were subsequently married off to the sons of John Stewart of Innermeath. Robert Stewart, 1st Lord of Lorne was succeeded by his oldest son John, member of the Parliament of Scotland. In 1463 the second lord died and his younger brother Walter became 3rd Lord Lorne. Walter Stewart resigned the lordship on 30 November 1463, or 17 April 1470, and was created 1st Lord Innermeath on the same day. Second creationThe next creation was for Colin Campbell, 1st Earl of Argyll, the husband of Isabelle Stewart, daughter of John Stewart, 2nd Lord Lorne and niece of William Stewart, 1st Lord Innermeath, on 17 April 1470. The title was a subordinate title of the.", "target": "British title", "baseline_candidates": ["noble title"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7136893", "label": "Pareuthria", "source": "Pareuthria is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Cominellidae.", "target": "genus of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q637602", "label": "Zürich Selnau railway station", "source": "Zürich Selnau, (German: Zürich Selnau or Bahnhof Selnau), is an underground railway station on the Zürich S-Bahn system in Selnau in the centre of the Swiss city of Zürich. The station is on a section of tunnel common to the Uetliberg line and the Sihltal line, both of which are operated by the Sihltal Zürich Uetliberg Bahn (SZU).The original Bahnhof Selnau was an above-ground terminal station, serving as the Zürich city terminus of both the Uetliberg and Sihltal lines. It first opened in 1875 to serve the Uetliberg line, and was reached by the Sihltal line in 1892.In 1990, the two lines were extended to an underground terminus at Zürich Hauptbahnhof via a tunnel running under and along the River Sihl. The original Bahnhof Selnau was by-passed by this line, and a new underground intermediate station was provided adjacent to the former terminus. The original terminal was then redeveloped.The station is served by the following passenger trains: The underground station has two tracks, served by a central platform. The platform has access to the street at each end, with the northern access emerging through an unusual mid-river structure within the River Sihl.", "target": "underground railway station in the centre of the Swiss city of Zürich", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16006625", "label": "Kurt Petter", "source": "Kurt Petter (3 February 1909 – 3 October 1969) was a German physician, youth leader and educational administrator. Petter was born in 1909, the son of Bernhard and Marie Petter. He studied medicine at the University of Würzburg, University of Bonn and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. During his final exam period he was pediatrician to the Hitler Youth in Jena.He was appointed Hitler Youth area leader for Weimar region in 1933. In 1939 he was appointed head of the Reichsführerschule in Potsdam. In January 1937 he served as an inspector-general of the Adolf Hitler Schools with the rank of Gebietsführer. On 20 April 1942 he was promoted to Obergebietsführer and served as Deputy to Artur Axmann and as head of the Adolf Hitler Schools. From February to May 1945, he was acting Stabsführer of the Hitler Youth following the death of Helmut Möckel.He was also a senior physician advising on physical and nutritional requirements for former Hitler Youth joining the German Army. During April and May 1945 he served as Regimental Medical Officer to the 96th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment, 38th SS Division Nibelungen of the Waffen-SS.Petter was interned after the war and upon his release moved to Sweden. He married Carin Lennman (1912-1989), daughter of Lieutenant Henning Fredrik Gustaf Lennman (1879-1947) and Margarethe Lennman, geb. Eitze (1882-1965). Henning was son of Konteradmiral of the Royal Swedish Navy Fredrik Wilhelm Lennman (1840-1917) and Alice Lennman, geb. von Heidenstam (1850-1926). He worked as a pediatrician in his own medical practice in Hamburg, Germany until his death.", "target": "German physician, youth leader and educational administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13035033", "label": "Jannie Breedt", "source": "Johannes Christoffel Breedt (born 4 June 1959) is a South African former rugby union player.", "target": "South African rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7872666", "label": "USS Parrot", "source": "USS Parrot (AMS/MSC-197) was a Bluebird-class minesweeper in the United States Navy for clearing coastal minefields.", "target": "minesweeper of the United States Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18588958", "label": "Donuts", "source": "Donuts Inc. is a domain name registrar and registry providing paid domain names under 270 new generic top-level domains (gTLDs), as made possible by ICANN's gTLD expansion program, as well as 173 other TLDs including .au (ccTLD) and .org (gTLD managed by the Public Interest Registry), through its own registry status (for example, managing the .social gTLD) and contracts between its subsidiaries and other registries.It was co-founded in 2010 by Paul Stahura, Jonathon Nevett, Richard Tindal, and Daniel Schindler. The company's headquarters are located in Bellevue, Washington.In July 2017, Donuts acquired Rightside, along with domain registrar Name.com.On August 11, 2018, Donuts entered into an agreement to be acquired by private equity firm Abry Partners.In December 2020, Donuts acquired the registry division of Afilias, Inc., a registry, registrar and mobile software developer headquartered outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In January 2021, Donuts announced that Ethos Capital would be acquiring a controlling interest in the company.Donuts is named after the company's heavy reliance on DNS. DNS brought to mind the word donuts (DoNutS), and Donuts was chosen as the company name.", "target": "Internet domain name registry", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "domain name registry"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3705172", "label": "2002 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships – doubles", "source": "Jan-Michael Gambill and Andy Roddick were the defending champions but did not compete that year. Martin Damm and Cyril Suk won in the final 6–3, 6–7(5–7), [10–5] against David Adams and Ben Ellwood.", "target": "2002 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2376138", "label": "Splendid Geyser", "source": "Splendid Geyser is a geyser in the Upper Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park in the United States. Splendid Geyser is part of the Daisy Group. Its eruptions are infrequent and unpredictable, unless it is active. When it does erupt, its fountain can reach a height of 200 feet (60 m). Eruptions are more likely if a storm front reduces barometric pressure and lowers the boiling point of water around the geyser. Splendid’s eruptions are very rare with intervals between eruptions lasting decades. In the early to mid 1970s, the geyser was very active. Splendid came alive again in 1992. Splendid Geyser was last active in 1998. Eruptions last between 1 and 9 minutes. Splendid Geyser is closely linked to Daisy Geyser. Most often, when Daisy is active, Splendid is inactive. In times when Daisy goes dormant, Splendid becomes very active. In rare occasions, both geysers will be active at the same time, leading to a \"dual eruption\". During a concert (dual) eruption Daisy and Splendid are both much stronger than usual. Then Splendid erupts to about 250 feet, The dual eruptions last from 30 to 120 minutes.Splendid Geyser has not erupted since May 13, 1998.", "target": "geyser in Yellowstone National Park", "baseline_candidates": ["geyser"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4960047", "label": "Breckland Beira", "source": "The Breckland Beira is a sports car launched in June 2008 at the London Motorexpo, developed by the British company Breckland Technologies based in Dereham, Norfolk. Breckland Technologies was founded in 2000 specialising in manufacturing low volume specialist sports cars such as the Leading Edge 240 RT and Mosler MT900. The company became insolvent soon after the announcement of the new Beira, and was dissolved in July 2009.", "target": "motor vehicle", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model", "motor car"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18476943", "label": "San Giuseppe church", "source": "San Giuseppe is a complex of religious buildings in central Brescia, Lombardy, northern Italy. It includes a church and a monastery.", "target": "church in Brescia, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2885569", "label": "Barrett Heisten", "source": "William Barrett Heisten (born March 19, 1980) is an American former professional ice hockey forward who played in the National Hockey League (NHL).", "target": "American ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4971570", "label": "Britta Phillips", "source": "Britta Phillips (born June 11, 1963) is an American singer-songwriter, musician, record producer, and actress. Phillips' music career spans more than 30 years. She came to prominence in the mid-1980s as the singing voice of the title character of the animated television series Jem. She has also been a member of the bands Luna and as one half of the duo Dean & Britta, both with her husband Dean Wareham, and has had a solo career which has included one studio album: Luck or Magic. Phillips has also been an actress, with roles in films, including the 1988 comedy-drama film Satisfaction.", "target": "Female rock singer, band member of Luna", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56458236", "label": "Transference", "source": "Transference is a psychological thriller adventure video game developed by SpectreVision and Ubisoft Montreal and published by Ubisoft for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One. It was released on September 18, 2018.", "target": "video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1048333", "label": "Cassiano dal Pozzo", "source": "Cassiano dal Pozzo (1588 – 22 October 1657) was an Italian scholar and patron of arts. The secretary of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, he was an antiquary in the classicizing circle of Rome, and a long-term friend and patron of Nicolas Poussin, whom he supported from his earliest arrival in Rome: Poussin in a letter declared that he was \"a disciple of the house and the museum of cavaliere dal Pozzo.\" A doctor with interests in the proto-science of alchemy, a correspondent of major figures like Galileo, a collector of books and master drawings, dal Pozzo was a node in the network of European scientific figures.", "target": "Italian scholar and art patron (1588-1657)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49561909", "label": "Sydney Sweeney", "source": "Sydney Bernice Sweeney (born September 12, 1997) is an American actress and model. She gained mainstream attention in the Netflix series Everything Sucks! (2018) for her role as Emaline and has portrayed Eden in the Hulu series The Handmaid's Tale (2018) and Alice in the HBO miniseries Sharp Objects (2018). She has starred as Cassie Howard in the HBO teen drama series Euphoria since 2019 and as Olivia Mossbacher in The White Lotus since 2021. In film, she had a role in Quentin Tarantino's 2019 comedy-drama Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, portraying Dianne \"Snake\" Lake, a member of the Manson Family, and will appear in the upcoming Sony's Spider-Man Universe (SSU) film Madame Web.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q362056", "label": "Rocky Gray", "source": "William Rocky Gray (born July 2, 1974) is a drummer and guitarist who has been part of the Arkansas metal scene since the early 1990s. He has an extensive career as a musician and is best known as the former drummer for Evanescence from 2002-2007. He is the lead guitarist for Living Sacrifice and Solus Deus, and the drummer for We Are the Fallen. He also plays drums for Soul Embraced, Mourningside, and Machina. Gray is also currently creating a solo album titled Accursed.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q552022", "label": "Ferdinand the Holy Prince", "source": "Ferdinand the Holy Prince (Portuguese pronunciation: [fɨɾˈnɐ̃du]; Portuguese: Fernando o Infante Santo; 29 September 1402 – 5 June 1443), sometimes called the \"Saint Prince\" or the \"Constant Prince\", was an infante of the Kingdom of Portugal. He was the youngest of the \"Illustrious Generation\" of 15th-century Portuguese princes of the House of Aviz and lay administrator of the Knightly Order of Aviz. In 1437, Ferdinand participated in the disastrous Siege of Tangier led by his older brother Henry the Navigator. In the aftermath, Ferdinand was handed over to the Marinid rulers of Morocco as a hostage for the surrender of Ceuta in accordance with the terms of a treaty negotiated between the rulers of Portugal and Morocco by Henry. At first, Ferdinand was held in relative comfort as a noble hostage in Asilah, but when it became apparent that the Portuguese authorities had no intention of giving up Ceuta, Ferdinand's status was downgraded, and he was transferred to a prison in Fez, where he was subjected to much harsher incarceration conditions by his jailers. Negotiations for his release continued intermittently for years, but they came to naught, and Ferdinand eventually died in captivity in Fez on 5 June 1443. A popular cult quickly developed in Portugal around the figure of \"the Holy Prince\" (O Infante Santo), strongly encouraged by the House of Aviz. Ferdinand remains a \"popular saint\" by Portuguese tradition, neither beatified nor canonized by the Catholic Church.", "target": "Portuguese prince and blessed", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15895216", "label": "Bang Yai", "source": "Bang Yai (Thai: บางใหญ่, pronounced [bāːŋ jàj]) is one of the six subdistricts (tambon) of Bang Yai District, in Nonthaburi Province, Thailand. The subdistrict is bounded by (clockwise from north) Ban Mai, Bang Mae Nang, Bang Muang, Sala Klang and Sala Ya subdistricts. In 2020 it had a total population of 20,616 people.", "target": "subdistrict in Bang Yai district, Nonthaburi province, Thailand", "baseline_candidates": ["Tambon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q71463", "label": "Lucie Mannheim", "source": "Lucie Mannheim (30 April 1899 – 17 July 1976) was a German singer and actress.", "target": "German actress and singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q45722", "label": "cardinal", "source": "A cardinal of the Holy Roman Church (Latin: Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae cardinalis) is a senior member of the clergy of the Catholic Church, immediately behind the pope in the order of precedence. Collectively, they constitute the College of Cardinals, and are appointed for life. Their most solemn responsibility is to elect a new pope in a conclave, almost always from among themselves (with a few historical exceptions), when the Holy See is vacant. During the period between a pope's death or resignation and the election of his successor, the day-to-day governance of the Holy See is in the hands of the College of Cardinals. The right to participate in a conclave is limited to cardinals who have not reached the age of 80 years by the day the vacancy occurs. In addition, cardinals collectively participate in papal consistories (which generally take place annually), in which matters of importance to the Church are considered and new cardinals may be created. Cardinals of working age are also appointed to roles overseeing dicasteries of the Roman Curia, the central administration of the Catholic Church. Cardinals are drawn from a variety of backgrounds, being appointed as cardinals in addition to their existing roles within the Church. Most cardinals are bishops and archbishops leading dioceses and archdioceses around the world – often the most prominent diocese or archdiocese in their country. Others are titular bishops who are current or former officials within the Roman Curia (generally the leaders of dicasteries and other bodies linked with the Curia). A very small number.", "target": "senior ecclesiastical official of the Catholic Church", "baseline_candidates": ["Catholic clergyman", "title", "position", "Catholic religious occupation", "prince"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6146207", "label": "University of Jamestown", "source": "The University of Jamestown is a private Christian university in Jamestown, North Dakota. Founded in 1883 by the Presbyterian Church, it has about 1,300 students enrolled and has been co-educational from its founding. Until August 2013, the school was known as Jamestown College.", "target": "American university", "baseline_candidates": ["private not-for-profit educational institution", "university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10564547", "label": "I Love You", "source": "\"I Love You\" is the third single by Woodkid, taken from his debut album The Golden Age. It was co-written by Lemoine himself and by Ambroise Willaume. Arrangements were added by Willaume. B-sides for the I Love You single were Towers, I Love You (Booka Shade Remix), and The Deer. The single was released on 9 February 2013 as a warm-up to the imminent release of the album The Golden Age on 18 March 2013, whereas earlier two singles had been released much earlier, with \"Iron\" being released on March 28, 2011 and \"Run Boy Run\" on May 21, 2012.", "target": "2013 song by Woodkid", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7929900", "label": "Viktoria Allenstein", "source": "Viktoria Allenstein was a German football club from what was the city of Allenstein, East Prussia in Germany and is today Olsztyn, Poland. The club was established in 1916 and played as a lower tier local side making only a single season appearance in the top flight regional Baltenverband in 1925–26.In 1933 the team qualified for the new regional first division Gauliga Ostpreußen, one of 16 new regional circuits formed in the reorganization of German football under the Third Reich that year. They played another season there before the league was split into two divisions making Viktoria part of the Gauliga Allenstein for the next three campaigns. In 1939–40 they failed in an attempt to win their way back to the division in their own right when they lost a playoff 0:7 to Preußen Mlawa. Instead, playing alongside SV Allenstein, the team became part of Sportgemeinde Allenstein which played a single season in the Gauliga Ostpreußen. SG broke up the next year and Viktoria disappeared into lower level play. The club was lost at the end of World War II when parts of East Prussia, including Allenstein, were annexed by Poland.", "target": "German football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1918024", "label": "Toledo", "source": "Toledo is a city in, and the county seat of, Tama County, Iowa, United States. The population was 2,369 at the time of the 2020 census.", "target": "city in Iowa, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county seat", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23774734", "label": "Republican Guard Orchestra", "source": "The Republican Guard Band (French: Orchestre de la Garde républicaine) is a military band unit of the French Republican Guard, which is part of the National Gendarmerie. The band is composed of 120 professional musicians from national conservatories. As the senior band and field music unit of the French Armed Forces, it is aimed towards active participation as the musical accompaniment in all national events.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["orchestra", "military band", "musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5547002", "label": "Mitsuaki Iwagō", "source": "Mitsuaki Iwagō (岩合 光昭, Iwagō Mitsuaki, born November 27, 1950 in Tokyo) is a prominent Japanese wildlife photographer and filmmaker.", "target": "Japanese photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9343596", "label": "Stanisława Leszczyńska", "source": "Stanisława Leszczyńska (May 8, 1896 – March 11, 1974) was a Polish midwife who was incarcerated at the Auschwitz concentration camp during World War II, where she delivered over 3,000 children. She is an official candidate for canonization (sainthood) by the Catholic Church.", "target": "Polish obstetrician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q367301", "label": "Salmo obtusirostris", "source": "Salmo obtusirostris, also known as the Adriatic trout, Adriatic salmon, and softmouth trout, is a species of salmonid fish endemic to the rivers of Western Balkans in southeastern Europe. The scientific name has changed several times through history; synonyms include Thymallus microlepis, Salmothymus obtusirostris and Salar obtusirostris.This species spawns in the early spring and is an obligatory freshwater fish. They are an important game fish.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1763188", "label": "Jessica Long", "source": "Jessica Tatiana Long (born February 29, 1992) is a Russian-American Paralympic swimmer from Baltimore, Maryland, who competes in the S8, SB7 and SM8 category events. She has held many world records and competed at five Paralympic Games, winning 29 medals (16 of them gold). She has also won over 50 world championship medals.", "target": "American paralympic swimmer (1992-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3787235", "label": "Howard Post", "source": "Howard \"Howie\" Post (November 2, 1926 – May 21, 2010) was an American animator, cartoonist, and comic strip and comic book writer-artist. Post is known for his syndicated newspaper comic strip The Dropouts which had a 13-year run and for creating DC Comics' Anthro.", "target": "cartoonist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21600813", "label": "Eduardo Cabrita", "source": "Eduardo Arménio do Nascimento Cabrita (born 26 September 1961, in Barreiro) is a Portuguese legal professional and politician who served as Minister Assistant in the cabinet of Prime Minister António Costa from 2015 until 2021. He was a member of parliament from 2002 to 2015, before taking office as minister in the Government.During his time in government, Cabrita faced criticism over a range of incidents, including the death of a Ukrainian immigrant in custody at Lisbon airport; authorization for celebrations of the national football championship that were blamed for spreading COVID-19; and his handling of a coronavirus outbreak among migrant farm hands. In 3 December 2021, he resigned after his driver was accused of “negligent homicide” over the death of a highway worker, while driving Cabrita's car at 40 km/h above the speed limit, being substituted on the day after by the Minister of Justice Francisca Van Dunem.", "target": "Portuguese politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6691846", "label": "Love in a Peaceful World", "source": "\"Love in a Peaceful World\" is a song released in 1994 by the British musical group Level 42, from their final studio album of the decade, Forever Now. The song peaked at #31 on the UK Singles Chart, and is the last single of Level 42 to enter the charts. The music video of this song is the final video recorded by Level 42, with Jeff Baynes as director. The single was released only in the United Kingdom.The song appears on the compilation album Past Lives – The Best of the RCA Years, released in 2007 which features their greatest hit songs from 1991–1996 when the band was with RCA.", "target": "1994 single by Level 42", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5416457", "label": "Evelyn Thomson", "source": "Vice Admiral Evelyn Claude Ogilvie Thomson (13 April 1884 – 21 December 1941) was a Royal Navy officer who became Commander-in-Chief, Coast of Scotland.", "target": "Royal Navy admiral", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2168600", "label": "Ambulatory phlebectomy", "source": "Ambulatory phlebectomy is a minisurgical treatment for superficial varicose veins and so-called side branches.", "target": "treatment for varicose veins", "baseline_candidates": ["surgical procedure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7938968", "label": "Vlado Poslek", "source": "Vlado Poslek (born 16 October 1969) is a Croatian sprint canoer who competed in the early 1990s. At the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, he was eliminated in the semifinals of the C-1 1000 m event, placing 13th overall.", "target": "Croatian canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q431761", "label": "Elgin", "source": "Elgin is a city in northeastern Comanche County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 2,156 at the 2010 census, a 78 percent increase from 1,210 at the 2000 census. It is included in the Lawton, Oklahoma Metropolitan Statistical Area. It is the site of Fort Sill National Cemetery.", "target": "city in Comanche County, Oklahoma, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7634106", "label": "Sue Gordon", "source": "Sue Gordon is an Aboriginal retired magistrate from Western Australia who has been locally and nationally honoured for her work with Aboriginal people and in community affairs. She is known for being chair of the Gordon Inquiry (the Inquiry into response by government agencies to complaints of family violence and child abuse in Aboriginal communities) in 2002.", "target": "Indigenous Australian magistrate", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6986926", "label": "Neeraj Khemlani", "source": "Neeraj Khemlani is a Singaporean-born American serving as the co-president of CBS News and CBS Television Stations.", "target": "Singaporean businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4783526", "label": "Arachidonate-CoA ligase", "source": "In enzymology, an arachidonate-CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.15) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction ATP + arachidonate + CoA ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } AMP + diphosphate + arachidonoyl-CoAThe 3 substrates of this enzyme are ATP, arachidonate, and CoA, whereas its 3 products are AMP, diphosphate, and arachidonoyl-CoA. This enzyme belongs to the family of ligases, specifically those forming carbon-sulfur bonds as acid-thiol ligases. The systematic name of this enzyme class is arachidonate:CoA ligase (AMP-forming). This enzyme is also called arachidonoyl-CoA synthetase.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["Long-chain-fatty-acid-CoA ligase", "ligases", "group or class of enzymes"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21879905", "label": "Mitterdorf an der Raab", "source": "Mitterdorf an der Raab is a municipality in the district of Weiz in the Austrian state of Styria.", "target": "municipality in Weiz District, Styria, Austria", "baseline_candidates": ["rural municipality of Austria", "municipality of Austria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6647522", "label": "Lite FM", "source": "Lite FM was a New Zealand radio station broadcasting in Christchurch on 94.5FM. The station was first started in 1997 by Radio Otago in Dunedin on 90.2 FM, the programme was also networked to Invercargill on 98.0 FM. Programming on the station at this point was mostly voice tracked and on air the station was often called \"The Lite FM Network.\" In 1998 Lite FM began broadcasting in Christchurch when Radio Otago rebranded Easy Listening i94 as Lite FM. Easy Listening i94 was first started in Christchurch in 1994 by C93FM Limited under a franchise agreement with Easy Listening i, Radio Otago purchased C93FM Limited in 1997. In 1999 Radio Otago was sold to The RadioWorks and the Invercargill and Dunedin stations were replaced with network station Solid Gold. Lite FM continued to broadcast in Christchuch and became part of Radioworks collection of local stations known as LocalWorks. The station played easy-listening music from the 1970s to present day. The station was rebranded and replaced by The Breeze in 2004 when Radioworks decided to rebrand all their local Easy Listening stations as The Breeze. Today The Breeze in Christchurch remains a live and local station despite other The Breeze stations having their local shows replaced with Auckland-based network shows, However the night show now comes from Auckland.", "target": "radio station", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1478592", "label": "Fylde", "source": "The Borough of Fylde is a local government district with borough status in Lancashire, England. It covers part of the Fylde plain, after which it is named. The council's headquarters are in St Annes. Some council departments, including Planning and an office of the Registrar, were previously located in Wesham, but in 2007 these offices were transferred to the ownership of the NHS North Lancashire Primary Care Trust and have since been replaced by a new housing development. The population of the non-metropolitan district at the 2011 census was 75,757.Fylde borough was formed under the Local Government Act 1972, on 1 April 1974 by the merger of the borough of Lytham St Annes, Kirkham Urban District, and Fylde Rural District. It borders the unitary Authority of Blackpool, along with the Preston, South Ribble, West Lancashire and Wyre districts. The armorial arms of the borough bear the motto of the former Fylde RDC \"Gaudeat Ager\" from Psalm 96: 'Let the field (Fylde) be joyful' - \"Let Fylde Prosper\". The armorial bearings comprise a complete Achievement of Arms, that is - shield, crest and helm and mantling, supporters, badge and motto. They reflect the union of the three local authorities in the area: Lytham St Annes Borough Council, Kirkham Urban District Council and Fylde Rural District Council.The Mayor of Fylde for 2021-2022 is Councillor Elaine Silverwood.", "target": "local government district with borough status in Lancashire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["borough in the United Kingdom", "non-metropolitan district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3234280", "label": "Márcio Apagil", "source": "Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird (or simply Follow That Bird) is a 1985 American musical road comedy film directed by Ken Kwapis and written by Judy Freudberg and Tony Geiss. Based on the long-running popular children's television series Sesame Street created by Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett, it was the first theatrical feature-length Sesame Street film. The film stars Muppet performers Caroll Spinney, Jim Henson and Frank Oz alongside Sandra Bernhard, John Candy, Chevy Chase, Joe Flaherty, Waylon Jennings and Dave Thomas. Produced by the Children's Television Workshop and filmed at the Cinespace Film Studios and on location in the Greater Toronto Area, the film was released in the United States on August 2, 1985 by Warner Bros. and received mostly positive reviews from critics. However, the film was a box office disappointment, grossing only $13.9 million ($36 million when adjusted for inflation) and resulting in a slight loss for the Children's Television Workshop. This is the only Sesame Street feature film to both star Jim Henson and Richard Hunt. This was also Henson's final performance as Kermit the Frog (as well as Ernie) in a theatrical Muppets film before his death five years later in 1990. The film was then followed by The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland in 1999.", "target": "Artista", "baseline_candidates": ["feature film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q545607", "label": "Wales national basketball team", "source": "The Welsh national basketball team is the basketball side that represents Wales in international competition. They are organised by Basketball Wales, the sport's governing body in Wales. In 2005, Wales, along with England Basketball and basketballscotland combined forces to form the Great Britain national basketball team, with the target goal to field a competitive team capable of winning medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. England's and Scotland's affiliation to FIBA will end on 30 September 2016, but Wales did not sign the agreement with the British Basketball Federation and FIBA.", "target": "basketball team", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1584960", "label": "Harcharan Singh Brar", "source": "Harcharan Singh Brar (21 January 1922 – 6 September 2009) was an Indian politician belonging to the Punjab unit of Indian National Congress. He was the 13th Chief Minister of Punjab and held this position from 31 August 1995 to 21 November 1996. He succeeded the assassinated Chief Minister Beant Singh. At the time he was member of Punjab Vidhan Sabha from Muktsar Assembly Constituency.", "target": "Indian politician (1922-2009)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1672398", "label": "music of Iran", "source": "The music of Iran encompasses music that is produced by Iranian artists. In addition to the traditional folk and classical genres, it also includes pop and internationally celebrated styles such as jazz, rock, and hip hop. Iranian music influenced other cultures in West Asia, building up much of the musical terminology of the neighboring Turkic and Arabic cultures, and reached India through the 16th-century Persianate Mughal Empire, whose court promoted new musical forms by bringing Iranian musicians.", "target": "music and musical traditions of Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["music of the Middle East", "music by country or region", "music genre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18111076", "label": "Chaukhan", "source": "Chaukhan is a large village located in Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India. It has a population of almost 12,000. Local landmarks include Bhadreshwar Dham Temple and Kadam khandi.Nearby villages include Golasani, Barli, Rajasthan, and Bhadrava Moklavaas.Chokha is situated in arounding hills area. And very famus lake in chokha also known is umaid sagar lake.", "target": "village in Rajasthan, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6438533", "label": "Krisztián Bártfai", "source": "Krisztián Bártfai (born July 16, 1974) is a Hungarian sprint canoer who competed from the early 1990s to 2001. Competing in three Summer Olympics, he won a bronze medal in the K-2 1000 m event at Sydney in 2000. Bártfai also won ten medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with a gold (K-4 200 m: 1995), six silvers (K-2 500 m: 1995, K-2 1000 m: 2001, K-4 200 m: 1997, K-4 500 m: 1998, K-4 1000 m: 1995, 1998), and three bronzes (K-2 200 m: 1995, K-2 500 m: 1997, 1998). Having retired from his professional sport activities he pursued his career as a professional pilot. Currently he works as Captain for one of the Middle East's premium airlines.", "target": "Canoe racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26899804", "label": "The Arcade", "source": "The Arcade is an Australian nonprofit company that houses indie game developers in designated workspaces in order to foster a creative community \"using game methodologies and technologies\". They share property rent and are open to game testing each other's games to offer critique and support.", "target": "Australian workspace rental company", "baseline_candidates": ["workspace", "business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17421329", "label": "Amos Casselman", "source": "Amos Burr Casselman (November 14, 1850 – November 30, 1929) was an American archer. He competed in the men's double American round at the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri.", "target": "American archer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60463389", "label": "Central Committee on Women's Employment", "source": "The Central Committee on Women's Employment, later known as the Central Committee on Women’s Training and Employment, was an organisation set up in the United Kingdom during the First World War to provide employment for women, especially those who had become unemployed due to the War. In 1920, it became a standing committee in the House of Commons.", "target": "UK organization set up during the First World War to provide employment for women", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8081389", "label": "Łętowo, Masovian Voivodeship", "source": "Łętowo [wɛnˈtɔvɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bodzanów, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) north-east of Bodzanów, 25 km (16 mi) east of Płock, and 73 km (45 mi) north-west of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1961214", "label": "NOAA-7", "source": "NOAA-7, known as NOAA-C before launch, was an American operational weather satellite for use in the National Operational Environmental Satellite System (NOESS) and for the support of the Global Atmospheric Research Program (GARP) during 1978-1984. The satellite design provided an economical and stable Sun-synchronous platform for advanced operational instruments to measure the atmosphere of Earth, its surface and cloud cover, and the near-space environment. An earlier launch, NOAA-B, was scheduled to become NOAA-7, however NOAA-B failed to reach its required orbit.", "target": "meteorological satellite", "baseline_candidates": ["weather satellite"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4744000", "label": "American High School", "source": "American High School is a 2009 American direct-to-DVD coming-of-age romantic comedy film written and directed by Sean Patrick Cannon and starring Jillian Murray, Aubrey O'Day, Talan Torriero and Martin Klebba. It was released on April 7, 2009, in the United States. Trini Lopez makes a guest appearance as the performer at the Prom.", "target": "2009 film by Sean Patrick Cannon", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q665148", "label": "Bergland", "source": "Bergland is a municipality in the district of Melk in the Austrian state of Lower Austria.", "target": "municipality in Melk District, Lower Austria, Austria", "baseline_candidates": ["rural municipality of Austria", "municipality of Austria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6331498", "label": "KJLT", "source": "KJLT (970 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Christian format. Licensed to North Platte, Nebraska, United States, the station serves the North Platte area. The station is owned by Tri-State Broadcasting Association.", "target": "radio station in North Platte, Nebraska", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7457631", "label": "Seventeen Ain't Young", "source": "\"Seventeen Ain't Young\" is a bubblegum pop song written by American composer Jeff Barry for The Archies' 1968 debut album, The Archies. It was covered by Frankie Howson (with another Archies song) in 1969 and became a top 40 hit in Melbourne, Australia. His recording was produced by Australia's legendary DJ Stan Rofe.", "target": "1969 song performed by Frank Howson", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15496917", "label": "Goold Brown", "source": "Goold Brown (March 7, 1791 – March 31, 1857) was an American grammarian.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3728810", "label": "Inuyasha, season 6", "source": "The sixth and final season of the anime series Inuyasha aired in Japan on ytv from January 26, 2004, through September 13, 2004. Based on the manga series of the same title by Rumiko Takahashi, the anime was produced by Sunrise. The season continues the half demon Inuyasha's and the high school girl Kagome Higurashi's journey alongside their friends Shippo, Miroku and Sango to obtain the fragments of the shattered Jewel of Four Souls, a powerful jewel that had been hidden inside Kagome's body, and keep the shards from being used for evil. The anime is licensed for release in North America by Viz Media. The English dub of the last season was broadcast on Cartoon Network as part of its Adult Swim programming block from March 29, 2006, through October 27, 2006 The opening themes for this season were \"One Day, One Dream\" by Tackey & Tsubasa for episodes 139-153 and \"Angelus\" (ANGELUS -アンジェラス-, Anjerasu) by Hitomi Shimatani for episodes 154-167. The ending themes were \"Come\" by Namie Amuro for episodes 139-147, \"Change the World\" by V6 for episode 148, \"Brand-New World\" by V6 for episodes 149-166, and \"My will\" by Dream for episode 167.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3574949", "label": "Zayd ibn al-Khattab", "source": "Zayd ibn al-Khattab (Arabic: زيد ابن الخطاب, romanized: Zayd ibn al-Khaṭṭāb; died December 632) was an Arab Rashidun military general in the service of the Islamic prophet Muhammad the first Rashidun caliph Abu Bakr (r. 632–634). During the latter's caliphate, Zayd played a leading role in the initial campaigns of the Ridda Wars (lit. 'Apostasy Wars') in 632. Belonging to the aristocratic Banu Adi clan of the Quraysh, Zayd converted to Islam before his younger brother Umar. Both brothers were prominent companions of Muhammad and participated in the major battles under the Islamic prophet. After Muhammad's death, Zayd pledged allegiance to Abu Bakr and became one of his closest advisors and leading commanders. Zayd later became one of Khalid ibn al-Walid's deputy commanders during the Ridda Wars. In the Battle of Yamama, Zayd was killed while fighting Musaylima's forces of the Banu Hanifa and subsequently buried at Uyayna, a town which gained popularity as the place containing Zayd's mausoleum.", "target": "Sahabah", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5695311", "label": "Mark Mitchell Campbell", "source": "Mark Mitchell Campbell (December 31, 1897 – June 21, 1963) was a barnstormer, movie stunt man, Lockheed executive from 1934 to 1960. He was the co-founder of the Silver Wings Fraternity in California.", "target": "American aviator (1897-1963)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59530813", "label": "Friends Keep Secrets", "source": "Friends Keep Secrets (stylized in all caps) is the debut studio album by American record producer Benny Blanco, released on December 7, 2018. It shares its name with Blanco's imprint of Interscope Records, which it was released through. It was preceded by four singles: \"Eastside\" (with Halsey and Khalid), \"I Found You\" (with Calvin Harris), \"Better to Lie\" (with Jesse and Swae Lee), and \"Roses\" (with Juice Wrld featuring Brendon Urie). A reissue of the album was released on March 26, 2021.", "target": "2018 debut studio album by Benny Blanco", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q318537", "label": "Andreas Schröder", "source": "Andreas Schröder (born 8 July 1960 in Jena) is a German former wrestler who competed in the 1988 Summer Olympics and in the 1992 Summer Olympics.", "target": "East German wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3151942", "label": "Lille institute for electronics micro-electronics and nanotechnologies", "source": "The Institute of Electronics, Microelectronics and Nanotechnology or IEMN (Institut d'électronique de microélectronique et de nanotechnologie in French) is a research institute of University of Lille, CNRS and École Centrale de Lille (UMR CNRS 8520).", "target": "Joint research unit, located in Villeneuve d'Ascq (France)", "baseline_candidates": ["mixed research unit", "research institute", "laboratory"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17408221", "label": "Oqeirba", "source": "Uqayrabah (Arabic: عقيربة, also spelled Okeirbeh or Iqerba) is a Syrian village located in the Jubb Ramlah Subdistrict of the Masyaf District in Hama Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Uqayrabah had a population of 1,515 in the 2004 census.", "target": "village in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q781121", "label": "Austin Maestro", "source": "The Austin Maestro is a five-door hatchback small family car (and two-door van derivative) that was produced from 1982 to 1987 by British Leyland, and from 1988 until 1994 by Rover Group, as a replacement for the Morris Marina and Austin Allegro. The car was produced at Morris' former Oxford plant, also known as Cowley, with 605,000 units sold. Today, the redeveloped factory builds the BMW Mini. An MG-branded performance version was sold as the MG Maestro from 1983 until 1991. Although later models were sometimes referred to as the Rover Maestro, the model never wore the Rover badge. The Austin Montego saloon was a variant of the Maestro.", "target": "car model", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2635815", "label": "Men of a Certain Age", "source": "Men of a Certain Age is an American comedy-drama television series created by Ray Romano and Mike Royce, that ran on TNT from December 7, 2009 to July 6, 2011. The hour-long program stars Romano, Andre Braugher, and Scott Bakula as three best friends in their late forties dealing with the realities of being middle aged. It won a Peabody Award in 2010. On July 15, 2011, TNT cancelled the series after two seasons spanning 22 episodes.", "target": "American comedy-drama television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32115756", "label": "Akatarawa River", "source": "The Akatarawa River is in the lower North Island of New Zealand. It is a short river, flowing south for 20 kilometres (12 mi) through small rocky gorges and the Akatarawa Valley before joining the Hutt River at Birchville, a suburb in the northern end of Upper Hutt. Its eventual outflow is into Wellington Harbour, then into Cook Strait.", "target": "river in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21372418", "label": "Niangara Free-tailed Bat", "source": "The Niangara free-tailed bat or Niangara mops bat (Mops niangarae) is a species of bat in the family Molossidae known only from its holotype. It is endemic to Democratic Republic of the Congo. Its natural habitat is either moist tropical forest or savanna.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17141264", "label": "Nisan Stewart", "source": "Nisan Cumming Stewart (born 31 March 1974) is a noted drummer, record producer and songwriter. Having worked with Timbaland and Missy Elliott on Missy Elliott's earlier work (This Is Not a Test! ), he co-produced Karen Clark Sheard's 2002 album 2nd Chance, and co-produced and co-wrote the Nelly Furtado single \"No Hay Igual\" (from her 2006 album Loose) with Timbaland. Stewart and Timbaland also co-wrote and produced a song on rapper Busta Rhymes's 2006 album The Big Bang. He is currently the musical director for Jamie Foxx, and 50 Cent. He is the founder of the gospel music group The Soul Seekers.", "target": "American record producer and songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97486243", "label": "Lentinula guarapiensis", "source": "Lentinula guarapiensis is a species of agaric fungus in the family Marasmiaceae that is found in Paraguay. Originally described by Carlos Luigi Spegazzini in 1883 as Agaricus guarapiensis, it was moved to the genus Lentinula by David Pegler in 1983. It is only known from the type collection.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24940974", "label": "Fasti Antiates Maiores", "source": "The Fasti Antiates Maiores is a painted wall-calendar from the late Roman Republic, the oldest archaeologically attested local Roman calendar and the only such calendar known from before the Julian calendar reforms. It was created between 84 and 55 BC and discovered in 1915 at Anzio (ancient Antium) in a crypt next to the coast. It is now located in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme in Rome, part of the Museo Nazionale Romano, while a reconstruction of it is in the Museo del Teatro de Caesaragusta in Zaragoza, Spain.", "target": "Pre-Julian Roman calendar", "baseline_candidates": ["calendar", "inscription"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65515149", "label": "Budzma The Best Rock / Budzma The Best Rock/New", "source": "Budzma The Best Rock / Budzma The Best Rock/New is a two-disc compilation album by Belarusian rock bands. Both invited musicians and the winners of selection were put on the compilation. CDs were published by the public movement Budzma Belarusians! together with European Radio for Belarus in November 2009, and a few months later all of the FM-radio stations, regional and district Houses of Culture of Belarus received them. The compiler and mastering engineer is Slava Korań, the frontman of the ULIS band.", "target": "2009 compilation album by Various artists", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7231121", "label": "Port of Dartmouth Royal Regatta", "source": "The Port of Dartmouth Royal Regatta is a regatta in the English county of Devon. The first recorded regatta was in 1822 and the regatta was formally established in 1834. It is based on the River Dart, in the town of Dartmouth, and the village of Kingswear opposite. The Regatta takes place over the Thursday, Friday and Saturday where the Friday is the last Friday in August. The Regatta is formally opened on the preceding Wednesday evening, although as the regatta has grown, some events start as early as the weekend before. The Regatta is organised by a committee, and a review is presented at a public meeting each year called by Dartmouth Town Council. Many other organisations are involved in running events under the auspices of the Regatta Committee.", "target": "regatta in Devon, England", "baseline_candidates": ["recurring sporting event", "rowing regatta"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q145334", "label": "Zamane Ko Dikhana Hai", "source": "Zamaane Ko Dikhana Hai (translation: Show The World) is a 1981 Indian Hindi romantic thriller film produced and directed by Nasir Hussain. It stars Rishi Kapoor, Padmini Kolhapure, Yogeeta Bali, Amjad Khan, Kader Khan, Shreeram Lagoo in pivotal roles. The film flopped and Hussain blamed the arrival of video in the early 1980s for the film's failure and that it deserved a better fate.", "target": "1981 film by Nasir Hussain", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24687437", "label": "what3words", "source": "What3words is a proprietary geocode system designed to identify any location with a resolution of about 3 metres (9.8 ft). It is owned by What3words Limited, based in London, England. The system encodes geographic coordinates into three permanently fixed dictionary words. For example, the front door of 10 Downing Street in London is identified by ///slurs.this.shark.What3words differs from most location encoding systems in that it uses words rather than strings of numbers or letters, and the pattern of this mapping is not obvious; the algorithm mapping locations to words is proprietary and protected by copyright.The company has a website, apps for iOS and Android, and an API for bidirectional conversion between what3words addresses and latitude/longitude coordinates.", "target": "article covering multiple topics", "baseline_candidates": ["geographic coordinate system", "dot-com company", "Wikipedia article covering multiple topics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17053090", "label": "Des Tüfels Segi", "source": "Des Tüfels Segi (des tuiffels segin \"The Devil's Net\", conventional Standard German title Des Teufels Netz) is an Alemannic German satirical didactic poem of the early 15th century, most likely written during the years 1414–1420. The contents involve a long treatise on the estates (Stände) of traditional feudalism; the \"devil's net\" is an allegory for the various forms of vice affecting the various classes. The poem takes the form of a dialogue between a hermit and the devil. The theme of enumerating the various classes of society as all subject to sin and damnation is related to the Danse Macabre theme (enumerating them, somewhat less pessimistic, as all subject to death) which first developed at about the time of the poem's composition. The text survives in divergent forms in four manuscripts; the longest version is in a Donaueschingen ms., extending to 13,657 verses, nearly twice as long as the shortest version at a still appreciable 7,050 verses. A third ms. is both of intermediate length and age, Augsburg (formerly Maihingen) (1449, 9,979 verses).", "target": "satirical didactic poem of the 15th century", "baseline_candidates": ["poem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q959747", "label": "Igor Kurnosov", "source": "Igor Kurnosov (Russian: Игорь Курносов; 30 May 1985 – 8 August 2013) was a Russian chess grandmaster. In 2004 he won the 8th Open International Bavarian Chess Championship in Bad Wiessee edging out on tiebreak other five grandmasters. Kurnosov took clear first place at the Arctic Chess Challenge in Tromsø, Norway in 2008, 2008/9 Hastings Masters tournament and 2011 Politiken Cup in Helsingør, Denmark. In 2010 he played in the Russian Championship Superfinal, where he scored 5½/11 for a shared 7th–10th place. In December 2011, Kurnosov won the Zurich Christmas Open by tiebreak over Boris Grachev. In 2012, by winning the semi-finals in Astana, he qualified for the World Rapid Chess Championship final. In the same year he tied for 1st–3rd with Sergei Movsesian and Romain Edouard in the Biel Masters Open winning the tournament on countback. In May 2013 he won the Nakhchivan Open on tiebreak over Aleksandr Shimanov and Gadir Guseinov. Two months later, in July 2013, Kurnosov won the 20th Abu Dhabi Chess Festival, edging out Zahar Efimenko, Mikhailo Oleksienko and Avetik Grigoryan on tiebreak.On the August 2013 FIDE rating list, Kurnosov ranked 84th in the world with a 2662 rating.Kurnosov was hit and killed by a car on 8 August 2013 at 2:45 am in his home town Chelyabinsk, aged 28.", "target": "Russian chess grandmaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2030362", "label": "Gitega Airport", "source": "Gitega Airport (IATA: GID, ICAO: HBBE) was an airport serving the city of Gitega, the current capital of Burundi (and capital of the Gitega Province). The airport was on a low ridge in the northwest section of the city. The Bujumbura VOR-DME (Ident: BJA) is located 35.6 nautical miles (65.9 km) west of the airport. The Gitega non-directional beacon (Ident: GI) is located on the field.", "target": "airport serving Gitega in Burundi", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q986078", "label": "Gu Taiqing", "source": "Gu Taiqing (Chinese: 顧太清; Pinyin: Gù Tàiqīng; 1799 – c. 1877) was one of the top-ranked women poets of the Qing Dynasty. She is especially known for her ci poetry and for her sequel to the novel Honglou meng (Dream of the Red Chamber). One scholar estimates that there are as many as 1,163 surviving poems written by Gu.", "target": "Chinese female poet (1799-1877)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3566000", "label": "Wanaro N'Godrella", "source": "Wanaro N'Godrella (18 October 1949 – 26 May 2016) was a French tennis player who was active in the late 1960s and the 1970s. His best performance at a Grand Slam tournament was reaching the quarterfinals of the singles event at the 1973 Australian Open in which he was defeated by Karl Meiler in four sets. In 1973 and 1974 he played a doubles match for the French Davis Cup team.He reached a highest singles ranking of No. 71 in October 1973. N'Godrella reached the second round of the singles event at the Wimbledon Championships in 1972. In 1973 he defeated fifth-seeded Manuel Orantes in the second round of the singles event at the French Open.The center court at the ATP Challenger Tour event in his hometown of Nouméa is named for N'Godrella.", "target": "French tennis player (1949-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5663661", "label": "Eshaqlu", "source": "Eshaqlu (Persian: ايشقلو, also Romanized as Eshaqlū and Esheqlū; also known as Ashghaloo, Īshaqlū, and Ishikhli) is a village in Ozomdel-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Varzaqan County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 41, in 5 families.", "target": "village in East Azerbaijan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16728025", "label": "Serajul Islam Choudhury", "source": "Serajul Islam Choudhury (born 23 June 1936) is a Bangladeshi literary critic, public intellectual, social and political analyst, activist, historian, educationist, editor, translator, columnist, and professor emeritus at the University of Dhaka. He is the editor of Natun Diganta. Considered one of the foremost oppositional intellectuals of Bangladesh, he authored nearly a hundred books and countless essays in Bangla and English.", "target": "Bangladeshi academic and editor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3896121", "label": "Abu Turab al-Zahiri", "source": "Abū Mūḥāmmād ʿābd al-Jāmīl bīn ʿābd al-Ḥāqq bīn ʿābd al-Wāḥīd bīn Mūḥāmmād bīn al-Hāshīm bīn Bīlāl al-Hāshīmī al-ʿUmarī al-Adawī, better known as Abū Turāb al-Ẓāhirī (Arabic: أبو محمد عبد الجميل بن عبد الحق بن عبد الوحيد بن محمد بن الهاشم بن بلال الهاشمي العمري العدوي; 1 January 1923 – 4 May 2002), was an Indian-born Saudi Arabian linguist, jurist, theologian and journalist. he was often referred to as the Sibawayh of his era due to his knowledge of the Arabic language.", "target": "Saudi Arabian muhaddith, faqih and poet (1923-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12819947", "label": "Bayazid Bastami", "source": "Abū Yazīd Ṭayfūr bin ʿĪsā bin Surūshān al-Bisṭāmī (al-Basṭāmī) (d. 261/874–5 or 234/848–9), commonly known in the Iranian world as Bāyazīd Bisṭāmī (Persian: بایزید بسطامی), was a Persian Sufi from north-central Iran. Known to future Sufis as Sultān-ul-Ārifīn (\"King of the Gnostics\"), Bisṭāmī is considered to be one of the expositors of the state of fanā, the notion of dying in mystical union with Allah. Bastami was famous for \"the boldness of his expression of the mystic’s complete absorption into the mysticism.\" Many \"ecstatic utterances\" (شطحات shatˤħāt) have been attributed to Bisṭāmī, which lead to him being known as the \"drunken\" or \"ecstatic\" (Arabic: سُكْر, sukr) school of Islamic mysticism. Such utterance may be argued as, Bisṭāmī died with mystical union and the deity is speaking through his tongue. Bisṭāmī also claimed to have ascended through the seven heavens in his dream. His journey, known as the Mi'raj of Bisṭāmī, is clearly patterned on the Mi'raj of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Bisṭāmī is characterized in three different ways: a free thinking radical, a pious Sufi who is deeply concerned with following the sha'ria and engaging in \"devotions beyond the obligatory,\" and a pious individual who is presented as having a dream similar to the Mi'raj of Muhammed. The Mi'raj of Bisṭāmī seems as if Bisṭāmī is going through a self journey; as he ascends through each heaven, Bisṭāmī is gaining knowledge in how he communicates with the angels (e.g. languages and gestures) and the number of angels he encounters increases. His grandfather Surūshān was born a.", "target": "9th century Persian Sufi mystic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6506028", "label": "Lazkao Txiki", "source": "Joxe Miguel Iztueta Cortajarena (September 15, 1926 – April 3, 1993), better known as Lazkao Txiki was a Basque bertsolari poet and musician. Iztueta was born in Lazkao, in the Goierri region of the province of Gipuzkoa, in the Basque Autonomous Community in northern Spain. He had six brothers. He started attending school when he was 8. When he was 9, he watched bertsolaris for the first time, from which he developed an early and lasting enthusiasm for Basque bertsolaritza music.Early in his life Lazkao Txiki worked as a bricklayer and farmer, and sold fodder for cows. His first public performance as a bertsolari took place in Legorreta in 1936. He came first in a competition for young improvisational musicians in 1950. Twelve years later he entered the prestigious contest (txapelketa), reaching the finals. He ranked second in the same event three years later, coming up finalist again in 1967.He continued to perform regularly until January 1993, when he suffered a heart attack following a public performance which included a tribute to Aita Santiago Onaindia and Alfonso Irigoyen. He died in San Sebastián in April 1993 following three months in a coma.A bertsolari contest named after Lazkao Txiki, the Lazkao Txiki Bertsopaper Lehiaketa, was launched in 2007.", "target": "Basque farmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6097079", "label": "Ivan Neill", "source": "Sir Ivan Neill, KBE, PC (1 July 1906 — 7 November 2001), was a British Army officer and Unionist politician from Northern Ireland.", "target": "Northern Irish politician (1906-2001)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65091336", "label": "Netherlands in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019", "source": "The Netherlands participated in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019 which was held on 24 November 2019 in Gliwice, Poland. Matheu was selected with his song \"Dans met Jou\".Their entry was selected through the national selection Junior Songfestival 2019.", "target": "2019 Junior Eurovision participation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19093839", "label": "The Mercury", "source": "The Mercury is a daily newspaper, published in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, by Davies Brothers Pty Ltd (DBL), a subsidiary of News Corp Australia, itself a subsidiary of News Corp. The weekend issues of the paper are called Mercury on Saturday and Sunday Tasmanian. The current editor of The Mercury is Craig Warhurst.", "target": "daily newspaper for Hobart and southern Tasmania", "baseline_candidates": ["daily newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43385", "label": "Oliver Lampe", "source": "Oliver Lampe (born 9 April 1974 in Hannover, Niedersachsen) is a former butterfly and freestyle swimmer from Germany, who represented his native country at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. There he swam in the preliminary heats of the Men's 4×200 m freestyle relay, which eventually won the bronze medal in the final. A member of Sportverein Arpke he is the son of 1972 Olympian Werner Lampe, and a nephew of Hans Lampe.", "target": "German swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6005659", "label": "Imogen Edwards-Jones", "source": "Imogen Edwards-Jones (born June 1968, in Birmingham), is a British writer, author and journalist, who blogs for doyoutravel.com and Get the Gloss.", "target": "British author and journalist, best known for the Babylon series of exposes.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18640567", "label": "Fred Blackham", "source": "Frederick Albert Blackham (6 April 1873 – 31 January 1967) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL). His brother, Jack Blackham, played Test cricket for Australia.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96378894", "label": "Futari no Natsu Monogatari", "source": "Futari no Natsu Monogatari - Never Ending Summer (Japanese: ふたりの夏物語 Never Ending Summer, English: \"Summer Story for Two of Us - Never Ending Summer\"), also known as Futari no Natsu Monogatari, is the fifth single by Kiyotaka Sugiyama & Omega Tribe, released by VAP on March 6, 1985.", "target": "1985 single by Omega Tribe", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1593798", "label": "Monotonix", "source": "Monotonix were a garage rock band from Tel Aviv, Israel. The band — singer Ami Shalev, guitarist Yonatan Gat, and drummer Ran Shimoni (later replaced by Haggai Fershtman) — released their debut EP in 2008 and toured mostly in the United States and Europe, including notable appearances at SXSW. Monotonix subsequently released two full-length records: Where Were You When It Happened? and Not Yet. Over the span of five years (ending in 2011 with the breakup of the band), Monotonix played 1000 shows. They were famously dubbed, \"the most exciting live band in rock 'n' roll\" by Spin Magazine. The band is also noted as guitarist and co-founder Yonatan Gat's first band.", "target": "band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7591260", "label": "St. Paul Lutheran Church", "source": "St. Paul Lutheran Church is a small historic frame church in located about 2.1 miles (3.4 km) north of Mansura, Louisiana. It was built in 1916 to replace a previous building and features elements of the Gothic Revival and Queen Anne Revival styles. The main historic importance of this building was its usage as a school for local residents since its construction in 1916 through the late 1930s, as it was the only available educational opportunity for local black children until it ceased to be used as a school.The church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.", "target": "church building in Avoyelles Parish, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12692480", "label": "Douala International Airport", "source": "MD-Douala International Airport (French: Aéroport international MD-Douala) (IATA: DLA, ICAO: FKKD) is an international airport located in Douala, the largest city in Cameroon and the capital of Cameroon's Littoral Region. With its 4 terminals and an average of 1.5 million passengers and 50,000 tonnes of freight per year it is the country's busiest airport. The airport is managed and partly owned (34%) by the company Aeroport du Cameroon (ADC) which also manages all other 13 airports on Cameroonian soil.", "target": "airport", "baseline_candidates": ["international airport", "commercial traffic aerodrome"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q910112", "label": "The Mountain", "source": "The Mountain is a 1956 adventure drama film starring Spencer Tracy and Robert Wagner. The supporting cast included Claire Trevor, Richard Arlen, William Demarest, and Anna Kashfi. It is based on La neige en deuil, a 1952 French novel by Henri Troyat which was inspired by the crash of Air India Flight 245 in 1950.", "target": "1956 film by Edward Dmytryk", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4647750", "label": "A. F. Golam Osmani", "source": "A. F. Golam Osmani (1 April 1933 – 31 March 2009) was a member of the 14th Lok Sabha of India. He represented the Barpeta constituency of Assam and was a member of the Indian National Congress (INC) political party. He died 31 March 2009 at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New Delhi. He had been suffering from lung cancer.He was earlier member of 12th and 13th Lok Sabha. During 1978-1982 he was elected twice to Assam legislative Assembly.", "target": "Indian politician (1933-2009)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7576132", "label": "Spencer Miller", "source": "Spencer Miller is a professional rugby league footballer who has played as a second-row or loose forward in the 2000s and the 2010s. He has played at representative level for Scotland, and at club level for Whitehaven.", "target": "Scottish rugby league player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1086245", "label": "Millstone", "source": "Millstone is a borough in Somerset County, New Jersey, United States. It was originally known as Somerset Courthouse and was the county seat. As of the 2010 United States Census, the borough's population was 418, reflecting an increase of 8 (+2.0%) from the 410 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn declined by 40 (-8.9%) from the 450 counted in the 1990 Census.Millstone was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on May 14, 1894, from portions of Hillsborough Township, based on the results of a referendum held that day. The borough was reincorporated on March 12, 1928. The borough was named for the Millstone River (a major tributary of the Raritan River), whose name derives from an incident in which a millstone was dropped into it.A historic district in Millstone, comprising 58 buildings, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. The borough possesses a military significance for 1700–1749, 1750–1799, 1850–1874.New Jersey Monthly magazine ranked Millstone as its 7th best place to live in its 2008 rankings of the \"Best Places To Live\" in New Jersey.", "target": "borough in Somerset County, New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["borough of New Jersey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1377811", "label": "Tornay", "source": "Tornay (French pronunciation: ​[tɔʁnɛ]) is a commune in the Haute-Marne department in north-eastern France.", "target": "commune in Haute-Marne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7426203", "label": "Sati Tulasi", "source": "Sati Tulasi (English: Ever-Present Tulasi) (Telugu: సతీ తులసి) is a 1936 Telugu film directed by Chitrapu Narasimha Rao.", "target": "1936 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3521982", "label": "The National Interest", "source": "The National Interest (TNI) is an American bimonthly international relations magazine edited by American journalist Jacob Heilbrunn and published by the Center for the National Interest, a public policy think tank based in Washington, D.C., that was established by former U.S. President Richard Nixon in 1994 as the Nixon Center for Peace and Freedom. The magazine is associated with the realist school of international studies. It was founded in 1985 by Irving Kristol and until 2001 was edited by Australian academic Owen Harries.", "target": "American international affairs magazine", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55339229", "label": "Baloda bazar Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Baloda Bazar is one of the 90 Legislative Assembly constituencies of Chhattisgarh state in India. It is in Baloda Bazar district.", "target": "constituency of the Chhattisgarh legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56305167", "label": "Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran", "source": "The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran (Persian: نظام جمهوری اسلامی ایران, romanized: Neẓām-e jomhūrī-e eslāmi-e Irān, known simply as Neẓām (Persian: نظام, lit. 'the system') among its supporters) is the ruling state and current political system in Iran, in power since the Islamic revolution and fall of the Pahlavi dynasty in 1979.Its constitution, adopted by an ex post facto referendum, uses separation of powers model with Executive, Legislative, and Judicial systems, while the Supreme Leader is the country's head of state and commander-in-chief of the armed forces.It is currently one of the three governments using the title Islamic republic.", "target": "legislative, executive and judiciary powers of Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["executive branch"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22965145", "label": "Silvia Grijalba", "source": "Silvia Grijalba (Madrid, 1967) is a journalist, writer and cultural manager in the music field. She directs the Cervantes Institute in Cairo and Alexandria, after having been manager of the Rafael Pérez Estrada Foundation and director of the Gerald Brenan House in Malaga, Spain. She was awarded the Fernando Lara Novel Prize in 2011.", "target": "Spanish journalist and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37912667", "label": "The Bastard Brother of God", "source": "The Bastard Brother of God (Spanish: El hermano bastardo de Dios) is a 1986 drama film directed by Benito Rabal and starring Francisco Rabal, Asunción Balaguer and Agustín González. It is an adaption of the novel by José Luis Coll. It is about the Spanish Civil War and the Franco's rule.", "target": "1986 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5783608", "label": "Ola Halén", "source": "Ola Sven Halén (born 12 February 1977) is a Swedish metal vocalist, currently with the melodic power metal band Shadows Past. Between 2002 and 2010, he was the lead singer of the Stockholm-based power metal band Insania. He has written four solo records under the Shadows Past moniker, on which he plays all guitars, bass and keyboards himself, apart from singing. As of 2004/2005 his Shadows Past project is also an active band. Additionally, he has also written and recorded an album of pop songs, called Kind Of Weird. He cites his main vocal influences as Michael Kiske (Helloween), Oliver Hartmann (ex-At Vance) and former bandmate Dimitri Keiski.", "target": "Swedish singer, songwriter and musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5280010", "label": "Diplurodes", "source": "Diplurodes is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3048505", "label": "Edward Wotton", "source": "Edward Wotton (1492 – 5 October 1555) was an English physician, born in Oxford, credited with starting the modern study of zoology, by separating out much of the fanciful and folkloric additions that had been added over time to the body of zoological knowledge. His systematic researches on Aristotelian lines were collected in De differentiis animalium libri decem, published in Paris in 1552. Wotton was also partly responsible for Insectorum, sive, Minimorum animalium theatrum or Theatre of Insects, although this was not published (as edited by Thomas Muffet) until 1634. By favour of bishop Fox, he was made socius compar of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, with leave to travel into Italy for three years. He attended Padua, applied himself to physic, and took the degree of doctor. He was admitted a fellow of the College of Physicians 8 February 1528. He does not appear, as often stated, to have been physician to Henry VIII, but did serve the Duke of Norfolk and Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury. He was a fellow censor with Alban Hill in 1555.", "target": "English physician and early zoologist (1492-1555)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25227097", "label": "Bugiri General Hospital", "source": "Bugiri General Hospital, also Bugiri District Hospital, or Bugiri Hospital, is a hospital in the Eastern Region of Uganda.", "target": "hospital in Uganda", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3752821", "label": "Fredrik Dahm", "source": "Fredrik Dahm (born 29 October 1982) is a Norwegian footballer who currently plays for Korsvoll. Dahm originally came from Lyn's youth department. He played four games in 2000, but was then injured. Ahead of the 2003 season he left Lyn for Lørenskog IF. Ahead of the 2006 season he joined Sparta Sarpsborg. In 2007 and 2008 he played for Drøbak/Frogn IL, before he returned to Lyn before the Norwegian Premier League 2009 season.He is the older brother of Mads Dahm who has also played for Lyn.", "target": "Norwegian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12120557", "label": "macdonaldite", "source": "Macdonaldite is a rare barium silicate mineral with a chemical formula of BaCa4Si16O36(OH)2·10H2O. Macdonaldite was first described in 1965 and named for Gordon A. Macdonald (1911–1978) an American volcanologist at the University of Hawaii.Macdonaldite crystallises in the orthorhombic system. Macdonaldite is anisotropic with low relief.Macdonaldite appears as veins and fracture coatings in a sanbornite and quartz bearing metamorphic rock. Macdonaldite was first described in 1965 for an occurrence near the Big Creek-Rush Creek area in Fresno County, California. It has also been reported from Mariposa and Tulare counties in California. It has also been reported from a quarry in San Venanzo, Umbria, Italy.", "target": "phyllosilicate mineral", "baseline_candidates": ["rhodesite group", "mineral species"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97581910", "label": "list of National Treasures of Japan", "source": "In the mid-6th century, the introduction of Buddhism from Korea (Baekje) to Japan resulted in a revival of Japanese sculpture. Buddhist monks, artisans and scholars settled around the capital in Yamato Province (present day Nara Prefecture) and passed their techniques to native craftsmen. Consequently, early Japanese sculptures from the Asuka and Hakuhō periods show strong influences of continental art, which initially were characterized by almond-shaped eyes, upward-turned crescent-shaped lips and symmetrically arranged folds in the clothing. The workshop of the Japanese sculptor Tori Busshi, who was strongly influenced by the Northern Wei style, produced works which exemplify such characteristics. The Shakyamuni triad and the Guze Kannon at Hōryū-ji are prime examples. By the late 7th century, wood replaced bronze and copper. By the early Tang dynasty, greater realism was expressed by fuller forms, long narrow slit eyes, softer facial features, flowing garments and embellishments with ornaments such as bracelets and jewels. Two prominent examples of sculptures of this period are the Shō Kannon at Yakushi-ji and the Yumechigai Kannon at Hōryū-ji.During the Nara period, from 710 to 794, the government established and supported workshops called zōbussho, the most prominent of which was located in the capital Nara at Tōdai-ji, which produced Buddhist statuary. Clay, lacquer and wood, in addition to bronze, were used. Stylistically, the sculptures were influenced by the high Tang style, showing fuller body modelling, more natural drapery and a greater sense of movement. Representative examples of Nara period sculpture include the Great Buddha and the Four Heavenly Kings at Tōdai-ji, or the Eight.", "target": "national treasures of Japan, sculptures", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97194065", "label": "list of poems by Walt Whitman", "source": "This article lists the complete poetic bibliography of Walt Whitman (1819-1892), predominantly consisting of his poetry collection Leaves of Grass, in addition to periodical pieces that were never published in the aforementioned volume.", "target": "from all the standards hitherto publish's", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43661410", "label": "Dreneto", "source": "Dreneto (Bulgarian: Дренето) is a protected area in the western Balkan Mountains of Bulgaria. It is located in Botevgrad municipality in the land of the village of Litakovo. Under the name \"Dreneto\" are united the following localities: \"Dreneto\", \"Babanova Curia\", \"Shavara\" and \"Draganova ornitsa\". The protected area was established on 19 October 1979 by the Committee for the Protection of the Natural Environment. Dreneto has a total area of 33 hectares.When the site was declared a protected area, it was mostly marshland. Nowadays, due to climate changes, the site is drying out and serious care is taken for its protection and conservation. Hunting, logging and construction are prohibited.", "target": "Protected area in Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["IUCN category IV: Habitat/Species Management Area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6385192", "label": "Keith Watson", "source": "Keith Watson (Ormesby, 1 February 1935 – Cheam, 9 April 1994) was a British comics artist most famous for his work on Dan Dare and TV Century 21.", "target": "British comics artist (1935-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18355564", "label": "Satyavan Savithri", "source": "Satyavan Savithri is a 1977 Indian Malayalam-language period drama film directed by P. G. Viswambaran, starring Kamal Haasan and Sridevi. The film was also dubbed into Tamil with the same title and into Telugu as Sathyavanthudu.", "target": "1977 film by P. G. Viswambharan", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12691888", "label": "Berens River Airport", "source": "Berens River Airport (IATA: YBV, ICAO: CYBV) is located adjacent to the mouth of Berens River, Manitoba, Canada and serves the Berens River First Nation. The airport serves several small local airlines including Kitchi Airways, Northway Aviation, Lakeside Aviation, and Perimeter Aviation. There are six flights a week to and from Winnipeg via Perimeter Aviation.", "target": "airport", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3599608", "label": "67 Aquarii", "source": "67 Aquarii is a star located 484 light years away from the Sun in the zodiac constellation of Aquarius. 67 Aquarii is its Flamsteed designation. It is a dim, blue-white hued star near the lower limit of visibility to the naked eye with an apparent visual magnitude of 6.40. At the distance of this star, its visual magnitude is diminished by an extinction of 0.11 due to interstellar dust. The position of this star near the ecliptic means it is subject to lunar eclipses.This is a late B-type main-sequence star with a stellar classification of B7.5 V, which indicates it is generating energy through hydrogen fusion at its core. It is 316 million years old and is spinning rapidly with a projected rotational velocity of 205 km/s; the critical velocity for this star is 377 km/s. 67 Aquarii has 2.46 times the mass of the Suns and about double the Sun's radius. It is radiating 42 times the luminosity of the Sun from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 10,257 K.", "target": "star in the constellation Aquarius", "baseline_candidates": ["star", "infrared source", "blue object"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7970197", "label": "Warren Forma", "source": "Warren Forma (November 27, 1923 - March 26, 2014) was an American filmmaker and author, best known for his \"Artists at Work\" documentary film series and book on European and American painters and sculptors in the 1960s and 1970s, his 1973 novel The Falling Man, which contrasts the violence of 1920s Ireland and 1940s Harlem, New York, and They Were Ragtime, Forma's 1976 illustrated history of American cultural icons and political and economic movers and shakers in the \"Ragtime\" era of 1892 to 1917.", "target": "documentary filmmaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9168328", "label": "Begonia masoniana", "source": "Begonia masoniana, the iron cross begonia, is a species of plant in the family Begoniaceae, native to southern China and northern Vietnam. It was originally described from cultivated plants of unknown origin and was only much later rediscovered in the wild. It is a rhizomatous perennial begonia growing to 0.5 metres (20 in), bearing large, asymmetrical, textured green leaves covered in reddish hairs, with a prominent dark brown pattern in the centre of each leaf, reminiscent of the German Iron Cross. It produces small white flowers in erect panicles, but is cultivated mainly for its foliage effect. In temperate regions it must be grown under glass, or in a completely frost-free environment. Not to be confused with the similar looking species Begonia variegata, from Vietnam. Although sometimes (incorrectly) considered a Rex begonia, this species is classified in the related section Coelocentrum.This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20910616", "label": "Magwi County", "source": "Magwi County, also Magwe County, is a county in Eastern Equatoria, South Sudan.", "target": "County in Eastern Equatoria, South Sudan", "baseline_candidates": ["county of South Sudan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7505003", "label": "Shun'ichi", "source": "Shun'ichi or Shunichi (written: 俊一 or 駿一) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: Shunichi Amachi (天知 俊一, 1903–1976), Japanese baseball player and manager Shun'ichi Amari (甘利 俊一, born 1936), Japanese academic Shunichi Ikenoue (池ノ上 俊一, born 1967), Japanese footballer Shunichi Iwamura (岩村 俊一, born 1940), Japanese sprint canoeist Shun-ichi Iwasaki (岩崎 俊一, born 1926), Japanese engineer Shunichi Kajima (梶間 俊一, born 1944), Japanese film director Shun'ichi Kase (加瀬 俊一, 1897–1956), Japanese diplomat Shunichi Kawai (川合 俊一, born 1963), Japanese volleyball player, announcer and television personality Shunichi Kumai (熊井 俊一), Japanese footballer Shun'ichi Kuryu (born 1958), Japanese bureaucrat Shunichi Matsumoto (松本 俊一, 1897–1987), Japanese diplomat Shunichi Miyamoto (宮本 駿一, born 1986), Japanese musician and voice actor Shunichi Mizuoka (水岡 俊一, born 1956), Japanese politician Shunichi Nagasaki (長崎 俊一, born 1956), Japanese film director and screenwriter Shunichi Nakajima (中島 俊一, born 1982), Japanese footballer Shunichi Nemoto (根元 俊一, born 1983), Japanese baseball player Shunichi Shimizu (清水 俊一, born 1985), Japanese mixed martial artist Shun'ichi Suzuki (politician) (鈴木 俊一, born 1953), Japanese politician Shunichi Tanaka (田中 俊一, born 1987), Japanese footballer Shunichi Tokura (都倉 俊一, born 1948), Japanese composer Wakashoyo Shunichi (若翔洋 俊一, born 1966), Japanese mixed martial artist, kickboxer and sumo wrestler Shunichi Yamaguchi (山口 俊一, born 1950), Japanese politician Shunichi Yamashita (山下 俊一, born 1952), Japanese physician Shun'ichi Yukimuro (雪室 俊一, born 1941), Japanese screenwriter.", "target": "Japanese male given name", "baseline_candidates": ["undifferentiated kana given name", "male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q649092", "label": "Mleczkowo, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "source": "Mleczkowo [mlɛt͡ʂˈkɔvɔ] (German: Reichenhof) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Ryn, within Giżycko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) north of Ryn, 18 km (11 mi) south-west of Giżycko, and 71 km (44 mi) east of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60751953", "label": "Writer's Workbench", "source": "The Writer's Workbench (wwb) was a software package developed for the Unix operating system by Lorinda Cherry and Nina Macdonald of Bell Labs. It was perhaps the earliest grammar checker to receive wide usage on Unix systems.", "target": "software package developed for the Unix operating system", "baseline_candidates": ["grammar checker", "application"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16150224", "label": "Nicholas Alipui", "source": "Nicholas Kojo Alipui is UNICEF's Director and Senior Advisor on the Post-2015 Development Agenda. A native of Ghana, Alipui spent 25 years in various positions within UNICEF, most recently as Director of Programmes. Alipui also heads the Global Network for Sustained Elimination of Iodine Deficiency.In 2000, Alipui was UNICEF's representative in Kenya. By 2004, he had become UNICEF's representative in the Philippines and called attention to the lack of official recognition of child pornography as a problem in the country. In this capacity, he also spoke out against the prevalence of child soldiers in the country and denounced infant formula, calling on the country's mothers to breastfeed. In 2008, as Director of Programmes, he met with the President of Madagascar Marc Ravalomanana to strengthen ties between Madagascar and the United Nations.In 2010, Alipui said that UNICEF and its partners in the Roll Back Malaria Partnership hoped to end malaria deaths by 2015.In 2011, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) allowed infant formula company Mead Johnson to claim that adding docosahexaenoic acid to their infant formula contributes to developing infants' visual system. However, Alipui opposed the EFSA's decision, saying that \"there can be little doubt that the use of such health claims can mislead parents into thinking that the formulas are as good as, if not better than breast milk.\" He was interviewed in Not My Life, an independent documentary film about human trafficking.", "target": "UNICEF's Director and Senior Advisor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96359801", "label": "1892 Lafayette football team", "source": "The 1892 Lafayette football team was an American football team that represented Lafayette College as an independent during the 1892 college football season. In its second and final year under head coach Wallace Moyle, the team compiled a 5–7 record and was outscored by a total of 139 to 126. Gustave Voight was the team captain. The team played its home games on The Quad in Easton, Pennsylvania.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6157157", "label": "Japan National Route 294", "source": "National Route 294 is a national highway of Japan connecting Kashiwa, Chiba and Aizuwakamatsu, Fukushima in Japan, with a total length of 249.9 km (155.28 mi).", "target": "road in Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3264840", "label": "Luc Harvey", "source": "Luc Harvey (born April 4, 1964) is a Canadian politician and the former Member of Parliament for the riding of Louis-Hébert in Quebec from 2006 to 2008. He served as the leader of the Conservative Party of Quebec from January to September 2012. Harvey was born in Chicoutimi, Quebec. Harvey graduated from Université Laval with a bachelor's degree in political science, and studied English literature at the University of Guelph. Prior to being elected, he was in charge of business strategies at Centre Financier ASSEP, a life insurance broker. In 2006, Harvey ran for office as a member of the Conservative Party against Bloc Québécois politician Roger Clavet and won with 34.22% of the vote. Harvey attained attention during the 2008 federal election campaign, when he confronted and loudly castigated Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe at the Public Market Sainte-Foy. Duceppe dismissed Harvey by calling him an \"imbecile\" who \"asked why Canada is not in the European Union.\" Harvey was ultimately defeated by Bloc candidate Pascal-Pierre Paillé during this election.Harvey has also worked on developing an electronic system designed for aircraft engines, and an experimental plane with Denis Lambert and André Beaudoin. The plane was a winner at the EAA Air Venture Oshkosh show. In 2011, Harvey bought an old mansion that was converted into a daycare centre. Located less than 2 km of the bridges of Quebec, this centre will be able to receive nearly 160 children in the summer of 2012. During his free time, Harvey has also worked on the development of the controller.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q692032", "label": "Gap", "source": "Gap is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Salisbury Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States, with a ZIP code of 17527. The population was 1,931 at the 2010 census. U.S. Route 30 passes through the town, which is also the terminus for four Pennsylvania highways: 772, 741, 897, and the heavily used 41, which goes toward Wilmington, Delaware. Gap lies approximately 16 miles (26 km) east of Lancaster and 49 miles (79 km) west of Philadelphia.", "target": "census-designated place in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States", "census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3245665", "label": "Takeshi Nakashima", "source": "Takeshi Nakashima (中島 豪, Nakashima Takeshi, born January 15, 1976) is a former Japanese football player.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60736137", "label": "Bobby Howard", "source": "Bobby Allen Howard (born June 1, 1964) is a former American football running back. He played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1986-1988.", "target": "American football running back", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7821389", "label": "Tonico Pereira", "source": "Antônio Carlos de Sousa Pereira (born 22 June 1948 in Campos dos Goytacazes, Rio de Janeiro), better known as Tonico Pereira, is a Brazilian television and film actor.", "target": "Brazilian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55453775", "label": "Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College and Hospital", "source": "The Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College and Hospital (NRSMC&H), also known as NRS Medical College, Kolkata, is a public medical school and hospital in Kolkata, India. It is located in Sealdah, in the heart of Kolkata. The institute was established on 1 December 1873 as Sealdah Medical School.", "target": "Medical School and Tertiary care Hospital in Kolkata.", "baseline_candidates": ["medical college in India", "tertiary referral hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q917487", "label": "Brinker International", "source": "Brinker International, Inc. (or simply Brinker) is an American multinational hospitality industry company that owns Chili's and Maggiano's Little Italy restaurant chains. Founded in 1975 and based in Dallas, Texas, Brinker currently owns, operates, or franchises 1,672 restaurants under the names Chili's Grill & Bar and Maggiano's Little Italy worldwide.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["record label", "enterprise", "business", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3530242", "label": "Todd", "source": "Todd is the fifth album and second double album by American musician Todd Rundgren, released in February 1974 on Bearsville Records. It is the follow-up to the previous year's A Wizard, a True Star and features a comparatively heavier reliance on guitar playing and synthesizers. About half of the tracks were performed by Rundgren alone, with the other half recorded with varying configurations of musicians. In the US, the album peaked at number 54, while lead single \"A Dream Goes On Forever\" reached number 69.", "target": "album by Todd Rundgren", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4988155", "label": "Bulbophyllum henanense", "source": "Bulbophyllum henanense is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65419016", "label": "individual", "source": "An individual is that which exists as a distinct entity. Individuality (or self-hood) is the state or quality of being an individual; particularly (in the case of humans) of being a person unique from other people and possessing one's own needs or goals, rights and responsibilities. The concept of an individual features in diverse fields, including biology, law, and philosophy.", "target": "person, individual of an organism, or a specific object", "baseline_candidates": ["individual entity", "unit of analysis"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8019788", "label": "William W. Gullett", "source": "William Waitman Gullett (October 11, 1922 – September 24, 2015) served as the first county executive of Prince George's County, Maryland from 1971 to 1974. He had previously served three terms as the Mayor of College Park from 1963 to 1969, a delegate to the Constitutional Convention of Maryland, 1967–68 and a Presidential Elector for Maryland in 1972.", "target": "American politician in Maryland (1922-2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30089897", "label": "Francesco d'Errico", "source": "Francesco d'Errico (born 24 September 1957 in Foggia, Italy) is an archaeologist who works as CNRS Director of Research at the University of Bordeaux in France and Professor at the Centre for Early Sapiens Behaviour, University of Bergen. In 2014 he was awarded the CNRS silver medal. In 2015 Giorgio Napolitano, president of Italy, presented him with the Fabio-Frassetto prize from the Accademia dei Lincei.His research interests focus on the origins of modern behaviour in Hominins and specifically the emergence of cultural innovations in the African Middle Stone Age and the transition between Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon cultures.", "target": "Italian prehistorian (1957-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49006732", "label": "Florida Adentro", "source": "Florida Adentro is a barrio in the municipality of Florida, Puerto Rico. Its population in 2010 was 12,680.", "target": "barrio in Florida, Puerto Rico", "baseline_candidates": ["barrio of Puerto Rico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1522668", "label": "Giannini Automobili", "source": "Giannini Automobili S.p.A. is an Italian tuning company and a former producer of cars. Their focus has mainly been on Fiat cars. It was founded in 1920 by brothers Attilio and Domenico Giannini. The company headquarters are in Rome, Italy.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business", "automobile manufacturer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10557037", "label": "Lentinula guarapiensis", "source": "Lentinula guarapiensis is a species of agaric fungus in the family Marasmiaceae that is found in Paraguay. Originally described by Carlos Luigi Spegazzini in 1883 as Agaricus guarapiensis, it was moved to the genus Lentinula by David Pegler in 1983. It is only known from the type collection.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5633579", "label": "HMS Olympus", "source": "HMS Olympus was an Oberon-class submarine that served in the Royal Navy, and later in the Canadian Forces as a submarine trainer.", "target": "Oberon-class submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["attack submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18032889", "label": "PIP4K2B", "source": "Phosphatidylinositol-5-phosphate 4-kinase type-2 beta is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the PIP4K2B gene.The protein encoded by this gene catalyzes the phosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate on the fifth hydroxyl of the myo-inositol ring to form phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. This gene is a member of the phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5-kinase family. The encoded protein sequence does not show similarity to other kinases, but the protein does exhibit kinase activity. Additionally, the encoded protein interacts with p55 TNF receptor.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16252591", "label": "Little Fugitive", "source": "Little Fugitive is a 2006 remake of the 1953 film of the same name. It was directed by Joanna Lipper and produced by Nicholas Paleologos. The film is set in present day Brooklyn and tells the story of 11-year-old Lenny (Nicolas Martí Salgado) who must take care of his 7-year-old brother, Joey (David Castro), while their father (Peter Dinklage) is in jail and their mother works long hours a nursing home. When Lenny plays a practical joke on Joey that goes too far, Joey soon runs away to Coney Island.", "target": "2006 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7199957", "label": "Pizza Frenzy", "source": "Pizza Frenzy is an arcade-style pizza delivery game written by Sprout Games and published by PopCap Games. A trial Windows version of the game can be downloaded and played for an hour, with full capabilities unlockable for a fee.", "target": "2005 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q672271", "label": "East Coast Main Line", "source": "The East Coast Main Line (ECML) is a 393-mile long (632 km) electrified railway between London and Edinburgh via Peterborough, Doncaster, York, Darlington, Durham and Newcastle. The line is a key transport artery on the eastern side of Great Britain running broadly parallel to the A1 road. The line was built during the 1840s by three railway companies, the North British Railway, the North Eastern Railway, and the Great Northern Railway. In 1923, the Railway Act of 1921 led to their amalgamation to form the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) and the line became its primary route. The LNER competed with the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) for long-distance passenger traffic between London and Scotland. The LNER's chief engineer Sir Nigel Gresley designed iconic Pacific steam locomotives, including the Flying Scotsman and Mallard which achieved a world record speed for a steam locomotive, 126 miles per hour (203 km/h) on the Grantham-to-Peterborough section. In 1948, the railways were nationalised and operated by British Railways. In the early 1960s, steam was replaced by Diesel-electric traction, including the Deltics and sections of the line were upgraded so that trains could run at speeds of up to 100 miles per hour (160 km/h). With the demand for higher speed, British Rail introduced InterCity 125 high-speed trains between 1976 and 1981. In 1973, a Class 41 (an HST prototype), achieved a top speed of 143 mph (230 km/h) in a test run. In the 1980s, the line was electrified and InterCity 225 trains were introduced, which have now.", "target": "The main long-distance railway line between London and Edinburgh in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["main line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7934814", "label": "Virika Hospital", "source": "Holy Family Virika Hospital, commonly referred to as Virika Hospital, is a private, community hospital, in Fort Portal, Kabarole District, Western Uganda.", "target": "hospital in Western Region, Uganda", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19588366", "label": "Mariam A. Aleem", "source": "Mariam A. Aleem (28 December 1930 – 26 April 2010) was an Egyptian artist and art professor specializing in printed design. She received her Bachelor of Arts from the Faculty of Fine Arts Cairo in 1954 and her Master of Fine Arts in graphic printing 1957 from the University of Southern California. Beginning in 1958, Aleem taught printmaking at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Alexandria. In 1968 she became an assistant professor, heading the Printmaking Department. Aleem became a full professor in 1975 and led the Design Department from 1985 to 1990. She earned her Ph.D. in the history of art from Helwan University in Cairo. Aleem exhibited worldwide, with shows in the United States, Lebanon, Egypt, Germany, Italy, and Norway.", "target": "Egyptian artist (1930–2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18209228", "label": "Matt Stone filmography", "source": "The following is the filmography of American actor, voice actor, animator, writer, producer, and composer Matt Stone.", "target": "filmography", "baseline_candidates": ["filmography"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43618962", "label": "Sukhanovsky", "source": "Sukhanovsky (Russian: Сухановский) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Kachalinskoye Rural Settlement, Surovikinsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 155 as of 2010. There are 5 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Surovikinsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7255103", "label": "Pseudomonas rhodesiae", "source": "Pseudomonas rhodesiae is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium isolated from natural mineral waters. Based on 16S rRNA analysis, P. rhodesiae has been placed in the P. fluorescens group.", "target": "species of bacterium", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q810851", "label": "Batman Dracula", "source": "Batman Dracula is a 1964 black and white American superhero fan film produced and directed by Andy Warhol without the permission of DC Comics, who owns the character Batman.", "target": "1964 film by Andy Warhol", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66615372", "label": "Paul Wheeler", "source": "Paul Wheeler (born 1934) is a British screenwriter and novelist. He was born in 1934 in Kingston, Jamaica. He obtained his BA from Exeter College, Oxford in 1959 and his MA from the University of Chicago in 1960. As a screenwriter, he is best known for his scripts for The Medallion (2003), Caravan to Vaccares (1974) and The Terrorists (1975). He also wrote scripts for numerous TV series like Tenko, Minder and Poldark. In the early 1980s, he published a novel on the Bodyline controversy, which was adapted as an Australian TV series starring Hugo Weaving. He married Alexandra Martinez in 1964. He is related by marriage to the American journalist Morton Kondracke.", "target": "Jamaican-born UK author (1934- )", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31180172", "label": "Cahen's constant", "source": "In mathematics, Cahen's constant is defined as the value of an infinite series of unit fractions with alternating signs: C = ∑ i = 0 ∞ ( − 1 ) i s i − 1 = 1 1 − 1 2 + 1 6 − 1 42 + 1 1806 − ⋯ ≈ 0.64341054629. {\\displaystyle C=\\sum _{i=0}^{\\infty }{\\frac {(-1)^{i}}{s_{i}-1}}={\\frac {1}{1}}-{\\frac {1}{2}}+{\\frac {1}{6}}-{\\frac {1}{42}}+{\\frac {1}{1806}}-\\cdots \\approx 0.64341054629.} Here ( s i ) i ≥ 0 {\\displaystyle (s_{i})_{i\\geq 0}} denotes Sylvester's sequence, which is defined recursively by s 0 = 2 ; s i + 1 = 1 + ∏ j = 0 i s j for i ≥ 0. {\\displaystyle {\\begin{array}{l}s_{0}~~~=2;\\\\s_{i+1}=1+\\prod _{j=0}^{i}s_{j}{\\text{ for }}i\\geq 0.\\end{array}}} Combining these fractions in pairs leads to an alternative expansion of Cahen's constant as a series of positive unit fractions formed from the terms in even positions of Sylvester's sequence. This series for Cahen's constant forms its greedy Egyptian expansion: C = ∑ 1 s 2 i = 1 2 + 1 7 + 1 1807 + 1 10650056950807 + ⋯ {\\displaystyle C=\\sum {\\frac {1}{s_{2i}}}={\\frac {1}{2}}+{\\frac {1}{7}}+{\\frac {1}{1807}}+{\\frac {1}{10650056950807}}+\\cdots } This constant is named after Eugène Cahen (also known for the Cahen–Mellin integral), who was the first to introduce it and prove its irrationality.", "target": "a number, approximately 0.6434, the value of an alternating series derived from Sylvester's sequence", "baseline_candidates": ["mathematical model", "transcendental number", "mathematical constant", "irrational number"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4536712", "label": "Maurice Yaklashkin", "source": "Maurice Nikolaevich Yaklashkin (Russian: Мори́с Никола́евич Якла́шкин; born on August 4, 1947,. village Chuteevo of the Yantikovsky District of the Chuvash ASSR) is a choral, opera and symphony conductor, music teacher, People's Artist of Russia, Honored Art Worker of the Chuvash ASSR, professor. Now he is the artistic director and chief conductor of the Chuvash State Symphony Capella.", "target": "Russian choral conductor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3458638", "label": "Victor", "source": "Victor is a census-designated place and community in San Joaquin County, California, United States. The population was 215 at the 2020 census, which is lower than 293 at the 2010 census. The ZIP Code is 95253, and the settlement is inside area code 209.", "target": "census-designated place community in San Joaquin County, California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q936561", "label": "Guttorm Guttormsen", "source": "Guttorm Guttormsen (born 28 June 1950) is a Norwegian Jazz musician (flute, clarinet, alto saxophone), arranger and composer.", "target": "Norwegian jazz saxophonist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3238490", "label": "Galbert of Bruges", "source": "Galbert of Bruges (Galbertus notarius Brugensis in Latin) was a Flemish cleric and chronicler. A resident of Bruges and a functionary in the administration of the count of Flanders, he is known for his day-by-day Latin account De multro, traditione et occisione gloriosi Karoli comitis Flandriarum of the events surrounding the murder of Count Charles the Good, in 1127 and its aftermath up through the accession of Thierry of Alsace in summer 1128.", "target": "Flemish cleric and chronicler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6241757", "label": "John Jefferys", "source": "John Jefferys, is the first game designer to whom a game design can be definitively ascribed (in the Anglophone world).", "target": "board game designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1378466", "label": "Gaius Julius Eurycles", "source": "Gaius Julius Eurycles or Eurycles of Sparta (b. Sparta, fl. 1st century BCE), was \"hegemon of the Lacedaemonians\" (Λακεδαιμονίων ἡγεμών), a benefactor of Greek cities, and founder of the family of the Euryclids.", "target": "Ancient Spartan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19934000", "label": "Buster Howes", "source": "Major General Francis Hedley Roberton \"Buster\" Howes, (born 22 March 1960) is a former Royal Marines officer who was Commandant General Royal Marines from February 2010 to December 2011.", "target": "Royal Marines general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33132491", "label": "Harukana Receive", "source": "Harukana Receive (はるかなレシーブ, Harukana Reshību) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Nyoijizai. It was serialized in Houbunsha's Manga Time Kirara Forward from the October 2015 issue to the November 2020 issue. The manga has been licensed by Seven Seas Entertainment in North America, with the first two volumes released in July and October 2018 respectively. An anime television series adaptation by C2C aired from July 6 to September 21, 2018.", "target": "Japanese manga series", "baseline_candidates": ["manga series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1028498", "label": "Sylvan Lake", "source": "Sylvan Lake is a hamlet in the Town of Beekman, Dutchess County, New York, United States. It is named after the lake it sits on, which was formed during the Ice Age.The early Indians originally named it \"poughquag\", which means \"round body of water\". A smaller lake known as Hidden Lake is where Daniel Delany, in the late 19th century, discovered iron ore and made his fortune. He eventually bought the adjacent property which was the entire shoreline of Sylvan Lake and rebuilt St. Denis Church for the town. Some iron ore mining also took place along the shores of Sylvan Lake in the early 1930s and some of these retainer wall pilings are still standing and can be clearly seen from a boat. When the mine was filled with water, construction equipment and mining tools were left on the bottom, and are present today.", "target": "human settlement in New York, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21189657", "label": "OBB", "source": "OBB (meaning, Oswald Brothers Band) is an American pop rock band made up of the three Oswald brothers, Zach, Jacob, and Nich. They come from Atlanta, Georgia, where the band started making music in 2008. They have released four extended plays, 3 in 2011, Live, Life, Loving in 2012, OBB in 2013, and Feelin' like Christmas in 2014. The group have also released one studio album, Bright Side in 2014, and an independent album, Ready Set Go in 2009.", "target": "American pop rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15146148", "label": "1985 Toronto International Film Festival", "source": "The 10th Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) took place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada between September 5 and September 14, 1985. The festival featured 460 feature films, the highest number of films in festival.My American Cousin by Sandy Wilson was selected as the opening film.", "target": "1985 film festival edition", "baseline_candidates": ["film festival edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18041366", "label": "MKS1", "source": "Meckel syndrome, type 1 also known as MKS1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the MKS1 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75966138", "label": "Jean Hugo", "source": "Jean Hugo (19 November 1894 – 21 June 1984) was a painter, illustrator, theatre designer and author. He was born in Paris and died in his home at the Mas de Fourques, near Lunel, France. Brought up in a lively artistic environment, he began teaching himself drawing and painting and wrote essays and poetry from a very early age. His artistic career spans the 20th century, from his early sketches of the First World War, through the creative ferment of the Parisian interwar years, and up to his death in 1984. He was part of a number of artistic circles that included Jean Cocteau, Raymond Radiguet, Pablo Picasso, Georges Auric, Erik Satie, Blaise Cendrars, Marie-Laure de Noailles, Paul Eluard, Francis Poulenc, Charles Dullin, Louis Jouvet, Colette, Marcel Proust, Jacques Maritain, Max Jacob, Carl Theodor Dreyer, Marie Bell, Louise de Vilmorin, Cecil Beaton and many others.", "target": "French painter (1894-1984)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3575190", "label": "Zena Keefe", "source": "Zena Virginia Keefe (June 26, 1896 – November 16, 1977) was an American actress in silent film, active in the 1910s and 1920s.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q90726179", "label": "GURPS Steampunk", "source": "GURPS Steampunk is a role-playing game sourcebook written by William H. Stoddard and published by Steve Jackson Games in 2000. The supplement facilitates play in the steampunk genre using the GURPS system. Upon publication, the book won the Origins Award for \"Best Roleplaying Supplement\". As the most detailed definition of the genre at the time, it was also credited with reifying the attributes of steampunk. GURPS Steampunk was accompanied by licensed publications in the world of Castle Falkenstein and followed by supplements by Jo Ramsay and Phil Masters. Since 2016, SJG has published additional releases in the genre, compatible with GURPS Fourth Edition.", "target": "tabletop role-playing game supplement", "baseline_candidates": ["tabletop role-playing game supplement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63970191", "label": "Patrick Kwame Kusi Quaidoo", "source": "Patrick Kwame Kusi Quaidoo (1924-2002) was a Ghanaian politician and businessman. He served in various ministerial portfolios in the first republic and also served as a member of parliament in the first and second republic. He was the founder of the Republican Party and a founding member and leader of the All People's Republican Party.", "target": "Ghanaian politician and businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6254649", "label": "John Rex Farm", "source": "John Rex Farm, also known as Goodwin/Strickler Farm, is a historic home and farm located at Jefferson Township in Greene County, Pennsylvania. The main house was built about 1874, and is a 1+1⁄2-story, frame dwelling with a steeply pitched gable roof in the Gothic Revival style. The house was renovated in 1990, at which time a full basement was added. Also on the property are the contributing summer kitchen (c. 1865), barn (c. 1870), carriage house (c. 1870), smokehouse (c. 1870), and a wrought iron fence (c. 1910).It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.", "target": "historic house in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["barn"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10586866", "label": "Cladonia coniocraea", "source": "Cladonia coniocraea, commonly known as the common powderhorn or the powderhorn cup lichen, is a species of fruticose, cup lichen in the family Cladoniaceae. It was first described by Heinrich Gustav Flörke in 1821 under the name Cenomyce coniocraea, until Kurt Polycarp Joachim Sprengel reclassified it under the genus Cladonia in 1827.As of July 2021, its conservation status has not been estimated by the IUCN. In Iceland, its conservation status is denoted as data deficient (DD).", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q554140", "label": "Offenbüttel", "source": "Offenbüttel is a municipality in the district of Dithmarschen, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17143711", "label": "Mamath Eka Malak", "source": "Mamath Eka Malak is a Sinhala autism song composed by the Sri Lankan musician, Rukshan Karunanayake. The song was released on Sunday 9 February 2014 to mark Autism Sunday 2014 in Sri Lanka. 'Mamath Eka Malak' is the first Sinhala autism song from the Commonwealth of Nations in 2014. It is a tribute in song to children and adults who are on the autism spectrum. The song is all about the beauty and brokenness of autism. Like a flower, people with autism need to be loved, appreciated and accepted. This historic autism song won a Global Autism Award from the United Kingdom for highlighting the condition to mark Autism Sunday. 'Mamath Eka Malak' was dedicated to Charin Corea, son of the international autism campaigners Ivan and Charika Corea (who founded the global event Autism Sunday) and to all children and adults with autism on the island of Sri Lanka.Lyrics : Rev. Sr. Niroshi Dilhari Melody & Music Directions : Rukshan Karunanayake Vocals : B.M. Madhubashini Backed by : Rukshan Karunanayake (Lead/Rhythm Guitar), Sugath Asanka (Keyboards), Condrad De Silva (Bass Guitar), Udesha Karunanayake (Drums) Recorded, Mixed & Mastered by Rukshan Karunanayake at Studio Udeshan. Listen to a clip of the hit 'Mamath Eka Malak' here: [1] MP3 on the Sinhala autism song.Watch Rukshan Karunanayake unveiling 'Mamath Eka Malak,' on prime time television in Sri Lanka on the Rise & Shine TV programme on Channel Eye Television on YouTube: (Release of Mamath Eka Malak song on Rise & Shine Part 1) on YouTube (Release of Mamath Eka Malak.", "target": "2014 song", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49362747", "label": "Puczyce", "source": "Puczyce [puˈt͡ʂɨt͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Platerów, within Łosice County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) south of Platerów, 8 km (5 mi) north-east of Łosice, and 123 km (76 mi) east of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51296821", "label": "Margarette May Macaulay", "source": "Margarette May Macaulay (born 20th century) is the Jamaican Commissioner of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (OAS).", "target": "Commissioner of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (OAS)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16837634", "label": "1972 Cook Islands Round Cup", "source": "The 1972 season of the Cook Islands Round Cup was the third recorded season of top flight association football competition in the Cook Islands, with any results between 1951 and 1969 currently unknown. Titikaveka won the championship, their third recorded championship in a row.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1666976", "label": "International Tai Chi Chuan Association", "source": "The International Tai Chi Chuan Association (ITCCA) was founded in the 1970s (probably 1973) by Master Chu King Hung and Master Yang Shou Chung (Master Chu used the name ITCCA as early as 1974). Its purpose is the dissemination of the family-style Yang-style Tai Chi Chuan. There are branches of this organisation in several European countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Sweden and Switzerland.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3468579", "label": "Arnold Rosner", "source": "Arnold Rosner (November 8, 1945 in New York City – November 8, 2013) was an American composer of classical music.", "target": "American composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42496146", "label": "Third Iraqi–Kurdish War", "source": "The 2017 Iraqi–Kurdish conflict, also known as the Kirkuk crisis, was a conflict in which the Iraqi government retook disputed territories in Iraq which had been held by the Peshmerga since ISIL's Northern Iraq offensive in 2014. The conflict began on 15 October 2017 after tensions arising from the Kurdistan Region independence referendum of 25 September. The tension between the federal Iraqi government and Kurdistan Region escalated into conflict when the Peshmerga ignored repeated warnings to return Kirkuk to Iraqi government forces. Part of the conflict was the Battle of Kirkuk, when Iraqi forces regained control of the city. As a result of the conflict, Kurdistan Region withdrew from 20% of the territory they held.", "target": "armed disputes over Kurdish autonomy and sovereignty", "baseline_candidates": ["conflict"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4099685", "label": "Pavel Burlakov", "source": "Pavlo Mykolaiyovych Burlakov (Ukrainian: Павло Миколайович Бурлаков) is a Ukrainian politician and miner. In 2010–14 he served as the First Vice Prime Minister of Crimea and ex oficio served as Prime Minister of Crimea upon the abrupt death of Vasyl Dzharty.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4443751", "label": "shooting at the 1908 Summer Olympics – men's stationary target small-bore rifle", "source": "The men's stationary target small-bore rifle, also referred to as the miniature rifle competition, was one of 15 events on the Shooting at the 1908 Summer Olympics programme. Regulation of the equipment used in the event was done through proscribing ammunition weighing more than 140 grains, with a velocity of more than 1,450 feet per second, or having a hard metal base. Magnifying and telescopic sights were prohibited. Each shooter fired 80 shots, half at 50 yards and half at 100 yards. Maximum score for a shot was 5 points, giving a maximum total possible of 400 points. Twelve competitors from each nation were allowed to take part. Because of a delay in the arrival of Barnes' registration, the British team registered Philip Plater as a replacement. The original registration later arrived, resulting in Britain having 13 entrants. Further confusion on the day of competition resulted in all 13 shooting, Plater going last. Plater, who had scored 391 points to place first in the event and set a world record, was ruled to have been the illegal competitor and his score was invalidated.", "target": "Sports shooting at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4452315", "label": "Tasinsky Bor", "source": "Tasinsky Bor (Russian: Тасинский Бор) is a rural locality (a settlement) in Posyolok Urshelsky, Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 412 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["posyolok"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21170449", "label": "Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre", "source": "Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre (also called Bernardin de St. Pierre) (19 January 1737, in Le Havre – 21 January 1814, in Éragny, Val-d'Oise) was a French writer and botanist. He is best known for his 1788 novel Paul et Virginie, now largely forgotten, but in the 19th century a very popular children's book.", "target": "writer and botanist from France (1737-1814)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3137234", "label": "Wagneriana tauricornis", "source": "Wagneriana tauricornis is a species of orb weaver in the family Araneidae. It is found in USA to Peru.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42313294", "label": "William Clift", "source": "William Clift (born 1944, Boston, MA) is an American photographer known for his black-and-white imagery of landscapes and of architectural subjects. Most of his work has been made in New Mexico, including Santa Fe where he has lived and worked since 1971, and of Mont Saint Michel in France, and St. Louis, MO.", "target": "American photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16005833", "label": "Paulina Lebl-Albala", "source": "Paulina Lebl-Albala (Serbian Cyrillic: Паулина Лебл-Албала; August 9, 1891 – October 8, 1967) was a Serbian feminist, translator, literary critic, literature theoretician, and professor of literature in Belgrade. A co-founder of the Udruženje univerzitetski obrazovanih žena (UUOZ; Association of University-Educated Women; 1927), she also served as the organization's president. Rosie Stephenson-Goodknight is her granddaughter.", "target": "Serbian feminist, translator, literary critic, literature theoretician, professor (1891-1967)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5294627", "label": "Donald Kaufman", "source": "Donald Lewis Kaufman (8 October 1930 – 12 October 2009) was an American toy collector amassing millions of dollars' worth of antique items in his country home in western Massachusetts.", "target": "American toy collector", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q950996", "label": "Lada", "source": "Lada is one of eight parishes in Langreo, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain. Lada has a population of 3.500 inhabitants. In Lada, the German enterprise Bayer produce the world 100% acetylsalicylic acid for the aspirin. Lada has also an important thermal power station. Until the Spanish industrial conversion, Lada hosted a lot of little factories.", "target": "parish (parroquia) in Llangréu, Asturias, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["parish of Asturias", "collective population entity of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7838071", "label": "Tremblay's salamander", "source": "Tremblay's salamander (Ambystoma tremblayi) is a member of the family Ambystomidae from the United States of America and Canada. Reaching between 9.3 and 16 cm (3.7 and 6.3 in), the salamander is long and slender with many bluish-white markings. It is dark gray to gray-black and the area around the vent is black. Tremblay's salamander is a hybrid species of Jefferson salamanders (A. jeffersonianum) and blue-spotted salamanders (A. laterale). This hybridization created two all-female species: Tremblay's and silvery salamanders. These genetic curiosities possess three sets of chromosomes instead of the normal two.", "target": "species of amphibian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q36748901", "label": "Carol Lloyd", "source": "Carol Ann Lloyd (1948–2017), born as Carol Ann Cramb, was an Australian singer, songwriter, composer, and advertising executive. She was described as \"Australia's original rock chick\" for her role in the Brisbane-based bands Railroad Gin (1973–75) and Carol Lloyd Band, as well as her solo career. She was recognised for her long, curly red hair, which was insured with Lloyd's of London for $100,000. Carol Ann Lloyd died on 13 February 2017 due to complications from her interstitial pulmonary fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diagnosed four years earlier.", "target": "Australian musician (1948-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q414657", "label": "disulfur dichloride", "source": "Disulfur dichloride is the inorganic compound of sulfur and chlorine with the formula S2Cl2.Some alternative names for this compound are sulfur monochloride (the name implied by its empirical formula, SCl), disulphur dichloride (British English Spelling) and sulphur monochloride (British English Spelling). S2Cl2 has the structure implied by the formula Cl−S−S−Cl, wherein the angle between the Cla−S−S and S−S−Clb planes is 90°. This structure is referred to as gauche, and is akin to that for H2O2. A rare isomer of S2Cl2 is S=SCl2; this isomer forms transiently when S2Cl2 is exposed to UV-radiation (see thiosulfoxides).", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound", "Class IIIB combustible liquid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2761887", "label": "Chedi Kingdom", "source": "Chedi (Sanskrit: चेदी) was a kingdom which fell roughly in the Bundelkhand division of Madhya Pradesh regions to the south of river Yamuna along the river Ken. Its capital city was called Suktimati in Sanskrit. Ishwarsena alias Mahaksatrapa Isvardatta, the founder of the Abhira dynasty, who seemed to have ruled over a large territory in the Deccan, started an era to commemorate his ascension, which became known as the Kalachuri-Chedi era. According to the Mahabharata, the Chedi Kingdom was ruled by Shishupala, an ally of Jarasandha of Magadha and Duryodhana of Kuru. He was a rival of Vasudeva Krishna who was his uncle's son. He was killed by Vasudeva Krishna during the Rajasuya sacrifice of the Pandava king Yudhishthira. Bhima's wife was from Chedi. Prominent Chedis during the Kurukshetra War included Damaghosha, Shishupala, Dhrishtaketu, Suketu, Sarabha, Bhima's wife, Nakula's wife Karenumati, Dhrishtaketu's sons. Other Chedis included King Uparichara Vasu, his children, King Suvahu, King Sahaja. It was ruled during early periods by Paurava kings and later by Yadava kings in the central part of the country.", "target": "kingdom in ancient India", "baseline_candidates": ["historical country", "Mahajanapada"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19698649", "label": "911", "source": "911 (CMXI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41439", "label": ".ma", "source": ".ma is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Morocco (French: Maroc). A local registrar with a local Moroccan company as administrative contact is needed to register a .ma or .co.ma domain name. Further restrictions are imposed on the registering of other second-level domains (such as .net.ma or .gov.ma).", "target": "Internet country-code top level domain for Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["country code top-level domain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3082744", "label": "Frank O'Connor", "source": "Frank O'Connor (April 11, 1881 – November 22, 1959) was an American character actor and director, whose career spanned five decades and included appearances in over 600 films and television shows. Early in his career he was also billed as Frank A. Connor and Frank L.A. O'Connor. During the silent film era, he directed or was the assistant director on numerous films; he also penned several screenplays in both the silent and sound film eras. He is sometimes erroneously identified with the Frank O'Connor who was married to author Ayn Rand.", "target": "American actor (1881-1959)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6907297", "label": "Mook", "source": "Mook is an unincorporated community located in Breckinridge County, Kentucky, United States.", "target": "unincorporated community in Breckinridge County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1131651", "label": "Englewood", "source": "Englewood is a census-designated place (CDP) in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 484 at the 2000 census.", "target": "census-designated place in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States", "census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1691513", "label": "MWM GmbH", "source": "Caterpillar Energy Solutions GmbH, is a mechanical engineering company based in Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It was known as MWM GmbH Motoren-Werke Mannheim (MWM) until November 2013. In 2009 the company was the third-largest producer by revenue of gas and diesel engines.The main focus of production is gas engines and gensets for the generation of electrical energy from 400 to 10,300 kWel per unit. It also provides consulting, designing and engineering, construction and commissioning of plants as well as global after sales service. The company also has its own training center.", "target": "German engineering company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7899420", "label": "Uptown", "source": "Uptown is a 1990 jazz album by André Previn, Mundell Lowe and Ray Brown.", "target": "album by André Previn", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1821298", "label": "Lety", "source": "Lety is a village and municipality (obec) in Písek District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 13.92 square kilometres (5.37 sq mi), and has a population of 285 (as at 2005). Lety lies approximately 25 kilometres (16 mi) north of Písek, 67 km (42 mi) north-west of České Budějovice, and 68 km (42 mi) south of Prague. The hamlets Pukňov and Šerkov are administrative parts of Lety. During World War II a concentration camp was established near Lety. The camp is most known for its role as a Gypsy camp. See concentration camps Lety and Hodonín for details.", "target": "village in Písek District of South Bohemian region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q473208", "label": "Roger Clemens", "source": "William Roger Clemens (born August 4, 1962), nicknamed \"Rocket\", is an American former professional baseball pitcher who played 24 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB), primarily with the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees. Clemens was one of the most dominant pitchers in major league history, tallying 354 wins, a 3.12 earned run average (ERA), and 4,672 strikeouts, the third-most all time. An 11-time All-Star and two-time World Series champion, he won seven Cy Young Awards during his career, more than any other pitcher in history. Clemens was known for his fierce competitive nature and hard-throwing pitching style, which he used to intimidate batters. Clemens debuted in MLB in 1984 with the Red Sox, whose pitching staff he anchored for 12 years. In 1986, he won the American League (AL) Cy Young Award, the AL Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award, and the All-Star Game MVP Award, and he struck out an MLB-record 20 batters in a single game. After the 1996 season, in which he achieved his second 20-strikeout performance, Clemens left Boston via free agency and joined the Toronto Blue Jays. In each of his two seasons with Toronto, Clemens won a Cy Young Award, as well as the pitching triple crown by leading the league in wins, ERA, and strikeouts. Prior to the 1999 season, Clemens was traded to the Yankees where he won his two World Series titles. In 2001, Clemens became the first pitcher in major league history to start a season with a win–loss record of 20–1. In 2003, he.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3700485", "label": "Chasing Ice", "source": "Chasing Ice is a 2012 documentary film about the efforts of nature photographer James Balog and his Extreme Ice Survey (EIS) to publicize the effects of climate change. The film was directed by Jeff Orlowski. It was released in the United States on November 16, 2012. The documentary includes scenes from a glacier calving event that took place at Jakobshavn Glacier in Greenland, lasting 75 minutes, the longest such event ever captured on film. Two EIS videographers waited several weeks in a small tent overlooking the glacier and finally, were able to witness 7.4 cubic kilometres (1.8 cu mi) of ice crashing off the glacier. \"The calving of a massive glacier believed to have produced the ice that sank the Titanic is like watching a city break apart.\".", "target": "2012 documentary film directed by Jeff Orlowski", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21610914", "label": "Joseph Townsend", "source": "Joseph Townsend (4 April 1739 – 9 November 1816) was a British medical doctor, geologist and vicar of Pewsey in Wiltshire, perhaps best known for his 1786 treatise A Dissertation on the Poor Laws in which he expounded a naturalistic theory of economics and opposed state provision, either outdoor or otherwise. In A Dissertation on the Poor Laws, Townsend criticized relief as allowing the population to swell by protecting the weak (see his parable of the goats and dogs on the Island of Fernandez), and thus called for the abolition of any state relief in pursuance of greater productivity, as \"it is only hunger which can spur and goad them on to labour.\" (Townsend, 1971:23) In another statement, he more explicitly said: \"[Direct] legal constraint [to labor] . . . is attended with too much trouble, violence, and noise, . . . whereas hunger is not only a peaceable, silent, unremitted pressure, but as the most natural motive to industry, it calls forth the most powerful exertions. . . . Hunger will tame the fiercest animals, it will teach decency and civility, obedience and subjugation to the most brutish, the most obstinate, and the most perverse. \"Townsend has been credited with anticipating Thomas Malthus' argument against public welfare assistance in An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798). Unlike Malthus, however, Townsend advocated a system of social insurance through compulsory membership of friendly societies, which would meet the health and burial costs of the poor.", "target": "British medical doctor, geologist and vicar", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7382844", "label": "Ruth", "source": "Ruth is a novel by an English novelist Elizabeth Gaskell, first published in three volumes in 1853.", "target": "novel by Elizabeth Gaskell", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4588989", "label": "1993–94 ACB season", "source": "During the 1993–94 season, the Liga ACB – the top tier of the Spanish basketball league system – contained 20 teams. The winning team was Real Madrid Baloncesto.", "target": "season in Spanish basketball league", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8015528", "label": "William Mecklenburg Polk", "source": "William Mecklenburg Polk (15 August 1844 – 1918) was an American physician.", "target": "American physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q722981", "label": "Royal Spoonbill", "source": "The royal spoonbill (Platalea regia) also known as the black-billed spoonbill, occurs in intertidal flats and shallows of fresh and saltwater wetlands in Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. (In New Zealand, it is also known by the Māori name kōtuku ngutupapa.) It has also been recorded as a vagrant in New Caledonia. The royal spoonbill lives in wetlands and feeds on crustaceans, fish and small insects by sweeping its bill from side to side. It always flies with its head extended. Widespread throughout its large range, the royal spoonbill is evaluated as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q264413", "label": "Pustkówko", "source": "Pustkówko [pustˈkufkɔ] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Białogard, within Białogard County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north of Białogard and 119 km (74 mi) north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1813564", "label": "skeletal animation", "source": "Skeletal animation or rigging is a technique in computer animation in which a character (or other articulated object) is represented in two parts: a surface representation used to draw the character (called the mesh or skin) and a hierarchical set of interconnected parts (called bones, and collectively forming the skeleton or rig), a virtual armature used to animate (pose and keyframe) the mesh. While this technique is often used to animate humans and other organic figures, it only serves to make the animation process more intuitive, and the same technique can be used to control the deformation of any object—such as a door, a spoon, a building, or a galaxy. When the animated object is more general than, for example, a humanoid character, the set of \"bones\" may not be hierarchical or interconnected, but simply represent a higher-level description of the motion of the part of mesh it is influencing. The technique was introduced in 1988 by Nadia Magnenat Thalmann, Richard Laperrière, and Daniel Thalmann. This technique is used in virtually all animation systems where simplified user interfaces allows animators to control often complex algorithms and a huge amount of geometry; most notably through inverse kinematics and other \"goal-oriented\" techniques. In principle, however, the intention of the technique is never to imitate real anatomy or physical processes, but only to control the deformation of the mesh data.", "target": "Skeletal animation also known as rigging is used in 3D animation.", "baseline_candidates": ["animation technique"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12712936", "label": "Sheylanli", "source": "Sheylanli (Kurdish: Şeylanlî; Azerbaijani: Şeylanlı) is a village in the Lachin District of Azerbaijan. Historically, the village had a Kurdish population; the town itself is named after the Kurdish Sheylanli tribe. Sheylanli is surrounded by several historical, cultural and architectural monuments, including an arch bridge on the Hakari River.", "target": "Şeylanlî", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50813810", "label": "Lina Aristodimu", "source": "Lina Aristodimou (born 30 March 1965) is a Cypriot alpine skier. She competed at the 1980 Winter Olympics and the 1984 Winter Olympics. She was the first woman to represent Cyprus at the Olympics.", "target": "Cypriot alpine skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2723652", "label": "Lince", "source": "Lince is a district of the Lima Province in Peru. It is part of the city of Lima. Officially established as a district on May 29, 1936, the current mayor (alcalde) of Lince is Vicente Amable Escalante. The district's postal code is 14. Until 1936, when it was made into a separate district, Lince was attached to Miraflores and San Isidro district.", "target": "district of Lima, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30587815", "label": "Pashtun nationalism", "source": "Pashtun nationalism (Pashto: پښتون ملتپالنه) is a political and social movement which promotes the idea that the Pashtuns are deserving of a sovereign nation in their homeland of Pashtunistan, which consists of the Pashtun-majority parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Pashtun nationalism is closely linked to the cause of Pashtun home rule and Pashtun independence. The movement propagates the view that Muslims are not a nation and that ethnic loyalty must surpass religious loyalty. They favour the ideas of a \"Greater Afghanistan\" (i.e. it claims the Pashtun-speaking parts of Pakistan for Afghanistan). Therefore, the concept of Pashtun nationalism politically overlaps with Afghan nationalism.", "target": "Political ideology", "baseline_candidates": ["political ideology", "nationalism"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5071737", "label": "Pseuderemias smithii", "source": "Pseuderemias smithii, also known commonly as Smith's racerunner or Smith's sand racer, is a species of lizard in the family Lacertidae. The species is native to East Africa.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4400223", "label": "Mikhail Rusakov", "source": "Mikhail Petrovich Rusakov (Russian: Михаил Петрович Русаков, 20 November [O.S. 8 November] 1892 in Yukhnov – 24 October 1963 in Moscow) was a Soviet geologist, academician of the Kazakhstan Academy of Sciences, Honored Worker of Science and Technology of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic.He graduated from high school with a gold medal. In 1911, he entered the Geological Department of the Petrograd Mining Institute, from which he graduated in 1921.He worked in the Ural-Siberian Division of the Geological Committee, and then in the geological department of the Kazakh branch of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR.His main works are devoted to the study of geology and ore deposits of Kazakhstan.Rusakov discovered the following mining fields: Kounrad (copper), Semizbugskoe (corundum, andalusite) Karagaylinskoye (lead, barite), Kairaktinsky (asbestos, barite, base metals) and other mineral deposits.On 30 May 1949 Rusakov was arrested by the NKVD as a part of falsified \"Krasnoyarsk Case\". By an extrajudicial decision of the Special Council of the NKVD he was sentenced to 25 years of labor camps. He worked in a sharashka OTB-1 in Krasnoyarsk. He was freed and rehabilitated on 20 March 1954Mineral Rusakovite, water ferrovanadate Fe5 [VO4] 2 (OH) 9 • 3H2O is named after Mikhail Rusakov. There is a monument to Rusakov in the city of Balkhash erected in 1992 to commemorate the centenary of the scientist and a school and a street of the city is named after him.", "target": "Swiss-Russian geologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1715602", "label": "Jörgen Mårtensson", "source": "Jörgen Mårtensson (born December 4, 1959) is one of the most successful Swedish orienteer of all times. Twice a winner of the World Orienteering Championships, he also won the 5 days O-Ringen in 1981 (at age 21), 1996 and 1997 (at age 37). Furthermore, he won the Swedish Championship in Marathon at Stockholm Marathon in 1993 . Now retired, he had one of the longest spanning careers in orienteering at world class level, taking part in World Championships over a period of twenty years. Starting with the 1978 World Orienteering Championships, where he placed eighth in the individual contest, he competed in every world championship until 1997.", "target": "Swedish orienteer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28925175", "label": "Anders Indset", "source": "Anders Indset (born 11 April 1978) is a Norwegian philosopher, author and public speaker. Among the philosophical and socio-political ideas he has advanced are digitization, lifelong learning, narcissistic rage and the Q Economy (quantum economy).", "target": "Norwegian philosopher, author and public speaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17592003", "label": "1936 in science fiction", "source": "The year 1936 was marked, in science fiction, by the following events.", "target": "science fiction-related events during 1936", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27147129", "label": "Zambia national badminton team", "source": "The Zambia national badminton team represents Zambia in international badminton team competitions.", "target": "national badminton team", "baseline_candidates": ["national badminton team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19363530", "label": "3x3D", "source": "3x3D is a 2013 anthology film comprising three short 3D films directed by French/Swiss filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard, British filmmaker Peter Greenaway and Portuguese filmmaker Edgar Pêra. It was released in France April 30, 2014 after being presented at the closing night of International Critics' Week of the 2013 Cannes Film Festival in May. It also screened at the 2013 Vancouver International Film Festival. The film was commissioned by the city of Guimarães in Portugal at the time of its designation as European Capital of Culture in 2012.", "target": "2014 anthology film", "baseline_candidates": ["anthology film", "3D film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14881044", "label": "Acrulia inflata", "source": "Acrulia inflata is a species of beetle belonging to the family Staphylinidae.It is native to Europe.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3353573", "label": "Kristdala", "source": "Kristdala is a locality and a parish situated in Oskarshamn Municipality, Kalmar County, Sweden with 945 inhabitants in 2010.", "target": "urban area in Oskarshamn Municipality, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q622827", "label": "Bairgania", "source": "Bairgania is a town and notified area in the Sitamarhi district in the state of Bihar, India. Bairgania is one of the blocks of Sitamarhi districts and is a border of India that links Nepal via Rautahat District through a custom checkpoint. Bairgania is the first town of India that is located on the bank of the Bagmati River.It has a good government medical hospital and experience doctors such as alumni from PMCH.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "border town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7808415", "label": "Tino Schaedler", "source": "Tino Schaedler (born 1972) is a German film art director specializing in digital sets. He was signed by Warner Brothers as a digital set director in 2003.", "target": "German art director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q817926", "label": "Benno Geiger", "source": "Benno Geiger (pseudonym: Egon E. Nerbig, born February 21, 1882 in Rodaun near Vienna; died July 26, 1965 in Venice) was an Austrian art historian, art dealer, writer and translator, and member of the Nazi party.", "target": "Austrian art historian, art dealer, author and translator, Nazi (1882-1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5463765", "label": "Rollinia amazonica", "source": "Rollinia amazonica is a species of plant in the Annonaceae family. It is endemic to Colombia.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7613948", "label": "Steve Slade", "source": "Steven Anthony Slade (born 6 October 1975) is an English former professional footballer who played as a striker, notably in the Premier League for Tottenham Hotspur and earned four caps, scoring three times for the England U21 team. He also played as a professional in the Football League for Queens Park Rangers, Brentford, Cambridge United and Grimsby Town, as well as appearing in the Icelandic top flight 1. deild karla for Vikingur. He has also played non-League football for Hayes, Maidenhead United, Barking and Ware.", "target": "English footballer (born 1975)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65041594", "label": "Thomas Harrison", "source": "Thomas Harrison (c. 1823-1894) was the first Government Surveyor of Jamaica. His maps have become an important historical resource for the island.He was apprenticed to Edward McGeachy.", "target": "surveyor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2114424", "label": "Battle of Sluis", "source": "The Battle of Sluis was a naval battle during the Eighty Years' War in which a Spanish squadron commanded by the Italian captain Federico Spinola tried to break through a blockade of Sluis by Dutch ships under the command of Joos de Moor. After about two hours of fighting the heavily damaged Spanish ships returned to Sluis; Federico Spinola was killed during the action.", "target": "naval battle between a Spanish royal and a Dutch rebel fleet", "baseline_candidates": ["naval battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15967173", "label": "Arthur William Allen Harker", "source": "Arthur William Allen Harker CBE (7 September 1890 – 23 January 1960) was a British soldier who served in both World Wars, and in the latter was a Brigadier in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps. He was the son of James Allen Harker, professor at the Royal Agricultural College, Cirencester and his wife Lizzie Allen Harker. His older brother was Oswald Allen Harker, later Deputy Director General of MI5. He was educated at Cheltenham College and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. In 1919 he married Mabel Violet Jeans, daughter of Maj. Gen. Charles Gilchrist Jeans CB. They had no children. He was appointed CBE in 1941.", "target": "British soldier:both World Wars/Brigadier:Royal Army Ordnance Corps", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18581686", "label": "Lioglyphostoma", "source": "Lioglyphostoma is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Pseudomelatomidae.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q141826", "label": "Hakea", "source": "Hakea ( HAH-kee-ə, HAY-) is a genus of about 150 species of plants in the Family Proteaceae, endemic to Australia. They are shrubs or small trees with leaves that are sometimes flat, otherwise circular in cross section in which case they are sometimes divided. The flowers are usually arranged in groups in leaf axils and resemble those of other genera, especially Grevillea. Hakeas have woody fruit which distinguishes them from grevilleas which have non-woody fruit which release the seeds as they mature. Hakeas are found in every state of Australia with the highest species diversity being found in the south west of Western Australia.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7937557", "label": "Vivarium Inc.", "source": "Vivarium Inc. is a Japanese video game developer founded in 1996 by company president Yoot Saito. It is famous for designing innovative video games which use voice recognition technology. Seaman for the Dreamcast is their most famous game to date. Odama, for the GameCube was also developed by Vivarium. In 2012 the company released Aero Porter, a simulation game which is a part of the video game compilation Guild01 for the Nintendo 3DS handheld. In the Americas and Europe, the game was released as a standalone title on the Nintendo's eShop.", "target": "Japanese video game developer", "baseline_candidates": ["video game developer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1219183", "label": "Marcus Asinius Marcellus", "source": "Marcus Asinius Marcellus was the name of two men of the Asinii.", "target": "consul 104 AD", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16065882", "label": "J. Barclay Harding", "source": "James Barclay Harding (November 1, 1830 – October 29, 1865) was the publisher of the Philadelphia Evening Telegraph with Charles Edward Warburton.", "target": "American newspaper publisher (1830-1865)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65058842", "label": "1986–87 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team", "source": "The 1986–87 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team represented Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon in the 1986–87 season. Led by Ralph Miller, in his 17th season at Oregon State, the Beavers would finish with a record of 19–11 (10–8 Pac-10). The Beavers were invited to the 1987 NIT, where they lost in the second round to Cal.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16201815", "label": "Franco Wanyama", "source": "Franco \"Thunderbird\" Wanyama (7 February 1968 - 21 March 2019) in Kampala, was a Ugandan amateur middleweight and professional cruiser/heavyweight boxer of the 1980s, '90s and 2000s. He was an amateur representative of Uganda at middleweight in the Boxing at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, losing to eventual bronze medal winner Chris Sande of Kenya, and as a professional won the BeNeLux heavyweight title, BeNeLux cruiserweight title, Commonwealth cruiserweight title, and World Boxing Federation (WBF) cruiserweight title, and was a challenger for the Commonwealth cruiserweight title against Chris Okoh, his professional fighting weight varied from 181 lb (82 kg; 12 st 13 lb), i.e. cruiserweight to 192 lb (87 kg; 13 st 10 lb), i.e. heavyweight. Wanyama defeated notable fighters such as Jimmy Thunder, Carl Thompson and Johnny Nelson and was sparring partner to Vitali Klitschko & Wladimir Klitschko. He lived his last years in Rugby, Warwickshire, England and had 3 children, Nellie Wanyama, Shannon Wanyama and Wanga Wanyama.", "target": "Ugandan boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25476222", "label": "Panik i familien", "source": "Panik i familien is a 1945 Danish film directed by Lau Lauritzen Jr. and Alice O'Fredericks. Nordisk Film released the film on DVD in October 2016.", "target": "1945 film by Alice O'Fredericks, Lau Lauritzen", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27984112", "label": "Tebo Township", "source": "Tebo Township is a township in Henry County, in the U.S. state of Missouri.Tebo Township takes its name from Tebo Creek.", "target": "township in Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Missouri"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13846624", "label": "Metachanda heterobela", "source": "Metachanda heterobela is a moth species in the oecophorine tribe Metachandini. It was described by Anthonie Johannes Theodorus Janse in 1954.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5799099", "label": "Dehkadeh", "source": "Dehkadeh (Persian: دهكده) is a village in Tarrah Rural District, Hamidiyeh District, Ahvaz County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,592, in 490 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5204327", "label": "DASS2", "source": "Digital Access Signalling System 2 (DASS2) is an obsolescent protocol defined by British Telecom for digital links to PSTN based on ISDN. Although still available on request, it has been superseded by ETS 300 102 (\"EuroISDN\"). DASS2 is an improved version over DASS1, based on experiences with DPNSS. In the UK, the ISDN concept was first introduced to customers by BT with their DASS2 connections. DASS2 (Digital Access Signalling System) is a BT-designed signalling standard, and was introduced before the Q.931 standard was finalised by the international community. British Telecom used the term ISDN when describing their DASS2 lines. DASS2 lines are provided to customers on a 2Mbit/s link and can handle 30 simultaneous calls (64kbit/s each). DASS2 is still offered by BT and other UK carriers. Q.931 is the name of the CCITT document that describes the agreed signalling format for International ISDN. CCITT had previously been known as International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee. The organisation set out the internationally agreed standards for telecommunications, and subsequently evolved into the ITU. In the United Kingdom, the Q.931-based protocol is ETS 300 102 (also known as EuroISDN). This is a very close implementation of the original CCITT specification. It is a 2Mbit/s service as with DASS2, but the feature capability is far greater and has negated the problems associated with DASS2, including echo problems and circuit spikes. In the UK, both DASS 2 and EuroISDN (ETS 300 102) lines are available to customers with EuroISDN as the preferred signalling type. Customers normally choose the desired signalling.", "target": "protocol", "baseline_candidates": ["communication protocol"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4746947", "label": "Amitsorsuaq Island", "source": "Amitsorsuaq Island is a small, uninhabited island in Avannaata municipality in northwestern Greenland.", "target": "island in Greenland", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6870743", "label": "Minuscule 636", "source": "Minuscule 636 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), α 598 (von Soden), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on paper. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 15th century. The manuscript has complex contents. Formerly it was labeled by 174a and 212p.", "target": "New Testament manuscript", "baseline_candidates": ["manuscript"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6814125", "label": "Melvyn Betts", "source": "Melvyn Morris Betts (born 26 March 1975) is an English cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and a right-arm medium-fast bowler. Born in Sacriston, County Durham, Betts was educated at Fyndoune Community College in Sacriston. Betts participated in Under-19s cricket and Under-20s cricket with Durham, but left in September 2000 upon the refusal of an improvement in his contract. In November, Betts drew up a three-year contract with Warwickshire after they had lost Ed Giddins, Allan Donald an.", "target": "English cricketer (born 1975)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5380878", "label": "Enugwu Ukwu", "source": "Enugwu Ukwu (English: on top of a high hill) is a large town in Anambra State, Nigeria. Enugwu-Ukwu town is geographically situated on hilly terrain; thus it is named after its geographical topography. It is predominantly occupied by the Igbo people ethnic group of Anambra State. Most of its inhabitants are Christians (majorly Anglicans and Roman Catholics). It is located in Njikoka Local Government Area of Anambra State. Major villages that make up the town include Uruokwe, Enu-Avomimi, Adagbe-Avomini, Umu-Atulu, Urualor, Akiyi, Avomimi, Awovu, Enuagu, Ire, Orji, Orofia, Osili, Umuakwu, Umuatulu, Umuatuora, Umuokpaleri, Uruekwo, Urukpaleke, Urunnebo, and Uruogbo.Enugwu-Ukwu is surrounded by neighbouring towns including Nawfia, Nise, Agukwu-Nri, Nimo, Abagana and Enugwu-Agidi. The estimated population as at 2009 is 448,000.The traditional authority adopts the kingship title of Eze Enugwu-Ukwu na Igwe Umunri. The immediate past traditional ruler of the town was His Majesty, Igwe Osita Agwuna III. The current traditional ruler is His Majesty, Igwe Ralph Obumnemeh Ekpeh (Okpalanakana-Ukabia Nri IV) The people of Enugwu-ukwu usually organise a Mmonwu festival during the festive period in December. This event usually takes place on 26 December annually. It is usually held at Umunri Palace close to Nkwo market. The event is usually sponsored by different organizations and people around the country.The Mmonwu festival (Masquerade festival) stick fight was sponsored by MTN a large telecommunications brand in Nigeria and the palace was filled with a lot of spectators from far and wide. This event is basically done to display and exhibit the uniqueness of Igbo culture. Masquerade’s who came first,.", "target": "town in Anambra State, Nigeria", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4204112", "label": "Ismailovo", "source": "Ismailovo (Russian: Исмаилово) is a rural locality (a village) in Kakrybashevsky Selsoviet, Tuymazinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 197 as of 2010. There are 28 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Tuymazinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["subdivisions of Russia", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12452069", "label": "vanadium(III) oxide", "source": "Vanadium(III) oxide is the inorganic compound with the formula V2O3. It is a black solid prepared by reduction of V2O5 with hydrogen or carbon monoxide. It is a basic oxide dissolving in acids to give solutions of vanadium (III) complexes. V2O3 has the corundum structure. It is antiferromagnetic with a critical temperature of 160 K. At this temperature there is an abrupt change in conductivity from metallic to insulating. This also distorts the crystal structure to a monoclinic space group: C2/c.Upon exposure to air it gradually converts into indigo-blue V2O4.In nature it occurs as the rare mineral karelianite.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10468262", "label": "Delphinella abietis", "source": "Delphinella abietis is a species of fungus in the family Dothioraceae. It has been reported from western Norway where it infects needles and sometimes shoots of various fir species. These include subalpine fir, Nordmann fir including Turkish fir, Siberian fir and noble fir.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6412768", "label": "Kingi Te Ahoaho Tahiwi", "source": "Kingi Te Ahoaho Tahiwi (1883–1948) was a notable New Zealand teacher, interpreter, translator, rugby official and musician. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Whakaue and Te Arawa iwi. He was born in Ōtaki, New Zealand, in 1883. Pirimi Pererika Tahiwi was one of his younger brothers.In the 1946 New Year Honours, Tahiwi was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for services in connection with the organisation of the Māori war effort.", "target": "Ngati Raukawa and Ngati Whakaue; teacher, interpreter, translator, rugby official, musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17146909", "label": "John Jones", "source": "John Jones (c. 1798/1799 – 7 January 1882) was an art collector. He bequeathed his collection to the South Kensington Museum (which is now the Victoria and Albert Museum). The collection is regarded as important for the French decorative arts of the 18th century.Jones was born in Middlesex. He settled in London and became a tailor and clothier for the British army. Becoming wealthy, he retired from business in 1850. He devoted himself to collecting objets d'art, mostly French, which he exhibited in his house in Piccadilly. A catalogue of his bequest to the South Kensington Museum was published in 1882. The collection contains about 780 books and 1034 other items, including 313 prints, 105 paintings, 137 portrait miniatures, 147 pieces of porcelain, and 135 pieces of furniture. The Jones collection contains the first three Shakespeare folios and examples of the work of the principal French cabinet-makers of the 18th-century, including Jean-François Oeben, Martin Carlin, Jean-François Leleu, and Jean-Henri Riesener. The French furniture comprises an escritoire of great value and technical merit which belonged to Marie Antoinette, marquetrie cabinets which are marvels of exquisite inlaying, and otherwise superbly delicate ornamentation. The carriage clock of Marie Antoinette has the charms of its associations.", "target": "British art collector", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3908494", "label": "Porfirio", "source": "Porfirio is a 2011 Colombian drama film directed by Alejandro Landes. The film premiered at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival and subsequently screened at other festivals including Toronto and Maryland. The film is based on the real-life story of Porfirio Ramirez, who is cast to play himself. Porfirio is paraplegic after being shot by a rogue police officer. The film won the Golden Peacock Award for Best Film at the 42nd International Film Festival of India.", "target": "2011 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26791213", "label": "Carola Salvatella", "source": "Carola Salvatella Panés (born 8 July 1994) is a Spanish field hockey forward who is part of the Spain women's national field hockey team. She was part of the Spanish team at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where they finished eighth. On club level she plays for Club Egara in Spain.", "target": "Spanish field hockey player (1994-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20591273", "label": "Thikri tehsil", "source": "Thikri tehsil is a fourth-order administrative and revenue division, a subdivision of third-order administrative and revenue division of Barwani district of Madhya Pradesh.", "target": "tehsil in Madhya Pradesh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["tehsil of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5803019", "label": "Gursharan Owsta", "source": "Gursharan Owsta (Persian: گورشران اوستا, also Romanized as Gūrsharān Owstā; also known as Kūrsharān) is a village in Mahur Berenji Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 39, in 5 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15641254", "label": "Anacrusis securiferana", "source": "Anacrusis securiferana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Brazil in the states of Paraná, Santa Catarina and São Paulo.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2951174", "label": "2011–12 Division 1 Féminine", "source": "The 2011–12 Division 1 Féminine season was the 38th since its establishment. Lyon are the defending champions. The league schedule was announced on 31 March 2011 and the fixtures were determined on 10 June. The season began on 3 September 2011 and ended on 2 June 2012. The winter break was in effect from 11 December 2011 to 7 January 2012.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3040105", "label": "Nadya Suleman", "source": "Natalie Denise Suleman (born Nadya Denise Doud-Suleman; July 11, 1975), known as Octomom in the media, is an American media personality who came to international attention when she gave birth to the first surviving octuplets in January 2009. The circumstances of their high order multiple birth led to controversy in the field of assisted reproductive technology as well as an investigation by the Medical Board of California of the fertility specialist involved.Suleman conceived the octuplets and her six older children via in vitro fertilization (IVF). Although she initially denied ever having used public assistance, she confirmed in April 2012 on NBC's Today show that she was on public assistance.", "target": "mother of octuplets", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4900705", "label": "Bhagya Jathakom", "source": "Bhagyajathakam is a 1962 Indian Malayalam film, directed and produced by P. Bhaskaran. The film stars Sathyan, Sheela (Debut), Adoor Bhasi and Sam in lead roles. The film had musical score by M. S. Baburaj, Irayimman Thampi and Thyagaraja.", "target": "1962 Indian Malayalam film directed by P. Bhaskaran", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18425256", "label": "Hooven-Owens-Rentschler", "source": "The firm of Hooven, Owens, Rentschler, and Company manufactured steam and diesel engines in Hamilton, Ohio. Because the firm was frequently known by its initials, H.O.R., the Hooven is sometimes incorrectly rendered as Hoover, and the Owens may be mistaken for Owen.", "target": "American steam and diesel engine manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8045257", "label": "Xun-1", "source": "The Training-1 (Chinese: 训-1, Transliterated: Xun-1) training bottom mine is a training naval mine developed by Fengxi Machinery Factory (Chinese: 汾西机器厂) in China, and was accepted into service in November 1982. The Training-1 mine could be used to train for every bottom mine in the Chinese inventory, as well as for minesweeping training. When the training is completed, a high pressure gas valve is released, and the training bottom mine would float to the surface for recovery.", "target": "Chinese Naval mine", "baseline_candidates": ["naval mine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q540639", "label": "Ran Yunfei", "source": "Ran Yunfei (born 1965) is a Chinese writer and a high-profile democracy activist and blogger. He was arrested in late March 2011, shortly after the start of the 2011 Chinese pro-democracy protests, on charges of inciting subversion of state power. He was released in August 2011 and remains under residential surveillance. Ran expressed through social media that he converted to Christianity on 31 October 2015. He has been attending a Bible study since 2013.", "target": "Chinese activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q958010", "label": "Villa romana del Río Verde", "source": "Villa romana de Río Verde is a Roman villa on the coast of Marbella, Spain.", "target": "cultural property in Marbella, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["ancient Roman structure", "Roman villa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19577396", "label": "Mathilde Nelles", "source": "Mathilde Nelles (born 7 October 1997) is a Belgian alpine ski racer. She competed at the 2015 World Championships in Beaver Creek, USA, where she placed 47th in the slalom.", "target": "Belgian alpine skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52159440", "label": "Starcrawler", "source": "Starcrawler is an American rock band from Los Angeles, formed in 2015. The band consists of lead singer Arrow de Wilde, guitarist Henri Cash, bassist Tim Franco and drummer Seth Carolina, pedal steel/guitar player Bill Cash. They have released two studio albums, Starcrawler (2018) and Devour You (2019). Starcrawler lead singer Arrow de Wilde and guitarist Henri Cash both attended Los Angeles' Grand Arts High School. De Wilde is the child of photographer Autumn de Wilde and drummer Aaron Sperske.", "target": "American rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7102097", "label": "Organopoda", "source": "Organopoda is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae first described by George Hampson in 1893.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94942829", "label": "Marcus Bresslau", "source": "Marcus Hyman Bresslau (1807/8 – 14 May 1864) was a Prussian-born English Hebraist, editor, author, and journalist.", "target": "British newspaper editor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5080802", "label": "Charles McCreery", "source": "Charles Anthony Selby McCreery (born 30 June 1942) is a British psychologist, best known for his collaboration with Celia Green on work on hallucinatory states in normal people.", "target": "British psychologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17447128", "label": "Jakob Westholm", "source": "Jakob Westholm (11 May 1877 in Palmse Parish (now Haljala Parish), Kreis Wierland – 9 March 1935 in Tallinn) was an Estonian educator and politician. He was a member of the I, II, III and IV Riigikogu, representing the Estonian People's Party.He was not original member of I Riigikogu, but was chosen in order to replace Adam Bachmann. Westholm, a teacher and headmaster, founded the Jakob Westholm Gymnasium as a private school for boys in Tallinn in 1907. The school is now a co-educational primary and secondary school and still bears his name. Westholm was instrumental in helping to create the legal and foundational basis of the Estonian education system.", "target": "Estonian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7853696", "label": "Turandot at the Forbidden City", "source": "Turandot at the Forbidden City was a 1998 live production of Giacomo Puccini's opera Turandot directed by Zhang Yimou.The opera was performed by Giovanna Casolla, Audrey Stottler, and Sharon Sweet alternating as Princess Turandot; Kristján Jóhannsson, Sergej Larin and Lando Bartolini as Calàf; and Barbara Frittoli, Angela-Maria Blasi and Barbara Hendricks as Liù, with Zubin Mehta conducting the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. A film was made of the performance with Casolla, Larin and Frittoli. In the United States, the film was aired as part of PBS' Great Performances.", "target": "1998 film", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work", "film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q432562", "label": "Alvino Rey", "source": "Alvin McBurney (July 1, 1908 – February 24, 2004), known by his stage name Alvino Rey, was an American jazz guitarist and bandleader.", "target": "American swing era musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24639570", "label": "Minsmere Nature Reserve", "source": "RSPB Minsmere is a nature reserve owned and managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) at Minsmere, Suffolk. The 1,000-hectare (2,500-acre) site has been managed by the RSPB since 1947 and covers areas of reed bed, lowland heath, acid grassland, wet grassland, woodland and shingle vegetation. It lies within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and the Suffolk Heritage Coast area. It is conserved as a Site of Special Scientific Interest, Special Area of Conservation, Special Protection Area and Ramsar site. The nature reserve is managed primarily for bird conservation, particularly through control and improvement of wetland, heath and grassland habitats, with particular emphasis on encouraging nationally uncommon breeding species such as the bittern, stone-curlew, marsh harrier, nightjar and nightingale. The diversity of habitats has also led to a wide variety of other animals and plants being recorded on the site. Before becoming a nature reserve, the area was the site of an ancient abbey and a Tudor artillery battery. The marshes were reclaimed as farmland in the 19th century, but were re-flooded during World War II as a protection against possible invasion. The reserve has a visitor centre, eight bird hides and an extensive network of footpaths and trails. Entry is free for RSPB members. Potential future threats to the site include flooding or salination as climate change causes rising sea levels, coastal erosion and possible effects on water levels due to the construction of a new reactor at the neighbouring Sizewell nuclear power stations.", "target": "RSPB nature reserve in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["nature reserve"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6353245", "label": "Kalithozhan", "source": "Kalithozhan is a 1966 Indian Malayalam film, directed by M. Krishnan Nair and produced by A. V. Subbarao and L.V Prasad. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sheela, Sukumari and Adoor Bhasi in the lead roles. The film had musical score by G. Devarajan. The film was a remake of the Telugu film Illarikam.", "target": "1966 film by M. Krishnan Nair", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19690998", "label": "Nizhneye Zadolgoye", "source": "Nizhneye Zadolgoye (Russian: Нижнее Задолгое) is a rural locality (a village) in Dobryansky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 147 as of 2010. There are 12 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Dobryansky District, Perm Krai, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24809986", "label": "David Millener", "source": "David John Millener (born 2 May 1944) is a New Zealand physicist and former cricketer. He played first-class cricket for Auckland and Oxford University Cricket Club between 1964 and 1970.Millener studied at the University of Auckland, then won a Rhodes Scholarship to study at St Catherine's College, Oxford, where he gained a doctorate (D.Phil.) in physics with a thesis entitled \"Shell Model Studies in Light Nuclei\". He then moved to work at the Brookhaven National Laboratory at Upton, New York, where he played for the Brookhaven cricket team.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18504418", "label": "Pralungo", "source": "Pralungo is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Biella in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 70 kilometres (43 mi) northeast of Turin and just north of Biella. The municipality of Pralungo contains the frazioni (subdivisions, mainly villages and hamlets) Valle and Sant'Eurosia. Pralungo borders the following municipalities: Biella, Sagliano Micca, Tollegno.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29588632", "label": "Guido van Helten", "source": "Guido van Helten (born 1986) is an Australian artist, known for his photorealistic murals.Van Helten was raised in Brisbane and was a graffiti artist in his youth. He moved to Lismore, New South Wales to study visual arts at Southern Cross University, majoring in printmaking.Van Helten's work Brim Silo Art project, a large mural painted on the grain silos at Brim, Victoria, an example of the growing genre of silo art, was a finalist in 2016 Sulman Prize.Van Helten painted a mural on the former BB&T building in downtown Greenville, South Carolina, \"to give voice to traditionally Black communities on the west side of Greenville\", after a commission in 2019.", "target": "Australian artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96407733", "label": "Tales from the Lakeside", "source": "Tales from the Lakeside (Hungarian: Lengemesék) is a 2017 Hungarian animated adventure fantasy family film written and directed by Zsolt Pálfi. The film stars András Faragó, Anna Kubik and Tamás Markovics in the lead roles. The film was released on 27 April 2017 and received positive reviews from critics. The film also received several awards and nominations in international film festivals. Its sequel Willy and the Guardians of the Lake was released on 6 December 2018 and received positive reviews.", "target": "2017 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13539693", "label": "Eupithecia orsetilla", "source": "Eupithecia orsetilla is a moth in the family Geometridae first described by Herbert Druce in 1893. It is found in Mexico, Guatemala and Costa Rica.The forewings are dark silky brown, crossed by several very indistinct pale brown waved lines, and with a very narrow submarginal waved line extending from the apex to the anal angle and a black dot at the end of the cell. The hindwings are a little lighter than the forewings, mottled with pale brown near the anal angle.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10395461", "label": "Zé Pereira dos Lacaios", "source": "Zé Pereira dos Lacaios is a carnival block from Ouro Preto, Brazil. Founded in 1867, it is the oldest carnival block in the country which is still active.", "target": "carnival block from Ouro Preto, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["carnival association"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16887226", "label": "Lynn Zimmerman", "source": "Lynn Brian Zimmerman (born July 13, 1942) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey goaltender. During the 1975–76 season Zimmerman played 8 games in the World Hockey Association (WHA) with the Denver Spurs/Ottawa Civics, and during the 1977–78 season he played another 20 WHA games with the Houston Aeros.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey goaltender", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16759530", "label": "Tolidostena taiwana", "source": "Tolidostena taiwana is a beetle in the genus Tolidostena of the family Mordellidae. It was described in 1987 by Kiyoyama.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7264634", "label": "Pål Jackman", "source": "Pål Jackman (born 20 September 1967, in Haugesund, Norway) is a Norwegian film director and musician. As a musician he appears under the name Jackman, both as a solo artist and with his own alternative rock trio. In the trio format has with him his brother Morten Jackman on drums and John Lilja on bass. The trio has released an EP and an album, both named Jackman. He has also previously served as the frontman and songwriter in the band Wunderkammer who released two albums.Jackman has directed shorts and advertising films and received attention for his first short film, Benny – a playful and easygoing film in both style and content. Jackman studied television and direction at the University College in Stavanger, and has also enjoyed significant success with his Gypsy-inspired orchestra Wunderkammer. Jackman and Wunderkammer have also written the score for several shorts and documentaries. Jackman made his feature debut in 2000 with Detector. The film was entered into the 23rd Moscow International Film Festival. He has since written and directed one of the 5 short films in 5 grøss fra Vestlandet (5 horrors of Western Norway) and his second feature-length film, Jernanger, which premiered in 2009.", "target": "Norwegian film director and musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4575721", "label": "Ålfoten Church", "source": "Ålfoten Church (Norwegian: Ålfoten kyrkje) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Bremanger Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Ålfoten, very close to the shore of the Ålfotfjorden. It is the church for the Ålfoten parish which is part of the Nordfjord prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Bjørgvin. The white, cog-joint, wooden church was built in a long church style during the 17th century by an unknown architect. The church seats about 100 people.", "target": "church in Sogn og Fjordane, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "cultural property"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2646659", "label": "Ali Bongo", "source": "William Oliver Wallace (8 December 1929 – 8 March 2009), known by his stage name Ali Bongo, was a British comedy magician and former president of The Magic Circle who performed an act in which he was known as the \"Shriek of Araby\".", "target": "British comedy magician and president of The Magic Circle", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17791328", "label": "Berberis andrieuxii", "source": "Berberis andrieuxii is a shrub in the Berberidaceae described as a species in 1838. It is endemic to the State of Oaxaca in southern Mexico.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4580359", "label": "1982 Cincinnati Reds season", "source": "The Cincinnati Reds' 1982 season was a season in American baseball. It involved the Reds finishing in sixth place in the National League West Division, with a record of 61 wins and 101 losses, 28 games behind the Atlanta Braves. The Reds played their home games at Riverfront Stadium. John McNamara managed the club to a 34–58 start before being replaced in late July by Russ Nixon, who compiled a 27–43 record the rest of the year. 1982 was the first time that the Reds finished in last place since 1937, as well as their first losing season since 1971, the team's first full season at Riverfront. It was also the first and as of 2021, only 100-loss season in franchise history.", "target": "Major League Baseball season", "baseline_candidates": ["baseball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16138546", "label": "Vasu Sangsingkeaw", "source": "Vasu Sangsingkeo (also known as Jib Ror.Dor., Nickname: Jeep; born December 29, 1967) is a Thai actor, host and singer.", "target": "Thai actor, host and singer (born 1967)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6743162", "label": "Maleyali Jotheyali", "source": "Maleyali Jotheyali is a 2009 Indian Kannada-language film that stars Ganesh, Anjana Sukhani and Yuvika Chaudhary. It is directed by Preetham Gubbi, who also co-wrote the script. Shilpa Ganesh, wife of Ganesh, produced the film under their production house, Golden Movies.", "target": "2009 film by Preetham Gubbi", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q765614", "label": "Red-tailed Bristlebill", "source": "The red-tailed bristlebill (Bleda syndactylus) or common bristlebill, is a species of songbird in the bulbul family, Pycnonotidae. It is widely present throughout the African tropical rainforest.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13160617", "label": "Mata Amritanandamayi", "source": "Mātā Amritānandamayī Devī (born Sudhamani Idamannel; 27 September 1953), often known simply as Amma (\"Mother\"), is an Indian Hindu spiritual leader, guru and humanitarian, who is revered as 'the hugging saint' by her followers.In 2018, she was felicitated by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for largest contribution to the Government of India's Clean India Campaign Swachh Bharat Mission. She was the first recipient of Vishwaratna Puraskar (Gem of the World Award) by Hindu Parliament.", "target": "Indian spiritual leader and guru", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21510944", "label": "Reichart", "source": "Reichart, Reichhart or Reichardt are surnames, and may refer to: Israel Reichart, Israeli biologist and agriculturist Johann Reichhart, German executioner Johann Friedrich Reichardt, Prussian composer Kelly Reichardt, American film director Louis Reichardt, American big-mountain mountaineer Margaretha Reichardt (1907-1984), German textile designer and former Bauhaus student Martin Reichardt (born 1969), German politician Rick Reichardt, American baseball player Patricia \"Peppermint Patty\" Reichardt, a character in the Peanuts comic strip. Werner E. Reichardt, German physicist and biologistalso Robert Reichert, mayor of Macon, Georgia.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1359787", "label": "Lynda Haverstock", "source": "Lynda Maureen Haverstock (born September 16, 1948) is the former leader of the Saskatchewan Liberal Party, was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan, and served as the 19th Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan from 2000 until July 2006. In 2007, she was named President/CEO of Tourism Saskatchewan.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16086973", "label": "Sylvanite", "source": "Sylvanite is a census-designated place (CDP) in Lincoln County, Montana, United States. The population was 103 at the 2010 census.The community is in Kootenai National Forest in northwestern Lincoln County, in the valley of the Yaak River, a south-flowing tributary of the Kootenai River. Yaak River Road (National Forest Road 92) runs through the valley, leading south 11 miles (18 km) to U.S. Route 2 in the Kootenai valley and northeast (upriver) 17 miles (27 km) to Yaak. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the Sylvanite CDP has an area of 5.7 square miles (14.8 km2), all land.", "target": "unincorporated community in Lincoln County, Montana", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5148625", "label": "Color of Change", "source": "Color of Change is a progressive nonprofit civil rights advocacy organization in the United States. It was formed in 2005 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in order to use online resources to strengthen the political voice of African Americans. Color of Change is a 501(c)(4) advocacy organizing with an affiliated political action committee.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization", "nonprofit organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2712309", "label": "Pirmin Stierli", "source": "Pirmin Stierli (born 9 October 1947) is a former Swiss football player. During his career he played for FC Zug, FC Zürich, RSC Anderlecht and Neuchâtel Xamax. He made 16 appearances for the Switzerland national team between 1968 and 1974.", "target": "Swiss association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6382140", "label": "Kealiʻi Reichel", "source": "Carleton Lewis Kealiʻinaniaimokuokalani Reichel (born 1962) popularly known as Kealiʻi Reichel, is a popular and bestselling singer, songwriter, choreographer, dancer, chanter, scholar, teacher, and personality from Hawaiʻi. He has spent his life educating the world about Hawaiian culture through music and dance. Kealiʻi (pronounced Keh-ah-LEE-ee) Reichel was born and raised on the island of Maui. Reichel grew up in the town of Lahaina where he attended Lahainaluna High School, however he spent weekends and summers with his maternal grandmother in the plantation town of Pāʻia. At the age of 24, Reichel was convicted of theft, and was sentenced to community service, which involved a study of Hawaiian culture. This marked a turning point in his life, as he decided to devote the rest of his life to the study and promotion of Hawaiian culture. Reichel was one of the founding directors for Punana Leo O Maui, a Hawaiian language immersion pre-school. He has taught Hawaiian culture and language at the University of Hawaiʻi's, Maui Community College, and he was the Cultural Resource Specialist and curator at the Bailey House Museum in Wailuku.", "target": "singer, songwriter, choreographer, dancer, chanter, scholar, teacher, and personality from Hawaiʻi", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3514279", "label": "Take a Giant Step", "source": "Take a Giant Step is a 1959 American coming-of-age drama film directed by Philip Leacock. The plot concerns a black teenager living in a predominantly white environment and having trouble coping as he reaches an age at which the realities of racism are beginning to affect his life more directly and pointedly than they had in his childhood. Adapted from the Broadway play by Louis S. Peterson, the film stars Johnny Nash — who would ultimately become more well known for his singing career, including the hit song \"I Can See Clearly Now\" — as the lead character, Spencer \"Spence\" Scott. Co-stars included Ruby Dee as the Scott family's housekeeper, Estelle Hemsley as Grandma Martin (Hemsley was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for best supporting actress), and Beah Richards as Spence's mother. The movie's executive producer was Burt Lancaster through his Hecht-Hill-Lancaster production company.", "target": "1959 film by Philip Leacock", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q45189110", "label": "Shaun Evans", "source": "Shaun Evans (born 14 September 1996) is a Welsh rugby union player who plays for Scarlets regional team as a hooker or flanker. Evans made his debut for the Carmarthen Quins in March 2015, and he had established himself as a first team regular by the 2015-16 season. Evans earned a call-up to the Wales U20 squad for the 2016 Junior Six Nations, where he scored three tries in 5 games. He earned another call-up for the Junior World Championships, where he made a further three appearances.Evans earned his first professional contract with the Scarlets in 2016. He made his only Pro-14 appearance in a heavy defeat away to Edinburgh.", "target": "rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22036830", "label": "Quebra-Dentes River", "source": "The Quebra-Dentes River is a river of Rio Grande do Sul state in southern Brazil.", "target": "river in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58308", "label": "Rufus Bousquet", "source": "Rufus George Bousquet (born 28 November 1958) is a Saint Lucian politician who formerly represented the constituency of Choiseul for the United Workers Party. Bousquet last won the seat at the general election held on 11 December 2006 but lost it to Lorne Theophilus in the November 2011 General Elections. Prior to 2000 his name was Bruce Tucker or, from 1989, Joseph Michael Bousquet.", "target": "Saint Lucian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5375162", "label": "Enadi Siva Temple", "source": "Enadi Siva Temple is a Hindu temple located at Enadi in the Thirumayam taluk of Pudukkottai district in Tamil Nadu, India. Dedicated to Shiva, the temple dates from the early 10th century AD. The architecture resembles the late Pallava and the roof resembles that of Draupadi Ratha in Mahabalipuram.", "target": "temple in India", "baseline_candidates": ["Hindu temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3218398", "label": "Last Man Standing", "source": "Last Man Standing is the third studio album by Swedish singer-songwriter E-Type, which was released in 1998. It contains hit songs \"Angels Crying\", \"Here I Go Again\" and \"Princess of Egypt\". Nana Hedin provided much of the female lead vocals. The album debuted at number one on the Finnish Albums Chart, staying in the top for total 6 weeks. In Sweden the album peaked # 1 going platinum. The US and Japanese editions of the album were released with different cover art. The video for \"Angels Crying\" was based on Friday the 13th.", "target": "E-type album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13186113", "label": "Visakhapatnam district", "source": "Visakhapatnam district (formerly known as Vizagapatam district) is one of the nine districts in the Coastal Andhra region of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, headquartered at Visakhapatnam. : 14 It is one of the twelve coastal districts of the state.The district share broders with in the north and east, Vizianagaram district and South Anakapalli district in the south-west and Bay of Bengal in the south. : 15.", "target": "district of Andhra Pradesh", "baseline_candidates": ["district of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27984402", "label": "Joslin Branch", "source": "Joslin Branch is a stream in Cass County in the U.S. state of Missouri.Joslin Branch was named after the local Joslin family.", "target": "river in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2979735", "label": "Clove", "source": "The Clove was the first British trade ship to make port in Japan. Captained by John Saris, it landed at Hirado, near Nagasaki, on 12 June 1613. Saris opened a trading post and factory in Hirado, which he passed on to his colleague Richard Cocks when he left Japan in December that same year. Cocks would manage the post for roughly ten years before he was recalled by the British East India Company on charges of misconduct; he died of illness shortly after leaving Japan.", "target": "British trade ship", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2078851", "label": "São Braz do Piauí", "source": "São Braz do Piauí is a municipality in the state of Piauí in the Northeast region of Brazil.The municipality is in the Capivara-Confusões Ecological Corridor, created in 2006 to link the Serra da Capivara National Park to the Serra das Confusões National Park.", "target": "human settlement in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7892919", "label": "2000 United States presidential election in Nebraska", "source": "The 2000 United States presidential election in Nebraska took place on November 7, 2000, and was part of the 2000 United States presidential election. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Nebraska was won by Governor George W. Bush by a 29% margin of victory, winning every county. Also, with 62.25% of the popular vote, the state proved to be his fourth strongest state in the 2000 election after Wyoming, Idaho and Utah. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time the Democratic ticket did not win a single county in Nebraska.", "target": "election in Nebraska", "baseline_candidates": ["United States presidential election in Nebraska"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17862002", "label": "CKM", "source": "Creatine kinase, muscle also known as MCK is a creatine kinase that in humans is encoded by the MCK gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55629292", "label": "Paulasterias mcclaini", "source": "Paulasterias mcclaini is a species of starfish in the family Paulasteriidae. It is found in deep water at hydrothermal vents.", "target": "species of starfish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3829529", "label": "Somali Youth League", "source": "The Somali Youth League (SYL) (Somali: Ururka Dhalinyarada Soomaaliyeed رابطة الشباب الصومالي, Italian: Lega dei Giovani Somali or Lega Somala della Gioventù), initially known as the Somali Youth Club (SYC), was the first political party in Somalia. It played a key role in the nation's road to independence during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s.", "target": "political party", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55672188", "label": "Priamar Fortress", "source": "The Priamar Fortress (Italian: Fortezza del Priamar) is a fortress occupying the hill with the same name above the port of Savona, Liguria, northern Italy.", "target": "building in Savona, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["fort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31467596", "label": "Aparri", "source": "Aparri (Ibanag: Ili nat Aparri; Ilocano: Ili ti Aparri; Tagalog: Bayan ng Aparri), officially the Municipality of Aparri, is a 1st class municipality in the province of Cagayan , Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 68,839 people. It sits at the mouth of the Cagayan River, the longest river in the Philippines, about 55 miles north of Tuguegarao, the provincial capital. Aparri is a bustling municipality and the primary growth center of Northern Cagayan. It serves as the center of education, commerce and culture in the northern part of the Region which includes towns of the first and second districts of Cagayan as well as the towns of Apayao and some towns of Ilocos Norte. It serves as the show window of commerce and finance,economic transformation, information technology, livelihood development, fashion and culture, leisure and entertainment, agricultural modernization, and course good local governance. Aparri has an approximate income of ₱250 million. The valley has been one of the largest tobacco-producing sections in the Philippines, and the town has a considerable coastwise trade.It has a meteorological station located in Barangay Punta where the Cagayan River meets the Babuyan Channel. It also administers Fuga Island, which is part of the Babuyan Group and is much closer to Claveria. In the near future, it will become the next city in the province of Cagayan.", "target": "municipality of the Philippines in the province of Cagayan", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Philippines"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7501064", "label": "Shootout", "source": "Shootout is a 1985 arcade target shooting game developed and published by Data East.", "target": "1985 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19487122", "label": "Cantonal Revolution", "source": "The Cantonal rebellion was a cantonalist insurrection that took place during the First Spanish Republic between July 1873 and January 1874. Its protagonists were the \"intransigent\" federal Republicans, who wanted to establish immediately the Federal Republic from the bottom-up without waiting for the Constituent Cortes to draft and approve the new Federal Constitution, as defended by the president of the Executive Power of the Republic Francisco Pi y Margall, a Proudhonian Mutualist supported by the \"centrist\" and \"moderate\" sectors of the Federal Democratic Republican Party.Pi y Margall was the principal translator of Proudhon's works, according to George Woodcock \"These translations were to have a profound and lasting effect on the development of Spanish anarchism after 1870, but before that time Proudhonian ideas, as interpreted by Pi, already provided much of the inspiration for the federalist movement which sprang up in the early 1860s.\" According to the Encyclopædia Britannica \"During the Spanish revolution of 1873, Pi y Margall attempted to establish a decentralized, or “cantonalist,\" political system on Proudhonian lines. \"The rebellion began on 12 July, 1873 with the Canton of Cartagena – although three days earlier the Alcoy Petroleum Revolution had broken out at the initiative of the Spanish section of the International Workers Association (AIT) – spreading in the following days through the regions of Valencia, Murcia and Andalusia. In these areas, cantons were formed, whose federation would constitute the base of the Spanish Federal Republic. The political theory on which the cantonal movement was based was the \"pactist\" federalism of Francisco Pi y Margall.", "target": "insurrection in parts of Spain during the First Spanish Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["rebellion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2527228", "label": "vinylsulfonic acid", "source": "Vinylsulfonic acid is the organosulfur compound with the chemical formula CH2=CHSO3H. It is the simplest unsaturated sulfonic acid. The C=C double bond is a site of high reactivity. Polymerization gives polyvinylsulfonic acid, especially when used as a comonomer with functionalized vinyl and (meth)acrylic acid compounds. It is a colorless, water-soluble liquid, although commercial samples can appear yellow or even red.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21056402", "label": "Agnes Ellen Harris", "source": "Agnes Ellen Harris (July 17, 1883 – December 18, 1952) was an American educator. She worked in education in Georgia, Florida, Texas, Washington, D.C. and Alabama, establishing Home Economics programs throughout the area. She was instrumental in founding \"Tomato Clubs\" in Florida, which were the precursor to the 4-H Youth Programs. She was one of the earliest practitioners of the field of Domestic Science and taught nutrition and health to women for fifty years. She was a charter member of the American Home Economics Association and served as a national officer in the 1920s. She was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame in 1972.", "target": "American home economics academic (1883-1952)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47368402", "label": "Northern Saskatchewan Administration District", "source": "The Northern Saskatchewan Administration District (NSAD) is the unorganized area of the Canada province of Saskatchewan. Overwhelmingly larger than the province's other communities, it encompasses approximately half of Saskatchewan's landmass, an area comparable to that of New Zealand. Despite its extent, the majority of Saskatchewanians live in the southern half of the province, and the majority of Northern Saskatchewanians live in incorporated municipalities outside the NSAD's jurisdiction. As a result, the 2016 census counted only 1,115 district residents, which placed its population density at 250 square kilometres for every inhabitant. Because of its extremely sparse population, the district has no local government and is directly subject to the Minister of Government Relations.", "target": "region of Saskatchewan, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["administrative territorial entity of Canada", "geographic region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q851921", "label": "Shun Tono", "source": "Shun Tono (東野 峻, Tōno Shun, born July 11, 1986) is a Japanese Nippon Professional Baseball player. He is currently with the Yokohama DeNA BayStars in Japan's Pacific League. He made his Giants debut in 2007 against the Tokyo Yakult Swallows, pitching 2/3 of an inning and giving up a hit and a walk in that span. He saw expanded action in 2008 as a mid-season call-up, and he was part of a young bullpen that led the Giants to a Japan Series berth against the eventual champion Saitama Seibu Lions. In 28 games, he pitched in relief in 26 of them and made two starts, one of them being his first career complete game against the Hiroshima Toyo Carp on September 24. He made four appearances in the '08 playoffs, all without giving up a run. His first full season in 2009 started off very well, as Tono posted quality starts in four of his first five starts, en route to 14 for the year, but his smoking habit caught up with him late in the season. Run support was a problem for him though, as he had 10 no-decisions to go with his 8-8 record and a respectable 3.17 ERA. His season was marred by a bit of controversy, as Tono was pulled from his start on September 16 by manager Tatsunori Hara. A frustrated Hara said after the game, \"As an athlete, not being able to quit smoking represents a larger weakness. He needs to get stronger.\" This was the third in a.", "target": "baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12822720", "label": "Victor Grignard", "source": "Francois Auguste Victor Grignard (6 May 1871 – 13 December 1935) was a French chemist who won the Nobel Prize for his discovery of the eponymously named Grignard reagent and Grignard reaction, both of which are important in the formation of carbon–carbon bonds.", "target": "French chemist (1871-1935)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18407259", "label": "Black Rose", "source": "Black Rose (Russian: Чёрная роза, romanized: Chyornaya roza) is a 2014 cooperative American and Russian action film directed by, and starring, Alexander Nevsky. The film also stars Kristanna Loken, Adrian Paul, and Robert Davi. The film was released on 25 January 2014 in Russia. It was made on a budget of $7,000,000.", "target": "2014 film by Alexander Kuritsin", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13441714", "label": "The Mother", "source": "Mother (Russian: Мать, romanized: Mat') is a novel written by Maxim Gorky in 1906 about revolutionary factory workers. It was first published, in English, in Appleton's Magazine in 1906, then in Russian in 1907. The work was translated into many languages, and was made into a number of films. The German playwright Bertolt Brecht and his collaborators based their 1932 play The Mother on this novel. Modern critics consider it possibly the least successful of Gorky's novels, however, they call it Gorky's most important novel written before 1917.", "target": "novel by Maxim Gorki", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4942300", "label": "Bonnie Burnham Potter", "source": "Rear Admiral Bonnie Burnham Potter (born March 23, 1947) was the first female physician in the Navy Medical Corps to be selected for flag rank. She served as the commanding officer of the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Maryland and Chief of the Navy Medical Corps.", "target": "United States Navy admiral", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q91964864", "label": "Tamasini", "source": "Tamasini is a tribe of cicadas in the family Cicadidae, found in Australia. There are at least two genera and about eight described species in Tamasini.", "target": "Tribe of cicada", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2866798", "label": "Asphalt 5", "source": "Asphalt 5 is a 2009 racing video game, developed and published by Gameloft as part of the Asphalt series. It was released for iOS on November 2, 2009, for webOS on January 8, 2010, for Android on March 18, for Symbian^3 and Bada on December 22, and for Windows Phone 7 on July 16, 2012. A PSP minis version was planned to release but got cancelled.", "target": "2009 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3858396", "label": "Mingus at Carnegie Hall", "source": "Mingus at Carnegie Hall is a live album by the jazz bassist and composer Charles Mingus, recorded at Carnegie Hall in January 1974 by Mingus with Jon Faddis, Charles McPherson, John Handy, George Adams, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Hamiet Bluiett, Don Pullen, and Dannie Richmond. The original release did not include the first part of the concert, featuring Mingus’s working sextet without Handy, Kirk, and McPherson. An expanded “Deluxe Edition” including the entire concert, was issued in 2021.", "target": "live album by jazz bassist and composer Charles Mingus", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5179113", "label": "Coventry South East", "source": "Coventry South East was a parliamentary constituency in the city of Coventry. It returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The constituency was created for the February 1974 general election, and abolished for the 1997 general election.", "target": "Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1974-1997", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the House of Commons"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1149846", "label": "Under17", "source": "Under17 (stylized in all caps) was a Japanese musical duo formed in 2001 by Haruko Momoi and Masaya Koike. The group was known for producing music known colloquially as \"moe songs\", providing theme and insert songs to series such as Tenbatsu! Angel Rabbie, Popotan, and DearS.", "target": "Japanese pop music duo", "baseline_candidates": ["musical duo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4856321", "label": "Banking Hours 10 to 4", "source": "Banking Hours 10 to 4 is a 2012 Indian Malayalam-language film directed by K. Madhu, starring Anoop Menon, Meghna Raj, Jishnu, Kailash, Shankar . Crime Thriller Movie is Written by Sumesh Madhu & Amal K Joby.", "target": "2012 film by K. Madhu", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3620729", "label": "The Historian's Craft", "source": "The Historian's Craft (French: Apologie pour l'histoire ou Métier d'historien) is a 1949 book by Marc Bloch and first published in English in 1953 (New York: Knopf) (it was the first of his works to be translated into English). At that stage he was not as well known in the English-speaking world as he was to be in the 1960s where his works on feudal society and rural history were published. The book was written in 1941 and 1942. Bloch joined the French Resistance prior to its completion.", "target": "book published in 1954", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work", "written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5127359", "label": "Clark Rampling", "source": "Clark Rampling (bapt 6 April 1793 – buried 7 March 1875) was an English architect who worked from offices in London and from about 1820 in Birkenhead, Cheshire (now in Merseyside). By 1841 he was joined in partnership in Birkenhead by his nephew Robert Bushell Rampling and the practice was known as C. and R. B. Rampling. His best known work is the Liverpool Medical Institution, which was built in 1835–37 in Neoclassical style. This building is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. Earlier, he had designed the Church of St Mary, Birch, a Commissioners' church in Gothic Revival style, (c. 1827/28) which has since been demolished. Other works in Cheshire and Lancashire include 1832 Villas at Mill Bank, Nr. West Derby 1833/35 Birkenhead Town Hall 1834 House for Spencer Jones, West Derby 1837 The Fish Hall, Murray Street, Liverpool 1830/40 Estate cottages, Caldy, West Kirby 1840 Magistrates' offices, Birkenhead 1840 St John the Evangelist, Buglawton, Congleton 1845 Market etc., BirkenheadClark Rampling died in 1875 in Tranmere, which is now in Merseyside.", "target": "English architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4433691", "label": "Diocese of Helsinki", "source": "The Diocese of Helsinki (Finnish: Helsingin hiippakunta; Swedish: Helsingfors stift) is a diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland, and the seat of the Bishop of Helsinki. Its cathedral is Helsinki Cathedral. The diocese was established in 1959 by dividing the Diocese of Tampere. It covers only 1% of the country's territory, but contains 10% of its population. The diocese comprises 39 parishes. It was partitioned again in 2002, when the western part became the Diocese of Espoo. The current bishop of Helsinki is Teemu Laajasalo. The diocese is unique among the Finnish dioceses in the sense that in some parish areas, the church members are in a minority. In the Kallio and Vallila districts, church membership among the residents is circa 49 per cent. Only in six of the 18 parishes of the diocese the membership share reaches over 60 per cent of the population.", "target": "diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["Lutheran diocese"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20005800", "label": "The Knightsbridge Apartments", "source": "The Knightsbridge Apartments is a luxury apartment complex in Knightsbridge, London.", "target": "luxury apartment complex in Knightsbridge, London", "baseline_candidates": ["apartment building", "high-rise building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3652483", "label": "Solear", "source": "Solear is a district located in the Tangerang Regency of Banten in Java, Indonesia.", "target": "district in Tangerang Regency, Banten Province, Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["third-level administrative country subdivision in Indonesia", "kecamatan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28873508", "label": "Furman Paladins men's soccer", "source": "For information on all Furman University sports, see Furman PaladinsThe Furman Paladins men's soccer team is a varsity intercollegiate athletic team of Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. The team is a member of the Southern Conference, which is part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division I. Furman's first men's soccer team was fielded in 1967. The team plays its home games at Eugene Stone Stadium in Greenville. The Paladins are coached by Doug Allison.", "target": "athletic team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team", "college sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2579633", "label": "Paisley St James railway station", "source": "Paisley St James railway station is on the Inverclyde Line, serving one of the residential districts of the town, just west of the town centre. For passengers travelling to the commercial district, Paisley Gilmour Street is the main railway station of Paisley and is located in the heart of Paisley town centre. There is an ongoing campaign to rename the station \"Paisley St Mirren\" due to the station's proximity to St Mirren's new stadium.", "target": "railway station in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21063355", "label": "Jack Soren", "source": "Jack Soren is the pen name of Canadian writer Martin Richard Soderstrom (born September 7, 1962), a writer of action-adventure/thriller novels. He was born and raised in Toronto, Canada and he is now a resident of Oshawa, Canada. Under the name Martin R. Soderstrom, he has published horror and science fiction short stories.", "target": "Canadian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6727694", "label": "Madiatom", "source": "Madiatom is a village in the commune of Bassila in the Donga Department of western Benin.", "target": "village in Donga Department, Benin", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2131384", "label": "Raphael Laux", "source": "Raphael Laux is a German former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6484804", "label": "Landmark Theatre", "source": "The Landmark Theatre, originally known as Loew's State Theater, is a historic theater from the era of movie palaces, located on South Salina Street in Syracuse, New York, United States. Designed by Thomas W. Lamb, it is the city's only surviving example of the opulent theatrical venues of the 1920s. The Landmark is on the National Register of Historic Places.", "target": "theater in Syracuse, New York, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["theater", "movie theater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5615459", "label": "Guide to Extinction", "source": "Guide to Extinction is the third studio album of industrial rock band, Nocturne. It was their first studio album after 2001's Welcome to Paradise. The album was finally released in 2005, shortly after the break-up of the romantic relationship between producer, guitarist Chris Telkes and singer Lacey Conner. Even with this emotional stress upon the band's core members, the album was considered Nocturne's best showcase, and features a variety of tracks that quietly hint at the past, the band did a few months of touring, and afterward, was \"put on hold for an indefinite period of time\". This was their last album before the band's breakup.", "target": "album by Nocturne", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q617264", "label": "Judson Harmon", "source": "Judson Harmon (February 3, 1846 – February 22, 1927) was an American Democratic politician from Ohio. He served as United States Attorney General under President Grover Cleveland and later served as the 45th governor of Ohio.", "target": "American judge (1846-1927)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47468122", "label": "Peter Cortes", "source": "Peter Cortes (born September 7, 1947) is an American rower. He competed in the men's quadruple sculls event at the 1976 Summer Olympics.", "target": "American rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7742061", "label": "The Inkwell", "source": "The Inkwell is a 1994 romantic comedy-drama film directed by Matty Rich. The film stars Larenz Tate, Joe Morton, Suzzanne Douglass, Glynn Turman, Jada Pinkett and Vanessa Bell Calloway.", "target": "1994 film by Matty Rich", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16967998", "label": "WUFK", "source": "WUFK was an FM radio station that began in July 1974. It was owned by the University of Maine and licensed to the community of Fort Kent. Originally on 90.3 MHz, it later moved to 92.1 MHz around 1982 and continued there until its license was canceled on November 7, 2005.", "target": "former radio station at the University of Maine at Fort Kent", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55075111", "label": "Muntinlupa Cagers", "source": "The Muntinlupa Angelis Resort - EOG Cooly is a professional basketball team based in Muntinlupa, Philippines, competing in the Filbasket and earlier in the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL). The team plays its home games at the Muntinlupa Sports Center.", "target": "basketball team in Muntinlupa, Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1592879", "label": "Eleutherodactylus glandulifer", "source": "Eleutherodactylus glandulifer (common names: La Hotte glanded frog, Doris' robber frog) is a species of frog in the family Eleutherodactylidae endemic to the Massif de la Hotte, Haiti. Its natural habitat is closed-canopy forest, usually near streams. Its most distinctive feature are its striking blue sapphire-colored eyes—a highly unusual trait among amphibians.It is threatened by habitat loss; while the species occurs in the Pic Macaya National Park, there is no active management for conservation, and the habitat loss continues in the park.", "target": "species of amphibian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5875274", "label": "Hoby Brenner", "source": "Hoby F. J. Brenner (born June 2, 1959) is a former American football tight end who played professionally in the National Football League (NFL) for the New Orleans Saints.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2714994", "label": "Vache of Iberia", "source": "Vach'e (Georgian: ვაჩე), of the Arsacid dynasty, was a king of Iberia (natively known as Kartli; ancient Georgia) from 216 to 234. He is known exclusively from the medieval Georgian chronicles which make him either 20th or 22nd in the royal list of Iberia and merely relates that Vache was the son of Rev I.", "target": "King of Iberia (Georgia) from 216 to 234", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18528569", "label": "Susanna Taylor", "source": "Susannah Taylor or Susannah Cook (29 March 1755 – June, 1823) was a British socialite and correspondent.", "target": "wife of John Taylor, hymn writer (1755-1823)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5357755", "label": "Minose Station", "source": "Minose Station (三野瀬駅, Minose-eki) is a passenger railway station in located in the town of Kihoku, Kitamuro District, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Tōkai).", "target": "railway station in Kihoku, Kitamuro district, Mie Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1071392", "label": "Belyashevo", "source": "Belyashevo (Russian: Беляшево) is a rural locality (a selo) in Badryashevsky Selsoviet, Tatyshlinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 469 as of 2010. There are 7 streets.", "target": "village in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["subdivisions of Russia", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11072959", "label": "Valencian nationalism", "source": "Valencian nationalism (Valencian: Nacionalisme valencià; IPA: [nasionaˈlizme valensiˈa]) or Valencianism (Valencian: Valencianisme) is a political movement in the Land of Valencia, Spain. It advocates the promotion and recognition of the Valencian language, culture and the political sovereignty of the Land of Valencia. As an ideology, it has had varying levels of social and political influence since the nineteenth century, contributing to the consolidation of self-government in the Valencian Community as a political entity tracing its origins to the Ancient Kingdom of Valencia. Sometimes Catalan-nationalist groups are also included under the name of Valencian nationalism, as some Valencian nationalists see the Land of Valencia as part of the Catalan nation.Historically, Valencianism originates in the 19th century as a cultural movement during the Renaixença, a period of time where intellectuals tried to recover the culture status for the Valencian language after centuries of diglossia and the suppression of the Kingdom of Valencia under Bourbon absolutism with initiatives like the Floral Games held by Lo Rat Penat. Scissions from this association would be the first political organisations of the Valencianism, appeared at the beginning of the 20th century. The symbolical birthdate of Valencianism is considered to be 1902, when Faustí Barberà reads De regionalisme i valentinicultura. One of the first milestones for Valencianism would be the Declaració Valencianista made in 1918, although it was not until the Second Spanish Republic that Valencianism would achieve certain political influence and a climate prone to achieve a Statute of Autonomy. With the creation of Francoist Spain, the Valencianist tradition was repressed and.", "target": "political ideology", "baseline_candidates": ["political ideology", "nationalism"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q219283", "label": "Jorvi Hospital", "source": "The Jorvi Hospital is part of The Hospital District of Helsinki and Uusimaa (HUS) and Helsinki university central hospital (HUCS). The hospital is located in Karvasmäki, Espoo, Finland; next to Glims Farmstead Museum. Departments: • Maternity ward (one of the 3 in the greater Helsinki area) with on-call neonatologist. • Espoo town wards. • Children's wing with hospital school and 3 children's wards. • 24/7 emergency department for both adults and children's (serves mainly Espoo and adjacent municipalities). • High dependency unit. • ICU. • Nationwide comprehensive burn unit (integrated with the ICU). • 24/7 operating theatre. • Neurology ward. • Internal medicine & surgery wards.", "target": "hospital in Espoo, Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q162044", "label": "Vanilla", "source": "Vanilla, the vanilla orchids, forms a flowering plant genus of about 110 species in the orchid family (Orchidaceae). The most widely known member is the flat-leaved vanilla (V. planifolia), native to Mexico and Belize, from which commercial vanilla flavoring is derived. It is the only orchid widely used for industrial purposes in flavoring such products as foods, beverages and cosmetics, and is recognized as the most popular aroma and flavor. The key constituent imparting its flavour is the phenolic aldehyde, vanillin.This evergreen genus occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions, from tropical America to tropical Asia, New Guinea and West Africa. Five species are known from the contiguous United States, all limited to southern Florida.The genus was established in 1754 by Plumier, based on J. Miller. The word vanilla, derived from the diminutive of the Spanish word vaina (vaina itself meaning sheath or pod), simply translates as little pod.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60194828", "label": "Oleksandr Sivkov", "source": "Oleksandr Sivkov (born in Poltava Oblast, Ukraine) is a Ukrainian sprint canoer. He is a silver medalists of the 2018 European Championships.", "target": "Ukrainian canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2025774", "label": "Falkland", "source": "Falkland is a town in Pitt County, North Carolina, United States. The population was 96 at the 2010 Census, making it the least populous town in Pitt County. The town is a part of the Greenville Metropolitan Area located in North Carolina's Inner Banks region.", "target": "human settlement in Pitt County, North Carolina, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1677289", "label": "Jackie Lee Cochran", "source": "Jackie Lee Cochran (February 5, 1934, Dalton, Georgia – March 15, 1998, Burbank, California) was an American rockabilly musician, known as Jack the Cat.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5503527", "label": "Friday Night Lights, season 2", "source": "The second season of the American serial drama television series Friday Night Lights commenced airing in the United States and Canada on October 5, 2007 and concluded its 15-episode season on February 7, 2008, on NBC. While initially renewed for a 22-episode full season, the show ended production for the season after filming the 15th episode, due to the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike. The series' future was once again placed in doubt as it did not return to production once the strike ended, and it continued to suffer from low ratings in its new Friday at 9:00 pm time slot. However, NBC announced in April 2008 that the show would return for a third season, with first-run broadcasts airing on DirecTV's The 101 Network. The second season was released on DVD in region 1 on April 22, 2008.Season 2 continues to focus on the Dillon Panthers, as the pressures and challenges on and off the field have reached new highs after the team won the 2006 Texas 5A State Championship and lost head coach Eric Taylor to a coaching job at Texas Methodist University.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17238839", "label": "Air Asia", "source": "Air Asia Company Limited (Chinese: 亞洲航空股份有限公司) is a provider of aircraft maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) services headquartered in Taiwan. It is now located in the Tainan Airport. It is the only surviving member of the Pacific Corporation, but currently it is owned by Taiwan Aerospace Corporation and is no longer related to the Central Intelligence Agency.", "target": "aviation services company in Taiwan", "baseline_candidates": ["joint-stock company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4772028", "label": "Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 5th Earl of Shaftesbury", "source": "Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 5th Earl of Shaftesbury DL FRS (17 September 1761 – 14 May 1811) was a British peer. Ashley-Cooper was the son of Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 4th Earl of Shaftesbury and Mary Pleydell-Bouverie. He was educated at Winchester and served as Deputy Lieutenant of Dorset. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1785. Lord Shaftesbury married Barbara Webb, daughter of Sir John Webb, 5th Baronet and Mary Salvain, of Odstock House, Wiltshire, on 17 July 1786. His only child, a daughter, was Lady Barbara Ashley-Cooper (19 October 1788 – 5 June 1844), who married the Baron de Mauley. Lord Shaftesbury died on 14 May 1811 at age 49 and was buried at St Giles' parish church in Wimborne St Giles, Dorset. On his death, having no male heir, the title passed to his younger brother, Cropley Ashley-Cooper.", "target": "5th Earl of Shaftesbury", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2568724", "label": "Wielin", "source": "Wielin [ˈvjɛlin] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Polanów, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north of Polanów, 36 km (22 mi) east of Koszalin, and 165 km (103 mi) north-east of the regional capital Szczecin.", "target": "village in West Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2654133", "label": "Frövi", "source": "Frövi is a locality situated in Lindesberg Municipality, Örebro County, Sweden with 2,516 inhabitants in 2010.", "target": "urban area in Lindesberg Municipality, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58215977", "label": "Mesuli Vuba", "source": "Mesuli Vuba (born 4 February 1997) is a South African cricketer. He made his List A debut for South Western Districts in the 2018–19 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge on 4 November 2018. He made his first-class debut for South Western Districts in the 2018–19 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup on 14 February 2019. He made his Twenty20 debut for South Western Districts in the 2019–20 CSA Provincial T20 Cup on 14 September 2019.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q855543", "label": "Miss Universe 2010", "source": "Miss Universe 2010 was the 59th Miss Universe pageant, held at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States on August 23, 2010.At the end of the event, Stefanía Fernández of Venezuela crowned Ximena Navarrete of Mexico as Miss Universe 2010. It is Mexico's second victory after their victory in 1991.Contestants from 83 countries and territories participated in this year's pageant. The pageant was hosted by Bret Michaels and Natalie Morales. John Legend, The Roots, and Cirque du Soleil performed in this year's pageant.", "target": "59th Miss Universe pageant", "baseline_candidates": ["beauty pageant edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q677594", "label": "Martin Farineaux", "source": "Martin Farineaux (born 13 August 1981) is a French paracanoeist who has competed since the late 2000s. He won a silver medal in the K-1 200 m LTA event at the 2010 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Poznań.", "target": "French canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1768025", "label": "Koumankou", "source": "Koumankou is a village and rural commune in the Cercle of Sikasso in the Sikasso Region of southern Mali. The commune covers an area of 243 square kilometers and includes 4 villages. In the 2009 census it had a population of 4,227. The village of Koumankou, the chef-lieu of the commune, is 101 km northwest of Sikasso.", "target": "commune and village in Sikasso Region, Mali", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Mali"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5366530", "label": "Elmer E. Rasmuson", "source": "Elmer Edwin Rasmuson (February 15, 1909 – December 1, 2000) was an American banker, philanthropist and politician in the territory and state of Alaska. He led the family business, National Bank of Alaska, for many decades as president and later chairman. He also served as Mayor of Anchorage from 1964 to 1967 and was the Republican nominee for United States Senator from Alaska in the 1968 election, losing the general election to Mike Gravel.", "target": "American banker and politician (1909-2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6460968", "label": "LaVern Torgeson", "source": "LaVern Earl \"Torgy\" Torgeson (February 28, 1929 – March 20, 2015) was an American football player and coach. He played college football for Washington State from 1948 through 1950. Torgeson played professionally in the National Football League (NFL) for seven seasons, principally as a linebacker, for the Detroit Lions from 1951 to 1954 and for the Washington Redskins from 1955 to 1957.After retiring as a player, Torgeson worked for 35 years from 1959 to 1993 as an assistant coach in the NFL. His coaching positions included stints with the Washington Redskins (1959–1961, 1971–1977, 1981–1993), Pittsburgh Steelers (1962–1968), and Los Angeles Rams (1969–1970, 1978–1980). He was a coach on three Super Bowl championship teams in 1982, 1987, and 1991. As a player and coach, he spent 42 years in the NFL, 26 of them with the Redskins.", "target": "American football player and coach (1929-2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16939892", "label": "Itat Formation", "source": "The Itat Formation (Russian: итатская свита) is a geologic formation in western Siberia. It was deposited in the Bajocian to Bathonian ages of the Middle Jurassic. Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation, including the proceratosaurid Kileskus, as well as fish, amphibians, mammals and many other vertebrates. The formation is noted for bearing significant coal reserves, with large open pit coal mines extracting lignite from the unit currently in operation.", "target": "Middle Jurassic geological formation in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["formation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28971128", "label": "St Harmons railway station", "source": "St Harmons railway station was a station in St Harmon, Powys, Wales. The station opened in 1879 and closed in 1962.", "target": "railway station in Saint Harmon, the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station", "former railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5059269", "label": "Center Bridge Historic District", "source": "Center Bridge Historic District is a national historic district located in Solebury Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The district includes 60 contributing buildings, 2 contributing sites, and 3 contributing structures in the village of Center Bridge. Notable buildings are the William Mitchell / Edward R. Redfield House (1815, 1930s) and a unique row of two-family workers' dwellings. Also located in the district is the separately listed Isaiah Paxson Farm.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.", "target": "historic district in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3972317", "label": "Provincial Highway 16", "source": "Provincial Highway 16 (Chinese: 台16線) is an East-West highway from Mingjian to Xinyi in Nantou County, Taiwan. The total length of the highway is 41.349 km. A plan to extend the highway for another 96.2 km which will pass through the Central Range was abandoned due to environmental issues and difficulty of construction.", "target": "road in Taiwan", "baseline_candidates": ["highway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2939479", "label": "Carlos Torres", "source": "Carlos Ephriam Torres (born October 22, 1982) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Toros de Tijuana of the Mexican League. He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Chicago White Sox, Colorado Rockies, New York Mets, Milwaukee Brewers, Washington Nationals, and Detroit Tigers and for the Yomiuri Giants of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54878671", "label": "Nelson Bennett", "source": "Nelson Bennett (October 14, 1843 – July 20, 1913) was a Canadian-American railroad magnate who contributed to the growth of Fairhaven and Tacoma, Washington in the late 19th-century. Bennett was president of the Fairhaven and Southern Railroad, which first connected the Bellingham Bay region with the rest of the country.", "target": "Canadian-American businessman (1843-1913)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2447060", "label": "European Weightlifting Championships", "source": "European Weightlifting Championships is an annual event organised by the European Weightlifting Federation (EWF). It has been held since 1896. A separate event for women was held from 1988 to 1997, after which both championships have been held as one event.", "target": "international weightlifting competition", "baseline_candidates": ["European Championship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22948664", "label": "Fahad Tariq", "source": "Fahad Tariq (born 13 January 1990) is an Emirati cricketer. He made his Twenty20 International debut against the Netherlands on 3 February 2016.", "target": "Emirati cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q738841", "label": "5786 Talos", "source": "5786 Talos is an Apollo asteroid discovered on 3 September 1991 by R. H. McNaught at Siding Spring. It has a very small perihelion distance; only two other named asteroids have one less than 0.2 AU, 1566 Icarus and 3200 Phaethon.", "target": "asteroid", "baseline_candidates": ["asteroid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60036370", "label": "Zana Berisha", "source": "Zana Berisha (born 1995) is a Kosovan model and beauty pageant titleholder who won Miss Kosovo 2018 on June 29, 2018. She represented Kosovo at Miss Universe 2018 pageant.", "target": "Kosovar model", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7227957", "label": "Ponparappi", "source": "Ponparappi is a village in the Sendurai taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.", "target": "village in Tamil Nadu, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2733444", "label": "Fell on Black Days", "source": "\"Fell on Black Days\" is a song by the American rock band Soundgarden. Written by frontman Chris Cornell, \"Fell on Black Days\" was released as the fifth single from the band's fourth studio album, Superunknown (1994). The song peaked at number four on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. The song was included on Soundgarden's 1997 greatest hits album, A-Sides and the 2010 compilation Telephantasm as the Superunknown version on the single disk version and the video version on the Deluxe Edition.", "target": "1994 single by Soundgarden", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q944403", "label": "The Best Page in the Universe", "source": "The Best Page in the Universe is a personal satirical humor website created by George Ouzounian, better known as Maddox, of Salt Lake City, Utah. Launched in 1997 without any high expectations, the website became known by word of mouth.", "target": "website", "baseline_candidates": ["website"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55099253", "label": "Church of St Peter and St Paul", "source": "The Anglican Church of St Peter and St Paul in Charlton Horethorne, Somerset, England was built in the 12th century. It is a Grade II* listed building.", "target": "church in Charlton Horethorne, Somerset, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "historic site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13402081", "label": "Fusicocca-2,10(14)-diene synthase", "source": "Fusicocca-2,10(14)-diene synthase (EC 4.2.3.43, fusicoccadiene synthase, PaFS, PaDC4) is an enzyme with systematic name geranylgeranyl diphosphate-lyase (fusicocca-2,10(14)-diene-forming). This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction geranylgeranyl diphosphate ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } fusicocca-2,10(14)-diene + diphosphateThis multifunctional enzyme also has EC 2.5.1.29, farnesyltranstransferase, activity.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["lyase", "carbon-oxygen lyase, acting on phosphates", "group or class of enzymes"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49480891", "label": "Crawford Square", "source": "Crawford Square is one of the 22 squares of Savannah, Georgia, United States. It is located in the middle row of the city's five rows of squares, on Houston Street and East McDonough Street, and was laid out in 1841. It is south of Greene Square and east of Colonial Park Cemetery on the eastern edge of the Savannah Historic District. The oldest building on the square is at 224 Houston Street, which dates to 1850.Crawford Square is named in honor of Secretary of the Treasury William Harris Crawford, born in Amherst County, Virginia, in 1772. Crawford ran for the U.S. presidency in 1824 but came in third, after winner John Quincy Adams and runner-up Andrew Jackson.Although Crawford is the smallest of the squares, it anchors the largest ward, as Crawford Ward includes the territory of Colonial Park Cemetery.During the era of Jim Crow, this was the only square in which African-Americans were permitted.The square contains playground facilities, a basketball court, and a gazebo.While all squares were once fenced, it is the only one that remains so. Crawford Square has also retained its cistern, a holdover from early fire fighting practices. After a major fire in 1820 firemen maintained duty stations in the squares, each of which was equipped with a storage cistern.The Lady Chablis lived in the square prior to her rise to fame after her appearance in John Berendt's non-fiction novel Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.", "target": "public square in Savannah, Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["square"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18356691", "label": "United States International Communications Reform Act of 2014", "source": "The United States International Communications Reform Act of 2014 (H.R. 4490) is a bill that would revise U.S. international broadcasting and communications structures, missions, and objectives. The bill would also replace the Broadcasting Board of Governors with the United States International Communications Agency.The bill was introduced into the United States House of Representatives during the 113th United States Congress.", "target": "Unpassed bill in the US Congress", "baseline_candidates": ["bill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5073730", "label": "character arc", "source": "A character arc is the transformation or inner journey of a character over the course of a story. If a story has a character arc, the character begins as one sort of person and gradually transforms into a different sort of person in response to changing developments in the story. Since the change is often substantive and leading from one personality trait to a diametrically opposite trait (for example, from greed to benevolence), the geometric term arc is often used to describe the sweeping change. In most stories, lead characters and protagonists are the characters most likely to experience character arcs, although lesser characters often change as well. A driving element of the plots of many stories is that the main character seems initially unable to overcome opposing forces, possibly because they lack skills or knowledge or resources or friends. To overcome such obstacles, the main character must change, possibly by learning new skills, to arrive at a higher sense of self-awareness or capability. Main characters can achieve such self-awareness by interacting with their environment, by enlisting the help of mentors, by changing their viewpoint, or by some other method.", "target": "process of dynamic characters' transformation", "baseline_candidates": ["narrative technique"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q315214", "label": "Tariq Aziz", "source": "Tariq Aziz (Arabic: طارق عزيز Ṭāriq ʿAzīz, 28 April 1936 – 5 June 2015) was an Iraqi politician who served as Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs and a close advisor of President Saddam Hussein. Their association began in the 1950s when both were activists for the then-banned Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. He was both an Arab nationalist and a member of the Chaldean Catholic Church.Because of security concerns, Saddam rarely left Iraq, so Aziz would often represent Iraq at high-level diplomatic summits. What the United States wanted, he averred, was not \"regime change\" in Iraq but rather \"region change\". He said that the Bush Administration's reasons for war were \"oil and Israel. \"After surrendering to American forces on 24 April 2003, Aziz was held in prison, first by American forces and subsequently by the Iraqi government, in Camp Cropper in western Baghdad. He was acquitted of some charges on 1 March 2009 following a trial, but was sentenced to 15 years on 11 March 2009 for the executions of 42 merchants found guilty of profiteering in 1992 and another 7 years for relocating Kurds.On 26 October 2010, he was sentenced to death by the Iraqi High Tribunal, which sparked regional and international condemnation from Iraqi bishops and other Iraqis, the Vatican, the United Nations, the European Union and the human rights organization Amnesty International, as well as various governments around the world, such as Russia. On 28 October 2010, it was reported that Aziz, as well as 25 fellow prison inmates, had begun a.", "target": "Iraqi Foreign Minister under Saddam Hussein (1936-2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4671449", "label": "Academy of Economics in Białystok", "source": "Academy of Economics in Białystok (Polish: Wyższa Szkoła Ekonomiczna w Białymstoku, WSE) was opened on January 5, 1996. It is a non-governmental collegiate-level institution of higher education in the city of Białystok (wyższa uczelnia), one of several such institutions including the largest University of Białystok locally. The academy was ranked in 2008 by the Polish edition of Newsweek as best in the Podlaskie Voivodeship. It offers bachelor's and master's degrees in three general fields of knowledge, as well as one-year postgraduate studies.", "target": "private higher education institution in Białymstok, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["educational institution", "private university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5596822", "label": "Granuliterebra tricincta", "source": "Duplicaria tricincta is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Terebridae, the auger snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12885697", "label": "Philippe Gigantès", "source": "Philippe Deane Gigantès (August 16, 1923 – December 9, 2004) was a veteran of the Second World War, journalist, war correspondent, POW of the Korean War, author, television commentator, Greek minister of culture, and Canadian senator.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5937344", "label": "Isa Khandaq", "source": "Isa Khandaq (Persian: عيسي خندق, also Romanized as ‘Īsá Khandaq) is a village in Mazkureh Rural District, in the Central District of Sari County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 696, in 185 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6574624", "label": "Soğuksu", "source": "Soğuksu is a village in the Kestel district of Bursa Province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in Kestel, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4087242", "label": "Biskupice, Miechów County", "source": "Biskupice [biskuˈpit͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Miechów, within Miechów County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) west of Miechów and 33 km (21 mi) north of the regional capital Kraków.The village has a population of 400.", "target": "village in Lesser Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28925143", "label": "Vlatko Nedelkov", "source": "Vlatko Nedelkov (born July 13, 1985) is a former Macedonian professional basketball Guard who played for Žito Vardar, AMAK SP, Feni Industries and Borec Veles.", "target": "Macedonian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16507508", "label": "Cleft Island", "source": "Cleft Island, also known as Skull Rock, is a small, rugged, granite island in the Anser group of islands to the south-west of Wilsons Promontory, Victoria, Australia. The island is within Wilsons Promontory National Park. The surrounding waters to the mean high-water mark are within Wilsons Promontory Marine National Park. It is part of the Wilsons Promontory Islands Important Bird Area, identified as such by BirdLife International because of its importance for breeding seabirds.It is partially hollowed out by ancient waves, creating a cave 130m wide and 60m tall.Only 9 people have ventured into the cavern, finding \"old cannon balls left by passing ships practicing their aim\". Adventurers had to land on the top of the rock by helicopter, then they shimmied down ropes to gain entrance to the cave. The Australian defence force have been blamed for the other holes in the rock, being used for target practice in the past.", "target": "island in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12425020", "label": "Greendale", "source": "Greendale is a city in Dearborn County, Indiana, United States. The population was 4,520 at the 2010 census.", "target": "city in Lawrenceburg and Miller townships in Dearborn County, Indiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49178377", "label": "Valley Mountains", "source": "The Valley Mountains are a 28-mile (45 km) long mountain range located on the southwest border of Sanpete County, Utah, with the northeast border of Millard County. The north of the range is in Juab County; the south in Sevier County.The range is bordered by the Sevier River, and its corridor, and related valley landforms, three valleys border to the west, and Juab Valley lies to the north-northeast. Though it is a north-south trending range, the center of the range contains a small north-trending valley, Japanese Valley. Various knolls exist on the southwest and south. The Sevier River borders the range on the north, northeast, east, and southeast. Various cities exist at the east, and southeast; Scipio, Utah lies at the northwest foothills. The Sevier Bridge Reservoir is at the Valley Mountains north terminus on the Sevier River, and it is part of Yuba State Park, a 16-mi long park that extends from the north to the northeast on the range's foothills, and on the Sevier River.", "target": "mountain range in Utah, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6295812", "label": "Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment", "source": "The Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes papers in the field of educational psychology. The journal's editor-in-chief is Donald H. Saklofske (University of Western Ontario). It was established in 1983 and is currently published by SAGE Publications. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5293679", "label": "Don Watson", "source": "Don Watson (born 1949) is an Australian author, screenwriter, former political adviser and speechwriter.", "target": "Australian author and public speaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1604635", "label": "2005 Helvetia Cup", "source": "The 2005 Helvetia Cup or 2005 European B Team Championships in badminton was held from January 19 to January 23 in Agros, Cyprus.", "target": "badminton championships", "baseline_candidates": ["Helvetia Cup"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28224460", "label": "Hofgaard Park, Waimea, Kauai", "source": "Hofgaard Park is a narrow park between Kaumuali'i Highway and Waimea Road in the town of Waimea. The park was named after Judge Christopher Blom Hofgaard who was a resident in Waimea. It features a statue of Captain Cook, which is a replica of an original statue in Whitby, England. The park is dedicated to the historic events of Captain Cook's landing nearby. A timeline of Waimea and Western influence are documented on plaques in the park. Captain James Cook was the first European reported to have sighted the Hawaiian Islands, and the January 20 landfall on southwestern Kauai was his first arrival upon Hawaiian soil. On January 20, 1778, two ships under the command of British navigator Captain James Cook set anchor at the mouth of the Waimea River. The crew was able to converse with the native people having been acquainted with the Tahitian language. They spent two weeks on Kauai provisioning their ships for the journey north. The British explorers were amazed at the finding of Polynesian people on these remote islands. The actual landing site was probably located in what is now Lucy Wright Beach Park, near the mouth of the Waimea River, just south of the town of Waimea. A plaque at the park commemorates Cook's landing on the island.", "target": "place in Hawaii, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5814208", "label": "Vali Mohammad Bazar", "source": "Vali Mohammad Bazar (Persian: ولي محمدبازار, also Romanized as Valī Moḩammad Bāzār) is a village in Polan Rural District, Polan District, Chabahar County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 588, in 141 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56062876", "label": "Tampa Bay Titans", "source": "The Tampa Bay Titans are an American professional basketball team based in Tampa, Florida.", "target": "American professional basketball team", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49466126", "label": "Shanhe, Shanxi", "source": "Shanhe (Chinese: 山河; pinyin: Shānhé) is a town under the administration of Zezhou County, Shanxi, China. As of 2018, it has 52 villages under its administration.", "target": "town in Shanxi, People's Republic of China", "baseline_candidates": ["town in China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7410640", "label": "Samszyce", "source": "Samszyce [samˈʂɨt͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Osięciny, within Radziejów County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.", "target": "village in Kuyavian-Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2674137", "label": "Dağdelen", "source": "Dağdelen is a Turkish given name for males and a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Sevim Dağdelen, German politician Uğur Dağdelen, Turkish footballer Aydın Dağdelen, retired Turkish goalkeeper.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2370088", "label": "Suleyman Demirel University", "source": "Suleyman Demirel University (Kazakh: Сулейман Демирел атындағы Университет, romanized: Súleıman Demırel atyndaǵy Ýnıversıtet, Russian: Университет имени Сулеймана Демиреля, abbreviated as SDU) is a private university in Kaskelen, Almaty, Kazakhstan. It is named after Süleyman Demirel, the former prime minister and president of Turkey. The university was established in 1996, by the initiatives of the president of Kazakhstan, Nursultan Nazarbayev, and the former president of Turkey, Suleyman Demirel.", "target": "university located in Kaskelen, Almaty Region, Kazakhstan", "baseline_candidates": ["university", "private university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6781985", "label": "María Elisa Díaz de Mendibil", "source": "María Elisa Díaz de Mendibil Gómez de Segura is the representative of the government of the Basque Country Autonomous Community of Spain in Argentina.Born in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Díaz de Mendibil studied social work at the Universidad del País Vasco and worked as an event organiser and social worker with children, women and social exclusion. She served as a town councillor in Vitoria-Gasteiz. In September 2003, she was appointed as Director of Consumption of the Basque Country Autonomous Community. In 2005 it was announced that she had been appointed to the new position of Delegate of the Basque Country Autonomous Community to Argentina, following approval by the Argentine and Basque governments. Delegates have also been appointed to Madrid, Brussels, Mexico, Venezuela and Chile. She will be based in the Basque-Argentine Institute of Co-operation and Development in Buenos Aires until a new building is found in the city.", "target": "Basque Country Autonomous Community representative in Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5106934", "label": "Chris Hudson", "source": "Christopher Reshard Hudson (born October 6, 1971) is a former American college and professional football player who was a safety in the National Football League (NFL) for seven seasons during the 1990s and early 2000s. Hudson played college football for the University of Colorado, and earned All-American honors. A third-round pick of the Jacksonville Jaguars in the 1995 NFL Draft, he also played professionally for the Chicago Bears and Atlanta Falcons of the NFL.", "target": "All-American college football player, professional football player, defensive back, safety", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4170852", "label": "Dunheger", "source": "Dünkheger (Mongolian: Дүнхэгэр уул Dungheger ûûl; Chinese: 冬赫格尔; pinyin: Dōnghègé'ěr; Wade–Giles: Tung-ho-ko-erh), also known as Mount Altun Obo (Mongolian: Altan ôbôô ûûl; Oirat: Altun oboo uulǝ; Chinese: 阿同敖包; pinyin: Ātóng Áobāo; Wade–Giles: A-t'ung-ao-pao), is the highest peak of Baitag Bogda (Oirat: Baitag Bogdǝ uulǝs, Chinese: 北塔山, 拜克达山), a mountain range in the Altai Mountains of Asia. It has an elevation of 3,315 metres (10,876 ft) and is on the international border between Qitai County, China and Mongolia.", "target": "mountain in Mongolia", "baseline_candidates": ["upland", "mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5038363", "label": "Cardiff", "source": "Cardiff is a settlement in inland Taranaki, in the western North Island of New Zealand. It is located five kilometres southwest of Stratford close to Egmont National Park.", "target": "human settlement in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10803403", "label": "Ostrovnoy", "source": "Ostrovnoy (Russian: Островно́й), previously known as Murmansk-140 (Му́рманск-140), is a closed town in Murmansk Oblast, Russia. As of the 2010 Census, its population was 2,171; down from 5,032 recorded in the 2002 Census.", "target": "town in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["city/town", "subdivisions of Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19572781", "label": "Madhavi", "source": "Madhavi is an Indian play written in Hindi by Bhisham Sahni. This is a play in three acts which recounts an ancient tale of Madhavi, daughter of king Yayati from Mahabharata.", "target": "book by Bhisham Sahni", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2555492", "label": "Ultra-Humanite", "source": "The Ultra-Humanite was the first supervillain to appear in comic books published by DC Comics, usually as a recurring adversary of Superman.", "target": "fictional supervillain in DC Comics", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character", "animated character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q996386", "label": "bridge loan", "source": "A bridge loan is a type of short-term loan, typically taken out for a period of 2 weeks to 3 years pending the arrangement of larger or longer-term financing. It is usually called a bridging loan in the United Kingdom, also known as a \"caveat loan,\" and also known in some applications as a swing loan. In South African usage, the term bridging finance is more common, but is used in a more restricted sense than is common elsewhere. A bridge loan is interim financing for an individual or business until permanent financing or the next stage of financing is obtained. Money from the new financing is generally used to \"take out\" (i.e. to pay back) the bridge loan, as well as other capitalization needs. Bridge loans are typically more expensive than conventional financing, to compensate for the additional risk. Bridge loans typically have a higher interest rate, points (points are essentially fees, 1 point equals 1% of loan amount), and other costs that are amortized over a shorter period, and various fees and other \"sweeteners\" (such as equity participation by the lender in some loans). The lender also may require cross-collateralization and a lower loan-to-value ratio. On the other hand, they are typically arranged quickly with relatively little documentation.", "target": "short-term financial loan", "baseline_candidates": ["mortgage loan", "insurance", "financial product"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6036161", "label": "Innovation Academy", "source": "Innovation Academy Charter School (IACS) is a small charter school in Tyngsborough, Massachusetts, United States. The school was founded in 1996, under the name Chelmsford Public Charter School by a small group of parents from Chelmsford, Massachusetts. While initially a middle school serving only the town of Chelmsford, IACS has since expanded, establishing a high school and serving multiple towns within Massachusetts.", "target": "public charter school in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12764429", "label": "River Dee", "source": "The River Dee (Irish: An Níth) is a river in eastern Ireland, flowing from County Cavan to join the Glyde in County Louth.", "target": "river in County Louth, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30254234", "label": "Advocate Children's Hospital", "source": "Advocate Children's Hospital (ACH) is an academic pediatric acute care children's hospital located in Oak Lawn and Park Ridge, Illinois. The hospital has 259 pediatric beds and 150 bassinets between its two campuses. Advocate Children's operates a number of residency programs, which train newly graduated physicians in various pediatric specialties and subspecialties. The hospital is associated with the Chicago Medical School at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science and Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine at Midwestern University, and is a member of Advocate Aurora Health. The hospital provides comprehensive pediatric specialties and subspecialties to infants, children, teens, and young adults aged 0–21 throughout Illinois and the Midwest. The hospital also sometimes treats adults that require pediatric care. Advocate Children's Hospital features the only children's hospital in the greater north and northwest than the suburban region of Chicago. Additionally, The hospital has outpatient centers and doctors offices around Illinois.", "target": "children's Hospital in Oak Lawn, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital", "medical organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6491489", "label": "Lars Gulpen", "source": "Lars Gulpen (born 4 July 1993 in Nijswiller) is a Dutch former professional footballer who played as a midfielder for Fortuna Sittard in the Dutch Eerste Divisie.", "target": "Dutch footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6182901", "label": "Jerome Snyder", "source": "Jerome Snyder (1916 – May 2, 1976) was an American illustrator and graphic designer. He is best known as the first art director of the magazine Sports Illustrated and as the co-author of the popular New York City restaurant guidebook The Underground Gourmet written with Milton Glaser.", "target": "American artist (1916-1976)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6939897", "label": "Mussa", "source": "Musa is an administrative ward in the Arumeru district of the Arusha Region of Tanzania. According to the 2002 census, the ward has a total population of 10,763.", "target": "ward of Tanzania", "baseline_candidates": ["ward of Tanzania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7826476", "label": "Toronto Prep School", "source": "Toronto Prep School (TPS) is a private school in Toronto, Ontario that was founded in 2009. Toronto Prep School is a Grade 7 through 12, coeducational, private, day school situated on an urban campus in the heart of Toronto near Mount Pleasant Road and Davisville Ave. The school is accredited by the Ontario Ministry of Education. The total enrollment for 2019-20 was 450 students, Grades 7–12.", "target": "private school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q487552", "label": "Fort Point", "source": "Fort Point is a conspicuous rocky point rising to 85 m and linked by a low 700 m isthmus to the southeast coast of Greenwich Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica. The feature's name is descriptive, replacing the earlier version 'Castle Rock'.", "target": "rocky point", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9345418", "label": "Stefan Wasilew", "source": "Stefan Vasilev (Bulgarian: Стефан Василев, born 8 September 1968) is a Bulgarian bobsledder. He competed in the two man event at the 2002 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Bulgarian bobsledder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3297586", "label": "William Henry Lang", "source": "William Henry Lang FRS FRSE FLS (12 May 1874–29 August 1960) was a British botanist and served as Barker professor of cryptogamic botany at the University of Manchester. He was also a specialist in paleobotany.", "target": "British botanist and palaeobotanist (1874–1960)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4705903", "label": "Alamgir, Bhogpur", "source": "Alamgir village comes under the Bhogpur development block of Jalandhar. Jalandhar is a district in the Indian state of Punjab.", "target": "village in Punjab, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7866261", "label": "USCGC Tahoma", "source": "USCGC Tahoma (WMEC-908) is a United States Coast Guard medium endurance cutter. Her keel was laid on June 28, 1983 at Robert Derecktor Shipyard Incorporated, Middletown, Rhode Island. She was delivered August 12, 1987 and commissioned April 6, 1988. She is the third cutter to bear the name Tahoma, which is the Northwest Pacific Indian word that refers to the Cascade Range mountain peak now known as Mount Rainier. Her nickname, Mighty T, was selected because it was the nickname of her predecessor, Tahoma (WPG-80), during World War II.On 13 January 2010, the Tahoma was ordered to assist in the humanitarian relief efforts following the 2010 Haiti earthquake.During the afternoon of 16 January 2010 a boy was born on board to a Haitian woman while it was transporting wounded survivors from Port-au-Prince to the still-functional medical facilities of Cap-Haïtien, to the north. In March 2018 the Tahoma intercepted 201 Haitian undocumented immigrants, in Bahamanian waters.", "target": "American Famous-class Coast Guard cutter", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85540797", "label": "Jeanne Lopes", "source": "Jeanne Yvette Lopes (born on 22 July 1947) is a Dutch sport shooter. She competed in rifle shooting events at the 1988 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Dutch sport shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19859815", "label": "Luzhki", "source": "Luzhki (Russian: Лужки) is a rural locality (a village) in Turgenevskoye Rural Settlement, Melenkovsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 5 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Melenkovsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15076483", "label": "Cratoplastis catherinae", "source": "Cratoplastis catherinae is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Walter Rothschild in 1916. It is found in Brazil, Paraguay and Guatemala.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30013145", "label": "Yuan Sijun", "source": "Yuan Sijun (Chinese: 袁思俊; born 29 May 2000) is a Chinese professional snooker player.", "target": "Chinese snooker player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19942367", "label": "Apoaerenica", "source": "Apoaerenica martinsi is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Apoaerenica. It was described by Monné in 1979.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26702689", "label": "Shane Buechele", "source": "Shane Buechele (born January 8, 1998) is an American football quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Texas before transferring to SMU.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15619660", "label": "A Very British Airline", "source": "A Very British Airline is a British documentary television series that was first broadcast on BBC Two between 2 and 16 June 2014. The three-part series goes behind the scenes of British Airways with narration by Stephen Mangan.", "target": "British documentary television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6348027", "label": "Kaimkillenbun", "source": "Kaimkillenbun is a rural town and locality in the Western Downs Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, the locality of Kaimkillenbun had a population of 293 people.It is recognised as the Queensland town with the longest single-word name, but is affectionately known by locals as \"The Bun\".", "target": "town in Queensland, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2984565", "label": "Columbia", "source": "Columbia is a neighborhood located in Downtown San Diego, California. The neighborhood is largely commercial, however there are many highrise condominium buildings under construction. The Midway Aircraft Carrier Museum and the Maritime Museum are located in this neighborhood.", "target": "neighborhood of San Diego, California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6324275", "label": "KTLD-CD", "source": "KTLD-CD, virtual channel 8 (UHF digital channel 15), is a low-powered, Class A 3ABN-affiliated television station licensed to Bakersfield, California, United States. Founded November 18, 1994 by Three Angels Broadcasting Network, it was sold to HC2 Holdings in 2017.", "target": "3ABN television affiliate in Bakersfield, California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["television station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49053820", "label": "Mount Nystrom", "source": "Mount Nystrom (12,361 feet (3,768 m)) is located in the southern Wind River Range in the U.S. state of Wyoming. Mount Nystrom sits along the Continental Divide.", "target": "mountain in Wyoming, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7569946", "label": "Southern General Hospital", "source": "The Southern General Hospital (SGH) was a large teaching hospital with an acute operational bed complement of approximately 900 beds. The hospital was located in Linthouse in the south west of Glasgow, Scotland. All facilities and services have been succeeded by the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital which was constructed on the site of the old hospital.", "target": "former hospital in Glasgow, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["former hospital", "hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48801139", "label": "Sebastiani Vineyards", "source": "Sebastiani Vineyards is owned by Foley Wine Group of Los Olivos, California, which also owns Firestone Vineyards in Santa Barbara County, Merus in Napa, and Three Rivers Winery in Washington. Sebastiani produces 280,000 cases a year.", "target": "vineyards and winery in Sonoma County, California, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["vineyard", "winery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26306432", "label": "St John The Evangelist Church, Ridgeway", "source": "St John the Evangelist Church is a grade II listed Church of England church situated at Ridgeway, within the parish of Eckington, Derbyshire England. The church opened in 1840, having cost £2,000 to build. The tower was added in 1884. In 1984 changes were made so that the church could be used as a community centre.", "target": "building in Eckington, North East Derbyshire, Derbyshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3324323", "label": "Montjuïc Cable Car", "source": "The Montjuïc Cable Car (officially Telefèric de Montjuïc, in Catalan) is a gondola lift in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cable car runs from a lower terminus adjacent to the Montjuïc Park upper station of the Montjuïc funicular, and climbs higher up the Montjuïc hill to a terminal near the Montjuïc Castle on the summit of the hill. At its midpoint, the line executes a 90 degree turn and the cabins pass through Mirador station, although only down-bound cabins stop at this point.The cable car was originally put into service in 1970, replacing a former upper stage of the Montjuïc funicular. As built, it used a fleet of open cars. It was closed between October 2004 and May 2007, for a complete overhaul in order to increase capacity. At the same time the open cars were replaced by 55 new closed cabins.The cable car line is 752 m (2,467 ft) in length, and climbs a vertical distance of 84.55 m (277.4 ft) at a speed of 2.5 m/s (8.2 ft/s). The cars slow to a crawl as they pass through the station to allow passengers to board or exit. Two cars are equipped with the facility to carry wheelchairs. The line is operated by Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona (TMB) but, unlike the Montjuïc funicular, it is not part of Autoritat del Transport Metropolità (ATM) integrated fare network. Separate tickets must be purchased prior to boarding. Access to the castle is also available from the top funicular station via the 150 bus which is included in the ATM.", "target": "gondola lift in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["urban aerial tramway", "gondola lift"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61343352", "label": "Klimivka", "source": "Klymivka is a village in the Poltava Raion of the Poltava Oblast of Ukraine. Their local government body is called the Klymivka Village Council.", "target": "village in Karlivka Raion, Poltava Oblast, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Ukraine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23683447", "label": "Bella MacCallum", "source": "Bella Dytes MacIntosh MacCallum (née Cross, 1886 – 17 March 1927) was a New Zealand and British botanist and mycologist and was New Zealand's first female doctor of science.", "target": "New Zealand and British botanist and mycologist (1886-1927)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1355520", "label": "Asnois", "source": "Asnois (French pronunciation: ​[anwa]) is a commune in the Vienne department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in western France.", "target": "commune in Vienne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7958196", "label": "WYVN", "source": "WYVN (92.7 FM, \"The Van\") is a radio station broadcasting a classic hits format licensed to Saugatuck, Michigan, with studios in Holland, Michigan and is owned along with WHTC by Midwest Communications. The station began operations on July 4, 1987 as WEVS. WEVS' music format consisted of a hybrid of rock and pop oldies dating back to the 1950s and current adult contemporary chart hits. During this time, the station was known as \"The Lakeshore's Music Station,\" playing \"Your Favorites of Five Decades.\" In January 2001 Midwest Communications, Inc. began operating WEVS under a local marketing agreement. On April 9, 2001, after a weekend of stunting with a reading of last names from the Holland telephone directory beginning with \"Van,\" WEVS relaunched as Holland's Classic Hits 92 7 The Van and with the new call letters of WYVN. In October 2001, the station was purchased by Midwest Communications, bringing it into common ownership with Holland's longtime AM station, WHTC. In early October 2007, Michiguide.com reported that WYVN had adjusted its playlist from classic hits to oldies/classic hits. The station moved back to a rock-based classic hits approach on December 30, 2008. The Lakeshore's Morning Wake Up Call with Brent Alan debuted in March 2014. Alan is the former program director of WHTC and serves as program director of The Van. The remainder of the broadcast day is satellite-fed from Westwood One. The station streams its programming 24 hours a day on its website and multiple other platforms.", "target": "radio station in Saugatuck, Michigan", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56254886", "label": "Larissa Keat", "source": "Larissa Keat (born 1989) is a Swiss-American actress, director and performer.", "target": "Swiss-American actress, director, artist and performer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5451227", "label": "Firbank Fell", "source": "Firbank Fell is a hill in Cumbria between the towns of Kendal and Sedbergh that is renowned as a place where George Fox, the founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), preached. Fox described what happened there on 13 June 1652 in this way: While others were gone to dinner, I went to a brook, got a little water, and then came and sat down on the top of a rock hard by the chapel. In the afternoon the people gathered about me, with several of their preachers. It was judged there were above a thousand people; to whom I declared God's everlasting truth and Word of life freely and largely for about the space of three hours. Because of Fox's preaching there, the site is sometimes called \"Fox's Pulpit.\" A plaque on the rock there commemorates the event, which is sometimes considered the beginning of the Friends movement. Firbank Fell is now immortalised as a place of Quaker history in one of the four houses at the Quaker school Bootham School.", "target": "324m high mountain in England", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q440731", "label": "Ali Divandari", "source": "Ali Divandari (Persian: علی دیواندری; also Romanized as Alī Divāndarī, Persian pronunciation: [æliː diːvɒːndæriː]; Born 6 September 1957 in Sabzevar) is an Iranian cartoonist, painter, graphic designer, sculptor and journalist.", "target": "Iranian Painter, Cartoonist, Graphic Designer, Sculptor and Journalist.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6194101", "label": "Jim Cassidy", "source": "James Joseph Cassidy (2 May 1878 – 3 April 1956 ) was an Australian rules football coach who coached Footscray in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Cassidy played and coached Footscray in the Victorian Football Association (VFA) prior to his appointment as senior VFL coach. He coached Footscray to the 1908 and 1913 VFA premierships, then later worked at Footscray as a club trainer. In the 1926 VFL season, Cassidy was in charge of Footscray's seniors for the first eight rounds, before resigning. The club managed just one win under Cassidy but it was just their second season in the league. In 2010 he was inducted into the Bulldogs Hall of Fame.", "target": "Australian rules football coach (1878-1956)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6710693", "label": "László Karakó", "source": "Dr. László Karakó (born 27 March 1955) is a Hungarian politician, member of the National Assembly (MP) for Tiszavasvári (Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg County Constituency III) between 2010 and 2014. Formerly he also served as Member of Parliament for Tiszavasvári between 2002 and 2006. Karakó was the Chairman of the Council then Mayor of Gávavencsellő from 1988 to 2010.", "target": "Hungarian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19937475", "label": "German submarine U-857", "source": "German submarine U-857 was a Type IXC/40 U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine built for service during the Second World War. She was ordered on 5 June 1941, laid down on 16 November 1942, and launched on 25 May 1943. For her operational lifespan, she was commanded by Kapitänleutnant Rudolf Premauer and had a crew complement of 59.", "target": "German world war II submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["U-boat"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q798660", "label": "Jumpertown", "source": "Jumpertown is a town in Prentiss County, Mississippi, United States. The population was 480 at the 2010 census.", "target": "town in Prentiss County, Mississippi, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5539638", "label": "George Gaskin", "source": "George Gaskin (1751–1829) was a lecturer (assistant curate) at St Mary's, Islington for forty-six years, resigning in 1822, to become a prebendary at Ely Cathedral. He was also Rector of Stoke Newington and of St Benet, Gracechurch.For a long time, he was secretary to the Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge. A street in Islington bears his name.", "target": "English clergyman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16971905", "label": "2014–15 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team", "source": "The 2014–15 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2014–15 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fourth year head coach Rob Murphy, played their home games at the Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center, as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 21–14, 8–10 in MAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the West Division. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the MAC Tournament where they lost to Toledo. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Louisiana–Monroe.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28101716", "label": "Chandrashekhar Agashe", "source": "Chandrashekhar Agashe (Marathi: चंद्रशेखर आगाशे; IAST: Candraśekhara Āgāśe; 14 February 1888 — 9 June 1956) was an Indian industrialist and lawyer, best remembered as the founder of the Brihan Maharashtra Sugar Syndicate Ltd. He served as the managing director of the company from its inception in 1934 till his death in 1956. He served as the President of the Bhor State Council from 1932 to 1934. Today, the Chandrashekhar Agashe College of Physical Education in Pune, the CGA – BMTRC in the Brihan Maharashtra College of Commerce, and the Chandrashekhar Agashe High School in Shreepur are named after him. He is also the namesake of the Chandrashekhar Agashe Museum wing in the Raja Dinkar Kelkar Museum and the Chandrashekhar Agashe Road in Shaniwar Peth, Pune. He also became the namesake of the Agashe pattern, a means of equity crowdfunding, among businesses and press in Maharashtra between 1934 and 1956.", "target": "Indian industrialist and entrepreneur", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2299147", "label": "Tera Wray", "source": "Tera Wray (born Tera Elizabeth Lents; April 14, 1982 – January 13, 2016) was an American pornographic actress. In his biography of Wray, performing arts researcher Harris M. Lentz III referred to her as \"a star of alternative pornography\".", "target": "American pornographic actress (1982–2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47530289", "label": "Hajasoa Vololona Picard", "source": "Hajasoa Vololona Picard Ravololo (born 1956) is a Malagasy-born French academic, politician and writer. Since acquiring French nationality in 1982, she has held a number of cultural and political posts in La Réunion. Her writings include essays, fictional works and poetry.", "target": "Malagasy-born French politician and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6002648", "label": "Imagine: How Creativity Works", "source": "Imagine: How Creativity Works is the third non-fiction book by Jonah Lehrer, published in 2012. It explores brain science, and creativity and its social aspects. By July 2012, the book had been recalled by its publisher due to factual inaccuracies.", "target": "book by Jonah Lehrer", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3829971", "label": "Legua", "source": "Legua is a district of the Aserrí canton, in the San José province of Costa Rica.", "target": "district in Aserrí canton, San José province, Costa Rica", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Costa Rica"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65118036", "label": "Seine-Maritime's 2nd constituency", "source": "The 2nd constituency of the Seine-Maritime (French: Deuxième circonscription de la Seine-Maritime) is a French legislative constituency in the Seine-Maritime département. Like the other 576 French constituencies, it elects one MP using the two-round system, with a run-off if no candidate receives over 50% of the vote in the first round.", "target": "constituency of the French Fifth Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the French Fifth Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q250160", "label": "Ganguro", "source": "Ganguro (Japanese: ガングロ) is a fashion trend among young Japanese women that started in the mid-1990s, distinguished by a dark tan and contrasting make-up liberally applied by fashionistas. The Shibuya and Ikebukuro districts of Tokyo were the centres of ganguro fashion; it was started by rebellious youth who contradicted the traditional Japanese concept of beauty; pale skin, dark hair and neutral makeup tones. Ganguro instead tanned their skin, bleached their hair and used much colourful makeup in unusual ways.Ganguro has a connection to Japanese folklore of ghosts and demons who are depicted with a similar appearance such as those in kabuki and noh costumes. This connection is further underlined by the off-shoot style yamanba, named after a mountain witch in Japanese folklore.The ganguro trend started in the mid-1990s and reached its peak by the latter half of the decade; it purportedly became almost obsolete by 2000 when a bihaku (light skin) craze emerged among young women who wanted to imitate the look of their favourite popular singers, specifically Ayumi Hamasaki, who debuted at the time. The ganguro trend faded out afterwards, although its influence can be observed in yamanba and manba styles.", "target": "Japanese fashion trend", "baseline_candidates": ["fashion style", "fashion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3949881", "label": "Sanctuary of Greccio", "source": "The Hermitage of Greccio Sanctuary (Italian: Santuario Eremo di Greccio) is one of the four shrines erected by St. Francis in the Sacred Valley, along with the Sanctuary of Fonte Colombo, the Sanctuary of the Forest, and the convent of Poggio Bustone. It is located in the Italian town of Greccio, about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from the city of Rieti, seat of the homonym province, is recessed at an altitude of 665 metres (2,182 ft) above sea level, in the rocks of the mountains in the immediate vicinity of the medieval village of Greccio with stunning views of the wide Rieti Valley.", "target": "church in Greccio, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["Catholic church building", "shrine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4828032", "label": "Avena barbata", "source": "Avena barbata is a species of wild oat known by the common name slender wild oat. It has edible seeds. It is a diploidized autotetraploid grass (2n=4x=28). Its diploid ancestors are A. hirtula Lag. and A. wiestii Steud (2n=2x=14), which are considered Mediterranean and desert ecotypes, respectively, comprising a single species. A westie and A. hirtula are widespread in the Mediterranean Basin, growing in mixed stands with A. barbata, though they are difficult to tell apart. This is a winter annual grass with thin tillers (stems) growing up to 60 to 80 centimeters in maximum height, but known to sometimes grow taller. The bristly spikelets are 2 to 3 centimeters long, not counting the bent awn which is up to 4 centimeters in length. Avena barbata largely reproduces by selfing in natural populations, with very low rates of outcrossing.A. barbata is native to central Asia (as far east as Pakistan) and the Mediterranean Basin. As an introduced species it also occurs in other Mediterranean-like habitats of New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, Argentina, Chile, Brazil, and Uruguay. In Europe it has been reported in Finland, France, Germany, Norway, Bulgaria, and Austria. In North America it is an introduced species and noxious weed, where it is especially widespread in California. In California it has displaced native species of grass. It is also found in Oregon, Washington, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico.Genetic evidence indicates that A. barbata in Argentina and California originated from Spain, during the Spanish colonization of the Americas.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15733896", "label": "Louis Abel Caillouet", "source": "Louis Abel Caillouet (August 2, 1900 – September 16, 1984) was a bishop of the Catholic Church in the United States. He served as auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of New Orleans from 1947 to 1976.", "target": "Catholic bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10314867", "label": "Cuanza, Angola", "source": "Cuanza is a city and commune of Angola, located in the province of Bié.", "target": "commune in Bié Province, Angola", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Angola"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56434211", "label": "Skai Moore", "source": "Skai Moore (born January 8, 1995) is an American football linebacker who is currently a free agent. He played college football at South Carolina and signed with the Colts as an undrafted free agent in 2018.", "target": "American football linebacker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24005138", "label": "James Shaw", "source": "James Shaw (born March 5, 1994) is an American male volleyball player. He is part of the United States men's national volleyball team. On club level he played for Stanford University. Shaw will started professional career in Italy on 2016–17 season where he played for Pallavolo Padova. In May 2017, it was announced that he would spend the upcoming 2017/2018 season at Sir Safety Perugia.", "target": "American volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7304780", "label": "Red Razors", "source": "Red Razors is a comic strip appearing in the British anthology 2000 AD. Created by Mark Millar, it is set in the Judge Dredd universe, fifty years after the events detailed in the current Judge Dredd comics. The series debuted in Judge Dredd Megazine #1.08, in 1991. The stories focus on a Sov-Block (formerly East-Meg Two, formerly somewhere in Russia) Judge named Razors. Judge Razors is the prototype for a new breed of Judge, a brainwashed ex-gang member, conditioned to follow the orders of his superiors without question. His partner is a genetically enhanced horse named Comrade Ed.", "target": "comic strip series", "baseline_candidates": ["comic strip series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5644945", "label": "Operations plan", "source": "Operations plan (in Spanish, \"Plan de Operaciones\") is a secret document attributed to Mariano Moreno, that set harsh ways for the Primera Junta, the first de facto independent government of Argentina in the 19th century, to achieve its goals. Some historians consider it a literary forgery, and others consider it true.", "target": "book by Mariano Moreno", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7080129", "label": "Oględów", "source": "Oględów [ɔˈɡlɛnduf] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Staszów, within Staszów County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) west of Staszów and 51 km (32 mi) south-east of the regional capital Kielce.The village has a population of 435.", "target": "village in Świętokrzyskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3496757", "label": "Stanisław Hachorek", "source": "Stanisław Marian Hachorek (21 January 1927 in Czeladź – 24 October 1988 in Warsaw), was a Polish football player and coach.Hachorek, who began playing football in 1945 in CKS Czeladz, spent best years of his career in Gwardia Warszawa, a team that in the 1950s was among top Polish sides. Between 1955 and 1960, he capped sixteen times for Poland, scoring eight goals. He debuted on 29 May 1955 in Bucharest, scoring a goal in a 2-2 tie with Romania. In the same year, he became top goalscorer of the Ekstraklasa, with sixteen goals. Hachorek participated in the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, where he scored a goal in Poland's 6-1 victory with Tunisia.He spent last years of his career in Warszawianka Warszawa, and after retirement from active playing (1965), became a coach.", "target": "Polish footballer (1927-1988)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28444571", "label": "1950 Utah Utes football team", "source": "The 1950 Utah Redskins football team represented the University of Utah during the 1950 college football season. Home games were played on campus in Salt Lake City at Ute Stadium. Led by first-year head coach Jack Curtice, the Redskins were 3–4–3 overall and 1–2–2 in the Skyline Conference.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3987206", "label": "The Georgia Straight", "source": "The Georgia Straight is a free Canadian weekly news and entertainment newspaper published in Vancouver, British Columbia, by the Vancouver Free Press Publishing Corp. Often known simply as The Straight, it is delivered to newsboxes, post-secondary schools, public libraries and a large variety of other locations. As surveyed by VAC its per-issue circulation average as of January 25, 2011, is 119,971 copies, and its average weekly readership is 804,000 as of 2009. Its website traffic ranked 92,215 globally and 5,395 within Canada, according to November 2, 2021, figures from Alexa.The Straight has a long history of independent, unconventional editorials and content, and is known as a vocal critic of government, notably the former Liberal government of Gordon Campbell. In January 2020, the newspaper's acquisition by Media Central Corporation was announced, a few weeks after the same company announced a deal to acquire the similar Toronto publication Now.", "target": "Canadian weekly newspaper published in Vancouver, British Columbia", "baseline_candidates": ["periodical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q620457", "label": "Apostolic Vicariate of Ñuflo de Chávez", "source": "The Vicariate Apostolic of Ñuflo de Chávez (Latin: Apostolicus Vicariatus Niuflensis) is a Latin Church missionary ecclesiastical territory or apostolic vicariate of the Catholic Church in Bolivia. It is immediately exempt to the Holy See. Its cathedra is located in the episcopal see of Concepción, Santa Cruz.", "target": "Catholic missionary jurisdiction in Bolivia", "baseline_candidates": ["apostolic vicariate"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7627781", "label": "Student Union (University of North Florida)", "source": "The John A. Delaney Student Union is the student activity center at the University of North Florida (UNF) in Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. The first such building in UNF's history, it opened in 2009. It is located on the university's campus across from UNF Arena. The Student Union has been awarded several architectural awards, including the AIA Jacksonville Best Education Building in Florida award (2012), fourth place in AIA Florida's Best Building in Florida in 100 Years rankings (2012), and the AIA Jacksonville Design Award of Merit (2010). It was named in 2018 for former UNF president John A. Delaney.", "target": "student union in Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["architectural structure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18070620", "label": "Kim Soo-young", "source": "Kim Soo-young (Korean: 김수영; Hanja: 金水英; born 5 December 1964) is a South Korean politician serving as Mayor of Yangcheon District in Seoul and its first woman mayor from July 2014.From 2006 to 2008 she worked as the first head of Siheung's women's job center run by Ministry of Gender Equality and Family. From 2012 to 2014 Kim was the adjunct professor of social welfare at Soongsil University.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q642379", "label": "history of Islam", "source": "The history of Islam concerns the political, social, economic, military, and cultural developments of the Islamic civilization. Most historians believe that Islam originated in Mecca and Medina at the start of the 7th century CE. Muslims regard Islam as a return to the original faith of the Abrahamic prophets, such as Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, Solomon, and Jesus, with the submission (Islām) to the will of God.According to the traditional account, the Islamic prophet Muhammad began receiving what Muslims consider to be divine revelations in 610 CE, calling for submission to the one God, the expectation of the imminent Last Judgement, and caring for the poor and needy. Muhammad's message won over a handful of followers (the ṣaḥāba) and was met with increasing opposition from Meccan notables. In 622 CE, a few years after losing protection with the death of his influential uncle ʾAbū Ṭālib ibn ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib, Muhammad migrated to the city of Yathrib (now known as Medina). With the death of Muhammad in 632 CE, disagreement broke out over who would succeed him as leader of the Muslim community during the Rāshidūn Caliphate.By the 8th century CE, the Umayyad Caliphate extended from Muslim Iberia in the west to the Indus River in the east. Polities such as those ruled by the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates (in the Middle East and later in Spain and Southern Italy), the Fatimids, Seljuks, Ayyubids, and Mamluks were among the most influential powers in the world. Highly Persianized empires built by the Samanids, Ghaznavids, and Ghurids significantly contributed.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["history of religions", "aspect of history", "Islamic studies"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11772410", "label": "Małgorzata Wysocka", "source": "Małgorzata Wysocka (born 15 June 1979) is a road cyclist from Poland. She represented her nation at the 2004 Summer Olympics. She also rode at the 1998, 2001, 2003 and 2004 UCI Road World Championships.", "target": "Polish cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2601827", "label": "Dustin Acres", "source": "Dustin Acres is a census-designated place (CDP) in Kern County, California, United States. Dustin Acres is located 6.5 miles (10 km) north-northeast of Taft, at an elevation of 384 feet (117 m). The population was 652 at the 2010 census, up from 585 at the 2000 census.", "target": "census-designated place in Kern County, California", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q461856", "label": "A State of Trance", "source": "A State of Trance (often abbreviated as ASOT) is a Dutch trance radio show hosted by Armin van Buuren and co-producer Ruben de Ronde that first aired in June 2001. It is aired weekly every Thursday at 20:00 (CET) and 14:00 (EST). As of January 2021, ASOT is broadcast to more than 150 stations in 84 countries, and its listener count surpassed 40 million.ASOT is broadcast as a 2-hour livestream with some stations re-airing the entire stream (including Honolulu's My 95.9, Barcelona's Europa FM, Russia's Radio Record, and Sirius XM channel Diplo's Revolution). However several of its radio affiliates (including Romania's Dance FM, Western Africa's Hit Radio, Brisbane's Radio Metro, and Sri Lanka's Yes101) omit the second hour, while stations (including New Zealand's Pulzar FM, Melbourne's 88.7 Kiss FM, and Argentina's Delta 90.3) format the show into two 58-minute segments to make time for local advertising and station branding.", "target": "Dutch trance radio show hosted by Armin van Buuren and co-producers Ruben de Ronde and Ferry Corsten", "baseline_candidates": ["radio program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6372440", "label": "Karla Grant", "source": "Karla Grant is an Australian presenter, producer and journalist for the SBS's national Indigenous current affairs program Living Black, focusing on issues concerning Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities within Australia.", "target": "Australian television presenter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22812961", "label": "Manhigh", "source": "\"Manhigh\" is the twelfth episode and the season finale of the first season of the American period drama television series Masters of Sex. It premiered on December 15, 2013 in the United States on Showtime.", "target": "episode of Masters of Sex (S1 E12)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4705861", "label": "Alameda Corridor", "source": "The Alameda Corridor is a 20-mile (32 km) freight rail \"expressway\" owned by the Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority (reporting mark ATAX) that connects the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach with the transcontinental mainlines of the BNSF Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad that terminate near downtown Los Angeles, California. Running largely in a trench below Alameda Street, the corridor was considered one of the region's largest transportation projects when it was constructed in the 1990s and early 2000s.", "target": "freight rail line in Los Angeles, California", "baseline_candidates": ["cut", "railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q731740", "label": "Wiranto", "source": "Wiranto (born 4 April 1947) is an Indonesian politician and former army general, who is serving as the chairman of the Presidential Advisory Council, since December 2019. Previously, he was the Commander of the Indonesian Armed Forces from February 1998 to October 1999 during Indonesia's transition from authoritarian rule to democracy, he ran unsuccessfully for President of Indonesia in 2004 and for the vice-presidency in 2009. On 27 July 2016 Wiranto was appointed Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs, replacing Luhut Binsar Panjaitan.Wiranto played a significant role in facilitating severe human rights violations by the Indonesian army and Jakarta-backed militias, during Indonesia's withdrawal from the occupied territory of East Timor in 1999. Both the United Nations and domestic groups have gathered evidence on this, but he continues to deny the charges. In January 2000, an Indonesian commission placed general responsibility for these injustices on Wiranto. In May 2004, the United Nations-backed Special Panels of the Dili District Court indicted Wiranto and charged him with war crimes. Wiranto claimed the move was an effort to discredit his political ambitions.Some claim that Wiranto played a key role as a moderating influence during the turbulent times of 1998 when Soeharto resigned. He had the power to impose military rule, but refused to do so, thereby allowing the civilian process to develop. Taufik Darusman labeled him a \"military reformist\" because Wiranto reduced the military's role in Indonesian politics. He initiated the reduction of their seats in parliament and separated the police from the military. Nonetheless, more than 2,000.", "target": "Indonesian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3907126", "label": "2012–13 Slovenian Cup", "source": "The 2012–13 Slovenian Football Cup was the 22nd season of the Slovenian Football Cup, Slovenia's football knockout competition.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7929100", "label": "Vijay Award for Best Director", "source": "The Vijay for Best Director is given by STAR Vijay as part of its annual Vijay Awards ceremony for Tamil (Kollywood) films.", "target": "award category", "baseline_candidates": ["Vijay Awards", "class of award", "award for best direction"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5352389", "label": "El caballo blanco", "source": "The White Horse (Spanish:El caballo blanco) is a 1962 Mexican film. It stars Sara García.", "target": "1962 film by Rafael Baledón", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2876749", "label": "BBC Food", "source": "BBC Food is a division of the BBC which controls a recipe website part of BBC Online, an online streaming channel, and a former international commercial television channel focusing on food.", "target": "division of the British Broadcasting Corporation", "baseline_candidates": ["website", "television station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23882982", "label": "Walter Iuzzolino", "source": "Walter Iuzzolino (born 1968) is an Italian television producer, the titular Walter in Walter Presents. He is known for producing UK television shows including The Undateables and My Big Fat Fetish. Walter Iuzzolino was born in Genoa in 1968, and has had a lifelong interest in film and television drama.Iuzzolino is responsible for selecting the content for the Walter Presents range of foreign-language TV drama series to the UK's Channel 4 free streaming service.", "target": "Italian television producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7341235", "label": "Robert A. Graham", "source": "Robert Andrew Graham, SJ (March 11, 1912, Sacramento, California – February 11, 1997, Los Gatos, California) was an American Jesuit priest and World War II historian of the Catholic Church. He was a vigorous defender of Pope Pius XII over accusations that he had failed to do what he could to defend the Jews and others persecuted by the Nazis. The son of Charlie Graham, a former professional baseball player for the Boston Red Sox and part owner of the San Francisco Seals, Graham joined the California province of the Jesuits as a young man. He was ordained priest in 1941 and was soon sent to New York City to work on the Jesuit weekly, America, where he remained for two decades. In 1952, he gained a doctorate in political science and international law from the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva during a sabbatical. In 1959, his book, Vatican Diplomacy: A Study of Church and State on the International Plane, was published. This treatise on pontifical ecclesiastical diplomacy published by Princeton University Press would endure to become a discipline classic thus qualifying Rev. Graham as one of the Church's experts on the subject of Holy See diplomacy. This classic treatise continues to be used by English-language scholars specializing in the field of pontifical ecclesiastical diplomacy and diplomatic history even today. Following the publication of his book Rev. Graham travelled the world interviewing witnesses on the Vatican's diplomatic response to Nazism during the Second World War at a time when the Vatican archives remained closed.To.", "target": "American historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q90581888", "label": "Kate Challis RAKA Award", "source": "The Kate Challis RAKA Award is an arts award worth A$20,000, awarded annually by the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia to Indigenous Australian creative artists. It is awarded in a five-year cycle, each year in a different area of the arts: creative prose, drama, the visual arts, script-writing (screenplay or for theatre) and poetry.The award is sponsored by Professor Emeritius Bernard Smith, art and cultural historian, in honour his late wife, Kate Challis, who was earlier known as Ruth Adeney. \"RAKA\" is an acronym for \"Ruth Adeney Koori Award\". In the Pintupi language, \"raka\" means \"five\", and in Warlpiri, \"rdaka\" means \"hand\".It has been awarded since 1991.", "target": "Indigenous Australian arts award", "baseline_candidates": ["award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3177610", "label": "Ćirikovac", "source": "Ćirikovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Ћириковац) is a village in the municipality of Požarevac, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 1407 people.", "target": "village in Braničevo District, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2414443", "label": "Metepeira spinipes", "source": "Metepeira spinipes is a species of orb weaver in the spider family Araneidae. It is found in the United States and Mexico.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3424949", "label": "Renaud Roussel", "source": "Renaud Roussel is a French actor and model born on March 11, 1973.", "target": "French actor and model", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6947498", "label": "Myitkyina University", "source": "Myitkyina University is a university in northern Myitkyina, Myanmar.Since 1996, on-campus student housing has been banned. However, there were plans to reopen the Hkakaborazi (to house 120 male students) and Sumprabum (to house 128 female students) residence halls in 2013.", "target": "university in Myanmar", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7510727", "label": "Sig Ohlemann", "source": "Sig Ohlemann (birth name Siegmar Karl Ohlemann; born May 11, 1938) is a retired middle distance runner, who represented Canada in three events (800 metres, 4 × 100 metres and 4 × 400 metres) at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Italy. He claimed the silver medal in 800 metres at the 1963 Pan American Games in Brazil, behind fellow Canadian Don Bertoia.", "target": "Canadian middle-distance runner and sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16106202", "label": "José Cardenal", "source": "José Rosario Domec Cardenal (born October 7, 1943) is a Cuban American former professional baseball outfielder, who played Major League Baseball (MLB) for the San Francisco Giants (1963–64), Los Angeles/California Angels (1965–67), Cleveland Indians (1968–69), St. Louis Cardinals (1970–1971), Milwaukee Brewers (1971), Chicago Cubs (1972–77), Philadelphia Phillies (1978–79), New York Mets (1979–80), and Kansas City Royals (1980). Cardenal batted and threw right-handed. He is the cousin of former MLB infielder Bert Campaneris.", "target": "Cuban baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2375819", "label": "Longport railway station", "source": "Longport railway station is a station serving the areas of Longport, Middleport, Tunstall and Burslem, all districts in the northern part of Stoke-on-Trent, England. The station is served by trains on the Crewe to Derby Line, which is also a community rail line known as the North Staffordshire line. The station also has two trains a day on the Stoke-on-Trent to Manchester Piccadilly line. The station is owned by Network Rail and managed by East Midlands Railway.", "target": "railway station in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6873050", "label": "Mirchi FM", "source": "Mirchi FM is a \"Fiji Hindi\" language radio station in Fiji. The station broadcasts on the 97.8 frequency to the cities of Suva, Navua, Nausori, Labasa, Savusavu, Nadi, Denarau, Mamanuca and Lautoka. The station also broadcasts on the 97.6 MHz frequency to the towns of Coral Coast and Ba. The station broadcasts on 98.0 megahertz to the town of Tavua, and on 98.2 megahertz to Rakiraki and Nabouwalu. Mirchi FM is Fiji's first Hindi FM radio. It is operated by Fiji Broadcasting Corporation, the company which also owns FBC TV, Radio Fiji One, Radio Fiji Two, Bula FM, 2day FM-Fiji, and Gold FM-Fiji in Fiji.Mirchi FM was launched as Radio Rajdhani on 1 July 1989, and was rebranded as Bula 98 FM in 1998. To compete with other radio stations and attract more audience, the station once again changed its name to Radio Mirchi in 2004. To give better business outlook, the station was rebranded as Mirchi FM on 1 August 2009. The main competitors of Mirchi FM are Communications Fiji Limited owned Radio Navtarang and Radio Sargam. Mirchi FM is airing entertainment shows like Mast Morning, Saheli, Raftaar, Bhabi Ji Ghar Par Hai, Sham-e-Guzarish, Saturday Night Fever, Mohabbato Ka Safar and Saturday Sports. Mirchi FM is essentially a music station featuring a range of popular Hindi songs from the 1990s to present era. Its target audience are young people from the age of 12 to 20 years.", "target": "radio station", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7250636", "label": "Prosipho gracilis", "source": "Prosipho gracilis is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Buccinidae, the true whelks.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7730262", "label": "The Dirtwater Dynasty", "source": "The Dirtwater Dynasty is a five-part Australian drama miniseries, first screened on Network Ten in 1988. The Dirtwater Dynasty was directed by Michael Jenkins and John Power.The Dirtwater Dynasty is the story of embittered rivalry, triumph and despair, spanning three generations and eight decades. Born in the London slums in 1878, Richard Eastwick comes to Australia at age 20, with nothing but a handful of courage and a dream. He acquires land, marries and raises a family, makes loyal friends and bitter enemies. Two world wars and the economic depression take their toll on his family and his land and cattle ranching empire but his dream to create a dynasty gives him a reason to continue.", "target": "1988 miniseries", "baseline_candidates": ["television series", "miniseries"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2894590", "label": "Manzanares District", "source": "Manzanares District is one of fifteen districts of the province Concepción in Peru.", "target": "district in Junín, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48817634", "label": "101st Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery", "source": "The 101st Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery (101st HAA Rgt) was an air defence unit of Britain's Territorial Army raised in northern Scotland just before World War II. After defending the naval base of Scapa Flow against air attack in the early part of the war, the regiment went to India and later took part in the Burma Campaign in the anti-aircraft role and with heavy howitzers in support of ground forces, even on occasion fighting as infantry. It was reformed in the post-war TA (as 501st HAA Rgt) and continued until the abolition of Anti-Aircraft Command in 1955.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["regiment"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3750271", "label": "Kiss nightclub fire", "source": "The Kiss nightclub fire started between 2:00 and 2:30 a.m. (BRST) on 27 January 2013 in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, killing 245 people and injuring at least 630 others. It is the second most-devastating fire disaster in the history of Brazil—surpassed only by the Niterói circus fire of December 1961, which killed 503 people in Niterói, and the deadliest nightclub fire since the December 2000 fire that killed 309 people in Luoyang, China. It is also the third-deadliest nightclub fire in history, behind that fire and the Cocoanut Grove fire in 1942.", "target": "2013 fire in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["conflagration"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52720553", "label": "Michael Kölbl", "source": "Michael Kölbl (born 20 November 1986, in Austria) is an Austrian football player currently playing for SV Lafnitz. He has previously played for TSV Hartberg.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4983349", "label": "Buckley Claypits and Commons", "source": "Buckley Claypits and Commons is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in the preserved county of Clwyd, north Wales. It is an important reserve for the great crested newt.", "target": "Site of Special Scientific Interest in Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["Site of Special Scientific Interest"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48817163", "label": "1922 Paris-Tours", "source": "The 1922 Paris–Tours was the 17th edition of the Paris–Tours cycle race and was held on 30 April 1922. The race started in Paris and finished in Tours. The race was won by Henri Pélissier.", "target": "1922 edition of the Paris-Tours, cycling road race in France", "baseline_candidates": ["Paris–Tours"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25018296", "label": "velpatasvir", "source": "Velpatasvir is an NS5A inhibitor (by Gilead) which is used together with sofosbuvir in the treatment of hepatitis C infection of all six major genotypes.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["medication", "chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5944680", "label": "Huntercombe, Slough", "source": "Huntercombe is an area of Cippenham in Slough in the English historic county of Buckinghamshire, although it was administered as part of Berkshire between 1974 and 1996. It adjoins Burnham in Buckinghamshire. The district is well known to residents of Slough and Burnham, but is usually not listed on maps of the area. The area includes the public house Huntercombe Arms, situated on the Huntercombe Roundabout. This leads to the Huntercombe Spur, a dual carriageway to J7 on the M4 Motorway. On the Burnham side of the area, it includes the Maidenhead Huntercombe Hospital (formerly Huntercombe Manor), which is part of The Huntercombe Group, and Burnham Abbey.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97232365", "label": "Kim Bo-ra", "source": "Kim Bo-ra (Korean: 김보라; Hanja: 金補羅; born 8 September 1969) is a South Korean politician serving as Mayor of Anseong in Gyeonggi Province and its first woman mayor from April 2020.Before entering politics in 2014, Kim led various Non-governmental organisations on Social enterprise, medical cooperatives and local social welfare.In the 2014 election, Kim was placed as number 3 of the proportional list of her party for Gyeonggi Provincial legislature. Since then, she took numerous roles in Gyeonggi Assembly, Gyeonggi branch of her party and her party at Gyeonggi Assembly. She also took multiple roles in her party - vice chair of its Social economy Committee, Special Committee on Fine Dust and Women's Committee as well as director of Social Economy centre of party thinktank.Before running for mayor, Kim was the deputy spokesperson of her party.In the 2020 by-election Kim ran for Mayor of Anseong City - the post vacated by Woo Seok-jae (Korean: 우석제) from her party who was removed from the office after the Supreme Court found Woo guilty of breaking the election law.Kim was previously an adjunct professor of nursing at Sangmyung University from 2013 to 2014 and Soonchunhyang University from 2005 to 2007 as well as a visiting professor at Hanshin University from 2017 to 2018.Kim holds two degrees - a bachelor in nursing from Yonsei University and a master's in social welfare from Pyeongtaek University.", "target": "South Korean politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5262646", "label": "Derker", "source": "Derker is an area of Oldham, in Greater Manchester, England. It lies in north-central Oldham, close to the boundary with Royton.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7933677", "label": "Virdel", "source": "Virdel is a village in Sindkheda Taluka, Dhule district of Maharashtra, India. The taluka headquarters is 7.3 km away, and district headquarters Dhule is 48 km from town. Virdel also has a railway station by the named Virdel Road. The station code is VRD. Virdel station falls on Nandurbar to Jalgaon branch line. Religious places 1) Sunni Jama Masjid Chowk 2) Viththal Mandir Chowk 3) Maroti Mandir Chowk 4) 18 Patti Chowk 5) Koli Wada 6) Wadar Wada 5) Chambhar Wada 6) Kumbhar Wada 7) Maroti Mandeer Chowk 8) Aadivasi Vasti No.1 9) Aadivasi Vasti No.2 10) Vighnharta Nagar 11) Mali Wada.", "target": "village in Maharashtra, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4793513", "label": "Armin Faber", "source": "Oberleutnant Armin Faber was a German Luftwaffe pilot in World War II who mistook the Bristol Channel for the English Channel and landed his Focke-Wulf 190 (Fw 190) intact at RAF Pembrey in South Wales. His plane was the first Fw 190 to be captured by the Allies and was tested to reveal any weaknesses that could be exploited.", "target": "German World War II fighter pilot", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1514269", "label": "Marina Fischer-Kowalski", "source": "Marina Fischer-Kowalski (born 1946) is an Austrian sociologist and social ecologist and a professor emeritus of the University of Klagenfurt, currently teaching at the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, the University of Klagenfurt and the University of Vienna. She is known for founding the Vienna School of Social Ecology and for her pioneering work on the widely used metric for material and energy flows to complement economic accounting. Fischer-Kowalski works on socio-environmental change, sustainable development and the Anthropocene.", "target": "Austrian socoiologist and professor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6702178", "label": "Luke Morrison", "source": "Luke Morrison is an Australian sprint canoer who has competed since the late 2000s. He won a silver medal in the K-2 1000 m event at the 2009 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Dartmouth.", "target": "canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q40566157", "label": "Fier Railway Station", "source": "Fier railway station serves the city of Fier in Fier County, Albania. The station opened in 1968 after an extension from Rrogozhine was completed. It was a terminus until the line was extended southwards to Ballsh in 1975, though passenger services south of Fier did not commence until 1985.Like Laç, Fier was a busy transportation hub in the days of the People's Socialist Republic of Albania for ores and fertiliser freight at a time when road infrastructure was still underdeveloped. In 1991, the International Fertilizer Development Center reported that 80-90% of fertiliser produced in Fier and Laç was transported by rail. Although the journey estimates were optimistic, the transportation methods were not suitable and were in need of revision.", "target": "railway station in Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12243251", "label": "Ohio Valley Wrestling", "source": "Ohio Valley Wrestling (OVW) is an American professional wrestling promotion based in Louisville, Kentucky. The company is currently run by Al Snow and Matt Jones, who took over from founder and former owner Nightmare Danny Davis. OVW was initially a member promotion of the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) from its inception in 1993 until 2000, when it became the primary developmental territory for WWE. It remained in this role from 2000 until February 7, 2008, when the promotion became unaffiliated. In November 2011, OVW became the developmental territory for Impact Wrestling (then known as Total Nonstop Action Wrestling or TNA). This relationship initially ended on November 2, 2013, but on March 19, 2019, the two promotions re-established their developmental agreement.OVW's television programming originates from the Davis Arena in the Buechel neighborhood of Louisville. Their weekly series, known informally as OVW TV, currently airs locally on WBNA-21 and is streaming online via FITE TV. As of 2020, through various syndication and distribution deals, OVW's weekly series is available to view in over 100 million households in the U.S, and to over 700 million worldwide.", "target": "American professional wrestling television program", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business", "professional wrestling promotion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3166527", "label": "Jean-Joseph Regnault-Warin", "source": "Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Junbient Philadelphe Regnault-Warin (28 December 1773, Bar-le-Duc – 4 November 1844, Paris) was an 18th–19th-century French novelist, playwright and pamphleteer.", "target": "French journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15590131", "label": "Baccharis acutata", "source": "Baccharis acutata is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae and is an endemic to Cuba.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49061891", "label": "Leptodeira annulata", "source": "The banded cat-eyed snake (Leptodeira annulata) is a species of medium-sized, mildly venomous, colubrid snake endemic to the New World.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18031038", "label": "RAP2B", "source": "Ras-related protein Rap-2b is a protein that in humans is encoded by the RAP2B gene. RAP2B belongs to the Ras-related protein family. This intronless gene belongs to a family of RAS-related genes. The proteins encoded by these genes share approximately 50% amino acid identity with the classical RAS proteins and have numerous structural features in common. The most striking difference between the RAP and RAS proteins resides in their 61st amino acid: glutamine in RAS is replaced by threonine in RAP proteins. Evidence suggests that this protein may be polyisoprenylated and palmitoylated.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q954230", "label": "Michael Rodríguez", "source": "Michael Steven Rodríguez Gutiérrez (born 30 December 1981) is a Costa Rican former footballer who most recently played for the National Premier Soccer League club Puerto Rico Bayamón.", "target": "Costa Rican footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5525163", "label": "Gary Green", "source": "Gary Francis Green (born October 2, 1955) is a former American football cornerback. A star at Baylor, he played nine professional seasons as a cornerback from 1977-1985 in the National Football League and intercepted 33 passes over the course of his career. Green was selected to 4 Pro Bowls and five All-Pro Teams during his career. He was inducted into the Kansas City Chiefs Ring of Honor January 3, 2016.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56302556", "label": "Our Man in Havana", "source": "Our Man in Havana (1958) is a novel set in Cuba by the British author Graham Greene. He makes fun of intelligence services, especially the British MI6, and their willingness to believe reports from their local informants. The book predates the Cuban Missile Crisis, but certain aspects of the plot, notably the role of missile installations, appear to anticipate the events of 1962. It was adapted into a film of the same name in 1959, directed by Carol Reed and starring Alec Guinness. In 1963, it was adapted into an opera by Malcolm Williamson and a libretto by Sidney Gilliat, who had worked on the film. In 2007, it was adapted into a play by Clive Francis, which has toured the UK several times and been performed in various parts of the world.", "target": "novel by Graham Greene", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2583736", "label": "Lincolnville", "source": "Lincolnville is a city in Marion County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 168. It is located northeast of Marion, west of the intersection of U.S. Route 77 (aka U.S. Route 56) highway and 290th Street next to the Union Pacific Railroad.", "target": "human settlement in Marion County, Kansas, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12449333", "label": "Rajaraja I", "source": "Rajaraja I (947 CE – 1014 CE), born Arulmoli Varman and often described as Rajaraja the Great, was a Chola emperor who reigned from 985 CE to 1014 CE. He was the most powerful king in south India during his reign and is remembered for reinstating the Chola influence and ensuring its supremacy across the Indian Ocean.His extensive empire included vast regions of the Pandya country, the Chera country and northern Sri Lanka. He also acquired Lakshadweep and Thiladhunmadulu atoll, and part of the northern-most islands of the Maldives in the Indian Ocean. Campaigns against the Western Gangas and the Chalukyas extended the Chola authority as far as the Tungabhadra River. On the eastern coast, he battled with the Chalukyas for the possession of Vengi.Rajaraja I, being an able administrator, also built the great Brihadisvara Temple at the Chola capital Thanjavur. The temple is regarded as the foremost of all temples constructed in the medieval south Indian architectural style. During his reign, the texts of the Tamil poets Appar, Sambandar and Sundarar were collected and edited into one compilation called Thirumurai. He initiated a massive project of land survey and assessment in 1000 CE which led to the reorganisation of the country into individual units known as valanadus. Rajaraja died in 1014 CE and was succeeded by his son Rajendra Chola I.", "target": "Chola Emperor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6272885", "label": "Jonathan D. Moreno", "source": "Jonathan D. Moreno is an American philosopher and historian who specializes in the intersection of bioethics, culture, science, and national security, and has published seminal works on the history, sociology and politics of biology and medicine. He is an elected member of the National Academy of Medicine.Moreno is the David and Lyn Silfen University Professor at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is also he is also Professor of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, of History and Sociology of Science, and of Philosophy.", "target": "American academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13036050", "label": "Battle of Vegkop", "source": "The Battle of Vegkop, alternatively spelt as Vechtkop, took place on 16 October 1836 near the present day town of Heilbron, Free State, South Africa. After an impi of about 600 Matebele murdered 15 to 17 Afrikaner voortrekkers on the Vaal River, abducting three children, King Mzilikazi (c. 1790 – 9 September 1868; also known as Mzilikazi, Oemsiligasi or Moselekatse; Afrikaans: Silkaats) ordered another attack. The voortrekkers, under the command of Andries Potgieter, repulsed them, but at the cost of abandoning their livestock.", "target": "1836 battle between Voortrekkers and the Matebele", "baseline_candidates": ["battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47529985", "label": "Inkosi Holomisa", "source": "Inkosi Sango Patekile Holomisa (born 26 August 1959) is an ANC politician and the Deputy Minister of Correctional Services in South Africa, having been the Deputy Minister of Labour before.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3792045", "label": "Dinoflagellate luciferase", "source": "Dinoflagellate luciferase (EC 1.13.12.18, Gonyaulax luciferase) is a specific luciferase, an enzyme with systematic name dinoflagellate-luciferin:oxygen 132-oxidoreductase. dinoflagellate luciferin + O2 ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } oxidized dinoflagellate luciferin + H2O + hnu.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["oxidoreductase, acting on single donors with incorporation of molecular oxygen, incorporation of one atom of oxygen (internal monooxygenases or internal mixed function oxidases)", "group or class of enzymes", "oxidoreductase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28209418", "label": "Robert V. Riddell State Park", "source": "Robert V. Riddell State Park is a 2,163-acre (8.75 km2) state park in Otsego and Delaware counties, New York. The park is located approximately 20 miles (32 km) from Cooperstown.", "target": "State park in Otsego and Delaware counties, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["New York state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1920868", "label": "Teghenik", "source": "Teghenik Armenian: Թեղենիք, formerly Tkhit (Armenian: Թղիթ), is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia.", "target": "village in Kotayk Province of Armenia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Armenia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20687952", "label": "YouBike", "source": "YouBike, or Taipei Bike Sharing System, is a public bicycle sharing service offered by the Taipei City Department of Transportation in a BOT collaboration with local manufacturer Giant Bicycles. As of 26 May 2016, service stations in the bike system are available in Taipei City, New Taipei City, Taoyuan City, Hsinchu City, Taichung City, Changhua County, and Miaoli County. In Taipei City, rental is NT$5 for the first 30 minutes of use and adopts progressive tolls from NT$10 to NT$40 thereafter. No other fee, such as yearly deposit, is required. In New Taipei City, Taichung City and Changhua County, rental is free for the first 30 minutes. There is a 15-minute renewal restriction period at the station to which the bike was returned.In 2014, the system saw 22 million rentals, double the 11 million rentals the previous year, with 196 rental stations circulating 6,046 bikes.", "target": "bicycle-sharing system in Taiwan", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "bicycle-sharing system"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q274345", "label": "Zinaida Stahurskaya", "source": "Zinaida Vladimirovna Stahurskaya (original name: Зинаида Владимировна Стагурская; also written as Zinaida Stagurskaya, Zinaida Stahurskaia or Zinaida Stagourskaya; 9 February 1971 – 25 June 2009) was a Belarusian racing cyclist who was the world champion in 2000. Stahurskaya was born in Vitebsk. She rode at the 1992 Summer Olympics for the Unified Team and at the 1996 Summer Olympics and the 2004 Summer Olympics for Belarus.", "target": "Belarusian racing cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59588614", "label": "Howard Meyerhoff", "source": "Howard Augustus Meyerhoff (May 27, 1899 – March 24, 1982) was an American geologist who taught geology at Smith College from 1925 to 1949. He served as administrative secretary of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), as well as editor-in-chief of its journal, Science, from 1949 to 1953. He conducted research on the geology of Puerto Rico, which led to him publishing the book Geology of Porto Rico in 1933.", "target": "American geologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1051607", "label": "2004–05 Nemzeti Bajnokság I", "source": "The 2004–05 Nemzeti Bajnokság I, also known as NB I, was the 103rd season of top-tier football in Hungary. The league was officially named Arany Ászok Liga for sponsoring reasons. The season started on 7 August 2004 and ended on 26 May 2005.", "target": "Hungarian football tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15896248", "label": "Guo Meimei", "source": "Guo Meimei (Chinese: 郭美美; pinyin: Guō Měiměi; born 15 June 1991), born as Guo Meiling (Chinese: 郭美玲), is a Chinese Internet celebrity who was involved in some scandals and crimes.", "target": "Chinese Internet celebrity", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4282080", "label": "Markova (urban-type settlement)", "source": "Markova (Russian: Маркова) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Irkutsky District of Irkutsk Oblast, Russia. Population: 9,894 (2010 Census); 6,509 (2002 Census); 2,569 (1989 Census).", "target": "human settlement in Irkutsky District, Irkutsk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "work settlement of Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6387346", "label": "Ken Boden", "source": "Ken Boden (born 5 July 1950) is a former footballer, who played at both professional and international levels as a midfielder. Born in England, he represented Australia.", "target": "Australian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48807711", "label": "Washington State University Everett", "source": "Washington State University Everett (WSU Everett) is a campus of Washington State University in Everett, Washington. The land-grant research university was founded in 1890 and the Washington State Legislature approved funding for WSU to expand to Snohomish County in 2011. The campus began with a 95,000-square foot building costing $64 million. The campus was founded in 2014, and courses began in the Fall of 2017.", "target": "public university campus in Everett, Washington", "baseline_candidates": ["campus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25393808", "label": "Midnight Sun", "source": "Midnight Sun (M'Nai) is a fictional character and supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.", "target": "fictional character in Marvel Comics", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1127617", "label": "The Vampire Bat", "source": "The Vampire Bat is a 1933 American Pre-Code horror film directed by Frank R. Strayer and starring Lionel Atwill, Fay Wray, Melvyn Douglas, and Dwight Frye.", "target": "1933 film by Frank R. Strayer", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17511300", "label": "boxing at the 2002 Asian Games – men's 48 kg", "source": "The men's light flyweight (48 kilograms) event at the 2002 Asian Games took place from 2 to 13 October 2002 at Masan Gymnasium, Masan, South Korea.", "target": "Boxing competitions", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2002170", "label": "Kielce City Stadium", "source": "Stadion Miejski w Kielcach (Municipal Stadium in Kielce), named Suzuki Arena due to the sponsorship reasons, is a multi-purpose stadium in Kielce, Poland. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of Korona Kielce. The stadium holds 15,500 and was built in 2006. At the time, it was one of the most modern football stadiums in Poland. On the 1 April 2006, eighteen months to the day that construction started on the project, its inaugural match took place, an Ekstraklasa match between Korona and Zagłębie Lubin. The match finished in a 1–1 draw. The old stadium of Korona is currently being used by Korona Kielce II (the reserve team).", "target": "Multi-purpose stadium in Kielce, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["association football venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4863768", "label": "Barrister Baachaa Khan", "source": "Barrister Baachaa Khan was a Pakistani lawyer and ANP (Awami National Party) leader. He was very active in the historic Pakistan Lawyers' Movement, during which he was arrested and jailed. He is an Ex-vice president of the Pakistan Supreme Court Bar Association. In the 28 October 2009 elections for the Pakistan Supreme Court Bar presidency, Baachaa lost to Qazi Muhammad Anwar by 44 votes. Baachaa has called for new elections, protesting that the vote was rigged.", "target": "Pakistani barrister", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1188426", "label": "FCW Southern Heavyweight Championship", "source": "The FCW Southern Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling heavyweight championship owned and promoted by Florida Championship Wrestling (FCW, now known as NXT Wrestling), the developmental territory of WWE. It was contested for in their heavyweight division. The championship was created and debuted on June 26, 2007 at a FCW house show. Harry Smith became the inaugural champion by winning a 21-man battle royal. The title was retired on March 22, 2008, after being unified with the FCW Florida Heavyweight Championship.", "target": "Professional wrestling championship", "baseline_candidates": ["sports competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16595738", "label": "Marianne Lundquist", "source": "Ingrid Marianne Lundquist (later Grane, 24 July 1931 – 10 April 2020) was a Swedish freestyle swimmer who won a bronze medal in the 4 × 100 m relay at the 1950 European Aquatics Championships. She competed at the 1948 and 1952 Olympics in the 100 m, 400 m and 4 × 100 m events with the best result of sixth place in the relay in 1952. She died 10 April 2020, from COVID-19.", "target": "Swedish swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4924728", "label": "Blameshift", "source": "Blameshift is a four-piece rock band from Long Island, New York that started in 2005. The band consists of Jenny Mann, Tim Barbour, Mike LaRoache and Jeff Mauer. The band is recognized for their work ethic, extensive touring history and high energy live show. In 2006 they recorded a self-released album, “Drop Down”. The release was followed by over 150 tour dates including three dates on the Warped Tour. In 2007 Blameshift recorded their second album. “The Test” with Michael Birnbaum and Chris Bittner. The album was nationally released through Smart Punk, F.Y.E, Hot Topic, and iTunes. Alternative Press named Blameshift as “Unsigned Band Of The Month” in August 2008. Blameshift won a contest through Taco Bell called “Feed The Beat” in 2008. Michael Birnbaum and Chris Bittner also produced the single, The Sirens Are Set in 2008. Blameshift toured through all of 2008 in the U.S. and Canada with And Then There Was You, and The Material on the Everlasting Sound Tour. At the start of 2009 producer Mike Watts demoed the bands’ Self Titled EP. With touring in between with Sky Tells All and The Material, the release of the EP was put on hold until February 2010. In May 2010 the band raised $5500 through Kickstarter to record with producer / engineer Erik Ron in Hollywood, California. In June 2010 the band signed with Restless Management out of Venice Beach, California. Blameshift kicked off their “The Fortune and Flames Tour” with fellow East Coast rockers Dive on 10/25/2012 in Philadelphia for a set.", "target": "American rock music band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3293419", "label": "Corunna", "source": "Corunna is a town in Richland Township, DeKalb County, Indiana, United States. The population was 251 at the 2010 census.", "target": "town in Indiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5059601", "label": "Center for Earthquake Studies", "source": "The Centre for Earthquake Studies (CES) (Urdu: دانشگاہ برائے تحقیق و مطالعہِ زلزالیات) is a federally funded research institute and national laboratory dedicated to the advancement in understanding of natural vibration, seismology, and yield-based energy measurement of seismic waves. The CES was established through federal funding as a direct response to the devastating 2005 Kashmir earthquake in order to understand earthquakes and provide scientific prediction of quakes to improve earthquake preparedness. The CES is the only national site in Pakistan working on earthquake precursors.The national laboratory is headquartered in the campus area of the National Centre for Physics (NCP) and conducts mathematical research in earth sciences, in close coordination with the NCP.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2635560", "label": "Alness railway station", "source": "Alness railway station is a railway station on the Far North Line, serving the town of Alness, on the Cromarty Firth, in the Highland council area of Scotland. The station is 28 miles 70 chains (46.5 km) from Inverness, between Dingwall and Invergordon.", "target": "railway station in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q477002", "label": "RNA modification", "source": "RNA editing (also RNA modification) is a molecular process through which some cells can make discrete changes to specific nucleotide sequences within an RNA molecule after it has been generated by RNA polymerase. It occurs in all living organisms and is one of the most evolutionarily conserved properties of RNAs. RNA editing may include the insertion, deletion, and base substitution of nucleotides within the RNA molecule. RNA editing is relatively rare, with common forms of RNA processing (e.g. splicing, 5'-capping, and 3'-polyadenylation) not usually considered as editing. It can affect the activity, localization as well as stability of RNAs, and has been linked with human diseases.RNA editing has been observed in some tRNA, rRNA, mRNA, or miRNA molecules of eukaryotes and their viruses, archaea, and prokaryotes. RNA editing occurs in the cell nucleus, as well as within mitochondria and plastids. In vertebrates, editing is rare and usually consists of a small number of changes to the sequence of the affected molecules. In other organisms, such as squids, extensive editing (pan-editing) can occur; in some cases the majority of nucleotides in an mRNA sequence may result from editing. More than 160 types of RNA modifications have been described so far.RNA-editing processes show great molecular diversity, and some appear to be evolutionarily recent acquisitions that arose independently. The diversity of RNA editing phenomena includes nucleobase modifications such as cytidine (C) to uridine (U) and adenosine (A) to inosine (I) deaminations, as well as non-template nucleotide additions and insertions. RNA editing in mRNAs effectively alters the amino acid sequence.", "target": "covalent alteration of one or more nucleotides within an RNA molecule to produce an RNA molecule with a sequence that differs from that coded genetically", "baseline_candidates": ["macromolecule modification", "RNA metabolic process", "biological process", "biochemistry method"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6114097", "label": "Jack Metherell", "source": "Jack Rogers Metherell (9 November 1912 – 30 November 1992) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong in the VFL during the 1930s. He was the younger brother of teammate Len Metherell. Metherell came to Geelong from Western Australia and made his league debut in 1932. A half forward for most of his career, he topped Geelong's goalkicking in 1934, 1936 and 1937. His tally of 71 goals in 1937 saw him finish one short of Gordon Coventry who topped the league. Metherell kicked four goals in that year's grand final and helped the Cats to their third flag, and his first. It was his final game in the league and in 1938 he went on to become a successful coach in the TANFL with North Hobart and also for Tasmania at interstate football. Geelong refused him a clearance so he stood out of playing. He coached from the sidelines. After standing out for a year Metherell topped the TANFL's goal kicking list in 1939, 1940 and 1941. Metherell served in the Australian Army for two year from 1943.When play resumed in 1945 Metherell who continued as both player and coach. In 1946 he captain-coached Cooee, for one season. He returned to North Hobart, where he enjoyed one last year as a player before continuing as coach in an off-field capacity.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3650764", "label": "Eulalia clavigera", "source": "Eulalia clavigera is a species of polychaete worm in the family Phyllodocidae, native to the coasts around Britain, through Western France, and to the Iberian Peninsula. It closely resembles Eulalia viridis, and there has been confusion in the past as to the identification of the two species.", "target": "species of annelid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6111386", "label": "Roberts Rode", "source": "Roberts Rode (born 29 May 1987 in Riga) is an alpine skier from Latvia. He competed for Latvia at the 2010 Winter Olympics. His best finish was a 58th place in the downhill.", "target": "Latvian alpine skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2399812", "label": "Françoise Bertaut de Motteville", "source": "Françoise Bertaut de Motteville (c. 1621 – 1689) was a French memoir writer.", "target": "French writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1379579", "label": "Eva von Trott", "source": "Eva von Trott (1505 – 12 January 1567), was the royal mistress of Henry V, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, from 1522 until 1567. The affair was a contemporary scandal and was used as propaganda against the duke of Brunnswick in Wider Hans Worst by Martin Luther during the Schmalkaldic War.", "target": "Mistress of German Duke", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21903504", "label": "Northern Limestone Alps", "source": "The Northern Limestone Alps (German: Nördliche Kalkalpen), also called the Northern Calcareous Alps, are the ranges of the Eastern Alps north of the Central Eastern Alps located in Austria and the adjacent Bavarian lands of southeastern Germany. The distinction from the latter group, where the higher peaks are located, is based on differences in geological composition.", "target": "mountain range", "baseline_candidates": ["alpine major sector", "Austroalpine nappes"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18079565", "label": "Hal Cooper", "source": "Harold \"Hal\" Cooper (February 23, 1923 – April 11, 2014) was an American television director and executive producer who worked primarily on sitcoms. After establishing himself as a pioneer of the Golden Age of Television, Cooper became a regular director on many of the popular and enduring shows of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Cooper directed 54 episodes of I Dream of Jeannie between 1966 and 1969 and 126 of the 141 episodes of Maude, where he also served as executive producer from 1975 through 1978. His work on the latter series earned him two Emmy Award nominations as well as three nominations from the Directors Guild of America Awards.", "target": "American director, producer and actor (1923-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2182686", "label": "Özgür Dengiz", "source": "Özgür Dengiz (born 1984) is a Turkish serial killer and cannibal. Captured on September 14, 2007 in Ankara, he admitted killing two men, attempting to murder another man and cannibalising one of his victims. He is nicknamed the \"Cannibal of Ankara\".", "target": "Turkish serial killer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11704951", "label": "VMFA-323", "source": "Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323 (VMFA-323) is an aircraft carrier-based aviation squadron of the United States Marine Corps. The squadron is equipped with the McDonnell Douglas F/A-18C Hornet and is based at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, California, United States. It falls under the command of Marine Aircraft Group 11 (MAG-11) and the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing (3rd MAW) but deploys with the U.S. Navy's Carrier Air Wing 17 (CVW-17).", "target": "Marine Fighter Attack squadron based in Marine Corps Air Station Miramar", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2960711", "label": "Charles de Tournemine", "source": "Charles-Émile Vacher de Tournemine (25 October 1812, Toulon - 22 December 1872, Toulon) was a French painter who specialized in Orientalist scenes.", "target": "French painter (1812-1872)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8008071", "label": "William Dufris", "source": "William Duffy (February 1, 1958 – March 24, 2020) known professionally as William Dufris, was an American voice actor and audiobook narrator.", "target": "voice actor (1958-2020)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28509289", "label": "Chiryapchi", "source": "Chiryapchi (Russian: Чиряпчи) is a rural locality (a selo) in Bert-Usovsky Rural Okrug of Ust-Aldansky District in the Sakha Republic, Russia, located 41 kilometers (25 mi) from Borogontsy, the administrative center of the district and 13 kilometers (8.1 mi) from Syrdakh, the administrative center of the rural okrug. Its population as of the 2002 Census was 8.", "target": "human settlement in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4905485", "label": "Big Cove", "source": "Big Cove is an unincorporated community in Madison County, Alabama, United States. It is located roughly seven miles southeast of downtown Huntsville. Big Cove is located close to the quickly-growing Hampton Cove community.", "target": "unincorporated community in Alabama", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5181663", "label": "Craigenputtock", "source": "Craigenputtock (usually spelled by the Carlyles as Craigenputtoch) is the craig/whinstone hill of the puttocks (small hawks). It is the 800-acre (3.2 km2) upland farming estate in the civil parish of Dunscore in Dumfriesshire, within the District Council Region of Dumfries and Galloway. It comprises the principal residence – a two-storey, four bedroomed Georgian Country House (category B listed), two cottages and a farmstead, 315 acres (127 ha) of moorland hill rising to 1,000 ft (300 m) above sea level, 350 acres (140 ha) of inbye ground of which 40 acres (16 ha) is arable/ploughable and 135 acres (55 ha) of woodland/forestry. It was once the residence of the well-known writer Thomas Carlyle, who wrote many famous works there. It was the property for generations (circa 1500) of the family Welsh, and eventually that of their heiress, Jane Baillie Welsh Carlyle (1801–1866) (descended on the paternal side from Elizabeth, the youngest daughter of John Knox), which the Carlyles made their dwelling-house in 1828, where they remained for seven years (before moving to Carlyle's House in Cheyne Row, London), and where Sartor Resartus was written. The property was bequeathed by Thomas Carlyle to the Edinburgh University on his death in 1881. It is now home to the Carter-Campbell family, and managed by the C.C.C. (Carlyle Craigenputtock Circle). It is certain that for living and thinking in, I have never since found in the world a place so favourable. How blessed might poor mortals be in the straitest circumstances if their wisdom and fidelity to heaven and to.", "target": "architectural structure in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["farmhouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17479309", "label": "David P. Kvile", "source": "David Pedersen Kvile (21 September 1861 – 24 June 1918) was a Norwegian teacher, farmer and politician for the Liberal Party. He was born at Kvile in Breim as a son of farmers Peder A. Kvile and Kirsti J. Kaudal. He graduated from Stord Teachers' College in 1882, and worked briefly in Gransherred from 1883 before settling as a teacher in Øvre Rendal in 1885. From 1890 he also ran the farm Berger. He married a farmer's daughter from Gransherred.He was a member of Øvre Rendal municipal council from 1893 to 1904, serving as mayor since 1897. In 1911 he again became mayor after a hiatus. He was elected as a deputy representative to the Parliament of Norway in 1909, 1912 and 1915. He died in June 1918 and was buried in Øvre Rendal.", "target": "Norwegian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1747578", "label": "Vincenzo Costaguti", "source": "Vincenzo Costaguti (1612 – 6 December 1660) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal.", "target": "Catholic cardinal", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14521796", "label": "Pelecocera escorialensis", "source": "Pelecocera escorialensis is a species of hoverfly in the family Syrphidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5815328", "label": "Qeysariyeh-ye Vosta", "source": "Qeysariyeh-ye Vosta (Persian: قيصريه وسطي, also Romanized as Qeysarīyeh-ye Vostá) is a village in Hoveyzeh Rural District, in the Central District of Hoveyzeh County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 255, in 45 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q470902", "label": "Bhaskara-I", "source": "Bhāskara (c. 600 – c. 680) (commonly called Bhaskara I to avoid confusion with the 12th-century mathematician Bhāskara II) was a 7th-century mathematician and astronomer, who was the first to write numbers in the Hindu decimal system with a circle for the zero, and who gave a unique and remarkable rational approximation of the sine function in his commentary on Aryabhata's work. This commentary, Āryabhaṭīyabhāṣya, written in 629 CE, is among the oldest known prose works in Sanskrit on mathematics and astronomy. He also wrote two astronomical works in the line of Aryabhata's school, the Mahābhāskarīya and the Laghubhāskarīya.On 7 June 1979 the Indian Space Research Organisation launched Bhaskara I honouring the mathematician.", "target": "7th-century Indian mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97359549", "label": "hydrostannylation", "source": "In chemistry, hydrostannylation is the insertion of unsaturated substrates into an Sn-H bond. The reaction occurs under free-radical conditions, but the stereochemistry and regiochemistry are often complex. The reaction gained synthetic importance with the discovery that palladium complexes catalyze the reaction. The reaction is analogous to hydrosilylation and is a subset of hydroelementation. Hydrostannylation is a versatile route to organotin compounds, many of which are versatile synthetic intermediates, e.g. in Stille coupling.", "target": "chemical reaction", "baseline_candidates": ["addition reaction"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18918095", "label": "L'abitudine di tornare", "source": "L'abitudine di tornare (\"The habit of returning\") is the eighth studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Carmen Consoli. It was issued in 2015, five years after the greatest hits Per niente stanca and six years after her last studio album Elettra. The album is named after the single \"L'abitudine di tornare\", released in November 2014. The album peaked at third place on the Italian hit parade.", "target": "album by Carmen Consoli", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7545567", "label": "Smiths Falls Beavers", "source": "The Smiths Falls Beavers were a professional baseball team that played for one season in 1937, in Smiths Falls, Ontario. The team played as part of the Canadian–American League. Two players from the single-season team made it to the major leagues. Matt Christopher, the well-known author of over a hundred sports books for young adults, made the team out of training camp, but was released early in the season. Ballpark: Canadian Pacific Recreation Grounds Team Members included: Xavier Rescigno (p) Walt Lanfranconi (p) Art Horsington (p) Andy Palau (c) Al Smith (2b) Ernie Downer (cf) Matt Christopher (3b).", "target": "Canadian professional baseball team", "baseline_candidates": ["baseball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4939106", "label": "Bolderāja Lutheran Church", "source": "Bolderāja Lutheran Church (Latvian: Bolderājas evaņģēliski luteriskā baznīca) is a Lutheran church in Riga, the capital of Latvia. It is a parish church of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia. The building is situated at the address Lielā iela 45. The wooden church was built in 1875.", "target": "church building in Bolderāja, Latvia", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17741655", "label": "St Fagans Old Rectory", "source": "St Fagans Old Rectory is a Grade II* listed building in the village of St Fagans in western Cardiff. It is an important Victorian house designed by John Prichard and John Pollard Seddon, built in 1858–9 and used as a rectory until 1975. It is built from coursed squared lies with Bath stone dressings in two storeys and a French medieval-style attic. The steep roofs are made from Welsh slate. A lean-to veranda across the ground floor is supported by stone columns with capitals. The southern bay of the east elevation has a tall truncated pyramidal roof and on the eastern end is a gabled porch.", "target": "Grade II* listed building in Cardiff. Historic building in St Fagans, Cardiff, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["clergy house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q530593", "label": "Chaource", "source": "Chaource (French pronunciation: [ʃa.uʁs] (listen)) is a commune in the Aube department in north-central France. A cheese is named after this town. See Chaource cheese. In the Chaource parish church there is a sculpture by The Maitre de Chaource.", "target": "commune in Aube, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13121937", "label": "Sahil Kukreja", "source": "Sahil Kukreja (born 9 July 1985) is an Indian first-class cricketer who plays for Mumbai. He made his first-class debut for Mumbai in the 2005–06 Ranji Trophy on 1 December 2005. He announced his retirement from all forms of cricket in 2011 at the age of 26.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q610525", "label": "Love It or List It", "source": "Love It or List It is a home design TV show currently airing on HGTV, W Network, and on OWN Canada, and is the original show in the Love it or List It franchise. The show is produced by Big Coat Productions and premiered as a primetime program on W Network on September 8, 2008, and has since aired on OWN Canada as well as HGTV in the United States. In September 2014, the show began filming in the United States in North Carolina.In September 2017, HGTV ordered 20 additional episodes of the program. The following season started airing in June 2018. On February 4, 2019, HGTV announced a new order of 26 episodes for premiering season 15 on November 18, 2019.", "target": "Canadian-American television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5611919", "label": "Grudusk-Brzozowo", "source": "Grudusk-Brzozowo [ˈɡrudusk bʐɔˈzɔvɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Grudusk, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4947455", "label": "Bosphorus Gaz Corporation", "source": "Bosphorus Gaz Corporation is a gas importer and distributor in Turkey. It controls about 25% of Turkey's private natural gas market.The company was established in 2003 in Istanbul. In 2004, Securing Energy for Europe a former subsidiary of the Russian gas company Gazprom, became shareholder in Bosphorus Gaz. In 2009, Gazprom raised its share in the company from 40% to 51% and then to %71 in 2010. In 2018, Gazprom sold all of its %71 shares in the company to the Şen Group who owned %29 of the shares, making Şen Group's shares add up to a %100. In 2005, Bosphorus Gaz won a tender to resell 750 million cubic meters of the gas purchased by the Turkish energy company BOTAŞ from Gazprom until 2021.", "target": "gas importer and distributor in Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q837451", "label": "Wu Jinglian", "source": "Wu Jinglian (Chinese: 吴敬琏; pinyin: Wú Jìnglián; born January 24, 1930) is one of the preeminent economists of the People's Republic of China (PRC), primarily specializing in economic policy as it applies to China's ongoing series of economic reforms. Renowned for his resolute conviction that socialism is compatible with a market system, he is affectionately referred to in the media as Wu Shichang (Chinese: 吴市场; lit. 'Market Wu'). Wu currently (as of 2006) holds multiple positions, the most important of which are: Professor of Economics at both the China Europe International Business School and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences; Senior Research Fellow for the Development Research Center of the State Council of the PRC; and Member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. As of 2021, he is also an adviser to the China Finance 40 Forum (CF40).Wu graduated from Fudan University with a degree in economics in 1954. He later attended the Institute of Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Through his long career, he has, in addition to his professorships at Chinese universities, been visiting researcher and professor at a number of international universities, including Yale, MIT, Duke, Stanford, and Oxford. A prominent target of political persecution during the Cultural Revolution, Wu was criticized for advocating the doctrine of \"bourgeois right,\" more simply understood as the principle of \"compensation according to work.\" He was forced to make public denunciations of his revered teacher Sun Yefang, for which he later expressed deep regret. He has honoured the memory.", "target": "Chinese economist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2197104", "label": "New Underwood", "source": "New Underwood (Lakota: wóȟešma tȟéča; \"new undergrowth\") is a city in Pennington County, South Dakota, United States. The population was 590 at the 2020 Census.New Underwood got its start circa 1906. The city was named for John Underwood, a cattleman. Until 2017, it was home to the world’s smallest biker bar, which is now closed.", "target": "human settlement in Pennington County, South Dakota, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65963077", "label": "Arthur Cook", "source": "Arthur Eyre Cook (28 July 1889 – 25 September 1970) was a South African first-class cricketer. Cook was born at King William's Town in July 1889. He made his debut in first-class cricket for Border against Transvaal at King William's Town in March 1907, with Cook featuring in the return fixture at East London. He next played for Border in the 1908–09 Currie Cup, making three appearances in the competition. He played against the touring Marylebone Cricket Club in January 1910, before playing two matches for H. D. G. Leveson Gower's touring XI against Rhodesia. He played one match for The Rest against Transvaal in December 1911, before making four appearances for Transvaal from March 1913 to April 1914. In thirteen first-class matches, Cook scored 506 runs at an average of 24.09 and a high score of 101. This score, which was his only first-class century, came for H. D. G. Leveson-Gower's XI against Rhodesia. With his left-arm medium pace bowling, he took 10 wickets at a bowling average of 27.80, with best figures of 3 for 35. He died at Benoni in September 1970. His son, Trevor, and brother, George, both played first-class cricket.", "target": "South African cricketer (1889-1970)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5353924", "label": "Elder-Beerman", "source": "The Elder-Beerman Stores Corp. was a chain of department stores founded in 1883 and whose last stores closed in 2018. The chain, based primarily in the Midwestern United States, was composed of 31 stores in eight states at the time of its liquidation in 2018, and peaked around 2003 with 68 stores and $670 million in annual sales.", "target": "chain of department stores in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["department store chain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4725169", "label": "Ali Sadr Rural District", "source": "Ali Sadr Rural District (Persian: دهستان علي صدر) is a rural district (dehestan) in Gol Tappeh District, Kabudarahang County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,872, in 1,486 families. The rural district has 15 villages.", "target": "rural district in Hamadan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21491327", "label": "Doyon", "source": "Doyon may refer to: Cyrille Doyon (1842–1918), Quebec merchant, farmer and political figure Marie-Claude Doyon (born 1965), Canadian luger who competed in the late 1980s Mario Doyon (born 1968), retired Canadian ice hockey defenceman Pierre Adolphe Adrien Doyon (1827–1907), French dermatologist and balneologist born in Grenoble Stephanie Doyon (born Maine), an American novelist best known for her award-winning novel, The Greatest Man in Cedar Hole.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24661145", "label": "Beinn nan Caorach", "source": "Beinn nan Caorach (774 m) is a mountain in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland, It is located near the village of Corran in Lochalsh. One of the smaller mountains in the immediate area, it is often climbed in conjunction with its higher neighbour Beinn na h-Eaglaise. It provides a fine viewpoint from its summit.", "target": "mountain in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75401347", "label": "Edward Holland", "source": "Edward Holland (12 February 1806 – 5 January 1875) was a British Liberal Party politician from Worcestershire. He was elected at the 1835 general election as a Member of Parliament (MP) Member of Parliament for East Worcestershire, but was defeated at the 1837 election. He returned to the House of Commons after an 18-year absence when he was elected at a by-election in July 1855 as an MP for the borough of Evesham. He held that seat until he stood down at the 1868 general election, when the borough's representation was reduced to one seat.He lived in the Vale of Evesham and ran a model farm at Dumbleton in Gloucestershire. He was at various points a president of the Royal Agricultural Society, a High Sheriff of Worcestershire and a deputy lieutenant of Gloucestershire.", "target": "British politician; (1805-1875)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1306907", "label": "Hairy-backed Bulbul", "source": "The hairy-backed bulbul (Tricholestes criniger) is a songbird species in the bulbul family, Pycnonotidae. It is the sole species contained within the monotypic genus Tricholestes. It is found on the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19804691", "label": "Vysoky, Olkhovatsky District, Voronezh Oblast", "source": "Vysoky (Russian: Высокий) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Karayashnikovskoye Rural Settlement, Olkhovatsky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 50 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Olkhovatsky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16749794", "label": "Mervyn Patrick Wingfield, 9th Viscount Powerscourt", "source": "Mervyn Patrick Wingfield, 9th Viscount Powerscourt (22 August 1905 – 1973), was an Irish peer. He was the son of The 8th Viscount Powerscourt and Sybil Pleydell-Bouverie. He married Sheila Claude Beddington on 16 December 1932 in Jerusalem. They had three children, a daughter and two sons, Grania Langrishe, the heir 10th Viscount Powerscourt Mervyn Niall Wingfield ((1935-2015) son (the heir 11th Viscount Powerscourt)) Mervyn Anthony Wingfield 1963-) and Guy Wingfield. The Second World War had a huge impact on the family. The then Mervyn Patrick Wingfield (he succeeded as The 9th Viscount Powerscourt in March 1947) served in the war and was captured by the Germans in Italy. When he came home his health had been compromised and he suffered from shell shock. His wife Sheila (known as Lady Powerscourt from March 1947) had taken the family to Bermuda. They returned home when he did. He came into his inheritance of the Powerscourt Estate in March 1947, when he became Lord Powerscourt. His marriage never recovered from the impact of the war. In 1963, his wife left and, as a result of the financial impact, the family sold the Powerscourt Estate.He was appointed the first Chief Scout of the Boy Scouts of Ireland (BSI) in 1949. He was an uncle of the mother of Sarah, Duchess of York.", "target": "Irish Viscount (1905-1973)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q578789", "label": "Higher Superstition", "source": "Higher Superstition: The Academic Left and Its Quarrels with Science is a 1994 book about the philosophy of science by the biologist Paul R. Gross and the mathematician Norman Levitt.", "target": "book by Paul R. Gross and Norman Levitt", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48968211", "label": "Nemacheilus inglisi", "source": "Nemacheilus inglisi is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Nemacheilus from India.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4698902", "label": "Airport Drive", "source": "Airport Drive is a 5.7 kilometre highway in Melbourne, Australia, linking Centre Road at Melbourne Airport with the M80 Ring Road at Airport West. This road is an important thoroughfare for the adjacent Melbourne Airport Business Park along South Centre Road, and acts as an alternative access road to Tullamarine Freeway.", "target": "freeway in Melbourne", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16959053", "label": "Not Fade Away", "source": "Not Fade Away is the fifth album recorded by Irish singer-songwriter David Kitt, and was released on 18 August 2006. The album was also nominated for the Choice Music Prize as an album of the year but lost out to The Divine Comedy's album Victory for the Comic Muse.The album spawned the popular single, \"Say No More\", which received extensive airplay on national radio in summer 2006.", "target": "album by David Kitt", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4215414", "label": "Tangled Up in Me", "source": "\"Tangled Up in Me\" is a song recorded by Canadian musician Skye Sweetnam. It was released as the first single from Sweetnam's debut album Noise From the Basement on March 9, 2004, through Capitol Records. The song was written by Skye Sweetnam, James Robertson, Heather Mitchell, and Jimmy Harry. The song became Sweetnam's best-charting single in the United States after it was featured in an episode of MTV's Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County, reaching number 37 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40. It also reached the top 40 in Italy.", "target": "2004 single by Skye Sweetnam", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7496943", "label": "Shimobe-onsen Station", "source": "Shimobe-onsen Station (下部温泉駅, Shimobe-onsen-eki) is a railway station on the Minobu Line of Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) located in the town of Minobu, Minamikoma District, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan.", "target": "railway station in Minobu, Minamikoma district, Yamanashi prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66144619", "label": "Jeffrey LaRe", "source": "Jeffrey LaRe (; born February 9, 1976) is an American politician and law enforcement officer serving as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives from the 77th district. A Republican, LaRe's district includes the northern half of Fairfield County.", "target": "member of the Ohio House of Representatives", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17198560", "label": "Neville Hayes", "source": "Neville Hayes was primarily a defender for the Port Adelaide Football Club and won eight premierships during his career. North Adelaide forward Jeff Pash described Hayes as a \"player of all-round gifts who backs his judgement (to a hair-raising extent in this particular case) and plays his man at a distance\".", "target": "Australian australian-rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28128737", "label": "2017 Australian Open – men's doubles", "source": "Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Sam Querrey and Donald Young. Henri Kontinen and John Peers won their maiden Grand Slam title, defeating Bob and Mike Bryan in the final, 7–5, 7–5.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4731510", "label": "Allen Apsley", "source": "Sir Allen Apsley, 28 August 1616 to 15 October 1683, was a Royalist soldier and administrator during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, who took part in the Second Anglo-Dutch War. He was also MP for Thetford from 1661 to 1679. One biographer describes him as having an \"ability to maintain friendly contact with figures across a wide range of affiliations, which helped to make him a successful political fixer\".Born in London, his family came from West Sussex, an area solidly Parliamentarian at the outbreak of the First English Civil War in August 1642. As a result, Apsley spent most of it in Devon, serving as deputy governor of Exeter from 1643 to 1645, then governor of Barnstaple until the war ended in 1646. This brought him into close contact with senior figures like Queen Henrietta Maria of France, Charles II and Clarendon, connections which became important in later years. His younger sister Lucy was married to the Parliamentarian John Hutchinson, who used his influence to obtain Apsley favourable terms for regaining his estates. In return, he avoided involvement in Royalist conspiracies during the Protectorate and after the Stuart Restoration in May 1660 Apsley intervened to save Hutchinson from execution as a regicide. He became treasurer for James, Duke of York and his political manager in the Commons until losing office in 1679. He died in October 1683 and was buried in Westminster Abbey.", "target": "English politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6420625", "label": "kleptolagnia", "source": "Kleptolagnia (from Greek kleptein meaning \"to steal\", and lagnia meaning \"sexual excitement\") is the state of being sexually aroused by theft. A kleptolagniac is a person aroused by the act of theft. It is also known as kleptophilia, and is a sexual form of kleptomania.", "target": "paraphilia in which a subject derives gratification from stealing", "baseline_candidates": ["paraphilia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4042789", "label": "Leptothorax acervorum", "source": "Leptothorax acervorum is a small brown to yellow ant in the subfamily Myrmicinae. It was first described by Johan Christian Fabricius in 1793. L. acervorum is vastly distributed across the globe, most commonly found in the coniferous forests of Central, Western and Northern Europe. The morphology of L. acervorum is extremely similar to that of other Leptothorax ants. The difference arises in the two-toned appearance of L. acervorum, with the head and metasoma being darker than the mesosoma segment of the body, and hair across its body. Following Bergmann's rule—unusually, for ectothermic animals—body size increases with latitude.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21043245", "label": "Matt Duncan", "source": "Matt Duncan (born 29 August 1959) is a former Scotland international rugby union player.", "target": "Scottish rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q46687", "label": "Belfiore", "source": "Belfiore is a comune s in the province of Verona, Veneto, northern Italy.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2354467", "label": "Joe Graboski", "source": "Joseph W. Graboski (January 15, 1930 – July 2, 1998) was an American professional basketball player. He spent 13 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He was the third player to enter the NBA without having played in college: (Tony Kappen and Connie Simmons being the first two prep-to-pro players). He was also the second player to play in the league while still being 18 years old. A star at Tuley High School in Chicago, the 6'7\" power forward had previously played some basketball with the Philadelphia Sphas while he was a high school junior and senior before he began his professional career with the hometown Chicago Stags, with whom he played from 1949 to 1950. He also played for the Indianapolis Olympians, Philadelphia Warriors, St. Louis Hawks, and Chicago Packers, and he left the NBA in 1962 with 9,398 career points and 6,104 career rebounds.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12978257", "label": "Ponvaithanathar Temple", "source": "Ponvaithanathar Temple (பொன்வைத்தநாதர் கோயில்) is a Hindu temple located near Aalathampadi between Thiruvarur and Thiruthuraipoondi in the Tiruvarur district of Tamil Nadu, India.", "target": "temple in India", "baseline_candidates": ["Hindu temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16950222", "label": "Smoking Gun", "source": "Smoking Gun is the debut studio album by Angus Stone, released in March 2009, under the name Lady of the Sunshine. It peaked at number 45 in Australia.", "target": "album by Angus Stone", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13616774", "label": "Asota", "source": "Asota is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae first described by Jacob Hübner in 1819. Species are widely distributed throughout Africa, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, the Malayan region and tropical parts of the Australian region.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21936522", "label": "Meshak Munyoro", "source": "Meshak Munyoro (born 24 August 1958) is a Kenyan hurdler. He competed in the men's 400 metres hurdles at the 1984 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Kenyan hurdler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2255167", "label": "Luciano Zavagno", "source": "Luciano Germán Zavagno (born August 6, 1977 in Santa Fe) is an Argentine retired footballer.", "target": "Argentine footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6662699", "label": "Lloyd R. George", "source": "Lloyd Reid George (October 23, 1925 – February 25, 2012) was an American politician. George was a mayor of Danville, Arkansas and then served in the Arkansas House of Representatives 1963-1967 and 1973–1997. A son, Nathan V. George, was also a state representative. George was well known for wearing overalls on the last day of the legislative session to mark his return from the legislature to his farm.", "target": "American politician in Arkansas", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5054700", "label": "Cautionary Tales", "source": "\"Cautionary Tales\" is the ninth episode of the second season of the NBC superhero drama series Heroes. It aired on November 19, 2007.", "target": "episode of Heroes (S2 E9)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2268652", "label": "International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science", "source": "The International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science (IAQMS) is an international scientific learned society covering all applications of quantum theory to chemistry and chemical physics. It was created in Menton in 1967. The founding members were Raymond Daudel, Per-Olov Löwdin, Robert G. Parr, John Pople and Bernard Pullman. Its foundation was supported by Louis de Broglie.Originally the Academy had 25 regular members under 65 years of age. This was later raised to 30, and then to 35. There is no limit on the number of members over 65 years of age. The members are \"chosen among the scientists of all countries who have distinguished themselves by the value of their scientific work, their role of pioneer or leader of a school in the broad field of quantum chemistry, i.e. the application of quantum mechanics to the study of molecules and macromolecules\". The Academy presently consists of 90 members (as of 2006). The Academy organizes the International Congress of Quantum Chemistry every three years. The academy awards a medal to a young member of the scientific community who has distinguished himself or herself by a pioneering and important contribution. The award has been made every year since 1967.", "target": "organization devoted to applying quantum physics to chemistry", "baseline_candidates": ["learned society"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51749570", "label": "Samiollah Hosseini Makarem", "source": "Samiollah Hosseini Makarem (Persian: سمیع‌الله حسینی مکارم) is an Iranian politician who served as the acting mayor of Tehran.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5395435", "label": "Erotokritos Damarlis", "source": "Erotokritos Damarlis (Greek: Ερωτόκριτος Νταμαρλής; born on 13 May 1992) is Greek midfielder currently playing in the Football League for Agrotikos Asteras.", "target": "Greek footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54874886", "label": "Al-Fotuwa SC", "source": "Al-Fotuwa Sport Club (Arabic: نادي الفتوة الرياضي), is an Iraqi football team based in Mosul, that plays in the Iraq Division Two.", "target": "Iraqi football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q531465", "label": "Caulières", "source": "Caulières (French pronunciation: ​[koljɛʁ]; Picard: Queuillère) is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.", "target": "commune in Somme, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q472251", "label": "geosynchronous orbit", "source": "A geosynchronous orbit (sometimes abbreviated GSO) is an Earth-centered orbit with an orbital period that matches Earth's rotation on its axis, 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4 seconds (one sidereal day). The synchronization of rotation and orbital period means that, for an observer on Earth's surface, an object in geosynchronous orbit returns to exactly the same position in the sky after a period of one sidereal day. Over the course of a day, the object's position in the sky may remain still or trace out a path, typically in a figure-8 form, whose precise characteristics depend on the orbit's inclination and eccentricity. A circular geosynchronous orbit has a constant altitude of 35,786 km (22,236 mi).A special case of geosynchronous orbit is the geostationary orbit, which is a circular geosynchronous orbit in Earth's equatorial plane with both inclination and eccentricity equal to 0. A satellite in a geostationary orbit remains in the same position in the sky to observers on the surface.Communications satellites are often given geostationary or close to geostationary orbits so that the satellite antennas that communicate with them do not have to move, but can be pointed permanently at the fixed location in the sky where the satellite appears.", "target": "satellite orbit keeping the satellite at a fixed longitude above the equator", "baseline_candidates": ["location", "geocentric orbit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q746695", "label": "Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department", "source": "The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department (IMPD) is the law enforcement agency for the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, in the United States. Its operational jurisdiction covers all of the consolidated city of Indianapolis and Marion County except for the Airport Authority and the four excluded cities of Beech Grove, Lawrence, Southport and Speedway (see Unigov). It was created on January 1, 2007, by consolidating the Indianapolis Police Department and the road division of the Marion County Sheriff's Office.", "target": "law enforcement agency for the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["municipal police"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5384910", "label": "Eraserheads", "source": "Eraserheads (sometimes stylized as ERASƎRHEADS or ƎRASƎRHƎADS) were a Filipino alternative rock band formed in 1989. With a line-up comprising Ely Buendia, Buddy Zabala, Marcus Adoro, and Raimund Marasigan, the band became one of the most influential and successful in the history of Filipino music. Often dubbed as \"The Beatles of the Philippines\", they are credited for spearheading a second wave of Manila band invasions, paving the way for a host of Filipino alternative rock bands like Rivermaya.The band released several singles, albums, and EPs. They achieved commercial success with their third album Cutterpillow (1995), which achieved platinum status several times. They also received the Viewer's Choice Award at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards in New York, the only Filipino artist to have received the award before the conception of the MTV Asia Awards.", "target": "Filipino rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7506383", "label": "Si Johnson", "source": "Silas Kenneth Johnson (October 5, 1906 – May 12, 1994) was an American professional baseball player, a right-handed pitcher who appeared in 492 Major League games pitched over 17 seasons for the Cincinnati Reds (1928–36), St. Louis Cardinals (1936–38), Philadelphia Phillies (1940–43; 1946) and Boston Braves (1946–47). He was born in Danway, near Ottawa, Illinois, and was listed as 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) tall and 185 pounds (84 kg). Johnson led the National League in losses in 1931 (19) and 1934 (22). He also led the National League in earned runs allowed (125) in 1934. Missing the 1944–45 baseball seasons, Johnson served with the US Navy during World War II.In 17 seasons Johnson had a 101–165 win–loss record, 492 games, 272 games started, 108 complete games, 13 shutouts, 115 games finished, 15 saves, 2,2811⁄3 innings pitched, 2,510 hits allowed, 1,226 runs allowed, 1,036 earned runs allowed, 120 home runs allowed, 687 walks allowed, 840 strikeouts, 36 hit batsmen, 26 wild pitches, 9,903 batters faced, 3 balks and a 4.09 ERA. Johnson remained in baseball for two seasons after his active career ended, serving as batting practice pitcher and then pitching coach of the Braves (1948–49); he was a member of Boston's 1948 National League champions. He died in Sheridan, Illinois at the age of 87.", "target": "American baseball player (1906-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14108748", "label": "Piruna polingii", "source": "Piruna polingii, the four-spotted skipperling, is a species of intermediate skipper in the family of butterflies known as Hesperiidae. It was first described by William Barnes in 1900 and it is found in Central and North America.The MONA or Hodges number for Piruna polingii is 3984.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60788032", "label": "FC Universitatea Galați", "source": "Fotbal Club Universitatea Galați, commonly known as Universitatea Galați, or simply U Galați, is a Romanian women's football club based in Galați, Galați County, Romania. The team was founded in 2015 and promoted to Liga I at the end of the 2017–18 season, as the winner of the first series of the Liga II.Universitatea Galați plays its home matches on Siderurgistul Stadium with a capacity of 6,000 seats.", "target": "A Romanian women's football club", "baseline_candidates": ["women's association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7599791", "label": "Stanley Meadows", "source": "Stanley Meadows (born 14 July 1931 in Stepney, London, England) is a British film and television actor. He graduated from RADA in 1955. Meadows made frequent appearances in British films and became something of a stalwart of British television series including Public Eye, Undermind, Randall and Hopkirk and Widows (Eddie Rawlins).", "target": "British actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6759986", "label": "Margaret Veley", "source": "Margaret Veley (12 May 1843 – 7 December 1887) was a British author and poet. Born in Braintree, Essex to Augustus Charles Veley and Sophia Ludbey, she was second in a family of four daughters. She never married. She died in her early forties after a short illness \"caused by a chill and ending in an affection of the throat.\".", "target": "English writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17354408", "label": "Durandus of Troarn", "source": "Durandus of Troarn (b. about 1012, at Le Neubourg near Evreux; d. 1089, at Troarn near Caen) was a French Benedictine and ecclesiastical writer.Affiliated from early childhood to the Benedictine community of Mont-Sainte-Cathérine and of Saint-Vandrille, he was made abbot of the newly founded Saint-Martin of Troarn by William, Duke of Normandy, in whose esteem he stood on a par with Lanfranc, Anselm, and Gerbert. Ordericus Vitalis calls him ecclesiastici cantus et dogmatis doctor peritissimus. Of his achievements in sacred music we know nothing beyond that mention, but we have his Liber de Corpore et Sanguine Domini against Berengarius. The ninth and last part of it contains precious historical information about the heresiarch. In Durandus's mind Berengarius is a figurist pure and simple, after the manner of Scotus Eriugena, whose now lost book he is said to have possessed and used. In the rest of his book Durandus follows Paschasius Radbertus, whom he somewhat emphatically styles Divini sacramenti scrutator diligentissimus discussorque catholicus, and from whom he borrows both his patristic apparatus and his theological views. Joseph Turmel, however, notes that Durandus quotes new texts of Bede, Amalarius, Fulbert de Chartres, and St. John Chrysostom. His presentation of the Eucharistic dogma is frankly Ambrosian, i.e., he maintains with Paschasius and Gerbert the conversion of the bread and wine into the identical body and blood of Christ, thus excluding the Augustinian theory of the Praesentia spiritalis still held by some of his contemporaries and contributing to prepare the definition of the Fourth Lateran Council (1215). Durandus explains with.", "target": "French Benedictine theologian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5000097", "label": "Burns and Carlin at the Playboy Club Tonight", "source": "Burns and Carlin at the Playboy Club Tonight is the 1963 first and only album by the short-lived comedy duo of Jack Burns and George Carlin. The album's title is technically a slight exaggeration, because the album was actually recorded at a club named Cosmo Alley in Hollywood, California; not at the Playboy Club. It was recorded in May 1960 but was not released until 1963.By the time of the album's release, Burns and Carlin had already split up amicably in 1962 to pursue separate endeavors, and the rights of the album were given to Carlin as his first album. Burns teamed with Avery Schreiber and the duo were a successful comedy act until their breakup in 1974. Carlin continued to perform stand-up and record comedy albums until his death in 2008. The album has been re-issued twice, both with alternate track listings: in 1972 as The Original George Carlin and again in 1981 as Killer Carlin (which itself was re-issued on CD in 1995).", "target": "album by George Carlin with Jack Burns", "baseline_candidates": ["comedy album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16534250", "label": "Bruno Maltar", "source": "Bruno Maltar (born 6 October 1994) is a Croatian racing cyclist. He rode at the 2014 UCI Road World Championships.", "target": "cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4460316", "label": "Tommi Läntinen", "source": "Tommi Pekka Läntinen (born August 22, 1959) is a Finnish singer-songwriter. After starting his career in 1980, Läntinen has worked in a number of bands as a vocalist and songwriter—perhaps best known as a lead vocalist of the bands Boycott and Fabrics. At that time, Läntinen mainly sang in English, but as he began his solo career in 1993, he started to write his lyrics in Finnish. His debut solo album, Veijareita ja pyhimyksiä, was released in 1994 and his seventh and latest solo album, Isoja aikoja, was released in 2011.With over 144,707 records sold, Läntinen is one of the best-selling male soloists in Finland. In 12 January 2022, he was announced as one of the participants in the Finnish national final for Eurovision 2022.", "target": "Finnish singer-songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15727318", "label": "Seega", "source": "Seega is an abstract strategy game that originated in Egypt. It can be played on boards with cells in a 5×5, 7×7 or 9×9 disposition. Other names include Seejeh, Siga and Sidjah.The board starts out empty, and players take turns placing two pieces in any empty cell, excluding the center cell. Then, players move their pieces trying to bound their opponent's pieces to remove them.The game has been described in literature at least since 1836.", "target": "abstract strategy game", "baseline_candidates": ["game on cell board"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95637", "label": "James III, Margrave of Baden-Hachberg", "source": "Margrave James III of Baden-Hachberg (26 May 1562 – 17 August 1590) was margrave of Baden-Hachberg from 1584 to 1590 and resided at Emmendingen. He converted, in 1590, from Lutheranism to the Roman Catholic confession, causing some political turmoil.", "target": "Margrave of Baden-Hachberg", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22022152", "label": "1934 Colgate Red Raiders football team", "source": "The 1934 Colgate football team was an American football team that represented Colgate University as an independent during the 1934 college football season. In its sixth season under head coach Andrew Kerr, Colgate compiled a 7–1 record and outscored opponents by a total of 188 to 38.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q938849", "label": "Christopher Lennertz", "source": "Christopher Joseph Lennertz (born January 2, 1972) is an American composer, songwriter, and conductor of film, television, and video game scores. His big break came with his musical scores for the 2007 film Alvin and the Chipmunks, Hop, Think Like a Man, and Horrible Bosses as well as the video game series Medal of Honor created by Steven Spielberg. He composed the score for Supernatural and more recently Revolution, two television series created by Eric Kripke. He also scored Galavant and Sausage Party with Alan Menken and Marvel's Agent Carter including a first ever Marvel musical number co-written with Tony award winning lyricist David Zippel. He wrote the songs for UglyDolls with Glenn Slater for Kelly Clarkson, Nick Jonas, Lizzo, Janelle Monae, and Blake Shelton. Currently he composes the score for the Netflix series Lost in Space and the Amazon Prime Video series The Boys from Kripke, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg.", "target": "American composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55784349", "label": "CANVAS syndrome", "source": "Cerebellar Ataxia with Neuropathy and Vestibular Areflexia Syndrome (CANVAS) is an autosomal recessive late-onset heredodegenerative multisystem neurological disease. The symptoms include poor balance and difficulty walking. Chronic cough and difficulty swallowing may also be present. Clinical findings include ataxia, sensory neuropathy, and absence of the vestibulo–ocular reflex. The syndrome was initially described in 2004. In 2019, the cause was identified as biallelic pentanucleotide expansion in the RFC1 gene.", "target": "human disease", "baseline_candidates": ["cerebellar ataxia", "genetic disease", "disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21587878", "label": "Ryu Tong-Song", "source": "Ryu Tong-song (born 27 January 1979) is a North Korean former footballer. He represented North Korea on at least one occasion in 2005.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5121745", "label": "circumlunar trajectory", "source": "In orbital mechanics, a circumlunar trajectory, trans-lunar trajectory or lunar free return is a type of free return trajectory which takes a spacecraft from Earth, around the far side of the Moon, and back to Earth using only gravity once the initial trajectory is set.", "target": "type of free-return trajectory", "baseline_candidates": ["trajectory", "orbital mechanics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5306322", "label": "Dream Café", "source": "Dream Café is an album by American folk singer/guitarist Greg Brown, released in 1992.", "target": "album by Greg Brown", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7671535", "label": "TRV Tailor", "source": "TRV Tailor (803) was one of three Torpedo Recovery Vessels operated by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) and Defence Maritime Services (DMS). Ordered in 1969, the vessel, originally identified as TRV 255, was completed in 1971 and assigned to the naval base HMAS Waterhen in Sydney. The ship received a name and the pennant number \"TRV 803\" in 1983. In 1988, the three vessels were sold to DMS. Tailor was assigned to the naval base HMAS Creswell in Western Australia. Tailor was decommissioned in 2018.", "target": "Australian navy vessel", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18371133", "label": "Shuruppak", "source": "Shuruppak (Sumerian: 𒋢𒆳𒊒𒆠 ŠuruppagKI, \"the healing place\"), modern Tell Fara, was an ancient Sumerian city situated about 55 kilometres (35 mi) south of Nippur on the banks of the Euphrates in Iraq's Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate. Shuruppak was dedicated to Ninlil, also called Sud, the goddess of grain and the air.", "target": "archaeological site in Iraq", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19724168", "label": "Lubusz Land", "source": "Lubusz Land (Polish: Ziemia lubuska; German: Land Lebus) is a historical region and cultural landscape in Poland and Germany on both sides of the Oder river. Originally the settlement area of the Lechites, the swampy area was located east of Brandenburg and west of Greater Poland, south of Pomerania and north of Silesia and Lower Lusatia. Presently its eastern part lies within the Polish Lubusz Voivodeship, the western part with its historical capital Lebus (Lubusz) in the German state of Brandenburg.", "target": "plateau in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["cultural region", "plateau", "historical region", "geographic region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4384667", "label": "USS Kansas", "source": "USS Kansas (BB-21) was a US Connecticut-class pre-dreadnought battleship, the fourth of six ships in the class. She was the second ship of the United States Navy named Kansas, but the only one named in honor of the state of Kansas. The ship was launched in August 1905 and commissioned into the fleet in April 1907. Kansas was armed with a main battery of four 12-inch (305 mm) guns and was capable of a top speed of 18 kn (33 km/h; 21 mph). Shortly after she entered service, Kansas joined the Great White Fleet for its circumnavigation of the globe in 1908–1909. She made trips to Europe in 1910 and 1911 and after 1912, became involved in suppressing unrest in several Central American countries, including the United States occupation of Veracruz during the Mexican Revolution. After the United States entered World War I in April 1917, Kansas was employed as a training ship for new personnel. In September 1918, she began escorting convoys to Europe. After the war ended in November, she then began a series of trips to France to bring American soldiers home. The ship's postwar career was short. She conducted training cruises for US Naval Academy cadets in 1920 and 1921, the first to the Pacific and the second to Europe. During this period she served briefly as the flagship of the 4th Battleship Division. After returning from the second cruise, Kansas was decommissioned and sold for scrap in August 1923 according to the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty.", "target": "Connecticut-class pre-dreadnought battleship of the United States Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["pre-dreadnought battleship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16200410", "label": "Khalid Al Merreikhi", "source": "Khalid Al Merreikhi (born 1968) is a Qatari retired football player. He played for the Qatar national team but is best known for his time with Al Sadd.He started his career in Al Tadamun. After the temporary dissolution of the Qatari Second Division in 1989, he moved to Al Sadd. Future star Fahad Al Kuwari also made the transition to Al Sadd alongside him. They were both considered the most prominent players to have transferred from the Second Division.He scored the winning goal in the final of the 1994 Emir Cup final.", "target": "Qatar footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30274106", "label": "Coir Board of India", "source": "The Coir Board is a statutory body established by the Government of India under the Coir Industry Act 1953 (No. 45 of 1953) for the promotion and development of the coir (coconut fibre) industry in India. It is based in Kochi and Alappuzha. The head office of the Coir Board is in Kochi and the research and training office is at Alappuzha and Bangalore. The coir industry is one of India's traditional industries that is still economically important. The Coir Board has regional offices in different parts of India, wherever there is a significant industry presence. The board works for the promotion, research, education, and training of the industry. The board functions under the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises.The coir industry employs more than 7 lakh (700,000) people, a majority of whom are from rural areas who belong to economically weaker sections of society. The Coir Board has worked actively to support the International Year of Natural Fibres 2009. Shri Sudhir Garg is the current chairman of Coir Board of India.", "target": "government organization in Kochi, India", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64520679", "label": "2019 Rosmalen Grass Court Championships – women's doubles", "source": "Shuko Aoyama and Aleksandra Krunić defeated Lesley Kerkhove and Bibiane Schoofs in the final, 7–5, 6–3, to win the women's doubles tennis title at the 2019 Rosmalen Grass Court Championships.Kerkhove and Schoofs had defeated defending champion Demi Schuurs in the semifinals, who partnered with Kiki Bertens in her title defense after Elise Mertens chose not to compete.", "target": "2019 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2320176", "label": "Estêvão Gomes", "source": "Estêvão Gomes, also known by the Spanish version of his name, Esteban Gómez (c. 1483 – 1538), was a Portuguese cartographer and explorer. He sailed at the service of Castile (Spain) in the fleet of Ferdinand Magellan, but deserted the expedition when they had reached the Strait of Magellan, and returned to Spain in May 1521. In 1524 he explored present-day Nova Scotia. While historical accounts vary, Gomes may have entered New York Harbor and seen the Hudson River. Because of his expedition, the 1529 Diogo Ribeiro world map outlines the East coast of North America almost perfectly.", "target": "Portuguese explorer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64768409", "label": "Chinna Muthu", "source": "Chinna Muthu is a 1994 Indian Tamil-language action drama film directed by Shanmuga Sundaram. The film stars Radha Ravi in the title role with Rajeev, Y. G. Mahendran, Vaishnavi, Chandrasekhar in supporting roles.", "target": "film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1328886", "label": "Rochefortia", "source": "Rochefortia is a genus of flowering plants in family Boraginaceae. Its species are native to North America, the Caribbean, and/or South America.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1300497", "label": "Ýdalir", "source": "In Norse mythology, Ýdalir (\"yew-dales\") is a location containing a dwelling owned by the god Ullr. Ýdalir is solely attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources. Scholarly theories have been proposed about the implications of the location.", "target": "fictional location", "baseline_candidates": ["Norse mythical location"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7691164", "label": "Teach For Us", "source": "Teach For Us is an American non-profit organization that works to educate the public about the challenges faced by recent college graduates and professionals who agree to teach for two years in low-income communities throughout the United States as part of the Teach For America program.", "target": "American non-profit organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3695435", "label": "Mount Azumaya", "source": "Mount Azumaya (四阿山, Azumaya-san) is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains. The 2,354-metre-high (7,723 ft) peak lies on the border of Nagano Prefecture and Gunma Prefecture. There exist alternative spellings of the mountain's name, like: 吾妻山 and 吾嬬山 which is read as \"Agatsuma-yama\" (Mount Agatsuma). In the village Tsumagoi, the mountain is spelled 吾妻山. The mountain should not be confused with Mount Azumaya (四阿屋山, Azumaya-san) of which there are two, one in Nagano Prefecture and the other in Saitama Prefecture. Though the reading is the same, the name written in Kanji differs from the mountain in this article.", "target": "mountain in Nagano Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["stratovolcano"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10702565", "label": "Trichadenotecnum merum", "source": "Trichadenotecnum merum is a species of common barklouse in the family Psocidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12026887", "label": "Josef Šulc", "source": "Josef Šulc (12 September 1907 – 10 July 1977) was a Czech long-distance runner. He competed in the marathon at the 1936 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Czechoslovak marathon runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11666537", "label": "Tokuji Iida", "source": "Tokuji Iida (飯田 徳治, Iida Tokuji, April 6, 1924 – June 19, 2000) was a Japanese former Nippon Professional Baseball first baseman. He both batted and threw right-handed. Iida spent most of his 16-year career with the Nankai Hawks, where he won 5 Best Nine Awards, 4 Pacific League pennants, and a Pacific League MVP Award in 1955. He spent the remainder of his career with the Kokutestu Swallows, with his final season in 1963. He played 1,246 consecutive games until finally taking a rest day on May 24, 1958.", "target": "Japanese baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25753022", "label": "Gennady Kazansky", "source": "Gennadi Kazansky (1 December 1910 – 14 September 1983) was a Sovietn film director of the Soviet era.", "target": "Soviet film director (1910-1983)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21016323", "label": "1964 in Libya", "source": "The following lists events that happened in 1964 in Libya.", "target": "Libya-related events during the year of 1964", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6412830", "label": "Kingman Township", "source": "Kingman Township is a township in Kingman County, Kansas, United States. As of the United States census in 2011, its population was 7,853.", "target": "township in Kingman County, Kansas", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Kansas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5231832", "label": "David Bruce", "source": "Alexander David Michael Bruce (born 5 July 1948 in Shimla, India) is a British entrepreneur who has been involved in the international brewing and leisure industry since 1966, in a career that has covered both production and retailing.", "target": "entrepreneur", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7177060", "label": "Peter Sprung", "source": "Peter Sprung (born July 20, 1979) is a German footballer who currently plays for Sportfreunde Seligenstadt.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4710904", "label": "Albert Norman", "source": "Albert Norman MBE (1882–1964) was one of the founders and the first secretary of the Institute of Biomedical Science.Norman was born in 1882 in the parish of St Giles in Cambridge, England.He and coworkers founded the Pathology and Laboratory Assistants Association now the Institute of Biomedical Science www.ibms.org in UK. In 1891 at aged 8 Albert Norman lived at 25 Madingley Road Cambridge with his father whose occupation was gardener, his mother and his paternal grandfather who was a retired farm labourer. By the age of 14 (1896) Albert Norman was working in the zoological department at Cambridge University where he gained experience in histological procedures and taxidermy and he eventually moved into the newly formed pathology laboratory. When he was about 17 he moved to the Norfolk and Norwich hospital as the sole laboratory worker, where he added the skills of museum specimen preparation, the newly discovered radiography and pharmacy. In the 1901 Albert was 19 year old young boarder in the household of an Anthony Bailey a grocer’s assistant at 44 Grapes Hill Norwich. Albert’s occupation is shown as a 'curator's assistant'.", "target": "scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2044345", "label": "PL/pgSQL", "source": "PL/pgSQL (Procedural Language/PostgreSQL) is a procedural programming language supported by the PostgreSQL ORDBMS. It closely resembles Oracle's PL/SQL language. Implemented by Jan Wieck, PL/pgSQL first appeared with PostgreSQL 6.4, released on October 30, 1998. Version 9 also implements some ISO SQL/PSM features, like overloading of SQL-invoked functions and procedures.PL/pgSQL, as a fully featured programming language, allows much more procedural control than SQL, including the ability to use loops and other control structures. SQL statements and triggers can call functions created in the PL/pgSQL language. The design of PL/pgSQL aimed to allow PostgreSQL users to perform more complex operations and computations than SQL, while providing ease of use. The language is able to be defined as trusted by the server.PL/pgSQL is one of the programming languages included in the standard PostgreSQL distribution, the others being PL/Tcl, PL/Perl and PL/Python. In addition many others are available from third parties, including PL/Java, PL/pgPSM, PL/php, PL/R, PL/Ruby,PL/sh, PL/Lua and PL/v8. PostgreSQL uses Bison as its parser, making it easy to port many open-source languages, as well as to reuse code.", "target": "procedural programming language", "baseline_candidates": ["programming language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25546459", "label": "Jahaniyan Jahangasht", "source": "Mīr Sayyid Jalāl ad-Dīn an-Naqwī al-Bukhārī (Persian: میر سید جلال الدین النقوی البخاری; 1308-1384), better known as Jahāniyān Jahāngasht (Persian: مخدوم جہانیاں جہان گشت), was a Sufi saint from South Asia.", "target": "Sufi saint", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17343455", "label": "Twal Dabaghin", "source": "Twal Dabaghin (Arabic: طوال دباغين) is a Syrian village located in Al-Hamraa Nahiyah in Hama District, Hama. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Twal Dabaghin had a population of 509 in the 2004 census.", "target": "village in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21685124", "label": "Álvaro Arias", "source": "Álvaro Arias (Oviedo, Spain, 1969) is a linguist and Hispanist specialist in the fields of phonology, morphology and dialectology. He has more than thirty scholarly publications. Born in Oviedo, with family roots in Felechosa (Aller, Asturias), is a linguist and Hispanist. He was educated at University of Oviedo, where he received a BA in Spanish philology and a PhD in Spanish linguistics. He is professor of Spanish philology at the University of Oviedo and author of publications on phonology and grammar, from a theoretical and dialectal perspective, with special attention to the Spanish, Galician and Asturian languages. He has published over 30 articles and book chapters, and edited or authored several books, in these areas.He has also published studies of linguistic historiography and rescued and published literature in Asturian of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.Damaso Alonso Prize of Philological Research, he has also received other awards for his academic work.", "target": "researcher ORCID ID = 0000-0002-1175-4030", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66084989", "label": "Mariana Arceo", "source": "Mariana Arceo (born 25 April 1994) is a Mexican modern pentathlete. In 2019, she represented Mexico at the 2019 Pan American Games in Lima, Peru and she won the gold medal in the women's individual event.She represented Mexico at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. She competed in the women's event. At the 2019 World Modern Pentathlon Championships in Budapest, Hungary, she won, with Mayan Oliver, the gold medal in the women's relay event.", "target": "Mexican athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7263464", "label": "Pyrenostigme", "source": "Pyrenostigme is a genus of fungi in the class Dothideomycetes. The relationship of this taxon to other taxa within the class is unknown (incertae sedis). A monotypic genus, it contains the single species Pyrenostigme siparunae.", "target": "genus of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28224696", "label": "Lucky Colour Blue", "source": "Lucky Colour Blue is an Australian TV series which first screened on the ABC in 1975. It was a sequel to 1973 television series A Taste for Blue Ribbons.Lucky Colour Blue was produced by Christopher Muir and written by Virginia Duigan.", "target": "Australian television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3009945", "label": "Cédric Penicaud", "source": "Cédric Pénicaud (born 27 September 1971 in Limoges) is a retired breaststroke swimmer from France, who represented his country at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. He won a silver medal at the 1991 European Long Course Championships in Athens, Greece, as a member of the French relay team in the men's 4 × 100 m medley.", "target": "French swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1155499", "label": "Sarıhacılar", "source": "Sarıhacılar is a village in the District of Gölpazarı, Bilecik Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 35 people.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21002277", "label": "electronics technician", "source": "Electronics technicians help design, develop, test, manufacture, install, and repair electrical and electronic equipment such as communication equipment, medical monitoring devices, navigational equipment, and computers. They may be employed in product evaluation and testing, using measuring and diagnostic devices to adjust, test, and repair equipment. Electronics technicians may also work as sales workers or field representatives for manufacturers, wholesalers, or retailers giving advice on the installation, operation, and maintenance of complex equipment and may write specifications and technical manuals. Electronics technicians represent over 33% of all engineering technicians in the U.S. In 2009, there were over 160,000 electronics technicians employed in the U.S. Electronics technicians are accredited by organizations such as the Electronics Technicians Association (ETA), or International Society of Certified Electronics Technicians (ISCET).", "target": "profession", "baseline_candidates": ["profession", "technician"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5203201", "label": "D'erlanger", "source": "D'erlanger is the self-titled fifth album by Japanese rock band D'erlanger, released on November 11, 2009. It reached number 19 on the Oricon chart. The limited edition came with a DVD of the music video for \"Angelic Poetry\" and other material. \"Easy Make, Easy Mark\" was a speed metal song the band wrote and played back in the 1980s. For 2017's D'erlanger Tribute Album ~Stairway to Heaven~, \"Easy Make, Easy Mark\" was covered by Dir en Grey.", "target": "2009 studio album by D'erlanger", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6314657", "label": "Jupiter and Lake Worth Railway", "source": "The Jupiter and Lake Worth Railway was a 3 feet (0.91 m) narrow gauge railway with a 7.5 miles (12.1 km) connection between the Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West Railway system in Florida. It connected the Lake Worth Lagoon at Juno to the Jupiter Inlet at Jupiter. With intermediate stops at Venus and Mars, the railroad was often called the Celestial Railroad, with the first use of that name appearing in the March 1893 issue of Harper's New Monthly Magazine in an article written by Julian Ralph. A report published by the town of Jupiter in 2012 noted that Mars and Venus \"were not much more than loading platforms. \"The purpose of the railroad was to link the Lake Worth and Jupiter inlets, both of which had plant system steamboat lines. The Indian River Steamboat Company went north through the Jupiter Inlet and connected waterways (now part of the Intracoastal Waterway) to Titusville. There were no turning tracks, so the locomotives always pointed towards Juno, forcing trains making the return trip to go in reverse. Fare was rather high for the time, being 10 cents per mile (6.2 ¢/km), a maximum total of 75 cents. Those who rode on the Jupiter and Lake Worth Railway recalled that the conductor would occasionally stop the train to allow passengers to pick flowers or hunt wild turkeys.Henry Flagler, the owner of the Florida East Coast Railway, rejected the high price, instead building his own line to the west. The new railroad was finished in February 1894, and the Jupiter.", "target": "nicknamed the \"Celestial Railroad\"", "baseline_candidates": ["railway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2040645", "label": "Hoshina Masatoshi", "source": "Hoshina Masatoshi (保科 正俊) (1509–1593) was a Japanese samurai of the Sengoku period, who served the Takeda clan. He was the head of Hoshina clan, son of Hoshina Masanori. Masatoshi served under Shingen from the latter's earliest campaigns and fought in many of battles. He initially opposed Takeda Shingen's invasion of Shinano; however, he later submitted to Shingen and became a Takeda general, in command of 120 cavalry. Together with Sanada Yukitaka and Kōsaka Masanobu, he was one of the three \"Danjo\" (Danjō stands for a formal title, Danjōchū; 弾正忠) in the Takeda clan, distinguished from the others as \"Yari Danjō\" (槍弾正), due to his skilled use of the spear. Masatoshi was succeeded by his son Hoshina Masanao.", "target": "samurai", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66606880", "label": "Gregory J. Weissenberger", "source": "Gregory Joseph Weissenberger (1914-1985) was a World War II fighter ace who served in the US Marine Corps. He is credited with five aerial victories, and reached the rank of Colonel during his service in the Marines.", "target": "American flying ace", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3772658", "label": "Go", "source": "Go is the title of the fourth album released by H2O. It was released on May 15, 2001. This and the All We Want EP are the only releases the band made with the major label, MCA Records. The album peaked at #21 on Billboard Top Heatseekers chart in May 2001. The last track includes a hidden track of \"Like a Prayer\", a punk rock cover of the song originally by Madonna. This is their second album in a row to have a cover as a hidden track, with the 7 Seconds cover \"Not Just Boys Fun\" on their last album, F.T.T.W.. H2O shot a video for \"Role Model\" and performed \"Memory Lane\" on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.", "target": "album by H₂O", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5817122", "label": "Kalateh-ye Sanam", "source": "Kalateh-ye Sanam (Persian: كلاته صنم, also Romanized as Kalāteh-ye Şanam and Kalāteh Şanam; also known as Kalāteh-ye Nūr Moḩammad Shādī) is a village in Gol Banu Rural District, Pain Jam District, Torbat-e Jam County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 126, in 32 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28150531", "label": "John Schaw", "source": "Sir John Shaw, 3rd Baronet (c. 1679–1752) of Greenock was a Scottish Whig politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1708 and 1734. He was instrumental in the construction of Greenock Harbour, and took part in actions against the Jacobite risings. Shaw was the eldest son of Sir John Shaw, 2nd Baronet and his wife Eleanor Nicolson, daughter of Sir Thomas Nicolson, 2nd Baronet, of Carnock. The Shaw (or Schaw) family owned estates in Clackmannan, and his father became instrumental in developing the growth of Greenock to rival Glasgow on the River Clyde, and in particular seeking funds to build a harbour at Greenock. Shaw was educated at Glasgow in 1694. He married Margaret Dalrymple, eldest daughter of Hon. Sir Hew Dalrymple, 1st Baronet of North Berwick, Haddington on 15 March 1700. Also in 1700 he became a Burgess of Glasgow. He succeeded his father to the baronetcy on 16 April 1702 and set out to achieve his father's aim of creating a harbour at Greenock.Shaw's various family properties at Greenock, Renfrewshire, Sauchie, Clackmannanshire; and Carnock Stirlingshire gave him several options for a parliamentary seat at the 1708 general election, and he chose to stand for Renfrewshire. He was returned unopposed as Member of Parliament for Renfrewshire. He and his fellow citizens raised their own funds to build Greenock Harbour, and the work was completed in 1710, with quays extended out into Sir John's Bay to enclose the harbour. Shaw did not stand at the 1710 and 1713 general elections, but he continued fight.", "target": "British Member of Parliament (died 1752)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5978091", "label": "I Love Hip Hop", "source": "\"I Love Hip Hop\" is the fifth maxi single by Dragon Ash, released in 1999. It was released on the same day as \"Grateful Days\" and both singles quickly gained popularity in Japan. \"I Love Hip Hop\" is performed to the tune of the famous 1975 song \"I Love Rock 'n' Roll\" by Arrows. Because of its remarkable karaoke-style singability, the song has been performed live by Dragon Ash on several occasions and remains a fan favorite. and this tune also samples the intro from \"Clean Up Woman\" by Betty Wright. \"Motor Headphone\" is produced by members Ikuzo Baba and Makoto Sakurai and is named after their side project Motör Headphone.", "target": "1999 single by Dragon Ash", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1766756", "label": "Bitter pit", "source": "Bitter pit is a disorder in apple fruits, now believed to be induced by calcium deficiency. It occurs less commonly in pears. The disease was probably first reported in Germany where it was known as Stippen. It was also known as \"Baldwin spot\" and \"blotchy cork\" in North America. The name \"bitter pit\" was first used by Cobb in Australia in 1895. The disease has been shown as non-pathological and is now known as a disorder. When it occurs on the tree, it is known as \"tree pit\"; it may also occur in storage, when it is known as \"storage pit\".", "target": "physiological disorder", "baseline_candidates": ["physiological plant disorders", "plant disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7883740", "label": "Underneath the Pine", "source": "Underneath the Pine is the second album from the artist Toro y Moi, released on February 22, 2011 on Carpark Records. The album was given the \"Best New Music\" designation by Pitchfork and they placed the album at number 48 on its list of the \"Top 50 albums of 2011\".The Korean edition of the album features the bonus track \"Ricardo and Ryne.\".", "target": "album by Toro y Moi", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q410861", "label": "U.S. Route 98", "source": "U.S. Route 98 (US 98) is an east–west United States Highway in the Southeastern United States that runs from western Mississippi to southern Florida. It was established in 1933 as a route between Pensacola and Apalachicola, Florida, and has since been extended westward into Mississippi and eastward across the Florida Peninsula. It runs along much of the Gulf Coast between Mobile, Alabama, and Crystal River, Florida, including extensive sections closely following the coast between Mobile and St. Marks, Florida. The highway's western terminus is with US 84 in Natchez, Mississippi. Its eastern terminus is Palm Beach, Florida, at State Road A1A (SR A1A) near the Mar-a-Lago resort.", "target": "highway in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q434990", "label": "2012–13 BFC Siófok season", "source": "The 2012–13 season will be BFC Siófok's 20th competitive season, 3rd consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 81st year in existence as a football club.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q559665", "label": "Darro", "source": "Darro is a municipality in the province of Granada, Spain. As of 2010, it has a population of 1462 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1780986", "label": "Nils Claus Ihlen", "source": "Nils Claus Ihlen (24 July 1855 – 22 March 1925) was a Norwegian engineer and politician for the Liberal Party. He served as Foreign Minister of Norway from 1913 to 1920.", "target": "Norwegian politician (1855-1925)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5928068", "label": "Javier Orozco Gómez", "source": "Javier Orozco Gómez (born 18 November 1964) is a Mexican politician affiliated with the PVEM. As of 2013 he served as Deputy of both the LIX and LXII Legislatures of the Mexican Congress representing the State of Mexico. He also served as Senator during the LX and LXI Legislatures. He was one of the promoters of the infamous Televisa Law.", "target": "Mexican politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6377966", "label": "Katrina Parrock", "source": "Katrina Parrock (born 2 September 1990) is an Irish camogie player, winner of All-Ireland Senior medals in 2007, 2010, 2011 and 2012 and an All Star award winner in 2010, 2011 and 2012. She was an All Star nominee in 2006, 2007 and 2009 and a member of the Team of the Championship for 2011. Also an accomplished association footballer, she played for Wexford Youths of the Women's National League (WNL) from 2017 until 2019, scoring the winning goal in the 2018 FAI Women's Cup final.", "target": "Irish camogie player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61421", "label": "Adolf Erman", "source": "Johann Peter Adolf Erman (German: [ɛɐ̯ˈmãː]; 31 October 1854 – 26 June 1937) was a renowned German Egyptologist and lexicographer.", "target": "German egyptologist and lexicographer (1854-1937) of quarter Jewish descent", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5299015", "label": "Dorton", "source": "Dorton is an unincorporated community and coal town in southern Pike County, Kentucky, United States. Located along U.S. Route 23, also known as Country Music Highway, it lies at 37.27667°N, 82.57917°W at an altitude of 683 feet. It is centered at the confluence of Dorton and Shelby Creeks and the junction of U.S. 23 and KY 610, 13 miles south of Pikeville. The community was named for William P. Dorton. The post office at Dorton was established July 2, 1872 and John Bumgardner was the first post master. Dorton Elementary School is located in the community. Dorton High School closed its doors at the conclusion of the 1989–90 school year when it consolidated with neighboring Virgie High School, forming Shelby Valley High School.", "target": "unincorporated community in Pike County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5892938", "label": "Hay Amores Que Matan", "source": "Hay amores que matan is a Venezuelan telenovela written by Carlos Pérez and produced by Radio Caracas Televisión in 2000. This telenovela lasted 120 episodes and was distributed internationally by RCTV International. In international broadcasts it was also known as Amanda, hay amores que matan.Carolina Tejera and Luis Fernandez starred as the main protagonists.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64006444", "label": "Patrick Henry Nelson III", "source": "Patrick Henry Nelson III (March 11, 1910 – June 28, 1964) was an American politician, U.S. Marine veteran of World War II, and attorney from Columbia, South Carolina.", "target": "human", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q420768", "label": "beryllium bromide", "source": "Beryllium bromide is the chemical compound with the formula BeBr2. It is very hygroscopic and dissolves well in water. The compound is a polymer with tetrahedral Be centres.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54811246", "label": "The Romance Promoters", "source": "The Romance Promoters is a 1920 American silent comedy film directed by Chester Bennett and starring Earle Williams, Helen Ferguson and Charles Wingate.", "target": "1920 film directed by Chester Bennett", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7522469", "label": "Sinezona costulata", "source": "Sinezona costulata is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Scissurellidae, the little slit shells.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5091803", "label": "Cheraghabad-e Jonubi", "source": "Cheraghabad-e Jonubi (Persian: چراغ آباد جنوبي, also Romanized as Cherāghābād-e Jonūbī) is a village in Cheraghabad Rural District, Tukahur District, Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 997, in 207 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2707807", "label": "Océan", "source": "Océan was a 118-gun first-rate three-decker ship of the line of the French Navy, lead ship of her class. She was funded by a don des vaisseaux donation from the Estates of Bourgogne. She was ordered as États de Bourgogne and was launched at Brest in 1790. Like many French ships of the line during the Revolutionary period, she was renamed several times, becoming Côte d'Or in January 1793, Montagne in October 1793, Peuple on 17 May 1795, and a matter of weeks later again renamed, to Océan. She served until 1855. A large model of a generic Océan-class ship, named Océan, at the 1⁄16 scale can be seen at the Musée de la Marine in Paris.", "target": "French 120-gun three-decker ship of the line", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2731791", "label": "Kaona", "source": "Kaona is a village in the municipality of Lučani, Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the village has a population of 384 people.", "target": "village in Lučani municipality, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75952", "label": "Robert Redslob", "source": "Robert Redslob (3 February 1882 – 6 June 1962) was a German-French constitutional and public international law-scientist who was critical of the French constitution in the early twentieth century. He was born in Straßburg in Elsass-Lothringen. From 1900 to 1906 he studied Law (inter alia) in Straßburg and in Berlin. In 1913 he accepted a position as professor at the University of Rostock, and after the First World War he returned to Strasbourg to the newly established University of Strasbourg. Redslob's ideas from his work Die parlamentarische Regierung in ihrer wahren und in ihrer unechten Form from 1918 had a remarkable influence on the German Weimar constitution of 1919. (The German title means ‘The parliamentary government in its true form and in its false (imperfect, incorrect) form’. The addition to the title: Eine vergleichende Studie über die Verfassungen von England, Belgien, Ungarn, Schweden und Frankreich is ‘A comparative survey of the constitutions of England, Belgium, Hungary, Sweden and France’.) In his capacity as a professor at The Hague Academy of International Law, Redslob introduced the concept of heimat in relation to international law in 1931.", "target": "French lawyer (1882-1962)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27480491", "label": "Monyake", "source": "Monyake is a community council located in the Mohale's Hoek of Lesotho. Its population in 2006 was 12,234.Under the previous administrations, the community used to fall under the Mafeteng District, but under the new demarcation, this village has been moved to the Mohale's Hoek district, with other villages such as Ha Panta, Ha Lengolo remaining under Thabana-Morena within the Mafeteng District.", "target": "community Council in Mafeteng District, Lesotho", "baseline_candidates": ["community council of Lesotho"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17502264", "label": "Spiros Louis", "source": "Spyridon Louis (Greek: Σπυρίδων Λούης [spiˈriðon ˈluis], sometimes transliterated Spiridon Loues; 12 January 1873 – 26 March 1940), commonly known as Spyros Louis (Σπύρος Λούης), was a Greek water carrier who won the first modern-day Olympic marathon at the 1896 Summer Olympics. Following his victory, he was celebrated as a national hero.A former soldier, Louis was encouraged to try out for the Olympics by his former commanding officer. After progressing through qualifying, he went on to win the inaugural Olympic marathon after placing first from seventeen competitors. Louis later became a police officer and a farmer. Outside of his athletics career, Louis was arrested for forgery, of which he was acquitted after spending a year in jail.", "target": "Greek athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97171084", "label": "R169 road", "source": "The R169 road is a regional road in Ireland linking Mollyrue and Dunleer in County Louth.The road is 7 km (4.3 mi) long.", "target": "road in Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7085600", "label": "Oldfield Estuary", "source": "Oldfield Estuary is an estuary in the Goldfields-Esperance region of Western Australia. The estuary has a length of 3 kilometres (2 mi) and is no wider than 600 metres (1,969 ft) with a total area of approximately 1 square kilometre (0 sq mi). The estuary has a main basin area of about 0.5 square kilometres (0 sq mi) and the rest is flood and tidal delta.The Oldfield River and the Munglinup River both discharge into the estuary. Uncleared bushland surrounds the estuary which has high dunes to the east and low sediments to the west. The lagoon is filled with river sediment to the north and beach sand to the south with a long high sandbar that breaks every three to four years. The estuary functions primarily as a result of wave energy. The seagrass Ruppia megacarpa is found in the estuary.The catchment area of the estuary is 30% natural vegetation and 70% cleared for cropping and pasture. The waters of the estuary are saline and heavily tannin-stained.", "target": "estuary in Western Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["estuary"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5822604", "label": "Dennis Iliadis", "source": "Dennis Iliadis (born 31 December 1969) is a Greek film director. He is best known for his work on The Last House on the Left.", "target": "Greek film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2921890", "label": "boulevard Mortier", "source": "The Boulevard Mortier is a boulevard in the 20th arrondissement of Paris, France. It is one of the Boulevards of the Marshals, which circle the outer parts of the city.", "target": "boulevard in Paris, France", "baseline_candidates": ["boulevard"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17088704", "label": "XplorAsia Airways", "source": "SEAir International is an all-cargo airline headquartered in Clark, Philippines. The airline is one of the two all cargo airlines operating in the country. Its main base is Clark International Airport in Pampanga, Philippines.", "target": "Philippine airline", "baseline_candidates": ["airline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7616989", "label": "Stilifer variabilis", "source": "Stilifer variabilis is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Eulimidae. The species is one of a number within the genus Stilifer.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4664877", "label": "Abdelrahman El-Trabely", "source": "Abdelrahman Yahia Abdulsalam Muhammad El-Trabily (also Abdelrahman El-Trabely, Arabic: عبد الرحمن يحيي عبد السلام محمد الطرابيلي; September 7, 1989 – August 19, 2013) was an amateur Egyptian Greco-Roman wrestler, who competed in the men's super heavyweight category.El-Trabely represented Egypt at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he competed for the men's 120 kg class. He received a bye for the preliminary round of sixteen match, before losing out to Cuban wrestler and defending Olympic champion Mijaín López, who was able to score four points in two straight periods, leaving El-Trabely without a single point. Because his opponent advanced further into the final match, El-Trabely offered another shot for the bronze medal by entering the repechage bouts. He was defeated in the first round by Georgia's Guram Pherselidze, with a three-set technical score (3–3, 0–4, 0–3), and a classification point score of 1–3.El-Trabely was shot dead by Egyptian Security forces during a protest in support of ousted Egyptian president Mohamad Morsi.", "target": "Olympic wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12205003", "label": "Get Busy", "source": "\"Get Busy\" is a dancehall song by Jamaican reggae toaster Sean Paul, from his album Dutty Rock. The song was one of the many hits from the jumpy handclap riddim known as the Diwali Riddim, produced by then-newcomer Steven \"Lenky\" Marsden, and was the only song that never made the \"Diwali\" rhythm album on Greensleeves Records as it was more than likely a late entry. Paul described it as \"mainly a party song. It's not all about smoking weed\". \"Get Busy\" topped the US Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks in May 2003 and also reached number one in Italy and the Netherlands, becoming a top-10 hit in an additional 11 countries. It was performed live on Saturday Night Live in May 2003.", "target": "song by Sean Paul", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15724338", "label": "Dharmagarh Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Dharmagarh is a Vidhan Sabha constituency of Kalahandi district, Odisha.This constituency includes Dharmgarh block, Kalampur block, Koksara block, and 2 Gram panchayats (Bandigaon and Ranamal) of Jaipatana block.In 2014 election, Biju Janata Dal candidate Puspendra Singh Deo defeated Bharatiya Janta Party candidate Rabindra Pattjoshi by a margin of 16,158 votes.In 2009 election, Biju Janata Dal candidate Puspendra Singh Deo defeated Indian National Congress candidate Rahasbihari Behera by a margin of 22,906 votes.", "target": "constituency of the Odisha legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Odisha Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27962412", "label": "A Fool and His Money", "source": "A Fool and His Money is a lost 1920 American silent feature film directed by actor Robert Ellis and starring Eugene O'Brien. It was produced at Lewis J. Selznick studios and distributed by the Select Film Company.The film was remade in 1925 with William Haines in O'Brien's role.", "target": "1920 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20873421", "label": "Jordan Dangerfield", "source": "Jordan Isaac Aldon Dangerfield (born December 25, 1990) is an American football safety who is currently a free agent. He played college football at Towson and was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Buffalo Bills in 2013. Dangerfield has also been a member of the Brooklyn Bolts of the FXFL.", "target": "American football safety", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59210849", "label": "Gümüş", "source": "Gümüş (Turkish for \"silver\") is a Turkish melodrama originally broadcast in Turkey by Kanal D from 2005 to 2007 and very popular in Arab world with a name of Noor which has 85 million viewership on its last episode.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2484050", "label": "Alain Levent", "source": "Alain Levent (15 September 1934 – 28 August 2008) was a French cinematographer and film director. He worked on 80 films between 1960 and 2007. His 1972 film The Bar at the Crossing was entered into the 22nd Berlin International Film Festival.", "target": "French cinematographer and film director (1934-2008)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4354487", "label": "Megachile horatii", "source": "Megachile horatii is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae. It was described by Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell in 1913.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67181811", "label": "Girijabai Kelkar", "source": "Girijabai Madhav Kelkar (Marathi: गिरिजाबाई माधव केळकर) (1886–1980) was a feminist and writer from India. The performance of her play led to many debates about women's rights and the concept of gender roles. She was president of 23rd Akhil Bharatiya Marathi Natya Sammelan (All-India Marathi Theatre Meet) of Akhil Bharatiya Marathi Natya Parishad held in 1928 at Pune.She was sister-in-law of Narasimha Chintaman Kelkar. She married into a family of illustrious Marathi literary figures. She was encouraged by her husband to pursue Marathi literature as a profession, and thus fulfill her aspirations. She was a prolific writer who promoted Marathi language and literature. She started Bhagini Mandal, a women's organisation in Jalgaon. She was the president of the All India Hindu Mahila Parishad in 1935.Her works include Purushanche Band [Men's Rebellion] and Striyanche Swarga [Women's Paradise]. Padma Anagol describes her views on women's oppression as complex, which found themselves expressed in her works. According to her, the play Purushanche Banda was written to \"counteract the effects of vilification of Indian women\" by Khadilkar's play Striyancha Band [Women's Rebellion]. The Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature describes her work as inspired by Apte. Her work describes \"women's suffering in the frame work of family life, moderately protesting against social injustice\". She strongly identified herself with the traditional Hindu notions of femininity, with a mystified role as spouse and mother, asking for trivial concessions.", "target": "Indian feminist and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76508368", "label": "Sione Asi", "source": "Sione Asi (シオーネ・アシ, Shiōne ashi, born 3 March 1998) is a New Zealand rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently plays for Sunwolves in Super Rugby.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5096258", "label": "Chicken Man", "source": "\"Chicken Man\" is a tune composed in 1975 by Alan Hawkshaw used in two popular British TV series since the 1970s.", "target": "2006 instrumental", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97670906", "label": "Judith Osimbo", "source": "Judith Osimbo Omondi (born 8 August 1999), known as Judith Osimbo, is a Kenyan footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Gaspo Women and the Kenya women's national team.", "target": "Kenyan association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q918353", "label": "Karl Dane", "source": "Karl Dane (born Rasmus Karl Therkelsen Gottlieb, 12 October 1886 – 14 April 1934) was a Danish-American comedian and actor known for his work in American films, mainly of the silent film era. He became a star after portraying “Slim”, a supporting role in one of the most successful silent films of all time, The Big Parade (1925), directed by King Vidor and starring John Gilbert. After signing with MGM in 1926, he appeared in supporting roles in several popular silent films before teaming up with George K. Arthur to form the successful comedy duo Dane & Arthur. They appeared in a number of very successful silent comedy features. When sound films arrived, they made short-subject comedies and toured in vaudeville. At the peak of his career, Dane earned $1500 a week. As the film industry transitioned from silent to sound films in the late 1920s, Dane's thick Danish accent became problematic. By 1930, Dane was relegated to less prominent roles, often with little to no dialogue. Later that year, MGM terminated his contract. Dane attempted to pursue work in other fields but found no success. Broke and despondent, he died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in April 1934. Karl Dane's rapid career decline, depression, and subsequent death have been cited as an extreme example of the fate that befell many silent film stars who were unable to make the transition from silent to sound films.", "target": "actor, comedian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4416324", "label": "St. Michael Airport", "source": "St. Michael Airport (IATA: SMK, ICAO: PAMK, FAA LID: SMK, formerly 5S8) is a state-owned, public-use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) west of the central business district of St. Michael, a city in the Nome Census Area of the U.S. state of Alaska.", "target": "airport in Alaska, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21660991", "label": "Baikal CPU", "source": "Baikal CPU is a line of MIPS and ARM-based microprocessors developed by fabless design firm Baikal Electronics, a spin-off of the Russian supercomputer company T-Platforms.", "target": "Russian microprocessor", "baseline_candidates": ["microprocessor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6525245", "label": "Leonard Doncaster", "source": "Leonard Doncaster (31 December 1877 – 28 May 1920) was an English geneticist and a lecturer on zoology at both Birmingham University and the University of Liverpool whose research work was largely based on insects.", "target": "geneticist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1392066", "label": "Jan Kucharzewski", "source": "Jan Kucharzewski (Polish pronunciation: [ˈjan kuxaˈʐɛfskʲi]; 27 May 1876 in Wysokie Mazowieckie – 4 July 1952) was a Polish historian, lawyer, and politician. He was the prime minister of Poland from 1917 to 1918. In 1898 he graduated from Warsaw University. He was a member of the Zet political organization, the National Democrats (Narodowa Demokracja) movement, and the National League (Liga Narodowa) until 1911. In the first years of World War I he resided in Switzerland, where he wrote articles for the Polish cause. In June 1917 he came back to Warsaw and received a job in the administration under the Regency Council. From 26 November 1917 till 27 February 1918 he was the Minister President of the Polish government. After 1920 he dedicated his life to scientific work. In 1940 (World War II) he went into exile in the US, where he published many works for the Polish cause, mainly from an anti-communist and anti-Soviet point of view.", "target": "Prime minister of Poland (1876-1952)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18779630", "label": "Kapustino", "source": "Kapustino (Russian: Капустино) is a rural locality (a village) in Borovetskoye Rural Settlement, Sokolsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 9 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Sokolsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26254729", "label": "Khijarpur", "source": "Khijarpur is a village in Sultanpur Lodhi tehsil in Kapurthala district of Punjab, India. It is located 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from the city of Sultanpur Lodhi, 40 kilometres (25 mi) away from district headquarter Kapurthala. The village is administrated by a Sarpanch who is an elected representative of village as per the constitution of India and Panchayati raj (India).", "target": "village in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4912934", "label": "Billy Mackessy", "source": "William Mackesy (8 April 1880 – 12 November 1956) was an Irish hurler and Gaelic footballer. At club level he played with Lees and Blackrock and was a member of the Cork senior teams in both codes. Mackessy is one of only fifteen players to have won All-Ireland medals in both codes.", "target": "Irish Gaelic footballer and hurler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8998330", "label": "Barry Lam", "source": "Barry Lam (Chinese: 林百里; pinyin: Lín Bǎilǐ; Cantonese Yale: Lam4 Baak3 Lei5; born 24 April 1949) is a Taiwanese billionaire businessman, and the founder and chairman of Quanta Computer. He is also a patron of the arts and a philanthropist in the area of culture and education.On 25 May 2021, Bloomberg Billionaires Index estimated his net worth at $5.98 Billion.Barry Lam was born in Shanghai and raised in Hong Kong. His father was an accountant for the Hong Kong Club. He studied engineering in Taiwan, graduating from National Taiwan University with bachelor's and master's degrees in electrical engineering.In 1973, he and some former classmates founded Kinpo Electronics, a manufacturer of handheld calculators. As president of the company he built it into the largest contract manufacturer of calculators. In the late 1980s, he became convinced that notebook computers would be the next big product. He left Kinpo and founded Quanta Computer in 1988. He set up Quanta Computer with the help of a colleague, C. C. Leung, with capital of less than US$900,000. It had a turnover of NT$777 billion in 2007, US$23.7 billion.In 2006, Fortune Magazine included Quanta in the Fortune Global 500 Companies, and in 2007, Forbes placed Quanta 15th in its ranking of the world's most admired computer companies, the highest of a Taiwanese company. Quanta designs and manufactures for clients such as Apple Inc., Compaq, Dell, Gateway, BlackBerry Ltd., Hewlett-Packard, Alienware, Cisco Systems, Fujitsu, Gericom, Lenovo, LG, Maxdata, MPC, Sharp Corporation, Siemens, Sony, Sun Microsystems, and Toshiba. It is the largest manufacturer of.", "target": "Taiwanese businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19662818", "label": "Mattia Battini", "source": "Mattia Battini (1666 – 1727) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active in Umbria.", "target": "Italian painter (1666-1727)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42666733", "label": "Kyle Marshall", "source": "Kyle Marshall is a Canadian animator, director, storyboard artist, and character designer, best known for serving as a storyboard artist, supervising director, supervising producer, and co-executive producer on Nickelodeon's The Loud House. He served as a storyboard supervisor until Miguel Puga succeeded him. He later became the head director of the series after Chris Savino was fired for sexual misconduct allegations. He worked on the show from Canada until moving to Los Angeles in 2015. He previously served as a storyboard artist and character designer on shows like Jimmy Two-Shoes and Grojband. He is also the creator of the YTV show 3 Amigonauts.", "target": "Canadian animator and director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3093243", "label": "LendingTree Bowl", "source": "The LendingTree Bowl is a postseason NCAA-sanctioned Division I FBS college football bowl game that has been played annually in Mobile, Alabama since 1999. In 2021, the game was moved from Ladd-Peebles Stadium to Hancock Whitney Stadium, on the campus of the University of South Alabama. The game currently matches teams from the Sun Belt Conference and the Mid-American Conference. Originally known as the Mobile Alabama Bowl during its first two playings, it has undergone name changes due to changes in sponsorship, which have included GMAC (2000–2010), GoDaddy (2011–2015), Dollar General (2016–2018), and LendingTree (2019–present).", "target": "postseason NCAA-sanctioned Division I FBS college football bowl game", "baseline_candidates": ["bowl game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q927120", "label": "Christophe Agou", "source": "Christophe Agou (1969 – September 2015) was a French documentary photographer and street photographer who lived in New York City. His work has been published in books and is held in public collections. He was a member of the In-Public street photography collective.", "target": "photographer (1969-2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7968056", "label": "Wanosuchus", "source": "Wanosuchus (\"Wangjiang County crocodile\") is an extinct genus of sebecosuchian mesoeucrocodylian known from Paleocene-age rocks of southern Anhui, China. It is based on IVPP V 6262, a nearly complete lower jaw, which is also the only known specimen. The bone lacks an external mandibular fenestra and has thirteen teeth, the longest of which are the fourth and eleventh. It was collected between 1970 and 1972 by Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) personnel; the exact location and rock unit that produced the bone are uncertain. Wanosuchus was named in 1981 by Zhang Fakui of the IVPP. The type species is W. atresus, a reference to the absent fenestra. Zhang classified Wanosuchus under its own family within Sebecosuchia, Wanosuchidae. It shares some characteristics with Doratodon, a crocodyliform from the Late Cretaceous of Europe.", "target": "genus of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7589726", "label": "St. Louis v. Myers", "source": "St. Louis v. Myers, 113 U.S. 566 (1885), was a motion to dismiss for want of a federal question to give jurisdiction regarding Acts that admitted Missouri into the Union while leaving the rights of riparian owners on the Mississippi River to be settled according to the principles of state law and relinquishing to the City of St. Louis the rights of the United States in wharves and thoroughfares, which did not authorize the city to impair the rights of other riparian proprietors by extending streets into the river.Chief Justice Waite delivered the opinion of the Court. The question on which this case turned below was whether Myers, the lessee of the property situated on the bank of the Mississippi River, within the City of St. Louis, which had been improved with a view to its use, and was used in connection with the navigation of the river, could maintain an action against the city for extending one of its streets into the river so as to divert the natural course of the water and destroy the water privileges which were appurtenant to the property. The supreme court of the state decided that he could, and to reverse that decision this writ of error was brought. We are unable to discover that any federal right was denied the city by the decision which has been rendered. The Act of Congress providing for the admission of Missouri into the Union, March 6, 1820, c. 22, 3 Stat. 545, and which declares that the Mississippi River shall be.", "target": "1885 United States Supreme Court case", "baseline_candidates": ["United States Supreme Court decision"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4470082", "label": "George Norris Williams", "source": "George Norris Williams (1866–1949) was the acting commissioner of Yukon from 1916 to 1918.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49332244", "label": "Samuel R. McKelvie National Forest", "source": "The Samuel R. McKelvie National Forest is a United States National Forest in the north-central Sandhills region of the U.S. state of Nebraska. The area of the national forest is 116,079 acres (181.373 sq mi). The forest is managed as part of the U.S. Forest Service's Nebraska National Forests and Grasslands, from ranger district offices in Halsey, Nebraska. The national forest is entirely within Cherry County, Nebraska.", "target": "forest in Nebraska, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["United States National Forest", "forest"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6755992", "label": "Marca", "source": "Marca is a genus of moths of the family Erebidae. The genus was erected by Max Saalmüller in 1891.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6509063", "label": "Topla", "source": "Topla (pronounced [ˈtoːpla]) is a dispersed settlement of isolated farmsteads in a valley with the same name at the foothills of Mount Peca west of Črna na Koroškem in the Carinthia region in northern Slovenia, close to the border with Austria.", "target": "place in Carinthia, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "cultural heritage site in Slovenia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7045586", "label": "Nob Yoshigahara", "source": "Nobuyuki Yoshigahara (芦ヶ原 伸之 Yoshigahara Nobuyuki, commonly known as \"Nob\"; May 27, 1936 – June 19, 2004) was perhaps Japan's most celebrated inventor, collector, solver, and communicator of puzzles. Nob graduated from the Tokyo Institute of Technology in applied chemistry. After becoming disenchanted with his career in high-polymer engineering, Nob turned to high school teaching as an educator of chemistry and mathematics. As a puzzle columnist, Nob was an active contributor to many journals and had monthly columns in various popular magazines including Quark. He penned over 80 books on puzzles. Perhaps best known as a puzzle inventor, he commercially licensed his designs, such as the Rush Hour puzzle game, to companies including Binary Arts (now known as ThinkFun), Ishi Press, and Hanayama. He was also an avid computer programmer who used computers to help solve mathematical puzzles. Nob was an active participant in the International Puzzle Party, traveling the world to attend the annual event. In 2005, the puzzle design competition of the International Puzzle Parties was renamed the Nob Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition. In 2003, the Association of Game & Puzzle Collectors awarded Nob with the Sam Loyd Award, given to individuals who have made a significant contribution to the world of mechanical puzzles.", "target": "Japanese puzzler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1210245", "label": "Around the Fur", "source": "Around the Fur is the second studio album by American alternative metal band Deftones, released on October 28, 1997, by Maverick Records. The songs \"My Own Summer (Shove It)\" and \"Be Quiet and Drive (Far Away)\" were released as singles with accompanying music videos. The album was certified Gold by the RIAA in June 1999, and was eventually certified Platinum in 2011.", "target": "1997 studio album by Deftones", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4816597", "label": "Pacific Park", "source": "Pacific Park is a mixed-use commercial and residential development project by Forest City Ratner that will consist of 17 high-rise buildings, under construction in Prospect Heights, adjacent to Downtown Brooklyn, Park Slope, and Fort Greene in Brooklyn, New York City. The project overlaps part of the Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area, but also extends toward the adjacent brownstone neighborhood. Of the 22-acre (8.9 ha) project, 8.4 acres (3.4 ha) is located over a Long Island Rail Road train yard. A major component of the project is the Barclays Center sports arena, which opened on September 21, 2012. Formerly named Atlantic Yards, the project was renamed by the developer in August 2014 as part of a rebranding. The development of Pacific Park is overseen by the Empire State Development Corporation. As of 2018, four of fifteen planned buildings had opened, but the deadline was delayed by about 10 years from 2025 to 2035. The residential component includes the world's tallest modular apartment building, 461 Dean, opened in November 2016.", "target": "development in Brooklyn, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["mixed-use development"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5522546", "label": "Gardiner Wright Mansion", "source": "Gardiner Wright Mansion, also known as The Marsh House, is a historic mansion located at Georgetown, Sussex County, Delaware. It was built in 1841, and is a two-story, three-bay, double pile, stuccoed brick dwelling. It is in the Regency style, with Second Empire and Italianate style design elements. The plan consists of two double-pile, single-bay, parallel rectangular sections, with a two-story brick central hall running between them. It was extensively renovated in the late-1940s. Also on the property are a contributing wood shed and two-level milk house.The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.", "target": "building in Delaware, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20040320", "label": "Satanicpornocultshop", "source": "Satanicpornocultshop is a Japanese experimental music group making assemblage-style compositions that incorporate a variety of musical styles and techniques. The group draws heavily on hip hop and electronic influences to create \"bricolage hip hop\" inspired by the theories of Claude Lévi-Strauss. Beginning in the early 2010s, the group began focusing on Juke and Footwork music, influenced by the Chicago scene.", "target": "Japanese experimental music group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13131502", "label": "South Heighton", "source": "South Heighton is a village and civil parish in the Lewes District of East Sussex, England. The village is seven miles (12 km) south of Lewes. In the 1890s the village's population grew from less than 100 to over 500 after a cement manufacturing plant opened nearby. The village is now associated with the urbanised area of Newhaven. There is no place called North Heighton although part of the South Downs above the village is called Heighton Hill, from which one can get to Norton, which lies north-east of South Heighton, and north of Bishopstone. It is a regular thoroughfare and point of rest for ramblers, and features a series of ponds, known locally as 'The Three Lakes', which were until the early 1990s open to the public. It remains a popular destination for local visitors, with its public house, The Hampden Arms, and until recently, its corner-shop and post office, which has now closed and been converted into a residential dwelling. South Heighton is one of many villages in the area which maintains a bonfire society, celebration and parade. South Heighton is famous for its secret tunnels, built and used for defence during the Second World War, which lie underneath most of the village, with the main entrance at Denton House. In 1998, when work finished on the conversion of Denton House into flats and of the surrounding area into houses, the road was called Forward Close, after the ship associated with Newhaven and the secret tunnels, HMS Forward. Notable residents, past and present, include.", "target": "village in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5358387", "label": "Iwakuni Station", "source": "Iwakuni Station (岩国駅, Iwakuni-eki) is a railway station in Iwakuni, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan, operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West).", "target": "railway station in Iwakuni, Yamaguchi prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2019555", "label": "Vukovski Dol", "source": "Vukovski Dol (pronounced [ˈʋuːkɔu̯ski ˈdo:l]) is a settlement in the Slovene Hills (Slovene: Slovenske gorice) in northeastern Slovenia. It lies in the Municipality of Pesnica, part of the traditional region of Styria. The municipality is now included in the Drava Statistical Region.", "target": "place in Styria, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6098236", "label": "Özgün", "source": "Özgün Uğurlu (born 19 October 1979) is a Turkish singer.", "target": "Turkish musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48815850", "label": "2018 MPBL season", "source": "The 2018 MPBL season is the inaugural season of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League. For the tournament for this season was named the Rajah Cup, also known as the Anta–Rajah Cup after sponsor Anta Sports. The tournament opened on January 25, 2018 at the Smart Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City. After the opening ceremonies, the game between Parañaque Patriots and Caloocan Supremos immediately followed. All games were aired on ABS-CBN Sports (ABS-CBN Sports and Action Channel 23 & HD Channel 166). The tournament ended on April 19 with the Batangas City Athletics defeating Muntinlupa Cagers in the 2018 MPBL Rajah Cup Finals.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21757016", "label": "Damurhuda Upazila", "source": "Damurhuda (Bengali: দামুড়হুদা) is an upazila of Chuadanga District in the Division of Khulna, Bangladesh.", "target": "upazila in Khulna Division, Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["upazila of Bangladesh"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25302461", "label": "French submarine Aréthuse", "source": "The French submarine Aréthuse was one of eight Amphitrite-class submarines built for the French Navy during the 1910s and completed during World War I.", "target": "Amphitrite-class French submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20830319", "label": "Karen Knorr", "source": "Karen Knorr HonFRPS is a German-born American photographer who lives in London. In 2018 she received an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society.", "target": "British photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5655532", "label": "Hard for Me", "source": "\"Hard for Me\" is the second single by Australian recording artist Tamara Jaber, released on 1 August 2005 through King Kyle Records.", "target": "single by Tamara Jaber", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14844972", "label": "Antodilanea auana", "source": "Antodilanea auana is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Martins and Galileo in 2004.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65031304", "label": "Dennis Day", "source": "Dennis W. Day (July 12, 1942 – July 17, 2018) was an American actor, singer, dancer and theater director, best known as one of the original cast members of The Mickey Mouse Club. After ending his career as a child actor, he went on to work as a theater director before relocating to Oregon in the 1980s. Day disappeared in July 2018 and was found dead several months later. A roommate was charged with his death in 2019.", "target": "Mouseketeer (1942-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7402618", "label": "Sajanaspis", "source": "Sajanaspis is an extinct genus from a well-known class of fossil marine arthropods, the trilobites. It lived during the Botomian stage, which lasted from approximately 524 to 518.5 million years ago. This faunal stage was part of the Cambrian Period.", "target": "genus of arthropods (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4441797", "label": "Vladimir Stepanov", "source": "Vladimir Alekseyevich Stepanov (Степанов, Владимир Алексеевич; born 1958) is a Russian armwrestler. He is one of the strongest Russian armwrestlers in Grand-master class (over 50 years of age), multiple world champion in less than 100 kg category. He is a current arm wrestling team member of Russian Federation and Sverdlovsk region. Arm wrestling came to his life by accident. Vladimir Stepanov, alongside his childhood friend Vladimir Levitsky, visited some relatives in West Ukraine in August 1978. At approximately that time, World Arm wrestling Federation (WAF) started to create events. Arm wrestling was very popular in western part of USSR. Vladimir Stepanov and Vladimir Levitsky were invited to participate in minor amateur tournaments. All opponents were defeated because by then both Vladimirs were well trained weightlifters. From 1997 and until now, Vladimir Stepanov started participating in major competitions across Ural region, Russian Federation and worldwide. From 1997 to 2001 Vladimir had trained in Nizhny Tagil, Sverdlovsk region. Since 2002 he has trained in Ekaterinburg under supervision of Ivan Getmansky.", "target": "Russian arm wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11961203", "label": "Bjarne Johannes Hope", "source": "Bjarne Johannes Hope (30 March 1944 - 30 June 2006) was a Norwegian civil servant. He was born in Masfjorden. Having graduated from the Norwegian Institute of Technology in 1968 as siv.ing., he worked as a consultant from 1972. From 1995 to his death in 2006 he served as director of the Norwegian Tax Administration.Shortly before his death he was awarded the Order of St. Olav. He was the brother of Einar Hope.", "target": "Norwegian civil servant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4227529", "label": "Ruslan Kokshin", "source": "Ruslan Kokshin (born May 7, 1979) is an officer in the Russian military. While serving as a leader of a mortar platoon, Kokshin located and took out a small group of opposition forces in Chechnya. Due to this action by him, Kokshin was awarded the title Hero of the Russian Federation for his \"heroic duty while in the service of the state.\" [1].", "target": "Russian Army officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q924029", "label": "Oyes", "source": "Oyes (French pronunciation: ​[wa]) is a commune in the Marne department in north-eastern France.", "target": "commune in Marne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7189810", "label": "IXICO", "source": "IXICO plc is a UK clinical research firm that provides neuroimaging and digital biomarker analytics to biopharmaceutical firms conducting clinical trials into neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Huntington’s disease (HD).", "target": "UK biotech company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61721904", "label": "The Hero", "source": "The Hero is a 1923 American silent drama film directed by Louis J. Gasnier and starring Gaston Glass, Barbara La Marr, and John St. Polis. It is based upon the 1921 play of the same name by Gilbert Emery.", "target": "1923 American silent drama film directed by Louis J. Gasnier", "baseline_candidates": ["silent film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1039069", "label": "The Snow Maiden", "source": "The Snow Maiden (subtitle: A Spring Fairy Tale) (Russian: Снегурочка–весенняя сказка, tr. Snegúrochka–vesénnyaya skázka listen ) is an opera in four acts with a prologue by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, composed during 1880–1881. The Russian libretto, by the composer, is based on the like-named play by Alexander Ostrovsky (which had premiered in 1873 with incidental music by Tchaikovsky). The first performance of Rimsky-Korsakov's opera took place at the Mariinsky Theatre, Saint Petersburg on 29 January 1882 (OS; 10 February NS) conducted by Eduard Nápravník. By 1898 it was revised in the edition known today. It remained the composer's own favorite work.", "target": "opera by Nikolaj Rimski-Korsakov", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q301569", "label": "1649 in science", "source": "The year 1649 in science and technology involved some significant events.", "target": "natural science-related events during the year of 1649", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4094575", "label": "Borodino", "source": "Borodino (Russian: Бородино) is a poem by Russian poet Mikhail Lermontov which describes the Battle of Borodino, the major battle of Napoleon's invasion of Russia. It was first published in 1837 in the literary magazine Sovremennik on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the battle. In Russia, it is required reading in most schools. The poem was based on his 1831 teenage version, The Battlefield of Borodino (Поле Бородина).The poem starts with the direct appeal \"Tell me, uncle,...\". Lermontov had several relatives (Arsenyevs and Stolypins) who were veterans of the Patriotic War of 1812, and there have been speculation that the poem was based on the narrations of one of them. Other critics suggest that his original version was written under the influence of Denis Davydov's Borodino Battlefield (Бородинское поле).", "target": "poem by Russian poet Mikhail Lermontov", "baseline_candidates": ["poem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7413289", "label": "San Antonio", "source": "San Antonio is one of the 142 barangays of Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines.", "target": "barangay in Quezon City, Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["barangay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1356701", "label": "Julien Clerc", "source": "Paul Alain Leclerc (born 4 October 1947), better known by his stage name Julien Clerc (pronounced [ʒy.ljɛ̃ klɛʁ]), is a French singer-songwriter.", "target": "French singer-songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12552295", "label": "mahjong", "source": "Mahjong or mah-jongg (English pronunciation: mah-JONG, Mandarin Chinese: [mǎ.tɕjâŋ]) is a tile-based game that was developed in the 19th century in China and has spread throughout the world since the early 20th century. It is commonly played by four players (with some three-player variations found in parts of China, Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asia). The game and its regional variants are widely played throughout East and Southeast Asia and have also become popular in Western countries. The game has also been adapted into a widespread online entertainment. Similar to the Western card game rummy, Mahjong is a game of skill, strategy, and luck. To distinguish it from mahjong solitaire, it is sometimes referred to as mahjong rummy.The game is played with a set of 144 tiles based on Chinese characters and symbols, although some regional variations may omit some tiles or add unique ones. In most variations, each player begins by receiving 13 tiles. In turn, players draw and discard tiles until they complete a legal hand using the 14th drawn tile to form four melds (or sets) and a pair (eye). A player can also win with a small class of special hands. While many variations of mahjong exist, most variations have some basic rules in common including how a piece is drawn and discarded, how a piece is robbed from another player, the use of suits (numbered tiles) and honors (winds and dragons), the basic kinds of melds allowed, how to deal the tiles and the order of play. Beyond these basic common.", "target": "game", "baseline_candidates": ["tile-based game", "gambling", "board game", "sports discipline", "tabletop game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15437280", "label": "Platanthera orbiculata", "source": "Platanthera orbiculata, the round leaved orchid or lesser roundleaved orchid, is a species of orchid native to forested areas of North America. It is widespread across most of Canada and parts of the United States (Alaska, New England, Appalachian Mountains, Great Lakes Region, Rocky Mountains, Black Hills and northern Cascades).", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11746972", "label": "Church of St. Charles Borromeo, Pinsk", "source": "Church of Charles Borromeo in Pinsk is a former Roman Catholic temple in Belarus. Constructed in 1770-1782, it was consecrated in the name of St. Charles Borromeo, then reconstructed in the second part of the XIX century and dedicated to the Holy Trinity. The church was closed by the Soviet authorities in the 1960s and repurposed as a music hall. Nowadays it is one of the cultural centres of Pinsk. Listed as a monument of historical heritage of Belarus.", "target": "church building in Pinsk, Belarus", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "Catholic church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18345721", "label": "Miss Perú 1975", "source": "The Miss Peru Pageant was reinstated in 1975 and the winner was chosen by votes of readers of Gente Magazine (the official sponsor of the pageant). That year, 23 candidates were competing for the 3 national crowns. The chosen winner represented Peru at the Miss Universe 1975, Miss World 1975, and Miss Ambar 1975. The rest of the finalists would enter in different pageants.", "target": "beauty pageant edition", "baseline_candidates": ["beauty pageant edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21105013", "label": "True Friends", "source": "\"True Friends\" is a song by British rock band Bring Me the Horizon. Produced by keyboardist Jordan Fish and vocalist Oliver Sykes, it was featured on the band's 2015 fifth studio album That's the Spirit. The song was also released as the fourth single from the album on 20 November 2015, reaching number 91 on the UK Singles Chart and topping the UK Rock & Metal Singles Chart.", "target": "2015 single by Bring Me the Horizon", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1634397", "label": "Malvathu River", "source": "The Malwathu Oya (Sinhala: මල්වතු ඔය Malwathu Oya, Tamil: அருவி ஆறு Aruvi Aru), at 164 km (102 mi) long, is the second longest river in Sri Lanka. The river originates in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka and enters the sea on the northwest coast, into the Gulf of Mannar, near Vankalai. It is a seasonal river that spans over 164 kilometers through paddy and forest lands, which are used by the inhabitants to cultivate for their survival.The river basin covers an area of 3,284 km2 (1,268 sq mi) (with a length of 125 km (78 mi), a maximum width of 40 km (25 mi) at an average height of 85.5 m (281 ft) above sea level). The average annual rainfall in the basin area is 1,223 mm (48.1 in). The Ritigala mountain range, which comprises four main peaks (the highest of which is over 900 m (3,000 ft) high), in the upper reaches of the river, serves as the main catchment.", "target": "river in Sri Lanka", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4995536", "label": "Bulbophyllum punamense", "source": "Bulbophyllum punamense is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28220279", "label": "Ela é Carioca", "source": "\"Ela é Carioca\" (\"She’s a Carioca\") is a bossa nova song composed in 1963 by Antônio Carlos Jobim, with Portuguese lyrics by Vinícius de Moraes. English lyrics were written by Ray Gilbert. The song is sometimes titled \"Ele é Carioca (He’s a Carioca).\" \"Carioca\" is a Brazilian term for someone from or something related to Rio de Janeiro. John Bush at AllMusic calls the song \"a cheerful sequel to 'The Girl From Ipanema,'\" which was also written by Jobim and Moraes, and features lyrics about a young woman from Rio. The song was used as the name of a 2005 documentary film about \"Jobim's love for Rio de Janeiro and the influence it had on his music\" - Tom Jobim: She’s a Carioca.The first recording of the song was by Os Cariocas in 1963. Antônio Carlos Jobim recorded it for his 1965 album, The Wonderful World of Antonio Carlos Jobim.", "target": "song composed by Antônio Carlos Jobim performed by Ella Fitzgerald", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24845987", "label": "George Potter", "source": "George Potter (28 November 1883 – 10 December 1945) was an Australian politician who was a Nationalist Party member of the Legislative Council of Western Australia from 1922 to 1928, representing West Province. Potter was born in Glasgow, Scotland, to Ellen (née Thomson) and John Potter. He attended James Gillespie's High School and Heriot-Watt College, and then joined the British Army, serving in the Boer War. Potter emigrated to Western Australia in 1909, to farm wheat at Bruce Rock. He re-entered the military on the outbreak of the First World War, joining the Australian Imperial Force. In August 1915, while fighting in the Gallipoli Campaign, Potter was wounded in action. He was subsequently repatriated to Australia, and worked at a military hospital in Fremantle until his discharge in February 1917. After the war's end, Potter worked as a hospital secretary. He was elected to parliament in 1922, defeating a sitting Labor member, Alexander Panton, in West Province. He held his seat for a single six-year term before being defeated by Labor's Gilbert Fraser at the 1928 election. After leaving parliament, Potter worked as a business agent until his sudden death in 1945, aged 62. He collapsed in an elevator at the Perth GPO, and was rushed to hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5539974", "label": "George Gunton", "source": "George Gunton (September 8, 1845 – September 11, 1919) was an influential figure in the labor movement of the United States around the turn of the 20th century and was an avid supporter of industrial combinations and trusts. He was a close colleague of Ira Steward, and upon Steward's death in 1883 he agreed to complete and prepare for publication a book that Steward had been writing. Gunton found only notes, not a nearly complete book. Deciding the notes were not sufficient for editing, Gunton discarded them, instead building on the ideas of his colleague to formulate his own book on the labor movement, Wealth and Progress, which was published in 1887, followed by Principles of Social Economics in 1891. He founded a school, the Institute of Social Economics, in 1891, with the aim of educating the masses in the path of responsible citizenship. Gunton was the editor of Gunton's Magazine, a goal-oriented publication, which drew many prominent thinkers of his time. An early supporter and adviser to Theodore Roosevelt, Gunton later became a vocal critic of the president, when the administration began attacking trusts, forming a Bureau of Corporations with full investigative powers in 1903. Though Gunton was accused in his life of being bought by big business, he genuinely believed, and made good argument to the fact, that well organized capital was vital to the protection of the rights of a well-organized labor force.", "target": "American labor unionist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4192289", "label": "Zirikovo", "source": "Zirikovo (Russian: Зириково) is a rural locality (a village) in Abitovsky Selsoviet, Meleuzovsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 180 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "human settlement in Meleuzovsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4698606", "label": "Airdrie F.C", "source": "Airdrie Football Club was a Scottish association football club based in the town of Airdrie, Lanarkshire. The club was founded in 1868 and disbanded in 1890. The club competed in the Scottish Cup between 1875 and 1890. From 1884 onwards, the club's home colours were white shirts with green tassels and white shorts.", "target": "defunct club that competed in the Scottish Cup between 1875 and 1890", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3614255", "label": "Amici per la pelle", "source": "Friends for Life (Italian: Amici per la pelle also known as Amis pour la vie in France) is a 1955 Italian and French comedy-drama film directed by Franco Rossi. It was nominated for \"Best Film\" at the 10th British Academy Film Awards.", "target": "1955 film by Franco Rossi", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19366386", "label": "Lucas Bögl", "source": "Lucas Bögl (born 14 June 1990) is a German cross-country skier who competes internationally. He competed for Germany at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 in Lahti, Finland.", "target": "German cross-country skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7987190", "label": "Westbury-on-Severn", "source": "Westbury-on-Severn is a rural village in England that is the centre of the large, rural parish, also called Westbury-on-Severn.", "target": "village and civil parish in Gloucestershire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3829255", "label": "Leandro Díaz", "source": "Leandro Nicolás Díaz (born 6 June 1992) is an Argentine football forward. He currently plays for Estudiantes de La Plata.", "target": "Argentine footballer born 1992", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12904373", "label": "NGC 6975", "source": "NGC 6975, also known as NGC 6976, is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Aquarius. The object was discovered on 12 July 1864 by the German astronomer Albert Marth. NGC 6975 is part of Hickson Compact Group 88, along with NGC 6977, NGC 6978, and MCG-01-53-014. The group is at a distance of about 273 million light years (84 million parsecs). In 2012, supernova SN 2012ga was discovered within NGC 6975.", "target": "galaxy", "baseline_candidates": ["galaxy", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5407146", "label": "Eugene Cotran", "source": "Judge Eugene Cotran (6 August 1938 – 7 June 2014) was a circuit judge in England and one of the main jurists in charge of the drafting of a Basic Law of Palestine.", "target": "British judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20578694", "label": "Hyderabad", "source": "Hyderabad ( (listen) HY-dər-ə-bad; Telugu: [ˈɦaɪ̯daraːbaːd], Urdu: [ˈɦɛːdəɾaːbaːd]) is the capital and largest city of the Indian state of Telangana and the de jure capital of Andhra Pradesh. It occupies 650 km2 (250 sq mi) on the Deccan Plateau along the banks of the Musi River, in the northern part of South India. With an average altitude of 542 m (1,778 ft), much of Hyderabad is situated on hilly terrain around artificial lakes, including the Hussain Sagar lake, predating the city's founding, in the north of the city centre. According to the 2011 Census of India, Hyderabad is the fourth-most populous city in India with a population of 6.9 million residents within the city limits, and has a population of 9.7 million residents in the metropolitan region, making it the sixth-most populous metropolitan area in India. With an output of US$74 billion, Hyderabad has the fifth-largest urban economy in India. Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah established Hyderabad in 1591 to extend the capital beyond the fortified Golconda. In 1687, the city was annexed by the Mughals. In 1724, Mughal Viceroy Nizam Asaf Jah I declared his sovereignty and founded the Asaf Jahi dynasty, also known as the Nizams. Hyderabad served as the imperial capital of the Asaf Jahis from 1769 to 1948. As capital of the princely state of Hyderabad, the city housed the British Residency and cantonment until Indian independence in 1947. Hyderabad was annexed by the Indian Union in 1948 and continued as a capital of Hyderabad State (1948–56). After the introduction of the States.", "target": "city in Telangana, India", "baseline_candidates": ["city of India", "million city", "megacity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q523865", "label": "Dru Drury", "source": "Dru Drury (4 February 1724 – 15 December 1803) was a British collector of natural history specimens and an entomologist. He had specimens collected from across the world through a network of ship's officers and collectors including Henry Smeathman. His collections were utilized by many entomologists of his time to describe and name new species and is best known for his book Illustrations of natural history which includes the names and descriptions of many insects, published in parts from 1770 to 1782 with copperplate engravings by Moses Harris.", "target": "British entomologist and essayist (1725–1804)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2822170", "label": "Abu Bakr al-Kalabadhi", "source": "Abu Bakr al-Kalabadhi, in full, Abu Bakr ibn Abi Ishaq Muhammad ibn Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub al-Bukhari al-Kalabadhi (fl. late 10th century, Bukhara) was a Persian Hanafi Maturidi Sufi scholar and the author of the Kitab at-ta'arruf, one of the most important works of Sufism composed during the first 300 years of Islam.", "target": "Sufi Maturidi scholar and Hanafi jurist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4884596", "label": "Beloved", "source": "Beloved is an American post-hardcore band from Kernersville, North Carolina, United States.", "target": "American melodic hardcore band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17536445", "label": "Ripon Town Hall", "source": "Ripon Town Hall is a municipal building in the Market Place, Ripon, North Yorkshire, England. The structure, which was the headquarters of Ripon Borough Council, is a Grade II* listed building.", "target": "municipal Building in England", "baseline_candidates": ["rathaus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7381202", "label": "Russ Ortiz", "source": "Russell Reid Ortiz (born June 5, 1974) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. Ortiz during his career played for the San Francisco Giants, Atlanta Braves, Arizona Diamondbacks, Baltimore Orioles, Houston Astros and Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball. He is 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) tall, and weighs 220 pounds.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58404", "label": "Haaften", "source": "Haaften is a village in the Dutch province of Gelderland, on the northern shore of the river Waal, about opposite Zaltbommel. It is a part of the municipality of West Betuwe, and lies about 25 km south of Utrecht. From 1818 to 1977 Haaften was the main village and seat of the town hall of the eponymous municipality, which also comprised the smaller villages of Hellouw to the west and Tuil to the east, all on the northern bank of the river Waal. On 1 January 1978 it was merged with the Neerijnen municipality of which it formed the westernmost part. In 2019 Neerijnen merged with several other municipalities to form West Betuwe.", "target": "farm village in the Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "populated place in the Netherlands"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54257654", "label": "Help", "source": "Help (1878 – December 1891) was a Scotch collie dog which gained fame through being used to collect money for charity. Bred in the vicinity of Hailes Castle in East Lothian by William Riddell, in 1880 Help was donated to John Climpson. Climpson, who was the long-serving guard of the night boat train to Newhaven on the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, had previously had the idea of using a dog to obtain donations for the Orphans Fund of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants (ASRS). He did not provide Help with any special training, the dog simply being fitted with a wooden collecting box on his back, and a silver collar and medal. The medal was inscribed: \"I am Help, the railway dog of England, and travelling agent for the orphans of railwaymen who are killed on duty. My office is at 306, City Road [later 55, Colebrooke Row], London, where subscriptions will be thankfully received and duly acknowledged\".While Help often travelled with Climpson, he was also lent out to other guards to undertake collections on their routes. By the time of his death, it was claimed that he had travelled every railway line in Britain and visited all the major towns, and had also travelled twice to France, in the course of his travels raising more than £1,000. He also attended many of the conferences of the ASRS.Help was awarded a silver medal at the Bristol Dog Show of 1884, was the subject of numerous paintings and sketches, and appeared on a commemorative.", "target": "dog", "baseline_candidates": ["dog"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16896557", "label": "Daban", "source": "Daban (Russian: Дабан) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Dabansky Rural Okrug of Olyokminsky District in the Sakha Republic, Russia, located 85 kilometers (53 mi) from Olyokminsk, the administrative center of the district. Its population as of the 2002 Census was 562.", "target": "human settlement in Sakha Republic, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5434830", "label": "Farang Wa Gharu", "source": "Farang wa Gharu or Firing wa Gharu is a district in Baghlan Province, Afghanistan. It was created in 2005 from part of Khost wa Fereng District.", "target": "district of Baghlan, Afghanistan", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Afghanistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31725740", "label": "Nabadwip Municipality", "source": "Nabadwip Municipality is the self-governing and urban local body of the town Nabadwip of Nadia district of the Indian state West Bengal. It is a registered government organisation. The primary and main objective of Nabadwip Municipality is to provide all municipal facilities to all of the citizens.", "target": "Municipal Corporation in West Bengal, India", "baseline_candidates": ["municipal corporation in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5340177", "label": "Edogawa University", "source": "Edogawa University (江戸川大学, Edogawa daigaku) is a private university in Nagareyama, Chiba, Japan, established in 1990. The school has two divisions, a College of Sociology and a College of Media and Mass Communication.", "target": "Higher education institution in Chiba Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3385229", "label": "Pierre Girard", "source": "Pierre Girard was born in the commune of Saint-Symphorien-sur-Coise, in the Department of Rhone, once in the ancient County of Forez. He died in Avignon on 9 November 1415. He was Bishop of Lodeve and then Bishop of Le Puy. He was a cardinal of the Avignon Obedience during the Great Western Schism, and was promoted to the Bishopric of Tusculum (Frascati). His principal work, however, was as a courtier and administrator at Avignon, and as a papal diplomat.", "target": "French bishop and Cardinal", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47385257", "label": "Mufti Gulab Khan", "source": "Mufti Gulab Khan is a Pakistani politician who was a Member of the Provincial Assembly of Balochistan, from May 2013 to May 2018.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28840491", "label": "Blair Hicken", "source": "Blair Hicken (born 10 February 1965) is a Canadian swimmer. He competed in two events at the 1984 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Canadian swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2060780", "label": "America's Stonehenge", "source": "America's Stonehenge is a privately owned tourist attraction and archaeological site consisting of a number of large rocks and stone structures scattered around roughly 30 acres (12 hectares) within the town of Salem, New Hampshire, in the United States. It is open to the public for a fee as part of a recreational area which includes snowshoe trails and an alpaca farm. A number of hypotheses exist as to the origin and purpose of the structures. One viewpoint is a mixture of land-use practices of local farmers in the 18th and 19th centuries and construction of structures by owner William Goodwin, an insurance executive who purchased the area in 1937. Some claim that the site has a pre-Columbian European origin, but this is regarded as pseudoarchaeological. Archaeologist David Starbuck has said: \"It is widely believed that Goodwin may have 'created' much of what is visible at the site today. \": 106 The site was first dubbed Mystery Hill by William Goodwin. This was the official name of the site until 1982, when it was renamed \"America's Stonehenge\", a term coined in a news article in the early 1960s. The rebranding was an effort to separate it from roadside oddity sites and to reinforce the idea that it is an ancient archaeological site. The area is named after Stonehenge in England, although there is no evidence of cultural or historical connection between the two. It is mentioned, as Mystery Hill, on New Hampshire Historical Marker No. 72.", "target": "archeological stonework site in New Hampshire", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2660178", "label": "Perućac", "source": "Perućac (Serbian Cyrillic: Перућац) is a village in western Serbia, in the municipality of Bajina Bašta. It is situated at the right bank of the 346 km-long Drina River, which constitutes the natural border between Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 2011 Census, the village has 530 residents.Perućac gave name to the artificial Perućac Lake, supplying the Bajina Bašta hydro-electric power plant, built in 1966 in vicinity of the village. Perućac features what is reputedly Serbia's smallest river — the Vrelo. It is known as the \"year-long river\", due to its length — 365 m — from its source to its end, with the length in metres corresponding to the number of days in a year. The Vrelo flows into the Drina just a few hundred metres downstream the dam. During the summer days, Lake Perućac is the place where many of the residents of the surrounding area and the town of Bajina Bašta come to sunbathe, swim and fish. Perućac is also where the 56 km-long canyon of the River Drina begins.", "target": "village in Zlatibor, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7168746", "label": "Peris Chepchumba", "source": "Peris Chepchumba Simam (born 1968, Kapkoi near Eldoret) is a Kenyan politician. She belongs to the Orange Democratic Movement and was elected to represent the Eldoret South Constituency in the National Assembly of Kenya in the 2007 Kenyan parliamentary election.", "target": "Kenyan politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55769875", "label": "The Pines", "source": "The Pines is a locality in the Toowoomba Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, The Pines had a population of 48 people.", "target": "locality in Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4863264", "label": "Barratt Waugh", "source": "Barratt Waugh (born August 1979, Swindon, Wiltshire) is a British countertenor singer.", "target": "British singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1365904", "label": "Metro 2034", "source": "Metro 2034 (Russian: Метро 2034) is a 2009 post-apocalyptic science fiction novel in the Metro series, written by Russian author Dmitry Glukhovsky as a sequel to his earlier Metro 2033.", "target": "2009 novel by Dmitry Glukhovsky, a sequel to his novel Metro 2033", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16960351", "label": "Deveaux Bank, South Carolina", "source": "Deveaux Bank is a horseshoe-shaped sand spit island encompassing a 215-acre (87-hectare) bird sanctuary at the mouth of the North Edisto River in Charleston County, South Carolina. It is located on the Atlantic Coast between Edisto Island, South Carolina and Seabrook Island, South Carolina. Its average elevation is three feet. It has approximately 2.75 miles (4.43 kilometres) of sandy beaches on three sides (some of which are completely submerged at high tide) and a tidal lagoon on the side facing the mainland.", "target": "island in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6243903", "label": "John Lampen", "source": "John Lampen (born 1938) is a Quaker peace educator and writer. He is married to Diana Lampen. In 1987, he gave the Swarthmore Lecture, entitled Mending Hurts. For twenty years, he worked with emotionally disturbed adolescent boys at Shotton Hall School, Shropshire. One of his students, Andrew Liddell, states, \"Mr Lampen and his family helped me to develop my character and core values. I will never forget them.\" Then John lived in South Africa for some months. He then moved to Derry in Northern Ireland, working in the communities with young people and seeking reconciliation.Currently, Diana and John Lampen run a small training and consultancy agency, The Hope Project, based in Stourbridge, England, which works for peace in partnership with local organizations in Britain, Belarus, Bosnia, Croatia, Uganda and Ukraine.", "target": "British Quaker writer and peace educator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q634533", "label": "Süderau", "source": "Süderau is a municipality in the district of Steinburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28403455", "label": "Paul Dlamini", "source": "Paul Dlamini is a Swazi politician who was deputy prime minister of Eswatini from to 2013 to 2018. He was the first of the Dlamini clan to be appointed to such a high position in the national government. In October 2015 he led an eight-member delegation to Taiwan to support celebration of the 104th National Day of the Republic of China.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42529306", "label": "Off the Grid & Somewhere in Between", "source": "Off the Grid & Somewhere in Between is an extended play by Australian singer/songwriter Casey Donovan. The EP explores themes of love, loss, addiction and disappointment, and was released on 25 August 2017.The songs were written over a 3-month period from December 2016 with producer and songwriting collaborator Dan Skeed. The album was financed by a Kickstarter campaign, an experience, which according to Donovan was equal parts gratifying and stressful. She said: \"It was nerve wracking asking people for help. I'm not one usually to put my hand up for help. It was very confronting but very rewarding as well. For people to step up and put their money where their mouth was, is a very generous thing and I am forever grateful to those people. \"Upon release, Donovan said: \"This EP is something that I am extremely proud of. It's an amazing feeling to hear, see, feel and watch your love form a magical bond through melodies that are my soul breaking out of my body and into people's ears through to their hearts. What a great way to get back out into the music industry with 6 original new tracks.\".", "target": "album by Casey Donovan", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5242727", "label": "Dax Cowart", "source": "Donald Herbert Cowart (December 16, 1947 – April 28, 2019), better known as Dax Cowart, was an attorney and a former United States Air Force pilot who served in the Vietnam War. He was born in Henderson, Texas. In 1973, Cowart sustained debilitating injuries from a propane gas explosion that resulted in the loss of his hands and eyes. He suffered significant hearing loss, and was so severely burned over most of his body that the only place where his skin remained undamaged was on the bottom of his feet. Prior to the accident, he was known to his family and friends as Don or Donnie; however, after the accident he changed his first name to Dax because it was a rather uncommon name, easier for him to write, and it helped to avoid the embarrassment he felt after responding to someone he thought was addressing him, only to discover they were addressing someone else with the same name. Cowart's pleas that he be allowed to die were not honored even though, that same year, the American Medical Association had endorsed a competent patient's right to discontinue prolonged life-saving treatments. He said the doctors thought that if they forced him to receive treatment, he would change his mind and want to live, and that it would be the best outcome for him in the long run. Dax disagreed and continued to hold the belief that it is wrong to force a person who is in full control of their faculties to receive treatment against their will;.", "target": "American lawyer and burn victim", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17097859", "label": "Second Serbian Uprising Museum", "source": "Takovo Museum is an old museum located in Takovo in the municipality of Gornji Milanovac. Takovo's Museum is located in the school, founded by King Aleksandar Obrenović and tourists, the museum exhibition, inevitably visit the former school, the construction of which was started by King Milan, and completed by his son Alexander. The museum houses numerous museum exhibits dedicated to the Second Serbian Uprising.", "target": "museum in Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["historic site", "museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2068730", "label": "Pendleton", "source": "Pendleton is a town in Fall Creek Township, Madison County, Indiana, United States. The population was 4,253 at the 2010 census.", "target": "town in Fall Creek Township, Madison County, Indiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8080645", "label": "Łobudzice, Zduńska Wola County", "source": "Łobudzice [wɔbuˈd͡ʑit͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szadek, within Zduńska Wola County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north-east of Szadek, 17 km (11 mi) north of Zduńska Wola, and 32 km (20 mi) west of the regional capital Łódź.", "target": "village in Łódź, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7490559", "label": "Shashi Sankhla", "source": "Shashi Sankhla, (born 28 October 1948), is an exponent of the Jaipur gharana of Kathak dance in India. She is a Senior Disciple of Guru Pt. Kundan Lal Gangani Ji. She has been awarded by Sangeet Natak Akademi Awards 2008 in Kathak dance. She was the principal of Jaipur Kathak Kendra. She founded Geetanjali music Society an institute devoted to Kathak.", "target": "dancer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19743747", "label": "M Anwarul Azim", "source": "M Anwarul Azim (13 December 1931 – 5 May 1971) was a Bengali industrial administrator who was killed in the Bangladesh Liberation war. He was awarded Independence Day Award in 2018 posthumously by the Government of Bangladesh.", "target": "Independence Day Award Winner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28122362", "label": "Chloris", "source": "In Greek mythology, Chloris (; Ancient Greek Χλωρίς Khlōris, from χλωρός khlōros, meaning \"greenish-yellow\", \"pale green\", \"pale\", \"pallid\" or \"fresh\") was a Minyan princess.", "target": "wife of Neleus and daughter of Amphion", "baseline_candidates": ["mythological Greek character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q110745", "label": "Attalus I", "source": "Attalus I (Ancient Greek: Ἄτταλος Α΄), surnamed Soter (Greek: Σωτήρ, \"Savior\"; 269–197 BC) ruled Pergamon, an Ionian Greek polis (what is now Bergama, Turkey), first as dynast, later as king, from 241 BC to 197 BC. He was the first cousin once removed and the adopted son of Eumenes I, whom he succeeded, and was the first of the Attalid dynasty to assume the title of king in 238 BC. He was the son of Attalus and his wife Antiochis. Attalus won an important victory over the Galatians, newly arrived Celtic tribes from Thrace, who had been, for more than a generation, plundering and exacting tribute throughout most of Asia Minor without any serious check. This victory, celebrated by the triumphal monument at Pergamon (famous for its Dying Gaul) and the liberation from the Gallic \"terror\" which it represented, earned for Attalus the name of \"Soter\", and the title of \"king\". A courageous and capable general and loyal ally of Rome, he played a significant role in the first and second Macedonian Wars, waged against Philip V of Macedon. He conducted numerous naval operations, harassing Macedonian interests throughout the Aegean, winning honors, collecting spoils, and gaining for Pergamon possession of the Greek islands of Aegina during the first war, and Andros during the second, twice narrowly escaping capture at the hands of Philip. Attalus was a protector of the Greek cities of Anatolia and viewed himself as the champion of Greeks against barbarians. During his reign he established Pergamon as a considerable power in the Greek.", "target": "Greek dynast and king of Pergamon", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6534566", "label": "Leung Chin-man", "source": "Leung Chin-man JP (梁展文, born 22 November 1945) is a retired senior civil servant in the Government of Hong Kong the former Permanent Secretary for Housing, Planning and Lands.", "target": "Hong Kong government official", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5302324", "label": "Dousland railway station", "source": "Dousland railway station, originally opened at Dousland Barn in 1883 was located on the 10.5 mile long single track branch railway line in Devon, England, running from Yelverton to Princetown with eventually four intermediate stops, three being halts and one at Dousland as a fully fledged station.", "target": "माधव राजे गाडगे", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q667749", "label": "Port St. Lucie", "source": "Port St. Lucie is a city in St. Lucie County, Florida, United States. It is the most populous municipality in the county with a population of 204,851 at the 2020 census. It is located 125 miles (201 km) southeast of Orlando and 113 miles (182 km) north of Miami. The Port St. Lucie Metropolitan Area includes the counties of St. Lucie and Martin and as of 2016 had an estimated population of 465,208. Port St. Lucie is also contained within the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Port St. Lucie Combined Statistical Area with an estimated population of 6,832,588.", "target": "city in Florida", "baseline_candidates": ["big city", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2020224", "label": "Kaprichaur", "source": "Kaprichaur is a village development committee in Surkhet District in the Bheri Zone of mid-western Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2569 people living in 446 individual households.", "target": "human settlement in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1315790", "label": "SuperBrawl", "source": "SuperBrawl was an annual professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) during February (and in May in 1991) from 1991 through 2001. Along with Starrcade, Bash at the Beach, The Great American Bash, and Halloween Havoc, SuperBrawl was booked to be one of WCW's flagship pay-per-views. The first SuperBrawl was held in May, but from 1992 onward it was held in February to coincide with the Super Bowl, which inspired the SuperBrawl name. The final installment in 2001 was the penultimate WCW PPV as the organization folded a month later. Sting holds the record for most appearances at the pay-per-view with eight. In 2015, all WCW pay-per-views were made available on the WWE Network. The trademark was owned by the WWE after it bought the promotion's intellectual properties in March 2001 and expired in 2005. Cody Rhodes subsequently filed to claim the SuperBrawl trademark in November 2019. In November 2020, a settlement was reached between Cody Rhodes and WWE in which Cody gained the \"Cody Rhodes\" trademark, which WWE had held onto after his run in that company, in exchange for WWE gaining the WCW event name trademarks that Cody had claimed, including SuperBrawl.A Super NES video game named after the event, titled WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling, was released in 1994.", "target": "WCW pay-per-view", "baseline_candidates": ["professional wrestling event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16312096", "label": "Bhatika Tissa of Anuradhapura", "source": "Bhatika Tissa was King of Anuradhapura in the 2nd century, whose reign lasted from 141 to 165. He succeeded his father Mahallaka Naga as King of Anuradhapura and was succeeded by his brother Kanittha Tissa.", "target": "King of Anuradhapura from 141 to 165", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26292385", "label": "Streptomyces rubrisoli", "source": "Streptomyces rubrisoli is a neutrotolerant and acidophilic bacterium species from the genus of Streptomyces which has been isolated from red soil from Liu Jia Zhan from the Jiangxi Province in China.", "target": "species of Actinobacteria", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3529883", "label": "Tatenda Taibu", "source": "Tatenda Taibu (born 14 May 1983) is a former Zimbabwean cricketer who captained the Zimbabwe national cricket team. He is a wicket-keeper-batsman. From 6 May 2004 to 5 September 2019, he held the record for being the youngest test captain in history when he captained his team against Sri Lanka until Rashid Khan of Afghanistan claimed the record.In July 2012 Taibu, aged only 29, decided to retire from cricket to focus on his work in church. In December 2018, it was reported that he was making a return to cricket. Later the same month, he played first-class cricket for Badureliya Sports Club in the 2018–19 Premier League Tournament in Sri Lanka.", "target": "Former Zimbabwean cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7423340", "label": "Saratoga", "source": "Saratoga is a residential south-eastern village and suburb of the Central Coast region of New South Wales, Australia, located on a peninsula of Brisbane Water and part of the Central Coast Council local government area. The suburb is characterised by its largely settled shoreline, with houses extending up coastal slopes to the base of the tall hills that comprise the core of the peninsula. The village of Saratoga occupies the central portion of its peninsula, bordered towards the point by Davistown and toward the mainland by Yattalunga. Initially utilised by indigenous peoples, the area of Saratoga was first exploited by European settlers for citrus orchards, after John Bourke and his family settled in the area in 1863. Bourke went on to become a pioneer in commercial citrus growing in the area of Brisbane Water. Sporadic building occurred thereafter, including the notable Federation-style house 'Rosemount', built in 1917 and surviving on 0.5 ha of land at the corner of Village Road and Brooklyn Road. In recent decades, housing development has transformed most of Saratoga into an outer residential suburb of Gosford. Bordered on three sides by water, Saratoga has also become a favourite haunt of fishermen and sports people. Most residents commute to Gosford, Kincumber or Erina for their daily needs, with few working in the suburb itself. Saratoga has a small shopping centre located on Village Road, which includes a petrol station, a general store, a fruit shop, a hairdresser, a newsagency, a liquor outlet, a real estate agency, a pharmacy, a takeaway shop,a bakery and.", "target": "locality in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7122602", "label": "Pacific Ocean Blues", "source": "Pacific Ocean Blues is the final album by Gigolo Aunts. It was released in 2002 on Bittersweet Recordings in Spain and Japan, and subsequently released in 2003 in the U.S. on Q Division Records. The track, \"Lay Your Weary Body Down (Reprise)\" from the US version of the album is not listed on the album cover. Both the Spanish and US versions of the CD are housed in digipaks.", "target": "album by Gigolo Aunts", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19705158", "label": "Sultan Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah Bridge", "source": "The Sultan Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah Bridge or Penang Second Bridge (Malay: Jambatan Sultan Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah or Jambatan Kedua Pulau Pinang;) is a dual carriageway toll bridge in Penang, Malaysia. It connects Bandar Cassia (Batu Kawan) in Seberang Perai on mainland Peninsular Malaysia with Batu Maung on Penang Island. It is the second bridge to link the island to the mainland after the first Penang Bridge. The total length of the bridge is 24 km (15 mi) with length over water at 16.9 km (10.5 mi), making it the longest bridge in Malaysia and the second longest in Southeast Asia. China Harbour Engineering Co Ltd (CHEC), a main contractor for the second bridge was expected to start work on the second Penang bridge in November 2007 and complete the project in 2011, but the completion date was then postponed to May 2012, and later to February 2014.It originally was given route code but later changed to and was used by Senai–Desaru Expressway. Construction started in November 2008. To reduce the cost of construction, its design was then modified to resemble the first cable stayed Penang Bridge. The bridge has been built with a large loan from the People's Republic of China to continue and maintain the economic relationship between China and Malaysia. The bridge was officially opened on 1 March 2014 at 20:30 MST and was named after the fourteenth Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the late Tuanku Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah of Kedah and was assigned with the route number E28.", "target": "Second Penang Bridge", "baseline_candidates": ["road bridge", "cable-stayed bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4675794", "label": "Șona", "source": "Șona (German: Schönau; Hungarian: Szépmező) is a commune located in Alba County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of seven villages: Alecuș (Elekes), Biia (Magyarbénye), Doptău (Dobtanya), Lunca Târnavei (until 1964 Spini; Kistövis), Sânmiclăuș (Betlenszentmiklós), Șona, and Valea Sasului (Szászvölgy). The commune lies on the Transylvanian Plateau, on the banks of the Târnava Mică River. It is located in the northeastern part of the county, 10 km (6.2 mi) from Blaj and 50 km (31 mi) from the county seat, Alba Iulia. At the 2011 census, 68.5% of inhabitants were Romanians, 25.2% Hungarians, and 5.8% Roma. Notable sights include the Șona fortified church, dating to the 16th century, and the Bethlen castle in Sânmiclăuș, dating to the 17th century.", "target": "commune in Alba County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85795260", "label": "Quantum telescope", "source": "A quantum telescope is an idea for a telescope aimed at beating the diffraction limit of space telescopes by exploiting some properties of quantum mechanics, such as entanglement and photon cloning.", "target": "concept telescope", "baseline_candidates": ["hypothetical technology", "telescope"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7737329", "label": "The Goose-Step", "source": "The Goose-step: A Study of American Education is a book, published in 1923, by the American novelist and muckraking journalist Upton Sinclair. It is an investigation into the consequences of plutocratic capitalist control of American colleges and universities. Sinclair writes, “Our educational system is not a public service, but an instrument of special privilege; its purpose is not to further the welfare of mankind, but merely to keep America capitalist.\" (p. 18) The book is one of the “Dead Hand” series: six books Sinclair wrote on American institutions. The series also includes The Profits of Religion, The Brass Check (journalism), The Goslings (elementary and high school education), Mammonart (great literature, art and music) and Money Writes! (literature). Using \"Dead Hand\" as the title of the series, Sinclair tried to show the difference between the reality of a 'Dead Hand' of greed in human life and the ideal of Adam Smith’s \"Invisible Hand\" laissez-faire concept of guiding economics.", "target": "book by Upton Sinclair", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7611004", "label": "Stephensville", "source": "Stephensville is a small unincorporated community located entirely within the town of Ellington in west-central Outagamie County, Wisconsin, United States. Stephensville is classified as a Class U6 Community by the USGS, being a populated place located wholly or substantially outside the boundaries of any incorporated place or CDP with a recognized authoritative common name. Stephensville is located 4 miles northeast of Hortonville, 7 miles northwest of Greenville, 5 miles south of Shiocton and 15 miles northwest of Appleton. Bear Creek passes through the community just east of its mouth with the Wolf River. Mail is delivered by the Hortonville post office.", "target": "human settlement in Ellington, Wisconsin, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q478825", "label": "Amstrad", "source": "Amstrad was a British electronics company, founded in 1968 by Alan Sugar at the age of 21. The name is a contraction of Alan Michael Sugar Trading. It was first listed on the London Stock Exchange in April 1980. During the late 1980s, Amstrad had a substantial share of the PC market in the UK. Amstrad was once a FTSE 100 Index constituent, but since 2007 has been wholly owned by Sky UK. As of 2006, Amstrad's main business was manufacturing Sky UK interactive boxes. In 2010, Sky integrated Amstrad's satellite division as part of Sky so they could make their own set-top boxes in-house. The company had offices in Kings Road, Brentwood, Essex.", "target": "British electronics company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20936749", "label": "Jinaharsha", "source": "Jinaharsha was a Jain ascetic poet who lived in 17th and 18th century. He was a disciple of Shantiharsha of Kharatara Gaccha. He spent last years of his life in Anhilwad Patan where his handwritten manuscripts are preserved in Jain libraries.", "target": "Jain ascetic poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5111215", "label": "Christine Warren", "source": "Christine Warren is a USA Today and The New York Times recognized American author of romance novels. She is the author of the series The Others. Her books are published by St. Martin’s Press.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67675790", "label": "John William Tripe", "source": "John William Tripe (26 February 1821 – 7 April 1892) was an English physician of the Victorian era and President of the Royal Meteorological Society (1871–72). Tripe was born in London in 1821, one of 11 children born to Mary née Broad (1795–1874) and Dr John Tripe (1789–1841). He was educated at the Merchant Taylor's School before studying medicine at the London Hospital, where he was awarded two gold medals. He became a Licentiate of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries (LSA) in 1843 before making further studies in medicine at the University of St Andrews from where he graduated as a Doctor of Medicine in 1846. He became MRCS (England) in 1848 and MRCP (Edinburgh) in 1879. He became a Licentiate in Midwifery (LM) in 1853. Tripe was Medical Officer of Health for Hackney from 1856 to his death in 1892. He married Elizabeth Thomson on 10 October 1850; she died in 1860. In 1864 he married Grace Wright (1841–1901), with whom he had two children: Mary Grace Tripe (1870–1941) and John Henry Tripe (1874–1913), who, like his father and grandfather, became a doctor. Tripe joined the Royal Meteorological Society as a young man; he was elected a Fellow in 1856, and served on the Council with a break of only a year from 1858 to his death in 1892. He held the office of President in 1871–72; of Vice-President in 1860–61, 1863–64, 1869–70; and of Secretary in 1865–66, 1868 and 1873–1892. John William Tripe died aged 71 in London in 1892 leaving £3,836 15s 7d.", "target": "English physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25346000", "label": "Yiddishkayt", "source": "Yiddishkayt is a Yiddish cultural and educational organization, based in Los Angeles, California. Its offices are located in the Pellissier Building above the Wiltern Theater in the Koreatown District of Los Angeles. Its name refers to the cultural concept of yiddishkayt, (Yiddish culture, literally \"Jewishness\" or \"Yiddishness\"), which the American Jewish critic Irving Howe described not in religious terms, but rather as a humanism based in a \"readiness to live...beyond the clamor of self.\" According to the Yiddishkayt website, the organization seeks to \"inspire current and future generations with the artists, writers, musicians, performers, filmmakers, philosophers, and social justice activists whose yiddishkayt — their particular form of critical and compassionate engagement with humanity — emerged from the Jewish communities of Europe as they developed in constant contact with their non-Jewish neighbors. \"Since its founding in 1995, Yiddishkayt has become the largest organization devoted to yiddishkayt west of the Hudson and has produced six Yiddish festivals, a high school Yiddish language education program, two local cultural fellowships, 30 Los Angeles premiere, 16 US premiere and 5 world premiere presentations devoted to Yiddish culture, 10 cross-cultural performances, and partnerships with over 25 organizations and venues, including the Workmen's Circle, REDCAT, University of California, Los Angeles, Hollywood Forever Cemetery, and the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. In 2009 and 2010, Yiddishkayt was named by Slingshot Fund as the \"50 of the most innovative organizations in Jewish life today.\".", "target": "cultural and educational organization in Los Angeles", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1169855", "label": "Foum Jamaa", "source": "Foum Jamaa is a town in Azilal Province, Béni Mellal-Khénifra, Morocco. According to the 2004 census it has a population of 5,360.", "target": "rural commune of Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Morocco", "rural commune of Morocco"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4506859", "label": "Chak Tok Ich'aak II", "source": "Chak Tok Ichʼaak II, also known as Jaguar Paw II and Jaguar Paw Skull (died July 24, 508), was an ajaw of the Maya city of Tikal. He took the throne c. 486 and reigned until his death. He was son of Kʼan Chitam and Lady Tzutz Nik. The monuments associated with Chak Tok Ichʼaak II are Stelae 3, 7, 15, 21, and possibly 26.", "target": "ajaw of Tikal", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16163162", "label": "Ku Bon-chan", "source": "Ku Bon-chan (Korean pronunciation: [ku.bon.tɕʰan] or [ku] [pon.tɕʰan]; born 31 January 1993) is a South Korean recurve archer. He won an individual and a team gold medal at the 2016 Olympics and two team gold medals at the 2015 World Championships.", "target": "South Korean archer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6682354", "label": "Los Angeles Terminal Railway", "source": "The Los Angeles Terminal Railway, earlier known as the Pasadena Railway, and unofficially as the Altadena Railway, was a small terminal railroad line that was constructed between Altadena and Pasadena, California in the late 1880s. It was a byproduct of a land boom period and a victim of the land bust that occurred soon thereafter. It opened officially on January 31, 1888.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["railway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3776430", "label": "Greg McElroy", "source": "Gregory Vincent McElroy, Jr. (born May 10, 1988) is an American football commentator and former quarterback in the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL) in the seventh round of the 2011 NFL Draft after playing college football at Alabama. During his high school career, McElroy won several awards including being named an EA Sports All-American and winning a Texas 5A state championship for Southlake Carroll. He was the starting quarterback for the Crimson Tide football team. As a junior, he led the Crimson Tide to an undefeated 14–0 season, which included the 2009 SEC Championship and BCS National Championship. After retiring from the NFL, McElroy became an analyst for the SEC Network.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18516718", "label": "Master of the Morrison Triptych", "source": "The Master of the Morrison Triptych is the name given to an unknown Early Netherlandish painter active in Antwerp around 1500-1510. He is named for the Morrison Triptych, now in Toledo, Ohio, United States, which is described below. The same master is attributed an Adoration of the Magi with donor portrait, in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, c. 1504, probably the side-wing of another triptych. It is dateable by the stage of progress reached in the construction of the new tower of Antwerp Cathedral in the background, a typical exhibition of civic pride. A triptych in the National Gallery, London (NG 1085) has been suggested as another work by the artist. In Lisbon's Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga there is yet another triptych believed to have been painted by this master with the Virgin with the Child and Angels, and with St John the Baptist and St john the Evangelist in the side panels. Museum Catharijneconvent in Utrecht houses a small panel painting with an Adoration of the Shepherds (ABM s355) that is attributed to the master.", "target": "painter (1471-1571)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16996585", "label": "If You Don't Give a Doggone About It", "source": "\"If You Don't Give a Doggone about it\" (spelled \"Dogone\" in its original release) is a song written and performed by James Brown. Issued as the B-side of Brown's 1977 single \"People Who Criticize\", it charted #45 R&B. It also appeared on the album Mutha's Nature.", "target": "single by James Brown", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4860702", "label": "Baribour District", "source": "Baribour (Khmer: ស្រុកបរិបូណ៌ \"Abundance\") is a district (srok) in the north of Kampong Chhnang province, in central Cambodia. The district capital is Baribour town located around 38 kilometres north west of the provincial capital of Kampong Chhnang by road. The district shares a border with Pursat province to the west and with Kampong Thom province to the north. The district borders on the Tonle Sap and the Tonle Sap river forms the northern and eastern borders of the district.The district is easily accessed by road from Kampong Chhnang (38 km) Pursat (55 km) and Phnom Penh (129 km). Baribour district is one of the smallest districts in Kampong Chhnang province by land area and only Chol Kiri district is smaller. However, it has an average district population for the province due to the Tonle Sap and the National Highway. National Highway 5 which begins in Phnom Penh and ends at Poipet bisects the district running from north west to south east. National road 52 begins at the highway at Ponley and runs north to the port of Kampong Preah.", "target": "district of Cambodia", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Cambodia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7830980", "label": "Tozé", "source": "António José Alves Ribeiro (born 4 September 1965 in Amarante, Porto District), known as Tozé, is a Portuguese retired footballer who played as a forward.", "target": "Portuguese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7445404", "label": "Seduction", "source": "Seduction is the debut studio album by English gothic rock band the Danse Society. It was released in September 1982 on the band's own record label, Society. It includes a song inspired by the David Lynch film Eraserhead.", "target": "The Danse Society album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16156219", "label": "Abdirahman bin Isma'il al-Jabarti", "source": "Sheikh Abdirahman bin Isma'il al-Jabarti, (Arabic: عبدالرحمن بن اسماعيل الجبرتي) also known as Daarood, Dawud or Da'ud (Arabic: دارود), is the semi-legendary common ancestor of the Somali Darod clan. According to local tradition, Abdirahman descended from Aqil ibn Abi Talib, a member of the Banu Hashim and a cousin of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.", "target": "Originator of the Darod clan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29545567", "label": "Dimitris Stamatis", "source": "Dimitrios Stamatis (alternate spelling: Dimitris) (Greek: Δημήτρης Σταμάτης; born January 12, 1996) is a Greek professional basketball player. He is 1.88 m (6'2\") tall. He can play at both the point guard and shooting guard positions. His father, Antonios Stamatis, was also a professional basketball player.", "target": "Greek professional basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23684149", "label": "Potosí", "source": "Potosí is a town and municipality in the Nariño Department, Colombia.", "target": "Colombian municipality of the department of Nariño", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Colombia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16119511", "label": "The Forbidden Kingdom", "source": "The Forbidden Kingdom (Chinese: 功夫之王: Gong Fu Zhi Wang (Mandarin) or Gung Fu Ji Wong (Cantonese) and translated King of Kung Fu (English); Working title: The J & J Project) is a 2008 wuxia film written by John Fusco, and directed by Rob Minkoff, and starring Jackie Chan and Jet Li. Loosely based on the 16th-century novel Journey to the West, it is the first film to star Jackie Chan and Jet Li. The action sequences were choreographed by Yuen Woo-ping. The film is distributed in the United States through Lionsgate and The Weinstein Company, and through The Huayi Brothers Film & Taihe Investment Company in China. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the US and Hong Kong on September 9, 2008 and the United Kingdom on November 17, 2008. Rotten Tomatoes' critical consensus praises the fight scenes but says the film has too much filler. The Forbidden Kingdom grossed $128 million against a budget of $55 million. The film was a box office success.", "target": "2008 film by Rob Minkoff", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60747545", "label": "My Kitchen Rules NZ, series 4", "source": "My Kitchen Rules NZ (series 4) is a reality television cooking programme which airs on TVNZ 2. It follows last season's truncated format of only one instant restaurant round, however, after the first round, sudden elimination public challenges follows before one-on-one cookoffs semifinals off-sote rather than inside elimination houses. The series is sponsored by Harvey Norman. The season premiered on 7 October.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7322764", "label": "Ricardo Pando Córdova", "source": "Ricardo Pando Córdova (born 7 February 1964) is a Peruvian Fujimorist politician and dentist. He is a former Congressman representing Junín for the 2006–2011 term. Pando lost his seat in the 2011 elections when he ran for re-election under the Force 2011 party of the former president's daughter, Keiko.", "target": "Peruvian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1184480", "label": "Sayō", "source": "Sayō (佐用町, Sayō-chō) is a town located in Sayō District, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. As of 31 March 2022, the town had an estimated population of 15,701 in 6797 households and a population density of 51 persons per km².The total area of the town is 307.44 square kilometres (118.70 sq mi).", "target": "town in Sayō district, Hyōgo prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["town of Japan", "municipality of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q93456804", "label": "Nancy Kleniewski", "source": "Nancy Kleniewski is an American sociologist and academic administrator who served as the president of the State University of New York at Oneonta.", "target": "American sociologist and academic administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5205804", "label": "DNR", "source": "Dreams Now Reality (formerly known as Do Not Reanimate and Dreams Not Reality and officially abbreviated as DNR) is an Italian glam rock band formed in Modena, Italy. They have performed domestically, as well as internationally at venues in Russia, Japan, Ukraine, and Belarus. Their look is self-described as \"Eurovisual\" - taking influences from Japanese visual kei and Western glam rock. Luminor, formerly of Cinema Bizarre, has collaborated extensively with the band. The band's full name changed to Dreams Not Reality after the departure of Mantis, as the remaining members sought a more optimistic name.They released their first single \"Visual Evolution\" in 2008 and first studio album, Visual Evolution Reloaded, in 2009 under the independent label Miraloop. In January 2011, a new single \"Beyond This World\" was released with the first video produced by Matteo Cifelli and Toby Chapman (Spandau Ballet, Lionel Richie, Andy Taylor, Tom Jones) under Fastermaster Records. Sebastiano Serafini joined the band in May 2011 as the fifth member \"Seba\", playing keyboard and performing vocals for the band. Together, they opened up for Versailles on June 4, 2011, in Salerno, and also played at the 2011 V-Rock Festival held at Saitama Super Arena. The band was also part of the lineup for V-Love Live International, which took place two days later on October 25. Their first single under Serafini's lineup, \"A Taste of... Eurovisual\" was released in October 2011In September 2012 they opened up for INORAN (guitarist and co-founder of the rock band Luna Sea) for his European tour, Seven Samurais (gigs of:.", "target": "musical group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16058832", "label": "F. H. Herbert", "source": "Frederick Henry Herbert (1865–1914) was an architect practicing in Toronto, Ontario, during the late 19th century and early 20th century. Several buildings that he designed have survived into the 21st century and have been registered as significant heritage properties. He was one of the city's best-known practitioners specializing in residential architecture at the close of the 19th century.Herbert moved to Toronto in 1887. According to the Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada, \"He was born in Bath, England, but no information can be found on his early education or training there. \"Herbert designed close to 150 buildings over the course of his career.", "target": "Canadian architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q277464", "label": "Cercepiccola", "source": "Cercepiccola is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Campobasso in the Italian region Molise, located about 11 kilometres (7 mi) south of Campobasso. Cercepiccola borders the following municipalities: Cercemaggiore, Mirabello Sannitico, San Giuliano del Sannio, Sepino.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6993594", "label": "Neopaschia nigromarginata", "source": "Neopaschia nigromarginata is a species of snout moth in the genus Neopaschia. It was described by Viette in 1953, and is known from Madagascar (including Fianarantsoa, the type location).", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31087828", "label": "Victor Louis Ménage", "source": "Victor Louis Ménage (15 April 1920 – 11 June 2015) was a British historian, Turkologist, with a particular focus on the early Ottoman Empire and an editor of the Encyclopaedia of Islam. Ménage described his experience of childhood poverty in Chislehurst, Kent from where study offered escape. A grant gained him a place at Eltham College (1930–1938). Encouraged by his teachers, he went on to Clare College, Cambridge University, to study Classics (1938–1940).Although an opponent of war in 1940 World War II, he was enlisted into the military where he joined the ambulance service. At the end of the war, he was stationed in Ethiopia. After leaving the army, he accepted a teaching position in Addis Ababa. He later described this time as stimulating and pioneering. He transferred to the British Council at the end of the decade, when he met his future wife, Johannan.Ménage produced several books and articles on Ottoman history over years working in research. In addition to teaching as professor of Turkish history at the University of London, he also edited and contributed chapters to the second edition of the Encyclopaedia of Islam .Victor Louis Ménage died on 11 June 2015 in Sussex, England.", "target": "British historian and Turkologist (1920–2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12694750", "label": "Ruacana Airport", "source": "Ruacana Airport (ICAO: FYRC) is an airport serving Ruacana and the Ruacana hydroelectric power station in the Omusati Region of Namibia. The Ruacana non-directional beacon (Ident: RC) is on the field.", "target": "airport in Namibia", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q160221", "label": "Crassula helmsii", "source": "Crassula helmsii, known as swamp stonecrop or New Zealand pigmyweed, is an aquatic or semiterrestrial species of succulent plant in the family Crassulaceae. Originally found in Australia and New Zealand, it has been introduced around the world. In the United Kingdom, this plant is one of five introduced invasive aquatic plants that were banned from sale from April 2014, the first ban of its kind in the country. It is on the Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species of eleven countries.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3465836", "label": "Nadalama", "source": "Nadalama is a village in Kehtna Parish, Rapla County in northern-central Estonia.", "target": "village in Kehtna Rural Municipality, Rapla County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6829384", "label": "Michael Collins", "source": "Michael Collins (born 16 September 1977) is a Northern Irish retired professional footballer who last played for Irish League club Crusaders.", "target": "professional footballer (born 1977)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5338074", "label": "Edikli", "source": "Edikli is a belde (town) in the central district (Niğde) of Niğde Province, Turkey. At 38°15′N 34°57′E it is at the east of Misli plains. Distance to Niğde is about 45 kilometres (28 mi). The population of the town is 5996 as of 2011. The settlement was known to be a Seljuk settlement. But it was ruined during the Mongol invasion in the 13th century. According to inscriptions on the oldest mosque of the town, the settlement was refounded in 1730s, during the Ottoman era. In 1970 it was declared a seat of township. Main agricultural product of the town is potato. Other crops like apple and nuts are also produced.", "target": "town municipality in Niğde Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["town municipality of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19727865", "label": "Commandant of the Marine Corps", "source": "The commandant of the Marine Corps (CMC) is normally the highest-ranking officer in the United States Marine Corps and is a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The CMC reports directly to the secretary of the Navy and is responsible for ensuring the organization, policy, plans, and programs for the Marine Corps as well as advising the president, the secretary of defense, the National Security Council, the Homeland Security Council, and the secretary of the Navy on matters involving the Marine Corps. Under the authority of the secretary of the Navy, the CMC designates Marine personnel and resources to the commanders of unified combatant commands. The commandant performs all other functions prescribed in Section 8043 in Title 10 of the United States Code or delegates those duties and responsibilities to other officers in his administration in his name. As with the other joint chiefs, the commandant is an administrative position and has no operational command authority over United States Marine Corps forces. The commandant is nominated for appointment by the president, for a four-year term of office, and must be confirmed by the Senate. The commandant can be reappointed to serve one additional term, but only during times of war or national emergency declared by Congress. By statute, the commandant is appointed as a four-star general while serving in office. \"The commandant is directly responsible to the Secretary of the Navy for the total performance of the Marine Corps. This includes the administration, discipline, internal organization, training, requirements, efficiency, and readiness of the service. The.", "target": "member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article", "position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2061000", "label": "Alaska Permanent Fund", "source": "The Alaska Permanent Fund (APF) is a constitutionally established permanent fund managed by a state-owned corporation, the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation (APFC). It was established in Alaska in 1976 by Article 9, Section 15 of the Alaska State Constitution under Governor Jay Hammond and Attorney General Avrum Gross. From February 1976 until April 1980, the Department of Revenue Treasury Division managed the state's Permanent Fund assets, until, in 1980, the Alaska State Legislature created the APFC.As of 2019, the fund was worth approximately $64 billion that has been funded by oil revenues and has paid out an average of approximately $1,600 annually per resident (adjusted to 2019 dollars). The main use for the fund's revenue has been to payout the Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD), which many authors portray as the only example of a Basic Income in practice.", "target": "permanent fund of oil revenues managed by the State of Alaska", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2399919", "label": "Teddy Tetzlaff", "source": "Theodore Herbert \"Teddy\" Tetzlaff (February 5, 1883 – December 8, 1929) was an American racecar driver active in the formative years of auto racing. He competed in the first four Indianapolis 500s, with a highest finish of second in 1912. He earned the nickname \"Terrible Teddy\" due to his rough treatment of his vehicles. His wide-open throttle racing style would variously win a race, blow up his engine or cause him to crash. As auto racing strategies evolved from the early \"go as fast as you can and see if you can stay on the track,\" his early dominance of the sport waned.", "target": "American racing driver (1883-1929)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20685351", "label": "Arny Ross Roque", "source": "Arny Ross Roque Banongon or simply known as Arny Ross (born July 19, 1991), is a Filipino actress, comedian, model, and dancer. She is known as one of the contestants of Protégé: The Battle For The Big Artista Break under Gina Alajar and later to Phillip Salvador. She represented Southern Luzon in that season.During Protégé, Arny developed a love interest with Jeric Gonzales, who ended up as the Grand Winner of the show. She was eliminated from the competition before the announcement of the final 10 contestants. She is currently a mainstay and a member of \"Bubble Shakers\" of Bubble Gang.", "target": "actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2721488", "label": "Pietro Perdichizzi", "source": "Pietro Perdichizzi (born 16 December 1992) is a Belgian professional footballer who plays as a centre0back for Belgian First Division A club Westerlo.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3101819", "label": "George Palmer Putnam", "source": "George Palmer Putnam (February 7, 1814 – December 20, 1872) was an American publisher and author. He founded the firm G. P. Putnam's Sons and Putnam's Magazine. He was an advocate of international copyright reform, secretary for many years of the Publishers' Association, and founding superintendent of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.", "target": "19th-century American publisher and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12408138", "label": "Yannets Levi", "source": "Yannets Levi (Hebrew: ינץ לוי, born 14 June 14, 1975) is an Israeli author, playwright, TV host and lecturer. Levi is one of Israel's most popular and acclaimed writers for children and adults with 12 best sellers published in a row. Books by Levi have been translated into English, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Czech, Arabic, Hungarian and Macedonian. In 2010 Levi won the Public Library Award, the most prestigious prize for children's literature in Israel. In 2016 he won the Dvora Omer Award for children's literature. In 2021, Levi won the Prime Minister's Prize for Hebrew Literary Works.", "target": "Israeli writer of books and drama, a TV host and a lecturer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6138164", "label": "James Lofton", "source": "James O'Neal Lofton (born March 6, 1974 in Los Angeles, California) is a former shortstop in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Boston Red Sox during the 2001 season. Listed at 5' 9\", 170 lb., he was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed. In an eight-game career, Lofton was a .192 hitter (5-for-26) with one run, one double, one RBI, and two stolen bases. In seven fielding appearances, he committed two errors in 25 chances for a .920 fielding percentage. Lofton also played in the Boston, Baltimore and Cincinnati minor league systems (1993–2007), as well as in several independent leagues. He was named an All-Star in the Pioneer (1994) and Western (2000) leagues. In 14 minor league seasons, he was a .271 hitter with 57 home runs and 533 RBI in 1264 games. Lofton is not believed to be related to former MLB outfielder Kenny Lofton. Lofton has two daughters Jasmine Lofton and Jamie Lofton.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22095613", "label": "Log Chapel, University of Notre Dame", "source": "The log chapel was originally built in 1831 by Rev. Stephen Badin as a mission to the Potawatomi Indians in what would become northern Indiana. It was the first Catholic place of worship in Northern Indiana. It was given in 1842 to Fr. Edward Sorin, and it became the original nucleus of the University of Notre Dame. The original was destroyed in 1856 by a fire, and an identical replica was built in the same spot in 1906. In 1973 it was added to the National Register of Historic PlacesIn February 1987, Fr. Theodore Hesburgh decided to move the burials of Fr. Louis DeSeille, Fr. Benjamin Petit, and Fr. Francis Cointet, from the basilica Crypt to the Log Chapel, where Fr. Badin was buried. All three priests had been buried under the original Chapel before Fr. Sorin moved them to the crypt.", "target": "religious Chapel in Indiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1403996", "label": "Renato Benaglia", "source": "Renato Benaglia (born 24 March 1938 in Valeggio sul Mincio) is a retired Italian football player and coach. He played for 7 seasons (151 games, 7 goals) in the Serie A for ACF Fiorentina, Calcio Catania and A.S. Roma. He lives in Florence.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19597906", "label": "1-methylpsilocin", "source": "1-Methylpsilocin is a tryptamine derivative which acts as a selective agonist for the 5-HT2C receptor (IC50 of 12 nM, vs 633 nM at 5-HT2A), and an inverse agonist at 5-HT2B (Ki of 38 nM). While 1-methylpsilocin does have higher affinity for 5-HT2C than 5-HT2A, it does produce a head-twitch response in mice that are dependent on 5-HT2A, so it is not entirely free of effects on 5-HT2A in vivo. In contrast to psilocin, 1-methylpsilocin did not activate 5-HT1A receptors in mice. 1-Methylpsilocin has been investigated for applications such as treatment of glaucoma, OCD, and cluster headaches, as these conditions are amenable to treatment with psychedelic drugs but are not generally treated with such agents due to the hallucinogenic side effects they produce, which are considered undesirable. 1-Methylpsilocin therefore represents a potential alternative treatment to psilocin that may be less likely to produce hallucinogenic effects.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3161543", "label": "Jamie Livingston", "source": "Jamie Livingston (October 25, 1956 – October 25, 1997) was a New York-based photographer, film-maker and circus performer. Between March 31, 1979, and October 25, 1997, the day of his death, he took a single picture nearly every day with a Polaroid SX-70 camera.Livingston's 'Polaroid a Day' photographic diary started at Bard College and though some photos have gone missing from the collection, 6,697 Polaroids remain. The collection, dated in sequence, has been organized by his friends Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid into an exhibit at the Bertelsmann Campus Center at Bard College called \"Photo of the Day\", which opened in 2007. By the next year, the pictures were hosted online and became a popular discovery of several online blogs.", "target": "American photographer (1956-1997)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19383439", "label": "Norway at the 2000 Summer Paralympics", "source": "Norway competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, Australia. 39 competitors from Norway won 15 medals, including 2 gold, 6 silver and 7 bronze to finish 40th in the medal table.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Paralympics delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5785695", "label": "Bakar-e Sofla", "source": "Bakar-e Sofla (Persian: بكرسفلي, also Romanized as Bakar-e Soflá; also known as Bakar-e Dūmen and Bakar-e Pā’īn) is a village in Poshtkuh-e Rostam Rural District, Sorna District, Rostam County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 139, in 32 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5492313", "label": "Franny Billingsley", "source": "Franny Billingsley (born July 3, 1954) is the author of three award-winning children's fantasy novels, Well Wished, The Folk Keeper, and Chime, and the picture book Big Bad Bunny.", "target": "American children's writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28047844", "label": "Tuca Guimarães", "source": "Antônio Carlos Guimarães (born 12 April 1973), known as Tuca Guimarães, is a Brazilian football manager who manages Treze.Starting his career in futsal, Tuca moved to football in 2010 with São Paulo's youth setup. In 2016, he managed Série A club Figueirense for eight matches.", "target": "Brazilian association football manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5611544", "label": "Grover L. Broadfoot", "source": "Grover Lee Broadfoot (December 27, 1892 – May 18, 1962) was an American lawyer and judge from Wisconsin. He was a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court for thirteen years and was briefly Chief Justice for the last 5 months of his life. Earlier in his career, he had been the 30th Attorney General of Wisconsin, a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly, Mayor of Mondovi, Wisconsin, and District Attorney of Buffalo County for twelve years.", "target": "American judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5762985", "label": "Katra", "source": "Katra is a village in Kaniavos eldership, Varėna district municipality, Alytus County, southeastern Lithuania. According to the 2001 census, the village had a population of 35 people. At the 2011 census, the population was 19.", "target": "village in Lithuania", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5131993", "label": "Clevan Thomas", "source": "Clevan Nathaniel Thomas (born April 6, 1979) is a former American football cornerback. Along with Kenny McEntyre, he is regarded as one of the top defensive backs in Arena Football history. He spent ten of his seasons in the AFL with the SaberCats; over this span, he won four ArenaBowl championships and three Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY) awards. In 2012, Thomas was inducted into the AFL Hall of Fame.", "target": "player of American football", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31736601", "label": "Natavalasa", "source": "Natavalasa is a village and panchayat in Denkada mandal of Vizianagaram district, Andhra Pradesh, India. It is located on the banks of River Champavathi.", "target": "village in Andhra Pradesh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18702681", "label": "Melia", "source": "Melia is a given name of Greek origin and comes from μελία, the ancient Greek word for ash-tree. In Greek mythology, Melia was an Oceanid, daughter of the Titans Oceanus and Tethys.", "target": "name: given name and surname", "baseline_candidates": ["name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2075085", "label": "Efterklang", "source": "Efterklang (Danish pronunciation: [ˈeftɐˌkʰlɑŋˀ]) is a Danish indie rock group from Copenhagen, formed in December 2000. The band has recorded five studio albums and are currently signed to the 4AD label, as well as their own record label Rumraket. In 2012, they released their fourth album Piramida to good reviews.", "target": "Danish indie rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15849311", "label": "Stipe Brnas", "source": "Stipe Brnas (born September 26, 1969) is a retired Croatian football defender.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22067643", "label": "Hulha Negra", "source": "Hulha Negra is a municipality in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. As of 2020, the estimated population was 6,836.", "target": "municipality of Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19879175", "label": "Cooper Heights", "source": "Cooper Heights is an unincorporated community in Walker County, in the U.S. state of Georgia.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1193960", "label": "Covington", "source": "Covington is a city in Newton County, Georgia, located 26 miles east of Atlanta. As of the 2010 Census, its population was 13,118.", "target": "city and the county seat of Newton County, Georgia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county seat", "municipality of Georgia", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1005621", "label": "alpine skiing at the 2002 Winter Olympics – men's slalom", "source": "The event was held on February 23 at Deer Valley. Pre-race favorite Bode Miller fell off the course in the second run, and many of the other top competitors struggled with an extremely challenging course.Alain Baxter of Great Britain originally took the bronze, but was disqualified after testing positive for traces of methamphetamine. This apparently occurred because Baxter had used a Vicks inhaler from Canada, which had a slightly different chemical content from the legal British Vicks inhaler.", "target": "men's slalom events at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16043681", "label": "Charles D. Lane", "source": "Charles D. Lane (November 15, 1840 - 1911) was a US millionaire mine owner, who is recognized as a founder of Nome, Alaska. Lane was born in Palmyra, Missouri November 15, 1840. His parents were Virginians of Scottish descent. He moved to California with his father in 1852 and almost immediately took up mining. After an unsuccessful attempt to develop a lode mine in Nevada, he achieved his first success on the Snake River in Idaho, followed some years later by a major strike at the Utica Mine at Angels, California. Lane also developed the Fortuna Mine in Arizona. Lane was a central figure in the industrial phase of mining on the Seward Peninsula, constructing a number of developments in support of the industry, particularly in the Nome and Council areas. An employee of Lane's, G. W. Price, was present in the Golovin Bay area late in 1898, when the three “lucky Swedes”, Jafet Lindeberg, Erik O. Bloom, and J. J. Brynteson, returned from their discovery of the rich placer deposits on tributaries of the Snake River, near what is now Nome. The three original discoverers formed a second party, including Price and a few others, and returned to the Snake River, organizing the Cape Nome mining district, and staking additional claims.Lane quickly acquired claims in the Nome area, and in 1899 was listed as co-owner, with Price, of claim. No. 8 Above Discovery on Anvil Creek, which was worked that season. At about this time, Lane joined with capitalists from California and the East Coast.", "target": "American mine owner and a founder of Nome, Alaska", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7496282", "label": "Shifty Disco", "source": "Shifty Disco was a British independent record label based in Oxford, England.The record label was started by local enthusiasts in January 1997 and their early releases were often featured by John Peel on his BBC Radio 1 show. Shifty Disco has released recordings by artists such as Beulah, Mark Gardener, Unbelievable Truth, and Young Knives. One of Shifty Disco's early, defining initiatives was the Shifty Disco singles club which released a new single every month to subscribers. A compilation of all the Singles Club releases was released as a 5-CD set in 2002: 0-60 In Five Years - The Complete Shifty Disco Singles Club Collection.", "target": "British independent record label based in Oxford, England, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["record label"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6055871", "label": "Internet in Botswana", "source": "The Internet in Botswana is used by about 28.4% of the population. This is slightly lower than the figure of 28.6% for Africa as a whole in 2015.", "target": "overview about the Internet in Botswana", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect in a geographic region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30325758", "label": "Elizabeth Jenner", "source": "Elizabeth Ann Jenner (born 30 August 1941) is a British sprinter. She competed in the women's 100 metres at the 1960 Summer Olympics.", "target": "British sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5358973", "label": "Elena Bobrovskaya", "source": "Elena Bobrovskaya (born 11 April 1975) is a retired Kyrgyz athlete who specialized in the 100 metres and long jump. As a sprinter she competed at the World Indoor Championships in 1997, 1999, 2001 and 2004 as well as the 2004 Olympic Games, but without reaching the final. Her personal best time was 11.35 seconds, achieved in July 2004 in Bishkek. She also had 23.35 seconds in the 200 metres, achieved in May 2004 in Tashkent. As a long jumper she competed at the World Championships in 1999 and 2001 as well as the 2000 Olympic Games, but again without reaching the final. Her personal best jump was 6.73 metres, achieved in June 2001 in Almaty. She also had 13.14 metres in the triple jump, achieved in May 2000 in Almaty.", "target": "Athletics (sport) competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6661149", "label": "Llandarcy", "source": "Llandarcy is a village near Neath in the Neath Port Talbot county borough, Wales, and was the site of the first oil refinery in the United Kingdom. It was originally designed as a garden village to house the workers for the BP refinery built between 1918 and 1922. The village is near junction 43 of the M4 motorway.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q343415", "label": "İbrahim Üzülmez", "source": "İbrahim Üzülmez (born 10 March 1974), known by his given nicknames \"Deli İbrahim\" or \"Deli İbo\" (lit. 'İbo the Mad'), is a Turkish former professional international footballer and current coach and pundit. Üzülmez last entrained MKE Ankaragücü.", "target": "Turkish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2351472", "label": "Rauma dialect", "source": "Rauma dialect (\"rauman giäl\", \"language of Rauma\") is a Southwestern dialect of Finnish spoken in the town of Rauma, Finland. The written form of the dialect was preserved by the writer and doctor Hj. Nortamo, and is currently practiced mainly as a hobby. Some of the most distinctive characteristics of the dialect (as written) are the use of letters 'g' and 'b', which are uncommon in the Finnish language. Pronunciation of these letters is, however, is in between 'g' and 'p' and are close to the 'k' and 'p' of mainstream Finnish. And the shortening of words The Rauma dialect also contains its own pitch accent.", "target": "nearly-extinct dialect of the Finnish language", "baseline_candidates": ["Finnish dialects"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7536538", "label": "Skowrony, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "source": "Skowrony [skɔˈvrɔnɨ] (German: Schmauch) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Godkowo, within Elbląg County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 33 kilometres (21 mi) east of Elbląg and 51 km (32 mi) north-west of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "target": "village in Warmian-Masurian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2539003", "label": "Louis I, Duke of Nemours", "source": "Louis of Savoy (1615 – 16 September 1641) was Count of Geneva, Duke of Nemours, and Duke of Aumale from the death of his father Henry of Savoy in 1632 until his own death in 1641. Louis never married. On his death, his titles passed to his brother Charles Amadeus.", "target": "French noble", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5756707", "label": "Castanea ozarkensis", "source": "Castanea ozarkensis, also known as the Ozark chinkapin (also spelled chinquapin), is a species of tree that is native to the United States. It is in the Castanea genus that includes chestnuts and types of chestnut known as chinkapins. Some authorities consider it a variant of the Allegheny chinkapin (C. pumila) as C. pumila ozarkensis. It grows in the Ozark Mountains and Ouachita Mountains of Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma. The nuts it produces provided food for indigenous people, early settlers, and various animals including squirrel, chipmunk, deer, turkey, and bobwhite.Castanea ozarkensis is susceptible to chestnut blight and has been devastated by the disease, and largely now grows only as a small tree or shrub. However, several mature individuals have survived the blight, with over 45 such individuals located so far since the 2000s. The discovery of these specimens has spurred an ongoing project to restore the species by using the offspring of these trees, headed by the Ozark Chinkapin Foundation. An analysis has also found that Ozark chinkapin populations contain far more genetic diversity than those of the American chestnut, which was also devastated by the chestnut blight. The study also found that the Ozark chinkapin may actually be ancestral to the American chestnut and Allegheny chinkapin, rather than the other way around. Another study has found that the surviving Ozark chinkapins are even more resistant to the chestnut blight than the Chinese chestnut, which is not affected by the blight.Castanea ozarkensis was described by William Willard Ashe and published in the Bulletin of the Torrey.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1367845", "label": "Eskişehir Atatürk Stadium", "source": "Eskişehir Atatürk Stadium (Turkish: Eskişehir Atatürk Stadı) was a multi-purpose stadium in Eskişehir, Turkey. It was used mostly for football matches and was the home ground of Eskişehirspor. The stadium held 13,520 people and was built in 1953. It was burnt down by angry fans in 2016 following the relegation of Eskişehirspor. It was replaced in October 2016 by the New Eskişehir Stadium It was named after the Turkish statesman Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.", "target": "football stadium", "baseline_candidates": ["association football venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7459354", "label": "Seyyed Naser", "source": "Seyyed Naser (Persian: سيدناصر, also Romanized as Seyyed Nāşer) is a village in Allah-o Akbar Rural District, in the Central District of Dasht-e Azadegan County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 189, in 28 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5498724", "label": "Frederick Sherriff", "source": "Frederick George Sherriff OBE MC (8 March 1889 – 31 January 1943) was a British fencer who was an officer in the British Army and later the Royal Air Force.He competed at two Olympic Games, in the men's team foil, at Paris in 1924 and Amsterdam in 1928.He had served in the First World War in the York and Lancaster Regiment and continued into the Second as a Royal Air Force officer, ultimately Group Captain. He is buried in St Cuthbert's Churchyard, Donington, Shropshire.", "target": "fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55589740", "label": "Lunglei South Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Lunglei South Legislative Assembly constituency is one of the 40 Legislative Assembly constituencies of Mizoram state in India.It is part of Lunglei district and is reserved for candidates belonging to the Scheduled tribes.", "target": "constituency of the Mizoram legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Mizoram Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2240180", "label": "Astylosternus rheophilus", "source": "Astylosternus rheophilus is a species of frog in the family Arthroleptidae. It is endemic to western Cameroon. Common name Cameroon Range night frog has been coined for it. Two subspecies are recognized: Astylosternus rheophilus rheophilus Amiet, 1978 \"1977\" Astylosternus rheophilus tchabalensis Amiet, 1978 \"1977\".", "target": "species of amphibian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16837317", "label": "For the Thrashers", "source": "\"For the Thrashers\" is a four track 12\" promotional single sampler by the funk rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1989 to promote their then forthcoming fourth studio album, Mother's Milk. The single was never released for sale or intended for radio airplay and was issued as a sampler only to radio stations.", "target": "1989 song performed by Red Hot Chili Peppers", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20053922", "label": "Las Suertes", "source": "Las Suertes is a station on Line 1 of the Madrid Metro. It is located in fare Zone A. The station opened on 16 May 2007.", "target": "Madrid Metro station", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "station located underground"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2111574", "label": "Albertus Wielsma", "source": "Albertus Wielsma (19 December 1883 in Amsterdam – 26 March 1968 in Amsterdam) was a Dutch rower.After a four months training period, he competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics in the coxless four event. He and the other of the team were a member of “de Amstel” and trained by Ooms. The team won the bronze medal in the coxless four.", "target": "Dutch rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2286170", "label": "Mexcala vicina", "source": "Mexcala vicina is a jumping spider species in the genus Mexcala that lives in Cameroon. The male was described by Wanda Wesołowska in 2009. The species is named after the Latin word for neighbour, referring to the relationship between this species and others in the genus.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56377916", "label": "Four Corners Tour", "source": "The Four Corners Tour was the tenth headlining concert tour by British pop rock band The Vamps. The tour began on 27 April 2019 in Plymouth and concluded on 1 June 2019 in Bournemouth.", "target": "The Vamps 2019 concert series", "baseline_candidates": ["concert"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q265342", "label": "Lyudmila Galkina", "source": "Lyudmila Ivanovna Galkina (Russian: Людмила Ивановна Галкина; born January 20, 1972 in Saratov) is a Russian track and field athlete. She won the European Junior Championships in 1991 as a triple jumper, but thereafter later focused on the long jump. Her greatest achievement was taking the World Championship title in 1997, with a personal best jump of 7.05 metres.", "target": "Russian long jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13472394", "label": "Cochylis philypna", "source": "Cochylis philypna is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Brazil, where it is found from Minas Gerais to Goias.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2267676", "label": "Burn to Shine", "source": "Burn to Shine is an album by Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals, released in 1999 on Virgin Records America. Harper's fourth album, it shows him working within many different genres, including blues, rock, soul, and folk. The songs \"Steal My Kisses\" and \"Suzie Blue\" became successful on college radio. Like most other Harper albums, different versions were released in different regions within varying bonus material.", "target": "album by Ben Harper", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16545048", "label": "Corey Oswalt", "source": "Corey Edward Oswalt (born September 3, 1993) is an American professional baseball pitcher in the Philadelphia Phillies organization. He made his Major League Baseball (MLB) debut in 2018 with the New York Mets.", "target": "American professional baseball pitcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12847299", "label": "Vladimir Samoylov", "source": "Vladimir Yakovlevich Samoilov (Russian: Влади́мир Я́ковлевич Само́йлов; 1924–1999) was a Soviet and Russian film and theater actor. People's Artist of the USSR (1984). Winner of the Stanislavsky State Prize (1972), and two USSR State Prizes (1976, 1986).", "target": "Soviet and Russian actor (1924-1999)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q984189", "label": "Neptunia", "source": "Neptunia is a resort town of the Costa de Oro in the Canelones Department of southern Uruguay.", "target": "human settlement in Uruguay", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3328054", "label": "Murchad mac Diarmata", "source": "Murchad mac Diarmata (English: Murrough MacDermot) (died 1070) was a late eleventh-century ruler of the kingdoms of Leinster, Dublin, and the Isles. He was a member of the Uí Chennselaig, and a son of Diarmait mac Máel na mBó, King of Leinster (died 1072). Murchad had three sons: Domnall (died 1075), Donnchad (died 1115), and Énna. He is the eponymous founder of the Meic Murchada, a branch of the Uí Chennselaig who adopted the surname Mac Murchada (MacMurrough, MacMorrow, Morrow). Murchad led an army into the Kingdom of Meath in July 1069 \"where he burned territories and churches\", he was however badly wounded by Feichin, a defender. It was probably these injuries, or complications, that led to Murchad's death in 1070. He was then buried in Áth Cliath, near what is now Dublin.", "target": "King of Leinster and Dublin", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65920661", "label": "Shelby Pierson", "source": "Shelby Pierson is the top election security official of the American intelligence community, the chair of the Election Executive and Leadership Board. Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats instituted the position and appointed Pierson to fill it in July 2019. The board includes representatives from the intelligence community and other federal agencies coordinating on election security.", "target": "American intelligence official", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32182359", "label": "275", "source": "Year 275 (CCLXXV) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Aurelianus and Marcellinus (or, less frequently, year 1028 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 275 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q367027", "label": "Nanumanga", "source": "Nanumanga or Nanumaga is a reef island and a district of the Oceanian island nation of Tuvalu. It has a surface area of about 3 km² with a population of 491 (2017 Census).", "target": "reef island of Tuvalu", "baseline_candidates": ["island", "Council of Tuvalu"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q238104", "label": "Sumampattus", "source": "Sumampattus is a genus of South American jumping spiders that was first described by María Elena Galiano in 1983. As of August 2019 it contains only three species, found in Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay: S. hudsoni, S. pantherinus, and S. quinqueradiatus. The name is a combination of Sumampa, a Department of Argentina, and the common ending for salticid genera -attus.", "target": "genus of arachnids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18040587", "label": "KDM3B", "source": "Lysine-specific demethylase 3B is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the KDM3B gene. KDM3B belongs to the alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent hydroxylase superfamily.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q732186", "label": "Pavel Krotov", "source": "Pavel Vadimovich Krotov (Russian: Павел Вадимович Кротов; born 24 April 1992) is a Russian freestyle skier, specializing in aerials.", "target": "Russian freestyle skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37958167", "label": "Segezha", "source": "Segezha (Russian: Сеге́жа; Karelian: Segeža; Finnish: Sekehe) is a town and the administrative center of Segezhsky District of the Republic of Karelia, Russia, located 267 kilometers (166 mi) north of Petrozavodsk on the Segezha River and on the western shore of Lake Vygozero. Population: 29,631 (2010 Census); 34,214 (2002 Census); 38,207 (1989 Census).", "target": "human settlement in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["city/town", "subdivisions of Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q543977", "label": "Franziska Gude", "source": "Franziska (\"Franzi\") Gude (born 19 March 1976 in Göttingen, Lower Saxony) is a field hockey midfielder from Germany, who won the gold medal with the German National Women's Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece.", "target": "field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6376222", "label": "Katharine Park", "source": "Katharine Park is a Radcliffe Professor of the History of Science at Harvard University. She specializes in the history of gender, sexuality, and the female body in medieval and Renaissance Europe, as well as categories and practices of experience and observation in the Middle Ages. Park was awarded a Marshall Scholarship in 1974. She received her M.Phil in the Combined Historical Studies of the Renaissance at the Warburg Institute, University of London, and earned a Ph.D. in the History of Science at Harvard in 1981.", "target": "History of Science professor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85812232", "label": "Unity of Command II", "source": "Unity of Command II is a turn-based wargame developed by 2x2 Games, and co-produced by Croteam. The game was released on November 12, 2019. It is the sequel to Unity of Command.", "target": "2019 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5460248", "label": "Flor de caña", "source": "Flor de caña (\"Sugarcane Flower\") is a 1948 Mexican film. It was written by Luis Alcoriza.", "target": "1948 film by Carlos Orellana", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3047164", "label": "Ed Chynoweth", "source": "Edward Chynoweth (December 14, 1941 – April 22, 2008) was a Canadian ice hockey executive. He served as president of the Western Hockey League and the Canadian Hockey League for over 20 years each. He was also a league director, team owner, and reported by The Canadian Press to have been one of the most influential men in junior ice hockey in Canada.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6741697", "label": "Malaysia FAM Cup 2010", "source": "2010 FAM League is the 58th edition season of current third-tier league competition in Malaysia. The league is called TM Malaysia FAM League for sponsorship reason. The league winner for 2010 season is Sime Darby FC.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29743645", "label": "2012–13 Lithuanian Football Cup", "source": "The 2012–13 Lithuanian Football Cup was the 24th season of the Lithuanian annual football knock-out tournament. The competition started on 15 June 2012 with the matches of the first round and ended with the final on 19 May 2013, when Žalgiris Vilnius defeated FC Šiauliai in penalty kicks. Žalgris qualified for the first qualifying round of the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12060469", "label": "Rattanakosindra-class gunboat", "source": "The Ratanakosindra class gunboats were built in the UK for the Royal Thai Navy. Originally ordered in 1914, they were cancelled as a result of the First World War. They were reordered again in the 1920s from Hawthorn Leslie.The class consisted of two ships, Ratanakosindra and Sukothai. They displaced 1000 tons and were capable of 12 knots. They were armed with two 6 inch guns, and 4 12-pounders.", "target": "early 20th century gunboat class built for the Royal Thai Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["ship class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5040253", "label": "Carl Gustaf Löwenhielm", "source": "Count Carl Gustaf Löwenhielm (January 30, 1790 – May 18, 1858) was a Swedish diplomat and Lieutenant general. Carl Gustaf Löwenhielm was born in Värmland and grew up in a manor house. He joined the military in 1809 and in 1811 became courtier in the service of the Crown Price, the future King Oscar I of Sweden. In 1812 he traveled to Russia to join the anti-Napoleonic cause. He fought in the Russian army against the French in the battles of Borodino and Leipzig and was present during the conquest of Paris in 1814. He married on 18 September 1817 Jacquette Löwenhielm, the mistress of King Oscar I of Sweden and Norway. The couple had no children and divorced in 1828.In 1821, he was promoted to the rank of colonel and served in the general staff of Sweden. He traveled to Bavaria in 1822 on a mission from Prince Oscar to ask for the hand of Josephine of Leuchtenberg on his behalf. In 1824 he was appointed to the equivalent of Swedish ambassador to the Ottoman Empire and served in Istanbul until 1830. Löwenhielm detested his assignment to Turkey and considered the time there a waste of years. He nonetheless managed to accomplish a deal with the Ottoman government through which Swedish merchant ships were allowed to pass through the Bosphorus. After his years in Turkey, Löwenhielm also worked for some years as a Swedish envoy to the Imperial Court in Vienna.In 1840 Löwenhielm married in Vienna Countess Natalie Alexandra von Buxhoeveden (1814-1867), a granddaughter of.", "target": "Swedish count, lieutenant-general, diplomat, county governor and artist (1790-1858)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27178314", "label": "Lucy Wortham James", "source": "Lucy Wortham James (September 13, 1880 – January 20, 1938) was an American philanthropist. She dedicated her life to helping others and funding medical research. Her most memorial donation was land, part of Maramec Springs, which is now a park open to the public and maintained by the James Foundation.", "target": "American philanthropist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39048944", "label": "The Bravest Girl in the South", "source": "The Bravest Girl of the South is a 1910 American silent film produced by Kalem Company. It was directed by Sidney Olcott with Gene Gauntier in the leading role. It is a story of Civil War.", "target": "1910 film by Sidney Olcott", "baseline_candidates": ["short film", "film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94922766", "label": "David Middleton Greig", "source": "David Middleton Greig FRSE FRCSE LLD TD (1864-4 May 1936) was a Scottish surgeon who worked for most of his career at Dundee Royal Infirmary. He developed an interest in diseases of bone and came to be regarded as an international authority on the subject. He wrote numerous papers on skeletal abnormalities and Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome (first described in 1926) is named after him. Over the course of his career he amassed a large collection of skulls demonstrating various bony abnormalities. After retiring from surgical practice he became conservator of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh at Surgeons' Hall. He donated 250 skulls to Surgeons' Hall Museum, where some remain on display as part of the Greig Collection.", "target": "Scottish surgeon", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7614730", "label": "Steven G. Smith", "source": "Steven Grayson Smith (born 3 August 1946), is a former United States Navy Rear Admiral. He ended his military career in January 2003 after 34 years. Smith received the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, Navy Distinguished Service Medal, two Defense Superior Service Medals, four awards of the Legion of Merit and two Bronze Star Medals with Combat \"V\".", "target": "United States admiral", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q557076", "label": "Liang Wenbo", "source": "Liang Wenbo (Chinese: 梁文博; born 25 March 1987) is a Chinese professional snooker player based at the Oracle Snooker Club, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England. Liang, who plays left-handed, has reached one Triple Crown final, made two Masters appearances, and won one ranking title at the inaugural English Open in 2016. He twice won the World Cup for China along with teammate Ding Junhui. Liang has made three maximum breaks in his career, and reached an all-time high of 11th in the world rankings.On 1 April 2022, Liang was convicted of domestic assault, receiving a 12-month community order plus a £1,380 fine. The World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) suspended him for four months, from 2 April until 1 August 2022, for engaging in behavior unbecoming of a sportsperson and bringing the sport into disrepute.", "target": "Chinese snooker player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4346555", "label": "Tiempos que cambian", "source": "Tiempos que cambian (Times That Change) was scheduled to be the ninth studio album by Chilean songwriter Víctor Jara as a soloist, but was left incomplete due to the murder of the songwriter by the Chilean military in the 1973 military coup d'état. Originally, the album was planned to be named Tiempos Nuevos (New Times), but later on the title was modified to the present version.Although intended for release in 1974, it was released posthumously in Europe with numerous earlier songs added to complete the album. It was released in the UK as Manifiesto (Manifest), in France as Presente (Present) and in Spain as Canciones póstumas (Posthumous songs). The Chilean music group Inti Illimani and the Chilean musician Patricio Castillo, of Quilapayún until 1971, also collaborated on the recording of this album. Several years later, Castillo returned to Quilapayún in a more definitive way. The vast majority of the songs were written by Víctor Jara, with the exception of \"Aquí me quedo\" (Here I stay), composed with Patricio Castillo. The description below only shows the original songs Victor Jara left for this album.", "target": "1974 unreleased studio album by Víctor Jara", "baseline_candidates": ["unreleased album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65150016", "label": "1706 in science", "source": "The year 1706 in science and technology involved some significant events.", "target": "natural science-related events during the year of 1706", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10393806", "label": "Wilson Martins", "source": "Wilson Nunes Martins (born May 17, 1953 in Santa Cruz do Piauí, Piauí) is a Brazilian politician and member of the Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB). He served as Governor of Piauí from April 1, 2010 to April 2, 2014.", "target": "Brazilian physician and politician, former governor of the state of Piauí", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1894505", "label": "Castello di Maredolce", "source": "The Maredolce Castle (Italian: Castello di Maredolce), also called Favara Palace (Italian: Palazzo della Favara), is a medieval building of Palermo. During the Siculo-Norman age it represented one of the \"Solatii Regii\" of the Kings of Sicily in the capital city. It is located within Favara Park, in the neighbourhood of Brancaccio.", "target": "building in Palermo, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["château"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49988437", "label": "Cameron Stones", "source": "Cameron Stones (born 5 January 1992) is a Canadian bobsledder. He competed in the four-man event at the 2018 Winter Olympics.In January 2022, Stones was named in Canada's 2022 Olympic team. Stones would go onto win the bronze medal in the Four-man event.", "target": "Canadian bobsledder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10776795", "label": "Karaboya", "source": "Karaboya is a village in the Kargı District of Çorum Province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in Kargı, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42286", "label": ".zw", "source": ".zw (zimbabwe) is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Zimbabwe. Although no registry Web site is shown in the IANA whois listing, at least .co.zw registrations are presently being taken by the Zimbabwe Internet Service Providers Association, whose charter claims that one of the purposes of the organization's founding was to oversee the .zw domain. .ac.zw registrations are being taken by the University of Zimbabwe. Applications are handled by this institution's Computer Centre. As with the general norm, .ac.zw registrations are for academic institutions. .org.zw registrations are taken by the country's fixed telecommunications provider, TelOne. These are intended for use by NGOs, individuals and such like organisations but any restrictions are not clear.", "target": "country code top-level Internet domain for Zimbabwe", "baseline_candidates": ["country code top-level domain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55584947", "label": "Andreea Roșca", "source": "Andreea Amalia Roșca (born 20 March 1999) is a Romanian tennis player.She has won 11 singles titles and 14 doubles titles on the ITF Women's Circuit. Roșca made her WTA Tour main-draw debut at the 2018 Bucharest Open where she received a wildcard into the singles draw and lost her first-round match to Claire Liu.", "target": "Romanian tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18636527", "label": "Sequoia", "source": "Sequoia is a 1934 American drama film directed by Chester M. Franklin and written by Ann Cunningham, Sam Armstrong and Carey Wilson. The film stars Jean Parker, Russell Hardie, Samuel S. Hinds, Paul Hurst and Willie Fung. The film was released on December 22, 1934, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.", "target": "1934 film by Edwin L. Marin, Chester M. Franklin", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3414171", "label": "Quentin Compson", "source": "Quentin Compson is a fictional character created by William Faulkner. He is an intelligent, neurotic, and introspective son of the Compson family. He is featured in the classic novels The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom! as well as the short stories \"That Evening Sun\" and \"A Justice\". After moving north to study at Harvard College, he eventually commits suicide by drowning himself in the Charles River. In 1929, Faulkner published The Sound and the Fury which chronicles Quentin's childhood in postbellum Mississippi as well as the last months of his life in Cambridge, Massachusetts at Harvard University, before hurling himself off a bridge on June 2, 1910. Quentin's thoughts are articulated with Faulkner's innovative stream-of-consciousness technique. In 1936, Faulkner published Absalom, Absalom!, which takes place before Quentin left for Harvard, in which Quentin attempts to solve and reflect on a mysterious tragedy in the past. Quentin Compson is also the name of his niece, the illegitimate daughter of his sister Candace (Caddy).", "target": "fictional character created by William Faulkner", "baseline_candidates": ["literary character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q851822", "label": "Green Party of Bulgaria", "source": "The Green Party of Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Зелена партия, romanized: Zelena partiya) is an environmentalist political party in Bulgaria. It was founded in Sofia in 1989 by Aleksandar Karakachanov, who later went on to become the chairperson of the party.", "target": "political party", "baseline_candidates": ["political party in Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3310066", "label": "Michel Laframboise", "source": "Michel Laframboise (May 11, 1793 – January 25, 1865) was a French Canadian fur trader in the Oregon Country who settled on the French Prairie in the modern U.S. state of Oregon. A native of Quebec, he worked for the Pacific Fur Company, the North West Company, and the Hudson’s Bay Company before he later became a farmer and ferry operator. In 1843 he participated in the Champoeg Meetings. Though he voted against the measure to form a provisional government, the measure passed and led to the creation of the Provisional Government of Oregon.", "target": "Canadian fur trader", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14201486", "label": "Aracena", "source": "Aracena (Spanish pronunciation: [aɾaˈθena]) is a town and municipality located in the province of Huelva, south-western Spain. As of 2012, the city has a population of 7,814 inhabitants. The town derived its name from the Sierra de Aracena, which is part of the Sierra Morena system. Aracena is the largest town in the Parque Natural Sierra de Aracena y Picos de Aroche. In 2006, Aracena was named a Tourist Municipality of Andalucía and became the first town in the province of Huelva to achieve this status.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2657838", "label": "Rao Birender Singh", "source": "Raja Rao Birender Singh (20 February 1921 – 30 September 2009) was a King of erstwhile state of Haryana and an Indian politician. He served first as a minister in the state government of Punjab and then as Chief Minister of Haryana from 24 March 1967 - 2 November 1967, and also served as a minister in Punjab state, Haryana state and the Union cabinet. He also served as the second speaker (first male speaker) of Haryana state assembly in 1967. He coined an Indian political vocabulary Aya Ram, Gaya Ram to describe the practice of frequently floor-crossing by legislature.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7303971", "label": "Red Crow Community College", "source": "Red Crow Community College is a college located on the Kainai Nation reserve in southern Alberta, Canada with a campus in Lethbridge.", "target": "First Nation-operated community college in Alberta", "baseline_candidates": ["community college in Alberta", "First Nations college in Alberta"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3477604", "label": "Keava", "source": "Keava is a small borough (alevik) in Kehtna Parish, Rapla County, Estonia. Population 287 (as of 1 January 2007). It has a railway station on the Tallinn–Viljandi railway line operated by Elron (rail transit).", "target": "township in Kehtna Rural Municipality, Rapla County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["township"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q712928", "label": "Cameron Mackintosh", "source": "Sir Cameron Anthony Mackintosh (born 17 October 1946) is a British theatrical producer and theatre owner notable for his association with many commercially successful musicals. At the height of his success in 1990, he was described as being \"the most successful, influential and powerful theatrical producer in the world\" by the New York Times. He is the producer of shows such as Les Misérables, The Phantom of the Opera, Mary Poppins, Oliver!, Miss Saigon, Cats, Half a Sixpence and Hamilton. Mackintosh was knighted in 1996 for services to musical theatre. Two of his productions, Les Misérables and The Phantom of the Opera, are the two longest-running musicals in West End history. In 2008, The Daily Telegraph ranked him number 7 in their list of the \"100 most powerful people in British culture\". In the Sunday Times Rich List of 2021, Mackintosh was estimated to have a net worth of £1.2 billion.", "target": "British theatre and musical producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4596783", "label": "2,4 Dienoyl-CoA reductase deficiency", "source": "2,4 Dienoyl-CoA reductase deficiency is an inborn error of metabolism resulting in defective fatty acid oxidation caused by a deficiency of the enzyme 2,4 Dienoyl-CoA reductase. Lysine degradation is also affected in this disorder leading to hyperlysinemia. The disorder is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner, meaning an individual must inherit mutations in NADK2, located at 5p13.2 from both of their parents. NADK2 encodes the mitochondrial NAD kinase. A defect in this enzyme leads to deficient mitochondrial nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate levels. 2,4 Dienoyl-CoA reductase, but also lysine degradation are performed by NADP-dependent oxidoreductases explaining how NADK2 deficiency can lead to multiple enzyme defects.2,4-Dienoyl-CoA reductase deficiency was initially described in 1990 based on a single case of a black female who presented with persistent hypotonia. Laboratory investigations revealed elevated lysine, low levels of carnitine and an abnormal acylcarnitine profile in urine and blood. The abnormal acylcarnitine species was eventually identified as 2-trans,4-cis-decadienoylcarnitine, an intermediate of linoleic acid metabolism. The index case died of respiratory failure at four months of age. Postmortem enzyme analysis on liver and muscle samples revealed decreased 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase activity when compared to normal controls. A second case with failure to thrive, developmental delay, lactic acidosis and severe encephalopathy was reported in 2014.2,4-Dienoyl-CoA reductase deficiency was included as a secondary condition in the American College of Medical Genetics Recommended Uniform Panel for newborn screening. Its status as a secondary condition means there was not enough evidence of benefit to include it as a primary target, but it may be detected during the screening.", "target": "medical condition", "baseline_candidates": ["Fatty-acid metabolism disorder", "rare disease", "disorder of phospholipids, sphingolipids and fatty acids biosynthesis with central nervous system predominant involvement", "neurometabolic disease", "rare dyslipidemia", "disease", "nervous system heredodegenerative disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4807066", "label": "Ask Forgiveness", "source": "Ask Forgiveness is a 2007 EP by Bonnie 'Prince' Billy. It is a collection of covers, with the exception of one original song by Oldham.", "target": "2007 EP by Bonnie 'Prince' Billy", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5715656", "label": "Henri Quersin", "source": "Henri Quersin (26 June 1863 – 24 October 1944) was a Belgian sport shooter. Competing for Belgium, he won a silver medal in team clay pigeons at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp.", "target": "Olympic sport shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11320103", "label": "Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party", "source": "Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party (MNSSHP) is a separate-admission Halloween-themed event held annually during the months of August, September, and October at the Magic Kingdom theme park of the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, near Orlando, and at Disneyland Paris Resort outside Paris, France. The party began as a response to the Halloween Horror Nights event at Universal Studios Florida. Disney's event caters to a traditional family atmosphere, whereas Universal's has more of a \"fright-centered\" event with their monsters. The event encourages guests to dress up in Halloween costumes and celebrate the season with themed events throughout the park. Regular park rules prohibit guests over the age of fourteen years from dressing in costume, however, this rule is waived for the Halloween event, although adults dressed as a Disney character are prohibited from signing autographs or posing for pictures with other guests. The event begins at 7pm on select nights but guests with a ticket for the event can enter Magic Kingdom beginning at 4pm.On June 18, 2020, Disney announced that all Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party celebrations for the year would be cancelled due to delays and restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. A smaller-scale event, Disney After Hours Boo Bash, replaced it for 2021.On April 27, 2022, Disney announced that Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party will be returning to the Magic Kingdom on August 13, 2022, as part of Walt Disney World's 50th Anniversary celebration.", "target": "annual Halloween celebration at Magic Kingdom and Disneyland Paris", "baseline_candidates": ["party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2381871", "label": "Ottawa Police Service", "source": "The Ottawa Police Service (OPS; French: Service de police d'Ottawa) is a municipal police force in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The OPS serves an area of 2,790 square kilometres and 1,017,449 (2021 Census) people alongside several other police forces which have specialized jurisdiction.", "target": "police agency of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["police"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5830414", "label": "Bembézar Reservoir", "source": "Bembézar Reservoir is a reservoir in Hornachuelos, province of Córdoba, Andalusia, Spain. It is located in the Sierra de Hornachuelos, a mountain range of the Sierra Morena.", "target": "body of water", "baseline_candidates": ["reservoir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6416027", "label": "Leporinus paranensis", "source": "Leporinus paranensis is a species of Leporinus widely found in the Paraná River basin in South America. This species can reach a length of 16.0 centimetres (6.3 in) SL.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16950632", "label": "Soul Legacy", "source": "Soul Legacy is a box set of Curtis Mayfield hits. Five years after Mayfield's box set People Get Ready: The Curtis Mayfield Story was released in the United States, the UK came up with this more comprehensive collection. Unlike its predecessor, track list for this set is not in chronological order, instead opting for thematic divisions.", "target": "compilation album by Curtis Mayfield", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q93433578", "label": "Indra Joshi", "source": "Indra Joshi is a British physician who is Director of Artificial Intelligence for NHSX and a founding ambassador of One HealthTech. She supports NHSx with digital health initiatives in the National Health Service in England. During the COVID-19 pandemic Joshi was appointed to the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE).", "target": "British physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5097075", "label": "Chief of the United States Army Reserve", "source": "The chief of the United States Army Reserve (CAR) is the commanding officer of the United States Army Reserve, the reserve component of the United States Army. As the highest-ranking officer in the United States Army Reserve, the CAR is the principal advisor to the chief of staff of the Army on all matters relating to the Army Reserve, and is responsible for the personnel, operations and construction budgets of the Army Reserve, subject to the supervision and control of the secretary of the Army. Dual-hatted as Commanding General, United States Army Reserve Command, the CAR is also responsible to the Commanding General, United States Army Forces Command for the oversight of operationally-deployed Army Reserve forces.By statute, the CAR is a member of the Army Staff, as well as one of five Army Reserve members of the Reserve Forces Policy Board. The CAR is also designated by statute as the executive agent for the Full Time Support Program, a personnel program under the Department of Defense. The Chief's headquarters is the Office of the Chief of Army Reserve, housed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The 33rd and current Chief of the Army Reserve is Lieutenant General Jody J. Daniels, the first woman to lead the Army Reserve as well as an Army service component command.", "target": "senior appointment in the United States Army", "baseline_candidates": ["position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7342848", "label": "Robert Chambers", "source": "Robert Emmet Chambers Jr. (born September 25, 1966) is an American criminal and convicted killer. Chambers was dubbed the Preppy Killer and the Central Park Strangler by the media after the August 26, 1986 strangulation death of 18-year-old Jennifer Levin in New York City's Central Park, for which he was originally charged with second degree murder. Chambers changed his story during the course of the ensuing investigation, ultimately claiming that Levin's death was the accidental result of him pushing her off of him when she caused him pain as she sexually assaulted him, an account that was characterized by media accounts as one of \"rough sex\". Chambers later pleaded guilty to manslaughter after a jury failed to reach a verdict after nine days of deliberation.", "target": "American criminal, born 1966", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17388659", "label": "Raghuji III", "source": "Raghuji Bhonsle III (1806 or 1808 – 11 December 1853) or Raghuji III Bhonsle, was the Maratha ruler of the Principal States of Nagpur in Central India from 1818 to 1853.", "target": "maharaja of Nagpur", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16589616", "label": "Late Show", "source": "The Late Show is an American late-night talk show franchise on CBS. It first aired in August 1993 with host David Letterman, who previously hosted Late Night with David Letterman on NBC from 1982 to 1993. Letterman's iteration of the program ran until his retirement on May 20, 2015. Comedian Stephen Colbert, best known for his roles on Comedy Central programs The Daily Show and The Colbert Report, assumed hosting duties that September. The show originates from the Ed Sullivan Theater in the Theater District of Manhattan, New York, and airs live to tape in most U.S. markets at 11:35 p.m. Eastern and Pacific, 10:35 in the Central and Mountain time zones.", "target": "American late night television talk show franchise", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6812428", "label": "Acer tutcheri", "source": "Acer tutcheri, or Tutcher's maple, is a species of deciduous maple tree native to the Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, south Hunan, south Jiangxi, and south Zhejiang provinces of southern China, as well as Taiwan and certain districts of Hong Kong.Acer tutcheri is found in forests between 300 and 1000 metres of altitude. It is a tree up to 15 metres tall, with brown bark. The leaves are up to 9 cm long and 13 cm across, with three or occasionally five lobes. They are deciduous, hairless, thin and papery, and have teeth along the edges.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10652066", "label": "Rhadinosticta handschini", "source": "Rhadinosticta handschini is a species of damselfly in the family Isostictidae. It has been reported from northern Australia, where it inhabits streams. Rhadinosticta handschini is a slender, medium-sized, dully-coloured damselfly.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7695191", "label": "Tejano Music Awards", "source": "The Tejano Music Awards (TMA) is an accolade created by former arts teacher and musician Rudy Trevino in 1980. The accolade recognizes outstanding performers of Tejano music, a German polka-based Latin music genre recorded in Spanish or English-language. The annual presentation ceremony features performances by Tejano artists and bands and the presentation of all awards. The Tejano Music Awards are annually presented in San Antonio, Texas, although the ceremony has been presented in other cities such as Eagle Pass, Texas in the past. The first Tejano Music Awards was held in 1980 and recognized Tejano musicians and recordings of 1980. The ceremony awarded Tejano musicians in 11 categories: Male Vocalist of the Year, Female Vocalist of the Year, Vocal Duo of the Year, Album of the Year – Orchestra, Album of the Year – Conjunto, Single of the Year, Male Entertainer of the Year, Female Entertainer of the Year, Song of the Year, Songwriter of the Year, and Most Promising Band of the Year. Tejano music enjoyed a wider success in the 1990s as it entered in its first renaissance and marketable era. This was due to the popularity of American singer Selena, who was called the \"Queen of Tejano music\". Selena dominated the female-only awards, while American singer Emilio Navaira was called the \"King of Tejano music\". The Tejano Music Awards celebrated their \"quinceañera\" year in 1995 and awarded Tejano musicians in 14 categories.By the 20th annual Tejano Music Awards, the genre suffered and its popularity wane after Selena was shot and killed in 1995.", "target": "awards", "baseline_candidates": ["award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7774941", "label": "The Wilderness", "source": "\"The Wilderness\" is a science fiction short story by Ray Bradbury first published in the November 1952 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and included in Bradbury's 1953 collection The Golden Apples of the Sun. The year is 2003, and Janice and Leonora are spending their last days on Earth before leaving for Mars to join Janice's husband Will. While having mixed feelings at first, Janice slowly reveals throughout the story that she is more and more willing to join her husband on Mars while still lamenting about leaving behind all that is on Earth. Janice and Leonora also lament on the second-hand role played by women in exploration and similar situations (i.e. conquest of Western America).", "target": "short story by Ray Bradbury", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q344045", "label": "Alfred P. Sloan", "source": "Alfred Pritchard Sloan Jr. (; May 23, 1875 – February 17, 1966) was an American business executive in the automotive industry. He was a long-time president, chairman and CEO of General Motors Corporation. Sloan, first as a senior executive and later as the head of the organization, helped GM grow from the 1920s through the 1950s, decades when concepts such as the annual model change, brand architecture, industrial engineering, automotive design (styling), and planned obsolescence transformed the industry, and when the industry changed lifestyles and the built environment in America and throughout the world. Sloan wrote his memoir, My Years with General Motors, in the 1950s.Like Henry Ford, the other \"head man\" of an automotive colossus, Sloan is remembered today with a complex mixture of admiration for his accomplishments, appreciation for his philanthropy, and unease or reproach regarding his attitudes during the interwar period and World War II.", "target": "American businessman (1875–1966)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q628674", "label": "Slow", "source": "\"Slow\" is a song by Australian singer Kylie Minogue from her ninth studio album, Body Language (2003). It was released as the lead single from the album by Festival Mushroom Records and Parlophone on 3 November 2003. The song was written by Minogue, Dan Carey, Emilíana Torrini, and produced by Carey, Torrini, and Sunnyroads. \"Slow\" is an electropop and synth-pop song in which Minogue invites a man to \"slow down\" and dance with her. Upon its release, \"Slow\" was acclaimed by music critics, many of whom praised Minogue's sensual and seductive vocals. At the 47th Grammy Awards ceremony, the song received a nomination in the category of \"Best Dance Recording\". Commercially, the song was a success and peaked at number one on the singles charts in Australia, Denmark, Romania, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The song also reached number one on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs in the United States. In Australia, the song was certified platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for sales of 70,000 units. An accompanying music video for the song was shot in Barcelona, Spain, and features Minogue singing the song while sunbathing next to the Piscina Municipal de Montjuïc swimming pool. Minogue performed the song on a number of television shows and included it on the set lists of all of her concert tours to date, with the exception of the Anti Tour. In 2012, Minogue named \"Slow\" as her favourite song from her music career.", "target": "2003 single by Kylie Minogue", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1799702", "label": "Spjutsbygd", "source": "Spjutsbygd is a locality situated in Karlskrona Municipality, Blekinge County, Sweden with 383 inhabitants in 2010.", "target": "urban area in Karlskrona Municipality, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2878685", "label": "Badioncoto", "source": "Badionkoto is a village in the Ziguinchor Department of the Ziguinchor Region of southwestern Senegal. In 2002 it had a population of 150 people.", "target": "village in Ziguinchor, Senegal", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6840621", "label": "Mid-Atlantic Air Museum", "source": "The Mid-Atlantic Air Museum (MAAM) is an aviation museum and aircraft restoration facility located at Reading Regional Airport in Reading, Pennsylvania. The museum, founded by Russ Strine, the current President, collects and actively restores historic war planes and classic airliners as well as rare civilian and military aircraft. Many of the museum's historic aircraft are often seen on the airshow circuit.", "target": "aviation museum in Reading, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q860716", "label": "Glodeni District", "source": "Glodeni District (Romanian pronunciation: [ɡloˈdenʲ]) is a district (Romanian: raion) in northwestern Moldova, with its administrative center at Glodeni. As of 1 January 2011, its population was 61,900. The district consists of 35 localities, 18 communes, 16 villages and one city (Glodeni).", "target": "district of Moldova", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Moldova"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6501697", "label": "Laurie Rinker", "source": "Laurie Anne Rinker (born September 28, 1962) is an American professional golfer who played on the LPGA Tour in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s.", "target": "All-American college golfer, professional golfer, LPGA Tour member", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2895051", "label": "Giuseppe Taglialatela", "source": "Giuseppe \"Pino\" Taglialatela (born 2 January 1969) is an Italian former professional football coach and goalkeeper. He is currently club chairman of Lega Pro club Ischia.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5209367", "label": "Daily Sports Women's Tag Team Championship", "source": "The Daily Sports Women's Tag Team Championship (デイリースポーツ認定女子タッグ王座, Deirī Supōtsu Nintei Joshi Taggu Ōza) is a professional wrestling tag team championship owned by the Pure-J promotion. The title is named after the Daily Sports newspaper.", "target": "professional wrestling championship", "baseline_candidates": ["championship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7617959", "label": "Stockbury", "source": "Stockbury is a village and civil parish in the Maidstone district of Kent, England. The population of the civil parish at the Census 2011 was 691.In 1800, Edward Hasted noted, it was called in the Domesday survey, Stochingeberge, in later records, Stockesburie, and then Stockbury. Most of the parish was within the hundred of Eyhorne and a division of West Kent.Most of the parish is on a valley (between Key Street, Sittingbourne and Detling Hill, Maidstone).On St. Mary Magdalen's day, July 22, there used to be a pedlars fair near the Three Squirrels public house.The parish church, dedicated to St Mary Magdalene, is a Grade I listed building and the adjacent ringwork is a scheduled monument. Listed in the Domesday Book.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5985803", "label": "Icelandic goat", "source": "The Icelandic goat (Icelandic: íslenska geitin [ˈistlɛnska ˈceiːtɪn]), also known as the 'settlement goat', is an ancient breed of domestic goat believed to be of Norwegian origin and dating back to the settlement of Iceland over 1100 years ago. This breed of goat was on the verge of extinction during the late 19th century, but recovered prior to World War II, only to precipitously decline again. As of 2003, there were 348 goats in 48 flocks distributed throughout most parts of Iceland. At the end of 2012, the herd had increased to 849. Since this breed has been isolated for centuries, the Icelandic populations are highly inbred. The Icelandic goat is very rare outside its native land. Under its coarse, long guard hair, the Icelandic goat has a coat of high quality cashmere fiber. Icelandic goats are kept mainly as pets and their economic potential for meat, milk, cashmere and skin production remains to be explored. The Icelandic goat is currently of little economic value.The Icelandic goat is the only farm animal sponsored by the Icelandic government for the purpose of ensuring its survival. In 2014, the annual grant was ISK 4,200 (36 US dollars) per goat, for a maximum of 20 goats, down from ISK 6,500 (56 US dollars) per goat in 2010, contingent upon the owner submitting a report on each animal. Farmer Jóhanna Bergmann Þorvaldsdóttir has been breeding the Icelandic goat to save it from extinction.", "target": "goat breed", "baseline_candidates": ["goat", "goat breed"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6118654", "label": "Jacob Funk House and Barn", "source": "Jacob Funk House and Barn is a historic home located at Springfield Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The house consists of three sections; the oldest built about 1792. It is a 2+1⁄2-story, stone dwelling measuring 40 feet wide and 28 feet deep and originally reflective of the Georgian style. The oldest section is a two-story, two bay, stone structure two rooms deep. About 1855, a two-story, three-bay extension was added to the east gable. A kitchen and bath addition was built about 1930. The house was remodeled in the Colonial Revival style between about 1945 and 1955, at which time a one-story addition and deck were added to the rear of the house. Also on the property are a contributing stone bank barn (c. 1810) and stone spring house (c. 1855).It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.", "target": "Springfield, Pennsylvania, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Bucks County", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3703714", "label": "1996 Davidoff Swiss Indoors – doubles", "source": "Cyril Suk and Daniel Vacek were the defending champions but they competed with different partners that year, Suk with Petr Korda and Vacek with Yevgeny Kafelnikov. Korda and Suk lost in the quarterfinals to Jonas Björkman and Jakob Hlasek. Kafelnikov and Vacek won in the final 6–3, 6–4 against David Adams and Menno Oosting.", "target": "1996 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1266199", "label": "Dunnichen", "source": "Dunnichen (Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Neachdain, meaning the \"Fort of Neachdan/Nechtan\") is a small village in Angus, Scotland, situated between Letham and Forfar. It is close to Dunnichen Hill, at which the Battle of Dun Nechtain is popularly believed to have been fought. The church is part of the parish of Letham, Dunnichen and Kirkden.", "target": "village in Angus, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7706403", "label": "Tetragonoderus eximius", "source": "Tetragonoderus eximius is a species of beetle in the family Carabidae. It was described by Theodor Franz Wilhelm Kirsch in 1873.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1335469", "label": "Susong County", "source": "Susong County (simplified Chinese: 宿松县; traditional Chinese: 宿松縣) is a county in the southwest of Anhui Province, situated on the northwest (left) bank of the Yangtze, bordering the provinces of Hubei to the west and Jiangxi to the south. It is located in the southwest of the jurisdiction of the prefecture-level city of Anqing and is its southernmost county-level division. It has population of 800,000 and an area of 2,394 km2 (924 sq mi). The government of Susong County is located in Fuyu Town.", "target": "county", "baseline_candidates": ["county of China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18288474", "label": "1980 Djurgårdens IF season", "source": "The 1980 season was Djurgårdens IF's 80th in existence, their 35th season in Allsvenskan and their 19th consecutive season in the league. They were competing in Allsvenskan, 1979–80 Svenska Cupen, and 1980–81 Svenska Cupen.", "target": "Djurgården 1980 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2177994", "label": "Ginneken en Bavel", "source": "Ginneken en Bavel was a municipality in the Dutch province of North Brabant, located southeast of the city of Breda. It covered the villages of Ginneken (now a neighbourhood of Breda) and Bavel. Ginneken en Bavel existed until 1942, when the village of Ginneken was transferred to Breda, and the other part of the area became a new municipality called Nieuw-Ginneken.", "target": "place in the Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Netherlands"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2958822", "label": "Charles Cressent", "source": "Charles Cressent (1685–1768) was a French furniture-maker, sculptor and fondeur-ciseleur of the régence style. As the second son of François Cressent, sculpteur du roi, and grandson of Charles Cressent, a furniture-maker of Amiens, who also became a sculptor, he inherited the tastes and aptitudes which were likely to make a finished designer and craftsman. Even more important perhaps was the fact that he was a pupil of André Charles Boulle. Trained in such surroundings, it is not surprising that he should have reached a degree of achievement which has to a great extent justified the claim that he was the best decorative artist of the 18th century. Cressent's distinction is closely connected with the regency, but his earlier work had affinities with the school of Boulle, while his later pieces were full of originality.As Geoffrey Bellaigue suggests, \"Cressent was in his opinion and in that of his contemporaries more than just a skilled cabinet maker and sculptor...he was a collector of refined taste and a talented designer\".Cressent was likewise a sculptor, and among his plastic work is known to have been a bronze bust of Louis d'Orléans, Duke of Chartres, the son of Philippe d'Orléans, Duke of Orléans (later Regent of France for Louis XV), for whom Cressent had made one of the finest examples of French furniture of the 18th century the famous medaillier now in the Bibliothèque Nationale. Cressent's bronze mounts were executed with a sharpness of finish and a grace and vigour of outline which were hardly excelled by his great contemporary Jacques.", "target": "French master sculptor and cabinetmaker (1685-1768)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6778977", "label": "Mary Astor Paul", "source": "Mary Astor Paul Munn Allez (March 26, 1889 – July 28, 1950) was a Philadelphia socialite who was related to the Astor and Drexel families. During World War II, she helped the American forces in France.", "target": "Philadelphia socialite", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2336212", "label": "Prince Aschwin of Lippe-Biesterfeld", "source": "Prince Aschwin of Lippe-Biesterfeld (13 June 1914 – 14 May 1988) was an expert in Chinese painting and Indian sculpture and curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. He was the younger brother of Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld.", "target": "German prince (1914-1988)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16150530", "label": "Ibrahim Abdel Rehim Ibrahim Ahmed", "source": "Ibrahim Abdel Rehim Ibrahim Ahmed (born 28 November 1982) is an Egyptian fencer.", "target": "fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2421782", "label": "Tripsacum dactyloides", "source": "Tripsacum dactyloides, commonly called eastern gamagrass, or Fakahatchee grass, is a warm-season, sod-forming bunch grass. It is widespread in the Western Hemisphere, native from the eastern United States to northern South America. Its natural habitat is in sunny moist areas, such as along watercourses and in wet prairies. In some areas, it has adapted well to disturbed conditions.Eastern gamagrass is a widely cultivated for its use as forage.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1371390", "label": "Ron Zanussi", "source": "Ronald Kenneth Zanussi (born August 31, 1956) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey right winger who played five seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Minnesota North Stars and Toronto Maple Leafs between 1977 and 1982.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21511488", "label": "Amerika", "source": "Amerika is an American television miniseries that was broadcast in 1987 on ABC. The miniseries inspired a novelization entitled Amerika: The Triumph of the American Spirit. Amerika starred Kris Kristofferson, Mariel Hemingway, Sam Neill, Robert Urich, and a 17-year-old Lara Flynn Boyle in her first major role. Amerika was about life in the United States after a bloodless takeover engineered by the Soviet Union. Not wanting to depict the actual takeover, ABC Entertainment president, Brandon Stoddard, set the miniseries ten years after the event, focusing on the demoralized U.S. people a decade after the Soviet conquest. The intent, he later explained, was to explore the U.S. spirit under such conditions, not to portray the conflict of the Soviet coup. Described in promotional materials as \"the most ambitious American miniseries ever created\", Amerika aired for 14+1⁄2 hours (including commercials) over seven nights (beginning February 15, 1987), and reportedly cost $40 million to produce. The miniseries was filmed in the Golden Horseshoe and southwestern Ontario Canadian cities of Toronto, London, and Hamilton, as well as various locations in Nebraska – most notably the small town of Tecumseh, which served as \"Milford\", the fictional setting for most of the series. Donald Wrye was the executive producer, director, and writer of Amerika, while composer Basil Poledouris scored the miniseries, ultimately recording (with the Hollywood Symphony Orchestra) eight hours of music – the equivalent of four feature films.", "target": "1987 television serial", "baseline_candidates": ["television series", "television film", "miniseries"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16200795", "label": "Soman Chainani", "source": "Soman Chainani is an American author and filmmaker, best known for writing the children's book series The School for Good and Evil.Soman's first novel, The School for Good and Evil, debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List, has sold more than 3 million copies, been translated into 30 languages across 6 continents, and will soon be a film from Netflix directed by Paul Feig.His other five books in the School for Good and Evil series – A World Without Princes, The Last Ever After, Quests for Glory, A Crystal of Time and One True King – have all debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List as well. To date, these six books in the series have been on the print and extended New York Times Bestseller List for more than 35 weeks.His most recent book, Beasts and Beauty, was released on September 21, 2021, to wide acclaim, with Kirkus Reviews calling the collection \"expertly crafted... evoking the wonder, terror, and magic of the fantasy realms.\" Beasts & Beauty was an instant New York Times bestseller, Soman’s seventh New York Times bestseller in a row.", "target": "American filmmaker and children's novelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20720729", "label": "Bryan O'Linn", "source": "Bryan O'Linn (November 30, 1927 – July 19, 2015) was a Namibian jurist, politician, lawyer and author. Born in Brandfort, South Africa, O'Linn moved to Namibia when he was a year old. From 1946 to 1952 he was with the South Africa Police instead on serving in the military. He also served as a civil servant and a newspaper reporter before embarking on a career in law in 1961. Prior to Namibia's independence, he defended several Namibian independence fighters in court. O'Linn also chaired Namibia Peace Plan 435 which conducted dialogues with the independence movement.In 1974, he became the leader of the United National South West Party after serving as vice-chairman. The party renamed itself the National Party in October 1975, staying under O'Linn's leadership, but disintegrated some time later.O'Linn led the Society of Advocates from 1982 to 1989, prosecuting human rights abuses throughout the country. After Namibia became independent in November 1989, O'Linn became a justice of the High Court. He oversaw cases involving the fishing industry and crime legislation during his tenure on the High Court, which lasted until September 1999, when he was appointed to the Supreme Court. O'Linn served on the Supreme Court until 2006, during which time he published a book in 2003 entitled Namibia: The sacred Trust of Civilization - Ideal and Reality that dealt with Namibian history, struggle for independence, and his opinion on several current issues. A second volume came out in 2010.O'Linn died in Windhoek on July 19, 2015, after suffering from ill health for several years.", "target": "Namibian lawyer, politician and writer (1927-2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6972020", "label": "Jerusalem Crown", "source": "The Jerusalem Crown (כתר ירושלים Keter Yerushalayim) is a printed edition of the Tanakh (the Hebrew Bible) printed in Jerusalem in 2001, and based on a manuscript commonly known as the Aleppo Crown). The printed text consists of 874 pages of the Hebrew Bible, two pages setting forth both appearances of the Ten Commandments (one from Exodus 20 and the other from Deuteronomy 5) each showing the two different cantillations - for private and for public recitation, 23 pages briefly describing the research background and listing alternative readings (mostly from the Leningrad Codex, and almost all very slight differences in spelling or even pointing, which do not change the meaning), a page of the blessings - the Ashkenazic, Sefardic and Yemenite versions - used before and after reading the Haftarah (the selection from the Prophets), a 9-page list of the annual schedule of the Haftarot readings according to the three traditions. The text has been recognized as the official Bible of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israeli parliament (the Knesset) since 2001. Since its publication, it has been used to administer the oath of office to new presidents of the State of Israel. The text was edited according to the method of Mordechai Breuer under the supervision of Yosef Ofer, with additional proofreading and refinements since the Horev edition.", "target": "printed edition of the Tanakh printed in Jerusalem in 2001", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6521845", "label": "Len Kieran", "source": "Len Kieran (25 July 1926 – 24 July 1981) was an English footballer who played as a left half for Tranmere Rovers and Macclesfield Town. He made 359 appearances for Tranmere, scoring 6 goals.", "target": "English footballer (1926-1981)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60543064", "label": "1889 Nelson by-election", "source": "The 1889 Nelson by-election was a by-election held on 3 April 1889 in the Nelson electorate during the 10th New Zealand Parliament. The by-election was caused by the death on 11 February of the incumbent MP Henry Levestam. The by-election was won by Joseph Harkness. He was opposed by the Mayor of Nelson, John Sharp. Sharp had been the MP until he resigned in 1879.", "target": "New Zealand by-election", "baseline_candidates": ["by-election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4851929", "label": "Balls", "source": "The Balls are a mountain range within the Sierra Nevada, in Madera County, California. They are \"glacier-carved granite domes\" and have been described as \"looking like smooth scoops of butterscotch ice cream\". The mountain range has federal protection as part of the Sierra National Forest.", "target": "eviuveiuvtuivvteiouetviue", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19748346", "label": "Dandagaun, Bagmati", "source": "Dandagaun is a Village Development Committee in Kabhrepalanchok District in Bagmati Province of central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2,365 and had 374 houses in it.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7961255", "label": "Walaha Airport", "source": "Walaha Airport is an airport in Walaha, Vanuatu (IATA: WLH, ICAO: NVSW).", "target": "airport in Vanuatu", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6811017", "label": "Melaleuca eurystoma", "source": "Melaleuca eurystoma is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south of Western Australia. It is a small shrub with pale lemon to greenish flowers and egg-shaped to almost oval leaves.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q711454", "label": "Marco V", "source": "Marco V (born Marco Verkuylen; pronounced [ˈmɑrkoː vərˈkœylə(n)], 3 April 1967, Heeswijk-Dinther) is a Dutch electronic music DJ.", "target": "Dutch DJ", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28458378", "label": "An Egyptian Hornet", "source": "\"An Egyptian Hornet\" is a short story written by Algernon Blackwood. The story has first appeared in 1915 in Reedy's Mirror.", "target": "short story by Algernon Blackwood", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7237252", "label": "Prabhleen Sandhu", "source": "Prabhleen Sandhu (born 5 December 1983) is an Indian Punjabi film actress who rose to fame with the Indian soap on periodic freedom struggle on COLORS' Mohe Rang De as Kranti, dons a different look and role in Zee's new show, Aapki Antara as Vidya, a middle-class wife, who has trouble adjusting with her \"autistic \" child.Her first film was Yaaran Naal Baharan, where she played Juhi Babbar's friend. She also acted in the Punjabi movie Mehndi Waley Hath, a 2004 Drama. She has also acted in the Punjabi movie Ek Jind Ek Jaan playing a sister of Aryan Vaid and Raj Babbar in the movie. In the film Not a Love Story, she played Anju, directed by Ram Gopal Verma and she also acted in the Punjabi film Rahe Chardi Kala Punjab Di. Her film Nabar (2013) won best Punjabi film at 60th National Film Awards.", "target": "Indian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1640704", "label": "Hymns to the Rising Sun", "source": "Hymns to the Rising Sun is a best-of compilation album by the Swedish melodic death metal band Amon Amarth. It was released through Metal Blade Records on 8 September 2010.", "target": "album by Amon Amarth", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q425528", "label": "Ẽ", "source": "Ẽ, ẽ is a letter in which the tilde indicates a nasal vowel. It is the 5th letter in the Guaraní alphabet and widely used in other Amerindian languages in Brazil, such as Kaingang. It is also found in Umbundu and perhaps in related Bantu languages. In IPA, /ẽ/ represents a nasal \"e\" sound. In Vietnamese, it was used to represent an E with a ngã tone.", "target": "letter of the Latin alphabet", "baseline_candidates": ["IPA symbol", "Latin-script letter"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96368704", "label": "1 2 3", "source": "\"1 2 3\" is a song by American rapper Moneybagg Yo featuring American rapper Blac Youngsta, from the former's third studio album Time Served (2020). It was sent to rhythmic contemporary radio on April 14, 2020, as the third single of the album. The music video was released on the same day.", "target": "2020 single by Moneybagg Yo", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3994644", "label": "1969 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa", "source": "The 1969 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A (officially the 1969 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa) was the 13th edition of the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. It began on 6 September and ended on 7 December. Santos came as the defending champion having won the 1968 season and Palmeiras won the championship, the 4th national title of the club at 10 years of tournament contention.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q981927", "label": "Hussein bin Abdullah, Crown Prince of Jordan", "source": "Hussein bin Abdullah (Arabic: الحسين بن عبدالله, Al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAbdullāh; born 28 June 1994) is Crown Prince of Jordan as the son of King Abdullah II. As a member of the Hashemite dynasty, the royal family of Jordan since 1921, he is a 42nd-generation direct descendant of Muhammad. Hussein, currently a Captain in the Jordanian Armed Forces, started his education in Jordan and in 2016 he graduated from Georgetown University with a degree in International History. Since reaching the age of majority in 2012, Hussein has functioned as regent on several occasions and has accompanied his father on a number of local and international visits. Hussein is in charge of the Crown Prince Foundation, which is responsible for a technical university and a number of scientific and humanitarian initiatives. In 2015, at the age of 20, Hussein became the youngest person to chair a UN Security Council session. After graduating from Sandhurst in 2017, he made a global debut when he addressed the UN General Assembly in September of that year.", "target": "Jordanian Crown Prince", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59655824", "label": "Wendy Mayer", "source": "Wendy Mayer (born 1960) is an Australian scholar in late antiquity and religion who is a research professor and associate dean for research at Australian Lutheran College, dean of research strategy for the University of Divinity, and honorary research fellow at the University of South Africa. She is known for her work on John Chrysostom and on early Christian preaching.", "target": "Australian academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7274837", "label": "R626 road", "source": "The R626 is a regional road in County Cork, Ireland. The route begins 1 km (0.62 mi) south of Rathcormac at its junction with the R639 and travels southeast for 23 km (14 mi) until it arrives at Midleton. The R626 is located entirely in County Cork.", "target": "regional road in County Cork, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4268451", "label": "Allium altaicum", "source": "Allium altaicum is a species of onion native to Asiatic Russia (Altay, Buryatiya, Zabaykalsky Krai, Irkutsk, Tuva, Amur Oblast), Mongolia, Kazakhstan and northern China (Inner Mongolia, Heilongjiang and Xinjiang).", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14556075", "label": "Acrometopia conspicua", "source": "Acrometopia conspicua is a species of fly in the family Chamaemyiidae. It is found in Taiwan and is the only known representative of its genus there. The specific name conspicua refers to the conspicuousness of this fly, including the colorful head that makes this species easily recognizable.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6304243", "label": "Kazia Pelka", "source": "Kazia Pelka (born 1962) is a British actress who has worked primarily in UK television, appearing in the soap opera series Brookside in the early 1990s, the period police drama series Heartbeat in the late 1990s, the police procedural series The Bill, and the BBC medical drama series Doctors, and Casualty.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q81274767", "label": "Vivian Wade-Gery", "source": "Vivian Wade-Gery (née Whitfield) (1897-1988) was a British classical archaeologist.", "target": "British classical archaeologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15264986", "label": "Pachenaran", "source": "Pachenaran (Persian: پاچناران, also Romanized as Pāchenārān; also known as Pāchenār) is a village in Madvarat Rural District, in the Central District of Shahr-e Babak County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 12, in 4 families.", "target": "village in Kerman, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7869610", "label": "USS General Burnside", "source": "USS General Burnside (1862) was a Steamship acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. She was used by the Navy as a gunboat, and was assigned to patrol waterways in the Confederate South.", "target": "Union gunboat", "baseline_candidates": ["steamship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22006354", "label": "Boris Loginow", "source": "Boris Loginow (born 9 February 1935) is a Venezuelan former sports shooter. He competed in the 50 metre rifle, prone event at the 1968 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Venezuelan sports shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7386040", "label": "Râușor", "source": "Râușor is a rock-fill water dam build in 1987 in the far north of Argeș County, Romania. It impounds the Râul Târgului. It has a wall height of 120 m (390 ft) and a total volume of 60 million m³.", "target": "dam located in Argeș County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["dam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13470601", "label": "Clivina tridentata", "source": "Clivina tridentata is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Scaritinae. It was described by Putzeys in 1866.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q91212834", "label": "DiDi Richards", "source": "Deauzya \"DiDi\" Richards (born February 8, 1999) is an American basketball player for the New York Liberty of the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA). She played college for the Baylor Lady Bears. Following the 2019–20 season, Richards was named WBCA Defensive Player of the Year and Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Award as well as Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year. She averaged 8.2 points and 4.9 rebounds per game, and had 52 steals and 25 blocked shots.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16008800", "label": "Herbert Sturhahn", "source": "Herbert Sturhahn (July 29, 1902 – January 10, 1979) was an American football player. He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1981.", "target": "American football player (1902-1979)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17150733", "label": "Kiki Byrne", "source": "Kiki Byrne (18 April 1937 – 3 April 2013) was a Norwegian-born, London-based fashion designer who is mainly remembered as Mary Quant's rival on the King's Road in the late 1950s and 1960s.", "target": "fashion designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7111397", "label": "out-of-box experience", "source": "An Out-of-box experience (OOBE pronounced oo-bee) is the experience an end-user has when taking a product after unboxing, or for digital distribution, runs the installer, and is preparing to first use it, as opposed to the point-of-sale experience or the interaction experience of an expert user. In computing, this includes the initial configuration of a piece of hardware or software on a computer. The out-of-box experience is typically the first impression a product creates, such as the ease with which a buyer can begin using the product. For hardware products, a positive OOBE can be created with logical easy-to-follow instructions and good quality of manufacturing.Microsoft Corporation uses this term to refer to the user experience that takes place after software installation, and immediately following the first launch of a software product.", "target": "computer software term", "baseline_candidates": ["computer software term"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1463998", "label": "The Wash", "source": "The Wash is a rectangular bay and multiple estuary at the north-west corner of East Anglia on the East coast of England, where Norfolk meets Lincolnshire and both border the North Sea. One of Britain's broadest estuaries, it is fed by the rivers Witham, Welland, Nene and Great Ouse. It is a 62,046-hectare (153,320-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is also a Nature Conservation Review site, Grade I, a National Nature Reserve, a Ramsar site, a Special Area of Conservation and a Special Protection Area. It is in the Norfolk Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and part of it is the Snettisham Royal Society for the Protection of Birds nature reserve.", "target": "bay", "baseline_candidates": ["bay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5710973", "label": "Atlético Echagüe Club", "source": "Atlético Echagüe is an Argentine professional basketball team located in Paraná, Entre Ríos. The team competes in the Liga Nacional de Básquet.", "target": "basketball team in Entre Ríos, Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q461698", "label": "Gwen Moore", "source": "Gwendolynne Sophia Moore (born April 18, 1951) is an American politician serving as the U.S. representative for Wisconsin's 4th congressional district since 2005. In 2016, Moore was elected to serve as caucus whip of the Congressional Black Caucus for the 115th United States Congress. She is a member of the Democratic Party. Her district is based in Milwaukee and as a result of the 2011 redistricting also includes some Milwaukee County suburbs: Bayside, Brown Deer, Cudahy, Fox Point, Glendale, St. Francis, South Milwaukee, West Milwaukee, Shorewood and Whitefish Bay. Moore is the first woman to represent the district and the second woman after Tammy Baldwin and the first African American elected to Congress from Wisconsin.", "target": "American politician (1951-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20062687", "label": "Mind Game", "source": "Mind Game (Chinese: 心迷) is a Singaporean crime drama produced by Mediacorp Channel 8, produced by its Malaysian subsidiary MediaCorp Studios Malaysia. The show aired at 9pm on weekdays and had a repeat telecast at 8am the following day. This drama involves many plot twists and cases that requires strong thinking to solve the cases. This drama stars Tay Ping Hui, Joanne Peh, Zhang Yaodong and Paige Chua.", "target": "2015 Malaysian TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2848962", "label": "Andrée Lavieille", "source": "Andrée Lavieille (Paris 11 September 1887 – 14 May 1960 Paris) was a French painter. Daughter and granddaughter of painters (her father, Adrien Lavieille, and her mother, Marie Adrien Lavieille, her grandfather on the father's side, Eugène Lavieille), Andrée Lavieille entered École des Beaux-Arts in 1908. Subjects of her paintings were still lifes, interiors and especially landscapes. She painted at Saint-Jean-de-Monts in Vendée beside Auguste Lepère, at Fontainebleau, Vendôme, Chartres, then in Paris, where she and her husband, Paul Tuffrau, a man of letters, have successively inhabited, in Gironde in the little village of Plassac, and above all in Brittany, which immediately won her heart, particularly at Le Pouldu (1924–1939), and in the region of the Pointe du Raz and the baie des Trépassés (1937–1947). She realized oil paintings, but more and more was attracted by watercolour, more spontaneous for her. Nourished by the classicism of the Chardin of the still lifes, her painting evoke the impressionists by its luminosity, and in some works the Fauves by the technique of flat tints, and the play of colours. Andrée Lavieille exhibited several times at Salon des Artistes Français, from 1911 to 1939.", "target": "French painter (1887-1960)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18048701", "label": "IGSF8", "source": "Immunoglobulin superfamily member 8 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the IGSF8 gene. IGSF8 has also been designated as CD316 (cluster of differentiation 316).", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5856531", "label": "Mehranabad", "source": "Mehranabad (Persian: مهران اباد, also Romanized as Mehrānābād and Mihrānābād; also known as Mehrānābād-e Feyzābād and Mehrānābād va Feyzābād) is a village in Bahramabad Rural District, in the Central District of Eslamshahr County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 245, in 64 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q579920", "label": "Zollie Volchok", "source": "Zalmon Marcola \"Zollie\" Volchok (September 22, 1916 – February 26, 2012) was the general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics of the National Basketball Association. Volchok was born in Salem, Oregon and graduated from the University of Oregon in 1939. His parents were Russian-Jewish immigrants. Volchok served in the United States Navy during World War II. In the early 1950s, he started a film distribution company in Seattle that later became Northwest Releasing, a booking company for theatrical shows, musical performances (such as The Beatles' first Seattle appearance in 1964, The Rat Pack, Bill Cosby, and Elvis Presley) and closed-circuit broadcasts of athletic contests.Volchok's success with Northwest Releasing led SuperSonics owner Sam Schulman to offer him a position as general manager of the team. Volchok concentrated on marketing and promoting the SuperSonics, bringing live and recorded music into the Seattle Center Coliseum, creating halftime shows, and introducing kids' nights, ladies' nights, and seniors' nights.Volchok was manager when the SuperSonics won the NBA championship in 1979 and won the 1983 NBA Executive of the Year Award. In 1983, Volchok's involvement with the SuperSonics ended when Schulman sold it.Volchok died in 2012 of pneumonia at the age of 95.He has multiple great grand children including Leo Volchok, Benjamin Volchok, Isabella Volchok, Sam Volchok and Joshua Volchok.", "target": "American basketball executive (1916-2012)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7969041", "label": "Ward McIntyre", "source": "Walter Wharton \"Ward\" McIntyre, Jr (1930 – July 20, 2007) was a television and radio personality from Birmingham, Alabama. A graduate of Ramsay High School and Birmingham-Southern College, he worked at WSGN radio before he was hired by WBRC in 1962 to take over as announcer, newscaster, and Bozo the Clown. He remained at the station until 1968, when he returned to radio, where he remained until his retirement from WBHM in the 1990s.", "target": "American broadcaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1276376", "label": "Samuel Bodman", "source": "Samuel Wright Bodman III (November 26, 1938 – September 7, 2018) was an American businessman, engineer, and politician who served as the 11th United States Secretary of Energy during the George W. Bush administration, from 2005 to 2009. He was also, at different times, the Deputy Secretary of the Treasury and the Deputy Secretary of Commerce. In December 2004, Bodman was nominated to replace Spencer Abraham as the Energy Secretary and was confirmed unanimously by the United States Senate on January 31, 2005. During his tenure, he oversaw the security problems at Los Alamos National Laboratory and a budget in excess of $23 billion and over 100,000 federal and contractor employees.", "target": "United States Secretary of Energy and previously Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2357548", "label": "René Bondoux", "source": "René Bondoux (26 May 1905 – 6 May 2001) was a French fencer. He won a gold medal in the team foil event at the 1932 Summer Olympics and a silver in the same event at the 1936 Summer Olympics.", "target": "French lawyer and fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18369955", "label": "Cimicidae", "source": "The Cimicidae are a family of small parasitic bugs that feed exclusively on the blood of warm-blooded animals. They are called cimicids or, loosely, bed bugs, though the latter term properly refers to the most famous member of the family, Cimex lectularius, the common bed bug and its tropical relation Cimex hemipterus. The family contains over 100 species. Cimicids appeared in the fossil record in the Cretaceous period. When bats evolved in the Eocene, they switched hosts and now feed mainly on bats or birds. Members of the group have colonised humans on three separate occasions. Cimicids usually feed on their host's blood every three to seven days, crawling away from the host and hiding while they digest the blood, which may take several days. This means that they specialise in vertebrate hosts that return regularly to particular sites to nest, roost or sleep. Birds and bats suit these specific requirements, as do humans now that they live in dwellings, and these are the main hosts used by the bugs. Most cimicids are able to go for long periods without feeding, over a year in some instances. Cimicids are typically small, oval, flattened, wingless insects. They are stimulated to appear from their hiding places by cues such as a slight rise in the temperature of their surroundings. Among the family's distinctive characteristics are traumatic insemination, in which the male fertilises the eggs by piercing the female's abdominal wall with his intromittent organ. They also have distinctive paired structures called mycetomes inside their bodies, in which they.", "target": "family of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3744557", "label": "Fides Romanin", "source": "Fides Romanin (12 November 1934 – 23 October 2019) was an Italian cross-country skier who competed in the 1950s. She was born in Forni Avoltri. She competed in two Winter Olympics, serving as flag bearer for the Italian team at Oslo in 1952. Romanin finished 17th in the women's 10 km in Oslo. Romanin also competed in the 1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina d'Ampezzo, finishing 31st in the 10 km and eighth in the 3 × 5 km relay. After her 1959 retirement, Romanin married and raised four children. While a mother, she remained active in nordic skiing, providing an inspiration for future women skiers that included Manuela Di Centa, Bice Vanzetta, Gabriella Paruzzi, and Stefania Belmondo.", "target": "Italian cross-country skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6776168", "label": "Martin McLaughlin", "source": "Martin L. McLaughlin is Professor of Italian and Agnelli-Serena Professor of Italian Studies in the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford where he is a Fellow of Magdalen College. In addition to his published academic results he is the English translator of Umberto Eco's On Literature and Italo Calvino's Hermit in Paris.", "target": "British literary historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4657862", "label": "A Little Raw on Monday Mornings", "source": "A Little Raw on Monday Mornings is an adult novel published by popular young adult author Robert Cormier in 1963.", "target": "novel by Robert Cormier", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4057556", "label": "Shamil Adzynba", "source": "Shamil Adzynba (Abkhazian: Шамиль Аӡынба, Georgian: შამილ აძინბა; born 21 May 1970) is the current First Vice Premier of Abkhazia in the Government of President Khajimba, and a two-time acting Prime Minister.", "target": "Abkhazian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23927546", "label": "Saint Nicholas Church on Lipno Island", "source": "Saint Nicholas Church on Lipno Island (церковь Николы на Липне) is a late 13th-century Russian Orthodox church sitting on a small island in the delta of the Msta River, 9 km south of Novgorod. Its design harks back to the Nativity Church on Peryn Island. The main altar is consecrated in the name of Saint Nicholas. A huge icon of this saint (184 cm in height) was painted for the church by Aleksa Petrov in 1294. The fact was notable enough to be mentioned in the Third Novgorod chronicle. This painting — among the most famous of all Russian icons — is now exhibited at the Novgorod Kremlin museum. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the Lipno church had no parishioners and was almost deserted. After the Bolshevik revolution its belfry was pulled down. A set of 13th century frescoes was discovered under a layer of plaster in 1930. Despite its remote location, the building sustained heavy damage during the World War II, so that about 35% of medieval masonry had to be replaced. On 6 January 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin attended a Christmas eve service at the church. It is part of the Historic Monuments of Novgorod and Surroundings, a World Heritage Site inscribed in 1992.", "target": "church in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "landmark"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7070522", "label": "nutritional epidemiology", "source": "Nutritional epidemiology examines dietary and nutritional factors in relation to disease occurrence at a population level. Nutritional epidemiology is a relatively new field of medical research that studies the relationship between nutrition and health. It is a young discipline in epidemiology that is continuing to grow in relevance to present-day health concerns. Diet and physical activity are difficult to measure accurately, which may partly explain why nutrition has received less attention than other risk factors for disease in epidemiology. Nutritional epidemiology uses knowledge from nutritional science to aid in the understanding of human nutrition and the explanation of basic underlying mechanisms. Nutritional science information is also used in the development of nutritional epidemiological studies and interventions including clinical, case-control and cohort studies. Nutritional epidemiological methods have been developed to study the relationship between diet and disease. Findings from these studies impact public health as they guide the development of dietary recommendations including those tailored specifically for the prevention of certain diseases, conditions and cancers. It is argued by western researchers that nutritional epidemiology should be a core component in the training of all health and social service professions because of its increasing relevance and past successes in improving the health of the public worldwide. However, it is also argued that nutritional epidemiological studies yield unreliable findings as they rely on the role of diet in health and disease, which is known as an exposure that is susceptible to considerable measurement error.", "target": "Field of medical research on disease and diet", "baseline_candidates": ["epidemiology", "academic discipline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4691548", "label": "Agathocles of Pella", "source": "Agathocles (Greek: Ἀγαθοκλῆς, flourished 4th century BC) was a Greek nobleman who was a contemporary to King Philip II of Macedon (reigned 359 BC–336 BC). Agathocles was a Thessalian serf from Crannon. His father’s name may have been Alcimachus. It was through his flattery that Agathocles became an intimate friend of Philip II, who raised him to high rank. Agathocles was granted Macedonian citizenship for himself and his family. Agathocles shared in Philip II’s councils and Phillip II sent him to deal with the Perrhaebi and Agathocles took charge of affairs in that area.There is a possibility that Phillip II rewarded Agathocles for his services with estates in Pella. Agathocles became a favorite in the Argead court in Pella and his family assimilated into Macedonian society.Agathocles married an unnamed Greek woman, a local Thessalian, perhaps a woman called Arsinoe. With his wife they had four sons: Alcimachus Lysimachus, one of the Diadochi of Alexander the Great Autodicus Philip.", "target": "father of Lysimachus, general of Alexander the Great", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97266", "label": "Silvia Wadhwa", "source": "Silvia Wadhwa (born 1959 in Hagen) is a German financial journalist. She previously worked for CNBC Europe in Frankfurt. She reported daily from the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (usually on European Closing Bell and Europe Tonight), and provided German language business news updates for the N24 news channel. Wadhwa was also the network's European Central Bank correspondent, reporting from the bank's headquarters on days of Interest rate decisions and attending the subsequent press conferences. In December 2007 she began writing a blog, €urocentric, for CNBC.com.", "target": "German journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1992688", "label": "Highland Beach", "source": "Highland Beach is a town in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States. It is situated 49 miles north of Miami and 20 miles south of Palm Beach. As of the 2010 census, the population was 3,539.", "target": "town in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16885891", "label": "Mike Stinziano", "source": "Michael Stinziano is an American politician who served as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives for the 23rd district from 1973 to 1994. His son, Michael Stinziano, is an attorney and politician.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10580987", "label": "Beachy Head Lighthouse", "source": "Beachy Head Lighthouse is a lighthouse located in the English Channel below the cliffs of Beachy Head in East Sussex. It is 43 m (141 ft) in height and became operational in October 1902. It was the last traditional-style 'rock tower' (i.e. offshore lighthouse) to be built by Trinity House.", "target": "lighthouse at Eastbourne, East Sussex, England", "baseline_candidates": ["lighthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16357709", "label": "history of the Jews in Albania", "source": "The history of the Jews in Albania dates back about 2,000 years. According to historian Apostol Kotani (Albania and the Jews): \"Jews may have first arrived in Albania as early as 70 C.E. as captives on Roman ships that washed up on the country's southern shores...descendants of these captives that would build the first synagogue in the southern port city of Sarandë in the fifth century...[but] Little is known about the Jewish community in the area until the 15th century. \"In the early 16th century, there were Jewish settlements in most of major cities of Albania such as Berat, Elbasan, Vlorë, Durrës and also they are reported as well in Kosovo region. These Jewish families were mainly of Sephardic origin and descendants of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews expelled from Iberia in the end of 15th century CE. Present-day Albanian Jews, predominantly of Romaniote and Sephardi origin, have in modern times only constituted a very small percentage of the population. During the Italian and German occupations of Albania which coincided with World War II, Albania was the only country in Nazi-occupied Europe which saw an increase in its Jewish population, because Albanian Jews were not turned over to the Germans thanks to an Albanian set of laws which is known as the Besa from the Kanun. During the communist dictatorship of Enver Hoxha which was named the People's Socialist Republic of Albania, all religions were banned in the country from February 1967 to 1990, including Judaism, in adherence to the doctrine of state atheism, and all.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6387528", "label": "Ken Demarest", "source": "Kenneth Llewellyn Demarest III is a computer game programmer, artist, and business person.", "target": "Computer game programmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31190816", "label": "autophobia", "source": "Autophobia, also called monophobia, isolophobia, or eremophobia, is the specific phobia of isolation; a morbid fear of being egotistical, or a dread of being alone or isolated. Those with the condition need not be physically alone, but just to believe that they are ignored or unloved. Contrary to what would be inferred by a literal reading of the term, autophobia does not describe a \"fear of oneself\" nor is it the fear of automobiles (despite various cultures abbreviating automobile to \"auto\"). It typically develops from and is associated with other anxiety disorders.Autophobia can be associated with or accompanied by other phobias, such as agoraphobia, and is generally considered part of the agoraphobic cluster, meaning that it has many of the same characteristics as certain anxiety disorders and hyperventilation disorders. The main concern of people with phobias in the agoraphobic cluster is their ability to get help in case of emergency. This often makes them afraid of going out in public, being caught in crowds, being alone, or being stranded.Autophobia is not to be confused with agoraphobia (fear of being in public or being caught in crowds), self-hatred, or social anxiety, although it can be closely related to them. It is a distinct phobia that tends to be accompanied by other anxiety disorders and phobias.", "target": "specific phobia of isolation", "baseline_candidates": ["phobia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3776107", "label": "Irish grammar", "source": "The morphology of Irish is in some respects typical of an Indo-European language. Nouns are declined for number and case, and verbs for person and number. Nouns are classified by masculine or feminine gender. Other aspects of Irish morphology, while typical for an Insular Celtic language, are not typical for Indo-European, such as the presence of inflected prepositions and the initial consonant mutations. Irish syntax is also rather different from that of most Indo-European languages, due to its use of the verb–subject–object word order.", "target": "grammar of the Irish language", "baseline_candidates": ["grammar"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28163948", "label": "Erythropitta palliceps", "source": "The Siau pitta or Siao pitta (Erythropitta palliceps) is a species of the pitta. It was considered a subspecies of the red-bellied pitta. It is endemic to Indonesia where it occurs in Siau and Tagulandang. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16148309", "label": "Richard Coutu", "source": "Richard Coutu (born May 3, 1951) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey goaltender. He was selected by the Minnesota North Stars in the fifteenth round (117th overall) of the 1971 NHL Amateur Draft; he was the final pick that year. Between 1974 and 1976, Coutu played 24 games (9-13-1, 4.11 GAA) in the World Hockey Association with the Chicago Cougars (two seasons) and Cincinnati Stingers (one season).", "target": "Canadian ice hockey goaltender", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94092622", "label": "Peter Michael Muhich", "source": "Peter Michael Muhich (born May 13, 1961) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who has been serving as bishop of the Diocese of Rapid City in South Dakota since 2020.", "target": "bishop of the Roman Catholic Church", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16859455", "label": "Jean Orillat", "source": "Jean Orillat (1733–1779) was a Canadien-born merchant in Quebec who was captured by American supporters during the American Revolutionary War.The son of Jean Orillat and Marie Dupuy, he was born in Barbezieux and came to Canada at a young age. He was involved in the fur trade in the Michilimackinac and La Baye areas and also operated a shop in Montreal. Orillat also lent money and dealt in real estate, lumber and wheat. He operated in partnership with various other merchants, including Pierre Foretier and Jean-Gabriel Cerré.After the invasion of Quebec in September 1775 by the Americans, some parishes in the Richilieu valley joined the Americans. Orillat was sent by Governor Carleton with an offer of amnesty, but was taken prisoner and brought to Connecticut. He was able to escape in late December of that year and had resumed business by September of the following year.He was married twice, both times in Montreal: first to Marie-Amable Filiau, dit Dubois in 1761 and then to Thérèse-Amable Viger in 1767.Orillat died in Montreal. After his death, his estate was left to his daughter Luce-Amable. Her husband Alexis Réaume took over the operation of the business interests but, by 1786, the firm of Rashleigh and Company in London had taken over the operation of the estate.", "target": "Canadian fur trader", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22096637", "label": "1900 Texas Longhorns football team", "source": "The 1900 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 1900 college football season. In their first year under head coach Samuel Huston Thompson, the Longhorns compiled an undefeated 6–0 and outscored opponents by a collective total of 113 to 13.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3755357", "label": "Fábio Eduardo Cribari", "source": "Fábio Eduardo Cribari (born 13 February 1975 in Cambará, Paraná)), better known as Binho, is a Brazilian football defender. He last played for Castelnuovo in 2006-07 season.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1790272", "label": "Churt", "source": "Churt is a village and civil parish in the borough of Waverley in Surrey, England, about 5.5 miles (8.9 km) south of the town of Farnham on the A287 road towards Hindhead. A clustered settlement is set in areas acting as its green buffers, which include the Devil's Jumps. The west of the village slopes down to the steep edge of Whitmore Vale, which is mostly in Headley, Hampshire; at the foot of this bank is a steeply cut brook which defines the Hampshire border. There are forests and heathland by and atop the Greensand Ridge, and the hamlet of Crosswater is in the north of the parish.", "target": "village and civil parish in Surrey, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17198416", "label": "Robert M Oppenheim", "source": "Robert Matthew Oppenheim is an American scholar of Korean studies. He is a professor of Asian studies and anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin.Oppenheim majored in anthropology at Princeton University, graduating in 1991. He received his Ph.D. (2003) and M.A. (1995) in sociocultural anthropology at the University of Chicago. At the University of Texas, he directed the Center for East Asian Studies from 2011 to 2015. He is the author of the book Kyǒngju Things: Assembling Place (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2008).In 2015, Oppenheim won the Global Korea Award of the Council on Korean Studies at Michigan State University.", "target": "American academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19573247", "label": "Navagraha Nayagi", "source": "Navagraha Nayagi (Tamil: நவகிரக நாயகி; English: Goddess of nine planets) is a 1985 Tamil devotional film, directed by K. Shankar and produced by L. N. Nachiappan, L. N. Chidambaram and V. Rangasamy. The film stars Vijayakanth, Nalini, K. R. Vijaya and Srividya in lead roles. The film had musical score by M. S. Viswanathan.", "target": "1985 film by K. Shankar", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6887319", "label": "Mobilize.org", "source": "Mobilize.org is a non-partisan American non-profit organization that works with and for members of the Millennial Generation. The stated mission of Mobilize.org is to empower and invest in Millennials to create and implement solutions to social problems.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48920919", "label": "Gergely Dánielfy", "source": "Gergely Dánielfy or Gergő Dánielfy (born 22 June 1997, Debrecen) is a Hungarian singer and performer, most notable for participating in A Dal 2018 and participating in the sixth season of X-Factor.", "target": "Hungarian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4640885", "label": "58 Division", "source": "The 58 Division is an infantry division of the Sri Lanka Army formed in 2008, prior to which it was known as Task Force 1 from 2007 to 2009. A principal offensive division, it is currently deployed for combat operations in the Wanni region. The Special Forces Brigade has been attached to the division.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q188536", "label": "Anu", "source": "Anu (Akkadian: 𒀭𒀭 ANU, from 𒀭 an “Sky”, “Heaven”) or Anum, originally An (Sumerian: 𒀭 An), was the divine personification of the sky, king of the gods, and ancestor of many of the deities in ancient Mesopotamian religion. He was regarded as a source of both divine and human kingship, and opens the enumerations of deities in many Mesopotamian texts. At the same time, his role was largely passive, and he was not commonly worshiped. It is sometimes proposed that the Eanna temple located in Uruk originally belonged to him, rather than Inanna, but while he is well attested as one of its divine inhabitants, there is no evidence that the main deity of the temple ever changed, and Inanna was already associated with it in the earliest sources. After it declined, a new theological system developed in the same city under Seleucid rule, resulting in Anu being redefined as an active deity. As a result was actively worshiped by inhabitants of the city in the final centuries of history of ancient Mesopotamia. Multiple traditions regarding the identity of Anu's spouse existed, though three of them—Ki, Urash, and Antu—were at various points in time equated with each other, and all three represented earth, similar to how he represented heaven. In a fourth tradition, more sparsely attested, his wife was the goddess Nammu instead. In addition to listing his spouses and children, god lists also often enumerated his various ancestors, such as Anshar or Alala. A variant of one such family tree formed the basis of the.", "target": "Sumerian deity", "baseline_candidates": ["Sky father", "god"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7687442", "label": "Tasmanian Conservatorium of Music", "source": "The University of Tasmania Conservatorium of Music offers students an integrated music education based on best international contemporary arts practice.", "target": "music faculty of the University of Tasmania, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["conservatory", "faculty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48844692", "label": "1968 UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race", "source": "The men's road race at the 1968 UCI Road World Championships was the 35th edition of the event. The race took place on Sunday 1 September 1968 in Imola, Italy. The race was won by Vittorio Adorni of Italy after a successful 90 km breakaway from the leading group on the 4th lap.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11888921", "label": "Prättäkitti", "source": "Prättäkitti (also Rättäkitti) was a Finnish fortune teller or a witch from the household of Manninen, Loimaa (present day Ypäjä). Prättäkitti's magical powers are said to come from the fact that when she was born, the person acting as the midwife was a witch herself.", "target": "fortune teller or witch", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2177540", "label": "La Redoute-Cycles MBK", "source": "La Redoute was a French professional cycling team that existed from 1979 to 1985. Its main sponsor was French mail order company La Redoute, with French bicycle manufacturer Motobécane a co-sponsor between 1979 and 1983.", "target": "cycling team (1979-1985)", "baseline_candidates": ["professional cycling team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27062754", "label": "Creevelea Friary", "source": "Creevelea Abbey is a medieval Franciscan friary and National Monument located in DromahairCounty Leitrim, Ireland. Creeveley Abbey is now in use for as a grave yard.", "target": "friary located in County Leitrim, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site", "friary"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5006517", "label": "C. Henry Kimball House", "source": "The C. Henry Kimball House is an historic house at 295 Washington Avenue in Chelsea, Massachusetts. The 2+1⁄2-story wood-frame house was built c. 1896, and is one of the city's finest Queen Anne Victorian houses. It was built by Charles Henry Kimball, an innovative businessman who developed heated vehicles, revolutionizing the transport of potatoes. He was also a major figure in the development of Chelsea's wholesale fruit and produce exchange.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.", "target": "Chelsea, Massachusetts, listed on the NRHP in Suffolk County", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3363622", "label": "Masanori Sugiura", "source": "Masanori Sugiura (杉浦 正則, born May 23, 1968) is a retired Japanese Olympic baseball player from Kudoyama, Wakayama, Japan. Sugiura was the ace pitcher of the Nippon Life Insurance Company baseball team, and was chosen to join the Japanese national team in the 1992 Summer Olympics, where he won a bronze medal. He returned to the olympics four years later, winning a silver medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics. Professional players were allowed to participate in the 2000 Summer Olympics, but Sugiura was still chosen as the captain of the Japanese national team, and the captain of the entire Japanese olympic team in 2000 Summer Olympics. The Japanese team did not win a medal that year. Sugiura refused numerous offers to join the Japanese professional leagues, and retired in 2000. The Nippon Life Insurance Company baseball team won the Intercity Baseball Tournament twice during the 10 years Sugiura played with the team. He also marked a record five career wins in the olympic tournaments.He served as a pitching coach for his team from 2001–2004, and became the manager in 2006.", "target": "baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83699194", "label": "Sign of the Wolf", "source": "Sign of the Wolf is a 1941 American adventure film directed by Howard Bretherton and written by Elizabeth Sutphin and Edmond Kelso. The film stars Michael Whalen, Grace Bradley, Darryl Hickman, Mantan Moreland, Louise Beavers and Wade Crosby. The film was released on March 25, 1941, by Monogram Pictures.", "target": "1941 film by Howard Bretherton", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q240342", "label": "Lendians", "source": "The Lendians (Polish: Lędzianie) were a Lechitic tribe who lived in the area of East Lesser Poland and Cherven Cities between the 7th and 11th centuries. Since they were documented primarily by foreign authors whose knowledge of Central and East Europe geography was often vague, they were recorded by different names, which include Lendzanenoi, Lendzaninoi, Lz’njn, Lachy, Lyakhs, Landzaneh, Lendizi, Licicaviki and Litziki.", "target": "a Lechitic tribe who lived in the area of East Lesser Poland and Cherven Towns between the 7th and 11th centuries", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7499349", "label": "Shivaraj Patil", "source": "Shivaraj Virupanna Patil (born 12 January 1940) is a retired Indian judge who served as a Justice of the Supreme Court of India between 2000 and 2005.", "target": "Indian judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1551483", "label": "RAAF Williams", "source": "RAAF Williams (ICAO: YMPC) is a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) military air base set across two locations, at Point Cook and Laverton, located approximately 20 kilometres (12 mi) south-west of the Melbourne central business district in Victoria, Australia. Both establishments previously existed as separate RAAF Bases (RAAF Base Point Cook and RAAF Base Laverton) until 1989 when they were amalgamated to form RAAF Williams. The name was chosen in honour of Air Marshal Sir Richard Williams, the 'father' of the RAAF.RAAF Williams, Point Cook is the birthplace of the Royal Australia Air Force and is the oldest continually operating military airfield in the world. Since 1994 RAAF Williams (Point Cook) has been the home of RMIT Flight Training.", "target": "Australian military air base", "baseline_candidates": ["airbase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q995752", "label": "San Ignacio de Velasco", "source": "San Ignacio de Velasco, is the capital of the José Miguel de Velasco Province and the San Ignacio de Velasco Municipality in the Santa Cruz Department of Bolivia.", "target": "city in Bolivia", "baseline_candidates": ["city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3661178", "label": "Casa Vasari", "source": "The Casa Vasari is a building at 8 borgo Santa Croce in Florence, previously the residence in that city of the painter, art historian and architect Giorgio Vasari. It houses a fresco cycle painted by his pupils to designs by Vasari himself.", "target": "building in Florence, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["building", "real property", "museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4636863", "label": "3rd Missouri Volunteer Cavalry", "source": "The 3rd Missouri Cavalry Regiment was a cavalry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War principally in Missouri and Arkansas.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q177688", "label": "gyrfalcon", "source": "The gyrfalcon ( or ) (Falco rusticolus), the largest of the falcon species, is a bird of prey. The abbreviation gyr is also used. It breeds on Arctic coasts and tundra, and the islands of northern North America and the Eurosiberian region. It is mainly a resident there also, but some gyrfalcons disperse more widely after the breeding season, or in winter. Individual vagrancy can take birds for long distances. Its plumage varies with location, with birds being coloured from all-white to dark brown. These colour variations are called morphs. Like other falcons, it shows sexual dimorphism, with the female much larger than the male. For centuries, the gyrfalcon has been valued as a hunting bird. Typical prey includes the ptarmigan and waterfowl, which it may take in flight; it also takes fish and mammals.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q701071", "label": "Duan Zhigui", "source": "Duan Zhigui (simplified Chinese: 段芝贵; traditional Chinese: 段芝貴; pinyin: Duàn Zhīguì; IPA: [tu̯àn ʈ͡ʂīku̯èi̯] 1869 – March 1925) was a Chinese general. Born in Hefei, Anhui, he attained the post of Heilongjiang governor in the late Qing dynasty and between 1912-13 was governor of Chahar and the military governor of Hubei between 1914–15, as well as military and civil governor of Fengtian in 1915-16. A staunch supporter of Yuan Shikai, he was nicknamed the \"Adopted Prince\", and when Duan Qirui, a fellow Hefei native, took the Beijing government in 1917, Duan was made a Minister of War; however, with Duan Qirui's defeat by 1920, Duan Zhigui fled to the Japanese embassy. He was remitted in 1922 and lived in Tianjin until his death there in 1925.", "target": "Chinese politician (1869-1925)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7242108", "label": "Preta Gil", "source": "Preta Maria Gadelha Gil Moreira (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈpɾetɐ maˈɾiɐ ɡaˈdeʎɐ ˈʒiw moˈɾejrɐ]) (born 8 August 1974), known as Preta Gil (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈpɾetɐ ˈʒiw]), is a Brazilian singer and actress. She is the daughter of Gilberto Gil, a musician and former Minister of Culture in Brazil.", "target": "Brazilian singer and actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65682227", "label": "Lemuel McPherson Christian", "source": "Lemuel McPherson Christian MBE (1913–2000) was a Dominican music educator and composer, who wrote the music for \"Isle of Beauty, Isle of Splendour\", the national anthem of the Commonwealth of Dominica, the words being written by Wilfred Oscar Morgan Pond (1912–1985). Also a music teacher, Christian ran the first music school in the Eastern Caribbean.", "target": "Dominican music educator and composer (1913 – 2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73311496", "label": "Lutu T. S. Fuimaono", "source": "Lutu Tenari S. Fuimaono (September 15, 1930 – September 19, 2004) American Samoa politician and journalist who was the longest-serving legislator in the territory's history. He served as the President of the American Samoa Senate from 1996 until his death in 2004. Before being elected president, he served three terms in the American Samoa House of Representatives prior to becoming a senator.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79867", "label": "Birmingham", "source": "Birmingham ( BUR-ming-ham) is a city in the north central region of the U.S. state of Alabama. Birmingham is the seat of Jefferson County, Alabama's most populous county. As of 2020, Birmingham had a population of 200,733, making it Alabama's second-most populous city after Huntsville. The broader Birmingham metropolitan area had a 2020 population of 1,115,289, and is the largest metropolitan area in Alabama as well as the 50th-most populous in the United States. Birmingham serves as an important regional hub and is associated with the Deep South, Piedmont, and Appalachian regions of the nation. Birmingham was founded in 1871, during the post-Civil War Reconstruction period, through the merger of three pre-existing farm towns, notably, Elyton. It grew from there, annexing many more of its smaller neighbors, into an industrial and railroad transportation center with a focus on mining, the iron and steel industry, and railroading. Birmingham was named for Birmingham, England, one of that nation's major industrial cities. Most of the original settlers who founded Birmingham were of English ancestry. The city may have been planned as a place where cheap, non-unionized, and often African-American labor from rural Alabama could be employed in the city's steel mills and blast furnaces, giving it a competitive advantage over industrial cities in the Midwest and Northeast.From its founding through the end of the 1960s, Birmingham was a primary industrial center of the South. The pace of Birmingham's growth during the period from 1881 through 1920 earned its nicknames The Magic City and The Pittsburgh of the South. Much.", "target": "city in and county seat of Jefferson County, Alabama, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county seat", "big city", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1946107", "label": "Tristramella sacra", "source": "Tristramella sacra, the long jaw tristramella, is a species of cichlid fish that was endemic to the Sea of Galilee in Israel. It has not been recorded since 1990, despite searches both of the lake and in local markets, and it is regarded as extinct by the IUCN. This species could reach a total length of up to 28 cm (11 in).T. sacra's spawning ground was the marshy northern margin of the lake. This dried out in 1991 and again in the mid-1990s, destroying this species' breeding habitat and therefore possibly causing its disappearance.Water levels in the Sea of Galilee may have been under stress since Israel's National Water Carrier was built in 1964, and this stress may have been increased since the Israel–Jordan peace treaty of 1994 committed Israel to supply 50 million cubic meters of water per year from the lake to Jordan.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4890434", "label": "Bentinckia condapanna", "source": "Bentinckia condapanna, the hill areca nut, is a species of flowering plant in the family Arecaceae. It is found only in India. It is threatened by habitat loss. This palm is mainly found in the evergreen forests of Western Ghats of India.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19264000", "label": "Ten Love Songs", "source": "Ten Love Songs is the fourth studio album by Norwegian singer-songwriter Susanne Sundfør, released on 16 February 2015 by the label Warner Music Norway. Sundfør began writing her sixth album in 2012 with the intention of it being about violence, but as she noticed themes of love and relationships coming into place of all the songs she was writing for the album, she titled the LP Ten Love Songs. The production and style of the LP differed from Sundfør's previous albums; she was much more focused on making a pop album with \"repetitive\" and \"direct\" musical and lyrical structures than her past works. This was also the first time she was involved in all aspects of producing an LP, including writing, recording, mixing, orchestration and audio editing, and this huge amount of work as well as the extreme personal themes of the LP led her to feel very ill, depressed, and \"naked\" when production ended in 2014. While half of Ten Love Songs was self-produced by Sundfør, the album also features collaborations with producers such as Lars Horntveth, Anthony Gonzalez, Jonathan Bates and Röyksopp. Ten Love Songs spawned four singles: \"Fade Away,\" \"Delirious,\" \"Kamikaze,\" and \"Accelerate.\" Ten Love Songs and its lead single \"Fade Away\" became a commercial success in Sundfør's home country both receiving a gold certification. The album was also a huge success in terms of reviews from music critics, some journalists calling it one of the best albums of 2015 as well as all-time. The record landed on the year-end lists of several.", "target": "album by Susanne Sundfør", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1098136", "label": "Claudio Procesi", "source": "Claudio Procesi (born 31 March 1941 in Rome) is an Italian mathematician, known for works in algebra and representation theory.", "target": "Italian mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16241429", "label": "2013–14 Blackpool F.C. season", "source": "The 2013–14 season was Blackpool's third-consecutive season in the Football League Championship, the second tier of English professional football, and their 105th overall season in the Football League.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3926742", "label": "Football at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's Asian Qualifiers", "source": "The Asian Football Confederation's Pre-Olympic Tournament was held from 20 May 1995 to 27 March 1996. Twenty-five teams entered the qualification for the three allocated spots for the 1996 Summer Olympics Football tournament in Atlanta. The qualification saw Korea Republic, Japan and Saudi Arabia winning their final round groups and qualifying to the Olympics.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["qualification"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1840891", "label": "Ptychochromis grandidieri", "source": "Ptychochromis grandidieri is a species of fish in the family Cichlidae endemic to river basins along a large part of the eastern coast of Madagascar, although it has been recorded as far as 100 km (62 mi) inland. Uniquely in the genus Ptychochromis, this species also occurs in brackish water. It reaches 35cm in standard length. It shares a large part of its range with a cichlid from another genus, Paretroplus polyactis. The specific name honours Alfred Grandidier (1836-1921), the French naturalist and explorer who, with Henri Joseph Léon Humblot (1852-1914), collected the type.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q623897", "label": "Hangang Railway Bridge", "source": "The Hangang Railway Bridge (Korean: 한강철교; Hanja: 漢江鐵橋) crosses the Han River in Seoul, South Korea and connects Noryangjin Station and Yongsan Station.", "target": "bridge", "baseline_candidates": ["railway bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1140719", "label": "Refuge Crête Sèche", "source": "Refuge Crête Sèche or Rifugio Crête Sèche is a shelter in the Alps of Italy near the border with Switzerland. More precisely, this refuge is located in the valley of Valpelline, a side valley of the Aosta Valley in the Italian Pennine Alps, at 2,410 metres (7,910 ft) above sea level. It lies on the slopes of Mont de Crête Sèche whose summit is at elevation 2,941 metres (9,649 ft).The shelter was built in 1982, and is owned by the Italian Alpine Club. One of the nearby mountains to climb is Mont Gelé whose summit is 3,518 metres (11,542 ft) above sea level, and which can be accessed via the Col de Crête Sèche. This same mountain pass continues from Italy into the Swiss district of Entremont in the canton of Valais. Another mountain near this shelter is Bec d'Epicoune, elevation 3,531 metres (11,585 ft).To reach the shelter, one can hike on a dirt trail for about two hours from the village of Rû in the municipality of Bionaz. The capacity of this shelter in summer is 86 beds, and in winter 8 beds.", "target": "building", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain hut"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6175458", "label": "Jefferson Davis Memorial Historic Site", "source": "Jefferson Davis Memorial Historic Site (also known as the Jefferson Davis Capture Site) is a 12.668-acre (5.127 ha) state historic site located in Irwin County, Georgia that marks the spot where Confederate States President Jefferson Davis was captured by United States Cavalry on Wednesday, May 10, 1865. The historic site features a granite monument with a bronze bust of Davis that is located at the place of capture. The memorial museum, built in 1939 by the Works Progress Administration, features Civil War era weapons, uniforms, artifacts and an exhibit about the president's 1865 flight from Richmond, Virginia to Irwin County, Georgia.", "target": "state historic site in Irwin County, Georgia; site of the capture of Jefferson Davis (May 10, 1865)", "baseline_candidates": ["historic site", "Georgia state park", "heritage site", "museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1050076", "label": "Justus Doolittle", "source": "Justus Doolittle (simplified Chinese: 卢公明; traditional Chinese: 盧公明; Pinyin: Lú Gōngmíng; Foochow Romanized: Lù Gŭng-mìng; June 23, 1824, Rutland, New York - June 15, 1880, Clinton, New York) was an American Board missionary to China.", "target": "American missionary to China", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14828652", "label": "Acalolepta variolaris", "source": "Acalolepta variolaris is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Francis Polkinghorne Pascoe in 1866, originally under the genus Monochamus. It is known from Papua New Guinea.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16007728", "label": "Birch Wilson", "source": "L. Birch Wilson Jr. (1883–1974) was an American political activist, newspaper editor, and civic employee. Wilson is best remembered as a member of the governing National Executive Committee of the Socialist Party of America during the 1920s and the éminence grise behind the Socialist mayoral administration of J. Henry Stump in the city of Reading, Pennsylvania as well as the editor of the Reading weekly newspaper, The Labor Advocate. His wife, Lillith M. Wilson (1887–1937), was a three term member of the Pennsylvania General Assembly during the decade of the 1930s.", "target": "American newspaper editor (1883-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3474789", "label": "Frances", "source": "Frances is an unincorporated community in Pacific County, Washington, United States. Frances is located along State Route 6 east of the community of Lebam. Frances and surrounding areas are part of an area heavily affected by the logging industry.", "target": "unincorporated community in Pacific County, Washington, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33104071", "label": "Sidetracks", "source": "Sidetracks: Explorations of a Romantic Biographer is an autobiographical book by the biographer Richard Holmes, his second of three.", "target": "autobiography by Richard Holmes", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q122776", "label": "Barnsbury", "source": "Barnsbury is an area of north London in the London Borough of Islington, within the N1 and N7 postal districts. The name is a syncopated form of Bernersbury (1274), being so called after the Berners family: powerful medieval manorial lords who gained ownership of a large part of Islington after the Norman Conquest. The area of Barnsbury was predominantly rural until the early nineteenth century. By the end of the 18th century, however, Barnsbury, like other parts of Islington, was being regarded as attractive part-rural suburbs by the comparatively wealthy people wanting to move out of the cramped City of London and industrial Clerkenwell. The area is close to the city, and had strong local trade in its position as the first staging post for travellers making the journey from London to the north, and with considerable agricultural traffic and cattle driving to the nearby Smithfield cattle market in the city. Barnard Park, consisting of 10 acres including a large area of football pitches, was created in 1967 on an area of housing that had been bombed during World War Two and named after former Islington Mayor Cllr George Barnard.Pentonville Prison (built 1842) is located within Barnsbury. Since 2006, Barnsbury ward has been represented by three Labour councillors.", "target": "area of north London, England", "baseline_candidates": ["area of London"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49100356", "label": "Acora District", "source": "Axura District is one of fifteen districts of the Puno Province in the Puno Region, Peru.", "target": "district of the Puno Province in the Puno region, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75947954", "label": "Sir Francis Heathcote, 9th Baronet", "source": "Sir Francis Cooke Caulfeild Heathcote, 9th Baronet (1868–1961) was an Anglican cleric, and 4th Bishop of New Westminster. He was born in Northamptonshire, England and educated at Lancing College, Sussex before emigrating to Canada in 1882. He studied at Trinity College, Toronto, and was ordained in 1891. He was appointed Archdeacon of British Columbia in 1913 (which was changed to Archdeacon of Vancouver in 1924. He succeeded the Most Reverend Dr Adam de Pencier as Bishop of New Westminster of the Anglican Church of Canada, located in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, on 25 January 1941. He died in 1961 at the age of 93.", "target": "Anglican bishop (1868-1961)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21664813", "label": "Horace Packe", "source": "Horace Packe (22 March 1865 – 2 December 1934) was the Archdeacon of Southland from 1913 until 1922. Packe was born in Shangton on 22 March 1865; educated at St Edward's School, Oxford and Worcester College, Oxford and deacon in 1891 and priest in 1892. After curacies in Hastings, Darrington and Georgetown he was Chaplain to the Gold Coast Colony then Vicar of Suva. He came to New Zealand in 1907 and was Vicar of Wakatipu until his appointment as Archdeacon.Packe died in Gisborne on 2 December 1934.", "target": "Anglican archdeacon", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19891844", "label": "1954 in Laos", "source": "The following lists events that happened during 1954 in Laos.", "target": "events in the Lao People's Democratic Republic occuring in 1954", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4353536", "label": "Pseudomorphine", "source": "Pseudomorphine (also known as oxydimorphine or dehydromorphine) is an inactive, natural dimerisation product of the morphine molecule in tandem and thus a common impurity in morphine concentrations. It was first described by Pelletier in 1835.This compound may be synthesized by the oxidative coupling of morphine by potassium ferricyanide.Pseudomorphine contributes very little to morphine's effects. It produces no effects in the central nervous or gastrointestinal systems, but it might have some effects on the circulatory system.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7384705", "label": "Rybaki, Masovian Voivodeship", "source": "Rybaki [rɨˈbaki] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Słubice, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3202048", "label": "Erginus rubellus", "source": "Erginus rubellus is a species of sea snail, a true limpet, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Erginidae, one of the families of true limpets.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q360655", "label": "Mohr's circle", "source": "Mohr's circle is a two-dimensional graphical representation of the transformation law for the Cauchy stress tensor. Mohr's circle is often used in calculations relating to mechanical engineering for materials' strength, geotechnical engineering for strength of soils, and structural engineering for strength of built structures. It is also used for calculating stresses in many planes by reducing them to vertical and horizontal components. These are called principal planes in which principal stresses are calculated; Mohr's circle can also be used to find the principal planes and the principal stresses in a graphical representation, and is one of the easiest ways to do so.After performing a stress analysis on a material body assumed as a continuum, the components of the Cauchy stress tensor at a particular material point are known with respect to a coordinate system. The Mohr circle is then used to determine graphically the stress components acting on a rotated coordinate system, i.e., acting on a differently oriented plane passing through that point. The abscissa and ordinate ( σ n {\\displaystyle \\sigma _{\\mathrm {n} }} , τ n {\\displaystyle \\tau _{\\mathrm {n} }} ) of each point on the circle are the magnitudes of the normal stress and shear stress components, respectively, acting on the rotated coordinate system. In other words, the circle is the locus of points that represent the state of stress on individual planes at all their orientations, where the axes represent the principal axes of the stress element. 19th-century German engineer Karl Culmann was the first to conceive a graphical representation for.", "target": "geometric engineering calculation technique", "baseline_candidates": ["diagram"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q704592", "label": "Charles Kamathi", "source": "Charles Waweru Kamathi (born 18 May 1978, near Nyeri, Kenya) is a Kenyan long-distance runner. He is best known for winning the 10,000 metres distance at the 2001 World Championships in Edmonton.", "target": "athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27057870", "label": "Stewart Cruickshank", "source": "Stewart Dawson Cruickshank (born 1970), is a male former weightlifter who competed for England.", "target": "English weightlifter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9387468", "label": "detention", "source": "Detention is the process whereby a state or private citizen lawfully holds a person by removing their freedom or liberty at that time. This can be due to (pending) criminal charges preferred against the individual pursuant to a prosecution or to protect a person or property. Being detained does not always result in being taken to a particular area (generally called a detention centre), either for interrogation or as punishment for a crime (see prison). The term can also be used in reference to the holding of property for the same reasons. The process of detainment may or may not have been preceded or followed with an arrest. Detainee is a term used by certain governments and their armed forces to refer to individuals held in custody, such as those it does not classify and treat as either prisoners of war or suspects in criminal cases. It is used to refer to \"any person captured or otherwise detained by an armed force.\" More generally, it means \"someone held in custody.\" The prisoners in Guantánamo Bay are referred to as \"detainees\". Article 9 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights provides that \"[n]o one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.\" In wars between nations, treatment of detainees is governed by the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention.", "target": "removal of the freedom of liberty by a state", "baseline_candidates": ["imprisonment", "legal term", "punishment"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20724580", "label": "Renée Eykens", "source": "Renée Eykens (born 8 June 1996) is a Belgian middle-distance runner. She competed in the 800 metres at the 2016 Summer Olympics reaching the semifinals. In addition, she is the 2015 European Junior gold medallist.", "target": "Belgian athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q746526", "label": "Martin of Aragon, Heir of Sicily", "source": "Martin (17/19 December 1406 – August 1407) was heir apparent to the throne of Sicily. He was a member of the House of Barcelona.", "target": "Aragon infante and Heir of Sicily and Navarre", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27590677", "label": "The Testament of Aga Koppanyi", "source": "The Testament of Aga Koppanyi (Hungarian: A koppányi aga testamentuma) is a 1967 Hungarian adventure film based on the eponymous novel by István Fekete.", "target": "1967 film directed by Éva Zsurzs", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1170159", "label": "Saint-Laurent-des-Bois", "source": "Saint-Laurent-des-Bois (French pronunciation: ​[sɛ̃ loʁɑ̃ de bwa]) is a commune in the Loir-et-Cher department in central France.", "target": "commune in Loir-et-Cher, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7427471", "label": "Saunders Valkyrie", "source": "The Saunders A.3 Valkyrie was a large three-engined biplane flying boat with a wooden hull built to an Air Ministry specification. It was not found suitable for production and helped to confirm a preference for metal-hulled flying boats.", "target": "type of aircraft", "baseline_candidates": ["flying boat"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q168801", "label": "A63 autoroute", "source": "The A63 autoroute is a motorway in southwest France, connecting Bordeaux (from Junction 15 of the Rocade) to the border with Spain. The motorway, rather than being a purpose-built route, is an upgrade of the former RN10, which became a full toll road and no longer exists south of Bordeaux. The motorway crosses Les Landes (moorland) as a dual-carriageway. The road is an important axis of communication between the French and Spanish Basque Country.", "target": "road in France", "baseline_candidates": ["controlled-access highway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1993722", "label": "Nissan Gloria", "source": "The Gloria (Japanese: 日産・グロリア) is a large luxury car made from 1959 by the Prince Motor Company, and later by Nissan Motors since its merger with the former - hence being originally marketed as Prince Gloria and later as Nissan Gloria. Initially based on the smaller Prince Skyline, the Gloria line was merged with Nissan Cedric starting with 1971 models and both continued until 2004, when they were both replaced by Nissan Fuga. Glorias were sold at Nissan Prince Shop dealerships that were formerly affiliated with the Prince company; when Nissan assumed operations, Glorias were sold along with the Nissan Skyline. The Prince G engine was used in the Gloria until 1969. It was inspired by the Latin word \"Glory\".", "target": "motor vehicle", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8002836", "label": "Will H. Chandlee", "source": "Will H. Chandlee (January 1865 – 1955) was a painter and illustrator who worked in Washington, D.C. He was the art manager of The Evening Star for 20 years.", "target": "American artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7287171", "label": "Ralph Anstruther", "source": "Major Sir Ralph (Hugo) Anstruther, 7th Baronet (13 June 1921 – 19 May 2002) was a Scottish British Army officer and courtier.", "target": "Scottish courtier (1921-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1907349", "label": "Serkadji prison", "source": "Serkadji Prison, formerly Barberousse Prison, is a high-security prison in Algiers, Algeria; in 1995, about two-thirds of the 1,500 prisoners detained there have been accused or convicted of terrorism.", "target": "Prison in Algiers, Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["prison"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16953102", "label": "Moment of Truth", "source": "Moment of Truth is the second and final album by ELO Part II, released on October 1, 1994. The cover illustration by Graham Reynolds depicts an incandescent light bulb shattering. The light bulb image continues a visual theme that began with the light bulb depicted on the cover of Electric Light Orchestra's debut album. Moment of Truth and the single \"One More Tomorrow\" would determine if ELO Part II would continue re-establishing themselves in America. \"The Fox\" was originally from the 1985 Kelly Groucutt EP, We Love Animals.The album was reissued in 2021 by Renaissance Records on CD and 2xLP, marking the first time Moment of Truth was available on LP. Both the CD and LP releases included bonus tracks.", "target": "album by ELO Part II", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16995668", "label": "Holliday Creek", "source": "Holliday Creek is a stream located in Archer and Wichita counties, Texas. Its headwaters are in western Archer County, Texas. It crosses Archer County and then enters Wichita County and Lake Wichita. From the spillway of Lake Wichita dam, it passes through the city of Wichita Falls, Texas, and empties into the Wichita River, a tributary of the Red River. A federally funded flood control project was completed about 1998 where the creek passes through Wichita Falls.", "target": "river in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3846064", "label": "Marco Dezzi Bardeschi", "source": "Marco Dezzi Bardeschi (September 30, 1934 – November 4, 2018) was an Italian architect. He was a professor of Architectural Restoration at the Polytechnic University of Milan. He authored several books, and he was the founding editor of ANANKE, an architectural magazine.", "target": "Italian engineer and architect (1934-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2155685", "label": "2005 Tour du Haut Var", "source": "The 2005 Tour du Haut Var was the 37th edition of the Tour du Haut Var cycle race and was held on 19 February 2005. The race started and finished in Draguignan. The race was won by Philippe Gilbert.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour du Haut Var"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5931114", "label": "Hugh Hesketh Hughes", "source": "Hugh Hesketh Hughes (October 1902 – 23 May 1940) was a Welsh champion polo player who trained in Argentina.", "target": "polo player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5274842", "label": "Diego Vásquez", "source": "Diego Martín Vásquez Castro (born 3 July 1971) is a football coach and former player who is the manager of the Honduras national team.", "target": "Argentinian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24666074", "label": "Stainfield", "source": "Stainfield is a village and civil parish about 10 miles (16 km) east of the city of Lincoln, in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 189.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6307356", "label": "Julian Lewis Jones", "source": "Julian Lewis Jones (born 21 August 1968) is a Welsh actor. He trained at the Welsh College of Music & Drama. He has appeared largely in British television in shows such as Where the Heart Is and Caerdydd. In 2009, he starred in Clint Eastwood's drama film Invictus, as the head of Nelson Mandela's bodyguard team.Originally from Anglesey, Jones lives in Nantgaredig. A fluent Welsh speaker, he has appeared on various productions on the Welsh-language channel S4C, including as a presenter of a popular fishing programme Sgota.In 2010, he appeared in the TV series The Tudors as Mr. Roper (the park keeper) in Season 4, Episode 1. Also in 2010 he appeared on British TV series Spooks (US title MI-5) as Russian spy Viktor Barenshik in Season 9, Episode 3. From 2012 onwards he appeared in the Sky1 drama-comedy series Stella as Karl Morris, and in 2012 in an episode of the BBC Two drama-comedy series Ambassadors. Jones portrayed Atlan, King of Atlantis, in the superhero film Justice League (2017) and the director's cut Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021).Jones is a supporter of Welsh independence, joining YesCymru in June 2020.", "target": "Welsh actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27074295", "label": "abnormal cannabidiol", "source": "Abnormal cannabidiol (Abn-CBD) is a synthetic regioisomer of cannabidiol, which unlike most other cannabinoids produces vasodilator effects, lowers blood pressure, and induces cell migration, cell proliferation and mitogen-activated protein kinase activation in microglia, but without producing any psychoactive effects.", "target": "Synthetic, cannabinoid-like compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q894237", "label": "Lentinus strigosus", "source": "Lentinus strigosus is a species of fungus in the family Polyporaceae. It is edible when young, but becomes very tough with age.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7230020", "label": "Porcupine Bank", "source": "Porcupine Bank is an area of the Irish shelf, on the fringes of the Atlantic Ocean approximately 200 kilometres (120 mi) west of Ireland. The relatively raised area of seabed, 200 m below sea level at its highest, lies between the deep-water Porcupine Seabight and Rockall Trough. The name comes from the bank's discovery in 1862 by HMS Porcupine, a British sail and paddle-wheel ship used mainly for surveying.The northern and western slopes of the bank feature species of cold-water corals.According to Dr. Anthony Grehan of the National University of Ireland, Galway, the virtually untouched site could benefit dwindling fish stocks and possibly aid medical research. \"These are by far the most pristine, thriving and hence spectacular examples of cold-water coral reefs that I’ve encountered in almost ten years of study in Irish waters. There is also evidence of recent recruitment of corals and many other reef animals in the area suggesting this area is an important source of larvae supply to other areas further along the Porcupine Bank.\" In an 1870 paper presented to the Geological Society of Ireland, Mr W Fraser suggested that these reefs mark the site of the sunken island of Hy-Brasil.", "target": "area of the Atlantic Ocean", "baseline_candidates": ["ocean bank"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16115742", "label": "Stuart Macdougall", "source": "Stuart Grant Macdougall (born 1 June 1947) is a former Australian Rugby Union player who represented for the Wallabies eight times.", "target": "Australian rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6312455", "label": "June Zimmerman Fullmer", "source": "June Fullmer (née Zimmerman; December 12, 1920 – January 31, 2000) was an American historian of chemistry.", "target": "chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1342106", "label": "Pyotr Yakir", "source": "Pyotr Ionavich Yakir (Russian: Пётр Ионавич Якир) (20 January 1923 – 14 November 1982) was a Soviet historian who survived a childhood in the Gulag, and became well known as a critic of Stalinism, though ultimately he denounced dissident activity in the Soviet Union.", "target": "Soviet historian (1923-1982)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q74435385", "label": "DFS Weihe", "source": "The DFS Weihe (English: Harrier) is a German single-seat, high-wing, 18 metre wingspan, high-performance glider that was designed by Hans Jacobs in 1937-38.", "target": "German single-seat glider, 1938", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2565585", "label": "El Ultimo Adios", "source": "\"El Último Adiós\" (English: \"The Last Goodbye\") is a song written by Peruvian singer Gian Marco and Cuban American musician and producer Emílio Estefan to commemorate the September 11 attacks and support the families of the victims. Proceeds of the recording went to the American Red Cross and the United Way. This version of the song was released both as a stand-alone single, and as part of a four-song special EP by the same name. Gian Marco also recorded a solo version of the song, which was considered one of his standout pieces during his international debut.In the four minutes of the song, a variety of musical genres can be heard, and over 120 different artists were involved in the project, including Ricky Martin, Christina Aguilera, Jennifer Lopez, Shakira, Paulina Rubio, Thalía, Chayanne, Alejandro Sanz, José José, Ivete Sangalo, Luis Fonsi, Ana Bárbara, Juan Luis Guerra and Gloria Estefan.", "target": "2001 single", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5232569", "label": "David Corcoran", "source": "David Corcoran is a former Australian rules football umpire who umpired in the Australian Football League. On the 19th of October 2019, he controversially drafted Gordon Hayward in the 6th round of the NBLAFL Fantasy Basketball Draft. It was widely recognised as one of the worst picks of all time until the Helena Valley Goats drafted Hassan Whiteside, Tobias Harris, Kevin Love and Paul Millsap with consecutive picks. Tried to draft Wendell Carter in the 12th when he had been selected 5 rounds earlier. On the 23rd of February 2020, he become only the 2nd person to win three consecutive NBLAFL Coach of the Week awards. He is rumoured to be a participant in Season 2 of Holey Moley.", "target": "Australian rules football umpire", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q425728", "label": "Narayan Gopal", "source": "Narayan Gopal Guruacharya(Nepali: नारायणगोपाल गुरुआचार्य) (4 October 1939 – 5 December 1990), known professionally as Narayan Gopal and N. Gopal was a prominent popular singer and composer of Nepali music. Regarded one of the most significant cultural icons in Nepal, he is referred as \"Swar Samrat\" (Nepali: स्वर सम्राट, meaning: Emperor of Voice) in Nepal. He is also known as \"King of Tragedy\" owing to his numerous tragedy songs due to forbidden love with then queen of Nepal . He also sang in Nepal Bhasa. Owing to his vocal range he was capable of singing songs of every Nepalese genre. Often, his songs were accompanied by the sitar, harmonium and flute. He was also a music director during the 1950s to the 70s and belongs to the first generation of professional Nepali singers. His songs have been showcased in several movies and dramas across the country.Narayan Gopal released 137 songs during his lifetime, his first songs were composed by his friends Prem Dhoj Pradhan and Manik Ratna.Gopal is one of the most celebrated and influential musicians of the 20th century and received many awards during his lifetime.", "target": "Nepalese singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2120432", "label": "Angry Brides", "source": "Angry Brides is an online flash-based browser game on Facebook. It was launched by the matchmaking site Shaadi.com to help raise awareness of dowry harassment in India.", "target": "game developed by Shaadi.com to raise awareness about Dowry", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32752608", "label": "Wald-Michelbach", "source": "Wald-Michelbach is a community in the Bergstraße district in Hessen, Germany.", "target": "municipality in Kreis Bergstraße in Hesse, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Gemarkung", "municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13194739", "label": "Lucca", "source": "Lucca ( LOO-kə, Italian: [ˈlukka] (listen)) is a city and comune in Tuscany, Central Italy, on the Serchio River, in a fertile plain near the Ligurian Sea. The city has a population of about 89,000, while its province has a population of 383,957.Lucca is known as one of the Italian's \"Città d'arte\" (Arts town), thanks to its intact Renaissance-era city walls and its very well preserved historic center, where, among other buildings and monuments, are located the Piazza dell'Anfiteatro, which has its origins in the second half of the 1st century A.D. and the Guinigi Tower, a 45-metre-tall (150 ft) tower that dates from the 1300s.The city is also the birthplace of numerous world-class composers, including Giacomo Puccini, Alfredo Catalani, and Luigi Boccherini.", "target": "city and comune in Tuscany, Central Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["city", "commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14706079", "label": "New Mexico Supreme Court", "source": "The New Mexico Supreme Court is the highest court in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It is established and its powers defined by Article VI of the New Mexico Constitution. It is primarily an appellate court which reviews civil and criminal decisions of New Mexico's trial courts of general jurisdiction and certain specialized legislative courts, only having original jurisdiction in a limited number of actions. It currently resides in the New Mexico Supreme Court Building in Santa Fe. The court's five justices are chosen by statewide election, or appointed by the governor if to fill a seat that has become vacant mid-term; the justices in turn choose who among them will serve as chief justice. The second time they face popular election, they must first pass review by a judicial standards committee, and then face a retention election in which they must receive at least 57% of the vote.", "target": "the highest court in the U.S. state of New Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["U.S. state supreme court"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6292620", "label": "José Jorquera", "source": "José Jorquera Gutiérrez (born 1 April 1991) is a Chilean footballer who currently plays for the Chilean Primera División club Cobresal as goalkeeper.", "target": "Chilean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7987006", "label": "West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District", "source": "The West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District is a comprehensive high achieving regional public school district in New Jersey, United States, serving students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade from West Windsor Township (in Mercer County) and Plainsboro Township (in Middlesex County). There are four elementary schools (grades PreK/K - 3), two upper elementary schools (grades 4 and 5), two middle schools (grades 6 - 8) and two high schools (grades 9 - 12). Niche.com listed the district as third best in New Jersey, and 55th best in the nation, according to its 2018 Best Schools ranking.As of the 2017-18 school year, the district and its 10 schools had an enrollment of 9,812 students and 761.6 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.9:1.The district is classified by the New Jersey Department of Education as being in District Factor Group \"J\", the highest of eight groupings. District Factor Groups organize districts statewide to allow comparison by common socioeconomic characteristics of the local districts. From lowest socioeconomic status to highest, the categories are A, B, CD, DE, FG, GH, I and J.", "target": "school district in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21510955", "label": "Fomienko", "source": "Fomenko is a (Cyrillic: Фоменко) is a Russian-language surname that corresponds to the Ukrainian surname Khomenko (Cyrillic: Хоменко) derived from the given name Khoma, or Thomas. The Russian form is derived from the corresponding name Foma (Russian: Фома). Notable people with this surname include: Anatoly Fomenko, Russian mathematician and topologist, known for his work on historical revisionism Arturas Fomenko, Lithuanian football player Mykhailo Fomenko, Ukrainian football coach and former player Nikolai Fomenko, Russian rock musician and motor racer Pavel Fomenko, Russian high jumper Serhiy Fomenko, Ukrainian singer Yuliya Fomenko, Russian backstroke swimmer.", "target": "family name (Фоменко)", "baseline_candidates": ["family name", "Russian family name of Ukrainian origin"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16964406", "label": "Gora Rudnaya mine", "source": "The Gora Rudnaya mine is one of the largest gold mines in Russia and in the world. The mine is located in Sakha Republic. The mine has estimated reserves of 6.4 million oz of gold.", "target": "mine in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["mine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3511701", "label": "Josef Liesler", "source": "Josef Liesler (19 September 1912, in Vidolice near Kadaň – 23 August 2005, in Prague) was a Czech surrealist painter, graphic designer, illustrator, exlibris and postage stamp designer.He studied art at University of the Architecture and Structural Engineering, Prague in 1934-38 under professors Cyril Bouda, Oldřich Blažíček, and Josef Sejpka. He became a member of the Mánes Union of Fine Arts (1942) and SČUG Hollar (1945). He illustrated over one hundred book titles and he created many drawings of postage stamps and exlibris. He received a UNESCO award for the finest stamp design (Hydrologic decade). His production is represented in many prominent Czech and international collections, including the Galleria degli Uffizi in Florence.He was married to Blazena Málková and has two sons.", "target": "Czech painter (1912-2005)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19867228", "label": "Majed Abu Maraheel", "source": "Majed Abu Maraheel (born 5 June 1963) is a retired athlete who competed internationally for Palestine.He represented Palestine at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. He competed in the 10,000 metres where he finished 21st, so he did not advance to the final.", "target": "Palestinian athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q607968", "label": "Antony C. Sutton", "source": "Antony Cyril Sutton (February 14, 1925 – June 17, 2002) was a British-American writer, researcher, economist, and professor.", "target": "British writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19789338", "label": "To Be", "source": "To Be (做自己 Zuò zìjǐ, \"be yourself\") is a 1997 Mandarin-language pop album by Karen Mok. It was Mok's first album for the Taiwan and PRC markets. The album sold over 800,000 copies, and included a hit single, Ta Bu Ai Wo (\"He does not love me\").", "target": "album by Karen Mok", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q686843", "label": "Bonaire Democratic Party", "source": "The Bonaire Democratic Party (Papiamentu: Partido Demokrátiko Boneriano, PDB; Dutch: Democratische Partij Bonaire), also known as Demokrat, is a political party in Bonaire and formerly the Netherlands Antilles.", "target": "political party in Bonaire", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10858517", "label": "Asteroid Redirect Mission", "source": "The Asteroid Redirect Mission (ARM), also known as the Asteroid Retrieval and Utilization (ARU) mission and the Asteroid Initiative, was a space mission proposed by NASA in 2013. The Asteroid Retrieval Robotic Mission (ARRM) spacecraft would rendezvous with a large near-Earth asteroid and use robotic arms with anchoring grippers to retrieve a 4-meter boulder from the asteroid. The spacecraft would characterize the asteroid and demonstrate at least one planetary defense technique before transporting the boulder to a stable lunar orbit, where it could be further analyzed both by robotic probes and by a future crewed mission, Asteroid Redirect Crewed Mission (ARCM). If funded, the mission would have launched in December 2021, with the additional objectives to test a number of new capabilities needed for future human expeditions to deep space, including advanced ion thrusters.The proposed 2018 NASA budget called for its cancellation, the mission was given its notice of defunding in April 2017, and NASA announced the \"close out\" on June 13, 2017. Key technologies being developed for ARM have continued, especially the ion thruster propulsion system that would have been flown on the robotic mission.", "target": "United States space mission to collect samples from an asteroid", "baseline_candidates": ["space mission", "joint venture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28798090", "label": "Ministry of the Colonies", "source": "The Ministry of the Colonies was the ministry of the government of the Kingdom of Italy responsible for the government of the country's colonial possessions and the direction of their economies. It was set up on 20 November 1912 by Royal Decree n. 1205, turning the Central Direction of Colonial Affairs within the Ministry for Foreign Affairs into a separate ministry. Royal Decree n. 431 of 8 April 1937 renamed it the Ministry of Italian Africa after the Italian annexation of Ethiopia and the birth of Italian East Africa. It was suppressed on 19 April 1953 by law n. 430.", "target": "former ministry of Italy (1912-1946)", "baseline_candidates": ["ministry of the Kingdom of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87777677", "label": "Simon Coombs", "source": "Simon Coombs (born 6 April 1976) is an Australian swimmer. He competed in the men's 200 metre individual medley event at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Australian swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16351432", "label": "Bubendorf", "source": "Bubendorf is a municipality in the district of Liestal in the canton of Basel-Country in Switzerland.", "target": "municipality in the canton Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Switzerland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4451852", "label": "Tarasovskaya, Beketovsky Selsoviet, Vozhegodsky District, Vologda Oblast", "source": "Tarasovskaya (Russian: Тарасовская) is a rural locality (a village) in Beketovskoye Rural Settlement, Vozhegodsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 47 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Vozhegodsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27055882", "label": "Walter Francini", "source": "Walter Augusto Francini (3 June 1926 – 3 May 1996) was a Brazilian journalist and Esperantist. He wrote original books, translated a lot of books to Esperanto and informed and propagandized about the international language. He was active in the \"Goodwill\" organization. Francini was born in São Paulo. Until the age of 33, he rejected Esperanto, because of advice from a teacher. However, in 1959, he learned Esperanto with Erlind Salzan in Portoferraio, where Francini was working as a gymnastics teacher. Later he lived and propagandized Esperanto in São Paulo, where he died aged 69.", "target": "Brazilian Esperantist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1915726", "label": "Summit Township", "source": "Summit Township is a township in Steele County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 515 at the 2000 census. Summit Township was organized in 1858, and named for a relatively high point of elevation atop a drainage divide.", "target": "township in Steele County, Minnesota", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Minnesota"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56809350", "label": "Amaia Aberasturi", "source": "Amaia Aberasturi Franco (born 28 April 1997) is a Spanish actress, best known for her roles in 2020 drama film Coven and television series 45 rpm.", "target": "actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q957378", "label": "Monte Bignone", "source": "Monte Bignone is a mountain in Liguria, northern Italy, part of the Ligurian Alps. It is located in the province of Imperia near Sanremo. It lies at an altitude of 1299 metres and lies within the San Romolo Natural Park.", "target": "mountain", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2978700", "label": "straight-three", "source": "A straight-three engine (also called an inline-triple or inline-three) is a three-cylinder piston engine where cylinders are arranged in a line along a common crankshaft. Less common than straight-four engines, straight-three engines have nonetheless been used in various motorcycles, cars and agricultural machinery.", "target": "inline piston engine with three cylinders", "baseline_candidates": ["inline engine", "engine configuration"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15711458", "label": "Fiona Hodgson, Baroness Hodgson of Abinger", "source": "Fiona Ferelith Hodgson, Baroness Hodgson of Abinger, (née Allom) is a Conservative politician and life peer.", "target": "British peer (born 1954)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5182108", "label": "Cranford House School", "source": "Cranford House School is a co-educational independent day school for boys and girls aged 3 to 18, in Moulsford, a village in South Oxfordshire near Wallingford, England. In September 2020, a Sixth Form was added and boys were admitted into Year 7 and Year 12 with a view to the school gradually becoming fully co-educational. Established in 1931 by a Moulsford resident, Miss Winifred E Laurence, the school now numbers around 500 pupils.", "target": "school in Moulsford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["independent school", "school", "charitable organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21002015", "label": "The Jungle Book", "source": "Disney's The Jungle Book is a series of platform video games based on the 1967 Disney animated film of the same name. The game was released by Virgin Interactive Entertainment in 1994 for the Game Boy, NES, Master System, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Sega Game Gear, Super NES, and PC, and a remake for the Game Boy Advance was released in 2003 to celebrate the film's sequel, The Jungle Book 2. While gameplay is the same on all versions, technological differences between the systems forced changes – in some case drastic – in level design, resulting in six fairly different versions of the 'same' game. This article is largely based upon the Genesis version.", "target": "1993 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q146351", "label": "Liberec", "source": "Liberec (Czech: [ˈlɪbɛrɛts] (listen); German: Reichenberg [ˈʁaɪçn̩bɛʁk]) is a city in the Czech Republic. It has about 103,000 inhabitants and it is the fifth-largest city in the country. It lies on the Lusatian Neisse and is surrounded by the Jizera Mountains and Ještěd–Kozákov Ridge. The city centre is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument zone. Liberec was once home to a thriving textile industry and hence nicknamed the \"Manchester of Bohemia\". For many Czechs, Liberec is mostly associated with the city's dominant Ještěd Tower. Since the end of the 19th century, the city has been a conurbation with the suburb of Vratislavice nad Nisou and the neighbouring city of Jablonec nad Nisou. Therefore, the total area with suburbs encompasses 150,000 inhabitants.", "target": "city in the Czech Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality with authorized municipal office", "district town", "municipality with town privileges in the Czech Republic", "municipality of the Czech Republic", "statutory city", "Czech municipality with expanded powers", "big city", "capital of region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q402915", "label": "Rosenhan experiment", "source": "The Rosenhan experiment or Thud experiment was an experiment conducted to determine the validity of psychiatric diagnosis. The participants feigned hallucinations to enter psychiatric hospitals but acted normally afterwards. They were diagnosed with psychiatric disorders and were given antipsychotic medication. The study was conducted by psychologist David Rosenhan, a Stanford University professor, and published by the journal Science in 1973 under the title \"On Being Sane in Insane Places\". It is considered an important and influential criticism of psychiatric diagnosis, and broached the topic of wrongful involuntary commitment. Rosenhan along with 8 other people (5 men and 3 women) went into these 12 hospitals across 5 states along the West coast of the US. The pseudo-patients who were only admitted for a short period of time went to a different hospital, hence they went to 12 hospitals but there were only 9 participants altogether. Rosenhan's study was done in two parts. The first part involved the use of healthy associates or \"pseudopatients\" (three women and five men, including Rosenhan himself) who briefly feigned auditory hallucinations in an attempt to gain admission to 12 psychiatric hospitals in five states in the United States. All were admitted and diagnosed with psychiatric disorders. After admission, the pseudopatients acted normally and told staff that they no longer experienced any additional hallucinations. As a condition of their release, all the patients were forced to admit to having a mental illness and had to agree to take antipsychotic medication. The average time that the patients spent in the hospital was 19 days.", "target": "psychological experiment", "baseline_candidates": ["psychological experiment"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4844455", "label": "Emanuele Padella", "source": "Emanuele Padella (born 24 September 1988) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Vicenza.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7435839", "label": "Scott", "source": "Scott is a town in Crawford County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 503 at the 2000 census. The unincorporated communities of Harmony Hill, Mount Zion, and Plugtown are located in the town.", "target": "town in Crawford County, Wisconsin, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3274292", "label": "Hillsboro Municipal Airport", "source": "Hillsboro Municipal Airport (FAA LID: 3H4) is three miles south of Hillsboro, in Traill County, North Dakota,. It is owned by the Hillsboro Municipal Airport Authority. The FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 categorized it as a general aviation facility.", "target": "airport in North Dakota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14950889", "label": "Guepiniopsis alpina", "source": "Guepiniopsis alpina, commonly known as the jelly cup, alpine jelly cone, or poor man's gumdrop, is a species of fungus in the family Dacrymycetaceae. The small, gelatinous Fruit bodies are orange and cone or cup shaped. Found in western North America and Iran, the fungus grows on decaying conifer wood.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31474680", "label": "Duplyatsky", "source": "Duplyatsky (Russian: Дуплятский) is a rural locality (a khutor) and the administrative center of Duplaytskoye Rural Settlement, Novonikolayevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 922 as of 2010. There are 14 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Novonikolayevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3718560", "label": "1973 St. Petersburg Masters Invitation", "source": "The 1973 St. Petersburg Masters Invitation was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor green clay courts at the St. Petersburg Tennis Center in St. Petersburg, Florida in the United States. The event was part of the USLTA circuit which in turn was part of the Grand Prix circuit. It was the third edition of the tournament and was held from April 16 through April 22, 1973. First-seeded Chris Evert won the singles title and earned $5,000 first-prize money.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Eckerd Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3416266", "label": "Warner Springs", "source": "Warner Springs is set of springs and a small unincorporated community in northern San Diego County, California. Warner Springs is on the Pacific Crest Trail.", "target": "unincorporated community in California", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59386", "label": "Culcairn railway station", "source": "Culcairn railway station is a heritage-listed railway station located on the Main South line in New South Wales, Australia. It serves the town of Culcairn. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.", "target": "railway station", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7898219", "label": "Update", "source": "Update is the second studio album by Chinese singer Jane Zhang, released on August 2, 2007 by Huayi Brothers.", "target": "album by Jane Zhang", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1287801", "label": "Shahr-e Babak County", "source": "Shahr-e Babak County (Persian: شهرستان شهربابک; also romanized as Shahr-e Bābak, Šahr-e Bābak; translation from Persian; City of Bābak ) is a county in Kerman Province in Iran. The capital of the county is Shahr-e Babak. At the 2006 census, the county's population was 100,192 in 22,973 families. The county is subdivided into two districts (bakhsh): the Central District and Dehaj District. The county has five cities: Shahr-e Babak, Khorsand, Khatunabad, Dehaj, and Jowzam.", "target": "county in Kerman, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14689371", "label": "Adetus obliquus", "source": "Adetus obliquus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Bates in 1885.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4949186", "label": "Rosita Sokou", "source": "Rosita Sokou (Greek: Ζωή Μαρία (Ροζίτα) Σώκου, Zoi Maria (Rozita) Sokou; 9 September 1923 – 14 December 2021) was a Greek journalist, author, playwright and translator. Sokou was one of the first women journalists in Greece and started her career as a film critic in 1946. She moved to Rome, Italy after marrying an Italian journalist and author, Manlio Maradei. Having difficulty adjusting to life and career in Italy, she moved back to Greece with her daughter to resume her work. From 1977–1983 she became a celebrity as part of a panel in the TV Show Na I Efkeria. In 1992–1993 she went on to host her own TV show at New Channel called Visitors at Night. She translated work for many authors. She was also very involved with theatre and wrote plays, adaptations and more. She also wrote books, and won awards from the French government and from Greece for her Greek journalism.", "target": "Greek journalist, author, playwright, translator ( 1923-2021)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18351578", "label": "Mahad Mohamed Salad", "source": "Mahad Mohamed Salad Alshabaab Member(Somali: #Mahad #Maxamed #Salaad,#Alshabab #Member Arabic: مهاد محمد صلاد) is a Somali politician. He is the general director of NISA (Intelligence agency). Mahad is also a member of the Union for Peace and Development Party and one of the key people of the Peace and Development Party, he served as the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Somalia in 2014. In February of the year, Salad was appointed state Minister of presidential affairs by Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke.", "target": "Somali politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15503012", "label": "Kay Tremblay", "source": "Kay Tremblay (13 March 1914 – 9 August 2005) was a Canadian film actress, also appearing on television and theatre. She was best known for her Gemini Award-winning role of Great Aunt Eliza on Road to Avonlea.", "target": "actress (1914-2005)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18637884", "label": "Lucas Ponce", "source": "Lucas Ponce (born 3 September 1990) is an Argentine rugby union footballer who plays as a loose forward for Club Universitario de Buenos Aires and the Argentina national rugby union team.", "target": "Argentine rugby union footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q338663", "label": "Neil Petruic", "source": "Neil Petruic (born July 30, 1982) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player. He was selected by the Ottawa Senators in the 8th round (235th overall) of the 2001 NHL Entry Draft. Prior to the 2010–11 season, on September 24, 2010, Petruic signed a contract with the Hamilton Bulldogs and was invited to NHL affiliate, the Montreal Canadiens training camp, before returning to the Bulldogs.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4707271", "label": "Alan McCrabbe", "source": "Alan McCrabbe (born 29 April 1986 in Dublin) is an Irish sportsperson. He plays hurling with his local club Craobh Chiaráin and has been a member of the Dublin senior inter-county team since 2006.", "target": "Irish hurler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q904337", "label": "diisodecyl phthalate", "source": "Diisodecyl phthalate (DIDP) is a commonly used plasticizer used in the production of plastic and plastic coating to increase flexibility. It is a mixture of compounds derived from the esterification of phthalic acid and isomeric decyl alcohols. The coating on furnishings, cookware, pharmaceutical pills, food wrappers and many other products may have DIDP or other phthalates in them. There has been recent concern in the US and European Union for their toxicity and bioaccumulative quality. The European Union has set a maximum specific migration limit (SML) from food contact materials of 9 mg/kg food for the sum of diisodecyl phthalates and diisononyl phthalates.DIDP has been listed since 2007 under Proposition 65 as a substance known to the state of California to cause reproductive toxicity. The similar compound DINP is also listed. In 2013, ECHA's Risk Assessment Committee (RAC) concluded that Di-isodecyl phthalate (DIDP) does not warrant classification for reprotoxic effects under the EU's Classification, Labelling and Packaging (CLP) regulation.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7606150", "label": "Stefan Joos", "source": "Stefan Joos (born 3 April 1963) is a Belgian fencer. He competed at the 1984 and 1988 Summer Olympics. His brother, Peter Joos, also fenced for Belgium at the 1984 Games.", "target": "Belgian fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25577340", "label": "speed of light", "source": "The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted c, is a universal physical constant that is important in many areas of physics. Its exact value is defined as 299792458 metres per second (approximately 300000 km/s or 186000 mi/s). According to the special theory of relativity, c is the upper limit for the speed at which conventional matter, energy or any signal carrying information can travel through space. All forms of electromagnetic radiation — not just visible light — travel at the speed of light. For many practical purposes, light and other electromagnetic waves will appear to propagate instantaneously, but for long distances and very sensitive measurements, their finite speed has noticeable effects. Starlight viewed on Earth left the stars many years ago, allowing humans to study the history of the universe by viewing distant objects. When communicating with distant space probes, it can take minutes to hours for a message to travel between Earth and the spacecraft. In computing, 1/c is the ultimate minimum communication delay between computers, to computer memory, and within a CPU. The speed of light can be used with time of flight measurements to measure large distances to high precision. Ole Rømer first demonstrated in 1676 that light travels at a finite speed (non-instantaneously) by studying the apparent motion of Jupiter's moon Io. Progressively more accurate measurements of its speed came over the following centuries. In 1865, James Clerk Maxwell proposed that light was an electromagnetic wave, and therefore travelled at the speed c appearing in his theory of electromagnetism. In 1905,.", "target": "speed at which all massless particles and associated fields travel in vacuum", "baseline_candidates": ["fundamental limit", "physical constant", "measured quantity value", "UCUM constant", "unit of speed", "unit of measurement", "constant"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19676921", "label": "Kolontayevka, Kursk Oblast", "source": "Kolontayevka (Russian: Колонтаевка) is a rural locality (a settlement) in Gustomoysky Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Lgovsky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population: 358 (2010 Census); 573 (2002 Census);.", "target": "human settlement in Lgovsky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["posyolok"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6213622", "label": "Joel Judd", "source": "Joel Stanton Judd (born September 10, 1951) is an American lawyer and former politician from Denver, Colorado. Elected to the Colorado House of Representatives as a Democrat in 2002, Judd represented House District 5, which encompasses downtown Denver, until 2010.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q845136", "label": "Lawrence of Ilok", "source": "Lawrence of Ilok (Croatian: Lovro Iločki, Hungarian: Újlaki Lőrinc; c. August 1459 – c. June 1524) was a Croatian-Hungarian nobleman, a member of the Iločki noble family, very wealthy and powerful in the Kingdom of Hungary-Croatia. He held the title \"Voivode (Duke) of Ilok\" and Voivode of Bosnia, and was during his life Ban of Macsó (1477–1492), Ban of Belgrade (1511–1513), member of the Royal Chamber Council (around 1516) and judge royal (1517–1524).", "target": "Croatian and Hungarian noble, Prince of Bosnia", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12191340", "label": "The Cursed Palace", "source": "The Cursed Palace also known as The Accursed Castle (Egyptian Arabic: القصر الملعون translit: Al Qasr Al Mal’oun) is 1962 Egyptian horror film starring Salah Zulfikar, and Mariam Fakhr Eddine and directed by Hassan Reda.", "target": "1962 Egyptian film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2651788", "label": "Gasteracantha interrupta", "source": "Gasteracantha interrupta is a species of spiny orb-weaver spider in the genus Gasteracantha. It is black and white in color, and it occurs in the Lesser Sundas and Sulawesi in Indonesia.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8317759", "label": "Lemma", "source": "Lemma is an album composed by John Zorn and featuring violinists David Fulmer, Chris Otto and Pauline Kim which as recorded in New York City in 2012 and released on the Tzadik label in February 2013.", "target": "album by John Zorn", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65303969", "label": "Port Hedland", "source": "Port Hedland (Kariyarra: Marapikurrinya) is the second largest town in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, with an urban population of 14,320 at June 2018 including the satellite town of South Hedland, 18 kilometres (11 mi) away. It is also the site of the highest tonnage port in Australia.Port Hedland has a natural deep anchorage harbour which, as well as being the main fuel and container receival point for the region, was seen as perfect for shipment of the iron ore being mined in the ranges located inland from the town. The ore is moved by railway from four major iron ore deposits to the east and south of the Port Hedland area. The port exported 519,408,000 tonnes (1.1 trillion pounds) of iron ore (2017–2018). Other major resource activities supported by the town include the offshore natural gas fields, salt, manganese, and livestock. Major deposits of lithium are being developed and exploited south of the town as well. Grazing of cattle and sheep was formerly a major revenue earner for the region, but this has slowly declined. Port Hedland was also formerly the terminus for the WAGR Marble Bar Railway, which serviced the gold mining area of Marble Bar from July 1911 until closure on 31 October 1951. The locomotive from the Port Hedland to Marble Bar rail service is now preserved at the Kalamunda Historical Village in the south of the state. Located between Port Hedland and South Hedland are the large salt hills of Dampier Salt, a subsidiary of Rio Tinto. These large mounds.", "target": "port city in Pilbara region of Western Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4105302", "label": "Vatsimanyoki", "source": "The Vatsimanyoki (Russian: Ватсиманйоки, Finnish: Vaatsimenjoki) is a river in the south of the Murmansk Oblast, Russia. It is 50 kilometres (31 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 547 square kilometres (211 sq mi). The Vatsimanyoki flows into the Tuntsayoki.", "target": "river in Murmansk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7363123", "label": "Romeo Wouden", "source": "Romeo Ricardo Wouden (born 24 December 1970) is a Dutch former professional footballer who played as a left winger.", "target": "Dutch footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4600397", "label": "2002 Philadelphia Eagles season", "source": "The 2002 Philadelphia Eagles season was their 70th in the National Football League. The team improved upon their previous output of eleven wins, going 12–4 and making the playoffs for the third consecutive year.This was the first of three consecutive NFC top seeds for the Eagles. The Eagles' record gave the team a tie for the best record in the NFL, despite losing franchise quarterback Donovan McNabb and backup quarterback Koy Detmer during the regular season, and due to tiebreakers, gave them the top seed in the NFC, a first-round bye, and home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs. The Eagles suffered arguably their worst loss at home in franchise history in the NFC Championship Game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who went on to win Super Bowl XXXVII. The Eagles had easily defeated the Buccaneers in the playoffs in each of the previous two seasons, and many experts thought that this season's Conference Championship game would be no different. The game was the final football game played at Veterans Stadium, as the Eagles would move in to their new home field in the 2003 season.", "target": "70th season in franchise history; second consecutive NFC championship game appearance and loss", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24007548", "label": "Abdurahman Waleed", "source": "Abdurahman Waleed (Arabic:عبد الرحمن وليد) (born 25 March 1994) is a Qatari footballer who plays for Al-Shamal as a midfielder.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15247033", "label": "Margaret E. Poague House", "source": "Margaret E. Poague House is a historic home located near Lexington, Rockbridge County, Virginia. It was built about 1847, and is a two-story, three-bay Greek Revival style brick dwelling. It sits banked into a hillside and has a standing seam metal gable roof and interior end chimneys. The property also includes a contributing early-20th century gate pillar.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.", "target": "historic house in Virginia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4044771", "label": "Myrmoteras binghamii", "source": "Myrmoteras binghamii is a species of ant in the subfamily Formicinae. It is found in Myanmar, and Thailand.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q304980", "label": "Nebula Device", "source": "Radon Labs was a German video game developer based in Berlin. The company was founded in 2000 as a spin-off of the company Terratools. Radon Labs has its headquarters in Berlin and a second development studio in Halle-Leipzig. The company filed for bankruptcy in May 2010 and was bought by the browsergames publisher Bigpoint GmbH.", "target": "video game developer", "baseline_candidates": ["video game developer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5103514", "label": "Chochołów", "source": "Chochołów pronounced [xɔˈxɔwuf] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czarny Dunajec, within Nowy Targ County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland, close to the border with Slovakia.Chochołów lies approximately 9 kilometres (6 mi) south of Czarny Dunajec, 19 km (12 mi) south-west of Nowy Targ, and 78 km (48 mi) south of the regional capital Kraków. The village has an approximate population of 1,135.", "target": "village in Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5103130", "label": "Mizdej-e Sofla Rural District", "source": "Mizdej-e Sofla Rural District (Persian: دهستان ميزدج سفلي) is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Farsan County, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23,944, in 5,358 families. The rural district has 7 villages.", "target": "rural district in Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5235422", "label": "Eugenia orites", "source": "Eugenia orites is a species of plant in the family Myrtaceae, the myrtles. It is a tree endemic to Peninsular Malaysia. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9366511", "label": "1990 Umaglesi Liga", "source": "The 1990 Umaglesi Liga was the first and inaugural season of top-tier football in Georgia. It began on 30 March and ended on 12 November 1990. Georgia was still a part of Soviet Union, but the Georgian clubs were withdrawn from the Soviet league system and formed the Georgian league system. Iberia Tbilisi won the championship.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3017050", "label": "Washington Township", "source": "Washington Township is a township in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the township's population was 687 reflecting an increase of 66 (+10.6%) from the 621 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn declined by 184 (-22.9%) from the 805 counted in the 1990 Census.Washington was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on November 19, 1802, from portions of Evesham Township, Little Egg Harbor Township and Northampton Township (now known as Mount Holly Township, New Jersey). Portions of the township were taken to form Shamong Township (February 19, 1852), Bass River Township (March 30, 1864), Woodland Township (March 7, 1866) and Randolph Township (March 17, 1870, reannexed to Washington Township on March 28, 1893). The township was named for George Washington, one of more than ten communities statewide named for the first president. It is one of five municipalities in the state of New Jersey with the name \"Washington Township\". Another municipality, Washington Borough, is completely surrounded by Washington Township, Warren County.", "target": "township in Burlington County, New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["township of New Jersey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96074654", "label": "Eadhild", "source": "Eadhild (died 937) was an English princess, the second wife of Hugh, duke of the Franks. She was a daughter of Edward the Elder, king of the Anglo-Saxons and his second wife Ælfflæd.In 926 Edward's son, king Æthelstan, received an embassy from his cousin, Adelolf, Count of Boulogne, on behalf of Hugh, and Æthelstan agreed to give his half-sister, Eadhild, in marriage in return for an enormous quantity of gifts and relics. According to William of Malmesbury, these included spices, jewels, many swift horses, an elaborate onyx vase, a crown of solid gold, the sword of Constantine the Great, Charlemagne's lance and a piece of the Crown of Thorns. Eadhild's full sister, Eadgifu, was the wife of the deposed king of the West Franks, Charles the Simple. Hugh was a potential rival for the Frankish throne, and Eadgifu may have promoted the marriage in order to sever a dangerous link between Hugh and Count Herbert of Vermandois.Eadhild died childless in 937.", "target": "Anglo-Saxon noble", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1385739", "label": "Val-de-Meuse", "source": "Val-de-Meuse (French pronunciation: ​[val də møz]) is a commune in the Haute-Marne department in north-eastern France. Val-de-Meuse was created in 1972 by the merger of the former communes of Avrecourt, Épinant, Lécourt, Maulain, Montigny-le-Roi (main area of the new commune), Provenchères-sur-Meuse, Ravennefontaines, Récourt and Saulxures and in 1974 Lénizeul. In 2012 Avrecourt and Saulxures became independent communes again.", "target": "commune in Haute-Marne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5955325", "label": "Wanfang", "source": "Lin Wanfang (simplified Chinese: 万芳; traditional Chinese: 萬芳; pinyin: Wànfāng), professionally known as Wanfang, is a Taiwanese singer, actress and radio DJ. She is renowned for her sonorous, gentle soft voice and probably best known for being the original theme singer of the film C'est la vie, mon chéri (新不了情).", "target": "Taiwanese actress and singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1185322", "label": "Dementium II", "source": "Dementium II is a survival horror first-person shooter for the Nintendo DS. It is the sequel to 2007's Dementium: The Ward, also for the Nintendo DS. The game was developed by Renegade Kid and published by SouthPeak Games. It was released in 2010. A remastered version of the game was released for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X on December 17, 2013.", "target": "2010 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6924324", "label": "Mount Verhaegen", "source": "Mount Verhaegen (72°34′S 31°8′E) is an ice-free mountain (2,300 m) standing immediately west of Mount Perov in the Belgica Mountains. It was discovered by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition, 1957–1958, under G. de Gerlache and named by him for Baron Pierre Verhaegen, collaborator of the expedition. This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Geological Survey document: \"Mount Verhaegen\". (content from the Geographic Names Information System).", "target": "mountain in Queen Maud Land, Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69357947", "label": "Septian Bagaskara", "source": "Septian Satria Bagaskara (born 26 September 1997) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Liga 1 club RANS Nusantara.", "target": "Indonesian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7704136", "label": "Terry Bradbury", "source": "Terence Eugene Bradbury (born 15 November 1939) is an English former professional footballer who played as a wing half.", "target": "English footballer and manager (born 1939)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25623348", "label": "Shan State", "source": "Shan State (Burmese: ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်, pronounced [ʃáɰ̃ pjìnɛ̀]; Shan: မိူင်းတႆး) also known by the endonyms Shanland, Muang Tai, and Tailong, is a state of Myanmar. Shan State borders China (Yunnan) to the north, Laos (Louang Namtha and Bokeo Provinces) to the east, and Thailand (Chiang Rai, Chiang Mai and Mae Hong Son Provinces) to the south, and five administrative divisions of Burma (Myanmar) in the west. The largest of the 14 administrative divisions by land area, Shan State covers 155,800 km2, almost a quarter of the total area of Burma. The state gets its name from Burmese name for the Tai peoples: \"Shan people\". The Tai (Shan) constitute the majority among several ethnic groups that inhabit the area. Shanland is largely rural, with only three cities of significant size: Lashio, Kengtung, and the capital, Taunggyi. Taunggyi is 150.7 km northeast of the nation's capital Naypyitaw. The Shan state, with many ethnic groups, is home to several armed ethnic armies. While the military government has signed ceasefire agreements with most groups, vast areas of the state, especially those east of the Salween River, remain outside the central government's control, and in recent years have come under heavy ethnic-Han Chinese economic and political influence. Other areas are under the control of military groups such as the Shan State Army. According to data from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Shan State is the region that produces the most opium in Myanmar, accounting for 82% (331 metric tons) of the country's total output (405 metric tons) in.", "target": "state of Myanmar", "baseline_candidates": ["state of Myanmar"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6833601", "label": "Michael Power", "source": "Michael Power (born 9 May 1976) is an Australian former long-distance runner who competed in the 2000 Summer Olympics in the 5000m. Power attended Mentone Grammar high school from 1990 to 1994, then moved to The Peninsula School for his final year of high school. He competed in the 1995 World Junior Athletics Championships in Lisbon, Portugal (1500m) and finished 5th in the final in a new personal best time of 3:43.", "target": "Australian long-distance runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24806849", "label": "SAP Anywhere", "source": "SAP Anywhere is a front office software package from SAP SE (SAP) for small and medium sized enterprises (SMBs) with 10 – 500 employees. Early 2018 SAP decided to sunset the product and to focus in the SMB market on the established SAP Business One and SAP Business ByDesign ERP solutions.SAP Anywhere includes several front office applications that is intended to help retail and wholesale businesses market and sell their products and services through multiple sales channels including in-store, direct sales, and online. This system facilitates effective customer relationship management by allowing business owners to review and direct their marketing, inventory, and direct customer experiences using a single system on their mobile devices. According to research firm International Data Corporation (IDC), many small businesses struggle with out of date processes, and fail to optimise online business tools.E-Commerce is an increasing factor for maintaining relationships with customers. SAP Anywhere is intended to allow small businesses to take advantage of the digital revolution and increase their customer reach through e-commerce, both in business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) channels. President of global channels and general business at SAP, Rodolpho Cardenuto, said in 2016, \"The more than 79 million small and midsize companies worldwide are the lifeblood of the economy.\" SAP Anywhere is primarily used by SMBs, with about 20% of its clients falling outside of the SMB category.", "target": "software package from SAP SE", "baseline_candidates": ["software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7703175", "label": "Terrace End", "source": "Terrace End is a suburb of Palmerston North, New Zealand. Terrace End is located in the south east part of the city on a bend in the Manawatu River. It is bounded to the north by Main Street East, Roslyn and Kelvin Grove. On the east by Whakarongo, the south by the Manawatu River and Hokowhitu and the west by Ruahine Street, Papaioea and Hokowhitu. The suburb is predominantly residential. In 2018, Terrace End had a resident population of 6,177.The area includes Palmerston North Golf Club, Brightwater Centre, Memorial Park, Balmoral Park and Ruamahanga Wilderness Reserve.", "target": "human settlement in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7264820", "label": "Półsieraków", "source": "Półsieraków [puu̯ɕeˈrakuf] (Ukrainian: Підсераків, Pidserakiv) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Harasiuki, within Nisko County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) west of Harasiuki, 21 km (13 mi) east of Nisko, and 56 km (35 mi) north-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "target": "village in Subcarpathian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1375226", "label": "Elkton", "source": "Elkton (formerly Conrad's Store) is an incorporated town in Rockingham County, Virginia, United States. It is included in the Harrisonburg Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 2,762 at the 2010 census. Elkton was named for the Elk Run stream. It is located along the south fork of the Shenandoah River at the intersections of east-west U.S. Route 33 and north-south U.S. Route 340. The town celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2008.", "target": "town in Rockingham County, Virginia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4725206", "label": "Ali Shama", "source": "Musa Ali Shama (also known as Eon) is a New York City based educator and a painter of \"hip hop cubist\" art.Shama was born in the Bronx, of Palestinian and Brazilian descent. Shama has a Masters of Fine Arts degree from CUNY-Lehman College and studied art education at C.W. Post College / Long Island University. Shama had earned his second master's degree from Queens College, City University of New York in Educational Administration & Supervision. He taught art at his alma mater, Lehman High School in the Bronx for seven years. He previously worked as an Assistant Principal at John F. Kennedy H.S. in the Bronx, and in 2008 became Principal of Francis Lewis High School in Queens, NY. After his principalship, Musa served as a Director for Principal Evaluations and Deputy Superintendent of High Schools in the New York City Department of Education. Ali Shama served as the Superintendent of New Visions Charter High Schools for four years. He was recently named as the Executive Vice President of Programs for Virtual Enterprises International.", "target": "American artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15980825", "label": "Alliance Party of Kenya", "source": "The Alliance Party of Kenya (APK) was a political party in Kenya.", "target": "political party established in 2012", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5313931", "label": "Neusticurus racenisi", "source": "Neusticurus racenisi, known commonly as Roze's neusticurus or the common Venezuelan water teiid, is a species of lizard in the family Gymnophthalmidae. The species is endemic to northern South America.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8064997", "label": "Zakalia Koté", "source": "Zakalia Kote is a Burkinabé politician who served in the government of Burkina Faso as Minister of Justice from 2007 to 2011.Kote worked as a magistrate for years before being appointed as Secretary-General of the Government and the Council of Ministers on January 6, 2006. Later, on June 10, 2007, he was appointed as Minister of Justice.", "target": "Burkinabé politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q322963", "label": "Son Tae-jin", "source": "Son Tae-jin (Hangul: 손태진, Hanja: 孫泰珍; Korean pronunciation: [son.tʰɛ̝.dʑin]; born May 5, 1988 in Gyeongsan, Gyeongsangbuk-do, South Korea) is a South Korean Taekwondo practitioner. In May 2007, Son first competed in the World Taekwondo Championships in Beijing, China at the age of 19, but lost to Algimiro Mejias of Venezuela in the bantamweight (-62 kg) first round. In September 2007, he finished in 1st place in the -68 kg category at the World Qualification Tournament in Manchester, England by defeating 2005 world featherweight (-67 kg) champion Mark López of United States in the quarterfinals and 2007 world featherweight (-67 kg) champion Gessler Viera Abreu of Cuba in the final. In May 2008, Son eventually qualified for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, defeating 2006 Asian Game winner Kim Ju-Young and 2004 Olympic bronze medalist Song Myeong-Seob at the 2008 Korean Olympic Taekwondo Trials. On August 21, 2008, Son won the gold medal in the -68 kg category at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, defeating Mark López of the United States in the final.On July 22, 2009, Son was knocked out by Park Hyung-Jin in Round 2 of the featherweight (-68 kg) final match at the 2009 President's Cup in Ulsan, South Korea via a back spinning hook kick. He collapsed to the mat and was disoriented after the stand-up. Due to the defeat, Son didn't qualify as a member of the 2010 South Korean national taekwondo team. In 2010, Son won the gold medal in the World Combat Games by defeating Reza Naderian in the final.", "target": "Taekwondo practitioner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21502005", "label": "Simkins", "source": "Simkins is a surname, and may refer to: David Simkins. American screenwriter and producer Eldred Simkins (1779–1831), American lawyer and politician from South Carolina; U.S. representative 1818–21 Francis Butler Simkins (1897–1966), American historian Geoff Simkins (b. 1948), British jazz musician and saxophonist George Simkins Jr. (1924 – 2001). American dentist and civil rights activist. Greg \"Craola\" Simkins (b 1975) American artist. Modjeska Monteith Simkins (1899–1992), American civil rights leader Ormond Simkins (1879 – 1921) American football and baseball player Paris Simkins (1849-1930.African-American storekeeper, lawyer, minister, barber, and politician William Stewart Simkins (1842–1929), American law professor; said to have fired the first shot of the American Civil War.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11951082", "label": "Tébessa Province", "source": "Tébessa (Arabic: ولاية تبسة) is a province (wilayah) of Algeria. Tébessa is also the name of the capital, which in ancient times it was known as Theveste. Another important city is El Ouenza. Tébessa is located only 20 kilometers west of the Tunisian border.", "target": "province of Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["province of Algeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3714768", "label": "Pusionella compacta", "source": "Pusionella compacta is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Clavatulidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20015985", "label": "Copenhagen Wolfpack", "source": "BMS Herlev, formerly known as Wolfpack, is a professional basketball team based in Ballerup, Denmark. The team was established in 2014, as a result of a merger between the local clubs Falcons, Glostrup IC and BMS Skovlunde. BMS Herlev plays in the Basketligaen, the highest level of national basketball.", "target": "Professional basketball team in Ballerup, Denmark", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3071141", "label": "José María del Castillo y Rada", "source": "José María del Castillo y Rada (December 20, 1776 in Cartagena de Indias – June 5, 1833 in Bogotá) was a neo-granadine politician, President of the United Provinces of the New Granada from October 5, 1814 until January 21, 1815. Castillo y Rada also served as Vice President of the Republic of Colombia from June 6, 1821 until October 3, 1821.", "target": "President of Colombia (1776-1833)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q572769", "label": "Wysocko, Masovian Voivodeship", "source": "Wysocko [vɨˈsɔt͡skɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szydłowiec, within Szydłowiec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north of Szydłowiec and 104 km (65 mi) south of Warsaw. The village has a population of 173.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7790269", "label": "Thomas H. Brown", "source": "Thomas Hoyt Brown (April 3, 1839 – June 19, 1908) was an American businessman and Republican politician. He was the 25th and 28th mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and was the first mayor of Milwaukee born in Milwaukee.", "target": "American mayor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97174100", "label": "Line Manga", "source": "Line Manga (LINEマンガ) is an online manga and webtoon platform and smartphone app operated by Line Corporation. It originally launched with just licensed manga titles but soon expanded to include original webtoons.", "target": "manga and webtoon platform", "baseline_candidates": ["website"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85011", "label": "Franz Winkelmeier", "source": "Franz Winkelmeier (27 April 1860 – 24 August 1887) was an Austrian man who, at 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m), is the fourth-tallest recorded man, and once was the tallest person in history. He was known as the Giant (German: Riese) of Friedburg-Lengau.", "target": "Tallest human (1860-1887)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15614748", "label": "Snow Dog", "source": "Snow Dog is a 1950 American Northern film directed by Frank McDonald and starring Kirby Grant, Elena Verdugo and Rick Vallin. It was the third of a series of ten films featuring Grant as a Canadian Mountie.", "target": "1950 film by Frank McDonald", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4115549", "label": "Middle Persian literature", "source": "Middle Persian literature is the corpus of written works composed in Middle Persian, that is, the Middle Iranian dialect of Persia proper, the region in the south-western corner of the Iranian plateau. Middle Persian was the prestige dialect during the era of Sassanid dynasty. The rulers of the Sassanid Empire (224–654 CE) were natives of that south-western region, and through their political and cultural influence, Middle Persian became a prestige dialect and thus also came to be used by non-Persian Iranians. Following the Arab conquest of the Sassanian Empire in the 7th century, shortly after which Middle Persian began to evolve into New Persian, Middle Persian continued to be used by the Zoroastrian priesthood for religious and secular compositions. These compositions, in the Aramaic-derived Book Pahlavi script, are traditionally known as \"Pahlavi literature\". The earliest texts in Zoroastrian Middle Persian were probably written down in late Sassanid times (6th–7th centuries), although they represent the codification of earlier oral tradition. However, most texts, including the Zend commentaries and translations of the Zoroastrian canon, date from the 9th to the 11th century, when Middle Persian had long ceased to be a spoken language, so they reflect the state of affairs in living Middle Persian only indirectly. The surviving manuscripts are usually 14th-century copies.Other, less abundantly attested varieties of Middle Persian literature include the 'Manichaean Middle Persian' corpus, used for a sizable amount of Manichaean religious writings, including many theological texts, homilies and hymns (3rd–9th, possibly 13th century). Even less-well attested are the Middle Persian compositions of Nestorian Christians,.", "target": "written works composed in Middle Persian", "baseline_candidates": ["book series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18619414", "label": "John McLachan", "source": "John McLachlan (6 June 1843 – 13 May 1893) was a Scottish architect, based in Edinburgh operating in the late 19th century. He was a brother-in-law to Robert Morham. He has been described as a \"minor master\".", "target": "British architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2994870", "label": "Jean Michel Constant Leber", "source": "Jean Michel Constant Leber (8 May 1780 – 22 December 1859) was a French historian and bibliophile.", "target": "French historian (1780-1859)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23924332", "label": "textile conservator", "source": "A textile conservator is a conservator-restorer charged with the care, treatment, research, and preservation of textiles. Issues addressed by a textile conservator are generally related to the field of textile preservation, and include damage caused to textiles by: light, mold and mildew, insects, cleaning, surface cleaning, washing, mounting for display, and storage. Variations in textile types and “the diversity of the textile conservator’s work makes it a very rewarding profession”. Textiles are among the most fragile artifacts, as they are susceptible to damage from atmospheric pollutants, moisture, biological organisms, and environmental changes and care varies with size, shape, material, and condition issues, all of which a textile conservator must be well versed. A textile conservator may be employed by a museum, other institution, or be an independent contractor. Most textile conservators have or will be in private practice at one time in their career. In the current professional climate, “funding cuts have led to a reduction in the number of permanent jobs available in textile conservation and a contract culture exists in many museums”. A positive result “of the economic constraints on modern textile conservation is that conservators have developed a more reflective practice and think in a creative and flexible way of how to balance the key issues of access and preservation in their work.", "target": "conservator-restorer charged with the care, treatment, research, and preservation of textiles", "baseline_candidates": ["profession", "conservator"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96402054", "label": "Alness River", "source": "The River Averon is a river in Easter Ross, north-east Scotland that flows into the Cromarty Firth from the north. It is also known as the River Alness. The river flows for about 15 km eastward and then southward, starting as the main outflow from Loch Morie and passing through the town of Alness around 1.5 km before reaching the sea. Its main tributary is the River Blackwater, one of many rivers of that name, also known as the River Rusdale. The Abhainn na Glass is the main inflow to Loch Morie and may be regarded as part of the River Alness system.", "target": "river in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4431215", "label": "Back to Back", "source": "Back to Back, also known as American Yakuza 2, and Back to Back: American Yakuza 2, is a 1996 American action film. It is directed by Roger Nygard and written by Nygard and Scott Nimerfro (who is credited under the name, Lloyd Keith). The film was produced by W.K. Border, Thomas Calabrese, Takashige Ichise, Aki Komine, Michael Leahy, and Joel Soisson. It stars Michael Rooker, Ryo Ishibashi, and Danielle Harris. It is a sequel to the 1993 film, American Yakuza.", "target": "1996 film by Roger Nygard", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1661208", "label": "Jay Gruska", "source": "Jay Gruska (; born April 23, 1952) is an American songwriter and composer best known for his film and television scoring, and for writing hit songs for a variety of artists. He has composed musical scores for dozens of TV dramas, with over 500 hours of shows played internationally. Gruska has received three Emmy Award nominations, one Genie Award nomination, and nine ASCAP awards. Some of his best-known scores are for the TV shows Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, Charmed, and Supernatural.", "target": "American songwriter and composer (born 1952)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3808193", "label": "Jesús Gil", "source": "Jesús Gil (born 5 September 1951) is a Cuban fencer. He competed in the individual and team foil events at the 1968 and 1972 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Cuban fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q91015222", "label": "Too Hot to Handle", "source": "Too Hot to Handle is an American-British reality television dating game show produced by Fremantle production companies Talkback and Thames. Created by Laura Gibson and Charlie Bennett, the show's eight-episode first season was released on Netflix on April 17, 2020. Hosted by a virtual assistant named \"Lana\", the show revolves around 10 adults – all of whom primarily engage in meaningless flings and are unable to form long-lasting relationships – who are placed together in a house for four weeks and must go through various workshops, all while being forbidden from any kissing, sexual contact or self-gratification, with the monetary prize getting reduced any time a rule is broken. In January 2021, the series was renewed for two more seasons, both of which were filmed back-to-back amid the COVID-19 pandemic on the Turks and Caicos Islands. The first half of the second season released June 23, 2021, followed by the second half the next week on June 30, 2021. The third season was released on January 19, 2022. In February 2022, the show was renewed for a fourth season.", "target": "2020 Netflix's American-British reality dating game show", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q569123", "label": "Cramberg", "source": "Cramberg is a municipality in the Nassau Nature Park in the district of Rhein-Lahn, in Rhineland-Palatinate, in western Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Diez.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5044702", "label": "Carole Lynne", "source": "Helen Violet Carolyn Delfont, Baroness Delfont (née Heyman; 16 September 1918 – 17 January 2008), known professionally as Carole Lynne, was a British theatre actress, best known for her work in the 1940s and 1950s. She was the widow of the impresario Lord Bernard Delfont, a prominent figure in the British entertainment industry.", "target": "British actress (1918-2008)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6940140", "label": "Musashi-Nitta Station", "source": "Musashi-Nitta Station (武蔵新田駅, Musashi-Nitta-eki) is a railway station on the Tokyu Tamagawa Line in Ōta, Tokyo, Japan, operated by Tokyu Corporation.", "target": "railway station in Ota, Tokyo, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2000014", "label": "John Wilbanks", "source": "John Wilbanks is the Senior Medical Director at Biogen, and formerly the Chief Commons Officer at Sage Bionetworks. Previously he was a Senior Fellow at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and at FasterCures. He is known for his work on open science and research networks.", "target": "American entrepreneur; runs the Consent to Research Project", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65231045", "label": "May 2021", "source": "May 2021 was the fifth month of that common year. The month, which began on a Saturday, ended on a Monday after 31 days.", "target": "month of 2021", "baseline_candidates": ["calendar month of a given year", "May", "month starting on Saturday"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3160794", "label": "Never was so much owed by so many to so few", "source": "\"Never was so much owed by so many to so few\" was a wartime speech delivered to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom by British prime minister Winston Churchill on 20 August 1940. The name stems from the specific line in the speech, \"Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few\", referring to the ongoing efforts of the Royal Air Force and other Allied aircrew who were fighting in the Battle of Britain, the pivotal air battle with the German Luftwaffe.The speech came amidst German plans for an invasion. At the end of June 1940, the Luftwaffe had a large numerical superiority over the Royal Air Force, with around 2,550 planes compared to the only 750 planes of the RAF. Pilots who fought in the Battle of Britain have been known as \"the Few\" ever since, at times being specifically commemorated for Battle of Britain Day, on 15 September. The speech has become one of Churchill's most famous, along with \"we shall fight on the beaches\", \"their finest hour\", and \"blood, toil, tears, and sweat\".", "target": "speech by the British prime minister Winston Churchill on 20 August 1940", "baseline_candidates": ["speech", "political catchphrase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4835887", "label": "BL 13.5 inch naval gun Mk I – IV", "source": "The BL 13.5 inch naval gun Mk I (\"67-ton gun\") was Britain's first successful large breechloading naval gun, initially designed in the early 1880s and eventually deployed in the late 1880s. Mks I - IV were all of 30 calibres length and of similar construction and performance.", "target": "type of Naval gun", "baseline_candidates": ["naval artillery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3418952", "label": "Talkududechour", "source": "Talku Dudechaur is a village and former Village Development Committee that is now part of Dakshinkali Municipality in Kathmandu District in Province No. 3 of central Nepal. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 2858 and had 648 households in it.", "target": "human settlement in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4001555", "label": "2002 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships – singles", "source": "Andy Roddick was the defending champion and won in the final 7–6(11–9), 6–3 against Pete Sampras.", "target": "2002 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85785315", "label": "Microzercon", "source": "Microzercon is a genus of mites in the family Zerconidae.", "target": "genus of mites", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31900792", "label": "Mamolj", "source": "Mamolj (pronounced [ˈmaːmɔl]; German: Mamol) is a settlement in the hills east of Litija in central Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region. It includes the hamlets of Spodnji Mamolj, Zgornji Mamolj, Čebelnik, Češek, Podmilj, Resnarica, and Trinkavs.", "target": "place in Lower Carniola, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q472609", "label": "Thomas Dufter", "source": "Thomas Dufter (born 20 December 1966 in Inzell) is a former German nordic combined skier who competed during the late 1980s and early 1990s. He won a bronze medal in the 3 x 10 km team event at the 1993 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Falun. Dufter's lone individual victory was in a World Cup event at Planica, Yugoslavia in 1990.", "target": "German Nordic combined skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2044872", "label": "Buffalo darter", "source": "The buffalo darter (Etheostoma bison) is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish, a darter from the subfamily Etheostomatinae, part of the family Percidae, which also contains the perches, ruffes and pikeperches. It is found in the tributaries of the lower Duck and lower Tennessee Rivers. It is distinguished from other darter species by the presence of eight anal rays, as well breeding males having a unique hump behind the head reminiscent of a buffalo.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8083743", "label": "Əbil", "source": "Əbil (formerly Ukrainskiye Otruba, 26 Bakı Komissarı) is a village and municipality in the Saatly Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 887. Ukrainskiye Otruba was founded in the nineteenth century by Russian-speaking immigrants from what is now Ukraine. By the 1950s, most Russian speakers had left the village and it was resettled by ethnic Azeris from neighbouring villages. As of 2016, only one Russian-speaker, a 90-year-old man, still lived in Əbil.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19588521", "label": "Mathieu Michel", "source": "Mathieu Michel (born 4 September 1991) is a French professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Chamois Niortais.", "target": "French Footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6354009", "label": "Kalman J. Cohen", "source": "Kalman J. Cohen (3 February 1931 – 12 September 2010) was an American economist and among the pioneers of studying market microstructure. Cohen was the Distinguished Bank Research Professor at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business. He served at Duke since 1974. Prior to joining the Duke faculty, he was a tenured professor at Carnegie Mellon University and New York University. He also taught as a visiting professor in Sweden, Denmark, China, and Singapore. Cohen received his B.A. degree in mathematics at Reed College in 1951. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to study mathematical logic at Oxford University where he earned a M.Litt. degree. He completed M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in economics at Carnegie Institute of Technology. He was awarded the Alexander Henderson Award and received numerous scholarships, fellowships, and research grants from many sources including the National Science Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the FDIC. Cohen published eight books and over eighty articles in the fields of management science in banking, security market microstructure, corporate finance, computer simulation, management games, and microeconomics.", "target": "American economist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1099962", "label": "Germenay", "source": "Germenay (French pronunciation: ​[ʒɛʁmənɛ]) is a commune in the Nièvre department in central France.", "target": "commune in Nièvre, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65311158", "label": "Adam Johann von Krusenstern", "source": "Adam Johann von Krusenstern (also Krusenstjerna in Swedish; Russian: Ива́н Фёдорович Крузенште́рн, tr. Iván Fyodorovich Kruzenshtérn; 10 October 1770 – 12 August 1846) was a Russian admiral and explorer, who led the first Russian circumnavigation of the globe.", "target": "Baltic German admiral and explorer in Russian service, who led the first Russian circumnavigation of the globe", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15240833", "label": "Gurab Zarmikh Rural District", "source": "Gurab Zarmikh Rural District (Persian: دهستان گوراب زرميخ) is a rural district (dehestan) in Mirza Kuchek Janghli District, Sowme'eh Sara County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 15,672, in 3,919 families. The rural district has 14 villages.", "target": "rural district in Gilan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6210845", "label": "Joe Lane", "source": "James Charles \"Joe\" Lane (11 July 1892 – February 1959) was an English professional footballer who played as a forward. After spells with Hungarian club Ferencvárosi TC and English side Sunderland, Lane signed for another English club, Blackpool, in 1913 for £400. He made his debut for the club on 22 November 1913, in a 2–2 draw at home to Leeds City, scoring one of Blackpool's goals. He went on to make a further 25 appearances during the 1913–14 campaign, scoring ten more goals. The following season, 1914–15, he was an ever-present in Blackpool's 38 league games and one FA Cup tie. He scored 28 goals, including two hat-tricks: one in the second league game of the season, a 3–1 victory at Hull City on 5 September 1914, and all of the goals in Blackpool's victory against Glossop at Bloomfield Road on 21 November. Despite Lane's goal haul, Blackpool still only managed a tenth-placed finish after losing almost as many games as they won. In 1915–16, World War I intervened, leading to the implementation of regional competitions. Lane served in Egypt with the Hertfordshire Yeomanry during the conflict. When the Football League resumed in 1919–20, with Blackpool's new manager, Bill Norman, in his second season in charge, Lane continued where he had left off, netting 26 goals in 30 league appearances. He scored one hat-trick, in a 6–0 whitewash of Lincoln City at Bloomfield Road on 8 September 1919. He left Blackpool with two months of the season remaining, joining Birmingham for a Blackpool club-record fee.", "target": "English footballer (1892-1959)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41278648", "label": "11/9", "source": "\"11/9\" is the fourth episode of the seventh season of the anthology television series American Horror Story. It aired on September 26, 2017, on the cable network FX. The episode was written by John J. Gray, and directed by Gwyneth Horder-Payton. Adina Porter was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie for this episode.", "target": "episode of American Horror Story (S7 E4)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25134564", "label": "Kefalari (Kastoria)", "source": "Kefalari (Greek: Κεφαλάρι, before 1926: Σέτομα - Setoma) is a village in Kastoria Regional Unit, Macedonia, Greece. The Greek census (1920) recorded 408 people in the village and in 1923 there were 164 inhabitants (or 30 families) who were Muslim. Following the Greek-Turkish population exchange, in 1926 within Setoma there were 16 refugee families from Asia Minor and 9 refugee families from Pontus. The Greek census (1928) recorded 371 village inhabitants. There were 25 refugee families (104 people) in 1928.", "target": "village in Greece, Western Macedonia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27902073", "label": "Gye of Samhan", "source": "King Gye (Korean: 기정; Hanja: 箕貞) was the 9th king of Mahan confederacy. He reigned from 33 BCE to 17 BCE. His true name was Gye (Korean: 정; Hanja: 貞).", "target": "king of Mahan confederacy 33 BC–17 BC", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14817499", "label": "Paradystus", "source": "Paradystus is a genus of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae, containing the following species: Paradystus ceylonicus Breuning, 1954 Paradystus infrarufus Breuning, 1954 Paradystus innotatus Breuning, 1954 Paradystus notator (Pascoe, 1867).", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q100215", "label": "Justus Scharowsky", "source": "Justus Scharowsky (born 13 August 1980) is a field hockey player from Germany, who plays for French club Racing Club de France. The midfielder made his international senior debut for the German team on 10 July 1999 in a friendly against South Korea in Leipzig. As of 12 November 2005, Scharowsky earned 93 caps for his native country, in which he scored fifteen goals.", "target": "German field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5114587", "label": "Chryseofusus graciliformis", "source": "Chryseofusus graciliformis is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Fasciolariidae, the spindle snails, the tulip snails and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56678246", "label": "Mohsin Akhtar Kayani", "source": "Mohsin Akhtar Kayani (born 11 February 1970) is a Pakistani jurist who has been Justice of the Islamabad High Court since 22 December 2015.", "target": "Pakistani jurist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7064845", "label": "Novi Handriawan", "source": "Thomas Novi Handriawan (born November 4, 1986) is an Indonesian footballer who currently plays for PSMS Medan in the Indonesia Super League.", "target": "Indonesian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35696972", "label": "Klecin", "source": "Klecin [ˈklɛt͡ɕin] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Marcinowice, within Świdnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 12 kilometres (7 mi) north-east of Świdnica, and 42 kilometres (26 mi) south-west of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has a population of 170.", "target": "village in Lower Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20539307", "label": "feature.fm", "source": "Feature.fm is a marketing and advertising platform for music industry professionals like labels, artists, and other music marketers. They offer a self-serve, music focused ad platform and a marketing suite to help artists marketing to fans in a smarter way. The Marketing Suite includes tools like Pre-Saves, Gated Unlocks & Contests, Music Smart Link Landing Pages, Audience Email Collection, Music Analytics, and other landing pages that fans engage with or are directed to the artist's content. The ad platform includes a native song advertising network through which artists can promote their songs inside music streaming services and on music websites. Artists' sponsored songs are played to people who are currently listening to streaming radio of the artist's style of music as an alternative to traditional audio ads. Feature.fm partners with streaming services to help them reduce audio ads and improve user experience by using native content as a source of advertising. Feature.fm is currently funded by Star Farm Ventures.", "target": "marketing and advertising platform", "baseline_candidates": ["website"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20638882", "label": "Buurtzorg Nederland", "source": "Buurtzorg Nederland is a Dutch home-care organization which has attracted international attention for its innovative use of independent nurse teams in delivering relatively low-cost care. The word buurtzorg is Dutch for “neighborhood care”.", "target": "Dutch home-care organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6384736", "label": "Keith McDonald", "source": "William Keith McDonald (born February 8, 1973 in Yokosuka, Japan) is a former Major League Baseball catcher and right-handed batter. He made his debut with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2000. On July 4, 2000 McDonald became the third player in St. Louis history to hit a home run in his first major league at-bat. On July 6, he homered in his second at-bat, becoming only the second player in MLB history to hit home runs in each of his first two big league at bats. Bob Nieman, in 1951, is the other. McDonald hit a third home run that year. McDonald has the most home runs of any MLB player not to have had any other hits.In his first season McDonald batted .429 (3-7), with three homers, five RBI and three runs in six games. He returned the following season as a September call-up, and was hitless in two at-bats.", "target": "Japanese baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23944725", "label": "Kostadin Zahov", "source": "Kostadin Zahov (Macedonian: Костадин Захов; born 8 November 1987) is a Macedonian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Shkëndija and the Macedonia national team.", "target": "Macedonian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4119063", "label": "Paraphasmophaga", "source": "Paraphasmophaga is a genus of flies in the family Tachinidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7356981", "label": "Rodney Lees", "source": "Rear Admiral Rodney Burnett Lees, CVO (born 31 December 1944) is a former senior Royal Navy officer who served as Defence Services Secretary from 1998 to 2001.", "target": "Royal Navy admiral", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20853097", "label": "Carl Plate", "source": "Carl Olaf Plate (19 December 1909 – 15 May 1977) was a prominent Australian modernist painter and collage artist.", "target": "Australian painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9673734", "label": "Caladenia lowanensis", "source": "Caladenia lowanensis, commonly known as Wimmera spider orchid is a plant in the orchid family Orchidaceae and is endemic to Victoria. It is a ground orchid with a single leaf and a single cream-coloured flower with red lines and blotches. The total population of this orchid was estimated in 2010 to be only about 700 plants but most are protected in reserves.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4704662", "label": "Al Qurayyat", "source": "Al Qurayyat (Arabic: القريات) is a town in the Madaba Governorate of western Jordan.", "target": "human settlement in Jordan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q209863", "label": "Highway 66", "source": "Highway 66 is a north-south highway in the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel. It extends along the eastern lowlands below the Menashe Heights and the Carmel. It is 17 kilometres (11 mi) long. In the past the road continued south to Jenin, but today it ends at checkpoint. The northern section of the highway was constructed in 1929 to allow access to Tel Megiddo archaeological site for the anticipated visit of John D. Rockefeller Jr. The southern section was constructed in the 1930s, and the highway opened to general traffic between Haifa and Jenin in 1936 as a bypass road avoiding Nazareth.", "target": "road in Israel", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2127666", "label": "Battle of Cabin Creek", "source": "Battle of Cabin Creek may refer to: First Battle of Cabin Creek, a July 1863 engagement in Indian Territory Second Battle of Cabin Creek, a September 1864 engagement on roughly the same ground Cabin Creek battlefield, an eastern Oklahoma park which encompasses much of the land upon which the two engagements occurred.", "target": "Civil War battles in Indian Territory", "baseline_candidates": ["conflict"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8042626", "label": "XXXVII Corps", "source": "The US XXXVII Corps (37th Corps) was a 'Phantom Unit' created in 1944 as part of Fortitude South II, a military deception by the Allied nations during the build-up to the 1944 Normandy landings.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["United States Army Corps"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3518541", "label": "Terracotta, Inc.", "source": "Terracotta, Inc. is a computer software company that specializes in increasing scalability, availability, and performance of real-time Big Data applications. The company's flagship product is Terracotta DB, an in-memory distributed data management platform which provides persistent storage, caching and compute capabilities. Terracotta is used in 190 countries by over two million developers and has more than 2.5 million deployments. The company is owned by Software AG.", "target": "computer software company", "baseline_candidates": ["software company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6420082", "label": "Kleena Kleene", "source": "Kleena Kleene is an unincorporated settlement and recreational community on the western end of the Chilcotin Plateau, west of Tatla Lake and northeast of One-Eye Lake. It lies in the upper reaches of the basin of the Klinaklini River, for which it is named, and which penetrates the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains to enter the sea at the head of the Knight Inlet. The community is recreational in nature and like nearby Nimpo Lake it is a base for sightseeing to Hunlen Falls, Klinaklini Falls and Chilko Lake, and for fly-outs to fishing on the area's many small plateau and alpine lakes.", "target": "human settlement in British Columbia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3634572", "label": "Barbalissos", "source": "Barbalissos (Ancient Greek: Βαρβαλισσός, Latin: Barbalissus) was a city in the Roman province of Euphratensis. Its site is marked by the ruins at Qala'at Balis (Arabic: قلعة بالس), which partly retains the old name, south of Maskanah (the ancient Emar), in modern Syria, on the road from Aleppo to the site of Sura, where the Euphrates turns suddenly to the east.", "target": "ancient city in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["ancient city", "archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1047078", "label": "Casekirchen", "source": "Casekirchen is a village and a former municipality in the Burgenlandkreis district, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2010 it has been part of the municipality Molauer Land.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48802994", "label": "Emesa helmet", "source": "The Emesa helmet (also known as the Homs helmet) is a Roman cavalry helmet from the early first century AD. It consists of an iron head piece and face mask, the latter of which is covered in a sheet of silver and presents the individualised portrait of a face, likely its owner. Decorations, some of which are gilded, adorn the head piece. Confiscated by Syrian police soon after looters discovered it amidst a complex of tombs in the modern-day city of Homs in 1936, eventually the helmet was restored thoroughly at the British Museum, and is now in the collection of the National Museum of Damascus. It has been exhibited internationally, although as of 2017, due to the Syrian civil war, the more valuable items owned by the National Museum are hidden in underground storage. Ornately designed yet highly functional, the helmet was probably intended for both parades and battle. Its delicate covering is too fragile to have been put to use during cavalry tournaments, but the thick iron core would have defended against blows and arrows. Narrow slits for the eyes, with three small holes underneath to allow downward sight, sacrificed vision for protection; roughly cut notches below each eye suggest a hastily made modification of necessity. The helmet was found in a tomb near a monument to a former ruler of Emesa and, considering the lavishness of the silver and gold design, likely belonged to a member of the elite. As it is modelled after those helmets used in Roman tournaments, even if unlikely.", "target": "archaeological artifact", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological artifact", "helmet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10565422", "label": "Coobool Creek", "source": "Coolbool Creek is an archaeological site near the Wakool River in New South Wales, Australia. It is about halfway between Swan Hill and Deniliquin. The site is near Doherty's Hut at Coobool Crossing, although the exact spot is unknown. G. M. Black found 126 skulls at the site in 1950. It has been difficult to give an exact age for the skulls, but one has been dated to 14,300 years ago. Some of the skulls also show artificial cranial deformation. The age, location, and deformities make the site similar to another Pleistocene site at Kow Swamp. Some scientists have said that this shows they were part of the same population, but others have disagreed. Because Coolbool Creek skulls were found on the surface it is difficult to date them, and other scientists have argued that they might be much older.The skulls were kept at the University of Melbourne until 1984. They were returned to the local Aboriginal communities and reburied.", "target": "Pleistocene archaeological site in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1898593", "label": "Marinus Jan Granpré Molière", "source": "Marinus Jan Granpré Molière (Oudenbosch, 13 October 1883 – Wassenaar, 13 February 1972) was a Dutch architect. His work was part of the architecture event in the art competition at the 1924 Summer Olympics.Granpré Molière was a professor at the Delft University of Technology and was seen as founder of the Traditionalist School. Molière initiated numerous urban projects, such as the Wieringermeer (from 1927) and the North East Polder (from 1937).", "target": "Dutch architect (1883-1972)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18107449", "label": "The Giver Quartet", "source": "The Giver Quartet is a series of four books about a dystopian world by Lois Lowry. The quartet consists of The Giver (1993), Gathering Blue (2000), Messenger (2004), and Son (2012). The first book won the 1994 Newbery Medal and has sold more than 10 million copies. The story takes place in the world of The Giver. Each book has a different protagonist, but is set in the same futuristic era.", "target": "Novel series by Lois Lowry", "baseline_candidates": ["book series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4923995", "label": "You Bo", "source": "You Bo is a Khmer writer and the president of the Khmer Writers' Association, whose office is located at Wat Botum, Oknha Suor Srun Street 7, Sangkat Chaktomuk, Khan Daun Penh, Phnom Penh 12207, Cambodia. You finished high school in 1962, then he became a teacher. To supplement the meager income he received from his teaching job, You wrote poems and stories for local newspapers, such as the Mietophoum newspaper. Later he became the editor-in-chief of that same newspaper when he left teaching in the mid-1960s to focus on his writing. You Bo had as his teachers some very notable Cambodians, among whom are Nou Hach, Keng Vansak and Samdech Preah Moha Chorn Nath.", "target": "writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q869252", "label": "Setolu", "source": "Setolu (Persian: ستلو, also Romanized as Setolū, Satloo, Satlū, and Sotolū; also known as Seh Tolū and Setowlū) is a village in Kushk-e Nar Rural District, Kushk-e Nar District, Parsian County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,376, in 271 families.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7504110", "label": "Shrines", "source": "Shrines is the debut studio album by Canadian electronic music duo Purity Ring. It was released on July 20, 2012, by 4AD. Purity Ring recorded the album separately at home over several months, sending their parts via email. Shrines has been described as an electropop, synth-pop, dream pop, and indie pop album, incorporating hip hop-inspired production and \"striking\" lyrics. It was produced by Purity Ring, with additional production by Jon Hopkins. The album, which was recorded following two acclaimed singles by vocalist Megan James and producer Corin Roddick, has been described as \"personal\" and deals with themes of self empowerment and love using graphic, \"gory\" imagery. To promote Shrines, Purity Ring released the promotional single \"Obedear\", followed by two singles, \"Belispeak\" and \"Fineshrine\", to critical acclaim. The album debuted at number 32 on the Billboard 200 and number two on the Dance/Electronic Albums chart. It had sold 90,000 copies in the United States as of February 2015. The album received positive reviews from most critics, many of whom praised its contrast between slick pop production and graphic lyrics. It appeared on several year-end critics' lists, and was nominated for the 2013 Polaris Music Prize. Pitchfork retrospectively described Shrines as \"a definitive time capsule for the sound of 2012 (and 2013)\".", "target": "album of Canadian electronica duo Purity Ring", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12259388", "label": "Ibon Idigoras", "source": "Ibón Idigoras (born 8 November 1979) is a Spanish snowboarder. He competed in the men's snowboard cross event at the 2006 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Spanish snowboarder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3950622", "label": "Sarà perché ti amo", "source": "\"Sarà perché ti amo\" (Italian: [saˈra pperˈke tti ˈaːmo]; \"It must be so because I love you\") is the sixth single of Italo disco group Ricchi e Poveri.", "target": "song written and composed by Dario Farina, Daniele Pace, Luis Gómez Escolar and Enzo Ghinazzi, originally performed by Ricchi e Poveri at the 1981 San Remo Festival", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18202182", "label": "Friedrich Herzfeld", "source": "Friedrich Herzfeld (also Fritz Herzfeld) (17 June 1897 – 19 September 1967) was a German Kapellmeister, musicologist and music critic.", "target": "German writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6688032", "label": "Louis Ramey", "source": "Louis Ramey is an American stand-up comedian from Atlanta, Georgia. He started performing comedy while in college after being dared to perform by his friends.He was featured in his own episode of Comedy Central Presents in 2001. It was filmed at the Hudson Theatre, in New York City. In 2008, he was a finalist on Last Comic Standing 6. On July 31, he was voted into the top 5. He finished in 5th place. He was then the host of the Last Comic Standing tour, in which he performed along with the 4 other finalists. He briefly worked for Nickelodeon as a member of the Nick at Nite \"Road Crew\".Comedian and former Daily Show correspondent Wyatt Cenac named Ramey as one of his comedy influences, saying that \"I remember seeing guys like Vince Morris and Louis Ramey do stuff that wasn’t what you saw on ComicView\".", "target": "American comedian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49295321", "label": "Qiqihar", "source": "Qiqihar (simplified Chinese: 齐齐哈尔; traditional Chinese: 齊齊哈爾; pinyin: Qíqíhā'ěr) is the second-largest city in the Heilongjiang province of China, in the west central part of the province. The built-up (or metro) area made up of Longsha, Tiefeng and Jianhua districts had 959,787 inhabitants, while the total population of the prefecture-level city was shrinking to 4,067,489 as of the 2020 census (5,367,003 as of 2010). These are mainly Han Chinese, though the city is also home to thirty-four minorities including Manchus, Daur, and Mongols.Close to Qiqihar are numerous wetlands and the Zhalong Nature Reserve, famous in China for being home to numerous red-crowned cranes.", "target": "prefecture-level city in Heilongjiang, China", "baseline_candidates": ["million city", "prefecture-level city", "big city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18051029", "label": "CST11", "source": "Cystatin-11 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CST11 gene.The cystatin superfamily encompasses proteins that contain multiple cystatin-like sequences. Some of the members are active cysteine protease inhibitors, while others have lost or perhaps never acquired this inhibitory activity. There are three inhibitory families in the superfamily, including the type 1 cystatins (stefins), type 2 cystatins and the kininogens. The type 2 cystatin proteins are a class of cysteine proteinase inhibitors found in a variety of human fluids and secretions. The cystatin locus on chromosome 20 contains the majority of the type 2 cystatin genes and pseudogenes. This gene is located in the cystatin locus and encodes an epididymal-specific protein whose specific function has not been determined. Alternative splicing yields two variants encoding distinct isoforms.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7867246", "label": "USS Alshain", "source": "USS Alshain (AKA-55) (nicknamed \"Johnny\") was an Andromeda-class attack cargo ship in the service of the United States Navy. She was named after the star Alshain in the constellation Aquila, and served as a commissioned ship for 11 years and 9 months. Alshain (AKA-55) was laid down on 29 October 1943 under a Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 209) at Kearny, New Jersey, by the Federal Shipbuilding & Drydock Co., launched on 26 January 1944, sponsored by Mrs. J. H. King, acquired by the Navy on 31 March 1944, and placed in commission at Brooklyn, New York, on 1 April 1944, Commander (later Captain) Roland E. Krause in command, succeeded by Comdr. (later Capt.) B.W. Strickland. Other officers on the ship included, Comdr. L.B. Swann, Lt.Comdr. G.R. Kilburn, Lt.Comdr. Mitchell Justice, Lt. Tierney, Lt. Batson, and Lt. Lexey R. Shields.", "target": "Andromeda-class attack cargo ship", "baseline_candidates": ["amphibious cargo ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12162960", "label": "Stefania Turkevych-Lukiianovych", "source": "Stefania Turkewich-Lukianovych (April 25, 1898 – April 8, 1977) was a Ukrainian composer, pianist, and musicologist, recognized as Ukraine's first woman composer. Her works were banned in Ukraine by the Soviets.", "target": "Ukrainian pianist, composer, and musicologist (1898-1977)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3699893", "label": "Cynodictis", "source": "Cynodictis, (\"slender dog marten\") is an extinct amphicyonid carnivoran which inhabited Eurasia from the Late Eocene subepoch to the Early Oligocene subepoch living from 37.2—28.4 million years ago, existing for approximately 8.8 million years.", "target": "genus of mammals (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8031053", "label": "Women's Rights National Historical Park", "source": "Women's Rights National Historical Park was established in 1980, and covers a total of 6.83 acres (27,600 m2) of land in Seneca Falls and nearby Waterloo, New York, United States. The park consists of four major historical properties including the Wesleyan Methodist Church, which was the site of the Seneca Falls Convention, the first women's rights convention. The Elizabeth Cady Stanton House, and the homes of other early women's rights activists (the M'Clintock House and the Richard Hunt House) are also on display. The park includes a visitor center and an education and cultural center housing the Suffrage Press Printshop. The Visitor Center lobby houses a large, life-size bronze sculpture, The First Wave, which consists of twenty figures representing women and men who attended the first Women's Rights Convention. Nine of the sculpture's figures represent actual participants and organizers of the convention: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Mary Ann M'Clintock, Martha Wright, Jane Hunt, Frederick Douglass, James Mott, Thomas M'Clintock, and Richard Hunt. The other eleven figures represent the \"anonymous\" women and men who participated in the two-day convention, which took place on July 19 and 20, 1848, and which drew over 300 people. Many of the participants signed a \"Declaration of Sentiments\", the convention's defining document, which declared that \"all men and women are created equal.\".", "target": "historic park and museum in New York state, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["National Historical Park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1156107", "label": "Aşağıkuzören", "source": "Aşağıkuzören is a village in the District of Bolu, Bolu Province, Turkey. As of 2010, it had a population of 133 people.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q90552740", "label": "Summer Worden", "source": "Summer Worden (born 1975) is a former intelligence officer for the United States Air Force and Intelligence Community. She is the founder of a technology and security service company, Filly Intelligence LLC. Worden became the first person to file an accusation of a crime committed in outer space when she accused her then-estranged wife NASA astronaut Anne McClain of wrongfully accessing their bank accounts. However, those accusations were subsequently shown to be false and Worden was indicted by a Grand Jury in March 2020 on two counts of lying to federal investigators. Her trial is in spring of 2022, and she faces up to 10 years in prison.", "target": "American computer scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50329545", "label": "A Red, Red Rose", "source": "\"A Red, Red Rose\" is a 1794 song in Scots by Robert Burns based on traditional sources. The song is also referred to by the title \"(Oh) My Love is Like a Red, Red Rose\" and is often published as a poem. Many composers have set Burns' lyric to music, but it gained worldwide popularity set to the traditional tune \"Low Down in the Broom\".", "target": "Robert Burns poem and song", "baseline_candidates": ["poem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3906522", "label": "Player 5150", "source": "Player 5150 is a 2008 American film directed by David O'Neill.", "target": "2008 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25618311", "label": "king", "source": "King is the title given to a male monarch in a variety of contexts. The female equivalent is queen, which title is also given to the consort of a king. In the context of prehistory, antiquity and contemporary indigenous peoples, the title may refer to tribal kingship. Germanic kingship is cognate with Indo-European traditions of tribal rulership (c.f. Indic rājan, Gothic reiks, and Old Irish rí, etc.). In the context of classical antiquity, king may translate in Latin as rex and in Greek as archon or basileus. In classical European feudalism, the title of king as the ruler of a kingdom is understood to be the highest rank in the feudal order, potentially subject, at least nominally, only to an emperor (harking back to the client kings of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire). In a modern context, the title may refer to the ruler of one of a number of modern monarchies (either absolute or constitutional). The title of king is used alongside other titles for monarchs: in the West, emperor, grand prince, prince, archduke, duke or grand duke, and in the Islamic world, malik, sultan, emir or hakim, etc. The city-states of the Aztec Empire had a Tlatoani, which were kings of pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica. The Huey Tlatoani was the emperor of the Aztecs.The term king may also refer to a king consort, a title that is sometimes given to the husband of a ruling queen, but the title of prince consort is more common.", "target": "title given to the name of a male monarch", "baseline_candidates": ["noble title", "monarch", "position", "profession", "man"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12642230", "label": "amblyopia", "source": "Amblyopia, also called lazy eye, is a disorder of sight in which the brain fails to fully process input from one eye and over time favors the other eye. It results in decreased vision in an eye that typically appears normal in other respects. Amblyopia is the most common cause of decreased vision in a single eye among children and younger adults.The cause of amblyopia can be any condition that interferes with focusing during early childhood. This can occur from poor alignment of the eyes (strabismic), an eye being irregularly shaped such that focusing is difficult, one eye being more nearsighted or farsighted than the other (refractive), or clouding of the lens of an eye (deprivational). After the underlying cause is addressed, vision is not restored right away, as the mechanism also involves the brain. Amblyopia can be difficult to detect, so vision testing is recommended for all children around the ages of four to five.Early detection improves treatment success. Glasses may be all the treatment needed for some children. If this is not sufficient, treatments which encourage or force the child to use the weaker eye are used. This is done by either using a patch or putting atropine in the stronger eye. Without treatment, amblyopia typically persists. Treatment in adulthood is usually much less effective.Amblyopia begins by the age of five. In adults, the disorder is estimated to affect 1–5% of the population. While treatment improves vision, it does not typically restore it to normal in the affected eye. Amblyopia was first described in.", "target": "Human disease", "baseline_candidates": ["eye disease", "disease (individual)", "disease (class)", "visual impairment", "disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q443610", "label": "Alto de L'Angliru", "source": "Alto de L'Angliru (Asturian: L'Angliru;Spanish: el Angliru) is a steep mountain road in Asturias, near La Vega-Riosa, in northern Spain. It is considered one of the most demanding climbs in professional road bicycle racing and is often used in the Vuelta a España stage race.", "target": "mountain road in Asturias, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain", "mountain pass"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2698070", "label": "Tušovice", "source": "Tušovice is a village and municipality in Příbram District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic.", "target": "village in Příbram District of Central Bohemian region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16579863", "label": "Mopsus", "source": "In Greek mythology, Mopsus, a celebrated seer and diviner, was the son of Manto, daughter of the mythic seer Tiresias, and of Rhacius of Caria or of Apollo himself, the oracular god. Greeks of the Classical age accepted Mopsus as a historical figure, though the anecdotes concerning him bridge legend and myth.", "target": "Greek mythological seer. son of Manto,", "baseline_candidates": ["mythological Greek character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5095959", "label": "Chichagof Harbor", "source": "Chichagof Harbor is an inlet on the northeast coast of the island of Attu in the Aleutian Islands in Alaska. It is named after Russian Admiral and polar explorer Vasily Chichagov. It is the location of the Aleut village served by an American pastor and his wife. It was also where some heavy fighting took place during the recapture of the island from the Japanese during the Battle of Attu in World War II and afterwards was the site of Battery B 42nd Coast Artillery Battalion.", "target": "inlet on the island of Attu, Aleutian Islands, Alaska, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["landform"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4016874", "label": "1985 Buick WCT Finals", "source": "The 1985 Buick WCT Finals was a season-ending men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 15th edition of the WCT Finals and was part of the 1985 Nabisco Grand Prix, as the two organisations had reunited. It was played at the Reunion Arena in Dallas, Texas in the United States from April 8 through April 15, 1985. Third-seeded Ivan Lendl won the title.", "target": "tennis tournament edition", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition", "WCT Finals"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3097641", "label": "Sainte-Colombe railway station", "source": "Sainte-Colombe station (French: Gare de Sainte-Colombe) is a railway station in the commune of Sainte-Colombe, in the French department of Doubs, in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region. It is an intermediate stop on the Frasne–Les Verrières line of SNCF.", "target": "railway station in Sainte-Colombe, France", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q714057", "label": "Infernal Affairs", "source": "Infernal Affairs is a 2002 Hong Kong action thriller film co-directed by Andrew Lau and Alan Mak. Jointly written by Mak and Felix Chong, it stars Andy Lau, Tony Leung, Anthony Wong, Eric Tsang, Sammi Cheng and Kelly Chen. The film follows an undercover Hong Kong Police Force officer who infiltrates a Triad, and another officer who is secretly a spy for the same Triad. It is the first in the Infernal Affairs series and is followed by Infernal Affairs II and Infernal Affairs III. The film was selected as the Hong Kong entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 76th Academy Awards but was not nominated. Miramax Films acquired the United States distribution rights and gave it a limited US theatrical release in 2004. Martin Scorsese remade the film in 2006 as The Departed, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture as well as Best Adapted Screenplay. In 2017, an Indian remake of the film was also planned.", "target": "2002 film directed by Andrew Lau and Alan Mak", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25615159", "label": "Vysokoye, Mikhaylovsky District, Amur Oblast", "source": "Vysokoye (Russian: Высокое) is a rural locality (a selo) in Novochesnokovsky Selsoviet of Mikhaylovsky District, Amur Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2018. There is 1 street.", "target": "village in Mikhaylovsky District, Amur Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q831044", "label": "Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique", "source": "The National Syndicate of Phonographic Publishing (French: Syndicat national de l'édition phonographique; SNEP) is the inter-professional organisation that protects the interests of the French record industry. Originally known under the acronym SNICOP, the organisation was established in 1922 and has 48 member companies. SNEP's responsibilities include collecting and distributing royalty payments for broadcast and performance, preventing copyright infringement of its members' works (including music piracy), and sales certification of silver, gold, platinum and diamond records and videos. SNEP also compiles weekly official charts of France's top-selling music, including singles and albums.", "target": "French music industry organization", "baseline_candidates": ["labor union", "record chart"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7123820", "label": "Padloping Island", "source": "Paallavvik (Inuktitut syllabics: ᐹᓪᓚᕝᕕᒃ) formerly Padloping Island is an uninhabited island in the Qikiqtaaluk Region of Nunavut, Canada. It is located in Davis Strait's Merchants Bay off the eastern coast of Baffin Island. The smaller Aggijjat is approximately 7 km (4.3 mi) to the east, while Auyuittuq National Park is to the west.", "target": "island in Nunavut, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12716999", "label": "Mount Shear", "source": "Mount Shear (78°20′S 86°8′W) is a mountain over 4,000 m, standing 4 miles (6 km) northwest of Mount Tyree in the Sentinel Range, Ellsworth Mountains, Antarctica. It surmounts Patton Glacier to the northeast. The peak was discovered by the Marie Byrd Land Traverse Party (1957–58) led by Charles R. Bentley, and was named for James A. Shear, a scientific leader at Hallett Station during the IGY in 1957.", "target": "mountain in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12969357", "label": "pedophilia", "source": "Pedophilia (alternatively spelt paedophilia) is a psychiatric disorder in which an adult or older adolescent experiences a primary or exclusive sexual attraction to prepubescent children. Although girls typically begin the process of puberty at age 10 or 11, and boys at age 11 or 12, criteria for pedophilia extend the cut-off point for prepubescence to age 13. A person must be at least 16 years old, and at least five years older than the prepubescent child, for the attraction to be diagnosed as pedophilia.Pedophilia is termed pedophilic disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), and the manual defines it as a paraphilia involving intense and recurrent sexual urges towards and fantasies about prepubescent children that have either been acted upon or which cause the person with the attraction distress or interpersonal difficulty. The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) defines it as a \"sustained, focused, and intense pattern of sexual arousal—as manifested by persistent sexual thoughts, fantasies, urges, or behaviours—involving pre-pubertal children. \"In popular usage, the word pedophilia is often applied to any sexual interest in children or the act of child sexual abuse, including any sexual interest in minors below the local age of consent and/or age of majority, regardless of their level of physical or mental development. This use conflates the sexual attraction to prepubescent children with the act of child sexual abuse and fails to distinguish between attraction to prepubescent and pubescent or post-pubescent minors. Researchers recommend that these imprecise uses be avoided, because although some people who commit child.", "target": "paraphilia characterized by a sexual attraction to prepubescent children", "baseline_candidates": ["mental disorder", "disease (individual)", "disease (class)", "paraphilia", "sexual preference"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q456420", "label": "Philes Ongori", "source": "Philes Moora Ongori (born 19 July 1986 in Chironge, Kiamokama, in Kisii District) is a Kenyan long-distance runner who competes in half marathon and marathon events. Her early career was based in Japan and she won a number of All-Japan Corporate titles for the Hokuren team. She ran the 10,000 metres for Kenya at the 2007 World Championships in Athletics, but came to prominence in the half marathon in 2008 when she won the Kagawa Marugame Half Marathon in the fastest time of the year. At the 2009 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships she won the silver medal. Ongori won on her marathon debut at the Rotterdam Marathon in 2011, setting a time of 2:24:20 hours.", "target": "Kenyan long-distance runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4971552", "label": "Britt McHenry", "source": "Brittany May \"Britt\" McHenry (born May 28, 1986) is a former ESPN personality. She was formerly a commentator on Fox Nation, Fox News' 24/7 streaming service. She is the host of a show on WTTG Fox 5 in Washington, D.C.", "target": "American sports reporter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39090780", "label": "military ranks of Bhutan", "source": "The Military ranks of Bhutan are the military insignia used by the Military of Bhutan. Bhutan is a landlocked country, and does therefore not possess a navy. Additionally, Bhutan does not have an air force. India is responsible for military training, arms supplies and the air defense of Bhutan.", "target": "military insignia used by the Military of Bhutan", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect in a geographic region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33036876", "label": "Viviane Pereira", "source": "Viviane \"Sucuri' Pereira (born August 8, 1993) is a Brazilian mixed martial artist and competes in strawweight division. She last competed for Invicta Fighting Championships. Professional mixed martial artist since 2013, Pereira has also fought in the UFC .", "target": "Brazilian mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4984801", "label": "Buddy Alliston", "source": "Vaughn Samuel \"Buddy\" Alliston Jr. (December 14, 1933 – October 1, 2021) was a professional American football player who played the positions of guard and linebacker. He played college football at the University of Mississippi before being drafted by the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League (NFL) in the 15th round of the 1956 NFL Draft. Alliston first played professionally in the Canadian Football League (CFL) with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. In 1956, he was the runner-up for the CFL's Most Outstanding Lineman Award. After years of military service, he played in the American Football League (AFL) for the Denver Broncos in 1960.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79585969", "label": "Mayes Middleton", "source": "David Mayes Middleton II (born September 18, 1981) is an American businessman and politician serving as a member of the Texas House of Representatives for District 23. A member of the Republican Party, Middleton took office on January 8, 2019.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q920150", "label": "Cristóbal de Oñate", "source": "Cristóbal de Oñate (1504, Spain—October 6, 1567, Pánuco, Zacatecas) was a Spanish Basque explorer, conquistador and colonial official in New Spain. He is considered the founder of the contemporary city of Guadalajara in 1531, as well as other places in Nueva Galicia (western New Spain).", "target": "Spanish conquistador", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64446405", "label": "Bionomia", "source": "Bionomia (formerly Bloodhound Tracker) is a database and database entry tool which permits the name strings of collectors, and of taxonomists who determine specimen data, to be assigned to the unique person who collected or identified the specimen. If the person is living, this is done via their ORCID iD, and if dead, via their Wikidata identifier. The specimen data associated with, and used by, Bionomia are the aggregated GBIF data.This mechanism of contributing to specimen data arose from a project initiated by the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Paris (MNHN) in March 2019, and is motivated (in part) by \"the world-wide importance of natural history collections, (which) are at risk because they are critically underfunded or undervalued. A contributing factor for this apparent neglect is the lack of a professional reward system that quantifies and illustrates the breadth and depth of expertise required to collect and identify specimens, maintain them, digitize their labels, mobilize the data, and enhance these data as errors and omissions are identified by stakeholders.\" It is also motivated by the fact that the important work of taxonomists in identifying specimens in collections across the world fails to be recognised, and this failure, fails both institutions and taxonomists. In August 2018, Bionomia was launched (under the name Bloodhound Tracker) as a submission to the Ebbe Nielsen Challenge.Other papers which set the scene, the rationale and the purpose of Bionomia are:The primary task in Bionomia is to resolve the name strings of the various collectors and the taxonomists who have determined the species of.", "target": "database of biological specimen records", "baseline_candidates": ["online database"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5121846", "label": "Circus of Pepin and Breschard", "source": "The equestrian theatre company of Pépin and Breschard, American Victor Pépin and Frenchman Jean Baptiste Casmiere Breschard, arrived in the United States of America from Madrid, Spain (where they had performed during the 1805 and 1806 seasons), in November 1807. They toured that new country until 1815. From their arrival until the present day, what is now known as the traditional circus has had a presence in North America. Invited to perform in the United States by Spanish Ambassador Luis de Onís, the company landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts from Spain. They performed their first season in Charlestown, Massachusetts, after being refused a permit to perform in neighboring Boston. In the following years Pépin and Breschard's troupes built circus theatres in cities across the United States, including New York, New York; New Orleans; Charlestown, Massachusetts; Baltimore, Maryland; Richmond, Virginia; Alexandria, Virginia; Charleston, South Carolina; Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They also built a theatre in Lower Canada in Montreal. The oldest continuously operating theatre in the English-speaking world and the oldest theatre in the United States, the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia was built by Pépin and Breschard in 1809.During the early 19th century, the word \"circus\" was used primarily to indicate the equestrian theatre building itself. Pépin and Breschard introduced at least one Shakespearean play to the US and were one of the first, if not the first, companies in America to perform hippodrama. They were the first to bring a circus west of the Appalachian Mountains to such frontier cities as Pittsburgh, PA, where Benjamin Latrobe,.", "target": "equestrian theatre company", "baseline_candidates": ["equestrian theatre company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5500946", "label": "Freelance Animators New Zealand", "source": "Freelance Animators was an animation studio based in Auckland, New Zealand.", "target": "animation studio", "baseline_candidates": ["film production company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18029053", "label": "MFAP1", "source": "Microfibrillar-associated protein 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the MFAP1 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q822191", "label": "Louis Saillant", "source": "Louis André Saillant (27 November 1910 – 28 October 1974) was a French trade unionist and resistance fighter. Born in Valance, Saillant worked as a cabinet maker. He became active in the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), becoming secretary of its Building and Woodworkers' Federation. In 1940, the Vichy government outlawed trade unions, but the CGT continued, illegally, in support of the French Resistance. Saillant was a signatory to the Manifesto of the Twelve, in which twelve leading trade unionists publicly opposed Vichy policy, and was also active in Libération-Nord.In 1943, the CGT was a founding element of the National Council of the Resistance (CNR), and Saillant became its delegate to the CNR, taking over as chair of the resistance in 1944.After World War II, Saillant was elected as the general secretary of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU). When the right-wing split away from the CGT, he supported the generally communist majority, but thereafter devoted his time to the WFTU.Saillant denounced the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia. He resigned as leader of the WFTU shortly afterwards, blaming health problems, and was instead made honorary president of the federation. He was also president of the World Peace Movement, and won the Lenin Prize.", "target": "French functionary (1910-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22095650", "label": "1980 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team", "source": "The 1980 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team represented Mississippi State University during the 1980 NCAA Division I-A football season. The season is best known for a win over then-#1 Alabama, often considered to be the greatest win in school history.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1054483", "label": "Century City", "source": "Century City is a 176-acre (71.2 ha) neighborhood and business district in Los Angeles, California. Located on the Westside to the south of Santa Monica Boulevard around 10 miles (16 km) west of Downtown Los Angeles, Century City is one of the most prominent employment centers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, and its skyscrapers form a distinctive skyline on the Westside. The district was developed on the former backlot of film studio 20th Century Fox, and its first building was opened in 1963. Important to the economy are the Westfield Century City shopping center, business towers, and Fox Studios.", "target": "commercial and residential district in Los Angeles, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q924883", "label": "Walter Krivitsky", "source": "Walter Germanovich Krivitsky (Ва́льтер Ге́рманович Криви́цкий; June 28, 1899 – February 10, 1941) was a Soviet intelligence officer who revealed plans of signing the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact after he defected to the West.", "target": "Soviet spy (1899-1941)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15576", "label": "University of South Australia", "source": "The University of South Australia (UniSA) is a public research university in the Australian state of South Australia. It is a founding member of the Australian Technology Network of universities, and is the largest university in South Australia with approximately 32,000 students. The university was founded in its current form in 1991 with the merger of the South Australian Institute of Technology (SAIT, established in 1889 as the South Australian School of Mines and Industries) and the South Australian College of Advanced Education (SACAE, established 1856). The legislation to establish and name the new University of South Australia was introduced by the Hon Mike Rann MP, Minister of Employment and Further Education. Under the University's Act, its original mission was \"to preserve, extend and disseminate knowledge through teaching, research, scholarship and consultancy, and to provide educational programs that will enhance the diverse cultural life of the wider community\".UniSA is among the world's top newer universities, ranked in the World's Top 50 Under 50 (universities which are under 50 years old) by both the Quacarelli Symonds (QS) World University Ranking (#29) and Times Higher Education (THE) (#25). It has two Adelaide city centre campuses, two Adelaide metropolitan campuses, and two South Australian regional campuses.", "target": "A university with its main campus in Adelaide, Australia, and other campuses in regional South Australia.", "baseline_candidates": ["public university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13476144", "label": "Lysimachus", "source": "Lysimachus also known as Lysimachus Junior (Greek: Λυσίμαχος, 297/296 BC-279 BC) was a Greek Prince from Asia Minor who was of Macedonian and Thessalian descent.", "target": "son of Lysimachus, king of Thrace", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2446204", "label": "New Fairfield", "source": "New Fairfield is a town in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. The population was 13,579 at the 2020 census. New Fairfield is one of five towns that surround Candlewood Lake, the largest lake in Connecticut. The town is located 55 miles (89 km) northeast of New York City, making it part of the New York metropolitan area.", "target": "town in Connecticut, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3563692", "label": "Vrnogračka Slapnica", "source": "Vrnogračka Slapnica is a village in the municipality of Velika Kladuša, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "target": "village in Bosnia and Herzegovina", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5260659", "label": "Depienne Airfield", "source": "Depienne Airfield is a World War II airfield in Tunisia, located approximately 12 km northeast of El Fahs, and 53 km southwest of Tunis. The airfield was first used by the German Luftwaffe in 1941 and 1942, and was captured by the British Army by a parachute attack on 3 December 1942. It was later used by the United States Army Air Force Twelfth Air Force as a B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bomber airfield during the North African Campaign. HQ 5th Bombardment Wing, August–December 1943 97th Bombardment Group, 15 August-20 December 1943, B-17 Flying FortressIn aerial imagery, the airfield looks almost like it did in 1943 and is probably the most well-preserved wartime bomber field in Tunisia. The runway, although deteriorated, along with all of the taxiways and aircraft hardstands are very much in evidence. It is unclear what the current use of the facility is.", "target": "abandoned World War II military airfield in Tunisia", "baseline_candidates": ["aerodrome"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16248370", "label": "Fever", "source": "Fever is a 2016 Indian suspense thriller written and directed by Rajeev Jhaveri and produced by Ravi Agrawal, Mahesh Balekundri, Ajay Chabbria and Rajath Manjunath. The film features Gauahar Khan and Rajeev Khandelwal in the lead roles along with Gemma Atkinson, Caterina Murino and Ankita Makwana. The film was shot in Switzerland. Trailer of the film was released on 14 June 2016. The movie was released on 5 August 2016.", "target": "2016 film by Rajeev Jhaveri", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q801155", "label": "Malmsheim station", "source": "Malmsheim station is in the town of Malmsheim in the municipality of Renningen in the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It is located at kilometer 22.4 of the Black Forest Railway and it is served by line S 6 of the Stuttgart S-Bahn.", "target": "railway station in Renningen, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6843162", "label": "Midway", "source": "Midway is an unincorporated community in Crockett County, Tennessee, United States. Midway is 5 miles (8.0 km) east of Bells.", "target": "unincorporated community in Crockett County, Tennessee", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16832313", "label": "Julius Herzka", "source": "Julius Herska or Julius Herzka (1859–1925) was an Austrian stage actor and director. He also directed eight films during the silent era including the Victor Hugo adaptation The Grinning Face.", "target": "Austrian actor and director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3775371", "label": "1982 Grand Prix de Tennis de Toulouse", "source": "The 1982 Grand Prix de Tennis de Toulouse was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor Carpet courts in Toulouse, France that was part of the Grand Prix series of the 1982 Grand Prix tennis circuit. It was the first edition of the tournament and was held from 6 December until 12 December 1982. First-seeded Yannick Noah won the singles title.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Grand Prix de Tennis de Toulouse", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2137563", "label": "Hermann Lindt", "source": "Otto Hermann Lindt (9 February 1872, in Bern – 21 October 1937, in Bern) was a Swiss politician who served as the ninth mayor of Bern.", "target": "Swiss politician (1872-1937)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3109463", "label": "Gnathophyllum elegans", "source": "Gnathophyllum elegans is a species of shrimps found in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean. The type specimen was found near Nice, France. Also found in Ecuador It is active at night.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19786976", "label": "Mikhaylovsky", "source": "Mikhaylovsky (Russian: Михайловский) is a rural locality (a village) in Yermolkinsky Selsoviet, Belebeyevsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 6 as of 2010. There are 4 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Belebeyevsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3964858", "label": "Sonny Strait", "source": "Sonny Strait is an American voice actor, ADR director, and writer at Funimation, known for his work on a number of English versions of Japanese anime series and as an illustrator for the independently published comic book series Elfquest.", "target": "American voice actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28405713", "label": "Chaetothyriothecium", "source": "Chaetothyriothecium is a genus of fungi in the family Microthyriaceae.", "target": "genus of Dothideomycetes", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24069383", "label": "Khonkhino", "source": "Khonkhino (Russian: Хонхино) is a rural locality (an ulus) in Kurumkansky District, Republic of Buryatia, Russia. The population was 135 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "human settlement in Kurumkansky District, Republic of Buryatia, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["ulus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47508543", "label": "Pickle Rick", "source": "\"Pickle Rick\" is the third episode of the third season of the Adult Swim animated television series Rick and Morty. Written by Jessica Gao and directed by Anthony Chun, the episode premiered on August 6, 2017. In \"Pickle Rick\", the eccentric scientist Rick Sanchez turns himself into a pickle just as he and his family are scheduled to attend a therapy session. The episode follows Rick's adventures as a pickle and the rest of the family's trip to therapy. The episode parodies action films and was inspired by the Breaking Bad episode \"4 Days Out\". In a continuation of the third season's storyline of Beth and Jerry's divorce, \"Pickle Rick\" explores Beth's unhealthy relationship with Rick and their views on intelligence and self-improvement. The episode was highly anticipated, with a rough cut animation premiering at the 2016 San Diego Comic-Con, and was watched by 2.3 million viewers when it first aired on Adult Swim. The episode received positive reviews, with critics praising the animation and design of Pickle Rick, the fight scenes, the performance of guest actor Danny Trejo (as Jaguar), and the episode's ending. It won Rick and Morty the 2018 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program, the show's first Emmy Award. Several merchandise products, particularly of the character Pickle Rick, have been released.", "target": "episode of Rick and Morty (S3 E3)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16240071", "label": "17th Precinct", "source": "17th Precinct is a police procedural television program created by Ronald D. Moore. In a modern world where magic supplanted science, the unaired pilot featured two non-intersecting stories: the death of a city executive at the hands of a wrongful convict, and the introduction of terrorists who are devoted to the destruction of magic. Moore developed the series with Sony Pictures Television for NBCUniversal, bringing with him several of the stars of his reimagined Battlestar Galactica franchise as cast members. The series was pitched in September 2010, the pilot was ordered January 2011, NBC passed on the series in May 2011, and the unaired pilot was leaked in December 2011. Reviewers mostly liked 17th Precinct, commenting on its innovativeness despite its police procedural roots.", "target": "police procedural television program", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2487816", "label": "Conamara Chaos", "source": "Conamara Chaos is a region of chaotic terrain on Jupiter's moon Europa. It is named after Connemara (Irish: Conamara) in Ireland due to its similarly rugged landscape.Conamara Chaos is a landscape produced by the disruption of the icy crust of Europa. The region consists of rafts of ice that have moved around and rotated. Surrounding these plates is a lower matrix of jumbled ice blocks which may have been formed as water, slush, or warm ice rose up from below the surface. The region is cited as evidence for a liquid ocean below Europa's icy surface.", "target": "region on Europa", "baseline_candidates": ["chaos terrain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q945321", "label": "Austrogomphus cornutus", "source": "Austrogomphus cornutus, also known as Austrogomphus (Austrogomphus) cornutus, is a species of dragonfly of the family Gomphidae, commonly known as the unicorn hunter. It inhabits streams and rivers in eastern Australia.Austrogomphus cornutus is a tiny to medium-sized, black and yellow dragonfly.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62584765", "label": "Harry Hickox", "source": "Harry Hickox (October 22, 1910 – June 3, 1994) was an American character actor.", "target": "actor (1910-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7126831", "label": "Palatka Daily News", "source": "The Palatka Daily News is a local newspaper published in Palatka, Florida, United States, which appears every Tuesday to Saturday. It was founded in 1885. Coverage includes local news, sports and community events in Putnam County. Other spin-off publications are also in print. The group is owned by Community Newspapers, Incorporated, based in Athens, Georgia.", "target": "newspaper in Palatka, Florida", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4581104", "label": "1983 NASL Grand Prix of Indoor Soccer", "source": "The 1983 NASL Grand Prix of Indoor Soccer was an indoor soccer tournament staged by four franchises of the North American Soccer League.", "target": "indoor soccer tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4762000", "label": "Ange Armato", "source": "Ange Lou Armato (born October 27, 1929) is an American former infielder who played in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.Born in Rockford, Illinois, Ange Armato was the seventh girl out of eight children from a large Italian family. In high school, her teacher encouraged her to go to college to become a physical education teacher, but her career dream was to be an artist, so her parents sent her to art school. During that period of time, Armato went to her first baseball game and she was hooked. She then practiced with the Rockford Peaches for three years and went to school in Chicago. In the process, Armato signed a contract and joined the Peaches in 1949, but due to an injury, she was unable to complete the season.In 1953 Armato returned to the league and was assigned to the Kalamazoo Lassies. She only had two hits in 26 at-bats for a .077 average, but was a sure-handed fielder at second base. Kalamazoo ended the season in third place with a 56–50 record and defeated the Fort Wayne Daisies in the first round, two to one games, but lost to the Grand Rapids Chicks in the final series in just two games.Armato did not play for the league's final season and returned home, where she worked for Barber Colman Company and became a pioneer for women draftsmen and later a technical illustrator. Learning all she could she decided to move into the advertising world, working now for local advertising agencies as a commercial artist and.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43282138", "label": "Tianjin Binhai Library", "source": "Tianjin Binhai New Area Library (Chinese: 天津滨海新区图书馆), nicknamed The Eye, is a library in Tianjin, China. It is part of the Binhai Cultural Center, being one of its five central attractions.", "target": "library", "baseline_candidates": ["library"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1544937", "label": "Mimi", "source": "Mimis (or Mimih spirits ) are fairy-like beings of Arnhem Land in the folklore of the Aboriginal Australians of northern Australia. They are described as having extremely thin and elongated bodies, so thin as to be in danger of breaking in case of a high wind. To avoid this, they usually spend most of their time living in rock crevices.According to Aboriginal folklore, Mimi had human form and made the first rock paintings before the Aboriginal people first came to northern Australia. The Mimi taught the Aboriginal people how to paint, and how to hunt and cook kangaroo meat. The Mimi are considered to be mischievous but generally harmless.", "target": "fairy-like beings of Arnhem Land in the folklore of the Indigenous Australians of northern Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["mythical character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24005874", "label": "Sofia Rodríguez", "source": "Sofia Rodríguez Revert (born 21 October 1999) is a Spanish professional racing cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Women's Continental Team Sopela Women's Team.", "target": "Spanish cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2662108", "label": "Gloire-class cruiser", "source": "The Gloire class consisted of five armored cruisers built for the French Navy (Marine Nationale) during the first decade of the 20th century. Fitted with a mixed armament of 194-millimeter (7.6 in) and 164.7-millimeter (6.5 in) guns, the ships were designed for service with the fleet. After their completion in 1903–1904, the five sister ships were initially assigned to the Northern Squadron (Escadre du Nord), often serving as flagships. Sully was transferred to the Far Eastern Squadron (Escadre de l'Extrême-Orient) shortly afterwards and was wrecked when she struck an uncharted rock in February 1905. Marseillaise and Condé were transferred to the Mediterranean Squadron (Escadre de la Méditerranée) in 1905–1906. The surviving sisters were generally divided between the Northern and Mediterranean Squadrons until a reorganization in 1910 caused all but Amiral Aube to be concentrated in the Mediterranean. The following year another reorganization reduced Amiral Aube to reserve and her sisters were transferred to the 2nd Light Squadron (2e Escadre légère), as the Northern Squadron had been renamed. Gloire became a training ship in 1913 and Amiral Aube was reactivated to replace her. Condé was transferred to the French West Indies in early 1914 where she could monitor events during the Mexican Revolution. When World War I began in August 1914, the three ships in French waters were assigned to defend Allied shipping in the English Channel and enforce the blockade of Germany while Condé was tasked to hunt down German commerce raiders in the Western Atlantic. Once the defenses of the Channel were completed in 1915,.", "target": "French Navy's Gloire-class of armored cruisers", "baseline_candidates": ["ship class", "cruiser"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26129568", "label": "Scott Thomsen", "source": "Scott Thomsen (born December 31, 1993) is a former American professional soccer player who played for USL League One club Richmond Kickers as a defender.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3032700", "label": "dienochlor", "source": "Dienochlor is an organochlorine compound included in the group of cyclic chlorinated hydrocarbons. Its chemical formula is C10Cl10. Dienochlor is mostly used as a pesticide and ovicide.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16050190", "label": "Ferdows Rural District", "source": "Ferdows Rural District (Persian: دهستان فردوس) is a rural district (dehestan) in Ferdows District, Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (including Safayyeh, which was later detached from the rural district and promoted to city status) was 6,889, in 1,785 families; excluding Safayyeh, the population (as of 2006) was 4,928, in 1,286 families. The rural district has 27 villages.", "target": "rural district in Kerman, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28777409", "label": "Mohammed Ibrahim Eid", "source": "Mohammed Ibrahim Eid (Arabic:محمد إبراهيم عيد) (born 7 August 1991) is an Emirati footballer. He currently plays for Al-Hamriyah.", "target": "Emirati association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3140962", "label": "Alvania punctura", "source": "Alvania punctura is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Rissoidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7735448", "label": "The Fun of It", "source": "The Fun of It is Amelia Earhart's second book after her travelogue 20 Hrs., 40 Min.. In it Earhart recollects how she became interested in being an aviator, which led to her establishing several firsts for women, and also becoming aviation editor for Cosmopolitan Magazine. She also profiles the careers of other pioneering female flyers of her time. Earhart also encourages young women to follow their own careers and dreams. The title comes from her quote \"Flying may not be all plain sailing, but the fun of it is worth the price.\" Earhart's next book, Last Flight, would be published posthumously.", "target": "book by Amelia Earhart", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1738058", "label": "Keith Ingham", "source": "Keith Christopher Ingham (born 5 February 1942) is an English jazz pianist, mainly active in swing and Dixieland revival.", "target": "British musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2976638", "label": "Claude-Aimé Chenavard", "source": "Claude-Aimé Chenavard was a French decorative painter and draughtsman and was born at Lyons in 1798. He published Nouveau Recueil de Decorations intérieures, 1833–1835, and Album de L'Ornemaniste, 1835. He died in Paris in 1838 and was buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery.", "target": "French painter (1798-1838)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5107596", "label": "Chris Noakes", "source": "Chris Noakes (born 21 July 1985 in Auckland, New Zealand) is a professional rugby union player.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1586246", "label": "Earl G. Harrison", "source": "Earl Grant Harrison (April 27, 1899 – July 28, 1955) was an American attorney, academician, and public servant. He worked on behalf of displaced persons in the aftermath of the Second World War, when he brought attention to the plight of Jewish refugees in a report, commonly known as the Harrison Report, that he produced for President Harry S. Truman. He was Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School from 1945 to 1948. He also had a distinguished career as an attorney in the Philadelphia area and was a name partner in the law firm of Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis LLP.", "target": "American attorney", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5623020", "label": "Campbell Dodgson", "source": "Campbell Dodgson, CBE DLitt (13 August 1867 – 11 July 1948) was a British art historian and museum curator. He was the Keeper of Prints and Drawings at the British Museum in 1912–32.", "target": "Curator, born 1867", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4960377", "label": "Bregas", "source": "Bregas (definite Albanian form: Bregasi; Greek: Βρωμερό or Βρεμερό) is a village in Vlorë County, southwestern Albania. It is part of the municipality Finiq. It is located to the north of Sarandë, northwest of Metoq, Sheleqar and Vrion, southwest of Karanxh and west of Finiq. Bregas is inhabited solely by Greeks.In the place situated a christian orthodox church dedicated to St. Paraskevi (Paraskevi of Rome).", "target": "village in Vlorë, Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5574745", "label": "Go Deuk-jong", "source": "Go Deuk-jong (1388-1452) was a scholar-official of the Joseon Dynasty Korea in the 14th century. He was also diplomat and ambassador, representing Joseon interests in the tongsinsa (diplomatic mission) to the Ashikaga shogunate in Japan.", "target": "Korean diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1094862", "label": "Song of Seven", "source": "Song of Seven is the second solo album by Yes lead singer Jon Anderson, released in 1980, and his first to utilize an actual band (the New Life Band).", "target": "Jon Anderson album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6485477", "label": "Lanedo", "source": "Lanedo is a professional open source software development consultancy based in Germany. It operates as a European company with limited liability based in Hamburg. The company has been involved with a number of mobile and embedded platforms over the years including Maemo and MeeGo. Their software development has a focus around Linux in general and targeting platforms ranging from mobile and embedded to desktop environments. The name 'Lanedo' is based on a roughly phonetic sounding of the letters L, N, and D. These are mentioned as Linux, Networking, and Development respectively.", "target": "this article is about a German open-source software development consultancy", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "application"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12169160", "label": "Stepan Charnetskyi", "source": "Stepan Mykolaiovych Charnetskyi (sometimes Charnetsky, Ukrainian: Степан Миколайович Чарнецький, Polish: Stepan Czarnecki; January 21 1881, Shmankivtsi, Austria-Hungary – October 2 1944, Lviv, USSR) was a Ukrainian poet, translator, journalist, theatre and music critic, and theatre director and producer, author of the anthem of the Ukrainian Sich Riflemen \"Oi u luzi chervona kalyna\".", "target": "Ukrainian writer, translator and theatre critic (1881-1944)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56662507", "label": "Gardenstown, St John's Church", "source": "St John's Church is a ruined church and kirkyard in the parish of Gamrie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. A church existed since the 12th century, with the current remains dating from the 16th and 18th century. The church was dedicated to St John the Evangelist.", "target": "church building in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16230728", "label": "Jonathan Goldstein", "source": "Jonathan Goldstein (27 September 1968 – 25 August 2019) was an English composer of music for film, television, advertising, theatre, and live events. His work encompassed a range of contemporary classical styles with orchestral, jazz, electro-acoustic and world influences. Goldstein died in a light-plane crash in the Alps along with his wife and young child.", "target": "British composer and conductor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4311717", "label": "To Award (Posthumously)", "source": "To Award (Posthumously) (Russian: Наградить (посмертно)) is a 1986 Soviet action film directed by Boris Grigoryev.", "target": "1986 film by Boris Alekseevitsj Grigorev", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q526204", "label": "Crescent-chested Puffbird", "source": "The crescent-chested puffbird (Malacoptila striata) is a species of near-passerine bird in the family Bucconidae, the puffbirds, nunlets, and nunbirds. It is endemic to Brazil.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2633150", "label": "Cello Symphony", "source": "The Symphony for Cello and Orchestra or Cello Symphony, Op. 68, was written in 1963 by the British composer Benjamin Britten. He dedicated the work to Mstislav Rostropovich, who gave the work its premiere in Moscow with the composer and the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra on 12 March 1964. The work's title reflects the music's more even balance between soloist and orchestra than in the traditional concerto format.The piece is in the four-movement structure typical of a symphony, but the final two movements are linked by a cello cadenza: Allegro maestoso Presto inquieto Adagio – cadenza ad lib Passacaglia: Andante allegro.", "target": "symphony by Benjamin Britten", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7698375", "label": "Tempestas", "source": "In ancient Roman religion, Tempestas (Latin tempestas: \"season, weather; bad weather; storm, tempest\") is a goddess of storms or sudden weather. As with certain other nature and weather deities, the plural form Tempestates is common. Cicero, in discussing whether natural phenomena such as rainbows and clouds should be regarded as divine, notes that the Tempestates had been consecrated as deities by the Roman people.A temple (aedes or delubrum) was dedicated to the Tempestates (given in the singular by Ovid) by L. Cornelius Scipio in 259 BC, as recorded by his epitaph. Scipio had been caught in a storm with his fleet off Corsica, and the building of the temple was in fulfillment of a vow made in asking for deliverance. Ovid gives the dedication day as June 1, but it appears as December 23 in the Fasti Antiates Maiores; this latter date may mark a renovation, or there may have been more than one temple to the Tempestates. The temple vowed in 259 was located in Regio I, perhaps near the Tomb of the Scipios, and was connected with the temples of Mars and Minerva there. William Warde Fowler saw a pattern of temple dedications during this period that acknowledged water as a divine force, including the Temple of Juturna vowed in 241 by Lutatius Catulus, and the Temple of Fons during the Corsican war of 231. Black sheep where sacrificed at her temple.", "target": "ancient Roman goddess of weather", "baseline_candidates": ["Roman deity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15990722", "label": "Juan Francisco Guevara", "source": "Juan Francisco \"Juanfran\" Guevara Silvente (born 19 August 1995 in Lorca, Murcia, Spain) is a retired Spanish Grand Prix motorcycle road racer, who last competed in the Moto3 World Championship with the RBA Racing Team.", "target": "Spanish motorcycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4019749", "label": "Mahdah", "source": "Mahdah (Arabic: مَحْضَة, romanized: Maḥḍah, or Wilāyat Maḥḍah (وِلَايَة مَحْضَة), is an Omani territory north of the town of al Buraimi which borders the emirates of Sharjah, Ajman and Dubai. It was previously necessary to pass through Mahdah when travelling through Madam to reach the Ajman exclave of Masfut, as well as the Dubai exclave of Hatta, a tourist spot popular for its hotel, heritage village and the famous (although now a metalled road) Hatta track. The Mleiha road bypasses Mahdah for travel from the Emirates' coastal towns to Hatta and Masfut. Mahdah contains the township of Rawdah and is governed from Buraimi. It was traditionally home to the Bani Kaab tribe.", "target": "wilayah in Oman", "baseline_candidates": ["province of Oman", "border town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5173020", "label": "Corroboree", "source": "Corroboree is a ballet written by Australian composer John Antill in the early 1940s. The first full version of the score was completed in 1944 and it was first performed as a concert suite in 1946. On 3 July 1950 it was performed as a ballet, at the Empire Theatre in Sydney, choreographed by Rex Reid, with dancers of the Melbourne-based National Theatre Ballet.Wildly successful and seen as a national \"coming-of-age\", the ballet was performed again with new choreography by American-born dancer, choreographer and writer Beth Dean in 1954. Notably, Dean and her Australian husband, Victor Carell, had spent several months in remote outback Australia researching Aboriginal ceremonies, costumes and dance, upon which Dean's version was based. In this first production, Dean danced the role of the Initiate herself. Many of the costumes and props for this version of the ballet are held by the National Museum of Australia. The music manuscript is held by the State Library of New South Wales.", "target": "ballet", "baseline_candidates": ["ballet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2876845", "label": "SNCF BB 66400", "source": "The SNCF Class BB 66400 is a class of centre cab mixed traffic diesel locomotives. The class is a development of the BB 66000 with 3 phase electric transmission. The 106 locomotives were built for SNCF by a consortium of CAFL, CEM, Alsthom, Fives-Lille and SACM between 1968 and 1971. They are 14.972 m (49.12 ft) long and weigh 64 t (63 long tons; 71 short tons). The prime mover is a MGO V16BSHR diesel engine developing 1,030 kW (1,380 hp). The maximum speed is 120 km/h (75 mph).As built they had no train heating but were later fitted with electric train heating and equipped for push–pull working for operating local passenger trains. From 2004 some 75 members of the class were rebuilt with new MTU 12V 4000 R41 engines and reclassified as BB 69400.", "target": "class of 106 French Diesel-electric locomotives", "baseline_candidates": ["locomotive class", "diesel-electric locomotive"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58407665", "label": "2000 Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship", "source": "The 2000 Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship was the 110th staging of the Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Tipperary County Board in 1887. The championship began on 9 September 2000 and ended on 15 October 2000. Toomevara were the defending champions. On 15 October 2000, Toomevara won the title after a 2-10 to 0-11 defeat of Thurles Sarsfields in the final at Semple Stadium. It was their 16th championship title overall and their third title in succession. Paddy O'Brien from Toomevara and Johnny Enright from Thurles Sarsfields were the championship joint top scorers.", "target": "gaelic sports competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season", "championship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3231328", "label": "Riders of Destiny", "source": "Riders of Destiny is a 1933 pre-Code Western musical film starring 26-year-old John Wayne as Singin' Sandy Saunders, the screen's second singing cowboy (the first being Ken Maynard in the 1929 film The Wagon Master). It was the first of a series of sixteen Lone Star Westerns made for Monogram Pictures between 1933-1935, by Wayne and director Robert N. Bradbury, and the first pairing of Wayne with George \"Gabby\" Hayes.", "target": "1933 western film starring John Wayne directed by Robert N. Bradbury", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58175633", "label": "Denis Hergheligiu", "source": "Denis Libera Hergheligiu (born 9 December 1999) is an Italian-born Romanian football player. He plays for Feralpisalò. He also holds Italian citizenship.", "target": "Italian-born Romanian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16882028", "label": "Afro Blue", "source": "Afro Blue is an a cappella jazz ensemble at Howard University, directed by Connaitre Miller. They have released 4 albums.", "target": "Jazz ensemble based at Howard University", "baseline_candidates": ["musical ensemble", "choir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25000451", "label": "1985 Greenlandic Men's Football Championship", "source": "The 1985 Greenlandic Men's Football Championship was the 15th edition of the Greenlandic Men's Football Championship. The final round was held in Nuuk. It was won by Nuuk IL for the third time in its history.", "target": "15th edition of the Greenlandic Men's Football Championship", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2129877", "label": "Pesa Elf", "source": "The Elf (Electric Low Floor) is an electric multiple unit developed by Polish rolling-stock manufacturer Pesa SA. It is intended for commuter and regional service where platform height is 550mm. It is based on earlier EMU designs named ED59 and ED74. A Pesa Elf was exhibited at InnoTrans 2010.In 2016 a new version, Elf 2, was introduced, featuring new design. In 2019, Elf.eu – a multisystem version targeting EU markets – was introduced.", "target": "electric multiple unit", "baseline_candidates": ["electric multiple unit", "rolling stock class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5577652", "label": "Goima", "source": "Goima is an administrative ward in the Chemba District district of the Dodoma Region of Tanzania. According to the 2002 census, the ward has a total population of 20,309.", "target": "Tanzanian administrative ward", "baseline_candidates": ["ward of Tanzania", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7845212", "label": "Trolleybuses in Darlington", "source": "The Darlington trolleybus system once served the town of Darlington, County Durham, England. Opened on 17 January 1926 (1926-01-17), it replaced the Darlington Corporation Light Railways tramway network. By the standards of the various now-defunct trolleybus systems in the United Kingdom, the Darlington system was a moderately sized one, with a total of 5 routes, and a maximum fleet of 66 trolleybuses. It was closed relatively early, on 31 July 1957 (1957-07-31).None of the former Darlington trolleybuses are recorded as having been preserved.", "target": "town trolleybus system, Darlington UK", "baseline_candidates": ["trolleybus system"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1523895", "label": "Betula fruticosa", "source": "Betula fruticosa, commonly known as dwarf bog birch, (traditional Chinese: 柴樺; simplified Chinese: 柴桦; pinyin: chái huà) is a species of dwarf birch that grows in central and eastern Europe (except for Finland where it grows rare) and Siberia and Mongolia on elevation of 600–1,100 metres (2,000–3,600 ft) in forests, streambanks, and swamps.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6261559", "label": "John Ulric Nef", "source": "John Ulric Nef, Jr. (1899–1988) was an American economic historian, and the co-founder of the University of Chicago's Committee on Social Thought. He was associated with the University of Chicago for over half a century, and co-founded the Committee there in 1941.", "target": "American economic historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3968674", "label": "equestrian statue of Ferdinando I de' Medici", "source": "The Equestrian Monument of Ferdinando I is a bronze equestrian statue by Giambologna, executed in 1602–1607, and erected in 1608 in the Piazza of the Annunziata in Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy.", "target": "monument in Florence, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["sculpture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7614154", "label": "Steve Tosh", "source": "Steven William Tosh (born 27 April 1973) is a Scottish former professional association footballer. A Midfielder of many Scottish clubs, Tosh's last club was Cove Rangers.", "target": "Scottish footballer (born 1973)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5979469", "label": "I Want Somebody", "source": "\"I Want Somebody (Bitch About)\" is a song by American recording artist Kristin Chenoweth. The song was written by Diane Warren and produced by Bob Ezrin for Chenoweth's fourth studio album, Some Lessons Learned (2011). The song was released on May 31, 2011 by Sony Music Entertainment's record label Masterworks Broadway, as the lead single from the album. An accompanying music video, directed by Roman White, was Chenoweth's first televised music video and was released on Country Music Television. Chenoweth performed \"I Want Somebody (Bitch About)\" on many TV shows as part of the promo for her album, making the world premiere of the single on CMT's Next Superstar. Other performances include shows such as Live! with Regis and Kelly and Jimmy Kimmel Live!.", "target": "Song by Kristin Chenoweth", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6151218", "label": "2008 Tour de San Luis", "source": "The 2008 Tour de San Luis was a men's road cycling race held from 22 to January 27, 2008 in Argentina. The second edition of this road racing event was a multiple stage race with a prologue, five stages and a total length of 622 kilometres.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour de San Luis", "2.2"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4026327", "label": "solar eclipse of January 27, 2074", "source": "An annular solar eclipse will occur on Saturday, January 27, 2074. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the image of the Sun for a viewer on Earth. An annular solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the Sun's, blocking most of the Sun's light and causing the Sun to look like an annulus (ring). An annular eclipse appears as a partial eclipse over a region of the Earth thousands of kilometres wide.", "target": "future annular solar eclipse", "baseline_candidates": ["solar eclipse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20438057", "label": "Andi Tóth", "source": "Andrea \"Andi\" Tóth (born 18 January 1999) is a Hungarian actress and singer, most notable for winning of the fifth series of X-Faktor, acting in the television show Válótársak, and for participating in A Dal.", "target": "Romanian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19672280", "label": "Sultanpur panchayat", "source": "Sultanpur is a Gram panchayat in hajipur, vaishali district, bihar.", "target": "village in Bihar, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q361199", "label": "Sejad Salihović", "source": "Sejad Salihović (Bosnian pronunciation: [sějad sâːlixoʋitɕ]; born 8 October 1984) is a Bosnian professional footballer who plays for 1899 Hoffenheim II. He spent most of his career playing for 1899 Hoffenheim in the German Bundesliga. He also played for Hertha BSC, Beijing Renhe, St. Gallen and Hamburger SV. For eight years, from 2007 to 2015, Salihović played for the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team, earning 47 caps and scoring 4 goals for the team. He represented the nation at their first major tournament, the 2014 FIFA World Cup.", "target": "Bosnian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q738316", "label": "Wesley LaViolette", "source": "Wallace Wesley LaViolette (4 Jan 1894 Saint James, Minnesota - 29 Jul 1978 Escondido, California) was an American musician who composed, conducted, lectured, and wrote about music. He was also a poet and music theorist. As an educator, he mentored Shorty Rogers, Jimmy Giuffre, John Graas, George Perle, Florence Price, Bob Carter, Bob Florence and Robert Erickson and writer William Irwin Thompson. Laviolette was an important figure on the West coast jazz scene of the 1950s.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7922886", "label": "Verticordia brachypoda", "source": "Verticordia brachypoda is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an irregularly branched shrub with narrow leaves crowded on side-branches, and cream-coloured or white flowers with pink, cream or white centres.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22006054", "label": "Aleksandar Kršić", "source": "Aleksandar Kršić (Serbian Cyrillic: Александар Кршић; born 6 May 1991) is a Serbian football defender who plays for OFK Odžaci, on loan from in the ČSK Pivara.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18222373", "label": "Laura Kamhuber", "source": "Laura Kamhuber (born 8 August 1999) is an Austrian singer. Her performance of Whitney Houston's \"I Will Always Love You\", taped when she was a 13-year-old on the 2013 German edition of The Voice Kids, is the most watched YouTube video by an Austrian artist. She has recorded three albums.", "target": "Austrian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5347718", "label": "Egbert Seymour", "source": "Egbert Seymour (December 15, 1850 – February 6, 1921) was the 6th mayor of Bayonne, New Jersey from 1895 to 1904.", "target": "American mayor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97453159", "label": "Medicines Discovery Catapult", "source": "The Medicines Discovery Catapult (MDC) is the United Kingdom's catapult centre for medicine research and innovation, headquartered at Alderley Park in Cheshire.", "target": "Company from the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85952043", "label": "Clara Lerby", "source": "Clara Lerby (born 8 May 1999) is a Swedish handball player for Lugi HF and the Swedish national team.Lerby represented Sweden at the 2017 Women's U-19 European Handball Championship, placing 9th and at the 2018 Women's Junior World Handball Championship, placing 12th.She also represented Sweden at the 2021 World Women's Handball Championship.", "target": "Swedish handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16217620", "label": "Kwesi Sinclair", "source": "Kwesi Lee Sinclair (born 26 October 1978) is a Guyanese-born former British Virgin Islands cricketer. Sinclair was a right-handed batsman. In February 2008, the British Virgin Islands were invited to take part in the 2008 Stanford 20/20, whose matches held official Twenty20 status. Sinclair made a single appearance in the tournament against Dominica in a preliminary round defeat, with Sinclair being dismissed for 9 runs by Liam Sebastien.", "target": "British Virgin Islands cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5827552", "label": "Bankastan", "source": "Bankastan (Persian: بنكستان, also Romanized as Bankastān; also known as Bangastān) is a village in Khafri Rural District, in the Central District of Sepidan County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 69, in 15 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16308172", "label": "Anchuthengu Fort", "source": "The fort was the East India Company's first permanent post on the Malabar Coast. In November 1693, John Brabourne was sent by the British East India Company (EIC) to Attingal, where he obtained from Rani Ashure a grant of a site for a fort on the sandy spit of Anchuthengu (then known as Anjengo), together with the monopoly of the pepper trade of Attingal. The EIC commenced construction in January 1696. In June 1696 British pirates in the ketch Josiah under Robert Culliford, destroyed the Bengal Pilot Service's sloop Gingali (or Gingalle) at Anjengo.While construction was ongoing the Dutch lobbied the Rani against the fort's construction, as it would impact adversely on their own trade on the Malabar coast. She ordered Brabourne to stop building but he ignored her orders. The Rani then tried to starve out the British by cutting off supplies; but as they could be supplied from the sea, the land blockade proved ineffectual. She then sent an armed force against Brabourne but he defeated it and a peace was arranged. The fort was completed in 1699, and a flourishing trade in pepper and cotton cloth speedily grew up. The fort served as the first signaling station for ships arriving from Britain.The fort is 256 ft (78.0 m) square, with four bastions, each of which mounted eight 18-pounder guns. The walls between the bastions had seven or eight guns. In addition, there was a battery of some twenty 18&24-pounder guns facing the sea. The fort had a garrison of 400 Europeans and 70-80.", "target": "building in India", "baseline_candidates": ["fort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18201409", "label": "Floydia praealta", "source": "Floydia is a monotypic species of tree in the family Proteaceae native to Australia. It is a somewhat rare tree found only growing in the rainforests of southeastern Queensland and northern New South Wales. The sole species is Floydia praealta which is commonly known as the ball nut or possum nut. The tree has a superficial resemblance to the closely related Macadamia and could be confused with them. The fruit of F. praealta is poisonous. The species was formally described in 1862 by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller based on plant material collected near the Clarence River in northern New South Wales and the Brisbane River in Queensland. In his publication Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae Mueller named the plant Helicia praealta. The species was transferred to the genus Macadamia in 1901 by Queensland Colonial Botanist Frederick Manson Bailey and then to Floydia in 1975 by Lawrie Johnson and Barbara Briggs.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6122382", "label": "Jagdstaffel 21", "source": "Royal Saxon Jagdstaffel 21 was a \"hunting group\" (i.e., fighter squadron) of the Luftstreitkräfte, the air arm of the Imperial German Army during World War I. As one of the original German fighter squadrons, the unit would score 148 verified aerial victories, including at least 30 destructions of enemy observation balloons.In turn, their casualties for the war would amount to eight pilots killed in action, six wounded in action, and one fallen prisoner of war.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2619898", "label": "Somethin's Happening", "source": "Somethin's Happening is the third studio album by English musician Peter Frampton, released in 1974. It reached #125 on the Billboard 200 album chart.", "target": "Peter Frampton album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5975025", "label": "Licania pyrifolia", "source": "Licania pyrifolia, commonly known as merecure, is a species of flowering tree in the family Chrysobalanaceae. It has large green fruits, similar in size to the avocado, greenish with whitish freckles. It is widespread in the Llanos or Great Plains of the Orinoco river. The fruit is edible and it used to be planted near the Fundos for shade because it is evergreen and because of its fruit. It contains compounds that can be used to control snails and other mollusks harmful to crops. Its Latin name alludes to its leaves being similar to those of the pear tree. It is the flagship tree of the state of Apure in Venezuela.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24038731", "label": "Follow You", "source": "\"Follow You\" is a song by British rock band Bring Me the Horizon. Produced by keyboardist Jordan Fish and vocalist Oliver Sykes, it was featured on the band's 2015 fifth studio album That's the Spirit. The song was also released as the fifth single from the album on 26 February 2016, reaching number 95 on the UK Singles Chart and topping the UK Rock & Metal Singles Chart.", "target": "2016 single by Bring Me the Horizon", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25387686", "label": "Dapediidae", "source": "Dapediidae is an extinct family of neopterygian ray-finned fish that lived during the Triassic and Jurassic periods. It is the only family of the order Dapediiformes. Its members were historically placed within the ginglymodian family Semionotidae, but were moved to their own family in 1966.", "target": "family of fishes (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17245310", "label": "Tetragonia coronata", "source": "Tetragonia coronata is a member of the genus Tetragonia and is endemic to Australia. The annual herb has a decumbent habit. It blooms in July producing yellow flowers.Often found among calcrete outcrops it has a scattered distribution throughout the Gascoyne region of Western Australia where it grows in clay loam soils.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11879232", "label": "radioactive source", "source": "A radioactive source is a known quantity of a radionuclide which emits ionizing radiation; typically one or more of the radiation types gamma rays, alpha particles, beta particles, and neutron radiation. Sources can be used for irradiation, where the radiation performs a significant ionising function on a target material, or as a radiation metrology source, which is used for the calibration of radiometric process and radiation protection instrumentation. They are also used for industrial process measurements, such as thickness gauging in the paper and steel industries. Sources can be sealed in a container (highly penetrating radiation) or deposited on a surface (weakly penetrating radiation), or they can be in a fluid. As an irradiation source they are used in medicine for radiation therapy and in industry for such as industrial radiography, food irradiation, sterilization, vermin disinfestation, and irradiation crosslinking of PVC. Radionuclides are chosen according to the type and character of the radiation they emit, intensity of emission, and the half-life of their decay. Common source radionuclides include cobalt-60, iridium-192, and strontium-90. The SI measurement quantity of source activity is the Becquerel, though the historical unit Curies is still in partial use, such as in the USA, despite their NIST strongly advising the use of the SI unit. The SI unit for health purposes is mandatory in the EU. An irradiation source typically lasts for between 5 and 15 years before its activity drops below useful levels. However sources with long half-life radionuclides when utilised as calibration sources can be used for much longer.", "target": "radionuclide which emits ionizing radiation", "baseline_candidates": ["radionuclide", "source type", "radiator"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5295120", "label": "Donald Schmitt", "source": "Donald Schmitt (born 1951) is a Canadian architect.Born in 1951 in South Porcupine, a mining town in northern Ontario, Canada, he went to high school at the University of Toronto Schools (UTS) and studied afterwards at the University of Toronto Faculty of Architecture. Donald Schmitt has practiced architecture with A.J Diamond since 1978 and is a Principal in the firm currently known as Diamond Schmitt Architects Incorporated. He is the Founding Chair of the Public Art Commission for the City of Toronto for which he was awarded the Civic Medal and is currently a member of the University of Toronto Design Review Panel. He served on the Design Review Panel of the National Capital Commission for over a decade and for many years for Waterfront Toronto.", "target": "Canadian architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29914969", "label": "DeVante Swing production discography", "source": "The following list is a discography of production by DeVante Swing.", "target": "production discography", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia production discography"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7409746", "label": "Sammy Forcillo", "source": "Savino \"Sammy\" Forcillo is a retired Canadian politician and a former mayor of Ville-Marie borough in Montreal, Quebec.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33632", "label": "2009 Gerry Weber Open", "source": "The 2009 Gerry Weber Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 17th edition of the event known that year as the Gerry Weber Open, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2009 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Gerry Weber Stadion in Halle, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, from 6 June through 14 June 2009. The singles draw featured Miami, Monte Carlo and Rome finalist, Dubai and Belgrade titlist Novak Djokovic and 2008 Davis Cup winner, Brisbane runner-up Fernando Verdasco. Also seeded were Johannesburg and Marseille winner Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Munich champion Tomáš Berdych, Dmitry Tursunov, Jürgen Melzer and Rainer Schüttler. Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) No. 2 Roger Federer, reigning US Open champion, winner of the Madrid Open and runner-up in the 2009 Australian Open, was initially in the draw as the top seed, but pulled out before playing a match, citing fatigue after winning the French Open the previous week. The doubles draw was led by 2009 French Open champions, US Open, Rotterdam, and 2008 Halle finalists Lukáš Dlouhý and Leander Paes. Also present were Acapulco winners František Čermák and Michal Mertiňák, Martin Damm and Robert Lindstedt, and Philipp Petzschner and Alexander Peya. The singles event was won by German Tommy Haas, who had earned a wildcard entry into the main draw, over Djokovic in three sets. The doubles were won by the unseeded German pair of Christopher Kas and Philipp Kohlschreiber in straight sets over the wildcard pair of German Andreas Beck.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Halle Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65421447", "label": "Hedonism", "source": "Hedonism refers to a family of theories, all of which have in common that pleasure plays a central role in them. Psychological or motivational hedonism claims that human behavior is determined by desires to increase pleasure and to decrease pain. Normative or ethical hedonism, on the other hand, is not about how we actually act but how we ought to act: we should pursue pleasure and avoid pain. Axiological hedonism, which is sometimes treated as a part of ethical hedonism, is the thesis that only pleasure has intrinsic value. Applied to well-being or what is good for someone, it is the thesis that pleasure and suffering are the only components of well-being. These technical definitions of hedonism within philosophy, which are usually seen as respectable schools of thought, have to be distinguished from how the term is used in everyday language, sometimes referred to as \"folk hedonism\". In this sense, it has a negative connotation, linked to the egoistic pursuit of short-term gratification by indulging in sensory pleasures without regard for the consequences.", "target": "philosophy of pleasure as the highest value", "baseline_candidates": ["philosophy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1863001", "label": "Susanne Munk Wilbek", "source": "Susanne Munk Wilbek [born Munk Lauritsen, (1967-10-12) 12 October 1967] is a former Danish team handball player and Olympic champion. She won a gold medal with the Danish national team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.Susanne Lauritsen is married to handball coach Ulrik Wilbek.", "target": "Danish handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7815959", "label": "Tom Godal", "source": "Tomas \"Tom\" Godal (born 6 July 1953) is a Norwegian former motorcycle speedway rider who rode in Britain for Halifax Dukes and Leicester Lions. Born in Notodden, Godal gained his early experience in Norway, and finished fourth in the Norwegian Championship in 1975. In 1977 he signed for Halifax Dukes, moving on to Leicester Lions in April 1978. Never averaging above 5 points in a season, his last year in British speedway was 1979.", "target": "Motorcycle rider", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25650370", "label": "Golestaneh", "source": "Golestaneh (Persian: گلستانه, also Romanized as Golestāneh) is a village in Margavar Rural District, Silvaneh District, Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 555, in 81 families.", "target": "village in Margavar Rural District, Silvaneh District, Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3915375", "label": "2013 Australian federal election", "source": "The 2013 Australian federal election to elect the members of the 44th Parliament of Australia took place on 7 September 2013. The centre-right Liberal/National Coalition opposition led by Opposition leader Tony Abbott of the Liberal Party of Australia and Coalition partner the National Party of Australia, led by Warren Truss, defeated the incumbent centre-left Labor Party government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd by an 18-seat 3.6 percentage point two-party swing resulting in a landslide win for the Coalition. Labor had been in government for six years since first being elected in the 2007 election. This election marked the end of the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd Labor government and the start of the 9 year long Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Liberal-National Coalition government. Abbott was sworn in by the Governor-General, Quentin Bryce, as Australia's new Prime Minister on 18 September 2013, along with the Abbott Ministry. The 44th Parliament of Australia opened on 12 November 2013, with the members of the House of Representatives and territory senators sworn in. The state senators were sworn in by the next Governor-General Peter Cosgrove on 7 July 2014, with their six-year terms commencing on 1 July.The proclamation dissolving the House of Representatives and formally beginning the election period had been issued by Governor-General Bryce on 5 August 2013. The writs of election were subsequently issued by Bryce for the election of members of the House of Representatives and territory senators, and by the state governors for the senators for each state.Voting in Australia's federal elections has been compulsory since 1925. For the House of Representatives, a.", "target": "election held on 7 September 2013", "baseline_candidates": ["Australian federal election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2897641", "label": "Bernard Carayon", "source": "Bernard Carayon (born 1 October 1957, in Paris) was a member of the French parliament. First elected in Tarn in 1993; he has been then reelected in 2002 and 2007. He is also mayor of Lavaur, a historic city near Toulouse, since 1995. He is a member of the Union for a Popular Movement. Since 2009, he has been a lecturer at SciencesPo Paris in the department of public affairs. With a focus on the questions of globalization, he has written two books entitled \"Patriotisme économique\" and \"Changeons le monde\" (\"Let's change the world\"). Together with a socialist MP he started a foundation called \"Prometheus\". Supported by a dozen prominent French companies, Prometheus tries to bridge the gap between the private and the public reflexions about globalization in order to build a genuine economic strategy for France and Europe.", "target": "French politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5145489", "label": "Colin Pressdee", "source": "Colin Pressdee is a food writer, broadcaster and consultant living in London.", "target": "Food writer, presenter, consultant specializing in oysters", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15713273", "label": "Kisses of Fire", "source": "\"Kisses of Fire\" is a song recorded by Swedish pop group ABBA, released on their 1979 album Voulez-Vous.", "target": "song written and composed by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, originally recorded by ABBA and released in 1979", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7743953", "label": "The Kampung Boy", "source": "The Kampung Boy, also known as Lat, the Kampung Boy or simply Kampung Boy, is a graphic novel by Lat about a young boy's experience growing up in rural Perak in the 1950s. The book is an autobiographical account of the artist's life, telling of his adventures in the jungles and tin mines, his circumcision, family, and school life. It is also the basis for the eponymous animated series broadcast in 1999. First published in 1979 by Berita Publishing, The Kampung Boy was a commercial and critical success; its first printing (of at least 60,000 copies, 16 times) was sold out within four months of its release. Narrated in English with a smattering of Malay, the work has been translated into other languages, such as Japanese and French, and sold abroad. The book made Lat an international figure and a highly regarded cartoonist in Malaysia. It won several awards when released as Kampung Boy in the United States, such as Outstanding International Book for 2007 and the Children's Book Council and Booklist Editor's Choice for 2006. The Kampung Boy became a franchise, with the characters of The Kampung Boy decorating calendars, stamps, and aeroplanes. A Malaysian theme park is scheduled to open in 2012 with the fictional characters as part of its attractions. The Kampung Boy is very popular in Southeast Asia and has gone through 16 reprints. A sequel, Town Boy, which followed the protagonist in his teenage years in the city, was published in 1981 and a spin-off, Kampung Boy: Yesterday and Today, in.", "target": "autobiographical graphic novel by Lat", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17462830", "label": "Barbara Jones", "source": "Barbara Jones (born January 6, 1977) is an American cross-country skier. She competed in three events at the 2002 Winter Olympics. Jones attended Saint Paul Central High School where she won three straight Minnesota State High School League championships in 1993, 1994, and 1995. She also placed second in the 1,600 meter and 3,200 meter races at the state track meet in 1994. The Star Tribune described her as the best high school level skier from the state until the emergence of Jessie Diggins. She graduated from Dartmouth College in 1999.", "target": "American cross-country skier born 1977", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5203508", "label": "D. Bernard Amos", "source": "Dennis Bernard Amos (April 16, 1923 – May 15, 2003) was a British born American immunologist. National Academies Press called Amos \"one of the most distinguished scientists of the genetics of individuality of the twentieth century\". In 1969, Amos and Dr. David Hume founded the first regional organ sharing program in the United States. Amos made significant contributions in immunogenetics, tumor immunity, and transplantation immunology.", "target": "English-born American immunologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78254147", "label": "Nicolaas Hendrik Swellengrebel", "source": "Nicolaas Hendrik Swellengrebel (12 August 1885 – 1 January 1970) was a Dutch epidemiologist, parasitologist, pathologist, and specialist on several human diseases, particularly malaria. He pioneered an ecological approach to the management of the habitat to control vector species that he called as \"species sanitation.\" Born in an upper-class Amsterdam family, he became interested in biology at high school and went to university to study biology at the University of Zurich and at University of Amsterdam where professor Hugo de Vries warned him of the lack of jobs in the field. He then worked at the Pasteur Institute in Paris in 1907. One of early works was to show that spirochetes were not bacteria and he described Borrelia after Dr. Amédée Borrel. He was also influenced by Robert Koch and Louis Pasteur but found that medical researchers lacked a sound training or interest in many aspects of biology. His first work in public health was on plague dealing with an outbreak in Holland and in the colonies in Indonesia and Java. While in Southeast Asia he met the malariologist W.A.P. Schüffner and began to collaborate with him on malarial studies. He saw the need for entomological studies and made more trips in the region, accompanied by his wife Meta, and sought a naturalistic approach to the management of vectors by modification of the habitats, a method that he called \"species sanitation.\" This required a knowledge of the biology of malaria vectors that examined the habitat and biology of the species found in a location and the.", "target": "Dutch pathologist, parasitologist, and epidemiologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q325513", "label": "Mahmud Shaltut", "source": "Sheikh Mahmoud Shaltut (Arabic: محمود شلتوت; 23 April 1893 – 13 December 1963) was a Egyptian figure best known for his attempts in Islamic reform. A disciple of Mohammad Abduh’s school of thought, Shaltut rose to prominence as Grand Imam of Al-Azhar during the Nasser years from 1958 until his death in 1963.", "target": "Egyptian imam (1893-1963)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7517085", "label": "Silvina Luna", "source": "Silvina Noelia Luna Stavrópulos (born June 21, 1980) is an Argentinian model, actress and vedette born in Rosario, Santa Fe Province, Argentina.", "target": "Argentine actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7110226", "label": "Ouavoussé, Méguet", "source": "Ouavoussé is a town in the Méguet Department of Ganzourgou Province in central Burkina Faso. The town has a population of 1,143.", "target": "place in Plateau-Central Region, Burkina Faso", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Burkina Faso"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5534184", "label": "Geoff Jansz", "source": "Geoff Jansz (born 1958) is a Sri Lankan-born Australian chef and television presenter.", "target": "Australian chef", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16135345", "label": "Sadya", "source": "Sadya (Malayalam: സദ്യ) is a platter of Kerala origin and of importance to all Malayalis, consisting of a variety of traditional vegetarian platters usually served on a banana leaf in Kerala as lunch. Sadya means banquet in Malayalam. Sadya is typically served as a traditional platter for Onam, the state festival of Kerala, Vishu.", "target": "Traditional feast in Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["eating party", "food"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q276737", "label": "Alvach", "source": "Alvach (Persian: الواچ, also Romanized as Alvāch; also known as Alvāj) is a village in Rowzeh Chay Rural District, in the Central District of Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,320, in 1,075 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7167847", "label": "Pereneia", "source": "Pereneia is a genus of skippers in the family Hesperiidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5411211", "label": "Eureka Peak", "source": "Eureka Peak is a mountain in the Black Rock Canyon region of Joshua Tree National Park in the U.S. state of California. The peak is the 4th highest summit in the park after Quail Mountain, Queen Mountain and Inspiration Peak. The Eureka Peak Road, an unpaved dirt road, leads up to the summit from Upper Covington Flat and is drivable by 4-wheel drive vehicles under suitable conditions. Mountain biking is also very popular on this peak. An alternative route, the Eureka Peak Trail, branches off the California Riding and Hiking Trail and ascends the peak from the north. The upper slopes of the mountain may occasionally see snow in winter.", "target": "mountain in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4249457", "label": "East Sister Island", "source": "East Sister Island is a 15 hectare island in Ontario, Canada, located within Lake Erie. It has no long-term human population and is maintained as a Provincial Nature Reserve.The island is part of the Pelee Archipelago which also includes West Sister Island (in Ohio, USA) and Middle Sister Island.", "target": "Sovereign Territory", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3047484", "label": "Višnjica", "source": "Višnjica (Serbian Cyrillic: Вишњића) is a small village in the municipality of Pljevlja, Montenegro.", "target": "village in Pljevlja, Montenegro", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5525727", "label": "Gary Pearce", "source": "Peter Gary Pearce (born 11 November 1960) is a Welsh director of rugby at Hull RUFC (2000–2005), and dual-code international rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1980s and 1990s. He played representative level rugby union (RU) for Wales, and at club level for Laugharne RFC, Bridgend RFC and Llanelli RFC, as a fly-half. i.e. number 10, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Wales, and at club level for Hull FC, Scarborough Pirates and Ryedale-York, as a stand-off, or hooker, i.e. number 6, or 9, during the era of contested scrums.", "target": "Welsh rugby union and rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24975727", "label": "Droxinavir", "source": "Droxinavir (also known as SC 55389A) was an experimental protease inhibitor researched by Pharmacia as a treatment for HIV infection. Its research and development was discontinued on March 06, 1995.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5426330", "label": "FK Polet Ljubić", "source": "FK Polet Ljubić (Serbian Cyrillic: ФК Полет Љубић) is a football club based in Ljubić, Čačak, Serbia. They currently play in the Serbian League West, a third tier in Serbia's football league, and spent the 2001–02 season in the Serbian First League.", "target": "association football club in Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4954101", "label": "Brad Ludden", "source": "Brad Ludden is a professional kayaker born in Sheridan, Wyoming on May 8, 1981. He started kayaking internationally at age 12 and has been to over 40 countries. He is the founder of a charity called First Descents, an organization that benefits cancer patients. At age 12, Brad learned his aunt was diagnosed with cancer, and shortly after his mother began volunteer work at a local pediatric oncology camp. He volunteered one day each summer, instructing campers on kayaking. This is when he realized he could serve his community while kayaking. In 1999 he began construction of First Descents and in 2001, construction was finished, with aid from The State of Colorado.In 2008 he was named Cosmopolitan Magazine's \"Hottest Bachelor in America.\" Ludden's has also started a blog known as Athletes Giving [1] where he highlights athletes involved in charitable work. He lives in Kalispell, Montana. he has numerous sponsorship deals, including deals with - Nike, Smith Optics [2]. Dagger Kayaks, Subaru, AT Paddles, Kokatat [3], and Training Day.", "target": "kayaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48697895", "label": "Carle Hessay", "source": "Hans Karl Hesse, known in later life as Carle Hessay (30 November 1911 - 1 January 1978), was a German-born Canadian painter. Starting at age fourteen, he studied at art academies in Dresden and Paris. He came to Canada, and served as a Canadian soldier in World War II. After the establishment of peace, Hessay moved to British Columbia, eventually settling in the town of Langley, where he took up art again in the 1950s. Some of his early paintings were done in the manner of Romantic realism. The influence of Expressionism soon became significant, with Hessay drawing on both the European and American movements, together with aspects of Emily Carr and the Group of Seven. He painted landscapes throughout his artistic life, as well as cityscapes, the Spanish Civil War, Biblical prophecy, and conceptions of the far future. A sizable fraction of his output consisted of abstract pieces. Over time, Hessay's depictions grew more symbolic, one commentator describing his late work as \"brazenly metaphysical and apocalyptic\". He often made his own pigments, and his style is distinguished by his use of colour, especially black. In 2014, a group of Canadian writers published poems based on his small abstracts. Hessay was the subject of a 2017 documentary film and art exhibition at the University of Victoria.", "target": "Canadian painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12240469", "label": "Mohammed Rateb al-Nabulsi", "source": "Mohammed Rateb Al-Nabulsi (Arabic: محمد راتب النابلسي) (born 29 January 1939) is a Syrian writer, professor, Islamic scholar, and Co-founder & manager (Nabulsi Encyclopedia of Islamic Science). He was a professor at Damascus University. He was living in Syria but after the Syrian Revolution started in 2011 he went to Jordan.", "target": "Syrian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2748550", "label": "Chalcosyrphus nemorum", "source": "Chalcosyrphus (Xylotomima) nemorum (Fabricius 1805) , the Dusky-banded Leafwalker , is a common species of syrphid fly with a Palearctic and Nearctic distribution. Hoverflies get their names from the ability to remain nearly motionless while in flight The adults, also know as flower flies for they are commonly found around and on flowers from which they get both enegy-giving nectar and protein rich pollen. Larvae have been found under the bark of Larix, Pinus and a variety of hardwoods..", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19406845", "label": "Caimito", "source": "Caimito is a town and municipality located in the Sucre Department, northern Colombia.", "target": "Colombian municipality of the department of Sucre", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Colombia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5830964", "label": "Dam Tang-e Kap", "source": "Dam Tang-e Kap (Persian: دم تنگ كپ; also known as Tang Kap) is a village in Sar Asiab-e Yusefi Rural District, Bahmai-ye Garmsiri District, Bahmai County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 37, in 7 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1805337", "label": "energy policy", "source": "Energy policy is the manner in which a given entity (often governmental) has decided to address issues of energy development including energy conversion, distribution and use as well as reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in order to contribute to climate change mitigation. The attributes of energy policy may include legislation, international treaties, incentives to investment, guidelines for energy conservation, taxation and other public policy techniques. Energy is a core component of modern economies. A functioning economy requires not only labor and capital but also energy, for manufacturing processes, transportation, communication, agriculture, and more. Energy planning is more detailed than energy policy. Energy policy is closely related to climate change policy because totalled worldwide the energy sector emits more greenhouse gas than other sectors.", "target": "policy addressing energy issues", "baseline_candidates": ["type of policy", "public policy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66232907", "label": "West Herts College", "source": "West Herts College is a college for further education in Watford, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom. The college has campuses in Watford, Hemel Hempstead and Kings Langley. As of 2017 the college has 5,900 students on study programmes or apprenticeships.", "target": "college in Hertfordshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["college", "further education college"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7322876", "label": "Ricards Lodge High School", "source": "Ricards Lodge High School is a single-sex comprehensive secondary school for girls aged 11 to 16, located on Lake Road in Wimbledon, London. The school's headteacher has been Alison Jerrard since 2005. It was judged as an Outstanding school by Ofsted in November 2017.", "target": "school in Merton, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["girls' school", "community school", "secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q934975", "label": "Montezuma Oropendola", "source": "The Montezuma Oropendola (Psarocolius montezuma) is a New World tropical icterid bird. It is a resident breeder in the Caribbean coastal lowlands from southeastern Mexico to central Panama, but is absent from El Salvador and southern Guatemala. It also occurs on the Pacific slope of Nicaragua and Honduras and northwestern and southwestern Costa Rica. It is among the oropendola species sometimes separated in the genus Gymnostinops. The English and scientific names of this species commemorate the Aztec emperor Moctezuma II. The sexes are very different in size; the male is 50 cm (20 in) long and weighs 520 g (18 oz); the smaller female is 38 cm (15 in) long and weighs 230 g (8.1 oz). In total body mass, the males are 100% bigger than the females, which is a 2:1 body-to-mass ratio and makes the Montezuma oropendola one of the most sexually-dimorphic birds in the world. Webster et al. says that the size difference in males and females is probably directly related to differences in foraging habits. The females often forage on thin branches, eating insects out of curled up leaves, while the males often perch on thick branches and forage in epiphytes and bromeliads.Webster et al. also found that sexual dimorphism was more obvious in length of the wing and body mass. Male size and body mass is associated with sexual fitness and dominance. Webster et al. observed that males defend sexually-receptive females, suggesting that Montezuma oropendolas have a female-defence mating system. While the females nest, the males fight and fend off one.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5126271", "label": "Clare Venables", "source": "Clare Rosamund Venables (17 March 1943 – 17 October 2003) was an English theatre director. She was artistic director of regional theatres in Lincoln, Stratford East (London), and Sheffield; she became Director of Education at the Royal Shakespeare Company, and she also directed a number of operas.", "target": "English theatre director (1943-2003)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7581010", "label": "Springfield Municipal Group", "source": "The Municipal Group of Springfield, Massachusetts is a collection of three prominent municipal buildings in the city's Metro Center district. Consisting of a concert hall, City Hall, and a 300-foot-tall (91 m) clocktower, the Group is a center of government and culture in the city. The Municipal Complex's architecture is a notable example of the City Beautiful style made popular by Daniel Burnham, an architect from Chicago, Illinois, in the early 20th century.", "target": "office, Indoor theatre in Springfield, Massachusetts", "baseline_candidates": ["rathaus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3299542", "label": "Matt Orford", "source": "Matthew Orford (born 22 April 1978), also known by the nickname of \"The Ox\", is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 2000s and 2010s. He played for the Erina Eagles as a junior. A City New South Wales representative halfback, he played the majority of his club football career in Australia for National Rugby League clubs Melbourne Storm and Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles, representing the latter when he won 2008's Dally M Medal and NRL premiership. Orford also played for NRL sides Northern Eagles and Canberra Raiders, as well as in Super League for England's Bradford Bulls.", "target": "Australian rugby league player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5038618", "label": "The Cardinal Vaughan Memorial RC School", "source": "Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School is a Roman Catholic day secondary school in Holland Park with approximately 950 students.", "target": "school in Kensington and Chelsea, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["academy school", "Catholic school", "boys' school", "secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5231461", "label": "David Blake", "source": "David Eustace Blake (27 April 1925 – 21 May 2015) was an English amateur cricketer. He was a left-handed batsman who played primarily as an opening batsman and as an occasional wicketkeeper. Blake attended Aldenham School and Guy's Hospital Dental School. He made his first-class debut for Hampshire in 1949 against a Combined Services team. In the same year he made his County Championship debut against Middlesex. Blake played regular matches for the county in the Championship over the coming years. In 1952 Blake played for the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) against Ireland in Dublin. The following year he represented the Free Foresters in a single first-class match against Cambridge University. By the end of the 1954 season Blake's appearances for Hampshire were becoming less frequent and in 1955/56 he toured the West Indies with EW Swanton's XI, and played against the national teams of Barbados and Trinidad and against a West Indies XI. Blake represented Hampshire in a single first-class match in 1956 against Worcestershire. Also in 1956, he played for the Gentlemen of England in a single match against the touring Australians. In the 1957 season, he did not play any matches for Hampshire, but did play a single first-class match for the Duke of Norfolk's XI against Jamaica, in their tour to the West Indies. In the 1958 County Championship Blake represented Hampshire five times, with his final first-class match for the club coming against Warwickshire. In his fifty matches for Hampshire, Blake scored 1,811 runs at an average of 21.81. Blake made.", "target": "cricketer (1925-2015)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13490108", "label": "Belvosia bifasciata", "source": "Belvosia bifasciata is a species of bristle fly in the family Tachinidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3194136", "label": "Katia Skanavi", "source": "Katia Skanavi (born in Moscow, 1971) is a Russian pianist. Granddaughter of the Russian film director Aleksandr Zarkhi. Skanavi started a concert career after being awarded the XXII Long-Thibaud Competition's 3rd prize at 18. In 1994 she won Athens' Maria Callas Grand Prize. In 1995, she received an honorable mention at the XIII International Chopin Piano Competition.", "target": "Russian musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13039970", "label": "Hodgeman County", "source": "Hodgeman County (county code HG) is a county located in the U.S. state of Kansas. As of the 2020 census, the county population was 1,723. Its county seat and most populous city is Jetmore.", "target": "county in Kansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Kansas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3559644", "label": "Vincent Geisser", "source": "Vincent Geisser (born 15 January 1968) is a French sociologist and political scientist.Principal themes of his work and extensive written output include political questions in the Arab world, the role of Islam in France and in Europe more generally, and problems involving discrimination in the French political parties.", "target": "French sociologist and political scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18364195", "label": "Johanna Mappes", "source": "Riitta Johanna Mappes (born 13 October 1965 in Valkeakoski, Finland) is an evolutionary ecologist based in Finland. Her research focuses on interspecific interactions, such as those between predators and prey. She is known for her work on the evolution of aposematic signals and mimicry in chemically defended prey, the evolution of signal polymorphism, the evolution of bacterial virulence, and the evolution of sexual and asexual reproduction. Her main study species include the wood tiger moth (Arctia plantaginis), vipers (Viperidae), the Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) and the drumming wolf-spider (Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata).Mappes earned her MSc degree in 1991 and her PhD in 1994, both from the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. Her doctoral thesis focused on reproductive tactics and maternal care in shield bugs, particularly the parent bug (Elasmucha grisea). In 2003 The Academy of Finland awarded Mappes the 'Young Dynamic Researcher Award' for her research merits in developing the ‘novel world method’ to study the evolution of aposematism.She was elected as a Research Professor at the Academy of Finland from 2009-2013, and again from 2019-2023. Mappes served as a Professor of Evolutionary Ecology at the University of Jyväskylä from 2008-2019, where she headed the Centre of Excellence in Biological Interactions for the Academy of Finland from 2012-2018. In 2017 she was elected member of the Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters and in 2018 she became an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS). In 2019 she was invited to membership in the Royal Physiographic Society of Lund. As of 2020, she is.", "target": "Finnish evolutionary ecologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7093951", "label": "Onismor Bhasera", "source": "Onismor Bhasera (born 7 January 1986) is a Zimbabwean footballer who plays as a left back for SuperSport United in the South African Premier Soccer League. He previously played in the South African Premier Division for Bidvest Wits, Maritzburg United and Kaizer Chiefs, and the Football League for Plymouth Argyle. Bhasera has won caps at full international level for Zimbabwe.", "target": "Zimbabwean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17116345", "label": "Magic Shell", "source": "Magic Shell is a dessert product produced by Smucker’s in the US, originally created as Ice Magic by Cottees in Australia, and sold in the UK as Bird's Ice Magic. It is a syrup that quickly hardens into a crispy shell when poured onto a cold surface, which is the origin of the product's name. The syrup is primarily designed for use on ice cream. It comes in several flavours, including chocolate, caramel, chocolate fudge, cupcake, cherry, and smores in addition to two unique flavours—One with chocolate, caramel, and pecans, which the company calls \"Turtle Delight\", and a flavour based upon the candy bars Twix, Hersheys, and Reeses.", "target": "dessert sauce", "baseline_candidates": ["dessert sauce", "brand"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5193844", "label": "Cumberland Bone Cave", "source": "The Cumberland Bone Cave is a fossil-filled cave along the western slope of Wills Mountain on the outskirts of Cumberland, Maryland near Corriganville in Allegany County, Maryland.", "target": "Fossil-filled cave on the outskirts of Cumberland, Maryland, US", "baseline_candidates": ["cave"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8343698", "label": "CSA Can Vies", "source": "Can Vies (also known as Centre Social Autogestionat Can Vies) is a building located in the Sants neighborhood of Barcelona, built in 1879. It has been squatted since 1997, when a group of youths occupied it and began using it as a self-managed social centre and infoshop. In late May 2014, riots broke out in a successful attempt to stop an eviction. The building was partially demolished and rebuilt by the local community.", "target": "Centre Social Autogestionat Can Vies is a self-managed social center (CSA) squatted since 1997. The building was built in 1879 as a house, remodeled for the construction of the metro L1. Survived an eviction attempt failed in 2014", "baseline_candidates": [""]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42567347", "label": "Metsähovi Radio Observatory", "source": "The Metsähovi Radio Observatory is an astronomical observatory in Finland, affiliated with the Aalto University. Its main premises are in Metsähovi, Kirkkonummi, 35 kilometers west of the university's Otaniemi campus. The observatory currently operates a 13.7 metres (45 ft) diameter radio telescope, and has an array of four 5.5 metres (18 ft) dishes to serve as a compact interferometer called the 'Metsähovi Compact Array', as well as several smaller radio telescopes and instruments. The observatory is staffed by some 20 researchers, engineers, and students, mostly from Aalto University and the Finnish Centre for Astronomy with the ESO. The observatory has been operational since 1974 and active in the fields of: Fundamental research in radio astronomy Development of instruments needed in radio astronomy Development of methods for radio astronomical measurements Applied scientific computing Space research EducationThe current research focuses on variable quasars, active galaxies, solar observations, and very long baseline interferometry. Metsähovi is as a member of the European VLBI Network. The observatory observed the near-total Solar eclipse of March 20, 2015 at 11.2 and 37 GHz.", "target": "observatory in Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["astronomical observatory"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4042145", "label": "Kepler-29", "source": "Kepler-29 is a Sun-like star in the northern constellation of Cygnus. It is located at the celestial coordinates: Right Ascension 19h 53m 23.6020s, Declination +47° 29′ 28.436″. With an apparent visual magnitude of 15.456, this star is too faint to be seen with the naked eye. It is a solar analog, having a close mass, radius, and temperature as the Sun. Currently the age of the star has not been determined due to its 2780 light-year (850 parsecs) distance. As of 2016 no Jovian exoplanets of 0.9–1.4 MJ have been found at a distance of 5 AU.", "target": "star in the constellation Cygnus", "baseline_candidates": ["star", "rotating variable star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12736648", "label": "Nicolae Drăganu", "source": "Nicolae Drăganu (18 February 1884 – 18 December 1939) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian linguist, philologist, and literary historian.", "target": "Romanian philologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1894043", "label": "Glenvil", "source": "Glenvil is a village in Clay County, Nebraska, United States. The settlement has formerly also been known as Glenville. The population was 310 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Hastings, Nebraska Micropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "human settlement in Clay County, Nebraska, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["village in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q984801", "label": "Pystira", "source": "Pystira is a genus of spiders in the jumping spider family Salticidae.", "target": "genus of arachnids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q454615", "label": "Marianne Jelved", "source": "Marianne Bruus Jelved (née Hirsbro, born 5 September 1943 in Aarhus) is a Danish politician, who is a member of the Folketing for the Danish Social Liberal Party. She was elected into parliament in the 1994 Danish general election and previously sat in parliament from 1987 to 1993. She is a former Minister of Economic Affairs, Nordic Cooperation, Culture and Ecclesiastical Affairs.", "target": "Danish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q339335", "label": "Accolay", "source": "Accolay (French pronunciation: ​[akɔlɛ]) is a former commune in the Yonne department in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in north-central France. On 1 January 2017, it was merged with Cravant into the new commune of Deux Rivières. The population of Accolay was 448 inhabitants as of January 1, 2019.The commune is bordered by the Cure River and the Nivernais Canal, just beside it. The canal junction was built in the 19th century to transport wood by timber rafting from the Morvan forests to Paris.Accolay is one of the most ancient locations of the Yonne department, first mentioned in a document by the Bishop of Auxerre, Saint Aunaire, in the 6th century under the name Accolacus. The name is from the Gaulish patronym Accola with the suffix acus, which was applied to settlements along Roman villaes. The Saint-Nizier church has a chancel and a Romanesque apsel separated by a classic nave. The first church on this site was built in the 11th century, and the present building dates from the 18th century. The church possesses three statues dating from 1695, classified as national monuments.The village was noted as a producer of pottery and ceramics that became renowned between 1945 and 1983.The commune boasts, amongst others, a library, an elementary school, a children's nursery, a recreation centre, a municipal camping ground and a post office.", "target": "former commune in Yonne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France", "delegated commune"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4156647", "label": "Tamara Degtyaryova", "source": "Tamara Vasilyevna Degtyaryova (Russian: Тамара Васильевна Дегтярёва; 29 May 1944 – 9 August 2018) was a Russian stage, television and film actress. In 1979, she received the State Prize of the USSR for her role in the television series Eternal Call. In 2005 she was made a People's Artist of Russia.", "target": "Soviet actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3639897", "label": "Bikini Atoll", "source": "Bikini Atoll were a post-rock band formed in London, though Ché Albrighton is from Jugenheim, Germany, and Bastian Juel is from Denmark. The band was signed to the Bella Union label in 2004. They released two albums, Moratoria in 2004 and Liar's Exit in 2005.", "target": "English band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5523097", "label": "Garfield Public Schools", "source": "The Garfield Public Schools is a comprehensive community public school district that serves students in pre-Kindergarten through twelfth grade from Garfield, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The district is one of 31 former Abbott districts statewide that were established pursuant to the decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Abbott v. Burke which are now referred to as \"SDA Districts\" based on the requirement for the state to cover all costs for school building and renovation projects in these districts under the supervision of the New Jersey Schools Development Authority.As of the 2020–21 school year, the district, comprised of 12 schools, had an enrollment of 4,713 students and 438.1 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 10.8:1.The district is classified by the New Jersey Department of Education as being in District Factor Group \"B\", the second-lowest of eight groupings. District Factor Groups organize districts statewide to allow comparison by common socioeconomic characteristics of the local districts. From lowest socioeconomic status to highest, the categories are A, B, CD, DE, FG, GH, I and J.", "target": "school district in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60395092", "label": "Qiu Zhanxuan", "source": "Qiu Zhanxuan (Chinese: 邱占萱; pinyin: Qiū Zhànxuān) is a Chinese student activist and Marxist. Qiu was president of the Peking University Marxist Society, a Marxist study group, until 28 December 2018.", "target": "Chinese student activist and Marxist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7239982", "label": "Preiesener Formation", "source": "The Priesener Formation is a Coniacian geologic formation in the Czech Republic. Dinosaur remains diagnostic to the genus level are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation.", "target": "geologic formation in Czech Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["formation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98841708", "label": "Mihail Caimacov", "source": "Mihail Caimacov (born 22 July 1998) is a Moldovan footballer who plays as a midfielder for Slaven Belupo.", "target": "Moldovan association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29868107", "label": "Stephen Rennicks", "source": "Stephen Rennicks is an Irish musician and film score composer based in Dublin.As a boy, Rennicks predominantly listened to and sang what he described as \"Irish Protestant Baptist gospel music, choruses and hymns\", and later claimed it was an influence on his process of learning harmony. During the later years of the 1980s, Rennicks was a member of a band called the Prunes, which traveled through nightclubs in France and Germany playing punk music.Rennicks worked with director Lenny Abrahamson on What Richard Did (2012). For Abrahamson, he later served as music director for the 2014 film Frank, where he was tasked to write songs that were a hybrid of pop and experimental rock music. Rennicks was inspired by musicians he met while in the Prunes, wrote the score and supervised the recordings of his original songs. For Frank, Rennicks won the award for Best Technical Achievement – Music at the 2014 British Independent Film Awards, and was nominated for Original Score at the 12th Irish Film & Television Awards.Abrahamson and Rennicks collaborated again on the 2015 film Room. As a Canadian co-production, Rennicks was nominated for the Canadian Screen Award for Best Score in January 2016. In April, he then won for Original Music at the 13th Irish Film & Television Awards.", "target": "composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4205075", "label": "history of economy in Russia since the 1990s", "source": "After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and collapse of Soviet Russia's controlled economy, a new Russian Federation was created under Boris Yeltsin in 1991. The Russian Federation had multiple economic reforms, including privatization and market and trade liberalization because of collapse of communism. The economy is much more stable than in the early 1990s, but inflation still remains an issue for Russia. Historically and currently, the Russian economy has differed sharply from major developed economies in terms of a weak legal system, underdevelopment of modern economic activities, technological backwardness, and lower living standards.", "target": "aspect of history regarding the economy since the proclamation of Russian Federation and the dissolution of the Soviet Union", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history", "economic history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2313586", "label": "Pedro Beda", "source": "Pedro Henrique Nogueira Beda (born March 5, 1989) is a Brazilian footballer who plays in Spain, as a forward for Arosa SC.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5331008", "label": "Eastwood Academy", "source": "Eastwood Academy is a secondary school in the Eastwood neighborhood of the East End, Houston, Texas, United States. The school is a member of the Houston Independent School District and is a school-of-choice for residents in the city of Houston. Eastwood Academy has been an \"exemplary\" high school since 2008, and is rated by the Texas Education Agency and was nominated as a Blue Ribbon School in 2010 and received the award, officially, in 2011. Eastwood Academy has been ranked number 3 in the Greater Houston area by Children at Risk, number 70 in the nation by The Washington Post, and number 22 in the nation by U.S. News .", "target": "Houston, Texas", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5233736", "label": "Whitiora", "source": "Whitiora is a suburb in central Hamilton in New Zealand. The suburb is home to Waikato Stadium, formerly Rugby Park. It is a major sporting and cultural events venue in Hamilton with a total capacity of 25,800. The stadium is a multi-purpose facility, though used mainly for rugby union. Many of Hamilton's hotels are in Whitiora, along the main road from the north.", "target": "suburb of Hamilton, New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11791788", "label": "Nietkowice", "source": "Nietkowice [ɲɛtkɔˈvit͡sɛ] (German: Deutsch Nettkow, after 1937: Straßburg (Oder)) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czerwieńsk, within Zielona Góra County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) north-west of Czerwieńsk and 17 km (11 mi) north-west of Zielona Góra. The village has a population of 700.", "target": "village in Lubusz, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2738094", "label": "Lucio Massari", "source": "Lucio Massari (22 January 1569 – 3 November 1633) was an Italian painter of the School of Bologna. He can be described as painting during both Mannerist and early-Baroque periods.", "target": "Italian painter (1569-1633)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12845001", "label": "Resident Evil", "source": "Resident Evil, known in Japan as Biohazard, is a Japanese horror video game series and media franchise created by Capcom. It consists of survival horror, third-person shooter and first-person shooter games, with players typically surviving in environments filled with zombies and other creatures. The franchise has expanded into a live-action film series, animated films, television series, comic books, novels, audio dramas, and other media and merchandise. The first Resident Evil was created by Shinji Mikami and Tokuro Fujiwara and released for the PlayStation in 1996. It is credited for defining the survival horror genre and returning zombies to popular culture. With Resident Evil 4 (2005), the franchise shifted to more dynamic shooting action; it influenced the evolution of the survival horror and third-person genres, popularizing the \"over-the-shoulder\" third-person view. Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (2017) moved the series to a first-person perspective. Capcom has also released three Resident Evil remakes: Resident Evil (2002), Resident Evil 2 (2019) and Resident Evil 3 (2020), with a Resident Evil 4 remake scheduled for 2023. The first Resident Evil film was released in 2002, followed by five sequels and a 2021 reboot, Welcome to Raccoon City. The films received generally negative reviews, but have grossed more than $1 billion, making Resident Evil the highest-grossing live-action video game film series. Resident Evil is Capcom's best-selling franchise, with 125 million copies sold worldwide as of March 2022. It is the best-selling horror game series, in addition to the film adaptations being the highest-grossing live-action video game film series, making Resident Evil the highest-grossing.", "target": "video game and media franchise", "baseline_candidates": ["media franchise"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7367361", "label": "Rosanova Glacier", "source": "Rosanova Glacier (73°15′S 97°55′W) is a glacier about 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9.2 mi) long flowing north from King Peninsula into the Abbot Ice Shelf. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) after Christine E. Rosanova, United States Geological Survey (USGS), Flagstaff, AZ; specialist in the use of satellite imagery for geological and glaciological studies from the early 1990s to 2002; a pioneer in the use of imagery for glacier velocity measurements.", "target": "glacier in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["glacier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7436015", "label": "Scott Bond", "source": "Scott Bond is a trance music artist, producer, and promoter from Birmingham, England, who began DJing in 1989. He started out DJing at venues such as Cream, Miss Moneypenny's, Fun and Gatecrasher, which he co-founded. He has toured internationally with Gatecrasher. He was voted World's Finest Resident DJ in the Mixmag Dance Awards.Scott Bond, John Purser, Darren Hodson and Nick Rose have also recorded under the name Q:Dos, producing and writing dance tracks as well as re-mixing for most of the major dance labels. Scott has also worked on many tracks with Solarstone. One of his most critically acclaimed releases has been in collaboration with Solarstone, a track called \"Third Earth\" [more commonly known as 3rd Earth].One of his mix albums is called Gatecrasher Wet. His most recent production Airfoil is a collaboration with Marc Mitchell, and was released in September 2014.", "target": "British DJ", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4996162", "label": "Bulgaria at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics", "source": "Bulgaria competed at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics from 15–23 August in Berlin. The team won no medals; the only athlete to reach the finals of their event was Momchil Karailiev in the triple jump.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at the World Championships in Athletics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26255338", "label": "Adriel d’Avila Ba Loua", "source": "Adriel D'Avila Ba Loua (born 25 July 1996) is an Ivorian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder or forward for Ekstraklasa club Lech Poznań.", "target": "Ivorian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30411426", "label": "Loïc Prud’homme", "source": "Loïc Prud'homme (born 19 August 1969) is a French politician representing la France Insoumise. He was elected to the French National Assembly on 18 June 2017, representing Gironde's 3rd constituency.", "target": "French politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16974443", "label": "Edmund Abbott", "source": "Captain Edmund Geoffrey Abbott, GC (20 July 1895 – 3 April 1974) was a Royal Navy officer and recipient of the Albert Medal, later exchanged for the George Cross. Abbott was promoted to captain on 5 July 1939.", "target": "Royal Navy officer (1895-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28062314", "label": "Charles Bathurst", "source": "Charles Bathurst (c. 1703–1743) of Clints and Skutterskelfe, Yorkshire was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons briefly from 1727 to 1728 Bathurst was the son of Charles Bathurst of Clints and Skutterskelfe, Yorkshire, and his wife Frances Potter, daughter of Thomas Potter merchant of Leeds. He was educated at Richmond, Yorkshire, and was admitted at Peterhouse, Cambridge on 25 April 1720, aged 16. In 1724 he succeeded his father. He was a prominent freemason,Bathurst was High Sheriff of Yorkshire for the year 1727 to 1728. At the 1727 British general election, he was returned as Member of Parliament for Richmond wth Sir Marmaduke Wyvill. Their friend the mayor, who was returning officer, allowed a large number of unqualified persons to vote for them. On petition the seats were awarded to their opponents on 14 March 1728. He did not stand again.Bathurst became insane. In 1730 he killed his butler but the coroner's inquest decided he had acted in self-defence. It was also said that at an inn, he threw a waiter downstairs and broke his leg, telling the innkeeper to put it in the bill. He married Anne Hendry, sister of John Hendry of Norbon, county Durham on 16 February 1736.Bathurst died in 1743 and was buried on 24 September. He was described in his obituary as ‘a man of vivacity, integrity, and generosity’.", "target": "British Member of Parliament (died 1743)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2923075", "label": "Bozovce", "source": "Bozovce (Macedonian: Бозовце, Albanian: Bozoc) is a village in the municipality of Tetovo, North Macedonia.", "target": "village in North Macedonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1808295", "label": "Al Yaqoub Tower", "source": "The Al Yaqoub Tower is a 328 m (1,076 ft) tall skyscraper on Sheikh Zayed Road in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The tower topped out in 2010 and was completed in 2013. It has 69 floors. The building is owned privately by Daro Saifuddin Yaquob, and functions as a 224-room hotel.The building design was inspired by Elizabeth Tower (more commonly known as Big Ben) in London. However, no clock face is present on Al Yaqoub Tower. It also bears a resemblance to The Tower, a building located directly north of it.", "target": "skyscraper in the United Arab Emirates", "baseline_candidates": ["skyscraper", "high-rise building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7085421", "label": "Old Windsor Lock", "source": "Old Windsor Lock is a lock on the River Thames in England on the right bank beside Old Windsor, Berkshire. The lock marks the downstream end of the New Cut, a meander cutoff built in 1822 by the Thames Navigation Commissioners which created Ham Island. The lock and a wider footbridge give access to the island. Two weirs are associated; the smaller adjoins and the larger is upstream. The lock is the ninth lowest of the forty-five on the river.", "target": "lock on the River Thames in Berkshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["lock"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13634381", "label": "EIF4G1", "source": "Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4 gamma 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the EIF4G1 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4705897", "label": "Alamein", "source": "The Alamein railway line is a commuter railway line operating between Flinders Street in the Melbourne central business district and Ashburton through Melbourne's eastern suburbs including Richmond, Cremorne, Burnley, Hawthorn, Hawthorn East, Camberwell, Glen Iris and Ashburton. It is part of the Melbourne rail network, which is operated by Metro Trains Melbourne.", "target": "passenger rail service in metropolitan Melbourne, Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line", "train service"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1140278", "label": "Quilapayún", "source": "Quilapayún (Spanish pronunciation: [kilapaˈʝun]) are a folk music group from Chile and among the longest lasting and most influential ambassadors of the Nueva Canción Chilena movement and genre. Formed during the mid-1960s, the group became inseparable with the revolution that occurred in the popular music of the country under the Popular Unity Government of Salvador Allende. Since its formation and during its forty-year history - both in Chile and during its lengthy period of exile in France - the group has seen modifications to its personnel lineup and the subject and content of its work. Controversy regarding irreconcilable differences with the current and former group directors led to the division into two distinctive Quilapayún ensembles; one in Chile (Quilapayún-Histórico) and one in France (Quilapayún-France).", "target": "Chilean folk music group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64860414", "label": "November 3", "source": "November 3 is the 307th day of the year (308th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar; 58 days remain until the end of the year.", "target": "date", "baseline_candidates": ["point in time with respect to recurrent timeframe"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65030682", "label": "Tonino Biondini", "source": "Tonio Biondini (1 January 1945 – 23 June 1983) was an Italian cross-country skier. He competed at the 1972 Winter Olympics and the 1976 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Italian cross-country skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47486169", "label": "Ulf Lienhard", "source": "Ulf Lienhard (born 3 May 1975) is an Argentine rower. He competed in the men's lightweight double sculls event at the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Argentine rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5499073", "label": "Frederick William Freking", "source": "Frederick William Freking (August 11, 1913 – November 28, 1998) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Bishop of the Diocese of Salina, Kansas (1957–1964) and the Diocese of La Crosse, Wisconsin (1964–1983).", "target": "Catholic bishop (1913-1998)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4776861", "label": "António Pedro Monteiro Lima", "source": "Antonio Pedro Monteiro Lima (born 5 January 1948) is a Cape Verdean diplomat who was the Permanent Representative to the United Nations for Cape Verde from August 2007 to February 2014. Before working for the UN, Monero Lima held multiple positions in External Affairs from 1975 to 1991. He also was an ambassador for Guinea-Bissau and Algeria between 1982 to 1990.", "target": "Cape Verdean diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1501063", "label": "Tulireki", "source": "Tulireki is a roller coaster located at Linnanmäki in Helsinki, Finland. It is Kalevala featured, just like Salama.", "target": "roller coaster in Linnanmäki, Helsinki, Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["steel roller coaster"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8081703", "label": "Ōshima Joun", "source": "Ōshima Joun (大島如雲, Ōshima Joun, 1858 – 1940) was a Japanese sculptor and artist, noted for his great artistry and skill in bronze casting.", "target": "Japanese sculptor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4119263", "label": "Khamis Mosque", "source": "The Khamis Mosque (Arabic: مسجد الخميس; transliterated: Masǧid al-ḫamīs) is believed to be the first mosque in Bahrain, built during the era of the Umayyad caliph Umar II. According to Al Wasat journalist Kassim Hussain, other sources mention that it was built in a later era during the rule of Uyunids with one minaret. The second was built two centuries later during the rule of Usfurids.The identical twin minarets of this ancient Islamic monument make it easily noticeable as one drives along the Shaikh Salman Road in Khamis.", "target": "mosque in Bahrain", "baseline_candidates": ["mosque"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4842694", "label": "Bahndwivici", "source": "Bahndwivici is an extinct genus of lizard known from a nearly complete and articulated skeleton discovered in rocks of the Green River Formation of Wyoming, United States. The skeleton is very similar to that of the modern Chinese crocodile lizard, Shinisaurus.", "target": "genus of reptiles", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15869944", "label": "Mimeremon", "source": "Mimeremon flavovittatum is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Mimeremon. It was described by Breuning in 1967.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28089376", "label": "Francis Gilmore", "source": "Francis Gilmore (12 September 1909 – 26 April 1955) was an Australian cricketer and rugby league footballer. He played two first-class cricket matches for New South Wales between 1938/39 and 1939/40, before which he competed as a first-grade rugby league player for Newtown and Balmain.Gilmore made his first grade rugby league debut in Round 3 1931 against Balmain at Marrickville Oval. Gilmore initially started as a five-eighth at Newtown before switching to the centres for the 1933 season. In 1933, Gilmore played for Newtown in the 1933 NSWRL grand final against St George at the Sydney Sports Ground. Newtown would win the match 18-5 claiming its second premiership with Gilmore kicking 3 goals. Gilmore played with Newtown up until the end of 1935 before departing the club. Due to the residency rules at the time, Gilmore sat out the 1936 season before signing with Balmain in 1937. Gilmore played only a single game for Balmain before retiring at the end of 1937.", "target": "cricketer (1909-1955)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5131516", "label": "Clements Mountain", "source": "Clements Mountain (8,765 feet (2,672 m)) is located in the Lewis Range, Glacier National Park in the U.S. state of Montana. Clements Mountain rises to the west of Logan Pass and above the Hidden Lake Trail which leads to Hidden Lake just west of the continental divide. The peak was named after Walter M. Clements who had worked to set up a treaty between the Blackfeet and the U.S. Government for the purchase of tribal lands east of the continental divide which later became part of the park.", "target": "mountain in Glacier National Park, Montana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q255133", "label": "Qozlu, Ardabil", "source": "Quzlu (Persian: قوزلو, also Romanized as Qūzlū; also known as Tūzlū) is a village in Ani Rural District, in the Central District of Germi County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 222, in 47 families. Quzlu lies on the Mughan plain; the people are Muslim and speak in Azerbaijani language.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85801687", "label": "Smithophis", "source": "Smithophis is a genus of snakes in the subfamily Natricinae of the family Colubridae; the one species that was known prior to 2019 had been classified under the genus Rhabdops, but was removed in the process of erecting the new genus Smithophis. The genus is endemic to Asia. It is named for Malcolm Arthur Smith, a British herpetologist who was active in Indian herpetology.", "target": "genus of reptiles", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6220203", "label": "John Backus", "source": "John Graham Backus (April 29, 1911 – October 28, 1988) was a Lithuanian American physicist and acoustician. John Backus was born and raised in Portland, Oregon, where he studied at Reed College, receiving a BA in 1932. He went on to graduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley, where he did research in nuclear physics at the Radiation Laboratory under Ernest Lawrence. He received an MA in 1936, and a PhD in 1940. In 1945 he was appointed Professor of Physics at the University of Southern California, a post he retained until his retirement in 1980. During the early part of his career, his research focussed on gaseous discharges in strong magnetic fields. He was also a musician, trained as a performer on piano, bassoon, clarinet and other woodwinds and received the degree of MMus in conducting from the University of Southern California in 1959. In his later career he turned increasingly to the study of musical acoustics, particularly those of wind instruments and organ pipes. In 1969 he published The Acoustical Foundations of Music, a book which became a standard text for introductory courses in musical acoustics. A second edition appeared in 1977. He received the Silver Medal of the Acoustical Society of America in 1986. Backus died in Los Angeles in 1988. John Backus was a Renaissance man who in addition to music and physics was a highly skilled mountaineer. The Sierra Club's Hundred Peaks Section List contains approximately 275 summits, and John was the first person to ascend every mountain on the.", "target": "Lithuanian American physicist and acoustician (1911–1988)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q656154", "label": "Xeon", "source": "Xeon ( ZEE-on) is a brand of x86 microprocessors designed, manufactured, and marketed by Intel, targeted at the non-consumer workstation, server, and embedded system markets. It was introduced in June 1998. Xeon processors are based on the same architecture as regular desktop-grade CPUs, but have advanced features such as support for ECC memory, higher core counts, more PCI Express lanes, support for larger amounts of RAM, larger cache memory and extra provision for enterprise-grade reliability, availability and serviceability (RAS) features responsible for handling hardware exceptions through the Machine Check Architecture. They are often capable of safely continuing execution where a normal processor cannot due to these extra RAS features, depending on the type and severity of the machine-check exception (MCE). Some also support multi-socket systems with two, four, or eight sockets through use of the Quick Path Interconnect (QPI) bus.", "target": "brand of x86 microprocessors from Intel", "baseline_candidates": ["Intel microprocessor", "brand"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75488221", "label": "Richmond Ritchie", "source": "Sir Richmond Thackeray Willoughby Ritchie (6 August 1854 – 12 October 1912) was a British civil servant. He spent most of his working life at the India Office, reaching the post of Permanent Under-Secretary of State for India.", "target": "British colonial administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7093786", "label": "Ong-Art Singlumpong", "source": "Ong-Art Singlumpong (Thai: องอาจ สิงห์ลำพอง) is a Thai film director. Currently he is the executive director of Channel 8.", "target": "film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8071617", "label": "Zielonka, Konin County", "source": "Zielonka [ʑeˈlɔnka] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wierzbinek, within Konin County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) east of Wierzbinek, 32 km (20 mi) north-east of Konin, and 113 km (70 mi) east of the regional capital Poznań.", "target": "village in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25566834", "label": "International Cat Day", "source": "International Cat Day is a celebration which takes place on 8 August of every year. It was created in 2002 by the International Fund for Animal Welfare. It is a day to raise awareness for cats and learn about ways to help and protect them. In 2020 custodianship of International Cat Day passed to International Cat Care, a not-for-profit British organization that has been striving to improve the health and welfare of domestic cats worldwide since 1958.", "target": "celebration which takes place on 8 August, every year", "baseline_candidates": ["world day"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1322832", "label": "Saint-Hilaire", "source": "Saint-Hilaire (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃.t‿ilɛʁ] (listen); Occitan: Sant Alari) is a commune in the Haute-Loire department in south-central France.", "target": "commune in Haute-Loire, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3983775", "label": "Tenshi no Revolver", "source": "Tenshi no Revolver (天使のリボルバー, \"Angel's Revolver\") is the fifteenth studio album by Japanese rock band Buck-Tick. It was released on September 19, 2007, through BMG Records. The limited edition came with a DVD of the music videos for the singles \"Rendezvous\" and \"Alice in Wonder Underground\". Tenshi no Revolver peaked at number five on the Oricon chart with 23,114 copies sold. For the album Buck-Tick went for a \"band sound,\" the sound of an ordinary straight rock band.", "target": "album by Buck-Tick", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55634957", "label": "Teresa Miller", "source": "Teresa Ann Miller (February 20, 1962 – August 6, 2021) was an American professor, author, legal scholar, educator, and administrator. At the time of her death in August 2021, she was senior vice chancellor for strategic initiatives and chief diversity officer to State University of New York (SUNY) Chancellor Jim Malatras. She previously served as vice chancellor and chief of staff to Chancellor Kristina M. Johnson. Before moving to SUNY in 2018, Miller had been vice provost for inclusive excellence at the University of Buffalo. She had been a professor of law at the University at Buffalo Law School since 1995. As a law professor at Buffalo, Miller taught broadly but was probably best known for her work on prison law and her efforts within the Attica Correctional Facility.", "target": "American legal scholar and academic administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5361335", "label": "Elis Paprika", "source": "Elis Paprika (real name Erika Elizabeth Nogues; May 8, 1980) is an independent musician, singer, songwriter, and activist from Guadalajara, Mexico, active in Mexico's Rock scene since 2004. She has performed in important music venues such as Auditorio Nacional in México City (with Julieta Venegas in 2007, Belanova in 2008, and Juan Gabriel in 2009., and Hidden Agenda in Hong Kong, as well as performing in international music festivals like Vive Latino in México City (2006, 2011, 2014),, Playtime in Ulaanbaatar Mongolia, Meet in Beijing in China, and Altavoz in Medellín, Colombia. Elis Paprika has also performed internationally in North and South America, South East and East Asia, and Europe. She was named \"Artist of the Month\" on MTV Latin America in August 2006. Musicians in her band have varied throughout the years, and her current live and recording band is called The Black Pilgrims. Elis started her career in Guadalajara Jalisco, Mexico. She has released 8 records to date, Give Me Love in 2006, EP2 in 2007, Express in 2009, Maldito in 2010, Animal in 2012, Adiós in 2013, Black & White in 2016, Venganza in 2019. She also released singles like \"Love Love Love\" (2011), and \"Now Girls Rule\" (2014) which were not included in any of her previous records, but became part of Black & White, and singles like \"The End Of The World\", and \"Todo Se Está Cayendo\" (both in 2021). She was part of the tribute álbum Amo al Divo de Juarez with her versión of \"Hasta Que Te Conocí\" by.", "target": "musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65705996", "label": "Jim Sibraa", "source": "James 'Jim' Sibraa (1896–1982) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s.", "target": "Australian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q215921", "label": "Gliese 581g", "source": "Gliese 581g , unofficially known as Zarmina (or Zarmina's World), is an unconfirmed (and frequently disputed) exoplanet claimed to orbit within the Gliese 581 system, twenty light-years from Earth. It was discovered by the Lick–Carnegie Exoplanet Survey, and is the sixth planet orbiting the star; however, its existence could not be confirmed by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) / High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) survey team, and its existence remains controversial. It is thought to be near the middle of the habitable zone of its star. That means it could sustain liquid water—a necessity for all known life—on its surface, if there are favorable atmospheric conditions on the planet. Gliese 581g was claimed to be detected by astronomers of the Lick–Carnegie Exoplanet Survey. The authors stated that data sets from both the High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) and HARPS were needed to sense the planet; however, the ESO/HARPS survey team could not confirm its existence. The planet remained unconfirmed as consensus for its existence could not be reached. Additional reanalysis only found evidence for four planets, but the discoverer, Steven S. Vogt, did not agree with those conclusions; another study by Guillem Anglada-Escudé later supported the planet's existence. In 2012, a reanalysis by Vogt supported its existence. A new study in 2014 concluded that it was a false positive; however, in 2015, a reanalysis of the data suggested that it could still exist. The planet is thought to be tidally locked to its star. If the planet has a dense atmosphere, it may be.", "target": "unconfirmed (and disputed) exoplanet", "baseline_candidates": ["extrasolar planet", "unconfirmed exoplanet", "visual artifact"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7573043", "label": "Spamount", "source": "Spamount is a townland (of 88 acres) and small village in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, near Castlederg. It is situated in the historic barony of Strabane Lower and the civil parish of Ardstraw. In the 2001 Census it had a population of 309 people. It is in the Derry City and Strabane District Council area and has a small community hall and its own sports ground.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16016455", "label": "Allison Green", "source": "Allison R. Green (October 28, 1911 – March 26, 2005) was a Republican politician from Michigan who served in the Michigan House of Representatives, and as its Speaker during the 72nd Legislature. He was also appointed by Governor George Romney as Michigan's state treasurer in 1965, retiring from that position in 1978 as the longest-serving treasurer in Michigan history.Green became interested and learned about politics and state government by reading the Michigan Manual, the biennial publication which lists information about Michigan's history, constitutions, government officials, and institutions.Green was a member of the original Tuscola County Board of Education and served on the board of directors of the Kingston State Bank.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q615763", "label": "Monastery of Sant Cugat", "source": "The Monastery of Sant Cugat (Catalan: Monestir de Sant Cugat, Spanish: Monasterio de San Cugat del Vallés) is a Benedictine abbey in Sant Cugat del Vallès, Catalonia, Spain. Founded in the ninth century, and under construction until the 14th century, it was the most important monastery in the county of Barcelona. Its most notable architectural feature is its large Romanesque cloister.", "target": "monastery", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "Benedictine monastery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2594230", "label": "Hallum", "source": "Hallum is a village in the province of Friesland, the Netherlands. It is a village in the municipality of Noardeast-Fryslân and it had a population of around 2,746 in January 2017. The primary language spoken is West Frisian. Before 2019, the village was part of the Ferwerderadiel municipality. The monastery Mariëngaarde was located in Hallum between 1163 and 1578.", "target": "human settlement in the Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "populated place in the Netherlands", "municipality of the Netherlands"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28599263", "label": "Exostoma peregrinator", "source": "Exostoma peregrinator is a species of sisorid catfish from Thailand. This species reaches a length of 7.0 cm (2.8 in).", "target": "species of Actinopterygii", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8012668", "label": "William Humphrey", "source": "William Joseph Humphrey (born 17 October 1967) is a Unionist politician from Northern Ireland representing the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). Humphrey was a Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly (MLA) for North Belfast from 2010 to 2022, replacing Nigel Dodds. Born in the Woodvale area of Belfast, Humphrey studied at the Boys' Model School. A member of the Woodvale Residents' Association, he joined the Democratic Unionist Party, becoming its chairman in North Belfast, and a member of the party's executive.He was elected to Belfast City Council in the Court district at the 2005 Northern Ireland local elections, then served as High Sheriff of Belfast in 2006.At the 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly election, Humphrey stood in North Belfast, but was not elected. He moved to contest West Belfast at the UK general election, 2010, but took only 7.6% of the votes cast. In June, he became Deputy Lord Mayor of Belfast,In September 2010, he was selected to replace Nigel Dodds in the Northern Ireland Assembly, representing North Belfast and was elected at the 2011 Assembly election. Referencing his predecessor, Humphrey said, \"Nigel has a proven track record of dedicated hard work on the ground, making a difference in peoples' lives within the Constituency...That will be the record I will strive to emulate. \"Humphrey was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2021 New Year Honours for public service, particularly during the COVID-19 response.In 2022, Humphrey announced that he would not contest the 2022 Assembly election.", "target": "Northern Irish politician (born 1967)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3064727", "label": "Falcileptoneta", "source": "Falcileptoneta is a genus of East Asian leptonetids that was first described by T. Komatsu in 1970.", "target": "genus of arachnids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30226321", "label": "Dan Carden", "source": "Daniel Joseph Carden (born 28 October 1986) is a British Labour Party politician serving as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Liverpool Walton since 2017. Carden served as Shadow Secretary of State for International Development from 2018 to 2020, and Shadow Financial Secretary to the Treasury from April to October 2020. He was reelected in 2019.", "target": "British politician, Labour Party MP for Liverpool Walton, elected June 2017", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3188942", "label": "Jules Thurmann", "source": "Jules Thurmann (5 November 1804, Neuf-Brisach in Haut-Rhin, France – 25 July 1855, Porrentruy) was an Alsatian French-Swiss geologist and botanist. He studied at the college in Porrentruy, then continued his education at the University of Strasbourg and at the École royale des mines in Paris. In 1832 he was appointed professor of mathematics and natural sciences at Porrentruy College. In 1837 he became the first director of the \"normal school\" for teachers in Porrentruy. In 1838 he was chairman of the first congress for the Société géologique de France, which took place in Porrentruy. He devoted much of his time to geological studies of the Jura Mountains, being known for his pioneer investigations in regards to Jurassic orography. In the field of statigraphy, he introduced in 1834 the term \"Neocomian\" to define the lowest stage of Cretaceous formation. As a botanist, he conducted phytosociological research, and is credited with directing the last phases of development for the botanical garden at Porrentruy.He was the founder of the Société de statistique des districts du Jura (1832); co-founder and first president of the Société jurassienne d'émulation (1847–1855) and a member of the Grand Conseil bernois (1837–1839, 1844–1845).", "target": "Swiss botanist (1804-1855)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q870019", "label": "Crushcrushcrush", "source": "\"Crushcrushcrush\" (stylized in all lowercase) is a song by American rock band Paramore, and is the third single from the group's second studio album, Riot!. The official music video premiered on TRL on October 16, 2007. The single was released in late 2007. It was made available in the United Kingdom for download from November 5 and purchase on November 26, 2007. The single is also playable on various music video games such as Rock Band, Rock Band Unplugged, Guitar Hero On Tour: Decades, and Ultimate Band. The single won a Teen Choice Award for \"Choice Rock Track\". It was also used briefly in NCIS, in the episode \"Stakeout\". On March 24, 2016, the song was certified Platinum in the United States for selling over 1,000,000 copies.", "target": "original song written and composed by Josh Farro, Hayley Williams", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6093631", "label": "Italy at the 1951 Mediterranean Games", "source": "Italy competed at the 1951 Mediterranean Games in Alexandria, Egypt.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at the Mediterranean Games"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2843483", "label": "Judgment", "source": "\"Judgment\" is the nineteenth episode of the second season of Star Trek: Enterprise, the forty-fifth episode overall. It first aired April 9, 2003 on UPN.Captain Archer appears before a Klingon tribunal, charged with attacking a Klingon space ship and inciting a rebellion. This episode guest stars J. G. Hertzler as a Klingon lawyer. Bakula picked this episode as a favorite of his.", "target": "episode of Star Trek: Enterprise (S2 E19)", "baseline_candidates": ["Star Trek episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2485", "label": "1969", "source": "1969 (MCMLXIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 1969th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 969th year of the 2nd millennium, the 69th year of the 20th century, and the 10th and last year of the 1960s decade.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["common year starting and ending on Wednesday", "calendar year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8008033", "label": "William Duborgh", "source": "William Adolf Duborgh (14 November 1860 – 1929) was a Norwegian businessperson. He was born in Kristiania as a son of Peter Therentie Duborgh and Caroline Joseline Mervis. His sister Ragnhild married Ingvald Mareno Smith-Kielland. In 1886, he married Louise Fredrikke Krohn, a daughter of actor Georg Herman Krohn.He finished Kristiania Commerce School in 1878. In 1892 he took over his father's company Peter Thr. Duborgh together with his brother Peter Carl Duborgh. Peter Carl died in 1894, and William Duborgh was the sole owner until 1908 when Trygve Wettre was brought on board. William Duborgh died in a car accident in France in 1929, and Trygve Wettre became sole owner.Duborgh also served as a vice consul for Argentina from 1907. He chaired Kristiania Commerce School, was a board member of Kristiania Gasværk and Nationaltheatret and deputy board member of the Bank of Norway. He was a supervisory council member of Livsforsikringsselskapet Brage (chair from 1918), and Handels- og Exportbanken.He was decorated as a Knight of the Order of St. Olav, was a Commander of the Order of the Dannebrog and the Order of Vasa.", "target": "Norwegian businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66168113", "label": "Avanti Fields School", "source": "Avanti Fields School is a Hindu faith all-through school in Leicester, United Kingdom that is part of the Avanti Schools Trust.", "target": "school in Leicester, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["free school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8010634", "label": "William H. Van Schoonhoven", "source": "William Henry Van Schoonhoven (January 5, 1810 Waterford, Saratoga County, New York – January 16, 1855 Troy, Rensselaer County, New York) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3036132", "label": "Dumb Bell of the Yukon", "source": "Dumb Bell of the Yukon is a 1946 Disney animated short starring Donald Duck and Daisy Duck. It was directed by Jack King.", "target": "1946 film by Jack King", "baseline_candidates": ["animated short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q829289", "label": "Beryl Wayne Sprinkel", "source": "Beryl Wayne Sprinkel (November 20, 1923 – August 22, 2009) was a Under Secretary for Monetary Affairs in the US Treasury from January 1981 to April 1985, and member of the Executive Office of the US President and chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) between April 4, 1985 and January 21, 1989, during the Reagan administration. Prior to government service, Dr. Sprinkel worked at the Harris Trust and Savings Bank in Chicago from 1952 to 1981, rising to the position of executive vice president.Raised on a farm near Richmond, Missouri, Sprinkel was a member of the 2nd Armored Division, which led the attack that penetrated and defeated the German offensive near Celles, Belgium, in the Battle of the Bulge during World War II. After the war he earned a degree in economics from the University of Missouri and, later, an MBA and PhD from the University of Chicago. At the University of Chicago he was one of a circle of economists who was heavily influenced by the monetarist ideas of Milton Friedman, who later won the Nobel Prize in Economics.", "target": "American banker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27049925", "label": "Bhushan Patil", "source": "Bhushan Patil (born 03 Jan 1996) is an Indian actor who appears in Marathi films.", "target": "Indian actor (born 1985)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4224593", "label": "Acer leucoderme", "source": "Acer leucoderme (English: chalk maple; also whitebark maple, pale-bark maple and sugar maple) is a deciduous tree native to the southeastern United States from North Carolina south to northwest Florida and west to eastern Texas. It lives in the understory in moist, rocky soils on river banks, ravines, woods, and cliffs. Although generally a uncommon tree, it is most often found in the inner coastal plain and Piedmont regions of Georgia.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14726988", "label": "Trupanea vulpina", "source": "Trupanea vulpina is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Tephritomyia of the family Tephritidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4668822", "label": "Qərchə", "source": "Qərchə (also, Garcha, Karcha, and Kerche) is a village in the Ismailli Rayon of Azerbaijan.", "target": "village in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15516697", "label": "Vallefoglia", "source": "Vallefoglia is a comune in the province of Pesaro and Urbino, in the Italian region Marche, created in 2014 from the merger of the communes of Colbordolo and Sant'Angelo in Lizzola, after 76,3% of the population approved the unification in a referendum. The 16th-century parish church of the hamlet of Montefabbri is titled San Gaudenzio. Likely from Italian valle (\"valley\") + foglia (\"leaf\"), thus (\"leaf valley\").", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7966533", "label": "Walter of Gloucester", "source": "Walter of Gloucester (also Walter FitzRoger or Walter de Pitres) (d. c. 1129) was an early Anglo-Norman official of the King of England during the early years of the Norman conquest of the South Welsh Marches. He was a sheriff of Gloucester and also a Constable under Henry I.", "target": "English Baron", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7418807", "label": "Sanna 11–22", "source": "Sanna 11–22 was released on March 7, 2007 and is the first greatest hits compilation album from Swedish singer Sanna Nielsen. It peaked at number 19 on the Swedish Albums Chart. The album title refers to the age she started recording songs to her present age.", "target": "2007 compilation album by Sanna Nielsen", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1312761", "label": "Erynnis icelus", "source": "Erynnis icelus, the dreamy duskywing or aspen dusky wing, is a butterfly of the family Hesperiidae. It is found in boreal North America, from the Northwest Territories east across southern Canada to Nova Scotia, south in the western mountains to southern Arizona and southern New Mexico, south in the east to Arkansas, north-eastern Alabama and northern Georgia. The wingspan is 29–38 mm. There is one generation with adults on wing from April to early July. There might be a rare second generation in the southern Appalachian Mountains.The larvae are pale green with multiple white dots. Its heart is visible as a green, middorsal stripe.The larvae feed on Salix, Populus and sometimes Betula species. Adults feed on nectar from flowers of blueberry, wild strawberry, blackberry, Labrador tea, dogbane, New Jersey tea, winter cress, purple vetch and lupine.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26159432", "label": "Chuharwal", "source": "Chuharwal is a village in Kapurthala district of Punjab State, India. It is located 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) from Kapurthala, which is both district and sub-district headquarters of Chuharwal. The village is administrated by a Sarpanch, who is an elected representative.", "target": "village in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q494513", "label": "Lee Ae-jung", "source": "Lee Ae-jung (Korean: 이애정; March 17, 1987 – September 6, 2007), also romanized as Yi Ae-jeong, was a South Korean actress.", "target": "South Korean actress (1987-2007)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5568279", "label": "Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation", "source": "The Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation is a non-governmental charitable organisation located in the Republic of Ireland. Its goal is to promote peace and reconciliation within and between communities through facilitated dialogue and learning. It was founded as a response to the Troubles and its aftermath. It is housed in a complex of buildings that had many previous functions including barracks and reformatory school. The Glencree Centre is devoted to peacebuilding and reconciliation in Ireland, North and South, and beyond. The programme work builds peace and fosters reconciliation through facilitated dialogue, peace education, and much more. The organisation was founded in 1974 as a response to violent conflict in Ireland, and in light of a conviction that non-violent solutions must be pursued to encourage reconciliation within and between communities. The organisation assists in the building of improbable relationships by providing the space for difficult conversations to take place.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98078929", "label": "Wang Zhifeng", "source": "Wang Zhifeng (Chinese: 王智峰; born 1 February 1997) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a goalkeeper for Wuhan Zall.", "target": "Chinese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4727326", "label": "Alistair Urquhart", "source": "Alistair Urquhart (; 8 September 1919 – 7 October 2016) was a Scottish businessman and the author of The Forgotten Highlander, an account of the three and a half years he spent as a Japanese prisoner of war during his service in the Gordon Highlanders infantry regiment during the Second World War.", "target": "Scottish writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10485633", "label": "Eosentomon zelandicum", "source": "Eosentomon zelandicum is a species of proturan in the family Eosentomidae. It is found in Australia.", "target": "species of arthropods", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5084968", "label": "Charlie Hall", "source": "Charles Walter Hall (August 24, 1863 – June 24, 1921) was a professional baseball player who was an outfielder in the American Association for the 1887 New York Metropolitans. After his baseball career, he became a physician and practiced in Tacoma, Washington.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7721924", "label": "The Centre", "source": "The Centre is the name of a shopping centre in Livingston, Scotland. Formerly known as 'Livingston Regional Centre' before becoming the more widely recognised 'Almondvale Shopping Centre'. It is (as of 2019) the 28th largest shopping centre in the UK.", "target": "shopping mall in Livingston, Scotland", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21403611", "label": "Jrashen", "source": "Jrashen (Armenian: Ջրաշեն), is a village in the Ararat Province of Armenia.", "target": "village in Ararat Province of Armenia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Armenia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51756477", "label": "10 Days in Sun City", "source": "10 days in Sun City is a 2017 Nigerian romantic action comedy film which premiered on 17 June 2017. It is executively produced AY Makun, who is also a lead character in the film. It is directed by Adze Ugah, written by Kehinde Ogunlola and produced by Darlington Abuda. The film is the third installment in the Akpos Adventure franchise, and was shot on location in Lagos and Johannesburg, South Africa.The film tells the story of an aspiring beauty queen who was brought to stardom and in the process had to pay the price of losing her peace and joy by denouncing her fiancé who happened to be her manager as well. She was on the verge of being enslaved by her God Father when he got dealt with by some of the people he had deprived of the benefits in time past. It explains that true love conquers all irrespective of the barrier or challenges encountered.", "target": "2017 film directed by Adze Ugha", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2019433", "label": "Olessia Koulakova", "source": "Olessya Kulakova (born January 31, 1977 in Almaty) is a Kazakhstani-German volleyball player. She played as a middle blocker for the German Women's National Team. Kulakova represented her adopted country at the 2004 Summer Olympics, finishing in ninth place, and at the 2002 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship in Germany. On the club level she played with Schweriner SC.", "target": "German volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4118898", "label": "Armi Ratia", "source": "Armi Maria Ratia née Airaksinen (13 July 1912 – 3 October 1979) was the co-founder of the Finnish textile and clothing company Marimekko Oy. She is among Finland's most famous female entrepreneurs. She was born in Pälkjärvi in Ladoga Karelia. For a detailed biographical article in the context of her Marimekko company, see The National Biography of Finland entry.She is buried in the Hietaniemi Cemetery in Helsinki.", "target": "Finnish designer and businessperson", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17300117", "label": "Marcus Eriksson", "source": "Marcus Eriksson (born April 26, 1976) is a Swedish former professional ice hockey player. Eriksson played six seasons in the Swedish Elite League with Leksands IF and Mora IK.", "target": "Swedish ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49941054", "label": "Connoquenessing Creek", "source": "Connoquenessing Creek is a tributary of the Beaver River, approximately 50 mi (80 km) long, in Western Pennsylvania in the United States.", "target": "tributary of the Beaver River in Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14733875", "label": "Rhaphiptera affinis", "source": "Rhaphiptera affinis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by James Thomson in 1868. It is known from Paraguay and Brazil.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q962639", "label": "Comité des forges", "source": "The Comité des forges (Foundry Committee) was an organization of leaders of the French iron and steel industry from 1864 to 1940, when it was dissolved by the Vichy government. It typically took a protectionist attitude on trade issues, and was opposed to social legislation that would increase costs. At times it was influential, particularly during World War I (1914–18), and the Left often viewed it with justified suspicion. However the Comité des forges always suffered from divisions among its members, and the government often ignored its advice.", "target": "French political organization of the iron and steel industry", "baseline_candidates": ["employers' organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16901164", "label": "Tanjil River", "source": "The Tanjil River is a perennial river of the West Gippsland catchment, located in the West Gippsland region of the Australian state of Victoria.", "target": "river in Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1057330", "label": "Urnyak", "source": "Urnyak (Russian: Урняк) is a rural locality (a village) in Mayadykovsky Selsoviet, Birsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 19 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "human settlement in Birsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10275869", "label": "Imperatriz Leopoldina (CPTM)", "source": "Imperatriz Leopoldina is a train station on ViaMobilidade Line 8-Diamond, located in the district of Vila Leopoldina in São Paulo.", "target": "railway station in São Paulo, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7191846", "label": "Pierceland Central School", "source": "Pierceland Central School (PCS) is a pre-K to 12 school in Pierceland, Saskatchewan. PCS is one of twenty-four schools in the Northwest School Division. The division spans seventeen communities in north west Saskatchewan. The school mascot is the Panther. There are four house teams - Bobcats, Cheetahs, Lynx and Pumas.", "target": "school in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5011368", "label": "CHST6", "source": "Carbohydrate sulfotransferase 6 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the CHST6 gene.It codes for an enzyme necessary for the production of keratan sulfate. Mutations in the gene lead to macular corneal dystrophy.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3536948", "label": "Okocim Brewery", "source": "Okocim Brewery (Polish pronunciation: [ɔˈkɔt͡ɕim]), in Brzesko in southeastern Poland, is a brewery founded in 1845.", "target": "brewery in Brzesko, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["brewery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7623847", "label": "Strikeforce: Rousey vs. Kaufman", "source": "Strikeforce: Rousey vs. Kaufman was a mixed martial arts event held by Strikeforce. The event took place on August 18, 2012, at the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego, California. It was broadcast live on Showtime and Showtime Extreme.", "target": "Strikeforce mixed martial arts event in 2012", "baseline_candidates": ["mixed martial arts event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15975773", "label": "Lu Guang", "source": "Lu Guang (simplified Chinese: 陆广; traditional Chinese: 陸廣; pinyin: Lù Guǎng; Wade–Giles: Lu Kuang); was a Chinese landscape painter and poet during the Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368). His specific birth and death dates are not known. Lu was born in Suzhou in the Jiangsu province. His style name was 'Jihong' (季弘) and his pseudonym was 'Tian Yousheng' (天游生). Lu's painting followed the style of Huang Gongwang and Wang Meng.", "target": "Chinese painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62005403", "label": "High Court metro station", "source": "High Court metro station is a Metro railway station on the Blue Line of the Chennai Metro. The station is among the underground stations along corridor I of the Chennai Metro, Wimco Nagar–Chennai International Airport stretch. The station serves the neighbourhoods of George Town, chiefly Parry's Corner.", "target": "metro station in Chennai, India", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7946458", "label": "WAGY", "source": "WAGY (1320 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a rock and roll Oldies format. Licensed to Forest City, North Carolina, United States, the station is currently owned by Calvin and Teresa Hastings, through licensee KTC Broadcasting, Inc.", "target": "radio station in Forest City, North Carolina", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5912474", "label": "Hotspot", "source": "Hot Spot is an unincorporated community and former coal town in Letcher County, Kentucky, United States. It was named for the Hot Spot Coal Company. Other names for the community have been Smoot Creek, Dalna, Elsiecoal, and Premium. It has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place names.", "target": "township in Letcher County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8083292", "label": "Żerniki Małe", "source": "Żerniki Małe [ʐɛrˈniki ˈmawɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kobierzyce, within Wrocław County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) north of Kobierzyce and 17 km (11 mi) south-west of the regional capital Wrocław.", "target": "village in Lower Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26250297", "label": "Ryan Sessegnon", "source": "Kouassi Ryan Sessegnon (born 18 May 2000) is an English professional footballer who plays as a left-back or left winger for Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur. Sessegnon made his breakthrough in the Fulham senior side in 2016, aged 16. He made an instant impact, becoming the first footballer born in the 2000s to score a goal in a first-team game in the professional English leagues, and the youngest player to score in a Championship match. In 2017–18, his second season, Sessegnon helped Fulham achieve promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, scoring fifteen goals and winning numerous personal awards. He totalled 120 games and 25 goals for Fulham, before joining Tottenham for a £25 million fee in 2019.", "target": "English association football player (born 2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6773819", "label": "Marshall Township", "source": "Marshall Township is a civil township of Calhoun County in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is part of the Battle Creek, Michigan Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 3,115 at the 2010 census. The city of Marshall is adjacent to the township, but is administratively autonomous.", "target": "township in Calhoun County, Michigan", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Michigan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1046151", "label": "Hyphomycetes", "source": "Hyphomycetes are a form classification of fungi, part of what has often been referred to as fungi imperfecti, Deuteromycota, or anamorphic fungi. Hyphomycetes lack closed fruit bodies, and are often referred to as moulds (or molds). Most hyphomycetes are now assigned to the Ascomycota, on the basis of genetic connections made by life-cycle studies or by phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequences; many remain unassigned phylogenetically. Although no longer considered a phylogenetically defined taxon, the prevalence of hyphomycete forms in nature, the built environment, and laboratories means that identification of members this group remains of practical importance.", "target": "class of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4501848", "label": "St. Philip's Episcopal Church", "source": "St. Philip's Church is an historic church at 142 Church Street in Charleston, South Carolina. Its National Historic Landmark description states: \"Built in 1836 (spire completed in 1850), this stuccoed brick church features an imposing tower designed in the Wren-Gibbs tradition. Three Tuscan pedimented porticoes contribute to this design to make a building of the highest quality and sophistication.\" On November 7, 1973, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places and designated a National Historic Landmark.", "target": "church building in Charleston, South Carolina", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5511159", "label": "Fwe", "source": "Fwe, or Chifwe, is a Bantu language spoken by 10,000 people along the Okavango River in the Zambezi region of Namibia and in the Western Province in Zambia. It is closely related to Kuhane, and is one of several Bantu languages of the Okavango which have click consonants. Although under the pressure of Lozi and Kuhane (Subiya), Fwe speakers tend to have a positive attitude towards Fwe, and speaking Fwe is often considered an important part of one's identity, and thus underscores the vitality of the language.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "Botatwe"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16197750", "label": "1981 New York City mayoral election", "source": "The New York City mayoral election of 1981 occurred on Tuesday, November 3, 1981, with Democratic incumbent Mayor Ed Koch being re-elected to a second term by a landslide margin. Koch won both the Democratic and Republican nominations and appeared on the ballot with both of their lines. He only faced opposition from third parties in the election.Koch received an overwhelming 74.64% of the vote citywide. Koch also swept all five boroughs by landslide margins, breaking 60% of the vote in Manhattan and breaking 70% of the vote in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens and Staten Island.Koch's closest competitor was the short-lived New York Unity Party nominee Frank J. Barbaro, who received 13.31%. Finishing in a distant third and fourth were the Conservative Party nominee, John A. Esposito, who received 4.92%, and Liberal Party nominee, Mary T. Codd, who received 3.41%. Koch defeated his nearest competitor by a landslide 61.35% Democratic margin of victory and was sworn into his second term in January 1982.", "target": "election", "baseline_candidates": ["mayoral election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56274232", "label": "Rainier Fog", "source": "\"Rainier Fog\" is a song by the American rock band Alice in Chains. It is the fourth single and the title track to the band's sixth studio album, Rainier Fog (2018). Written by guitarist and vocalist Jerry Cantrell, the song is a tribute to the Seattle music scene, and the title was inspired by Mount Rainier, a volcano that overlooks Seattle. The single peaked at No. 20 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart. Excerpts from the lyrics are featured upside down on the album cover. The full lyrics to \"Rainier Fog\" are inscribed on the bottom plate of Jerry Cantrell's signature Dunlop Cry Baby Wah pedal, released in April 2019.", "target": "2019 single by Alice in Chains", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4682688", "label": "Adibah Noor", "source": "Adibah Noor Mohamed Omar (3 September 1970 – 18 June 2022) was a Malaysian singer, actress and master of ceremonies. She made her start in the entertainment industry in 1995 and had gone on to star in films such as Sepet and Gubra.", "target": "Malaysian singer and actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28684507", "label": "We", "source": "We (stylized as WE) is the fourth studio album by Japanese singer Leo Ieiri. It was released on July 6, 2016, through Colourful Records. The album yielded three singles, including \"Hello to the World\", \"Bokutachi no Mirai\" and the best-selling \"Kimi ga Kureta Natsu\".", "target": "album by Leo Ieiri", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34271301", "label": "Alvaro Herrera", "source": "Álvaro Herrera Mendoza (born May 14, 1990) is a Mexican mixed martial artist competing in the Lightweight division. A professional competitor since 2008, he competed in the Ultimate Fighting Championship and was also a contestant on The Ultimate Fighter: Latin America 2.", "target": "Mexican mixed martial arts fighter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q489199", "label": "Steve Barron", "source": "Steven Barron (born 4 May 1956) is an Irish-British filmmaker. He is best known for directing the music videos for the songs \"Billie Jean\" by Michael Jackson, \"Summer of '69\" and \"Run to You\" by Bryan Adams, \"Money for Nothing\" by Dire Straits, \"Electric Avenue\" and \"I Don't Wanna Dance\" by Eddy Grant, \"Let's Get Rocked\" by Def Leppard, \"Going Underground\" by The Jam, \"Don't You Want Me\" by The Human League, \"Baby Jane\" by Rod Stewart, \"Pale Shelter\" by Tears for Fears, \"Africa\" by Toto, and \"Take On Me\" by A-ha. The videos for \"Take On Me\" and \"Billie Jean\" have each garnered over 1 billion views on YouTube. Barron also directed several films, including Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990), Coneheads (1993), The Adventures of Pinocchio (1996) and Mike Bassett: England Manager (2001).", "target": "Irish film director, film producer, music video director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q722091", "label": "Katharine Cullen", "source": "Katharine Cullen (born 9 June 1975) is an Australian actress, daughter of actors Max Cullen and Colleen Anne Fitzpatrick.", "target": "Australian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3605903", "label": "Advent Corporation", "source": "Advent Corporation was a consumer audio and video hardware company founded in Cambridge, Massachusetts by Henry Kloss in 1967. It closed in 1981.The name came from the legal description the advent corporation used in the incorporation documents as a placeholder name before the actual name is selected. Around 1968, Kloss had quit KLH to develop a low-cost projection television, but had trouble financing the leading-edge research and development that was still required. To earn some money, he decided to build a high-performance low-cost dual driver speaker system with 10-inch (25 cm) woofer called simply The Advent Loudspeaker (later given the retronym the Larger Advent, after introduction of The Smaller Advent Loudspeaker). It rivaled the sound of the then top-line AR Model 3a (which used three drivers and a 12-inch (30 cm) woofer), but only cost about half as much. Advent produced a number of different versions of the 2-way Advent, including the Advent Loudspeaker, the Smaller Advent Loudspeaker, the \"New\" Advent Loudspeaker, Advent/2, Advent/3, 4000 series, and 5000 series, to name a few. They were usually offered in both wood veneer and vinyl-covered \"utility\" cabinet versions, which other than appearance were acoustically identical. Kloss then resumed work on increasing the fidelity of cassette tapes, a format that had originally been developed to be used only for voice dictation. Kloss introduced the Advent 201 in 1971, incorporating Dolby B noise reduction (for both recording and playback), along with chromium dioxide tape in the first popular high fidelity cassette deck. In 1972, the Advent VideoBeam 1000 was finally.", "target": "former consumer electronics manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q44875242", "label": "Betrayal", "source": "Betrayal ( Trahir) is a 1993 Romanian film directed by Radu Mihăileanu. It won Grand Prix des Amériques, the main prize as well as three additional prizes at the Montreal World Film Festival.", "target": "1993 film by Radu Mihăileanu", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1617611", "label": "Villamontán de la Valduerna", "source": "Villamontán de la Valduerna (Spanish pronunciation: [biʎamonˈtan de la βalˈðweɾna]) is a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2008 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 941 inhabitants. In addition to Villamontán, the municipality includes the villages of Fresno de la Valduerna, Miñambres de la Valduerna, Posada de la Valduerna, Redelga de la Valduerna, Valle de la Valduerna and Villalís de la Valduerna.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6335070", "label": "KONA-FM", "source": "KONA-FM (105.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting an adult contemporary format. Licensed to Kennewick, Washington, United States, the station serves the Tri-Cities area. The station is owned by Cherry Creek Media and features programming from Westwood One and Premiere Radio Networks. Mix 105.3 is home to AJ and Raleigh in the Morning.", "target": "radio station in Kennewick, Washington", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18844245", "label": "Ven. Xuecheng", "source": "Xuecheng (Chinese: 学诚; pinyin: Xuéchéng; born 3 October 1966) is a Chinese Buddhist monk, a former member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, and a popular blogger. He was president of the Buddhist Association of China from 2015 to 2018 when he resigned after allegations that he had engaged in corruption and sexual assault surfaced. He was ordered to be punished by the National Religious Affairs Administration after they corroborated the allegations.", "target": "Chinese Buddhist monk", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73694", "label": "Thomas William Körner", "source": "Thomas William Körner (born 17 February 1946) is a British pure mathematician and the author of three books on popular mathematics. He is titular Professor of Fourier Analysis in the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity Hall. He is the son of the philosopher Stephan Körner and of Edith Körner. He studied at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and wrote his PhD thesis Some Results on Kronecker, Dirichlet and Helson Sets there in 1971, studying under Nicholas Varopoulos. In 1972 he won the Salem Prize.He has written academic mathematics books aimed at undergraduates: Fourier Analysis Exercises for Fourier Analysis A Companion to Analysis Vectors, Pure and Applied Calculus for the AmbitiousHe has also written three books aimed at secondary school students, the popular 1996 title The Pleasures of Counting, Naive Decision Making (published 2008) on probability, statistics and game theory, and Where Do Numbers Come From? (published October 2019).", "target": "British mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7608714", "label": "Stephen Billington", "source": "Stephen Billington (born 10 December 1969) is an English actor, best known for playing Greg Kelly in Coronation Street (for which he won the 1999 British Soap Award for Villain of the Year).", "target": "English actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q238317", "label": "Miss Earth", "source": "Miss Earth is a major international beauty pageant that advocates for environmental awareness, conservation and social responsibility. It is the third-largest beauty pageant in the world in terms of the number of national-level competitions to participate in the world finals. Along with Miss World, Miss Universe and Miss International, it is one of the Big Four international beauty pageants, the most coveted titles among international pageant competitions.The reigning titleholders dedicate their year to promote specific projects and often address issues concerning the environment and other global challenges through school tours, tree planting activities, street campaigns, cleanups, speaking engagements, shopping mall tours, media guesting, environmental fairs, storytelling programs to children, eco-fashion shows, and other environmental activities.The Miss Earth winner is the spokesperson for the Miss Earth Foundation, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and other environmental organizations. The Miss Earth Foundation also works with the environmental departments and ministries of participating countries, various private sectors and corporations, as well as the World Wildlife Foundation (WWF).The current Miss Earth is Destiny Wagner of Belize who was crowned virtually on November 21, 2021.And the current Elemental Queens are Marisa Butler: Miss Earth – Air from United States Romina Denecken: Miss Earth – Water from Chile Jareerat Petsom: Miss Earth – Fire from Thailand.", "target": "Annual environmental-themed beauty contest", "baseline_candidates": ["female beauty pageant"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5117385", "label": "Church of St Clare, Liverpool", "source": "The Church of St Clare is on the corner of Arundel Avenue and York Avenue in the Sefton Park area of Liverpool, Merseyside, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building, and is an active Roman Catholic parish church in the Archdiocese of Liverpool and the Pastoral Area of Liverpool South. It is the only Grade I listed Roman Catholic church in the Archdiocese of Liverpool. Sharples and Pollard consider it to be \"one of the most imaginative churches of its date in the country\".", "target": "church in Liverpool, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60675838", "label": "Kazuki Sumiishi", "source": "Kazuki Sumiishi (住石 加寿己, Sumiishi Kazuki, born 12 May 1997) is a Japanese footballer who plays for Yokohama Takeru FC.", "target": "Japanese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5092625", "label": "Cherupuzha", "source": "Cherupuzha is one of the tributaries of the Chaliyar River. It originates from the foothills of the Thamarassery churam as three separate rivulets. Iruthullippuzha (coming from Manalvayal) and Kadungampuzha (from Adivaram) merge near Kaithappoyil. Engappuzha join to it near Kuppayakkode and forms Cherupuzha. Cherupuzha passes very near to the campus of the National Institute of Technology Calicut, at chenoth and is the sole source of water to the resident academic community there. Due to active sand lobbying on the banks of the river, there is an acute threat of the river drying up in the summer, or changing its course. It joins with the Chaliyar at Kavanakkallu Regulator-cum-Bridge near Mavoor.", "target": "river in India", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17992762", "label": "Bernard Thomas Edward Clark", "source": "Bernard Thomas Edward Clark (12 November 1856 - 26 September 1915) was an English Catholic Bishop and Missionary.", "target": "British prelate (1856-1915)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3053084", "label": "Emoia digul", "source": "The Digul emo skink (Emoia digul) is a species of lizard in the family Scincidae. It is found in Indonesia.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7420151", "label": "Santhanuthala padu", "source": "Santhanuthalapadu (or Santanutalapadu) is a village in Prakasam district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It is located Santhanuthalapadu mandal in Ongole revenue division.", "target": "village panchayat in Prakasam district in the state of Andhra Pradesh in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4527698", "label": "Johann Daniel Schumacher", "source": "Johann Daniel Schumacher (Russian: Ива́н Дани́лович Шума́хер; German: Johann Daniel von Schumacher; 5 February 1690 – 14 June 1761) was the secretary of the Russian Academy of Sciences and director of the Library of the Russian Academy of Sciences, during the Russian Empire.", "target": "Russian scholar", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4674986", "label": "Acraea rahira", "source": "Acraea rahira, the marsh acraea, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is found in southern Africa. In South Africa it is found from the Western Cape along the coast to the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal, then inland to Mpumalanga, Gauteng, Limpopo and North West.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15835761", "label": "Issama Mpeko", "source": "Djo Issama Mpeko (born 30 April 1989) is DR Congolese football player. He plays for Kabuscorp S.C.P, and is playing in the Angolan major league Girabola as a defender.He previously played for AS Vita Club Kinshasa. He played for Democratic Republic of the Congo in the 2011 African Nations Championship. During the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification he scored one goal, and went forward to Casablanca in 2013.", "target": "Congolese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10262646", "label": "Cycas riuminiana", "source": "Cycas riuminiana, commonly known as the Arayat pitogo or simply pitogo, is a species of cycad endemic to Luzon, Philippines. It is also locally known as bayit in Tagalog and sawang in Ilocano, among other names.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10551155", "label": "Erdal Çelik", "source": "Erdal Çelik (born 1 January 1988) is a Turkish-German former professional footballer who played as a centre-back.", "target": "Turkish-German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14924242", "label": "Cnesinus", "source": "Cnesinus is a genus of beetles in the subfamily Scolytinae. Species are from North America, Central America and South America.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["monotypic taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q941458", "label": "Oliva de Mérida", "source": "Oliva de Mérida is a municipality located in the province of Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain. According to the 2005 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 1888 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality in the province of Badajoz, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3276791", "label": "Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park", "source": "Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park, originally Carmanah Pacific Provincial Park, is a remote wilderness park located inside traditional Ditidaht First Nation (also spelled diiɁdiitidq) ancestral territory. The park covers a land area of 16,450 ha (63.5 sq mi) immediately adjacent to Pacific Rim National Park Reserve's West Coast Trail on the south-western, coastal terrain of Vancouver Island. The provincial park comprises the entire drainage of Carmanah Creek (northwest of the mouth of the creek hosted the kwaabaaduw7aa7tx village, a \"local group\" whose alliance makes up one branch of the Ditidaht Nation), and a good portion of the lower Walbran River drainage, both of which independently empty into the Pacific Ocean. The park is named after the Anglicized diitiid?aatx word kwaabaaduw7aa7tx, or Carmanah, meaning \"thus far upstream\" and John Thomas Walbran, a colonial explorer and ship's captain. Access to the park is by gravel logging road from Port Alberni, Lake Cowichan, or Port Renfrew. The Carmanah Walbran protects extensive tracts of luxuriant Pacific temperate rainforest, and is famous for its ancient old growth, which includes giant western redcedar, coast Douglas-fir, western hemlock, and towering groves of Sitka spruce that grow along the productive riverside flats. Some of the western redcedar in the area are well over 1,000 years old, and Canada's tallest tree, a Sitka spruce named the Carmanah Giant, measured at 95.836 m (314 ft), estimated to be around 400 years old, lives along the lower reaches of Carmanah Creek. However, trails to the Carmanah Giant and many other portions of the park are currently inaccessible due.", "target": "provincial park of British Columbia", "baseline_candidates": ["provincial park of Canada"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15929014", "label": "Rethwisch", "source": "Rethwisch is a municipality in the district of Stormarn, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6789082", "label": "Matt Monro Jnr", "source": "Matthew Frederick Monro (born 21 February 1964) is a British singer. The son of Matt Monro, he often performs his father's work. In 1977, when Monro junior was 13, he was invited by his father to join him on stage to perform a duet.When he signed with EMI in 1995 modern technology enabled him to sing with his father again. The album, 'Matt Sings Monro', is a collection of Matt Monro songs, rearranged as duets featuring Monro junior and senior. In 2005, he toured England with a new show The Legend Lives On which was a year in the making and took him to over 40 concert venues across England. He toured the same show in 2006. In the last few years he has been working with his late father's musical director, Colin Keyes.", "target": "British singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7194129", "label": "Pillar Box War", "source": "The Pillar Box War refers to a number of politically motivated acts of vandalism against post boxes in Scotland during the early 1950s in a dispute over the correct title of the new British monarch, Elizabeth II or Elizabeth I.", "target": "vandalism of post boxes in Scotland during the early 1950s", "baseline_candidates": ["occurrence"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48791791", "label": "Neem the Half-Boy", "source": "Neem the Half Boy, first published in 1998, is the first of eleven children's books written by Idries Shah and published by Hoopoe Books.", "target": "book by Idries Shah", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73919973", "label": "1985–86 Michigan State Spartans men's ice hockey season", "source": "The 1985–86 Michigan State Spartans men's ice hockey team represented Michigan State University in college ice hockey. In its 7th year under head coach Ron Mason the team compiled a 34–9–2 record and reached the NCAA tournament for the eighth time in its history. The Spartans defeated Harvard 6–5 in the championship game at the Providence Civic Center in Providence, Rhode Island.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49357402", "label": "Natalia, Greater Poland Voivodeship", "source": "Natalia [naˈtalja] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Władysławów, within Turek County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north of Władysławów, 15 km (9 mi) north of Turek, and 111 km (69 mi) east of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 239.", "target": "village in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65227631", "label": "Aurora Arc", "source": "Aurora Arc is the ninth studio album by Japanese band Bump of Chicken, released through Toy's Factory on July 10, 2019. It debuted atop the Oricon Albums Chart, selling 202,157 copies in its first week. The lead single, \"Aria\", was released in mid-2016.Several of the tracks were used as theme songs for anime series; \"Gekkou\" was used as the first opening theme of Karakuri Circus, while \"Sirius\" was used as the opening of the anime Juushinki Pandora, with \"Spica\" being used as its ending theme. The band embarked on the Aurora Ark tour in support of the album from July to November 2019.", "target": "2019 studio album by Bump of Chicken", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17985565", "label": "Anything Goes", "source": "Anything Goes is the second studio album by American country music duo Florida Georgia Line. It was released on October 14, 2014, by Republic Nashville. The release of the album was announced August 15 from Central Park in New York City on Good Morning America. The album was produced by Joey Moi. Its first single, \"Dirt\", became Florida Georgia Line's sixth number one hit when it peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.", "target": "album by Florida Georgia Line", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24884484", "label": "Kuwait at the 1992 Summer Paralympics", "source": "Kuwait competed at the 1992 Summer Paralympics in Barcelona, Spain. 24 competitors from Kuwait won 5 medals, 1 gold, 3 silver and 1 bronze and finished 36th in the medal table.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Paralympics delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q464855", "label": "Richie Beirach", "source": "Richard Alan Beirach (born 23 May 1947) is an American jazz pianist and composer.", "target": "jazz pianist and composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q36896", "label": "HC Shakhtyor Soligorsk", "source": "Shakhtyor Soligorsk is an ice hockey club, based in Soligorsk, Belarus. It was founded in 2009. It is playing in the Belarusian Extraliga. The team was formed to act as farm club for HC Dynamo Minsk of the KHL.", "target": "ice hockey club", "baseline_candidates": ["ice hockey team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30080836", "label": "Nasreddin", "source": "Nasreddin () or Nasreddin Hodja (1208–1285) (other variants include: Mullah Nasreddin Hooja, Mullah Nasruddin, Mullah Nasriddin, Khoja Nasriddin) was a Seljuk satirist, born in Hortu Village in Sivrihisar, Eskişehir Province, present-day Turkey and died in 13th century in Akşehir, near Konya, a capital of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum, in today's Turkey. He is considered a philosopher, Sufi, and wise man, remembered for his funny stories and anecdotes. He appears in thousands of stories, sometimes witty, sometimes wise, but often, too, a fool or the butt of a joke. A Nasreddin story usually has a subtle humour and a pedagogic nature. The International Nasreddin Hodja festival is celebrated between 5 and 10 July every year in Akşehir.", "target": "philosopher, Sufi and wise man from Turkey, remembered for his funny stories and anecdotes", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5271721", "label": "Dianthovirus", "source": "Dianthovirus is a genus of viruses, in the family Tombusviridae. Dianthoviruses are plant viruses. There are three species in this genus. The virus probably has a worldwide distribution, and can be transmitted via nematodes, by mechanical inoculation, by grafting of plants and by contact between infected hosts with previously uninfected host.", "target": "genus of viruses", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5624929", "label": "Kalah Now", "source": "Kalah Now (Persian: كله نو) is a village in Almalu Rural District, Nazarkahrizi District, Hashtrud County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 162, in 34 families.", "target": "village in East Azerbaijan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19974970", "label": "Arthur Morry", "source": "Arthur Morry (4 January 1854 – 25 May 1938) was an English architect. In 1884 he emigrated to Australia where he became a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.", "target": "English architect (1854-1938)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3592340", "label": "Etienne Pradier", "source": "Étienne Pradier (born 13 January 1965) is a French magician and is a member of the Magic Circle with Gold Star. He is a past winner of the Blackpool Magician's Club Close-up Magic Championships and was awarded third place in the Card Magic category in the FISM world championship.", "target": "magician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6522150", "label": "Lena Morrow Lewis", "source": "Martha Lena Morrow Lewis (1868-1950) was an American orator, political organizer, journalist, and newspaper editor. An activist in the prohibition, women's suffrage, and socialist movements, Lewis is best remembered as a top female leader of the Socialist Party of America during that organization's heyday in the first two decades of the 20th century and as the first woman to serve on that organization's governing National Executive Committee.", "target": "American activist and journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26663697", "label": "Dent Head Viaduct", "source": "Dent Head Viaduct is a railway viaduct on the Settle–Carlisle line in Dentdale, Cumbria, England. It is the second major viaduct on the line northwards after Ribblehead Viaduct, and is just north of Blea Moor Tunnel at milepost 251, and to the south of Arten Gill Viaduct. Construction of the viaduct began in 1869, and it was completed in 1875, extra time being needed due to periods of heavy rainfall. The line bows slightly to the east in order to follow the contours of Woldfell, which it navigates on the western side. The viaduct was grade II Listed in 1999. Dent Head Viaduct is 17 miles (27 km) north of Settle Junction, and 57 miles (92 km) south of Carlisle railway station.", "target": "railway viaduct in Cumbria, England", "baseline_candidates": ["railway viaduct", "viaduct"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2317785", "label": "St. Clair Bourne", "source": "St. Clair C. Bourne (February 16, 1943 – December 15, 2007) was an American documentary filmmaker, who focused on African-American subjects and addressed social issues. He also developed projects that explored African-American cultural figures, such as Langston Hughes and Paul Robeson. Not only was Bourne a towering figure in the documentary film world but also an activist, teacher, and organizer.", "target": "American filmmaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4861495", "label": "Napaeus nanodes", "source": "Napaeus nanodes is a species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Enidae. This species is endemic to Spain.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28030509", "label": "Boruto: Naruto Next Generations", "source": "Boruto: Naruto Next Generations is a Japanese manga series written by Ukyō Kodachi and Masashi Kishimoto, and illustrated by Mikio Ikemoto. It began monthly serialization with Kodachi as writer and Kishimoto as editorial supervisor in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine, Weekly Shōnen Jump, in May 2016 and was transferred to Shueisha's monthly magazine, V Jump, in July 2019. In November 2020 Kodachi stepped down, with Kishimoto taking over as writer. Boruto is a spin-off and a sequel to Kishimoto's Naruto, which follows the exploits of Naruto Uzumaki's son, Boruto Uzumaki, and his ninja team. Boruto originated from Shueisha's proposal to Kishimoto on making a sequel to Naruto. However, Kishimoto rejected this offer and proposed his former assistant Mikio Ikemoto to draw it; the writer of the film Boruto: Naruto the Movie, Ukyō Kodachi, created the plot. Both Kodachi and Ikemoto are in charge of the manga. An anime television series adaptation started airing on TV Tokyo on 5 April 2017. Unlike the manga, which began as a retelling of the Boruto film, the anime begins as a prequel set before Boruto and his friends become ninjas in a later story arc. A series of light novels have also been written. Pierrot's anime prequel also earned praise for its use of both new and returning characters, but the narrative of the manga was noted to be more serious as it focused more on the protagonist. Shueisha has shipped a million copies of the manga series as of January 2017.", "target": "media franchise", "baseline_candidates": ["media franchise", "anime television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23039395", "label": "2014 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II – Play-offs", "source": "The Play-offs of the 2014 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II were the final stages of the Group II Zonal Competition involving teams from the Americas. Using the positions determined in their pools, the seven teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2014 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II. The top two teams advanced to Group I for the next year.", "target": "try try but don't cry", "baseline_candidates": ["playoffs"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48816124", "label": "Little Compton", "source": "Little Compton is a village and civil parish in the Stratford-on-Avon district, in south Warwickshire, England, and is located about three miles of Moreton-in-Marsh. Historically an exclave of Gloucestershire, the centre of the village is home to the Reed Business School, under the company of the same name (Reed), and is owned by Sir Alec Reed.", "target": "village and civil parish in Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16237597", "label": "Grand Lodge of Indiana", "source": "The Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of Indiana is one of two statewide organizations that oversee Masonic lodges in the state of Indiana. It was established on January 13, 1818. The Grand Lodge of Indiana's offices and archives are located in the Indianapolis Masonic Temple.", "target": "Grand Lodge", "baseline_candidates": ["Grand Lodge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2592590", "label": "2-D", "source": "Stuart Harold \"2-D\" Pot is a fictional English singer, musician and member of the British virtual band Gorillaz. He provides the lead vocals and plays the keyboard for the band. 2-D's singing voice is provided by Blur frontman Damon Albarn on Gorillaz' recordings and performances; his speaking voice was provided by actor Nelson De Freitas in various Gorillaz direct-to-video projects such as Phase One: Celebrity Take Down and Phase Two: Slowboat to Hades. In 2017, Kevin Bishop was cast as the new speaking voice of 2-D. He was created by Albarn and Jamie Hewlett in 1998.", "target": "Fictional vocalist and keyboard player of the virtual band Gorillaz", "baseline_candidates": ["fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7815034", "label": "Tom Bradley", "source": "Thomas George Bradley (13 April 1926 – 9 September 2002) was a British politician for Labour and the SDP. Kettering-born, Tom Bradley was educated at Kettering Central School and worked in the mines during World War II. Bradley joined the London, Midland and Scottish Railway as a junior clerk in the Goods Depot at Kettering in 1941. He became a railway clerk at Oundle and was national treasurer of the clerks' union, the Transport Salaried Staffs' Association from 1961, its president from 1964 to 1977, and was its acting General Secretary for four months in 1977 after the retirement of the previous General Secretary (David MacKenzie) on health grounds. He served as a councillor on Northamptonshire County Council from 1952 and as an alderman from 1961. Bradley contested Rutland and Stamford as a Labour candidate in 1950, 1951 and 1955, and Preston South in 1959. He was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Leicester North East at a 1962 by-election, representing Leicester East from 1974. He served as parliamentary private secretary to the Home Secretary from 1966. On 20 February 1981 Bradley announced he would not seek to contest his seat again as a Labour Candidate. He claimed that the Party's National Executive Committee and the Party Conference were \"knocking the living daylights out of decent, well established party practices\" and said he would be morally compelled to join any new party formed by the Council for Social Democracy which had been created by the Gang of Four the previous month. The same day three other.", "target": "British politician (1926-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7194193", "label": "Pillow Pal", "source": "Pillow Pals were a line of plush toys made by Ty, Inc. during the 1990s. The toys were given their name because they were soft like a pillow, and were made with children in mind. Though many of them resembled certain Beanie Babies, those that did not share names with their Beanie Baby counterparts. Such Pillow Pals saw a decline in popularity in the late 1990s with the introduction of Beanie Buddies, which were also larger versions of various Beanie Babies. In January 1999, all Pillow Pals were redesigned, and their colors were changed. This line did not sell well, and was discontinued by Ty around the end of the year. Today, PillowPals LLC takes children's drawings and replicates them into 3D pillows. At the time of the final retirement, Ty donated its remaining stock of pillow pals to the Ronald McDonald House to be distributed to sick children.", "target": "stuffed toy line", "baseline_candidates": ["stuffed toy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1021309", "label": "Plouguiel", "source": "Plouguiel (French pronunciation: [pluɡjɛl] (listen); Breton: Priel) is a commune in the Côtes-d'Armor department of Brittany in northwestern France.", "target": "commune in Côtes-d'Armor, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1029606", "label": "Susan's Plan", "source": "Susan's Plan (also released as Dying to Get Rich on video) is a 1998 American black comedy film written and directed by John Landis and starring Nastassja Kinski, Dan Aykroyd, Billy Zane, Rob Schneider, Lara Flynn Boyle and Michael Biehn. The plot revolves around Susan (Kinski)'s plan to kill her former husband (with the help of a group of misfits) and collect his life insurance. The film was screened at the AFI Film Festival in 1998 but due to poor audience reactions, Susan's Plan was released straight to video in 2000.", "target": "1998 film by John Landis", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3295643", "label": "Martin Střelba", "source": "Martin Střelba (born 22 March 1967) is a former professional tennis player from the Czech Republic.", "target": "tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4603724", "label": "2004–05 Liverpool F.C. season", "source": "The 2004–05 season was the 113th season of competitive football played by Liverpool. It began on 1 July 2004 and concluded on 30 June 2005, with competitive matches played between August and May. Liverpool finished fourth in the previous Premier League season. However, they were unable to improve on this position finishing in fifth place, 37 points behind eventual winners Chelsea with a record of 17 wins, 7 draws and 14 defeats. Liverpool fared better in cup competitions. Although they were eliminated by Burnley in the third round of the FA Cup, they reached the final of the League Cup, which they lost 3–2 to Chelsea. Despite their lack of success domestically, Liverpool were successful in the UEFA Champions League. They won the competition for the fifth time, defeating Italian team Milan in the final. Liverpool acquired eight players in the transfer market, including Djibril Cissé, Xabi Alonso and Luis García. They were supplemented by the arrival of Mauricio Pellegrino, Fernando Morientes and Scott Carson during the January transfer window. A total of four players departed including Markus Babbel, Danny Murphy and Michael Owen, who were all transferred in the summer transfer window. Stéphane Henchoz left the club during the winter transfer window. Thirty-two different players represented the club in four competitions, and there were 17 different goalscorers. Liverpool's top goalscorer were Milan Baroš, Steven Gerrard and García with 13 goals each. Defender John Arne Riise made the most appearances during the season with 57.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6944153", "label": "Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company", "source": "The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company was a life insurance company that was chartered in 1845 and based in Newark in Essex County, New Jersey, United States. The company was headed by Frederick Frelinghuysen (1848–1924). The company was known as the \"Tiffany\" of insurance companies, a reference to its reputation as the life insurance company to the upper classes. Mutual Benefit Life was taken into receivership for rehabilitation by the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance on July 16, 1991, after losses in an overheated real estate market led to a run by policyholders, who ultimately lost the purported \"cash value\" that had been said to have accrued in their policies. At the time, the collapse was the largest ever of an American insurer. AMEV acquired the group life, accident and health insurance Mutual Benefit in 1991. SunAmerica acquired the remaining divisions in 1998. Effective June 14, 2001, Mutual Benefit was liquidated and dissolved.", "target": "office in Newark, New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7810180", "label": "Tito Lara", "source": "Tito Lara (December 23, 1932 – June 23, 1987), was considered by many to be Puerto Rico's first television singing idol.", "target": "Puerto Rican musician (1932-1987)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1425318", "label": "Tréjouls", "source": "Tréjouls (Languedocien: Truèjols) is a commune in the Tarn-et-Garonne department in the Occitanie region in southern France.", "target": "commune in Tarn-et-Garonne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q529404", "label": "Jane Welch", "source": "Jane Welch (born 1964) is a writer of fantasy short stories and novels. Jane Welch was born in Derbyshire. After school she worked as a bookseller before going for five years to Soldeu, Andorra in the Pyrenees as a ski teacher. She is married and has two children and lives in Somerset.", "target": "British writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10466591", "label": "Paul Randall", "source": "Paul Randall (born 16 February 1958) is an English footballer who played in the English Football League for Bristol Rovers and Stoke City.", "target": "English footballer (born 1958)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51179514", "label": "Michael F. Fay", "source": "Michael Francis Fay (born 1960) is a British geneticist and botanist currently serving as Senior Research Leader, Conservation Genetics, at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.", "target": "British botanist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2460039", "label": "Buxton Orr", "source": "Buxton Orr (18 April 1924 – 27 December 1997) was a Glasgow-born Anglo-Scottish composer and teacher.", "target": "British composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q794615", "label": "Aetius", "source": "Aetius (; Greek: Ἀέτιος) was a 1st- or 2nd-century AD doxographer and Eclectic philosopher.", "target": "1st- or 2nd-century AD Greek doxographer and philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human", "mononymous person"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2635474", "label": "Prvoslav Mihajlović", "source": "Prvoslav Mihajlović (Serbian Cyrillic: Првослав Михајловић; 13 April 1921 – 28 June 1978) was a Serbian-Yugoslav footballer and head coach.", "target": "Serbian footballer (1921-1978)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19748515", "label": "thallium", "source": "Thallium is a chemical element with the symbol Tl and atomic number 81. It is a gray post-transition metal that is not found free in nature. When isolated, thallium resembles tin, but discolors when exposed to air. Chemists William Crookes and Claude-Auguste Lamy discovered thallium independently in 1861, in residues of sulfuric acid production. Both used the newly developed method of flame spectroscopy, in which thallium produces a notable green spectral line. Thallium, from Greek θαλλός, thallós, meaning \"green shoot\" or \"twig\", was named by Crookes. It was isolated by both Lamy and Crookes in 1862; Lamy by electrolysis, and Crookes by precipitation and melting of the resultant powder. Crookes exhibited it as a powder precipitated by zinc at the international exhibition, which opened on 1 May that year.Thallium tends to form the +3 and +1 oxidation states. The +3 state resembles that of the other elements in group 13 (boron, aluminium, gallium, indium). However, the +1 state, which is far more prominent in thallium than the elements above it, recalls the chemistry of alkali metals, and thallium(I) ions are found geologically mostly in potassium-based ores, and (when ingested) are handled in many ways like potassium ions (K+) by ion pumps in living cells. Commercially, thallium is produced not from potassium ores, but as a byproduct from refining of heavy-metal sulfide ores. Approximately 65% of thallium production is used in the electronics industry, and the remainder is used in the pharmaceutical industry and in glass manufacturing. It is also used in infrared detectors. The radioisotope thallium-201.", "target": "chemical element with symbol Tl and atomic number 81", "baseline_candidates": ["post-transition metal", "chemical element"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25608835", "label": "Pyshnograyev", "source": "Pyshnograyev (Russian: Пышнограев) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Alexeyevsky District, Belgorod Oblast, Russia. The population was 8 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Alexeyevsky District, Belgorod Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6094413", "label": "Quemado", "source": "Quemado is a barrio in the municipality of Mayagüez, Puerto Rico. Its population in 2010 was 2518.", "target": "barrio in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico", "baseline_candidates": ["barrio of Puerto Rico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97996376", "label": "Frank Pinello", "source": "Francesco Pinello (born August 20, 1982) is an Italian American pizzaiolo, who founded the pizzeria Best Pizza in 2010 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He also works as a reporter for Viceland on The Pizza Show and regularly appears on Munchies.", "target": "cook and restaurateur", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98095", "label": "Matthias Hagner", "source": "Matthias Hagner (born 15 August 1974 in Gießen) is a German former professional footballer who played as a midfielder.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23771299", "label": "Filip Arsenovski", "source": "Filip Arsenovski (Macedonian: Филип Арсеновски) (born 30 July 1998) is a Macedonian handball player who plays for RK Eurofarm Pelister 2 and the Macedonian national team. He participated at the 2017 Men's Junior World Handball Championship.", "target": "Macedonian handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16214806", "label": "Spike Dawbarn", "source": "Simon James \"Spike\" Dawbarn (born 5 August 1974 in Warrington, England) is an English singer and dancer. He is a member of the boy band 911, who were originally active between 1995 and 2000 and had ten consecutive top 10 hits before splitting up in 2000. In 2012, 911 reformed for the ITV2 documentary series The Big Reunion, along with other bands from their time including Five, B*Witched and Atomic Kitten.", "target": "British musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32092578", "label": "Lelkendorf", "source": "Lelkendorf is a municipality in the Rostock district, in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27862757", "label": "Jerusa Santos", "source": "Jerusa Geber dos Santos (born 26 April 1982) is a visually impaired Brazilian sprinter. Competing in the T11 classification, Geber has competed at two Summer Paralympic Games, winning two silver and a bronze medal. She is also a multiple World Championships and Parapan American medalist, taking ten medals over five tournaments. She qualified for the 2020 Summer Paralympics, in Women's 100m T11, and Women's 200m T11.", "target": "Brazilian paralympic athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67498395", "label": "Shotaro Shiroyama", "source": "Shotaro Shiroyama (城山正太郎, Shiroyama Shōtarō, born March 6, 1995) is a Japanese long jumper who won a bronze medal at the 2017 Asian Championships. He placed fifth at the 2018 Asian Games. In 2019, he competed in the men's long jump at the 2019 World Athletics Championships held in Doha, Qatar. He finished in 11th place.", "target": "Japanese long jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16728688", "label": "John Dugan", "source": "John Dugan is a retired American soccer player and coach who both played and coached professionally in the USL A-League.", "target": "American soccer player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18810082", "label": "Casper Ruud", "source": "Casper Ruud (born 22 December 1998) is a Norwegian professional tennis player. Ruud has a career-high singles ranking of world No. 5, achieved on 13 June 2022, making him the highest-ranked Norwegian tennis player in history. He has won eight ATP Tour singles titles, seven of which were on clay courts. Ruud is the first Norwegian man to win an ATP singles title, to reach a major final (at the 2022 French Open), to reach a Masters 1000 final, and to enter the Top 10 in the ATP rankings. In doubles, he has a career-high ranking of world No. 133, which he achieved after reaching the quarterfinals of the 2021 Wimbledon Championships.", "target": "Norwegian tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q367499", "label": "Michel Fournier", "source": "Michel Fournier (born 9 May 1944) is a French adventurer and retired Air Force colonel. He has been involved in planning attempts to break freefall jumping height records, but has yet to be successful in carrying out an attempt. He was born in Treban (Allier), in the Auvergne region of France.", "target": "French adventurer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2519324", "label": "Shinichi Shinohara", "source": "Shinichi Shinohara (篠原 信一, Shinohara Shin'ichi, born January 23, 1973 in Kobe, Japan) is a retired Japanese judo and winner of the gold medal at the 1999 World Judo Championships in Birmingham. To Shinohara's disappointment, French champion David Douillet did not compete at Birmingham due to back injury; Shinohara was quoted as saying, \"Even though I lifted the double crown at the worlds, it won't mean anything as long as people say it was won in Douillet's absence.\" Douillet had previously been declared victor at the 1997 championships in Paris after a French judge gave Shinohara a controversial penalty.Three years after, Shinohara received the silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics when he was defeated by Douillet due to another disputed judgment about Uchi Mata Sukashi in the finals which was strongly protested by the Japanese participants. Douillet performed Uchi Mata but over-rotated and landed on his back; Shinohara fell to the mat as well. One judge had ruled for Shinohara, while the other two ruled for Douillet. Shinohara cried throughout the medal ceremony as a result of his loss, while head coach and 1984 Olympic champion Yasuhiro Yamashita harshly criticised the judges and apologized to Shinohara for his powerlessness after the ceremony. However, at a later press conference, Shinohara expressed that he was not dissatisfied with the judgment, stating, \"I lost because I was weak. Douillet was strong. \"As of 2007, Shinohara coaches judo at his alma mater, Tenri University, where he previously studied as an undergraduate. Among his students is Asian champion Takamasa Anai.", "target": "judoka", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96679654", "label": "Tom Whatley", "source": "Thomas McKee Whatley (born August 7, 1970) is an American politician. He is a Republican representing district 27 in the Alabama State Senate.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59268727", "label": "Borisz Tóth", "source": "Borisz Alexander Tóth (born 7 July 2002) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Diósgyőr II.", "target": "Hungarian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4924515", "label": "Blake Worsley", "source": "Blake Thomas Worsley (born November 7, 1987 in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a Canadian Olympic swimmer. He competed for Canada at the 2009 World Aquatics Championships and the 2010 Commonwealth Games, where he finished 12th. He was raised in Steamboat Springs, Colorado and swam for the University of Denver.", "target": "Canadian swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q573471", "label": "The Boomtown Rats", "source": "The Boomtown Rats are an Irish rock band originally formed in Dublin in 1975. Between 1977 and 1985, they had a series of Irish and UK hits including \"Like Clockwork\", \"Rat Trap\", \"I Don't Like Mondays\" and \"Banana Republic\". The group is led by vocalist Bob Geldof. The original line-up comprised Geldof, Garry Roberts (lead guitar), Johnnie Fingers (keyboards), Pete Briquette (bass), Gerry Cott (rhythm guitar) and Simon Crowe (drums). The Boomtown Rats broke up in 1986, but reformed in 2013, without Fingers or Cott.", "target": "Irish rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5246004", "label": "Dean Beckwith", "source": "Dean Stuart Beckwith (born 18 September 1983) is an English semi-professional footballer who plays as a central defender for Chatham Town.", "target": "English footballer (born 1983)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q91292068", "label": "Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre", "source": "Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre (Malay: Pusat Pameran dan Perdagangan Antarabangsa Malaysia), often abbreviated as MITEC, is the largest trade and exhibition centre of Malaysia located in the suburb of Segambut, Kuala Lumpur. It is situated right next to MATRADE Exhibition and Convention Centre and Menara MITI. The centre has a gross floor area of 143,191 square meters (1.5 million square feet), sprawling over a 13.3-acre prime land and a total of 484,376 square meters of exhibit space with ceilings as high as 36 meters making indoor sporting events feasible.MITEC also consists of the largest pillar-less exhibition hall in Malaysia. It is capable of hosting mega-exhibitions for over 100,000 visitors and conventions with the capacity of 20,000 as well as 28,300 visitors in banquet seating at a time during events. MITEC is poised to be the first exhibition and convention venue of choice in the Southeast Asia region. Nine events of the South East Asia Games were held at MITEC. The architecture takes inspiration from a Rubber Seed and Songket, a traditional Malay fabric.MITEC is the first component and flagship of the KL Metropolis development project with a total gross development value (GDV) of approximately RM20 billion. The development is currently being handled by Naza TTDI as its master developer.", "target": "Malaysia's largest exhibition centre, Kuala Lumpur", "baseline_candidates": ["convention center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4900653", "label": "Bhagmati", "source": "Bhagamati (Hyder Mahal) was a queen of Sultan Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, in whose honor Hyderabad was supposedly named. There exists debate among scholars about whether there existed any Bhagamati at all and whether she influenced the naming.", "target": "Wife of Sultan Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5652999", "label": "Happy Retreat", "source": "Happy Retreat (also known as Charles Washington House and Mordington) is a historic property in Charles Town, West Virginia, which was originally owned and developed by Charles Washington, the youngest brother of George Washington and the founder of Charles Town.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["plantation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q947033", "label": "Paso del Rey", "source": "Paso del Rey is a city located 35.5 km west of Buenos Aires, in Moreno, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. Paso del Rey (King's Ford) takes its name from the estancia (ranch) owned by Senator Amancio Jacinto Alcorta: Estancia Paso del Rey. The surrounding area was well-known since colonial times because there was a ford which provided a useful crossing place to get the west bank of the Reconquista River. In fact, Charles Darwin could have crossed the ford in his journey from Buenos Aires to Luján on 27 September 1833 (the only alternative crossing was a wooden bridge known as Puente de Márquez, 4.5 km north). According to the 2001 census [INDEC], the population was 41,775. Paso del Rey is bordered by Moreno City (west), Trujui (north) and Merlo and Reconquista River (south).", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4604937", "label": "2005 Thailand Open – singles", "source": "The 2005 Thailand Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 3rd edition of the Thailand Open, and was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand, from September 26 through October 2, 2005. Roger Federer won in the final 6–3, 7–5 against Andy Murray. By reaching the final, Murray entered the ATP's Top 100 for the first time.", "target": "2005 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11671275", "label": "Shigeo Takahashi", "source": "Shigeo Takahashi (高橋 成夫, Takahashi Shigeo, 29 March 1912 – 4 November 1990) was a Japanese swimmer. He competed in the men's 100 metre freestyle at the 1932 Summer Olympics and the water polo tournament at the 1936 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Japanese swimmer and water polo player (1912-1990)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29890692", "label": "Matteo Marrai", "source": "Matteo Marrai (born 17 November 1986) is a former professional tennis player from Italy.", "target": "tennis player (1986-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q493580", "label": "Andrea Capone", "source": "Andrea Capone (born 8 January 1981) is a retired Italian footballer, who played as a midfielder.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1574065", "label": "United Nations Security Council Resolution 48", "source": "United Nations Security Council Resolution 48, adopted on April 23, 1948, called on all concerned parties to comply with United Nations Security Council Resolution 46 and to that end established a Truce Commission for Palestine to assist the Security Council in implementing the truce. The resolution was approved by eight votes to none, with three abstentions from Colombia, the Ukrainian SSR and the Soviet Union.", "target": "United Nations Security Council resolution", "baseline_candidates": ["United Nations Security Council resolution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18913641", "label": "Panagiotis Nikoloudis", "source": "Panagiotis Nikoloudis (Greek: Παναγιώτης Νικολούδης; born 1949) is a Greek prosecutor who served as the Minister of State for Combatting Corruption in the Caretaker Cabinet of Vassiliki Thanou-Christophilou and the Cabinet of Alexis Tsipras.", "target": "Greek politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20128058", "label": "Arthur Savile", "source": "Arthur Savile (20 December 1819 – 23 April 1870) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and other amateur teams between 1839 and 1841. He was born at Methley in Yorkshire and died at Fowlmere in Cambridgeshire. Savile was the sixth son of John Savile, 3rd Earl of Mexborough, and of his wife Anne, who was the daughter of Philip Yorke, 3rd Earl of Hardwicke. Throughout his life, he was styled as \"The Honourable Arthur Savile\". He was educated at Eton College and at Trinity College, Cambridge. As a cricketer, Savile was a middle-order batsman, and he appears not to have bowled, though he played one first-class match for a team called the \"Fast Bowlers\" in 1841 and in any case records from his time as a cricketer are incomplete. He played three times from 1836 to 1838 for Eton in the annual Eton v Harrow cricket match before going to Cambridge University in 1839. He was not successful in first-class cricket. In his first match for Cambridge University, he scored 14 not out in the first innings of the match against the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), but that remained his highest score, and in his only other appearance for the University side, in the University Match against Oxford University in 1840, he scored just 3 and 1. Three matches for MCC produced just 11 runs in four innings, while he failed to score in either innings of his other first-class game. Savile graduated from Cambridge University in 1841.", "target": "English clergyman and cricketer (1819-1870)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18606478", "label": "Anarithma", "source": "Anarithma is a small genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Mitromorphidae, in the superfamily Conoidea the cone snails and their allies.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66050544", "label": "Stephen Salter", "source": "Stephen Salter (30 May 1862 – 19 September 1956) was an English architect who practised in Oxford, Maidenhead, and the Isle of Wight. He should not be confused with another (unrelated) architect called Stephen Salter who lived from 1826 to 1896 and worked in London.", "target": "English architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q661575", "label": "Astor family", "source": "The Astor family achieved prominence in business, society, and politics in the United States and the United Kingdom during the 19th and 20th centuries. With ancestral roots in the Italian Alps, the Astors settled in Germany, first appearing in North America in the 18th century with John Jacob Astor, one of the wealthiest people in history.", "target": "family that achieved prominence in business, society, and politics in the United States and the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11836118", "label": "Catch the Heat", "source": "Catch the Heat, also known as Feel the Heat, Sin escape and Narcotraficantes, is a 1987 Argentine-American action film directed by Joel Silberg and written by Stirling Silliphant. It stars Tiana Alexandra, David Dukes, Rod Steiger and Brian Thompson. It was also released with the alternative titles Sentir la persecución (\"Feel the Chase\") and Misión: Alto riesgo (\"Mission: High Risk\").", "target": "1987 film by Joel Silberg", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6210578", "label": "Mattias Tichy", "source": "Mattias Tichy (born 12 October 1974 in Fristad) is a Swedish rower.", "target": "Swedish rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49178525", "label": "Wind River Range", "source": "The Wind River Range (or \"Winds\" for short) is a mountain range of the Rocky Mountains in western Wyoming in the United States. The range runs roughly NW–SE for approximately 100 mi (160 km). The Continental Divide follows the crest of the range and includes Gannett Peak, which at 13,802 ft (4,207 m), is the highest peak in Wyoming; and also Fremont Peak at 13,750 ft (4,191 m), the third highest peak in Wyoming. There are more than 40 other named peaks in excess of 12,999 ft (3,962 m). With the exception of the Grand Teton in the Teton Range, the next 19 highest peaks in Wyoming after Gannett are also in the Winds.Two large national forests including three wilderness areas encompass most of the mountain range. Shoshone National Forest is on the eastern side of the continental divide while Bridger-Teton National Forest is on the west. Both national forests and the entire mountain range are an integral part of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Portions of the east side of the range are inside the Wind River Indian Reservation.", "target": "mountain range of the Rocky Mountains in western Wyoming in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5334896", "label": "Ed Hale", "source": "Ed Hale (born October 20, 1974) is an American writer, singer-songwriter-recording artist. His hit singles include \"I Walk Alone\", \"New Orleans Dreams\" and \"Scene in San Francisco\", which all landed in the Billboard Top 40 Charts in the Adult Contemporary radio format. Hale was formerly known as Eddie Darling throughout the early 1990s, and is the lead singer of the American modern rock musical group Ed Hale and The Transcendence, formerly called Transcendence. He also performs, records and releases solo albums. He is currently signed to the Dying Van Gogh record label and the BMG subsidiary label Fieldhouse Music. Hale is frequently referred to as \"The Ambassador\" by fans and the press due to Hale's penchant for global volunteer and diplomatic travel, exploring other cultures, and for singing in and speaking multiple languages. Along with his native English, Hale speaks Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, French, Hebrew and Persian.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2279417", "label": "Dror Hajaj", "source": "Dror Hagag (Hebrew: דרור חג'ג', born December 31, 1978) is an Israeli former professional basketball player of a Tunisian-Jewish descent. He plays at the point guard position. He last played with the pro club Maccabi Ashdod. He also played for the Israeli National Team.", "target": "Israeli basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27889214", "label": "Craig Johnson", "source": "Craig Paul Johnson (born September 16, 1963) is an American politician who was elected as a Republican member of the Iowa State Senate's 32nd district in 2016. He defeated Democratic incumbent Brian Schoenjahn. He previously ran for election to the Iowa House of Representatives in 2014 for the 64th district. Johnson, born and raised in Independence, Iowa, is a financial planner and former sales and engineer manager. As of February 2020, Johnson serves on the following committees: State Government (Vice Chair), Appropriations, Commerce, Education, and Human Resources. He also serves on the Transportation, Infrastructure, and Capitals Appropriations Subcommittee (Chair), as well as the Capital Projects Committee, State Government Efficiency Review Committee, and the Capitol Planning Commission.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4588555", "label": "1993 Holiday Bowl", "source": "The 1993 Holiday Bowl was a college football bowl game played December 30, 1993, in San Diego, California. It was part of the 1993 NCAA Division I-A football season. It featured the tenth ranked Ohio State Buckeyes, and the unranked BYU Cougars. It was famous for coach John Cooper's famous bowl win guarantee, which he came through on.", "target": "NCAA football bowl game", "baseline_candidates": ["bowl game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4782737", "label": "Aquarelliste", "source": "Aquarelliste (foaled January 23, 1998) is a French Thoroughbred racehorse. Owned and bred by Daniel Wildenstein, she was sired by Danehill, a Leading sire in Australia as well as in France and Great Britain & Ireland. She was out of the mare Agathe, a daughter of Manila, the 1986 Breeders' Cup Turf winner voted 1986 U.S. Champion Male Turf Horse. Trained by Élie Lellouche, Aquarelliste went into the 2001 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe undefeated having won two Listed races, the Classic Prix de Diane and the Prix Vermeille. However, Godolphin Racing's colt Sakhee won the Arc with Aquarelliste finishing second, six lengths back. Racing in 2002 at age four, Aquarelliste won that year's Prix Foy and the Group I Prix Ganay. She ran third to Ange Gabriel in the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud at Saint-Cloud Racecourse and was third to the same horse when sent overseas to race at Sha Tin Racecourse in the Hong Kong Vase. Sent to compete in England's important King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, Aquarelliste finished fourth to winner Golan. She wound up her 2002 season with a sixth-place finish in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. As a five-year-old, Aquarelliste's best result was a win in March 2003 in the Group III Prix Exbury. Retired to broodmare duty, in 2004 Aquarelliste was bred to Sadler's Wells and produced a filly, Aquarelle Bleu.", "target": "race horse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5322475", "label": "EA-Ski", "source": "Shon Adams (born September 17, 1968), better known by his stage name E-A-Ski, is an American rapper and producer from Oakland, California. He served as both a rapper and producer for No Limit Records, producing on Master P's early records and also releasing some of his own material.", "target": "American rapper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6287545", "label": "Joseph Urner", "source": "Joseph Walker Urner (January 16, 1898 – 1987) American sculptor, painter and etcher born in Frederick, Maryland. He was the son of the Hon. Hammond G. Urner (1868–1942) and Mary Lavinia \"Birdie\" Floyd (1872–1956). His paternal grandfather was Milton Urner (July 29, 1839 – February 9, 1926), a U.S. Congressman from the sixth district of Maryland who served two terms from 1879 until 1883. He studied sculpture with Ettore Cadorin. Joseph served in both World War I and World War II. He was an architect and practiced sculpture as well. He died in 1987. He created the Alabama State Memorial at Gettysburg, PA.", "target": "American artist (1898-1987)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7499304", "label": "Shivajirao Shankarrao Deshmukh", "source": "Shivajirao Shankarao Deshmukh (30 July 1931 – 28 June 1977) was a Member of Parliament from Parbhani in Maharashtra, India. He served during the 3rd, 4th and 5th Lok Sabha and was elected as an Indian National Congress candidate.He served as an elected Secretary of Congress Parliamentary Committee for two terms, 1968–69 and 1969–70 and was Member of Executive Committee, Congress Parliamentary Committee, 1967—70 and also Founder President of Marathwada Sahakari Sakhar karkhana at Dongarkada village in Kalamnuri taluka Dist. Hingoli. He was married to Shrimati Shalini, he has son Shri Sambhajirao Shivajirao Deshmukh and two daughters Sushma and Sujata. He has studied law in Hyderabad.", "target": "Member of Parliament", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2848170", "label": "André Liabel", "source": "André Liabel was a French actor, film director and screenwriter. André Liabel began his career as comedian by working full-time as an actor for the cinematographic compagny Laboratoires Éclair which had just opened its new studios at Épinay-sur-Seine in 1908. He performed in more than sixty films until 1933. He also was assistant director.", "target": "French actor (1871-1942)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7873214", "label": "USS R-19", "source": "USS R-19 (SS-96) was an R-class coastal and harbor defense submarine of the United States Navy.", "target": "1918 R-class coastal and harbor defense submarine of the United States Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4606817", "label": "2006 Polish Figure Skating Championships", "source": "The 2006 Polish Figure Skating Championships (Polish: Mistrzostwa Polski w łyżwiarstwie figurowym 2005/2006) were held in two parts: Senior and junior competitions were held in Krynica between December 9 and 11, 2005. Novice and younger senior competitions were held in Oświęcim between March 17 and 19, 2006.", "target": "figure skating competition", "baseline_candidates": ["figure skating competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3665261", "label": "2001 Cerveza Club Colombia Open – singles", "source": "Mariano Puerta was the defending champion but did not compete that year. Fernando Vicente won in the final 6–4, 7–6(8–6) against Juan Ignacio Chela.", "target": "2001 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6553762", "label": "Lingan", "source": "Lingan (2021 population: 229) is a Canadian suburban community in Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Regional Municipality. Lingan is located on the shore of the Cabot Strait, northeast from Sydney, east of New Waterford and northwest of Glace Bay. The community occupies a headland which forms the north side of Lingan Bay, to the south, and forms the western shore of Indian Bay, to the east. Lingan was an active coal mining area from the early 19th century until 1999 when the last coal mines in the community operated by the Cape Breton Development Corporation, or DEVCO, were closed. The most recent mines in Lingan operated by DEVCO included the Lingan Colliery and the adjacent Phalen Colliery. They were served by the Devco Railway, formerly the Sydney & Louisburg Railway. In the late 1970s, the Nova Scotia Power Corporation constructed the Lingan Generating Station to generate electricity from coal. This plant is still in operation and currently uses coal imported from the United States and South America which is shipped to Sydney and hauled by the Sydney Coal Railway. Lingan has a long history of Irish heritage with some of the most prominent names being Burke, Handrigan, Hall, Hanrahan/ Handrahan, Kelly, Laffin, Miller, and Rockett many of these families have roots going back 7 generations and they continue to live in the community. During the mid-first decade of the 21st century nine large wind turbines were erected in Lingan along the cliffs on the Northern Head. During World War2 the US army had an observation post here.", "target": "general service area in Nova Scotia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["General Service Area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27929437", "label": "Crocus nevadensis", "source": "Crocus nevadensis is a species of Crocus from North Africa and Spain.It is found growing in mountain meadows, scree, scrub, and open pine forests at altitudes that range from 1000 to 3000 meters; flowers occur in February to April.Plants have fimbriate, white stigmas, and the petals are sometime not marked - especially for plants found around the Sierra de Cazorla region.Under cultivation the plants are very susceptible to infections by botrytis, which attacks the faded flowers and can move into the corm and kill it.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q381270", "label": "AB 260AG", "source": "The Aero Boero 260AG is an Argentine agricultural aircraft that first flew in 1973. Despite the similarity in designation, it is completely different from and unrelated to the Aero Boero AB-260. The 260AG is a low-wing monoplane with a single seat and fixed tailwheel undercarriage. Development commenced in 1971 as the AG.235/260, but various problems forced the project to stagnate and it was not revived until the 1990s.", "target": "1972 agricultural aircraft model by Aero Boero", "baseline_candidates": ["agricultural aircraft", "aircraft model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6304256", "label": "Judson McKinney", "source": "Judson McKinney (born August 4, 1988) is an American soccer player.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17264673", "label": "Oosterella", "source": "Oosterella is an extinct ammonoid cephalopod genus belonging to the family Oosterellidae. These fast-moving nektonic carnivores lived during the Cretaceous, from the upper Valanginian age to the lower Hauterivian age.", "target": "genus of molluscs (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1074107", "label": "Land of Pine Groves", "source": "The Land of Pine Groves (Spanish: Tierra de Pinares) is a natural region located in the autonomous community of Castilla and León in Spain, and includes the north of the province of Segovia and the south of the province of Valladolid. It also extends to the east of the province of Ávila. It is a forest mass composed of the species Pinus pinaster and Pinus pinea.", "target": "natural region in Castilla and León, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["geographic region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60614349", "label": "Steinberg", "source": "Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH (trading as Steinberg) is a German musical software and hardware company based in Hamburg with satellite offices in Siegburg and London. It develops music writing, recording, arranging, and editing software, most notably Cubase, Nuendo, and Dorico. It also designs audio and MIDI hardware interfaces, controllers, and iOS/Android music apps including Cubasis. Steinberg created several industry standard music technologies including the Virtual Studio Technology (VST) format for plug-ins and the ASIO (Audio Stream Input/Output) protocol. Steinberg has been a wholly owned subsidiary of Yamaha since 2005.", "target": "musical software and hardware company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69778", "label": "Milan Horáček", "source": "Milan Horáček (born 30 October 1946 in Velké Losiny, Czechoslovakia) is a Czech-born German politician, a founding member of the German Green Party, a former member of the Bundestag (1983–1985) and a former Member of the European Parliament (2004–2009). From 1965 to 1967 his political activism got him into trouble with the Czechoslovak communist regime, and he was arrested several times. After the suppression of the Prague Spring in 1968, he fled from Czechoslovakia and settled in West Germany. There he worked in industry and for a trade union magazine. From 1976 to 1981 he studied political science in Frankfurt, and in 1979 was involved in the establishment of Die Grünen. In the 1980s he was active in Hesse for the party, was a municipal councillor in Frankfurt 1981–1983, and was elected to the Bundestag in 1983, serving until 1985, as a member of its Foreign Affairs Committee. His main interests there were foreign affairs and security, Central and Eastern Europe and human rights. From 1985 to 1990, he was a group specialist on foreign and security policy, human rights and Eastern Europe. Besides his political work, Horáček engaged in Czechoslovakian exile activities. He was publisher of the Czech exile magazine Listy (\"Sheets\"). In 1990 his Czech citizenship was restored and president Václav Havel appointed him to the Council of Advisers. He was director of the Heinrich Böll Foundation's office in Prague from 1991 to 2004, and also worked at its Bonn office 1998–2000. As a candidate of the Green Party federations of Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and.", "target": "German politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2605615", "label": "Schistometopum", "source": "Schistometopum is a genus of amphibian in the family Dermophiidae. S. thomense is only known from two islands in the Bight of Benin, but has been reported from \"Upper Zaïre\". This likely refers to an undiscovered third species.", "target": "genus of amphibians", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6803161", "label": "Meade LX90", "source": "The Meade LX90 is a Schmidt-Cassegrain design of telescope made by Meade Instruments for the mid-priced (2000 USD circa 2008) commercial telescope market. It uses a similar optical system to the bigger and more expensive Meade LX200—although it lacks some useful functions like primary mirror locking. The LX90 telescopes were equipped with Autostar soon after its 1999 introduction by Meade instruments. Optical apertures included in the product line included 8 (20 cm), 10 (25 cm) and 12 (30 cm) inches on a double tine fork mount and Autostar system.", "target": "telescope", "baseline_candidates": ["optical telescope", "Schmidt–Cassegrain telescope"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17484445", "label": "Zach Bauman", "source": "Zachary Jordan \"Zach\" Bauman (born July 24, 1992) is an American football running back who is currently a free agent. He played college football for the Northern Arizona University Lumberjacks. He was considered one of the top running backs in FCS history, being one of only nine players to rush for 1,000+ yards four times .", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4837297", "label": "Baba Gerd Ali", "source": "Baba Gerd Ali (Persian: باباگردعلي, also Romanized as Bābā Gerd ‘Alī; also known as Bābā Kord ‘Alī) is a village in Kunani Rural District, Kunani District, Kuhdasht County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,394, in 304 families.", "target": "village in Lorestan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5660509", "label": "Harold Dorman", "source": "Harold Kenneth Dorman (December 23, 1926 – October 8, 1988) was an American rock and roll singer and songwriter. Dorman was born in Drew, Mississippi. He wrote a song called \"Mountain of Love\", which he released as a single in 1960 on the Rita record label. The song became a hit in the U.S., selling over a million copies and reaching No. 7 on the R&B singles chart and No. 21 on the Billboard Hot 100. Though it was Dorman's only hit record, it proved to be a popular song for covers; Charley Pride, Johnny Rivers, and Ronnie Dove all hit the U.S. chart with the song, and it was also recorded by Bruce Springsteen, The Beach Boys, Tommy Cash, and Narvel Felts. He also wrote three songs for country music and blues singer pianist Moon Mullican in the early 1960s. These songs are the blues song \"Mr Tears\"; the honky tonk ballad \"Just to be With You\"; and the bluesy country drinking song \"This Glass I Hold\". Dorman died in October 1988 while traveling in McKinney, Texas, at the age of 61. At the time of his death Dorman lived in Memphis, Tennessee. Bear Family Records posthumously reissued an album of Dorman's recordings in 1999.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1424491", "label": "Aplasia cutis congenita", "source": "Aplasia cutis congenita is a rare disorder characterized by congenital absence of skin. Frieden classified ACC in 1986 into 9 groups on the basis of location of the lesions and associated congenital anomalies. The scalp is the most commonly involved area with lesser involvement of trunk and extremities. Frieden classified ACC with fetus papyraceus as type 5. This type presents as truncal ACC with symmetrical absence of skin in stellate or butterfly pattern with or without involvement of proximal limbs. It is the most common congenital cicatricial alopecia, and is a congenital focal absence of epidermis with or without evidence of other layers of the skin.The exact etiology of ACC is still unclear but intrauterine infection by varicella or herpes virus, drugs such as methimazole, misoprostol, valproate, cocaine, marijuana etc., fetus papyraceus, feto-fetal transfusion, vascular coagulation defects, amniotic membrane adherence, abnormal elastic fiber biomechanical forces and trauma are implicated. It can be associated with Johanson-Blizzard syndrome, Adams-Oliver syndrome, trisomy 13, and Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. It can also seen with exposure to methimazole and carbimazole in utero. This dermatological manifestation has been linked to Peptidase D haploinsufficiency and a deletion in Chromosome 19.", "target": "medical condition", "baseline_candidates": ["mixed dermis disorder", "rare disease", "disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34933764", "label": "Battista Sforza", "source": "Battista Sforza (1446 – 6 or 7 July 1472) was the second wife of Federico da Montefeltro, and Countess of Urbino.", "target": "Duchess of Urbino", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1552687", "label": "Guam Shipyard", "source": "Guam Shipyard is a top level association football club that currently plays in the Guam Soccer League in the United States territory of Guam. The team have won three national cups and hold the record for the most league championships.", "target": "association football club in Guam", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17625101", "label": "azo dye", "source": "Azo dyes are organic compounds bearing the functional group R−N=N−R′, in which R and R′ are usually aryl. They are a commercially important family of azo compounds, i.e. compounds containing the linkage C-N=N-C. Azo dyes are widely used to treat textiles, leather articles, and some foods. Chemically related to azo dyes are azo pigments, which are insoluble in water and other solvents.", "target": "class of dyes", "baseline_candidates": ["azo compound", "class of chemical compounds with similar applications or functions", "synthetic dye"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56283871", "label": "Bogor FC", "source": "Sulawesi Utara United Football Club is an Indonesian football club based in Manado, North Sulawesi. The club currently plays in Liga 2.", "target": "association football team in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q175843", "label": "Flenucleta", "source": "Flenucleta was an ancient Berber, Roman and Byzantine civitas located in the Mediterranean hinterland of what was then the province of Mauretania Caesariensis. It was situated in present-day northern Algeria. The exact location of the city is unknown.Flenucleta was also the seat of the Catholic Church diocese of Flenucleta which goes back to a Roman era bishopric in the ancient town of the same name. Although the diocese ceased to effectively function with the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb, the diocese has been re-established in name at least as a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.", "target": "Roman Catholic titular see", "baseline_candidates": ["titular see"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48853492", "label": "Raekwon Davis", "source": "Raekwon Davis (born June 10, 1997) is an American football defensive tackle for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Alabama.", "target": "American-football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8059089", "label": "Youssef Moustaïd", "source": "Youssef Moustaïd (born 21 August 1976) is a French former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. Between 1994 and 2003, he played in Ligue 1 and Ligue 2 for AS Nancy.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16301498", "label": "Ernesto Mejía", "source": "Ernesto Antonio Mejía Alvarado [meh-HEE-ah] (born December 2, 1985) is a Venezuelan first baseman who is currently a free agent. Listed at 6' 5\", 245 lb., he bats and throws right handed. He previously played in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) for the Saitama Seibu Lions.", "target": "Venezuelan baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25675534", "label": "Giovanni Battista Scalabrini", "source": "Giovanni Battista Scalabrini (8 July 1839 – 1 June 1905) was an Italian Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Piacenza from 1876 until his death. He was the founder of both the Missionaries of Saint Charles (also known as the Scalabrinians) and the Mission Sisters of Saint Charles.Scalabrini's rise to the episcopate came at a rapid pace due to a series of lectures have gave on the First Vatican Council in 1872, and his staunch dedication to catechism, which led Pope Pius IX to dub him as the \"Apostle of the Catechism\"; successive popes Leo XIII and Pius X held him in incredible esteem and both failed to convince him accept archdioceses or the cardinalate. He made five pastoral visits across his diocese which proved to be an exhaustive but effective mission of evangelization and his efforts at reforming seminaries and pastoral initiatives earned him praise even from the secular detractors who criticized him for his strict obedience to the pope.The bishop's episcopal tenure resulted in the establishment of the \"Saint Raphael Association\" dedicated to the care of Italian migrants which proved to be a cause he held close to his heart. This solidified through the actions of his twin religious congregations and his visits to both Brazil and the United States of America where he went to meet Italian immigrants. He also dealt with the Paolo Miraglia-Gulotti schism that took place in his diocese and had known the faux-bishop after ordaining him in 1879. Scalabrini also held three important episcopal gatherings in his diocese.", "target": "Bishop of Piacenza", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7662593", "label": "Synomera", "source": "Synomera is a genus of moths of the family Erebidae. The genus was described by Schaus in 1916.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17042687", "label": "Pac-Man Museum", "source": "Pac-Man Museum is a 2014 compilation title developed and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment under the Namco label. It is a compilation of 9 (10 if Ms. Pac-Man is counted) Pac-Man games, with additional features such as achievements and online leaderboards. It was released digitally on February 26, 2014, for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, but was released on Steam and the North American PlayStation Store a day earlier (February 25, 2014). It was released in Japan for PS3 and Xbox 360 on June 25, 2014. Versions of the game for the Nintendo 3DS and Wii U were announced and intended to release on the Nintendo eShop, but was cancelled due to \"delayed development\". The game was delisted from all platforms on July 20, 2020. A sequel, Pac-Man Museum +, has been released on May 27, 2022.", "target": "2014 Pac-Man video game compilation", "baseline_candidates": ["video game compilation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2828063", "label": "Aimé Halbeher", "source": "Aimé Halbeher (16 March 1936 – 3 August 2021) was a French political activist and syndicalist. He served as Deputy Secretary General of the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) to Renault factories in Boulogne-Billancourt. He was one of the main players of the Metalworkers' Federation factory occupation during May 68. From 1976 to 1987, he was on the Central Committee of the French Communist Party (PCF) and served as Editor-in-Chief of the PCF newsletter Économie & Politique from 1985 to 1989.", "target": "French politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3535966", "label": "Townsendia condensata", "source": "Townsendia condensata is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae known by the common names cushion Townsend daisy and cushion townsendia. It is native to North America where it is known from many scattered occurrences in the mountains of the western United States and Alberta in Canada. It is mainly limited to the alpine climates of high mountain peaks, where it grows in meadows, tundra, and barren, rocky talus. It grows alongside other alpine plants such as Eriogonum androsaceum.This is a petite biennial or perennial herb taking a clumped form just a few centimeters tall, its herbage growing on a caudex and taproot unit. The leaves are 1 or 1.5 centimeters long, rounded, and coated in woolly hairs. The inflorescence is generally a solitary flower head 1 to 3 centimeters wide with rough-haired, lance-shaped phyllaries. The head contains many yellow disc florets and many white, pinkish, or purplish ray florets each measuring up to 16 millimeters in length. The fruit is a hairy achene tipped with a deciduous pappus of bristles. One variety of this species, var. anomala, the North Fork Easter-daisy, is endemic to the Absaroka Mountains of Wyoming, mostly in the drainage of the North Fork of the Shoshone River.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79470", "label": "Dover", "source": "Dover is a small town in Pope County, Arkansas, United States. The population was 1,378 at the 2010 census. Dover is located in the Arkansas River Valley, and is part of the Russellville Micropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "small town in Pope County, Arkansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6861749", "label": "Milwaukee Hospital", "source": "The Milwaukee Hospital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, was a leader in antiseptic surgery when its surgery rooms opened in 1912, and was also a leader in using x-rays in medicine, having in 1926 the most powerful x-ray machine in the U.S. The complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006.", "target": "hospital in Wisconsin, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["former hospital", "hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26258697", "label": "British International School of Tunis", "source": "The British International School of Tunis (commonly abbreviated to BIST) is a private school in La Soukra, Ariana Governorate, Tunisia that provides elementary and secondary education. It enrols about 250 students, aged 3 to 18, from Key Stage 1 to 5. The new sixth form opened in September 2020. The school is accredited by COBIS, has a membership to IAPS & is inspected under the ISI framework.", "target": "school in Tunisia", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34736322", "label": "East Brunswick", "source": "East Brunswick is a township in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States. The suburban bedroom community is part of the New York City metropolitan area and is located on the southern shore of the Raritan River, directly adjacent to the city of New Brunswick and located roughly 29 miles (47 km) away from New York City. According to the 2010 United States Census, the township's population was 47,512, reflecting an increase of 756 (+1.6%) from the 46,756 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 3,208 (+7.4%) from the 43,548 counted in the 1990 Census.East Brunswick was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on February 28, 1860, from portions of both Monroe Township and North Brunswick Township. Portions of the township were taken to form Washington town within the township (February 23, 1870; became independent as South River on February 28, 1898), Helmetta (March 20, 1888), Milltown (January 29, 1889) and Spotswood (April 15, 1908).As of the 2010 Census, the United States Census Bureau calculated that New Jersey's center of population was located a few hundred feet east of Nenninger Lane, near the New Jersey Turnpike. Based on the results of the 2000 Census, the state's center of population was located on Milltown Road in East Brunswick.", "target": "township in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["township of New Jersey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3852265", "label": "Matthew John Armstrong", "source": "Matthew John Armstrong (born August 28, 1973 in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.) is an American actor. He is known for roles in Turks (1999), The Profile (2010) and Heroes (2006).", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8081244", "label": "Łążek Chwałowicki", "source": "Łążek Chwałowski [ˈwɔ̃ʐɛk xfawɔˈvski] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomyśl nad Sanem, within Stalowa Wola County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) north of Radomyśl nad Sanem, 22 km (14 mi) north of Stalowa Wola, and 82 km (51 mi) north of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village is located in the historical region Galicia.The village has a population of 110.", "target": "village in Subcarpathian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12180099", "label": "Lola la Chata", "source": "María Dolores Estévez Zuleta (1906–1959), commonly known as Lola la Chata, was the first major female drug trafficker dealing marijuana, morphine and heroin in Mexico from the 1930s to 1950s. She became well known due to tabloid newspaper coverage. She was a predecessor of today’s drug trafficking culture in the country.Estévez went from being a local dealer to an international trafficker at a time when the drug trade was becoming more sophisticated. She sold her merchandise both outside and inside of prison for almost thirty years, contributing to a crisis in relations between the governments of Mexico and the United States. Efforts against her included a Mexican presidential decree, but she avoided a life sentence and continued her activities.", "target": "Mexican drug trafficker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3006022", "label": "Troides oblongomaculatus", "source": "Troides oblongomaculatus, the oblong-spotted birdwing, is a birdwing butterfly found in Indonesia and New Guinea. T. oblongomaculatus is the only Troides species found as far east as New Guinea. It has been assumed that the species originated in the Moluccas and later penetrated into Melanesia. It is a common species, the larva of which feed on Aristolochia tagala.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6223447", "label": "John Brown", "source": "John Brown (23 December 1841 – 1 August 1905) was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in Wentworth County, Canada West and became a miller and mining consultant / prospector by career. He became the Member of Parliament for Monck following his victory in the 1891 federal election. After several months service in the 7th Parliament, Brown was unseated the following year and replaced by Arthur Boyle in a 12 March 1892 by-election.", "target": "Liberal party member of the Canadian House of Commons", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4816473", "label": "Atlantic Junior Hockey League", "source": "The Eastern Hockey League (EHL) is an American Tier III Junior ice hockey league with teams in the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic United States. The EHL was officially announced on June 6, 2013, after the Atlantic Junior Hockey League welcomed six new members from the old Eastern Junior Hockey League and the AJHL re-branded itself under the EHL banner The league prepares high school and college aged players for college and professional hockey. The league has hundreds of alumni that have gone on to play for NCAA colleges, various professional leagues, the CHL, and in Europe.", "target": "American Tier III Junior ice hockey league", "baseline_candidates": ["sports league"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7600958", "label": "Assignment: Earth", "source": "Star Trek: Assignment: Earth is a five-issue limited series, written and drawn by John Byrne, based on the events in the Star Trek second-season finale, \"Assignment: Earth\". The series was published by IDW Publishing. One notable story shows Gary Seven's and Roberta Lincoln's peripheral involvement in the events of a prior Star Trek episode, \"Tomorrow Is Yesterday\"—which, due to peculiarities of time travel, happens after \"Assignment: Earth\" for Seven and Roberta, but before \"Assignment: Earth\" for the Enterprise crew.", "target": "comic book series", "baseline_candidates": ["Star Trek Comic series", "comic book series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5246217", "label": "Dean Hodgson", "source": "Geoffrey Dean Hodgson (born 22 October 1966) is a former English cricketer. Hodgson played as a right-handed opening batsman. He was born in Carlisle, Cumberland and played Minor Counties cricket for Cumberland County Cricket Club between 1984 and 1989, initially whilst studying human biology at Loughborough University.Whilst a student, Hodgson played for Lancashire Second XI before joining Warwickshire for two seasons between 1987 and 1988. He made a single senior appearance for the county in 1987 before joining Gloucestershire in 1989. After initially playing mainly in the second XI, Hodgson came close to retiring as a professional before being called in to the first XI due to other players not being available and scoring well. He played in over 100 first-class cricket matches for Gloucestershire in a career which lasted until the end of the 1995 season.", "target": "cricketer (born 1966)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1331129", "label": "Eliza Swenson", "source": "Eliza Swenson (also known as Victoria Mazze) is an American actress, producer, singer, and composer. She was born on July 28, 1982 in Quincy, California. She has five siblings and is the youngest of them. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Music Media and Sound Engineering from Brigham Young University in 2003. She is known for producing, editing, co-writing, composing, and starring in the 2012 feature film Dorothy and the Witches of Oz. Under the pseudonym Victoria Mazze, Swenson is lead singer of the band The Divine Madness. On July 26, 2015 she married Jason Tibor Farkas. She has no children.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6442901", "label": "Kuldīga Half Marathon", "source": "Kuldīga Half Marathon is an annual road marathon, held in Kuldīga, Latvia. The main sponsor of the marathon is SEB. It is also the Latvian championship in half marathon. It is known as a tough half marathon - usually the weather in the old city's streets is rather hot, the track has many curves and most of the streets in the city are cobblestoned.", "target": "Latvian athletics competition", "baseline_candidates": ["half marathon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5543518", "label": "George Powell-Shedden", "source": "George Ffolliott Powell-Shedden, (1 April 1916 – 31 October 1994) was a Royal Air Force pilot who flew during the Battle of Britain and later went on to operational commands. He was also an Olympic bobsledder who competed for Britain in the late 1940s.", "target": "British bobsledder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16996399", "label": "I Wouldn't Change You If I Could", "source": "\"I Wouldn't Change You If I Could\" is a song originally recorded by country singer Jim Eanes in 1959 and credited to himself as songwriter. It was later more successfully recorded by American country music artist Ricky Skaggs. It was released in January 1983 as the second single from the album Highways & Heartaches. The song was Skaggs' fourth #1 on the country chart. The single stayed at #1 for one week and spent a total of 12 weeks on the country chart.The song was actually written by Arthur Q. Smith and purportedly sold to Eanes, as Smith had sold him many of his songs. Smith also sold a 1/2 share of the song to Paul H. Jones, and retained the other half. When Skaggs' recording came out it was initially credited to Eanes, but once it became a hit, Smith's widow, Lillian Pritchett, sued the publisher. As Eanes couldn't show proof he had purchased the song, the song credits were transferred out of Eanes' name over to Smith's estate and Jones. Eanes went to his grave attesting that he actually wrote the song.", "target": "1983 single by Ricky Skaggs", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17509824", "label": "Expatriate Party of New Zealand", "source": "The Expatriate Party of New Zealand was an unregistered political party that sought to represent people who consider themselves New Zealanders but who do not reside in New Zealand. It contested one electorate, but not the party vote, at the 2014 general election.", "target": "unregistered political party", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2962618", "label": "Laurentian Channel", "source": "For the underground aquifer spanning from Georgian Bay to High Park in Toronto, see Laurentian River System. The Laurentian Channel is a deep submarine valley off the coast of eastern Canada in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. The channel is of glacial origin and is the submerged valley of the historic Saint Lawrence River, running 1,400 kilometres (870 mi) from a sharp escarpment downstream from the confluence of the St. Lawrence with the Saguenay River, past Anticosti Island and through the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the edge of the continental shelf off the island of Newfoundland. Its depth ranges from 180–550 metres (590–1,800 ft) with sub-tidal shelves on each side of the channel ranging in depths of less than 100 metres (330 ft). The channel ranges from a minimum width of 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) to as much as 55 kilometres (34 mi) at the Laurentian fan which is located at the edge of the continental shelf. Deep waters with temperatures between 2 and 6.5 °C (36 and 44 °F) enter the Gulf at the continental slope and are slowly advected up the channel by estuariane circulation. Over the 20th century, the bottom waters of the end of the channel (i.e. in the Saint Lawrence estuary) have become hypoxic.", "target": "Submarine valley in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["undersea valley"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13060281", "label": "Hridoyer Katha", "source": "Hridoyer Kotha (Bengali: হৃদয়ের কথা) is a Bangladeshi film released on 18 October 2006 directed by S.A. Haque Alik. Riaz produced the movie, the first time in his career. Notable songs in the film include \"Valobasbo Bashbo Re\" (Habib Wahid) and \"Jay Din Jay Ekaki\" (S.I. Tutul).", "target": "2006 Bangladeshi movie directed by SA Haque Alik", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2319401", "label": "solo performance", "source": "A solo performance, sometimes referred to as a one-man show or one-woman show, features a single person telling a story for an audience, typically for the purpose of entertainment. This type of performance comes in many varieties, including autobiographical creations, comedy acts, novel adaptations, vaudeville, poetry, music and dance. In 1996, Rob Becker's Defending the Caveman became the longest running solo (one man) play in the history of Broadway.", "target": "single person telling a story to entertain an audience", "baseline_candidates": ["theatrical genre", "occupation", "profession", "performance"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4760788", "label": "Andy Hawthorne", "source": "Andy Hawthorne, OBE is a British evangelist, author and founder of The Message Trust, a Christian mission organisation based in Manchester, UK. Working for over 25 years with young people in the area, his initiatives have been particularly directed at those who are traditionally hard to reach, in prison or from disadvantaged communities. Originally focused in Greater Manchester, The Message now has offices in locations across the UK and internationally in Cape Town, South Africa, Vancouver, Canada and Annaberg-Buchholz, Germany. The story of The Message is told in his books, The Message 20: Celebrating Two Decades of Changed Lives and Being The Message: Lessons learned on the frontline of mission.In recognition for his services to young people, he was awarded the OBE in 2011.Hawthorne was named ‘Best Leader’ in The Sunday Times Best Not-For-Profit Organisations To Work For surveys in 2017 and 2018.In the early days of The Message, Andy was a member of the Christian band World Wide Message Tribe who had success in the UK and American pop charts. He is a popular speaker at New Wine, Spring Harvest, Soul Survivor, Keswick Convention, and other Christian conferences in the UK. With Mike Pilavachi from Soul Survivor and Roy Crowne of YFC, he was one of the founders of the Hope 08 and subsequent Hope Together initiatives.In 2018, Hawthorne was a key figure in launching Advance 2020, a coordinated campaign by Christian ministries to deliver a major evangelistic push in the UK in 2020. Speaking about the campaign, he said, ‘I felt like we need.", "target": "British evangelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4233679", "label": "Sergey Korovushkin", "source": "Sergey Alexandrovich Korovushkin (Russian: Серге́й Алекса́ндрович Коро́вушкин; born 26 January 1979) is a former professional association football player from Russia. He made his debut in the Russian Premier League in 1997 for PFC CSKA Moscow.", "target": "Russian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18153095", "label": "Kentucky Route 94", "source": "Kentucky Route 94 (KY 94) is a 79.816-mile-long (128.451 km) state highway in Kentucky that runs from Tennessee State Route 78 at the Tennessee state line to KY 80 southwest of the unincorporated community of Aurora via Hickman, Water Valley, and Murray.", "target": "state highway in Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7914544", "label": "Vandiyur Mariamman Teppakulam", "source": "Vandiyur Mariamman Teppakulam (Tamil:வண்டியூர் மாரியம்மன் தெப்பக்குளம்) is a temple tank located near to Vandiyur Mariamman Temple and situated at a distance of about 5 km from the Meenakshi Amman Temple. Literally, Teppakulam means temple pond mainly used for devotional festivals. The tank is connected to Vaigai River through an ingenious system of underground Channels. It has total of 12 long stairs (steps) made of granite on all four sides. The temple as well as the stairs was built by the King Thirumalai Nayak. In the centre of the tank there is a Madapam called Maiya Mandapam (Central Mandapam) with Vinayakar temple and garden.", "target": "temple in India", "baseline_candidates": ["Hindu temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2428757", "label": "A15 highway", "source": "The A15 highway is a highway in Lithuania (Magistraliniai keliai). It runs from Vilnius to the Belarusian border near Šalčininkai. From there it continues to Lida as M11. The length of the road is around 49 km.", "target": "road in Lithuania", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6509509", "label": "Leander Babcock", "source": "Leander Babcock (March 1, 1811 – August 18, 1864) was a Democratic United States Representative for the 23rd district of New York.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18719627", "label": "Oscar Bernal", "source": "Óscar Antonio Bernal López (born September 28, 1995), known as Óscar Bernal, is a Mexican professional football player who last played for La Equidad on loan from Santos Laguna.", "target": "Mexican association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1795160", "label": "Kyra Vayne", "source": "Kyra Knopmuss; Kyra Vayne (29 January 1916 in St Petersburg, Russia – 12 January 2001 in London; Cyrillic form Кира Кнопмусс) was a Russian-born British opera singer.", "target": "British opera singer (1916-2001)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5591792", "label": "Nils Erik Bæhrendtz", "source": "Nils Erik Bæhrendtz (20 November 1916 – 14 February 2002) was a Swedish literary historian, and radio and television personality. Bæhrendtz played an important role in creating Sweden's first television news show Aktuellt, and in bringing new television show formats to Sweden. He was head of Swedish Radio and Swedish Television during the 1960s. After his sudden resignation as powerful manager, he was the executive president of the Skansen open-air museum foundation in Stockholm during the 1970s.", "target": "radio and television personality (1916-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5047159", "label": "Carter Glass House", "source": "Carter Glass House is a historic house at 605 Clay Street in Lynchburg, Virginia. Built in 1827, it is nationally significant as the longtime home of United States Congressman, Senator, and Treasury Secretary Carter Glass (1858-1946), who championed creation of the Federal Reserve System and passage of the Glass-Steagall Act, which constrained banking activities. The house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976. It now serves as a parish hall for the adjacent St. Paul's Church.", "target": "historic house in Virginia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1602889", "label": "Hellman & Friedman", "source": "Hellman & Friedman LLC (H&F) is an American private equity firm, founded in 1984 by Warren Hellman and Tully Friedman, that makes investments primarily through leveraged buyouts as well as growth capital investments. H&F has focused its efforts on several core target industries including media, financial services, professional services and information services. The firm tends to avoid asset intensive or other industrial businesses (e.g., manufacturing, chemicals, transportation). H&F is based in San Francisco, with offices in New York and London.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1414168", "label": "Filles de Kilimanjaro", "source": "Filles de Kilimanjaro (French for Girls of Kilimanjaro) is a studio album by American jazz trumpeter Miles Davis. It was recorded in June and September 1968, and released on Columbia Records. It was released in the United Kingdom by the company's subsidiary Columbia (CBS) in 1968 and in the United States during February 1969. The album is a transitional work for Davis, who was shifting stylistically from acoustic recordings with his “second great quintet” to his electric period. Filles de Kilimanjaro was well received by contemporary music critics, who viewed it as a significant release in modern jazz. Pianist Chick Corea and bassist Dave Holland appear together on two tracks, marking their first participation on a Davis album.", "target": "1969 studio album by Miles Davis", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27983841", "label": "Butler Creek", "source": "Butler Creek is a stream in the U.S. states of Arkansas and Missouri. It is a tributary of the White River. The stream headwaters are in Barry County, Missouri at 36°31′26″N 93°56′18″W and its confluence with the White River in Carroll County, Arkansas is at 36°28′15″N 93°46′31″W. The stream source is southeast of Seligman and it flows east to northeast for about 3.5 miles then turns southeast for about three miles to enter Arkansas north of Busch. East of Busch, the stream crosses under Arkansas Route 187. The stream runs parallel to that road for about 2.5 miles to its confluence with the White River just upstream from Beaver.Butler Creek was named after the local Butler family.", "target": "river in Missouri, United States of America - Geonames ID = 4103853", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q841297", "label": "Battle of Williamsport", "source": "The Battle of Williamsport, also known as the Battle of Hagerstown or Falling Waters, took place from July 6 to July 16, 1863, in Washington County, Maryland, as part of the Gettysburg Campaign of the American Civil War. It is not to be confused with the fighting at Hoke's Run which was also known as the Battle of Falling Waters. During the night of July 4–July 5, Gen. Robert E. Lee's battered Confederate army began its retreat from Gettysburg, moving southwest on the Fairfield Road toward Hagerstown and Williamsport, screened by Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry. The Union infantry followed cautiously the next day, converging on Middletown, Maryland. By July 7, Brig. Gen. John D. Imboden stopped Brig. Gen. John Buford's Union cavalry from occupying Williamsport and destroying Confederate trains. On July 6, Brig. Gen. Judson Kilpatrick's cavalry division drove two Confederate cavalry brigades through Hagerstown before being forced to retire by the arrival of the rest of Stuart's command. Lee's infantry reached the rain-swollen Potomac River but could not cross, the pontoon bridge having been destroyed by a cavalry raid. On July 11, Lee entrenched in a line protecting the river crossings at Williamsport and waited for Maj. Gen. George G. Meade's Army of the Potomac to advance. On July 12, Meade reached the vicinity and probed the Confederate line. On July 13, skirmishing was heavy along the lines as Meade positioned his forces for an attack. In the meantime, the river fell enough to allow the construction of a new bridge, and Lee's army.", "target": "battle of the American Civil War", "baseline_candidates": ["battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7544443", "label": "Smerinthulus witti", "source": "Smerinthulus witti is a species of moth of the family Sphingidae. It is known from Yunnan and Guangxi in China.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1172984", "label": "Pauline van der Wildt", "source": "Paulina (\"Pauline\") Jacoba van der Wildt (born 29 January 1944) is a retired Dutch swimmer who won a bronze medal in the 4 × 100 m freestyle relay at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Her teammates in that race, who clocked in at 4:12, were Toos Beumer, Erica Terpstra and Winnie van Weerdenburg.", "target": "Dutch swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6514522", "label": "Lee Medlin", "source": "Frankie Lee Medlin (born December 9, 1964 in Riverside, California United States) was a professional American \"Old School\" Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer whose prime competitive years were from (1977–1982) His nickname was \"Peddlin'\", an obvious play on his surname and the motive power of a bicycle.", "target": "American bicycle motocross rider", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49349024", "label": "Dziurdziewo", "source": "Dziurdziewo [d͡ʑurˈd͡ʑevɔ] (German: Thalheim) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kozłowo, within Nidzica County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 15 kilometres (9 mi) west of Nidzica and 49 km (30 mi) south-west of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 280.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6407820", "label": "Killingly Pond State Park", "source": "Killingly Pond State Park is a public recreation area encompassing 162 acres (66 ha) in the town of Killingly, Connecticut. The state park sits on the western side of Killingly Pond, a 122-acre (49 ha) body of water that straddles the state line between Connecticut and Rhode Island. The park offers boating, fishing, hiking, and hunting.", "target": "American public recreation area and water reservoir in Connecticut", "baseline_candidates": ["Connecticut state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97967224", "label": "Sergio Calatroni", "source": "Sergio Maria Calatroni is an Italian artist living in Kamakura, Japan. Although he graduated from Accademia delle Belle Arti di Brera in set design, he is also known as an architect, industrial designer, interior designer, graphic artist, creative director, and journalist.As an architect, he has worked all over the world. This is a short list of buildings he designed. Roux di Perfe, Osaka (1989), Japan N.O.Z. Building in Shizuoka, Japan (1992) Japanese Embassy in Damascus, Syria (2004), Yammine Center in Lebanon (2008) Galleria Etica in Shizuoka, Japan (2009)As a fashion designer, he has organized shows and installations for Luciano Soprani, Gillette Italia, GFT and others.As an Industrial designer he has created for Pallucco srl, Zeus, Barovier & Toso, Pozzi & Figli, Vilca, Sisal, Metals, Alessi, Glass Design, Nippon Alumi, Crassevig, Museo Alchimia, Memphis, Gabbianelli.", "target": "Italian designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3070561", "label": "Tahvonlahti", "source": "Tahvonlahti (Finnish), Stansvik (Swedish) is a southeastern neighborhood of Helsinki, Finland.", "target": "Baltic sea bay and a former neighborhood in Helsinki, Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["bay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5046597", "label": "Carroll Morgan", "source": "Charles Carroll Morgan (born 1952) is an American computer scientist who moved to Australia in his early teens. He completed his education there (high school, university, several years in industry), including a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree from the University of Sydney, and then moved to the United Kingdom in the early 1980s. In 2000, he returned to Australia. During the 1980s and 1990s, Morgan was based at the Oxford University Computing Laboratory in England as a researcher and lecturer working in the area of formal methods, and was a Fellow of Pembroke College. Having been influenced by the Z notation of Jean-Raymond Abrial, he authored Programming from Specifications as an attempt to combine the high-level specification aspects of Z, with the rigorous computer program derivation methods of Edsger W. Dijkstra. His treatment concentrated on elementary program constructs to make the material accessible to undergraduates in their early years. Some of the ideas there were later incorporated as elements of the B-Method by Abrial, when Abrial returned in Oxford in the last half of the 1980s. Together with Annabelle McIver, Morgan later authored Abstraction, Refinement and Proof for Probabilistic Systems, in which the same themes were pursued for probabilistic programs.Morgan is now a professor in the School of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of New South Wales, and a Senior Principal Researcher at Trustworthy Systems, both in Australia. His main research interests are probabilistic models for computer security and concurrency. He is a known proponent of a formalized approach to program development called the.", "target": "computer scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6271999", "label": "Jonas Augusto Bouvie", "source": "Jonas Augusto Bouvie (born October 5, 1986) was a Brazilian football player.", "target": "Brazilian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16970857", "label": "1902–03 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team", "source": "The 1902–1903 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team represented University of Wisconsin–Madison. The head coach was Dr. James C. Elsom, coaching his fifth season with the Badgers. The team played their home games at the Red Gym in Madison, Wisconsin and was a member of the Western Conference.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1304754", "label": "Joseph Horace Lewis", "source": "Joseph Horace Lewis (October 29, 1824 – July 6, 1904) was an American lawyer, military leader and politician. He served as a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War, and later a U.S. Representative from Kentucky and justice of the Kentucky Court of Appeals, the court of last resort in Kentucky at the time.", "target": "Confederate Army general (1824-1904)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q127921", "label": "C.D. Jorge Wilstermann", "source": "Club Deportivo Jorge Wilstermann, known simply as Wilstermann, is a Bolivian football club from the city of Cochabamba, founded on 24 November 1949 by a group of workers of Lloyd Aereo Boliviano. It is named after Bolivian aviator Jorge Wilstermann. Wilstermann is one of the three most frequent winners of the Primera Division de Bolivia and the first Bolivian team to qualify to the Copa Libertadores semi-finals.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5614157", "label": "Guareí River", "source": "The Guareí River is a river of São Paulo state in southeastern Brazil.", "target": "river in São Paulo, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q81790378", "label": "2020 FIA World Rallycross Championship", "source": "The 2020 FIA World Rallycross Championship was the seventh season of the FIA World Rallycross Championship, an auto racing championship recognised by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) as the highest class of international rallycross. Johan Kristoffersson won the Drivers' Championship for the third time. KYB Team JC won the Teams' Championship.", "target": "auto racing season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2714908", "label": "1925 Australasian Championships", "source": "The 1925 Australasian Championships was a tennis tournament that took place on outdoor Grass courts at the White City Tennis Club, Sydney, Australia from 24 January to 31 January. It was the 18th edition of the Australian Championships (now known as the Australian Open), the 4th held in Sydney, and the first Grand Slam tournament of the year. The singles titles were won by Australians James Anderson and Daphne Akhurst.", "target": "1925 Australasian Tennis Championships", "baseline_candidates": ["Australian Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16006622", "label": "James O'Toole", "source": "James O'Toole (died 24 September 1969) was an Irish Fianna Fáil politician. He was a native of Ballinamuck, County Longford. A publican, he was elected to Dáil Éireann as a Fianna Fáil Teachta Dála (TD) for the Wicklow constituency at the 1957 general election. He lost his seat at the 1961 general election.", "target": "Irish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6546995", "label": "Lijah Perkins", "source": "Lijah Perkins (born 22 January 1977) in Birmingham, United Kingdom is a professional basketball player, currently signed to Worthing Thunder, playing as a Power forward or Centre.", "target": "British basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26791853", "label": "Barbil", "source": "Barbil is a city and a Municipal Council in the Kendujhar district (also known as Iron City) of the state of Odisha, India. The region around Barbil has one of the largest deposit of iron ore and manganese ore in the world. It is a major source of revenue generation for both the Central and the State Governments. According to sources, 45% to 48% ST and SCs are living here.It is a fifth scheduled area under the constitution of india.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14662223", "label": "Merzomyia licenti", "source": "Merzomyia licenti is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Merzomyia of the family Tephritidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q276421", "label": "Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman", "source": "Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman (October 31, 1852 – March 13, 1930) was an American author.", "target": "American novelist, short story writer, poet, children's author (1852-1930)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3787279", "label": "Howie Wright", "source": "Howard L. Wright (born February 22, 1947, in Louisville, Kentucky) is a retired professional basketball shooting guard who played two seasons in the American Basketball Association (ABA) as member of the Kentucky Colonels (1970–72). He attended Austin Peay State University where he was selected during the second round of the 1970 NBA draft, but never signed.", "target": "Professional basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7765838", "label": "The Spicy Effect", "source": "The Spicy Effect, commonly referred to as Spicy or Spicy Music, is a Greek independent record label founded in 2009 by songwriter and record producer Phoebus, in association with the investment arm of Nea Tileorasi.", "target": "Greek record label", "baseline_candidates": ["record label", "independent record label"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16966310", "label": "Kappur Grama Panchayat", "source": "Kappur is a village and gram panchayat in Palakkad district, Kerala, India.", "target": "Gram Panchayat in Palakkad district of Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["Gram panchayat"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3805873", "label": "Jacopo Filippo Crivelli", "source": "Giacomo Filippo Crivelli (died 1466) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Novara (1457–1466).", "target": "Roman Catholic bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58494933", "label": "Kévin Cabral", "source": "Kévin Cabral (born 10 July 1999) is a French professional footballer who plays as a forward for Major League Soccer club LA Galaxy.", "target": "French footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25651487", "label": "Abu Khazravi", "source": "Abu Khazravi (Persian: ابوخضراوي, also Romanized as Abū Khaẕrāvī; also known as Abū Khaẕrārī, Sabzān, and Shelīshāt) is a village in Minubar Rural District, Arvandkenar District, Abadan County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 594, in 116 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31790912", "label": "Gopika", "source": "Girly Anto, credited by her screen name Gopika (born 1 February 1984) is an Indian actress, who has predominantly starred in Malayalam films.Starting her career as a model, she ventured into acting with the Malayalam film, Pranayamanithooval , directed by Thulasidas, opposite Jayasurya and Vineeth Kumar in 2002. She also acted in the Tamil, Telugu and Kannada film industries as well.", "target": "Indian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1343925", "label": "Sholem Schwarzbard", "source": "Samuel \"Sholem\" Schwarzbard (Russian: Самуил Исаакович Шварцбурд, Samuil Isaakovich Shvartsburd, Yiddish: שלום שװאַרצבאָרד, French: Samuel 'Sholem' Schwarzbard; 18 August 1886 – 3 March 1938) was a Jewish Russian-born French Yiddish poet. He served in the French and Soviet military, was a communist and anarchist, and is known for the assassination of the Ukrainian national leader Symon Petliura in 1926. He wrote poetry in Yiddish under the pen name of Baal-Khaloymes (English: The Dreamer).", "target": "Russian-born French Yiddish poet of Jewish descent and anarchist (1886-1938)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3015832", "label": "Varanus bogerti", "source": "Bogert's monitor (Varanus bogerti) is a species of tree-dwelling lizard in the family Varanidae. The species is native to Papua New Guinea.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7581900", "label": "Squadron, Ellenoff, Plesent & Sheinfeld", "source": "Squadron, Ellenoff, Plesent & Sheinfeld was a New York City-based law firm that practiced from 1970 to 2002 when it merged with Washington, D.C.-based Hogan & Hartson, when the Squadron Ellenoff name was discontinued. It was a prominent mid-sized firm in New York City founded by well-known Jewish lawyers and civic leaders, Howard Squadron, a litigator, Stanley Plesent, and Theodore Ellenoff, a corporate attorney and alumnus of Shea & Gould. At its height, Squadron Ellenoff employed nearly 200 attorneys with offices on New York City's Fifth Avenue and in Los Angeles. The firm was particularly known for its First Amendment practice and its work for media clients in its Los Angeles office.In 2002, they joined White & Case, a majority of whose partners were recruited into Linklaters in 2004.", "target": "New York City law firm that practiced from 1970 to 2002", "baseline_candidates": ["law firm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q466541", "label": "Manuel Pérez Treviño", "source": "General Manuel Pérez Treviño (June 5, 1890 – April 29, 1945) was a Mexican politician and was an important military and political leader during and after the Mexican Revolution. Pérez Treviño was born on June 5, 1890, to Jesús Pérez Rodríguez and Candelaria Treviño Rivera in Villa de Guerrero in the state of Coahuila. He was married to Esther González Pemoulié. In 1913, after studying engineering in Mexico City, he joined the Mexican Revolution as a second captain in an artillery unit. After the Revolution, he founded the National Revolutionary Party (PNR, Partido Nacional Revolucionario), which later became the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI, Partido Revolucionario Institucional). Among other positions, he was the president of the PNR, governor of Coahuila, preliminary candidate to the Presidency of the Republic, Secretary of Agriculture, Secretary of Industry and Commerce, and ambassador to Chile, Spain, Portugal and Turkey. While being ambassador in Spain 1936, the civil war started. He and his diplomatic team saved many lives because he ordered to give them asylum at the Mexican embassy in Madrid. He died on April 29, 1945, in Nueva Rosita, Coahuila.", "target": "Mexican politician (1890-1945)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65170303", "label": "Dobiesław-Kolonia", "source": "Dobiesław-Kolonia [dɔˈbjɛswaf kɔˈlɔɲa] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Darłowo, within Sławno County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 11 kilometres (7 mi) south of Darłowo, 21 km (13 mi) west of Sławno, and 156 km (97 mi) north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "target": "settlement in West Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29349558", "label": "Graciela Laura Kaminsky", "source": "Graciela Kaminsky is a Professor of Economics and International Affairs at George Washington University and a Faculty Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Kaminsky studied Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where she received her Ph.D. In 1984 she did a brief research stay at the Argentine Central Bank, later in 1985 she moved to San Diego as an assistant professor at the University of California. In 1992 she worked on the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve System, later in 1998 she was appointed a full professor at George Washington University where she works at the Elliot School of International Affairs. Kaminsky has been a visiting scholar at the Bank of Japan, the Bank of Spain, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, and the Central Bank of France.Kaminsky’s research focuses on contagion, currency and financial crises, exchange rates, fiscal and monetary policies, international capital flows as well as sovereign debt crises. She has published numerous academic journals including the American Economic Review, the Journal of Economic Perspectives, Journal of Development Economics, Journal of Monetary Economics and the Journal of International Economics. Furthermore, her research has been highlighted in the financial media such as Business Week, The Financial Times and The Economist.", "target": "Professor of Economics and International Affairs", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6536685", "label": "Lewis Henry Meakin", "source": "Lewis Henry Meakin (12 July 1850 – 4 August 1917) was an English-American Impressionist landscape artist. Born in Newcastle, England, he moved to Cincinnati, Ohio with his family in 1863. After studying art in Europe he returned to Cincinnati where he taught at the Cincinnati Art Academy. Among his students were Frances Farrand Dodge, Edna Boies Hopkins, Maud Hunt Squire, and Ethel Mars. Artist George Bellows called him “one of the best landscape painters in America. \"A skilled painter of landscapes, Meakin is known for his scenes along the Ohio River, the American and Canadian Rockies, and his depictions of summer in Camden, Maine and Cape Ann, Massachusetts.Meakin began working in a tonalist manner, then moved toward Impressionism around the turn of the century. From his travels to the American West where he pioneered the Impressionist-style for a new region, Meakin earned the title \"Father of Western Art. \"He served as president of the Cincinnati Art Club from 1910 to 1912 as curator at the Cincinnati Art Museum from 1911 to 1917, where today some of his pieces are on exhibit.", "target": "American Impressionist artist (1850-1917)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1911307", "label": "Michaël Murcy", "source": "Michaël Murcy (born 18 September 1979) is a French professional football forward.", "target": "French footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16207690", "label": "John Chambre", "source": "John Chambre (also Chamber or Chambers) (1470–1549) was an English churchman, academic and physician.", "target": "English churchman, academic and physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7815244", "label": "Tom Cecchini", "source": "Thomas A. Cecchini (born December 9, 1944) is a former American football player and coach. He played college football as an All-Big Ten Conference linebacker at the University of Michigan, and he held coaching positions with Xavier University, University of Iowa, and the Minnesota Vikings. In two years as the head coach at Xavier, he compiled a record of 8–13–1.", "target": "American football player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5221376", "label": "Danville National Cemetery", "source": "Danville National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the city of Danville, in Boyle County, Kentucky. Administered by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, it has 394 interments and is currently closed to new interments.", "target": "historic veterans cemetery in Boyle County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["military cemetery", "United States national cemetery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7498968", "label": "Shirq", "source": "Shirgj (sometimes Shirq) is a settlement in the former Dajç municipality, Shkodër County, northern Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Shkodër. At the banks of the river Buna a little bit outside the village lie the ruins of the Shirgj Church from the late 13th century.", "target": "village in Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4591158", "label": "1996 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final", "source": "The 1996 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 109th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1996 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland. It went to a replay and was eventually won by Meath, with Mayo losing. Neither team was expected to make the final as the competition got underway; Meath were expected to lose to Carlow in their first game of the Leinster Senior Football Championship. However, it would be for the most significant breach of on-field discipline in the sport's history that the 1996 All-Ireland final would be remembered.", "target": "football match", "baseline_candidates": ["association football final"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6509926", "label": "Leap into Darkness", "source": "Leap into Darkness is a 1998 memoir by Holocaust survivor Leo Bretholz and co-author Michael Olesker, in the vein of Night by Elie Wiesel or My Brother's Voice (2003) by Stephen Nasser, in which he recounts the astounding story of his surviving the Holocaust as a young man owing to his wits, stomach for risk taking and well developed flight instinct.", "target": "book by Leo Bretholz", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26251602", "label": "Vít Christov", "source": "Vít Christov (born August 30, 1996) is a Czech professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing for HC Oceláři Třinec of the Czech Extraliga.Christov made his Czech Extraliga debut playing with HC Oceláři Třinec during the 2014-15 Czech Extraliga season.", "target": "ice hockey player (1996-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1929918", "label": "Slave to the Grind", "source": "Slave to the Grind is the second studio album by American heavy metal band Skid Row, released on June 11, 1991, by Atlantic Records. The album displayed a harsher sound than its predecessor and lyrics that avoided hard rock cliches. Slave to the Grind is the first heavy metal album to chart at number one on the Billboard 200 in the Nielsen SoundScan era, selling 134,000 copies in its opening week. The album was certified 2× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in 1998 for shipping two million copies in the United States. It produced five singles: \"Monkey Business\", \"Slave to the Grind\", \"Wasted Time\", \"In a Darkened Room\" and \"Quicksand Jesus\". Skid Row promoted the album opening for Guns N' Roses in 1991 and as a headliner the following year.", "target": "album by Skid Row", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5187417", "label": "Crocolandia Foundation", "source": "The Crocolandia Foundation Inc., founded in 2001, is a nature conservation center located in Talisay City, Cebu, Philippines. The park houses birds, lizards, snakes, and crococodiles. The park also breeds endangered animals such as the Philippine crocodile and the sailfin lizard. The park's most famous resident is Lapu-Lapu, an estuarine crocodile. Other animals include civets, rufous hornbill, ostrich, monitor lizards, myna, iguana, squirrel, turtles, peacock, deer and a Visayan warty pig. The park also has a museum, a library, gardens, and fishponds. The park is the first of its kind in Central Visayas.", "target": "zoo in Cebu, Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["zoo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1677023", "label": "Jack Dragna", "source": "Jack Ignatius Dragna (born Ignazio Dragna, Italian pronunciation: [iɲˈɲattsjo ˈdraɲɲa]; April 18, 1891 – February 23, 1956) was an American Mafia member and Black Hander who was active in both Italy and the United States in the 20th century. He was active in bootlegging in California during the Prohibition Era in the United States. In 1931, he succeeded Joseph Ardizzone as the boss of the Los Angeles crime family after Ardizzone's mysterious disappearance and death. Both James Ragen and Earl Warren dubbed Dragna the \"Capone of Los Angeles\". Dragna remained the boss of the Los Angeles crime family from 1931 until his death in 1956.", "target": "American mobster (1891-1956)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16488878", "label": "Arsenal F.C. (Honduras)", "source": "Arsenal Football Club de Roatán is a professional Honduran football team based in Roatán, Honduras. It currently plays in the second division Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso in Zona Norte-Occidente Group A.", "target": "association football club in Roatan, Honduras", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1192215", "label": "Dataganj", "source": "Dataganj is a town and a nagar palika in Badaun district in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India.Dataganj city acts as a junction for many roads leading to Budaun (27 km), Tilhar(38 km),Bareilly (50 km), Miyaun (26 km) and Bela Dandi (7 km).", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7416882", "label": "Sandro Tsirekidze", "source": "Sandro Tsirekidze (Georgian: სანდრო ცირეკიძე) (1894–1923) was a Georgian poet, Symbolist. Born in Kutaisi, he graduated from the school course in 1912 and then continued his studies at St. Petersburg University. Because of health problems he moved to Kiev University. In 1916 he became one of the founder members of the Symbolist group Blue Horns. In 1920s he established writers corporation \"Writers Publishing Cooperative.\" At the same time he founded the publishing house \"Kirchkhibi.\" His first book \"Mtvareulebi\" was published in 1921. He died in 1923, in the summer. He was buried at the Vera Cemetery.", "target": "Georgian poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13589016", "label": "Dichomeris bilobella", "source": "Dichomeris bilobella, the bilobed dichomeris moth, is a moth in the family Gelechiidae. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1873. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from Nova Scotia, southern Quebec and southern Ontario to Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri and eastern Kansas.The wingspan is about 15 mm (0.59 in). The forewings are dark grey to blackish, with a large pale brownish-yellow patch from the base along costa, then crossing the wing to the inner margin in the postmedian area. The subterminal line consists of several pale dots. The hindwings are pale grey. Adults are on wing from May to August. The larvae feed on the leaves of Solidago (including Solidago flexicaulis) and Aster species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5525731", "label": "Gary Pearson", "source": "Gary Pearson (born 7 December 1976) is an English former professional footballer and now a manager. He played as a defender and a midfielder for Sheffield United, Stalybridge Celtic, Gateshead, Spennymoor United, Seaham Red Star, Whitby Town, Durham City, Darlington, York City, Bedlington Terriers, Horden Colliery Welfare, Sunderland Nissan, Spennymoor Town and Crook Town.", "target": "footballer; football manager (born 1976)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q134048", "label": "Beaufortia kweichowensis", "source": "Beaufortia kweichowensis is a species of gastromyzontid loach native to rivers in China. The common names for this popular aquarium species are Chinese hillstream loach, Hong Kong pleco, butterfly hillstream loach, and Chinese sucker fish.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3557265", "label": "Give It All U Got", "source": "\"Give It All U Got\" was supposed to be the fourth single from Lil Jon's debut studio album, Crunk Rock. It was released digitally on November 3, 2009 in iTunes The song features Kee (Kinnda) and it was produced by RedOne. The song was left off the album when it was finally released in 2010. \"Give It All U Got\", which features Kee on the original version and also features British rapper Tinchy Stryder on the official remix (along with Kee), peaked at 90 on the Canadian Hot 100.There is also a remix by Laidback Luke.", "target": "single", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78356160", "label": "World War II Memorial (Charlestown, Boston)", "source": "The World War II Memorial is installed in City Square Park, in Charlestown, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.The memorial was dedicated in 1946 and rededicated in 1996.", "target": "War memorial in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.", "baseline_candidates": ["memorial"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q941441", "label": "Jasper", "source": "Jasper is a city in, and the county seat of, Dubois County, Indiana, United States, located along the Patoka River. The population was 16,703 at the 2020 census making it the 48th largest city in Indiana. On November 4, 2007, Dubois County returned to the Eastern Time Zone, after having moved to the Central Time Zone the previous year. Land use in the area is primarily agricultural. The Indiana Baseball Hall of Fame, which honors players and others associated with the national pastime who were born or lived in Indiana, is located in Jasper.", "target": "city in Dubois County, Indiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16978085", "label": "1961 Mexican legislative election", "source": "Legislative elections were held in Mexico on 2 July 1961. The Institutional Revolutionary Party won 172 of the 178 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.", "target": "Robert Park's Approach on Human Sustainability and Diversities of several Institutions : A study on West Bengal", "baseline_candidates": ["Mexican legislative election", "election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56025708", "label": "Kirill Shamalov", "source": "Kirill Nikolayevich Shamalov (Russian: Кирилл Николаевич Шамалов; born 22 March 1982) is a Russian businessman, the ex-husband of Katerina Tikhonova and the ex-son-in-law of the Russian President Vladimir Putin. He was the former economic advisor to the Russian government.He is the younger son of Nikolai Shamalov, a co-owner of Rossiya Bank and a close Putin confidante.After marrying Putin's daughter in 2013, Shamalov was offered numerous lucrative and preferential business deals worth billions of dollars. He became Russia's youngest billionaire at the age of 32. Shamalov is a director and part-owner of Sibur, a Russian petrochemicals company. Shamalov's 21% stake in the company is reportedly worth $2 billion. The price for the stake and the circumstances behind the acquisition of the stake are unclear. Immediately after marrying Putin's daughter, he obtained a 3.8% stake (valued at $388 million) in the company for $100.In 2018, the United States sanctioned him. After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Shamalov was sanctioned by the United Kingdom.", "target": "a Russian businessman, the ex-husband of Katerina Tikhonova", "baseline_candidates": ["billionaire", "human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12553267", "label": "Marifa", "source": "Maʿrifa (Arabic: “interior knowledge”) is the mystical knowledge of God or the “higher realities” that is the ultimate goal of followers of Sufism. Sufi mystics came to maʿrifa by following a spiritual path that later Sufi thinkers categorized into a series of “stations” that were followed by another series of steps, the “states,” through which the Sufi would come to union with God. The acquisition of maʿrifa was not the result of learnedness but was a type of gnosis in which the mystic received illumination through the grace of God. The finest expressions of maʿrifa can be found in the poetry of the Sufis Jalāl al-Dīn al-Rūmī (1207–73) and Ibn al-ʿArabī (1165–1240). A seeker of ma'rifa is called 'arif, \"the one who knows\".", "target": "mystical intuitive knowledge of spiritual truth reached through ecstatic experiences", "baseline_candidates": ["Sufi terminology"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11229550", "label": "landed property", "source": "In real estate, a landed property or landed estate is a property that generates income for the owner (typically a member of the gentry) without the owner having to do the actual work of the estate. In medieval Western Europe, there were two competing systems of landed property; manoralism, inherited from the Roman villa system, where a large estate is owned by the Lord of the Manor and leased to tenants; and the family farm or Hof owned by and heritable within a commoner family (c.f. yeoman), inherited from Germanic law. A gentleman farmer is the largely historic term for a country gentleman who has a farm as part of his estate and farms mainly for pleasure rather than for profit. His acreage may vary from under ten to hundreds of acres. The gentleman farmer employed labourers and farm managers. However, according to the 1839 Encyclopedia of Agriculture, he \"did not associate with these minor working brethren\". The chief source of income for the gentleman farmer was derived not from any income that his landed property may generate; he had either access to his own private income, he worked as a professional and/or he owned a large business elsewhere. Or all three.Modern landed property often consists of housing or industrial land, generating income in the form of rents or fees for services provided by the facilities on the land, such as port facilities. Owners often commission an estate map to help manage their estate as well as serving as a status symbol.Landed property was a key.", "target": "property that generates income for the owner without the owner having to do the actual work of the estate", "baseline_candidates": ["", "property", "territory"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55013784", "label": "bovine malignant catarrhal fever", "source": "Bovine malignant catarrhal fever (BMCF) is a fatal lymphoproliferative disease caused by a group of ruminant gamma herpes viruses including Alcelaphine gammaherpesvirus 1 (AlHV-1) and Ovine gammaherpesvirus 2 (OvHV-2) These viruses cause unapparent infection in their reservoir hosts (sheep with OvHV-2 and wildebeest with AlHV-1), but are usually fatal in cattle and other ungulates such as deer, antelope, and buffalo. In Southern Africa the disease is known as snotsiekte, from the Afrikaans.BMCF is an important disease where reservoir and susceptible animals mix. There is a particular problem with Bali cattle in Indonesia, bison in the US and in pastoralist herds in Eastern and Southern Africa.Disease outbreaks in cattle are usually sporadic although infection of up to 40% of a herd has been reported. The reasons for this are unknown. Some species appear to be particularly susceptible, for example Pére David's deer, Bali cattle and bison, with many deer dying within 48 hours of the appearance of the first symptoms and bison within three days. In contrast, post infection cattle will usually survive a week or more.", "target": "cattle disease", "baseline_candidates": ["Herpesviridae infectious disease", "infectious disease", "bovine disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16029981", "label": "Jani Vruho", "source": "Jani Vruho (August 5, 1863 – September 15, 1931) was an Albanian publisher and nationalist figure.", "target": "Albanian publisher (1863-1931)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14678066", "label": "Haptoclinus dropi", "source": "Haptoclinus dropi, the Four-fin blenny, is a species of labrisomid blenny only known to occur off of Curaçao in the Caribbean where it was collected from a deep-sea reef at a depth between 157 and 167 metres (515 and 548 ft). The only specimen collected, a female, measured 2.15 centimetres (0.85 in) SL.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q630758", "label": "Georgios Iwanow-Szajnowicz", "source": "Jerzy Iwanow-Szajnowicz (Greek: Γεώργιος Ιβάνωφ-Σαϊνόβιτς, Georgios Ivanof-Sainovits; Warsaw, 14 December 1911 – Athens, 4 January 1943) was a Polish-Greek athlete who fought as a saboteur in the Greek Resistance during World War II and was executed by the Germans.", "target": "Greek association football player (1911-1943)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4809282", "label": "Association Footballers' Union", "source": "The Association Footballers' Union (the AFU), formed in England in 1898, was the first attempt by football players in the United Kingdom to organize themselves into a union. The AFU was formed in response to the introduction by the Football League of the \"retain and transfer\" system which restricted the movement of players from one club to another, and proposals to introduce a maximum wage of £4 per week. The AFU was short-lived and failed to achieve any of its objectives. The AFU was dissolved in 1901, the same year in which the Football League introduced the maximum wage.", "target": "former trade union of the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["labor union"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2917894", "label": "Klečet", "source": "Klečet (pronounced [ˈkleːtʃɛt]) is a small village in the Municipality of Žužemberk in southeastern Slovenia. It lies on the right bank of the Krka River in the historical region of Lower Carniola. The municipality is included in the Southeast Slovenia Statistical Region.", "target": "place in Lower Carniola, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q44178295", "label": "Samy Bourard", "source": "Samy Bourard (born 29 March 1996) is a Belgian professional footballer who plays for Dutch club Hapoel Hadera. He formerly played for ADO Den Haag, Fehérvár FC, FC Eindhoven and Sint-Truiden.", "target": "Belgian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8010022", "label": "William Gordon Harris", "source": "Sir William Gordon Harris (10 June 1912 – 20 February 2005) was a British civil engineer. His early career was with the London, Midland and Scottish Railway and in the Sudanese Irrigation Department before he began a 26-year spell with the Admiralty Civil Engineers Department. Harris rose to become Civil Engineer in Chief in 1959 and was responsible for building facilities to cope with the change in focus of the Royal Navy from gunnery ships to aircraft carriers and submarines, including the nuclear submarine docks at Faslane. Harris was later made director-general of highways in the Ministry of Transport during which time he was responsible for the construction of the 650 miles of motorway, a focus on ground investigation at pre-tender stage and the development of new motorway signalling and telecommunications systems. He later entered private practice as a consulting engineer and was chairman of the Port of Dover. Harris also served as president of the Institution of Civil Engineers and of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers.", "target": "British civil engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5576385", "label": "Godfrey Blow", "source": "Godfrey Blow (born 6 October 1948) is an artist based in Kalamunda, Western Australia. He is the founder of the Perth Stuckists.", "target": "Australian artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17000906", "label": "1836 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania", "source": "The 1836 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania was held on December 14, 1836. Future President of the United States James Buchanan was re-elected by the Pennsylvania General Assembly to the United States Senate.", "target": "class III U.S. Senate election in Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4695671", "label": "Ahmadu Hussaini", "source": "Lt-Colonel Ahmadu G. Hussaini was a Military Administrator of Adamawa State between August 1998 and May 1999 during the transitional regime of General Abdulsalami Abubakar, handing over to the elected civilian governor Boni Haruna at the start of the Nigerian Fourth Republic. He was required to retire, as were all previous military administrators, in June 1999.", "target": "Nigerian politician and Army officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59725750", "label": "IK Ogbonna", "source": "Ikechukwu Mitchel Ogbonna, professionally known as IK Ogbonna, is a Nigerian film and television actor, model, director and television personality. He was in the movie Playing Safe alongside Tonto Dikeh and Ini Edo.", "target": "Nigerian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6923779", "label": "Mount Sphinx", "source": "Mount Sphinx is a mountain rising to 2,200 m, the culminating peak of the Prince de Ligne Mountains, standing 9 nautical miles (17 km) north of the Belgica Mountains. Discovered by Belgian Antarctic Expedition, 1957-58, under G. de Gerlache, who named it for its characteristic form resembling a sphinx. This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Geological Survey document: \"Mount Sphinx\". (content from the Geographic Names Information System).", "target": "mountain in Queen Maud Land, Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48732687", "label": "Cannabis in Saint Lucia", "source": "Cannabis in Saint Lucia is legal, up to 30 grams. Cannabis is the only drug grown locally on Saint Lucia, and meets 20% of the local demand, with the remainder coming from the other Caribbean island, predominantly Jamaica and St vincent, and more developed countries such as the United States. Also, a significant portion is shipped in from countries in south America such as Columbia and Venezuela. https://mugglehead.com/st-lucia-decriminalizes-up-to-30g-of-cannabis-for-adult-use/.", "target": "Use of cannabis in Saint Lucia", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect in a geographic region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21068895", "label": "Thomas Young Simons", "source": "Thomas Young Simons (October 1, 1828 – April 30, 1878) was an American lawyer and politician.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18510243", "label": "The Heart Wants What It Wants", "source": "\"The Heart Wants What It Wants\" is a song by American singer Selena Gomez. It was released on November 6, 2014, through Hollywood Records, as the lead and only single from her compilation album For You (2014). The song was written by Gomez, Antonina Armato, David Jost and Tim James. Armato and James, who collectively form the production duo Rock Mafia, also produced the song. A mid-tempo pop and R&B track with a minimal electropop beat, its accompanying music video was premiered on November 6, 2014, alongside the premiere of the song itself. It is Gomez's last release under the label.Music critics mostly commended the song's lyrical content, production, vocals, and Gomez's new direction. The song reached number six on the Billboard Hot 100. It also reached the top ten in Canada, Denmark, Lebanon, and South Africa, as well as the top 40 in thirteen additional countries.", "target": "2014 song by Selena Gomez", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19874243", "label": "Henry 'Babe' Curran", "source": "Henry ‘Babe’ Curran (1896–1964) was one of the most successful Australian woolgrowers during the industry's boom in the 1940s and 1950s.", "target": "Australian woolgrower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12130575", "label": "The Museum of Abandoned Secrets", "source": "The Museum of Abandoned Secrets (Ukrainian: Музей покинутих секретів) is a 2009 novel written by Oksana Zabuzhko. The novel, more than 800 pages long, spans six decades of contemporary Ukrainian history.Critics have compared the book to Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks and works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky. The novel, Zabuzhko's third, is a modern multigenerational saga which covers the years 1940 to 2004, framed as investigations by a journalist, Daryna Hoshchynska, of historical events in western Ukraine including the Holodomor, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, and later political changes, ending just before the Orange Revolution.The book won the 2010 award for best Ukrainian book, presented by Korrespondent magazine, and the 2013 Angelus Central European Literature Award, presented by the City of Wroclaw. Angelus jury president, Natalya Gorbanevskaya, described the book as a \"book that weaves into one history and modernity, the book that features magic, love, betrayal, and death.\".", "target": "book by Oksana Zabuzhko", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5726832", "label": "Pir Yadegar", "source": "Pir Yadegar (Persian: پيريادگار, also Romanized as Pīr Yādegār and Pīr Yādgār; also known as Pirdavār and Pīr Dāwar) is a village in Hajjilar-e Shomali Rural District, Hajjilar District, Chaypareh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 232, in 46 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78116706", "label": "Zou Yixin", "source": "Zou Yixin or Chou Yi-Hsin (1911–1997) was a Chinese astronomer, who has been called \"the first female astronomer in China\".", "target": "Chinese astronomer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2157330", "label": "Bellevue", "source": "Bellevue is a village in Eaton County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 1,282 at the 2010 census. The village is located within Bellevue Township.", "target": "village in Michigan, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["village in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2625543", "label": "ANZUK", "source": "ANZUK was a tripartite force formed by Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom to defend the Asian Pacific region after the United Kingdom withdrew forces from the east of Suez in the early 1970s. The ANZUK force was formed in Singapore on 1 November 1971 under Rear Admiral David Wells and disbanded on 31 January 1974.", "target": "former tripartite force formed by Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom to defend the Asian Pacific region", "baseline_candidates": ["international organization", "military alliance"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16897584", "label": "Verkhny Kuranakh", "source": "Verkhny Kuranakh (Russian: Верхний Куранах) is a rural locality (a selo), one of three settlements, in addition to the Urban-type settlement of Nizhny Kuranakh, the administrative centre of the settlement, and Yakokit in the settlement of Nizhny Kuranakh of Aldansky District in the Sakha Republic, Russia. It is located 26 kilometers (16 mi) from Aldan, the district centre and 4 kilometers (2.5 mi) from Nizhny Kuranakh. Its population as of the 2010 Census was 577; down from 658 recorded in the 2002 Census.", "target": "human settlement in Urban settlement Nizhny Kuranakh, Aldansky District, Sakha Republic, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3313616", "label": "Mikel de Epalza", "source": "Mikel de Epalza Ferrer (1938 – 6 December 2008) was a Spanish academic who was a specialist in Arab and Islamic studies. Born in Pau, France in 1938, he was a specialist on Mudéjars (Muslims permitted to remain in the Christian realms of the medieval Iberian peninsula) and Moriscos (converts from Islam to Christianity in the same era). He encouraged good relations between Mediterranean European and North African nations. He had previously been a Jesuit, and worked in Algeria and Tunisia.He was a Professor of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Alicante. In 2001, he completed a Catalan language translation of the Quran which he titled L'Alcorà. The translation received an award from the city of Barcelona, and was the joint winner of the 2002 National Prize for Translation, alongside the Hellenist Carlos García Gual. His origin was in fact Basque, and his native language was Spanish.He was married to María Jesús Rubiera Mata, a colleague in his university department. He died at the age of 70, months after a severe traffic accident in May 2008.", "target": "Spanish arabist, historian, translator and professor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58278415", "label": "Hayato Murotsu", "source": "Hayato Murotsu (室津 颯斗, Murotsu Hayato, born April 12, 2000) is a Japanese football player.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6472229", "label": "Lago Mar", "source": "Lago Mar (sometimes spelled Lagomar or LagoMar) is a neighborhood on the north end of the Currituck Sound in the Princess Anne area of southeastern Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States. The name translated from Spanish to English means \"lake\" and \"ocean\". It is derived from its proximity to the Atlantic Ocean and Brinson's Inlet Lake (originally known as \"Salt Pond\" and later \"Lake Tecumseh\"), as well as from the neighboring community of Ocean Lakes. The street names within Lago Mar are also of Spanish origin with the notable exception of Atwoodtown, which is what the area was called prior to being renamed in the 1960s. Today, neighboring communities Ashby's Bridge, Lotus Creek, Mirasol, Parkway Estates, and parts of Sigma are sometimes included in greater Lago Mar, especially for real estate marketing or demographic purposes.", "target": "neighborhood in Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States", "neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55798475", "label": "Karanja", "source": "Karanja is a rural locality in the local government area (LGA) of Derwent Valley in the South-east LGA region of Tasmania. The locality is about 26 kilometres (16 mi) north-west of the town of New Norfolk. The 2016 census recorded a population of 28 for the state suburb of Karanja.", "target": "locality in Derwent Valley, Tasmania, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb/locality of Tasmania", "locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28220003", "label": "Maroona", "source": "Maroona is a rural village in the western region of Victoria, Australia. It is approximately 229 kilometres (142 mi) west of the state's capital, Melbourne. Maroona is part of the statistical area of Tatyoon which at the 2016 Census, had a population of 110.Maroona sits on the junction of the Western standard gauge line and the Portland railway line. The lines were built as 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in) (broad gauge) from Ararat to Portland in 1877. and 1913 the Gheringhap–Maroona line was opened, junctioning with the line at Gheringhap. They were converted to standard gauge in 1995. The grain handling facility at Maroona railway station has been closed.", "target": "town in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1566605", "label": "Tübatulabal people", "source": "The Tübatulabal are an indigenous people of Kern River Valley in the Sierra Nevada range of California. They may have been the first people to make this area their permanent home. Today many of them are enrolled in the Tule River Indian Tribe. They are descendants of the people of the Uto-Aztecan language group, separating from Shoshone people about 3000 years ago.", "target": "ethnic group", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20685218", "label": "Christopher Ragland", "source": "Christopher Ragland (born June 18, 1984) is an American actor.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q764747", "label": "Derek J. de Solla Price", "source": "Derek John de Solla Price (22 January 1922 – 3 September 1983) was a British physicist, historian of science, and information scientist. He was known for his investigation of the Antikythera mechanism, an ancient Greek planetary computer, and for quantitative studies on scientific publications, which led to his being described as the \"Herald of scientometrics\".", "target": "British historian and physicist (1922-1983)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4701096", "label": "Akio Hattori", "source": "Akio Hattori (服部 晶夫, Hattori Akio, born in Tokyo in 1929, died on 25 August 2013 due to submandibular gland cancer.) was a Japanese mathematician working in algebraic topology who proved the Hattori–Stong theorem. Hattori was the president of the Mathematical Society of Japan in 1989–1991.Hattori received a Doctorate in Science from the University of Tokyo in 1959 with Shokichi Iyanaga as his advisor. He then joined the faculty of the University of Tokyo. Between 1966 and 1968 Hattori worked as a visiting scholar at both Johns Hopkins University and Yale University. After retirement from University of Tokyo, Hattori was invited to teach at Meiji University from 1991 to 1999, when they opened mathematics major in 1989. Professor Hiroko Morimoto invited Drs. Akio Hattori and Hiroshi Fujita from the University of Tokyo, and Dr. Shiro Goto from Nihon University joined to launch a research and educational system for algebra, geometry and analytics.", "target": "Japanese mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2526974", "label": "Vincenzo Zinna", "source": "Vincenzo Zinna (born 26 August 1981) is a Swiss football player who last plays as a midfielder for FC Gossau in the Swiss Challenge League.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42291383", "label": "Margaret Seward", "source": "Margaret Seward MBE (22 January 1864 - 29 May 1929) became the earliest Chemist on staff at the Women's College (of which she was a founding Lecturer), from 1896 to 1915. She became the pioneer woman to obtain a first class in the honour school of Natural Science and later received an MBE for her work on nutrition during World War I.", "target": "1864–1929, UK scientist and university teacher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26157701", "label": "Block House", "source": "The Block House was an old fort in the town of Melcombe, in Weymouth, Dorset, southern England. There are no visible remains today.", "target": "fortification in Weymouth, Dorset", "baseline_candidates": ["fortification"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q574907", "label": "McHale's Navy", "source": "McHale's Navy is an American sitcom starring Ernest Borgnine that aired 138 half-hour episodes over four seasons, from October 11, 1962, to April 12, 1966, on the ABC television network. The series was filmed in black and white and originated from a one-hour drama titled \"Seven Against the Sea\", broadcast on April 3, 1962. The ABC series spawned three feature films: McHale's Navy (1964); a sequel, McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force (1965); and a 1997 sequel-remake of the original series. The show can now be seen on Antenna TV.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38252238", "label": "Coconut Island", "source": "Coconut island was a river island in the mouth of the Marco River in Collier County, Florida.", "target": "at the mouth of the Marco River, Florida, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24063289", "label": "1980 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament", "source": "The 1980 CONCACAF Pre-Olympic Tournament was the fifth edition of the CONCACAF Pre-Olympic Tournament, the quadrennial, international football tournament organised by the CONCACAF to determine which national teams from the North, Central America and Caribbean region qualify for the Olympic football tournament.The top two teams, champions, Costa Rica and the United States, qualified for the 1980 Summer Olympics. However, the United States, boycotted the Olympic games and they were replaced by Cuba.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["squad", "qualification"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q573730", "label": "Anthony Page", "source": "Anthony Page (21 September 1935 in Bangalore, Karnataka, India) is a British stage and film director.", "target": "British film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5838550", "label": "Kuseh, Golestan", "source": "Kuseh (Persian: كوسه, also Romanized as Kūseh) is a village in Kongor Rural District, in the Central District of Kalaleh County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,770, in 420 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6377637", "label": "Katiuscia Canoro", "source": "Katiuscia Canoro (born 4 December 1978) is a Brazilian actress.", "target": "Brazilian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q124887", "label": "Chris-Carol Bremer", "source": "Chris-Carol Bremer (born January 5, 1971 in Hannover) is a former German Olympic swimmer of the 1990s who captained the German swimming team at the 2000 Summer Olympics. He also competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "German swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2344515", "label": "history of trigonometry", "source": "Early study of triangles can be traced to the 2nd millennium BC, in Egyptian mathematics (Rhind Mathematical Papyrus) and Babylonian mathematics. Trigonometry was also prevalent in Kushite mathematics. Systematic study of trigonometric functions began in Hellenistic mathematics, reaching India as part of Hellenistic astronomy. In Indian astronomy, the study of trigonometric functions flourished in the Gupta period, especially due to Aryabhata (sixth century CE), who discovered the sine function. During the Middle Ages, the study of trigonometry continued in Islamic mathematics, by mathematicians such as Al-Khwarizmi and Abu al-Wafa. It became an independent discipline in the Islamic world, where all six trigonometric functions were known. Translations of Arabic and Greek texts led to trigonometry being adopted as a subject in the Latin West beginning in the Renaissance with Regiomontanus. The development of modern trigonometry shifted during the western Age of Enlightenment, beginning with 17th-century mathematics (Isaac Newton and James Stirling) and reaching its modern form with Leonhard Euler (1748).", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8062116", "label": "Yutta Barding", "source": "Yutta Barding (26 December 1880 – 12 March 1976) was a Danish fencer. She competed in the women's foil competition at the 1924 Summer Olympics.", "target": "fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4903041", "label": "Bibiana Candelas", "source": "Bibiana Candelas Ramírez (born December 2, 1983 in Torreon, Coahuila) is a 6'5\" (195 cm) female beach volleyball and indoor volleyball player who represented her native country, Mexico, at the 2008 Olympics with her beach partner, Mayra García.", "target": "Volleyball and Beach Volleyball player from Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11481909", "label": "Igualada-Ódena Aerodrome", "source": "The Igualada-Òdena Aerodrome, known officially as the Igualada-Òdena General Vives Aerodrome, is an airfield located in the municipality of Òdena (Anoia). It has an asphalt runway 900 meters and 330 meters above sea level (1083 feet). The aerodrome is named after General Pere Vives Vich, a pioneer from Igualada in the field of aeronautics. The airfield has a lot of sport aviation traffic, in which the Igualada-Òdena Sailing Club, the Airbet company, several schools and ultralight clubs operate, as well as a pilot school. It is the headquarters and factory of Ultramagic, a Catalan company that manufactures hot air balloons and is the only manufacturer of hot air balloons in Spain, and the second largest in the world.The aerodrome is also the headquarters of the Aerosport air show, which has been held annually since 1993, organized by Fira d'Igualada. The show includes displays, demonstrations and flights of ultralight aircraft, autogyros, gliders, acrobatic aircraft, paramotors, helicopters, amateur aircraft, aeronautical accessories, flight training schools, clubs and a secondhand market.", "target": "airport in Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3811250", "label": "June Croft", "source": "June Alexandra Croft (born 17 June 1963) is an English former freestyle swimmer.", "target": "British swimmer, Olympic silver medallist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67651424", "label": "Natascha Hiltrop", "source": "Natascha Hiltrop (born 18 July 1992) is a German Paralympic sport shooter. She represented Germany at the Summer Paralympics in 2012, 2016 and 2021. She won the gold medal in the mixed 10 metre air rifle prone SH1 event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics held in Tokyo, Japan. She also won the silver medal in the mixed 10 metre air rifle prone SH1 event in 2016.In 2018, she became the European champion at the 2018 World Shooting Para Sport European Championships held in Belgrade, Serbia.", "target": "German Paralympic sport shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5459083", "label": "Flicker and Flames", "source": "Flicker and Flames is the debut extended play from Australian psychedelic rockers, the Silents, released on 6 March 2006 by Rubber Records through EMI. The EP was co-produced by Dave Parkin (Red Jezebel) and the group. Its lead track and debut single, \"Nightcrawl\", received significant airplay across Triple J networks.", "target": "extended play by The Silents", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61342152", "label": "Verhivtsi", "source": "Verkhivtsi (Ukrainian: Верхівці, Polish: Rajtarowice) is a village (selo) in Sambir Raion, Lviv Oblast, in south-west Ukraine. It belongs to Biskovychi rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.The local Orthodox church was mentioned in 1507.", "target": "village in Sambir Raion, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Ukraine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11033479", "label": "Aaj Ka Robin Hood", "source": "Aaj Ka Robin Hood (Translation: Today's Robin Hood) is a 1988 Indian Hindi adventure-drama film directed and produced by Tapan Sinha. It stars Anil Chatterjee, Utpal Dutt, Nana Patekar, Rabi Ghosh and Satish Shah in lead roles. Music for the film was also scored by Tapan Sinha.The film was a great success in the box office. The shooting of the film was done in Ranka Palace, Garhwa, Jharkhand. The film won the 1988 Berlin International Film Festival award under UNICEF Jury Commendation.", "target": "1998 film by Tapan Sinha", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3009567", "label": "Czarna, Dębica County", "source": "Czarna [ˈt͡ʂarna] is a village in Dębica County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Czarna. It lies approximately 13 kilometres (8 mi) west of Dębica and 55 km (34 mi) west of the regional capital Rzeszów.The village has a population of 2,474.", "target": "village in Subcarpathian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97911", "label": "Ernst Kühl", "source": "Ernst Kühl (24 October 1888 – 2 February 1972) was a German officer in the Luftwaffe during World War II. He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves of Nazi Germany.", "target": "German officer and Knight's Cross recipient (1888-1972)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7229201", "label": "Pope John Paul the Great Catholic High School", "source": "Saint John Paul the Great Catholic High School is a private, coeducational Catholic high school in Dumfries, Virginia led by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia. As a diocesan school of the Diocese of Arlington, it is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. In 2012 it was included in the Cardinal Newman Society's Top 50 Catholic High Schools list. It was placed on the list again in 2014.In 2013 it was chosen by the editors of Virginia Living magazine as a 2013 Top Virginia School.", "target": "Catholic high school in Potomac Shores, Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6720815", "label": "Ma Shi Chau Special Area", "source": "Ma Shi Chau Special Area (Chinese: 馬屎洲特別地區) is a Special Area of Hong Kong. It is located in Tai Po District and in Tolo Harbour, in the northeast of the New Territories. The Special Area comprises four islands in Tolo Harbour, namely Ma Shi Chau, Centre Island, Yeung Chau and an unnamed island located about 100 metres (330 ft) northeast of the shore of Yim Tin Tsai near Sam Mun Tsai New Village.It was designated in 1999 and covers 61 hectares.This area is considered a geological wonder, there are rocks over 280 million years old from the Permian period.", "target": "Country park in Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["country park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8045684", "label": "Y'all Come Back Saloon", "source": "\"Y'all Come Back Saloon\" is a song written by Sharon Vaughn, and recorded by American country music group The Oak Ridge Boys. It was released in July 1977 as the first single and title track from the album Y'all Come Back Saloon. The song reached number 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.", "target": "1977 single by The Oak Ridge Boys", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25624914", "label": "municipality", "source": "A municipality is usually a single administrative division having corporate status and powers of self-government or jurisdiction as granted by national and regional laws to which it is subordinate. The term municipality may also mean the governing body of a given municipality. A municipality is a general-purpose administrative subdivision, as opposed to a special-purpose district. The term is derived from French municipalité and Latin municipalis. The English word municipality derives from the Latin social contract municipium (derived from a word meaning \"duty holders\"), referring to the Latin communities that supplied Rome with troops in exchange for their own incorporation into the Roman state (granting Roman citizenship to the inhabitants) while permitting the communities to retain their own local governments (a limited autonomy). A municipality can be any political jurisdiction, from a sovereign state such as the Principality of Monaco, to a small village such as West Hampton Dunes, New York. The territory over which a municipality has jurisdiction may encompass only one populated place such as a city, a town, or a village several such places (e.g., early jurisdictions in the U.S. state of New Jersey (1798–1899) as townships governing several villages, Municipalities of Mexico, Municipalities of Colombia) only parts of such places, sometimes boroughs of a city, such as the 34 municipalities of Santiago, Chile.", "target": "administrative division having corporate status and usually powers of self-government or jurisdiction", "baseline_candidates": ["administrative territorial entity", "designation for an administrative territorial entity", "human settlement", "electoral district", "political territorial entity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60740960", "label": "Buried", "source": "\"Buried\" is the fourth episode of the fourth season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series Fear the Walking Dead, which aired on AMC on May 6, 2018.", "target": "episode of Fear the Walking Dead", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8075729", "label": "ZyWeb", "source": "ZyWeb is an online webpage authoring tool, created and owned by ZyNet Ltd, and is currently at version 3.1. It was an early adopter of an entirely server-based solution. ZyWeb was created to enable non-technical users to create and publish web sites without the need for any design, authoring or technical skills.", "target": "online webpage authoring tool", "baseline_candidates": ["software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6100540", "label": "50th government of Turkey", "source": "The 50th government of Turkey (25 June 1993 – 5 October 1995) was a coalition government formed by True Path Party (DYP) and Social Democratic Populist Party (SHP).", "target": "government of the Republic of Turkey (1993-1995)", "baseline_candidates": ["Cabinet of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6201588", "label": "Jimmy Williams", "source": "James Thomas Williams (December 20, 1876 – January 16, 1965) was a second baseman in Major League Baseball from 1899 to 1909. He played for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Baltimore Orioles, New York Highlanders, and St. Louis Browns. The power-hitting Williams set several records during his rookie season and led a major league in triples three times. He stood at 5' 9\" and weighed 175 lbs.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24913227", "label": "Namdarpura", "source": "Namdarpura is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "target": "village in Madhya Pradesh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5942662", "label": "Pseudolaubuca sinensis", "source": "Pseudolaubuca sinensis is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish from the family Cyprinidae, the carps and minnows from south east Asia. It occurs in China and Vietnam.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20658262", "label": "Asuo", "source": "Asuo (Chinese: 阿梭; also called Asong 阿松) is a Southern Loloish language of Yunnan, China. Asuo is spoken in Jiangcheng Hani and Yi Autonomous County, Yuanjiang Hani, Yi and Dai Autonomous County, Lüchun County, Jinping Miao, Yao, and Dai Autonomous County, and Yuanyang County, Yunnan. Lefèvre-Pontalis (1892) reports the presence of Asong in Poufang, Lai Chau province, Vietnam, and provides a word list for Asong as well.", "target": "Loloish language", "baseline_candidates": ["language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24661890", "label": "Castell Coch", "source": "Castell Coch (Welsh pronunciation: [ˈkastɛɬ koːχ]; Welsh for 'Red Castle') is a 19th-century Gothic Revival castle built above the village of Tongwynlais in South Wales. The first castle on the site was built by the Normans after 1081 to protect the newly conquered town of Cardiff and control the route along the Taff Gorge. Abandoned shortly afterwards, the castle's earth motte was reused by Gilbert de Clare as the basis for a new stone fortification, which he built between 1267 and 1277 to control his freshly annexed Welsh lands. This castle may have been destroyed in the native Welsh rebellion of 1314. In 1760, the castle ruins were acquired by John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, as part of a marriage settlement that brought the family vast estates in South Wales. John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute, inherited the castle in 1848. One of Britain's wealthiest men, with interests in architecture and antiquarian studies, he employed the architect William Burges to rebuild the castle, \"as a country residence for occasional occupation in the summer\", using the medieval remains as a basis for the design. Burges rebuilt the outside of the castle between 1875 and 1879, before turning to the interior; he died in 1881 and the work was finished by Burges's remaining team in 1891. Bute reintroduced commercial viticulture into Britain, planting a vineyard just below the castle, and wine production continued until the First World War. He made little use of his new retreat, and in 1950 his grandson, the 5th Marquess of Bute, placed.", "target": "castle in Tongwynlais, Cardiff, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1685863", "label": "Jean Toussaint", "source": "Jean Toussaint (born July 27, 1960) is an American jazz tenor and soprano saxophonist.", "target": "jazz musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34331310", "label": "Marcus Posley", "source": "Marcus Steffon Posley (born April 14, 1994) is an American professional basketball player. He played college basketball for Ball State, Indian Hills Community College and St. Bonaventure.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6087180", "label": "Israel Rosenberg", "source": "Israel (also Yisroel or Yisrol) Rosenberg (c. 1850 – 1903 or 1904; Yiddish/Hebrew: ישראל ראָזענבערג) founded the first Yiddish theater troupe in Imperial Russia.", "target": "Yiddish theatre performer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78170401", "label": "Mahinda Deshapriya", "source": "Waduge Warunasiri Mahinda Deshapriya (Sinhala: මහින්ද දේශප්රිය) is a former Chairman of Election Commission of Sri Lanka. On 30 November 2019, he informed the speaker of parliament that he would resign from the post and that his intention had been forwarded to the president Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.", "target": "current election commissioner of Sri Lanka", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55901122", "label": "Lucien Baudens", "source": "Lucien Jean-Baptiste Baudens (3 April 1804 – 27 December 1857) was a French military surgeon.", "target": "French historian (1804-1857)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10371572", "label": "Silvino João de Carvalho", "source": "Silvino João de Carvalho (born May 20, 1981) commonly known as Jabá, is a Brazilian football player who currently plays for Clube Esportivo União.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85815121", "label": "West Virginia's 3rd Senate district", "source": "West Virginia's 3rd Senate district is one of 17 districts in the West Virginia Senate. It is currently represented by Republicans Donna Boley and Mike Azinger. All districts in the West Virginia Senate elect two members to staggered four-year terms.", "target": "American legislative district", "baseline_candidates": ["United States of America State-level electoral district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5266071", "label": "Detrola", "source": "Detrola is an album by His Name Is Alive, released in 2006. Four years after being dropped from the 4AD roster, HNIA released this album on their own Silver Mountain Media Group label (with major-label distribution from Sony-BMG). While many of the band's longtime fans (and 4AD devotees) had been disappointed with the group's final two albums for 4AD, fan reception to Detrola was quite positive, with many observing that it was finally a proper follow-up to 1998's 4AD release Ft. Lake. Despite no longer being signed to 4AD, the record went a long way towards gaining back their fans from that era, while introducing the group to a new set of fans; the record was a considerable hit on modern rock radio and college rock charts. While long-time vocalist Karin Oliver does not appear on the album, having left the group in 1998, the majority of the vocals are handled by Oliver's cousin Andrea (stage name Andy FM), whose vocal style is quite similar to that of Oliver, and Erika Hoffman, who had been contributing vocals since 1996's Stars on ESP. Lovetta Pippen, the sole vocalist for the final two 4AD albums, also appears as a background singer on \"I Thought I Saw\" and sings lead on \"Seven Minutes.\" These factors gave the album a feel closer to their classic 4AD releases. In particular, many reviewers commented that \"Your Bones\" sounds like a track from the band's earliest albums on 4AD, and \"You Need a Heart to Live\" was a re-recorded version of a rare.", "target": "album by His Name Is Alive", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2215738", "label": "Acrogomphus fraseri", "source": "Acrogomphus fraseri is a species of dragonfly in the family Gomphidae. It is known only from the Western Ghats of India.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30640115", "label": "1990 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships", "source": "The 1990 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships took place between June 16–19 at Falcon Stadium on the campus of Cerritos College. The portion of the campus where the track lies is in the city of Norwalk, California. The meet was organized by The Athletics Congress.", "target": "international athletics championship event", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22499", "label": "Issenhausen", "source": "Issenhausen is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.", "target": "commune in Bas-Rhin, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1096678", "label": "Emil Imre", "source": "Emil Imre (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈɛmil ˈimrɛ]; born 8 March 1996) is a Romanian short track speed skater of Hungarian ethnicity.Imre's greatest achievement up to date is a gold medal he won in the 1000 metres event at the 2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival (EYOWF). This was also the first Romanian gold in the competition's history, having collected four bronze medals at the previous editions. Additionally, Imre finished second and earned the silver medal in the 500 metres race at the EYOWF.", "target": "Romanian short track speed skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89207899", "label": "medRxiv", "source": "medRxiv (pronounced \"med-archive\") is an Internet site distributing unpublished eprints about health sciences. It distributes complete but unpublished manuscripts in the areas of medicine, clinical research, and related health sciences without charge to the reader. Such manuscripts have yet to undergo peer review and the site notes that preliminary status and that the manuscripts should not be considered for clinical application, nor relied upon for news reporting as established information.In January 2022, there were over 10,000 preprints released on medRxiv, which is a 50 increase compared to January 2020. The site was founded in 2019 by John Inglis and Richard Sever of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL), Theodora Bloom and Claire Rawlinson of BMJ (the medical publisher), and Joseph Ross and Harlan Krumholz of Yale University. The server is owned and operated by CSHL. medRxiv, and its sister site, bioRxiv, have been major sources for the dissemination of research on COVID-19.Since February, 2020 medRxiv indexed in PubMed.", "target": "preprint server", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal", "website", "preprint server"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1959785", "label": "Tale Spinnin'", "source": "Tale Spinnin' is the fifth studio album by Weather Report, recorded and released in 1975, featuring the addition of Leon \"Ndugu\" Chancler on the drums. Ndugu was recruited after Josef Zawinul heard him play with Carlos Santana. Weather Report was recording next door to Ndugu in the studio, and Chancler was asked to join them for a recording session. That session ended up lasting a week and produced Tale Spinnin'. After the record, Ndugu was asked to join the band as a permanent member, but declined in favor of continuing to work with Carlos Santana.", "target": "album by Weather Report", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6394725", "label": "Kersey Coates", "source": "Kersey Coates (September 15, 1823 – April 24, 1887) was a businessman from Kansas City, in the U.S. state of Missouri, who developed Quality Hill, founded the Kansas City Board of Trade, and was among those who attracted the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad to the city.", "target": "American businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q707044", "label": "Fan Hung-hsuan", "source": "Fan Hung-hsuan (Chinese: 范鴻軒 born 5 September 1946) is a Taiwanese actor who achieved regional fame in East Asia and Southeast Asia for his portrayal of Gongsun Ce in the 1993 TV series Justice Bao.", "target": "actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39070082", "label": "Caucasus", "source": "Caucasus (14 May 1972 – after 1991) was an American-bred Thoroughbred racehorse and sire who won major races on both sides of the Atlantic. As a young horse he was sent to race in Ireland where he won four of his five races as a three-year-old in 1975 including the Ulster Derby and Irish St. Leger. He then returned to America where he had considerable success in the next two years, winning five races including the Sunset Handicap, Manhattan Handicap, Arcadia Handicap and San Luis Rey Handicap. He had some success as a breeding stallion.", "target": "name of American-bred Thoroughbred racehorse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2545464", "label": "Real Live Tour", "source": "The Real Live Tour was a concert tour by the heavy metal band Iron Maiden from 25 March 1993 to 28 August 1993.", "target": "Iron Maiden concert tour", "baseline_candidates": ["concert tour"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26705210", "label": "Anusha Samaranayake", "source": "Anusha Samaranayake (born 25 February 1962) is a Sri Lankan former first-class cricketer. He is now a bowling coach with the National Coaching Department. In January 2016 he was initially suspended by Sri Lanka Cricket for two months because of match-fixing allegations. However, in August 2016 he was cleared.", "target": "Sri Lankan cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28419525", "label": "Tell Me Why", "source": "\"Tell Me Why\" is a song by British recording artist M.I.A. from her third studio album, Maya (2010). It was written by Maya \"M.I.A.\" Arulpragasam, and Diplo, and production was handled by the latter. The song was recorded at Red Bull Studios in Santa Monica, California on Diplo's birthday in 2009. The producer admitted that \"Tell Me Why\" is his favorite song on the album, likening the track's sound to Wall of Sound and Motown. The song incorporates elements of Sarah Lancaster's \"The Last Words of Copernicus\" as performed by the Alabama Sacred Harp Singers. It was released worldwide as a digital download, under license to XL Recordings and N.E.E.T. Recordings, on 6 July 2010, as the fifth single from the album. No music video was made for the single, and M.I.A. has never performed it live.", "target": "2010 song performed by M.I.A.", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59276501", "label": "Custer", "source": "\"Custer\" is a single by American heavy metal band Slipknot. Released on October 10, 2014, it is the third single from their fifth studio album .5: The Gray Chapter.", "target": "2014 single by Slipknot", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17622299", "label": "MBK SPU Nitra", "source": "MBK SPU Nitra is a professional basketball club from Nitra, Slovakia. The team plays its games at the City Hall, which has place for 1,500 spectators. The club has won the domestic championship three times in its history. After the 2017–18 season, Nitra withdrew from the Extraliga.", "target": "basketball team in Nitra, Slovakia", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q626541", "label": "Sauxillanges", "source": "Sauxillanges (French pronunciation: ​[soksilɑ̃ʒ]) is a commune in the Puy-de-Dôme department in Auvergne in central France.", "target": "commune in Puy-de-Dôme, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18917315", "label": "Brinley Thomas", "source": "Brinley Thomas, CBE, FBA (6 January 1906 – 31 August 1994) was a Welsh economist. He was Professor of Economics and Social Sciences at University College, Cardiff, from 1946 to 1973.", "target": "Thomas, Brinley (1906–1994), economist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10409076", "label": "Amphisbaena", "source": "Amphisbaena is a genus in the family Amphisbaenidae, commonly known as worm lizards. Over 100 species are placed in this diverse genus.", "target": "genus of reptiles", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67506845", "label": "Quintrell Thomas", "source": "Quintrell Daron Thomas (born February 21, 1990) is an American professional basketball player for Frata Pallacanestro \"Andrea Pasca\" Nardò of the Serie A2. He played college basketball for the University of Kansas and the University of Nevada in Las Vegas before playing professionally in Ukraine, Angola, Saudi Arabia, Portugal, Israel and Qatar.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2741836", "label": "Oenanthe sarmentosa", "source": "Oenanthe sarmentosa is a species of flowering plant in the family Apiaceae known by the common name water parsley. It is native to western North America from Alaska to California, where it grows in wet areas, such as streambanks. It is sometimes aquatic, growing in the water. The plant has been used in cultivation in wetlands, and the recent discovery of several colonies growing by a stream in Illinois demonstrates its capacity to become a noxious weed if it is introduced elsewhere. This is a perennial herb growing to a maximum height near 1.5 meters. The leaves have blades up to 30 centimeters long borne on petioles up to 35 centimeters in length. The parsley-like leaf blade is divided into serrated, lobed leaflets. The inflorescence is a compound umbel of many flowers with bright white to red-tinged petals.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17295296", "label": "Trachelidae", "source": "Trachelidae is a family of araneomorph spiders (more recently evolved spiders with inward-pointing chelicerae) first described by Eugène Simon in 1897 as a subfamily called \"Tracheleae\" (\"Trachelinae\" in modern terminology). The Trachelidae family, also known as \"ground sac spiders\", is within the group of spiders known as the RTA clade, which includes mostly wandering spiders that do not use webs. Spiders in the Trachelidae family are characterized as being 3-10mm long and having a red cephalothorax and a yellow/tan abdomen. They are commonly found indoors. It was placed in the family Clubionidae, then later in Corinnidae when the Clubionidae were split up. The first study that suggested Trachelidae should be considered its own family was done by Deeleman-reinhold in 2001 as part of an analysis of RTA Clade spiders. An analysis by Martín J. Ramírez in 2014 suggested that it was not closely related to other members of the Corinnidae, and was better treated as a separate family. It was then placed in the CTC clade of spiders, or the Claw Tuft Clasper clade, which is a group of spiders that have two tarsal claws with tufts of hair.A major synapomorphy of Trachelidae is the reduction of leg spines. Other synapomorphies of the family include no scales, no epiandrous spigot, only one major ampullate gland in females, no median apophysis, and the secondary spermatheca are the same size as the primary. Currently, there are 271 known species across 20 genera.", "target": "family of spiders", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27102474", "label": "hydrocortisone acetate", "source": "Hydrocortisone acetate is a synthetic glucocorticoid corticosteroid and a corticosteroid ester.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["steroid", "chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7732318", "label": "The Entropy Effect", "source": "The Entropy Effect is a novel by Vonda N. McIntyre set in the fictional Star Trek Universe. It was originally published in 1981 and is the first original story in Pocket Books' long-running series of Star Trek novels (and the second published, after the novelization of Star Trek: The Motion Picture). The novel includes the first occurrence of given names for the characters Hikaru Sulu and Nyota Uhura, each of which were later made canon (in the films Star Trek VI and Star Trek, respectively). Robert Greenberger, the Editor at Starlog Press with responsibility for the Star Trek franchise, reviewed the novel favorably, calling it \"captivating reading\" and praising the characterization and the \"scientific emphasis\". : 65 It was the first novel that was effective in giving prominence to a supporting character – Sulu, in this case. McIntyre's naming of Sulu as \"Hikaru\" became canon through the efforts of George Takei and Peter David in the making of the film Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. : 2–3 The novel was one of the first to explore \"beyond the boundaries of the known Trek universe. \": 65 McIntyre developed the novel from a screenplay that she had conceived when she was 18, and this \"wonderful volume ... convinced Pocket Books to assign the subsequent three movie novelizations\" to McIntyre. : 65.", "target": "novel by Vonda McIntyre", "baseline_candidates": ["Star Trek novel", "written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7412735", "label": "Samuel T. Francis", "source": "Samuel Todd Francis (April 29, 1947 – February 15, 2005), known as Sam Francis, was an American columnist and writer. He was a columnist and editor for the conservative Washington Times until he was dismissed after making racist remarks at the 1995 conference of the American Renaissance. Francis would later become a \"dominant force\" on the Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist hate group. Francis was chief editor of the council's newsletter, Citizens Informer, until his death in 2005.Political scientist and writer George Michael, an expert on extremism, identified Francis as one of \"the far right's higher-caliber intellectuals\". The Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist groups, described Francis as an important white nationalist writer known for his \"ubiquitous presence of his columns in racist forums and his influence over the general direction of right-wing extremism\" in the United States. Analyst Leonard Zeskind called Francis the \"philosopher king\" of the radical right, writing that \"By any measure, Francis's white nationalism was as subtle as an eight-pound hammer pounding on a twelve inch I beam.\" Scholar Chip Berlet described Francis as an ultraconservative ideologue akin to Pat Buchanan, to whom Francis was an advisor. Anarcho-capitalist political theorist Hans-Hermann Hoppe called Francis \"one of the leading theoreticians and strategists of the Buchananite movement\". To the white supremacist Jared Taylor, \"Francis was the premier philosopher of white racial consciousness of our time\".", "target": "Journalist, historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7373204", "label": "Roy Nelson", "source": "Roy Nelson (May 17, 1905 – September 14, 1956) was a cartoonist and caricaturist. His talent for drawing was recognized at an early age, and after high school in Virginia, Minnesota, he was accepted into the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts (1922-1925). After graduation, Roy joined the staff of The Chicago Daily News as an artist-reporter, contributing caricatures, cartoons and comics. He created caricatures of many celebrities who visited Chicago. During this period, Roy also contributed many cartoons to Esquire magazine starting with the first issue in October 1933. Roy left the Chicago Daily News briefly in the early 1930s and joined the staff of The Walt Disney Studios, producing publicity artwork and assisting in drawing the daily Mickey Mouse newspaper strip. After several months he returned to Chicago and the Daily News. Roy worked for the Chicago Daily News for over 14 years before entering the Army in 1943. He served for 2+1⁄2 years, stationed in southern California creating illustrations for army training books, and after the end of the war returned to the Chicago Daily News. In 1950, Roy married Marcella Colberg and returned to his home town in Virginia, Minnesota for one year where he resumed his career as a cartoonist, working freelance for various clients including The Sporting News, Hearst Newspapers and Saalfield books. In 1951 they moved to Sarasota, Florida for one year, creating a daily cartoon strip called Dot, Mot and Tot. After they moved to Minneapolis, MN, Roy created a series of children's coloring books. Three years after their.", "target": "cartoonist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2749737", "label": "Khost wa Fereng", "source": "Khost wa Fereng or Khost wa Firing is the easternmost district of Baghlan province, Afghanistan in the Hindu Kush mountains. Its capital is Khost wa Fereng. The population of the district was estimated to be around 60,300 in 2011–2012, of which ethnic Tajiks made up 90% and Hazaras 10% of the total population. The district was part of Takhar Province until 1970. District profile: Health: 1 clinic Income: farming (50%), animal husbandry (20%), gardening (20%), shopkeepers (4%) Schools: 10 home based, 14 primary, 3 high schoolsMost of the people of Khost wa Firing speak Dari Persian. All people of Khost wa Firing are Sunni Hanafi. Afghan Encyclopedia added: that Mirza Abdul Qadir Bedul originally belongs to this district, upon certain issues he left to India and became the royal poet of Awrangzib king of subcontenant, due to that two daughter of Awrangzib had married in the district, when he was sending any gift to Khurasan, making particular the khost district due to that reason of his daughters. noted by Sayed Zakaria hashimi.The people of Khost wa Firing are Muslims. Most of them are Mujahid, and they belong to Jamiat-e Islami party. The people of Khost wa Firing are called kosti or khusti. According to Islamic books the Imam Mehdi rises from Taliqan which is near to Khost wa Firing and his flowers are called by the name of Khosti which is the name of their original place. Therefore, Islamic forecasts say that people of Khost wa Firing which are called Khosti are the first followers and.", "target": "district of Baghlan, Afghanistan", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Afghanistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6702058", "label": "Luke Isakka", "source": "Luke Isakka (born 1 November 1980 in Sydney, New South Wales) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 2000s. Isakka played junior rugby league for Mascot Jets. He previously played for the Wests Tigers in the National Rugby League competition in Australia. Isakka primarily played at lock-forward. He also had a short spell in England in 2004 with Leigh (Heritage № 1230).", "target": "Australian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60040656", "label": "Sidiga Washi", "source": "Sidiga Abdelrahim Washi (Arabic; صديقةوشي sidiga washiا) (5 May 1955 – 3 October 2018) was a Sudanese academic specializing in population, reproductive health and nutrition.sidiga washi is a Professor of Family and Consumer Sciences/Community Nutrition and former Dean of the School of Family/Health Sciences and former Director Nutrition and Health Research and Training at Ahfad University for Women-Sudan. She is currently the Director of the Quality Assurance and Institutional Assessment Office at the University.", "target": "academic specializing in population, reproductive health and nutrition", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19757629", "label": "Khwezi Mona", "source": "Khwezi Jongamazizi Mona (born 8 October 1992) is a South African rugby union player for Griquas in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is prop.", "target": "South African rugby union footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q264410", "label": "2008 Armenian presidential election protests", "source": "A series of anti-government riots took place in Armenia following presidential elections held on 19 February 2008. Protests broke out in the Armenian capital Yerevan, organized by supporters of presidential candidate and former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan and other opposition leaders. The protests began on 20 February, lasted for 10 days in Yerevan's Freedom Square, and involved tens of thousands of demonstrators during the day and hundreds camping out overnight. Despite the urges of the government to stop the demonstrations, the protests continued until 1 March. After nine days of peaceful protests at Freedom Square, the national police and military forces tried to disperse the protesters on 1 March. On the morning of 1 March, police and army units dispersed the 700 to 1,000 protesters who remained overnight, beating them with truncheons and electric-shock devices. As a result, 10 people were killed. As of 4 March, many protesters were still missing. On 1 March, Ter-Petrosyan was placed under de facto house arrest.At noon on 1 March, a crowd of at least 10,000 protesters held a rally in front of the French embassy in Yerevan. Police officers pulled away from the area by 4 pm, as they were overwhelmed by the growing number of demonstrators. Activists then used abandoned police buses to set up barricades. In the evening, clashes broke out between riot police and about 2,000 protesters who barricaded themselves at Miasnikyan Square. At around 10 pm, President Robert Kocharyan, with the approval of the Armenian parliament, declared a 20-day state of emergency, banning future demonstrations and.", "target": "protest", "baseline_candidates": ["protest"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3827843", "label": "Laura Scaravonati", "source": "Laura Scaravonati (born 1978) is an Italian mountain bike orienteering competitor. At the 2011 World MTB Orienteering Championships in Vicenza, she won a bronze medal in the long course, behind Rikke Kornvig from Denmark and Ingrid Stengård from Finland.", "target": "Italian mountain bike orienteer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5595983", "label": "Granny's Garden", "source": "Granny's Garden is an educational adventure game for the British BBC Micro computer, released in 1983. It served as a first introduction to computers for many schoolchildren in the United Kingdom during the 1980s and 1990s. According to the 4Mation webpage about the original version, it was the reason many teachers decided that computers had a real place in education. The software is still available in its original and updated formats. Created by Mike Matson for 4Mation, the game takes place in the Kingdom of the Mountains. The aim is to find the six missing children of the King and Queen, while avoiding the evil witch, by solving puzzles.", "target": "1983 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1262739", "label": "JAT Flight 367", "source": "JAT Yugoslav Airlines Flight 367 was a McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 aircraft (registration YU-AHT) which exploded shortly after overflying NDB Hermsdorf (located in or around Hinterhermsdorf, in the present-day municipality of Sebnitz), East Germany, while en route from Stockholm to Belgrade on 26 January 1972. The aircraft, piloted by captain Ludvik Razdrih and first officer Ratko Mihić, broke into three pieces and spun out of control, crashing near the village of Srbská Kamenice in Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic). Of the 28 on board, 27 were killed upon ground impact and one Yugoslav crew member, Vesna Vulović (1950–2016), survived. She holds the Guinness world record for surviving the highest fall without a parachute at 10,160 m (33,330 ft).", "target": "1972 airliner bombing", "baseline_candidates": ["terrorist attack", "aviation accident"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5084830", "label": "Charlie Faust", "source": "Charles Victor \"Victory\" Faust (October 9, 1880 – June 18, 1915) was an American Major League Baseball pitcher. Regarded as a good-luck charm, Faust helped the New York Giants win the 1911 National League championship.", "target": "American baseball player (1880-1915)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35919", "label": "Lexus", "source": "Lexus (レクサス, Rekusasu) is the luxury vehicle division of the Japanese automaker Toyota. The Lexus brand is marketed in more than 90 countries and territories worldwide and is Japan's largest-selling make of premium cars. It has ranked among the 10 largest Japanese global brands in market value. Lexus is headquartered in Nagoya, Japan. Operational centers are located in Brussels, Belgium, and Plano, Texas, United States. Created at around the same time as Japanese rivals Honda and Nissan created their Acura and Infiniti luxury divisions respectively, Lexus originated from a corporate project to develop a new premium sedan, code-named F1, which began in 1983 and culminated in the launch of the Lexus LS in 1989. Subsequently, the division added sedan, coupé, convertible and SUV models. Lexus did not exist as a brand in its home market until 2005, and all vehicles marketed internationally as Lexus from 1989 to 2005 were released in Japan under the Toyota marque and an equivalent model name. In 2005, a hybrid version of the RX crossover debuted and additional hybrid models later joined the division's lineup. Lexus launched its own F marque performance division in 2007 with the debut of the IS F sport sedan, followed by the LFA supercar in 2009. Lexus vehicles are largely produced in Japan, with manufacturing centered in the Chūbu and Kyūshū regions, and in particular at Toyota's Tahara, Aichi, Chūbu and Miyata, Fukuoka, Kyūshū plants. Assembly of the first Lexus produced outside the country, the Canadian-built RX 330, began in 2003. Following a corporate reorganization from.", "target": "Japanese brand of luxury vehicle owned by Toyota", "baseline_candidates": ["car brand", "division"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17580194", "label": "Jarandersonia", "source": "Jarandersonia is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Malvaceae.It is native to Borneo.The genus name of Jarandersonia is in honour of James Aidan Robb Anderson (1922–2004), an English forester, botanist and plant collector with the Forestry Service in Sarawak (now in Malaysia).it was first described and published in Reinwardtia Vol.5 on page 319 in 1960.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12847696", "label": "Khalifa Sultan", "source": "Sayyed Ala al-Din Hoseyn (Persian: سید علاء الدین حسین) (c.1592 – 5 March 1654), better known as Khalifeh Soltan (خلیفه سلطان), and also known as Sultan al-Ulama (سلطان‌العلماء), was an Iranian statesman and cleric, who served as the grand vizier of the Safavid king (shah) Abbas I (r. 1588–1629), the latter's grandson Safi (r. 1629–1642), and Abbas II (r. 1642–1666). A member of a prominent Sayyid family with origins in the royal Marashi family of Mazandaran, Khalifeh Soltan was a well-educated man of letters, who played an important role in the Iranian clergy affairs, and also later in the Safavid administration, when he was appointed as grand vizier in 1623/4. He was, however, in 1632, disgraced and exiled by the ruthless newly-crowned shah Safi. Later, in 1645, Khalifeh Soltan was re-appointed as grand vizier by the latter's son and successor, Abbas II, whom he became a close companion of, and gained considerable influence. Khalifeh Soltan later died in 5 March 1654 in his ancestral homeland of Mazandaran due to illness, and was succeeded by Mohammad Beg.", "target": "Iranian statesman, cleric and grand vizier (c.1592–1654)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5227396", "label": "Eugenia burkilliana", "source": "Eugenia burkilliana is a species of plant in the family Myrtaceae. It is a tree endemic to Peninsular Malaysia. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7313522", "label": "Rentadick", "source": "Rentadick is a 1972 British comedy film, directed by Jim Clark and starring James Booth, Richard Briers, Julie Ege, Ronald Fraser and Donald Sinden. It is a spoof spy/detective picture, the plot of which involves attempts to protect a new experimental nerve gas.", "target": "1972 film by Jim Clark", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18636111", "label": "One Hell of an Amen", "source": "\"One Hell of an Amen\" is a song co-written and recorded by American country rock singer Brantley Gilbert. It was released in November 2014 as the third single from his third studio album Just as I Am. The song was written by Gilbert, along with Mike Dekle and Brian Davis.", "target": "single by Brantley Gilbert", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97610074", "label": "2020–21 Hatayspor season", "source": "The 2020–21 season was Hatayspor's 54th season in existence and the club's first ever season in the top flight of Turkish football. In addition to the domestic league, Hatayspor participated in this season's edition of the Turkish Cup. The season covered the period from July 2020 to 30 June 2021.", "target": "Hatayspor 2020–21 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4880622", "label": "BGC Trust University Bangladesh", "source": "BGC Trust University Bangladesh (Bengali: বিজিসি ট্রাস্ট বিশ্ববিদ্যালয় বাংলাদেশ) is a private university in Bangladesh, established in 2001. The university is 34 km from the port city Chittagong at a place popularly known as BGC Biddyanagar by the side of the Chittagong Cox's Bazar Highway Road. The main campus in Chandanaish, spread over 100 acres (0.40 km2) of land, consists of a private university, a private medical college, a 1,000-bed hospital, a nurses' institute, a dental college, a college of physiotherapy and an IT institute. The current Vice-Chancellor (VC) of this university is Professor Dr. A.F.M. Aowrangazab.", "target": "Bangladeshi research university", "baseline_candidates": ["research university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1087086", "label": "Ho-Ho-Kus", "source": "Ho-Ho-Kus () is a borough in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 census, the borough's population was 4,078, reflecting an increase of 18 (+0.4%) from the 4,060 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 125 (+3.2%) from the 3,935 counted in the 1990 Census. The borough is the home of several historical landmarks, including the Ho-Ho-Kus Inn and The Hermitage. Ho-Ho-Kus was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on October 12, 1908, from what had originally been the borough of Orvil, which was in turn created on March 8, 1905, from portions of Orvil Township.As of the 2000 United States Census, Ho-Ho-Kus was the 15th-wealthiest community in New Jersey with a per capita money income of $63,594 as of 1999, an increase of 36.9% from the $46,451 recorded in 1989. The borough's median household income was $165,827 in 2013. In 2011, New Jersey Monthly magazine named Ho-Ho-Kus the best place to live in the state of New Jersey, citing its affluence, low crime rate and the quality of its school system, as well as its proximity to New York City and other major commercial destinations.", "target": "borough in Bergen County, New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["borough of New Jersey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1361966", "label": "First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina", "source": "The m:tel First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serbo-Croatian: m:tel Prva liga Federacije Bosne i Hercegovine / м:тел Прва лига Федерације Босне и Херцеговине) is a football league in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Together with the First League of the Republika Srpska, it forms the second level of football in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The league consists of 16 teams. Each team plays a total of 30 games during the course of a regular season, twice each team (once at home and once away). The league champion is promoted to the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Relegated teams fall to the Second League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The number of relegated clubs depends on how many teams will enter the competition - Four winners of the third level leagues (Second league) and clubs relegated from the Premier League. Depending on the situation, three to five teams can be relegated.", "target": "association football league", "baseline_candidates": ["association football league"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6922131", "label": "Mount Mee", "source": "Mount Mee is a rural town and locality in the Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, Mount Mee had a population of 484 people.", "target": "locality in Queensland, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain", "locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3015407", "label": "Vegetia grimmia", "source": "Vegetia grimmia is a species of moth in the family Saturniidae. It was described by Carl Geyer in 1831. It is found in South Africa.", "target": "species of moth", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14848159", "label": "Temnosternopsis quadrituberculatus", "source": "Temnosternopsis quadrituberculatus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by McKeown in 1942. It is known from Australia.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4628774", "label": "2012–13 Tai Po FC season", "source": "The 2012–13 season is Wofoo Tai Po's 7th season in the Hong Kong First Division League. Wofoo Tai Po will seek to win their first trophy for 3 seasons, competing in the Hong Kong First Division League, the Senior Challenge Shield and the FA Cup.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7763934", "label": "The Shopping Bags", "source": "The Shopping Bags was a Canadian television series that aired on the W Network in Canada and on Fine Living in the United States. Launched in 2002, the series focused on consumer affairs and better shopping. Each week the program looked at several goods and services to discover which one was the best. This was also done to guide viewers towards which product or service may best suit their needs. The program looked at day-to-day shopping and big ticket items, as well as having a final \"Shopping Thought\" at the end of each program. The Shopping Bags was produced in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada by Worldwide Bag Media Inc. The hosts and show creators are award-winning journalists Anna Wallner and Kristina Matisic. The show first aired on the W Network, a television channel in Canada aimed at women. The program was also broadcast on Fine Living in the United States, a channel aimed at both male and female viewers. In 2005, a companion book to The Shopping Bags television show was written by Wallner and Matisic and published in 2006. The book is titled The Shopping Bags: Tips, Tricks, and Inside Information to Make You a Savvy Shopper.The show received seven awards including the 2007 Leo Award for Best Hosts in an Information or Lifestyle Series and the 2006 Leo Award for Best Hosts in an Information or Lifestyle Series.The show ended in 2008, and was replaced by Anna & Kristina's Grocery Bag.", "target": "Canadian TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4134564", "label": "Syzygium aromaticum", "source": "Cloves are the aromatic flower buds of a tree in the family Myrtaceae, Syzygium aromaticum. They are native to the Maluku Islands (or Moluccas) in Indonesia, and are commonly used as a spice, flavoring or fragrance in consumer products, such as toothpaste, soaps, or cosmetics. Cloves are available throughout the year owing to different harvest seasons across various countries.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17350582", "label": "Laura Flippes", "source": "Laura Esther Ghislaine Flippes (born 13 December 1994) is a French handballer for Paris 92 and the French national team.", "target": "French handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5303424", "label": "Downtown East Village", "source": "Downtown East Village more commonly known as simply East Village, is a mixed-use neighbourhood within the eastern portions of downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It is contained within the city's Rivers District. Containing the earliest-settled land in the Calgary area - Fort Calgary - East Village was for years a mixture of high-rise residential, commercial, and industrial development. Much of the parkland currently surrounding Fort Calgary was industrial as recently as the 1960s. Construction of the city's light rail transit Blue Line, coupled with the closure of 8th Avenue at Macleod Trail in the early 1980s by construction of the massive Calgary Municipal Building, resulted in East Village being \"cut off,\" figuratively speaking, from the rest of downtown. As a result, it became home to many rundown properties and vacant lots over the years, and a severe crime problem.Plans to reshape this neighbourhood were approved by Calgary City Council in March, 2005 (East Village Area Redevelopment Plan ). In Spring 2007, Calgary City Council approved the formation of a wholly owned subsidiary known as Calgary Municipal Land Corporation (CMLC) with the mandate to revitalize and redevelop the Rivers District, which includes the East Village. Construction began in earnest within the Rivers District by the new corporation in 2007 with the undertaking of a rare downtown Calgary stormwater treatment pond in the NW corner of Fort Calgary. Many of the dilapidated buildings were torn down, to be replaced by modern structures, and the Jack and Jean Leslie RiverWalk along the south bank of the Bow River was completed.", "target": "neighbourhood in Calgary, Alberta, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21782855", "label": "Aydemir", "source": "Aydemir (Bulgarian: Айдемир, also Aidemir, Ajdemir) is a village in northeastern Bulgaria, part of Silistra Municipality, Silistra Province. Aydemir has 5711 inhabitants in 2016, down from 9095 short after the fall of communism in 1992. It is the second most populous village in Bulgaria: the village of Lozen took the lead as its population grew up to 6252 people while Aydemir lost many inhabitants in the same period. Aydemir lies at 44°6′N 27°10′E, 31 m above sea level. The village is located in the valley of the Danube, 3 km south of the river and 8 km west of Silistra, on the road from Silistra to Rousse. The mayor is Rumen Angelov. Aydemir is divided into three parts: the centre, the quarter of Delenkite and the quarter of Tataritsa, which was founded in 1674 by Old Believer Nekrasov Cossacks (see Russians in Bulgaria) at a location prior to that inhabited by Tatars. Tataritsa is now one of the only two Lipovan villages in Bulgaria, the other being Kazashko.The village has a church, the Church of the Holy Trinity, which was constructed in 1829. For a certain period, it was named Knyaz Hesenski (Княз Хесенски, \"Grand Duke of Hesse\") in honour of Alexander I Battenberg, the first monarch of modern Bulgaria. According to Ancho Kaloyanov, the name of the village is derived from Greek άγιος (agios, \"Saint\") and the shortening of the personal name Demetrius, i.e. \"Saint Demetrius\", both through Turkic.In 1924, a 14th-century treasure comprising 101 silver coins, including some of Tsar Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria,.", "target": "village in Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6918602", "label": "Motswako", "source": "Motswako is a Southern African subgenre of hip hop popular in South Africa. It consists of a mix of rap lyrics in both the local language (Setswana) and English layered on a steady beat. Other languages used include Sesotho, Zulu and Afrikaans as per the rapper's origin. The genre gained popularity in the late nineties as South African acts like HHP and Baphixile (consisting of \"Prof\" and \"Blax Myth\") started rapping in Setswana, resulting in an increased following from the local population. Because of its reputation in South Africa most of the upcoming artists use this genre as a base before they start their music careers because of its basic principles, a good motswako artist have to learn the creative writing skills used to perfect the genre making it easy to learn and write music. Today there is a high pool of motswako artists in Botswana and South Africa with few females artists.", "target": "southern African genre of hip hop", "baseline_candidates": ["hip hop", "music genre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3504126", "label": "Nimo", "source": "Nimo (Nimo-Wasawai) is a Left May language of Papua New Guinea, in Sandaun Province. Nimo and Wasawai are two of the villages inhabited by speakers of this language. It is close to Nakwi. It is spoken in Arakau, Binuto, Didipas (4.316471°S 141.54343°E / -4.316471; 141.54343 (Drupas)), Fowiom, Nimo (4.315194°S 141.603518°E / -4.315194; 141.603518 (Nimo)), Uburu, Uwawi, Wamwiu, Wasuai (4.258869°S 141.559617°E / -4.258869; 141.559617 (Wasuai)), and Yuwaitri villages, some of which are located in Nino ward, Tunap-Hunstein Rural LLG, East Sepik Province.", "target": "language of New Guinea", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "Left May"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2998299", "label": "Hawaiian ladyfish", "source": "The Hawaiian ladyfish (Elops hawaiensis), also known as the Hawaiian tenpounder or banana fish, is a species of ray-finned fish in the family Elopidae. It is sometimes referred to as the giant herring, though it is not closely related to the true herrings of the family Clupeidae. Its Hawaiian name is awa 'aua. It is native to the west central Pacific Ocean, and the current classification may in fact consist of several species.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5665130", "label": "Terry Macfarlane", "source": "Terry Desmond Macfarlane (born 1953) is a botanist and taxonomist, who has worked in both Australia and Peru. A senior research scientist at the Western Australian Herbarium, Macfarlane is associate editor of its journal Nuytsia and currently collaborates with researchers across Australia and in Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Russia, Spain and United Kingdom. He was also involved in the development of FloraBase, the Western Australian flora database.The standard author abbreviation T.D.Macfarl. is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.", "target": "Australian botanist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7516435", "label": "Silver Sun", "source": "Silver Sun is the debut full album by the British power pop band Silver Sun. It was released in May 1997 on Polydor Records and was produced by Nigel Godrich. Changing their name from Sun, under which their debut EP had been released, their debut studio album was released under the name Silver Sun. The album received critical acclaim, but had limited chart success, reaching #30 in the UK Album Chart. Four singles were released from the album; \"Lava\", \"Last Day\", \"Golden Skin\" and \"Julia\", of which, only \"Golden Skin\" and \"Lava\" reached the UK Top 40. \"Golden Skin\" was used in the soundtrack of the British romantic comedy film Shooting Fish which was released the same year as the album. [1].", "target": "album by Silver Sun", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7950539", "label": "WIAB", "source": "WIAB (88.5 FM) is a radio station in Mackinaw City, Michigan. The station is owned by Interlochen Center for the Arts, and is an affiliate of the Interlochen Public Radio's \"Classical IPR\" network, consisting of classical music.", "target": "radio station in Mackinaw City, Michigan", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4911466", "label": "Bill Zaring", "source": "Bill Zaring (August 24, 1917 – May 19, 2003) was an American racecar driver who raced midget cars in Southern California. A native of Southern California, he was born in North Hollywood.", "target": "American racecar driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30020649", "label": "Goudarz Habibi", "source": "Goudarz Habibi (Persian: گودرز حبیبی, born 23 February 1947) is an Iranian former footballer who played as a defender for Iran national football team at the 1972 Summer Olympics and 1970 RCD Cup. At the club level he played for Taj Tehran.", "target": "Iranian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7732358", "label": "The Equator", "source": "The Equator was a nineteenth-century black issues newspaper edited by the pioneering African-American baseball players and civil rights activists Weldy Walker and his brother Moses Fleetwood Walker. No copies are known to have survived to the present day.", "target": "American newspaper", "baseline_candidates": ["periodical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q738764", "label": "Lieråsen Tunnel", "source": "Lieråsen Tunnel is a single-tubed railway tunnel of the Drammen Line situated in Asker, Røyken and Lier in Norway. At a length of 10.723 kilometers (6.663 mi), the double track tunnel is located immediately between Asker Station and Lier Station. It is used for a mix of short- and long-haul passenger trains and freight trains. Construction of the tunnel commenced in 1962, along with a new section of track between the tunnel and Brakerøya Station. Inadequate geological surveys ahead of construction resulted in the tunnel being built in the middle of an altered and crushed zone, delaying construction and eventually shifting the route 300 meters (980 ft) to the southwest. The tunnel opened on 3 June 1973. In addition to providing double track, it shortened the Drammen Line by 12.4 kilometers (7.7 mi). Part of the old section of the Drammen Line became the Spikkestad Line, while the rest of line was closed. Lieråsen was the longest railway tunnel in the country until the Romerike Tunnel opened in 1999.", "target": "railway tunnel", "baseline_candidates": ["railway tunnel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6392926", "label": "Kenya–Russia relations", "source": "Kenya–Russia relations (Swahili: Uhusiano wa Kenya-Urusi) (Russian: Российско-кенийские отношения) are bilateral relations between Kenya and Russia. Russia had established diplomatic relations with Kenya on December 14, 1963, and has since maintained good relations with the African Great Lakes country.", "target": "bilateral relations between Kenya and Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["bilateral relation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6393493", "label": "Kerala Varma III", "source": "Karkidaka Masathil Theepeta Thampuran (died August 1828) (regnal name: Kerala Varma III), popularly known as Virulam Thampuran, was an Indian monarch who ruled the Kingdom of Cochin from 1809 to 1828. British protectorate was confirmed on 6 May 1809 when Virulam Thampuram was the ruler.", "target": "Indian monarch who ruled the Kingdom of Cochin", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15713032", "label": "Tasmanian Government Railways Za class", "source": "The Za class are a class of diesel locomotives built by English Electric Rocklea for the Tasmanian Government Railways in 1973.", "target": "diesel locomotive class", "baseline_candidates": ["locomotive class", "diesel-electric locomotive"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97059926", "label": "2020–21 Willem II season", "source": "The 2020–21 Willem II season was the club's 125th season in existence and the club's 7th consecutive season in the top flight of Dutch football. In addition to the domestic league, Willem II participated in this season's editions of the KNVB Cup and the UEFA Europa League. The season covered the period from 1 July 2020 to 30 June 2021.", "target": "Willem II 2020–21 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7131006", "label": "Panha 2091", "source": "The Panha 2091 \"Toufan\" is an Iranian overhaul and upgrade of the Bell AH-1J International (export version of the SeaCobra) attack helicopter purchased before the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The overhaul and upgrade program is known as project number 2091 of the Iranian Helicopter Support and Renewal Company (also known as Panha).", "target": "Iranian attack helicopter", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7348656", "label": "Weidman Millpond", "source": "Weidman Millpond is a dammed pond in the town of Weidman, Michigan, United States. Coldwater River supplies the pond. The pond has been stocked with yellow perch and largemouth bass. Attempts to introduce northern pike failed, presumably due to the pond's shallow nature. The bass, perch, and sunfish are said to be plentiful. The millpond has a high waterfowl population; the shores are commonly covered with flocks of Canada geese. There are occasional sightings of wood ducks, a few reports of ospreys and a few pairs of mute swans. There is a strip of land that separates the Millpond from Lake of the Hills. There are fishing contests held on the Millpond.", "target": "reservoir in Michigan, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["reservoir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49101176", "label": "Barranca District, Datem del Marañón", "source": "Barranca District is one of six districts of the province Datem del Marañón in Peru.", "target": "district in Loreto, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2025392", "label": "Rosemary Murphy", "source": "Rosemary Murphy (January 13, 1925 – July 5, 2014) was a German-American actress of stage, film, and television. She was nominated for three Tony Awards for her stage work, as well as two Emmy Awards for television work, winning once, for her performance in Eleanor and Franklin (1976).", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11570117", "label": "Kazuhiko Ushijima", "source": "Kazuhiko Ushijima (牛島 和彦, Ushijima Kazuhiko, born April 13, 1961 in Kawai, Nara, Japan) is a former Nippon Professional Baseball pitcher.", "target": "baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4634980", "label": "326th Aeronautical Systems Wing", "source": "The 326th Aeronautical Systems Wing is an inactive wing of the United States Air Force. It was last assigned to the Aeronautical Systems Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, where it was inactivated in 2008. The wing was first activated as the 326th Fighter Group in August 1942 during World War II and participated in the air defense of the Northeast until 1943, flying from Bradley Field, Connecticut. It moved to the Southeastern US where it was an operational and replacement training unit until it was disbanded in 1944 in a major reorganization of Army Air Forces units not programmed for overseas deployment. The group was reconstituted in 1955 as part of an Air Defense Command program to revive fighter units that had participated in World War II. The group provided air defense of the Northwestern United States until 1961 when it was replaced by the 57th Fighter Group, which assumed its personnel, equipment and mission. It was redesignated as the 326th Tactical Fighter Group in 1985 but remained inactive. In 2006, the group was consolidated with the Long Range Strike Systems Wing, which had been activated a year earlier at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base Ohio and the consolidated unit became the 326th Aeronautical Systems Wing. The wing conducted systems testing of advanced strike weapons for another two years before inactivating in 2008 when Air Force Materiel Command returned to its traditional directorate system of organization.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q115883", "label": "Eugen Huber", "source": "Eugen Huber (July 31, 1849 – April 23, 1923) was a Swiss jurist and the creator of the Swiss Civil code of 1907.", "target": "Swiss lawyer (1849-1923)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14537047", "label": "Christy Mack", "source": "Christine Mackinday, known professionally as Christy Mack, is an American nude model and former pornographic actress.", "target": "American model and former pornographic actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4172532", "label": "Gulbarga Lok Sabha constituency", "source": "Gulbarga Lok Sabha constituency is one of the 28 Lok Sabha constituencies in Karnataka state in India. This constituency was created before the first general elections in 1951.", "target": "Lok Sabha Constituency in Karnataka", "baseline_candidates": ["Lok Sabha constituency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q285521", "label": "Samuel Chase", "source": "Samuel Chase (April 17, 1741 – June 19, 1811) was a Founding Father of the United States, a signatory to the Continental Association and United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of Maryland, and an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. He was impeached by the House of Representatives on grounds of letting his partisan leanings affect his court decisions but was acquitted by the Senate and remained in office. Born near Princess Anne, Maryland, Chase established a legal practice in Annapolis, Maryland. He served in the Maryland General Assembly for several years and favored independence during the American Revolution. He won election to the Continental Congress before serving on the Baltimore District Criminal Court and the Maryland General Court. In 1796, President George Washington appointed Chase to the United States Supreme Court. After the 1800 elections, President Thomas Jefferson and the Democratic-Republicans sought to weaken Federalist influence on the federal courts. Chase's actions on the court had been accused of demonstrating bias, and Jefferson believed that Chase should be removed from office, a process that required a vote in both the Senate and the House of Representatives. The House passed eight articles of impeachment, all centering on Chase's alleged political bias. The Senate voted to acquit Chase on all counts, and Chase served on the Supreme Court until his death in 1811. Some historians have argued that Chase's acquittal set an important precedent regarding the independence of the federal judiciary.", "target": "Justice on the US Supreme Court (1741-1811)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5075076", "label": "Liolaemus kolengh", "source": "Liolaemus kolengh is a species of lizard in the family Iguanidae. It is found in Chile and Argentina.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q466248", "label": "Nuremberg–Würzburg railway", "source": "The Nuremberg–Würzburg Railway is a German trunk line railway in northern Bavaria, connecting the city of Nuremberg with Würzburg, the two largest cities in Franconia, and passing through Fürth, Neustadt an der Aisch and Kitzingen. In addition to hourly Regional-Express trains and numerous freight trains, it is served by Intercity-Express trains during the day at half-hourly intervals with some gaps.", "target": "railway line", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25241944", "label": "list of aircraft", "source": "This is a list of aircraft in alphabetical order beginning with 'S'.", "target": "beginning with Sy", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26496024", "label": "Otley Civic Centre", "source": "Otley Civic Centre is a municipal structure in Cross Green, Otley, West Yorkshire, England. The structure, which was the offices and meeting place of Otley Town Council, is a Grade II listed building.", "target": "mechanics' institute in Otley, Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["mechanics' institute"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51564160", "label": "Jacob Philipp Hackert", "source": "Jacob Philipp Hackert (15 September 1737 – 28 April 1807) was a landscape painter from Brandenburg, who did most of his work in Italy.", "target": "German painter (1737-1807)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2971360", "label": "Pteronotus paraguanensis", "source": "The Paraguana moustached bat (Pteronotus paraguanensis) occurs only on the Paraguaná Peninsula of Venezuela. The entire population uses three caves, one of which is subject to human vandalism. Their total range is less than 400 km2 (150 sq mi). In 2008, the caves where the bat is found were protected by the creation of the Cuevas de Paraguaná Wildlife Sanctuary–the first wildlife sanctuary in Venezuela.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7921603", "label": "Vermilion Provincial Park", "source": "Vermilion Provincial Park is a provincial park located in east-central Alberta, Canada, in the County of Vermilion River. It is located on the outskirts of the town of Vermilion which is at the junction of Highways 16 (Yellowhead) and 41 (Buffalo Trail), between Edmonton and Lloydminster.", "target": "provincial park in Alberta", "baseline_candidates": ["provincial park of Canada"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3043032", "label": "Dédé", "source": "Dédé is an opérette or musical comedy in three acts with music by Henri Christiné and a French libretto by Albert Willemetz. It marked an important milestone in developing the career of Maurice Chevalier.", "target": "1921 operetta", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q322837", "label": "Minerva Berlin", "source": "Minerva 93 Berlin is a German association football club from the district of Moabit in the city of Berlin. The club was established 10 May 1893 as Berliner Fußball Club Minerva taking its name from the Roman goddess of wisdom. A merger with Wilmersdorfer FC Frühling in 1896 led to the club taking on the name Sport-Club Minerva 93 Berlin.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4890024", "label": "Benny Meyer", "source": "Bernhard Meyer (January 21, 1885 – February 6, 1974) born in Hematite, Missouri, was a baseball outfielder for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1913), Baltimore Terrapins (1914–15), Buffalo Blues (1915) and Philadelphia Phillies (1925). In four seasons he played in 310 major league games and had 1,041 at bats, 146 runs, 276 hits, 29 doubles, 17 triples, 7 home runs, 84 RBIs, 46 stolen bases, 158 walks, .265 batting average, .365 on-base percentage, .346 slugging percentage, 360 total bases and 31 sacrifice hits. After retiring as a player, he worked as a coach for the Philadelphia Phillies under manager Art Fletcher. He served as a non-playing captain in 1924. He coached with the Detroit Tigers under manager Bucky Harris. He developed a reputation for his loudness as a coach for Detroit and was the subject of an article in The Sporting Life in 1929. He managed the Grand Rapids Chicks in 1945. He died in Festus, Missouri, at the age of 89.", "target": "American baseball player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61646681", "label": "Marq Cerqua", "source": "Marq Vincent Cerqua (born April 3, 1977) is a former American football linebacker in the National Football League for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Dallas Cowboys, Chicago Bears and Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Carson–Newman University.", "target": "American football player, linebacker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4761006", "label": "Andy McAvin", "source": "Andrew Mark McAvin (born January 4, 1952) is an American voice actor with nearly 80 credits to his resume. He also appeared in over 120 professional theatrical productions including Broadway musicals. He does voice work in anime dubs for ADV Films and Seraphim Digital. One of his most prominent roles was the genocidal villain Brian J. Mason in Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040, the voice type of which is referred to by cast and crew-mates as the \"slime that walks like a man\" voice. He also did voice work for the AD Police: To Serve and Protect spin off and for Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris. McAvin is also an instructor in powered paragliding, logging \"over 4000 flights and several thousand hours\" and has trained over 300 graduates. He is featured in a documentary called Into the Wind: The Sport of Powered Paragliding.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73542112", "label": "Azkajwar-Abdallah", "source": "Azkajwar-Abdallah was the Afrighid king of Khwarazm from the late 8th till the early 9th century. The precise date of his regnal period is uncertain. He ascended as king after 762, but not later than 783 or 787. He was the grandson of his predecessor Sawashfan. Azkajwar-Abdallah is notable for converting to Islam, taking the Muslim name of Abdallah. He was also the last Afrighid king to have coins minted in pre-Islamic style. The latest discovered coin of Azkajwar-Abdallah cites his overlord the Tahirid dynast Tahir ibn Husayn, who governed Khurasan on behalf of the Abbasid Caliphate in 821–822. Azkajwar-Abdallah was succeeded by Mansur.", "target": "khwarazmshah", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q582790", "label": "Erik Pimentel", "source": "Erik Alan Pimentel Benavides (born 15 May 1990) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for USL Championship club Rio Grande Valley.", "target": "Mexican footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20516879", "label": "Islamgulovo", "source": "Islamgulovo (Russian: Исламгулово) is a rural locality (a village) in Zildyarovsky Selsoviet, Miyakinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 205 as of 2010. There are 6 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Miyakinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["subdivisions of Russia", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31906482", "label": "Svibnik", "source": "Svibnik (pronounced [ˈsʋiːbnik]; German: Swibnik) is a settlement immediately west of Črnomelj in the White Carniola area of southeastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola and is now included in the Southeast Slovenia Statistical Region.", "target": "place in White Carniola, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4705603", "label": "Alai, Iran", "source": "Alai (Persian: آلائي, also Romanized as Ālā’ī) is a village in Surak Rural District, Lirdaf District, Jask County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 41, in 10 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q455818", "label": "Duane Eddy", "source": "Duane Eddy (born April 26, 1938) is an American instrumental rock guitarist. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, he had a string of hit records produced by Lee Hazlewood, which were noted for their characteristically \"twangy\" sound, including \"Rebel-'Rouser\", \"Peter Gunn\", and \"Because They're Young\". He had sold 12 million records by 1963.He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994, and the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in 2008.", "target": "American recording artist; rock guitarist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54563633", "label": "2019 Venezuelan Primera División season", "source": "The 2019 Primera División season, officially Liga de Fútbol Profesional Venezolano or Liga FUTVE, was the 38th professional season of Venezuela's top-flight football league. Zamora were the defending champions, but in the Torneo Apertura they were knocked out by Mineros in the quarter-finals and in the Torneo Clausura they failed to advance to the knockout stage. The champions were Caracas, who won the Torneo Clausura by defeating Deportivo Táchira in the final and then went on to beat Apertura winners Estudiantes de Mérida in the Serie Final on penalties to claim their twelfth league title.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6739196", "label": "Make the Grade", "source": "Make the Grade is a children's game show that aired from October 2, 1989 to September 14, 1990 on Nickelodeon.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6067488", "label": "Bülent Evcil", "source": "Bülent Evcil (born 1968) is a Turkish solo flutist and is the winner of the Royal Belgium Encouragement Medal of Art. He received the second place award in the Best Overall Performer Award at the 4th James Galway International Flute Seminar in Dublin. James Galway, the famous flute virtuoso, introduced him as being one of the best flutists of his respective generation.", "target": "Turkish musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65448179", "label": "Kumari Bank Limited", "source": "Kumari Bank Limited is one of the leading commercial banks in Nepal. Kumari Bank Limited provides a wide-range of modern banking services through 256 points of representation located in various urban, semi-urban and rural parts of the country, with 197 branches, 16 extension counters and 44 Branchless Banking Units. It serves through 186 ATMs and - POS terminals across the country. Its head office is located in Tangal, Kathmandu. The current CEO of Kumari Bank is Mr. Ram Chandra Khanal.", "target": "commercial bank of Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["bank", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20065218", "label": "The Glasgow Looking Glass", "source": "The Glasgow Looking Glass was the first mass-produced publication to tell stories using illustrations, and as such is regarded as the earliest comics magazine. The final issue was published on 3 April 1826.", "target": "BUILD YOUR OWN LEGACY", "baseline_candidates": ["comics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66360821", "label": "Ponir Uddin Ahmed", "source": "Ponir Uddin Ahmed (Bengali: পনির উদ্দিন আহমেদ) is a Jatiya Party (Ershad) politician and the incumbent Member of Parliament of Kurigram-2.", "target": "Bangladeshi politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q429947", "label": "Mohsen Kadivar", "source": "Mohsen Kadivar (Persian: محسن کدیور, born June 8, 1959) is a mujtahid, Islamic theologian, philosopher, writer, leading intellectual reformist, and research professor of Islamic Studies at Duke University. A political Iranian dissident, Kadivar has been a vocal critic of the doctrine of clerical rule, also known as Velayat-e Faqih (Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist), and a strong advocate of democratic and liberal reforms in Iran as well as constructional reform in understanding of shari'a and Shi'a theology. Kadivar has served time in prison in Iran for his political activism and beliefs.", "target": "Iranian philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3070138", "label": "Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival", "source": "The Festival Django Reinhardt is a Gypsy jazz music festival held during late June or early July at Samois-sur-Seine, France. It began as a single evening festival in 1968, but in 1983, became an annual week-long event commemorating Django Reinhardt and his music.The festival combines a musical program with creative, leisure and artistic activities about jazz, guitars and Gypsies.", "target": "Gypsy jazz music festival held during late June or early July at Samois-sur-Seine, France", "baseline_candidates": ["gypsy jazz festival"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4551159", "label": "160th Air Refueling Group", "source": "The 160th Air Refueling Group (160 ARG) is an inactive unit of the Ohio Air National Guard. It was last stationed at Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base, Columbus, Ohio. The 160th ARW was inactivated on 1 October 1993.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14364024", "label": "Tarn Oil Field", "source": "The Tarn oil field is an oil field in North Slope Borough, Alaska, United States. It is adjacent to the Kuparuk Oil Field, Alaska's second largest oil field. B.P. America and ARCO Alaska, Inc., first announced the Tarn discovery on 10 March after testing of the Tarn #2 well yielded a steady, stimulated flow rate in excess of 2,000 barrels per day of 38-degree API gravity oil from a sandstone reservoir discovered at a depth of 5,200 feet.", "target": "oil field in Alaska, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["oil field"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q121817", "label": "Kirsten Heisig", "source": "Kirsten Heisig (August 24, 1961, Krefeld – June 28, 2010, Berlin) was a German juvenile magistrate. Heisig was criticized by parts of the political left and parts of the Arabic community for her statements and for her view that some foreign cultures neglect education and encourage juvenile delinquency. As a juvenile magistrate for Neukölln, an area with a crime rate 40% above the average of Berlin, she initiated a model (Neuköllner Modell) that streamlined procedures and targeted an appearance before court within 3–5 weeks after the deed had been committed for deeds punishable by a maximum imprisonment of 4 weeks. Other key elements were encounters between delinquent and victim and community service and a cooperation between legal organs and social workers. This model was extended to the entire city of Berlin in June 2010 and caught attention on a national level. She was found dead in the forest near Heiligensee on the 3rd of July, 2010; after a search of five days. The public prosecutor at first imposed a total news embargo but then quickly announced that Heisig had committed suicide.The alleged suicide happened shortly after her submission of the manuscript of her book: Das Ende der Geduld: Konsequent gegen jugendliche Gewalttäter. (trans. When Patience Comes to an End: Consistent Actions Against Juvenile Offenders). Blurb from the dust jacket: \"Wenn wir nicht rasch und konsequent handeln, wenn wir unsere Rechts- und Werteordnung nicht entschlossen durchsetzen, werden wir den Kampf gegen die Jugendgewalt verlieren.\" (trans. \"If we do not react swiftly and decisively, if we do not.", "target": "German politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2744007", "label": "A Test Before Trying", "source": "\"A Test Before Trying\" is the tenth episode of the twenty-fourth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons, and the 518th episode overall. It first aired on the Fox network in the United States on January 13, 2013. The episode is dedicated to the memory of Huell Howser, who appeared in the episode \"O Brother, Where Bart Thou?\". This episode won the Writers Guild of America Award for Outstanding Writing in Animation at the 66th Writers Guild of America Awards.", "target": "episode of The Simpsons (S24 E10)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6887772", "label": "Mocis vitiensis", "source": "Mocis vitiensis is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by George Hampson in 1913. It is found in Fiji.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1187787", "label": "Sign \"O\" the Times", "source": "Sign o' the Times (often stylized as Sign \"☮︎\" the Times) is the ninth studio album by American singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist Prince. It was first released on March 31, 1987 as a double album by Paisley Park Records and Warner Bros. Records. The album is the follow-up to Parade and is Prince's first album following his disbanding of the Revolution. The album's songs were largely recorded during 1986 to 1987 in sessions for releases Prince ultimately aborted: Dream Factory, the pseudonymous Camille, and finally the triple album Crystal Ball. Prince eventually compromised with label executives and shortened the length of the release to a double album. Many of the drum sounds on Sign o' the Times came from the Linn LM-1 drum machine, and Prince used the Fairlight CMI synthesizer to replace other instruments. Minimal instrumentation is heard on the stripped-down \"Sign o’ the Times\", the lead single. Four songs contain higher-pitched vocals to represent Prince's alter ego \"Camille\". The album's music encompasses a varied range of styles, including funk, soul, psychedelic pop, electro, and rock. Sign o' the Times' release was supported by several singles, among them the socially conscious \"Sign o' the Times\" and \"If I Was Your Girlfriend\"; in addition to a well-received concert film of the same name. The album peaked at number six on the Billboard 200 and was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) four months after its release. It also reached the top 10 in Austria, France, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, and the.", "target": "album by Prince", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4799871", "label": "Arthur Ogden", "source": "Arthur Ogden was an English professional footballer who played as an inside forward.", "target": "English footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3346263", "label": "Numa Coste", "source": "Numa Coste (31 August 1843 – 10 June 1907) was a French painter and journalist.", "target": "French painter and journalist from Aix-en-Provence, second half of the 19th century", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12830072", "label": "pyrope", "source": "The mineral pyrope is a member of the garnet group. Pyrope is the only member of the garnet family to always display red colouration in natural samples, and it is from this characteristic that it gets its name: from the Greek for fire and eye. Despite being less common than most garnets, it is a widely used gemstone with numerous alternative names, some of which are misnomers. Chrome pyrope, and Bohemian garnet are two alternative names, the usage of the latter being discouraged by the Gemological Institute of America. Misnomers include Colorado ruby, Arizona ruby, California ruby, Rocky Mountain ruby, Elie Ruby, Bohemian carbuncle, and Cape ruby. The composition of pure pyrope is Mg3Al2(SiO4)3, although typically other elements are present in at least minor proportions—these other elements include Ca, Cr, Fe and Mn. Pyrope forms a solid solution series with almandine and spessartine, which are collectively known as the pyralspite garnets (pyrope, almandine, spessartine). Iron and manganese substitute for the magnesium in the pyrope structure. The resultant, mixed composition garnets are defined according to their pyrope-almandine ratio. The semi-precious stone rhodolite is a garnet of ~70% pyrope composition. The origin of most pyrope is in ultramafic rocks, typically peridotite from the Earth's mantle: these mantle-derived peridotites can be attributed both to igneous and metamorphic processes. Pyrope also occurs in ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) metamorphic rocks, as in the Dora-Maira massif in the western Alps. In that massif, nearly pure pyrope occurs in crystals to almost 12 cm in diameter; some of that pyrope has inclusions of coesite, and.", "target": "mineral, nesosilicate garnet", "baseline_candidates": ["garnet group", "mineral species"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29097202", "label": "1973 in German television", "source": "This is a list of German television related events from 1973.", "target": "overview of the events of 1973 in German television", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13541938", "label": "Acanthocephala latipes", "source": "Acanthocephala latipes is a species of leaf-footed bug in the family Coreidae. It is found in Central and South America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q819797", "label": "Campanula collina", "source": "Campanula collina, common name blue dwarf bellflower, is a species of flowering plant in the bellflower family Campanulaceae, native to the Caucasus and north-eastern Turkey.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49355573", "label": "Joursac", "source": "Joursac (French pronunciation: ​[ʒuʁsak]; Occitan: Jorçac) is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France.", "target": "commune in Cantal, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5614966", "label": "Guerrant House", "source": "Guerrant House is a historic home located near Arvonia, Buckingham County, Virginia. It was built about 1835, and consists of a 1+1⁄2-story, two room frame house with a separate kitchen set perpendicular to the rear of the main block. It features typical Federal period decorative and construction details. They include beaded weatherboards, a boxed cornice with dentils, and shouldered chimneys.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.", "target": "historic house in Virginia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64929834", "label": "Francis Abban", "source": "Francis Abban (born 22 March 1986) is a Ghanaian journalist with EIB Network's Starr FM and the host of The Morning Starr that runs every week day.", "target": "Ghanaian journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7397130", "label": "Sacred Heart Catholic Church and Rectory", "source": "The Sacred Heart Catholic Church and Rectory in Prescott, Arizona, United States is a complex of buildings that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2016, it serves as the Prescott Center for the Arts, formerly the Prescott Fine Arts Association. It is the former home of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, founded in 1871 now located at 150 Fleury Avenue in Prescott. The church is asserted to be \"one of the best examples of nineteenth century religious architecture in Arizona\". It was designed by architect Frank Parker and was built in 1915. It had a steeple until it was destroyed in a storm in 1930. The buildings served the parish until 1969.", "target": "church building in Prescott, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4635434", "label": "34th Pursuit Squadron", "source": "The 34th Pursuit Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was wiped out in the Battle of the Philippines (1941–42). The survivors fought as infantry during Battle of Bataan and after their surrender, were subjected to the Bataan Death March, although some did escape to Australia. The unit was never remanned or equipped. It was carried as an active unit until 2 April 1946.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3696164", "label": "UDEAC Championship", "source": "The Central African Customs and Economic Union (UDEAC) Cup was an association football tournament contested between countries in Central Africa. The creation of the UDEAC Cup was to mark the 20th anniversary since the formation of the Union but it was considered successful and was played a further six times. The tournament open to the national teams of the Union’s member countries who were affiliated to FIFA. The technical organisation of the tournament was entrusted to the Organising and Regulations Committee of the Central African Football Federations' Union (UNIFFAC). After the 1990 edition, the tournament was not played in the next decade. In 2003, the same countries decided to revive the competition under another name, the CEMAC Cup.", "target": "football tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["association football competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12368141", "label": "cookie", "source": "A cookie is a baked or cooked snack or dessert that is typically small, flat and sweet. It usually contains flour, sugar, egg, and some type of oil, fat, or butter. It may include other ingredients such as raisins, oats, chocolate chips, nuts, etc. In most English-speaking countries except for the United States, crunchy cookies are called biscuits. Many Canadians also use this term. Chewier biscuits are sometimes called cookies even in the United Kingdom. Some cookies may also be named by their shape, such as date squares or bars. Biscuit or cookie variants include sandwich biscuits, such as custard creams, Jammie Dodgers, Bourbons and Oreos, with marshmallow or jam filling and sometimes dipped in chocolate or another sweet coating. Cookies are often served with beverages such as milk, coffee or tea and sometimes \"dunked\", an approach which releases more flavour from confections by dissolving the sugars, while also softening their texture. Factory-made cookies are sold in grocery stores, convenience stores and vending machines. Fresh-baked cookies are sold at bakeries and coffeehouses, with the latter ranging from small business-sized establishments to multinational corporations such as Starbucks.", "target": "baked treat", "baseline_candidates": ["food", "biscuits, biscuits, crackers", "bánh", "dish", "pastry", "shelf-stable food", "confection"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3079539", "label": "Jorma Limmonen", "source": "Jorma Johannes Limmonen (29 September 1934 – 27 November 2012) was a Finnish boxer who competed in the featherweight division in the 1960 and 1964 Olympics. He won a bronze medal in 1960, losing in a semifinal to the eventual champion Francesco Musso, and was eliminated in the second bout in 1964.Limmonen won ten consecutive national titles in 1953–64, which remains a national record. He retired in 1964 and later worked as a boxing coach and a sports journalist. In 2006 he was inducted into the Finnish Boxing Hall of Fame.", "target": "boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6374905", "label": "Kasumo", "source": "Kasumo is a small settlement in Burundi, lying to the southeast of the largest city and former capital, Bujumbura. It is one of three places in Africa to claim to be the source of the Nile, being the southernmost source of any of the river's tributaries.", "target": "settlement in Burundi", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55773236", "label": "Johanna Kampmann-Freund", "source": "Johanna Kampmann-Freund (1888-1940) was an Austrian painter and in 1927 was the first woman to win the Austrian State Prize.", "target": "Austrian painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63311592", "label": "Andrzej Jerzy Mniszech", "source": "Andrzej Jerzy Mniszech (1823–1905) was a Polish painter and art collector. His father was Karol Filip Wandalin Mniszech (1794–1844), and his mother Eleonora Cetner (1798–1871). His paternal grandfather was Michał Jerzy Mniszech, a Polish nobleman who was Grand Marshal of the Crown during the reign of Stanisław II Augustus. He spent his youth in the family palace in Wiśniowiec and in Paris. In 1846 he inherited a lot of debt, and when he moved with his wife, Anna Elżbieta Potocka (1827–1885) and their son Leon (1849–1901) to Paris in 1854, he took with him a large part of the private family collection from Wiśniowiec, especially paintings. The palace the couple acquired in 1861 at 16 Rue Daru in Paris was owned by his wife, and after her death in 1885, it passed to their son Leon. The entire collection counted about 500 paintings, engravings, drawings, ceramics and furniture. Mniszech collected mainly Dutch masters of the 17th century and French art of the Rococo period. He was one of the first amateur collectors of Frans Hals. The collection was dispersed twice: in 1902 following his son Leon's death, and in 1910 when the collection went up for auction. He was active in Paris during the years 1854–1905. He started drawing lessons with his brother, Jerzy, in Wiśniowiec. In the 1860s he continued in Paris, studying with Jean Gigoux and Leon Cogniet. He painted mainly portraits often using the triptych form. In October 2007 his painting, Portrait of a Geisha, sold in Sotheby's, New York, for $85,000.", "target": "Polish artist (1823-1905)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7612723", "label": "Steve Gromek", "source": "Stephen Joseph Gromek (January 15, 1920 – March 12, 2002) was an American right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for 17 seasons in the American League with the Cleveland Indians and Detroit Tigers. In 447 career games, Gromek pitched 2,064+2⁄3 innings and posted a win–loss record of 123–108 with 92 complete games, 17 shutouts, and a 3.41 earned run average (ERA). Born in Hamtramck, Michigan, Gromek originally began playing professionally with the Indians organization as an infielder, but became a pitcher early on, and made his major league debut in 1941. He played sparingly his first three years before becoming an everyday starter in 1944 and 1945, earning his lone All-Star appearance in the latter year. After the war ended, he became a spot starter, spending time as both a starting pitcher and relief pitcher. Gromek was the winning pitcher in game four of the 1948 World Series with the Cleveland Indians. His career is best remembered for a post game celebratory photo taken of him hugging Larry Doby, the first black player in the American League, whose third inning home run provided the margin of victory. The photo became a symbol for integration in baseball.Gromek remained in the spot starter role with the Indians until 1953, when he was traded to the Tigers. The Tigers used him solely as a starting pitcher, and had 18 wins in his first full season with them in 1954. He played two more full seasons with the Tigers, and retired during the 1957 season. Gromek then became.", "target": "American baseball player (1920-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4294934", "label": "Minister for Defence of Abkhazia", "source": "The office of Minister for Defence (Abkhazian: атәыла хьчара аминистр, Georgian: თავდაცვის მინისტრი, Russian: министр обороны) has been one of the most important in the breakaway Republic of Abkhazia due to the ongoing conflict with Georgia. The person in the position heads the Ministry of Defence of Abkhazia, which controls the Abkhazian Armed Forces.", "target": "Political office in Abkhazia", "baseline_candidates": ["position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3283110", "label": "Pitfall 3D: Beyond the Jungle", "source": "Pitfall 3D: Beyond the Jungle (Pitfall 3D in Japan and Pitfall: Beyond the Jungle in Europe) is a platform game developed by Activision's internal Console Development Group and published by Activision in 1998 for the PlayStation and by Crave Entertainment in 1999 for the Game Boy Color, where it is called Pitfall: Beyond the Jungle in the Americas and Europe, and Pitfall GB in Japan.", "target": "1998 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5604599", "label": "Greentown, Jefferson County, Ohio", "source": "Greentown is an unincorporated community in eastern Smithfield Township, Jefferson County, Ohio, United States. It lies approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) south of Smithfield, on a small road. Part of the Dry Fork of Short Creek, a stream that meets the Ohio River at Rayland, flows past the community. It is located 11+3⁄4 miles (18.9 km) southwest of Steubenville, the county seat of Jefferson County. The community is part of the Weirton–Steubenville, WV-OH Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "human settlement in Ohio, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14325840", "label": "Clovis Thorel", "source": "Clovis Thorel, born April 28, 1833 in Hébécourt, Somme, France, died September 11, 1911 in Bagnoles-de-l'Orne, was a French botanist, explorer of Indochina and doctor. A significant number of plant species are named after him and he described 4,203 species himself.", "target": "French explorer and botanist (1833-1911)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5166269", "label": "Convention of Pardo", "source": "The Convention of Pardo, also known as the Treaty of Pardo or Convention of El Pardo, was a 1739 agreement between Britain and Spain. It sought to resolve trade issues between the two countries and agree boundaries between Spanish Florida and the English colony of Georgia. The Convention established a Boundary Commission to set borders between Georgia and Florida, while Spain provided compensation of £95,000 for confiscated British property. In return, the British South Sea Company would pay £68,000 to settle Spanish claims for profits due on the Asiento de Negros. Despite being owned by the British government, it refused to do so; both countries rejected the Convention, leading to the outbreak of the War of Jenkins Ear on 23 October 1739.", "target": "agreement between Great Britain and Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["treaty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4950804", "label": "Bowen Airport", "source": "Bowen Airport (IATA: ZBO, ICAO: YBWN) is located at Bowen, Queensland, Australia.", "target": "airport in Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1538197", "label": "Renmark Paringa", "source": "The Renmark Paringa Council is a local government area located adjacent to the Victorian border, in the Riverland, South Australia. The area is known for its various fruit production, and is heavily dependent on the River Murray as a water source. The council seat is at Renmark.", "target": "local government area in South Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["local government area of South Australia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7622823", "label": "Street Dreams", "source": "Street Dreams is a 2009 American film directed by Chris Zamoscianyk, produced by Rob Dyrdek, Jason Bergh and Sal Masekela and written by Elisa Delson, Rob Dyrdek, and Nino Scalia. Derrick Cabrera (Paul Rodriguez) has a dream of being sponsored and one day going pro. He is an up-and-coming street skateboarder from Chicago with all the talent but has the world against him. Parents, friends and schoolmates can't understand how Derrick has so much passion for something that has no future in their eyes. As everyone pushes him around, including his own father, girlfriend, and even one of his closest friends, he doesn't give up on both achieving his dreams, and proving everyone wrong.", "target": "2009 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q936852", "label": "Raphael Cartoons", "source": "The Raphael Cartoons are seven large cartoons for tapestries, belonging to the British Royal Collection but since 1865 on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, designed by the High Renaissance painter Raphael in 1515–16 and showing scenes from the Gospels and Acts of the Apostles. They are the only surviving members of a set of ten cartoons commissioned by Pope Leo X for the Sistine Chapel tapestries for the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican Palace, which are still (on special occasions) hung below Michelangelo's famous ceiling. Reproduced in the form of prints, the tapestries rivalled Michelangelo's ceiling as the most famous and influential designs of the Renaissance, and were well known to all artists of the Renaissance and Baroque. Admiration of them reached its highest pitch in the 18th and 19th centuries; they were described as \"the Parthenon sculptures of modern art\".", "target": "cartoons for tapestries by Raphael", "baseline_candidates": ["cycle of paintings"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1874991", "label": "PSV Vrouwen", "source": "PSV Vrouwen (or PSV Women) is a Dutch women's football (soccer) team representing PSV Eindhoven in the Eredivisie Vrouwen, the top women's league in the Netherlands. A founding member of the BeNe League in 2012, the team was known as PSV/FC Eindhoven and supported jointly by FC Eindhoven and PSV. Following the BeNe League's dissolution after the 2014–15 season, the team joined the Eredivisie as the women's team of PSV.", "target": "Dutch women's football team", "baseline_candidates": ["women's association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q549293", "label": "Simon White", "source": "Simon David Manton White (born 30 September 1951), FRS, is a British astrophysicist. He was one of directors at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics before his retirement in late 2019.", "target": "British astronomer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7781625", "label": "Theodor Spieker", "source": "Theodor Spieker (8 August 1823 – 9 April 1913) was a German mathematician, a teacher at a gymnasium in Potsdam.Spieker's geometry textbook Lehrbuch der ebenen Geometrie mit Übungs-Aufgaben für höhere Lehranstalten (Verlag von August Stein, Potsdam, 1862) was republished in many editions. A copy of this textbook was given to Albert Einstein by his tutor when Einstein was twelve, and quickly led Einstein to become interested in higher mathematics.Spieker is the namesake of the Spieker circle of a triangle (the circle inscribed in its medial triangle) and the Spieker center (the center of the Spieker circle).", "target": "German mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6498224", "label": "Laughter in the Rain: The Best of Neil Sedaka, 1974-80", "source": "Laughter in the Rain: The Best of Neil Sedaka, 1974–1980 is a compilation album containing the works of American pop singer Neil Sedaka. The album is composed mostly of material from his tenure with The Rocket Record Company in the mid-1970s. The title of this album is something of a misnomer, as it contains some material recorded prior to 1974. The album was released on compact disc in the US by Varèse Sarabande in 1994.", "target": "compilation album by Neil Sedaka", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7404505", "label": "Salih bin Abdullah al Humaid", "source": "Ṣāliḥ ibn ʻAbd Allāh Ibn Ḥumayd (Arabic: صالح بن عبد الله ابن حميد, Saleh bin Abdullah bin Humaid; born 1949), is a Saudi Arabian Imam and politician. He is currently one of the nine Imams of Grand Mosque of Mecca. He is also member of Assembly of Saudi Arabia since 1993 and had served Speaker of Majlis al Shura from February 2002 to February 2009.", "target": "former President of the Saudi Shoura Council and the Former Chairman of the Supreme Judiciary Council, presently Advisor at the Royal Court", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7800308", "label": "Tibagi River", "source": "The Tibagi River (Portuguese, Rio Tibagi, also spelled Tibagy and Tibají) is a river of Paraná state in southern Brazil. It is a tributary of the Paranapanema River.", "target": "river in Paraná, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21508745", "label": "Per Teodor Cleve", "source": "Per Teodor Cleve (10 February 1840 – 18 June 1905) was a Swedish chemist, biologist, mineralogist and oceanographer. He is best known for his discovery of the chemical elements holmium and thulium.Born in Stockholm in 1840, Cleve earned his BSc and PhD from Uppsala University in 1863 and 1868, respectively. After receiving his PhD, he became an assistant professor of chemistry at the university. He later became professor of general and agricultural chemistry. In 1874 he theorised that didymium was in fact two elements; this theory was confirmed in 1885 when Carl Auer von Welsbach discovered neodymium and praseodymium. In 1879 Cleve discovered holmium and thulium. His other contributions to chemistry include the discovery of aminonaphthalenesulfonic acids, also known as Cleve's acids. From 1890 on he focused on biological studies. He developed a method of determining the age and order of late glacial and postglacial deposits from the types of diatom fossils in the deposits, and wrote a seminal text in the field of oceanography. He died in 1905 at age 65.", "target": "Swedish chemist who discovered holmium and thulium (1840-1905)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4683895", "label": "Adnan Menderes Airport railway station", "source": "Adnan Menderes Airport railway station also referred to as just Airport (Turkish: Adnan Menderes Havaalanı, Havaalanı) is a railway station in southern Gaziemir. The station is served by regional trains heading to southwestern Turkey, operated by the Turkish State Railways. The station allows a connection for people between planes at Adnan Menderes Airport to direct train service into İzmir. All regional trains stops at the station. The station was built in 1987 along with the completion of the airport. The İZBAN commuter rail service began serving the station on August 30, 2010. İZBAN operates between Alsancak Terminal in İzmir and Cumaovası.", "target": "railway station in İzmir", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "airport railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24674300", "label": "Manby", "source": "Manby is a village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England, and lies approximately 5 miles (8 km) east from Louth. Manby contains a village post office. Other amenities, including a primary school, The Manby Arms public house, two village shops, and an Italian restaurant, are in the conjoined village of Grimoldby, separated from Manby by the B1200 road. It is also the administrative centre of the East Lindsey District. Manby scout group, the 1st Manby, has existed for 60 years. It is one of only two scout groups in the area to include all scouting sections: Beavers, aged 6–8; Cubs, aged 8–10; Scouts, aged 11½–14; and Explorers, aged 14–18. The other is the 6th Skegness.", "target": "village in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3405123", "label": "Yr Eifl", "source": "Yr Eifl, sometimes called the Rivals in English, is a group of hills on the north coast of the Llŷn Peninsula in Gwynedd, Wales. On a clear day, the views from the highest summit reach as far as the Isle of Man, the Wicklow Mountains in Ireland and the Lake District, as well as the entire sweep of Cardigan Bay. The view of Yr Eifl is especially striking from the SW coast of Anglesey, for instance from Ynys Llanddwyn. Ordnance Survey maps show a height of 564 metres, but a recent survey gives the height at 561 metres (1,841 feet).", "target": "mountain in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["summit", "hill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14849614", "label": "Velledopsis", "source": "Velledopsis is a genus of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae, containing the following species: Velledopsis kenyensis Breuning, 1936 Velledopsis tanganycae Breuning, 1969.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5058845", "label": "Cengkok", "source": "Céngkok (Javanese: ꦕꦺꦁꦏꦺꦴꦏ꧀, romanized: Céngkok) (old orthography: tjengkok) are patterns played by the elaborating instruments used in Indonesian Javanese gamelan. They are melodic formula that lead to a sèlèh, following the rules of the pathet of the piece. The most elaborate cengkok repertoire is that of the gendér barung. The gambang and siter, on the other hand, do not have such formalized sets of cengkok, and therefore may vary more from performer to performer. Most cengkok derive from the vocal repertoire, and many have names that originally came from lyrics, like the well-known \"Ayu kuning\". They may incorporate pre-existent melodic patterns through a process of centonization.", "target": "Indonesian musical melody used in Gamelan", "baseline_candidates": ["musical technique"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5034286", "label": "Cao Baoping", "source": "Cao Baoping (Chinese: 曹保平; pinyin: Cáo Bǎopíng) is a Chinese film director. He has emerged in recent years as a figure in China's \"midrange\" cinema industry. Some industry watchers, like Variety, have situated directors like Cao between the older fifth generation directors, such as Chen Kaige or Zhang Yimou, who have achieved major international and box-office success, and the more \"underground\" sixth generation directors, like Jia Zhangke and Wang Xiaoshuai.", "target": "Chinese film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q939192", "label": "Štefan Banič", "source": "Štefan Banič (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈʂtɕefam ˈbaɲitʂ]; 23 November 1870 – 2 January 1941) was a Slovak inventor who patented an early parachute design.Born in Jánostelek (Slovak: Neštich), Austria-Hungary (now part of Smolenice, Slovakia), Banič immigrated to the United States and worked as a coal miner in Greenville, Pennsylvania. After witnessing a plane crash in 1912, Banič constructed a prototype of a parachute in 1913 and was granted US patent, No. 1,108,484.The design which was radically different from others - it was a kind of umbrella attached to the body - but it is sometimes claimed that he successfully tested it in Washington, D.C. jumping first from a 15-storey building and subsequently from an airplane in 1914. He donated his patent to the U.S. Army - but there is no evidence that it was ever used. After World War I Banič returned to Czechoslovakia where he helped to explore the Driny karst cave in the foothills of the Little Carpathian Mountains, close to his hometown of Smolenice.", "target": "Slovak inventor (1870-1941)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20566741", "label": "La Trinité", "source": "La Trinité (French pronunciation: [la tʁinite] (listen)) is a commune in the Eure department in Normandy in northern France.", "target": "commune in Eure, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2042675", "label": "Shrawley", "source": "Shrawley is a village and civil parish in the Malvern Hills District in the county of Worcestershire, England. The village is situated on the western bank of the River Severn. The northern and southern boundaries of the parish are two small tributaries of the River Severn, Dick Brook to the north and Shrawley Brook to the south. To the west is Hillhampton, the north west and north is the parish of Astley and to the south Holt. The B4196 road runs throughout the village from the A433 at the Holt Heath boundary in the south to the Astley boundary at Glazenbridge on Dick Brook in the north. There are 22 miles of footpaths around Shrawley.", "target": "village and civil parish in the Malvern Hills District in the county of Worcestershire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6002377", "label": "Images of Heaven", "source": "Images of Heaven is the second EP by Peter Godwin. The EP was released in 1982.", "target": "1982 extended play by Peter Godwin", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6434080", "label": "Kotki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "source": "Kotki [ˈkɔtki] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Busko-Zdrój, within Busko County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-east of Busko-Zdrój and 44 km (27 mi) south of the regional capital Kielce.", "target": "village in Świętokrzyskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61959024", "label": "The Great Shadow", "source": "The Great Shadow, also known as The Great Shadow and other Napoleonic Tales, is an action and adventure novel written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It was published in 1892 in J.W. Arrowsmith’s Bristol Library. The novel takes place in the Napoleonic era on the Anglo-Scottish border city called West Inch. The Great Shadow refers to Napoleon’s influence and his reputation that forms a shadow over West Inch.", "target": "novel published by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96411333", "label": "Tung Yuan", "source": "Tung Yüan is a crater on Mercury, within the Borealis Planitia. Its name was adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1979, for the 10th century Chinese painter Tung Yüan.", "target": "crater on the planet Mercury", "baseline_candidates": ["impact crater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30610871", "label": "Wonchi", "source": "Wenchi crater lake, which is also spelled as Wancii or Wonchi, is a volcano located 98 km (61 mi) west of Addis Ababa, Oromia, Ethiopia. At 3,450 m (11,320 ft) above sea level, it is the highest volcano in Ethiopia, 13.5 km (8.4 mi) from Mount Dendi, Ethiopia's second highest volcano. Wonchi is located at equal distance between the towns of Ambo and Woliso. The volcano has a 4 by 4.8 km (2.5 by 3.0 mi) wide caldera, and a single crater lake, Wonchi lake, about 450 m (1,480 ft) below the rim of the volcano. Study of Wonchi's caldera is incomplete; initial findings show it could be as much as 900 m (3,000 ft) deep, and the lake itself could be as deep as 400 m (1,300 ft). Besides Wonchi lake, the caldera also contains hot springs, waterfalls, valleys, and other scenery. There are two islands in the lake. On one of the islands there is an ancient church called Cherkos monastery. One can reach the islands and the monastery by ferry. Due to its unique topography, Wanchi is blessed with varieties of animal and plant species. For these reasons, Wanchi has become a popular tourist destination in Ethiopia. This has been the case even though there was no dry weather road. Since the construction of Ambo-Waliso gravel road, tourism has emerged as one of the rapidly growing economic sectors in the district, Wanchi lake becoming a favored weekend destination for residents of nearby cities including Addis Ababa. The tourist can hire horses to take.", "target": "volcano in Ethiopia", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain", "volcano"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7082566", "label": "Okrajnik", "source": "Okrajnik [ɔˈkrai̯nik] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łękawica, within Żywiec County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 2 kilometres (1 mi) north of Łękawica, 7 km (4 mi) north-east of Żywiec, and 61 km (38 mi) south of the regional capital Katowice. The village has a population of 741.", "target": "village in Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q498380", "label": "Park Jung-soo", "source": "Park Jung-soo (also known as Park Jung-su) (born June 1, 1953) is a South Korean actress. Park made her acting debut in 1972 and became best known for starring in television dramas, notably Love and Farewell (1993), Way of Living: Woman (1994), LA Arirang (1995), Why Can't We Stop Them (2000), Rose Fence (2003), and Living in Style (2011).In 2005, she published her autobiography Park Jung-soo's Inner Beauty, which was also a style guide for women in their fifties.", "target": "South Korean actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1088090", "label": "Chrono Champenois Masculin International", "source": "The Chrono Champenois is a European individual time trial bicycle race held around Bétheny in France, in the Champagne region. The race has been organised as a 1.2 event since 1989 for women's and since 1998 there is also a men's race which is part of the UCI Europe Tour. The women's race is fully called: Chrono Champenois - Trophée Européen. The 2017 event was cancelled late in the season, with the organiser planning to hold the race again in 2018.", "target": "bicycle race", "baseline_candidates": ["single-day road race", "recurring event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5886413", "label": "Holy Trinity Catholic Secondary School", "source": "Holy Trinity Catholic Secondary School is a publicly funded Roman Catholic secondary school in Courtice, Ontario, Canada.", "target": "school in Courtice, Ontario", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1413148", "label": "1958 Coppa Italia", "source": "The 1958 Coppa Italia was the 11th Coppa Italia, the major Italian domestic cup. The competition was won by Lazio.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5545958", "label": "George Washington Crile", "source": "George Washington Crile (November 11, 1864 – January 7, 1943) was an American surgeon. Crile is now formally recognized as the first surgeon to have succeeded in a direct blood transfusion. He contributed to other procedures, such as neck dissection. Crile designed a small hemostatic forceps which bears his name; the Crile mosquito clamp. He also described a technique for using opioids, regional anesthesia and general anesthesia which is a concept known as balanced anesthesia. He is also known for co-founding the Cleveland Clinic in 1921.", "target": "American surgeon and co-founder of Cleveland Clinic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4670969", "label": "Acacia montis-usti", "source": "Senegalia montis-usti, the Brandberg acacia, is a species of plant in the family Fabaceae. It is found only in Namibia.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25841408", "label": "Citricoccus muralis", "source": "Citricoccus muralis is a Gram-positive and aerobic bacterium from the genus Citricoccus which has been isolated from a wall painting from Sankt Georgen ob Judenburg, Austria.", "target": "species of bacterium", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8038889", "label": "Wu Chun-ching", "source": "Wu Chun-ching (Chinese: 吳俊青) is a Taiwanese footballer who plays as a midfielder for Tatung F.C.", "target": "Taiwanese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21472112", "label": "Mount Solus", "source": "Mount Solus (68°50′S 65°33′W) is a conspicuous, isolated mountain (1,290 m) in the center and near the mouth of Weyerhaeuser Glacier, in southern Graham Land, the northernmost part of the mainland of Antarctica. It has steep rock sides meeting in a sharp summit ridge. Photographed from the air by Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS) in August 1947, and by Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition (RARE) (Trimetrogon photography) in December 1947. Surveyed by FIDS in December 1958. The United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) name is descriptive of the isolated position of the feature. This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Geological Survey document: \"Mount Solus\". (content from the Geographic Names Information System).", "target": "mountain in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5434543", "label": "Far East Network", "source": "The Far East Network (FEN) was a network of American military radio and television stations, primarily serving U.S. Forces in Japan, Okinawa, the Philippines, and Guam.", "target": "network of US military broadcast stations in Asia", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q92152", "label": "Nele Neuhaus", "source": "Cornelia Neuhaus (born 20 June 1967 in Münster as Cornelia Löwenberg) is a German writer. She is best known for her crime thrillers set in the Taunus near Frankfurt.She has also published romantic novels under her maiden name Löwenberg, as well as horse stories for teenagers.", "target": "German writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1950306", "label": "Dissosteira", "source": "Dissosteira is a genus of grasshoppers in the family Acrididae found in North America. They are about 1 to 1 1/2 inches long, and are completely grey. They can also be found in varying shades of brown.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7324719", "label": "Richard Cheadle", "source": "Rear Admiral Richard Frank Cheadle CB, DL (born 27 January 1950) is a former Royal Navy officer who went on to be Controller of the Navy.", "target": "Royal Navy admiral", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4083984", "label": "Bergamo Alps", "source": "The Bergamasque Alps or Bergamo Alps (Italian: Alpi Orobie, sometimes translated into English as Orobic Alps) are a mountain range in the Italian Alps. They are located in northern Lombardy and named after the city Bergamo, south of the mountains. Within the Eastern Alps, the Alpine Club or AVE system places them within the Western Limestone Alps, while the SOIUSA system classifies them within the Southeastern Alps.", "target": "mountain range in the Italian Alps", "baseline_candidates": ["Alpine subsection"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5311981", "label": "Dudley Spade", "source": "Dudley Spade (born March 8, 1956) is a politician from the U.S. state of Michigan. He served as State Representative from the 57th district from 2005 to 2010. He is a Democrat. His district includes almost all of Lenawee County. Prior to becoming a State Representative, Spade was a child and family activist.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27667101", "label": "Sara Castañeda", "source": "Sara Isobel Arrieta Castañeda (born December 5, 1996) is a Filipino footballer who plays as a midfielder for the Philippines women's national team.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16209160", "label": "Kimberlyn Duncan", "source": "Kimberlyn Duncan (born August 2, 1991) is an American track and field athlete, specializing in the sprints. She was the 2013 American champion at 200 metres, having defeated Olympic champion Allyson Felix with a strong stretch run. Her time of 21.80 seconds from that race at the 2013 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships would have ranked her as the 14th fastest female of all time, had it not been wind aided. She was 42nd on that 2013 list, from a qualifying heat at the NCAA Championships on the same Drake Stadium track a year earlier.Duncan was a standout athlete at Cypress Springs High School near her hometown in Katy, Texas, graduating in 2009. She ran track collegiately at Louisiana State University, where she became the first woman to win the NCAA Championships 200 meters back to back, both indoors and outdoors.She is the 2012 recipient of The Bowerman, the highest award for a collegiate track and field athlete. She won the Honda Sports Award as the nation's best female track and field competitor in 2011 and repeated in 2012.At the 2012 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics she again won the 200 meters in record time and anchored the victorious USA 4x100 metres relay team. A few weeks later, she anchored the USA \"Blue\" team to the meet record at Herculis. At 2013 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Duncan earned gold medal in the 200 meters and placed 21st in the 100 meters.At 2014 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Duncan earned silver medal in.", "target": "American sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96034973", "label": "Trollhunters: Defenders of Arcadia", "source": "Trollhunters: Defenders of Arcadia is a video game based on the popular television series Trollhunters: Tales of Arcadia. It was released on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch and Microsoft Windows. It was released on September 25, 2020. It was developed by WayForward and published by Outright Games, with European distribution handled through Bandai Namco Entertainment.", "target": "2020 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48731568", "label": "Kendua High School", "source": "Kendua High School (Bengali: কেন্দুয়া উচ্চ বিদ্যালয়), is a non-government educational institution in Kendua, Tangail, Dhaka Division, Bangladesh established in 1971. The school offers education for students ranging from six to SSC (Secondary School Certificate) with over 500 students. The school is under the direct control of the Ministry of Education.", "target": "school in Tangail, Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6893519", "label": "mohan", "source": "The Muan, Moan or Mohan (moo-ahn), sometimes also known as Poira is a name applied to several mythological or otherwise supernatural creatures in South and Central American folklore. The most common and widespread use of the term is to refer to the souls of the dead and the indigenous ancestors of old. The word is also used for shamans or witch doctors in some Colombian indigenous cultures (such as the Panches).", "target": "legendary creature", "baseline_candidates": ["mythical creature"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5132861", "label": "Clifford Antone", "source": "Clifford Antone (October 27, 1949 – May 22, 2006) was the founder of the eponymous Austin blues club Antone's and independent record label Antone's Records and Tapes, as well as a mentor to Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimmie Vaughan, Kim Wilson, Gary Clark, Jr. and numerous other musicians. He is the nephew of Jalal Antone, the founder of the Houston-based Antone's Import Co - known for its po-boy sandwiches.", "target": "Club founder and music publisher (1949-2006)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64342014", "label": "Zoe Colletti", "source": "Zoe Margaret Colletti (born November 27, 2001) is an American actress. She made her acting debut in the television pilot of American Men (2006) and played her first major-film role in Annie (2014). Colletti appeared in 2018 films Wildlife and Skin before garnering critical praise in the lead role of Stella Nicholls in horror film Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (2019). She achieved further recognition and plaudits as Dakota in the sixth season of horror drama series Fear the Walking Dead (2020–2021) and the Truth Pixie in fantasy film A Boy Called Christmas (2021).", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16096", "label": "Vechta", "source": "Vechta (German pronunciation: [ˈfɛçta]) is the capital and largest city of the Vechta district in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is home to the University of Vechta. It is known for the 'Stoppelmarkt' fair, which takes place every summer and has a history dating back to 1298. With an attendance of 800,000 visitors it is one of the biggest annual fairs in north-western Germany.The town was in the recent past known as a centre of far northern German Catholicism.", "target": "town in the German state of Lower Saxony, and capital of the district of Vechta", "baseline_candidates": ["urban municipality of Germany", "town", "independent community", "district capital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5896540", "label": "Honley High School", "source": "Honley High School is a coeducational secondary school situated on the edge of the village of Honley in the Holme Valley, West Yorkshire, England. The catchment area includes the neighbouring villages of Brockholes, Honley, Meltham and Netherton (those living in Holmfirth can also attend) Honley High has around 1,250 pupils aged 11–16. The school houses the specialist autism provision for young people with ASD from the South Kirklees area.", "target": "school in Kirklees, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["secondary school", "foundation school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5922887", "label": "Hoysala Karnataka Brahmins", "source": "Hoysala Karnataka Brahmins are a community of Kannada-speaking Smartha Brahmins. This sect of Brahmins are spread over the Southern Districts of the Indian state of Karnataka.", "target": "Kannada speaking Smartha Brahmin community", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19956547", "label": "Sarah Brusco", "source": "Sarah Brusco (born October 6, 1978, as Sarah Theresa Pinkerton), is an American Christian musician. Her first album, The Woven Whisper, was released by herself alongside Vineyard Music in 2014.", "target": "musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7029431", "label": "Nicolai Seebach", "source": "Nicolai Seebach (born August 22, 1977) is a Danish songwriter and music producer.", "target": "Danish record producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27986005", "label": "Watkins", "source": "Watkins is an unincorporated community in Miller County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. The community lies on a ridge between Barren and Brushy Forks on Missouri Route KK, approximately five miles northwest of Iberia.", "target": "unincorporated community in Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5628414", "label": "Madineh Qeshlaqi", "source": "Madineh Qeshlaqi (Persian: مدينه قشلاقي, also Romanized asMadīneh Qeshlāqī; also known as Askalū Moḩammad Ḩasanlū) is a village in Garamduz Rural District, Garamduz District, Khoda Afarin County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 144, in 26 families.", "target": "village in East Azerbaijan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11916432", "label": "Cocalus", "source": "Cocalus is also a genus of jumping spiders.In Greek mythology, Cocalus (Ancient Greek: Κώκαλος) was a king of Camicus (Ancient Greek: Κᾰμῑκός) in Sicily, according to Diodorus Siculus (book iv).", "target": "king of Kamikos in Sicily", "baseline_candidates": ["human who may be fictional", "king in Greek mythology"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7488437", "label": "Yantian Express", "source": "Yantian Express is a Hapag-Lloyd Hamburg Express class container ship, delivered in 2002. She was constructed by Hyundai Heavy Industries in Ulsan, South Korea, a measures 320 by 43 m (1,050 by 141 ft), and delivered under the name Berlin Express but soon renamed Shanghai Express. Her capacity is 7,510 20ft containers and she carries this load at 22.5 knots (41.7 km/h; 25.9 mph).As of April 2008, other Hamburg Express class ships included Berlin Express, Hong Kong Express, and Hamburg Express. As Shanghai Express, the ship was featured in an episode of Mighty Ships on The Discovery Channel in 2004.", "target": "Hapag-Lloyd Hamburg Express class container ship", "baseline_candidates": ["container ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16515575", "label": "curia", "source": "Curia (Latin plural curiae) in ancient Rome referred to one of the original groupings of the citizenry, eventually numbering 30, and later every Roman citizen was presumed to belong to one. While they originally likely had wider powers, they came to meet for only a few purposes by the end of the Republic: to confirm the election of magistrates with imperium, to witness the installation of priests, the making of wills, and to carry out certain adoptions. The term is more broadly used to designate an assembly, council, or court, in which public, official, or religious issues are discussed and decided. Lesser curiae existed for other purposes. The word curia also came to denote the places of assembly, especially of the senate. Similar institutions existed in other towns and cities of Italy. In medieval times, a king's council was often referred to as a curia. Today, the most famous curia is the Curia of the Roman Catholic Church, which assists the Roman Pontiff in the hierarchical government of the Church.", "target": "voting system", "baseline_candidates": ["assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5096515", "label": "Chicoreus corrugatus", "source": "Chicoreus corrugatus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14234889", "label": "sport", "source": "Sport pertains to any form of competitive physical activity or game that aims to use, maintain, or improve physical ability and skills while providing enjoyment to participants and, in some cases, entertainment to spectators. Sports can, through casual or organized participation, improve one's physical health. Hundreds of sports exist, from those between single contestants, through to those with hundreds of simultaneous participants, either in teams or competing as individuals. In certain sports such as racing, many contestants may compete, simultaneously or consecutively, with one winner; in others, the contest (a match) is between two sides, each attempting to exceed the other. Some sports allow a \"tie\" or \"draw\", in which there is no single winner; others provide tie-breaking methods to ensure one winner and one loser. A number of contests may be arranged in a tournament producing a champion. Many sports leagues make an annual champion by arranging games in a regular sports season, followed in some cases by playoffs. Sport is generally recognised as system of activities based in physical athleticism or physical dexterity, with major competitions such as the Olympic Games admitting only sports meeting this definition. Other organisations, such as the Council of Europe, preclude activities without a physical element from classification as sports. However, a number of competitive, but non-physical, activities claim recognition as mind sports. The International Olympic Committee (through ARISF) recognises both chess and bridge as bona fide sports, and SportAccord, the international sports federation association, recognises five non-physical sports: bridge, chess, draughts (checkers), Go and xiangqi, and limits the.", "target": "forms of competitive physical activity or games which, through casual or organized participation, maintain or improve physical ability and skills while providing enjoyment to participants, and in some cases, entertainment for spectators", "baseline_candidates": ["physical activity", "academic discipline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4996793", "label": "Bullet", "source": "The Bullet was a streamliner electric multiple-unit passenger car produced by the J. G. Brill Company in Philadelphia for the Philadelphia and Western Railroad (P&W) in 1931, and then similar, somewhat smaller single-unit, single-end versions were built for the Fonda, Johnstown and Gloversville Railroad in 1932. Few were sold because of the Great Depression and the public transport decline in the 1930s. : 70 However, some of the P&W cars ran for almost 60 years while later being under SEPTA.", "target": "Philadelphia electric multiple-unit passenger car", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5531333", "label": "Gene Markey", "source": "Eugene Willford \"Gene\" Markey (December 11, 1895 – May 1, 1980) was an American author, producer, screenwriter, and highly decorated naval officer.", "target": "American writer and producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20813346", "label": "Duets: Re-working the Catalogue", "source": "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. This is Morrison's first album for Sony Music since Blowin' Your Mind (Sony owns BANG).", "target": "album by Van Morrison", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1883081", "label": "Mad Gasser of Mattoon", "source": "The Mad Gasser of Mattoon (also known as the \"Anesthetic Prowler,\" the \"Phantom Anesthetist,\" or simply the \"Mad Gasser\") was the name given to the person or people believed to be responsible for a series of apparent gas attacks that occurred in Mattoon, Illinois, during the mid-1940s. More than two dozen separate cases of gassings were reported to police over the span of two weeks, in addition to many more reported sightings of the suspected assailant. The gasser's supposed victims reported smelling strange odors in their homes which were soon followed by symptoms such as paralysis of the legs, coughing, nausea and vomiting. No one died or had serious medical consequences. Police remained skeptical of the accounts throughout the entire incident. : 235 No physical evidence was ever found,: 175 and many reported gassings had simple explanations, such as spilled nail polish or odors emanating from animals or local factories. : 237 Victims made quick recoveries from their symptoms and suffered no long-term effects. : 175 Nevertheless, local newspapers ran alarmist articles about the reported attacks and treated the accounts as fact. : 234 The attacks are widely considered to be a case of mass hysteria. However, others maintain that the Mad Gasser actually existed, or that the perceived attacks have another explanation, such as industrial pollution.", "target": "supposed serial burglar known for their use of an alleged anaesthetic gas, or, case of mass hysteria", "baseline_candidates": ["mass hysteria", "human", "legendary figure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6276362", "label": "Jordan Atkins", "source": "Jordan Atkins (born 22 January 1983) is an Australian professional rugby league footballer who last played for the London Broncos in the Super League. His positions of choice are at wing or centre.", "target": "Australian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q511814", "label": "Andris Reiss", "source": "Andris Reiss (Kuldīga, 10 March 1978) was a Latvian former professional cyclist. He rode in the 2002 Vuelta a España, finishing 95th overall. He also competed in the road race at the 2000 Summer Olympics, and finished in 81st place.", "target": "Latvian cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25352246", "label": "Brij Lal", "source": "Brij Lal is a 1977-batch IPS officer and an Indian politician. He is a Member of Parliament in the Rajya Sabha from Uttar Pradesh. He belongs to the Bharatiya Janata Party. He was the Director General of Police of Uttar Pradesh during the Mayawati Government. he belong to the Koli community of Uttar Pradesh.In 2018, the Government of Uttar Pradesh appointed him as the head of scheduled caste and scheduled tribes commission in the state.After his retirement he has been active in Dalit politics. He has emerged as one of the strong Dalit leaders of the party.", "target": "Indian Police Officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6253715", "label": "John Quinn", "source": "John Quinn (30 May 1938 - 19 September 2020) was a professional footballer who played for Sheffield Wednesday, Rotherham United and Halifax Town. He also played for non league Worksop Town towards the end of his playing days. Johnny's professional career was long, lasting from 1959 to 1976 during which time he made 379 league appearances. Quinn played in the half back position or defensive midfielder but he could also play at fullback and winger if needed. He was relatively short of stature, being only 5 foot 6 inches (165 cm). Quinn played football in the St Helens Combination League as a teenager for Prescot Cables and signed for Sheffield Wednesday as an apprentice after leaving school. Wednesday had a top class team in late 1950s and early '60s and it was hard for the young Quinn to force his way into the first team. He made his debut as a 21-year-old on Saturday 26 September 1959 in a 2–0 home victory over Luton Town, however he only made one more appearance that season. It took four years for Quinn to become a regular in the Wednesday side, his cause not being helped by the fact that he had to do his national service during this time. Quinn was a regular for Wednesday from the start of the 1964–65 season up to his departure from the club in November 1967 during his time at Hillsborough he played 196 matches (including cup games) and scored 25 goals. He played in the 1966 FA Cup Final defeat against.", "target": "English footballer (born 1938)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43585169", "label": "Zero Hedge", "source": "Zero Hedge (or ZeroHedge) is a far-right libertarian financial blog and news aggregator. Zero Hedge, per its motto, is bearish in its investment outlook and analysis, often deriving from its adherence to the Austrian School of economics and credit cycles. While often labeled as a financial permabear, Zero Hedge has also been described as a source of \"cutting-edge news, rumors and gossip in the financial industry\".Over time, Zero Hedge expanded into non-financial political content, including conspiracy theories and fringe rhetoric advancing radical right, alt-right, and pro-Russia positions. Zero Hedge's non-financial commentary has led to multiple site bans by global social media platforms, although its 2019 Facebook ban and 2020 Twitter ban were later reversed.Zero Hedge in-house content is posted under the pseudonym \"Tyler Durden\"; the founder and main editor was identified as Daniel Ivandjiiski.", "target": "far-right libertarian financial blog", "baseline_candidates": ["website", "blog"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6114068", "label": "National Route 1", "source": "National Route 1 is a trunk highway that is mostly known as the Circunvalar de San Andrés or Circunvalación de la Isla de San Andrés. This route runs along the perimeter of the island of San Andrés in the department of San Andrés and Providencia.", "target": "highway in Colombia", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q584440", "label": "FC Mika", "source": "Football Club Mika (Armenian: Ֆուտբոլային Ակումբ Միկա), commonly known as Mika, was an Armenian football club from the capital Yerevan. It was owned by the Mika Corporation LLC headed by the Russia-based Armenian businessman Mikhail Baghdasarov. The club headquarters were located on Manandyan street 41, Yerevan.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17125203", "label": "St. Aloysius Senior Secondary School", "source": "St. Aloysius Senior Secondary School is a co-ed catholic school located in the city of Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, India. It is affiliated to Central Board of Secondary Education. Established in the year 1868, it is one of the oldest schools in India.", "target": "school in India", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20058584", "label": "Come Alive", "source": "Come Alive is the third studio album by Australian recording artist Paulini, released through Fortitude Group under exclusive licence to Ambition and Decca Records Australia on 29 May 2015. It is the follow-up to her 2006 album, Superwoman. Paulini described the album as a labour of love and her most personal album to date. She said \"[it] represents my personal struggle over the past few years to find my voice, not only in music but in life\". Come Alive is an adult contemporary pop album and marks a departure from the R&B sounds of Paulini's previous albums. It debuted at number 25 on the ARIA Albums Chart.", "target": "album by Paulini", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3644422", "label": "Loxton, Northern Cape", "source": "Loxton is a town in the Karoo region of South Africa's Northern Cape province. Within the Ubuntu Local Municipality of the Pixley ka Seme District Municipality It is in one of the major wool-producing and one of the largest garlic-producing areas in South Africa.With a population of 1,053 in 2011, the area is quiet and sparsely populated. Afrikaans is the most widely spoken language in the town.", "target": "human settlement in South Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10827785", "label": "Marcin Wrona", "source": "Marcin Wrona (25 March 1973 – 19 September 2015) was a Polish film director. His film Demon was shown at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. He debuted at the TIFF in 2010, with The Christening, and was also director of the Polish television series Medics. Wrona committed suicide by hanging in a hotel room on 19 September 2015 in Gdynia, while a film festival was taking place there. The film Demon had been previously shown in Toronto and was shown in Gdynia.", "target": "Polish film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28037442", "label": "Ezekiel Anisi", "source": "Ezekiel Anisi (1 September 1988 – 24 May 2017) was a Papua New Guinean politician. He was a member of the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea from August until October 2012, when he was unseated by the National Court, and from a December 2013 by-election until his death, representing the electorate of Ambunti-Dreikikir Open in East Sepik Province. He was the youngest MP in Papua New Guinea.", "target": "Papua New Guinean politician (1988-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2895242", "label": "Bemanonga", "source": "Bemanonga is a town and commune (Malagasy: kaominina) in Madagascar. It belongs to the district of Morondava, which is a part of Menabe Region. The population of the commune was estimated to be approximately 22,000 in 2001 commune census.Primary and junior level secondary education are available in town. The majority 52% of the population of the commune are farmers, while an additional 8% receives their livelihood from raising livestock. The most important crop is rice, while other important products are peanuts and lima beans. Industry and services provide employment for 7% and 3% of the population, respectively. Additionally fishing employs 30% of the population.The Andranomena Special Reserve is situated in the territory of the commune of Bemanonga.", "target": "place in Menabe, Madagascar", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Madagascar"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10396853", "label": "John Cozens", "source": "John William Cozens (born 14 May 1946) is an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League as a forward for Notts County, Peterborough United and Cambridge United. He began his career in non-league football with Tonbridge, was a prolific goalscorer for three seasons for Hayes, and signed professional forms with Hillingdon Borough in 1968, before moving into league football. Cozens went on to coach at Cambridge United, becoming assistant manager and on occasions caretaker manager, and managed non-league club King's Lynn for six months in the 1988–99 season.", "target": "footballer (born 1946)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49107155", "label": "Obi", "source": "Obi is a town and local government area in Benue State, Nigeria.", "target": "town and local government area in Benue, Nigeria", "baseline_candidates": ["Local Government Area in Nigeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6029644", "label": "Prince Hall", "source": "Prince Hall (c. 1735/8—1807) was an abolitionist and leader in the free black community in Boston. He founded Prince Hall Freemasonry and lobbied for education rights for African American children. He was also active in the back-to-Africa movement. Hall tried to gain a place for New York's enslaved and free blacks in Freemasonry, education, and the military, which were some of the most crucial spheres of society in his time. Hall is considered the founder of \"Black Freemasonry\" in the United States, known today as Prince Hall Freemasonry. Hall formed the African Grand Lodge of North America. Prince Hall was unanimously elected its Grand Master and served until his death in 1807. Steve Gladstone, author of Freedom Trail Boston, states that Prince Hall—known for his role in creating Black Freemasonry, championing equal education rights, and fighting slavery—\"was one of the most influential free black leaders in the late 1700s\".There is confusion about his year of birth, place of birth, parents, and marriages—at least partly due to the fact that there were numerous \"Prince Halls\" during this time period.", "target": "Founder of Prince Hall Freemasonry", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18167149", "label": "Trident High School", "source": "Trident High School is a state coeducational secondary school located in Whakatāne, New Zealand. The school opened in February 1973 as the town's second secondary school, alongside Whakatane High School. Serving Years 9 to 13 (ages 12 to 18), the school has a roll of 970 students as of March 2022.", "target": "state secondary (year 9-15) school in Whakatane, New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["state school", "secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5463760", "label": "Fløyfjellet", "source": "Fløya or Fløyfjellet is a mountain adjacent to the town of Svolvær in Vågan Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. The 590-metre (1,940 ft) tall mountain is located near the southeastern shore of the island of Austvågøya in the Lofoten archipelago. The mountain was historically called Svålen or Svolen and now that name usually refers to one of the lower peaks on the east side of the mountain.The mountain is popular among climbers, in particular Svolværgeita, a 150 m (490 ft) high pinnacle at the southern face of Fløya, which resembles a goat with two horns.", "target": "mountain in Vågan, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3140137", "label": "Honkarakenne", "source": "Honkarakenne Oyj (Nasdaq Helsinki: HONBS) is a Finnish company that manufactures log homes. Honka is also a registered trademark of the company.Honkarakenne’s factory is located in Karstula, Central Finland. By 2018, Honkarakenne had delivered about 85,000 log homes to more than 50 countries.Honkarakenne has been a listed company since 1987. Its B-shares are now on the Small Cap list of the Helsinki Stock Exchange.", "target": "Finnish company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1818220", "label": "Miřetice", "source": "Miřetice (German: Miřetitz, from 1939: Mirschetitz) is a municipality and village in Chrudim District in the Pardubice Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,300 inhabitants.", "target": "village in Chrudim District of Pardubice region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13497351", "label": "Cordilura fuscipes", "source": "Cordilura fuscipes is a species of dung fly in the family Scathophagidae.", "target": "species of dung fly", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14509533", "label": "Typhedanus crameri", "source": "Typhedanus crameri is a species of butterfly in the family Hesperiidae, native to Central America and Suriname. It was described by Pieter Cramer in 1777 using the name Papilio orion, which was preoccupied (see Scolitantides orion). A replacement name honouring Cramer was designated in 1960.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21188569", "label": "1914 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team", "source": "The 1914 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 1914 college football season.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7738107", "label": "The Greeks Have a Word For It", "source": "The Greeks Have a Word For It is the second novel by Booker Prize-winning author Barry Unsworth published by Hutchinson in 1967. It has since been republished by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in 1993 and W. W. Norton & Company in 2002. It has been praised for its 'utterly convincing characterizations'.", "target": "book by Barry Unsworth", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2273571", "label": "Adjuvilo", "source": "Adjuvilo is a constructed language created in 1910 by Claudius Colas under the pseudonym of \"Profesoro V. Esperema\". Although it was a full language, it may not have been created to be spoken. Many believe that as an Esperantist, Colas created Adjuvilo to help create dissent in the then-growing Ido movement. Colas himself called his language simplified Ido and proposed several reforms to Ido. Colas created a nearly complete grammar, but did not create a new vocabulary. Adjuvilo uses mainly the vocabulary of Ido with modifications according to the grammatical changes of Ido. Colas in some cases reestablishes the Esperanto forms of words and even constructed some new words like sulo for \"sun\" (Ido/Esperanto: suno) and dago for \"day\" (Ido: dio, Esperanto: tago).", "target": "constructed language similar to Ido and Esperanto", "baseline_candidates": ["constructed language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31684467", "label": "Qixia Mountain", "source": "Qixia Mountain (simplified Chinese: 栖霞山; traditional Chinese: 棲霞山; pinyin: Qīxiá shān) is a mountain in the northeast part of Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China.In the Southern Dynasties (420–589), there was a Qixia cottage (栖霞精舍) in the mountain, so the mountain's name Qixia derived from it. Qixia Mountain includes mountain peaks: the main peak, Sanmao Peak, with an elevation of 286 m (938 ft); Dragon Mountain, like a lying dragon, located in northeast; Tiger Mountain, like a fallen tiger, located in the northwest. Qixia Mountain has many scenic spots and historical sites. Its red autumnal leaves and especially its Dongfeitian grottos which were founded in 2000, make it a famous tourist attraction both at home and to abroad.", "target": "tourist attraction in Nanjing", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain", "mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69293456", "label": "Jesus Is King", "source": "Jesus Is King is a 2019 American experimental concert short film by Kanye West and directed by Nick Knight, featuring West's gospel-rap group, Sunday Service. The film accompanied the release of Jesus Is King, West's ninth studio album released after a series of delays on October 25, 2019.", "target": "2019 concert film about the album with the same name", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60574345", "label": "energy industry", "source": "The energy industry is the totality of all of the industries involved in the production and sale of energy, including fuel extraction, manufacturing, refining and distribution. Modern society consumes large amounts of fuel, and the energy industry is a crucial part of the infrastructure and maintenance of society in almost all countries. In particular, the energy industry comprises: the fossil fuel industries, which include petroleum industries (oil companies, petroleum refiners, fuel transport and end-user sales at gas stations) coal industries (extraction and processing) and the natural gas industries (natural gas extraction, and coal gas manufacture, as well as distribution and sales); the electrical power industry, including electricity generation, electric power distribution and sales; the nuclear power industry; the renewable energy industry, comprising alternative energy and sustainable energy companies, including those involved in hydroelectric power, wind power, and solar power generation, and the manufacture, distribution and sale of alternative fuels; and, traditional energy industry based on the collection and distribution of firewood, the use of which, for cooking and heating, is particularly common in poorer countries. The increased dependence during the 20th century on carbon-emitting sources of energy such as fossil fuels, and carbon-emitting renewables such as biomass, means that the energy industry has frequently been an important contributor to pollution and environmental impacts of the economy. Until recently, fossil fuels were the main source of energy generation in most parts of the world, and are a major contributor to global warming and pollution. As part of human adaptation to global warming, many economies are investing in.", "target": "industries involved in producing, selling, and distributing energy (in all forms, e.g. petroleum, natural gas, coal, peat, firewood, nuclear energy, solar energy, hydroelectic energy, wind energy, geothermal energy)", "baseline_candidates": ["industry", "economy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7576997", "label": "Spider: The Secret of Bryce Manor", "source": "Spider: The Secret of Bryce Manor is a 2009 side-scrolling action-puzzle video game for iOS and Android, developed and published by Tiger Style. The player takes control of a spider who comes to reside in to the deserted Bryce Manor and must spin webs to trap various types of insects, whilst simultaneously ascertaining what happened to the former residents of the manor. The game received critical acclaim and won multiple awards. Originally released in August, a Director's Cut update replaced the original version on the App Store in December. The update added ten levels, twenty-four Game Center achievements, new music, more story elements and an insect (the hornet). A year after the game's initial release, a HD version was released for the iPad. In 2013, the game was also released for Android. A sequel, Spider: Rite of the Shrouded Moon, was released in August 2015 for iOS, Android, Windows, Mac and Linux.", "target": "2009 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5970954", "label": "IGE", "source": "IGE (Internet Gaming Entertainment) is a company which trades in virtual currency and accounts for MMORPGs. The company sold virtual goods for early money that granted video-game players power and access to more than a dozen popular online role-playing games. One of the main dealers in virtual economy services, members of the gaming community were often critical of IGE, as its services may allow players to break rules in online games.During its peak, it had offices in Los Angeles, Shanghai as well as headquarters and a customer service center in Hong Kong. It was reformed in 2007 by Jonathan Yantis.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42934448", "label": "Davaajantsangiin Sarangerel", "source": "Davaajantsangiin Sarangerel (Mongolian: Даваажанцангийн Сарангэрэл) (born 1963) is a former photographer, journalist and the current Member of State Great Khural and Minister of Environment and Tourism in U.Khürelsükh's Second Cabinet. She served as Minister of Health in U.Khürelsükh's First Cabinet. Sarangerel was born in Ulaanbaatar in 1963. After finishing her schooling in 1979, she went to Russia to study photography at the Omsk State University (1983). For two years, she worked with the Montsame news agency as a photographer, before receiving her degree in journalism from the Rostov University in 1990.Sarangerel pursued a career in journalism and in 1990 became a correspondent for the Mongolian state broadcaster, where she later became its editor-in-chief. During 1995–99, she served as the director of Mongolia's national news agency. Later, Sarangerel joined TV5 in 2003 and worked as its general director from 2003 to 2005. She has been elected the chair of United Confederation of Mongolian Journalists twice.A member of the Mongolian People's Party, Sarangerel was elected to the State Great Khural for the first time in 2012 and after her reelection four years later was made the Health Minister in Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh's cabinet (2017).", "target": "Mongolian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60505597", "label": "Karantrav", "source": "Karantrav (Russian: Карантрав) is a rural locality (a selo) in Urgalinsky Selsoviet, Belokataysky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 264 as of 2010. There are 4 streets.", "target": "village in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["subdivisions of Russia", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19848202", "label": "Mordviny", "source": "Mordviny (Russian: Мордвины) is a rural locality (a village) in Ivanovskoye Rural Settlement, Kovrovsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 38 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16979556", "label": "Lindacatalina", "source": "Lindacatalina is a genus of crabs in the family Pseudothelphusidae, containing the following species: Lindacatalina brevipenis (Rodríguez & Diaz, 1980) Lindacatalina hauserae (Pretzmann, 1977) Lindacatalina latipenis (Pretzmann, 1968) Lindacatalina orientalis (Pretzmann, 1968) Lindacatalina puyensis (Pretzmann, 1978) Lindacatalina sinuensis Rodríguez, Campos & López, 2002 Lindacatalina sumacensis Rodríguez & von Sternberg, 1998.", "target": "genus of crustaceans", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3811285", "label": "Junie Sanders", "source": "William \"Junie\" Sanders (born May 12, 1972) is an American basketball player. He played high school ball at John Jay High School before he moved on to Independence Community College. He later played in the United States Basketball League and several foreign nations, including Argentina, Luxembourg, Germany, Israel, Poland, Portugal, and Puerto Rico. He played in the NBA D-League with Fayetteville Patriots for 2 years, where in his second year he averaged 16.9 points per game. As a streetball player, Junie has won in the range of $10,000 on a single game. In streetball he scored 39 points on NBA All Star Jerry Stackhouse. In streetball, he was nicknamed \"General Electric\".", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18086293", "label": "Eugenio Colmo", "source": "Eugenio Colmo, known by the pseudonym Golia (1885–1967) was an Italian cartoonist, caricaturist and watercolor painter. Giovanni was born in Turin to a father who worked for the railroad offices. He was the younger brother of the painter Giovanni Colmo. Eugenio lived for many years in Garessio. At elementary school he befriended the poet Guido Gozzano and Tancredi Vigliardi Paravia. He enrolled to study law, but abandoned his studies to become an artist, beginning his career by writing for satirical journals Due di picche and 'Torino ride published in Turin, and the journal Ma chi è?. Between 1904 and 1906, he directed the journal Pasquino. In 1911, he organized an international exhibition of cartoon art held at the same time as the Turin Exposition held on the 50th anniversary of the establishment of Italy. During the years after the first world war, he continued his activity as a humorist, but also made posters and ceramic designs. Between1941 and 1944, he confronted a number of tragedies: his wife committed suicide, his house and studio were destroyed during bombardments, and he lacked commissions. After the war, he found employment with the Gazzetta del Popolo in Turin.A museum in his honor has established in Garessio.", "target": "Italian painter (1885-1967)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7496407", "label": "Shigeto Kawahara", "source": "Shigeto Kawahara (川原 繁人, Kawahara Shigeto, born March 9, 1980) is a Japanese phonetician and phonologist. He is currently an associate professor in the linguistics institute at Keio University. Before he moved to Keio, he worked for the University of Georgia and Rutgers University. He was awarded his BA (liberal arts) from International Christian University in 2002 and Ph.D. (Linguistics) from University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2007 under the supervision of John Kingston.", "target": "Japanese scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49354723", "label": "Jabłonki", "source": "Jabłonki [jaˈbwɔŋkʲi] (Ukrainian: Яблінки, Yablinky) is a village near the Bieszczady mountains, in the administrative district of Gmina Baligród, within Lesko County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) south of Baligród, 24 km (15 mi) south of Lesko, and 88 km (55 mi) south of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 110.", "target": "village in Subcarpathian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q134143", "label": "Maniraptoriformes", "source": "Maniraptoriformes is a clade of dinosaurs with pennaceous feathers and wings that contains ornithomimosaurs and maniraptorans. This group was named by Thomas Holtz, who defined it as \"the most recent common ancestor of Ornithomimus and birds, and all descendants of that common ancestor.\".", "target": "clade of dinosaurs", "baseline_candidates": ["clade"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18390978", "label": "roller sports at the 2015 Pan American Games", "source": "Roller sports at the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto were held from July 11 to 13. The speed skating competitions were held at the St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School. Originally the 400 meters oval would be constructed at CIBC Pan Am/Parapan Am Aquatics Centre and Field House and meant to be temporary but a last minute venue change to St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School meant that the high school got to keep the track after the competition.The figure skating competitions took place at the Direct Energy Centre (Exhibition Centre) – Hall B. Due to naming rights the venue was known as the latter for the duration of the games. A total of eight events (six in speed and two in figure) were contested, with the events being equally split between each gender.", "target": "international sporting event", "baseline_candidates": ["roller figure skating at the Pan American Games"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2701030", "label": "The Horla", "source": "\"The Horla\" (French: Le Horla) is an 1887 short horror story written in the style of a journal by the French writer Guy de Maupassant, after an initial, much shorter version published in the newspaper Gil Blas, October 26, 1886. American horror writer H. P. Lovecraft, in his survey \"Supernatural Horror in Literature\" (1927), provides his own interpretation of the story: Relating the advent in France of an invisible being who lives on water and milk, sways the minds of others, and seems to be the vanguard of a horde of extra-terrestrial organisms arrived on earth to subjugate and overwhelm mankind, this tense narrative is perhaps without peer in its particular department. The story has been cited as an inspiration for Lovecraft's own \"The Call of Cthulhu\", which also features an extraterrestrial being who influences minds and who is destined to conquer humanity.The word horla itself is not French, and is a neologism. Charlotte Mandell, who has translated \"The Horla\" for publisher Melville House, suggests in an afterword that the word \"horla\" is a portmanteau of the French words hors (\"outside\"), and là (\"there\") and that \"le horla\" sounds like \"the Outsider, the outer, the one Out There,\" and can be transliterally interpreted as \"the 'what's out there'\".", "target": "short story by Guy de Maupassant", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1750837", "label": "Tumbleweed Connection", "source": "Tumbleweed Connection is the third studio album by English singer-songwriter Elton John. It was recorded at Trident Studios, London, England in March 1970, and released in October 1970 in the United Kingdom and January 1971 in the United States. It is a concept album based on country and western/Americana themes. All songs are written by John and Bernie Taupin, with the exception of \"Love Song\" by Lesley Duncan. In 2012, Tumbleweed Connection was ranked number 458 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. The album peaked at number two on the UK Albums Chart and number five on the US Billboard 200 chart. In the US, it was certified gold in March 1971 and platinum in August 1998 by the RIAA.", "target": "1970 studio album by Elton John", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18758218", "label": "Lema Mabidi", "source": "Lema Mabidi (born 11 June 1993) is a Congolese professional footballer who last played as a midfielder for Iraqi club Al-Diwaniya FC.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42851440", "label": "Sharkham Point Iron Mine", "source": "Sharkham Point Iron Mine was an iron mine at Sharkham Point, near the town of Brixham in Devon. The mine was worked for around 125 years and employed at its peak 100 workers. It was primarily an open cast mine, but five shafts and six adits are also mentioned in reports of the site. Some are still accessible today, but since the area was used as a rubbish tip in the 1950s and 60s, much of the archaeology has been covered over.", "target": "iron mine in Devon, England", "baseline_candidates": ["mine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55825385", "label": "Mian ljaz Hussain Bhatti", "source": "Mian Ijaz Hussain Bhatti is a Pakistani politician who has been a member of the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab since August 2018.", "target": "politician in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15997232", "label": "TSPAN31", "source": "Tetraspanin-31 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the TSPAN31 gene.The protein encoded by this gene is a member of the transmembrane 4 superfamily, also known as the tetraspanin family. Most of these members are cell-surface proteins that are characterized by the presence of four hydrophobic domains. The proteins mediate signal transduction events that play a role in the regulation of cell development, activation, growth and motility. This encoded protein is thought to be involved in growth-related cellular processes. This gene is associated with tumorigenesis and osteosarcoma.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q594189", "label": "Mandau", "source": "Mandau is the traditional weapon of the Dayak people of Borneo. It is also known as Parang Ilang among the Bidayuh, Iban and Penan people, Malat by the Kayan people or Baieng by the Kenyah people or Bandau by Lun Bawang or Pelepet/Felepet by Lundayeh. Mandau is mostly ceremonial. However, a less elaborate version called Ambang is used as an everyday practical tool. Associated with the Headhunting Ceremony, where people would gather to attack other tribes, and gather heads to be used in various festivities, Mandau is both a work of art in itself and a weapon.", "target": "Indonesian traditional weapon of Dayak people", "baseline_candidates": ["weapon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2274122", "label": "Sphaeromorda nummata", "source": "Sphaeromorda nummata is a species of beetle in the genus Sphaeromorda of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea. It was described in 1974 by Pankow.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15718456", "label": "T. K. Rama Rao", "source": "T. K. Rama Rao (7 October 1929 – 10 November 1988) was an Indian novelist of Kannada literature. He became popular in the early 1970s when his book Bangaaradha Manushya was made into a hit movie in the Kannada film industry. It inspired many youths to leave the city and return to their villages to look after their ancestral land. He won the Karnataka Sahitya Academy. award. Many of his works are detective novels, which sold millions of copies.", "target": "Indian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1857827", "label": "Vayigash", "source": "Vayigash or Vaigash (וַיִּגַּשׁ‎ — Hebrew for \"and he drew near\" or \"then he drew near,\" the first word of the parashah) is the eleventh weekly Torah portion (פָּרָשָׁה‎, parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading. It constitutes Genesis 44:18–47:27. In the parashah, Judah pleads on behalf of his brother Benjamin, Joseph reveals himself to his brothers, Jacob comes down to Egypt, and Joseph's administration of Egypt saves lives but transforms all the Egyptians into bondmen. The parashah is made up of 5,680 Hebrew letters, 1,480 Hebrew words, 106 verses, and 178 lines in a Torah Scroll (סֵפֶר תּוֹרָה‎, Sefer Torah). Jews read it the eleventh Sabbath after Simchat Torah, generally in December or early January.", "target": "Eleventh portion in the annual Jewish cycle of weekly Torah reading", "baseline_candidates": ["Weekly Torah portion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28608013", "label": "Psammaletes", "source": "Psammaletes is a genus of sand wasps in the family Crabronidae. There are about nine described species in Psammaletes.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4787955", "label": "Ardenheim", "source": "Ardenheim is an unincorporated community in Henderson Township, Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania about 4 miles east of Huntingdon. This village is where the Raystown Branch and Frankstown Branch of the Juniata River meet. Ardenheim is located between the boroughs of Huntingdon and Mill Creek.", "target": "unincorporated community in Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q641124", "label": "Rizvan Umarov", "source": "Rizvan Sarutdinoviç Umarov (born 5 April 1993) is a professional footballer who plays as a centre forward for Leningradets Leningrad Oblast. Born in Russia, he represented Azerbaijan at international level.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17992910", "label": "2005–06 F.C. Crotone season", "source": "The 2005–06 season was the 96th season in the existence of F.C. Crotone and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of Italian football. In addition to the domestic league, Crotone participated in this season's edition of the Coppa Italia.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q973034", "label": "Phengaris alcon", "source": "Phengaris alcon, the Alcon blue or Alcon large blue, is a butterfly of the family Lycaenidae and is found in Europe and across the Palearctic to Siberia and Mongolia.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20644081", "label": "Miguel Camargo", "source": "Miguel Elías Camargo Cañizales (born 5 September 1993) is a Panamanian footballer who currently plays for Deportivo Táchira.", "target": "Panamanian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1092448", "label": "Cinema 4D", "source": "Cinema 4D is a 3D software suite developed by the German company Maxon.", "target": "3D computer graphics software", "baseline_candidates": ["3D computer graphics software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29950446", "label": "Santiago Villarreal", "source": "Santiago Agustín Villarreal (born 28 February 1996) is an Argentine footballer who plays for Deportivo Armenio.", "target": "Argentinian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2057744", "label": "Bart Vanheule", "source": "Bart Vanheule (born 10 November 1983) is a Belgian professional road bicycle racer who rode for UCI Professional Continental team Chocolade Jacques–Topsport Vlaanderen between 2006 and 2009.", "target": "racing cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62630625", "label": "Peter Doherty and the Puta Madres", "source": "Peter Doherty and the Puta Madres are a British band, formed by Pete Doherty (lead vocals, rhythm guitar) and is his third musical project after the Libertines and Babyshambles. The band's first album, the self titled Peter Doherty and The Puta Madres was released on 26 April 2019. On 28 January they released their debut single, \"Who's Been Having You Over\", followed by \"Paradise is Under Your Nose\" on 5 April.", "target": "European band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13012454", "label": "Kanok Ratwongsakul", "source": "Kanok Ratwongsakul (Thai: กนก รัตน์วงศ์สกุล; nickname: Jing–จิ้ง) is well-known Thai journalist, now he served as Senior Vice President of the Nation Multimedia Group (NMG).", "target": "Thai journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56113", "label": "Quinta Normal", "source": "Quinta Normal is a commune of Chile located in Santiago Province, Santiago Metropolitan Region. It is named after a large park in the area.", "target": "commune of Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Chile"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q557305", "label": "Phil Knight", "source": "Philip Hampson Knight (born February 24, 1938) is an American billionaire businessman. He is the co-founder and chairman emeritus of Nike, Inc., and was previously chairman and CEO of the company. As of July 23, 2020, Knight was ranked by Forbes as the 24th richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of US$54.5 billion. He is also the owner of the stop motion film production company Laika. Knight is a graduate of the University of Oregon and Stanford Graduate School of Business. He ran track under coach Bill Bowerman at the University of Oregon, with whom he would co-found Nike. Knight has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to each of his alma maters, as well as Oregon Health & Science University. He has donated over $2 billion to the three institutions.", "target": "American billionaire and co-founder of Nike", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3996935", "label": "Town of Plenty", "source": "\"Town of Plenty\" is a song by English musician Elton John from the album Reg Strikes Back and was released in 1988. The song was the first album track to be heard after John's throat surgery. Pete Townshend of The Who plays acoustic guitar on the track, while Davey Johnstone plays electric. Among the backing vocalists contributing to the track are Elton's former bandmates Nigel Olsson and Dee Murray. This would be the final album of Elton John that Murray would contribute to, prior to his death from a stroke in 1992. The single release of \"Town of Plenty\" was the second to be issued from Reg Strikes Back in the United Kingdom where it barely charted; it reached number 74 (one place above the lowest chart position available in 1988) and was gone by the next week. The single was not released in the USA. The B-side to the single was \"Whipping Boy\" from the album Too Low for Zero, which was released five years earlier. A CD single of the release was also issued; this contained the two aforementioned tracks as well as \"Saint\" and \"I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues\", also from Too Low for Zero. A limited edition 7-inch single was also issued, which included four postcards, each depicting Elton in a particular stage costume. This coincided with Elton's Sotheby's auction in which the costumes pictured were sold.", "target": "1988 single by Elton John", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58568776", "label": "La Tour-en-Maurienne", "source": "La Tour-en-Maurienne is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France. It was established on 1 January 2019 by merger of the former communes of Hermillon (the seat), Le Châtel and Pontamafrey-Montpascal.", "target": "commune in France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q565065", "label": "Ateneo Puertorriqueño", "source": "The Ateneo Puertorriqueño (Puerto Rican Athenaeum), is a cultural institution in Puerto Rico. Founded on April 30, 1876, it has been called Puerto Rico's oldest cultural institution, however, it is actually its third oldest overall and second culturally, after the Bar Association of Puerto Rico and the Casino of Mayagüez.One of its founders was the playwright, Alejandro Tapia y Rivera. The Athenaeum was the first to give accolades and awards to artists and writers such as José Gautier Benítez, José de Diego, Manuel María Sama, Francisco Oller, Manuel Fernández Juncos, Lola Rodríguez de Tió and Luis Lloréns Torres.The Athenaeum serves as a museum, school, library, and performance hall for the arts in Puerto Rico. It hosts a number of contests, conferences, and exhibits each year, presenting Puerto Rican art, literature, and music. Since 1937 the use of the spaces of the Athenaeum has been limited to activities it sponsors. Its headquarters are located in Puerta de Tierra, adjacent to Old San Juan, in a strip that also houses the \"Casa de España\", the Carnegie Library, the Capitol complex and the Puerto Rico Olympic Committee headquarters.", "target": "cultural institution in Puerto Rico", "baseline_candidates": ["athenaeum", "art collection"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7789186", "label": "Thomas E. O'Donnell", "source": "Thomas E. O'Donnell (1841 – c. 1875) was one of the driving forces in the New York City draft riots, when he was 22 years old. He was a public opponent of the draft, so he was promptly arrested. Though his jail time is unknown, it is known that he died at age 34 due to heart problems. He is best represented in The Devil's Own Work: The Civil War Draft Riots and the Fight to Reconstruct America.", "target": "American activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1365642", "label": "Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Suva", "source": "The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Suva (Latin: Archidioecesis Suvana) is a Metropolitan Archdiocese in Fiji. It is responsible for the suffragan dioceses of Rarotonga and Tarawa and Nauru and —as of 21 March 2003—the Mission Sui Iuris of Funafuti. The archdiocese was created in 1966, to succeed the Apostolic Vicariate of Fiji.", "target": "archdiocese", "baseline_candidates": ["Roman Catholic metropolitan archdiocese"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2438808", "label": "Lake Tohmajärvi", "source": "Lake Tohmajärvi is a medium-sized shallow lake in the Tohmajoki main catchment area. It is located in the North Karelia region, in the very east of Finland, just outside the town of Tohmajärvi next to the border with Russia.", "target": "lake in Tohmajärvi, Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6376706", "label": "Kathleen Fitzwilliam", "source": "Kathleen Mary Fitzwilliam (1826–1894) was an English actress and singer appearing regularly on the London stage in the mid 19th century.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60016", "label": "Kiss the Girls", "source": "Kiss the Girls is a 1997 American neo-noir psychological thriller film directed by Gary Fleder and starring Morgan Freeman, Ashley Judd, and Cary Elwes. The screenplay by David Klass is based on James Patterson's best-selling 1995 novel of the same name. A sequel titled Along Came a Spider was released in 2001.", "target": "1997 film by Gary Fleder", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q285884", "label": "Alpine marmot", "source": "The alpine marmot (Marmota marmota) is a large ground-dwelling squirrel, from the genus of marmots. It is found in high numbers in mountainous areas of central and southern Europe, at heights between 800 and 3,200 m (2,600–10,500 ft) in the Alps, Carpathians, Tatras and Northern Apennines. In 1948 they were reintroduced with success in the Pyrenees, where the alpine marmot had disappeared at end of the Pleistocene epoch.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3888227", "label": "PTPN22", "source": "Protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor type 22 (PTPN22) is a cytoplasmatic protein encoded by gene PTPN22 and a member of PEST family of protein tyrosine phosphatases. This protein is also called \"PEST-domain Enriched Phosphatase\" (\"PEP\") or \"Lymphoid phosphatase\" (\"LYP\"). The name LYP is used strictly for the human protein encoded by PTPN22, but the name PEP is used only for its mouse homolog. However, both proteins have similar biological functions and show 70% identity in amino acid sequence. PTPN22 functions as a negative regulator of T cell receptor (TCR) signaling, which maintains homeostasis of T cell compartment.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33508735", "label": "Turowice, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "source": "Turowice [turɔˈvit͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Fałków, within Końskie County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north-west of Fałków, 26 km (16 mi) west of Końskie, and 52 km (32 mi) north-west of the regional capital Kielce.The village has a population of 360.", "target": "village in Świętokrzyskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3376446", "label": "Peter Barr", "source": "Peter Barr (1826–1909) was a Scottish nurseryman and merchant, best known for daffodils.", "target": "British botanist (1826-1909)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4954691", "label": "Bradford High School", "source": "Bradford High School is located in Starke, Florida, United States. It serves grades 9–12 students in the Bradford County School District. There are approximately 813 students currently enrolled in Bradford High School as of school year 2017–2019.", "target": "high school in Starke, Bradford County, Florida", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q186391", "label": "Theodor Svedberg", "source": "Theodor Svedberg (30 August 1884 – 25 February 1971) was a Swedish chemist and Nobel laureate for his research on colloids and proteins using the ultracentrifuge. Svedberg was active at Uppsala University from the mid 1900s to late 1940s. While at Uppsala, Svedberg started as a docent before becoming the university's physical chemistry head in 1912. After leaving Uppsala in 1949, Svedberg was in charge of the Gustaf Werner Institute until 1967. Apart from his 1926 Nobel Prize, Svedberg was named a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 1944 and became part of the National Academy of Sciences in 1945.", "target": "Swedish chemist (1884-1971)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5123293", "label": "City Mall", "source": "City Mall was a shopping mall located in Eroii Revolutiei square, Bucharest, Romania. Opened in 2005, the construction was based on an incomplete hunger circus abandoned after the fall of the Communist system.The mall became insolvent in 2012, and was bought by real estate investor Ioannis Papalekas. In March 2013, Papalekas announced plans to convert the mall into an office building.", "target": "shopping mall located in Eroii Revolutiei square, Bucharest, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25651120", "label": "Sheykh Jaber", "source": "Sheykh Jaber (Persian: شيخ جابر, also Romanized as Sheykh Jāber) is a village in Qoltuq Rural District, in the Central District of Zanjan County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 311, in 67 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4985963", "label": "Buffet family", "source": "The Buffet family was a family of French musical instrument makers.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15429720", "label": "Explorers of the Body", "source": "Explorers of the Body is a book by Steven Lehrer that tells the story of epochal medical discoveries which have profoundly affected human health, and the men and women who made them. From the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians to modern medical science, the book covers the gamut of medical advances, among them: Edward Jenner and smallpox vaccination Gregor Mendel and genetics Marie Curie and radioactivity Jonas Salk and the polio vaccine William Harvey and the circulation of the blood Louis Pasteur and rabies vaccination Joseph Lister and the rise of modern surgery.", "target": "book by Steven Lehrer", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4586367", "label": "1990 Washington Redskins season", "source": "The 1990 season was the Washington Redskins' 59th in the National Football League, their 54th representing Washington, D.C. and the tenth under head coach Joe Gibbs. The team matched on their 10–6 record from 1989, this time it was enough to earn them' their first playoff appearance since 1987. The Redskins season ended when they fell to the San Francisco 49ers 28–10 in the Divisional Playoffs.", "target": "franchise's 59th season in the National Football League", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6106075", "label": "J. J. Jameson", "source": "J. J. Jameson (real name: Norman A. Porter Jr.) is a self-proclaimed poet and activist, who was active in Chicago, Illinois from the mid-1980s until March 2005. His work is marked by an ironic and humorous style.", "target": "American poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42365314", "label": "Preguiça Lighthouse", "source": "Farol da Preguiça is a lighthouse located near the shore of Baía de São Jorge in Preguiça on the island of São Nicolau in northern Cape Verde. It is a masonry hut, coloured white. It sits at about 18 meters above sea level in the village, it is seven meters tall and its focal height is at 25 meters above sea level. Its focal range is 5 nautical miles (9.3 km; 5.8 mi). Its characteristic is Fl (2+1) R 15s.", "target": "lighthouse in Cape Verde", "baseline_candidates": ["lighthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18922604", "label": "WROB-LD", "source": "WROB-LD, virtual channel 25 (UHF digital channel 26), is a low-powered Buzzr-affiliated television station licensed to Topeka, Kansas, United States. The station is owned by Heartland Broadcasting, LLC. WROB-LD maintains offices located in the Two Pershing Square Center, near Crown Center and Union Station in Kansas City and a location in Topeka. KCKS-LD simulcasts on WROB-LD and KMJC-LD in Louisburg, Kansas.", "target": "television station in Kansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["television station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7336803", "label": "Ritsurin Station", "source": "Ritsurin Station (栗林駅, Ritsurin-eki) is a railway station on the Kōtoku Line in Takamatsu, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Shikoku and has the station number \"T26\".", "target": "railway station in Takamatsu, Kagawa prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station", "elevated station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7526950", "label": "Sir George Williams Affair", "source": "The Sir George Williams affair (also referred to as \"The Sir George Williams Computer Centre Incident\") was a 1969 event at Sir George Williams University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, now a part of Concordia University. It was the largest student occupation in Canadian history, and resulted in $2 million of property damage.", "target": "student occupation", "baseline_candidates": ["protest", "student protest"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6984304", "label": "Neapoli Municipal Stadium", "source": "Neapoli Stadium is a football stadium in Nikaia, Piraeus, Attica. The stadium was completed in 1965, and currently has a seating capacity of about 6,000.The stadium is mostly used for football matches and is the home field for Ionikos F.C. Record attendance is 6,565 for a match against Olympiacos F.C. in 1990. On June 13, 2009, it was also used as the field for the Rugby Sevens' finals of the Hellenic Rugby Federation.", "target": "Football stadium in Neapoli, Nikaia, Greece. Home of the Ionikos FC.", "baseline_candidates": ["association football venue", "sports venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7752453", "label": "The Motorship", "source": "The Motorship is a shipping magazine published 11 times per year by Mercator Media, a specialist maritime publisher based in Fareham in the United Kingdom. The magazine has an ABC audited and certified circulation. The November 2009 audited issue had an ABC certified average circulation of 7253, of which 62.2%, went to Europe, 24.2% to SouthEast Asia and 11.6% to the Americas.", "target": "shipping magazine published in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5064862", "label": "Buchin", "source": "Buchin (Hungarian: Bökény) is a commune in Caraș-Severin County, western Romania with a population of 2,147 people. It is composed of five villages: Buchin, Lindenfeld (Karánberek; German: Lindenfeld), Poiana (Sebesmező), Prisian (Perestyén) and Valea Timișului (Körpa). It is situated in the historical region of Banat. Lindenfeld village has been depopulated since 1998.", "target": "commune in Caraș-Severin County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q806283", "label": "Bandeirantes", "source": "The Bandeirantes ([bɐ̃dejˈɾɐ̃t(ʃ)is]), literally \"flag-carriers\", were slavers, explorers, adventurers, and fortune hunters in early Colonial Brazil. They are largely responsible for Brazil's great expansion westward, far beyond the Tordesillas Line of 1494, by which Pope Alexander VI divided the new continent into a western, Castilian section, and an eastern, Portuguese section.The bandeirantes were also known as Paulistas and Mamelucos. They mostly hailed from the São Paulo region, called the Captaincy of São Vicente until 1709 and then as the Captaincy of São Paulo. The São Paulo settlement served as the home base for the most famous bandeirantes. Some bandeirante leaders were descendants of first- and second-generation Portuguese who settled in São Paulo, but the bulk of their numbers was made of people of mameluco background (people of both European and Indian ancestries) and natives. Miscegenation was the norm in that society, and its initial family structure was polygamous (the father, his indigenous wives, and their children). Though they originally aimed to capture and enslave Indians, the bandeirantes later began to focus their expeditions on finding gold, silver, and diamond mines. As they ventured into unmapped regions in search of profit and adventure, they expanded the effective borders of the Brazilian colony. The \"bandeirantes\" spoke the Língua Geral, based on Tupi, and were the main source of toponyms in the Brazilian interior.", "target": "paulistas sertanists", "baseline_candidates": ["slave trader", "occupation", "sertanista"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16900802", "label": "Studio Voltaire", "source": "Studio Voltaire is a non-profit gallery and artist studios based in Clapham, South London. The organisation focuses on contemporary arts, staging a celebrated public programme of exhibitions, performances, and live events. Studio Voltaire invests in the production of new work and often gives artists their first opportunity for a solo exhibition in London. The gallery space is housed in a Victorian former Methodist Chapel and artist commissions frequently take the form of site-specific installation, focusing on the unique architecture of the space. Studio Voltaire also provides affordable workspace to over 40 artists and hosts artist residencies with a variety of national and international partners. Since 2011 the Not Our Class programme has provided a series of participation and research projects for local audiences. In 2011 Studio Voltaire was awarded with regular funding from Arts Council England as a National Portfolio Organisation. Joe Scotland is the Director of Studio Voltaire.", "target": "British charitable organization", "baseline_candidates": ["art gallery", "nonprofit organization", "charitable organization", "studio"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q904256", "label": "Dudley Do-Right", "source": "Dudley Do-Right is a 1999 American slapstick comedy film written and directed by Hugh Wilson, based on Jay Ward's Dudley Do-Right, produced by Davis Entertainment for Universal Studios. The film stars Brendan Fraser as the cartoon's titular Mountie with supporting roles from Sarah Jessica Parker, Alfred Molina, and Eric Idle.", "target": "1999 film by Hugh Wilson", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5587108", "label": "Gorłówko", "source": "Gorłówko [ɡɔrˈwufkɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Stare Juchy, within Ełk County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north-east of Stare Juchy, 19 km (12 mi) north-west of Ełk, and 115 km (71 mi) east of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "target": "village in Warmian-Masurian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7711639", "label": "TheGATE.ca", "source": "TheGATE.ca, referred to as The GATE, is a Canadian online entertainment website that reports on movies, television, music, video games, leisure travel and events, with reviews, news, and interviews. Launched in November 2000, The GATE is owned and operated by W. Andrew Powell with contributions from a variety of writers, including author Christopher Heard, among other freelance contributors. In 2022, The GATE celebrated more than 20 years of publishing, sharing retrospective articles and social media posts featuring videos, photos, and audio from the publication's archives. The publication also launched memberships on its website and YouTube channel. In June 2014, The GATE reported serving 124,000 unique visitors per month.Major coverage highlights throughout the year include the Toronto International Film Festival, Juno Awards, the Academy Awards, and an annual series of Holiday Gift Guides.", "target": "Canadian news websites", "baseline_candidates": ["website"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28232768", "label": "Inhuman Condition", "source": "Inhuman Condition is a Canadian web series created and written by R. J. Lackie, directed by Jared Pelletier, and starring Torri Higginson. The series premiered on the KindaTV YouTube channel on 4 July 2016. The series takes place in a world where the supernatural is an accepted part of life, and follows the story of a therapist who focuses on supernatural patients. The series was selected for funding the Independent Production Fund in 2014.The first season consisted of 33 three-to-sixteen minute episodes, which streamed on KindaTV.", "target": "Canadian web series", "baseline_candidates": ["web series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5079748", "label": "Charles Kennedy-Purvis", "source": "Admiral Sir Charles Edward Kennedy-Purvis (2 May 1884 – 26 May 1946) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to be Deputy First Sea Lord.", "target": "Royal Navy admiral (1884-1946)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5091061", "label": "Diplodactylus tessellatus", "source": "Diplodactylus tessellatus, commonly known as the tessellated gecko, is a small terrestrial lizard found distributed in inland New South Wales, Queensland, Northern Territory, South Australia and the north western corner of Victoria. The tessellated gecko is one of 26 species in the genus Diplodactylus all of which are confined to continental Australia. A small gecko varying in colour from grey to rich reddish-brown with a highly variable dorsal pattern.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2364430", "label": "FIBA Under-21 World Championship", "source": "The FIBA Under-21 World Championship was a men's under-21-only basketball competition organized by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA). It was known as the FIBA 22 & Under World Championship before FIBA lowered the age limit to 21 years in December 1998, and had its name changed to World Championship for Young Men. The competition adopted its final name in 2004. FIBA later discontinued the world championship for this age group.", "target": "international basketball tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["world championship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q703611", "label": "Branko Lustig", "source": "Branko Lustig (10 June 1932 – 14 November 2019) was a Croatian film producer best known for winning Academy Awards for Best Picture for Schindler's List and Gladiator. He is the only person born in the territory of present-day Croatia to have won two Academy Awards.", "target": "Croatian film producer (1932-2019)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6774470", "label": "Martha Long", "source": "Martha Long is an Irish author best known for the 'Ma...' series.", "target": "writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4897909", "label": "Bethel Johnson", "source": "Bethel Johnson (born February 11, 1979) is a former American football wide receiver. He was drafted by the New England Patriots in the second round of the 2003 NFL Draft. He played college football at Texas A&M. Johnson earned two Super Bowl rings with the Patriots in Super Bowl XXXVIII and Super Bowl XXXIX. He has also been a member of the New Orleans Saints, Minnesota Vikings, Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans and Toronto Argonauts.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22344104", "label": "Petretsovo", "source": "Petretsovo (Russian: Петрецово) is a rural locality (a settlement) in Cherdynsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 171 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Cherdynsky District, Perm Krai, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["posyolok"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q612714", "label": "Sunrise Senior Living", "source": "Sunrise Senior Living is an American operator of senior living communities. As of 2022, it operates over more than 270 assisted living facilities throughout the United States and Canada making it the sixth-largest senior living provider in the U.S.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5011363", "label": "CHST12", "source": "Carbohydrate sulfotransferase 12 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the CHST12 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q430060", "label": "Camugliano", "source": "Camugliano is a village in Tuscany, central Italy, administratively a frazione of the comune of Ponsacco, province of Pisa. At the time of the 2006 parish census its population was 40.Camugliano is about 32 km from Pisa and 2 km from Ponsacco.", "target": "frazione of Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["frazione"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18469955", "label": "Valadares Gaia FC", "source": "Valadares Gaia Futebol Clube is a Portuguese football club based in Valadares (Vila Nova de Gaia) in the Grande Porto.", "target": "Portuguese football club", "baseline_candidates": ["women's association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13562881", "label": "Chantal Gibney", "source": "Chantal Zita Gibney (born 28 December 1980) is an Irish former competitive swimmer who specialised in sprint and middle-distance freestyle events. Gibney became a semi-finalist in the 200-metre freestyle at the European Championships, and later represented Ireland, as a 19-year-old, at the 2000 Summer Olympics. She also holds numerous Irish records, long or short course, in a middle-distance freestyle double (200 and 400 m), and fifteen All-American honours, while attending the University of Florida.", "target": "Irish swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6938129", "label": "Murder on the Fourth of July", "source": "Murder on the Fourth of July is a Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys Supermystery crossover novel, published in 1996.", "target": "Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys Supermystery novel", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7893062", "label": "1988 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania", "source": "The 1988 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania took place on November 8, 1988, and was part of the 1988 United States presidential election. Voters chose 25 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Pennsylvania voted for the Republican nominee, Vice President George H. W. Bush, over the Democratic nominee, Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis. Bush won the state by a narrow margin of 2.31%, which made Pennsylvania about 5.5% more Democratic than the nation-at-large. This was the last election where Pennsylvania would be carried by a Republican presidential candidate until 2016 and the last election done so by a Republican with a majority of the vote. Northampton and Luzerne counties, both statewide bellwethers, would also not vote Republican again until 2016. This was also the first election since 1932 where Pennsylvania did not vote the same as neighboring New York, another phenomenon that would not occur again until 2016. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which three Philadelphia-area suburban counties--Bucks, Montgomery, and Delaware--as well as Lehigh County have voted Republican at the presidential level. Bush became the first ever Republican to win the White House without carrying Indiana County, as well as the first to do so without carrying Clinton County since Benjamin Harrison in 1888.", "target": "selection of Pennsylvania's presidential electors", "baseline_candidates": ["United States presidential election in Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21929674", "label": "Cape Melville National Park", "source": "Cape Melville is a national park in the Shire of Cook, Queensland, Australia.", "target": "national park of Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["national park of Australia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13233018", "label": "Agathotoma asthenika", "source": "Agathotoma asthenika is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Mangeliidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17010594", "label": "Minuscule 520", "source": "Minuscule 520 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 264 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 12th century. Scrivener labelled it by number 506. The manuscript has complex contents.", "target": "New Testament manuscript", "baseline_candidates": ["manuscript"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20570986", "label": "Andoharanofotsy", "source": "Andoharanofotsy is a suburb and a rural commune in Analamanga Region, in the Central Highlands of Madagascar. It belongs to the district of Antananarivo-Atsimondrano and its populations numbers to 58,878 in 2018.The National Road 1 crosses this suburb.", "target": "place in Analamanga, Madagascar", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Madagascar"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1388790", "label": "Stal Mielec", "source": "Stal Mielec (Polish pronunciation: [ˈstal ˈmjɛlɛt͡s]) is a Polish football club based in Mielec, Poland. The club was established on April 10, 1939. Historically, the club has enjoyed great successes within Poland's Ekstraklasa, winning the title twice (in 1973 and 1976) but had undergone significant management changes and financial difficulties within the past two decades, which forced the club from participation in the Poland's top league. After winning the third-tier II liga title in 2016, Stal Mielec was promoted to I liga. After finishing first in I liga in 2020, Stal Mielec was promoted to the Ekstraklasa for the first time since the 1995–96 season.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25549239", "label": "Baytu railway station", "source": "Baytu railway station is a railway station in Barmer district in Rajasthan state of India.", "target": "railway station in Rajasthan, India", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4258887", "label": "Yevgeny Leonov-Gladyshev", "source": "Yevgeny Borisovich Leonov-Gladyshev (Russian: Евге́ний Бори́сович Лео́нов-Гла́дышев; born 24 Jan 1952, Vilnius, Lithuanian SSR, USSR) is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, and film director. He was awarded Honored Artist of the Russian Federation (1993). and People's Artist of the Russian Federation (2007).", "target": "Soviet and Russian actor and film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4778125", "label": "AnyKode Marilou", "source": "anyKode Marilou is a modeling and simulation environment for mobile robots, humanoids, articulated arms and parallel robots operating in real-world conditions that respect the laws of physics. This robotics suite is used in research centers and industry for various projects like humanoid architectures, wheeled and multi legged vehicles, and multi-robot systems (Multi-agents). It also has a real-time engine that uses the ODE (Open Dynamics Engine) for collisions detecting and dynamics management. Various 'real world' variables like forces, torques, masses, damping, friction and others can be adjusted directly to the objects surfaces.", "target": "Software", "baseline_candidates": ["software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6984131", "label": "Neal L. First", "source": "Neal Lloyd First (October 8, 1930 – November 20, 2014) was an American biologist.", "target": "American biologist (1930-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6227548", "label": "John Crawfurd", "source": "John William Frederick Arthur Crawfurd (15 November 1878 in London, England – 22 June 1939 in Dublin, Ireland) was an Irish cricketer. He was a left-handed batsman and a left-arm fast-medium bowler.Crawfurd attended Merchant Taylors' School, Northwood, before going up to St John's College, Oxford. He started his first-class cricket career with Oxford University, for whom he played 14 first-class matches in 1900 and 1901. He later played two first-class matches against the University, one for Harlequins and another for an \"L Robinson's XI\" that featured his fellow Irish international Tim O'Brien. He also represented the University at Rugby Union.He played four times for Ireland between 1907 and 1923, making his debut against Yorkshire. Three of his matches for Ireland had first-class status.At his death in 1939, the notice in The Times cites him as being \"of Guinness's Brewery, Dublin\".", "target": "Irish rugby union player (1878-1939)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6788063", "label": "Matsudaira Shigeyoshi", "source": "Matsudaira Shigeyoshi (松平 重吉, 1493 – October 5, 1580) Also known as Jirōzaemon (次郎左右衛門). Head of the Nōmi-Matsudaira (能見 松平), a branch of the main Matsudaira house which later became the Tokugawa shogunal family. Shigeyoshi served three successive generations of the main Matsudaira line: Kiyoyasu, Hirotada, and (Tokugawa) Ieyasu. Served as Okazaki-sōbugyō (Okazaki Magistrate) with Torii Tadayoshi, father of the famous Torii Mototada. Shigeyoshi's 4th son Matsudaira Shigekatsu went on to be the daimyō of Tōtōmi-Yokosuka (26,000 koku).", "target": "[] samurai from Nomi Matsudaira clan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q608710", "label": "Double Vision", "source": "Double Vision was a Spanish Euro Dance duo, consisting of Carol McCloskey and DJ Pedro Cervero. They were successful mostly in Germany, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands and Switzerland with their songs with catchy lyrics with techno beats. After initial success in Spain, Double Vision's single \"Knockin'\" released in 1995 enjoyed big popularity in Germany reaching Top 5 in German, Dutch and Belgian Singles Chart and a Top 10 hit in the Swiss charts in addition to topping the Austrian Singles Chart for 7 consecutive weeks. The follow up single \"All Right\" charted in Germany and Austria.", "target": "Spanish band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical duo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22062374", "label": "Miraí", "source": "Miraí is a Brazilian municipality located in the state of Minas Gerais. The city belongs to the mesoregion of Zona da Mata and to the microregion of Muriaé. Main Rivers: Fubá and Muriaé.", "target": "Brazilian municipality located in the state of Minas Gerais", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q973226", "label": "Tristán Ulloa", "source": "Tristán Ulloa (born 6 May 1970) is a Spanish actor, writer, and director.", "target": "Spanish actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12140433", "label": "Tchan Fou-li", "source": "Tchan Fou-li (simplified Chinese: 陈复礼; traditional Chinese: 陳復禮; pinyin: Chén Fùlǐ; June 21, 1916 – September 11, 2018) was a Hong Kong photographer who worked to develop distinctive Chinese forms of photography and to establish photography as a serious art form in Hong Kong. He is known for his photographs, described as evoking the artistic values and composition of Chinese landscape paintings. A New York Times reviewer called him \"one of the great visual artists of his time\" because of his \"carefully crafted images that celebrate the beauty of the human condition and the majesty of nature.\".", "target": "Chinese photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1463552", "label": "Kubenskoe", "source": "Lake Kubenskoye (Russian: Кубенское озеро) is a large and shallow lake in Vologda Oblast of Russia, situated at the height of 110.1 metres above mean sea level, stretching for 54 km from north-west to south-east. The lake area is 648 square kilometres (250 sq mi), without islands — 407 square kilometres (157 sq mi). Its average depth is 1.2 metres (3.9 ft). The lake is known for its frequents storms and seasonal fluctuations of water level. The average seasonal variation is 2.4 metres (7.9 ft) and the maximum is 5.49 metres (18.0 ft). The lake is elongated from the northwest to the southeast. It is the source of the river Sukhona, which flows out in the southeastern corner of the lake. Administratively, the lake is divided between Vologodsky District (west), Sokolsky District (southeast), and Ust-Kubinsky District (east) of Vologda Oblast. In terms of the area, Lake Kubenskoye is the fourth natural lake of Vologda Oblast (behind Lake Onega, Lake Beloye, and Lake Vozhe) and the fifth lake (also behind the Rybinsk Reservoir). The area of the basin of the lake is 14,700 square kilometres (5,700 sq mi). The basin occupies much of the central and northern parts of Vologda Oblast, as well as parts of Konoshsky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast. The major tributary of the lake is the Kubena.", "target": "lake in Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7831943", "label": "Trade Development Bank", "source": "Trade Development Bank (TDB) was a private Geneva-based bank built by Edmond Safra, who also founded Brazil's sixth largest bank, Banco Safra, in the 1950s. Beginning with only US$1 million in funds, TDB grew into the flagship of Safra’s international banking empire, with nearly US$5 billion in deposits by the early 1980s. TDB's mode of banking was different from much of that done in the Western world, as it relied on intimacy and familiarity with depositors' personalities rather than balance sheets and hard numbers. In 1983, Safra sold TDB for US$550 million to American Express. The acquisition was part of a plan by American Express chairman Jim Robinson to break into the private depositor banking industry; TDB was intended to be the third arm of American Express's financial empire, reaching wealthy, international private depositors. In exchange for TDB, Safra was inducted to the board of American Express. However, TDB quickly realized that American Express was unable to uphold promises which had encouraged them to accept the deal, and that they had been excluded from important company decisions, such as the US$1 billion acquisition of Minneapolis financial services firm Investors Diversified Services. TDB was only notified of the Investors deal after their executives received a dispatch fresh from the Dow Jones news wire. Among other incidents, there was also a public announcement by American Express of a US$242 million earnings loss due to excessive insurance claims paid out through their California-based insurance company, Fireman's Fund. The claims contributed to American Express's first yearly net earnings loss; TDB.", "target": "former Geneva-based bank, now defunct", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7759473", "label": "The Rational Academy", "source": "The Rational Academy are a 4 (sometimes 5, sometimes 6) piece band based in Brisbane, Australia. After a slew of 7\" vinyl EP's they released their debut album \"A Heart Against Your Own\" in 2008. Produced by Lawrence English, the album married the Academy's pop leanings and guitar-heavy wall of sound approach with deeper avante garde and experimental interests. In 2009 they released their sophomore effort \"Swans\" and were awarded \"Best New Music / Experimental\" at the QMusic QSong awards, where they were also nominated for \"Song of the Year\".", "target": "Australian Band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1808456", "label": "Rhynchogadus hepaticus", "source": "Rhynchogadus hepaticus is a species of morid cod known only from the Mediterranean Sea where it occurs in the Gulf of Naples and near to Messina. This fish is found at depths from 400 to 700 m (1,300 to 2,300 ft). This species grows to 10 cm (3.9 in) in standard length.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25094610", "label": "Chalarotona", "source": "Chalarotona is a genus of moths of the Xyloryctidae( Xyloryctinae ) family.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q93627378", "label": "Marie-Anne Colson-Malleville", "source": "Marie-Anne Colson-Malleville (8 February 1892 – 11 March 1971), born Marie Anne Françoise Mareau, was a French film director, best known for her short documentary films about Algeria. She was the partner of director Germaine Dulac from the 1920s until Dulac's death in 1942.", "target": "French film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23307977", "label": "La guerre des femmes", "source": "La Guerre des femmes is an 1845 novel by Alexandre Dumas Senior. Set during the Fronde, the novel tells the story of naive Gascon soldier, Baron des Canolles, who is torn between love for two women.First translated by Samuel Springer as The War of Women for Potter Publishers, following a new French edition in 2003 it was re-translated as The Women's War in 2006 by Robin Buss.", "target": "book by Alexandre Dumas père", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4901867", "label": "Bhogabir", "source": "Bhogabir is a very large colony situated near Banaras Hindu University, in Varanasi in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India, and near the very famous Sankat Mochan Hanuman Temple. This colony named after the holy god bhogababa whose temple is also situated here. The colony has the largest water tank in the nearby area (capacity around 500000 lts).", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25041364", "label": "I See Stars discography", "source": "The discography of I See Stars, an American electronicore band formed in Warren, Michigan, in 2006 consists of five studio albums, three remix albums, two extended plays, and numerous singles and videos. The quartet consists of vocalist Devin Oliver, vocalist and keyboardist Andrew Oliver, lead guitarist Brent Allen, and bassist Jeff Valentine. Chris Moore replaced Johnson in the period of 2009–2010; however, Johnson was later reunited with the band in 2010. However, Johnson left the band once again in 2015, followed shortly after by Gregerson. The band self-released two extended plays, before signing to Sumerian Records in 2008. Ever since, the band went on to release five studio albums, 3-D (2009), The End of the World Party (2011), Digital Renegade (2012), and New Demons (2013), and Treehouse (2016).", "target": "band discography", "baseline_candidates": ["discography"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1895351", "label": "HNLMS O 4", "source": "O 4 was an O 2 class patrol submarine of the Royal Netherlands Navy. The ship was built by De Schelde shipyard in Flushing, Netherlands.", "target": "Dutch Submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["patrol submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1181211", "label": "Dearman", "source": "Dearman may refer to: Glyn Dearman (1939–1997), former child actor whose acting career spanned almost two decades James Dearman (1808–1854), English professional cricketer Jill Dearman, author, writing coach, editor and astrologist John Dearman, Grammy Award-winning classical guitarist Louise Dearman, British musical theatre performer.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22063814", "label": "Rio do Sul", "source": "Rio do Sul is a municipality in the state of Santa Catarina in the South region of Brazil. One of the postcards of the city is the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist. Other important buildings are Ponte dos Arcos, a former railway station and German-style buildings. Also in town is the Itajaí-Açu river (a confluence of Itajaí do Sul and Itajaí do Oeste).", "target": "human settlement in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7392916", "label": "SS&C Technologies", "source": "SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. (known as SS&C) is an American multinational holding company headquartered in Windsor, Connecticut, that sells software and software as a service to the financial services industry. The company has offices in the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia.Through its numerous acquired subsidiaries, such as Advent Software, Varden Technologies, Eze Software, and Primatics Financial, SS&C specializes in specific fintech markets, such as fund administration, wealth management accounting, and insurance and pension funds. In 2020 SS&C Technologies reported in their balance sheet over $1.69 trillion in Assets Under Custody (AUC).", "target": "an American multinational financial technology company", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62908", "label": "Mark Zbikowski", "source": "Mark \"Zibo\" Joseph Zbikowski (born March 21, 1956) is a former Microsoft Architect and an early computer hacker. He started working at the company only a few years after its inception, leading efforts in MS-DOS, OS/2, Cairo and Windows NT. In 2006, he was honored for 25 years of service with the company, the third employee to reach this milestone, after Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer. He was the designer of the MS-DOS executable file format, and the headers of that file format start with his initials: the ASCII characters 'MZ' (0x4D, 0x5A).", "target": "Microsoft computer programmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5127975", "label": "Class Clown", "source": "Class Clown is the fourth album released by American comedian George Carlin. It was recorded on May 27, 1972 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California, and released in September.", "target": "album by George Carlin", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22399039", "label": "Canada Bay", "source": "Canada Bay, a natural bay located on the east coast of the Great Northern Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada is home to some spectacular scenery is divided into two narrow indrafts, Chimney Bay and Bide Arm. The entrance to Canada Bay is between Canada Head (50°43′11″N 56°06′47″W) and Cape Daumalen (50°41′29″N 56°06′50″W).", "target": "bay in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["bay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24006409", "label": "Ashley Sutton", "source": "Ashley John Sutton (born 15 January 1994) is a British racing driver, and three time British Touring Car Champion, who currently competes in the British Touring Car Championship with NAPA Racing UK. After winning the Renault Clio Cup UK in 2015, Sutton moved up to the British Touring Car Championship for the 2016 season with MG Racing RCIB Insurance. He won one race in his début season, before moving to Adrian Flux Subaru Racing for the 2017 season. Sutton failed to score a point in the opening meeting, but won six races thereafter to win the championship, the youngest champion since 1966. He moved to Laser Tools Racing in 2020, and would win the championship back to back in 2020 and 2021. He moved to NAPA Racing UK for the 2022 season.", "target": "British racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16842999", "label": "Blakas", "source": "Blakas or Belakas is a general name for any sort of cleaver or large knife originating from Bali, Indonesia that has a heavy rectangular blade with a straight cutting edge used for chopping. The long, rounded hilt often becomes thinner at one or both ends. The blade often has a fanciful shape and encrusted motifs. Sometimes it is made for ceremonial purposes, and also used in pairs with golok. It is a common utensil in Balinese households and is used for kitchen chores, orchard work, and in ceremonial activities.", "target": "Indonesian type of machete", "baseline_candidates": ["weapon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5844836", "label": "Deh Kheyr-e Pain", "source": "Deh Kheyr-e Pain (Persian: ده خيرپائين, also Romanized as Deh Kheyr-e Pā’īn and Deh Khair Pain; also known as Deh Kheyr-e Soflá and Kheir Sofla) is a village in Qaryah ol Kheyr Rural District, in the Central District of Darab County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,987, in 459 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1038870", "label": "1975–76 Segunda División", "source": "The 1975–76 Segunda División season saw 20 teams participate in the second flight Spanish league. Burgos, Celta de Vigo and CD Málaga were promoted to Primera División. Real Murcia, CD Ensidesa, CA Osasuna and Gimnàstic de Tarragona were relegated to Tercera División.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3081861", "label": "Francisco Hernando Contreras", "source": "Francisco Hernando Contreras (2 June 1945 – 3 April 2020), known as Paco el Pocero, was a Spanish businessman in the construction industry. From a humble background, Hernando became a prominent builder in the Madrid area. His most famous project is probably Seseña near Madrid, where he promised to build 13,500 residences. Following the collapse of the Spanish property bubble, he went to Equatorial Guinea leaving Spanish projects unfinished.He died on 3 April 2020 of coronavirus disease 2019.", "target": "Spanish businessperson (1945-2020)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4062878", "label": "Northwest Staging Route", "source": "The Northwest Staging Route was a series of airstrips, airport and radio ranging stations built in Alberta, British Columbia, the Yukon and Alaska during World War II. It extended into the Soviet Union as the ALSIB (ALaska-SIBerian air road).", "target": "air route in Alaska and northern/western Canada during World War II", "baseline_candidates": ["series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4465296", "label": "Tuman", "source": "Tuman (Russian: Туман, meaning Mist) was a Soviet patrol boat that engaged a battle with German destroyers during World War II, fought in Arctic waters of the Barents Sea in 1941.", "target": "Soviet patrol boat", "baseline_candidates": ["naval trawler", "patrol vessel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12690121", "label": "Farewell Sermon", "source": "The Farewell Sermon (Arabic: خطبة الوداع, Khuṭbatu l-Widāʿ ) also known as Muhammad's Final Sermon or the Last Sermon, is a religious speech, delivered by the Islamic prophet Muhammad on Friday the 9th of Dhu al-Hijjah, 10 AH (6 March 632) in the Uranah valley of Mount Arafat, during the Islamic pilgrimage of Hajj. Muhammad al-Bukhari refers to the sermon and quotes part of it in his Sahih al-Bukhari. Part of it is also present in Sahih Muslim and Sunan Abu Dawood. Verse 5:3, \"Today I have perfected for you your religion ...\", is believed to have been recited during the address as the capstone verse of the Quran. Various versions of the sermon have been published, including several English translations. The sermon consists of a series of general exhortations for Muslims to follow the teachings that Muhammad had set forth in the Quran and sunnah.", "target": "Muhammad's Final Sermon", "baseline_candidates": ["document", "Khutbah"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1762205", "label": "Nephelomys keaysi", "source": "Nephelomys keaysi, also known as Keays's oryzomys or Keays's rice rat, is a species of rodent in the genus Nephelomys of family Cricetidae. It is found from southeastern Peru to northern Bolivia on the eastern slope of the Andes in Yungas humid forest at altitudes of 1000 to 2600 m. Although its continued existence is not in serious danger and it is listed as \"least concern\", destruction of its habitat may pose a threat to some populations.In 1900, Joel Asaph Allen described two rodents from Juliaca, Peru, at an altitude of 6,000 feet (1,800 m) on the basis of specimens collected in 1899 and 1900 by H. H. Keays. One he named, after Keays, Oryzomys keaysi, and the other Oryzomys obtusirostris. He considered the former to have no close relatives and the latter to be close to O. longicaudatus. Oldfield Thomas, in reporting on some specimens from Peru, concurred with the latter allocation, but considered O. keaysi to be part of the group around O. albigularis, and suggested that these should perhaps all be placed in the same species. After re-examining his specimens of O. obtusirostris, Allen reclassified the animal to the genus Zygodontomys in 1913, as Zygodontomys obtusirostris, but admitted that it was atypical for its long tail. In 1944, Philip Hershkovitz published a revision of the genus Nectomys as then understood, and in comparing it to what is now Sigmodontomys alfari, he listed, in a footnote, the names he understood as synonyms of Oryzomys albigularis. This list included both keaysi and obtusirostris, and since.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5640948", "label": "Hal Trosky, Jr.", "source": "Harold Arthur Trosky Jr. (September 29, 1936 – November 23, 2012) was an American professional baseball player who appeared as a pitcher in Major League Baseball in two games for the Chicago White Sox during the 1958 season. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, he was the son of Hal Trosky Sr., the Indians' slugging first baseman who played 11 seasons in the major leagues. Hal Jr. threw and batted right-handed, stood 6 feet 3 inches (1.91 m) tall and weighed 205 pounds (93 kg). Trosky grew up in Iowa, his father's native state, and signed with the White Sox as a first baseman in 1954 after graduating from St. Patrick's High School in Cedar Rapids. But he was plagued by injuries during his first two professional seasons in the minor leagues, and was converted to pitcher in 1956. After winning 36 games over his first three campaigns the mound, Trosky was called up the ChiSox in September 1958. Late in the month, he appeared in two games as a reliever, both of them at Comiskey Park. On September 25, against the Detroit Tigers, he entered the game in the fifth inning with Detroit ahead 5–0. He allowed a single to the first hitter he faced, Billy Martin, but then struck out Tiger slugger Charlie Maxwell, with Martin erased when he was caught stealing. When Red Wilson grounded out to end the frame, Trosky had escaped unscathed from his MLB debut. Three days later, against the Kansas City Athletics, he relieved starter Stover McIlwain, again in the fifth,.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95727903", "label": "Lucia Siposová", "source": "Lucia Siposová (born 21 May 1980) is a Slovak stage, television and film actress.", "target": "Slovak actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4822618", "label": "Özbaşı", "source": "Özbaşı, Söke is a village in the District of Söke, Aydın Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 430 people.", "target": "village in Aydın Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19968716", "label": "Rúben Lameiras", "source": "Rúben Barcelos De Sousa Lameiras (born 22 December 1994) is a Portuguese footballer who plays as a midfielder for Vitória de Guimarães.", "target": "Portuguese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7959979", "label": "Waikare River", "source": "The Waikare River is a river in the Bay of Plenty Region of New Zealand' North Island. It flows north from its origins between the peaks of Matawhio and Papakai north of Lake Waikaremoana to reach the Whakatane River 25 kilometres (16 mi) east of Murupara.", "target": "river in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31954080", "label": "Dill", "source": "Dill is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Kirchberg, whose seat is in the like-named town, and it is home to a castle ruin that bears the same name.", "target": "municipality in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1013758", "label": "Lipu", "source": "Lipu is a village in Lüganuse Parish, Ida-Viru County in northeastern Estonia.", "target": "village in Lüganuse Rural Municipality, Ida-Viru County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13450926", "label": "Calycopis isobeon", "source": "Calycopis isobeon, the dusky-blue groundstreak, is a butterfly native to the Americas, ranging from Venezuela to central Texas. It is very similar to the red-banded hairstreak (Calycopis cecrops) and the two are sometimes treated as conspecific.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4759370", "label": "Andrius Puotkalis", "source": "Andrius Puotkalis (born 6 October 1980) is a Lithuanian professional footballer. He was playing the position of midfielder and is 1.84 m tall. He is a former member of the Lithuania national football team.", "target": "Lithuanian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18749597", "label": "UMBC School of Public Policy", "source": "The Public Policy graduate program at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County was created in 1974 under Chancellor Calvin B. T. Lee. Now known as the School of Public Policy, the program offers the master of public policy and PhD. degrees, and has an enrollment of over 130 students.", "target": "graduate program at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County", "baseline_candidates": ["public policy school", "faculty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5287300", "label": "Doctor Chakravarthy", "source": "Doctor Chakravarthy is 1964 Telugu-language drama film, produced by D. Madhusudhana Rao under the Annapurna Pictures banner and directed by Adurthi Subba Rao. It stars Akkineni Nageswara Rao, Savitri, Jaggayya and music composed by S. Rajeswara Rao. The film is based on Koduri Kousalya Devi's novel Chakrabhramanam. The film was recorded as an industry hit at the box office. It is the first film to win the Nandi Award, instituted by Government of Andhra Pradesh in 1964. It inspired many people in India to become doctors.", "target": "1963 film by Adurthi Subba Rao", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12886004", "label": "Chalepa", "source": "Halepa or Chalepa (Greek: Χαλέπα) was formerly a town in northern Crete. It is now one of the districts of Chania. Its name was once well known owing to the Pact of Halepa, an agreement of 1878 on the administration of Crete as part of the Ottoman Empire. The local football team is Asteras Halepa. Emmanouil Antoniadis and Konstantinos Mitsotakis were born in Halepa.", "target": "human settlement in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11578842", "label": "When Supernatural Battles Became Commonplace", "source": "When Supernatural Battles Became Commonplace (Japanese: 異能バトルは日常系のなかで, Hepburn: Inō-Batoru wa Nichijō-kei no Naka de) aka InoBato is a Japanese light novel series written by Kōta Nozomi with illustrations by 029. SB Creative has published it in thirteen volumes from 2012 to 2018 under their GA Bunko imprint. A manga adaptation with art by Kōsuke Kurose was serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Comp Ace from September 2013 to February 2015 and compiled in four volumes. A 12-episode anime television series adaptation by Trigger aired in Japan between October 6 and December 22, 2014.", "target": "Japanese light novel series", "baseline_candidates": ["light novel series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q699913", "label": "Global Kryner", "source": "Global Kryner were a six-piece Austrian folk group, consisting of clarinet player Christof Spörk, bass trombonist, tenor and yodeller Sebastian Fuchsberger, guitarist Edi Koehldorfer, trumpet player Karl Rossmann, accordion player Anton Sauprügl, and jazz vocalist Sabine Stieger. The group has won numerous awards in Germany and Austria, and represented Austria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2005 in Kyiv, Ukraine.", "target": "Austrian folk group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2408063", "label": "Thomas Thøgersen", "source": "Thomas Thøgersen (born April 2, 1968) is a Danish former professional footballer who won three Danish football championships with Brøndby IF. Thøgersen was born in Copenhagen. He made his senior debut with BK Frem in 1989, but left the club when they were relegated in 1993. He moved to Brøndby IF in the top-flight Danish Superliga championship, and helped the club win the 1994 Danish Cup trophy from his position as forward. From 1996 to 1998, he was a part of the Brøndby team which won three Superliga titles in a row. In 1998, he moved abroad to play for English club Portsmouth in the second-tier Football League First Division. Initially playing as a defender, he was eventually moved into the attacking midfielder position. He played a total of 119 games for Portsmouth until 2002, when he returned to end his career with childhood club Frem.", "target": "Danish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48977616", "label": "Kenneth Spencer Research Library", "source": "The Kenneth Spencer Research Library is a library at the University of Kansas (KU) in Lawrence. Completed and dedicated in 1968, the library houses special collections materials including rare books, maps, archives, and photographs. The library is open to members of the public and is not limited to students and faculty members at KU.", "target": "Public Library at the University of Kansas", "baseline_candidates": ["academic library"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3703145", "label": "David Clayton Rogers", "source": "David Clayton Rogers (born October 21, 1977) is an American actor, writer, and film producer. He has co-starred in films such as Sublime and Dark Ride. Rogers began his acting career in the made-for-television film Bloody Sunday, followed by an appearance on The WB's Gilmore Girls. In early 2004, he joined the cast of the drama series NY-LON. In 2010, he co-starred in the ABC Family Original Movie Revenge of the Bridesmaids with Joanna Garcia. Rogers has produced two short films: 2006's Following Abraham and 2009's Skylight, which he also wrote and appeared in.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25704541", "label": "Pteris vittata", "source": "Pteris vittata, commonly known variously as the Chinese brake, Chinese ladder brake, or simply ladder brake, is a fern species in the Pteridoideae subfamily of the Pteridaceae. It is indigenous to Asia, southern Europe, tropical Africa and Australia. The type specimen was collected in China by Pehr Osbeck.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3090850", "label": "Fun", "source": "Fun was a Victorian weekly magazine, first published on 21 September 1861. The magazine was founded by the actor and playwright H. J. Byron in competition with Punch magazine. Fun ceased publication in 1901, when it was absorbed into Sketchy Bits.", "target": "Victorian weekly magazine", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89642678", "label": "Linda, Georgia", "source": "Linda (Abkhazian: Линда) is a village in Abkhazia, Georgia.The village was established by Estonians in 19th century. As of 2002, 0 dwellers live in village.", "target": "village in Abkhazia, Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31770816", "label": "Albu Hardan-e Olya", "source": "Albu Hardan-e Olya (Persian: البوحردان عليا, also Romanized as Ālbū Ḩardān-e ‘Olyā; also known as Abū Ḩardān-e ‘Olyā, Bahārdān, and Bahārdān-e Bālā) is a village in Jarahi Rural District, in the Central District of Mahshahr County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 100, in 22 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13563055", "label": "Maria Taylor Beale", "source": "Maria Parker Taylor Beale (January 30, 1849 – January 21, 1929) was an American author. She published Jack O'Doon: A Novel, a novel about the North Carolina coast, in 1895, and The White Horse In The Tree Top, as well as a number of short stories. She was born Maria Taylor in Richmond, Virginia, in 1894, and studied art in Paris. She married Charles Willing Beale, who was also an author, on January 25, 1872, and lived in Arden, North Carolina (which they helped found and which her husband named after the woods in William Shakespeare's As You Like It).She died in Arden on January 21, 1929, and is buried with her husband at Calvary Episcopal Church Cemetery in Fletcher, North Carolina.", "target": "American women writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10887503", "label": "Devil's Dust", "source": "Devil's Dust is a two-part Australian television docu-drama mini-series on the ABC which first screened in 2012. Based on journalist Matt Peacock's 2009 book Killer Company, Devil's Dust was researched and developed by producer Stephen Corvini for over two years prior to the series' production. Through the factual case of Bernie Banton, it recounts the tragedy of many Australian workers and their families afflicted with asbestosis and mesothelioma in the twentieth-century asbestos mining and processing industries. Though the extreme health risks of exposure to asbestos dust had been documented for many years, manufacturer James Hardie persisted in large-scale use of the material, aided by inadequate regulation by state health agencies.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q492216", "label": "Frank J. Corr", "source": "Frank J. Corr (January 12, 1877 – June 3, 1934) was an American politician. Corr served as the 45th mayor of Chicago, Illinois. Corr's term was as acting mayor from March 15, 1933, following the assassination of Anton Cermak until April 8, 1933. Corr was a member of the Democratic Party.", "target": "American politician (1877–1934); Mayor of Chicago March–April 1933", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4942240", "label": "Catherine of Luxembourg-Saint-Pol", "source": "Catherine of Luxembourg-Saint-Pol (died 1492), was a Duchess consort of Brittany, married to Arthur III, Duke of Brittany. She was a daughter of Peter of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol and Margherita del Balzo. Catherine’s marriage to Arthur III took place on 2 July 1445. In December 1445 she went to Nantes, where her husband organized wedding celebrations in her honor. Then she lived in Parthenay and travelled only in 1457 with her husband again to Brittany, because his nephew, the duke Peter II, had fallen ill. After Peter’s death (22 September 1457) Arthur III became new Duke and therefore his wife Catherine briefly Duchess consort of Brittany, but Arthur already died on 26 December 1458 at Nantes at the age of 65 years. His marriage with Catherine had remained childless. Catherine lived as widow a secluded life, probably died in March 1492 and was buried in the Carthusian monastery of Nantes, which she had finished.", "target": "Duchess consort of Brittany", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7184850", "label": "Philippe Lemay", "source": "Philippe Lemay (or LeMay) (born March 27, 1977) in is a Canadian curler from Grandes-Piles, Quebec. Lemay is most notable for playing second on the Quebec team, skipped by Pierre Charette at the 2007 Tim Hortons Brier. The team finished with a 4-7 record that year, missing the playoffs. Lemay himself curled well, at 82%, 5th among seconds. Lemay was also an accomplished junior curler. He won the 1994 and 1997 Quebec Junior Curling Championships, as a skip. His team of Patrice Rousseau, Pierre LePage and Steve Beaudry represented Quebec at the 1994 Canadian Junior Curling Championships. The team finished the round robin in a tie for first place, with an 8-3 record. However, they lost to Alberta's Colin Davison in the semifinal. In 1997, Lemay had a new team, consisting of Christian Cantin, Jonathan Hubert and Jean-Sébastien Roy. At the 1997 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, the team finished the round robin in a five-way tie for third place. They would be eliminated in their first tiebreaker game however, against the Yukon's Wyatt Redlin. Following Juniors, Lemay played for such acommplished curlers as Pierre Charette and Martin Ferland. He began skipping his own team on the World Curling Tour in 2011. As of 2013, he has played in 11 Grand Slams; 6 with Charette (2005-2007), 4 with Ferland (2007-2009) and one as a skip (2012). The best Slam result to date for Lemay is a semi-final finish at the 2007 Players' Championships with Charette and a semi-final finish at the Dec. 2007 Canadian Open with Ferland.", "target": "Canadian curler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41581715", "label": "Vinod Gudadhe Patil", "source": "Vinod Gudadhe Patil is an Indian politician and was a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party. Gudadhe Patil was a member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly from the Nagpur West constituency in Nagpur district. He was minister Ministers of State in Narayan Rane ministry.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16159977", "label": "Bless", "source": "Bless Online (Korean: 블레스, romanized: Beulleseu) was a massively multiplayer online role-playing game developed by Neowiz Games. The release date was May 28, 2018, for Founder's Pack purchasers and May 30 for Early Access on Steam. Bless Online uses a free-to-play business model.", "target": "MMORPG video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q135004", "label": "Ancistrus cirrhosus", "source": "Ancistrus cirrhosus, the Jumbie teta, is a species of armored catfish found in the Paraná River basin of Argentina and Uruguay. This species grows to a length of 8.9 centimetres (3.5 in) SL.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5713280", "label": "Kala, Nur", "source": "Kala (Persian: كلا, also Romanized as Kalā) is a village in Tatarestaq Rural District, Baladeh District, Nur County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 69, in 23 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11091841", "label": "37 Tauri", "source": "37 Tauri is a single, orange-hued star in the zodiac constellation of Taurus. It can be seen with the naked eye, having an apparent visual magnitude of 4.36. A magnitude 10.01 visual companion has an angular separation of 134.30″ on a position angle of 138.6°, as of 2003. Based on an annual parallax shift of 17.43±0.21 mas, 37 Tauri is about 187 light years away. It is moving further from the Sun with a heliocentric radial velocity of 9.5 km/s.This is an evolved K-type giant star with a stellar classification of K0 III-IIIb. At the age of 1.39 billion years, it has become a red clump giant, indicating that it is generating energy through helium fusion at its core. The star has around double the mass of the Sun and has expanded to 10 times the Sun's radius. It is radiating roughly 60 times the Sun's luminosity from its enlarged photosphere at an effective temperature of 4,732 K.", "target": "star in the constellation Taurus", "baseline_candidates": ["binary star", "star", "high proper-motion star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5327312", "label": "Earthsick", "source": "Earthsick is an album by American alternative hip hop sextet Subtle. It was released after the success of their first album A New White in the underground hip hop community. It is a compilation of what the band considered to be the best of the four previously released Season EPs, which are now out of print. Tracks 11 through 14 are previously unreleased material from a winter solstice session recorded the previous year and are, like the Winter EP, completely improvised with no overdubs.", "target": "album by Subtle", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21512828", "label": "Glen River", "source": "The Glen River (in French: rivière Glen) is a tributary of the west bank of the Chaudière River which flows north to empty onto the south bank of the St. Lawrence River. The Glen River flows through the municipalities of Nantes and Sainte-Cécile-de-Whitton, in the Le Granit Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Estrie, in Quebec, in Canada.", "target": "river in Quebec (Canada)", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17108919", "label": "Newton Municipal School District", "source": "The Newton Municipal School District is a public school district based in Newton, Mississippi (USA).", "target": "school district in Mississippi", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67742", "label": "Karl Ludwig Sand", "source": "Karl Ludwig Sand (Wunsiedel, Upper Franconia (then in Prussia), 5 October 1795 – Mannheim, 20 May 1820) was a German university student and member of a liberal Burschenschaft (student association). He was executed in 1820 for the murder of the conservative dramatist August von Kotzebue the previous year in Mannheim. As a result of his execution, Sand became a martyr in the eyes of many German nationalists seeking the creation of a united German national state.", "target": "German murderer (1795-1820)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3076170", "label": "Huttonella bicolor", "source": "Huttonella bicolor is a species of land snail in the family Streptaxidae known commonly as the two-toned gulella.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q868777", "label": "Conneaut", "source": "Conneaut ( KON-ee-awt) is a city in Ashtabula County, Ohio, United States, along Lake Erie at the mouth of Conneaut Creek 66 miles (106 km) northeast of Cleveland. The population was 12,841 at the 2010 Census. Conneaut is located at the far northeastern corner of the state.", "target": "city in Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23637398", "label": "Tata Tiago", "source": "Tata Tiago is a city car made by Tata Motors in India since 2016. It is derived from the Tata Kite project. The Tiago was previously announced as the Tata Zica, with \"Zica\" short for \"zippy car\", but it was changed because the launch of the car coincide with the outbreak of Zika virus. Tiago, a common Portuguese masculine name, was picked from suggestions solicited online.", "target": "City car made by Tata Motors", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18686322", "label": "Charles Frederick George", "source": "Sir Charles Frederick George (born 3 April 1941) is an English physician and academic.George was born in Birmingham to William Hubert George and Evelyn Pryce, and was educated in Oundle. He graduated from Birmingham University with an Intercalated BSc in Anatomy in 1962, and a MBChB in Medicine in 1965.He was President of the British Medical Association from 2004 to 2005. He was Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at Southampton University from 1983 to 1999, and Professor of Clinical Pharmacology at Southampton University from 1986 to 1990 and again from 1993 to 1998. He was medical director of the British Heart Foundation from 1999 to 2004.He was made a Knight Bachelor in the 1998 Birthday Honours, \"for services to medicine and medical education\".George was awarded the BMA Gold Medal in 2010. He was awarded an honorary DSc by the University of Birmingham in 2003, an honorary DM by the University of Southampton in 2004, and an honorary DSc by the University of Leicester in 2007.", "target": "British physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q595024", "label": "Ducati Paso", "source": "The Ducati Paso was introduced in 1986 with the slogan \"Il nostro passato ha un grande futuro\" (Our past has a great future). The name was in honour of racer Renzo Pasolini, nicknamed \"Paso\", who died on 20 May 1973 in an accident at the Monza race track during the Italian motorcycle Grand Prix (Gran Premio motociclistico d'Italia).", "target": "type of motorcycle", "baseline_candidates": ["motorcycle model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87453505", "label": "Chur", "source": "Chur (German: [ˈkuːr] (locally) or [ˈxuːr]; Italian: Coira [ˈkɔira]; Sursilvan: Cuera; Vallader: Cuoira; Puter and Rumantsch Grischun: Cuira; Surmiran: Coira; Sutsilvan: Cuera, Cuira; French: Coire [kwaʁ]) is the capital and largest town of the Swiss canton of the Grisons and lies in the Grisonian Rhine Valley, where the Rhine turns towards the north, in the northern part of the canton. The city, which is located on the right bank of the Rhine, is reputedly the oldest town of Switzerland.The official language of Chur is German, but the main spoken language is the local variant of Alemannic, known as Grisonian German. Romansh and Italian are significantly spoken in the city as a result of the trilingual identity of the canton. On 1 January 2020 the former municipality of Maladers merged into Chur and on 1 January 2021 Haldenstein also merged.", "target": "capital of the Swiss canton of Graubünden and lies in the northern part of the canton", "baseline_candidates": ["city of Switzerland", "cantonal capital of Switzerland", "municipality of Switzerland", "capital city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14948903", "label": "Henry Martyn Clark", "source": "Henry Martyn-Clark (Peshawar, c. 1857 - Edinburgh, April 1916) was an Afghan-born adopted British medical missionary stationed in Amritsar in the late 19th century.", "target": "British academic and missionary", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18367513", "label": "Sattar Khan", "source": "Sattar Khan (Persian: ستار خان) is a 1972 Iranian biographical film directed by Ali Hatami. The film is about Sattar Khan, the Iranian national hero, and his primary role in the events of Persian Constitutional Revolution. Ali Nasirian, Ezzatollah Entezami, Parviz Sayyad, Enayat Bakhshi, and Jahangir Forouhar are among the actors.", "target": "1972 film by Ali Hatami", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16644477", "label": "James Brokenshire", "source": "James Peter Brokenshire (8 January 1968 – 7 October 2021) was a British politician. A member of the Conservative Party, he served in Theresa May's cabinet as Secretary of State for Northern Ireland from 2016 to 2018, and then as Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government from 2018 to 2019. He also served as a minister at the Home Office under David Cameron and Boris Johnson. Brokenshire was Member of Parliament (MP) for Hornchurch from 2005 to 2010, and for Old Bexley and Sidcup from 2010 until his death. Born in Southend-on-Sea, Essex, Brokenshire studied law at the University of Exeter before beginning work with a large international law firm. Deciding on a career in politics, he stood successfully as the Conservative candidate for the parliamentary constituency of Hornchurch in the 2005 general election. When his constituency was to be abolished in the boundary changes, he sought out another constituency to represent, failing to be selected in six until being selected for Old Bexley and Sidcup. He was elected MP for the seat in 2010. In David Cameron's first government, Brokenshire was initially Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Crime Reduction; in May 2011 he was transferred to the position of Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Crime and Security. He oversaw the closure and privatisation of the Forensic Science Service and championed the Modern Slavery Bill. He served as Minister for Security and Immigration at the Home Office from 2014 to 2016. In July 2016, in Theresa May's new cabinet, he was appointed Northern Ireland Secretary. He resigned.", "target": "British Conservative party politician, MP and minister (1968–2021)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2877773", "label": "Kašice", "source": "Kašice is a village in the municipality of Prijepolje, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village had a population of 88 people.", "target": "village in Zlatibor District, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8039583", "label": "Wyciąg, Greater Poland Voivodeship", "source": "Wyciąg [ˈvɨt͡ɕɔnk] (German: Birkenbruch) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Wyrzysk, within Piła County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 kilometres (6 mi) south-east of Wyrzysk, 41 km (25 mi) east of Piła, and 82 km (51 mi) north of the regional capital Poznań.", "target": "settlement in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q189595", "label": "MV Zenith", "source": "The Zenith is a cruise ship operating with Peace Boat since early 2020. She was built in 1992 by Meyer Werft, Papenburg, Germany for Celebrity Cruises.", "target": "ship", "baseline_candidates": ["cruise ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4626895", "label": "2012 Sylvania 300", "source": "The 2012 Sylvania 300 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on September 23, 2012 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire. Contested over 300 laps, it was the twenty-eighth in the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, as well as the second race in the ten-race Chase for the Sprint Cup, which ends the season. Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his fifth of the season. Jimmie Johnson finished second and Jeff Gordon was third.", "target": "race 28 of 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup series", "baseline_candidates": ["ISM Connect 300"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q442132", "label": "Ray Chen", "source": "Ray Chen (born 6 March 1989) is a Taiwanese-Australian violinist. He was the first prize winner of the 2009 Queen Elisabeth Competition and the 2008 International Yehudi Menuhin Violin Competition.", "target": "Taiwanese-Australian violinist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60763988", "label": "Sierra Leone at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics", "source": "Sierra Leone participated at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires, Argentina from 6 October to 18 October 2018.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4039065", "label": "Japan, Our Homeland", "source": "Japan, Our Homeland (ふるさと-JAPAN, Furusato Japan) (officially capitalised as JAPAN, Our Homeland) is a Japanese animated film directed by Akio Nishizawa and his second long feature film effort, after his 2004 release Nitaboh, the Shamisen Master. It premiered in 2006 (film festival in Lyon, France), being released theatrically in 2007 in Japan. The film was produced at the animation studio WAO World.", "target": "2006 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6617655", "label": "Keçikaya", "source": "Keçikaya is a village in the Ayvacık district of Çanakkale Province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in Ayvacık, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60769467", "label": "Over Easy", "source": "Over Easy is the fifth studio album by Australian indie rock band The Cruel Sea. The album was released in July 1998 and peaked at number 13 the ARIA Charts. The album was supported with a \"Takin' All Day\" national tour.", "target": "album by The Cruel Sea", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7713469", "label": "The American Enterprise", "source": "The American Enterprise (TAE) was a public policy magazine published by the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. Its editorial stance was politically conservative, generally advocating free-market economics and a neoconservative U.S. foreign policy. The magazine was published approximately eight times per year. In addition to the content published in its print version, the magazine's Web site included articles and opinion pieces published under the name TAE Daily. Combining several American Enterprise Institute (AEI) publications, TAE was founded by Karlyn Bowman, then known as Karlyn Keene, in 1990. The AEI Economist became the new magazine's \"The Washington Economist\" column, written by Herbert Stein. Bowman and Everett Carll Ladd compiled \"Public Opinion and Demographic Report,\" a twenty-four page selection of polling data that offered a condensed version of Public Opinion. TAE's second editor, from 1995 to 2006, was Karl Zinsmeister. When he left to join the Bush White House, the magazine was shuttered. It was replaced in 2006 by a new publication, The American.", "target": "conservative public policy magazine (1990–2006)", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18414388", "label": "Jorge Intima", "source": "Jorge Fernando Barbosa Intima (born 21 September 1995), known as Jorginho, is a Bissau-Guinean professional footballer who plays as a winger for Ekstraklasa club Wisła Płock, on loan from Ludogorets Razgrad, and the Guinea-Bissau national team.", "target": "Bissau-Guinean association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18175671", "label": "potato", "source": "The potato is a starchy tuber of the plant Solanum tuberosum and is a root vegetable native to the Americas. The plant is a perennial in the nightshade family Solanaceae.Wild potato species can be found from the southern United States to southern Chile. The potato was originally believed to have been domesticated by Native Americans independently in multiple locations, but later genetic studies traced a single origin, in the area of present-day southern Peru and extreme northwestern Bolivia. Potatoes were domesticated there approximately 7,000–10,000 years ago, from a species in the Solanum brevicaule complex. In the Andes region of South America, where the species is indigenous, some close relatives of the potato are cultivated. Potatoes were introduced to Europe from the Americas in the second half of the 16th century by the Spanish. Today they are a staple food in many parts of the world and an integral part of much of the world's food supply. As of 2014, potatoes were the world's fourth-largest food crop after maize (corn), wheat, and rice. Following millennia of selective breeding, there are now over 5,000 different types of potatoes. Over 99% of potatoes presently cultivated worldwide descended from varieties that originated in the lowlands of south-central Chile. The importance of the potato as a food source and culinary ingredient varies by region and is still changing. It remains an essential crop in Europe, especially Northern and Eastern Europe, where per capita production is still the highest in the world, while the most rapid expansion in production over the past.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["vegetable", "taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5698334", "label": "Hege Nerland", "source": "Hege Nerland (27 October 1966 – 12 March 2007) was a Norwegian politician for the Socialist Left Party. In 2003 she helped found the local party chapter in her native Hemsedal. She worked with organic farming there, and had organizational experience from the Norwegian Farmers and Smallholders Union and Via Campesina. She was elected to the municipality council the same year, and became deputy mayor of Hemsedal. Following the 2005 Norwegian parliamentary election, she served as a deputy representative to the Norwegian Parliament from Buskerud. In November 2006, however, she had to relinquish her political positions due to illness. She died four months later.", "target": "Norwegian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4987307", "label": "Bulbophyllum alabastraceus", "source": "Bulbophyllum alabastraceus is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26225895", "label": "Goretti Zumaya", "source": "Goretti Alejandra Zumaya Flores (born 31 May 1997) is a Mexican sports shooter. She competed in the women's 10 metre air rifle event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Mexican sport shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65285681", "label": "scorodite", "source": "Scorodite is a common hydrated iron arsenate mineral, with the chemical formula FeAsO4·2H2O. It is found in hydrothermal deposits and as a secondary mineral in gossans worldwide. Scorodite weathers to limonite. Scorodite was discovered in the Schwarzenberg, Saxony district, Erzgebirge, Saxony, Germany. Named from the Greek Scorodion, \"garlicky\". When heated it smells of garlic, which gives it the name.", "target": "arsenate mineral", "baseline_candidates": ["scorodite mineral group", "mineral species"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30750596", "label": "2017 in classical music", "source": "This article lists major events and other topics related to the year 2017 in classical music.", "target": "classical music-related events during the year of 2017", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9310753", "label": "Robert Ciba", "source": "Robert Ciba (born 29 November 1969) is a Polish boxer. He competed in the men's bantamweight event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Polish sportsperson", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1244274", "label": "Waking up early", "source": "Waking up early is rising before most others and has also been described as a productivity method - rising early and consistently so as to be able to accomplish more during the day. This method has been recommended since antiquity and is now recommended by a number of personal development gurus. The philosopher Aristotle said, \"It is well to be up before daybreak, for such habits contribute to health, wealth, and wisdom.\".", "target": "Behaviour or productivity method consisting in waking up early in the morning", "baseline_candidates": ["behavior"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6029799", "label": "Infinite Love Songs", "source": "Infinite Love Songs is the debut studio album by German musician Maximilian Hecker. It was released by Kitty-Yo in 2001.", "target": "album by Maximilian Hecker", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1037884", "label": "Turkish Airlines Flight 634", "source": "Turkish Airlines Flight 634 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from Turkish Airlines' hub at Istanbul Atatürk Airport to Diyarbakır Airport in southeastern Turkey. On 8 January 2003 at 20:19 EET (18:19 UTC), the aircraft operating the flight, a British Aerospace Avro RJ100, struck the ground on final approach approximately 900 metres (3,000 ft) short of the runway threshold during inclement weather conditions. In the following collision with a slope, a post-crash fire broke out, killing 75 of the 80 occupants, including both pilots.", "target": "aviation accident", "baseline_candidates": ["aviation accident"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q911150", "label": "Land Rover 101 Forward Control", "source": "The 101 Forward Control or Land Rover 101FC was a light utility vehicle produced by Land Rover for the British Army. It was not available to the public off the production line, but was as military surplus.", "target": "truck", "baseline_candidates": ["truck model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q845057", "label": "Hannah and Her Sisters", "source": "Hannah and Her Sisters is a 1986 American comedy drama film which tells the intertwined stories of an extended family over two years that begins and ends with a family Thanksgiving dinner. The film was written and directed by Woody Allen, who stars along with Mia Farrow as Hannah, Michael Caine as her husband, and Barbara Hershey and Dianne Wiest as her sisters. The film's ensemble cast also includes Carrie Fisher, Maureen O'Sullivan, Lloyd Nolan (who died four-and-a-half months before the film's release), Max Von Sydow, and Julie Kavner. Daniel Stern, Richard Jenkins, Fred Melamed, Lewis Black, Joanna Gleason, John Turturro, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus all have minor roles, while Tony Roberts and Sam Waterston make uncredited cameo appearances. Several of Farrow's children, including Soon-Yi Previn (who married Allen in 1997), have credited and uncredited roles, mostly as Thanksgiving extras. Hannah and Her Sisters was, for a long time, Allen's biggest box office success (forgoing adjustment for inflation), with a North American gross of US$40 million. The film won Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Supporting Actress. It is often considered one of Allen's major works, with critics continuing to praise its writing and ensemble cast.", "target": "1986 film by Woody Allen", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55702751", "label": "1987 in film", "source": "The following is an overview of events in 1987 in film, including the highest-grossing films, award ceremonies and festivals, a list of films released and notable deaths. Paramount Pictures celebrated its 75th anniversary in 1987.", "target": "overview of the events of 1987 in film", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article", "events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q990001", "label": "Heroica Nogales", "source": "Heroica Nogales (Spanish pronunciation: [eˈɾojka noˈɣales]), more commonly known as Nogales, is a city and the county seat of the Municipality of Nogales. It is located on the northern border of the Mexican state of Sonora. The city is abutted on its north by the city of Nogales, Arizona, across the U.S.-Mexico border.", "target": "city of Sonora, Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["border town", "big city", "locality of Mexico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10327829", "label": "May This Be Love", "source": "\"May This Be Love\" is a song written by Jimi Hendrix for the Jimi Hendrix Experience debut album Are You Experienced (1967). It is a soft ballad that demonstrates Hendrix's ability to write thoughtful lyrics and subtle melodies.", "target": "song composed by Jimi Hendrix with lyrics by Jimi Hendrix performed by The Jimi Hendrix Experience", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3051257", "label": "Marcelo Serrado", "source": "Marcelo Magalhães Serrado (born February 10, 1967 in Rio de Janeiro) is a Brazilian actor.", "target": "Brazilian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65420585", "label": "Bayırbağ", "source": "Bayırbağ is a village in the Üzümlü District of Erzincan Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Üzümlü, Erzincan Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["town municipality of Turkey", "village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6389375", "label": "Kenji Uchida", "source": "Kenji Uchida (内田 健二, Uchida Kenji) is a Japanese anime producer. He is noted anime studio Sunrise's president.Debuting in 1980, with Muteki Robo Trider G7, among Sunrise's first works in the 1980s, Uchida has gone on to produce numerous of Sunrise's works, such as various iterations of the Gundam universe and other Sunrise anime productions. In April 2008, Uchida was promoted to being Sunrise's president, previously having been the studio's managing director.", "target": "Japanese film producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17151915", "label": "Anna Andres", "source": "Anna Oleksandrivna Andres (Ukrainian: Анна Олександрівна Андрес, born 17 November 1993 in Lviv, Ukraine) is a Ukrainian model, entrepreneur, fashion influencer. Andres was the winner of the beauty contest Miss Ukraine Universe 2014.", "target": "model, actress, and Miss Ukraine Universe 2014", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28966475", "label": "Coylet", "source": "Coylet is a hamlet on Loch Eck, Cowal peninsula, Argyll and Bute, in West Scotland.The hamlet is within the Argyll Forest Park, which is itself within the Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park. It developed around the Coylet Inn, a coaching inn on the A815 road that leads to Dunoon, the main town on the peninsula. The name may be derived from Gaelic caol ait, \"narrow place\".", "target": "hamlet on Loch Eck, Cowal peninsula, Argyll and Bute, West Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5597910", "label": "Gravesend", "source": "Gravesend is a 1996 criminal drama film directed by Salvatore Stabile.", "target": "1997 film directed by Salvatore Stabile", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29946264", "label": "Mark Kamlet", "source": "Mark S. Kamlet is an American political scientist currently the University Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Heinz College, Carnegie Mellon University and an Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.", "target": "American political scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q515155", "label": "Saving Grace", "source": "Saving Grace is an American crime drama television series which aired on TNT from July 23, 2007, to June 21, 2010. The show stars Holly Hunter as well as Leon Rippy, Kenny Johnson, Laura San Giacomo, Bailey Chase, Bokeem Woodbine, Gregory Norman Cruz and Yaani King. It is set in Oklahoma City—including numerous shots of local buildings and landmarks (such as the Oklahoma City National Memorial and the downtown skyline)—while much of the show was filmed in Vancouver and Los Angeles. The theme song for the show was written and performed by American rapper-musician Everlast. The series is rated TV-MA in the United States for language, sexuality, and violence.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5316960", "label": "Dust", "source": "Dust is a 2009 film by Luxembourgish director Max Jacoby.", "target": "2009 film by Max Jacoby", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97186960", "label": "Xie Jilai", "source": "Xie Jilai (Chinese: 谢计来; born February 1953) is a former Chinese politician who spent his entire career in north China's Hebei province. As of January 2022 he was under investigation by China's top anti-corruption agency. He has retired for four years. Previously he served as vice chairman of Hebei People's Congress.", "target": "Chinese politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7260021", "label": "Punctapinella", "source": "Punctapinella is a genus of moths belonging to the family Tortricidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18150504", "label": "Thomas Spencer Harris", "source": "Thomas Spencer Harris (1836 or 1831 - 1893) was an early California newspaperman. Born in 1836 (or 1831) in Ohio, Harris probably hailed from Cleveland. He traveled to the Pacific Coast in 1859, and three years later, joined the 2nd Regiment California Volunteer Cavalry. From 1874 through 1883, he worked as an editor and newspaper publisher in California mining camps, and founded ten newspapers, including the Panamint News (November 26, 1874), the first in the Death Valley area.", "target": "American newspaperman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20895763", "label": "Hammour Ziada", "source": "Hammour Ziada (Arabic: حمور زيادة, born 1979) is a Sudanese writer and journalist, born in Omdurman. He has worked as a civil society and human rights researcher, and currently works as journalist in Cairo. Also, he has been writing for a number of left-wing newspapers in Sudan and served as the culture editor of the Sudanese Al-Akhbar newspaper.", "target": "Sudanese writer and journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q208985", "label": "Sipocot", "source": "Sipocot, officially the Municipality of Sipocot (Central Bikol: Banwaan kan Sipocot; Tagalog: Bayan ng Sipocot), is a 1st class municipality in the province of Camarines Sur, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 68,169 people.", "target": "municipality of the Philippines in the province of Camarines Sur", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Philippines"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q612684", "label": "Anurutha", "source": "Chao Anurutha (also spelled Anouruttha or Anurathurat; Lao: ເຈົ້າອານຸຣຸດທະ; 1737 – 31 December 1819) was the king of Luang Phrabang from 1792 to 1819.Anurutha was the fourth son of king Inthasom. He was appointed the viceroy (oupahat) of Luang Phrabang in 1768. In 1788, he was taken as hostage to Bangkok together with other royalties. He was not allowed to return until 3 February 1792. After a four-year interregnum, he was crowned in Luang Phrabang by Siamese in 1792. However, he was accused of in treasonous contact with Burmese by the Vientiane king Nanthasen. Rama I permitted Nanthasen to attack Luang Prabang. After the capture of Luang Phrabang, Anurutha was detained in Bangkok. After Chinese intervention, Anurutha was allowed to return to Luang Phrabang in 1796. He died on 31 December 1819.", "target": "king of Luang Prabang", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19696070", "label": "670", "source": "Year 670 (DCLXX) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar, the 670th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 670th year of the 1st millennium, the 70th year of the 7th century, and the 1st year of the 670s decade. The denomination 670 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15965484", "label": "1400s in art", "source": "The decade of the 15th century in art involved some significant events.", "target": "overview of the events of the 1400s in art", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5201052", "label": "Cyrtulus serotinus", "source": "Cyrtulus serotinus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Fasciolariidae, the spindle snails, the tulip snails and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30273130", "label": "Scoular", "source": "Scoular (), formally The Scoular Company, is a corporation based in Omaha, Nebraska dedicated to the buying, selling, storage, handling, and processing of grain, feed and food ingredients. The company was founded in 1892 by George Scoular and was owned by the Scoular family until its purchase in 1967 by Omaha businessman Marshall Faith, who served as CEO for the next 23 years. At the time of Faith's purchase Scoular had 10 employees and operated three grain elevators, but grew considerably over subsequent decades and is one of the largest grain storage and handling companies in North America. In 2021, Scoular ranked 16th on FoodTalks' Global Top 40 Plant Protein Companies list.Scoular employs approximately one thousand people at 24 offices and 90 storage, handling, and processing facilities, mostly in the United States. In 2017 Scoular reported $4.3 billion in sales and more than one billion bushels traded.Minneapolis-based data analytics company DTN began as a subsidiary of Scoular in 1984, later separating into an independent company led by founder Roger Brodersen.", "target": "American agricultural services company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5273805", "label": "Dickson River", "source": "The Dickson River is a river of the West Coast Region of New Zealand. It arises near the Dickson Pass in the Southern Alps and flows north-west. It joins the Tuke River and flows into the Mikonui River, which exits in the Tasman Sea near Ross.", "target": "river in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87723116", "label": "Jarosław Morawiecki", "source": "Jarosław Józef Morawiecki (born 11 March 1964) is a Polish former ice hockey player and coach. He played for Zagłębie Sosnowiec, KKH Katowice, Olofströms IK, Drakkars de Caen, and TKH Toruń during his career. He also played for the Polish national team at the 1988 Winter Olympics and the 1986 and 1986 World Championships.", "target": "Polish ice hockey player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q503912", "label": "Berg", "source": "Berg is a former municipality that was located in the old Troms county, Norway. The municipality existed from 1838 until its dissolution in 2020 when it was merged into the new Senja Municipality. The administrative centre of the municipality was the village of Skaland. Other villages included Finnsæter, Mefjordvær, and Senjahopen. The municipality is located on the western part of the large island of Senja. At the time of its dissolution as a municipality on 1 January 2020, the 294-square-kilometre (114 sq mi) municipality was the 281st largest by area out of the 422 municipalities in Norway. Berg was also the 406th most populous municipality in Norway with a population of 902. The municipality's population density was 3.3 inhabitants per square kilometre (8.5/sq mi) and its population has decreased by 3.7% over the previous decade.The municipality was the first place in the world to utilize a hydroelectrical power station in the mining community of Hamn. When the mining industry ceased, the \"electrical adventure\" did as well. The buildings are still located at Hamn, now functioning as a special hotel/lodge. The first female pastor in the Lutheran Church of Norway, Ingrid Bjerkås, worked in this parish, starting in 1961.", "target": "former municipality in Troms, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Norway", "former municipality of Norway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q385994", "label": "special library", "source": "A special library is a library that provides specialized information resources on a particular subject, serves a specialized and limited clientele, and delivers specialized services to that clientele. Special libraries include corporate libraries, government libraries, law libraries, medical libraries, museum libraries, news libraries. Special libraries also exist within academic institutions. These libraries are included as special libraries because they are often funded separately from the rest of the university and they serve a targeted group of users.", "target": "specialized library providing resources on a particular topic or discipline", "baseline_candidates": ["type of library", "library"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4743158", "label": "American Beauty", "source": "American Beauty is the seventh novel in the A-List series by Zoey Dean. It was released in 2006 through Megan Tingley Publishers.", "target": "book by Zoey Dean", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65425629", "label": "judge", "source": "A judge is a person who presides over court proceedings, either alone or as a part of a panel of judges. A judge hears all the witnesses and any other evidence presented by the barristers or solicitors of the case, assesses the credibility and arguments of the parties, and then issues a ruling in the case based on their interpretation of the law and their own personal judgment. A judge is expected to conduct the trial impartially and, typically, in an open court. The powers, functions, method of appointment, discipline, and training of judges vary widely across different jurisdictions. In some jurisdictions, the judge's powers may be shared with a jury. In inquisitorial systems of criminal investigation, a judge might also be an examining magistrate. The presiding judge ensures that all court proceedings are lawful and orderly.", "target": "official who presides over court proceedings", "baseline_candidates": ["occupation group according to ISCO", "legal professionals", "legal profession", "judicial officer", "legal position", "jurist"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56754824", "label": "Barbara Gross", "source": "Barbara Gross (born 20 November 1993) is a 4.5 point wheelchair basketball player, who played for the German national team at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, winning silver. President Joachim Gauck awarded the team Germany's highest sporting honour, the Silbernes Lorbeerblatt (Silver Laurel Leaf).", "target": "German 4.5 point wheelchair basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22337504", "label": "Hong Kong women's national volleyball team", "source": "The Hong Kong women's national volleyball team represents Hong Kong in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches. It appeared at the Asian Women's Volleyball Championship 13 times. The team also participated at the 2016 Women's Volleyball Thai-Denmark Super League.", "target": "national sports team", "baseline_candidates": ["national sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1154509", "label": "Yunxi County", "source": "Yunxi County (simplified Chinese: 郧西县; traditional Chinese: 鄖西縣; pinyin: Yúnxī Xiàn) is a county in the northwest of Hubei province, China, bordering Shaanxi province to the north and the west. It is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Shiyan. The county spans a total area of 3,509.6 square kilometres (1,355.1 sq mi), and has a population of 447,482 as of 2010.", "target": "county in Shiyan, Hubei, China", "baseline_candidates": ["county of China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18367573", "label": "Catald", "source": "Catald of Taranto (also Cataldus, Cathaluds, Cathaldus, Cat(t)aldo, Cathal; fl. 7th century) was an Irish monk.", "target": "Irish monk", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27083056", "label": "Lyric Theatre", "source": "The Lyric Theatre is a West End theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue in the City of Westminster. It was built for the producer Henry Leslie, who financed it from the profits of the light opera hit, Dorothy, which he transferred from its original venue to open the new theatre on 17 December 1888. Under Leslie and his early successors the house specialised in musical theatre, and that tradition has continued intermittently throughout the theatre's existence. Musical productions in the theatre's first four decades included The Mountebanks (1892), His Excellency (1894), The Duchess of Dantzig (1903), The Chocolate Soldier (1910) and Lilac Time (1922). Later musical shows included Irma La Douce (1958), Robert and Elizabeth (1964), John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert (1974), Blood Brothers (1983), Five Guys Named Moe (1990) and Thriller – Live (2009). Many non-musical productions have been staged at the Lyric, from Shakespeare to O'Neill and Strindberg, as well as new pieces by Noël Coward, Terence Rattigan, Alan Ayckbourn, Alan Bennett and others. Stars appearing at the theatre included, in the early years, Marie Tempest, Johnston Forbes-Robertson, Eleonora Duse, Ellen Terry and Tallulah Bankhead, and in the mid-20th-century Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, Laurence Olivier, Ralph Richardson and Vivien Leigh. More recently Alec Guinness, Joan Plowright, Glenda Jackson, John Malkovich, Woody Harrelson and Ian McKellen have starred.", "target": "theatre in the West End of London", "baseline_candidates": ["theater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5128745", "label": "Tropidophorus grayi", "source": "Tropidophorus grayi, commonly called the spiny waterside skink or Gray's keeled skink, is a relatively common but secretive skink species, a lizard in the family Scincidae. The species is endemic to the Philippines.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14922006", "label": "Chrysobothris sexfasciata", "source": "Chrysobothris sexfasciata is a species of metallic wood-boring beetle in the family Buprestidae. It is found in the Caribbean Sea and North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5140469", "label": "Cody Spencer", "source": "Thomas Cody Spencer (born June 1, 1981) is a former NFL linebacker. He was drafted by the Oakland Raiders in the sixth round of the 2004 NFL Draft. He played college football at The University of North Texas. He won two State championships at Grapevine high school. Spencer has also played for the Tennessee Titans and New York Jets.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5306280", "label": "Dream 15", "source": "Dream 15 was a mixed martial arts event held by Fighting and Entertainment Group's mixed martial arts promotion Dream. The event took place on July 10, 2010 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. The event aired live in North America on HDNet.", "target": "Dream mixed martial arts event in 2010", "baseline_candidates": ["mixed martial arts event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7595086", "label": "St Patrick's Marist College", "source": "St. Patrick's Marist College (abbreviated as SPMC) is an independent Roman Catholic co-educational secondary day school in the tradition of the Marist Brothers located in Dundas, New South Wales, Australia. The college was founded by the Marist Brothers as a primary school catering for boys at Harrington Street in The Rocks in 1872. This leaves the college with the distinction of being the oldest school in Australia under the charge of the teaching Brothers and marks it as Australia's first Marist school. It is also one of the nation's oldest Catholic secondary schools. The College moved to its current site in 1962 and as of today, it provides education for approximately 1,000 students from Year 7 to Year 12. The college is a member of the Association of Marist Schools of Australia (AMSA) and the Metropolitan Catholic Schools. It is administered by the Catholic Education Office of the Diocese of Parramatta.", "target": "independent co-educational secondary day school in Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19678454", "label": "The Middle Management (Josei Chūkan Kanrishoku) / Wagamusha Life / Tsugi no Kado o Magare", "source": "\"The Middle Management (Josei Chūkan Kanrishoku) / Gamusha Life / Tsugi no Kado o Magare\" (The Middle Management~女性中間管理職~/我武者LIFE/次の角を曲がれ) is the 27th single by the Japanese female idol group Cute, released in Japan on April 1, 2015. It debuted at number 1 in the daily Oricon singles chart and at number 3 in the weekly Oricon singles chart.", "target": "single by Cute", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q948890", "label": "Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix", "source": "Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix is the fourth studio album by French indie pop band Phoenix. It was released on 25 May 2009 by V2 Records. While the band's previous work enjoyed a moderate underground following, the release of Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix drew the attention of a more mainstream audience. In the US, Phoenix began a promotional tour including performances on several late night talk shows. Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix continued to gain momentum with the increased exposure of the tour. The album received critical acclaim with many publications calling it one of the best albums of 2009. Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix earned the band a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album at the 52nd Grammy Awards held on 31 January 2010.", "target": "2009 studio album by Phoenix", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q761323", "label": "gymnastics at the 2008 Summer Olympics – men's vault", "source": "The men's vault competition at the 2008 Summer Olympics was held on August 9 and 18 at the Beijing National Indoor Stadium. The eight competitors (with a maximum of two per nation) with the highest scores in qualifying, among the gymnasts electing to make two vaults, proceeded to the men's vault finals. There, each gymnast performed two vaults; the scores from the final round (ignoring qualification) determined final ranking. There were 16 competitors from 13 nations that made a second vault attempt. The event was won by Leszek Blanik of Poland, the nation's first victory in the men's vault. Blanik was the seventh man to win multiple medals in the event, adding to his 2000 bronze. France earned its first medal in the event with Thomas Bouhail's silver. Anton Golotsutskov of Russia took bronze, putting the nation back on the podium after a one-Games absence.", "target": "olympic gymnastics event", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5529466", "label": "gear shaping", "source": "Gear shaping is a machining process for creating teeth on a gear using a cutter. Gear shaping is a convenient and versatile method of gear cutting. It involves continuous, same-plane rotational cutting of gear.", "target": "Cutting gears with a shaper tool", "baseline_candidates": ["machining", "manufacturing process", "gear manufacturing"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4553914", "label": "180th Airlift Squadron", "source": "The 180th Airlift Squadron (180 AS) is a unit of the Missouri Air National Guard 139th Airlift Wing located at Rosecrans Air National Guard Base, St. Joseph, Missouri. The 180th is equipped with the C-130H2 Hercules.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["squadron"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21623370", "label": "Fakhar Zaman", "source": "Fakhar Zaman (Pashto: فخر زمان; born 10 April 1990) is a Pakistani cricketer who plays for the Pakistan national cricket team and for Lahore Qalandars in the Pakistan Super League.On 20 July 2018, he became the first batsman for Pakistan to score a double century in a One Day International (ODI) match. Two days later, he became the fastest batsman to score 1,000 runs in ODIs. In August 2018, he was one of thirty-three players to be awarded a central contract for the 2018–19 season by the Pakistan Cricket Board.On 4 April 2021, while chasing against South Africa in the second ODI, Fakhar scored 193 before being run out by Quinton de Kock. Fakhar's 193 became the highest individual score while chasing in an ODI surpassing the 185 scored by Shane Watson against Bangladesh.", "target": "Pakistani cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1439747", "label": "Sikorsky S-52", "source": "The Sikorsky S-52 is a utility helicopter developed by Sikorsky Aircraft in the late 1940s. It was used by the U.S. Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard. The S-52 was the first US helicopter with all-metal rotor blades. A two-seater, it was developed into the four-seat S-52-2. It was designated HO5S-1 by the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps; HO5S-1G by the Coast Guard; and YH-18A by the Army.", "target": "1948 utility helicopter family by Sikorsky", "baseline_candidates": ["utility helicopter", "aircraft family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1059900", "label": "language tag", "source": "An IETF BCP 47 language tag is a standardized code or tag that is used to identify human languages in the Internet. The tag structure has been standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in Best Current Practice (BCP) 47; the subtags are maintained by the IANA Language Subtag Registry.To distinguish language variants for countries, regions, or writing systems (scripts), IETF language tags combine subtags from other standards such as ISO 639, ISO 15924, ISO 3166-1 and UN M.49. For example, the tag \"en\" stands for English; \"es-419\" for Latin American Spanish; \"rm-sursilv\" for Romansh Sursilvan; \"sr-Cyrl\" for Serbian written in Cyrillic script; \"nan-Hant-TW\" for Min Nan Chinese using traditional Han characters, as spoken in Taiwan; and \"gsw-u-sd-chzh\" for Zürich German. It is used by computing standards such as HTTP, HTML, XML and PNG.", "target": "abbreviated language code defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)", "baseline_candidates": ["machine-readable data", "language identifier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1431741", "label": "Michael Tombros", "source": "Michael Tombros (or Michalis Tombros, Greek: Μιχάλης Τόμπρος, 12 November 1889 – 28 May 1974) was a Greek sculptor who was influential in introducing avant-garde styles into Greece.", "target": "Greek sculptor (1889-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4418682", "label": "Siguang Ri", "source": "Siguang Ri is a mountain in the Mahalangur Himalayas of Tibet, China. At an elevation of 7,308 m (23,976 ft) it is the 83rd highest peak on Earth. It is located approximately 6 kilometers NNE of Cho Oyu, the world's 6th highest mountain. Siguang Ri has two significant subpeaks: Siguang Ri Shar 28°09′N 86°43′E (6998m, Prominence = 398m)Siguang Ri Northwest 28°10′N 86°39′E (6840m, Prominence = 340m).", "target": "mountain in People's Republic of China", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5079251", "label": "Charles Hutton Gregory", "source": "Sir Charles Hutton Gregory (14 October 1817 – 10 January 1898) was an English civil engineer. He was president of the Institution of Civil Engineers between December 1867 and December 1869.Charles was the son of Dr Olinthus Gilbert Gregory, a master of mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. The chair of mathematics at that time was held by Charles Hutton, who acted as Dr. Gregory's patron. It was in Hutton's honour that Charles was named.Gregory was consulting engineer of several major railway construction works, including those in Ceylon, Trinidad, Cape Colony, Perak and Selangor. He was the first to use railway semaphore signalling which he employed first at New Cross on the London and Croydon Railway in 1841, and the South Eastern Railways in 1842-3. This method later superseded all others and was dominant from 1870. In 1882 he was a member of the Channel Tunnel Committee and in 1886 was a Royal Commissioner for the Colonial and Indian Exhibition.With these uses in mind, he was interested in the properties of the less usual timbers. In 1886 he, in the company of other leading figures such as Sir Philip Cunliffe-Owen, Sir John Coode and Sir Frederick Bramwell, attended an exhibition at the Chelsea works of A. Ransome and Co, manufacturers of woodworking equipment. There they saw experiments on more than 40 different varieties of colonial timber, including Karri wood and Jarrah from Western Australia, and Padouk from India.Gregory was instrumental in furthering the careers of many fellow engineers, e.g. Frederick George Slessor (1831-1905) -- in.", "target": "British civil engineer (1817-1898)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37783651", "label": "Dondukovskaya", "source": "Dondukovskaya (Russian: Дондуковская) is a rural locality (a stanitsa) and the administrative center of Dondukovskoye Rural Settlement of Giaginsky District, Adygea, Russia. The population was 6636 as of 2018. There are 56 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Giaginsky District, Republic of Adygea, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["stanitsa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11338563", "label": "One Cab's Family", "source": "One Cab's Family is a 1952 Metro Goldwyn Mayer cartoon short directed by Tex Avery about the arrival of a yellow taxi cab \"child\". This is comparable to the 1953 cartoon, Little Johnny Jet. The title is a play on the radio soap opera program One Man's Family.", "target": "1952 film by Tex Avery", "baseline_candidates": ["animated short film", "film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3449733", "label": "Rideau Street", "source": "Rideau Street (French: Rue Rideau) is a major street in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and one of Ottawa's oldest and most famous streets running from Wellington Street in the west to Montreal Road in the east where it connects to the Vanier district. Rideau Street is home to the Château Laurier, the CF Rideau Centre and the Government Conference Centre (Ottawa's former central train station). Along with Wellington Street and Sussex Drive it was among the first streets in Ottawa to be host to businesses; it was created with the founding of the early town. The Plaza Bridge by the Rideau Canal is at its westmost point and the Cummings Bridge is at its eastmost point. For many years, Rideau Street was one of Ottawa's primary retail thoroughfares, containing department stores such as Freimans, Ogilvy's, Woolworth, Caplan's and Metropolitan. In November 1979, then mayor Marion Dewar examined a plan to create what became the 'Rideau Street Bus Mall.' Sidewalks from Sussex to Dalhousie were enclosed in a continuous glass-and-steel structure. The heated mall was expected to allow pedestrians to shop in comfort year-round. However, the structure had an unanticipated downside, in that it attracted large numbers of homeless and late-night drinkers. Many establishments along the affected stretch of Rideau Street failed as a result. The decision was made to tear the shelters down, and in the end the cost for dismantling them was almost as much as the $6.5 million incurred in their construction. Although the local department stores are gone, Rideau Street still features The.", "target": "street in Ottawa, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["street"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42349603", "label": "Donald Gehrmann", "source": "Donald Arthur Gehrmann (born November 16, 1927) is a retired American middle-distance runner. He competed in the 1500 m final at the 1948 Summer Olympics and placed eighth among twelve contenders. Gehrman won the NCAA 1500 m or mile title in 1948–50. He also won the AAU indoor 1000 yd title in 1952 and 1953; outdoors he placed third in 1947 in the mile.", "target": "American athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14840866", "label": "Bumetopia bakeri", "source": "Bumetopia bakeri is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Per Olof Christopher Aurivillius in 1927 and is known from the Philippines.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98081627", "label": "animation", "source": "Animation is a method in which figures are manipulated to appear as moving images. In traditional animation, images are drawn or painted by hand on transparent celluloid sheets to be photographed and exhibited on film. Today, most animations are made with computer-generated imagery (CGI). Computer animation can be very detailed 3D animation, while 2D computer animation (which may have the look of traditional animation) can be used for stylistic reasons, low bandwidth, or faster real-time renderings. Other common animation methods apply a stop motion technique to two- and three-dimensional objects like paper cutouts, puppets, or clay figures. An animated cartoon is an animated film, usually a short film, featuring an exaggerated visual style. The style takes inspiration from comic strips, often featuring anthropomorphic animals, superheroes, or the adventures of human protagonists (either children or adults). Especially with animals that form a natural predator/prey relationship (e.g. cats and mice, coyotes and birds), the action often centers around violent pratfalls such as falls, collisions, and explosions that would be lethal in real life. The illusion of animation—as in motion pictures in general—has traditionally been attributed to persistence of vision and later to the phi phenomenon and/or beta movement, but the exact neurological causes are still uncertain. The illusion of motion caused by a rapid succession of images that minimally differ from each other, with unnoticeable interruptions, is a stroboscopic effect. While animators traditionally used to draw each part of the movements and changes of figures on transparent cels that could be moved over a separate background, computer animation.", "target": "process of creating animated films and series", "baseline_candidates": ["cinematic technique", "filmmaking"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q374663", "label": "Haskell County", "source": "Haskell County (county code HS) is a county located in the U.S. state of Kansas. As of the 2020 census, the county population was 3,780. Its county seat and most populous city is Sublette.", "target": "county in Kansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Kansas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1897302", "label": "organomanganese compound", "source": "Organomanganese chemistry is the chemistry of organometallic compounds containing a carbon to manganese chemical bond. In a 2009 review, Cahiez et al. argued that as manganese is cheap and benign (only iron performs better in these aspects), organomanganese compounds have potential as chemical reagents, although currently they are not widely used as such despite extensive research. A key disadvantage of organomanganese compounds is that they can be obtained directly from the metal only with difficulty.", "target": "any organometalic compound with a carbon–manganese bond", "baseline_candidates": ["structural class of chemical compounds", "organometallic compound", "manganese compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3033850", "label": "Dolac, Glamoč", "source": "Dolac is a village in the municipality of Glamoč in Canton 10, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "target": "village in the municipality of Glamoč", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3720932", "label": "El Hijo de L.A. Park", "source": "El Hijo de L.A. Park (born November 20, 1988) is a Mexican Luchador enmascarado, or masked professional wrestler. His ring name (\"The Son of L.A. Park\") indicates he is the son of Adolfo Tapia, the original La Parka, who currently wrestles as L.A. Park. He currently wrestles in Mexico for Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) and alongside his father in the American promotion Major League Wrestling, where he is one half of the World Tag Team Champions with L.A. Park. Originally he wrestled under the name \"Black Spirit\", keeping the family relation to L.A. Park secret. He has been using the El Hijo de L.A. Park name since 2011. His real name is not a matter of public record, as is often the case with masked wrestlers in Mexico, where their private lives are kept a secret from the wrestling fans.", "target": "Mexican professional wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1592071", "label": "Hà Tiên Islands", "source": "Hà Tiên Islands (Vietnamese: Quần đảo Hà Tiên) is an archipelago located in the Gulf of Thailand. It constitutes Tien Hai Commune of Hà Tiên, Kiên Giang Province, Vietnam. Since pirates used to plague the region in the past, another popular name for the islands is Hải Tặc Islands (Quần đảo Hải Tặc, literally \"Pirate Islands\").", "target": "archipelago", "baseline_candidates": ["archipelago"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25616170", "label": "Colorado County", "source": "Colorado County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 20,557. Its county seat is Columbus. It is named for the Colorado River of Texas. The county was founded in 1836 and organized the next year.", "target": "county in Texas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Texas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6961113", "label": "Nam Na-yeong", "source": "Nam Na-yeong (Korean: 남나영; born 1970) is a South Korean film editor and negative cutter. She has edited films with directors Ryoo Seung-wan (Arahan, The City of Violence, and Crying Fist), Kim Jee-woon (The Good, the Bad, the Weird and I Saw the Devil), and Kang Hyeong-cheol (Scandal Makers, Sunny, and Tazza: The Hidden Card). As of 2020, Nam has edited more than 60 films.", "target": "South Korean film editor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7320428", "label": "Rhesalistis", "source": "Rhesalistis is a monotypic moth genus of the family Erebidae erected by George Hampson in 1926. Its only species, Rhesalistis rotundata, was first described by Rothschild in 1915. It is found on New Guinea.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24062984", "label": "The Push Man and Other Stories", "source": "The Push Man and Other Stories is a collection of gekiga short stories by manga artist Yoshihiro Tatsumi. It collects sixteen stories by Tatsumi which were serialized in the manga magazine Gekiga Young as well as in self-published dōjinshi magazines in 1969. Drawn & Quarterly collected the stories and published them on September 1, 2005. In 2006, the manga was nominated for the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Anthology or Collection and the Harvey Award for Best American Edition of Foreign Material.", "target": "short story manga collection", "baseline_candidates": ["manga series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1361918", "label": "tennis at the 1900 Summer Olympics – women's singles", "source": "The women's singles was an event on the Tennis at the 1900 Summer Olympics program in Paris. It was held from 6 to 11 July at the Île de Puteaux. There were 6 competitors from 4 nations. The event was won by Charlotte Cooper of Great Britain. France's Hélène Prévost was the silver medalist, while American Marion Jones Farquhar and Hedwiga Rosenbaumová of Bohemia are credited with bronze medals. The event made Cooper the first female individual Olympic champion (Hélène de Pourtalès won a gold medal in a team event in sailing earlier; Margaret Abbott would win the women's golf tournament later, in October).", "target": "tennis at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20668803", "label": "Udo Bentz", "source": "Udo Markus Bentz (born 3 March 1967 in Rülzheim) is a Roman Catholic clergyman and auxiliary bishop in Mainz. Udo Bentz first trained from 1986 to 1988 as a banker. In 1988 he entered the Mainz priesthood and studied theology and philosophy at the University of Mainz and University of Innsbruck. In 1994 the deacon ordination and the diaconate internship in Griesheim took place. He received the sacrament of the ordination of priests on 1 July 1995 for the bishopric of Mainz by Bishop Karl Lehmann Until 1998, he worked as a chaplain in the cathedral of St. Peter and the St. Martin parish in Worms. This was followed by a four-year period as personal secretary of the Mainz Bishop Karl Lehmann. After further studies he joined Albert Raffelt at the Albert-Ludwigs-University Freiburg in 2007 with a theological-historical dissertation on Dr. theol. PhD. For this work, he was awarded the Karl Rahner Prize in 2008 by the University of Innsbruck. He was pastoral in the parish of St. Michael in Sprendlingen (2002–2004) and in the parish of St. Peter Canisius in Mainz-Gonsenheim (2004–2007). Since 2007, he is a rain of the Mainz priest seminar. In 2011, he was appointed spiritual minister by the Bishop of Mainz. In 2013, Bentz was elected Chairman of the German Regency Council, the Conference of Rectors of the Priestly Seminars in Germany. In addition to the priestly seminar, he has been teaching the seminary for pastoralists and pastoral assistants of the diocese since 2014.", "target": "German Roman Catholic bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3656540", "label": "New Bridge in Kosovska Mitrovica", "source": "The New Bridge (also known as Mitrovica Bridge, Ibar River Bridge or with the unofficial Austerlitz Bridge) is a steel truss bridge crossing the Ibar river in Mitrovica, a city in Serbian enclave of northern Kosovo. The New Bridge has become an iconic symbol of Kosovo division, as it separates around 80,000 Kosovo Albanians in the south from 50 000 Serbs and other nationalities living in the north. It is was used as a military checkpoint and provides a de facto border and buffer zone between the northern Serbian enclaves and the rest of Kosovo. Today the bridge is open to pedestrians and there are only Carabinieri patrols from KFOR-MSU and Kosovo Police, but there is no longer any checkpoint. However, the bridge is important part for Serbian people who recognize this north part of Kosovo as their own.", "target": "bridge across the Ibar river in Mitrovica, Kosovo", "baseline_candidates": ["bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22964442", "label": "rowing at the 1992 Summer Olympics – men's coxless four", "source": "The men's coxless four competition at the 1992 Summer Olympics took place at took place at Lake of Banyoles, Spain.", "target": "Olympic rowing event", "baseline_candidates": ["rowing event", "Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q432851", "label": "Sheila Rowbotham", "source": "Sheila Rowbotham (born 27 February 1943) is a British socialist feminist theorist and historian.", "target": "British historian and feminist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7240820", "label": "Presbytery of Glasgow", "source": "The Presbytery of Glasgow is one of the 46 Presbyteries of the Church of Scotland. It dates back to the earliest periods of Presbyterian church government in the Church of Scotland in the late 16th century. The Presbytery of Glasgow currently has 125 congregations, making it by far the largest Presbytery in the Church of Scotland. Congregations vary in location from suburbs and urban priority areas (representing part of the poorest 5% of Scotland’s population) to outlying towns and villages. The Presbytery boundaries extend beyond the City of Glasgow to include parts of four other local authority areas (East Dunbartonshire, East Renfrewshire, North Lanarkshire and South Lanarkshire).", "target": "Church of Scotland Presbytery", "baseline_candidates": ["religious administrative entity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30334479", "label": "Ivan Marić", "source": "Ivan Marić (Serbian Cyrillic: Иван Марић; born 3 August 1994) is a Serbian footballer who is playing for Swadhinata KS.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21063351", "label": "Steven Reed", "source": "Steven L. Reed (born 1974) is an American jurist and politician serving as the Mayor of Montgomery, Alabama. A member of the Democratic Party, he previously served as a probate judge in Montgomery County.", "target": "American judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18159525", "label": "2776", "source": "2776 is the second musical comedy album created and produced by Los Angeles based comedians Rob Kutner, Joel Moss Levinson, and Stephen Levinson. Released on July 4, 2014, 2776 features 28 tracks and over 80 celebrity performers. It's the story of the President in the year 2776 journeying through time to save America. The album also includes music videos for three songs: “Toymageddon,” “I’m Cured,” and “These Aren’t the Droids.” The album is a benefit for OneKid OneWorld.", "target": "2014 compilation album by Various artists", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3330629", "label": "Museum of Islamic Art", "source": "The Museum of Islamic Art (MIA) in Cairo, Egypt is considered one of the greatest museums in the world, with its exceptional collection of rare woodwork and plaster artefacts, as well as metal, ceramic, glass, crystal, and textile objects of all periods, from all over the Islamic world. In recent years, the museum has displayed about 4,500 artefacts in 25 Halls , but it houses more than 100,000 objects, with the remainder in storage. The collection includes rare manuscripts of the Qur'an, with some calligraphy written in silver ink, on pages with elaborate borders. The Museum has conducted archaeological excavations in the Fustat area and has organized a number of national and international exhibitions. The museum closed for renovations in 2003, and re-opened 8 years later, in August 2010. The restoration cost nearly US$10 million.", "target": "art museum in Cairo, Egypt", "baseline_candidates": ["museum", "art museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61117547", "label": "Infante Alfonso of Spain", "source": "Infante Alfonso of Spain, Prince of the Two Sicilies, Duke of Calabria (30 November 1901 – 3 February 1964) was one of two claimants to the title of the head of the House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies from 1960 until his death in 1964. Alfonso was the son of Prince Carlos of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (1870–1949) and his wife, María de las Mercedes, Princess of Asturias (1880–1904). He was born and died in Madrid, Spain. Alfonso's mother was María de las Mercedes, Princess of Asturias, but she died in childbirth in 1904. King Alfonso XIII of Spain was unmarried at the time so as the Princess of the Asturias's eldest son, Alfonso became heir-presumptive to the Spanish crown, though, unlike his mother, he never held the title of Prince of Asturias. He was heir-presumptive until the birth of his cousin, Alfonso in 1907, to Alfonso XIII and Queen Victoria Eugenie.", "target": "Spanish and Bourbon-Two Sicilian Royal", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2205706", "label": "vincristine", "source": "Vincristine, also known as leurocristine and marketed under the brand name Oncovin among others, is a chemotherapy medication used to treat a number of types of cancer. This includes acute lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, neuroblastoma, and small cell lung cancer among others. It is given intravenously.Most people experience some side effects from vincristine treatment. Commonly it causes a change in sensation, hair loss, constipation, difficulty walking, and headaches. Serious side effects may include neuropathic pain, lung damage, or low white blood cells which increases the risk of infection. Use during pregnancy may result in birth defects. It works by stopping cells from dividing properly. It is vital that it not be given intrathecally, as this causes paralysis and in most cases, death.Vincristine was first isolated in 1961. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. It is a vinca alkaloid that can be obtained from the Madagascar periwinkle Catharanthus roseus.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["essential medicine", "chemical compound", "spindle poison", "mitotic inhibitor", "Vinca alkaloids", "medication", "aspidospermine / aspidofractine / kopsane alkaloid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21589627", "label": "Tell Arbid", "source": "Tell Arbid is an ancient Near East archaeological site in the Khabur River Basin region of Al-Hasakah Governorate, Syria. It is located 45 km south of Tell Mozan, the site of ancient Urkesh.", "target": "Archaeological site in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site", "hill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5246120", "label": "Dean Dingman", "source": "Dean Dingman (born September 27, 1968) is a former American football player. He was an All-American offensive guard who played for the University of Michigan Wolverines football team from [987 to 1990. He was drafted by in the eighth round of the 1991 NFL Draft. He was a member of the three-peat Big Ten Conference champions from 1988 to 1990 who appeared in two Rose Bowls and a Gator Bowl. A native of East Troy, Wisconsin, Dingman was named to the USA Today's All USA Football Team as a high school offensive lineman in 1986. Dingman contributed immediately as only the third true freshman to start any games on the Michigan offensive line. Dingman was a two-time All Big Ten selection, and he started 37 games at Michigan. In the January 1991 Gator Bowl, Dingman and the entire offensive line, which included Greg Skrepenak, were named Most Valuable Player. Dingman helped the Michigan offense gain a record 715 yards of total offense in a 35-3 victory over Mississippi in the Gator Bowl. This marked the culmination of a productive season in which the offensive line helped Jon Vaughn set the Michigan football record for career yards per carry (minimum 200 attempts). Behind true senior Dingman and redshirt junior Skrepenak, redshirt sophomore Vaughn concluded his Michigan career that season with 1473 yards on 226 rushes for a career 6.3 yards per attempt average, including 1416 yards on 216 rushes during the 1990 season. In 1990, Dingman was selected as a first-team All American by the Sporting News.", "target": "American football player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q241304", "label": "Jana Tichá", "source": "Jana Tichá (born 1965 in České Budějovice) is a Czech astronomer and discoverer of minor planets. She studied at the University of Economics in Prague and graduated in 1987. In 1992 she was selected for the position of a director of the Kleť Observatory. She specializes in discoveries of asteroids and comets especially near-Earth objects (NEOs). The Minor Planet Center credits her with the discovery of 104 numbered minor planets during 1995–2003. She is the chair of the IAU Committee on Small Body Nomenclature (CSBN), which is responsible for approving names of asteroids. She works together with her husband Miloš Tichý at Kleť.In her country she is also well known for her popularization activities. She is major contributor to the Czech web servers about asteroids and comets. On 3 May 1996 the asteroid 5757 Tichá was named in her honour (M.P.C. 27128), while she named her discovery, the main-belt asteroid 8307 Peltan, after several members of her family.", "target": "Czech astronomer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1440166", "label": "Valdeci Basílio da Silva", "source": "Valdeci Basílio da Silva (born 14 July 1972) is a Brazilian former football player.", "target": "Brazilian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18213380", "label": "Ammersee", "source": "Ammersee (English: Lake Ammer) is a Zungenbecken lake in Upper Bavaria, Germany, southwest of Munich between the towns of Herrsching and Dießen am Ammersee. With a surface area of approximately 47 square kilometres (18 sq mi), it is the sixth largest lake in Germany. The lake is at an elevation of 533 metres (1,749 ft), and has a maximum depth of 81 metres (266 ft). Like other Bavarian lakes, Ammersee developed as a result of the ice age glaciers melting. Ammersee is fed by the River Ammer, which flows as the Amper out of the lake. Like neighbouring Lake Starnberg - deeper, bigger in surface area, similar in shape - it is a popular location for watersports. Ammersee and the Amper are part of the ancient Celtic amber trading route leading to the Brenner Pass. The word Ammer is a 13th-century form of Amper, the Celtic *ambra, deriving from the Indo-European *ombh-, *mbh- \"wet, Water\".Passenger services have operated on the lake since 1879. Today they are operated by the Bayerische Seenschifffahrt company, using a mixture of historic paddle steamers and motor ships.", "target": "lake in Upper Bavaria, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q728822", "label": "Egon Petri", "source": "Egon Petri (23 March 1881 – 27 May 1962) was a Dutch pianist.", "target": "Dutch musician (1881-1962)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q139137", "label": "Candida glabrata", "source": "Candida glabrata is a species of haploid yeast of the genus Candida, previously known as Torulopsis glabrata. Despite the fact that no sexual life cycle has been documented for this species, C. glabrata strains of both mating types are commonly found. C. glabrata is generally a commensal of human mucosal tissues, but in today's era of wider human immunodeficiency from various causes (for example, therapeutic immunomodulation, longer survival with various comorbidities such as diabetes, and HIV infection), C. glabrata is often the second or third most common cause of candidiasis as an opportunistic pathogen. Infections caused by C. glabrata can affect the urogenital tract or even cause systemic infections by entrance of the fungal cells in the bloodstream (Candidemia), especially prevalent in immunocompromised patients.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22063871", "label": "Major Vieira", "source": "Major Vieira is a municipality in the state of Santa Catarina in the South region of Brazil.", "target": "human settlement in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5013746", "label": "CPT Word Processors", "source": "CPT Corporation was founded in 1971 by Dean Scheff in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with co-founders James Wienhold and Richard Eichhorn. CPT first designed, manufactured, and marketed the CPT 4200, a dual-cassette-tape machine that controlled a modified IBM Selectric typewriter to support text editing and word processing. The CPT 4200 was followed in 1976 by the CPT VM (Visual Memory), a partial-page display-screen dual-cassette-tape unit, and shortly thereafter by the CPT 8000, a full-page display dual-diskette desktop microcomputer that drove stand-alone daisy wheel printers. Subsequent products included (1) variants on the 8000 series; (2) the CPT 6000 series, which had a lower capacity, smaller screen, and was less expensive; (3) the CPT 9000 series, which had a larger capacity and could run IBM personal computer software; (4) the CPT Phoenix series, which had a graphical capabilities; (5) CPT PT, a software-only reduced version that ran on IBM personal computers and clones; and (6) other related products.The CPT logo—originally three letters chosen to sound well together—began to be taken as an acronym for \"cassette powered typewriting,\" and subsequently for \"computer processed text,\" and numerous other variants. Major competition was IBM, Wang, Lanier, Xerox, and other word processing vendors.CPT Corporation was fifth in size among Minnesota-based top high-tech companies, after 3M, Honeywell, Control Data, and Medtronic. Corporate revenues grew to approximately a quarter-billion dollars per year in the mid-1980s, then declined with the proliferation of personal computers. CPT ultimately ceased major manufacturing late in the 20th century.", "target": "20th-century word processor manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7239762", "label": "Preeta Samarasan", "source": "Preeta Samarasan is a Malaysian author writing in English whose first novel, Evening Is the Whole Day, won the Hopwood Novel Award (while she was doing her MFA at the University of Michigan), was a finalist for the Commonwealth Writers Prize 2009, and was on the longlist for the Orange Prize for Fiction. A number of short stories have also appeared in different magazines; “Our House Stands in a City of Flowers” won the Hyphen Asian American Short Story Contest or the Asian American Writers' Workshop/Hyphen Short Story award in 2007.", "target": "Malaysian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31701252", "label": "Saadi Yousef", "source": "Saadi Youssef (Arabic: سعدي يوسف) (1934 – 13 June 2021) was an Iraqi author, poet, journalist, publisher, and political activist. He published thirty volumes of poetry in addition to seven books of prose.", "target": "Iraqi poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1661845", "label": "publication history of Marvel Comics crossover events", "source": "Throughout its history of publication, Marvel Comics has produced many intercompany crossover stories combining characters from different series of comics. The following is a list of crossover events involving superheroes and characters from different series.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q440196", "label": "David Enskog", "source": "David Enskog (22 April 1884, Västra Ämtervik, Sunne – 1 June 1947, Stockholm) was a Swedish mathematical physicist. Enskog helped develop the kinetic theory of gases by extending the Maxwell–Boltzmann equations.", "target": "Swedish mathematician and physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20745287", "label": "Jaime Schultz", "source": "Jaime Matthew Schultz (born June 20, 1991) is an American professional baseball pitcher who is currently a free agent. He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Tampa Bay Rays and Los Angeles Dodgers.", "target": "American professional baseball pitcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7329242", "label": "Richard Stephenson", "source": "Richard Stephenson (born 12 August 1949) was one of Zambia's most gifted midfielders who featured during the country's very first Cup of Nations appearance in Egypt in 1974. He captained the 'Magnificent' Kabwe Warriors and was Zambia's footballer of the year in 1971. Stephenson also played for Kitwe giants Power Dynamos later in his career.", "target": "Zambian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48770905", "label": "1935–36 Celtic F.C. season", "source": "During the 1935–36 Scottish football season, Celtic competed in the Scottish First Division.", "target": "Celtic 1935–36 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5432074", "label": "Fall River Astros", "source": "The Fall River Astros was an American soccer club based in Fall River, Massachusetts that was a member of the American Soccer League. Following the 1968 season, the franchise folded but was restarted as the Boston Astros.", "target": "defunct American soccer club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5773515", "label": "Historic Hicks Field", "source": "Historic Hicks Field is a historic baseball stadium and national historic district located in Edenton, North Carolina, (Chowan County). The stadium is home to the John A. Holmes High School Aces as well as the Edenton Steamers of the Coastal Plain League. Hicks Field was a Works Progress Administration project in 1939 at the corner of East Freemason and Woodward, adjacent to John A. Holmes High School.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.The main structure is a wood grandstand with a roof that was built to accommodate slightly more than 500 people. The main grandstand is the oldest remaining wooden grandstand of its type in the state of North Carolina. Over the years, Hicks Field has been home to many minor league and semipro baseball teams, including the Edenton Colonials of the Virginia League in 1951, the original Coastal Plain League in 1952 and the semipro Albemarle League. Beginning in the 1930s, the Albemarle League was well known for high-level baseball as both top local players and college stars from around the region suited up for teams also representing Elizabeth City, Hertford, Colerain, Windsor and Williamston.Hicks Field was also the longtime spring training site for a number of minor league teams during the 1940s, including Binghamton, New York, and Reading, Pennsylvania. Players such as Bob Feller and other major league all-stars have set foot inside the historic stadium. In 1946, Hicks Field played host to arguably one of the best games of that era as an Albemarle League all-star team faced.", "target": "historic district in North Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6967276", "label": "Nasrabad, Golestan", "source": "Nasrabad (Persian: نصراباد, also Romanized as Naşrābād) is a village in Estarabad-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Gorgan County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,651, in 907 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q508377", "label": "Bob Seagren", "source": "Robert Seagren (born October 17, 1946) is a retired American pole vaulter, the 1968 Olympic champion. A native of Pomona, California, Seagren was one of the world's top pole vaulters in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He won six National AAU and four NCAA titles indoors and outdoors. Indoors he posted eight world bests between 1966 and 1969. He was also the Pan American Games champion in 1967. He set his first world record 5.32 metres (17 ft 5 in) in Fresno on May 14, 1966, followed by his world records 1967 in San Diego 5.36 metres (17 ft 7 in), 1968 in Echo Summit near South Lake Tahoe 5.41 metres (17 ft 9 in) and 1972 in Eugene 5.63 metres (18 ft 6 in). See the Eugene record jump Video on YouTube @ 19:20. In 1968, Seagren participated in his first Olympic Games in Mexico City. In an exciting contest, he won the gold medal with the top three vaulters, including silver medallist Claus Schiprowski (West Germany) and the bronze medal winner Wolfgang Nordwig (East Germany) reaching the same height 5.40 metres (17 ft 9 in). Four years later, in Munich, he remains best remembered for the Olympic gold medal he didn't get. In the 1972 Summer Olympics, a last-minute ruling barred the new banana-Pole from Olympic competition, forcing some vaulters, including Seagren, to compete with unfamiliar poles. East German Wolfgang Nordwig didn't use a Cata-Pole and won the gold medal, with Seagren coming second. It was the first time an American had failed.", "target": "athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97306972", "label": "Santiago Hernández", "source": "Santiago Hernández (born 1 October 1979) is a Mexican sailor. He competed in the men's 470 event at the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Mexican sailor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20710581", "label": "1905 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team", "source": "The 1905 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota in the 1905 Western Conference football season. In their sixth year under head coach Henry L. Williams, the Golden Gophers compiled a 10–1 record (2–1 against Western Conference opponents), shut out 9 of 11 opponents, and outscored all opponents 542 to 22.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3461209", "label": "Llanfaes", "source": "Llanfaes (formerly also known as Llanmaes) is a small village on the island of Anglesey, Wales, located on the shore of the eastern entrance to the Menai Strait, the tidal waterway separating Anglesey from the north Wales coast. Its natural harbour made it an important medieval port and it was briefly the capital of the kingdom of Gwynedd. Following Prince Madoc's Rebellion, Edward I removed the Welsh population from the town and rebuilt the port a mile to the south at Beaumaris. It is in the community of Beaumaris.", "target": "village in Anglesey, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60845845", "label": "Wardell", "source": "Wardell is a village in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia. It is situated on the Richmond River and the Pacific Highway between Broadwater and Ballina. Wardell is approximately 724 km (450 mi) north of Sydney and 200 km (124 mi) south of Brisbane. The boundaries are within the Ballina Shire local government area.", "target": "town in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4393221", "label": "Johan Gustaf Renat", "source": "Johan Gustaf Renat (1682–1744) was a Swedish soldier and cartographer. He is primarily known for his role in bringing detailed maps of Central Asia to Europe after close to two decades in captivity.", "target": "Swedish cartographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q172638", "label": "LDS", "source": "LDS is the name given to various single seater racing specials built for the South African Formula One Championship. The \"specials\" were built by Louis Douglas Serrurier, hence the name. The Mark 1 and Mark 2 models were based on Cooper designs, whilst the Mark 3 was based on the Brabham BT11. Mark 1 and Mark 2 models (1962–1965) used Alfa Romeo 1.5-litre straight-4 engines. A total of eight LDS cars participated in five World Championship Grands Prix. They did not score any World Championship points.", "target": "South African motorsport team", "baseline_candidates": ["racing automobile model", "auto racing team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3170740", "label": "Jean-François Berthelier", "source": "Jean-François-Philibert Berthelier (14 December 1830 – 29 September 1888) was a French actor and singer, who performed many light tenor roles in opéra-comique and opéra-bouffe.", "target": "French opera singer (1830-1888)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14636", "label": "Pare Pare", "source": "Parepare is a city (kota) in South Sulawesi, Indonesia, located on the southwest coast of Sulawesi, about 155 km (96 mi) north of the provincial capital of Makassar. A port town, it is one of the major population centers of the Bugis people. The city had a population of 129,542 people at the 2010 Census and 151,454 at the 2020 Census.Jusuf Habibie, the third President of Indonesia, was born in Parepare.", "target": "city in South Sulawesi Province, Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["city of Indonesia", "big city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47007154", "label": "Lake Leake", "source": "Lake Leake (palawa kani: kunawi) is the name of both a man-made water storage reservoir and a small township (Australian Postcode 7210) in the eastern midlands of Tasmania. The locality is split between two local authorities, as follows: Northern Midlands Council (53%), Glamorgan-Spring Bay Council (47%)The lake can hold 22.076 gigalitres (779,600,000 cu ft) of water. The lake was named after Charles Henry Leake a member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council. At the 2006 census, Lake Leake had a population of 176.", "target": "locality in Tasmania, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb/locality of Tasmania", "locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5496559", "label": "Fred William Bowerman", "source": "Fred William Bowerman (January 8, 1893 – May 1, 1953) was an American bank robber and Depression-era outlaw. A veteran holdup man, his criminal career lasted over 30 years and he was placed on the FBI's \"Ten Most Wanted\" list in 1953. That same year, his last, Bowerman organized and led the disastrous Southwest Bank holdup in St. Louis, Missouri, which resulted in a standoff between himself and his three partners against a force of over 100 officers of the St. Louis Police Department. The events were later made into a film, The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery (1959), starring Crahan Denton and Steve McQueen.", "target": "American bank robber and one of the FBI's \"Ten Most Wanted\" who led Southwest Bank holdup in 1953.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7157765", "label": "Peadar Andrews", "source": "Peadar Andrews is an Irish Gaelic footballer who played for the Dublin county team. He was part of the 2005 Dublin team that beat Laois to become the 2005 Leinster Champions and was in the panel for Dublin's second consecutive Leinster Championship against Offaly in July 2006. He plays his club football for St Brigid's and was part of the squad that defeated Thomas Davis to the Dublin AFL Division 1 title at O'Toole Park. Andrews retired from the Dublin panel in 2006.Peadar Andrews is currently a Partner in the tax department of Ernst & Young in Dublin, having previously worked at Bank of Ireland. He was on the Leinster squad in the 2005 Railway Cup victory over Ulster in Parnell Park were Leinster claimed the Martin Donnelly Cup for the 28th time. Andrews received a suspension of eight weeks in the controversial 2006 national league clash between Dublin and Tyrone. A game which resulted in disciplinary action against 9 players involved in the game. He was charged under rules 138 and 140 but was later exonerated due to 'a technicality'. He is the older brother of Paddy Andrews, who is currently part of the senior Dublin county football squad.", "target": "Gaelic football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11867234", "label": "Jouni Kailajärvi", "source": "Jouni Kalervo Kailajärvi (4 June 1938 – 18 August 2003) was a Finnish light-heavyweight weightlifter who won bronze medals at the European championships in 1961 and 1962. He competed at the 1960, 1964 and 1968 Olympics with the best result of fifth place in 1960. His younger brother Jaakko was also an Olympic weightlifter.", "target": "Finnish weightlifter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4822422", "label": "Aurland United Norwegian Lutheran Church", "source": "The Aurland United Norwegian Lutheran Church is a church located southwest of Frederick, South Dakota, built in 1903–1905. It is no longer actively used for services. The church has not been altered significantly since its construction. In 1982, it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places.The congregation was organized in 1885. The church was patterned after the home church of immigrants from Aurland, Sogn, Norway.", "target": "church building in South Dakota, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3892937", "label": "Santa María Tepantlali", "source": "Santa María Tepantlali is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. The municipality covers an area of km². It is part of the Sierra Mixe district within the Sierra Norte de Oaxaca Region. As of 2005, the municipality had a total population of .", "target": "municipality and town in Oaxaca, Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["geographical feature"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5265299", "label": "Destiny of the Daleks", "source": "Destiny of the Daleks is the first serial of the 17th season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts on BBC1 from 1 September to 22 September 1979. The story introduces Lalla Ward as the newly regenerated Romana. It is set on the planet Skaro centuries after events of the 1975 serial Genesis of the Daleks. The Daleks arrive on Skaro to find their creator Davros (David Gooderson) in suspended animation. They seek his guidance to help them beat the Movellan race with whom the Daleks are in a stalemated war.", "target": "Doctor Who serial", "baseline_candidates": ["Doctor Who serial"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60790557", "label": "Achelous River", "source": "The Achelous (Ancient Greek: Ἀχελῷος Akhelôios), also Acheloos, is a river of the district of Malis in ancient Thessaly, flowing past the town of Paracheloïtae, and near Lamia; a tributary of the Spercheios.", "target": "river in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75426170", "label": "Sir Charles Barrow, 1st Baronet", "source": "Sir Charles Barrow, 1st Baronet (1707–89), of Hygrove, Minsterworth, Gloucestershire, was an English politician.", "target": "British politician (1707–1789)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16208312", "label": "Cheri Madsen", "source": "Cheri Madsen (née Becerra; born September 27, 1976) is an American Paralympic wheelchair racing athlete. Madsen is a Native American from the Omaha tribe. She grew up in Nebraska, graduating from Nebraska City High School in 1995. Aged three she lost the use of her legs due to an unknown viral infection in her spine. She took up wheelchair racing in 1994 and two years later qualified for the 1996 Paralympics. There, she competed in four events in classification T53, medaling in each. She participated in the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney in the same four events, this time in T54, winning two gold and one silver medal. After that she semi-retired from competitions to build a family – she married Eric Madsen on June 2, 2001, and later gave birth to daughters Reese and Malayna. In 2007 her younger brother and father were killed in a car-train crash. Madsen returned to competitions in 2013 to honor her brother. She qualified for the 2013 IPC World Championships, 2015 Parapan American Games and 2016 Rio Paralympics, medaling on all occasions.", "target": "American Paralympic athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5721829", "label": "Henry Gaston Bunn", "source": "Henry Gaston Bunn (June 12, 1838 – July 17, 1908) was an American lawyer, soldier, and politician who served as Chief Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court.", "target": "American judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q916654", "label": "Ervenice", "source": "Ervenice is a village in the municipality of Tutin, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 57 people.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85879188", "label": "Veronika Macarol", "source": "Veronika Macarol (born 28 March 1987) is a Slovenian competitive sailor. She competed in the 470 class at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, together with Tina Mrak.", "target": "Slovenian sailor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4726842", "label": "Alipura State", "source": "Alipura was a princely state in what is today the Chhatarpur District in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.Alipura, the capital of the state is located between Gwalior and Satna at 25°10′31″N 79°20′08″E and had a population of 3,232 according to the 1881 Census of India.", "target": "princely state in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh", "baseline_candidates": ["princely state"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1058963", "label": "Sosuke Ikematsu", "source": "Sōsuke Ikematsu (池松 壮亮, Ikematsu Sōsuke) (born July 9, 1990) is a Japanese actor, television, and theatre actor best known for his role as Higen, the young nephew of samurai leader Katsumoto, in the 2003 film The Last Samurai.", "target": "Japanese actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39047816", "label": "Lovely Creatures: The Best of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds", "source": "Lovely Creatures: The Best of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds is a compilation album by Australian alternative rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, released on 5 May 2017.", "target": "2017 greatest hits album by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5617916", "label": "Gulubhai Jasdanwalla", "source": "Gulubhai Jasdanwalla was a Hindustani Classical vocalist of the Jaipur-Atrauli Gharana and one of the foremost disciples of Gharana founder Utd. Alladiya Khan.", "target": "Indian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16897450", "label": "Traunkammen", "source": "Traunkammen is a mountain in Sørkapp Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard. It forms a ridge of about three kilometers and is located south of Hornsund, west of the bay Samarinvågen, and east of Petersbreen. Its highest peak is 692 m.a.s.l. The ridge is named after Austrian count Otto Traun.", "target": "mountain in Svalbard", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain", "ridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85727902", "label": "2001 Queensland Cup", "source": "The 2001 Queensland Cup season was the 6th season of Queensland's top-level statewide rugby league competition run by the Queensland Rugby League. The competition, known as the Bundy Gold Cup due to sponsorship from Bundaberg Rum, featured 11 teams playing a 26-week long season (including finals) from March to September. The Toowoomba Clydesdales defeated the Redcliffe Dolphins 28–26 in the Grand Final at Dolphin Oval to claim their second premiership. Redcliffe fullback Adam Mogg was named the competition's Player of the Year.", "target": "proud Ugandan", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25241779", "label": "1996 Arab Cup Winners' Cup", "source": "The 1996 Arab Cup Winners' Cup was the seventh edition of the Arab Cup Winners' Cup held in Amman, Jordan between 13 – 22 May 1996. The teams represented Arab nations from Africa and Asia. Olympique Khouribga from Morocco won the final against Al-Faisaly from Jordan.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20647583", "label": "figure skating at the 2015 Winter Universiade – ladies' singles", "source": "The ladies' singles competition of the figure skating at the 2015 Winter Universiade was held at the Universiade Igloo in Granada. The short program was held on February 7 and the free skating was held on February 8.", "target": "part of a figure skating competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4925160", "label": "Blanket High School", "source": "Blanket High School or Blanket School is a public high school located in Blanket, Texas (USA) and classified as a 1A school by the UIL. It is part of the Blanket Independent School District located in eastern Brown County. In 2015, the school was rated \"Met Standard\" by the Texas Education Agency.", "target": "high school in Blanket, Brown County, Texas", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23694155", "label": "Won Bin", "source": "Won Bin (born Kim Do-jin on November 10, 1977) is a South Korean actor. He first gained wide popularity in 2000 after starring in the KBS's television series Autumn in My Heart. One of the most selective actors in the Korean entertainment industry, he has starred in only five films to date, Guns & Talks, Taegukgi, My Brother, Mother and The Man from Nowhere. He was Gallup Korea's Film Actor of the Year in 2010 and 2011.", "target": "South Korean actor, model", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16009538", "label": "Victor Davis", "source": "Victor Davis (2 November 1902 – 2 September 1981) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1339711", "label": "Jacques Higelin", "source": "Jacques Joseph Victor Higelin (French pronunciation: ​[ʒak ʒozɛf viktɔʁ iʒlɛ̃]; 18 October 1940 – 6 April 2018) was a French pop singer who rose to prominence in the early 1970s.", "target": "French actor and singer (1940-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31468786", "label": "Zarechnoye, Vladimir Oblast", "source": "Zarechnoye (Russian: Заречное) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Kopninskoye Rural Settlement, Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 1,165 as of 2010. There are 5 streets.", "target": "village in Sobinsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4694556", "label": "Aguinaldo International School Manila", "source": "Aguinaldo International School Manila (abbreviation: AIS Manila) is a private school in Paco, Manila, Philippines. It is non-denominational and co-educational, and serves both local and expat families. It is headed by a Canadian superintendent, Mr. Tim Boulton. The school consists of an Early Learning Center, elementary school, and high school. It aspires to become a premier international school in Manila and has taken steps to modernize its facilities & technology and internationalize its curriculum & teaching methods. Past students have been accepted to University of the Philippines, De La Salle University, and University of Santo Tomas. If AIS Manila extends to grade twelve, as it intends to, its graduates will be eligible to apply to top colleges overseas.", "target": "private, international school", "baseline_candidates": ["international school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61096527", "label": "Sekani", "source": "The Sekani language or Tse’khene is a Northern Athabaskan language spoken by the Sekani people of north-central British Columbia, Canada.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["Northern Athabaskan", "language", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85789050", "label": "Niels Hemmingsens Gade 32", "source": "Niels Hemmingsens Gade 32 is a historic building in the Old Town of Copenhagen, Denmark. It was built in the first half of the 1740s. A brewery was for more than one hundred years operated in a rear wing. Brødrene Cloëtta, one of Denmark's leading chocolate manufacturers of irs day, was based in the building from 1865 until 1901. The three-winged building complex was listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1981. A gilded Neptune figure is seen above the gateway and the keystone features the names of the first owners. Notable former residents include the naval officers Poul de Løvenørn and Peter Nicolay Skibsted, the businessman Conrad Hauser and the linguist Rasmus Rask.", "target": "historic building in the Old Town of Copenhagen", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q721749", "label": "Johan Falkberget", "source": "Johan Falkberget, born Johan Petter Lillebakken, (30 September 1879 – 5 April 1967) was a Norwegian author. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.", "target": "Norwegian politician and author (1879-1967)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6817485", "label": "Reuven Adiv", "source": "Reuven Adiv (Hebrew: ראובן אדיב; 5 June 1930 – 23 December 2004) was a Jerusalem-born Israeli actor, director and drama teacher, most notable as the head of acting at the Drama Centre in London from 1984 to 2004.", "target": "drama teacher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5204092", "label": "D404 road", "source": "D404 is a state road connecting A7 motorway Draga interchange to the eastern part of the city of Rijeka, and to the Port of Rijeka, Brajdica container cargo terminal. The road is 3.5 km (2.2 mi) long, and 60% of the route is carried by various structures, such as tunnels and viaducts. The road opening had a number of delays, even though associated construction works were virtually complete for a long time. In the meantime, the road was used as a parking space. Finally, on May 30, 2011, the D404 road was open to traffic considerably enhancing access to Brajdica and eastern parts of Rijeka. Approximately two thirds of the road are classified as an expressway with 3 lanes, although the section between Vežica and Draga interchanges has 4 lanes. A connection to Rijeka Tower Centre is also provided from the road (northbound only), from within Pećine Tunnel.The road, as well as all other state roads in Croatia, is managed and maintained by Hrvatske ceste, state owned company.", "target": "road in Croatia", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1411963", "label": "Johan Harstad", "source": "Johan Harstad (born 10 February 1979) is a Norwegian novelist, short story writer, playwright and graphic designer. He lives in Oslo.", "target": "Norwegian author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49095884", "label": "cancer cell", "source": "Cancer cells are cells that divide continually, forming solid tumors or flooding the blood with abnormal cells. Cell division is a normal process used by the body for growth and repair. A parent cell divides to form two daughter cells, and these daughter cells are used to build new tissue or to replace cells that have died because of aging or damage. Healthy cells stop dividing when there is no longer a need for more daughter cells, but cancer cells continue to produce copies. They are also able to spread from one part of the body to another in a process known as metastasis.", "target": "tumor cell", "baseline_candidates": ["mutant", "cell type", "cell"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15998884", "label": "Arthur Roper", "source": "Arthur Roper (12 January 1890 – 21 June 1956) was an English cricketer. He played for Gloucestershire between 1920 and 1921.", "target": "cricketer (1890-1956)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q640826", "label": "Hannover-Messe", "source": "The Hannover Messe (HM; \"Hanover Fair\") is one of the world's largest trade fairs, dedicated to the topic of industry development. It is organized by Deutsche Messe AG and held on the Hanover Fairground in Hanover, Germany. Typically, there are about 6,500 exhibitors and 250,000 visitors. The Hannover Messe started in 1947 in an undamaged factory building in Laatzen, south of Hanover, by an arrangement of the British military government in order to boost the economic advancement of post-war Germany. The first fair was colloquially known as Fischbrötchenmesse (Fischbrötchen fair) due to the exemptions in food rationing for the fair at this time. It proved hugely successful and was thence repeated on a yearly basis, contributing largely to the success of the Hanover fairground in replacing the then-East German city of Leipzig as the new major fair city for West Germany. The product portfolio includes building automation and technology, coating materials, air compressors, gas compressors, environmental technology, factory equipment, compressed air technology, micro-actuator systems, motors, scheduling software, refrigeration technology, robotics and additive manufacturing systems.In the 1980s, the growing information and telecommunication industry demanded the organizer Deutsche Messe AG to split the fair. CeBIT was a successful spin-off of the Hannover Messe. The Hanover Fair now covers all areas of industrial technology. The next Hanover Fair is scheduled for May 30th to June 02, 2022, with Portugal as the partner country.", "target": "trade fair", "baseline_candidates": ["trade fair"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q203767", "label": "Vis", "source": "Vis (pronounced [ʋîːs]; Ancient Greek: Ἴσσα; Latin: Issa, Italian: Lissa) is a small Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea. It is the farthest inhabited island off the Croatian mainland. Once known for its thriving fishing industry in the late 19th and early 20th century, the main present-day industries on the island are agriculture and tourism.", "target": "island of Croatia", "baseline_candidates": ["island", "polis"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29075262", "label": "1975 in Estonian television", "source": "This is a list of Estonian television related events from 1975.", "target": "overview of the events of 1975 in Estonian television", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11864660", "label": "Ilmari Vartia", "source": "Ilmari Vartia (25 August 1914 – 25 May 1951) was a Finnish fencer. He competed in the individual and team épée events at the 1948 Summer Olympics. He died as a result of a wound sustained during a competition in 1951.", "target": "Finnish fencer (1914-1951)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q477382", "label": "Quod Apostolici Muneris", "source": "Quod apostolici muneris is the second encyclical of Pope Leo XIII. It was published on 28 December 1878. The encyclical opposes \"socialism, communism and nihilism\", regarded as three aspects of a single ideology that is opposed to moral values, natural institutions and the principles of authority and property. This is contrasted with the Church's own social theory which respects social distinctions while stressing the importance of helping the poor. This was not a new battle for the Pope. He was continuing the war which had been waged for years against these enemies of the Catholic Faith beginning with Pope Clement XII (1730-1740).The form of socialism that the encyclical opposes is one whose proponents \"strive to seize and hold in common whatever has been acquired either by title of lawful inheritance, or by labour of brain and hands, or by thrift in one's mode of life\". To this is opposed the Church's teaching that \"the right of property and of ownership, which springs from nature itself, must not be touched and stands inviolate. For she knows that stealing and robbery were forbidden in so special a manner by God, the Author and Defender of right, that He would not allow man even to desire what belonged to another, and that thieves and despoilers, no less than adulterers and idolaters, are shut out from the Kingdom of Heaven\".In “Quod Apostolici Muneris”, Leo condemned the Socialists' attack on marriage and property, two topics he will devote entire encyclicals to later in his pontificate (“Arcanum” in 1880 and “Rerum Novarum”.", "target": "encyclical", "baseline_candidates": ["encyclical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3854758", "label": "How to Lie with Statistics", "source": "How to Lie with Statistics is a book written by Darrell Huff in 1954 presenting an introduction to statistics for the general reader. Not a statistician, Huff was a journalist who wrote many \"how to\" articles as a freelancer. The book is a brief, breezy illustrated volume outlining the misuse of statistics and errors in the interpretation of statistics, and how these errors may create incorrect conclusions. In the 1960s and 1970s, it became a standard textbook introduction to the subject of statistics for many college students. It has become one of the best-selling statistics books in history, with over one and a half million copies sold in the English-language edition. It has also been widely translated. Themes of the book include \"Correlation does not imply causation\" and \"Using random sampling\". It also shows how statistical graphs can be used to distort reality, for example by truncating the bottom of a line or bar chart, so that differences seem larger than they are, or by representing one-dimensional quantities on a pictogram by two- or three-dimensional objects to compare their sizes, so that the reader forgets that the images do not scale the same way the quantities do. The original edition contained illustrations by artist Irving Geis. In a UK edition, these were replaced with cartoons by Mel Calman.", "target": "book by Darrell Huff", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5583928", "label": "Goolam Essaji Vahanvati", "source": "Goolamhussein Essaji Vahanvati was an Indian senior counsel who served as the 13th Attorney General for India. His first term in office began in June 2009 and was for three years.", "target": "Indian attorney general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15686030", "label": "Nagpur Improvement Trust", "source": "Nagpur Improvement Trust (NIT) (Marathi: नागपूर सुधार प्रन्यास [नासुप्र]) is a local civic government body with the task of developing new areas within the city limits of Nagpur, India and maintaining existing city infrastructure. This trust works along with Nagpur Municipal Corporation (NMC) which is an elected body of city representatives (Corporation). NIT itself is not a democratically elected civic body and has members appointed in it from various levels like Government of Maharashtra, NMC and other representatives of Nagpur. NIT thus has a small management body as compared to NMC. NIT holds the planning and development authority for Nagpur but does not receive any funds from state government. Funds needed for development work are raised by NIT through the auction of newly developed areas.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5387690", "label": "Eric Sawyer", "source": "Eric W. Sawyer (born June 2, 1962 in Brookhaven, New York) is an American orchestral composer, pianist and professor of music at Amherst College. He has studied as an undergraduate at Harvard College, where he was selected as a Harvard Junior Fellow. He undertook graduate studies at both Columbia University and the University of California, Davis (where he completed his doctorate in 1994). Before taking up the position at Amherst, Sawyer spent four years as Chair of Composition and Theory at the Longy School of Music.", "target": "American composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65091584", "label": "2020 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana", "source": "The 2020 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana was held on November 3, 2020, to elect the nine U.S. representatives from the state of Indiana, one from each of the state's nine congressional districts. The elections coincided with the 2020 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate and various state and local elections.", "target": "Upcoming House elections in Indiana", "baseline_candidates": ["election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5682609", "label": "Haunted", "source": "\"Haunted\" is a song originally recorded by the Australian pop vocal group Human Nature for their 2004 album Walk the Tightrope. In 2007 the song was covered by the German pop quartet Room 2012 and released as the first single from their debut album, Elevator. The Room 2012 version charted at number 10 in Germany, 21 in Austria and 23 in Switzerland.", "target": "song originally recorded by the Australian pop vocal group Human Nature", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q215222", "label": "Joseph Buttinger", "source": "Joseph Buttinger (30 April 1906, Reichersbeuern, Germany – 4 March 1992, Queens, New York) was an Austrian politician and, after his immigration to the United States, an expert on East Asia. He co-founded the American Friends of Vietnam, a Cold War lobbying group.", "target": "Austrian politician (1906-1992)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25045650", "label": "Premier Hotel", "source": "The Premier Hotel, Ibadan, a subsidiary of Odu'a Heritage Company, is one of the oldest and most prestigious hotels in Ibadan. Its central location on the peak of Mokola Hill gives it a unique visibility hundreds of miles away, both day and night –due in part to its white cladding and bright lighting. The hotel is the most visited in the city of Ibadan and is known for hosting expatriates, heads of states, and other foreign dignitaries.", "target": "A Hotel in Ibadan", "baseline_candidates": ["hotel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2816922", "label": "48th Fighter Wing", "source": "The 48th Fighter Wing (48 FW) is part of the United States Air Force's Third Air Force, assigned to Headquarters Air Command Europe and United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE). It is based at RAF Lakenheath, England. The 48 FW is the only F-15 wing based in Europe and consists of both F-15C/D Eagle and F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft. The 48 FW was given the name \"Statue of Liberty Wing\" on 4 July 1954 and remains the only U.S. Air Force unit with both a name and a numerical designation. The 48 FW operates in support of United States Air Forces in Europe – Air Forces Africa, United States European Command and NATO.", "target": "Part of United States Air Force in Europe", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21452525", "label": "Apukhtin", "source": "Apukhtin (Russian: Апу́хтин) is a Russian surname and may refer to: Aleksey Apukhtin (1840–1893), Russian poet, writer and critic German Apukhtin (born 1936), Soviet footballer Alexander Apukthin (1822–1903), superintendent of Congress Poland in the late 19th century.", "target": "family name (Апухтин)", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q799011", "label": "Badhamia", "source": "Badhamia is a genus of slime molds in the family Physaraceae. It was circumscribed by English naturalist Miles Joseph Berkeley in 1853. The widespread genus contains about 30 species.", "target": "genus of slime moulds", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q281650", "label": "Kondé", "source": "Kondé is an arrondissement in the Donga department of Benin. It is an administrative division under the jurisdiction of the commune of Ouaké. According to the population census conducted by the Institut National de la Statistique Benin on February 15, 2002, the arrondissement had a total population of 5,472.", "target": "arrondissement of Benin", "baseline_candidates": ["arrondissement of Benin"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22096490", "label": "Shepherd Rams", "source": "The Shepherd Rams are the athletic teams that represent Shepherd University (formerly Shepherd College), located in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, in Division II intercollegiate sports of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The Rams compete as members of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC) for all 15 varsity sports since the 2019–20 academic year. They were previously competed in the Mountain East Conference (MEC) from 2013–14 to 2018–19, and before that, the now-defunct West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WVIAC) from 1924–25 to 2012–13.", "target": "shepherd University athletic teams", "baseline_candidates": ["university and college sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q324400", "label": "Dead Can Dance", "source": "Dead Can Dance is a British and Australian music duo first established in Melbourne. Currently composed of Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry, the group formed in 1981. They relocated to London the following year. Australian music historian Ian McFarlane described Dead Can Dance's style as \"constructed soundscapes of mesmerising grandeur and solemn beauty; African polyrhythms, Gaelic folk, Gregorian chant, Middle Eastern music, mantras, and art rock. \"Having disbanded in 1998, they reunited briefly in 2005 for a world tour and reformed in 2011 when they released and toured a new album, Anastasis. They released a new album in 2018 called Dionysus and are touring again as of 2022.", "target": "Australian-British musical project by Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16911423", "label": "1878 Marlborough by-election", "source": "The 1878 Marlborough by-election was fought on 31 January 1878. The byelection was fought due to the succession to a peerage of the incumbent Liberal MP, Lord Ernest Brudenell-Bruce. It was won by the Liberal candidate Lord Charles Brudenell-Bruce.", "target": "UK Parliamentary by-election", "baseline_candidates": ["by-election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13400243", "label": "Aspades luteomaculata", "source": "Aspades luteomaculata is a species of moth in the family Gelechiidae. It was described by Oleksiy V. Bidzilya and Wolfram Mey in 2011. It is found in Namibia.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19595779", "label": "Aecidium narcissi", "source": "Aecidium narcissi is a species of fungus in the Pucciniales order, causing rust in daffodils (Narcissus) and various wild Orchidaceae.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65089148", "label": "Scenic Views", "source": "Scenic Views is the debut studio album by Rhode Island new wave band Rubber Rodeo. It was released on November 15, 1984 by Mercury Records.", "target": "1984 studio album by Rubber Rodeo", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4873198", "label": "Battles of Chief Pontiac", "source": "Battles of Chief Pontiac is a 1952 American quasi-historical film directed by Felix E. Feist. The drama features Lex Barker, Helen Westcott and Lon Chaney Jr.", "target": "1952 film by Felix E. Feist", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1337864", "label": "Pennsylvania Route 408", "source": "Pennsylvania Route 408 (PA 408) is a 24.2-mile-long (38.9 km) state highway located in Crawford County, Pennsylvania. The western terminus is at US 6/US 19/PA 86 in Cambridge Springs. The eastern terminus is at PA 8 in Hydetown.", "target": "State highway in Crawford County, Pennsylvania, US", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26251494", "label": "Dhiraj Goswami", "source": "Dhiraj Goswami (born 1 May 1985) is an Indian cricketer who plays for Assam in domestic cricket. He is a right-handed batsman and right-arm medium pace bowler. Goswami is a bowling all-rounder. He made his first-class debut in the 2002–03 Ranji Trophy.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9435", "label": "Lugnacco", "source": "Lugnacco is a frazione (hamlet) of the comune (municipality) of Val di Chy in the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 45 kilometres (28 mi) north of Turin. It was a separate comune until January 2019.", "target": "former Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["abolished municipality in Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6173583", "label": "Jeff Clarke", "source": "Jeffrey J. Clarke (born July 1961 in Ithaca, New York) is the current Executive Chairman at Florists' Transworld Delivery (FTD LLC).", "target": "American businessman and CEO of Kodak", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23058314", "label": "Adekokwok Hydroelectric Power Station", "source": "Adekokwok Hydroelectric Power Station is an 8 megawatts (11,000 hp) mini hydroelectric power project in Uganda.", "target": "building in Uganda", "baseline_candidates": ["hydroelectric power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60734212", "label": "Nicolás Linares", "source": "Nicolás Linares (born 6 March 1996) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Central Córdoba SdE on loan from Banfield.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q762643", "label": "Gmina Sońsk", "source": "Gmina Sońsk is a rural gmina (administrative district) in Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. Its seat is the village of Sońsk, which lies approximately 11 kilometres (7 mi) south-east of Ciechanów and 66 km (41 mi) north of Warsaw. The gmina covers an area of 154.99 square kilometres (59.8 sq mi), and as of 2006 its total population is 8,047 (7,938 in 2013).", "target": "rural gmina of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["rural municipality of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6275777", "label": "Jonny Kennedy", "source": "Jonny Kennedy (4 November 1966 – 26 September 2003) was a British man who had a rare inherited condition known as dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (EB or DEB). Kennedy ultimately died of skin cancer, a complication of EB.", "target": "British sufferer of epidermolysis bullosa dystrophica", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6889516", "label": "Modliny", "source": "Modliny [mɔdˈlinɨ] (German: Modlainen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jeziorany, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north of Jeziorany and 30 km (19 mi) north-east of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "target": "village in Warmian-Masurian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q53764781", "label": "Sara Garcia Gross", "source": "Sara García Gross (born 1986) is a Salvadoran activist, psychologist, feminist, and human rights defender. She is the coordinator of political advocacy for the Citizen Group for the Decriminalization of Therapeutic, Ethical, and Eugenic Abortion, founded in 2009. She is also a member of the Salvadoran Network of Women Human Rights Defenders. In 2019, she was presented with France's Simone de Beauvoir Prize for her work promoting abortion rights.", "target": "human rights activist and feminist from El Salvador", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q433398", "label": "Tomáš Černý", "source": "Tomáš Černý (born 10 April 1985) is a Czech retired professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Černý has played football in the Czech Republic, Scotland, Bulgaria and Greece for Sigma Olomouc, Hamilton Academical, CSKA Sofia, Ergotelis, Hibernian, Partick Thistle and Aberdeen respectively. He has also played youth international football for the Czech Republic.", "target": "Czech soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6419656", "label": "Klamy", "source": "Klamy [ˈklamɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wyśmierzyce, within Białobrzegi County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-east of Wyśmierzyce, 3 km (2 mi) west of Białobrzegi, and 64 km (40 mi) south of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48725045", "label": "Paschimi Star", "source": "Paschimi Star (Western Star) was a medal awarded to members of the Indian armed forces for participation on the western borders of India during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971.", "target": "paschimi Star Medal", "baseline_candidates": ["medal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5664735", "label": "Richland Township", "source": "Richland Township is a township in Jackson County, Iowa, USA.", "target": "township in Jackson County, Iowa, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Iowa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23323669", "label": "Élodie Embony", "source": "Élodie Vanessa Embony (born 22 October 1987) is a Malagasy athlete competing in sprinting events. She represented her country at the 2016 World Indoor Championships without advancing from the first round.", "target": "Malagasy female sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3765701", "label": "Ozark Minnow", "source": "The Ozark minnow (Notropis nubilus) is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Notropis.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1314270", "label": "Scampolo", "source": "Scampolo (German: Scampolo, ein Kind der Straße) is a 1932 German comedy film directed by Hans Steinhoff and starring Dolly Haas, Karl Ludwig Diehl and Oskar Sima. The film is an adaptation of the Italian play Scampolo by Dario Niccodemi, which has been turned into numerous films.", "target": "1932 film by Hans Steinhoff", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64777680", "label": "Arnau de Gurb", "source": "Arnau de Gurb (in Spanish, Arnoldo de Guerbo) was bishop of Barcelona from 1252 to 1284. He had served as a canon at the cathedral of Vic and later as primary archdeacon in Barcelona. As bishop, he expanded the episcopal palace, and built the Chapel of Santa Llúcia (Saint Lucy) in the cathedral of Barcelona. With James II of Aragon, he participated in the conquest of the kingdom of Murcia. He served as ambassador to the French court. He was close with Saint Raymond of Peñafort and promoted the cult of the Immaculate Conception. He participated in the Disputation of Barcelona. James I of Aragon had appointed a censorship commission to remove the passages perceived offensive from the Talmud. It consisted of De Gurb, Raymond de Peñafort, and the Dominicans Arnoldo de Segarra, Pedro de Janua and Ramón Martí (author of Pugio Fidei). His body rests in a mausoleum in the Chapel of Santa Llúcia in the Cathedral of Barcelona.", "target": "bishop of Barcelona and diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q498671", "label": "Lake Hillier", "source": "Lake Hillier is a saline lake on the edge of Middle Island, the largest of the islands and islets that make up the Recherche Archipelago in the Goldfields-Esperance region, off the south coast of Western Australia. It is particularly notable for its pink colour. A long and thin shore divides the Southern Ocean (by some definitions, the Indian Ocean) from the lake.", "target": "Lake in Western Australia, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["lake", "salt lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q84761683", "label": "Flørli power station", "source": "The Flørli Power Station is a hydroelectric power station located on the shores of Lysefjord in the municipality Sandnes in Rogaland, Norway. The station was built in 1918 as the first in Lysefjord, from where it delivered power to Stavanger. The turbine hall was built in 1917 in Jugendstil, it is 80 m long, 9 m wide and stands 12 m tall. The water was supplied via two penstocks along which were built a cabled railway and a wooden stairway with 4,444 steps.In 1999 a new power station with new penstocks was built into the mountain next to the old one which was decommissioned. The new station can generate 80 MW power and has an average annual production of 290 GWh.", "target": "hydroelectric power station in Forsand municipality, Rogaland county, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["hydroelectric power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26838608", "label": "Jean Evelyn Headberry", "source": "Jean Evelyn Headberry (1911–1993) was an Australian registered nurse and midwife who was awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal in 1961.Headberry served as an Army nurse during World War II.Headberry was awarded a Centaur Memorial Scholarship in 1946 to study in England.She later became the Dean of Royal Melbourne and Associated Hospital's School of Nursing.", "target": "Australian nurse", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2633476", "label": "Vital Van Landeghem", "source": "Vital Van Landeghem (13 December 1912 – 15 October 1990) was a Belgian footballer. He played in one match for the Belgium national football team in 1932.", "target": "Belgian association football player (1912-1990)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2817350", "label": "Noor Hadi", "source": "Noor Hadi is an Indonesian footballer who plays for Barito Putera in the Indonesia Super League as a striker.", "target": "Indonesian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7770300", "label": "The Triumph of the Moon", "source": "The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft is a book of religious history by the English historian Ronald Hutton, first published by Oxford University Press in 1999. At the time, Hutton was a Reader in History at Bristol University, and had previously published a study of ancient pre-Christian religion, The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles (1991) as well as studies of British folk customs and the Early Modern period. The Triumph of the Moon dealt with the early history of Wicca, a contemporary Pagan religion which developed in England in the early 20th century. The first academic study to tackle the entirety of this subject, Hutton questioned many assumptions about Wicca's development and argued that many of the claimed connections to longstanding hidden pagan traditions are questionable at best. However, he also argued for its importance as a genuine new religious movement. The work was first presented as \"The Triumph of the Moon\" by Hutton, at the Centre For Pagan Studies in 1995.The Triumph of the Moon was well received in both academia and the mainstream press. Various academics working in the fields of Pagan studies, the history of western esotericism and the history of magic have praised it as an influential study that helped to legitimise the historical investigation of alternate and occult religious movements. An academic anthology edited by Dave Evans and Dave Green was later published in its honour, entitled Ten Years of Triumph of the Moon (2009). The book received a mixed reception from the Pagan.", "target": "book by Ronald Hutton", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65286999", "label": "Cauchy–Hadamard theorem", "source": "In mathematics, the Cauchy–Hadamard theorem is a result in complex analysis named after the French mathematicians Augustin Louis Cauchy and Jacques Hadamard, describing the radius of convergence of a power series. It was published in 1821 by Cauchy, but remained relatively unknown until Hadamard rediscovered it. Hadamard's first publication of this result was in 1888; he also included it as part of his 1892 Ph.D. thesis.", "target": "theorem", "baseline_candidates": ["theorem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q948363", "label": "Thames Barrier", "source": "The Thames Barrier is a retractable barrier system that is designed to prevent the floodplain of most of Greater London from being flooded by exceptionally high tides and storm surges moving up from the North Sea. It has been operational since 1982. When needed, it is closed (raised) during high tide; at low tide, it can be opened to restore the river's flow towards the sea. Built approximately 3 km (1.9 mi) east of the Isle of Dogs, its northern bank is in Silvertown in the London Borough of Newham and its southern bank is in the New Charlton area of the Royal Borough of Greenwich.", "target": "Flood defence", "baseline_candidates": ["flood barrier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3637091", "label": "2008–09 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season", "source": "During the 2008–09 season, Bayer 04 Leverkusen competed in the Bundesliga.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q792361", "label": "Belgium at the Olympics", "source": "Belgium has competed at most editions of the Olympic Games after making its first appearance at the 1900 Games. The nation was host to the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp. The National Olympic Committee for Belgium was created and recognized in 1906.", "target": "Participation of athletes from Belgium in the Olympic Games", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3075381", "label": "San Xavier talus snail", "source": "The San Xavier talus snail, scientific name Sonorella eremita, is a species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusc in the subfamily Helminthoglyptinae. This species is endemic to the United States. The common name \"talus snail\" refers to the fact that snails in this genus live on and in talus.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q255155", "label": "bi-curious", "source": "Bi-curious is a term for a person, usually someone who is a heterosexual, who is curious or open about engaging in sexual activity with a person whose sex differs from that of their usual sexual partners. The term is sometimes used to describe a broad continuum of sexual orientation between heterosexuality and bisexuality. Such continuums include mostly-heterosexual or mostly-homosexual, but these can be self-identified without identifying as bisexual. The terms heteroflexible and homoflexible are mainly applied to bi-curious people, though some authors distinguish heteroflexibility and homoflexibility as lacking the \"wish to experiment with sexuality\" implied by the bi-curious label. To sum it up, the difference between bisexual and bicurious is that bisexual people know that they are sexually attracted to both genders based on personal experience. Bicurious people are still maneuvering their way through their sexuality.", "target": "person who is attracted to experiencing bisexuality", "baseline_candidates": ["bisexuality", "sexual orientation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5444082", "label": "Fereydoun Davatchi", "source": "Fereydoun Davatchi is the director of Rheumatology Research Center (RRC) in Tehran University of Medical sciences.Davatchi studied medicine in France and received d'Etat Diploma in Rheumatology from Paris University. He is currently full professor (Emeritus) of medicine in Tehran University of Medical Sciences. He established modern Rheumatology in Iran and trained most of the Iranian Rheumatologists who are working and researching Rheumatology in medical universities of Iran.His main research field is Behcet's Disease.Fereydoun Davatchi is the author of more than 90 peer-reviewed articles in international journals and several books in English and Persian.Rheumatology Research Center is \"The Center of Excellence for Rheumatology in Iran\".", "target": "Iranian academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7655450", "label": "Sweet Rain", "source": "Sweet Rain is a jazz album by Stan Getz, released on the Verve record label in 1967.", "target": "album by Stan Getz", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17175432", "label": "Luigi Martini", "source": "Luigi Martini (Italian pronunciation: [luˈiːdʒi marˈtiːni]; born 15 June 1949) was an Italian footballer who played as a defender. On 29 December 1974, he represented the Italy national football team on the occasion of a friendly match against Bulgaria in a 0–0 home draw.", "target": "Italian association football player and politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58033249", "label": "Mary Lambie", "source": "Mary Lambie is a New Zealand media personality and journalist.", "target": "New Zealand media personality and journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85756438", "label": "Club de Deportes Limache", "source": "Club de Deportes Limache, is a Chilean football club based in Limache. They currently play at the third level of Chilean football, the Segunda Division.", "target": "Chilean football club based in Limache, Valparaíso Region", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14683314", "label": "McNee Ranch State Park", "source": "McNee Ranch is located in the Santa Cruz Mountains of the United States, near the unincorporated community of Montara, California in San Mateo County. The highest point in the 690-acre ranch rises to 1,898 feet above sea level. An unpaved fire road, the North Peak Access Road, accessible from the Pedro Mountain Road, provides access to the summit by hikers. The mountain has an extensive biodiversity especially on the serpentine soils of the lower slopes where such endangered species as Hickman's potentilla and San Mateo thornmint, Acanthomintha duttonii, are found. On rare occasions light snow has dusted the summit. On clear days the summit provides views of much of the San Francisco Bay Area.The ranch is part of Montara State Beach.", "target": "state park in California", "baseline_candidates": ["California state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14704884", "label": "Intercessors of the Lamb", "source": "The Hermit Intercessors of the Lamb was a Roman Catholic Association of priests, brothers, nuns, and lay people, based in Nebraska, United States. The 1998 canonical organization was suppressed by Omaha Archbishop George Joseph Lucas in 2010 and no longer exists. The 1980 legal organization, Intercessors of the Lamb, Inc., continues to exist but is disassociated from the Roman Catholic Church.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization", "Christian organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1475683", "label": "NET", "source": "NET was a Brazilian telecommunications company that offered services such as cable television, broadband internet and telephony. The company's NET TV service (cable TV) had around 5.4 million subscribers as of Q2 2012. NET also operated the broadband Internet service NET Vírtua, with over 9 million subscribers as of Q2 2019 and telephone over cable (under the NET Fone via Embratel name) with more than 2.5 million subscribers. It is owned by Mexican telecom giant América Móvil. On 11 July 2019, the NET brand was absorbed into the Claro brand, already used by América Móvil for its mobile business in Latin America.", "target": "telecommunications company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14076904", "label": "Perbrinckia scitula", "source": "Perbrinckia scitula is a species of freshwater crabs of the family Gecarcinucidae that is endemic to Sri Lanka. the species is categorized as critically endangered by founders due to their two localities where not protected by law. Very small number can be found among human habitations. The species distributed along Mahaweli River basin, around Deltota and Talawakelle areas.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7285126", "label": "Raisi", "source": "Raisi (Persian: رئيسي, also Romanized as Ra’īsī; also known as Rīsī) is a village in Eshqabad Rural District, Miyan Jolgeh District, Nishapur County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 901, in 222 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16944265", "label": "Christine Chaundler", "source": "Christine Chaundler (5 September 1887 – 15 December 1972) was a prolific English children's author, who also wrote stories for boys as Peter Martin. Some of her hundreds of short stories were broadcast by the BBC.", "target": "British children's author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16059482", "label": "John Caroll Houston, IV", "source": "John Caroll Houston IV (April 3, 1842 – February 22, 1918) was one of the first permanent settlers of Eau Gallie, Florida and served as its mayor for three terms in 1897, 1902, and 1910.", "target": "Florida settler and politician (1842-1918)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q155123", "label": "No Angels", "source": "No Angels are an all-female pop group from Germany, formed in 2000. Originally a quintet, consisting of band members Nadja Benaissa, Lucy Diakovska, Sandy Mölling, Vanessa Petruo, and Jessica Wahls, they originated on the debut season of the German adaptation of the talent series Popstars and were one of the first television-cast acts to achieve sustainable success throughout Central Europe in the early 2000s. Following a major success with record-breaking single \"Daylight in Your Eyes\" and debut album Elle'ments in 2001, a series of hit records established their position as one of the most successful female band vocalists to emerge in the early decade. With four number-one hits, four number-one albums and record sales of more than 5.0 million, they became one of the most successful acts in German music history, winning three ECHOs, a World Music Award, a NRJ Music Award, two Comets, a Bambi and a Goldene Kamera.In fall 2003, the members went their separate ways due to lasting exhaustion, focusing on their individual solo careers in music, theatre, television and film. In 2007, four members of the original line-up re-formed permanently and recorded their first studio album in over four years, Destiny (2007). A year after, the group represented Germany it the Eurovision Song Contest 2008 in Belgrade, Serbia, where they finished 23rd with their song \"Disappear\". A second post-reunion album, titled Welcome to the Dance and released in 2009, failed commercially. In September 2010, Benaissa officially left the band due to private reasons, leaving No Angels as a trio before they went.", "target": "German all-female pop band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3510857", "label": "Achike Udenwa", "source": "Achike Udenwa (born in 1948) was the governor of Imo State in Nigeria. He became governor after winning the election in 1999. Udenwa won re-election in 2003, and his term ended on 29 May 2007. He is a member of the People's Democratic Party. Udenwa is also an Igbo chief. He was succeeded by Chief Ikedi Ohakim on 29 May 2007. In December 2008, President Umaru Yar'Adua appointed him Minister of Commerce and Industry. He left office in March 2010 when Acting President Goodluck Jonathan dissolved his cabinet.", "target": "Nigerian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2044035", "label": "Thomas Traherne", "source": "Thomas Traherne (; 1636 or 1637 – c. 27 September 1674) was an English poet, Anglican cleric, theologian, and religious writer. The intense, scholarly spirituality in his writings has led to his being commemorated by some parts of the Anglican Communion on 10 October (the anniversary of his burial in 1674) or on 27 September. The work for which Traherne is best known today is the Centuries of Meditations, a collection of short paragraphs in which he reflects on Christian life and ministry, philosophy, happiness, desire and childhood. This was first published in 1908 after having been rediscovered in manuscript ten years earlier. His poetry likewise was first published in 1903 and 1910 (The Poetical Works of Thomas Traherne, B.D. and Poems of Felicity). His prose works include Roman Forgeries (1673), Christian Ethics (1675), and A Serious and Patheticall Contemplation of the Mercies of God (1699).Traherne's writings frequently explore the glory of creation and what he saw as his intimate relationship with God. His writing conveys an ardent, almost childlike love of God, and is compared to similar themes in the works of later poets William Blake, Walt Whitman, and Gerard Manley Hopkins. His love for the natural world is frequently expressed in his works by a treatment of nature that evokes Romanticism—two centuries before the Romantic movement.", "target": "English poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4533198", "label": "Elchin Afandiyev", "source": "Elchin Ilyas oglu Afandiyev (Azerbaijani: Elçin İlyas oğlu Əfəndiyev) is an Azerbaijani writer, professor and politician who served as Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan from 1993 to 2018.", "target": "Azerbaijani writer and politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2893899", "label": "Behir Chergui", "source": "Behir Chergui is a town and commune in Oum El Bouaghi Province, Algeria.", "target": "commune and town in Oum El Bouaghi Province, Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Algeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3748783", "label": "2006 Fortis Championships Luxembourg – doubles", "source": "Lisa Raymond and Samantha Stosur were the defending champions, but lost in first round to Nathalie Dechy and Tatiana Golovin. Květa Peschke and Francesca Schiavone won the title by defeating Anna-Lena Grönefeld and Liezel Huber 2–6, 6–4, 6–1 in the final.", "target": "2006 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21290179", "label": "George F. Sprague", "source": "George Frederick Sprague (September 3, 1902 – November 24, 1998) was an American geneticist and maize researcher. He was a faculty member at the Iowa State University and the University of Illinois and a researcher at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. He is credited with developing a genetically strong line of maize known as Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic. A recipient of the Wolf Prize in Agriculture, Sprague was also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a member of the National Academy of Sciences.", "target": "American geneticist and maize researcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13229734", "label": "Adoneta spinuloides", "source": "Adoneta spinuloides, the purple-crested slug moth, is a species of slug caterpillar moth in the family Limacodidae.The MONA or Hodges number for Adoneta spinuloides is 4685.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6927170", "label": "Moving to Opportunity", "source": "Moving to Opportunity for Fair Housing (MTO) was a randomized social experiment sponsored by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in the 1990s among 4600 low-income families with children living in high-poverty public housing projects.", "target": "large social experiment", "baseline_candidates": ["experiment"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65029593", "label": "Zelmar García", "source": "Zelmar García (born 2 March 1987) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Argentino de Quilmes.", "target": "Argentinian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5385937", "label": "Eriastrum pluriflorum", "source": "Eriastrum pluriflorum is a species of flowering plant in the phlox family known by the common names Tehachapi woollystar and many-flowered eriastrum.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3525256", "label": "Thomas Jesup", "source": "Thomas Sidney Jesup (December 16, 1788 – June 10, 1860) was a United States Army officer known as the \"Father of the Modern Quartermaster Corps\". His 52-year (1808–1860) military career was one of the longest in the history of the United States Army.", "target": "United States general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7568195", "label": "South Pelaw", "source": "South Pelaw is a village in County Durham, in England. It is situated immediately to the north of Chester-le-Street.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3700820", "label": "Dag Riisnæs", "source": "Dag Riisnæs (born 20 June 1969) is a Norwegian former footballer who played as a midfielder. He made six appearances for the Norway national team from 1989 to 1991.", "target": "Norwegian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22004052", "label": "Dick Doyle", "source": "Richard Albert Doyle (March 26, 1930 – April 7, 2003) was an American football defensive back who played two seasons for two different teams, the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Denver Broncos of the AFL and NFL. He was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers of the 27th round of the 318th pick. He played college football at Ohio State University for the Ohio State Buckeyes football team.", "target": "American-football player (1930-2003)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19759839", "label": "Nikos Pappas", "source": "Nikos Pappas (Greek: Νίκος Παππάς) is a Greek economist and politician who served as the Minister of Digital Policy, Telecommunications and Media in Alexis Tsipras' second cabinet. He represents the Athens B constituency in the Hellenic Parliament.", "target": "Greek politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1783093", "label": "Ygor Santiago", "source": "Ygor Maciel Santiago (born 1 June 1984), commonly known as Ygor, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a midfielder.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7239897", "label": "(3α,5β,20S)-pregnane-3,17,20-triol", "source": "Pregnanetriol, or 5β-pregnane-3α,17α,20α-triol, is a steroid and inactive metabolite of progesterone.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25625904", "label": "Bhupinder Nath Kirpal", "source": "Bhupinder Nath Kirpal (B. N. Kirpal) (born 8 November 1937) was the 31st Chief Justice of India, serving from 6 May 2002 until his retirement on 7 November 2002. He is an alumnus of The Modern School, New Delhi and St Stephens College, Delhi University. A top cricketer, he represented both his school and college. He began his legal career as an advocate in 1962 and was appointed a Judge of Delhi High Court in November 1979. In December 1993, he was appointed Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court. In September 1995, he was appointed Judge of the Supreme Court of India and became Chief Justice of India in May 2002. After retirement as the Chief Justice of India, he was appointed the 1st Chairman of the National Forest Commission on 21 February 2003.", "target": "31st Chief Justice of India", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12269537", "label": "Émile Aillaud", "source": "Émile Aillaud (18 January 1902 in Mexico City – 29 December 1988 in Paris) was a French architect. His design can be found after World War II in France, such as Les Courtilières in Pantin (1955–56, 1957–60), Wiesberg at Forbach (1959, 1961 ff.) and La Grande Borne at Grigny (1964–71), are representative of the attempts to compensate for the uniformity which resulted from extensively industrialized constructional methods (principally heavy construction employing prefabricated reinforced-concrete panels) by adopting more individualizing urban planning strategies. This is chiefly achieved in the overall arrangement of the building masses, reduced to smooth abstract forms, in curved serpentine compositions; through the integration of works of art; and finally through the careful handling of public spaces, at times eccentrically shaped and colourfully treated. The residents are thereby given an impetus to identify with their environment.", "target": "architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q379211", "label": "Jacob Riis", "source": "Jacob August Riis (; May 3, 1849 – May 26, 1914) was a Danish-American social reformer, \"muckraking\" journalist and social documentary photographer. He contributed significantly to the cause of urban reform in America at the turn of the twentieth century. He is known for using his photographic and journalistic talents to help the impoverished in New York City; those impoverished New Yorkers were the subject of most of his prolific writings and photography. He endorsed the implementation of \"model tenements\" in New York with the help of humanitarian Lawrence Veiller. Additionally, as one of the most famous proponents of the newly practicable casual photography, he is considered one of the fathers of photography due to his very early adoption of flash. While living in New York, Riis experienced poverty and became a police reporter writing about the quality of life in the slums. He attempted to alleviate the bad living conditions of poor people by exposing their living conditions to the middle and upper classes.", "target": "American photographer, journalist and activist (1849-1914)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7854703", "label": "Turbonilla urgorrii", "source": "Turbonilla urgorrii is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5829169", "label": "Elena", "source": "Elena is a Mexican telenovela produced by Televisa and transmitted by Telesistema Mexicano.Silvia Derbez and Carlos López Moctezuma starred as protagonists.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16864124", "label": "John M. Kovac", "source": "John Michael Kovac (born 1970) is an American physicist and astronomer. His cosmology research, conducted at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, focuses on observations of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) to reveal signatures of the physics that drove the birth of the universe, the creation of its structure, and its present-day expansion. Currently, Kovac is Professor of Astronomy and Physics at Harvard University.", "target": "American astrophysicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6032048", "label": "Elkin Soto", "source": "Elkin Soto Jaramillo (born 4 August 1980) is a retired Colombian football midfielder.", "target": "Colombian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4888750", "label": "Mutua Madrileña", "source": "Mutua Madrileña, S.A. also known as La Mutua, is by its joint venture with Vida Caixa, the largest Spanish insurance company as both Vida Caixa and Mutua Madrileña occupy the first and third position (respectively) of the Spanish Insurance Company Ranking in 2020 by GWP (Gross Written Premium). Founded in 1930, it provides life, automobile, health, and accident insurance, as well as pension and investment funds. It has an international footprint in Colombia and Chile since 2019 with the acquisition of 45% of Seguros del Estado (Colombia) and the acquisition and control of 60% of BCI Seguros (Chile), which are the second and first biggest companies in Colombia and Chile respectively. In 2011, it bought 50% of SegurCaixa Adeslas, the leading health insurance company in Spain. With an investment of more than 1,000 million euros, the purchase became the largest bancassurance operation ever carried out in Spain.", "target": "Spanish insurance company founded in 1930", "baseline_candidates": [""]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8066135", "label": "Zanele Situ", "source": "Ntombizanele Situ (born 19 January 1971), better known as Zanele Situ, is a Paralympian athlete from South Africa competing mainly in category F54 throwing events. Specialising in the javelin throw, Situ is a two-time gold medalist at both the Paralympics and the IPC Athletics World Championships and is the first female South African black athlete to win a Paralympic gold medal.", "target": "South African Paralympic athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q92865991", "label": "Donjuan Triumphant", "source": "Donjuan Triumphant (foaled 24 March 2013) is an Irish-bred Thoroughbred racehorse who excelled over sprint distances. He was rated one of the best two-year-olds in Europe when he won three of his eight races including the Rockingham Stakes and the Critérium de Maisons-Laffitte. He failed to win in the following year but ran second in both the Temple Stakes and the Prix Maurice de Gheest. After changing stables as a four-year-old he won the 32Red Gold Cup in 2017 and the Wentworth Stakes in 2018. In 2019 he was beaten in his first six starts but recorded his biggest win on his final racecourse appearance when he took the British Champions Sprint Stakes.", "target": "Irish racehorse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20573696", "label": "Pashtraj", "source": "Pashtraj is a village in the former municipality of Lumas in Berat County, Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Kuçovë.", "target": "village in Berat County, Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6821891", "label": "Messenger and Advocate", "source": "The Latter Day Saints' Messenger and Advocate, often shortened to Messenger and Advocate, was an early Latter Day Saint monthly newspaper published in Kirtland, Ohio, from October 1834 to September 1837. It was the successor to The Evening and the Morning Star and the predecessor to the Elders' Journal.", "target": "newspaper in Kirtland, Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q954022", "label": "Samiha Khalil", "source": "Samiha al-Qubaj Salameh Khalil (Arabic: سميحة خليل) in Anabta, District of Tulkarm 1923 – February 26, 1999 in Ramallah), also known as Umm Khalil, was a Palestinian charity worker as well as a prominent figure in Palestinian politics. Born in a village, she dropped out of highschool at the age of seventeen to marry Salameh Khalil. After the 1948 War, the couple fled to Gaza where they raised a family of five children, and in 1964 Samiha finally returned to school and graduated. In 1965, Khalil came to the public eye when she founded the al-Inaash al-Usra society in her garage - it would grow to become the largest and most effective Palestinian welfare organization. In 1977 she became the first and only female member of the National Front Committee. During the 1980s, Khalil was tied to the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine and detained six times by the IDF; she saw two of her children deported from Israel and the other three (who had been out of the country at the time) forbidden from re-entering. She was eventually placed under town-arrest in al-Bireh. In 1996 she ran for president of the Palestinian Authority, losing to Yasser Arafat, while garnering 11.5% of the vote. A grandmother of 13, Khalil remained an active member in the political scene, serving on the Palestinian National Council up until her death in 1999.", "target": "Palestinian politician (1923-1999)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6330495", "label": "IQCN", "source": "Uncharacterized protein KIAA1683 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the KIAA1683 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2090737", "label": "A Philosopher by Lamplight", "source": "A Philosopher by lamplight (also known as A Hermit Studying Anatomy) is a painting by Joseph Wright of Derby. It is not known when Wright painted the picture, but it was first exhibited in 1769 in London with the Society of Artists. This was one of the earliest of many lamplight or candlelight paintings and portraits for which Wright is famed.", "target": "painting by Joseph Wright of Derby", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3386682", "label": "Pierre Prieur", "source": "Pierre Prieur (25 May 1896 – 22 December 1968) was a French field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1928 Summer Olympics.", "target": "French field hockey player (1896-1968)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q53533313", "label": "Saoud Abdulrazaq", "source": "Saoud Abdulrazaq (Arabic:سعود عبد الرزاق) (born 23 January 1998) is an Emirati footballer. He currently plays as a midfielder for Shabab Al-Ahli.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16880616", "label": "O'Dwyer", "source": "O'Dwyer (Irish: Ó Dubhuir), also known as Dwyer, Dwyre or Dyer is one of Ireland’s oldest Gaelic noble or aristocratic houses, based most prominently in what is today County Tipperary. The name means \"dark coloured\", in reference to their progenitor Dubhuir mac Spealáin's hair colour.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name", "surname prefixed with Ó or O"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q595652", "label": "Leptosema", "source": "Leptosema is a genus of flowering plants from the legume family Fabaceae. According to the Australian Plant Census, species of Leptosema occur in the Northern Territory, Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7590200", "label": "St. Mary's Church", "source": "St. Mary's Church is a Catholic parish located in Ballston Spa, New York. It is located within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany. Father Francis R. Vivacqua is the current pastor. St. Mary's is the fourth oldest parish in the Diocese. St. Mary's of Ballston Spa has a mission church, St. Mary's of Galway.", "target": "church building in New York, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7525352", "label": "Sion Farm", "source": "Sion Farm is a settlement on the island of Saint Croix in the United States Virgin Islands.", "target": "human settlement in United States Virgin Islands, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "sub-district of the United States Virgin Islands"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4316938", "label": "Miroslav Nemirov", "source": "Miroslav Maratovich Nemirov (Russian: Мирослав Маратович Немиров, 8 November 1961 – 21 February 2016) was a Russian poet, associated with Russian punk rock, born in Rostov-on-Don. He is most known as a founder of Instruktsiya po Vyzhivaniyu rock group in 1985 in Tyumen and the author of the Great Tyumen Encyclopaedia (Russian: Большая Тюменская Энциклопедия), as well as being a regular columnist of Russian Journal between 2000 and 2003. He collaborated with Grazhdanskaya Oborona as well. Nemirov was born in Rostov-on-Don in 1961 and moved to Tyumen in the beginning of the 1980s, where he studied languages at the Tyumen State University. He was one of the founders of the Tyumen rock club. In the 1990s he returned to Rostov-on-Don where he became one of the founders of the art group Art or Death (Russian: Искусство или смерть”). One of the members of the group was Avdey Ter-Oganyan, who left for Prague in 1989, and Nemirov wrote a book about the art of Ter-Oganyan. Later he moved to Moscow. In 1999 he organized the Association of Masters of Arts OsumBez (Russian: Осумасшедшевшие Безумцы, Osumasshedshevshiye Bezumtsy). The partnership consisted of poets, photographers and musicians. Among other members of the group there were Vsevolod Yemelin, Vladimir Bogomyakov, and German Lukomnikov.Nemirov died of cancer in Moscow in 2016.Much of the lyrics of Nemirov contain obscene words and expressions and could not be published or put online according to Russian laws. The compendium of Nemirov's essays in Russian Journal is considered as an encyclopedia of Russian rock music. Most of.", "target": "Russian poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28232300", "label": "Auburndale, Alberta", "source": "Auburndale is an unincorporated area in Alberta, Canada.The community takes its name from Auburndale, Massachusetts, the native home of a first settler.", "target": "unincorporated area in Alberta, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5211074", "label": "Dalkey Quarry", "source": "Dalkey Quarry ( DAW-kee) is a long-disused 19th century granite quarry located on Dalkey Hill in the Dublin suburb of Dalkey, which was used to build several large maritime structures in south Dublin. Since passing into public ownership in the early 20th century and becoming part of Killiney Hill Park, it has become one of the most important rock climbing venues in Ireland, with over 350 graded routes, some of which are amongst the hardest single-pitch rock climbs in the country such as Indecent Assault (E8 6c, one of Ireland's first-ever E8 routes, first ascended in 1995). The climbs are all traditional climbing routes and no bolted sport climbing routes are permitted, although some metal pegs are tolerated on the most extreme routes.", "target": "granite rock climbing venue, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["quarry", "crag"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94836726", "label": "Cornelis Easton", "source": "Cornelis Easton (10 June 1864 – 3 June 1929) was a Dutch journalist and amateur astronomer who wrote popular material on astronomy and climatology apart from giving lectures. As a journalist he worked with the Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant (1895–1906), Nieuws van den Dag (1906–1923), and Haagsche Post (from 1923). In his first book, he was among the first to postulate a spiral structure for the Milky Way galaxy in which he located the solar system on the edge. A street in Dordrecht is named after him. Easton was born in Dordrecht where his father Johannes Jacobus was a captain in the Dutch East India Company and his mother Margrieta Wilhelmina was the daughter of a printer. He went to the local HBS (school) where he became interested in astronomy after observing the aperiodic Comet Coggia discovered on April 17, 1874 by Jérôme Coggia (1849-1919). He was greatly influenced by Jules Verne's Journey to the Moon and Popular Astronomy by Nicolas-Camille Flammarion (1842-1925). While still in high school he founded the Société Flammarion in Dordrecht in 1880 which had three members. He then went to the Polytechnicum Delft in 1881. He became more interested in astronomy and compiled star charts and was encouraged to publish his notes by H.G. van de Sande Bakhuyzen (1838-1923), professor of astronomy at Leiden University. He was assisted in his research by Anton Pannekoek (1873-1960), who was a student at Leiden University. This led to his 1893 book La Voie Lactee dans l'hemisphere boreal, in which he provided drawing and diagrams of.", "target": "Dutch journalist and astronomer (1864-1929)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48771644", "label": "Agozo", "source": "Firmin Boubié Bazié, better known by his stage name Agozo, is a Burkinabé singer.", "target": "Burkinabé singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3452813", "label": "Rugathodes", "source": "Rugathodes is a genus of comb-footed spiders that was first described by Allan Frost Archer in 1950. It is closely related to members of Theridion and Wamba.", "target": "genus of arachnids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5708751", "label": "Hello Kitty: Big City Dreams", "source": "Hello Kitty: Big City Dreams is a Hello Kitty game published by Empire Interactive for the Nintendo DS.Hello Kitty: Big City Dreams offers two complementary styles of play: exploration and mini-game. Exploration mode offers the chance to take control of Hello Kitty and explore a 3D city, complete with streets, buildings, shops, neighborhood characters, and public transportation that Hello Kitty can ride. Different locations within the city will trigger a variety of mini-games for Hello Kitty to play. Completing these mini-games will earn friendship points which Hello Kitty can then use to ride the bus or train, purchase new outfits and items, decorate and customize her apartment, and progress in her journey. In order to keep her friends happy, Hello Kitty will have to stay in touch by checking her mail frequently.", "target": "video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67918017", "label": "Sjoeke Nüsken", "source": "Sjoeke Nüsken (born 22 January 2001) is a German footballer who plays as a midfielder for Eintracht Frankfurt and the Germany women's national team.", "target": "German association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q113464", "label": "Chatham-Kent", "source": "Chatham-Kent (2021 population 104,316) is a single-tier municipality in Southwestern Ontario, Canada. Mostly rural, its population centres are Chatham, Wallaceburg, Tilbury, Blenheim, Ridgetown, Wheatley and Dresden. The current Municipality of Chatham-Kent was created in 1998 by the amalgamation of Blenheim, Bothwell, Camden, city of Chatham, township of Chatham, Dover, Dresden, Erie Beach, Erieau, Harwich, Highgate, Howard, Orford, Raleigh, Ridgetown, Rodney, Thamesville, Tilbury East, Tilbury, Wallaceburg, Wheatley and Zone. The Chatham-Kent census division, which includes the independent Delaware Nation at Moraviantown First Nation, had a population of 102,042 in the 2016 census.", "target": "rural municipality in Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["single-tier municipality", "city", "big city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2468085", "label": "USA Union", "source": "USA Union is a 1970 album by blues musician John Mayall, featuring Harvey Mandel on guitar, Larry Taylor on bass and Don \"Sugarcane\" Harris on violin. The album was recorded on July 27 & 28th, 1970 at Larrabee Studios in LA and released by Polydor later in the same year John Mayall - Discography. At the end of the sixties John Mayall was residing in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles, California and had developed connections with local musicians, befriending Harvey Mandel and Larry Taylor, who had both just departed Canned Heat. Taylor had appeared on one track of Mayall's previous album, Empty Rooms, the only studio recordings of his \"Turning Point\" band, and stayed on to replace Stephen Thompson (with whom he duetted on \"To a Princess\"); Mandel essentially replaced acoustic guitar specialist Jon Mark, and electric violinist Harris replaced saxophonist Johnny Almond. In the USA Union liner notes, Mayall noted that, after the Turning Point band broke up, he'd played a British music festival with an all-star lineup and then needed to form a new band swiftly when Polydor Records pressed him for a new album. With his new all-American line up, Mayall pursued the jazzy blues experiment documented on his live album The Turning Point. This unusual format (electric guitars by Mayall and Mandel, Mayall playing piano and harmonica as well, Harris's electric violin, Taylor's acoustic and electric bass, and no drums) the band created a unique sound and recorded this series of songs mostly chronicling Mayall's then-romance with Nancy Throckmorton (a theme he first.", "target": "1970 album by John Mayall", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1036745", "label": "Carl Andreas August Goos", "source": "Carl Andreas August Goos (6 August 1797, Schleswig - 12 July 1855, Schleswig) was a German-Danish painter working in history painting, genre painting and portrait painting.", "target": "Danish painter (1797-1855)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1953013", "label": "Mesoparapylocheles michaeljacksoni", "source": "Mesoparapylocheles michaeljacksoni is an extinct hermit crab species that existed during the Albian or Cenomanian in what is now Spain. It is the type species of the genus Mesoparapylocheles. It was described by René H.B. Fraaije, Adiël A. Klompmaker and Pedro Artal in 2012, and was named after the singer Michael Jackson.The fossil was discovered in the Koskobilo Quarry, in the Navarrese town of Olazagutía, northern Spain.", "target": "species of crustacean (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19661366", "label": "Prathista", "source": "Prathista is a Telugu actress who primarily acted in Telugu movies. She rose to fame when she acted in the remake of 1972 Malayalam movie Rasaleela of the same name. Her list of prominent Telugu movies include Swapna Sundari, To Let, Aata Modalaindi, and Chethilo Cheyyesi.", "target": "Indian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5645336", "label": "Hamis Kiiza", "source": "Hamis \"Diego\" Kiiza (born 10 December 1990) is a Ugandan professional footballer who plays for Vipers SC in Uganda.", "target": "Ugandan footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5657002", "label": "Harford Mall", "source": "The Harford Mall is a shopping mall owned by CBL & Associates Properties that is located near the junction of Maryland Route 24 and U.S. Route 1, about 32 miles (51 km) north of Baltimore, in Bel Air, Maryland, United States. Its anchor is Macy's. It is the only shopping mall in Harford County, Maryland. The mall was built on the previous site of the Bel Air Racetrack.", "target": "shopping mall in Maryland, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6484434", "label": "Landers", "source": "Landers is an unincorporated community in the High Desert region of the Mojave Desert, in San Bernardino County, Southern California. Landers' population, as of 2017, is 2,982 people. Its residents are sometimes referred to as \"Landroids\"—an allusion to the popular UFO culture in the area—and its official slogan is \"Beautiful Skies, Miles of Smiles,\" adopted pursuant to a contest held by the Landers Association in early 2014. It was submitted by Ms. McCall's 3rd and 4th grade class at Landers Elementary School and was unveiled on June 10, 2014. However, for almost half a century, Landers has been known to its residents as \"the land of 1000 vistas\".", "target": "unincorporated community in California", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6715057", "label": "MC Groovz Dance Craze", "source": "MC Groovz Dance Craze is a rhythm game for the Nintendo GameCube developed and published by Mad Catz. The game is a Dance Dance Revolution clone and was bundled with Mad Catz' Beat Pad accessory. The game was originally announced via a press release on November 2, 2004.", "target": "2004 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5280850", "label": "Dirk Muschiol", "source": "Dirk Muschiol (born 13 April 1969) is a former professional German footballer.Muschiol made 55 appearances in the 2. Bundesliga for SpVgg Blau-Weiß 1890 Berlin and Tennis Borussia Berlin during his playing career.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19749308", "label": "Avi Gabbay", "source": "Avraham \"Avi\" Gabbay (Hebrew: אַבְרָהָם \"אָבִי\" גַּבַּאי, born 22 February 1967) is an Israeli businessman and politician. He was CEO of the telecommunications company Bezeq from 2007 to 2013, then entered politics. He served as Minister of Environmental Protection between 2015 and 2016 as a member of the Kulanu party, before being elected leader of the Israeli Labor Party in 2017. He was elected to the Knesset in April 2019, but resigned as leader shortly afterwards. He did not run in the September 2019 elections. After leaving politics, Gabbay returned to the business world. He is currently the CEO of Cellcom.", "target": "Israeli politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22542389", "label": "Shellmouth Reservoir", "source": "The Shellmouth Reservoir (also known as Lake of the Prairies) is a man-made reservoir on the Assiniboine River in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, Canada.The Shellmouth Dam (50°57′49″N 101°25′07″W) is a multi-purpose, embankment dam built by the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration (PFRA).The dam and reservoir are part of a strategy to reduce the risk of flood damage for Winnipeg and other communities along the Assiniboine River. For example, in the 1997 Red River flood, the inflow to the reservoir peaked at 10,000 cubic feet per second (280 m3/s) while the outflow never exceeded 1,700 cu ft/s (48 m3/s). The reservoir is also used to supplement flows on the Assiniboine when conditions are dry, ensuring water supply for Brandon, Portage la Prairie, irrigators, and some industries. For example in early August, 2021 the flow in Brandon was a little over 9 cms while the outflow from Shellmouth was 5.7 cms and inflow was less than 0.5 cms. Therefore without the dam the flow in the Assiniboine at Brandon would be a bit under 4 cms. Asessippi Provincial Park is established around the southern arm of the lake.", "target": "lake in Manitoba, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["lake", "reservoir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2895873", "label": "Beni Chaib", "source": "Beni Chaib is a town and commune in Tissemsilt Province in northern Algeria.", "target": "commune and town in Tissemsilt Province, Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Algeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7069795", "label": "Nundle", "source": "Nundle is a village in the New England region of New South Wales, Australia. It was formerly the centre of Nundle Shire, but most of this area, including the village of Nundle, was absorbed into Tamworth Regional Council in 2004. The village is 400 km north of Sydney and about 56 km south east of Tamworth past Chaffey Dam via a good sealed road. In the 2006 census Nundle had a population of 289. Nundle is located at the southern end of Fossickers Way.", "target": "village in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5915097", "label": "House of Large Sizes", "source": "House of Large Sizes (sometimes known as HOLS) was an American alternative rock band from Cedar Falls, Iowa, formed in 1986. The band was led by singer/guitarist Dave Deibler and singer/bassist Barb Schilf, with three different drummers during their career.", "target": "American rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5073112", "label": "Sphaerodactylus elasmorhynchus", "source": "The Marche Leon least gecko (Sphaerodactylus elasmorhynchus), also known commonly as the snout-shield sphaero, is a species of lizard in the family Sphaerodactylidae. The species is endemic to Haiti.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16491978", "label": "Antonio Dias", "source": "Antonio Manuel Lima Dias (February 22, 1944 – August 1, 2018), commonly known as Antonio Dias, was a Brazilian artist and graphic designer. He was a prominent figure during the concretist and Tropicália movements.", "target": "Brazilian artist and painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13468821", "label": "Clarkenia superba", "source": "Clarkenia superba is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Colombia.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2093352", "label": "Sylhet District", "source": "Sylhet (Bengali: সিলেট), located in north-east Bangladesh, is the divisional capital and one of the four districts in the Sylhet Division.", "target": "district in its namesake division in Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["District of Bangladesh"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5201776", "label": "Czech Republic at the Paralympics", "source": "The Czech Paralympic team refers to athletes and their support teams, who represent or represented the Czech Republic at the Paralympic Games. It also includes a team of many people who have to coordinate security, and work on the preparation and realization of all Czech Paralympic activities. The Czech Paralympic committee (CPC) is the body whose main function is to develop ideas of Paralympism in the Czech Republic and is responsible for preparing and supplying stately representation for the Czech Republic at the Summer or Winter Paralympic Games. The mascot for the Czech Paralympic team is a bird named \"Emil\".", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Paralympics delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4613761", "label": "2009 FC Bunyodkor season", "source": "The 2009 FC Bunyodkor season was the 3rd season in the Uzbek League in Uzbekistan. Bunyodkor competed in Uzbek League, Uzbekistani Cup and AFC Champions League tournaments.", "target": "FC Bunyodkor 2009 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6056458", "label": "Semahat Özdenses", "source": "Semahat Özdenses (28 July 1913 – 3 July 2008) was a Turkish singer and composer of Ottoman classical music. She was a recipient of the \"Culture and Arts Service Award\" of Turkey.", "target": "Turkish singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97933029", "label": "2020–21 Zira FK season", "source": "The Zira FK 2020-21 season was Zira's sixth Azerbaijan Premier League season, and seventh season in their history.", "target": "Zira 2019-20 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1253114", "label": "1961 Scotch Cup", "source": "The 1961 Scotch Cup was the third edition of the men's World Curling Championship. It was held across four venues: Ayr, Kirkcaldy, Perth and Edinburgh, Scotland. The tournament began with games in Ayr on 21 March. The second and third days were on 22 and 23 March in Kirkcaldy, and the fourth day was in Perth on 24 March. The tournament was expanded to a three team competition with the United States debuting in the tournament. After the three teams ended up tied with a 2-2 win–loss record, a playoff was played with the semi-final played on 25 March in Perth and the final played in Edinburgh on 30 March. In the final, Canada won the Scotch Cup for the third time with a 12-7 win over Scotland in the final.", "target": "Curling championship", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7831800", "label": "Tracy Moore", "source": "Tracy Moore (born January 6, 1975) is a Canadian television journalist and host of lifestyle magazine Cityline on City since October 2008. She previously served as news anchor on Citytv Toronto's Breakfast Television from 2005 to 2008. She fills in for Dina Pugliese as co-host on Breakfast Television on an infrequent basis. Growing up in Richmond Hill, Ontario, she went to Langstaff Secondary School. According to host Kevin Frankish, \"she spent much of her youth as a Baton Twirler with the Progress Yorkettes in York Region.\" Moore then earned a BA at McGill University and Masters at the University of Western Ontario.Moore began her career as a videographer for CBC Television, then worked for the now-defunct television station, Toronto 1 before joining City.", "target": "newscaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2167814", "label": "Benedict", "source": "Benedict is a village in York County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 234 at the 2010 census.", "target": "human settlement in York County, Nebraska, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["village in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75529748", "label": "Sir Robert Buxton, 3rd Baronet", "source": "Sir Robert Jacob Buxton, 3rd Baronet (13 March 1829 – 20 January 1888) was an English Conservative Party politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1871 to 1885. Buxton was the eldest son of Sir John Buxton, 2nd Baronet and his wife Elizabeth Cholmeley, daughter of Sir Montague Cholmeley, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford. He became a lieutenant in the 1st Suffolk Yeoman Cavalry in 1852, and a captain in the 29th Norfolk Rifle Volunteers in 1860. He was a J.P. and a D. L. for Suffolk and Norfolk, and was High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1870.Buxton stood for parliament unsuccessfully in Bury St Edmunds at the 1859 general election. He was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for South Norfolk at a by-election in 1871, and held the seat until representation was reduced under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885.Buxton married Mary Augusta Harriet Johnstone, only daughter of lieutenant-colonel Johnstone in 1856. He had no male heir and the baronetcy became extinct in 1888. His daughter Maud Isabel Buxton married, in 1901, Gerard James Barnes, who changed his name to Buxton the following year and took the arms of Buxton together with his own. They sold the family estate.", "target": "British politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15919621", "label": "Xiangshan, Taipei", "source": "Xiangshan (Chinese: 象山), also known as Elephant Mountain or Mount Elephant, is a mountain in Xinyi District, Taipei, Taiwan. It is close to the Taipei Metro Xiangshan Station. It is 183 m high and has a hiking trail about 1.5 km long. The Taipei 101 can be seen from the trail. The Six Giant Rocks are a tourist attraction in Xiangshan, and there are platforms for photographers.", "target": "Elephant Mountain", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5571163", "label": "Gloeocercospora sorghi", "source": "Gloeocercospora sorghi is a plant pathogen and causal agent of zonate leaf spot also known as copper spot on Sorghum bicolor (though it can infect several other hosts). It is used as a bioherbicide.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49022486", "label": "Cowboy Mountain", "source": "Cowboy Mountain is a 5,853-foot-elevation (1,784 meter) mountain summit located in northeast King County of Washington state. It is situated at Stevens Pass, on land managed by Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest. This mountain is best known for ski runs on its north slopes which are part of the Stevens Pass Ski Area. Cowboy Mountain is part of the Chiwaukum Mountains, which are a subset of the Cascade Range. Its nearest higher neighbor is Big Chief Mountain, 1.9 mi (3.1 km) to the northeast, and the Pacific Crest Trail passes through the saddle between these two mountains. Precipitation runoff from the peak drains into headwaters of the Tye River, which in turn is a tributary of the Skykomish River. The longest railroad tunnel in the United States, the Cascade Tunnel, was bored directly under Cowboy Mountain, as a response to deadly avalanches that threatened trains of the Great Northern Railway. The deadliest avalanche in the history of the United States, the 1910 Wellington avalanche, occurred approximately two miles west of Cowboy Mountain.", "target": "mountain in Washington (state), United States", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain", "hill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5972233", "label": "Lu Zongyu", "source": "Lu Zongyu (simplified Chinese: 陆宗舆; traditional Chinese: 陸宗輿; pinyin: Lù Zōngyú; 1876–1941) was a Chinese diplomat at the Paris Peace Conference after World War I. Because of subscribing Twenty-One Demands supporting Japanese interests, along with Zhang Zongxiang and Cao Rulin, he was blamed as Hanjian (\"traitor to the Chinese people\") by students participating May Fourth Movement.", "target": "Chinese diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7721096", "label": "The Camp", "source": "The Camp is a hamlet in the south of Gloucestershire, approximately 10 miles south of Cheltenham and 5 miles north-east of Stroud. It is in the parish of Miserden, a village about 2 miles east of The Camp. The village clusters around two roads: Calf Way and Honeycombe Road. Calf Way is thought to be a Roman road, presumably named for the cattle driven along it. Honeycombe Road leads to Honeycombe Farm, and then on to Miserden. How the village came to be known as The Camp is a matter of debate. Some sources claim that it is related to Neolithic camps – and there are the remains of Neolithic burial chambers close to the village. Others claim that it was a Civil War encampment. In either case, at some point before 1767, the village was known as Hazlehouse-Yate. Hazle House is a large house close to the village; \"yate\" means gate. One of Neolithic barrows was opened in around 1720, and contained the skulls and skeletons of eight bodies. Another barrow was opened a few years later – this one contained human bones and an urn, and was assumed to be Roman (the village is not far from Ermin Street, one of the great Roman roads). Over the years, there have been a number of businesses in the village, some serving locals, and others finding customers further afield: the New Inn was the village pub until the 20th century; the village had a bakery; a quarry supplied roof tiles to the region; there were a.", "target": "village in Gloucestershire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1025873", "label": "Caimanera", "source": "Caimanera is a municipality and town in Guantánamo Province on the south eastern coast of Cuba. It is a fishing village and port built on the West shore of the sheltered Guantánamo Bay, just north of the US naval base and south of the provincial capital, Guantánamo.", "target": "Town in Guantánamo province, Cuba", "baseline_candidates": ["city", "municipality of Cuba"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60776557", "label": "1873 Collingwood by-election", "source": "The 1873 Collingwood by-election was a by-election held on 9 December 1873 in the Collingwood electorate during the 5th New Zealand Parliament. The by-election was caused by the resignation of the incumbent MP Arthur Collins on 8 October 1873.The by-election was won by William Gibbs, who had narrowly lost the previous 1868 by-election to Collins.Gibbs was elected unopposed.", "target": "New Zealand by-election", "baseline_candidates": ["by-election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q390272", "label": "Hichem Djaït", "source": "Hichem Djait (Arabic: هشام جعيط; December 6, 1935 – June 1, 2021) was a prominent historian and scholar of Islam.", "target": "Tunisian historian, islamic studies scholar and academic (1935-2021)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3171958", "label": "Jean Fabre", "source": "Jean Fabre (born Rodez, 7 November 1935) is a former French rugby union player. He played as a flanker. He played for Stade Toulousain. He earned his first cap with the French national team on 11 November 1962 against Romania at Bucharest. In 1964 he became captain of French national team. After his player career he became president of Stade Toulousain during the 1980s.", "target": "French rugby union footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q71749516", "label": "Statue of Benjamin Franklin", "source": "A statue of Benjamin Franklin by Richard Saltonstall Greenough is installed outside Old City Hall in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It rests on a base with plaques designed by Greenough and Thomas Ball.", "target": "statue in Boston, Massachusetts", "baseline_candidates": ["statue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51884593", "label": "Gong Jun", "source": "Gong Jun (Chinese: 龚俊, born 29 November 1992), also known as Simon Gong, is a Chinese actor and model. He gained attention for his role in Lost Love In Times (2017), and further recognition for his roles in Begin Again (2020), and Word Of Honor (2021).", "target": "Chinese actor born in 1992", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97128955", "label": "Shlomo Zev Zweigenhaft", "source": "Rabbi Shlomo Zev Zweigenhaft (he: הרב שלמה זאב צווייגענהאפט) was Rosh Hashochtim of Poland prior to the Holocaust. After the Holocaust, he was Chief Rabbi of Hannover and Lower Saxony. After emigrating to the United States he was a Rav Hamachshir and world-renowned for his expertise in all matters related to shechita and was described as the \"foremost authority on shechita\".", "target": "Rosh Hashochtim of Poland, Chief Rabbi of Hannover and Lower Saxony.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q331360", "label": "Kevin Constantine", "source": "Kevin Lars Constantine (born December 27, 1958) is an American ice hockey coach who currently serves as the head coach of the Hungarian hockey club Fehérvár AV19 of the ICE Hockey League (ICE). Constantine has coached hockey teams in the NHL, WHL, IHL, AHL and numerous major junior hockey leagues. He was also the former head coach of HC Ambri-Piotta in the Swiss National League A. He also coached the North Iowa Huskies for a brief time.", "target": "American ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5790476", "label": "Mazus miquelii", "source": "Mazus miquelii, commonly known as Miquel's mazus or creeping mazus, is a species of herbaceous perennial groundcover native to Japan and China.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1932747", "label": "Frederika", "source": "Frederika is a city in Bremer County, Iowa, United States. The population was 204 at the time of the 2020 census. It is named for Fredrika Bremer (note different spelling), the Swedish author, for whom the surrounding county was also named.Frederika is part of the Waterloo–Cedar Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "human settlement in Bremer County, Iowa, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4876936", "label": "Beat Gähwiler", "source": "Beat Gähwiler (born January 26, 1965) is a retired decathlete from Switzerland, who finished in twelfth place (8114 points) at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. He also competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain, ending up in 21st place. He is a five-time national champion in the men's decathlon.", "target": "Swiss decathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13231618", "label": "Aethes nefandana", "source": "Aethes nefandana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It was described by Kennel in 1899. It is found in Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, North Macedonia, Greece, Russia, Asia Minor and western Kazakhstan.The wingspan is 19–20 millimetres (0.75–0.79 in). Adults are on wing from April to July. The larvae feed on Eryngium species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2924202", "label": "Brdari", "source": "Brdari is a village in the municipality of Sanski Most, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "target": "village in Sanski Most, Bosnia and Herzegovina", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6036695", "label": "Inoue Masatsune", "source": "Inoue Masatsune (井上 正経, 1725 – July 6, 1766) was a daimyō and official of the Tokugawa shogunate during mid-Edo period Japan.", "target": "daimyo", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52151514", "label": "Christmas Is Coming", "source": "Christmas is Coming is a 2017 Nigerian romantic comedy starring Ufuoma McDermott, Chioma Chukwuka, Deyemi Okanlawon, Zack Orji and Sola Sobowale. The film was written and directed by Ufuoma McDermott.", "target": "2017 film directed by Ufuoma Ejenobor", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7162121", "label": "Pen y Brynfforchog", "source": "Pen y Brynfforchog is subsidiary summit of Glasgwm in North Wales forming part of the Aran range in southern Snowdonia.It is separated from Glasgwm by the pass, Bwlch y Fign. The summit is bare and marked by a few stones. The views to the Dyfi hills: include direct view of the Craig Portas ridge, with Maesglase and Cribin Fawr.", "target": "mountain (684.9m) in Gwynedd", "baseline_candidates": ["summit", "mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3148840", "label": "Nils Lorens Sjöberg", "source": "Nils Lorens Sjöberg (4 December 1754 in Jönköping – 13 March 1822 in Stockholm) was a Swedish officer and poet. He was the first holder of seat 18 at the Swedish Academy, from 1787 to 1822. Sjöberg was born in Jönköping to a working-class family. At fourteen years of age, he began his studies in Jönköping School. He continued his studies at the University of Lund. Sjöberg was set on becoming a priest, but later reconsidered. Instead, he entered the Foreign Expedition in 1782. While in Stockholm, he garnered attention as a poet and won the Society Utile Dulci, Vitterhetsakademien and Gothenburg Vitterhets awards. His poetical works include Skaldekonsten, Atheisten, Jordbrukaren, and Odödligheten. In 1787, he became the first seat holder of seat 18 at the Swedish Academy. He held the position until his death. In 1812, at the age of 58, he became the Academy's permanent secretary. Sjöberg died in Stockholm 13 March 1822. He died childless and unmarried.", "target": "Swedish poet (1754-1822)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12954388", "label": "Morchella deliciosa", "source": "Morchella deliciosa is a species of edible fungus in the family Morchellaceae. It was first described scientifically by Elias Magnus Fries in 1822. It is a European species, although the name has erroneously been applied to morphologically similar North American morels.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55117837", "label": "Suzana Straus", "source": "Suzana Straus is a Canadian chemist who is a professor at the University of British Columbia. Her research considers membrane proteins and their role in cellular processes.", "target": "Canadian chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75272130", "label": "John Brocklehurst, 1st Baron Ranksborough", "source": "John Fielden Brocklehurst, 1st Baron Ranksborough (13 May 1852 – 28 February 1921), was a British soldier, courtier and Liberal politician.", "target": "British Army general, politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5355270", "label": "Electoral district of Coolgardie", "source": "Coolgardie was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Western Australia from 1897 to 1930. The district was located in the Goldfields region, and was based in the town of Coolgardie. In 1898, it also included the settlements of Boorabbin, Bullabulling, Widgiemooltha, Londonderry, Siberia, Dunnsville, Bonnie Vale, and Kunanalling. Its first member was Alf Morgans who served briefly as Premier of Western Australia in late 1901. At the 1930 state election, the district was amalgamated with the neighbouring district of Yilgarn to form the new district of Yilgarn-Coolgardie.", "target": "former electoral district in Western Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["electoral district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5021823", "label": "Calle 45", "source": "The simple-station Calle 45 is part of the TransMilenio mass-transit system of Bogotá, Colombia, opened in year 2000.", "target": "Transmilenio stop", "baseline_candidates": ["station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83673760", "label": "Rosa 'Boscobel'", "source": "Rosa 'Boscobel' (aka AUScousin) is a pink shrub rose cultivar, bred by British rose breeder David C. H. Austin, and introduced into the UK by David Austin Roses Limited (UK) in 2012. The cultivar was named after Boscobel House (1632) in Shropshire, England.", "target": "rose cultivar", "baseline_candidates": ["rose cultivar"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7243263", "label": "Robin Burns", "source": "Robin Arthur Burns (born August 27, 1946) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey left winger. He is the cousin of coach Pat Burns.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16258470", "label": "CKVV-FM", "source": "CKVV-FM is a Canadian radio station broadcasting a variety/adult hits format on the frequency of 97.5 MHz (FM) in Kemptville, Ontario. The station is branded as 97.5 Moose FM.", "target": "Radio station in Kemptville, Ontario", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49007540", "label": "Pozas", "source": "Pozas is a barrio in the municipality of Ciales, Puerto Rico. Its population in 2010 was 1,430.", "target": "barrio in Ciales, Puerto Rico", "baseline_candidates": ["barrio of Puerto Rico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6764609", "label": "Mario Christian Meyer", "source": "Mario Christian Meyer is a Swiss-Brazilian doctor and advocate for the sustainable development of the Amazonia and preservation of its indigenous cultural heritage.", "target": "Brazilian doctor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6633605", "label": "list of places in California", "source": "This list of current: cities towns, unincorporated communities counties, and other recognized places in the U.S. state of California.Information on the number and names of counties in which the place lies, and its lower and upper ZIP code bounds, if applicable are also included.", "target": "list of places in California - H", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4893570", "label": "Lugares colombinos", "source": "The Lugares colombinos (\"Columbian places\") is a tourist route in the Spanish province Huelva, which includes several places that have special relevance to the preparation and realization of the first voyage of Cristopher Columbus. That voyage is widely considered to constitute the discovery of the Americas by Europeans. It was declared a conjunto histórico artístico (\"historic/artistic grouping\") by a Spanish law of 1967.There are two localities so honored: Palos de la Frontera (both the old center and the La Rábida Monastery 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) distant), and Moguer. Columbus visited each of these places several times, and people associated with each played roles in his voyage. He received help and collaboration for his projected voyage from the brothers of the La Rábida Monastery, the Pinzón Brothers of Palos de la Frontera, the Niño Brothers of Moguer and other prestigious families of mariners in the area who were further distinguished by their participation in the voyage of discovery. In the years following Columbus's voyage this area of Spain, especially Palos, suffered a great economic decline, owing in part to emigration to the newly discovered territories overseas. The recuperation of the historical importance of this region with respect to the Spanish discovery and conquest of the Americas (and the interest in preserving and restoring the buildings associated with Columbus) began, in part, with the nineteenth-century writer Washington Irving, from the United States, whose travels in Spain included this area. His diary entries for 12–14 August 1828 deal with the Lugares colombinos; that same year he would publish A.", "target": "tourist route in the Spanish province Huelva", "baseline_candidates": ["group of structures or buildings", "historic site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6427134", "label": "Kolby LaCrone", "source": "Kolby LaCrone (born September 12, 1986 in Zanesville, Ohio) is an American former soccer player.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18247971", "label": "BID", "source": "The BH3 interacting-domain death agonist, or BID, gene is a pro-apoptotic member of the Bcl-2 protein family. Bcl-2 family members share one or more of the four characteristic domains of homology entitled the Bcl-2 homology (BH) domains (named BH1, BH2, BH3 and BH4), and can form hetero- or homodimers. Bcl-2 proteins act as anti- or pro-apoptotic regulators that are involved in a wide variety of cellular activities.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3316616", "label": "Anton Wilhelm Brøgger", "source": "Anton Wilhelm Brøgger (11 October 1884 – 29 August 1951) was a Norwegian archaeologist.", "target": "Norwegian archaeologist and politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21172297", "label": "Ali Hassanein", "source": "Ali Hassanein (13 January 1939 – 12 August 2015) was an Egyptian actor.", "target": "Egyptian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2708333", "label": "Ora hyacintha", "source": "Ora hyacintha is a species of marsh beetle in the family Scirtidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94633968", "label": "Nyma Akashat Zibiri", "source": "Nihmatallah Akashat Zibiri, known as Nyma, is a Nigerian lawyer and television host. She is co-host on TVC's daytime show Your View.", "target": "Nigerian lawyer and television host", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19059687", "label": "Jolien Verschueren", "source": "Jolien Verschueren (7 May 1990 – 2 July 2021) was a Belgian cyclo-cross cyclist, who rode for UCI Cyclo-cross team Pauwels Sauzen–Bingoal. She represented her nation in the women's elite event at the 2016 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Heusden-Zolder.Verschueren combined her cycling career with working as a schoolteacher. She won the Koppenbergcross in 2015 and repeated this at the 2016 DVV Verzekeringen Trofee Koppenbergcross 2016, besting world champion Thalita de Jong. On 12 April 2018, it was announced that earlier that week Verschueren was operated on to remove a malignant brain tumor. Verschueren tried a comeback in 2019 and 2020 but her health did not allow for good results. Her last race was the 2020 edition of the Koppenbergcross. Verschueren died of brain cancer on 2 July 2021. In October 2021 the organisers of the Koppenbergcross announced that the women's edition of the race would be known as the Grand Prix Jolien Verschueren in her memory.", "target": "Belgian bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q91915312", "label": "Archibald Turner", "source": "Archibald Turner (1629–1681) was a 17th century Scottish minister who served as minister of St Giles Cathedral and as Sub-Dean of the Chapel Royal.", "target": "Minister of the Church of Scotland", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55629362", "label": "Pedro Marin", "source": "Pedro Rafael Marin (born March 30, 1958) is an American politician. He is a member of the Georgia House of Representatives, serving since 2003. He is a member of the Democratic party.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66699865", "label": "May M. Van Wye", "source": "May Martin Van Wye (1878–1968) was a member of the Ohio House of Representatives and the Ohio Senate. She was one of the first six women elected into the Ohio General Assembly in 1922. In 1962, she published her first novel, \"Eve's Tower,\" which is loosely based on her experiences as a female state senator.Van Wye was born May Martin on December 31, 1878 in Brooklyn, New York to Lewis E. Martin and Ella M. Seaman. She married Benjamin C. Van Wye (1867–1940), who became professor of speech at the University of Cincinnati. She died August 26, 1968, in Cincinnati, Ohio.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27734008", "label": "Knut Stiklestad", "source": "Knut Stiklestad (born 22 September 1948) is a Norwegian opera singer (bass). He has performed at the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet for many years, and at opera houses abroad, in Belgium, France, the Netherlands, and elsewhere. He has worked with Stein Winge, Bentein Baardson, and Wouter van Looy, among others. Stiklestad is also known for his work in church music. He has also cooperated with the composer Marcus Paus on work based on poems by Knut Hamsun.", "target": "Norwegian opera singer (born 1948)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4245063", "label": "Sergei Kuznetsov", "source": "Sergey Alekseyevich Kuznetsov (Russian: Серге́й Алексеевич Кузнецов; born 12 May 1966) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player. He made his professional debut in the Soviet Second League in 1984 for FC Spartak Tambov. Kuznetsov is the first Russian to play in the Bulgarian A PFG.", "target": "Russian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q373923", "label": "Claiborne Fox Jackson", "source": "Claiborne Fox Jackson (April 4, 1806 – December 6, 1862) was an American politician of the Democratic Party in Missouri. He was elected as the 15th governor of Missouri, serving from January 3, 1861, until July 31, 1861, when he was forced out by the Unionist majority in the legislature, after planning to force secession of the state. Before the war, Jackson worked with his father-in-law, John Sappington, to manufacture and sell patent medicines, in the form of quinine pills, to treat and prevent malaria. He became quite wealthy and politically influential, deeply involved in the Democratic party in Saline County and central Missouri. He served twelve years in the Missouri House of Representatives, twice as Speaker. In 1848 he was elected to the State Senate. To win votes in the 1860 election, Jackson claimed to be anti-secession, but he was secretly planning a secessionist coup in league with Confederate President Jefferson Davis.Nathaniel Lyon, Union commander of the arsenal in St. Louis, was suspicious of the governor's intentions and raided a state militia camp outside the city, where the force had been accumulating arms; Lyon's troops took many of the militia members as prisoners. As the latter were marched through the city, a riot broke out, and both soldiers and civilians were killed. Jackson declared Missouri to be a free republic. In July, the majority Unionist members of the Missouri State Legislature voted to remove him from office, but the governor refused to accept the action and went into exile in Arkansas, from whence he and.", "target": "15th Governor of Missouri (1806-1862)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2321329", "label": "Poulton-le-Fylde", "source": "Poulton-le-Fylde (), commonly shortened to Poulton, is a market town in Lancashire, England, situated on the coastal plain called the Fylde. In the 2001 United Kingdom census, it had a population of 18,264. There is evidence of human habitation in the area from 12,000 years ago and several archaeological finds from Roman settlement in England have been found in the area. At the time of the Norman conquest, Poulton was a small agricultural settlement in the hundred of Amounderness. The church of St Chad was recorded in 1094 when it was endowed to Lancaster Priory. By the post-Medieval period the town had become an important commercial centre for the region with weekly and triannual markets. Goods were imported and exported through two harbours on the River Wyre. In 1837, the town was described as the \"metropolis of the Fylde\", but its commercial importance waned from the mid-19th century with the development of the nearby coastal towns of Fleetwood and Blackpool. Poulton has the administrative centre of the borough of Wyre and is in the parliamentary constituency of Wyre and Preston North. It is part of the Blackpool Urban Area and approximately 5 miles (8 km) from Blackpool town centre; there are rail links to Blackpool and Preston, and bus routes to the larger towns and villages of the Fylde. Poulton has a library and two secondary schools; Baines School and Hodgson Academy. There is a farmers' market once a month and since October 2011 there has been a weekly market on Mondays in the centre of.", "target": "town in Lancashire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["unparished area", "market town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11264388", "label": "Kari-class submarine chaser", "source": "The Kari-class submarine chaser was a class of submarine chasers of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force after the Second World War, in the mid-1950s.", "target": "class of Japan Maritime Self Defense Force submarine chasers", "baseline_candidates": ["ship class", "submarine chaser"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18602750", "label": "Namma Ooru Nayagan", "source": "Namma Ooru Nayagan (Tamil: நம்ம ஊரு நாயகன்) is a 1988 Indian Tamil film, directed by Yaar Kannan and produced by V. Anbukarasu. The film stars Ramarajan, Gouthami and Sripriya in lead roles. The film had musical score by newcomer Rajesh Khanna.", "target": "1988 film by Yaar Kannan", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7354231", "label": "Rock 'n' Roll Marathon Series", "source": "The Rock 'n' Roll Marathon Series is a collection of road running events owned and operated by the IRONMAN Group's Competitor Group, part of Advance Publications. The series is known for lining race routes with live bands, cheerleaders and themed water stations.", "target": "'Rock N Roll Marathon' events", "baseline_candidates": ["event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7079125", "label": "Office International d'Hygiène Publique", "source": "The International Office of Public Hygiene, also known by its French name as the Office International d'Hygiène Publique and abbreviated as OIHP, was an international organization founded 9 December 1907 and based in Paris, France. It was created to oversee international rules regarding the quarantining of ships and ports to prevent the spread of plague and cholera, and to administer other public health conventions.The OIHP was part of the complex structure known as the Health Organization (Organisation d'Hygiène) of the League of Nations, in an often-competing, and sometimes collaborative relation with the League of Nations' Health Committee.The OIHP was dissolved by protocols signed 22 July 1946 and its epidemiological service was incorporated into the Interim Commission of the World Health Organization on 1 January 1947. However, the OIHP remained in existence legally until 1952. As of 1933, the OIHP was composed of the following contracting parties: Argentina, 1910 Australia, 1909 Belgian Congo, 1927 Belgium, 1907 Bolivia, 1912 Brasil, 1907 UK British dominions, 1927 UK British India, 1908 Bulgaria, 1909 Canada, 1910 Chile, 1912 Denmark, 1913 Netherlands (Dutch Indies), 1925 Egypt, 1907 France, 1907 French Algeria, 1910 French Equatorial Africa, 1929 French Indochina, 1914 French West Africa, 1920 Germany, 1928 UK (Great Britain), 1907 Greece, 1913 Kingdom of Hedjaz, 1932 Ireland (Irish Free State), 1928 Italy, 1907 Japan, 1924 Luxemburg, 1926 Madagascar, 1920 Morocco, 1920 Mexico, 1909 Monaco, 1913 Netherlands, 1907 Norway, 1912 New Zealand, 1924 Peru, 1908 Persia, 1909 Poland, 1920 Portugal, 1907 Romania, 1921 Sudan, 1926 Sweden, 1909 Switzerland Czechoslovakia, 1922 South African Union, 1919.", "target": "international medical organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4533188", "label": "Ilyas Afandiyev", "source": "Ilyas Mahammad oglu Afandiyev (Azerbaijani: Əfəndiyev İlyas Məhəmməd oğlu) was an Azerbaijani and Soviet writer, member of Azerbaijan Union of Writers (1940), Honored Art Worker of Azerbaijan (1960), laureate of the State Prize of Azerbaijan (1972) and People’s Writer of Azerbaijan (1979).", "target": "Azerbaijani and Soviet writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16316654", "label": "Sambalpur district", "source": "Sambalpur District is a district in the western part of state of Odisha, India. The historic city of Sambalpur is the district headquarters. The district is located in the Mahanadi River basin. It has a total area of 6,702 km2 (2,588 sq mi), of which almost 60% of the district is covered in dense forest. The district is bounded by Deogarh District to the east, Bargarh and Jharsuguda districts to the west, Sundergarh District to the north, and Subarnapur and Angul districts in the south. Sambalpur City is the connecting city between Chhattisgarh and Odisha. Whereas it used to be known for its importance as a diamond trading centre, nowadays it is mainly known for its textiles, especially the Sambalpuri Saree.", "target": "district of Odisha, India", "baseline_candidates": ["district of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55609252", "label": "death of Katrien De Cuyper", "source": "On the evening of 17 December 1991, Belgian teenager Katrien De Cuyper (Dutch pronunciation: [kɑtrin də ˈkœy̯pər]) disappeared in Antwerp. Six months later, her body was discovered in the port of Antwerp. In 2006, a 35-year-old man from Kessel, who had written to a magazine saying that he was with her on the night she disappeared, was arrested and charged with her kidnapping and murder; he was released after four months due to a lack of evidence. The case remains unsolved.", "target": "Unsolved homicide in Belgium", "baseline_candidates": ["certain aspects of a person's life"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26837653", "label": "Xavier Bartlett", "source": "Xavier Colin Bartlett (born 17 December 1998) is an Australian cricketer. He made his List A cricket debut for National Performance Squad against India A on 27 August 2016. A right-arm fast-medium bowler and a right-handed batsman, he lives in Queensland.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6817627", "label": "Mentzelia chrysantha", "source": "Mentzelia chrysantha is a species of flowering plant in the Loasaceae known by the common names gold blazingstar and golden blazingstar. It is endemic to Colorado in the United States.This species is a biennial or monocarpic perennial herb. The stem is up to 60 centimeters tall. It has leaves up to 15 centimeters long with toothed edges. The plant is coated in hairs. The flower has 10 yellow petals. Blooming occurs in July through September. The fruit is a capsule. This species is similar to Mentzelia reverchonii, which sometimes grows with it. The two can be distinguished by differences in the seeds.This plant is endemic to the Arkansas River Valley in Fremont and Pueblo Counties in Colorado. There are 28 occurrences, all located within 20 miles of the community of Portland.This species grows in an arid river valley which gets hot during the summers. Summer is generally the wettest season in this region, and it is the time when the plant experiences most of its growth. It is likely a calciphile, as it grows on calcium-rich geological substrates, such as limestone. The plant can be found on disturbed, barren slopes in the river valley, where it is often the only plant growing in abundance. It is often found on road cuts. It is adapted to disturbed habitat, and it grows on crumbling slopes. This may be because it cannot tolerate much competition from other plants. The habitat is sometimes pinyon-juniper woodland. Associated plants include Frankenia jamesii and Atriplex canescens. This species can be found growing with.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4905525", "label": "Big D and Bubba", "source": "The Big D and Bubba Show is a nationally syndicated radio show airing six days a week on approximately 80 country music FM radio stations. The show is syndicated by Compass Media Networks. Live shows are broadcast from 6 to 10 AM (Eastern Time) Monday through Friday. There is also a pre-show heard weekday mornings from 5 to 6 AM (EST), and a 4 hour \"best of\" show called \"The Big D & Bubba Weekend Wakeup\" which is heard on Saturday or Sunday mornings on most broadcast affiliates. The Big D & Bubba show is broadcast globally in over 177 countries through the American Forces Network (AFN). The show is available on all United States military installations, as well as all ships at sea. You can also listen to a live stream of the show on the \"Big D & Bubba APP\" which is available on iPhone & Android devices. \"The Big D & Bubba Weekly Podcast\" is a popular Comedy, Entertainment, & Lifestyle focused podcast centered around the lives of the members of the show, their families, and friends. Big D (Derek Haskins) is married with two sons and spent time as an exchange student in Russia. He originally from Cookeville, Tennessee. Big D is a married father of two, and a licensed airplane pilot . Bubba (Sean Powell) grew up in Houma, Louisiana, and like Big D, also started on the radio at age 14. He has spent time working for radio stations around the country, and the island of Guam. Bubba is married.", "target": "American syndicated radio morning show", "baseline_candidates": ["radio program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26923714", "label": "Jean-Noël Ferrié", "source": "Jean-Noël Ferrié (born 1959) is a French political scientist and sociologist.", "target": "French political scientist and sociologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19871442", "label": "Abucay Church", "source": "The Saint Dominic Parish Church (Tagalog: Simbahan ng Parokya ni Santo Domingo de Guzman), also known as Abucay Church, is a 17th-century Baroque church located at Brgy. Laon, Abucay, Bataan, Philippines. The parish church, established in 1587 and administered by the Dominican Missionary Friars in 1588, is dedicated to Saint Dominic of Guzman. The parish is under the jurisdiction of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Balanga. Since June 5, 2017, its parish priest is Fr. Josue V. Enero. The church housed one of the earliest printing presses in the Philippines, established in 1608 by Father Francisco Blancas de San Jose, O.P. and Tomas Pinpin who used the facility to print books in Spanish and Tagalog. The church was also a witness to the massacre of hundreds of Filipinos and Spaniards by the Dutch Invaders on June 23, 1647. These pieces of the church's history were inscribed on a historical marker installed by the National Historical Committee (now the National Historical Commission of the Philippines) in 1939.", "target": "Roman Catholic church in Abucay, Bataan in the Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["parish church", "Catholic church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4789509", "label": "Argentinísima II", "source": "Argentinísima II is a 1973 Argentine musical documentary film directed and written by Fernando Ayala and Héctor Olivera. It is the sequel to the 1972 Argentinísima. The film premiered on 21 June 1973 in Buenos Aires.", "target": "1973 film by Héctor Olivera, Fernando Ayala", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q846601", "label": "ProtoStar", "source": "ProtoStar Ltd is a private company incorporated in Bermuda, with U.S. operations based in San Francisco, California and Asian operations based in Singapore. ProtoStar intended to operate an initial fleet of three geostationary satellites. Two satellites were acquired and launched. ProtoStar's anchor customer, Dish TV India Limited, is the largest direct-to-home television operator in India.", "target": "short-lived satellite company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16893", "label": "Labergement-lès-Seurre", "source": "Labergement-lès-Seurre (French pronunciation: ​[labɛʁʒəmɑ̃ lɛ sœʁ], literally Labergement near Seurre) is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France.", "target": "commune in Côte-d'Or, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7400427", "label": "Sailor Creek", "source": "Sailor Creek is a 64-mile (103 km) long tributary of the Snake River in the U.S. state of Idaho. Beginning at an elevation of 4,879 feet (1,487 m) southwest of Castleford in southeastern Owyhee County, it flows north through the Bruneau Desert, briefly crossing into Elmore County in the process. It then flows northwest to its mouth near Hammett, at an elevation of 2,467 feet (751.9 m).", "target": "river in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3840915", "label": "Luteolin O-methyltransferase", "source": "In enzymology, a luteolin O-methyltransferase (EC 2.1.1.42) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction S-adenosyl-L-methionine + 5,7,3',4'-tetrahydroxyflavone ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine + 5,7,4'-trihydroxy-3'-methoxyflavoneThus, the two substrates of this enzyme are S-adenosyl methionine and 5,7,3',4'-tetrahydroxyflavone (luteolin), whereas its two products are S-adenosylhomocysteine and 5,7,4'-trihydroxy-3'-methoxyflavone. This enzyme belongs to the family of transferases, specifically those transferring one-carbon group methyltransferases. The systematic name of this enzyme class is S-adenosyl-L-methionine:5,7,3',4'-tetrahydroxyflavone 3'-O-methyltransferase. Other names in common use include o-dihydric phenol methyltransferase, luteolin methyltransferase, luteolin 3'-O-methyltransferase, o-diphenol m-O-methyltransferase, o-dihydric phenol meta-O-methyltransferase, and S-adenosylmethionine:flavone/flavonol 3'-O-methyltransferase. This enzyme participates in flavonoid biosynthesis.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["methyltransferase", "group or class of enzymes", "transferase", "S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferase", "S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferase family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19671806", "label": "Brown Dipper", "source": "The brown dipper (Cinclus pallasii), also known as Pallas's dipper, Asian dipper or the Asiatic dipper, is an aquatic songbird found in the mountains of the east Palearctic. It is a thrush-like bird with a cocked tail. Its plumage is chocolate-brown with a slightly lighter coloured back and breast. At 22 cm (8.7 in) and 87 g (3.1 oz), it is the largest of the dippers. This species, which is not often seen, is found at medium to low elevations where mountain streams flow.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7790252", "label": "Thomas Guthrie", "source": "Thomas Guthrie FRSE (12 July 1803 – 24 February 1873) was a Scottish divine and philanthropist, born at Brechin in Angus (at that time also called Forfarshire). He was one of the most popular preachers of his day in Scotland, and was associated with many forms of philanthropy—especially temperance and Ragged Schools, of which he was a founder.", "target": "Scottish social reformer and founding father of the Free Church of Scotland (1803-1873)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7382422", "label": "Rustam, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa", "source": "Sudhum Rustam is a valley situated in the east of Mardan District bordering District Swabi and District Buner in District Mardan of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. Sudhum Rustam is a Tehsil in District Mardan and is located at 34°21'0N 72°17'0E and has an altitude of 369 m (1213 feet). Chanry (Chengay Baba) and Aman Kot (east), Kara Maar (south), Sakrah (northwest) And Sar Malang (North East) from three sides enhance the area. Sudhum Rustam is famous for its agricultural products like oranges of Beruch and mustard oil.", "target": "village and union council in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["union council of Pakistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q173442", "label": "Trevor Taylor", "source": "Trevor Taylor (26 December 1936 – 27 September 2010) was a British motor racing driver from England.", "target": "racecar driver (1936-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60767754", "label": "Philippine Army Museum", "source": "The Philippine Army Museum is a military museum located within the premises of Fort Bonifacio in Taguig, Philippines.", "target": "military history museum in Taguig, Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["military museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1034288", "label": "Kahen", "source": "Kahen (Ge'ez: ካህን kahən \"priest\", plural ካህናት kahənat) is a religious role in Beta Israel second only to the monk or falasyan. Their duty is to maintain and preserve the Haymanot among the people. This has become more difficult by the people's encounter with the modernity of Israel, where most of the Ethiopian Jewish people now live.The high priest (ሊቀ ካህን liqa kahən, plural ሊቃነ ካህናት liqanä kahhənat) is the leader of the priests in a certain area. An aspiring kahen must spend time studying as a debtera before being ordained. As a debtera, he will be closer to the laypeople and serve as an intermediary between them and the clergy. Upon becoming a kahen, he will no longer perform the services of a debtera, though he may take them up again if he gives up his position or is deposed.The term qäsis (Ge'ez: ቀሲስ, Amharic: ቄስ qes; Tigrinya: ቀሺ qäši), which refers to married priest in the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Churches, is a synonym for kahen, an unmarried priest, among the Beta Israel. With the aliyah of Beta Israel to Israel, the Amharic \"qes\" Hebraized was translated as Kes (Hebrew: קס or קייס, plural קסים or קייסים Kesim).", "target": "Beta Israel religious leader role", "baseline_candidates": ["religious occupation", "religious leader", "spiritual leader"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5990840", "label": "If You Are But a Dream", "source": "\"If You Are But a Dream\" is a popular song published in 1942 with words and music by Moe Jaffe, Jack Fulton and Nat Bonx. The melody is based on Anton Rubinstein's \"Romance in E flat, Op. 44, No. 1,\" popularly known as \"Rubinstein's Romance\". The song is most closely associated with Frank Sinatra, who recorded it first for Columbia Records on November 14, 1944, with an arrangement by Axel Stordahl. This recording was on the reverse side of a 78 rpm record with \"White Christmas\", and consequently did very well with \"White Christmas\" reaching the No. 7 spot in the Billboard charts. \"If You Are But a Dream\" itself briefly reached the Billboard charts in the No. 19 position. A year later, in 1945, \"If You Are But a Dream\" was included in the Academy Award-winning short film, The House I Live In, in which Sinatra was featured.Sinatra recorded this song again for Capitol Records on December 11, 1957, with an arrangement by Nelson Riddle. This recording was first released on the LP This Is Sinatra Volume 2 (Capitol 982). Both the Columbia and Capitol versions have subsequently been reissued on a number of CDs. \"If You Are But a Dream\" was featured most prominently in Woody Allen's 1987 film, Radio Days, which features the 1944 recording on the soundtrack.There is also another song based on the same Rubenstein work. It was written by Al Kasha and Hank Hunter and was called \"Forever and a Day\". It was recorded by Jackie Wilson for his 1963.", "target": "derivative work; song written and composed by Nat Bonx, Jack Fulton, Moe Jaffe, based on Anton Rubinstein's \"Romance in E flat, Op. 44, No. 1\"", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition", "derivative work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1224086", "label": "Bannay", "source": "Bannay (French pronunciation: [banɛ] (listen)) is a commune in the Marne department in northeastern France.", "target": "commune in Marne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5238433", "label": "Euphorbia boissieri", "source": "Euphorbia boissieri is a species of plant in the family Euphorbiaceae. It is endemic to Madagascar. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests. It is threatened by habitat loss. A political crisis in 2009 also plunged Madagascar wildlife into a desperate state. [1] It is named after botanist Pierre Edmond Boissier.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16059036", "label": "James Kirby", "source": "James Kirby (c. 1865 – October 8, 1915) was an American labor leader and president of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America from 1913 to 1915.Born and raised near Kankakee, Illinois, he went to Chicago shortly after learning his trade as a carpenter, settling in South Chicago where he was a millwright and member of Local 199. He was elected a delegate to the Chicago District Council of the Carpenters' union, and president of the district council several times. In 1905 he was elected president of the Structural Building Trades Alliance. He served until 1908, when the Alliance affiliated with the American Federation of Labor and changed its name to the Building Trades Department (BTD). He was elected president of the BTD and served until 1910. In 1910, Carpenters president William Huber appointed him \"general organizer\" for the international union. In 1912, he ran for president of the union and won. He served as president until his death. When he was elected president of the United Brotherhood, he moved to Indianapolis with his family. He died suddenly after an operation for appendicitis. His funeral was attended by trades union officials from all over the United States.", "target": "American labor unionist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16728762", "label": "John Charles Edwards", "source": "John Charles Edwards is a former member of the Arkansas House of Representatives. He is a member of the Democratic Party. Edwards was born in Pine Bluff, Arkansas and grew up in rural Lonoke County, Arkansas.", "target": "American politician, Arkansas", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2923592", "label": "Brain Damage", "source": "Brain Damage are a French rock band, formed in 1977 by Haylock M.S. Ellis (guitar) and Philippe Poiret (guitar, keyboards, vocals). The French science fiction writer Roland C. Wagner was added as a singer in 1983. At that time, they played a mixture of punk, new wave and garage rock. They split in late 1984. 1984's Live au Cithéa is the only recording surviving from this period, recorded on 15 September 1984. Ellis, Poiret and Wagner got together again in 1988, with a new rhythm section, playing psychedelic garage. They obtained the nickname 'The French Fuzztones'. After the departure of Poiret in the early 1990s, Ellis and Wagner decided to stop performing and focus on recording. A single was issued in 1996, presenting Brain Damage on one side and X-men on the other, X-men being another side project of Ellis. Then a self-titled album was issued in 1999 as a private release. Both are now very rare. In 2006, Brain Damage released their second album under one of the Creative Commons licenses on the free music platform Jamendo. It is a collection of recordings spawning more than fifteen years, mostly punk and/or psychedelic with science fiction inspired lyrics — among them \"Quand le paysage se déchire\" (\"When the Landscape Tears\") a song about Philip K. Dick; and \"Un été de serre\" inspired by Norman Spinrad's novel Greenhouse Summer, which Wagner translated into French. Most of their recorded work is now online as they work on projects including their next album, and the soundtrack to Wagner's next.", "target": "French rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7532413", "label": "Sivapuripatti", "source": "Sivapuripatti is a small village located in Sivagangai District of Tamil Nadu, India. This place is blessed with a bright natural scenery. The nearest town to this village is Singampunari. It is located at a distance of 60 km from the city of Madurai in South India. Coconut rope production is one of main occupation here. STD code of this location is 4577.", "target": "village in Tamil Nadu, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79056117", "label": "The Marriage Chance", "source": "The Marriage Chance is a 1922 American silent comedy film directed by Hampton Del Ruth and starring Alta Allen, Milton Sills and Irene Rich.", "target": "1922 film directed by Hampton Del Ruth", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4772456", "label": "Anthony Emmett", "source": "Anthony Emmett (1790–1872), was an English soldier, who became a major-general in the Royal Engineers.", "target": "British general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q827021", "label": "Burgoyne Diller", "source": "Burgoyne A. Diller (January 13, 1906 – January 30, 1965) was an American abstract painter. Many of his best-known works are characterized by orthogonal geometric forms that reflect his strong interest in the De Stijl movement and the work of Piet Mondrian in particular. Overall, his Geometric abstraction and non-objective style also owe much to his study with Hans Hofmann at the Art Students League of New York. He was a founding member of the American Abstract Artists. Diller's abstract work has sometimes been termed \"constructivist\". He also did figurative and representational works early in his career working as a muralist for the New York City Federal Arts Project.", "target": "American abstract painter (1906-1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1898229", "label": "V603 Aquilae", "source": "V603 Aquilae (or Nova Aquilae 1918) was a bright nova first observed (from Earth) in the constellation Aquila in 1918. It was the brightest \"new star\" to appear in the sky since Kepler's Supernova in 1604. Like all novae, it is a binary system, comprising a white dwarf and donor low-mass star in close orbit to the point of being only semidetached. The white dwarf sucks matter off its companion, which has filled its Roche lobe, onto its accretion disk and surface until the excess material is blown off in a thermonuclear event. This material then forms an expanding shell, which eventually thins out and disappears.First seen by Zygmunt Laskowski, a medical professor and amateur astronomer, and then confirmed on the night of 8 June 1918 by the UK amateur astronomer Grace Cook, Nova Aquilae reached a peak magnitude of −0.5; it was the brightest nova recorded in the era of the telescope. It was brighter than all stars but Sirius and Canopus. Tycho's and Kepler's supernovae were brighter, but both occurred before the invention of the telescope. Originally a star system with a magnitude of 11.43, it took twelve days to fade three magnitudes and then 18.6 years to fade to quiescence. In 1964 Robert P. Kraft ascertained that it was a binary system, recently determined to be true for several other novae at the time.The star system has settled to an average apparent magnitude of 11.4 since the 1940s, fading by around 1/100 of a magnitude per decade. The nova's parallax, 3.191±0.069 milliarcseconds, was.", "target": "star in the constellation Aquila", "baseline_candidates": ["star", "emission-line star", "nova", "astrophysical X-ray source", "infrared source", "spectroscopic binary star"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q556250", "label": "Kenjirō Shōda", "source": "Kenjiro Shoda (Japanese: 正田 建次郎 Shōda Kenjirō; February 25, 1902 – March 20, 1977) was a Japanese mathematician.", "target": "Japanese mathematician (1902-1977)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19450523", "label": "The Young Man and the Swallow", "source": "The young man and the swallow (which also has the Victorian title of \"The spendthrift and the swallow\") is one of Aesop's Fables and is numbered 169 in the Perry Index. It is associated with the ancient proverb 'One swallow doesn't make a summer'.", "target": "fable by Aesop", "baseline_candidates": ["fable"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14623714", "label": "Muramasa", "source": "Muramasa (村正, born before 1501), commonly known as Sengo Muramasa (千子村正), was a famous swordsmith who founded the Muramasa school and lived during the Muromachi period (14th to 16th centuries) in Kuwana, Ise Province, Japan (current Kuwana, Mie).In spite of their original reputation as fine blades favored by the shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu and his vassals, the katana swords made by Muramasa gradually became a symbol of the anti-Tokugawa movement. Furthermore, in lore and popular culture from the 18th century, the swords have been regarded as yōtō (妖刀, \"wicked katana\").", "target": "Japanese swordsmith", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75291824", "label": "Conrad Black", "source": "Conrad Moffat Black, Baron Black of Crossharbour (born 25 August 1944), is a Canadian-born British former newspaper publisher, businessman, writer and convicted fraudster.His father was businessman George Montegu Black II, who had significant holdings in Canadian manufacturing, retail and media businesses through part-ownership of the holding company Ravelston Corporation. In 1978, two years after their father's death, Conrad and his older brother Montegu took majority control of Ravelston. Over the next seven years, Conrad Black sold off most of their non-media holdings in order to focus on newspaper publishing. Black controlled Hollinger International, once the world's third-largest English-language newspaper empire, which published The Daily Telegraph (UK), Chicago Sun-Times (US), The Jerusalem Post (Israel), National Post (Canada), and hundreds of community newspapers in North America, before controversy erupted over the sale of some of the company's assets. He was granted a peerage in 2001 and because of the Nickle Resolution, which bans British honours for Canadian citizens, gave up his Canadian citizenship in order to accept the title. In 2007, he was convicted on four counts of fraud in US District Court in Chicago. While two of the criminal fraud charges were overturned on appeal, a conviction for felony fraud and obstruction of justice was upheld in 2010 and he was re-sentenced to 42 months in prison and a fine of $125,000. In 2018, Black wrote a flattering biography of US President Donald Trump. In 2019, Trump granted him a presidential pardon.Black is a longtime columnist and author, including having written a column for the National Post.", "target": "Canadian-born newspaper publisher (born 1944)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1441681", "label": "Francis P. Murphy", "source": "Francis Parnell Murphy (August 16, 1877 – December 19, 1958) was an American manufacturer and politician from Nashua, New Hampshire. He served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives and on the Governor's Council before serving as the 64th governor of New Hampshire from 1937 to 1941. Murphy supported Roosevelt's New Deal policies and switched to the Democratic Party in an attempt to unseat U.S. Senator Styles Bridges in the 1942 Senate election. He retired from politics to enter the radio broadcasting business and later started the WMUR radio and television stations in Manchester. A large flood control project in northern New Hampshire at the headwaters of the Connecticut River is named for him, with Murphy Dam impounding Lake Francis. He was also responsible for one of the first ski area aerial tramways in the United States when the Cannon Mountain aerial tramway was built in Franconia Notch.", "target": "American politician (1877-1958)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12827751", "label": "Mongol invasions and conquests", "source": "The Mongol invasions and conquests took place during the 13th and 14th centuries, creating history's largest contiguous empire: the Mongol Empire, which by 1300 covered large parts of Eurasia. Historians regard the Mongol devastation as one of the deadliest episodes in history. In addition, Mongol expeditions may have spread the bubonic plague across much of Eurasia, helping to spark the Black Death of the 14th century.The Mongol Empire developed in the course of the 13th century through a series of victorious campaigns throughout Asia, reaching Eastern Europe by the 1240s. In contrast with later \"empires of the sea\" such as European colonial powers, the Mongol Empire was a land power, fueled by the grass-foraging Mongol cavalry and cattle. Thus most Mongol conquest and plundering took place during the warmer seasons, when there was sufficient grazing for their herds. The rise of the Mongols was preceded by 15 years of wet and warm weather conditions from 1211 to 1225 that allowed favourable conditions for the breeding of horses, which greatly assisted their expansion.As the Mongol Empire began to fragment from 1260, conflict between the Mongols and Eastern European polities continued for centuries. Mongols continued to rule China into the 14th century under the Yuan dynasty, while Mongol rule in Persia persisted into the 15th century under the Timurid Empire. In India, the later Mughal Empire survived into the 19th century.", "target": "series of Mongol invasions and conquests (1206–1405)", "baseline_candidates": ["military campaign", "war"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75546105", "label": "Thomas Fortescue, 1st Baron Clermont", "source": "Thomas Fortescue, 1st Baron Clermont (9 March 1815 – 29 July 1887) of Ravensdale Park in County Louth, Ireland, was an Irish Whig politician and was the historian of the ancient Fortescue family of 12th century Devonshire origins.", "target": "Irish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56884113", "label": "Lo Hin Shing", "source": "Lo Hin Shing (Chinese: 羅顯勝; 1889 – 2 January 1989) was a barrister and magistrate of Hong Kong. Educated in China, Hong Kong and Cambridge, he was called to the English and Hong Kong bar in the 1920s. During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, he was obliged by the Japanese authority to give his opinion on matters of English law. After the second world war, he became one of the first Chinese to be appointed as magistrate. His magisterial life spanned some 17 years until his final retirement in 1970.", "target": "former magistrate of Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1393663", "label": "Peter Rice", "source": "Peter Rice (16 June 1935 – 25 October 1992) was an Irish structural engineer. Born in Dublin, he grew up in 52 Castle Road, Dundalk in County Louth, and spent his childhood between the town of Dundalk, and the villages of Gyles' Quay and Inniskeen. He was educated at Queen's University of Belfast where he received his primary degree, and spent a year at Imperial College London. Rice acted as Structural Engineer on three of the most important architectural works of the 20th century: the Sydney Opera House (with Ove Arup), Pompidou Centre and the Lloyd's Building and was renowned for his innate ability to act as both engineer and designer. He originally studied Aeronautical Engineering but switched to Civil Engineering. Taken on by Ove Arup & Partners, his first job was the roof of the Sydney Opera House. He married Sylvia Watson in 1960 and they had one son and three daughters. Jonathan Glancey in his obituary said \"Rice was, perhaps, the James Joyce of structural engineering. His poetic invention, his ability to turn accepted ideas on their head and his rigorous mathematical and philosophical logic made him one of the most sought-after engineers of our times\".", "target": "Irish engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1308380", "label": "Ortiz", "source": "Ortiz is a municipality in the Venezuelan state of Guárico. Its shire town is Ortiz, Guárico. In honor of Christian S. Ortiz.", "target": "municipality in the state of Guárico, Venezuela", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Venezuela"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23771992", "label": "Chloe Arthur", "source": "Chloe Susan Arthur (born 21 January 1995) is a Scottish footballer who plays as a midfielder for Aston VIlla in the FA WSL and the Scotland national team.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4908004", "label": "Bill Bain", "source": "William Worthington Bain Jr. (July 30, 1937 – January 16, 2018) was an American management consultant, known for his role as one of the founders of the management consultancy that bears his name, Bain & Company. Prior to founding Bain & Company, he was a vice-president at the Boston Consulting Group (BCG).", "target": "American businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5560883", "label": "Gilbert Deya", "source": "Gilbert Juma Deya () is a stonemason turned evangelist who lived in Britain from the mid-1990s until 2017, when he was extradited to Kenya to face charges of stealing five children between 1999 and 2004, which he denies. His organization, Gilbert Deya Ministries, claims that Deya is able to help infertile women to conceive through the power of prayer.", "target": "Kenyan evangelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5650009", "label": "Furnias", "source": "Furnias is a barrio in the municipality of Las Marías, Puerto Rico. Its population in 2010 was 1,474.", "target": "barrio in Las Marías, Puerto Rico", "baseline_candidates": ["barrio of Puerto Rico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4871265", "label": "Battle of Ichogil Bund", "source": "The Battle of Ichogil Bund was a skirmish fought from 22 September to 23 September 1965 as part of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 in which approximately two Pakistani companies attempted to re-occupy the eastern bund of the Ichhogil Canal. It resulted in an Indian victory, and the contested section of the canal was re-captured by the 9th Battalion Madras Regiment, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel B.K. Satyan.The battle was notable for being fought after the cease-fire had been signed on September 22. Fighting began around midnight and lasted for about 2 and a half hours. Accounts differ: between 27 and 49 Indian soldiers died. Pakistani casualties included 48 dead, 11 captured and 80 jumped into the canal and were washed away (presumably dead).The Ichogil Canal was constructed by the Pakistanis in the 1950s partly as a defensive obstacle to prevent an invasion of Lahore. At 45 m (148 ft) wide and 5 m (16 ft) deep, it presents a serious obstacle for military forces. Much of the battle was fought from across the canal, with tanks providing fire support to a ground team which had crossed the canal.", "target": "Skirmish of the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965", "baseline_candidates": ["battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q102315", "label": "Christoph von der Schulenburg", "source": "Christoph von der Schulenburg (1513 – 9 September 1580) was a German nobleman. As bishop of Ratzeburg he converted to Protestantism.", "target": "Bishop of Ratzeburg and provost of Diesdorf", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q408038", "label": "acetyl chloride", "source": "Acetyl chloride (CH3COCl) is an acyl chloride derived from acetic acid. It belongs to the class of organic compounds called acid halides. It is a colorless, corrosive, volatile liquid. Its formula is commonly abbreviated to AcCl.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound", "acyl chloride"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15997109", "label": "LINC01630", "source": "Uncharacterized LOC100287225 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the RP11-267C16.1 gene.", "target": "non-coding RNA in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["gene", "non-coding RNA"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6468940", "label": "Lactarius lamprocystidiatus", "source": "Lactarius lamprocystidiatus is a member of the large milk-cap genus Lactarius in the order Russulales. Found in Papua New Guinea, it was first described scientifically by Verbeken and Horak in 2000.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9355282", "label": "Takashi Matsui", "source": "Takashi Matsui (born 27 February 1940) is a Japanese ski jumper. He competed in the individual event at the 1960 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Japanese skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1072851", "label": "Eucryphia cordifolia", "source": "Eucryphia cordifolia, the ulmo, is a species of tree in the family Cunoniaceae. It is found in Chile and Argentina. It is threatened by logging and habitat loss. The natural habitat is along the Andes Range from 38 to 43°S, and up to 700 meters (2300 ft) above sea level. It is a very elegant tree with a thick trunk and wide crown and can become over 12 m (39 ft) high. It blooms in February and March, depending on latitude and altitude. The fruit is a capsule about 1.5 cm (0.6 in) length.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15715508", "label": "Bachtel Tower", "source": "Bachtel Tower (German: Bachtelturm) is a 60 m (200 ft) tall radio tower on 1,115 m (3,658 ft) high Bachtel mountain near Hinwil, Switzerland, overlooking the Zürcher Oberland. Bachtel Tower is a lattice tower whose observation deck, 30 m (98 ft) metres above the ground, is accessible by a stairway. It was built as replacement for a smaller observation tower on the site in 1986. On the observation deck of Bachtel Tower there is an illustration with the names of the mountains of the Swiss Alps visible. This illustration was designed by Paul Thalmann from Wernetshausen near Hinwil.", "target": "radio tower", "baseline_candidates": ["observation tower", "communication tower"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q645470", "label": "The Labyrinth of Solitude", "source": "The Labyrinth of Solitude (Spanish: El laberinto de la soledad) is a 1950 book-length essay by the Mexican poet Octavio Paz. One of his most famous works, it consists of nine parts: \"The Pachuco and other extremes\", \"Mexican Masks\", \"The Day of the Dead\", \"The Sons of La Malinche\", \"The Conquest and Colonialism\", \"From Independence to the Revolution\", \"The Mexican Intelligence\", \"The Present Day\" and \"The Dialectic of Solitude\". After 1975 some editions included the essay \"Post data\", which discusses the massacre of hundreds of Mexican students in 1968. (Paz abandoned his position as ambassador in India in reaction to this event.) The essays are predominantly concerned with the theme of Mexican identity and demonstrate how, at the end of the existential labyrinth, there is a profound feeling of solitude. As Paz argues: Solitude is the profoundest fact of the human condition. Man is the only being who knows he is alone, and the only one who seeks out another. His nature – if that word can be used in reference to man, who has 'invented' himself by saying 'no' to nature – consists of his longing to realize himself in another. Man is nostalgic and in search for communion. Therefore, when he is aware of himself he is aware of his lack of another, that is, of his solitude. Paz observes that solitude is responsible for the Mexican's perspective on death, fiesta, and identity. Death is celebrated but at the same time repelled because of the uncertainty behind it. As for the fiestas, they express.", "target": "collection of essays by Octavio Paz", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18639489", "label": "Manly War Memorial", "source": "Manly War Memorial is a heritage-listed memorial at 184 Carlton Terrace, Manly, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1920 to 1921. It is also known as Ferguson Street Reserve, Manly Dam, and Soldiers Memorial Park. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 August 1992.", "target": "historic site in Queensland, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["sculpture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7916938", "label": "Vassil Kazandjiev", "source": "Vassil Kazandjiev or Vasil Ivanov Kazandzhiev (Bulgarian: Васил Иванов Казанджиев [vɐˈsiɫ kɐzɐnˈd͡ʒiɛf]; born September 10, 1934) is a Bulgarian composer of orchestral, chamber, vocal, film and piano music. His work is representative of the 20th-century classical music and 21st-century classical music. Vassil Kazandjiev was born in 1934 in Rousse, Bulgaria. At the age of 7 he started playing the guitar and two years later he learned to play the piano. At the age of 10 he started composing music. His first teachers of composition and conducting were Konstantin Iliev and Dobrin Petkov. In 1957 Kazandjiev graduated from the Bulgarian State Music Academy in the composition class of Professor Pancho Vladigerov and conducting with Professor Vladi Simeonov. Already as a student at the Academy, he won a laureate’s prize for his Symphonietta for a large orchestra at the Sixth International Youth Festival in Moscow (1957 – chairman of the jury Dm. Shostakovich). Vassil Kazandjiev started his career in conducting at the National Opera in Sofia, where he worked for seven years. During that period he staged and conducted a number of Bulgarian and foreign operas and ballets: Yana’s Nine Brothers and Antigona 43 by Lyubomir Pipkov, Sly Peter by Vesselin Stoyanov, The Boyana Master by Konstantin Iliev, Othello by Verdi, Turandot by Puccini, The Magic Flute by Mozart, Sleeping Beauty by Tchaikovsky, The Wooden Prince by Bartok and many more. In 1962 he founded the Sofia Soloists Chamber Ensemble with which he had very successful concerts in Bulgaria and abroad for 15 years. Since 1978 he was.", "target": "Bulgarian composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49482917", "label": "Desecheo National Wildlife Refuge", "source": "The Desecheo National Wildlife Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge in Puerto Rico. It is part of the Caribbean Islands National Wildlife Refuge Complex. The island of Desecheo is located 14 miles (23 km) west of Puerto Rico and is bounded by the Atlantic Ocean on the north and the Caribbean Sea on the south. The refuge encompasses the entire rugged island. From 1940 to 1952 the island was used as a practice target for aerial bombardment by the US War Department and from 1952 to 1960 Desecheo was used as a survival training area for the U.S. Air Force. Although formerly containing a colony of 15,000 brown boobies and 10,000 red-footed boobies, currently no successful booby breeding is known to occur on the island. Other seabird species also use the island. There are three endemic species of lizards. The endangered higo chumbo cactus is found on the island and hawksbill turtles sometimes nest on the refuge. Feral goats became established on the island in the 18th century. No public use is allowed on the island because of safety considerations associated with unexploded ordnance that remain on the refuge. The refuge has had a colorful past. In 1966, the National Institutes of Health introduced 56 rhesus monkeys to be later culled for medical research. Desecheo is often used as a drop off point for illegal aliens and drugs.", "target": "unit of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Puerto Rico", "baseline_candidates": ["National Wildlife Refuge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13210728", "label": "Safarovo", "source": "Safarovo (Russian: Сафарово) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Safarovsky Selsoviet, Chishminsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 991 as of 2010. There are 19 streets.", "target": "village in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["subdivisions of Russia", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17507724", "label": "Cellar Door", "source": "Cellar Door is an album by John Vanderslice, released in 2004. The album contains a few songs based on then-recent films: \"Promising Actress\" is about Mulholland Drive and \"When It Hits My Blood\" narrates Requiem For A Dream. The phrase cellar door is one of the most beautiful phrases in the English language, according to J.R.R. Tolkien.", "target": "album by John Vanderslice", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89608572", "label": "fire of the Mont Blanc tunnel", "source": "The Mont Blanc tunnel fire occurred on 24 March 1999. It was caused by a transport truck which caught fire while driving through the Mont Blanc Tunnel between Italy and France. Other vehicles travelling through the tunnel became trapped and fire crews were unable to reach the transport truck. Thirty-nine people were killed. In the aftermath, major changes were made to the tunnel to improve its safety.", "target": "disaster caused by a vehicle fire in the Mont Blanc Tunnel that killed 39 people", "baseline_candidates": ["traffic collision", "conflagration", "vehicle fire"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21003339", "label": "Loncopan Airport", "source": "Loncopan Airport Spanish: Aeropuerto Loncopan, (ICAO: SCFU) is an airstrip 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) west-northwest of Futrono, a lakeside town on Ranco Lake in the Los Ríos Region of Chile. The runway parallels the highway just south of the village of Nontuela.", "target": "airport in Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5202479", "label": "Célio Codó", "source": "Célio Luis da Sousa Bispo (born 7 October 1987 in Codó), commonly known as Célio Codó, is a Brazilian footballer, who plays as a forward for Iporá.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1757773", "label": "Dionísio Cerqueira", "source": "Dionísio Cerqueira is a municipality in the state of Santa Catarina in the South region of Brazil.", "target": "human settlement in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19882327", "label": "Bhavani", "source": "Bhavani (Tamil: பவானி) is a 2009 Indian Tamil-language crime thriller soap opera that aired on Kalaignar TV from 9 February 2009 Monday to Thursday at 20:00 (IST) and Ended with 116 Episodes. The show stars Bhavana, Neelima Rani, Subhalekha Sudhakar, Vadivukkarasi, Bharathy, Kavya, and Revathy Priya and directed by Rasool. From 12 February 2015 the show was relaunched on Kalaignar TV and aired Monday through Friday at 20:00 (IST) and the show was shifted to 18:30 (IST) time Slot.", "target": "Tamil Crime Thriller soap opera", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7289877", "label": "Ramon Sauló", "source": "Jordi Sauló (born 12 February 1954) is a singer and graphic designer from Catalonia. Sauló was born in Cerdanyola del Vallès. His first public performance was in 1971 in the theater of Sabadell La Faràndula, during a festival of \"Cançó\" presented by Salvador Escamilla. Sauló shared the list of acts with Guillem d'Efak, Pere Tàpies, Ramon Muntaner, Joan Isaac and Victorí.In 1973, Sauló won second prize in a singing competition in Sabadell, and first prize in the “Promoció de Noves Veus” (Promotion of New Voices) competition in La Cova del Drac. This victory led to the publishing of his first record with CBS in 1976. The record was a single, containing his songs \"Bona nit\" (Good Night) and \"En un racó del meu cos\" (Somewhere in my body).Sauló has also acted in Sis Hores de Cançó (Six hours of song) in Perpignan, the preface of Sis Hores in Canet, at the Palau dels Esports de Barcelona and appeared in television programs on Circuit Català TVE (Catalan Circuit of Spanish TV). He was regularly accompanied by pianist Joan Bertran and guitarist Feliu Gasull.Sauló ceased performing in the late 1970s and became a graphic designer. He resumed his music career three decades later, releasing an album of six of his old repertoire songs and five new pieces. Sauló was accompanied by guitarist and composer Toni Xuclà. The album, Som així.... was released through Picap in 2008. He released his follow up album Descobrint camins in 2011.", "target": "Spanish singer-songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16138651", "label": "Phra Ratcha Wang Bowon Sathan Phimuk", "source": "Rear Palace (วังหลัง wang lang) was a royal residence that belonged to the deputy Uparaja of Siam, who held the title Krom Phraratchawang Bowon Sathan Phimuk (Thai: กรมพระราชวังบวรสถานพิมุข).Around the time of Luang Sorasak's appointment, King Phetracha also appointed a Third King, Krom Phraratchawang Bowon Sathan Phimuk or Rear Palace. Nai Chopkhotchaprasit, a commoner, was appointed to the position. He, however, fell out of favour at some time during the king's reign and was executed. Around 1703, King Sanpet VIII appointed Prince Petch, his first-born son, as the Front Palace and younger son Prince Porn as Rear Palace. Because of the inauspicious end of the first Rear Palace, the King decided to change the title of the Front and Rear Palaces to Phra Banthun Yai (พระบัณฑูรใหญ่) and Phra Banthun Noi (พระบัณฑูรน้อย) respectively. The literal translation is \"Big\" and \"Little Royal Command,\" thus analogous to the naval ranks of Commander and Lieutenant Commander. The titles were later merged. Prince Anurak Devesh, a nephew of King Rama I, was the only Rear Palace appointed during the Rattanakosin period, in 1785. After his death in 1806, the office went vacant. Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok is now on the site of the former Rear Palace.", "target": "palace", "baseline_candidates": ["palace"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28006209", "label": "Edmond Jacques Eckel House", "source": "Edmond Jacques Eckel House is a historic home located at St. Joseph, Missouri. It was designed by the architect Edmond Jacques Eckel (1845–1934) and built in 1885. It is a 2+1⁄2-story, brick dwelling with a truncated hipped roof. It measures 25 feet wide and 36 feet deep. It features a small, flat roofed, wood entrance portico with Tuscan order columns. : 3 It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It is located in the Robidoux Hill Historic District.", "target": "historic house in Missouri, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["single-family detached home"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5187823", "label": "Crooked Lake, Nova Scotia", "source": "Crooked Lake may refer to any of the following lakes in Nova Scotia: In the Municipality of Clare: Crooked Lake at 44°16′33″N 66°3′48″WIn the District of Guysborough: Crooked Lake at 45°22′13″N 61°53′50″WIn Halifax Regional Municipality: Crooked Lake at 45°13′41″N 62°43′18″W Crooked Lake at 45°1′28″N 62°35′54″W Crooked Lake at 45°9′53″N 62°51′32″W Crooked Lake at 44°59′38″N 63°1′27″W Crooked Lake at 44°52′20″N 62°51′2″W Crooked Lakes at 44°52′11″N 62°43′37″WIn Kings County: Crooked Lake at 44°54′22″N 64°33′21″WIn District of Lunenburg: Crooked Lake at 44°16′35″N 64°35′18″WIn Richmond County: Crooked Lake at 45°42′11″N 60°20′45″W.", "target": "list of lakes that share the same name", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia set index article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3759912", "label": "Chanodichthys oxycephalus", "source": "Chanodichthys oxycephalus is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Chanodichthys from the Yangtze River.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q71669830", "label": "Keidean Coleman", "source": "Keidean Coleman (born 31 March 2000) is an Australian rules footballer who plays for the Brisbane Lions in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "target": "Australian rules football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1025910", "label": "Maïné-Soroa", "source": "Mainé-Soroa (Maine-Soroa, Maïné-Soroa) is a town in southeastern Niger, the capital of the Mainé-Soroa Department, and is in turn part of Diffa Region. Population 10,176 (2001).", "target": "urban commune in Niger", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Niger"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4583726", "label": "1987 Indiana Hoosiers football team", "source": "The 1987 Indiana Hoosiers football team represented Indiana University in the 1987 NCAA Division I-A football season. Playing as a member of the Big Ten Conference (Big Ten), the team was led by head coach Bill Mallory, in his fourth year, and played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington, Indiana. They finished the season with a record of eight wins and four losses (8–4 overall, 6–2 in the Big Ten) and with a loss against Tennessee in the Peach Bowl.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58972937", "label": "Siji Kumar Sadanandan", "source": "Sijikumar Sadandan (born 23 May 1974) is an Indian canoeing athlete who had won the bronze medal in men's C-2 1000M in 1994 Asian Games.", "target": "Indian canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26720261", "label": "Frederike Koleiski", "source": "Frederike Charlotte Koleiski (born 25 August 1987) is a German Paralympic athlete who competes in discus throw and shot put in international elite competitions. She is a World champion in shot put and narrowly missed a medal at the 2016 Summer Paralympics.", "target": "German athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3274610", "label": "Monster", "source": "Monster is the fifteenth studio album by the Japanese rock duo B'z, released on June 28, 2006. The album sold over 401,000 copies in its first week, an improvement from 2005's \"The Circle\". In total the album sold over 537,091 copies.", "target": "album by Japanese hard rock band B'z", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q625643", "label": "Lee Hyun-gon", "source": "Lee Hyun-Gon (Hangul: 이현곤, Hanja: 李賢坤) (born February 21, 1980 in Gwangju, South Korea) is a South Korean infielder who plays for the NC Dinos of the KBO League. He bats and throws right-handed.", "target": "South Korean baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6339473", "label": "KUBS", "source": "KUBS (91.5 FM) is a high school radio station broadcasting a country music format. Licensed to Newport, Washington, United States, the station is currently owned by Newport Consolidated School District #56415.", "target": "radio station in Newport, Washington", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q971422", "label": "Ed King", "source": "Edward Calhoun King (September 14, 1949 – August 22, 2018) was an American musician. He was a guitarist for the psychedelic rock band Strawberry Alarm Clock and guitarist and bassist for the Southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd from 1972 to 1975 and again from 1987 to 1996.", "target": "American musician (1949-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6114249", "label": "Jack Murta", "source": "Jack Burnett Murta, (born May 13, 1943) is a former Canadian politician. Born in Carman, Manitoba, the son of John James Murta and Jean (Burnett) Murta, he graduated from the Diploma course in Agriculture at the University of Manitoba in 1964. In 1970, he was elected to the House of Commons of Canada as a Progressive Conservative in a by-election for the riding of Lisgar following the death of the previous incumbent, George Muir. He was re-elected in 1972, 1974, 1979, 1980, and 1984. He was Parliamentary Secretary to the President of the Treasury Board in the short lived government of Joe Clark in 1979. In the Brian Mulroney government he was Minister of State (Multiculturalism) from 1984 to 1985 and Minister of State (Tourism) from 1985 to 1986.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1255599", "label": "IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey", "source": "IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey, or Wings of Prey on Windows, is a combat flight simulation video game. As with previous installments of the series IL-2 Sturmovik, it depicts combat aircraft from World War II, although with less focus on realistic simulation than other entries in the series. The game has a campaign mode in which players are able to fly the Allies against the Axis, and also a multiplayer mode in which they are able to select either faction. A demo of the game launched on the PSN and Xbox 360's Xbox Live on 29 July 2009.Birds of Prey is based around the large-scale aerial combat and ground military operations of World War II. Players can participate in some of the war's most famous battles, piloting fighters, attack aircraft and heavy bombers across a range of missions. There are six theatres of war to engage in: Battle of Britain, Stalingrad, Berlin, Sicily, Korsun and the Battle of the Bulge, representing the main airborne battles of World War II in Europe. Birds of Prey has a new damage effects engine. Players can see real-time damage to the aircraft such as holes in the wings and trail lines during dog fights. IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey features hundreds of aircraft taking part in air battles. The environmental engine also produces high-detail, realistic landscapes that allow players to easily see ground support actions.The game was developed by Gaijin Entertainment, who subsequently developed Birds of Steel, also exclusively for consoles. Birds of Steel shares many traits with Birds of.", "target": "World War II combat flight simulator video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25538216", "label": "weightlifting at the 1984 Summer Olympics", "source": "The weightlifting competition at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles consisted of ten weight classes. The 1984 Summer Olympics boycott meant that the most dominant forces in weightlifting at the time, the USSR and Bulgaria did not take part. This left the field wide open.", "target": "weightlifting at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sports discipline event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85744266", "label": "Austrasiatica sakuraii", "source": "Austrasiatica sakurai is a species of sea snail, a cowry, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Cypraeidae, the cowries.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9254396", "label": "epoprostenol", "source": "Prostacyclin (also called prostaglandin I2 or PGI2) is a prostaglandin member of the eicosanoid family of lipid molecules. It inhibits platelet activation and is also an effective vasodilator. When used as a drug, it is also known as epoprostenol. The terms are sometimes used interchangeably.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["Prostaglandins I", "prostaglandins", "chemical compound", "carboxylic acid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63226476", "label": "Roberto Montanari", "source": "Roberto Montanari (Ravenna, July 19, 1937 – Vicenza, August 10, 2017) was an Italian painter. Known as “El Pintor de Los Toros,” he painted mostly Spanish bulls and landscapes and he was a pupil of Salvador Dalí. He held over 300 exhibitions. In 1970, 1971 and 1972 he exhibited with Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalì. He is included in the cultural heritage of Emilia-Romagna and Italy and has pictures in several museums, such as Pinacoteca comunale di Faenza., the Casa Giorgione in Castelfranco Veneto, and the Gallery of Contemporary Figurative Arts in the Vatican.", "target": "Italian painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q632511", "label": "Seattle Sounders FC", "source": "Seattle Sounders Football Club is an American professional soccer club based in Seattle. The Sounders compete as a member of the Western Conference of Major League Soccer (MLS). The club was established on November 13, 2007, and began play in 2009 as an MLS expansion team. The Sounders are a phoenix club, carrying the same name as the original Sounders franchise that competed in the North American Soccer League (NASL) from 1974 to 1983. The club's majority owner is Adrian Hanauer, and its minority owners are the estate of Paul Allen, Drew Carey, and 14 families from the Seattle area. Former USL Sounders coach and assistant coach Brian Schmetzer took over as head coach in July 2016 after the departure of Sigi Schmid. The Sounders play their home league matches at Lumen Field, with a reduced capacity of 37,722 seats for most matches. Along with several organized groups, a 53-member marching band called \"Sound Wave\" supports the club at each home match. Seattle has longstanding rivalries with fellow Pacific Northwest clubs Portland Timbers and Vancouver Whitecaps FC, with whom it competes for the Cascadia Cup. The Sounders played their inaugural match on March 19, 2009, winning 3–0 over the New York Red Bulls. Seattle has been among the league's most successful teams, winning the U.S. Open Cup four times, the Supporters' Shield in 2014, and the MLS Cup in 2016 and 2019. The team has qualified for the MLS Cup Playoffs in each of its 12 seasons and competed in the CONCACAF Champions League six times,.", "target": "American Major League Soccer team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team", "association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15264617", "label": "Oswestry Uplands", "source": "The Oswestry Uplands are a small natural region in the English county of Shropshire on the border with Wales. The Oswestry Uplands have been designated as Natural Area No. 41 and National Character Area No. 63 by Natural England and its predecessor bodies. The area is much more closely linked by culture and language to Wales than other parts of Shropshire. The Uplands are characterized by an undulating landscape of Carboniferous Limestone hills with calcareous grasslands and rocky outcrops with steep wooded valleys; marshes and fens occupying the valley bottoms.The Uplands have a total area of 9,981 hectares and occupy a salient running from Pant to Chirk on the Anglo-Welsh border which takes in the town of Oswestry and village of Gobowen. The highest elevations lie on the western boundary of the NCA bordering the Berwyn Hills of Wales and the highest point is on Selattyn Hill (372 metres (1,220 ft)).", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1221550", "label": "Dieter Aderhold", "source": "Dieter Aderhold (27 November 1939 – 19 June 1989) was a German cathedratic and politician. He was a member of the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia from 1966 to 1970 and from 1980 until his death in 1989.", "target": "German politician and cathedratic (1939-1989)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7099776", "label": "Orange railway station", "source": "Orange railway station is a heritage-listed former railway bridge and now railway station located on the Main Western line on Peisley Street, Orange in the City of Orange local government area of New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1877 to 1950. It is also known as Orange Railway Station and yard group. The property was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.The station serves the city of Orange and opened on 19 April 1877 when the line was extended from Blayney. It served as the terminus of the line until it was extended to Wellington on 1 June 1880. A disused bay platform is located at the southern end.", "target": "railway station in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11902500", "label": "World Changed Forever", "source": "World Changed Forever is the sixth studio album by Finnish power metal band Dreamtale. Released on The Secret Door Records label on 26 April 2013 in Finland, it reached number 41 on Suomen virallinen lista, The Official Finnish Charts.", "target": "album by Dreamtale", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5081925", "label": "Hemidactylus lemurinus", "source": "Hemidactylus lemurinus, also known as the Dhofar leaf-toed gecko or Oman ghost leaf-toed gecko, is a species of gecko. It is endemic to Oman.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61129957", "label": "L-Alanine", "source": "Alanine (symbol Ala or A) is an α-amino acid that is used in the biosynthesis of proteins. It contains an amine group and a carboxylic acid group, both attached to the central carbon atom which also carries a methyl group side chain. Consequently, its IUPAC systematic name is 2-aminopropanoic acid, and it is classified as a nonpolar, aliphatic α-amino acid. Under biological conditions, it exists in its zwitterionic form with its amine group protonated (as −NH3+) and its carboxyl group deprotonated (as −CO2−). It is non-essential to humans as it can be synthesised metabolically and does not need to be present in the diet. It is encoded by all codons starting with GC (GCU, GCC, GCA, and GCG). The L-isomer of alanine (left-handed) is the one that is incorporated into proteins. L-alanine is second only to leucine in rate of occurrence, accounting for 7.8% of the primary structure in a sample of 1,150 proteins. The right-handed form, D-alanine, occurs in polypeptides in some bacterial cell walls: 131 and in some peptide antibiotics, and occurs in the tissues of many crustaceans and molluscs as an osmolyte.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["L-amino acid", "dispensable amino acids", "chemical compound", "amino acid", "metabolite", "flavoring substance", "DL-alanine", "proteinogenic amino acid", "medication"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85815837", "label": "Willow Peak", "source": "Willow Peak or Ras es-Safsafeh (Arabic: رأس صفصافة) is a mountain in the Sinai Peninsula. The mountain peak overlooks Saint Catherine's Monastery, and is situated approximately 1km to the west.Christian tradition considers the mountain to be the biblical Mount Horeb.", "target": "mountain peak in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1025029", "label": "Cachena cattle", "source": "The Cachena is a breed of triple-purpose cattle from Portugal and Galicia, Spain. In Portugal, there is also the similar but larger cattle breed known by the name, Barrosão or Barrosã. Cachena and Barrosã are sometimes considered variants of the same race.", "target": "cattle breed", "baseline_candidates": ["cattle breed"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7675246", "label": "Taghenkoh District", "source": "Taghenkoh District (Persian: بخش طاغنکوه) is a district (bakhsh) in Firuzeh County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 22,562, in 5,662 families. The District has one city: Hemmatabad. The District has Two rural districts (dehestan): Taghenkoh-e Jonubi Rural District and Taghenkoh-e Shomali Rural District.", "target": "district in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3656960", "label": "Fruzhin", "source": "Fruzhin (Bulgarian: Фружин; also transliterated Fružin or Frujin; c. 1380s - c. 1460) was a 15th-century Bulgarian noble who fought actively against the Ottoman conquest of the Second Bulgarian Empire. A son of one of the last Bulgarian tsars, Ivan Shishman of the Tarnovo Tsardom, Fruzhin co-organized the so-called Uprising of Konstantin and Fruzhin along with Constantine II of Vidin, the last Bulgarian monarchs. Fruzhin was mainly based in the Kingdom of Hungary, where he was the ruler of Temes County.Neither Fruzhin's birthdate nor his biography prior to the Fall of Tarnovo to the Ottomans in 1393 are known, but from his involvement in the 1404 uprising, the former can be narrowed down to the 1380s, the same decade his parents married, and there's no mention of him having been a bastard. He had a brother, Alexander, who converted to Islam after the Ottoman conquest, adopting the name Iskender and becoming governor of Samsun and then Smyrna, where he died in 1418. As the capital Tarnovo was captured by the Ottomans, Fruzhin fled initially to the domains of his uncle Ivan Sratsimir at Vidin, in the Bulgarian northwest. He settled in Hungary under Sigismund I some time after that. Sigismund accepted Fruzhin to his court and recognized his claim to the Bulgarian throne. In Hungary he stay a member of the Order of the Dragon with some other famous nobleman like Filipo Skolari, Vlad Dracula and Skenderbeg. Ecumenical Patriarch Joseph II of Constantinople may also have been an illegitimate half-brother of Fruzhin's. Probably in 1404, Fruzhin.", "target": "Prince of Bulgaria, Titular Tsar of Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69157172", "label": "Coro", "source": "The Coro costume jewelry company started doing business in 1901, producing jewelry under several brand names, including Corocraft. Some of their more notable products include the Coro Duettes, Coro Tremblers, Coro Door Knockers and Coro Crown Pins. The Coro company went out of business in 1979.", "target": "American costume jewelry company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21588243", "label": "Frixa", "source": "Frixa (Greek: Φρίξα, before 1916: Ανεμοχωράκιον - Anemochorakion) is a village in the municipal unit of Skillounta, Elis, Greece. In 2011 its population was 200 for the village and 309 for the community, which includes the village Anemochoraki. Frixa is on a hill near the left bank of the river Alfeios, 2 km northeast of Skillountia, 7 km southeast of Olympia and 8 km northeast of Krestena.", "target": "place in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7194020", "label": "Pilikaaiea", "source": "Pilikaʻaiea (or Pili-auau; the short form: Pili) was Aliʻi Nui of Hawaiʻi. He was a sovereign chief, who deposed the indigenous chief, Kapawa.", "target": "A Hawaiian nobleman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11879213", "label": "UvrABC endonuclease", "source": "UvrABC endonuclease is a multienzyme complex in bacteria involved in DNA repair by nucleotide excision repair, and it is, therefore, sometimes called an excinuclease. This UvrABC repair process, sometimes called the short-patch process, involves the removal of twelve nucleotides where a genetic mutation has occurred followed by a DNA polymerase, replacing these aberrant nucleotides with the correct nucleotides and completing the DNA repair. The subunits for this enzyme are encoded in the uvrA, uvrB, and uvrC genes. This enzyme complex is able to repair many different types of damage, including cyclobutyl dimer formation.", "target": "family of enzyme complexes", "baseline_candidates": ["endonuclease", "protein complex", "group or class of enzymes"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5081481", "label": "Charles Panici", "source": "Charles \"Chuck\" Panici (December 26, 1930 - December 20, 2017 ) was mayor of Chicago Heights, Illinois from 1975 to 1991. He was also head of the Bloom Township Republican Party from 1978 to 1992. He was born in 1930 in the \"Hungry Hill\" section of Chicago Heights, a south suburb, which was the home to mainly Italian immigrants in a heavily Italian town. His parents operated \"Three Star Restaurant\", a popular hangout for many neighborhood residents.", "target": "American mayor (1930-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33537111", "label": "Sigrid Behrenz", "source": "Sigrid Behrenz (also Sigrit; born 23 January 1941) is a retired German speed skater. She competed at the 1960 Winter Olympics and finished in 18th place in the 500 m and 1000 m events. At the 1960 Winter Olympics she was 25th in 500 m.Personal bests: 500 m – 50.2 (1960) 1000 m – 1:43.8 (1960) 1500 m – 2:45.8 (1960) 3000 m – 5:50.3 (1964).", "target": "German speed skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26254672", "label": "Diwali", "source": "Diwali is a village in Jalandhar district of Punjab State, India. It is located 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) from district headquarter Jalandhar and 149 kilometres (93 mi) from state capital Chandigarh. The village is administrated by a sarpanch who is an elected representative of village as per Panchayati raj (India).", "target": "village in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98078692", "label": "Erēmīta", "source": "Erēmīta (Anthologies) is an arthouse documentary anthology featuring short films composed during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. The anthology curated by Sam Abbas interweaves the literature of Friedrich Nietzsche.", "target": "arthouse documentary anthology featuring short films composed during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3434197", "label": "Rob Liley", "source": "Robert James Liley (born 3 April 1970) is an English former rugby union player. A fly half he played professionally for Sale, Leicester Tigers, Harlequins, Wakefield and Doncaster. He was the starting fly half for Leicester in the 1997 Heineken Cup Final.", "target": "English rugby union footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30023063", "label": "Apache Cordova", "source": "Apache Cordova (formerly PhoneGap) is a mobile application development framework created by Nitobi. Adobe Systems purchased Nitobi in 2011, rebranded it as PhoneGap, and later released an open-source version of the software called Apache Cordova. Apache Cordova enables software programmers to build hybrid web applications for mobile devices using CSS3, HTML5, and JavaScript, instead of relying on platform-specific APIs like those in Android, iOS, or Windows Phone. It enables wrapping up of CSS, HTML, and JavaScript code depending upon the platform of the device. It extends the features of HTML and JavaScript to work with the device. The resulting applications are hybrid, meaning that they are neither truly native mobile application nor purely Web-based. They are not native because all layout rendering is done via Web views instead of the platform's native UI framework. They are not Web apps because they are packaged as apps for distribution and have access to native device APIs. Mixing native and hybrid code snippets has been possible since version 1.9. The software was previously called just \"PhoneGap\", then \"Apache Callback\".PhoneGap was Adobe's commercial version of Cordova along with its associated ecosystem. Many other tools and frameworks are also built on top of Cordova, including Ionic, Monaca, VoltBuilder, TACO, Onsen UI, Visual Studio, GapDebug, App Builder, Cocoon, Framework7, Quasar Framework, Evothings Studio, NSB/AppStudio, Mobiscroll, and Telerik Platform. These tools use Cordova, and not PhoneGap for their core tools. Contributors to the Apache Cordova project include Adobe, BlackBerry, Google, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Mozilla, and others.", "target": "free software framework for multiplatform hybrid mobile apps", "baseline_candidates": ["free software", "mobile development framework"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5980699", "label": "iambic poetry", "source": "Iambus or iambic poetry was a genre of ancient Greek poetry that included but was not restricted to the iambic meter and whose origins modern scholars have traced to the cults of Demeter and Dionysus. The genre featured insulting and obscene language and sometimes it is referred to as \"blame poetry\". For Alexandrian editors, however, iambus signified any poetry of an informal kind that was intended to entertain, and it seems to have been performed on similar occasions as elegy even though lacking elegy's decorum. The Archaic Greek poets Archilochus, Semonides and Hipponax were among the most famous of its early exponents. The Alexandrian poet Callimachus composed \"iambic\" poems against contemporary scholars, which were collected in an edition of about a thousand lines, of which fragments of thirteen poems survive. He in turn influenced Roman poets such as Catullus, who composed satirical epigrams that popularized Hipponax's choliamb. Horace's Epodes on the other hand were mainly imitations of Archilochus and, as with the Greek poet, his invectives took the forms both of private revenge and denunciation of social offenders.", "target": "genre of ancient Greek poetry that included but was not restricted to the iambic meter and featured insulting and obscene language and sometimes it is referred to as \"blame poetry\"", "baseline_candidates": ["poetry", "verse", "literary genre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2017432", "label": "Steed Tchicamboud", "source": "Steed Tchicamboud (born June 18, 1981) is a French former professional basketball player for who last played for SLUC Nancy Basket of the LNB Pro A.", "target": "Professional basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33100707", "label": "Franjo Prce", "source": "Franjo Prce (Croatian pronunciation: [frǎːɲo př̩ːtse]; born 7 January 1996), is a Croatian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Indian Super League club East Bengal.", "target": "Croatian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6706900", "label": "Luśno", "source": "Luśno [ˈluɕnɔ] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Barlinek, within Myślibórz County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) south-east of Barlinek, 28 km (17 mi) east of Myślibórz, and 67 km (42 mi) south-east of the regional capital Szczecin. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "target": "settlement in West Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65050314", "label": "CS Viitorul Dăești", "source": "Clubul Sportiv Viitorul Dăești, commonly known as Viitorul Dăești, is a Romanian football club originally from Dăești, Vâlcea County. They currently play in the Liga III.", "target": "association football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6452717", "label": "Kyung-wan", "source": "Kyung-wan, also spelled Kyung-oan, is a Korean unisex given name, predominantly masculine. The meaning of the name differs based on the hanja used for each syllable. Regulations of the Supreme Court of Korea permit the following hanja to be registered for use in names: Kyung (70 hanja): 京 景 經 庚 耕 敬 輕 驚 慶 競 竟 境 鏡 頃 傾 硬 警 徑 卿 倞 鯨 坰 耿 炅 更 梗 憬 璟 瓊 擎 儆 俓 涇 莖 勁 逕 熲 冏 勍 烱 璥 痙 磬 絅 脛 頸 鶊 檠 冂 𠗊 憼 巠 曔 燛 剄 哽 惸 扃 焭 煢 畊 竸 綆 罄 褧 謦 顈 駉 鯁 黥 Wan (31 hanja): 完 緩 玩 垸 浣 莞 琓 琬 婠 婉 宛 梡 椀 碗 翫 脘 腕 豌 阮 頑 妧 岏 鋺 抏 杬 刓 忨 惋 涴 盌 輐People with this name include: Park Kyung-oan (born 1972), South Korean male baseball catcher Lim Gyoung-wan (born 1975), South Korean male baseball pitcher Jeongyeon (born Yoo Kyung-wan, 1996), South Korean female singer, member of TwiceFictional characters with this name include: Lee Kyung-wan, male supporting character in 2011 South Korean television series City Hunter Jang Kyung-wan, male supporting character in 2016 South Korean television series The Promise Park Kyung-wan, male supporting character in 2017 South Korean television series Stranger.", "target": "Korean male given name ()", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21916485", "label": "Coningham", "source": "Coningham is a rural residential locality in the local government area (LGA) of Kingborough in the Hobart LGA region of Tasmania. The locality is about 17 kilometres (11 mi) south of the town of Kingston. The 2016 census recorded a population of 253 for the state suburb of Coningham.", "target": "locality in Tasmania, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb/locality of Tasmania", "locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16151680", "label": "Peter Crowther", "source": "Peter Gwynne Crowther (born 26 April 1952 in Neath) is a Welsh former cricketer active from 1977 to 1978 who played for Glamorgan. He appeared in nine first-class matches as a righthanded batsman who bowled off breaks. He scored 185 runs with a highest score of 99 and took one wicket with a best performance of one for 22.", "target": "Welsh cricketer (born 1952)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5385552", "label": "Eremonthophagus", "source": "Eremonthophagus is a genus of Scarabaeidae or scarab beetles in the superfamily Scarabaeoidea.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25634286", "label": "Belga", "source": "Belga was a Belgian brand of cigarettes that was owned and manufactured by British American Tobacco.", "target": "Belgian cigarette brand owned and manufactured by British American Tobacco", "baseline_candidates": ["cigarette brand"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47010537", "label": "2018 Pittsburgh Pirates season", "source": "The 2018 Pittsburgh Pirates season was the franchise's 137th season overall, 132nd season as a member of the National League, and the 18th season at PNC Park. The Pirates finished the season in 4th place with a record of 82–79.", "target": "Major League Baseball season", "baseline_candidates": ["baseball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21646259", "label": "The Countess of Corfu", "source": "The Countess of Corfu (Greek: Η Κόμησσα Της Κέρκυρας, romanized: I Komissa tis Kerkyras) is a 1972 film starring Rena Vlahopoulou, Alekos Alexandrakis and Nonika Galinea. The movie was filmed in Corfu, the birthplace of Rena Vlahopoulou.", "target": "1972 film by Alekos Sakellarios", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5295761", "label": "Dong Puno", "source": "Ricardo Villanueva Puno Jr. (January 20, 1946 – February 15, 2022) was a Filipino television public affairs host, media executive, newspaper columnist, and lawyer.", "target": "Filipino journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58823899", "label": "Tori Morgan", "source": "Tori Morgan is a fictional character from the Australian television soap opera Home and Away, played by Penny McNamee. The actress had wanted to appear in the serial since the start of her acting career and described the part as her \"dream job\". During the audition process, McNamee was paired with various male actors to find the right combination for the Morgan siblings. A month later, she learned that she had won the role of Tori and began filming in November 2015. She made her first appearance during the episode broadcast on 5 May 2016. The character was introduced to the show along with her three brothers; Brody Morgan (Jackson Heywood), Justin Morgan (James Stewart) and Mason Morgan (Orpheus Pledger). Tori is portrayed as a caring, intelligent, understanding, successful doctor. She is very protective of her brothers and comes to Summer Bay ahead of them to see if it is safe to live there. She is caught up in an explosion at the local caravan park and helps treat several characters. The Morgans initially concealed the fact that they were in witness protection. The storyline saw the siblings targeted by their parents' killers, leading Tori to be held hostage, threatened, and involved in a plane crash. Later storylines have revolved around Tori's romantic relationships with Nate Cooper (Kyle Pryor), Duncan Stewart (Benedict Wall), and Martin \"Ash\" Ashford (George Mason). In 2018, a new storyline arc began with Tori deciding to become a mother and saw her undergoing fertility treatment in order to have a child. McNamee.", "target": "fictional human from the Home and Away television programme", "baseline_candidates": ["television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7898331", "label": "Upland", "source": "Upland is an unincorporated community in Dickinson County, Kansas, United States.", "target": "human settlement in Kansas, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14720869", "label": "Somatidia maculata", "source": "Somatidia maculata is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Broun in 1921.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26838068", "label": "Nadja Horwitz", "source": "Nadja Horwitz (born 10 March 1996) is a Chilean competitive sailor. She competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, in the women's 470 class. Her brother Kai Horwitz is an Olympic alpine skier for Chile.", "target": "Chilean sailor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14662557", "label": "Chaetostomella lenta", "source": "Chaetostomella lenta is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Chaetostomella of the family Tephritidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3947332", "label": "Saint Joseph and a follower", "source": "Saint Joseph and a Devotee is a 1529 tempera on canvas painting on two panels by Correggio, an attribution first proven in the modern era by Ferdinando Bologna in 1957. The panels are mentioned in the 1680 inventories of the Palazzo del Giardino in Parma as a work by Correggio. It is also recorded as such in Giacomo Barri's Viaggio pittoresco, published in 1671. Until the end of the 18th century it featured in Farnese inventories as a work by Corregio. It was probably moved to Naples with the rest of the Farnese collection in 1734 and is now in the National Museum of Capodimonte there.", "target": "painting by Antonio da Correggio", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31473533", "label": "Pustovsky", "source": "Pustovsky (Russian: Пустовский) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Slashchyovskoye Rural Settlement, Kumylzhensky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 5 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Kumylzhensky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12752461", "label": "KK Crnokosa", "source": "Košarkaški klub Crnokosa (Serbian Cyrillic: Кошаркашки клуб Црнокоса) is a men's professional basketball club based in Kosjerić, Serbia. The club currently plays in the First Regional Basketball League.", "target": "basketball club in Kosjerić, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16583758", "label": "Oliva", "source": "Oliva (Fiume Oliva in Italian; Jumu d'Oliva in local dialect) is a river in Calabria, Southern Italy. On the southern Tyrrhenian side, within the municipality of Amantea (specifically, the frazioni Coreca and Campora San Giovanni) in the Province of Cosenza, which gives its name to the entire valley it flows through (the Olivo valley). It is considered part of the Scala Basin, which contains an aquifer. It was in news for the alleged environmental pollution associated with the beaching of the \"Jolly Rosso\" on 14 December 1990 and its subsequent breaking in 1991. The river was again in the news in 2011 as an investigation into possible illegal dumping of hazardous waste (including Cesium 137) in the river was undertaken and reported to the European Union.", "target": "river in the province of Cosenza", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q596536", "label": "Xonotic", "source": "Xonotic () is a free and open-source first-person shooter video game. It was developed as a fork of Nexuiz, following controversy surrounding the game's development. The game runs on a heavily modified version of the Quake engine known as the DarkPlaces engine. Its gameplay is inspired by Unreal Tournament and Quake, but with various unique elements.", "target": "Free FPS video game", "baseline_candidates": ["free or open-source video game", "fork", "video game", "esports discipline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q337065", "label": "Football Association of the Czech Republic", "source": "The Football Association of the Czech Republic (Czech: Fotbalová asociace České republiky; FAČR) or colloquially the Czech Football Association is the governing body of association football in the Czech Republic based in Prague. It organizes the lower-level league competitions in the country (the professional Czech First League and Czech Second League are organized independently) and the Czech Cup.", "target": "sports governing body organizing association football in the Czech Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["organization", "association football federation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5368556", "label": "Elysia tomentosa", "source": "Elysia tomentosa is a species of sacoglossan sea slug, a shell-less marine opisthobranch gastropod mollusk in the family Plakobranchidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10534493", "label": "Popek", "source": "Paweł Ryszard Mikołajuw (Polish pronunciation: [ˈpavɛw ˈrɨʂart ˌmikɔˈwajuf], born 2 December 1978), also known as Popek, Popek Monster and Król Albanii (King of Albania),Abu Popeini al Ciapaq is a Polish rapper and professional mixed martial arts fighter. In 2000, together with such rappers as Bosski Roman, Tadek, Pomidor and Kali founded the group Firma. Popek creates music from the border of dubstep, grime and gangsta rap.Popek left his family home and dropped out of school at the age of 14. He speaks Polish, English and German. Solo activities began in 2007, Popek has since released three albums, including one self-released. The album Monster was certified Gold in Poland and the Czech Republic. Firma has recorded 6 albums, Popek however was not involved in the production of the album NieLegalne Rytmy: Kontynuacja. He collaborated with such artists as Tiggy Smith Chronik, Krept and Konan, Big Narstie, JME, Professor Green, Jędker, Sokół, Peja, Virus Syndicate, Tempa T, P Money, Devlin, Wiley, Małolat, The Game, Sean Price, Stitches. and Big H. Popek is also known for extreme behavior, including getting his eyeballs tattooed and being hung on hooks for the video of Pain be My Guest.", "target": "Polish rapper and martial arts fighter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33472484", "label": "Pierceton", "source": "Pierceton is a town in Washington Township, Kosciusko County, in the U.S. state of Indiana. The population was 1,015 at the 2010 census.", "target": "human settlement in Kosciusko County, Indiana, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1654743", "label": "Bemidji Regional Airport", "source": "Bemidji Regional Airport (IATA: BJI, ICAO: KBJI, FAA LID: BJI) is three miles northwest of Bemidji, in Beltrami County, Minnesota, United States. It is owned by the city of Bemidji and Beltrami County.The airport is used for general aviation and is served by SkyWest Airlines, as Delta Connection for Delta Air Lines. In 2012, a major terminal rehabilitation project was completed, which expanded the terminal from 13,000 square feet to almost 29,000 square feet.Airline flights (Wisconsin Central DC-3s) began in 1951–52.", "target": "airport in Beltrami County, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3219892", "label": "Lea by Backford", "source": "Lea-by-Backford is a hamlet and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England. It is situated between Chester and Ellesmere Port, west of the A41 trunk road and to the north of the Shropshire Union Canal. Backford is approximately 1.2 mi (2 km) to the east and Mollington is approximately 1.2 mi (2 km) to the south. At the 2011 census the population of the parish was 207.In 1086, the settlement was recorded in the Domesday Book as Wisdelea.Lea-by-Backford, including part of the hamlet of Dunkirk, was a township within the Backford parish of the Wirral Hundred. The population was recorded at 70 in 1801, 91 in 1851, 73 in 1901, 233 in 1951 and 191 in 2001.", "target": "hamlet and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4885435", "label": "Carel Vosmaer", "source": "Carel Vosmaer (20 March 1826 – 12 June 1888) was a Dutch poet and art critic, born at The Hague. He wrote under the pseudonym Flanor.", "target": "Dutch poet and art-critic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21622201", "label": "Henry Nicholls", "source": "Henry Michael Nicholls (born 15 November 1991) is a New Zealand cricketer who represents the New Zealand national team and plays for Canterbury in domestic first-class cricket. He has two older brothers, one of whom, Willy Nicholls, is a media correspondent for the Black Caps and White Ferns. He has also been the captain of the reserve A side since 2017.", "target": "New Zealand cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7173286", "label": "Peter Clark", "source": "Peter Alan Clark (born 24 May 1944) is a British historian. Since 2000, he was professor of European urban history at the University of Helsinki. He retired in 2011.Clark was educated at Balliol College, Oxford and graduated (Modern History first class) in 1966. He started his career as a research fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford. He was then lecturer, reader and later professor of economic and social history at the University of Leicester. From 1985 to 1999, he was the first director of the Centre for Urban History of the University of Leicester.In 1989, he was co-founder (with Bernard Lepetit and Herman Diederiks) of the European Association for Urban History and served as its treasurer from 1989 to 2010. He was also Secretary of International Commission for the History of Towns 1993 to 1995.He has contributed to a number of publications, including the Cambridge Urban History of Britain. Clark is a member of the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, of which he was a Council member from 1991 to 1995. He was elected a member of the Academia Europaea in 2011 and the Royal Belgian Academy (Flemish) in 2015. He was awarded an Honorary Degree of Philosophy by Stockholm University in 2012.", "target": "British historian, professor emeritus of urban history (University of Helsinki)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5584810", "label": "Gordon Arnaud Winter", "source": "Gordon Arnaud Winter, (October 6, 1912 – August 1, 2003) was the sixth lieutenant governor of Newfoundland from 1974 to 1981.In 1974, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 1989, he headed the Winter Commission, the diocesan commission appointed by bishop Alphonsus Liguori Penney to undertake an inquiry about the clerical child sexual abuse scandal at Mount Cashel orphanage.", "target": "Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador (1912-2003)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15944734", "label": "Canada–Philippines relations", "source": "The Canada–Philippines relations refers to the diplomatic relations between Canada and the Philippines.", "target": "bilateral relations between the Philippines and Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["bilateral relation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q924095", "label": "Dascilloidea", "source": "Dascilloidea is a superfamily of polyphagan beetles, comprising two families: Dascillidae (soft bodied plant beetles) and Rhipiceridae (cicada beetle and cicada parasite beetles).", "target": "superfamily of beetles", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3377878", "label": "Peyton Place", "source": "Peyton Place is a 1956 novel by the American author Grace Metalious. Set in New England in the time periods before and after World War II, the novel tells the story of three women who are forced to come to terms with their identity, both as women and as sexual beings, in a small, conservative, gossipy town. Metalious included recurring themes of hypocrisy, social inequities and class privilege in a tale that also includes incest, abortion, adultery, lust and murder. The novel sold 60,000 copies within the first ten days of its release, and it remained on The New York Times best seller list for 59 weeks. The novel spawned a franchise that would run through four decades. 20th Century-Fox adapted it as a movie in 1957, and Metalious wrote a follow-up novel that was published in 1959, titled Return to Peyton Place, which was filmed in 1961 using the same title. The original 1956 novel was adapted again in 1964, in what became a prime time television series for 20th Century Fox Television that ran until 1969, and the term \"Peyton Place\" entered the American lexicon describing any small town or group that holds scandalous secrets.A daytime soap opera titled Return to Peyton Place ran from 1972 to 1974, and the franchise was rounded out with two made-for-television movies: Murder in Peyton Place and Peyton Place: The Next Generation.", "target": "1956 novel by Grace Metalious", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7561421", "label": "Songs for the Incurable Heart", "source": "Songs for the Incurable Heart is STEMM's second full-length album originally released November 15, 2005. It was re-released on October 10, 2006 by major record label I Scream Records, who signed STEMM in 2006. The song \"The Day the Earth Stood Still\" is a tribute song to the victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks in which vocalist T.J. Frost was a survivor. The opening track, \"The Memory Remains\" is also a tribute song to former Pantera/Damageplan guitarist Darrell \"Dimebag\" Abbott. This is the only album to feature former vocalist T.J. Frost and the last album to feature guitarist Rich Spalla who both left the band in 2007. The album sold over 6,000 copies.", "target": "album by STEMM", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23008128", "label": "Prerak Mankad", "source": "Prerak Mankad (born 23 April 1994) is an Indian cricketer who plays for Saurashtra. On 24 February 2016 he made his first-class debut in the final of the 2015–16 Ranji Trophy. He made his List A debut for Saurashtra in the 2016–17 Vijay Hazare Trophy on 25 February 2017.He was the leading run-scorer for Saurashtra in the 2018–19 Vijay Hazare Trophy, with 212 runs in six matches. In February 2022, he was bought by the Punjab Kings in the auction for the 2022 Indian Premier League tournament.", "target": "Indian cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13465079", "label": "Chlorhoda rufoviridis", "source": "Chlorhoda rufoviridis is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found in Colombia and Peru.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17560945", "label": "2014 Ferguson unrest", "source": "The Ferguson riot (sometimes called the Ferguson uprising, Ferguson protests, or the Ferguson unrest) in Ferguson, Missouri, involved protests and riots which began on August 10, 2014, the day after the fatal shooting of Michael Brown by police officer Darren Wilson. The unrest sparked a vigorous debate in the United States about the relationship between law enforcement officers and African Americans, the militarization of police, and the use-of-force law in Missouri and nationwide. Continuing activism expanded the issues by including modern-day debtors prisons, for-profit policing, and school segregation.As the details of the shooting emerged, police established curfews and deployed riot squads in an attempt to maintain order. Along with peaceful protests, there was a significant amount of looting and violent unrest in the vicinity of the site of the shooting, as well as across the city. There was also a significant amount of media criticism of the militarization of the police when it dealt with protests in Ferguson. The unrest continued on November 24, 2014, after a grand jury did not indict Officer Wilson. It briefly continued again on the first anniversary of Brown's shooting. The Department of Justice (DOJ) concluded Wilson shot Brown in self-defense.In response to the shooting and the subsequent unrest, the DOJ conducted an investigation into the policing practices of the Ferguson Police Department (FPD). In March 2015, the DOJ announced that they had determined that the FPD had engaged in misconduct against the citizenry of Ferguson by, among other things, discriminating against African Americans and applying racial stereotypes in a \"pattern.", "target": "aftermath of the shooting of Michael Brown on August 9, 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["civil disorder"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51844165", "label": "Eriauchenius sama", "source": "Eriauchenus sama is a species of spider in the family Archaeidae. It is endemic to Madagascar. The genus name has also been incorrectly spelt \"Eriauchenius\".", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q504990", "label": "Untermerzbach", "source": "Untermerzbach is a municipality in the district of Haßberge in Bavaria in Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6685795", "label": "Lou Thornton", "source": "Louis Thornton (born April 26, 1963) is a former Major League Baseball outfielder and pinch runner. He played parts of five seasons in the major leagues between 1985 and 1990.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13469739", "label": "Clepsis gerasimovi", "source": "Clepsis gerasimovi is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30603030", "label": "Moneda", "source": "\"Moneda\" (English: \"Coin\") is a 2016 song by American singer Prince Royce, featuring Mexican singer Gerardo Ortiz. The song was released on October 7, 2016 as the third single taken from Royce's fifth studio album, Five (2017). The music video premiered on October 28, 2016.", "target": "2016 single by Prince Royce", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56702369", "label": "Vili Tolutaʻu", "source": "Vili Tolutaʻu (born January 26, 1994) is an American rugby union player who plays as a forward for the New England Free Jacks in Major League Rugby (MLR). He also represents America playing for the United States men's national team. Prior to joining the Free Jacks, Tolutaʻu played for the Seattle Seawolves for 2 full seasons and the shortened 2020 MLR season. Tolutaʻu was a part of two-time championship winning Seawolves in 2018 and 2019, as well as being the MVP of the Championship Match in 2018. Tolutaʻu previously represented the United States at the international level with several age-grade sides. Tolutaʻu also previously played for the USA Falcons, the developmental side for the United States men's national rugby sevens team.", "target": "American rugby union player (b. 1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2152341", "label": "Williston", "source": "Williston is a city in Levy County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 census it had a population of 2,768. The city was established before 1885 by J.M. Willis, who named it after himself.", "target": "city in Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5026768", "label": "Camino, Placerville and Lake Tahoe Railroad", "source": "The Camino, Placerville and Lake Tahoe Railroad (reporting mark CPLT) was an 8-mile (13 km) Class III short-line railroad operating in the Sierra Nevada in California, east of Sacramento. It was built primarily to haul lumber from the El Dorado National Forest. The standard gauge line ran west 8.05 miles (12.96 km) from a sawmill at Camino to a connection with the Placerville Branch of the Southern Pacific Company at Placerville. Loaded cars of lumber descended a 3.5 percent grade from 3,150 feet (960 m) at Camino to 1,900 feet (580 m) at Placerville.", "target": "railway line in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7698250", "label": "Tempe Daily News", "source": "The Tempe Daily News was an afternoon newspaper published in Tempe, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix. It was created in 1887 when Curt W. Miller (1864–1943) purchased the 20-month-old Salt River Valley News from Publishers John Byron Fitch and T.B. Martin, renamed it Tempe Daily News, and published its first edition in August 1887. The News became the town's official newspaper in 1895 and Miller continued publishing until his death in 1943.Miller's grandson, Curt W. Miller, published the newspaper until September 1944, at which time he sold it to Francis Connolly. At the time, the paper had one carrier, one linotype machine, and a circulation of 110. Connolly published the News until his death in July 1978, by which time he had built its circulation to 15,000 and employed 80 carriers in addition to 50 other employees. His widow, Irma Connolly, published the paper until 1980, at which time she sold it to Cox Enterprises. Cox renamed the paper Tempe Daily News Tribune in 1986 in order to make it consistent with the other newspapers it had acquired in the region. Cox sold its holdings to Canadian-based Thomson Newspapers in 1996 and the paper's new owners combined the Tempe Daily News Tribune with four other newspapers to form The Tribune in 1997. This publication became the East Valley Tribune in December 1999. Thompson sold its holdings to California's Freedom Publications, Inc. in 2000 and the East Valley Tribune ceased publication in 2009, ending 122 years of continuous local news coverage in Tempe.", "target": "Former newspaper in Arizona", "baseline_candidates": ["periodical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7700284", "label": "Tennga", "source": "Tennga is a small unincorporated community in Murray County, Georgia, United States, along U.S. Route 411 near the Tennessee border.", "target": "human settlement in Georgia, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16845231", "label": "IFK Mora FK", "source": "IFK Mora FK is a Swedish football club located in Mora.", "target": "IFK Mora's association football section", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13460768", "label": "Ceylonthelphusa diva", "source": "Ceylonthelphusa diva is a species of decapod in the family Gecarcinucidae.The IUCN conservation status of Ceylonthelphusa diva is \"EN\", endangered. The species faces a high risk of extinction in the near future. The IUCN status was reviewed in 2008.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6490722", "label": "Larry M. Bell", "source": "Larry Moseley Bell Sr. (born August 18, 1939) is a former Democratic member of the North Carolina General Assembly representing the state's twenty-first House district, including Sampson and Wayne counties. A retired school superintendent from Clinton, North Carolina, Bell started his first term in the State House in 2001. During a portion of his time in the legislature, he served as the majority whip. He did not run for re-election in 2018. During the 2015 legislative session, Bell was one of 22 African Americans serving in the North Carolina House of Representatives.During the 2016 legislative session, Bell was one of 11 Democrats to vote in favor of HB2, the controversial \"Bathroom Bill.\".", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q208566", "label": "Skyros", "source": "Skyros (Greek: Σκύρος, Modern Greek: [ˈs̠ci.ro̞s̠]), in some historical contexts Latinized Scyros (Ancient Greek: Σκῦρος, Attic Greek pronunciation: [skŷː.ros]), is an island in Greece, the southernmost of the Sporades, an archipelago in the Aegean Sea. Around the 2nd millennium BC and slightly later, the island was known as The Island of the Magnetes where the Magnetes used to live and later Pelasgia and Dolopia and later Skyros. At 209 square kilometres (81 sq mi) it is the largest island of the Sporades, and has a population of about 3,000 (in 2011). It is part of the regional unit of Euboea. The Hellenic Air Force has a major base in Skyros, because of the island's strategic location in the middle of the Aegean.", "target": "Greek island in the Aegean Sea", "baseline_candidates": ["island", "polis"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q695394", "label": "Swing When You're Winning", "source": "Swing When You're Winning is a swing cover album by English singer-songwriter Robbie Williams, and his fourth studio album overall. It was released in the United Kingdom on 19 November 2001 and peaked at number one on the UK Albums Chart. The album's title is a play on Williams' previous album Sing When You're Winning. In 2013, Williams returned to swing for his tenth studio album Swings Both Ways. Unlike Swing When You're Winning, however, the sequel is nearly evenly divided between covers and original songs penned by Williams and Guy Chambers.", "target": "2001 studio album by Robbie Williams; covers album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7588514", "label": "St. James Memorial Church of Eatontown", "source": "St. James Memorial Church of Eatontown is a historic church at 69 Broad Street in Eatontown, Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States. It was built in 1866 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.", "target": "church building in New Jersey, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1366666", "label": "Crypsiprora", "source": "Crypsiprora is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23762208", "label": "Jeeva Ravi", "source": "Jeeva Ravi is an Indian actor, casting director and television actor who has worked in Tamil-language films and television. He made a breakthrough as an actor with his performances in 3 (2012) and Jeeva (2014), with the latter film being a prefix for his stage name.", "target": "actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q924679", "label": "San Lorenzo Church, Potosí", "source": "Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas is a church located in the city of Potosí in the department of the same name, in Bolivia. According to historians, it was formerly called \"La Anunciación\" and, together with the Church of Santa Bárbara, they were the first churches built in the city. The construction of San Lorenzo \"La Anunciación\" began in 1548, but a heavy snowfall collapsed the church ten years later, so it had to be repaired. Upon the arrival of Viceroy Francisco de Toledo, its name was changed to San Lorenzo de Carangas, as it was destined for the cult of the Carangas indigenous people. When the current cathedral was built, it became an Indian parish. However, the greatest remodeling corresponds to the 18th century and completed in 1744, a time when the dome was raised and the Andean Baroque portal of vast ornamental richness was made.An embroidered effect was achieved through the use of diagonal cuts is low relief. Widely flora and fauna, including viscacha, vicuña, heads of puma, sun disks, angels faces, mermaids who strum guitars, maize, (etc.) are fantastic references to the Incan past mixed with Spanish culture, are carvings of this colonial church.Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas is widely considered the ultimate in paniform design.It is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site \"City of Potosí\".", "target": "church building in Potosí, Bolivia", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16027858", "label": "L'arène des rumeurs", "source": "L'Arène des rumeurs is the first album of the French rock group Zebda, released in 1992.", "target": "1992 album by Zebda", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16954658", "label": "David Nicholson Mares' Hurdle", "source": "The David Nicholson Mares' Hurdle, currently known for sponsorship purposes as the Close Brothers Mares' Hurdle, is a Grade 1 National Hunt hurdle race in Great Britain which is open to mares aged four years or older. It is run on the Old Course at Cheltenham over a distance of about 2 miles and 4 furlongs (2 miles, 3 furlongs and 200 yards, or 4,005 metres), and during its running there are ten hurdles to be jumped. The race is scheduled to take place each year during the Cheltenham Festival in March. The race's registered title commemorates David Nicholson (1939–2006), who was successful as both a jockey and a trainer in National Hunt racing. Nicholson's record at the Cheltenham Festival included five victories as a jockey, and seventeen as a trainer. This race was established in 2008, and in its inaugural year it was held on the final day of the Festival on Cheltenham's New Course. It was switched to the opening day on the Old Course in 2009. It was initially given Grade 2 status and was upgraded to Grade 1 status from the 2015 running. From 2012 to 2019 it was run as the OLBG Mares' Hurdle.", "target": "hurdle horse race in Britain", "baseline_candidates": ["horse race"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20836098", "label": "Loamneș", "source": "Loamneș (German: Ladmesch; Hungarian: Ladamos) is a commune located in Sibiu County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of six villages: Alămor, Armeni, Hașag, Loamneș, Mândra and Sădinca.", "target": "commune in Sibiu County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1775742", "label": "Tenth United States Army", "source": "The Tenth United States Army was the last army level command established during the Pacific War during World War II, and included divisions from both the U.S. Army and the U.S. Marine Corps.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["United States Field Army"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55979193", "label": "Joe Angyal", "source": "Joe Angyal (December 6, 1916 – June 26, 1954) was an American rower. He competed in the men's double sculls event at the 1948 Summer Olympics. A Marine Corps fighter pilot in World War II and reservist, Angyal was killed in 1954 when he crashed a jet fighter on Long Island.", "target": "American rower (1916-1954)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q795564", "label": "Flores Scops Owl", "source": "The Flores scops owl (Otus alfredi) is an owl endemic to the island of Flores, Indonesia. It is threatened by habitat loss. This owl is around 19–21 cm from head to tail. They are a forest dwelling owl that is smallish in size. Some 250–2,499 individuals are estimated to be extant in the wild, dwindling due to habitat loss.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7819992", "label": "Tommy Watt", "source": "Thomas Mitchell Watt (31 October 1925, Glasgow – 20 May 2006, Bristol, England) was a Scottish jazz bandleader. Born to a working-class family, his father a machinist toolmaker, Watt was hired as a pianist by Carl Barriteau at age 17, and served in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. He moved to London following the war, where he played with Ambrose, Harry Roy, and Ken Mackintosh. He teamed up with actor Brian Rix, whom he had met during the war, in 1955 to record a demo, which eventually led to a contract with the BBC. After making appearances behind Matt Monro, Watt was hired by Parlophone for session and arranging work. In 1956 Watt put together his first big band, which played at Quaglino's, a London restaurant. Among his sidemen were Tubby Hayes, Ronnie Ross, Jackie Armstrong, Tommy McQuater, Bert Courtley, and Phil Seamen. Watt became one of the better-known British bandleaders of the 1950s, winning an Ivor Novello Award for the song \"Overdrive\" and releasing their first LP record in 1958. Watt's arrangements of Count Basie songs so impressed Basie himself that he incorporated some of Watt's changes into his own performances. After disbanding his ensemble, Watt worked with Rix on stage shows and films, including the 1961 movies The Night We Got the Bird and Nothing Barred. He led the BBC Northern Dance Orchestra and the BBC Big Band briefly in the early 1960s, but squabbles with management quickly ended this contract. In 1964 he assembled the Centre 42 Big Band,.", "target": "Scottish bandleader (1925-2006)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2865132", "label": "Arthur Hamilton", "source": "Arthur Hamilton Stern (born October 22, 1926), known professionally as Arthur Hamilton, is an American songwriter. He is best known for writing the song \"Cry Me a River\", first published in 1953, and recorded by Julie London and numerous other artists.", "target": "songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6849284", "label": "Mike Williams", "source": "Michael Williams (born August 27, 1959) is a former American football tight end in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins. He played college football at Alabama A&M University and was drafted in the fifth round of the 1982 NFL Draft.", "target": "former American football tight end", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17060889", "label": "Williams Island", "source": "Williams Island is an island in the Australian state of South Australia located off the south coast of Jussieu Peninsula on Eyre Peninsula approximately 34 km (21 mi) south-east of Port Lincoln. It was named by Matthew Flinders for Robert Williams who subsequently lost his life along with seven other crew in the capsize of a cutter launched from HM Sloop Investigator to search for water on 21 February 1802. Since 2004, the island has been part of the Memory Cove Wilderness Protection Area.", "target": "island in South Australia, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1156509", "label": "Dabuzi", "source": "Dabuzi (Chinese: 大堡子山遗址及墓群) is an archaeological site in Li County, Gansu. Music instruments have been found there.", "target": "cemetery in Dabuzi, China", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site", "cemetery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q426765", "label": "Code of Scotland Yard", "source": "Code of Scotland Yard is a 1947 British crime film directed by George King and starring Oskar Homolka, Muriel Pavlow and Derek Farr. It was originally released as The Shop at Sly Corner, being based on the popular stage play of that title by Edward Percy.", "target": "1947 British crime film directed by George King", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16844359", "label": "Holy Family Catholic School", "source": "Holy Family Catholic School (formerly Holy Family Technology College) is a coeducational Roman Catholic secondary school and sixth form in the Walthamstow area of East London, England.", "target": "school in Waltham Forest, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["voluntary aided school", "secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5795422", "label": "Eyleh-ye Yek", "source": "Eyleh-ye Yek (Persian: عيله يك, also Romanized as ‘Eyleh-ye Yek; also known as ‘Asīleh-e Yek and Sheykh Hādī) is a village in Shoaybiyeh-ye Gharbi Rural District, Shadravan District, Shushtar County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 472, in 89 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25999974", "label": "Zindagi Kitni Haseen Hai", "source": "Zindagi Kitni Haseen Hay (ZKHH) (Urdu: زندگی کتنی حسین ہے, lit. 'Life is so beautiful') is a 2016 Pakistani romantic drama film directed by Anjum Shahzad, written by Abdul Khaliq Khan while produced by Rafiq Ahmed Choudhary, Fahmeeda Abdul Khaliq, Kamran Siddiqui and Jahanzaib Quadir while under the banner of Geo Films. The film's cast include Pakistani Television stars Sajal Ali and Feroze Khan in lead roles. It is the third project to feature Sajal Ali opposite Feroze Khan after Blockbuster Drama Serials Chup Raho and Gul e Rana. The film was distributed by Geo Films on Eid ul Adha 2016. The film was the remake of the 1979 American film Kramer vs. Kramer.", "target": "2016 film by Anjum Shahzad", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q159118", "label": "Poa trivialis", "source": "Poa trivialis (rough bluegrass; UK: rough-stalked meadow-grass or rough meadow-grass), is a perennial plant regarded in the US as an ornamental plant. It is part of the grass family.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7636704", "label": "Sultan Mehmood Chaudhry", "source": "Sultan Mehmood Chaudhry is a politician who hails from Azad Kashmir. He served as Prime Minister of Azad Kashmir between July 1996 to July 2001 and is currently serving as the President of Azad Kashmir since 25 August 2021.", "target": "Pakistani politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14505123", "label": "Terminalia albida", "source": "Terminalia albida is a tree species in the genus Terminalia found in West Africa. It is found in the savannah part of Bao Bolong Wetland Reserve in Gambia. The aqueous extract of the bark is used in Gambia as an eye-lotion.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16231586", "label": "Nikos Troiris", "source": "Nikos Troiris (Greek: Νίκος Τροΐρης; born 2 December 1986) is a Greek footballer currently playing for Football League 2 side Panelefsiniakos. He previously played in the Greek Superleague for Asteras Tripolis.", "target": "Greek footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10271227", "label": "Elas por Elas", "source": "Elas por Elas was a 1982 telenovela Brazilian created by Cassiano Gabus Mendes and directed by Paulo Ubiratan.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7174462", "label": "Peter H. Thomas", "source": "Peter H. Thomas (born September 14, 1938) is a Canadian entrepreneur, investor, author, public speaker, and philanthropist. Thomas was the founding partner and chairman of Century 21 Real Estate Canada Ltd and Samoth Capital Corporation (now known as Sterling Centrecorp Inc.). He is the founder and chairman of Thomas Pride International and its affiliates, including Thomas Franchise Solutions as well as LifePilot.", "target": "Canadian businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28406139", "label": "Gaziphema", "source": "Vafiimai or Laü, also called Gaziphema is a Poumai Naga village located north of Senapati in Senapati district of the Indian state of Manipur. It is bounded on the East by Ukhrul district and Nagaland on the North and West and covers an area of 46.48 km2. According to the Census of India 2011, there are 806 household with a total population of 5518 persons, out of which 2846 are male while 2672 are female.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5449341", "label": "Finaghy", "source": "Finaghy ( or ; from Irish: an Fionnachadh, meaning 'the white field') is an electoral ward in the Balmoral district of Belfast City Council, Northern Ireland. It is based on the townland of Ballyfinaghy (from Irish: Baile an Fhionnachaidh). There has been a small community living in the area since the 17th century, and it has been involved in the production of linen, which was key to the Lagan Valley area at the time.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7931480", "label": "Vince DiFrancesca", "source": "Vincent DiFrancesca (January 1, 1922 – May 21, 2007) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Western Illinois University from 1949 to 1953, at Iowa State University from 1954 to 1956, and at Carroll College—now known as Carroll University—in Waukesha, Wisconsin from 1959 to 1971, compiling a career college football coaching record of 106–71–7.", "target": "American football player and coach (1922-2007)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18574061", "label": "The Silent Men", "source": "\"The Silent Men\" (French: Les muets) is a short story written in 1957. It is the third short story published in the volume Exile and the Kingdom by Albert Camus.", "target": "short story", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5520489", "label": "Ganapathi Rao Aigal", "source": "Manjeshwar Ganapathi Rao Aigal (1881–1944) was a historian and served as a teacher in Bantwal, Dakshina Kannada. He was the author of Dakshina Kannada Jilleya Prachina Itihasa (Ancient History of Dakshina Kannada), published in 1923.", "target": "Indian historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17006472", "label": "Margaret E. Martin", "source": "Margaret E. Martin (May 6, 1912 – May 16, 2012) was an economist and statistician at the U.S. Bureau of the Budget from 1942 to 1973. She was influential in the development of U.S. economic statistics and became president of the American Statistical Association.", "target": "American economist and statistician (1912-2012)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26821378", "label": "Walter Drew McCaw", "source": "Walter Drew McCaw (February 10, 1863 – July 7, 1939) was a career officer in the United States Army. A medical doctor, he served as an army surgeon and attained the rank of brigadier general. A veteran of the Spanish–American War, Philippine–American War, and World War I, he was a recipient of the Army Distinguished Service Medal and Silver Star in addition to several foreign decorations. A native of Richmond, Virginia, McCaw was a member of a family long prominent in the medical field, and his father was a doctor and medical school professor who operated a Confederate hospital during the American Civil War. McCaw graduated from the Medical College of Virginia in 1882, and received a second medical degree from Columbia University in 1884. After completing his education, he passed the examination to serve as an army medical officer and was contracted to serve as an assistant surgeon. In December 1884, he received his commission as an assistant surgeon with the rank of first lieutenant. McCaw carried out assistant surgeon and surgeon assignments at posts throughout the United States. During the Spanish–American War, he took part in combat as part of the July 1898 Siege of Santiago and silver Citation Star for heroism (later converted to the Silver Star). He took part in the Philippine–American War as a regimental surgeon. After returning to the United States, he became chief librarian of the Army Medical Library, a position he held for twelve years. He then served as surgeon of the Philippine Department (1914-1916). During World War.", "target": "Chief surgeon in the United States Army Medical Corps", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86730816", "label": "Równe", "source": "Równe [ˈruvnɛ] (German: Roben) is a village located in Poland, in Opole Voivodeship, Głubczyce County, Gmina Głubczyce, near the border with the Czech Republic.", "target": "place in Opole, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9263271", "label": "Frank O'Connor", "source": "Francis O'Connor (1922 – 29 December 1997) was an Irish basketball player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1948 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Irish basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28140", "label": "Sergius VI of Naples", "source": "Sergius VI (died 1107) was the magister militum and duke of Naples from 1077 to his death. He was the son of the Neapolitan senator John, and succeeded his uncle, John's elder brother, Sergius V. His sister Inmilgia married Duke Landulf of Gaeta. His reign is very obscure because of the slight documentary evidence. In the face of the Norman conquests, Sergius reinforced the Neapolitan relationship with the Byzantine Empire and was at some point granted the Byzantine title of protosebastos. He apparently gave aid to the Norman prince Jordan I of Capua when the latter broke his alliance with Pope Gregory VII and did homage for his principality to the German emperor Henry IV. The pope wrote to Prince Gisulf II of Salerno asking him to persuade Sergius to break off his support for Jordan and Henry.Around 1078, Sergius married Limpiasa, a daughter of Prince Richard I of Capua and Fressenda, daughter of Tancred of Hauteville. He was succeeded by their son, John VI, whom he had made co-ruler in 1090.", "target": "Duke of Naples", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5080978", "label": "Charles Mingus with Orchestra", "source": "Charles Mingus with Orchestra is an album by American bassist, composer and bandleader Charles Mingus which was recorded in Japan in 1971 and first released on the Japanese Columbia label.", "target": "album by Charles Mingus Jr.", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5328336", "label": "East Farleigh", "source": "East Farleigh is a village and civil parish in the local government district of Maidstone, Kent, England. The village is located on the south side of the River Medway about two miles (3.2 km) upstream from the town of Maidstone.", "target": "village and civil parish in Kent, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12899395", "label": "Coleman County", "source": "Coleman County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 7,684. The county seat is Coleman. The county was founded in 1858 and organized in 1864. It is named for Robert M. Coleman, a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and soldier at the Battle of San Jacinto.", "target": "county in Texas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Texas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28180644", "label": "Marcus Williams", "source": "Marcus Alan Williams (born September 8, 1996) is an American football safety for the Baltimore Ravens of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Utah.", "target": "American football defensive back", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q464209", "label": "Rita May", "source": "\"Rita May\" (sometimes spelled as \"Rita Mae\") is a song by Bob Dylan, originally recorded during the sessions for the album Desire, but released only as the B-side of a single and on the compilation album, Masterpieces. The song is based on the 1957 rockabilly song \"Bertha Lou\". Some listeners believe that the lyrics of the song refer to writer Rita Mae Brown, who had complained of the lack of opportunities for casual lesbian sex.", "target": "Bob Dylan song", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33190322", "label": "Alif Hassan", "source": "Mohamad Alif bin Hassan (born 14 May 1994) is Malaysian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Kuching City.", "target": "Malaysian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7701975", "label": "Terence O'Brien", "source": "Terence O'Brien (1887–1970) was an Irish-born British stage actor, active at Stratford, The Old Vic and in the West End. He also appeared in several films.", "target": "British actor (1887-1970)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8346741", "label": "International Standard Industrial Classification", "source": "The International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities (ISIC) is a United Nations industry classification system. Wide use has been made of ISIC in classifying data according to kind of economic activity in the fields of employment and health data. It is maintained by the United Nations Statistics Division.ISIC classifies entities by activity. The most detailed categories are defined by combinations of activities described in statistical units, considering the relative importance of the activities included in these classes. ISIC Rev.4 continues to use criteria such as input, output and use of the products produced, but places additional emphasis on production processes.", "target": "international reference classification of productive activities", "baseline_candidates": ["industry classification"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7068726", "label": "Nuga Lake", "source": "Nuga Lake is an artificial lake of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Grude.", "target": "lake in Bosnia and Herzegovina", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10818340", "label": "Sarnıç", "source": "Sarnıç is a village in the District of Ulus, Bartın Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 310 people.", "target": "köy in Ulus, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65046791", "label": "Aiken's Hotel", "source": "Aiken's Hotel in Eagle, Idaho, also known as Eagle Hotel, is a two-story concrete block building constructed in 1910. The hotel features design elements of Colonial Revival architecture, but it has been considered an Italianate structure. The hotel was designed with 16 rooms large enough to accommodate residential customers. It was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places in 1982.Thomas H. Aiken, also known as Thomas H. Aikens, arrived in Idaho Territory in 1871. His brother, Samuel D. Aiken, owner of the Green Meadow Ranch, arrived in 1862. In 1877, Thomas Aiken secured water rights to property on Eagle Island. By the 1890s, Aiken promoted and finally secured construction of a bridge across the Boise River, and he increased his land holdings on Eagle Island. Aiken platted the town of Eagle in 1904.The interurban trolley line opened on the island in 1907.", "target": "historic hotel building in Eagle, Idaho", "baseline_candidates": ["hotel building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q504133", "label": "jalapeño", "source": "The jalapeño (UK: HAL-ə-PAY-nyoh, US: HAHL-, Spanish: [xalaˈpeɲo] (listen)) is a medium-sized chile pepper pod type cultivar of the species Capsicum annuum. A mature jalapeño chile is 5–10 cm (2–4 in) long and hangs down with a round, firm, smooth flesh of 25–38 mm (1–1+1⁄2 in) wide. It can have a range of pungency, with Scoville heat units of 4,000 to 8,500. Commonly picked and consumed while still green, it is occasionally allowed to fully ripen and turn red, orange, or yellow. It is wider and generally milder than the similar Serrano pepper.", "target": "hot pepper", "baseline_candidates": ["food ingredient", "cultivar", "chili pepper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2220529", "label": "Barbuda Council", "source": "The Barbuda Council is a local authority that manages the internal affairs on the island of Barbuda.", "target": "government of Barbuda Island", "baseline_candidates": ["council"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13856596", "label": "Fuladshahr District", "source": "Fuladshahr District (Persian: بخش فولادشهر) is a district (bakhsh) in Lenjan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. The District has one city: Fuladshahr.", "target": "district in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47404829", "label": "Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards 2017", "source": "The 16th Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards were announced on December 8, 2017.", "target": "award ceremony", "baseline_candidates": ["award ceremony"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5379238", "label": "Ennore Thermal Power Station", "source": "The Ennore Thermal Power Station is a coal based power plant located in Chennai Ennore, Tamil Nadu.", "target": "building in India", "baseline_candidates": ["coal-fired power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60747840", "label": "2018 Breeders' Cup", "source": "The 2018 Breeders' Cup World Championships was the 35th edition of the premier event of the North American thoroughbred horse racing year. The 14 races, all but one of which were Grade I, took place on November 2 and 3 at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. The races were telecast by NBCSN on Friday and early Saturday, and by NBC later on Saturday. The Breeders' Cup is generally regarded as the end of the North American racing season, although a few Grade I events take place in later November and December. The event typically determines champions in many of the Eclipse Award divisions, although it was missing the eventual Horse of the Year, Triple Crown champion Justify, who was retired in July.", "target": "horse race", "baseline_candidates": ["Breeders' Cup"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3565474", "label": "Nampong Air Force Base", "source": "Nampong Air Force Base (ICAO: VYNP) is a Myanmar Air Force base in Myitkyina, Myanmar (Burma). Formerly known as Myikyina West, it is located several miles to the west of Myitkyina. It is in current military use and home to a fighter squadron and an attack squadron.", "target": "airport in Myitkyina, Myanmar", "baseline_candidates": ["airbase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13579358", "label": "Eucosma cathareutis", "source": "\"Eucosma\" cathareutis is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae described by Edward Meyrick in 1938. It is found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In 2010 Józef Razowski, Leif Aarvik and Jurate De Prins wrote \"The taxonomic position of this species is unknown. It is not a true member of the genus Eucosma Hübner, 1823.\".", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61000982", "label": "São Caetano Esporte Clube", "source": "São Caetano is a professional women's volleyball team, based in São Caetano do Sul, São Paulo (state), Brazil.", "target": "professional women's volleyball team in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["volleyball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15221246", "label": "Gaddafi Mosque", "source": "National Mosque is the largest mosque in Tanzania and the second largest in East Africa after the Uganda National Mosque in Uganda. It is located in the Tanzanian capital of Dodoma. It was named after the former Libyan Leader Muammar Gaddafi who provided the funds for its construction via the World Islamic Call Society. The mosque was inaugurated by President Jakaya Kikwete in 2010 and has a capacity for at least 3,000 worshippers.", "target": "mosque in Dodoma, Tanzania", "baseline_candidates": ["mosque"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16632882", "label": "Ergi Dini", "source": "Ergi Dini (15 October 1994 – 21 November 2016) was a well-known singer and the winner of the third season of X Factor Albania. Dini was born in Shkodra, Albania on October 15, 1994 and began singing as a soloist at children's festivals. He was the brother of the famous singer Barbana Dini. Ergi Dini attended the Jordan Misja Artistic Lyceum in Tirana and was a very good instrumentalist. The year 2013 marked a turning point in Dini's career. He decided to appear in the auditions of X Factor Albania where Ergi stood out for his voice timber, vocal potency and interpretation of songs. His work was highly praised by the X Factor jury and was always considered the most likely winner of this competition. On February 23, 2014, Ergi Dini was announced the winner of the third season of X Factor. Sarah, the 3rd competitor from Italy, was ranked 3rd among the best, only to remain in the strong competition between two boys like Ergi Dini & Senad Rrahmani. With a majority of votes from the public, Dini managed to become the winner, thus making his mentor Tuna the winner for the second time. On April 9, 2015, Ergi Dini released the music video for \"Morphine\". This was the first single and the first video clip of the artist from Shkodra. The song was sung in Gheg Albanian and was very carefully curated. In September 2015, Ergi Dini participateD in the Kënga Magjike 2015 with the song \"Pa Fryme\", with music and lyrics by Dini.", "target": "Albanian singer (1994-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16190299", "label": "José Conrado", "source": "José Conrado Rodríguez Alegre, a Cuban priest from the parish of Santa Teresita del Niño Jesús, in Santiago de Cuba, is best known for his strongly worded open letter in 2009 to Cuban President Raúl Castro. The letter condemns what Conrado says are the social problems, the restrictions on liberty and the increasing threats and interrogations that have been directed at his parishioners. Conrado had written a similar open letter to Fidel Castro in 1994.Conrado, considered one of the most outspoken of the church figures in Cuba, has been called the \"Cardinal of the people\". After a visit to see the Pope in 1998, Conrado stated, \"The fundamental change is the protagonism of the Cuban people after years of having to hide what they think. What has happened in Cuba is a genuine miracle. It's the resurrection of the Cuban people. \"An interview with Conrado by journalist Emio de Armas won third place for the Catholic Journalist's Best News Writing National/International Event, an article that, despite the restrictions on the press imposed by the Cuban government, gives an account by Conrado where he details the arrest and beatings of dissidents by the Cuban police inside his church.Conrado also has been interviewed in 2009 by Pierantonio Micciarelli, an italian film-maker, for his documentary \"SOY LA OTRA CUBA\" where he described a very different reality from the one displayed by the official propaganda.", "target": "Cuban priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7858897", "label": "Two Creeks, Manitoba", "source": "Two Creeks is an unincorporated community in southwestern Manitoba, Canada. It is located approximately 21 kilometers (13 miles) northwest of Virden, Manitoba in the Rural Municipality of Wallace.", "target": "place in Manitoba, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4049361", "label": "Shake Your Pelvis", "source": "Shake Your Pelvis is a 2000 album released by the Red Elvises.", "target": "album by Red Elvises", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q426985", "label": "L 73", "source": "The Albatros L 73 was a German twin-engined biplane airliner of the 1920s. Of conventional configuration, it featured a streamlined, boat-like fuselage and engine nacelles. All four manufactured aircraft of that type were operated by Deutsche Luft Hansa, one of which (Brandenburg, D-961) crashed near Babekuhl on 28 May 1928.", "target": "1926 airliner by Albatros", "baseline_candidates": ["airliner biplane with 2 engines", "aircraft model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25590321", "label": "Iberian Woodpecker", "source": "The Iberian green woodpecker (Picus sharpei) is a medium-sized woodpecker endemic to the Iberian peninsula. It was formerly considered as a subspecies of the European green woodpecker but differs in having little black on the head and a dusky rather than a black ring around each eye.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4021202", "label": "X-Out", "source": "X-Out is a horizontally scrolling shooter with eight levels set underwater. It was released by Rainbow Arts in 1989 for the Commodore 64, and in 1990 for the Amiga, Atari ST, ZX Spectrum, and Amstrad CPC. On 13 January, 2022, Ziggurat Interactive announced that they had acquired the rights to the game.", "target": "1989 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21067201", "label": "Charles Burnham", "source": "Charles Russell Burnham (1904–1995) was an American plant geneticist who studied maize cytology and genetics. In 1968 he was elected a fellow of the American Society of Agronomy. After his retirement he played a critical role in developing a blight resistant strain of the American chestnut.", "target": "American plant geneticist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7058538", "label": "Northern Ireland Women's Coalition", "source": "The Northern Ireland Women's Coalition (NIWC) was a minor cross-community political party in Northern Ireland from 1996–2006.The NIWC was founded by Catholic academic Monica McWilliams and Protestant social worker Pearl Sagar to contest elections to the Northern Ireland Forum, the body for all-party talks which led to the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement. The party campaigned principally around the fact that it was led by women, declining to take a position on whether Northern Ireland should be part of the United Kingdom or a United Ireland. It did not identify as feminist.", "target": "political party in Northern Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7328123", "label": "Richard O'Connell", "source": "Richard O'Connell (13 March 1892 – 1 October 1964) was an Irish Cumann na nGaedheal politician. A former Army officer, he was first elected to Dáil Éireann as a Cumann na nGaedheal Teachta Dála (TD) for the Limerick constituency at a by-election on 28 May 1924. He was re-elected at the June 1927 and September 1927 general elections but lost his seat at the 1932 general election. He stood again at the 1933 general election but was not elected.His nephew Tom O'Donnell was a TD for Limerick East from 1961 to 1987. His grand-nephew Kieran O'Donnell is currently a TD for Limerick City.", "target": "Irish politician (1892-1964)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1027624", "label": "Egoli Air", "source": "Egoli Air is an airline based in Johannesburg, South Africa. It operates charter flights both domestically and to destinations throughout Africa. Its main base is OR Tambo International Airport, Johannesburg.", "target": "airline", "baseline_candidates": ["airline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56678442", "label": "Marjorie Smith", "source": "Marjorie Smith (born February 22, 1941) is an American politician in the state of New Hampshire. She is a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, sitting as a Democrat from the Strafford 6 district, having been first elected in 2012. She previously served from 1996 to 2010.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1513677", "label": "Gerit Kling", "source": "Gerit Kling (born 21 April 1965) is a German film, television and voice actress.", "target": "German actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7627783", "label": "Student Union in Sundsvall", "source": "Student Union in Sundsvall at Mid Sweden University is a students' union representing students studying on campus Sundsvall at Mid Sweden University, and those distance students who are registered in Sundsvall. This includes all the bachelor's, Master's and doctoral students as well as exchange students and visiting students.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17627259", "label": "Mina SayWhat", "source": "Mina SayWhat Llona is an American radio and TV personality. Currently on air on Philadelphia's urban radio station WUSL - Power 99. Mina grew up in Union City and Jersey City, New Jersey. She started her radio career at the age of 18 while living in New York and attending Syracuse University. She graduated cum laude from Syracuse University with a dual major in Television, Radio and Film from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communication and Political Science. She also minored in Music Business. Mina worked for Sirius XM Radio for four years prior to working at Power 99. She is also the voice of the weather for 103.5 The Beat in Miami. She is an ambassador for the Philadelphia 76ers' community outreach program, \"Sixer's Strong\", and works with the 76ers' Latino youth basketball league \"La Liga Del Barrio\", which is open for boys and girls ages 6 to 17 and consists of 28 teams.", "target": "American broadcaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2127082", "label": "Henk Grol", "source": "Hindrik Harmannus Arnoldus \"Henk\" Grol (born 14 April 1985 in Veendam) is a retired Dutch judoka.", "target": "Dutch judoka", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12614676", "label": "Jang Jeong-il", "source": "Jang Jung-il (This is the author's preferred Romanization per LTI Korea) is a Korean poet and novelist.", "target": "Korean writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12984295", "label": "Tripuranthaka Swamy Temple", "source": "Tripuranthaka Swamy Temple is a Hindu temple located in the Tiruvallur district of Tamil Nadu, India. The presiding deity is Shiva.", "target": "temple in India", "baseline_candidates": ["Hindu temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7251356", "label": "Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013", "source": "The Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013 is a legislative act in India that seeks to protect women from sexual harassment at their place of work. It was passed by the Lok Sabha (the lower house of the Indian Parliament) on 3 September 2012. It was passed by the Rajya Sabha (the upper house of the Indian Parliament) on 26 February 2013. The Bill got the assent of the President on 23 April 2013. The Act came into force from 9 December 2013. This statute superseded the Vishaka Guidelines for Prevention Of Sexual Harassment (POSH) introduced by the Supreme Court (SC) of India. It was reported by the International Labour Organization that very few Indian employers were compliant to this statute. Most Indian employers have not implemented the law despite the legal requirement that any workplace with more than 10 employees need to implement it. According to a FICCI-EY November 2015 report, 36% of Indian companies and 25% among MNCs are not compliant with the Sexual Harassment Act, 2013. The government has threatened to take stern action against employers who fail to comply with this law.", "target": "Act of the Parliament of India", "baseline_candidates": ["Act of the Parliament of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1328165", "label": "Odeon of Herodes Atticus", "source": "The Odeon of Herodes Atticus (Greek: Ωδείο Ηρώδου του Αττικού; also called Herodeion or Herodion; Greek: Ηρώδειο) is a stone Roman theatre structure located on the southwest slope of the Acropolis of Athens, Greece. The building was completed in AD 161 and then renovated in 1950.", "target": "ancient theater in Athens Acropolis", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site", "odeon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q971138", "label": "Apogonichthyoides pharaonis", "source": "Apogonichthyoides pharaonis, the Pharaoh cardinalfish, is a species of cardinalfish from the family Apogonidae which is found the western Indian Ocean and Red Sea. It is one of a group of species which have colonised the eastern Mediterranean Sea from the Red Sea via the Suez Canal, a process known as Lessepsian migration.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4812498", "label": "At the Edge of the World", "source": "At the Edge of the World is a 2008 documentary which chronicles the efforts of animal rights activist Paul Watson and 45 other volunteers, who set out in two Sea Shepherd ships to hinder the Japanese whaling fleet in the waters around Antarctica. The film won Best Environmental Film at the Vancouver International Film Festival. Director and Producer Dan Stone would later produce the first season of Whale Wars. It depicts what actually went on during this excursion, with clips of beautiful scenery, news clips, whaling in action, and life on the ship.", "target": "2008 documentary film about whaling", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4409519", "label": "Sahl Hasheesh", "source": "Sahl Hasheesh (Arabic: سهل حشيش Egyptian Arabic pronunciation: [ˈsæhle ħæˈʃiːʃ]) is a bay located on the Red Sea coast of Egypt, across from Sharm El Sheikh, approximately 18 km south of Hurghada International Airport.The Sahl Hasheesh Bay is home to a number of islands and coral reefs with diving and snorkeling. The nearby Abou Hasheesh Island is a local protectorate containing a thriving community of marine life.", "target": "human settlement in Egypt", "baseline_candidates": ["resort town", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6837130", "label": "Michelle Litjens", "source": "Michelle Litjens (born September 28, 1972) is an American politician and businesswoman.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4832913", "label": "Azriel Rosenfeld", "source": "Azriel Rosenfeld (February 19, 1931 – February 22, 2004) was an American Research Professor, a Distinguished University Professor, and Director of the Center for Automation Research at the University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, where he also held affiliate professorships in the Departments of Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, and Psychology, and a massive talmid chochom. He held a Ph.D. in mathematics from Columbia University (1957), rabbinic ordination (1952) and a Doctor of Hebrew Literature degree (1955) from Yeshiva University, honorary Doctor of Technology degrees from Linkoping University (1980) and Oulu University (1994), and an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Yeshiva University (2000); he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science degree from the Technion (2004, conferred posthumously). He was a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery (1994). Rosenfeld was a leading researcher in the field of computer image analysis. Over a period of nearly 40 years he made many fundamental and pioneering contributions to nearly every area of that field. He wrote the first textbook in the field (1969); was founding editor of its first journal, Computer Graphics and Image Processing (1972); and was co-chairman of its first international conference (1987). He published over 30 books and over 600 book chapters and journal articles, and directed nearly 60 Ph.D. dissertations. Rosenfeld's research on digital image analysis (specifically on digital geometry and digital topology, and on the accurate measurement of statistical features of digital images) in the 1960s and 1970s formed the foundation for a generation of industrial vision inspection systems that have found.", "target": "computer scientist (1931-2004)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57915865", "label": "Lindsay Ellis", "source": "Lindsay Ellis (born 1984/1985) is an American author, film critic, video essayist, and former YouTuber. Her debut novel, Axiom's End, published in July 2020, became a New York Times Best Seller.", "target": "American media critic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q206571", "label": "Bernard Lubat", "source": "Bernard Lubat (born July 12, 1945, Uzeste) is a French jazz drummer, pianist, singer, percussionist, vibraphonist, and accordionist. Lubat grew up in a musical family (his father played trumpet) and he received formal training at the Bordeaux Conservatory and the Paris Conservatory. He worked with Jef Gilson in 1964-1965 and was a vocalist with Les Double Six in 1965; later in the decade he drummed for the Paris Jazz All Stars, Roger Guerin, and the Swingle Singers. He also worked as a session musician, for Hubert Rostaing among others. He began a long-term association with Michel Portal in 1969 and played increasingly in avant-garde idioms, though he continued working in more traditional styles with Dexter Gordon, Stan Getz, and Eddy Louiss, among others. He was awarded the Prix Django Reinhardt in 1972. During his life he played with a lot of artists, jazz giants and entertainer giants. He played notably with Dalida, Aznavour, Claude François, Yves Montand, Sacha Distel, and also Salif Keita, Manu Dibango, Max Roach, René Thomas, Alby Cullaz, Michel Graillier, Jean-Luc Ponty, Sylvain Luc, Mimi Perrin, Pierre Michelot, Martial Solal, Michel Portal, Jean-François Jenny-Clark, Roland Kirk, Dexter Gordon, Bud Powell, Archie Shepp, Kenny Clarke, Cecil Taylor, Nathan Davis, Stan Getz, Didier Lockwood, Stéphane Grappelli, Hermeto Pascoal, Richard Galliano, Claude Nougaro, Joao Gilberto, Paco Séry, Eddy Louiss, Vanina Michel, Yves Carbonne, Michel Macias, François Corneloup, Eric Le Lann, Jacques di Donato, Sigfried Kessler, Daniel Humair, Christophe Monniot, Francis Bourrec, Géraldine Laurent, Henri Texier, André Ceccarelli, Luther François, Maurice Vander, Louis Sclavis, Dominique Pifarély, Marc.", "target": "French jazz musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3508605", "label": "autosomal dominant type IV Ehlers-Danlos syndrome", "source": "Sack–Barabas syndrome is an older name for the medical condition Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, vascular type. It affects the body's blood vessels and organs, making them prone to rupture.", "target": "Human disease", "baseline_candidates": ["disease (class)", "autosomal dominant disease", "rare disease", "Ehlers-Danlos syndrome"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6270797", "label": "Jon Gosselin", "source": "Jonathan Keith Gosselin (born April 1, 1977) is an American former television personality, previously known for his appearances with former wife Kate Gosselin and their eight children on the American reality TV show Jon & Kate Plus 8.", "target": "American television personality", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83193", "label": "lettuce", "source": "Lettuce (Lactuca sativa) is an annual plant of the family Asteraceae. It is most often grown as a leaf vegetable, but sometimes for its stem and seeds. Lettuce is most often used for salads, although it is also seen in other kinds of food, such as soups, sandwiches and wraps; it can also be grilled. One variety, the celtuce (asparagus lettuce), is grown for its stems, which are eaten either raw or cooked. In addition to its main use as a leafy green, it has also gathered religious and medicinal significance over centuries of human consumption. Europe and North America originally dominated the market for lettuce, but by the late 20th century the consumption of lettuce had spread throughout the world. As of 2017, world production of lettuce and chicory was 27 million tonnes, 56% of which came from China.Lettuce was originally farmed by the ancient Egyptians, who transformed it from a plant whose seeds were used to obtain oil into an important food crop raised for its succulent leaves and oil-rich seeds. Lettuce spread to the Greeks and Romans; the latter gave it the name lactuca, from which the English lettuce is derived. By 50 AD, many types were described, and lettuce appeared often in medieval writings, including several herbals. The 16th through 18th centuries saw the development of many varieties in Europe, and by the mid-18th century, cultivars were described that can still be found in gardens. Generally grown as a hardy annual, lettuce is easily cultivated, although it requires relatively low temperatures to.", "target": "plant species", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon", "leaf vegetable"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q872967", "label": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Neiva", "source": "The Roman Catholic Diocese of Neiva (Latin: Neivensis) is a diocese located in the city of Neiva in the Ecclesiastical province of Ibagué in Colombia.", "target": "diocese of the Catholic Church in Colombia", "baseline_candidates": ["diocese of the Catholic Church"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17678478", "label": "Stone circle on Withypool Hill 670m ESE of Portford Bridge", "source": "Withypool Stone Circle, also known as Withypool Hill Stone Circle, is a stone circle located on the Exmoor moorland, near the village of Withypool in the southwestern English county of Somerset. The ring is part of a tradition of stone circle construction that spread throughout much of Britain, Ireland, and Brittany during the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, over a period between 3300 and 900 BCE. The purpose of such monuments is unknown, although archaeologists speculate that the stones represented supernatural entities for the circle's builders. Many monuments were built in Exmoor during the Bronze Age, but only two stone circles survive in this area: the other is Porlock Stone Circle. The Withypool ring is located on the south-western slope of Withypool Hill, on an area of heathland. It is about 36.4 metres (119 feet 5 inches) in diameter. Around thirty small gritstones remain, although there may originally have been around 100; there are conspicuous gaps on the northern and western sides of the monument. The site was rediscovered in 1898 and surveyed by the archaeologist Harold St George Gray in 1905.", "target": "stone circle located on Exmoor", "baseline_candidates": ["stone circle", "minilith"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19843536", "label": "Cephaloziella elachista", "source": "Cephaloziella elachista is a species of liverwort belonging to the family Cephaloziellaceae.Synonyms: Cephalozia elachista (J.B.Jack) Lindb. Jungermannia elachista J.B.Jack.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21786206", "label": "Guliya", "source": "Guliya is a village in Krumovgrad Municipality, Kardzhali Province, southern Bulgaria.", "target": "village in Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54962483", "label": "Xanthorhoe pontiaria", "source": "Xanthorhoe pontiaria is a species of geometrid moth in the family Geometridae. It is found in North America.The MONA or Hodges number for Xanthorhoe pontiaria is 7379.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6429550", "label": "Konne", "source": "Konne [ˈkɔnnɛ] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Supraśl, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) east of Supraśl and 21 km (13 mi) north-east of the regional capital Białystok.", "target": "settlement in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1009479", "label": "George Kay", "source": "George Kay (21 September 1891 – 18 April 1954) was an English football player and manager of Luton Town, Southampton and Liverpool. The highlight of his playing career was when he captained West Ham United in the first FA Cup final to be played at Wembley, the White Horse Final. He was manager of Liverpool for 15 years (1936–1951) and led them to the Football League title in 1947, the first post-war football season, as well as taking them to the 1950 FA Cup Final (the club's first in thirty-six years).", "target": "Footballer and football manager (1891-1954)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97886605", "label": "Saint Mercurius slaying Julian the Apostate (St. George church, Struga)", "source": "Saint Mercurius slaying Julian the Apostate is an icon found in the St. George's church in Struga. It is the third in a row on this topic in the Ohrid region, North Macedonia.Faced with the upper part of the body, Saint Mercurius, with a cinnabar halo, triumphantly rides a white horse, who with a whirling mane lifts his hooves upon the emperor Julian \"the Apostate\". Hit by the spear, the fallen emperor can only be seen in the lower right corner. Mercurius is depicted in a leather armor with a metal gambeson; a cinnamon chlamys with pearl ornaments, tied by a large knot on the chest; a short green tunic; blue socks with black and red hinges and ocher shoes; a metal helmet with wide visor and long feather on top; a circular shield, profiled along the outer edge and a black vase motif on the white center field; a sword and a bow with an arrow in obscure fragments to the body. In the upper right corner, a Slavic inscription in three lines, written with cinnabar on the ocher background, describes the content: \"Мерькоурï[е] /велïкï [по]корьï /..с…в.ïтек\" (\"Mercurius/great conqueror/..с…в.ïтек\") In addition to the sense of composition and proportions, the iconographer's painting process is characterized by a deep dark, often black line. The image is painted on a light ocher with olive shades, cinnamon accentuated on the cheeks, nose and mouth, as well as a white weight on the face and neck. The physiognomic features of the saint with a full cheek face, curly hair up.", "target": "icon found in the \"St. George\" church in Struga, Ohrid region, North Macedonia.", "baseline_candidates": ["icon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65041423", "label": "Capital Region, Veracruz", "source": "Capital Region is one of the regions of Veracruz, Mexico.", "target": "region in Xalapa, Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2895643", "label": "Benagil", "source": "Benagil is a small Portuguese village on the Atlantic coast in the municipality of Lagoa, Algarve, in Portugal. Up to the late 20th century, the village's economy was based on ocean fishing. Now it is a tourist area with a widely used beach: Praia de Benagil. A place where there are few inhabitants but in the summer many people come from abroad. The population contains at least 60 people but this source is just an average. This village and beach are located close to the internationally famous Marinha Beach. Benagil caves are the most popular of all the maritime caves in Portugal.", "target": "beach in Lagoa, Algarve, Portugal", "baseline_candidates": ["beach", "seaside resort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49507634", "label": "Jessie M. Honeyman Memorial State Park", "source": "Jessie M. Honeyman Memorial State Park, also known simply as Honeyman State Park, is in Lane County of the U.S. state of Oregon. It lies 3 miles (5 km) south of Florence along Highway 101, the coastal highway. The 27,212-acre (11,012 ha) Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area adjoins the park to the west. Many amenities are available, including over 200 campsites, all-terrain vehicle access, swimming, fishing and sandboarding.Originally named Camp Woahink, the park was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), and was later renamed in honor Jessie M. Honeyman (1852–1948) of Portland. As president of the Oregon Roadside Council, Honeyman worked with Samuel Boardman, Oregon's first Superintendent of State Parks in the 1920s and 1930s, to preserve Oregon coastal lands. Several of the structures built by the CCC, including the camp store, three picnic shelters, and the administrative building, comprise the Jessie M. Honeyman Memorial State Park Historic District. The campground was added in the 1950s. The Lake Woahink Seaplane Base is on Woahink Lake, southeast of the park, and Camp Cleawox, a Girl Scout camp, is across Cleawox Lake and northwest of the park.", "target": "State park in Oregon, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["Oregon state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9059900", "label": "Pinedo", "source": "Pinedo is a village inside the boundaries of the Pobles del Sud district, in the municipality of Valencia. Its population consisted in 2,531 inhabitants in 2017.", "target": "location in Valencia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["pedanía"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94868306", "label": "Lambert de Briarde, Lord of Liezele", "source": "Lambert de Briarde, Lord of Liezele sometimes Lambrecht van den Bryaerde (died 10 October 1557) was a Flemish judge.", "target": "High court judge in the Southern Netherlands; diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2208305", "label": "Somerset MRT station", "source": "Somerset MRT station is an underground Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station on the North South Line in Orchard planning area, Singapore. It is one of the three stations located along the popular shopping belt, Orchard Road. The station connects to Comcentre, Singapore Power Building, Skate Park, 313@Somerset, Orchard Gateway, Orchard Central, Cathay Cineleisure Orchard, Centrepoint Shopping Centre, Mandarin Orchard, The Heeren, Faber House, Orchard Point, Peranakan Place and Emerald Hill. The section of tracks between this station and Dhoby Ghaut MRT station is the shortest between any two MRT stations on the North South Line, taking approximately 1 minute for a train to travel between these two stations.", "target": "MRT station in Singapore", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "station located underground"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q459298", "label": "Ana Ambrazienė", "source": "Ana Ambrazienė (born April 14, 1955) is a retired hurdler from Lithuania. Also known as Anna Kostecka (or Kastetskaya), she was born in Vilnius and is of Polish descent. She represented the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s. Her personal best in the women's 400 m hurdles was 54.02 at a meet in Moscow on June 11, 1983. That mark was the standing world record for over a year.", "target": "Lithuanian hurdler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13590228", "label": "Turbonilla semicostata", "source": "Turbonilla semicostata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17267218", "label": "Gebo and the Shadow", "source": "Gebo and the Shadow (Portuguese: O Gebo e a Sombra, French: Gebo et l'Ombre) is a 2012 Portuguese-French drama film directed by Manoel de Oliveira. It is based on a play by Raul Brandão. It was shown at the 69th Venice International Film Festival. The film received a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.It was the final feature film directed by de Oliveira, who was 104 years of age when the film was released, and one of the last film appearances of Jeanne Moreau before her death on 31 July 2017.", "target": "2012 film by Manoel de Oliveira", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5551065", "label": "German Committee for Freeing of Russian Jews", "source": "The German Committee for the Freeing of Russian Jews (German, 'Deutsches Komitee zur Befreiung der russischen Juden') was created in August 1914 by Max Bodenheimer with Franz Oppenheimer, Adolf Friedman and Leo Motzkin to lobby for the socio-political liberation of Jewish people living in the Russian Empire and ensure their protection from pogroms. In November 1914 it was renamed the Committee for the East.The Committee was initially supported by the German Empire but as no Jewish insurrection arose against the Russians the Germans soon lost interest.", "target": "World War I era group", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6174743", "label": "Jeff Rabhan", "source": "Jeffrey S. Rabhan (May 7, 1970) is an American music industry executive, artist manager, Arts Professor and former Chair of the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at Tisch School of the Arts, New York University (NYU). He currently serves as Executive Director of Los Angeles Academy for Artists & Music Production.", "target": "American artist manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4697533", "label": "Aintourine", "source": "Aintourine ( known also as Ain Tourine, `Aynturin, `Intawrin, or Amtourine, Arabic: عينطورين) is a village located in the Zgharta District in the North Governorate of Lebanon. It is situated in the valley of Qozhaya, the northern branch of the Valley of Qadisha. The population is mainly Maronite Christian.", "target": "human settlement in Lebanon", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q747610", "label": "West African potto", "source": "The West African potto (Perodictitus potto) is a species of nocturnal strepsirrhine primate. It is found in tropical West Africa. It is also known as Bosman's potto, after Willem Bosman, who described the species in 1704. It is the type species of the genus Perodictitus.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5293175", "label": "Don Morin", "source": "Don Albert Morin (born 1954 in Hay River, Northwest Territories) was the seventh premier of the Northwest Territories, Canada.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24897507", "label": "The Guardian of Paradise", "source": "The Guardian of Paradise (German: Der Wächter des Paradieses) is an 1889 painting by the German artist Franz Stuck. It shows a glowing angel with bird-like wings and a flaming sword. It was Stuck's first large oil painting. It was entered into the 1889 art exhibition at the Glaspalast in Munich, where it won a gold medal and 6000 Mark. The painting became a breakthrough for Stuck and made him a recognised symbolist artist.It is kept at the Museum Villa Stuck in Munich.", "target": "painting by Franz Stuck", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6386376", "label": "Kellysville", "source": "Kellysville is an unincorporated community in Mercer County, West Virginia, United States. Kellysville is 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of Oakvale. Kellysville has a post office with ZIP code 24732.", "target": "unincorporated community in Mercer County, West Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10536306", "label": "internal medicine", "source": "Internal medicine or general internal medicine (in Commonwealth nations) is the medical specialty dealing with the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of internal diseases. Doctors specializing in internal medicine are called internists, or physicians (without a modifier) in Commonwealth nations. Internists are skilled in the management of patients who have undifferentiated or multi-system disease processes. Internists care for hospitalized and ambulatory patients and may play a major role in teaching and research. Internal medicine and family medicine are often confused as equivalent in the Commonwealth nations (see below). Because internal medicine patients are often seriously ill or require complex investigations, internists do much of their work in hospitals. Internists often have subspecialty interests in diseases affecting particular organs or organ systems. Internal medicine is also a specialty within clinical pharmacy and veterinary medicine.", "target": "medical specialty dealing with the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of adult diseases", "baseline_candidates": ["medical specialty", "medicine", "academic discipline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6409705", "label": "Kim Động", "source": "Kim Động is a rural district of Hưng Yên province in the Red River Delta region of Vietnam. As of 2003 the district had a population of 123,443. The district covers an area of 115 km². The district capital lies at Lương Bằng.", "target": "rural district of Hung Yen, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6759945", "label": "Margaret Tait", "source": "Margaret Caroline Tait (11 November 1918 – 16 April 1999) was a Scottish medical doctor, filmmaker and poet.", "target": "British filmmaker, writer, poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43540057", "label": "Britt Tully", "source": "Brittany Tully (born 3 May 1993) is an Australian rules footballer and Softballer. Tully plays for the Greater Western Sydney Giants in the AFL Women's competition and retired in 2021. She was drafted by Greater Western Sydney with their tenth selection and eightieth overall in the 2016 AFL Women's draft. She made her debut in the thirty-six point loss to Adelaide at Thebarton Oval in the opening round of the 2017 season. She played every match in her debut season to finish with seven games and ranked second for tackles and third in clearances in the league. She placed 3rd in the GWS Best & Fairest Gabriel Trainor Medal in 2017.Tully won the best and fairest of AFL Canberra Women's for three consecutive years, between 2016 and 2018.Tully was listed as an inactive player for GWS for personal reasons in 2019 but has now been recontracted to resume with GWS for the 2020 season. In June 2021, she delisted herself.She plays for Boomerangs Softball Club in Canberra and played for the ACT Diamonds in the Softball Australia National Competition (Gillies Shield) from 2012 to 2016. She was an Australian Schoolgirls representative in 2010.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85573", "label": "Andreas Zelinka", "source": "Andreas Zelinka (Czech: Ondřej Zelinka; born 23 February 1802, in Vyškov, Moravia – 21 January 1868, in Vienna) served as the mayor of Vienna, Austria from 1861 to 1868.", "target": "Mayor of Vienna from 1861 to 1868", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65121484", "label": "The Greatest", "source": "\"The Greatest\" is a song by British R&B singer and actor Raleigh Ritchie, released as the third single from his debut album, You're a Man Now, Boy.", "target": "2015 single by Raleigh Ritchie", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17796389", "label": "Stephania pierrei", "source": "Stephania pierrei, also known as Stephania erecta or binh voi in Vietnamese, is a caudiciform vine native to the Indo-Chinese Peninsula. It is cultivated as a houseplant; in commerce it is typically described as Stephania erecta. It was first described by Ludwig Diels in 1910. The root or caudex is used medicinally in Vietnam; the 2006 Vietnam Red List of Medicinal Plants lists Stephania pierrei as a vulnerable species within the country.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17241482", "label": "Fouquieria burragei", "source": "Fouquieria burragei, known commonly as the gulf ocotillo or pichilingue, is a species of perennial plant in the genus Fouquieria (referred to as ocotillos), native to the gulf coast of Baja California Sur. It is a shrub to small tree distinguished by its white to rose-red flowers, which are unique among the ocotillo species on the peninsula. It is the only ocotillo endemic to the peninsula, and is threatened by invasive species (particularly feral goats), tourism, coastal development and other human activities.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7766423", "label": "The Staves", "source": "The Staves are an English indie folk trio of sisters Emily, Jessica and Camilla Staveley-Taylor from Watford, Hertfordshire, England.", "target": "English folk rock trio", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24856590", "label": "Park Hyeon-joo", "source": "Park Hyeon-joo (born 17 October 1958), a South Korean billionaire business magnate and a representative investment strategist who is the founder of Mirae Asset Financial Group which consists of asset management, investment banking, stock brokerage, life insurance, venture capital, and other financial services. Park was born in Gwangju Metropolitan City, South Jeolla Province of South Korea in 1958. He graduated from Gwangju Cheil High School in 1977, and received his bachelor's degree in business from Korea University in 1983. Park founded Mirae Asset Global Investment and Mirae Asset Capital in 1997, Mirae Asset Securities (hereinafter referred to as Mirae Asset Daewoo) in 1999, and subsequently founded Mirae Asset Venture Capital and so forth, and made Mirae Asset become Korea's leading independent financial conglomerate. Park brought the concept of the mutual fund as well as real-estate fund, and private equity fund into Korea's financial market which has changed its market dramatically from conventional to innovation. Park is a prominent philanthropist, pledging to donate all his dividend payouts of shares to Mirae Asset Park Hyeon Joo Foundation, founded in 2000 with his own wealth, since 2010. The foundation has been providing scholarships to underprivileged students and other outreach programs which have accumulated to around 270,000 students. (as of February 2019) Park has been appointed as Global Investment Strategy Officer (GISO) of Mirae Asset Financial Group in order to focus on global business and stepped down as a chairman of Mirae Asset Daewoo as of May 23, 2018. The successful story of Mirae Asset Financial Group, led by Park,.", "target": "South Korean magnate", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1201876", "label": "Open Library", "source": "Open Library is an online project intended to create \"one web page for every book ever published\". Created by Aaron Swartz, Brewster Kahle, Alexis Rossi, Anand Chitipothu, and Rebecca Malamud, Open Library is a project of the Internet Archive, a nonprofit organization. It has been funded in part by grants from the California State Library and the Kahle/Austin Foundation. Open Library provides online digital copies in multiple formats, created from images of many public domain, out-of-print, and in-print books.", "target": "online project for book data of the Internet Archive", "baseline_candidates": ["digital library", "website", "online database", "free software", "library"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14249960", "label": "Acrocera obsoleta", "source": "Acrocera obsoleta is a species of small-headed flies in the family Acroceridae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1742988", "label": "Zu den heiligen Engeln", "source": "Zu den heiligen Engeln (To the Holy Angels) is a Catholic parish and church in Hanover-Kirchrode, Lower Saxony, Germany. The church was built in 1964 on a design by Josef Bieling, and was remodeled in 2014. It is now the parish church of a larger parish, serving the district Kirchrode-Bemerode-Wülferode. It belongs to the deanery of Hanover and the Diocese of Hildesheim. The church is dedicated to the angels. In 1977, the church served for a pilot project by the ZDF for nation-wide regular live broadcasts of services on television. The parish collaborates in ecumenical partnership with Protestant parishes in the neighbourhood. It was certified for ecological awareness and management.", "target": "Catholic parish church", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10282488", "label": "1993 UEFA Champions League Final", "source": "The 1993 UEFA Champions League Final was a football match between French club Marseille and Italian club Milan, played on 26 May 1993 at the Olympiastadion in Munich. The final, which followed the second-ever UEFA Champions League group stage, saw Ivorian-born Marseille defender Basile Boli score the only goal of the match in the 43rd minute with a header to give l'OM their first European Cup title. It was the first time a French team had won the European Cup. No other French side – apart from Monaco-based AS Monaco, who play in the French league system – would reach the final until Paris Saint-Germain in 2020. Marseille and their club president Bernard Tapie would later be found to have been involved in a match-fixing scandal during the 1992–93 season (in which Marseille allegedly paid Valenciennes to lose a match), which saw them relegated to Division 2 and banned from participation in European football for the following season. As the scandal affected only French league matches, Marseille's status as 1993 European champion was not affected. The first Champions League final turned out to be the last game of Milan's highly accomplished but injury-prone Dutch forward Marco van Basten, who was 28 at the time; having been subbed off in the 86th minute due to fatigue and yet another ankle injury, he would spend the next two years in recovery before announcing his retirement in August 1995.", "target": "association football match", "baseline_candidates": ["UEFA Champions League final"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4050670", "label": "Take Love Easy", "source": "Take Love Easy is an album by the jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald with guitarist Joe Pass, released in 1974.", "target": "album by Ella Fitzgerald", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2491470", "label": "Ekmania", "source": "Ekmania is a genus of flowering plants in the daisy family. It contains only one known species, Ekmania lepidota, endemic to Cuba.The genus is named in honor of botanist Erik L. Ekman of Harvard University.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26656697", "label": "St Winefride Church, South Wimbledon", "source": "St Winefride Church is Roman Catholic Parish church in South Wimbledon in the London Borough of Merton. It was founded as a chapel of ease of Sacred Heart Church, Wimbledon by the Society of Jesus in 1905. It is Grade II listed building and was designed by Frederick Walters.", "target": "grade II listed church in the United kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86012704", "label": "Victoria Hammah", "source": "Victoria Lakshmi Hamah is a National Democratic Congress politician in Ghana.", "target": "Ghanaian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q272585", "label": "Barbara Pym", "source": "Barbara Mary Crampton Pym FRSL (2 June 1913 – 11 January 1980) was an English novelist. In the 1950s she published a series of social comedies, of which the best known are Excellent Women (1952) and A Glass of Blessings (1958). In 1977 her career was revived when the critic Lord David Cecil and the poet Philip Larkin both nominated her as the most under-rated writer of the century. Her novel Quartet in Autumn (1977) was nominated for the Booker Prize that year, and she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.", "target": "British writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14776627", "label": "Ieva Kibirkštis", "source": "Ieva Melanija Kibirkštis (born 2 April 1991) is a Canadian-raised Lithuanian football manager and a former player who played as a defender. She has been a member of the Lithuania women's national team.", "target": "Lithuanian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62598138", "label": "The Four Brasil (season 1)", "source": "The first season of The Four Brasil, hosted by Xuxa Meneghel and judged by Aline Wirley, João Marcello Bôscoli and Leo Chaves, premiered Wednesday, February 6, 2019 at 10:30 p.m. (BRT / AMT) on RecordTV. The winner is awarded a R$300.000 cash prize.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24011104", "label": "Rillo de Gallo", "source": "Rillo de Gallo is a municipality located in the province of Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 74 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q697321", "label": "Arnsberg", "source": "Arnsberg is a mountain in the Bavarian part of the Rhön Mountains, Germany.", "target": "mountain in Bavaria, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1449404", "label": "Revelation", "source": "Revelation is the thirteenth studio album by American rock band Journey, and their first with lead singer Arnel Pineda. It features 11 new songs (\"Faith in the Heartland\" was previously recorded with Steve Augeri), 11 re-recorded greatest hits (all featuring Pineda) and a DVD (North American version only) featuring the current lineup's March 8, 2008 concert in Las Vegas, Nevada. Three singles penned by Neal Schon and Jonathan Cain were released to radio: the distinctively Journey-sounding \"Never Walk Away,\" \"Where Did I Lose Your Love,\" and the power ballad \"After All These Years\". \"Where Did I Lose Your Love\" and \"After All These Years\" both found success on the adult contemporary charts; \"Where Did I Lose Your Love\" peaked at No. 19, while \"After All These Years\" peaked at No. 9 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart and stayed on the charts for over 23 weeks. On May 14, 2008, MelodicRock.com reported that Journey and Frontiers Records agreed to add \"an exclusive original bonus track, \"Let It Take You Back\", a mid-tempo rocker, to the European release to close the album.", "target": "album by Journey", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17004115", "label": "Corta Jaca", "source": "Corta Jaca is a figure from the Bronze level syllabus of the ballroom Samba dance, danced in closed position. It may also be used in other dances, such as Cumbia or Balboa.", "target": "step from the syllabus of the International Style ballroom samba", "baseline_candidates": ["dance move"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5355115", "label": "Benambra", "source": "The electoral district of Benambra is one of the electoral districts of Victoria, Australia, for the Victorian Legislative Assembly. It covers an area of 10,037 square kilometres (3,875 sq mi) in north-eastern Victoria. The largest settlement is the city of Wodonga. Benambra also includes the towns towns of Baranduda, Barnawartha, Beechworth, Chiltern, Corryong, Eskdale, Kiewa, Mitta Mitta, Mount Beauty, Rutherglen, Tallangatta, Tangambalanga, Tawonga, Wahgunyah, and Yackandandah. It lies in the Northern Victoria Region of the upper house, the Legislative Council.The district of Benambra was created by the Electoral Act Amendment Act 1876. taking effect at the 1877 elections. The district has been held by various conservative parties unbroken since 1877, with the Liberal Party taking the seat from the Nationals in 1976 and retaining it since. The district of Benambra is named after Benambra, a small town 28km north of Omeo in Gippsland. The town of Benambra is not actually located in the electoral district. Benambra is thought to be Aboriginal in origin meaning hills with big trees or men spearing eels.", "target": "state electoral district of Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["electoral district of Victoria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47508547", "label": "Saint Vincent and the Grenadines at the 2018 Commonwealth Games", "source": "Saint Vincent and the Grenadines competed at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in the Gold Coast, Australia from April 4 to April 15, 2018.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2734685", "label": "Taking Chances", "source": "\"Taking Chances\" is a song recorded by Canadian singer Celine Dion, taken from her tenth English-language studio album of the same name (2007). It was written by Kara DioGuardi and former Eurythmics member, Dave Stewart for their band named Platinum Weird. The song was supposed to be released as a single in February 2007 from their unreleased self-titled album. However, after DioGuardi and Stewart recorded it, they played the track for Dion's husband René Angélil, who loved it and she recorded it. It was released as the first single from Taking Chances in September 2007. \"Taking Chances\" is a pop ballad with a soft rock finish. Lyrically, it is about trusting and baring our souls to each other and committing to making something special. The line, \"So talk to me, like lovers do\" came from the Eurythmics song \"Here Comes the Rain Again.\" The song received positive reviews from music critics, who praised Dion for taking risks and called it a hopeful and heartfelt song. The song was a success around the world, peaking inside the top ten in Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Italy and Switzerland. It also peaked at number 40 on the UK Singles Chart, while on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, it reached number 54. It also topped the Hot Dance Club Play chart. The song was nominated for the Single of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2009. \"Taking Chances\" was covered on Fox's hit TV show Glee by Lea Michele's character Rachel Berry. Her version peaked at number 71 on.", "target": "2007 single by Celine Dion", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97250239", "label": "Swami Akhandananda", "source": "Swami Akhandananda (1864–1937) was a swami and direct disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, a 19th-century mystic. He was the third president of the Ramakrishna Mission.", "target": "Hindu religious leader", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7637054", "label": "Sumburgh Head Lighthouse", "source": "Sumburgh Head Lighthouse is a lighthouse on Sumburgh Head at the southern tip of the Mainland of Shetland.", "target": "lighthouse at Sumburgh Head on the mainland of Shetland, Shetland Islands, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["lighthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85845774", "label": "Dance This Mess Around", "source": "\"Dance This Mess Around\" is a song by American new wave band The B-52's. It was released in 1979, as the third and final single from their self-titled debut album. The song features Cindy Wilson on lead vocals, as well as Fred Schneider and Kate Pierson, and has become a live favorite, even 40 years after its release. It was heard once in Alex Strangelove.", "target": "1979 single by the B-52's", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5385132", "label": "Erbessa longiplaga", "source": "Erbessa longiplaga is a moth of the family Notodontidae first described by William Warren in 1907. It is found in Brazil.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6551833", "label": "Linda Mellerick", "source": "Linda Mellerick is a former camogie player selected on the camogie team of the century in 2004, and winner of All Ireland medals in 1992, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2002.", "target": "Camogie player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10773534", "label": "Jackson Township", "source": "Jackson Township is a township in Daviess County, in the U.S. state of Missouri.Jackson Township has the name of President Andrew Jackson.", "target": "township in Daviess County, Missouri, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["civil township", "township of Missouri"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10884649", "label": "Ren Huan", "source": "Ren Huan (Chinese: 任圜; died 927) was a general and official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period state Later Tang (and Later Tang's predecessor state Jin). He served as a chancellor during the reign of Later Tang's second emperor Li Siyuan, but became embroiled in a power struggle with Li Siyuan's powerful chief of staff An Chonghui. He eventually was forced into retirement, but An eventually had Li Siyuan order him to commit suicide.", "target": "Chinese mayor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39474624", "label": "Mark Blatchly", "source": "Mark Laurence James Blatchly (born 1960) is an English organist and composer.Born in Shepton Mallet, Blatchly was an organ scholar at St Paul's Cathedral. He was assistant organist at Gloucester Cathedral, and organist at St Edmundsbury Cathedral, as well as a music teacher and organist at Charterhouse until his retirement in 2018. His best known work is a setting of For the Fallen, which has been recorded by several cathedral choirs for Remembrance services. As organist, he has been recorded both in solo roles and as part of larger ensembles.", "target": "English organist and composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2654713", "label": "Hillesden", "source": "Hillesden is a village and civil parish in north-west Buckinghamshire, England, about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Buckingham. The village name is Anglo-Saxon in origin, and means 'Hild's hill'. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the village was recorded as Ilesdone, though earlier it had been referred to as Hildesdun. Hillesden is split up into three areas; Church End, The Orchard and The Barracks. Church End is situated at the top of the hill and surrounds the church. The Orchard consists of Orchard Cottages and Orchard View, whilst The Barracks are situated across from Great Ground. The 15th century parish church in Hillesden is dedicated to All Saints and is a grade I listed building. The tithes of the church were anciently collected by Christ Church, Oxford. The Irish judge Godfrey Boate, subject of a famous mocking elegy by Jonathan Swift, is buried here (he had married into the Dentons, the local landowning family). Hillesden was the home of the Denton family. During the English Civil War the manor house at Hillesden, was owned by Sir Alexander Denton, Member of Parliament for Buckingham. Denton was a Royalist and his house at Hillesden became a focal point in the conflict. In January 1644 Parliamentary forces occupied Hillesden House but they were ejected. In early February Colonel William Smith garrisoned Hillesden House with about 260 men to support the King at Oxford. The house was occupied by many of the Denton family and some of the Verney family and Sir Alexander also arrived at the house by.", "target": "village in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1442723", "label": "Francus", "source": "Francus is a mythological figure of Merovingian scholars which referred to a legendary eponymous king of the Franks, a descendant of the Trojans, founder of the Merovingian dynasty and forefather of Charlemagne. In the Renaissance, Francus was generally considered to be another name for the Trojan Astyanax (son of Hector) saved from the destruction of Troy. He is not considered to be historical, but in fact an attempt by medieval and Renaissance chroniclers to model the founding of France upon the same illustrious tradition as that used by Virgil in his Aeneid (which had Rome founded by the Trojan Aeneas).The 7th century Chronicle of Fredegar contains the oldest mention of a medieval legend thus linking the Franks to the Trojans. The Carolingian Liber historiae Francorum elaborates new details, and the tradition continued to be elaborated throughout the Middle Ages, when it was taken seriously as genealogy and became a \"veritable form of ethnic consciousness\".The 8th-century Historia Brittonum, borrowing from the 6th-century Frankish Table of Nations, makes mention of Francus as one of the four sons of Hisicion (Francus, Romanus, Alamanus, and Brutus), grandsons of Alanus, the first man to live in Europe.The Grandes Chroniques de France (13th - 15th centuries), a vast compilation of historic material, make reference of the Trojan origins of the French dynasty.Johannes Trithemius' De origine gentis Francorum compendium (1514) describes the Franks as originally Trojans (called \"Sicambers\" or \"Sicambrians\") after the fall of Troy who came into Gaul after being forced out of the area around the mouth of the Danube by.", "target": "legendary figure, eponymous king of the Franks", "baseline_candidates": ["legendary figure", "fictional human formerly considered to be historical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12270423", "label": "1952 British Grand Prix", "source": "The 1952 British Grand Prix was a Formula Two race held on 19 July 1952 at Silverstone Circuit. It was race 5 of 8 in the 1952 World Championship of Drivers, in which each Grand Prix was run to Formula Two rules rather than the Formula One regulations normally used. New pit facilities had been built on the straight between Woodcote and Copse corners; the original pits were located between Abbey and Woodcote.", "target": "Formula One motor race held in 1952", "baseline_candidates": ["British Grand Prix"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16239335", "label": "John Connelly", "source": "John Connelly was an English professional footballer who played as an inside left.", "target": "British association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5835441", "label": "Zeynalu, Shahin Dezh", "source": "Zeynalu (Persian: زينالو, also Romanized as Zeynālū) is a village in Chaharduli Rural District, Keshavarz District, Shahin Dezh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 142, in 28 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7842432", "label": "Trinidad and Tobago at the 1991 Pan American Games", "source": "The 11th Pan American Games were held in Havana, Cuba from August 2 to August 18, 1991.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3402776", "label": "Pretty Polly Stakes", "source": "The Pretty Polly Stakes is a Group 1 flat horse race in Ireland open to thoroughbred fillies and mares aged three years or older. It is run at the Curragh over a distance of 1 mile and 2 furlongs (2,012 metres), and it is scheduled to take place each year in late June or early July.", "target": "horse race", "baseline_candidates": ["horse race"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6729816", "label": "Magdalemitra gilesorum", "source": "Magdalemitra gilesorum is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Volutomitridae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94849349", "label": "Sidney Gerald Burrard", "source": "Sir Sidney Gerald Burrard, 7th Baronet, (12 August 1860 – 16 March 1943) was a British army officer who served as Surveyor General of India and played a major role in the Great Trigonometrical Survey's work in the Himalayas and identified the source of errors resulting from the displacement of the plumbline by the mountains.", "target": "Surveyor General of India", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2005798", "label": "Nuytsia", "source": "Nuytsia is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the Western Australian Herbarium. It publishes papers on systematic botany, giving preference to papers related to the flora of Western Australia. Nearly twenty percent of Western Australia's plant taxa have been published in Nuytsia. The journal was established in 1970 and has appeared irregularly since. The editor-in-chief is Kevin Thiele. Nuytsia is named after the monospecific genus Nuytsia, whose only species is Nuytsia floribunda, the Western Australian Christmas tree. Occasionally, the journal has published special issues, such as an issue in 2007 substantially expanding described species from Western Australia.", "target": "Western Australian journal of systematic botany", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q776925", "label": "Mohamed Abdel-Shafy", "source": "Mohamed Sayed Abdel Shafy (Arabic: محمد سيد عبد الشافي; born 1 July 1985) is an Egyptian professional footballer who plays as a left back for Egyptian Premier League club Zamalek and the Egypt national team.", "target": "Egyptian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22084847", "label": "Schiaparelli EDM lander", "source": "Schiaparelli EDM (Italian: [skjapaˈrɛlli]) was a failed Entry, Descent, and Landing Demonstrator Module (EDM) of the ExoMars programme—a joint mission of the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Russian Space Agency Roscosmos. It was built in Italy and was intended to test technology for future soft landings on the surface of Mars. It also had a limited but focused science payload that would have measured atmospheric electricity on Mars and local meteorological conditions.Launched together with the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) on 14 March 2016, Schiaparelli attempted a landing on 19 October 2016. Telemetry signals from Schiaparelli, monitored in real time by the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope in India (and confirmed by Mars Express), were lost about one minute from the surface during the final landing stages. On 21 October 2016, NASA released an image by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter showing what appears to be the lander's crash site. The telemetry data accumulated and relayed by ESA's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter and Mars Express were used to investigate the failure modes of the landing technology employed.", "target": "ExoMars 2016 lander module", "baseline_candidates": ["planetary probe", "lander"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12200285", "label": "Boeing 717", "source": "The Boeing 717 is an American twin-engine, single-aisle jet airliner, developed for the 100-seat market. The five-abreast airliner was designed and originally marketed by McDonnell Douglas as the MD-95, a derivative of the DC-9 family. Capable of seating up to 134 passengers, the 717 has a design range of 2,060 nautical miles (3,820 km). It is powered by two Rolls-Royce BR715 turbofan engines mounted at the rear of the fuselage. The first order for the airliner was placed with McDonnell Douglas in October 1995 by ValuJet Airlines (later AirTran Airways). With McDonnell Douglas and Boeing merging in 1997 prior to production, the airliner entered service in 1999 as the Boeing 717. Production of the Boeing 717 ceased in May 2006 after 156 were built. As of July 2018, 148 Boeing 717 aircraft were still in service.", "target": "1998 airliner series by Boeing", "baseline_candidates": ["McDonnell Douglas DC-9", "aircraft family", "airliner"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18637934", "label": "Mikhael Subotzky", "source": "Mikhael Subotzky (born Cape Town, South Africa, 1981) is a South African artist based in Johannesburg. His installation, film, video and photographic work have been exhibited widely in museums and galleries, and received awards including the KLM Paul Huf Award, W. Eugene Smith Grant, Oskar Barnack Award and the Discovery Award at Rencontres d'Arles. He has published the books Beaufort West (2008), Retinal Shift (2012) and, with Patrick Waterhouse, Ponte City (2014). Subotzky is a member of Magnum Photos.", "target": "South African artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6002963", "label": "Imai Sōkyū", "source": "Imai Sōkyū (今井 宗久, 1520 – 31 August 1593) was an important 16th century merchant in the Japanese port town of Sakai, and a master of the tea ceremony. His yagō was Naya.", "target": "samurai", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3666677", "label": "Charlie Quintana", "source": "Gonzalo Quintana III (January 29, 1962 – March 12, 2018), also known as Charlie Quintana or Chalo, was an American rock and punk drummer. He is best known as a founding member of the band The Plugz and as the drummer for the punk rock band Social Distortion from 2000 to 2009.", "target": "American drummer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24697184", "label": "Bight of Benin", "source": "The Bight of Benin or Bay of Benin is a bight in the Gulf of Guinea area on the western African coast.", "target": "bay", "baseline_candidates": ["bay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55974069", "label": "5 August 2018 Lombok earthquake", "source": "On 5 August 2018, a destructive and shallow earthquake measuring Mw 6.9 (ML 7.0 according to BMKG) struck the island of Lombok, Indonesia. It was the main shock following its foreshock, a nearby Mw 6.4 earthquake on 29 July. It was followed by a nearby 6.9 earthquake on 19 August 2018. The epicentre was located inland, near Loloan Village in North Lombok Regency. The fault rupture spread to the north and reached the sea, creating tsunamis. Severe shaking was reported throughout the entire island, while strong shaking was reported on the neighboring islands of Bali and Sumbawa. Widespread damage was reported in Lombok and Bali. Officials stated that at least 80% of structures in North Lombok were damaged or destroyed. In the aftermath of the sequence of earthquakes in August, a total of 563 people were confirmed killed while more than 1,000 were confirmed injured. More than 417,000 people were displaced.This earthquake is the largest and the strongest earthquake to have hit Lombok in recorded history. With more than 560 deaths, it is also the deadliest earthquake in the Lesser Sunda Islands since the 1992 Flores earthquake and tsunami. The earthquake later caused chains of earthquakes in West Nusa Tenggara with significant magnitude, which was deemed by officials as a rare event.", "target": "earthquake in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["earthquake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4784137", "label": "Aransas City, Texas", "source": "Aransas City is a ghost town on the tip of the Live Oak Peninsula in Aransas County, Texas near present-day Fulton. It served as a port on Aransas Bay at its confluence with Copano Bay during the 1830s and 1840s, but declined following its loss of a Republic of Texas customhouse to the rival port of Lamar.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["ghost town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13904453", "label": "Notonomus marginatus", "source": "Notonomus marginatus is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Pterostichinae. It was described by Castelnau in 1840.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6061129", "label": "Invisible Agent", "source": "Invisible Agent is a long-standing Irish record label, founded in Dublin in 2000. Founded by Warren Daly and Donard McCabe the label has released music from such notable artists as Decal, Chymera, Eomac, Ryan Van Winkle, Corrugated Tunnel, and Ikeaboy. Remix artists include renowned Electro producer Sir Real, Techno legend David Tarrida, Ambient artists Porya Hatami and Cousin Silas.", "target": "record label", "baseline_candidates": ["record label"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5312062", "label": "Dudleya palmeri", "source": "Dudleya palmeri is a species of succulent plant in the family Crassulaceae known by the common name Palmer's liveforever. This Dudleya is endemic to California where it grows along the coast. It is characterized by orange to red over yellow or pink flowers. It is a polyploid species that closely resembles Dudleya lanceolata but has a coastal habit, and hybridizes with Dudleya caespitosa and Dudleya cymosa.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5185463", "label": "Crimebuster", "source": "Crimebuster (Chuck Chandler) is a fictional boy hero, appearing as the lead feature in Boy Comics in the 1940s and 1950s. Dressed in a hockey uniform and cape, and accompanied by a performing monkey named Squeeks, he fights crime to avenge his parents' deaths. He is described by Joe Brancetelli in The World Encyclopedia of Comics as \"a hero, yes, but first a boy... arguably the best-handled boy's adventure feature ever to appear in comics.\" Some sources credit the character solely to Charles Biro; others co-credit Bob Wood, co-credited on the first cover of the new Boy Comics title.", "target": "comic book hero", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14235940", "label": "Tabuaeran", "source": "Tabuaeran, also known as Fanning Island, is an atoll that is part of the Line Islands of the central Pacific Ocean and part of Kiribati. The land area is 33.73 square kilometres (13.02 square miles), and the population in 2015 was 2,315. The maximum elevation is about 3 m (10 ft) above high tide. The lagoon has an area of 110 square kilometres (42 square miles). The deepest water in the lagoon is about 15 metres (49 feet), but most of it is very shallow.", "target": "atoll in Kiribati", "baseline_candidates": ["atoll"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21572869", "label": "Shehzad Butt", "source": "Shehzad Butt (born 4 February 1974) is a Pakistani first-class cricketer who played for Lahore cricket team.", "target": "Pakistani cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15854677", "label": "William M. Lindsay", "source": "William M. Lindsay (24 July 1880 – 22 February 1957) was an American politician. Between 1937 and 1939 he served as Lieutenant Governor of Kansas.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3337850", "label": "Neilson Dairy", "source": "William Neilson Dairy Limited is a Canadian dairy company owned by Saputo Inc. The company is based in Toronto, Ontario. In the United States, its products are sold under the name Neilson. Its products are sold at Loblaws, Real Canadian Superstore, Giant Tiger, and Fortinos, among others.", "target": "Canadian dairy company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business", "dairy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3336604", "label": "Nathalie Handal", "source": "Nathalie Handal (Arabic: نتالي حنظل) is an American poet, writer and educator, described as a “contemporary Orpheus.” A New Yorker of Mediterranean roots, she has published seven prize-winning collections, including Life in a Country Album. She is praised for her “diverse, and innovative body of work.”.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2080507", "label": "Alfredo Alcón", "source": "Alfredo Félix Alcón (Spanish pronunciation: [alˈfɾeðo alˈkon]; 3 March 1930 – 11 April 2014) was an Argentine theatre and film actor born in Buenos Aires. Widely regarded as one of the best and most important Argentine actors of the 20th century.He worked in more than 50 movies since his first one, El amor nunca muere (Love Never Dies), in 1955, and received many recognitions for his work: among others, the Silver Condor, the Martin Fierro Award and the 1981 Diamond Konex Award.He died on April 11, 2014 at the age of 84.", "target": "Argentine theatre and film actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23131363", "label": "Empire", "source": "Empire is a 1978 graphic novel written by Samuel R. Delany and illustrated by Howard Chaykin.", "target": "book by Samuel R. Delany", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5388355", "label": "Erie West Subdivision", "source": "The Erie West Subdivision is a railroad line owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. states of Pennsylvania and Ohio. The line runs from Erie, Pennsylvania, southwest along the shore of Lake Erie to Cleveland, Ohio, along the former New York Central Railroad main line. At its east end (west of downtown Erie), the Erie West Subdivision becomes the Lake Shore Subdivision; at its west end (east of downtown Cleveland), it becomes the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision. This subdivision is also known as the Great Lakes Service Lane. Amtrak's Lake Shore Limited and Capitol Limited use the Erie West Subdivision.", "target": "rail line in Pennsylvania and Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34850231", "label": "Sparta Mountains", "source": "The Sparta Mountains are a range of the New York-New Jersey Highlands region of the Appalachian Mountains. The summit, reaching a height of 1,230 feet (375 metres), lies within Sussex County, New Jersey.", "target": "mountain range in Sussex County, New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17421390", "label": "Sir Clement Thornton Hallam", "source": "Sir Clement Thornton Hallam (4 January 1891 – 17 March 1965) was solicitor to the General Post Office.", "target": "British civil servant (1891-1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14084104", "label": "Peter Van Den Abeele", "source": "Peter Van Den Abeele (born 1 May 1966) is a Belgian cyclist. He competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Belgian cyclo-cross cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2267246", "label": "Shiz", "source": "In the Book of Mormon, Shiz () is a Jaredite military leader who was beheaded by Coriantumr. Since the nineteenth century, the account of Shiz's death in the Book of Ether has been claimed by critics to be an error in the Book of Mormon. However, Mormon apologists argue that the statement may be physiologically accurate.", "target": "Jaredite military leader", "baseline_candidates": ["fictional character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25647545", "label": "Takleh-ye Abbasabad-e Sofla", "source": "Takleh-ye Abbasabad-e Sofla (Persian: تكله عباس ابادسفلي, also Romanized as Takleh-ye ‘Abbāsābād-e Soflá; also known as Ḩājj Khosrow and Qeshlāq-e Ḩājj Khosrow) is a village in Tazeh Kand Rural District, Tazeh Kand District, Parsabad County, Ardabil Province, Iran. During the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.", "target": "village in Ardabil, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5623423", "label": "Gwen Gordy Fuqua", "source": "Gwen Fuqua (born Gwendolyn Gordy; November 26, 1927 – November 8, 1999) was an American businesswoman, songwriter and composer, most notably writing hit songs such as \"Lonely Teardrops\", \"All I Could Do Was Cry\" and \"Distant Lover\". She acquired her full name after marrying Harvey Fuqua and kept the name after their divorce.", "target": "American businesswoman and musician (1927-1999)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5923973", "label": "JF Villarreal", "source": "JF Villarreal is a census-designated place (CDP) in Starr County, Texas, United States. It is a new CDP formed from part of the North Escobares CDP prior to the 2010 census with a population of 104.", "target": "human settlement in Texas, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5783802", "label": "Fardabad", "source": "Fardabad (Persian: فرداباد, also Romanized as Fardābād; also known as Pardābād) is a village in Jaru Rural District, Palangabad District, Eshtehard County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 239, in 60 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4910270", "label": "Bill Moss, Jr.", "source": "Bill Moss Jr. (born 1971 in Detroit, Michigan, United States) is an American gospel singer-songwriter, composer, arranger, and producer.", "target": "Gospel artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96409020", "label": "The House Between the Worlds", "source": "The House Between the Worlds is a novel by Marion Zimmer Bradley published in 1981.", "target": "1981 novel by Marion Zimmer Bradley", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16848852", "label": "Syed Ata-ul-Muhaimin Bukhari", "source": "Syed Ata-ul-Muhaimin Bukhari (1 July 1944 – 8 February 2021) (سید عطاء المہیمن بخاری ) was a Pakistani politico-religious leader, President of Majlis-e-Ahrar-ul-Islam and the son of Syed Ata Ullah Shah Bukhari.", "target": "Pakistani politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q458282", "label": "Yuriy Lutsenko", "source": "Yuriy Vitaliyovych Lutsenko (Ukrainian: Юрій Віталійович Луценко; born 14 December 1964) is a Ukrainian politician whose most recent post was Prosecutor General of Ukraine from 12 May 2016 until 29 August 2019.Lutsenko is a former Minister of Internal Affairs. He occupied this post in the two cabinets of Yulia Tymoshenko and in cabinets of Yuriy Yekhanurov, and Viktor Yanukovych. The Ministry of Internal Affairs is the Ukrainian police authority, and Lutsenko became the first civilian minister in February 2005. Lutsenko is also a former leader of the Bloc of Petro Poroshenko party and a former leader of its faction in parliament.In 2010, Lutsenko was charged with abuse of office and forgery by Prosecutor General of Ukraine Viktor Pshonka, in what was widely viewed as political retaliation for having investigated one of Yanukovych's cabinet members in four years earlier. In 2012, he was sentenced to four years in prison but was pardoned by Yanukovych in 2013. In 2016, he became Ukraine's chief prosecutor under President Petro Poroshenko, during which time he was criticized for undermining Ukraine's newly established National Anti-Corruption Bureau. While in office, Lutsenko a became central figure in the Trump–Ukraine scandal, in which he worked with U.S. President Donald Trump to try to find incriminating information on one of Trump's political rivals, Joe Biden. He was dismissed by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in 2019; Trump later tried unsuccessfully to pressure Zelenskyy to reinstate him.", "target": "Ukrainian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1565304", "label": "HMS Sahib", "source": "HMS Sahib was a third-batch S-class submarine built for the Royal Navy during the Second World War. She was launched on 19 January 1942 and commissioned on 13 May 1942. She was the only British naval vessel to bear the name Sahib. After an initial patrol in the Arctic Ocean off Norway, Sahib sailed to Gibraltar, then patrolled the Alboran Sea, sinking one ship and damaging another. Sahib then transited to Malta, from which she conducted three war patrols. On the second one, Sahib sank the Italian transport SS Scillin, which was transporting Allied prisoners of war; Scillin sank with the loss of 787 men. On her next patrol, Sahib sank a large Italian merchant ship, then damaged a coastal trading vessel. The submarine was then assigned to join another submarine flotilla and operated from Algiers in French North Africa. In her next patrols, Sahib sank the German submarine U-301, two Italian merchant ships, and two small sailing vessels. On 24 April 1943, Sahib sank a heavily protected Italian merchant; however, she was then attacked with depth charges and forced to surface. The crew of Sahib were evacuated and rescued with only one casualty by the Italian ships while the submarine was scuttled and sank.", "target": "submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49347875", "label": "Clarksville", "source": "Clarksville is a borough in Greene County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 230 at the 2010 census.", "target": "borough of Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["borough of Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11913353", "label": "Caecilia Metella", "source": "Caecilia Metella was daughter of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer and Clodia. She was an infamous woman in Rome during the late Republic and a celebrity of sorts.", "target": "daughter of Clodia and Metellus", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25842429", "label": "Teresa Giudice", "source": "Teresa Giudice ( JOO-dee-chay, Italian: [ˈdʒudiːtʃe]; née Gorga; born May 18, 1972) is an American television personality best known for starring in The Real Housewives of New Jersey. Besides appearing on the show, Giudice wrote multiple New York Times bestseller cookbooks and was featured on Donald Trump's The Celebrity Apprentice 5 (2012). On December 23, 2015, she was released from prison after serving 11 months of a 15-month sentence for fraud, while her husband and four daughters resided in the Towaco section of Montville, New Jersey. She is known for her extravagant lifestyle and highly publicized financial and legal troubles leading up to her prison sentence. Her husband, born Giuseppe but called Joe, began his 41-month sentence on March 23, 2016.", "target": "American reality show participant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17623872", "label": "2015 Argentine Primera División", "source": "The 2015 Argentine Primera División or Torneo de Primera División 2015 \"Julio H. Grondona\" was the 125th season of top-flight professional football in Argentina. The season began on February 13 and ended on December 6. Thirty teams competed in the league, twenty returning from the 2014 Torneo de Transición and ten promoted from the 2014 Primera B Nacional (Aldosivi, Argentinos Juniors, Colón, Crucero del Norte, Huracán, Nueva Chicago, San Martín (SJ), Sarmiento, Temperley and Unión). No teams were relegated to the Primera B Nacional Championship in the previous tournament.", "target": "125th season of top-tier football league in Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5890593", "label": "Hometown, My Town", "source": "Hometown, My Town is an album by American singer Tony Bennett. It was originally recorded in 1958 and released in 1959 on Columbia as CL 1301.", "target": "album by Tony Bennett", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19884561", "label": "Kolokolnitsa", "source": "Kolokolnitsa (Russian: Колокольница) is a rural locality (a village) in Aserkhovskoye Rural Settlement, Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 17 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6305052", "label": "Juha Sihvola", "source": "Juha Sihvola (29 August 1957, Sippola – 14 June 2012, Helsinki) was a Finnish philosopher and historian. He was a university professor of general history from 2000, and part of The Academy of Finland's Centre of Excellence program upon Philosophical Psychology, Morality and Politics, serving as the Deputy Director of the Centre of Excellence from 2008. In the years 2004–2009, he was the Director of Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies.", "target": "Finnish historian and philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q625843", "label": "Chung Ho-yong", "source": "General Chung Ho-yong (Korean: 정호용; Hanja: 鄭鎬溶; born 10 September 1932) is a South Korean politician and army general, who was held the positions of minister of the interior and later minister of defense. He is considered as one of the best friends of Chun Doo-hwan and Roh Tae-woo, who both served as President of South Korea.", "target": "General, Interior Minister and Military Minister of South Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q270307", "label": "Santo Stefano di Magra", "source": "Santo Stefano di Magra (Ligurian: San Steva, Lunigiano Emilian: Sa' Steu) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of La Spezia in the Italian region Liguria, located about 80 kilometres (50 mi) southeast of Genoa and about 11 kilometres (7 mi) northeast of La Spezia. It is located near the confluence of torrent Vara into the Magra river. It is part of the Montemarcello-Magra Natural Regional Park. It has an entrance and exit to the toll-paying \"Autostrada\" The municipality of Santo Stefano di Magra contains the frazioni (subdivisions, mainly villages and hamlets) Ponzano Magra, Ponzano Belaso, and Ponzano Superiore. Santo Stefano di Magra borders the following municipalities: Aulla, Bolano, Sarzana, Vezzano Ligure.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6466037", "label": "La chanson de Fortunio", "source": "La chanson de Fortunio (The Song of Fortunio) is a short opéra-comique in one act by Jacques Offenbach with a French libretto by Ludovic Halévy and Hector Crémieux. The music was composed within a week, with a further week being spent in preparations for the production. Its success was welcome after the failure of Barkouf a fortnight earlier.Taken as a whole, this operetta has never formed part of what may be termed the standard repertoire, but despite this, and especially during the period prior to the First World War, the title song remained extremely popular as a recital item, and indeed the writer of Offenbach's obituary in The Times considered the song itself to be one of his best compositions along with Orpheus in the Underworld and La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein – with La belle Hélène following behind these \"at some distance\".Offenbach had composed music for the song of Fortunio in act 2, scene 3, of Le Chandelier by Alfred de Musset for a revival of the play in 1850 at the Comédie-Française and this was published (by Heugel) as part of Offenbach's collection of songs Les Voix mystérieuses in 1853, and taken up enthusiastically by the tenor Gustave-Hippolyte Roger in his concerts. The librettists based their one-act La chanson de Fortunio around this song – with the story as a sort of sequel to the original play, the melody of the song being heard in the overture. Messager composed an opera Fortunio (1907) based on the Musset play; Fortunio's song from that work was also.", "target": "opera by Jacques Offenbach", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16955294", "label": "The Pale", "source": "The Pale are an Irish band of varying genres including rock, and indie. They have recorded twelve albums and have toured extensively in Ireland and abroad.", "target": "Irish rock and indie band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8068113", "label": "Zdzisław Marchwicki", "source": "Zdzisław Marchwicki (October 18, 1927 – April 29, 1977), known as The Zagłębie Vampire (Polish: Wampir z Zagłębia), was an alleged Polish serial killer who, together with several accomplices, was convicted of killing 14 women and attacking 7 others around the country from 1964 to 1970. For this, Marchwicki was executed in 1977, but since then his guilt has been questioned.", "target": "Polish serial killer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7172438", "label": "Peter A. MacIsaac", "source": "Peter A. MacIsaac (February 10, 1878 – January 9, 1969) was a dairy farmer and political figure on Prince Edward Island. He represented 1st Kings in the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island from 1935 to 1943 as a Liberal. He was born in Souris, Prince Edward Island, the son of Donald A. MacIsaac and Annie Ford. MacIsaac was a lieutenant in a Canadian artillery unit from 1898 to 1902. In 1910, he married Mary Josephine McInnis. He was an unsuccessful candidate for a seat in the provincial assembly in 1931 and was defeated when he ran for reelection in 1943. MacIsaac died in the Souris Hospital at the age of 80.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7609716", "label": "Stephen Kulik", "source": "Stephen Kulik (born August 3, 1950 in Boston, Massachusetts) is an American politician who represents the 1st Franklin District in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, was a member of the Worthington, Massachusetts Board of Selectmen from 1983 to 1994, and was a Hampshire County Commissioner from 1989 to 1992.In 2018, Kulik did not run for re-election. The seat was won by fellow Democrat Natalie Blais.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4586412", "label": "1990 in Irish television", "source": "The following is a list of events relating to television in Ireland from 1990.", "target": "television-related events in Ireland during the year of 1990", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19859443", "label": "Valovo", "source": "Valovo (Russian: Валово) is a rural locality (a village) in Kovarditskoye Rural Settlement, Muromsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16196429", "label": "Simon Barry", "source": "Simon Barry (born 25 September 1966, in London, UK) is a Canadian screenwriter, director, and film and television producer.", "target": "Canadian screenwriter and TV producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q579415", "label": "Falcon Entertainment", "source": "Falcon Entertainment (also known as Falcon Studios), a United States company based in San Francisco, California, is one of the world's largest producers of gay pornography.Founded in 1971 by Chuck Holmes, the company is one of the most recognizable brand names in gay pornography. The owners/managers of several of its major American competitors, Hot House Entertainment, Colt Studios, Channel 1 Releasing and Titan Media (Steven Scarborough, John Rutherford, Chi Chi LaRue, Bruce Cam,: 262 respectively) previously worked for Falcon.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["television production company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61063205", "label": "Odampokki River", "source": "Odampokki is a river flowing in the Tiruvarur district of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.", "target": "river in India", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17060053", "label": "The Big Beat", "source": "The Big Beat is an American music and dance television program broadcast on the ABC Network in 1957. It was hosted by Alan Freed, and subsequently by Richard Hayes. The program debuted on May 4, 1957, four months before American Bandstand, making it the United States' \"first nationally-televised rock 'n roll dance show\". The fourth episode caused an uproar 1957 when it showed Frankie Lymon, a black teen star, dancing with a white woman.Two more episodes were aired but the show was suddenly cancelled. A local version continued on WNEW-TV New York. The Wall Street Journal summarized the end of the program as follows. \"Four episodes into “The Big Beat,” Freed’s prime-time TV music series on ABC, the show was canceled after black singer Frankie Lymon was seen on TV dancing with a white audience member\".", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5110440", "label": "Christiane Baroche", "source": "Christiane Baroche (born 20 January 1935 Paris) is a French novelist, and short story writer. She graduated with a BS in 1954. After a scientific career, at the Curie Institute (Paris) she turned to writing.", "target": "French novelist and short story writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4884665", "label": "Belpınar", "source": "Belpınar is a village in the District of Kızılcahamam, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "target": "village in Ankara Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q457088", "label": "Jens Christian Berg", "source": "Jens Christian Berg (23 September 1775 – 4 June 1852) was a Norwegian lawyer and historian.", "target": "Norwegian historian (1775-1852)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4796771", "label": "Art Deco Detective", "source": "Art Deco Detective is a 1994 film directed by Philippe Mora. In the film, while investigating the murder of a movie star, a detective finds that he himself is being set up for the crime. The detective's full name is Arthur Decowitz, but he is known to all as \"Art Deco\" - hence the title.", "target": "1994 film by Philippe Mora", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q620988", "label": "Israel–Jordan Treaty of Peace", "source": "The Israel–Jordan peace treaty (formally the \"Treaty of Peace Between the State of Israel and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan\"), sometimes referred to as the Wadi Araba Treaty, is an agreement that ended the state of war that has existed between the two countries since the 1948 Arab–Israeli War and established mutual diplomatic relations. In addition to establishing peace between the two countries, the treaty also settled land and water disputes, provided for broad cooperation in tourism and trade, and obligated both countries to prevent their territory being used as a staging ground for military strikes by a third country. The signing ceremony took place at the southern border crossing of Arabah on 26 October 1994. Jordan was the second Arab country, after Egypt, to sign a peace accord with Israel.", "target": "peace treaty", "baseline_candidates": ["peace treaty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5198591", "label": "Llavares", "source": "Llavares is a parish in Santo Adriano, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain. The elevation is 440 m (1,440 ft) above sea level. It is 3.67 km2 (1.42 sq mi) in size. The population is 39 (2006). The postal code is 33115. The Asturian people of this parish live in two villages: Cuatumonteros LlavaresFiesta days include: \"Feast of Flowers\", the last Sunday of May San Antonio, 13 June.", "target": "parish (parroquia) in Asturias, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["parish of Asturias", "collective population entity of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17115169", "label": "Chrysogeneia", "source": "In Greek mythology, Chrysogeneia or Chrysogenia (Ancient Greek: Χρυσογένεια) may refer to the two different individuals: Chrysogenia, daughter of the river-god Peneus, and thus can be considered a naiad. She was the mother of Thissaeus by Zeus. Chrysogeneia, a Minyan princess as the daughter of King Almus of Orchomenus. She was the sister of Chryse and mother, by the sea-god Poseidon, of Chryses, father of the eponym Minyas. In some myths, Minyas himself was the son of Chrysogone and Poseidon. Her name which can denote “golden” expresses the traditional opinion of the Orchomenians' wealth.", "target": "mythical daughter of Almus", "baseline_candidates": ["mythological Greek character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q45925084", "label": "Hon Ki Tsang", "source": "Hon Ki Tsang (Chinese: 曾漢奇) is an engineer from Hong Kong who specializes in silicon photonics.Tsang took a gap year after graduating from high school, during which he worked for GEC Plessey Telecommunications. Tsang remained in the United Kingdom to enroll at the University of Cambridge, where he completed a bachelor's degree and doctorate, both in engineering. Upon completing his studies in 1991, Tsang became a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Bath. He returned to Hong Kong in 1993, for a lectureship at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Three years later, Tsang was named an associate professor. Between 2002 and 2003, Tsang worked for Bookham Technology. Upon Tsang's return to academia, CUHK appointed him to a full professorship.Over the course of his career, Tsang has been elected fellow of the IEEE and the Optical Society. He became the Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics in 2017.", "target": "Hong Kong engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6038962", "label": "Instinto Asesino", "source": "Instinto Asesino (Spanish: [insˈtinto aseˈsino], English: \"Killer Instinct\") is a series produced by Endemol Argentina for the Discovery Channel. Each episode portrays a notorious serial killer case that occurred in a country in Latin America. So far, cases depicted occurred in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Venezuela. The first season features six cases and the death toll caused by the six criminals combined surpasses one hundred victims, most of them women and children.A second season aired in Latin America, with eight episodes total.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3107671", "label": "Girolamo Alessandro Biaggi", "source": "Girolamo Alessandro Biaggi (February 2, 1819 – March 21, 1897) was an Italian composer, critic, and teacher of music.", "target": "Italian composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47546599", "label": "Lennox Burgher", "source": "Lennox G. Burgher (born 17 March 1946) is a Jamaican athlete. He competed in the men's triple jump at the 1968 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Jamaican triple jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18027670", "label": "IGFALS", "source": "Insulin-like growth factor binding protein, acid labile subunit, also known as IGFALS, is a protein which in humans is encoded by the IGFALS gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12580762", "label": "BMP-1", "source": "The BMP-1 is a Soviet amphibious tracked infantry fighting vehicle. BMP stands for Boyevaya Mashina Pyekhoty 1 (Russian: Боевая Машина Пехоты 1; БМП-1), meaning \"infantry fighting vehicle, 1st serial model\". The BMP-1 was the first mass-produced infantry fighting vehicle (IFV) of the Soviet Union, and the second worldwide behind the Hispano-Suiza HS.30. It was called the M-1967, BMP and BMP-76PB by NATO before its correct designation was known.The Soviet military leadership saw any future wars as being conducted with nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. A new design, like the BMP, combining the properties of an armored personnel carrier (APC) and a light tank would allow infantry to operate from the relative safety of its armoured, radiation-shielded interior in contaminated areas and to fight alongside it in uncontaminated areas. It would increase infantry squad mobility, provide fire support to them, and also be able to fight alongside main battle tanks.The BMP-1 was first tested in combat in the 1973 Yom Kippur War, where it was used by Egyptian and Syrian forces. Based on lessons learned from this conflict, and early experiences in the Soviet–Afghan War, a version with improved fighting qualities was developed, the BMP-2. It was accepted into service in August 1980. In 1987, the BMP-3, a radically redesigned vehicle with a completely new weapon system, entered service in limited numbers with the Soviet Army.", "target": "amphibious infantry fighting vehicle family", "baseline_candidates": ["BMP", "combat vehicle family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6762972", "label": "Marie Norton Harriman", "source": "Marie Harriman (née Norton, formerly Whitney; April 12, 1903 – September 26, 1970) was an American art collector and First Lady of New York from 1955 to 1958. She was the second wife of former New York Governor and diplomat Averell Harriman. Harriman operated a prominent New York City art gallery for more than a decade.", "target": "American art dealer and collector (1903-1970)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3832584", "label": "Linda Ann Martin", "source": "Linda Ann Martin (born 12 June 1954) is a British fencer. She competed in the women's individual and team foil events at the 1980, 1984 and 1988 Summer Olympics.", "target": "fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3091522", "label": "Mega Man Battle Network 4", "source": "Mega Man Battle Network 4 is a video game developed by Capcom for the Game Boy Advance (GBA) handheld game console. It is the fourth game in the Mega Man Battle Network series. The European version featured a completely different logo, which was also used on Mega Man X7, Mega Man X8, Mega Man Zero 2, Mega Man Zero 3, Mega Man Zero 4, Mega Man X: Command Mission, Mega Man Network Transmission, Mega Man Battle Chip Challenge, Mega Man Battle Network 3, and Mega Man Battle Network 5. Like Battle Network 3 before it, Battle Network 4 has two different versions, Red Sun and Blue Moon, that differ in story and gameplay details. Battle Network 4 is compatible with the e-Reader, and can be linked up with Rockman EXE 4.5 Real Operation and the Battle Chip Gate for NetBattles. It is able to link with Mega Man Zero 3, and contains references to Konami's Boktai series.", "target": "2003 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63856898", "label": "Veronica Monet", "source": "Veronica Monet (born April 1, 1960) is an American author and activist for sex worker rights. Her early activism focused on debunking stereotypes about sex workers and advocating for the decriminalization of all sex work. From 1989 to 2004, she was a high-end escort and courtesan. Monet's later work focuses on anger management, healing shame, and helping couples integrate their sexuality with their spirituality.", "target": "American activist for sex worker rights", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2661120", "label": "Eva Estrada Kalaw", "source": "Evangelina Estrada Kalaw (June 16, 1920 – May 25, 2017) was a Filipina politician who served as a senator in the Senate of the Philippines from 1965 to 1972 during the presidency of Ferdinand Marcos. She was one of the key opposition figures against Marcos' 20-year authoritarian rule and was instrumental in his downfall during the People Power Revolution. As a senator, she wrote several laws relating to education in the Philippines, such as the salary standardization for public school personnel, the Magna Carta for Private Schools, the Magna Carta for Students, and an act to institute a charter for Barrio High Schools. She was also among the Liberal Party candidates injured during the Plaza Miranda bombing on August 21, 1971.", "target": "Filipino politician (1920-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15240458", "label": "Semail Ophiolite", "source": "The Semail Ophiolite of the Hajar Mountains of Oman and the United Arab Emirates is a large slab of oceanic crust, made of volcanic rocks and ultramafic rocks from the Earth's upper mantle, that was overthrust onto continental crust as an ophiolite. It is located on the eastern corner of the Arabian Peninsula and covers an area of approximately 100,000 km2. Based on uranium-lead dating techniques, the Semail Ophiolite formed in the Late Cretaceous. It is primarily made of silicate rocks with (SiO2) content ranging from 45–77 wt%. The Semail Ophiolite is important because it is rich in copper and chromite ore bodies, and because it also provides valuable information about the ocean floor and the upper mantle on land. Geologists have studied the area, attempting to find the best model explaining the formation of the Semail Ophiolite.", "target": "slab of oceanic crust", "baseline_candidates": ["ophiolite"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q437683", "label": "Daniel Friberg", "source": "Daniel Friberg (born 10 July 1986) is a Swedish speed skater. He competed in two events at the 2010 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Swedish speed skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9336793", "label": "Mount Boman", "source": "Mount Boman (82°32′S 162°0′E) is a mountain, 1,630 m, between Tranter and Doss glaciers in the north part of the Queen Elizabeth Range. Mapped by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) from tellurometer surveys and Navy air photos, 1960–62. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for William M. Boman, United States Antarctic Research Program (USARP) traverse engineer at Roosevelt Island, 1962–63, and McMurdo Station, winter of 1965. This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Geological Survey document: \"Mount Boman\". (content from the Geographic Names Information System).", "target": "mountain in Ross Dependency, Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23663311", "label": "Beatnik", "source": "Beatnik is a simple stack-oriented esoteric programming language, by Cliff L. Biffle. A beatnik program consists of any sequence of English words. Each word is assigned the score you would get for it in a Scrabble game. The value of the score determines what function is performed. Functions include pushing the score of the next word onto the stack, testing the stack and skipping forward or backward in the program and other stack operations.", "target": "esoteric programming language designed by Cliff L. Biffle", "baseline_candidates": ["esoteric programming language", "programming language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4894893", "label": "Berryville High School", "source": "Berryville High School is a comprehensive public high school for students in grades 9 through 12 located in Berryville, Arkansas, United States. Berryville High School is the only high school of the Berryville School District and the largest of three public high schools in Carroll County.", "target": "public high school in Berryville, Arkansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["state school", "high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q381482", "label": "Hyacinth", "source": "Nikita Yakovlevich Bichurin (Никита Яковлевич Бичурин) (29 August 1777 – 11 May 1853, St. Petersburg), better known under his archimandrite monastic name Hyacinth (sometimes rendered as Joacinth), or Iakinf (Иакинф), was one of the founding fathers of Russian Sinology. He translated many works from Chinese into Russian, which were then translated into other European languages.", "target": "Russian sinologist, historian, translator, eastern orthodox missionary (1777-1853)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1134101", "label": "Cornershop", "source": "Cornershop are a British indie rock band best known for their single \"Brimful of Asha\", originally released in 1997 and, in a remixed version, topping the UK chart in 1998. The band was formed in 1991 by Wolverhampton-born Tjinder Singh (singer, songwriter, and guitar), his brother Avtar Singh (bass guitar, vocals), David Chambers (drums) and Ben Ayres (guitar, keyboards, and tamboura), the first three having previously been members of Preston-based band General Havoc, who released one single (the \"Fast Jaspal EP\") in 1991. The band name originated from a stereotype referring to British Asians often owning corner shops. Their music is a fusion of Indian music, indie rock, alternative and electronic dance music.", "target": "British indie rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55063729", "label": "Italian ship Fortunale", "source": "Fortunale has been borne by at least two ships of the Italian Navy and may refer to: Italian patrol boat Fortunale, previously the Norwegian fishing boat Lionell Jacobsen purchased by Italy in 1916 and renamed. She was discarded in 1919. Italian torpedo boat Fortunale, a Ciclone-class torpedo boat launched in 1942 and transferred to Russia under the designation Z 17 in 1949.", "target": "list of ships with the same or similar names", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia set index article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2625611", "label": "Chuck Mosley", "source": "Charles Henry Mosley III (December 26, 1959 – November 9, 2017) was an American musician, singer and songwriter, who was the frontman for Faith No More from 1984 to 1988. During his tenure with the band, they released two albums, We Care a Lot and Introduce Yourself.", "target": "American musician (1959-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12969529", "label": "Poch Juinio", "source": "Edward \"Poch\" Juinio (born May 25, 1973) is a Filipino retired former professional basketball player of the Philippine Basketball Association. He played most of his seasons with Alaska Aces and won numerous championships.", "target": "Filipino basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7509231", "label": "Sidney Meyrick", "source": "Admiral Sir Sidney Julius Meyrick KCB (28 March 1879 – 18 December 1973) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to be Commander-in-Chief, America and West Indies Station.", "target": "Royal Navy admiral (1879-1973)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25565491", "label": "Isle of Man", "source": "The Isle of Man (Manx: Mannin [ˈmanɪnʲ], also Ellan Vannin [ˈɛlʲan ˈvanɪnʲ]), also known as Mann (), is an island nation and self-governing British Crown Dependency in the Irish Sea between Great Britain and Ireland. The head of state, Queen Elizabeth II, holds the title Lord of Mann and is represented by a Lieutenant Governor. The United Kingdom is responsible for the isle's military defence. Humans have lived on the island since before 6500 BC. Gaelic cultural influence began in the 5th century AD, when Irish missionaries following the teaching of St. Patrick began settling the island, and the Manx language, a branch of the Goidelic languages, emerged. In 627, King Edwin of Northumbria conquered the Isle of Man along with most of Mercia. In the 9th century, Norsemen established the thalassocratic Kingdom of the Isles, which included the Isle of Man. Magnus III, King of Norway from 1093 to 1103, reigned as King of Mann and the Isles between 1099 and 1103.In 1266, King Magnus VI of Norway sold his suzerainty over Mann to King Alexander III of Scotland under the Treaty of Perth. After a period of alternating rule by the Kings of Scotland and England, the island came under the feudal lordship of the English Crown in 1399. The lordship revested in the British Crown in 1765, but the island did not become part of the 18th-century Kingdom of Great Britain, nor of its successors, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the present-day United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern.", "target": "An island in the British Isles", "baseline_candidates": ["state", "Crown Dependencies"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7316266", "label": "restraint bias", "source": "Restraint bias is the tendency for people to overestimate their ability to control impulsive behavior. An inflated self-control belief may lead to greater exposure to temptation, and increased impulsiveness. Therefore, the restraint bias has bearing on addiction. For example, someone might use drugs, simply because they believe they can resist any potential addiction. An individual's inability to control, or their temptation can come from several different visceral impulses. Visceral impulses can include hunger, sexual arousal, and fatigue. These impulses provide information about the current state and behavior needed to keep the body satisfied.Empathy Gap Effect: The Empathy Gap Effect deals with individuals having trouble appreciating the power that the impulse states have on their behavior. There is a cold-to-hot empathy gap that states when people are in a cold state, like not experiencing hunger, they tended to underestimate those influences in a hot state. The underestimation of the visceral impulses can be contributed to restricted memory for the visceral experience which means the individual can recall the impulsive state but cannot recreate the sensation of the impulsive state.Impulse Control and Attention: Studies have concluded that when people believe that they have stronger sense of self-control over situations in their environment, they have greater impulse control. Individuals also tend to overestimate their capacity for self-control when one is told that they have a high capacity for self-restraint. The more someone is told that they have a high capacity for self-restraint, the more they believe it and display higher levels of impulse control. Attention has a lot to.", "target": "cognitive bias", "baseline_candidates": ["cognitive bias"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26837817", "label": "Fisayo Adarabioyo", "source": "Fisayo Mubarak Adarabioyo (born 1 February 1995) is an English professional footballer who plays as a striker for Ashton United.", "target": "association football player (born 1995)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6781249", "label": "Lee Han-dong", "source": "Lee Han-dong (5 December 1934 – 8 May 2021) was a South Korean politician. He served from May 2000 to July 2002 as the 33rd prime minister of South Korea.", "target": "South Korean politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1318755", "label": "Lewisia cotyledon", "source": "Lewisia cotyledon is a species of flowering plant in the family Montiaceae known by the common names Siskiyou lewisia and cliff maids. It is native to southern Oregon and northern California, where it grows in rocky subalpine mountain habitat.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16137800", "label": "Chirayinkeezhu State Assembly constituency", "source": "Chirayinkeezhu State assembly constituency is one of the 140 state legislative assembly constituencies at the state Kerala in southern India. It is also one of the 7 state legislative assembly constituencies included in the Attingal Lok Sabha constituency. As of the 2021 assembly elections, the current MLA is V. Sasi of CPI.", "target": "constituency of the Kerala legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Kerala Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11702574", "label": "North Finland Group", "source": "The North Finland Group (Finnish: Pohjois-Suomen Ryhmä) was a formation of the Finnish Army during the Winter War. It was responsible for an almost 800-kilometer-long border from the town of Lieksa to the Arctic Ocean. The group was under the command of Major General Wiljo Tuompo, and its headquarters was located in Kajaani.The formation was charged with defending Northern Finland. It had two subgroups, the Lapland Group in the north and the North Karelian Group in the south. During the Battle of Suomussalmi on 11 December 1939, the main headquarters took under control the Lapland Group, and appointed Kurt Martti Wallenius as its commander. The North Finland Group remained in areas of the North Karelian Group, Suomussalmi and Kuhmo.", "target": "Finnish military unit in the Winter War", "baseline_candidates": ["field army", "military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5466829", "label": "For Once in My Life", "source": "For Once in My Life is an album by Tony Bennett, released in December 1967. The album reached a peak position of number 164 on the Billboard 200 charts.", "target": "album by Tony Bennett", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3773161", "label": "sociative case", "source": "In grammar, the sociative case is a grammatical case in the Hungarian and Tamil, and Malayalam languages that can express the person in whose company (cf. Latin socius) an action is carried out, or to any belongings of people which take part in an action (together with their owners).", "target": "grammatical case", "baseline_candidates": ["case"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8029511", "label": "Wola Maradzka", "source": "Wola Maradzka [ˈvɔla maˈrat͡ska] (German: Maradtkenwolka) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sorkwity, within Mrągowo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) south of Sorkwity, 13 km (8 mi) south-west of Mrągowo and 45 km (28 mi) east of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "target": "village in Warmian-Masurian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4961915", "label": "Bret Bailey", "source": "Bret Bailey (born 22 January 1964) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Melbourne and Geelong in the Victorian/Australian Football League (VFL/AFL).", "target": "Australian rules football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19660985", "label": "Michael Baskette", "source": "Michael \"Elvis\" Baskette is an American music producer who has worked with artists such as Alter Bridge, Tremonti, Chevelle, Falling in Reverse, Coldrain, The Classic Crime, Temple Agents, and Slash.", "target": "American music producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1166343", "label": "Darlene butler", "source": "The first name Darlene is derived from the Old English darel-ene, meaning \"little dear one\".", "target": "female given name", "baseline_candidates": ["female given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4830406", "label": "Axeltree", "source": "Axeltree is a public art work by Russian-American artist Alexander Liberman located at the Lynden Sculpture Garden near Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The sculpture is an abstract form; it is installed on the lawn.", "target": "sculpture by Alexander Liberman", "baseline_candidates": ["sculpture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6796629", "label": "May the Music Never End", "source": "May the Music Never End is a 2003 studio album by Shirley Horn, it was Horn's last studio album.", "target": "album by Shirley Horn", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2981072", "label": "Left Unity", "source": "Left Unity was a communist political group with seats in the European Parliament between 1989 and 1994.", "target": "political group in the European Parliament (1989-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["political group of the European Parliament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6489785", "label": "Larrakeyah Barracks", "source": "Larrakeyah Barracks, incorporating HMAS Coonawarra, is the main base for the Australian Defence Force in the Northern Territory of Australia, and occupies the headland west of the suburb of Larrakeyah in the capital, Darwin. It was established in 1932–33, with building commencing in earnest in 1934, although many of the oldest structures were built in the early years of World War II.The name Larrakeyah is a transcription of the name of the Australian Aborigine tribe known also as the Larrakia people, the traditional owners of where Darwin was built and its surrounding areas.", "target": "primary Australian military base in the Northern Territory", "baseline_candidates": ["barracks"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11710882", "label": "Ian Jones", "source": "Ian Jones (born 11 July 1980), is a British-born football player who represents Turks and Caicos Islands as a goalkeeper.", "target": "association football player (born 1980)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6165672", "label": "Javier Patiño", "source": "Javier Lachica Patiño (Spanish pronunciation: [xaˈβjeɾ paˈtiɲo]; born February 14, 1988) is a former professional footballer who played as a striker. He represented the Philippines national team from 2013 to 2019.Born in Spain to a Spanish father and Filipino mother, Patiño began his career in the Divisiones Regionales and moved up to the Tercera División and Segunda División. He then played in the Chinese Super League and Thai League 1, notably with Buriram United where he won several accolades.", "target": "Spanish-Filipino professional footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q724048", "label": "Desert Punk", "source": "Desert Punk (Japanese: 砂ぼうず, Hepburn: Sunabōzu) is a Japanese post-apocalyptic manga series written and illustrated by Masatoshi Usune, serialized in Enterbrain's Comic Beam from August 1997 to October 2020. The published chapters have been collected in 22 volumes. The manga was adapted into a 24-episode anime television series produced by Gonzo and directed by Takayuki Inagaki with character designs by Takahiro Yoshimatsu and music by Kouhei Tanaka. It aired in Japan from 4 October 2004 to 28 March 2005. Funimation has licensed the series for distribution in the United States.", "target": "manga series written and illustrated by Usune Masatoshi", "baseline_candidates": ["manga series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1181085", "label": "Dean Ing", "source": "Dean Charles Ing (June 17, 1931 – July 21, 2020) was an American author, who usually wrote in the science fiction and techno-thriller genres. His novel The Ransom of Black Stealth One (1989) was a New York Times bestseller. He wrote more than 30 novels, and co-authored novels with his friends Jerry Pournelle, S. M. Stirling, and Leik Myrabo. Following the death of science fiction author Mack Reynolds in 1983, Ing was asked to finish several of Reynolds' uncompleted manuscripts. Ing was a United States Air Force veteran (where he served as a USAF interceptor crew chief), a former aerospace engineer, and a university professor who held a doctorate in communications theory. He was a former member of the Citizens' Advisory Council on National Space Policy.", "target": "American science fiction writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22080957", "label": "Samatiguila Department", "source": "Samatiguila Department is a department of Kabadougou Region in Denguélé District, Ivory Coast. In 2014, its population was 17,483, making it the least-populous department in the country. The departmental seat is the settlement of Samatiguila. The sub-prefectures of the department are Kimbirila-Sud and Samatiguila.", "target": "department in Kabadougou Region, Côte d'Ivoire", "baseline_candidates": ["department of Ivory Coast"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24956358", "label": "Ao Tegen", "source": "Ao Tegen (Chinese: 敖特根; pinyin: Áo Tè-gēn; born 12 June 1975) is a Chinese judoka. He competed in the men's middleweight event at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Chinese judoka (1975-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3404595", "label": "Aberystwyth and Tregaron Bank", "source": "The bank officially known as the Aberystwith and Tregaron Bank was established at Aberystwyth, Cardiganshire in the beginning of the 19th century and was locally known as ‘Banc y Ddafad Ddu’, because the bank notes were imprinted with an engraving of a black sheep. The Bank later established a branch at TregaronIn the 1960s and 1970s the Bank's notes inspired a Mr Richard Williams to imitate them.", "target": "Welsh bank formed in late 18c.", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "bank"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18034071", "label": "ARHGAP29", "source": "ARHGAP29 is a gene located on chromosome 1p22 that encodes Rho GTPase activating protein (GAP) 29, a protein that mediates the cyclical regulation of small GTP binding proteins such as RhoA.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q150917", "label": "Leavenworthia", "source": "Leavenworthia is a genus of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae. It includes about eight species native to the southern and southeastern United States. They are known generally as gladecresses.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17063446", "label": "Take My Love", "source": "\"Take My Love\" is a 1950 pop song co-written and recorded by Frank Sinatra. The song was released as a Columbia Records A side single.", "target": "song performed by Frank Sinatra", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1661640", "label": "S&T Motiv K12", "source": "S&T Motiv K12 is a 7.62×51mm NATO machine gun manufactured by S&T Daewoo to replace M60 machine gun for Republic of Korea Armed Forces. The XK12 was first shown to the public in 2009, during the Seoul ADEX International Aerospace and Defense Exhibition.", "target": "type of General purpose machine gun", "baseline_candidates": ["general-purpose machine gun"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7641610", "label": "Sunshine on a Rainy Day", "source": "\"Sunshine on a Rainy Day\" is a 1990 song by British pop singer and songwriter Zoë, released as the first single from her debut album, Scarlet Red and Blue. It reached number four on the UK Singles Chart in September 1991 and also charted within the top 40 in Ireland, Sweden and Zimbabwe, where it reached number-one.", "target": "Zoë song", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47510489", "label": "Andy Irving", "source": "Andrew Irving (born 13 May 2000) is a Scottish footballer who plays for 3. Liga club Türkgücü München, as a midfielder. He has previously played for Heart of Midlothian, Berwick Rangers and Falkirk.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4784391", "label": "Arassen Ragaven", "source": "Arassen Ragaven (born 8 April 1987) is a former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. Born in France, he represented Mauritius internationally, earning a total of 14 caps for the national team.", "target": "Mauritian-French Footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4630565", "label": "20 Grandes Exitos", "source": "20 Grandes Exitos (English: 20 Big Hits) is the second Compilation album by Argentine rock and ska band Los Fabulosos Cadillacs, released in 1998. It is a two-CDs set covering 8 years and 6 albums plus a never-released song \"Igual a Quien\".", "target": "1998 compilation album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31485973", "label": "Fried Rice", "source": "Fried rice is a dish of cooked rice that has been stir-fried in a wok or a frying pan and is usually mixed with other ingredients such as eggs, vegetables, seafood, or meat. It is often eaten by itself or as an accompaniment to another dish. Fried rice is a popular component of East Asian, Southeast Asian and certain South Asian cuisines, as well as a staple national dish of Indonesia. As a homemade dish, fried rice is typically made with ingredients left over from other dishes, leading to countless variations. [1] first developed during the Sui Dynasty in China and as such all fried rice dishes can trace their origins to Chinese fried rice.Many varieties of fried rice have their own specific list of ingredients. In Greater China, common varieties include Yangzhou fried rice and Hokkien fried rice. Japanese chāhan is considered a Japanese Chinese dish, having derived from Chinese fried rice dishes. Korean bokkeum-bap in general is not of Korean Chinese origin, although there is a Korean Chinese variety of bokkeum-bap. In Southeast Asia, similarly constructed Indonesian, Malaysian, and Singaporean nasi goreng and Thai khao phat are popular dishes. In the West, most restaurants catering to vegetarians have invented their own varieties of fried rice, including egg fried rice. Fried rice is also seen on the menus of American restaurants offering cuisines with no native tradition of the dish. Additionally, the cuisine of some Latin American countries includes variations on fried rice, including Ecuadorian chaulafan, Peruvian arroz chaufa, Cuban arroz frito, and Puerto Rican.", "target": "cooked rice stir-fried with eggs and other ingredients", "baseline_candidates": ["rice dish", "food ingredient", "human food", "Asian cuisine", "dish", "food"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15738305", "label": "Angus", "source": "Angus (Scots: Angus; Scottish Gaelic: Aonghas) is one of the 32 local government council areas of Scotland, a registration county and a lieutenancy area. The council area borders Aberdeenshire, Dundee City and Perth and Kinross. Main industries include agriculture and fishing. Global pharmaceuticals company GSK has a significant presence in Montrose in the north of the county. Angus was historically a province, and later a sheriffdom and county (known officially as Forfarshire from the 18th century until 1928), bordering Kincardineshire to the north-east, Aberdeenshire to the north and Perthshire to the west; southwards it faced Fife across the Firth of Tay; these remain the borders of Angus, minus Dundee which now forms its own small separate council area). Angus remains a registration county and a lieutenancy area. In 1975 some of its administrative functions were transferred to the council district of the Tayside Region, and in 1995 further reform resulted in the establishment of the unitary Angus Council.", "target": "council area of Scotland", "baseline_candidates": ["registration county", "Scottish district", "Scottish council area", "lieutenancy area of Scotland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16834936", "label": "2014 Thai Division 2 League North Eastern Region", "source": "2014 Regional League Division 2 North Eastern Region is the 6th season of the League competition since its establishment in 2009. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system. The league winners and runners up will qualify for the 2014 Regional League Division 2 championship stage.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5368147", "label": "Elvis, Barbra & jag", "source": "Elvis, Barbra & jag is a cover album by Swedish pop singer Carola Häggkvist, consisting of remakes of songs by Elvis Presley and Barbra Streisand. Carola interpreted the songs live on 3 July 2010 in Dalarna. The Swedish television station TV4 broadcast the event and it had a great success. A DVD of the live show reached the top of the DVDs Chart in Sweden, which encouraged her to record some of the songs she sang during the show in studio. The album, crediting the performer as just Carola rather than the full name Carola Häggkvist, was released on 23 March 2011 on X5 Music Group and reached the top of the Swedish Albums Chart on the chart dated 22 April 2011.", "target": "2011 Carola Häggkvist studio album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6732596", "label": "Magydus", "source": "Magydus (Ancient Greek: Μάγυδος, romanized: Magydos) was a city and bishopric of ancient Pamphylia on the Mediterranean coast of southwestern Asia Minor. It is probably the same as Mygdale (Μυγδάλη) described in the Stadiasmus Maris Magni.Its site was probably at modern Lara (Antalya province), where there are ruins of a small artificial harbour.", "target": "settlement of ancient Pamphylia", "baseline_candidates": ["ancient city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5117615", "label": "Church of St Michael, Buckland Dinham", "source": "The Church of St Michael in Buckland Dinham, Somerset, England, has been designated as a Grade I listed building.The church has a nave, chancel, south chapel and south porch which date from around 1200. The north chapel was added in 1325, and a further chapel to the north of the chancel and the west tower being added in 1480. It underwent restoration in the late 19th century.The tower contains six bells which were not rung between the 1950s and 1990s when a restoration project was undertaken including the addition of a bell from St Paul's Church, Bristol.The Anglican parish is part of the Mells with Buckland Dinham, Elm, Whatley and Chantry benefice within the archdeaconry of Wells.", "target": "church in Buckland Dinham, Somerset, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85433401", "label": "Pampas Grande", "source": "Pampas Grande, founded as San Jerónimo de Pampas, It is a Peruvian town, capital of the homonymous district, located in the central part of the so-called Callejón de Huaylas in the Ancash region, about 4 hours from Huaraz and 9 from Lima. It has an approximate population of 1044 inhabitants, located at an average altitude of 3690 m a.s.l. It has a cold climate with average temperatures of 17 °C in summer and 12 °C in winter.The history of Pampas Grande before the arrival of the Spanish is very little known. The Kajur archaeological site, located at 1250 meters above sea level, evidences one of the oldest human settlements in this part of the Cordillera Negra. The Cuchicoto archaeological site located near the Canchón summit shows the influence of the Recuay culture during the Early Intermediate period. Inca domination occurred between approximately 1430 and 1450, during the rule of the Sapa Inca Pachacútec. The lordships of huaylas and conchucos were incorporated into Tahuantinsuyo after a fierce invasion by the Inca Cápac Yupanqui, brother and general of the Sapa Inca, who was forced to withdraw and build the Maraycalle tambo in Yauya. The first reference to Pampas Grande during the colony it is made in the year 1618. In 1774 the parish of La Asunción de Huaylas was founded, with two partialities: Allauca and Ichoc. Here the town of Pampas was assigned, forming its population members of the ayllu Poma, west of the town of Cajamarquilla. By 1830 the parish of Pampas, was made up of the.", "target": "village in Ancash, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55740650", "label": "Gauriganj Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Gauriganj is a constituency of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly covering the city of Gauriganj in the Amethi district of Uttar Pradesh, India.Gauriganj is one of five assembly constituencies in the Amethi (Lok Sabha constituency) Since 2008, this assembly constituency is numbered 185 amongst 403 constituencies.", "target": "constituency of the Uttar Pradesh legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95635827", "label": "Vishva Dixit", "source": "Vishva Mitra Dixit (born c. 1956) is a physician of Indian origin who is the current Vice President of Discovery Research at Genentech.", "target": "Kenyan molecular biologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4370753", "label": "Andrew Paulson", "source": "Andrew Meredith Paulson (November 13, 1958 – July 18, 2017) was an American entrepreneur. Born in Champaign, Illinois, he was the son of noted American professor Ronald Paulson.During his early years he worked with oncology and neurophysiology researchers at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Yale University and at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. As an undergraduate he ran the classical music program at WYBC, a commercial radio station, and founded The New Theater Company where he produced and directed numerous plays. Paulson graduated with a BA in French Literature and Literary Criticism from Yale University in 1981, and attended the Yale School of Drama. From 1982 to 86 he lived in Berlin and Paris, writing novels; from 1987 to 93 he lived in Paris, London and Milan, shooting fashion and advertising photography. During this period he co-founded (with Gilles Dusein) the Paris conceptual photography gallery Urbi et Orbi, and co-founded (with Kurt Novack) a graphic design studio, Pourriture Noble. In 1991, David Hirson’s celebrated play La Bête was premiered on Broadway and in London. Valère, the principal character, is said to be largely based on the young Paulson. The Molière-inspired comedy, written in rhyming iambic pentameter, is set in 17th-century France and Valère’s 30-minute manic monologue, a theatrical tour-de-force, has become a staple of the modern American repertory. The play was reprised in 2010 on Broadway and in the West End, with Mark Rylance as Valère. In October, 2013, another play -- Virtual, or the Life and Adventures of Andrew Paulson, Entrepreneur (Виртуал, или Жизнь и Приключения Эндрю.", "target": "American businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4050385", "label": "1948 Sunday Empire News Tournament", "source": "The 1948 Sunday Empire News Tournament was a professional snooker tournament sponsored by the Sunday Empire News newspaper. The tournament was won by Joe Davis with John Pulman finishing in second place. The tournament saw the re-introduction of the popular round-robin handicap format had been used for Daily Mail Gold Cup before World War II. Thurston's Hall, the home of the Daily Mail Gold Cup, had re-opened in late 1947, although renamed as the Leicester Square Hall. It was the only time the tournament was held although the format continued with the News of the World Snooker Tournament. In the final match of the tournament Fred Davis, playing without a points handicap, beat brother Joe 36–35. This was the first time Joe had lost a competitive match when playing on level terms. However, under the \"sealed handicap\" aspect of the event, Joe received 2 frames and won the match 37–36.", "target": "Professional snooker tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["snooker tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7155245", "label": "Paulo Lopes de Faria", "source": "Paulo Lopes de Faria (February 24, 1931 Igaratinga - July 16, 2009) was the Brazilian Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Diamantina from May 14, 1997 until his retirement on May 30, 2007. He was succeeded by Archbishop João Bosco Oliver de Faria, but remained Archbishop Emeritus of the diocese until his death in 2009. Archbishop Paulo Lopes de Faria died on July 16, 2009, in Belo Horizonte at the age of 78.", "target": "Roman Catholic archbishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96364398", "label": "Judah Eskender Tafari", "source": "Ronald William Merrills (23 July 1957 – 5 June 2020), better known by the stage name Judah Eskender Tafari was a Jamaican reggae vocalist and musician, known for his distinct vocal tone, and spiritual outlook. His records on the Studio One label are regarded as classics. He died in 2020 after a lengthy illness.", "target": "musical artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31471007", "label": "Olkhovsky, Bolshebabinsky Selsoviet, Alexeyevsky District, Volgograd Oblast", "source": "Olkhovsky (Russian: Ольховский) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Bolshebabinskoye Rural Settlement, Alexeyevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 59 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Alexeyevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31797434", "label": "Jacques Villon", "source": "Jacques Villon (July 31, 1875 – June 9, 1963), also known as Gaston Duchamp, was a French Cubist and abstract painter and printmaker.", "target": "French painter (1875-1963)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28802726", "label": "Tylosurus fodiator", "source": "Tylosurus fodiator, the Mexican needlefish, is a species of needlefish from the family Belonidae which is found only in the eastern Pacific, from the Gulf of California south to Ecuador including the Galapagos, Cocos and Malpelo Islands. It was previously considered to be a subspecies of the houndfish but is now regarded as valid species. This species is normally encountered close to the coast but can be found in offshore waters. It is a predatory species, feeding mainly on small fishes. They lay eggs which adhere to objects in the water by filaments which cover the outer layer of the eggs. This species was described in 1882 by David Starr Jordan and Charles Henry Gilbert with the type locality given as Mazatlán in Sinaloa, western Mexico.", "target": "species of Actinopterygii", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22103530", "label": "Hagnagora luteoradiata", "source": "Hagnagora luteoradiata is a species of moth of the family Geometridae first described by Paul Thierry-Mieg in 1892. It is found from Costa Rica to Ecuador. The most prominent difference from related species is the absence of the yellow blotches on the hindwings that are present in both Hagnagora ephestris and Hagnagora discordata. The transversal yellow band on the forewing is broader than in H. discordata and has a different shape than in H. ephestris.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6915950", "label": "Moses T. Clegg", "source": "Moses T. Clegg (September 1, 1876 – August 10, 1918) was an American bacteriologist. He is best known as the first scientist to segregate and propagate the leprosy bacillus.", "target": "American military personnel (1876-1918)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8028891", "label": "Wknd@stv", "source": "wknd@stv was a short-lived children's programming strand on Scottish television channel, STV. The block aired on Saturdays and Sundays, usually starting at 9:25 am (the first ever edition began at 9:55 am). It began on Saturday 17 January 2009 with a three-hour edition. The majority of editions were one to two hours in length. The first series was originally scheduled to run for twelve weeks (to Sunday 12 April 2009), but STV subsequently decided to extend the run, which eventually ended on 21 June, just before the Scottish school summer holidays. A second series of wknd@stv began on Saturday 15 August 2009; this ran for six weeks, ending on 20 September 2009. Featured programming consisted of cartoons, live-action drama/comedy and gameshows, principally archive output produced or co-produced by Scottish/Grampian (formerly SMG Productions or Scottish Television Enterprises); there was also some imported programming to which STV holds the rights, such as Flying Rhino Junior High, which STV co-produced prior to the launch of wknd@stv. At the time of wknd@stv launching, the ITV network was not airing children's programming on weekend mornings. A networked CITV block was reintroduced in March and April 2009 and again from September 2009; STV prioritised their own show, such that in weeks where both wknd@stv and the CITV block were running, STV would screen their strand first and timeshift the CITV block to run afterwards; if there was not room to do this then the CITV block would be omitted completely in favour of the local show. In several weeks where the structure.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28233440", "label": "Knob Lake and Timmins Railway", "source": "The Knob Lake and Timmins Railway is an industrial railway owned by Genesee & Wyoming. It provides rail services between Schefferville, Quebec, and iron mines located approximately 13 mi (21 km) to the northwest, straddling the border between Quebec and Labrador. It interchanges with Tshiuetin Rail Transportation in Schefferville.", "target": "railway line in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7937529", "label": "Vivaldi Glacier", "source": "Vivaldi Glacier (70°47′S 69°50′W) is a glacier lying between the Colbert Mountains and the Lully Foothills, flowing south from Purcell Snowfield into the head of Schubert Inlet on the west coast of Alexander Island, Antarctica. The feature appears to be first shown on maps of the United States Antarctic Service (USAS) which photographed Alexander Island from the air in 1940. It was mapped from air photos obtained by the Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition in 1947–48, by Searle of the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in 1960. Named \"Vivaldi Gap\" by the United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee in 1961, after Antonio Vivaldi (1678–1741), Venetian composer. The name was amended to Vivaldi Glacier following review of Landsat program imagery, 1979, displaying flow lines in the feature.", "target": "glacier in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["glacier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4985840", "label": "Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team", "source": "The Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team is an independent barnstorming hockey (and occasionally basketball) team located in Buffalo, New York. Its roster consists entirely of retired National Hockey League players, mostly former members of the Buffalo Sabres. The team is operated by the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Association. The team plays teams assembled by various local organizations around Western New York primarily as charity fundraisers. Its uniform is identical to the classic \"blue and gold\" Sabres home (white) uniform from 1970 to 1996. The team considers KeyBank Center to be its home arena but rarely plays there. One of its more recent and most notable games took place on March 29, 2007, when the team played a home game against the Buffalo Police Department as a fundraiser for police officer Patty Parete, who suffered spinal injury from a gunshot wound. The game drew over 7,000 fans as the Sabres Alumni won. The Alumni Team played at HSBC Arena as part of the pre-game events for the 2008 NHL Winter Classic held at Ralph Wilson Stadium on January 1, 2008. They were also a part of the 2013-14 AHL Outdoor Classic as the opponent of the Rochester Americans alumni team in December 2013. One of the key initiatives of the Buffalo Sabres Alumni is to fund-raise and support their family of scholarships they award to high school seniors attending college.", "target": "Barnstorming sports team", "baseline_candidates": ["ice hockey team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1848033", "label": "Waterloo Medal", "source": "The Waterloo Medal is a military decoration that was conferred upon every officer, non-commissioned officer and soldier of the British Army (including members of the King's German Legion) who took part in one or more of the following battles: Ligny (16 June 1815), Quatre Bras (16 June 1815) and Waterloo (18 June 1815).", "target": "medal awarded to British soldiers who fought in the Waterloo campaign in 1815", "baseline_candidates": ["award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11609224", "label": "Mino Kokubun-ji", "source": "Mino Kokubun-ji (美濃国分寺) is a Shingon-sect Buddhist temple in the Aono neighborhood of the city of Ōgaki, Gifu, Japan. It is one of the few surviving provincial temples established by Emperor Shōmu during the Nara period (710 – 794). Due to this connection, the foundation stones of the Nara period temple now located to the south of the present day complex were designated as a National Historic Site in 1916.", "target": "temple in Ōgaki, Gifu", "baseline_candidates": ["Buddhist temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5160796", "label": "Congress Hall", "source": "The Congress Hall (Polish: Sala Kongresowa) is a 2,880-seat theatre at the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw, Poland. It was opened in 1955.", "target": "concert hall in Warszawa, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["auditorium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14697969", "label": "Aralle-Tabulahan", "source": "Aralle-Tabulahan is an Austronesian language that belongs to the South Sulawesi subgroup. It is spoken in Mamasa Regency, West Sulawesi, Indonesia.Aralle-Tabulahan has three dialects: Aralle, Tabulahan and Mambi. The Mambi dialect is the most divergent and takes an intermediate position between the other two dialects and the neighboring Bambam language.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5136682", "label": "Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble", "source": "The Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) was a program on the Hubble Space Telescope to observe 25 massive galaxy clusters. CLASH was one of three programs selected (along with CANDELS and PHAT) in the first class of Hubble multi-cycle treasury programs, which were designed to tackle large questions unanswerable through normal observations. Observations for CLASH were conducted between November 2010 and July 2013. CLASH was led by principal investigator Marc Postman, and had a science team of over 40 researchers.Primary observations for CLASH were conducted on the Hubble Space Telescope with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). Images were taken in 16 filters, which were selected to maximize the ability to detect distant galaxies behind each cluster. Twenty of the observed clusters were selected due to their relaxed morphology in X-ray observations, while the other five were chosen due to their strength as gravitational lenses.", "target": "astronomical survey by the Hubble Space Telescope", "baseline_candidates": ["astronomical survey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6861468", "label": "Milton T. Murray", "source": "Milton T. Murray (June 1, 1898 – October 3, 1991) was a teacher, lawyer and politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Born in Milwaukee, Murray went to University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Marquette University, and the University of Chicago. He worked as a teacher and coach and then went into the practice of law. He served in the Wisconsin State Assembly before getting elected to the Wisconsin Senate.He was elected to the Wisconsin State Senate's 4th District (the thirteenth, eighteenth, and twenty-first wards of the City of Milwaukee; and the Villages of Fox Point, River Hills, Shorewood, Whitefish Bay, and the Town of Milwaukee) in 1939 to fill the vacancy created by the death of incumbent Oscar Morris. He was re-elected in 1940 for a full term, with 24,919 votes to 9,258 for Democrat Thomas Nimlos and 8,346 for Progressive nominee Anton Blechinger.Murray was a candidate in the Republican primary for Governor of Wisconsin twice. In 1942 he challenged incumbent Julius P. Heil, coming in second in a three-way race, with 95,908 votes to Heil's 136,980 and 32,740 for a third candidate; reporters speculated that Murray's high results in normally Progressive districts were the product of mischievous votes from Progressives (who did not have a contest on their ballot line). Heil went on to lose to Progressive Orland Steen Loomis in the general election. In 1944, rather than run for re-election, Murray challenged Acting Governor Walter Samuel Goodland, and came in third in a five-man race.", "target": "Wisconsin State Senator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5110949", "label": "Christine Brunner", "source": "Christine Brunner (born 25 September 1959) is an Austrian luger who competed in the late 1970s and early 1980s. She is best known for finishing third overall in the Luge World Cup women's singles twice (1978–79, 1979–80). Brunner also finished tenth in the women's singles event at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.", "target": "luger", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42361303", "label": "Steve Wijler", "source": "Steve Wijler (born 19 September 1996) is a Dutch archer competing in men's recurve events. He won the bronze medal in the men's individual recurve event at the 2017 World Archery Championships held in Mexico City, Mexico. In 2021, Wijler and Gabriela Schloesser won the silver medal in the mixed team event at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.", "target": "Dutch archer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1430974", "label": "Braga Airport", "source": "Braga Airport (IATA: BGZ, ICAO: LPBR) is an airport in Palmeira, 3 km (1.9 mi) north northwest of Braga, Portugal.", "target": "airport in Portugal", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33533995", "label": "Museum of Pawiak Prison", "source": "Muzeum Więzienia \"Pawiak\" (Museum of Pawiak Prison) is a museum in Warsaw, Poland, established in 1965. It shows the history of Pawiak Prison which was notably used during the German occupation between 1939 and 1944.", "target": "history museum in Warsaw, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["military museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7755155", "label": "The Only Way Is Up", "source": "\"The Only Way Is Up\" is a song written by George Jackson and Johnny Henderson and originally released in 1980 as a single by soul singer Otis Clay. In 1988, it became a chart-topping single for Yazz and the Plastic Population. The song is used as the theme tune to the popular ITV2/ITVBe reality television series The Only Way Is Essex.", "target": "1980 single by Yazz", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4966049", "label": "Brickwood Galuteria", "source": "Brickwood M. Galuteria (born 1955), is an American politician, radio host, musician and actor. He was the Hawaii State Senator representing District 12 of Honolulu. He previously served as state chairman of the Democratic Party of Hawaii (2004–2006).", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13016474", "label": "Phitsanulok Mansion", "source": "Phitsanulok Mansion (Thai: บ้านพิษณุโลก) or formerly known Banthomsinth House (Thai: บ้านบรรทมสินธุ์ lit: House of the Sleeping Narayana) is the official residence of the Prime Minister of Thailand, located not far to the east from the government house in Dusit, Bangkok. The mansion was originally built at the behest of King Rama VI was and given to his aide-de-camp, Phraya Aniruth-deva.", "target": "official residence of the prime minister of Thailand", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3060378", "label": "Eunoe", "source": "Eunoe is a genus of marine annelids in the family Polynoidae (scale worms). The genus includes 48 species which are found world-wide, mostly from depths of 50 m or more.", "target": "genus of ringed worms", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9378833", "label": "Easter Tuesday", "source": "Easter Tuesday is the third day of the Octave of Easter and is a holiday in some areas. Easter Tuesday in the Western Christian liturgical calendar is the third day of Eastertide and analogously in the Byzantine Rite is the third day of Bright Week.", "target": "Tuesday following Easter", "baseline_candidates": ["Christian holy day"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55632955", "label": "Shaanbeikannemeyeria", "source": "Shaanbeikannemeyeria is an extinct genus of dicynodont known from the Early Triassic of China. It contains a single species, S. xilougoensis, which was described in 1980 by Zheng-Wu Cheng from a skull catalogued as IGCAGS V315. The specimen was lost, and a neotype skull IVPP V 11674 was later designated. A second species, S. buergondia, was named by Jin-Lin Li in 1980 from a partial skeleton, but it has since been regarded as a synonym of S. xilougoensis.", "target": "Extinct genus of dicynodonts", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95013849", "label": "Sulawesi montane rain forests", "source": "The Sulawesi montane rain forests is a tropical moist forest ecoregion in Indonesia. It includes the highlands of Sulawesi.", "target": "Terrestrial ecoregion in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["WWF ecoregion", "ecoregion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1750110", "label": "Manoel Viana", "source": "Manoel Viana is a Brazilian municipality in the western part of the state of Rio Grande do Sul. It has a population of 7,307 (2020). Its elevation is 113 m. It has an area of 1,390.7 square kilometers making it one of the largest municipalities in the state. It is located 590 km west of the state capital of Porto Alegre and east of Alegrete. It is the only municipality that is by the Ibicuí River.", "target": "municipality of Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7380984", "label": "Ruslan Bogdan", "source": "Ruslan Dmytrovich Bogdan (born 28 January 1972 in Kyiv) is a Ukrainian businessman, and politician.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3772074", "label": "Archangels Don't Play Pinball", "source": "Archangels Don't Play Pinball (Italian title: Gli arcangeli non giocano al flipper) is a 1959 two-act play by Dario Fo. The play uses the metaphor of a pinball machine—a new innovation in Italy at the time and one which Fo and his wife Franca Rame were fond of— to convey mechanisation and conspicuous consumption.", "target": "1959 play written by Dario Fo", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2001671", "label": "Thoksila", "source": "Thoksila is a village development committee in Udayapur District in Province No. 1 of south-eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 11,940 people living in 2139 individual households.", "target": "village development committee in Sagarmatha Zone, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22411277", "label": "Vaudreuil-Dorion", "source": "Vaudreuil-Dorion (French pronunciation: ​[vodʁœj dɔʁjɔ̃]) is a suburb of Greater Montreal, in the Montérégie region of southwestern Quebec, Canada. The result of the merger of two towns, Vaudreuil and Dorion, it is located in the Vaudreuil-Soulanges Regional County Municipality.", "target": "town in Québec, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["city or town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12967978", "label": "Mercedes Alvarez", "source": "Mercedes \"Cheding\" Kho Alvarez-Lansang is a Filipino politician who served as Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines and represented the 6th district of Negros Occidental.", "target": "Filipino politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1940613", "label": "2009 Shanghai ATP Masters 1000", "source": "The 2009 Shanghai ATP Masters 1000 (also known as the 2009 Shanghai ATP Masters 1000–presented by Rolex) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 1st edition of the Shanghai ATP Masters 1000, and was classified as an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2009 ATP World Tour. It was played at Qizhong Forest Sports City Arena in Shanghai, People's Republic of China. The tournament replaced Madrid as the second and last ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament where it was now moved into a spring calendar, the inaugural edition was held from October 11 to October 18, 2009.The singles field was led by Rafael Nadal. Other top seeds were 2008 Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic, reigning US Open champion Juan Martín del Potro and Wimbledon finalist Andy Roddick. World No. 1 Roger Federer had been due to play but withdrew, citing fatigue. World No. 3 Andy Murray was also scheduled to play, but withdrew due to a wrist injury.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition", "Shanghai Masters"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q459654", "label": "Enderûnlu Fâzıl", "source": "Enderûnlu Fâzıl (1757–1810) was an Ottoman poet who depicted the beauty of men from various lands of the Ottoman Empire. He achieved fame through his erotic works, which were published posthumously. Among his most famous works is The Book of Women, which was banned in the Ottoman Empire. The book describes the advantages and disadvantages of women from different nations.", "target": "Ottoman writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4663810", "label": "Abbasabad, Ardabil", "source": "Abbasabad (Persian: عباس اباد, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Fuladlui Jonubi Rural District, Hir District, Ardabil County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 145, in 24 families.", "target": "village in Ardabil, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28230406", "label": "Elton High School", "source": "Elton High School is a junior and senior high school in Elton, Louisiana, United States. It is a part of Jeff Davis Parish Public Schools. As of 2016 it has 250 students.", "target": "high school in Elton, Louisiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1508281", "label": "Cathcart", "source": "Cathcart is a census-designated place (CDP) in Snohomish County, Washington, United States. The population was 2,458 at the 2010 census. Based on per capita income, one of the more reliable measures of affluence, Cathcart ranks 45th of 522 areas in the state of Washington to be ranked. Cathcart was named for Isaac Cathcart, a businessperson in the lumber industry.", "target": "census designated place in Washington State, U.S.", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5202998", "label": "Cổ Linh", "source": "Cổ Linh is a rural commune (xã) of Pác Nặm District, Bắc Kạn Province, in Vietnam.", "target": "rural commune in Bắc Kạn, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["rural commune of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19667759", "label": "Christine Forster", "source": "Christine Forster is a former Australian local government politician who was a Liberal councillor in the City of Sydney (2012–2021) and the younger sister of former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott.Forster worked as a journalist covering the Australian energy sector for resources information service Platts, was elected to the City of Sydney Council in September 2012 and in 2014 announced a plan to run for the New South Wales Legislative Council. Forster has opposed local council amalgamation plans, called for Martin Place to be smoke free, and advocated tall buildings and increased street parking in Sydney City. She describes herself as \"committed to the principles of common sense government, genuine sustainability, free enterprise and respect for the individual. \"Forster lives with her wife Virginia Flitcroft, with whom she has raised money for the Sir David Martin Foundation and campaigned for same-sex marriage. Forster had been married previously. In 2013, she attended the launch of the Bingham Cup in Sydney, along with Bruce Notley-Smith, Don Harwin, Malcolm Turnbull, Nick Farr-Jones and John Eales.Following the 2018 Liberal leadership spill that resulted in the defeat of Malcolm Turnbull, Forster indicated that she would seek preselection as a Liberal candidate for 2018 Wentworth by-election, but later withdrew her nomination.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15094561", "label": "Russian Union of Engineers", "source": "The Russian Union of Engineers (RUE) (Russian: Российский союз инженеров (РСИ)) claims to be an all-Russian nongovernmental organization of engineers, design-engineers, builders, inventors, rationalizers, researchers, scientists, scientific and technical employees, and managers of industrial production. It has published several studies on economics, energy and housing related subjects and a paper on Malaysia Airlines Flight 17.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59571272", "label": "Demetrida hollandia", "source": "Demetrida hollandia is a species of ground beetle in Lebiinae subfamily. It was described by Darlington in 1968 and is found in Indonesia and New Guinea.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7609275", "label": "Stephen G. Post", "source": "Stephen Garrard Post (1951-; PhD University of Chicago, 1983) has served on the Board of the John Templeton Foundation (2008-2014), which focuses on virtue and public life. He is a researcher, opinion leader, medical school professor, and best-selling author who has taught at the University of Chicago Medical School, Fordham University-Marymount, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine (1988-2008) and Stony Brook University School of Medicine (2008-). He is widely known for his research on the ways in which giving can enhance the health and happiness of the giver, how empathy and compassionate care contribute to patient outcomes, ethical issues in caring for people with dementia, medical professionalism and the virtues, and positive psychology in relation to health and well-being. Post is an elected member of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, the New York Academy of Medicine, and the Royal Society of Medicine, London. He was selected nationally as the Public Member of the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Composite Committee (2000-2005), and was reappointed for outstanding contributions. His book The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease: Ethical Issues from Diagnosis to Dying (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2nd edition 2000) was designated a \"medical classic of the century\" by the British Medical Journal, which wrote (2009), \"Until this pioneering work was published in 1995 the ethical aspects of one of the most important illnesses of our aging populations were a neglected topic.\" He is an elected member of the Medical and Scientific Advisory Panel of Alzheimer's Disease International. Post is one of several recipients of.", "target": "American philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q68815253", "label": "Cults", "source": "Cults is a small parish and hamlet close to the centre of the Kingdom of Fife, Scotland. It lies mainly in the Howe of Fife, and about 4+1⁄2 miles (7.2 km) south-west of the nearest town - Cupar. The parish is about 2+1⁄3 miles (3.8 km) long and 1+1⁄3 miles (2.1 km) wide. The parish contains various villages, farms and hamlets including Cults, Pitlessie, Crossgates and Walton. The only archaeological site of any importance seems to be a fort on the western slope of Walton Hill.Its name is derived from the Scottish Gaelic cùilt meaning a corner or recess.", "target": "civil parish in Fife, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["Scottish civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16023496", "label": "Harry Short", "source": "Harry Bernard Short (1 September 1864 – 15 April 1937) was a Conservative member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in Bear River, Nova Scotia and became a corporate manager and municipal politician. Short attended school at Digby Academy. For five years, he served as Digby's mayor, and was director and manager of Maritime Fish Corporation's Digby division.He was first elected to Parliament at the Digby—Annapolis riding in the 1925 general election and re-elected there in 1926 and 1930. After completing his term in the 17th Canadian Parliament, Short did not seek re-election in 1935.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16198885", "label": "Giangiacomo Moretti", "source": "Giangiacomo or Gian Giacomo Moretti (1843 in Spalato – ?) was an Italian painter, mainly of genre subjects. He resided in Milan. In 1886 at Milan, he exhibited: Rimembranze e L'arcolaio pericoloso. In 1887 at Venice, he exhibited: Studi dal vero and Fumatrice. In 1893, he was an honorary associate of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Milan.", "target": "Italian painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19520688", "label": "2009 in Dutch television", "source": "This is a list of Dutch television related events from 2009.", "target": "overview of the events of 2009 in Dutch television", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18345517", "label": "2005 in Shooto", "source": "The year 2005 is the 17th year in the history of Shooto, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2005 Shooto held 27 events beginning with, Shooto: 1/29 in Korakuen Hall.", "target": "Shooto-related events during the year of 2005", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33026225", "label": "Carl Plaskett", "source": "Carl Plaskett (born September 23, 1943) is a sprinter who represents the United States Virgin Islands. He competed in the men's 200 metres at the 1968 Summer Olympics.", "target": "American sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4755646", "label": "Andreas Thorud", "source": "Andreas Aas Thorud (born 14 February 1984) is a former Norwegian football defender. Thorud started his career in Skjetten SK. He was brought to regional greats Lillestrøm SK ahead of the 2003 season. He got one Norwegian Premier League game in 2003, and five in 2004, without scoring. In total, Thorud played 30 games for Lillestrøm and made 1 goal. In 2004, he was awarded the \"Show Racism the Red Card-prize\" by NISO and Norsk Folkehjelp for his work and writings against racism. After the 2004 season he made something of a shock move when he retired from professional football, only 20 years old, even though the new coach Uwe Røsler wanted to give him the chance as a first team regular. Ahead of the 2007 season, he signed for Lørenskog IF after extensive studies and traveling in America, Asia and Europe. Ahead of the 2008 season he was wanted by second-tier club Sandnes Ulf, but joined Manglerud Star to stay in Oslo. After one season he returned to Lørenskog but made his final retirement from football in June 2009. He studied philosophy, religious history, theology, psychology and sociology at the University of Oslo in the period 2004-2014. His masters thesis in philosophy is a study of the Russian-born French philosopher Alexandre Kojève with the title \"Amicus Alexandre Kojève\".http://www.duo.uio.no/sok/work.html?WORKID=126779. Thorud is certified as a Philosophical Practitioner through the Norwegian Society for Philosophical Practice. His website is: Polyfonia Philosophical Practice.", "target": "Norwegian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3113322", "label": "Graiseljići", "source": "Graiseljići (Serbian Cyrillic: Граисељићи) is a village in the municipality of Kalinovik, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "target": "village in Bosnia and Herzegovina", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5012489", "label": "CKOS-FM", "source": "CKOS-FM is a contemporary Christian music radio station serving Fort McMurray, Alberta owned by United Christian Broadcasters Canada (UCB Canada) (formally owned by King's Kids Promotions Outreach Ministries). The station received approval by the CRTC in 2006. CKOS broadcasts at 91.1 MHz and streams live on the internet as well. The station changed its name from KAOS 91.1, which it held for 10 years, to 91.1 The Bridge on March 12, 2017. On April 30, 2019, CKOS-FM officially launched as UCB Canada 91.1 FM under the ownership of United Christian Broadcasters Canada (UCB Canada). CKOS-FM is also the former high school radio station for Overlea Secondary School in East York, Ontario.", "target": "Christian radio station in Fort McMurray, Alberta", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q706401", "label": "Obergebra", "source": "Obergebra is a former municipality in the district of Nordhausen, in Thuringia, Germany. Since 1 December 2007, it is part of the town Bleicherode.", "target": "village in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5491614", "label": "Franklin Jacobs", "source": "Franklin Jacobs (born December 31, 1957 ) is a former high jumper from the United States. His personal best of 2.32 meters (7 ft 7+1⁄4 in) was a world indoor record in 1978, and at 59 centimeters (23 in) above Jacobs' own height of 1.73 meters (5 ft 8 in), it remains the record for height differential, now held jointly with Stefan Holm.", "target": "American high jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5767263", "label": "Hinkletown", "source": "Hinkletown, Pennsylvania is an unincorporated community located in Earl Township in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Hinkletown is located along U.S. Route 322.", "target": "unincorporated community in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14445720", "label": "Pseudonotoncus", "source": "Pseudonotoncus is a genus of ants in the subfamily Formicinae. The genus is known only from forested areas on the east coast of Australia.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24006617", "label": "Ilias Theodoridis", "source": "Ilias-Angelos Theodoridis (Greek: Ηλίας-Άγγελος Θεοδωρίδης; born February 5, 1997) is a Greek professional basketball player. He is a 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) tall point guard.", "target": "basketball player (1997-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30972339", "label": "2017 Uzbekistan Cup", "source": "The 2017 Uzbekistan Cup is the 25th season of the annual Uzbek football Cup competition. The competition started on 19 March 2017, and ended in November 2017.The cup winner is guaranteed a place in the 2018 AFC Champions League.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4580747", "label": "1982 in paleontology", "source": "Paleontology or palaeontology is the study of prehistoric life forms on Earth through the examination of plant and animal fossils. This includes the study of body fossils, tracks (ichnites), burrows, cast-off parts, fossilised feces (coprolites), palynomorphs and chemical residues. Because humans have encountered fossils for millennia, paleontology has a long history both before and after becoming formalized as a science. This article records significant discoveries and events related to paleontology that occurred or were published in the year 1982.", "target": "overview of the events of 1982 in paleontology", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7569080", "label": "Southam Road and Harbury railway station", "source": "Southam Road and Harbury railway station was a railway station, located 1 mile (1.6 km) east of Harbury, and 2.5 miles (4.0 km) south-west of Southam, Warwickshire.", "target": "railway station in Harbury, the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18389801", "label": "Faggs Manor", "source": "Faggs Manor is an unincorporated community in Londonderry Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The hamlet, at the corner of Street Road (PA 926) and Faggs Manor Road includes a church and cemetery with a few nearby houses.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55760051", "label": "Jocelyn Orejel", "source": "Jocelyn Marie \"Joss\" Orejel Tavares (born 14 November 1996) is an American-born Mexican professional footballer who plays as defender for Liga MX Femenil club América and the Mexico women's national team.", "target": "Mexican association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6771171", "label": "Marko Lopušina", "source": "Marko Lopušina (Марко Лопушина) (born 1951) is a Serbian journalist and publicist, known for writing a number of books on the Serbian diaspora, and also on secret services and their role in contemporary Serbian politics.", "target": "Serbian journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18632138", "label": "Awdry Julius", "source": "John Awdry Julius (1874–1956) was Dean of Christchurch from 1927 to 1940. He was born in Norwich and educated at Melbourne Grammar School, Christ's College, Christchurch and Keble College, Oxford. He was ordained deacon in 1897 and priest in 1898. and began his ecclesiastical career with a curacy in Kettering. Emigrating to New Zealand he was: Vicar of Papanui, (1904–14); then Waimate, (1914–20); and Timaru, (1921–27). As well as his position as dean he was Archdeacon of Timaru, (1922–27); Rangiora, (1928–34); and Christchurch, (1934–37). Awdry was the son of Churchill Julius and brother of George Julius. He died on 18 July 1956.", "target": "New Zealand priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18776340", "label": "Yershovo", "source": "Yershovo (Russian: Ершово) is a rural locality (a village) in Teplogorskoye Rural Settlement, Velikoustyugsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 57 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Velikoustyugsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6484672", "label": "Landis Store", "source": "Landis Store is a village in District Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. It is drained by the West Branch Perkiomen Creek into the Perkiomen Creek in the Green Lane Reservoir. It is split between the Alburtis zip code of 18011, the Barto zip code of 19504, and the Boyertown zip code of 19512.", "target": "human settlement in Pennsylvania, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2916089", "label": "Temljine", "source": "Temljine (pronounced [tɛˈmljiːnɛ]) is a settlement in the Municipality of Tolmin in the Littoral region of Slovenia.", "target": "place in Slovenian Littoral, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47550622", "label": "Carlos Vera", "source": "Carlos Vera Guardia (30 August 1928 – 22 June 2022) was a Chilean athlete. He competed at the 1948 Summer Olympics and the 1952 Summer Olympics. Vera died in Bloomington, Minnesota on 22 June 2022, at the age of 93.", "target": "Chilean long jumper, triple jumper and decathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1942863", "label": "To Whom It May Concern", "source": "To Whom It May Concern is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter Lisa Marie Presley. It was released on April 8, 2003, in the United States and Canada. Two singles were released from the album: \"Lights Out\" and \"Sinking In\". The video for \"Lights Out\" reached No. 15 on the CMT Top 20 Countdown. A song Presley wrote about her ex-husband Michael Jackson, \"Disciple\", was cut from the album prior to its release.", "target": "album by Lisa Marie Presley", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q489602", "label": "Elmer Snowden", "source": "Elmer Chester Snowden (October 9, 1900 – May 14, 1973) was an American banjo player of the jazz age. He also played guitar and, in the early stages of his career, all the reed instruments. He contributed greatly to jazz in its early days as both a player and a bandleader, and launched the careers of many top musicians.", "target": "American musician (1900-1973)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5104469", "label": "Chomętów-Socha", "source": "Chomętów-Socha [xɔˈmɛntuf ˈsɔxa] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skaryszew, within Radom County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5788072", "label": "Cham Hendi", "source": "Cham Hendi (Persian: چم هندي, also Romanized as Cham Hendī and Cham-e Hendī; also known as Cham-e Hend) is a village in Abu Ghoveyr Rural District, Musian District, Dehloran County, Ilam Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 142, in 17 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12980351", "label": "Kumudham", "source": "Kumudham is a 1961 Indian Tamil-language film, directed by Adurthi Subba Rao and written by K. S. Gopalakrishnan. The film stars S. S. Rajendran, Vijayakumari and Sowcar Janaki. The film had musical score by K. V. Mahadevan. Kumudham was released on 29 July 1961 and became a commercial success, later receiving the Certificate of Merit for Third Best Feature Film at 9th National Film Awards. The film was remade in Telugu as Manchi Manasulu (1962), in Malayalam as Suseela (1963) and in Hindi as Pooja Ke Phool (1964).", "target": "1961 film by Adurthi Subba Rao", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q603588", "label": "Maesulians", "source": "The Massylii or Maesulians were a Berber federation in eastern Numidia, which was formed by an amalgamation of smaller tribes during the 4th century BC. They were ruled by a king. On their loosely defined western frontier were the powerful Masaesyli. To their east, lay the territory of the rich and powerful Carthaginian Republic. Their relationship to Carthage resembled that of a protectorate. Carthage maintained its dominance over the Massylii by skillful diplomatic manoeuvering, playing off local tribal and kingdom rivalries. The principal towns of the Massylii were Cirta, Tébessa and Thugga in Algeria and Tunisia.", "target": "ethnic group", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15218256", "label": "Teatro Campesino", "source": "El Teatro Campesino (Spanish for \"The Farmworker's Theater\") is a Chicano theatre company in California. Performing in both English and Spanish, El Teatro Campesino was founded in 1965 as the cultural arm of the United Farm Workers and the Chicano Movement with the \"full support of César Chávez.\" Originally based in Delano, California, during the Delano Strike, the theatre is currently based in San Juan Bautista, California. Currently, El Teatro Campesino’s mission is “…to create a popular art with 21st century tools that presents a more just and accurate account of human history, while encouraging the young women and men of a new generation to take control of their own destiny through creative discipline, vibrant education, economic independence, and artistic excellence.”.", "target": "theater group founded by the United Farm Workers", "baseline_candidates": ["theatrical troupe"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28700026", "label": "Friedenstag", "source": "Friedenstag (Peace Day) is an opera in one act by Richard Strauss, his Opus 81 and TrV 271, to a German libretto by Joseph Gregor. The opera was premiered at the National Theatre Munich on 24 July 1938 and dedicated to the leading singer Viorica Ursuleac and her husband, conductor Clemens Krauss. Strauss had intended Friedenstag as part of a double-bill, to be conducted by Karl Böhm in Dresden, that would include as the second part his next collaboration with Gregor, Daphne. The opera thematically expresses anti-war sentiments, which William Mann has described as \"a determined counter to the militaristic policies of Nazi Germany\". These caused the work to be shelved after the outbreak of World War II.", "target": "opera by Richard Strauss", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76100505", "label": "Rudolf Hesso, Margrave of Baden-Baden", "source": "Rudolf Hesso of Baden-Baden (c. 1290 – 17 August 1335) was a son of Hesso, Margrave of Baden-Baden and his wife, Adelaide of Rieneck. He succeeded his father as Margrave of Baden-Baden in 1297, and ruled jointly with his uncle, Rudolf III. From 1332 to 1335, he ruled alone. He married Joanna of Burgundy, Lady of Héricourt, a daughter of Reginald of Burgundy and widow of Count Ulrich II of Pfirt. Rudolf Hesso and Joanna had two daughters: Margareta (d. 1367), married Frederick III, Margrave of Baden-Baden (d. 1353) Adelheid (d. after 1399), married in 1345 Rudolf V, Margrave of Baden-Pforzheim (d. 1361) and secondly Walram IV, Count of Tierstein (d. 1386).Rudolph Hesso died in 1335. As he had no male heirs, Baden-Baden was inherited after his death by his cousin, Rudolf IV, Margrave of Baden-Pforzheim.", "target": "Co-ruler of Baden-Baden", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96001734", "label": "Lawrence Cager", "source": "Lawrence Cager (born August 20, 1997) is an American football wide receiver for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for Miami (FL) and Georgia.", "target": "American football wide receiver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3028348", "label": "Kristin Ross", "source": "Kristin Ross (born 1953) is a professor emeritus of comparative literature at New York University. She is primarily known for her work on French literature and culture of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.", "target": "American academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22084062", "label": "Kilkea and Moone", "source": "Kilkea and Moone (Irish: Cill Chá agus Maoin) is a barony in County Kildare, Republic of Ireland.", "target": "barony in County Kildare, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["barony"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21281093", "label": "Viking Terra", "source": "Viking Terra is a region on the dwarf planet Pluto which lies just west of Sputnik Planum and south of Voyager Terra. It was discovered by the New Horizons probe during the July 2015 flyby of the dwarf planet. It is named after the Viking program.", "target": "terra on Pluto", "baseline_candidates": ["terra"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6699712", "label": "Lugaid Loígde", "source": "Lugaid Loígde \"Lugaid of the Calf Goddess\", also known as Lugaid mac Dáire, was a legendary King of Tara and High King of Ireland. He is a son of Dáire Doimthech, ancestor of the Dáirine, and gives his epithet to their principal royal sept, the Corcu Loígde. A descendant of Lugaid, with whom he may be to some extent identical, is the famous Mac Con, listed in the Old Irish kinglist Baile Chuinn Chétchathaig as Mac Con macc aui (moccu) Lugde Loígde.In some later syncretic traditions, as Lugaid Laigde, he is made a son of Eochu mac Ailella, and given a son Rechtaid Rígderg. Another late emanation is Lugaid Luaigne.", "target": "legendary King of Tara and High King of Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q516344", "label": "Apostag", "source": "Apostag is a village and municipality in Bács-Kiskun county, in the Southern Great Plain region of southern Hungary. Croats in Hungary call this village Štagara.", "target": "village in Hungary", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Hungary"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1421407", "label": "economy of Cyprus", "source": "The economy of Cyprus is a high-income economy as classified by the World Bank, and was included by the International Monetary Fund in its list of advanced economies in 2001. Cyprus adopted the euro as its official currency on 1 January 2008, replacing the Cypriot pound at an irrevocable fixed exchange rate of CYP 0.585274 per €1.The 2012–2013 Cypriot financial crisis, part of the wider European debt crisis, has dominated the country's economic affairs in recent times. In March 2013, the Cypriot government reached an agreement with its eurozone partners to split the country's second biggest bank, the Cyprus Popular Bank (also known as Laiki Bank), into a \"bad\" bank which would be wound down over time and a \"good\" bank which would be absorbed by the larger Bank of Cyprus. In return for a €10 billion bailout from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, the Cypriot government would be required to impose a significant haircut on uninsured deposits. Insured deposits of €100,000 or less would not be affected. After a three-and-a-half-year recession, Cyprus returned to growth in the first quarter of 2015. Cyprus successfully concluded its three-year financial assistance programme at the end of March 2016, having borrowed a total of €6.3 billion from the European Stability Mechanism and €1 billion from the IMF. The remaining €2.7 billion of the ESM bailout was never dispensed, due to the Cypriot government's better than expected finances over the course of the programme.", "target": "economy of the country", "baseline_candidates": ["economy of Eurozone", "economy of Europe", "national economy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16068995", "label": "Andris Treimanis", "source": "Andris Treimanis (born 16 March 1985) is a Latvian professional football referee. He has been a full international for FIFA since 2011. He refereed the final of the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup in Brazil.", "target": "Latvian football referee", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2714288", "label": "Roberto Cereceda", "source": "Roberto Andrés Cereceda Guajardo (born 10 October 1984) is a Chilean footballer, who currently plays for Chilean club Audax Italiano.", "target": "Chilean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7404744", "label": "Salisbury Cathedral Choir", "source": "The Choir of Salisbury Cathedral exists to sing services in Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire, England, and has probably been in existence since the consecration of the cathedral in 1258. The choir comprises twenty boy choristers and twenty girl choristers aged from 8 to 13 years and six professional Lay Vicars singing countertenor, tenor and bass. Salisbury Cathedral was the first English cathedral to recruit girl choristers (in 1991) and, when in the cathedral, the girls' choir is usually wholly independent of the boys'. The weekly services are equally divided between the boy and girl choristers throughout the school year. The choristers are educated at Salisbury Cathedral School, which is situated in the Cathedral Close. The Lay Vicars live locally. In addition to services, the choir is involved in BBC broadcasts, concerts, CD recordings and the annual Southern Cathedrals Festival. The choir also broadcasts frequently on BBC Radio 3 and BBC Radio 4. A documentary programme about the choir was shown on BBC4 television in March 2012 under the title Angelic Voices; it included episodes in the life of the members of both choirs over a four-month period.The choir is directed by the Director of Music, currently David Halls, and accompanied by the Assistant Organist, plus an organ scholar, who is selected by audition on an annual basis.", "target": "Choir in Wiltshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["choir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26903181", "label": "Jam County", "source": "Jam County (Persian: شهرستان جم) is a county in Bushehr Province in Iran. The capital of the county is Jam. At the 2006 census, its population was 37,999, in 8,412 families. The county is subdivided into two districts: the Central District and Riz District. The county has three cities: Jam, Anarestan and Riz.", "target": "county in Bushehr Province, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5613764", "label": "Guanine-transporting ATPase", "source": "In enzymology, a guanine-transporting ATPase (EC 3.6.3.37) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction ATP + H2O + guanineout ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } ADP + phosphate + guanineinThe 3 substrates of this enzyme are ATP, H2O, and guanine, whereas its 3 products are ADP, phosphate, and guanine. This enzyme belongs to the family of hydrolases, specifically those acting on acid anhydrides to catalyse transmembrane movement of substances. The systematic name of this enzyme class is ATP phosphohydrolase (guanine-importing).", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["group or class of transmembrane transport proteins", "ATP-binding cassette transporter"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7288098", "label": "Ralph Smith", "source": "Ralph Smith (August 8, 1858 – February 17, 1917) was a Canadian coal miner, labour leader, and politician. Born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, he emigrated to Canada with his wife in 1891 settling in Nanaimo, British Columbia. A miner by trade, Smith was a moderate trade unionist in Nanaimo. In 1898, he won election to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia on a moderate \"Liberal-Labour\" platform. He ran for Vancouver's seat in the House of Commons of Canada in the 1900 federal election. Reports vary on whether he ran as an Independent Labour-Liberal candidate defeating the official Liberal and Conservative candidates, but once elected, he joined the Liberal caucus. He was re-elected in the 1904 and 1908 elections as a Liberal. He was defeated in the 1911 election. Smith subsequently returned to provincial politics and, returned to the provincial legislature in the 1916 provincial election that brought the British Columbia Liberal Party to power. Smith served as Minister of Finance in the government of Premier Harlan Carey Brewster, and died in office on February 17, 1917. His wife, Mary Ellen Smith, succeeded him in the subsequent by-election (held January 1918) as an Independent Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA). She subsequently became the first female cabinet minister in the British Empire. Ralph Smith was a supporter of women's suffrage, which was enacted in the province shortly after the Liberals came to power after ten previous attempts over the years had failed.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14710645", "label": "KKYS", "source": "KKYS (104.7 FM, \"Mix 104.7\") is a radio station broadcasting a hot adult contemporary format. Licensed to Bryan, Texas, United States, the station serves the Brazos Valley. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. Its studios and transmitter are located separately in Bryan.", "target": "radio station in Bryan, Texas", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6277888", "label": "Jorge Cáceres", "source": "Jorge Cáceres (14 April 1917 – 3 December 1975) was an Argentine modern pentathlete and military general. His brother, José Rafael Cáceres Monié, was the Minister of Defense under the presidencies of Roberto Marcelo Levingston and Alejandro Agustín Lanusse.", "target": "modern pentathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3246884", "label": "Peshawar Division", "source": "Peshawar Division is an administrative division of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, Pakistan. It was abolished in the reforms of 2000, like all divisions, but reinstated in 2008. At independence in 1947, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (then North-West Frontier Province) was split into two divisions, Dera Ismail Khan and Peshawar. Until 1976, Peshawar Division contained the districts of Hazara and Kohat, when they both became divisions themselves. Later in the mid-1990s, the district of Mardan (and its tehsils) also became a division itself.", "target": "division of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["division of Pakistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q688252", "label": "Amazed", "source": "\"Amazed\" is a song by American country music group Lonestar, released on March 22, 1999, for country radio as the second single from their third studio album Lonely Grill (1999). The power ballad is the band's longest-lasting number one single and biggest hit, spending eight weeks at the top of the Billboard country chart. The song was written by Marv Green, Aimee Mayo, and Chris Lindsey. A pop remix of the song reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and number two on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks charts in 2000. The song has sold over 1,650,000 digital copies in the US as of February 2016.Only five years after Lonestar's \"Amazed\" topped the Billboard Hot 100 did another country song top the chart, as Carrie Underwood's \"Inside Your Heaven\" debuted at number one on the Hot 100 in 2005, making it one of just two songs to top the Hot 100 since 2000. Since the release of the original, the song has been covered by Bonnie Tyler, Duncan James, and Fady Maalouf, all of whom have released their respective versions as singles. Ben Mills, Boyz II Men and Shane Filan of Westlife have included covers in their respective albums. On The Sing-Off (season 4, episode 3), judge Shawn Stockman, of Boyz II Men fame, mentioned that the song had been offered to them first, and they decided to turn it down.", "target": "Lonestar song", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5390645", "label": "Juan Carlos Mendoza García", "source": "Juan Carlos Mendoza García (San José, 7 July 1975) is a Costa Rican politician and the country's current Ambassador to the United Nations. He was a deputy with the Citizens' Action Party (PAC for its Spanish initials) during the 2010 to 2014 and served as President of the Legislative Assembly from 2011 to 2012.", "target": "Costa Rican civil servant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4503917", "label": "Grechów", "source": "Grechów [ˈɡrɛxuf] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rzeczniów, within Lipsko County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) south of Rzeczniów, 16 km (10 mi) west of Lipsko, and 128 km (80 mi) south of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1254597", "label": "Richard Maxfield", "source": "Richard Vance Maxfield (February 2, 1927 – June 27, 1969) was a composer of instrumental, electro-acoustic, and electronic music. Born in Seattle, Maxfield studied at Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley (with Roger Sessions) and privately with Ernst Krenek in Los Angeles. A Hertz Prize travel scholarship allowed Maxfield to travel to Europe, where he met Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Luigi Nono. in 1953 he studied at Tanglewood with Aaron Copland. In 1954-55 he studied at Princeton University with Sessions and his pupil Milton Babbitt. A Fulbright Scholarship allowed Maxfield to live in Europe between 1955 and 1957, where he studied with Luigi Dallapiccola and Bruno Maderna, lived for a brief period with Hans Werner Henze and met John Cage and David Tudor. In 1958, he attended Cage's courses at the New School for Social Research (now The New School). In 1959 he taught classes there himself, becoming the first American to teach purely electronic music (as opposed to electronic music based on musique concrete-style real life recordings). As a student at University of California and in Europe in the 1950s, he composed instrumental scores in a neoclassical style and then adopted 12-tone techniques. It is however techniques for composing with magnetic tape that would prove decisive in the development of Maxfield's mature compositions. Among his innovations with tape music were the simultaneous performance of improvised instrumental solos with tapes based upon samples of the same soloist, re-editing of tapes before each public performance so that the pieces were not fixed in a single form,.", "target": "American composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3183631", "label": "Jermaine Flowers", "source": "Jermaine \"Jonte\" Flowers (born April 12, 1985) is an American professional basketball player.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2607880", "label": "Ministry of Petroleum and Energy of Norway", "source": "The Royal Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum and Energy (Norwegian: Olje- og energidepartementet) is a Norwegian ministry responsible for energy, including petroleum and natural gas production in the North Sea. It is led by Minister of Petroleum and Energy Terje Aasland (Labour Party). The department must report to the legislature, the Storting.", "target": "Norwegian ministry", "baseline_candidates": ["energy ministry", "Ministry of Norway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1193287", "label": "Angen", "source": "Angen (安元) was a Japanese era name (年号,, nengō,, lit. \"year name\") after Jōan and before Jishō. This period spanned the years from July 1175 through August 1177. The reigning emperor was Takakura-tennō (高倉天皇).", "target": "Japanese era from January 1175 to August 1177", "baseline_candidates": ["Japanese era name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1101111", "label": "Shiseibyō", "source": "The Shiseibyō (至聖廟) is a Confucian temple in the Wakasa district of Naha, Okinawa. It served for centuries as a major center of Chinese learning for the Ryūkyū Kingdom, and contains within its precincts the Meirindō, first public school in Okinawa.", "target": "building in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["temple of Confucius"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3523458", "label": "Murasoli Maran", "source": "Murasoli Maran (17 August 1934 – 23 November 2003) was an Indian politician and an important leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party which was headed by his maternal uncle and mentor, M. Karunanidhi. A Member of Parliament for 36 years, he was made a Union Minister in three separate central governments, in charge of Urban Development in the V.P. Singh government, Industry in the Gowda and Gujral governments, and finally Commerce and Industry under Vajpayee. Apart from being a politician, Maran was a journalist and scriptwriter for films too.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11939934", "label": "Palu", "source": "Palu (Kurdish: Palo) is a town and district of Elazığ Province of Turkey. The current mayor is Efrayim Ünalan (AKP). It has a population of 8,652.", "target": "district of Elazığ, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "district of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60791339", "label": "Levan Kharabadze", "source": "Levan Kharabadze (Georgian: ლევან ხარაბაძე; 26 January 2000) is a Georgian football player who plays as a left-back for Georgian side Dinamo Tbilisi.", "target": "football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60978852", "label": "European route E581", "source": "European route E 581 is a European B class road in Romania, Moldova and Ukraine.", "target": "road in Romania, Moldova, and Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6820564", "label": "Abu Tubar", "source": "Abu Tubar (literally The Hatchet Man) was the name given to the perpetrator of a series of robberies and murders committed in Baghdad during the early years of the Ba'ath Party rule. Although eventually ascribed to former members of Nadhim Kzar's (chief of the Directorate of General Security) police force, at the time there was widespread fear amongst the Baghdad population about the nature of the crimes.Abu Tubar has achieved the title \"hatchet man\" in early 1970s. His real name was حاتم كاظم الهضم (Hatem Kazem Hathom); born 1932 in the city of Babylon, Hilla in Iraq. He was known as the man who brought fear and terror to the civilians of Iraq. He had a reputation of murdering families by chopping them with his hatchet. He usually began his crimes with a strange phone call, usually when the victim was alone at home. The call consisted of a useless conversation, threatening, and cursing. After the phone call, there was a knock on the door, after which the crime began.", "target": "Iraqi robber and serial killer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25705521", "label": "animal", "source": "Animals (also called Metazoa) are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms in the biological kingdom Animalia. With few exceptions, animals consume organic material, breathe oxygen, are able to move, can reproduce sexually, and go through an ontogenetic stage in which their body consists of a hollow sphere of cells, the blastula, during embryonic development. Over 1.5 million living animal species have been described—of which around 1 million are insects—but it has been estimated there are over 7 million animal species in total. Animals range in length from 8.5 micrometres (0.00033 in) to 33.6 metres (110 ft). They have complex interactions with each other and their environments, forming intricate food webs. The scientific study of animals is known as zoology. Most living animal species are in Bilateria, a clade whose members have a bilaterally symmetric body plan. The Bilateria include the protostomes, containing animals such as nematodes, arthropods, flatworms, annelids and molluscs, and the deuterostomes, containing the echinoderms and the chordates, the latter including the vertebrates. Life forms interpreted as early animals were present in the Ediacaran biota of the late Precambrian. Many modern animal phyla became clearly established in the fossil record as marine species during the Cambrian explosion, which began around 539 million years ago. 6,331 groups of genes common to all living animals have been identified; these may have arisen from a single common ancestor that lived 650 million years ago. Historically, Aristotle divided animals into those with blood and those without. Carl Linnaeus created the first hierarchical biological classification for animals in 1758 with his Systema.", "target": "kingdom of multicellular eukaryotic organisms", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon", "organism"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29097497", "label": "Houston Ranger Station Historic District", "source": "Houston Ranger Station Historic District is a national historic district located in Mark Twain National Forest near Houston, Texas County, Missouri. The district encompasses five frame and limestone buildings constructed by the Lynchburg Camp of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) during 1936 and 1937. They are the 1 1/2-story Colonial Revival style ranger's office, 1 1/2-story Colonial Revival style dwelling, garage, warehouse and oil house.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.", "target": "national historic district located in Mark Twain National Forest near Houston, Texas County, Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["ranger station", "historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4708452", "label": "Alasea corniculata", "source": "Alasea is a genus of moths in the family Choreutidae, containing only one species, Alasea corniculata, which is known from Costa Rica. The length of the forewings is 4.5–5.2 mm for males and 5.2–5.7 mm for females.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12482012", "label": "dual", "source": "Dual (abbreviated DU) is a grammatical number that some languages use in addition to singular and plural. When a noun or pronoun appears in dual form, it is interpreted as referring to precisely two of the entities (objects or persons) identified by the noun or pronoun acting as a single unit or in unison. Verbs can also have dual agreement forms in these languages. The dual number existed in Proto-Indo-European and persisted in many of its descendants, such as Ancient Greek and Sanskrit, which have dual forms across nouns, verbs, and adjectives, Gothic, which used dual forms in pronouns and verbs, and Old English (Anglo-Saxon), which used dual forms in its pronouns. It can still be found in a few modern Indo-European languages such as Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Lithuanian, Slovene, and Sorbian languages. The majority of modern Indo-European languages, including modern English, however, have lost dual through their development and only show residual traces of it. In all these languages, its function has mostly been replaced by simple plurals, although the remnants are evident in the English distinctions: both vs. all, either vs. any, neither vs. none, and so on. A commonly used sentence to exemplify dual in English is \"Both go to the same school.\" where both refers to two specific people who had already been determined in the conversation. Many Semitic languages also have dual numbers. For instance, in Hebrew יים‎- (-ayim) or a variation of it is added to the end of some nouns, e.g. some parts of the body (eye, ear, nostril,.", "target": "grammatical number found in some languages representing two of an entity", "baseline_candidates": ["grammatical number"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7329863", "label": "Richard Weber", "source": "Richard Robert Weber (born 25 February 1953) is a mathematician working in operational research. He is Emeritus Churchill Professor of Mathematics for Operational Research in the Statistical Laboratory, University of Cambridge. Weber was educated at Walnut Hills High School, Solihull School and Downing College, Cambridge. He graduated in 1974, and completed his PhD in 1980 under the supervision of Peter Nash. He has been on the faculty of the University of Cambridge since 1978, and a fellow of Queens' College since 1977 where he has been Vice President from 1996–2007 and again from 2018–2020. He was appointed Churchill Professor in 1994, and he became Emeritus Churchill Professor on retirement in 2017. He was Director of the Statistical Laboratory from 1999 to 2009, and is a trustee of the Rollo Davidson Trust.He works on the mathematics of large complex systems subject to uncertainty. He has made contributions to stochastic scheduling, Markov decision processes, queueing theory, the probabilistic analysis of algorithms, the theory of communications pricing and control, and rendezvous search. Weber and his co-authors were awarded the 2007 INFORMS prize for their paper on the online bin packing algorithm.", "target": "British mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25584894", "label": "tomato", "source": "The tomato is the edible berry of the plant Solanum lycopersicum, commonly known as the tomato plant. The species originated in western South America, Mexico, and Central America. The Mexican Nahuatl word tomatl gave rise to the Spanish word tomate, from which the English word tomato derived. Its domestication and use as a cultivated food may have originated with the indigenous peoples of Mexico. The Aztecs used tomatoes in their cooking at the time of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, and after the Spanish encountered the tomato for the first time after their contact with the Aztecs, they brought the plant to Europe, in a widespread transfer of plants known as the Columbian exchange. From there, the tomato was introduced to other parts of the European-colonized world during the 16th century.Tomatoes are a significant source of umami flavor. It is consumed in diverse ways: raw or cooked, and in many dishes, sauces, salads, and drinks. While tomatoes are fruits—botanically classified as berries—they are commonly used culinarily as a vegetable ingredient or side dish.Numerous varieties of the tomato plant are widely grown in temperate climates across the world, with greenhouses allowing for the production of tomatoes throughout all seasons of the year. Tomato plants typically grow to 1–3 meters (3–10 ft) in height. They are vines that have a weak stem that sprawls and typically needs support. Indeterminate tomato plants are perennials in their native habitat, but are cultivated as annuals. (Determinate, or bush, plants are annuals that stop growing at a certain height and.", "target": "type of plant species with edible, often red, berry fruit", "baseline_candidates": ["food crop", "taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2697202", "label": "Pampas Grande District", "source": "Pampas District is one of twelve districts of the province Huaraz in Peru. Its capital is the city of Pampas Grande.", "target": "district in the Huaraz Province (Ancash, Peru)", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15658534", "label": "Pravachan", "source": "Pravachan, or Pravacana (Sanskrit: प्रवचन) is a term for any exposition of a doctrine or treatise, or to the recitation of a scripture or text in Jainism and Hinduism traditions. It particularly refers to the tradition of Pravacanakara (monks, scholars or saints) presenting their teachings or explanations of spiritual ideas before a gathering of householders or general public in the Indian traditions. Pravacana is an ancient tradition, whose earliest mentions are found in the Vedic texts but one that is also found in post-Vedic Shastra and Sutra texts of Hindus and Jains.", "target": "discourse, recital or discussion of a spiritual text or ideas in Indian religions", "baseline_candidates": ["discourse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10417127", "label": "Archaeodictyna", "source": "Archaeodictyna is a genus of cribellate araneomorph spiders in the family Dictynidae, and was first described by Lodovico di Caporiacco in 1928.", "target": "genus of arachnids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20711193", "label": "2011 NCAA Bowling Championship", "source": "The 2011 NCAA Bowling Championship was the eighth annual tournament to determine the national champion of women's NCAA collegiate ten-pin bowling. The tournament was played at Skore Lanes in Taylor, Michigan from April 15–16, 2011.Maryland Eastern Shore defeated Vanderbilt in the championship match, 4 games to 2 (215–197, 164–193, 201–248, 234–204, 235–166, 192–181), to win their second national title. The Hawks were coached by Sharon Brummell. Maryland Eastern Shore's Kristina Frahm was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Frahm, along with four other bowlers, also comprised the All Tournament Team.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6589507", "label": "Mixed Artillery Brigade", "source": "The Mixed Artillery Brigade (Serbian: Мешовита артиљеријска бригада, romanized: Mešovita artiljerijska brigada) is the artillery brigade of the Serbian Army with the task of providing artillery support to other Serbian Army units.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75135548", "label": "The Stranded", "source": "The Stranded (Thai: เคว้ง; RTGS: Khweng) is a 2019 Thai television series starring Papangkorn Lerkchaleampote, Chutawut Phatrakampol and Oabnithi Wiwattanawarang. The plot revolves around a number of teens who are stranded on an island when a tsunami hits.Produced by GMM Grammy's Bravo Studios and H2L Media Group in association with Netflix Studios, it was released on November 14, 2019 on Netflix.", "target": "2019 thai TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7114981", "label": "Owston Abbey", "source": "Owston Abbey was an Augustinian monastery in Owston, Leicestershire, England.", "target": "monastery in Leicestershire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["monastery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22006187", "label": "Richard Lathim", "source": "Richard Lathim is an American politician who served as the Sheriff of Franklin County, Washington. Lathim is a veteran of the Franklin County Sheriff's Office, serving 7 terms as Sheriff from 1986 to 2014, until being succeeded by James (Jim) Raymond in the 2014 elections.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2698307", "label": "Robert ten Brink", "source": "Robert ten Brink (Amsterdam, 20 October 1955) is a Dutch presenter. He won the Golden TeleVizier-Ring in 1993 for his television program All you need is love. In 1997, he was chosen as the Netherlands' most popular TV personality. He has been married since 1981 to Roos Cialona, with whom he has five children, all of them are girls.", "target": "Dutch actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7033469", "label": "Night Slaves", "source": "Night Slaves is a 1970 American television science fiction horror film directed by Ted Post and starring James Franciscus and Lee Grant. It was based on a 1965 novel by science fiction writer Jerry Sohl, best known for writing episodes of The Outer Limits, Star Trek, Alfred Hitchcock Presents and as ghostwriter for Charles Beaumont on three episodes of The Twilight Zone. Night Slaves aired as part of the ABC Network's Movie of the Week series.", "target": "1970 television film directed by Ted Post", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26265919", "label": "Stephen Thurston Adey", "source": "Stephen Thurston Adey (died 28 October 1801) was a British politician and the Member of Parliament for Higham Ferrers from 1798 to 1801.", "target": "British Member of Parliament (died 1811)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96056", "label": "Christian Günther III, Prince of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen", "source": "Christian Günther III of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (24 June 1736 – 14 October 1794) was the ruling Prince of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen from 1758 until his death. Some authors call him Prince Christian Günther I, because he was the first ruler of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen named Christian Günther who held the title of Prince. Others call Christian Günther III, because there were two earlier Counts by that name.", "target": "German prince (1736-1794)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q141570", "label": "Lebanon at the 2012 Summer Olympics", "source": "Lebanon competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, from 27 July to 12 August 2012. This was the nation's sixteenth appearance at the Olympics, except the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne as a response to the Suez Crisis. The Lebanese Olympic Committee sent the nation's largest delegation to the Games, after the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. A total of 10 athletes, 3 men and 7 women, competed in 7 different sports. For the first time in its Olympic history, Lebanon was represented by more female than male athletes. Three of its athletes were born in the United States: foil fencers and siblings Zain and Mona Shaito, and freestyle swimmer Katya Bachrouche. Two other athletes had competed in Beijing, including sprinter Gretta Taslakian, who was at her third consecutive Olympics. Asian Games silver medalist Andrea Paoli, who became the first Lebanese taekwondo jin to participate in the Olympics, was the nation's flag bearer at the opening ceremony. Lebanon, however, failed to win an Olympic medal in London since the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, where Hassan Bchara won the bronze for Greco-Roman wrestling.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28228971", "label": "Paradelta Parma", "source": "Paradelta Parma srl is an Italian aircraft manufacturer based in Parma and founded in 1980. The company specializes in the design and manufacture of paragliders in the form of ready-to-fly aircraft. The company also produces sewn banners, inflatables and windsocks.The company is a società a responsabilità limitata (srl), an Italian limited liability venture.By the mid-2000s the company was producing a full range of gliders including the competition Ben Hur and Breathless, the two-place BiBreak for flight training, the intermediate Bora and beginner Break.", "target": "Italian aircraft manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21500549", "label": "Alladi", "source": "Alladi (Telugu: అల్లాడి) is a Telugu Indian surname and given name. Notable people with the name include: Alladi Krishnaswamy Iyer (1883–1953), Indian lawyer and member of the Constituent Assembly of India Alladi Kuppu Swamy (1920–2012), Indian lawyer of Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh High Court Alladi Ramakrishnan (1923–2008), Indian physicist and the founder of the Institute of Mathematical Sciences Krishnaswami Alladi (born 1955) Indian-American mathematician who specializes in number theory.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26702698", "label": "Lisa Pruitt", "source": "Lisa Anne Pruitt (born April 2, 1966) is an American mechanical engineer known for her research on orthopedic biomaterials and medical polymers.", "target": "American mechanical engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q605756", "label": "FC Lokomotivi Tbilisi", "source": "FC Locomotive Tbilisi is a Georgian football club from the capital, Tbilisi. During the existence of the USSR the club was a part of the Lokomotiv Voluntary Sports Society. The club has strong connections with the Georgian Railways.", "target": "Georgian association football club from the capital, Tbilisi", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18394459", "label": "Wangcha Rajkumar", "source": "Wangcha Rajkumar (29 December 1966 - 23 December 2007) was an Indian politician and former Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha representing Arunachal Pradesh East from 1996 to 2004. He was assassinated by unidentified assailants of on 23 December 2007.", "target": "Indian politician (1965-2007)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31469425", "label": "Lunkovo", "source": "Lunkovo (Russian: Луньково) is a rural locality (a village) in Golovinskoye Rural Settlement, Sudogodsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 11 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Sudogodsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5496829", "label": "Freddie as F.R.O.7", "source": "Freddie as F.R.O.7 (also known as Freddie the Frog) is a 1992 British animated musical action fantasy comedy film written and directed by Jon Acevski and starring the voice of Ben Kingsley. Inspired by bedtime stories Acevski told to his son about his favourite toy frog working as a secret agent, it is a parody of James Bond. The film was released in both the United Kingdom and the United States in the summer of 1992. It was negatively received by critics and audiences, with the American release in particular resulting in a box office bomb. It held the record of the lowest-grossing animated film at the US box office until The Ten Commandments in 2007, also starring Ben Kingsley.", "target": "1992 film by Jon Acevski", "baseline_candidates": ["animated feature film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35697344", "label": "Klukowicze", "source": "Klukowicze [klukɔˈvʲit͡ʂɛ] (Ukrainian: Клюковичі, Kliukovychi) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Nurzec-Stacja, within Siemiatycze County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It lies approximately 14 kilometres (9 mi) south-east of Nurzec-Stacja, 28 km (17 mi) east of Siemiatycze, and 80 km (50 mi) south of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 370.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4217835", "label": "Nissan Katzenelson", "source": "Dr. Nissan Katzenelson (1862, Babruysk – 1925), was a Russian Jewish activist, member of the First State Duma of the Russian Empire in 1906-1907. This Libau banker, son of Yosef Katzenelson and Feye Breyne Katzenelson, took part in the Third Zionist congress at Basle, and was subsequently elected to the Directorate of the Jewish Colonial Trust. A close friend of Dr. Theodor Herzl, he was invited to accompany him to Saint Petersburg in 1903. After signing the Vyborg Manifesto, he spent three months in prison and was forbidden to stand again for election.", "target": "Russian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3295988", "label": "The Yes Album", "source": "The Yes Album is the third studio album by English progressive rock band Yes, released on 19 February 1971 by Atlantic Records. It was the band's first album to feature guitarist Steve Howe, who replaced Peter Banks in 1970, as well as their last to feature keyboardist Tony Kaye until 1983's 90125. The album was the first by the band not to feature any cover versions of songs. The band spent mid-1970 writing and rehearsing new material at a farmhouse at Romansleigh, Devon, and the new songs were recorded at Advision Studios in London in the autumn. While the album retained close harmony singing, Kaye's Hammond organ, and Chris Squire's melodic bass, as heard on earlier releases, the new material also covered further styles including jazz piano, funk, and acoustic music. All of the band members contributed ideas, and tracks were extended in length to allow music to develop. Howe contributed a variety of guitar styles, including a Portuguese guitar, and recorded the solo acoustic guitar piece \"Clap\", live at the Lyceum Theatre, London. The album was a critical success and a major commercial breakthrough for Yes, who had been at risk of being dropped by Atlantic due to the commercial failures of their first two albums. It reached number 4 in the United Kingdom and number 40 in the United States, and was later certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America for surpassing one million copies. The album has been reissued on CD several times, and was given a Blu-ray release in 2014.", "target": "1971 studio album by Yes", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2852285", "label": "Anomalopus pluto", "source": "The Cape York worm-skink (Sepsiscus pluto) is a species of skink found in Queensland in Australia.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1501564", "label": "Kilmore, County Armagh", "source": "Kilmore or Killmore (from the Irish: Cill Mhór) is a small village, townland and civil parish in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. It lies 2.5 miles (4 km) north of Richhill and within the Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council area. It had a population of 190 people (74 households) in the 2011 Census.Finds from the area include a 12th-century silver finger ring, a bone comb, fragments of a lignite bracelet, skeletal remains from fields surrounding the church and an early 10th-century copper alloy and crutch-headed pin now in the British Museum.", "target": "village in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27704750", "label": "2016–17 Segunda División", "source": "The 2016–17 Segunda División Femenina de Fútbol was the 2016–17 edition of the Spanish women's football second-tier league.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16214786", "label": "Casey Colby", "source": "Casey Colby (born November 3, 1974 in Lake Placid, New York) is an American former ski jumper who competed in the 1998 Winter Olympics.", "target": "American ski jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69541153", "label": "Kristie Peterson", "source": "Kristie Peterson (born October 10, 1955) is a ProRodeo Hall of Fame barrel racer. She was inducted into the Cheyenne Frontier Days Hall of Fame in 2020.", "target": "American barrel racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q265854", "label": "Psammopolia", "source": "Psammopolia is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6402399", "label": "Khorram Brickworks", "source": "Khorram Brickworks (Persian: كوره اجرپزي خرم – Kūreh Ajorpazī Khorram) is a company town and village in Narjeh Rural District, in the Central District of Takestan County, Qazvin Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 16 families.", "target": "company town/village in Qazvin, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47018838", "label": "Gtashen", "source": "Gtashen (Armenian: Գտաշեն) is a village and rural community (municipality) in the Shirak Province of Armenia.", "target": "village in Shirak Province of Armenia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Armenia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18519129", "label": "Echinarachnius", "source": "Echinarachnius is a genus of sand dollars, belonging to the family Echinarachniidae . Species of Echinarachnius have been around since the Pliocene epoch.", "target": "genus of echinoderms", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q349892", "label": "Adam Jones", "source": "Adam Thomas Jones (born January 15, 1965) is an American musician and visual artist, best known as the guitarist for Tool. Jones has been rated the 75th-greatest guitarist of all time by the Rolling Stone and placed ninth in Guitar World's Top 100 Greatest Metal Guitarists. With experience in special effects and set design in the Hollywood film industry, Jones is also the director of the majority of Tool's music videos.", "target": "American guitarist; musician and visual artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5528460", "label": "Gawler Oval railway station", "source": "Gawler Oval railway station is located on the Gawler line. Situated in the South Australian town of Gawler, it is 41.4 kilometres (25.7 mi) from Adelaide station.", "target": "railway station in South Australia, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7442643", "label": "Sebastián Gaitán", "source": "Sebastián Rodrigo Gaitán Araújo (born June 21, 1987 in Montevideo) is a Uruguayan footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder.", "target": "Uruguayan footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5373553", "label": "Emmett O'Donnell, Jr.", "source": "General Emmett E. \"Rosie\" O'Donnell Jr. (September 15, 1906 – December 26, 1971) was a United States Air Force four-star general who served as Commander in Chief, Pacific Air Forces (CINCPACAF) from 1959 to 1963. He also led the first B-29 Superfortress attack against Tokyo during World War II.", "target": "United States general (1906-1971)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20051080", "label": "Cortinarius cruentipellis", "source": "Cortinarius cruentipellis is a rare species of agaric fungus in the subgenus Phlegmacium of the large mushroom genus Cortinarius. Described as new to science in 2014, it is found in northern Europe—Estonia, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden—where it grows on the ground in temperate and hemiboreal forests dominated by hazel and oak trees, and also in wooded pastures and parks. The cap of the mushroom is hemispherical to convex, measuring 3–7.5 cm (1.2–3.0 in) in diameter. It is yellowish brown in the center, becoming more yellow towards the cap margin. The specific epithet cruentipellis refers the blood red droplets in the cap cuticle.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5065750", "label": "Cevdetiye", "source": "Cevdetiye is a belde (town) in the central district (Osmaniye) of Osmaniye Province, Turkey. At 37°08′N 36°12′E it is 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) north of Osmaniye. It is situated on the road connecting Osmaniye to Kadirli at the east end of the Çukurova (Cilicia) plains. The population of Cevdetiye is 2996 as of 2010.", "target": "town in Osmaniye Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18393748", "label": "Red Aces", "source": "Gaining the same praises like the \"Blue Diamonds\" the Philippine Air Force \"Red Aces\" were the 7th Tactical Squadrons Aerial Demonstration Team.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["aerobatic team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60442076", "label": "2020 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania", "source": "The 2020 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, as part of the 2020 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Pennsylvania voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican Party's nominee, President Donald Trump, and running mate Vice President Mike Pence against Democratic Party nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, and his running mate California Senator Kamala Harris. Pennsylvania has 20 electoral votes in the Electoral College.Although Trump had won the state in 2016 by a narrow margin of 0.72%, Biden was able to reclaim the state, winning it by a similarly narrow 1.17% margin. Because of the way the state counted in-person ballots first, Trump started with a wide lead on election night. However, over the next few days, Biden greatly closed the margin due to outstanding votes from Democratic-leaning areas, most notably Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, as well as mail-in ballots from all parts of the state which strongly favored him. On the morning of November 6, election-calling organization Decision Desk HQ forecast that Biden had won Pennsylvania's 20 electoral votes, and with them the election. The following morning, November 7, during a Trump campaign press conference outside a Philadelphia landscaping business, nearly all major news organizations followed suit and called Pennsylvania for Biden, proclaiming him President-elect.One key to Biden's success in the state was his improvement on Hillary Clinton's margins in the large Philadelphia-area suburban counties: he won Bucks by.", "target": "presidential election in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["United States presidential election in Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13638683", "label": "Ivo Protulipac", "source": "Ivo Protulipac (4 June 1899 – 31 January 1946) was a Croatian lawyer and Catholic activist, assassinated in 1946, reportedly by the UDBA (Yugoslav secret police). He served in the defence of Marko Hranilović in the latter's trial by the Royal Yugoslav government in 1930. He was the president of the \"Union of Croatian Eagles\" (\"Hrvatski orlovski savez\"). When the association was banned by King Alexander's dictatorship, he reformed it together with Ivan Merz under the name \"Crusaders\" (\"Križari\"). He was subsequently imprisoned for this act and bishops Akšamović and Bonefačić were brought in by the authorities for questioning.He was assassinated, reportedly by UDBA agents, in Trieste in 1946. After Croatian independence, Protulipac's remains were exhumed and he was returned to Croatia and buried in Zagreb's Mirogoj cemetery.", "target": "Croatian Catholic activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1901965", "label": "Marland P. Billings", "source": "Marland Pratt Billings (March 11, 1902 – October 9, 1996) was an American structural geologist who was considered one of the greatest authorities on North American geology. Billings was Professor of Geology at Harvard University for almost his entire career, having joined the faculty in 1930 and retired to emeritus status in 1972. He also taught for a brief time at Bryn Mawr College.", "target": "American structural geologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q930510", "label": "Renault Vel Satis", "source": "The Renault Vel Satis is an executive car that was produced by the French manufacturer Renault, launched at the 2001 Geneva Motor Show to replace the already discontinued Safrane. It was previously revealed as a concept car in 1998, at the Paris Motor Show. However, the following production model does not have very much in common with it.A specially prepared Vel Satis was used by the President of France until 2009. It is still used on ceremonial occasions. The car was Renault's flagship model at the time, and the first Renault to be offered with adaptive cruise control as supplied by Robert Bosch GmbH.", "target": "car model", "baseline_candidates": ["executive car", "automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18363666", "label": "Chydenanthus", "source": "Chydenanthus is a genus of woody plant in the Lecythidaceae family first described as a genus in 1875. There is only one known species, Chydenanthus excelsus, native to Indonesia, Myanmar, New Guinea, and the Andaman & Nicobar Islands.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35764107", "label": "Last Chance U", "source": "Last Chance U is an American documentary streaming television series that is produced and premiered by Netflix. The six-episode first season explores the football program at East Mississippi Community College, which features several collegiate athletes that have had trouble in their lives and struggled with finding structure. The players are then required to perform at the junior college (JUCO) level, under the stewardship of coach Buddy Stephens, in order to prove themselves and return to Division I.The series' second season returned to Mississippi, but transitioned to Independence Community College in Kansas for the show's third season, which premiered on July 21, 2018. This was followed by a return to Independence for the fourth season; it debuted on July 19, 2019. The final season took place at Laney College in Oakland, California and premiered on July 28, 2020. In 2020, it was announced that a scripted drama based on the first two seasons would be produced by and starring Courteney Cox.", "target": "documentary series about American football", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1190177", "label": "Veinticinco de Mayo", "source": "Veinticinco de Mayo is a department of the province of Misiones (Argentina).", "target": "department in Misiones, Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["department of Argentina"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28452318", "label": "Cavell Creek", "source": "Cavell Creek is a stream in Alberta, Canada.Cavell Creek has the name of Edith Cavell, an English nurse.", "target": "watercourse in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["stream", "watercourse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26970826", "label": "Daniel Descalso", "source": "Daniel William Descalso (born October 19, 1986) is an American professional baseball utility player who is currently a free agent. The St. Louis Cardinals drafted him in the third round of the 2007 Major League Baseball draft from the University of California, Davis, and he made his MLB debut for the Cardinals in 2010. He later played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Colorado Rockies, Arizona Diamondbacks and Chicago Cubs.", "target": "American baseball player for the Chicago Cubs", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4557537", "label": "18 Vulpeculae", "source": "18 Vulpeculae is a binary star system in the northern constellation of Vulpecula, located about 489 light years away from the Sun. It is visible to the naked eye as a faint, white-hued star with a combined apparent visual magnitude of 5.51. The system is moving closer to the Earth with a heliocentric radial velocity of −11.7 km/s.This is a double-lined spectroscopic binary system with an orbital period of 9.3 days and a small eccentricity of 0.0116. It is a detached binary with a semimajor axis of 0.14742 ± 0.00047 AU. The system contains a Delta Scuti variable, but the temperature places it to the blue (hotter) side of the δ Scuti instability strip. The combined stellar classification of this system remains unclear, with classes of A3 III, A1 IV, A3 V, and A2 IV being given. The ultraviolet spectrum matches an A3 dwarf star. It shows no spectral peculiarities.", "target": "star in the constellation Vulpecula", "baseline_candidates": ["star", "Delta Scuti variable", "infrared source", "spectroscopic binary star"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15062295", "label": "Franz Eckstein", "source": "Franz Eckstein (2 April 1878 – February 1945) was a German screenwriter and film director of the silent era. He made a number of films for the National Film company during the 1920s. He was married to the actress Rosa Porten, sister of Henny Porten.", "target": "German film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6182924", "label": "Jerome Tanner", "source": "Jerome Tanner (aka Lex T. Drill, Lex Drill, Jerry Tanner) is a pornographic film producer/director.", "target": "American pornographic film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13035193", "label": "Coloured vote constitutional crisis", "source": "The Coloured vote constitutional crisis, also known as the Coloured vote case, was a constitutional crisis that occurred in the Union of South Africa during the 1950s as the result of an attempt by the Nationalist government to remove coloured voters in the Union's Cape Province from the common voters' rolls. It developed into a dispute between the judiciary (in particular the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court) and the other branches of government (Parliament and the executive) over the power of Parliament to amend an entrenched clause in the South Africa Act (the constitution) and the power of the Appellate Division to overturn the amendment as unconstitutional. The crisis ended when the government enlarged the Senate and altered its method of election, allowing the amendment to be successfully enacted.", "target": "constitutional crisis in South Africa in the 1950s due to the government trying to remove Coloured voters in Cape Province from voters’ rolls, causing a dispute between the judiciary and parliament", "baseline_candidates": ["racism in South Africa", "voter suppression", "constitutional crisis"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20427721", "label": "Nanjing Normal University", "source": "Nanjing Normal University (NNU or NJNU; simplified Chinese: 南京师范大学; traditional Chinese: 南京師範大學; pinyin: Nánjīng Shīfàn Dàxué) is a public research university in Nanjing, China. Founded in 1902 as Sanjiang Normal School, it is one of the oldest and most prestigious higher normal schools in China, and has become a research-intensive comprehensive university co-funded by the Ministry of Education of China and Jiangsu Provincial Government since its separation from Nanjing University in 1952. NNU is a leading National Key University designated by China's former Project 211, Plan 111, and Double First Class University Plan.As of 2020, NNU has three campuses in Nanjing, namely Xianlin, Suiyuan, and Zijin. It consists of 28 colleges and schools with an enrollment of 18,369 undergraduates and 12,564 graduate students, including 1,525 doctoral candidates. In the fiscal year 2021, the university acquired six Key Projects from the National Social Science Fund of China, ranking 10th among domestic institutions. NNU is a relatively selective university that only admits domestic students who score in the top 5% (95th percentile) in the National College Entrance Examination. The 2021 Academic Ranking of World Universities ranked NNU 401st-500th globally.", "target": "normal university in Nanjing, Jiangsu, China", "baseline_candidates": ["organization", "university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q72697401", "label": "Raymond Fonvieille", "source": "Raymond Fonvieille (born 16 October 1942) is a French speed skater. He competed in two events at the 1964 Winter Olympics.", "target": "French speed skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1383405", "label": "Transamerica Tower", "source": "Transamerica Tower (colloquially known by its most recent former label, the Legg Mason Building) and originally built as the USF&G Building, serving as headquarters of the United States Fidelity and Guarantee Company, a specialized insurance company founded in Baltimore in 1896, and relocated here from its former complex of three adjoining early 20th Century masonry structures at the southwest corner of South Calvert and Redwood (formerly German Street before World War I) Streets. Later occupied by and known as the Legg-Mason Building, it is a 40-story, 161 m (528 ft) skyscraper completed in 1973 in downtown Baltimore, Maryland at 100 Light Street (postal address) on the city block bounded by South Charles (Maryland Route 139), East Lombard, Light and East Pratt Streets, facing the former \"The Basin\" of the Helen Delich Bentley Port of Baltimore on the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River and the newly iconic Inner Harbor downtown business waterfront redevelopment of the 1970s–1980s.", "target": "skyscraper in Baltimore, Maryland, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["skyscraper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65043960", "label": "Binghamton, California", "source": "Binghamton is an unincorporated community in Solano County, California, United States. The community is on California State Route 113 6.5 miles (10.5 km) south of Dixon.", "target": "unincorporated community in California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8527875", "label": "Inner Rothorn", "source": "The Inner Rothorn is a mountain of the Swiss Pennine Alps, overlooking Saas-Balen in the canton of Valais. It lies on the ridge descending from the Fletschhorn, which ends at the Jegihorn.", "target": "mountain in Switzerland", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4755526", "label": "Andreas Liveras", "source": "Andreas Dionysiou Liveras (1935 – 26 November 2008) was a Cyprus-born British businessman, who rose from modest means to own and run successful bakery and yacht charter companies. He held British and Cypriot citizenship and was killed during Mumbai attacks of November 2008.", "target": "British businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55956250", "label": "Paul Poatinda", "source": "Paul Poatinda (born 7 December 1978) is a New Caledonian retired international footballer who played as a forward. He represented New Caledonia at the 2003 South Pacific Games.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10414270", "label": "John Raus", "source": "John Raus (born August 31, 1984 in Stamford, Connecticut) is a former American soccer player.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31682611", "label": "Penile Hill", "source": "Penile Hill is a summit in Franklin County, Tennessee, in the United States. With an elevation of 1,152 feet (351 m), Penile Hill is the 1,207th highest summit in the state of Tennessee.", "target": "mountain in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15020976", "label": "Aspergillus rhizopodus", "source": "Aspergillus rhizopodus is a species of fungus in the genus Aspergillus. It is from the Clavati section. The species was first described in 1975. A. rhizopodus has been reported to produce pseurotins, dehydrocarolic acid, tryptoquivalines, tryptoquivalones, kotanins, and cytochalasins.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21468128", "label": "The Amazing Race 28", "source": "The Amazing Race 28 is the twenty-eighth season of the American reality television show The Amazing Race. The season premiered on February 12, 2016. This installment featured 11 teams consisting of two notable social media personalities or at least one social media personality teamed up with a non-notable internet celebrity in a race around the world for a $1 million grand prize.Engaged dancers Dana Borriello and Matt Steffanina were the winners of this season.", "target": "28th season of The Amazing Race", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7994916", "label": "White House United Methodist Church", "source": "White House United Methodist Church, also known as the White Meeting House and White Church, is a historic Methodist church located near Orangeburg in Orangeburg County, South Carolina. It was built about 1850, and is a one-story, rectangular frame meeting house style building. It houses the oldest Methodist congregation in Orangeburg County, dating back to the late 1780s. Francis Asbury visited the congregation in 1801 and 1803.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.", "target": "church building in South Carolina, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["protestant church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15732795", "label": "RK Ovče Pole", "source": "RK Ovče Pole (HC RK Ovče Pole) (Macedonian: РК Овче Поле) is a team handball club from Sveti Nikole, North Macedonia. The club was founded in 1954 and compete in the Macedonian Handball Super League.Macedonia's best known handball player Kiril Lazarov started his career at Ovče Pole.", "target": "Macedonian handball club", "baseline_candidates": ["handball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7857496", "label": "Tweedsmuir", "source": "Tweedsmuir (Scottish Gaelic: Sliabh Thuaidh) is a village and civil parish in Tweeddale, the Scottish Borders Council district, southeastern Scotland.", "target": "village in Scottish Borders, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3289162", "label": "Marcel Liebman", "source": "Marcel Liebman (7 July 1929 – 1 March 1986) was a Belgian Marxist historian of political sociology and theory, active at the Université libre de Bruxelles and Vrije Universiteit Brussel.", "target": "Belgian historian (1929-1986)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3981550", "label": "Taufa Neuffer", "source": "Taufa Neuffer (born 30 August 1978) in Tahiti is a footballer who plays as a Center Back. He currently plays for AS Tefana in the Tahiti Division Fédérale and the Tahiti national football team.", "target": "football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25351771", "label": "Panama", "source": "Panama (Tamil: பாணமை, Sinhala: පාණම) is a coastal village in the Eastern Province of Sri Lanka, located 126 kilometres (78 mi) south of Batticaloa and 12 km (7.5 mi) south of Arugam Bay. It is the last populated settlement in the southernmost part of the province, within the Ampara District. Kumana Bird Sanctuary and Heritage park starts southwards from Panama. Panama was the capital of the Colonial Panamapattuwa of Mattakkalappu Desam. This ancient village can be seen in the historical maps of Portuguese and Dutch as Panao, Panova, and Paneme. Panama's inhabitants are mixed people of Sinhalese and Tamils. Panama is known for its Pattini Cult. The village's name has been a cause for mix-up by Sri Lanka Post resulting in local mail being wrongly redirected to the Central American nation of Panama and vice versa for international mail.", "target": "village in Sri Lanka", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22955476", "label": "Bangladesh at the 2016 South Asian Games", "source": "Bangladesh participated in the 2016 South Asian Games in Guwahati and Shillong, Bangladesh from 5 February to 16 February 2016.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8023789", "label": "Winchester College Ground", "source": "Winchester College Ground is a cricket ground in Winchester, Hampshire. The ground is the historic grounds of Winchester College, with evidence suggesting cricket in Winchester dates back to the 17th century. The present ground, which is also known as New Field or Ridding Field, dates from 1869 when the then headmaster George Ridding bought land south of \"meads\" and donated it to the college. In 1875, the ground held was is to date the only first-class match to be played there when Hampshire played Kent in 1875. Hampshire, who were captained by Clement Booth, were dismissed for just 34 in their first-innings. In response, Kent were dismissed for 333, giving them a lead of 299. Hampshire fared little better in their second-innings, making just 82 to lose the match by an innings and 217 runs.Until 1888 the pitch lay east–west, after which it was moved to lay north–south, a position retained to this day. The ground is used by the College for matches against Eton College and Harrow School, as well as being used by the Old Wykehamist Cricket Club.", "target": "cricket ground in Winchester, Hampshire", "baseline_candidates": ["sports venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79362770", "label": "Manon Landowski", "source": "Manon Landowski (born 1964) is a French singer-songwriter who sings chansons and pop music. She is author, composer and performer of the musical show Le Manège.", "target": "singer, songwriter, composer and actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56323391", "label": "Sanin Kaigan National Park", "source": "Sanin Kaigan National Park (山陰海岸国立公園, San'in Kaigan Kokuritsu Kōen) is a National Park in Tottori, Hyōgo, and Kyōto Prefectures, Japan. Established in 1963, the park runs continuously along the Sea of Japan coast from Tottori to Kyōtango. The park covers 87.83 km². Sanin Kaigan National Park is known for its numerous inlets, rock formations, islands, and caves.The entire area of this national park is a part of San'in Kaigan Global Geopark.", "target": "national park of Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["National parks of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q264575", "label": "Music for Pets", "source": "Music for Pets is an album by the band Z, led by Dweezil and Ahmet Zappa, released in 1996. The creation of the album was a troubled one, with multiple recording sessions interrupted by the death of Frank Zappa, the creation and recording of new material based on what was popular at the time, and delays in the release causing several versions to be released at various times. This resulted in the \"French Version\" the \"US Version\", and the \"Bone-Us Version\" which was a CD of out-takes and unreleased material. When all is counted, Music for Pets underwent over a year of recording sessions, five re-mixes, three different sequences, and at least three different main engineers.The cover art is a parody of their previous effort, Shampoohorn, and the inner photograph and listing of dogs as \"band members\" Bing Jang on guitar and background vocals and Arkansas on bass guitar are pseudonyms and retribution for the firing of guitarist Mike Keneally due to the Zappas' reluctance to allow his own band, Mike Keneally & Beer for Dolphins (later called the Mike Keneally Band) to exist at the same time as Z. Bass guitarist Bryan Beller made the decision to leave the band in support of Keneally, with whom he also played bass guitar in Beer for Dolphins. This proved to be an important decision for both sidemen, as Keneally and Beller have continued to work together on Mike Keneally & Beer For Dolphins/The Mike Keneally Band releases, recording and touring together with guitarist Joe Satriani, in the.", "target": "album by Z", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4967489", "label": "Bright Star Wilderness", "source": "Bright Star Wilderness is a 8,190-acre (3,314 ha) wilderness area in Kern County in the U.S. state of California.The California Desert Protection Act of 1994 (Public Law 103–433) added the wilderness to the National Wilderness Preservation System and it is administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Bright Star Wilderness surrounds 5,090-foot (1,551 m) Kern County's Kelso Peak and drainages to the north, south and east, including Bright Star Canyon and Cortez Canyon.The Wilderness lies within the BLM's Jawbone-Butterbredt Area of Critical Environmental Concern in the higher Mojave Desert and protects much of the Piute Mountains, of the southern Sierra Nevada (not to be confused with the Piute Mountains to east in Mojave National Preserve).", "target": "Wilderness area in California", "baseline_candidates": ["wilderness area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2243000", "label": "Monterrey metropolitan area", "source": "The Monterrey metropolitan area refers to the surrounding urban agglomeration of Monterrey, Nuevo León. Officially called Area Metropolitana de la Ciudad de Monterrey or AMM, the metropolitan area is the 2nd-largest in Mexico.", "target": "place in - Nuevo León, Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["metropolitan area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4972539", "label": "Broadway Winter Hill Congregational Church", "source": "The Broadway Winter Hill Congregational Church is a historic church building at 404 Broadway in Somerville, Massachusetts. Built in 1890–91 to a design by Hartwell and Richardson for a Congregationalist congregation founded in 1865, it is one of the city's only examples of Shingle style architecture, and one of its finer architect-designed buildings from the 19th century. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. It is now home to the Vida Real Church.", "target": "church building in Massachusetts, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21176621", "label": "Addis Priestley", "source": "Neils Addis Priestley (8 September 1903 – 12 September 1984) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Hawthorn Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "target": "Australian rules footballer (1903-1984)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18379800", "label": "Moldoveanu", "source": "Moldoveanu is a Romanian-language surname that may refer to: Alin Moldoveanu (born 1983), Romanian 10 m Air Rifle sport shooter Ioachim Moldoveanu (1913–1981), Romanian footballer Vasile Moldoveanu (born 1935), Romanian tenor Vlad Moldoveanu (born 1988), Romanian basketball player.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7059162", "label": "Denis Čery", "source": "Denis Čery (born 1 August 1994) is a Slovak football midfielder who currently plays for FC Petržalka .", "target": "Slovak soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24729247", "label": "Maly Kaltay", "source": "Maly Kaltay (Russian: Малый Калтай) is a rural locality (a selo) in Cheryomushkinskoye Selsoviet, Zalesovsky District, Altai Krai, Russia. The population was 121 as of 2013. There are 2 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Zalesovsky District, Altai Krai, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6360736", "label": "Kanataki", "source": "Kanataki (Persian: كنتكي, also Romanized as Kanatakī) is a village in Ganjabad Rural District, Esmaili District, Anbarabad County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 40, in 11 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26775156", "label": "Aryan Tajbakhsh", "source": "Aryantaj Tajbakhsh (born 20 October 1990) is an English professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Kings Langley.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94253685", "label": "Herbert Hollings", "source": "Herbert John Butler Hollings (18 June 1855 – 6 March 1922) was an English first-class cricketer and barrister. The son of John Hollings, he was born in June 1855 at Manningham, Yorkshire. He was educated at Winchester College, before going up to Corpus Christi College, Oxford. While studying at Oxford, he made a single appearance in first-class cricket for Oxford University against the Marylebone Cricket Club at Oxford in 1877. Batting twice in the match, he was dismissed without scoring in both Oxford innings' by Fred Morley and Robert Clayton respectively.A student of the Inner Temple, he was called to the bar in 1881. He became a justice of the peace for Surrey in 1884. Hollings married Nine Augusta Stacey in 1886, with the couple having a son who was killed in the First World War. He died at Bournemouth in March 1922.", "target": "English cricketer and barrister", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25651277", "label": "Baba Marghuz", "source": "Baba Marghuz (Persian: بابامرغوز, also Romanized as Bābā Marghūz; also known as Baba-Marguz and Bābā Mūrqūz) is a village in Dast Jerdeh Rural District, Chavarzaq District, Tarom County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 17, in 6 families.", "target": "village in Zanjan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7321745", "label": "Rhynocoris rubricus", "source": "Rhynocoris rubricus is a species belonging to the family Reduviidae, subfamily Harpactorinae. The base of the scutellum is slightly longer or equal to its height, the front lobe of pronotum is red and femora have a narrow black band. This species is mainly found in France, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia and Albania.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5630520", "label": "HMAS Penguin", "source": "HMAS Penguin is a Royal Australian Navy (RAN) base located at Balmoral on the lower north shore of Sydney Harbour in the suburb of Mosman, New South Wales. Penguin is one of the RAN's primary training establishments, with a responsibility for providing trained specialists for all areas of the navy. The current commander of Penguin is Commander Bernadette Alexander, RAN.", "target": "naval base in Sydney, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["naval base"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25114910", "label": "Gubkin", "source": "Gubkin (Russian: Губкин) is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Gubkina. It may refer to Irina Gubkina (born 1972), Russian luger Ivan Gubkin (1871–1939), Russian geologist Lyudmila Gubkina (born 1973), Belarusian hammer thrower.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6971172", "label": "National CSS", "source": "National CSS, Inc. (NCSS) was a time-sharing firm in the 1960–80s, until its acquisition by Dun & Bradstreet in 1979. NCSS was originally headquartered in Norwalk, Connecticut, but relocated to Wilton in 1978. Sales offices, data centers, and development facilities were located at various sites throughout the U.S. Some additional sales offices were active in the UK and elsewhere.", "target": "defunct American computer time-sharing firm", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5086914", "label": "Chartiers Valley High School", "source": "Chartiers Valley High School is a public school that was established in 1959 and is physically located in Collier Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States. The school's post-office address is Bridgeville, PA however. The school district serves Collier Township, Bridgeville Borough, Scott Township and Heidelberg Borough. A new high school and middle school complex is being constructed at the site. The new complex will retain its gymnasium, pool and auditorium. The school has an olympic-sized indoor swimming pool which is open to the public three evenings a week. A small fee is charged to district residents and non residents. The school's on-site stadium was home to the professional soccer team Pittsburgh Riverhounds (2008-2012).The school district is named for Chartiers Creek, which flows through and/or forms part of the border for all four regions the district serves (Bridgeville, Collier, Heidelberg, and Scott). The creek itself is named after Pierre Chartier.", "target": "highin Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5112112", "label": "Christopher Clayton", "source": "Sir George Christopher Clayton (11 July 1869 – 28 July 1945) was a British scientist, industrialist and Conservative politician. Clayton was educated at Harrow School and Heidelberg and graduated from University College, Liverpool with a PhD in chemistry in 1896. On graduation he obtained a post with the United Alkali Company of Widnes. In 1907 he joined the board of the company. When United Alkali was merged with three other chemical companies to form Imperial Chemical Industries in 1926, Clayton became a director of ICI.At the 1922 general election he succeeded in regaining the Widnes constituency for the Conservative party. He held the seat until the 1929 election when he was defeated by his Labour Party opponent. In 1925 he was appointed by Order in Council to the Board of Trade Advisory Council for Scientific and Industrial Research. At the 1931 general election he returned to parliament as MP for the Wirral Division of Cheshire. He was President of the Royal Institute of Chemistry from 1930 to 1933 and was knighted in 1933. He only sat for one term, retiring in 1935 due to his business commitments.Apart from being a director of ICI, Clayton was also chairman of the Liverpool Gas Company and vice-chairman of the Power Gas Corporation.Clayton married Mabel Valentine Grainger of Perth in 1896, and made his home at Kilry Lodge, Alyth, Perthshire, where he died in 1945 aged seventy-six.", "target": "British politician (1876-1945)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q352631", "label": "Agustín Torassa", "source": "Agustín Gonzalo Torassa (born 20 October 1988, in Resistencia) is an Argentinian professional football player who plays as a striker for Albanian club .", "target": "Argentine association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28871021", "label": "Lorenz Büffel", "source": "Stefan Scheichel (born 1979 in Krems an der Donau, Austria), better known by his stage name Lorenz Büffel, is an Austrian DJ best known for his 2016 single \"Johnny Däpp\".", "target": "Austrian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5568789", "label": "Glenn Dunaway", "source": "Henry Glenn Dunaway (July 6, 1914 – March 8, 1964) was an American auto racer noted for initially winning, and then being disqualified from, what is today recognized as NASCAR's first-ever race.", "target": "American racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22211421", "label": "Olga Hadžić", "source": "Olga Hadžić (25 August 1946 – 23 January 2019) was a Serbian mathematician known for her work on fixed-point theorems.", "target": "Serbian mathematician (1946-2019)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16750985", "label": "George F. Torsney", "source": "George F. Torsney (December 27, 1896 – December 28, 1942) was an American businessman and politician from New York.", "target": "American politician in New York (1896-1942)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7448886", "label": "Selvík", "source": "Selvík is a small bay on the southside of Sørvágsfjørður. It is about one kilometer to the west of the village Sørvágur in the Faroe Islands. In 1901 the owners of the whaling station in Norðdepli, decided to build a new station in Selvík. During the spring of 1902 the Norwegian cargo ship \"Viking\", and the whaling boat Norddeble came with equipment and material and already in June 1902 whaling activity started from the station.The station got a brand new whaling boat with the name Selvik in 1904. The station closed down already in 1912. Between 1894 and 1905 seven whaling stations were established in the Faroes. These were located in Selvík, Lopra (Suðuroy), Gjánoyri, Norðdepil, Funningsfjørður, Signabøur and Við Áir.", "target": "small bay on the southside of Sørvágsfjørður", "baseline_candidates": ["fjord"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7528052", "label": "Sir John Sebright, 6th Baronet", "source": "General Sir John Saunders Sebright, 6th Baronet (19 October 1725 – 23 February 1794) was the sixth Sebright baronet, an officer in the British Army and a Member of Parliament. Sir John was a younger son of Sir Thomas Sebright, 4th Baronet and Henrietta Dashwood and was educated at Westminster School. In 1761 he succeeded his elder brother to the baronetcy and the Beechwood Park estate in Hertfordshire. Sir John was colonel of the 83rd Regiment of Foot from 1758 to 1760, and then the 52nd Regiment of Foot, from 1760 to 1762. In 1762 he was promoted to the Colonelcy of the 18th (Royal Irish) Regiment of Foot, a position he held until his death. He was promoted full general on 20 November 1782. He was elected MP for Bath in 1763, was defeated in 1774, but returned in a by-election a few months later, sitting until 1780.He was a close friend of the Irish statesman and writer Edmund Burke. In 1765, on a visit to Sebright's home at Beechwood Park Burke came across a considerable number of medieval Irish manuscripts in the library. The manuscripts had been given to Sebright's father by the antiquary and philologist Edward Lhuyd who had acquired them on a tour of Ireland in 1700. In 1786, these were bequeathed to the library of Trinity College Dublin and formed the foundation of the Irish manuscript collections there. The manuscripts presented by Sebright included the Yellow Book of Lecan and the Book of Leinster.In 1766, he had married Sarah Knight, daughter.", "target": "English Baronet (1725-1794)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q195853", "label": "Saint-Just", "source": "Saint-Just (French pronunciation: ​[sɛ̃ ʒyst]; Breton: Sant-Yust; Gallo: Saent-Just) is a commune in the Ille-et-Vilaine department of Brittany in northwestern France.", "target": "commune in Ille-et-Vilaine, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5315297", "label": "Dunimarle Castle", "source": "Dunimarle Castle is located 1 km west of the centre of the village of Culross in Fife, Scotland. The name 'Dunimarle' means 'castle by the sea', although the original name of the estate was 'Castlehill'. The mansion house is a Category A listed building and the ruins of the medieval castle are Category B listed. The grounds are included in the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland.", "target": "castle in Fife, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22008414", "label": "Shalë", "source": "Shalë is a former municipality in the Shkodër County, northwestern Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision of the municipality Shkodër. The population at the 2011 census was 1,804. Its name comes from the Shala tribe which lives in the area. The municipal unit covers the upper course of the river Shalë, and part of the Accursed Mountains range. There are eleven small mountain villages in the municipality: Breg-Lumi, Abat, Nicaj-Shalë, Lekaj, Vuksanaj, Pecaj, Theth, Ndërhysaj, Gimaj, Nen-Mavriq, Mekshaj, and Lotaj.", "target": "municipality of Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["Administrative unit", "komuna"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4760611", "label": "Krzyszkowo", "source": "Krzyszkowo [kʂɨʂˈkɔvɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rokietnica, within Poznań County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) west of Rokietnica and 19 km (12 mi) north-west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 648.", "target": "village in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16842202", "label": "Hatred", "source": "Hatred (in Persian: بغض; transliterated: boqz) is a 2012 Iranian drama film directed by Reza Dormishian. It is set in Istanbul, Turkey and deals with Iranian youth immigration.", "target": "2012 film directed by Reza Dormishian", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20029312", "label": "Muhammad Karmus", "source": "Mohamed Karmous (born 5 June 1949) is a Moroccan wrestler. He competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics, the 1972 Summer Olympics and the 1976 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Moroccan amateur wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56276147", "label": "Wem Town F.C.", "source": "Wem Town Football Club is a football club based in the market town of Wem, Shropshire, England. They are currently members of the Shropshire County League Premier Division and play at the Butler Sports Centre.", "target": "English semi-professional association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4965151", "label": "Brian Robinson", "source": "Brian Robinson (born 1953) is a former Canadian national soccer team player. He was born in Victoria, British Columbia.", "target": "Canadian soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12472479", "label": "Arja", "source": "Arja, also known as Balinese opera, is a popular form of Balinese theatre which combines elements of opera, dance, and drama. It was created in 1825 for the funeral of a Balinese prince. In the beginning it had an all-male cast; since the 20th century all performers (including those playing men) have been women.The Panji tales are the most important plot material. Since the 20th century, Arja performances have also enacted Balinese mythology and legends as well as Indian (Mahabharata and Ramayana), Chinese, Arabic, and more recently, western and contemporary Indonesian stories.Singing and stylized dance movements are accompanied by gamelan music played with two bamboo zithers called guntang.", "target": "form of Balinese theatre", "baseline_candidates": ["theatrical genre", "Balinese theatre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24829286", "label": "Telen River", "source": "Telen River is a river in East Kalimantan, Borneo island, Indonesia, about 110 kilometers (68 miles) north of the provincial capital Samarinda. It is a tributary of the Mahakam River.", "target": "river in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["river", "watercourse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55979056", "label": "Gustavo Lanusse", "source": "Gustavo Lanusse (5 January 1909 – 14 March 1938) was an Argentine rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1928 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Argentine rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7330399", "label": "Richelle Carey", "source": "Richelle Carey (born October 13, 1976) is an American broadcast journalist. She is currently an anchor on Al Jazeera English and was previously an anchor for Al Jazeera America. Carey was previously a news anchor for HLN and correspondent for its Prime News broadcast, from May 2006 to June 2013; she joined HLN from KMOV-TV St. Louis, Missouri. Prior to joining KMOV in the summer of 2003, Carey was the morning and afternoon news anchor at the Fox affiliate in Henderson-Las Vegas, Nevada (KVVU).", "target": "American journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1657944", "label": "Pławniowice", "source": "Pławniowice [pwavɲɔˈvit͡sɛ] (German: Plawniowitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rudziniec, within Gliwice County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north-east of Rudziniec, 19 km (12 mi) north-west of Gliwice, and 41 km (25 mi) west of the regional capital Katowice. The village has a population of 824.", "target": "village in Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6818990", "label": "Meredith Townsend", "source": "Meredith White Townsend (1831–1911) was an English journalist and editor of The Spectator. With Richard Holt Hutton, he was joint-editor of the Spectator until 1887, and he was largely instrumental in making it an established success, writing most of the political articles and the opening paragraphs every week. His two chief publications were The Great Governing Families of England (1865), written in conjunction with Langton Sanford, and Asia and Europe (1901). Townsend was considered as one of the finest journalists of his day, and he has since been called \"the greatest leader writer ever to appear in the English Press.\".", "target": "British newspaper editor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52634712", "label": "Hadewijch", "source": "Hadewijch, sometimes referred to as Hadewych or Hadewig (of Brabant or of Antwerp) was a 13th-century poet and mystic, probably living in the Duchy of Brabant. Most of her extant writings are in a Brabantian form of Middle Dutch. Her writings include visions, prose letters and poetry. Hadewijch was one of the most important direct influences on John of Ruysbroeck.", "target": "13th-century Dutch poet and mystic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4732262", "label": "Alliance", "source": "Alliance is an unincorporated community in Adams Township, Madison County, Indiana. Alliance was a station and shipping point on the Big Four Railroad.", "target": "community in Indiana, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61439243", "label": "Church of All Saints", "source": "The Church of All Saints, Harlow Hill, Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, is a grade II listed mission church, or chapel of ease, completed in 1871 on land donated by Henry Lascelles, 4th Earl of Harewood, within the parish of St Mary. It was consecrated by the Bishop of Ripon in 1871. The building was designed with a round bell tower, in Gothic Revival style, by Isaac Thomas Shutt and Alfred Hill Thompson. After some years of closure due to structural problems, as of 2014 it was being restored for use by a funeral director's company.", "target": "church building in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8525044", "label": "Nubble Peak", "source": "Nubble Peak, also known as The Peak Above The Nubble, is a mountain located in Grafton County, New Hampshire. The mountain is part of the Twin Range of the White Mountains. A rock outcrop on its northwestern ridge is known as The Nubble, but topographic maps identify the formation as Haystack Mountain. Nubble Peak is flanked to the south by North Twin Mountain. The mountain is officially trailless and is one of New England's hundred highest summits. Nubble Peak stands within the watershed of the Ammonoosuc River, which drains into the upper Connecticut River, and into Long Island Sound in Connecticut. The east and southeast faces of Nubble Peak drain into the Little River, thence into the Ammonoosuc River. The northwest side of Nubble Peak drains into Haystack Brook, thence into the Ammonoosuc. The southwest end of Nubble Peak drains to the North Branch of the Gale River, another tributary of the Ammonoosuc River.", "target": "mountain in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2698971", "label": "Megachile minutula", "source": "Megachile minutula is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae. It was described by Friese in 1911.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7991240", "label": "What Is It", "source": "\"What Is It\" is a song recorded by American recording artists Baby Bash featuring Sean Kingston for Baby Bash's third album, Cyclone (2007). It was released on January 4, 2008, by Arista Records as the second single. It was written by Baby Bash, J.R. Rotem, Marty James and produced by J.R. Rotem and it contains a sample of \"9MM Goes Bang\" performed by KRS-One.", "target": "1910 single by Sean Kingston and Baby Bash", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2196817", "label": "Barbus stanleyi", "source": "Enteromius stanleyi is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Enteromius which is endemic to the Congo River system in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.The fish was named in the memory of Henry Morton Stanley (1841-1904), “du grand explorateur” of the Congo River Basin.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4947394", "label": "Bosnian American", "source": "Bosnian Americans are Americans whose ancestry can be traced to Bosnia and Herzegovina. The vast majority of Bosnian Americans immigrated to the United States during and after the Bosnian War which lasted from 1992–95. Nevertheless, many Bosnians immigrated to the United States as early as the 19th century. The largest Bosnian American population can be found in St. Louis, Missouri, which boasts the largest number of Bosnians in the world outside Europe. While official census reports from the 2010 Census indicate that there are 125,793 Bosnian-Americans in U.S., it is estimated that as of 2020 there are some 300,000 to 350,000 Americans of full or partial Bosnian descent living in the country.", "target": "American whose ancestry can be traced to Bosnia and Herzegovina", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group", "Eastern European Americans"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5216309", "label": "Daniel-Leon Kit", "source": "Daniel-Leon Kit (born June 14, 1998) is an American actor, singer, dancer, writer, and songwriter, best known as Vincent Ellis Ross, III in Stretch: the Movie, Walter Rat in the stage play of Thumbelina, and Santa Claus in the musical of Santa Dot Claus. He currently lives in Warner Robins, Georgia. Kit appeared in the 2012 family comedy Parental Guidance.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19881816", "label": "Marion Fellows", "source": "Marion Fellows (née Fullarton, born 5 May 1949) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician. Since the 2015 General Election, she has been the Member of Parliament for Motherwell and Wishaw. She currently serves as the SNP spokesperson for Disabilities and as an SNP whip. Between June 2017 and January 2020 she was the SNP spokesperson for Small Business, Enterprise and Innovations.", "target": "Scottish politician (born 1949)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17379633", "label": "Goplana", "source": "Goplana is a genus of rust fungi in the Chaconiaceae family. The widespread genus contains 12 species that grow on dicots.", "target": "genus of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7176053", "label": "Peter Nazareth", "source": "Peter Nazareth (born 27 April 1940) is a Ugandan-born literary critic and writer of fiction and drama.", "target": "Ugandan writer and academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5550157", "label": "Gerard Smyth", "source": "Gerard Smyth (born 1951) is an Irish poet, born in Dublin in 1951 and began publishing poetry in the late 1960s when his first poems were published by David Marcus in the New Irish Writing Page of The Irish Press and by James Simmons in The Honest Ulsterman. New Writers’ Press published a limited edition small collection, The Flags Are Quiet, in 1969 and another limited, hand-printed edition, Twenty Poems in 1971, followed by Orchestra of Silence, a Tara Telephone publication, also in 1971. This early work – highly influenced by his reading of Dylan Thomas and Hopkins – also appeared in the Press's journal The Lace Curtain. Smyth was born and grew up in the old Liberties heartland of the city which has influenced, and features in, much of the poetry he has written. It is the factor in his work that prompted the poet Michael Hartnett to say “Gerard Smyth is essentially a city-poet; lyrical, passionate, he may do for Dublin in verse what Joyce did for it in prose”. When he was presented with the O’Shaughnessy Poetry Award from the University of St Thomas in St Paul, Minnesota, in 2012, the citation remarked that he was “ inescapably a poet of the inward city. His city is one in which every day comes as news: a city of endless stories, of streets and neighbourhoods rich with associations, and a city of early memories. He gives us a city of found objects and found connections…” The poet Martyn Dyar, in his introduction to a.", "target": "Irish poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30779772", "label": "Ahrens, KwaZulu-Natal", "source": "Ahrens is a railway stop in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, 16 km west of Greytown, en route to Kranskop. The railway stop is named after Wilhelm Ahrens, from 1880 to 1906 headmaster of the German school at Hermannsburg, 4 km northeast from here.", "target": "railway stop in South Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["railway stop"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1749430", "label": "Klotz", "source": "Klotz as a surname (German for block) can refer to: Klotz (violin makers), a family of German violin makers (also spelt Kloz and Cloz)Klotz (fire Fighters), a family of Chicago area firefighters.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name", "Übername"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8145368", "label": "Pełele", "source": "Pełele [pɛˈwɛlɛ], (Lithuanian: Peleliai), is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Puńsk, within Sejny County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Lithuania. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) south-east of Puńsk, 13 km (8 mi) north-west of Sejny, and 123 km (76 mi) north of the regional capital Białystok.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5321833", "label": "E. E. Haugen House", "source": "The E. E. Haugen House, also known as Charles R. Berry Residence or E. E. Haugen Residence, in Brookings, South Dakota, United States, was built in 1904.According to the National Park Service: The Haugen, E.E., Residence is an excellent local example of the Colonial Revival style of architecture used for homes built in the U.S. during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. The residence is a local interpretation of a nationally advertised architect’s design that appeared in The Woman’s Home Companion between 1898 and 1904. The grand home, built in 1904, was one of the early landmarks in Brookings and was even featured in an early twentieth-century promotional booklet for the town. The house is currently privately owned. The building was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on March 1, 2010. The listing was announced as the featured listing in the National Park Service's weekly list of March 12, 2010.", "target": "historic house in South Dakota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2080211", "label": "Sónia Ndoniema", "source": "Sónia Sebastião Guadalupe Ndoniema (born 15 September 1985) is an Angolan basketball player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Angola women's national basketball team in the women's event. She is 6 feet 2 inches tall. Sónia is married to fellow Angolan basketball player Edson Ndoniema.", "target": "Angolan basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1260347", "label": "Ohio River Valley AVA", "source": "The Ohio River Valley AVA is an American Viticultural Area centered on the Ohio River and surrounding areas. It is the second largest wine appellation of origin in the United States (only the Upper Mississippi Valley is larger) with 16,640,000 acres (26,000 sq mi) (67,300 km2) in portions of the states of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia. The area is mostly planted with hybrid grapes like Baco noir, Marechal Foch, Seyval blanc and Vidal. Of the Vitis vinifera found in the area Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Petit Manseng and Riesling are the most common. The AVA size was decreased by approximately 1,530 square miles when the Indiana Uplands AVA was established in 2013 composed of the bordering area in Indiana.", "target": "wine region along the Ohio River", "baseline_candidates": ["American Viticultural Area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6731089", "label": "Magik Three: Far from Earth", "source": "Magik Three: Far From Earth is the third album in the Magik series by well-known trance DJ and producer Tiësto. As with the rest of the Magik series, the album is a live turntable mix.", "target": "compilation album by Tiësto", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13541472", "label": "Chloroclystis hypopyrrha", "source": "Chloroclystis hypopyrrha is a moth in the family Geometridae first described by West in 1929. It is found in Japan.The wingspan is 16–17 mm.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q238942", "label": "lesser house fly", "source": "The lesser house fly or little house fly, Fannia canicularis, is somewhat smaller (3.5–6 mm (0.14–0.24 in)) than the common housefly. It is best known for its habit of entering buildings and flying in jagged patterns in the middle of a room. It is slender, and the median vein in the wing is straight. Larvae feed on all manner of decaying organic matter, including carrion.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5065545", "label": "Cesilio de los Santos", "source": "Cesilio de los Santos (born 12 February 1965) is a retired Uruguayan football defender. He has been capped for Uruguay. He made his debut in a friendly match against Mexico (1-1 draw) on November 20, 1991 in Veracruz.", "target": "Uruguayan footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5134385", "label": "Clipper Windpower", "source": "Clipper Windpower is a wind turbine manufacturing company founded in 2001 by James G.P. Dehlsen. It designed one of the largest wind turbines in the United States, manufactured in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It was working collaboratively with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Affected by a global recession, in December 2010 Clipper Windpower was acquired by United Technologies Corporation. It was sold in 2012 to Platinum Equity. The company has reduced its manufacturing and is supporting its turbines.", "target": "wind turbine manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19921962", "label": "future tense", "source": "In grammar, a future tense (abbreviated FUT) is a verb form that generally marks the event described by the verb as not having happened yet, but expected to happen in the future. An example of a future tense form is the French aimera, meaning \"will love\", derived from the verb aimer (\"love\"). The \"future\" expressed by the future tense usually means the future relative to the moment of speaking, although in contexts where relative tense is used it may mean the future relative to some other point in time under consideration. English does not have an inflectional future tense, though it has a variety of grammatical and lexical means for expressing future-related meanings. These include modal auxiliaries such as will and shall as well as the futurate present tense.", "target": "grammatical tense", "baseline_candidates": ["grammatical tense", "form"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61355940", "label": "Banaz", "source": "Banaz is a town and district of Uşak Province in the inner Aegean region of Turkey. The mayor is Zafer Arpacı (AKP). Banaz district area neighbors those of two other districts of the same province, namely Sivaslı and Uşak central district from its south to its west, ranges three districts of Kütahya Province, Gediz, Altıntaş and Dumlupınar, along its north, and adjoins three districts of Afyonkarahisar Province, namely Sandıklı, Sinanpaşa and Hocalar to its east. The town is situated on the main road from İzmir to Ankara, at a distance of 33 km (21 mi) to the province seat of Uşak. The town has a population of 15,504 (2007 census). The district extends on a large and fertile plain (65 km²) that carries the same name as the town and the district (Banaz Plain - Banaz Ovası), and it is an area of intense and varied agricultural production, as well as of dense forestation. The stream that crosses and feeds the plain carries the name Banaz as well (Banaz Çayı) and it later joins Büyük Menderes River. Sugarbeet and opium are the principal agricultural products that are grown in Banaz. Another notable feature of the district is the presence of several hot thermal springs, some of which, such as those at localities called Evrendede, Çatalçam and Hamamboğazı have been arranged to serve as health centers with accommodation and as recreational areas. The district has two depending townships with their own municipality (Büyükoturak and Kızılcahöyük) and 45 villages. One of these villages, lying at a distance of.", "target": "district of Uşak, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "district of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65421046", "label": "Buitrago del Lozoya", "source": "Buitrago del Lozoya (Spanish pronunciation: [bwiˈtɾaɣo ðel loˈθoʝa]) is a municipality of the autonomous community of Madrid in central Spain. It belongs to the comarca of Sierra Norte. The town is one of the few in the community that have maintained its walls, which are of Moorish origin (11th century) and have been restored in the 15th century. It lies on a peninsula surrounded by the Lozoya river. Other sights include: Buitrago del Lozoya Castle, a Gothic-Mudéjar structure dating from the 15th century, with rectangular plan the church of Santa María del Castillo (1321), in the same style the Picasso Museum. This small museum contains works by Pablo Picasso from the collection of Eugenio Arias. Arias, a barber by profession, came from Buitrago and was a friend of the artist.", "target": "human settlement in Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q825061", "label": "Bernhard Fuchs", "source": "Bernhard Fuchs (born 1971 in Haslach a.d. Mühl / Upper Austria) is an Austrian photographer.", "target": "Austrian photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24716948", "label": "Juliet Mphande", "source": "Juliet Mphande is a Zambian LGBT activist and director of Friends of Rainka Zambia. She is a human rights activist, journalist, and peace activist. Mphande has called on governments that colonized Africa to take responsibility for anti-sodomy laws they brought to the continent.", "target": "Zambian LGBT activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18045390", "label": "BRCA3", "source": "Breast cancer 3 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the BRCA3 gene.", "target": "genetic element in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q841359", "label": "Kapuas", "source": "The Kapuas River (or Kapoeas River) is a river in the Indonesian part of Borneo island, at the geographic center of Maritime Southeast Asia. At 1,143 kilometers (710 mi) in length, it is the longest river in the island of Borneo and the longest river of Indonesia and one of the world's longest island rivers. It originates in the Müller mountain range at the center of the island and flows west into the South China Sea creating an extended marshy delta. The delta is located west-southwest of Pontianak, the capital of the West Kalimantan province. This Kapuas River should be distinguished from another Kapuas River, which starts on the other side of the same mountain range in central Borneo, but flows to the south, merging with the Barito River and discharging into the Java Sea.", "target": "river in West Kalimantan, Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54693323", "label": "Latata", "source": "\"Latata\" (stylized as \"LATATA\") is a song recorded by South Korean girl group (G)I-dle as the lead single from their debut Korean extended play (EP) I Am. It was released on May 2, 2018, by Cube Entertainment and distributed by Kakao M. It was written by member Soyeon, who also produced the song alongside Big Sancho. A music video for the song was also released on the same day. Promotions for the song resulted in (G)I-dle's first music show win on SBS MTV's The Show on May 22, 2018. The song also resulted in a second win on Mnet's M Countdown.A Japanese version was released on July 12, 2019 as the lead single from their Japanese debut EP of the same name.An English version was released on May 15, 2020.", "target": "2018 single by (G)I-dle", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18748101", "label": "Rich Nigga Timeline (Migos Mixtape)", "source": "Rich Nigga Timeline (censored, marketed as and on cover Rich Ni**a Timeline) is the fifth mixtape by American hip hop group Migos, released on November 5, 2014. Rolling Stone named Rich Nigga Timeline as the seventh Best Rap Album of 2014. It features production by Cassius Jay, Cheeze, Deko, DeeMoney, DJ Durel, Mario Beats, Murda Beatz, Phenom Da Don, StackboyTwaun, Swift Bangs, TM88 and Zaytoven.Rolling Stone voted it the 7th-best rap album of 2014.", "target": "album by Migos", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7966448", "label": "Walter Woods", "source": "Walter Alan Woods (28 December 1861 – 28 February 1939) was an Australian Labor politician and journalist. He was born Walter William Head at Oakleigh, Victoria on 28 December 1861. He later used various names throughout his life.", "target": "Australian politician, journalist and poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18400762", "label": "Skitsky Island", "source": "Skitsky (Russian: Скитский, Finnish: Erakkosaari - \"island of the hermits\") is an island that is part of the larger Valaam archipelago in Lake Ladoga in the Republic of Karelia, Russia. Situated directly on the northwestern shore of the island of Valaam, Skitsky is separated from Valaam by Sredneosrovsky Strait on its eastern and southeastern coastlines and by Moscow Strait on its southwestern coastline. The area of the island of Skitsky is 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi), which is the second largest in the Valaam archipelago after Valaam island.Skitsky Island is high, hilly and covered with pine forest. The northern part of the island is mountainous. Big Skete is 52 meters (171 ft) high, and the stone is visible from a distance of 31 kilometres (19 mi). The island shores are predominantly rocky with deeply indented bays that do not have navigational significance.There is a bridge and road that connects Skitsky island to the island of Valaam.", "target": "island in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10668695", "label": "Dermatocarpon miniatum", "source": "Dermatocarpon miniatum is a species of fungus belonging to the family Verrucariaceae.It has cosmopolitan distribution.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6166828", "label": "Jay Landsman", "source": "Jay Landsman is a semi-fictional character on the HBO drama The Wire based upon the real life Baltimore City police officer Jay Landsman. The fictional character of Jay Landsman is portrayed by actor Delaney Williams.", "target": "character from The Wire", "baseline_candidates": ["television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4778974", "label": "Apaconjunctdonta", "source": "Apaconjunctdonta is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q537686", "label": "Angelus of Jerusalem", "source": "Angelus of Jerusalem (Italian: Sant'Angelo; 1185 – 5 May 1220) was a Catholic convert from Judaism and a professed priest of the Carmelites. He and his twin brother were converted to the faith once their mother did so while both became ordained priests and Carmelite friars. But, unlike his brother he retreated into the desert to a hermitage after his ordination. But, he emerged once he was instructed to go to the Italian mainland to evangelize as well as to meet with Pope Honorius III to have him approve a new rule for the Carmelites.He was slain whilst preaching and was believed a saint after his death. The Carmelites venerated him as such until Pope Pius II beatified the slain priest during his pontificate circa 1459.", "target": "Christian saint", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1197395", "label": "Der Teutsche Merkur", "source": "Der teutsche Merkur (English: The German Mercury) was a literary magazine published and edited by Christoph Martin Wieland. The magazine was modeled on French magazine, Mercure de France. The first issue appeared in 1773. Wieland published and edited the magazine until 1790. He used the Merkur as an organ to advance the Enlightenment and to provide a platform to support literary taste. In 1790 the title was changed to Der neue teutsche Merkur and continued publication until 1810.", "target": "German literary magazine", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7842292", "label": "Trina Schart Hyman", "source": "Trina Schart Hyman (April 8, 1939 – November 19, 2004) was an American illustrator of children's books. She illustrated over 150 books, including fairy tales and Arthurian legends. She won the 1985 Caldecott Medal for U.S. picture book illustration, recognizing Saint George and the Dragon, retold by Margaret Hodges.", "target": "American children's illustrator and writer (1939-2004)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11326767", "label": "Haradasun", "source": "Haradasun (foaled 28 November 2003) was an Australian Thoroughbred racehorse. His most significant wins include the 2007 Group 1 Doncaster Handicap and George Ryder Stakes in Australia and the Queen Anne Stakes in Britain in 2008.", "target": "Australian-bred Thoroughbred racehorse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q118487", "label": "Roberto Simanowski", "source": "Roberto Simanowski (born 1963) is a German scholar of literature and media studies and founder of dichtung-digital. Simanowski studied German literature and history at the University of Jena where he finished his PhD on mass-culture around 1800 with a grant by the German Studienstiftung in 1996. He worked 1997 and 1998 in the research center Nationality of International Literatures at the University of Göttingen, conducted his research project Cyberspace and Literature with a stipend from the German Humboldt-Foundation at Harvard University 1998 until 2000, was visiting scholar at the University of Washington in Seattle 2001 until 2002, and served as guest professor at the department of media studies at the University of Jena in 2002/2003. Simanowski was a professor of German literature and culture as well as digital aesthetics at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island (2003-2010), and professor of media studies at the University of Basel in Switzerland (2010-2013) and at City University of Hong Kong (2014-2017). In 1999 he founded the online-journal dichtung-digital.org, a Journal of art and culture in digital media, that he edited until 2014 when it contained about 450 contributions by over 100 scholars and artists from 20 countries. Simanowski works as author and media consultant in Berlin and Rio de Janeiro and is currently Distinguished Fellow of Global Literary Studies am Excellence-Cluster \"Temporal Communities\" at Freie Universität Berlin. His book Todesalgorithmus. Das Dilemma der künstlichen Intelligenz (Wien: Passagen Verlag 2020) received the Tractatus Award for best philosophical essay in German in 2020.", "target": "German-born American literary theorist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2466621", "label": "Santo Tomás de los Plátanos", "source": "Santo Tomás de los Plátanos also known as Nuevo Santo Tomás de los Plátanos is a town and municipal seat of the municipality of Santo Tomás, located in the center-west of Mexico State, in Mexico. It is approximately 185 km from Mexico City, and 107 km from Toluca.", "target": "human settlement in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5419655", "label": "Exciting Soccer", "source": "Exciting Soccer is an association football video game developed and released by Alpha Denshi for arcades in 1983. It featured an early use of a top-down overhead perspective, two years before it was popularized by Tehkan World Cup (1985) from Tehkan (later called Tecmo).A sequel, Exciting Soccer II, was released in 1984. Japan replaced Austria. It has new music, but gameplay is identical.", "target": "1984 arcade game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27016701", "label": "Öxarárfoss", "source": "Öxarárfoss (Icelandic pronunciation: ​[ˈœksarˌaurˌfɔsː]) is a waterfall in Þingvellir National Park, Iceland. It flows from the river Öxará over the Almannagjá [ˈalˌmanːaˌcauː]. The pool at the base of the waterfall is filled with rocks and is often extremely icy during winter. The waterfall is one of the main attractions of Þingvellir National Park and there is a path from the nearby car park leading up to it.", "target": "waterfall in Iceland", "baseline_candidates": ["waterfall"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7201073", "label": "Planet Drum", "source": "Planet Drum is a world music album by Mickey Hart, a musician and musicologist who was a member of the rock band the Grateful Dead. Hart's concept for Planet Drum was to play drum music with percussionists from around the world, and incorporate their different musical styles and traditions into a new global sound. The musicians on the Planet Drum album were from the United States (Hart), India (Zakir Hussain and T.H. \"Vikku\" Vinayakram), Nigeria (Sikiru Adepoju and Babatunde Olatunji), Brazil (Airto Moreira and his wife, vocalist Flora Purim), and Puerto Rico (Giovanni Hidalgo and Frank Colón). Planet Drum won the Grammy Award for Best World Music Album of 1991, the first year in which the award was given. It reached number 1 on the Billboard chart for Top World Music Albums.", "target": "album by Mickey Hart", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29641589", "label": "Churchill, Renville County, Minnesota", "source": "Churchill is an unincorporated community in Renville County, Minnesota, United States.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14707177", "label": "Perry Downtown Historic District", "source": "Perry Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Perry in Wyoming County, New York. The district encompasses 41 contributing buildings in the village of Perry. They are a variety of commercial, institutional, and governmental buildings with most built between 1850 and 1918. Most of the commercial buildings are two-stories and constructed of brick. They include the Town Hall (1909), Masonic Temple (1914), Bussey Block (1898), Bailey-Roche Block (c. 1836), A. Cole and Wygant Building (1867), Garrison Building (1901), Rufus Smith Block (1856), Howell Building (1895), Traver Place Apartments (1924), and the Wise Building (1903).It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012.", "target": "historic district in Perry, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26263401", "label": "29th Division War Memorial", "source": "The 29th Division War Memorial is a war memorial beside the junction of the A45 and the B4455 near Stretton-on-Dunsmore, near Rugby, Warwickshire. It commemorates the service of the British 29th Division during the First World War. The memorial became a Grade II listed building in 1987, upgraded to Grade II* in 2015, and it is described by Historic England as \"probably the most significant single memorial in Britain associated with the Gallipoli campaign\".", "target": "war memorial in Stretton-on-Dunsmore, Rugby, Warwickshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["obelisk", "war memorial"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2755854", "label": "Alfonso Gatto", "source": "Alfonso Gatto (17 July 1909 – 8 March 1976) was an Italian writer. Along with Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, he is one of the foremost Italian poets of the 20th century and a major exponent of hermetic poetry.", "target": "Italian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7861478", "label": "Tyrees Allen", "source": "Tyrees Allen (born July 31, 1954) is an American actor on stage, television, and film.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3006166", "label": "Pavlovskoye, Ust-Kubinsky District, Vologda Oblast", "source": "Pavlovskoye (Russian: Павловское) is a rural locality (a village) in Vysokovskoye Rural Settlement, Ust-Kubinsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 15 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Vysokovskoye, Ust-Kubinsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7650417", "label": "Suurballe's algorithm", "source": "In theoretical computer science and network routing, Suurballe's algorithm is an algorithm for finding two disjoint paths in a nonnegatively-weighted directed graph, so that both paths connect the same pair of vertices and have minimum total length. The algorithm was conceived by John W. Suurballe and published in 1974. The main idea of Suurballe's algorithm is to use Dijkstra's algorithm to find one path, to modify the weights of the graph edges, and then to run Dijkstra's algorithm a second time. The output of the algorithm is formed by combining these two paths, discarding edges that are traversed in opposite directions by the paths, and using the remaining edges to form the two paths to return as the output. The modification to the weights is similar to the weight modification in Johnson's algorithm, and preserves the non-negativity of the weights while allowing the second instance of Dijkstra's algorithm to find the correct second path. The problem of finding two disjoint paths of minimum weight can be seen as a special case of a minimum cost flow problem, where in this case there are two units of \"flow\" and nodes have unit \"capacity\". Suurballe's algorithm, also, can be seen as a special case of a minimum cost flow algorithm that repeatedly pushes the maximum possible amount of flow along a shortest augmenting path. The first path found by Suurballe's algorithm is the shortest augmenting path for the initial (zero) flow, and the second path found by Suurballe's algorithm is the shortest augmenting path for the residual graph.", "target": "algorithm for finding two disjoint paths in a nonnegatively-weighted directed graph", "baseline_candidates": ["algorithm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12547826", "label": "carbon monoxide", "source": "Carbon monoxide (chemical formula CO) is a colorless, highly poisonous, odorless, tasteless, flammable gas that is slightly less dense than air. Carbon monoxide consists of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom connected by a triple bond. It is the simplest molecule of the oxocarbon family. In coordination complexes the carbon monoxide ligand is called carbonyl. It is a key ingredient in many processes in industrial chemistry.Thermal combustion is the most common source of carbon monoxide, however there are numerous environmental and biological sources that generate and emit a significant amount of carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide is important in the production of many compounds, including drugs, fragrances, and fuels. It is produced by many organisms, including humans. Upon emission into the atmosphere, carbon monoxide affects several processes that contribute to climate change.Carbon monoxide has important biological roles across phylogenetic kingdoms. In mammalian physiology, carbon monoxide is a classical example of hormesis where low concentrations serve as an endogenous neurotransmitter (gasotransmitter) and high concentrations are toxic resulting in carbon monoxide poisoning. It is isoelectronic with cyanide anion CN−.", "target": "colourless and odourless gas, containing equal proportions of carbon and oxygen", "baseline_candidates": ["flammable gas", "chemical compound", "oxocarbon", "metabolite", "developmental toxicant"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19663486", "label": "Pramod Payyannur", "source": "Pramod Payyannur is an Indian director and writer who works in Malayalam theater. He has left his mark on the Malayalam arts and culture; Theater Arts is the main field but he has also created a place of his own in the visual media. Has also directed a film based on Vaikom Mohammad Basheer's Balayakala Sakhi act lead role by Mammootty. He is currently working as the director of Bharat Bhavan, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala.", "target": "Indian theater director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q233262", "label": "Dutch House of Representatives", "source": "The House of Representatives (Dutch: Tweede Kamer der Staten-Generaal, pronounced [ˈtʋeːdə ˈkaːmər dɛr ˈstaːtə(ŋ) ˌɣeːnəˈraːl] (listen); commonly referred to as the Tweede Kamer, literally Second Chamber of the States General) is the lower house of the bicameral parliament of the Netherlands, the States General, the other one being the Senate. It has 150 seats, which are filled through elections using party-list proportional representation. Generally, the house is located in the Binnenhof in The Hague, however, it has temporarily moved to the former building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at Bezuidenhoutseweg 67 in the Hague while the Binnenhof is being renovated.", "target": "lower house of the Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["lower house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5977725", "label": "I Just Want to Celebrate", "source": "\"I Just Want to Celebrate\" is a song recorded by American rock band Rare Earth. It was the lead single on their 1971 album One World and was the band's fifth single overall.", "target": "1971 single by Rare Earth", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2246103", "label": "Schmettau family", "source": "Schmettau, or Schmettow, is the name of an ancient Silesian noble family.", "target": "family", "baseline_candidates": ["German noble family", "family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17364431", "label": "Michael Almebäck", "source": "Michael Almebäck (born 4 April 1988) is a Swedish professional footballer who plays as a central defender.", "target": "Swedish football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97704127", "label": "Max Winslow and the House of Secrets", "source": "Max Winslow and the House of Secrets is a science-fiction thriller written by Jeff Wild, produced by Johnny Remo and directed by Sean Olson. It is produced by SkipStone Pictures in association with Standing Room Only Cinema and BFY Productions and released theatrically through 3-D Live. The movie stars Sydne Mikelle, Tanner Buchanan, Jade Chynoweth, Emery Kelly, Jason Genao with Marina Sirtis and Chad Michael Murray.", "target": "2020 film directed by Sean Olson", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15255691", "label": "Modern Benoni", "source": "The Modern Benoni is a chess opening that begins with the moves 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 c5 3.d5 e6. It is classified under the ECO codes A60–A79. After the initial moves, Black proceeds to capture on d5, creating a majority of black pawns on the queenside. To support their advance, the king's bishop is usually fianchettoed on g7. These two features differentiate Black's setup from the other Benoni defences and the King's Indian Defence, although transpositions between these openings are common. Frank Marshall invented the Modern Benoni in 1927, but his experiments with the opening went largely ignored for over 20 years. In the 1950s the system was revitalized by players in the Soviet Union, chief among them Mikhail Tal. Its subsequent adoption by players of a similarly aggressive and uncompromising style such as Bobby Fischer and Garry Kasparov established the opening's reputation as one of Black's most dynamic responses to 1.d4. The Modern Benoni suffered a serious theoretical crisis in the 1980s and 1990s, when players as Black encountered great difficulties in meeting the Taimanov Attack and the Modern Main Line. Only in the 21st century has the opening's reputation and theoretical standing made a recovery. Notably, it was Vladimir Kramnik's choice when he needed a win with Black in the penultimate game of the 2004 World Championship, though that particular game resulted in a draw.", "target": "chess opening", "baseline_candidates": ["Indian Defense", "chess opening"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2896649", "label": "Beit Iba", "source": "Beit Iba (Arabic: بيت إيبا) is a Palestinian village in the Nablus Governorate in the North central West Bank, located 7 kilometers northwest of Nablus. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), the village had a population of 3,268 inhabitants in mid-year 2006.", "target": "municipality in Nablus", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q183001", "label": "somatic", "source": "The term somatic - etymologically from the Ancient Greek words of \"σωματικός\" (sōmatikós, “bodily”) and σῶμα (sôma, “body”) - is often used in biology to refer to the cells of the body in contrast to the reproductive (germline) cells, which usually give rise to the egg or sperm (or other gametes in other organisms). These somatic cells are diploid, containing two copies of each chromosome, whereas germ cells are haploid, as they only contain one copy of each chromosome (in preparation for fertilisation). Although under normal circumstances all somatic cells in an organism contain identical DNA, they develop a variety of tissue-specific characteristics. This process is called differentiation, through epigenetic and regulatory alterations. The grouping of similar cells and tissues creates the foundation for organs. Somatic mutations are changes to the genetics of a multicellular organism that are not passed on to its offspring through the germline. Most cancers are due to somatic mutations. Somatic is also defined as relating to the wall of the body cavity, particularly as distinguished from the head, limbs or viscera. It is also used in the term somatic nervous system, which is the portion of the vertebrate nervous system that regulates voluntary movements of the body.", "target": "term in biological sciences referring to cells that aren't passed down in reproduction", "baseline_candidates": ["biological terminology"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63285566", "label": "Fathi Bashagha", "source": "Fathi Ali Abdul Salam Bashagha (Arabic: فتحي علي عبد السلام باشآغا; born 20 August 1962) known simply as \"Fathi Bashagha\" or occasionally Fathi Ali Pasha, is a Libyan politician who currently claims to be the interim prime minister of Libya. He served as Minister of Interior from 2018 to 2021. On 10 February 2022, Bashagha was selected as prime minister-designate by the eastern-based Libyan House of Representatives. However, Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh rejected Bashagha's appointment as prime minister, stating that he will only hand power after a national election. Khalifa Haftar and his Libya National Army welcomed Bashagha's appointment.", "target": "Libyan politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7815131", "label": "Tom Burke", "source": "Thomas Allen Burke (born October 12, 1976) is a former American college and professional football player who was a defensive end in the National Football League (NFL) for four seasons. He played college football at University of Wisconsin and earned All-American honors. During the 1997-98 season, Burke led all college football with 22 sacks and 31 total tackles for loss while helping Wisconsin to a Rose Bowl victory and #5 overall ranking. He was chosen 83rd overall in the 3rd round of the 1999 draft NFL draft by the Arizona Cardinals and played all four years of his NFL career with Arizona.", "target": "All-American college football player, professional football player, defensive lineman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4807324", "label": "Aslauga guineensis", "source": "Aslauga guineensis, the Guinea aslauga, is a butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It is found in Guinea.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20482588", "label": "Justin Ahomadégbé-Tomêtin", "source": "Justin Ahomadegbé-Tomêtin (January 16, 1917 – March 8, 2002) was a Beninese politician most active when his country was known as Dahomey. He arose on a political scene where one's power was dictated by what region of Dahomey one lived in. He served as president of the National Assembly of Dahomey from April 1959 to November 1960 and as prime minister and vice president of Dahomey from 1964 to 1965. Ahomadégbé became President as part of a system that rotated the office between three leading political figures: Ahomadégbé, Hubert Maga, and Sourou-Migan Apithy. Maga peacefully handed power to Ahomadégbé on May 7, 1972. On October 26, 1972, he was overthrown in a coup d'état led by Mathieu Kérékou. All three remained under house arrest until 1981.", "target": "politician (1917-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5286253", "label": "Do Sono River", "source": "The Do Sono River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "target": "river in Minas Gerais, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2311685", "label": "canton of Le Lamentin-2-Nord", "source": "Le Lamentin 2nd Canton Nord is a former canton in the Arrondissement of Fort-de-France on Martinique. It had 19,066 inhabitants (2012). It was disbanded in 2015. The canton comprised part of the commune of Le Lamentin.", "target": "canton of France", "baseline_candidates": ["canton of France (until 2015)"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18389659", "label": "The Faith Instinct", "source": "The Faith Instinct: How Religion Evolved and Why It Endures is a 2009 book about the evolution of religious behavior by New York Times science reporter Nicholas Wade, in which the author argues that religious behaviours have evolved through natural selection. Wade argues that religious behaviour, through shared gods and beliefs, creates social solidarity, which is the driving force in making groups of people who are not related to each other by family, comply with and enforce shared norms and rules for social behaviour, that are not beneficial on an individual level, but beneficial for the tribe as a whole. Wade argues that the selection for religious behaviour began at least 50,000 years ago between African tribes, where tribes that benefited more from the unifying power of shared gods and beliefs, music and dance, outcompeted rivals and thus left more survivors, whereby genes underlying a brain-based “faith instinct” proliferated, which caused religious tendencies to be ingrained in the human brain.", "target": "book by Nicholas Wade", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4925439", "label": "Blasting St. Vincent's Rock, Clifton", "source": "Blasting St. Vincent's Rock, Clifton is a watercolor created by Norwich artist John Sell Cotman. Created in 1830, it is currently part of the permanent collection in the Indianapolis Museum of Art.", "target": "painting by John Sell Cotman", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4728872", "label": "All I Wanna Do", "source": "All I Wanna Do is a 2011 Moroccan documentary film produced by La Prod and directed by Michelle Medina starring Omar Sayed Nass El Ghiwane and Don Bigg, Simohamed, a parking guard and his 17-year-old son, Ayoub. The documentary was shot on location in Casablanca, Morocco from 2009 to 2010 and has won a documentary prize at the 2011 Athens International Film Festival and was nominated at the 2011 Aljazeera International Documentary Film Festival for \"Best Film\" and \"Best Director\" at the 2011 World Music and Independent Film Festival in Washington, DC.", "target": "2011 film directed by Michelle Medina", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13541562", "label": "Chloroclystis acygonia", "source": "Glaucoclystis acygonia is a moth in the family Geometridae first described by Charles Swinhoe in 1895. It is found in the north-eastern Himalayas.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5376371", "label": "Endomyces", "source": "Endomyces is a genus of fungi in the family Dipodascaceae.", "target": "genus of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2710705", "label": "Xenochrophis asperrimus", "source": "Boulenger's keelback (Fowlea asperrimus), also known commonly as the Sri Lankan keelback, is a species of water snake in the family Colubridae. The species is endemic to Sri Lanka.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12549523", "label": "Koine Greek", "source": "Koine Greek (UK: ; Modern Greek: Ελληνιστική Κοινή, romanized: Ellinistikí Kiní, lit. 'Common Greek'; Greek: [elinistiˈci ciˈni]), also known as Alexandrian dialect, common Attic, Hellenistic, or Biblical Greek, was the common supra-regional form of Greek spoken and written during the Hellenistic period, the Roman Empire and the early Byzantine Empire. It evolved from the spread of Greek following the conquests of Alexander the Great in the fourth century BC, and served as the lingua franca of much of the Mediterranean region and the Middle East during the following centuries. It was based mainly on Attic and related Ionic speech forms, with various admixtures brought about through dialect levelling with other varieties.Koine Greek included styles ranging from more conservative literary forms to the spoken vernaculars of the time. As the dominant language of the Byzantine Empire, it developed further into Medieval Greek, which then turned into Modern Greek.Literary Koine was the medium of much of post-classical Greek literary and scholarly writing, such as the works of Plutarch and Polybius. Koine is also the language of the Christian New Testament, of the Septuagint (the 3rd-century BC Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible), and of most early Christian theological writing by the Church Fathers. In this context, Koine Greek is also known as \"Biblical\", \"New Testament\", \"ecclesiastical\", or \"patristic\" Greek. The Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius also wrote his private thoughts in Koine Greek in a work that is now known as The Meditations. Koine Greek continues to be used as the liturgical language of services in the Greek Orthodox.", "target": "common dialect of Greek spoken and written in the ancient world", "baseline_candidates": ["dialect", "historical language", "sacred language", "Ancient Greek"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60542952", "label": "2019 in Philippine music", "source": "The following is a list of notable events that are related to Philippine music in 2019.", "target": "music-related events in the Philippines during the year of 2019", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56192990", "label": "David Sambissa", "source": "David Sambissa (born 11 January 1996) is a professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Dutch club SC Cambuur. Born in France, he represented the Republic of the Congo national team before switching to the Gabon national team.", "target": "French association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22964678", "label": "Miguel Luque Avila", "source": "Miguel Luque Ávila (born 21 September 1976 in Granollers, Barcelona) is a Spanish swimmer.", "target": "Spanish swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q552228", "label": "Akhet", "source": "Akhet (Ancient Egyptian: Ꜣḫt; Gardiner: N27) is an Egyptian hieroglyph that represents the sun rising over a mountain. It is translated as \"horizon\" or \"the place in the sky where the sun rises\". Betrò describes it as \"Mountain with the Rising Sun\" (The hieroglyph for \"mountain\" is 𓈋) and an ideogram for \"horizon\".Akhet appears in the Egyptian name for the Great Pyramid of Giza (Akhet Khufu), and in the assumed name of Akhetaten, the city founded by pharaoh Akhenaten. It also appears in the name of the syncretized form of Ra and Horus, Ra-Horakhty (Rꜥ Ḥr Ꜣḫty, \"Ra–Horus of the Horizons\").In ancient Egyptian architecture, the pylon mirrored the hieroglyph. The symbol is sometimes connected with the Egyptian deity Aker and the astrological sign of Libra.", "target": "Egyptian hieroglyph", "baseline_candidates": ["Egyptian hieroglyph"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7308336", "label": "Reggie Yates", "source": "Reginald (Reggie) Yates (born 31 May 1983) is a British writer and director with a career spanning three decades on screen as an actor, television presenter and radio DJ. Yates played Leo Jones in Doctor Who and has worked at the BBC in radio and television–presenting various shows for BBC Radio 1 for a decade as well as hosting the BBC One singing show The Voice UK, hosting the first two series with Holly Willoughby. Yates co-presented the prime-time BBC One game show Prized Apart, alongside Emma Willis, The ITV2 reality show Release the Hounds from 2013 until 2017 and was also the presenter of the BBC Three documentary series Reggie Yates' Extreme Russia, Extreme South Africa and Extreme UK as well as featuring as lead voice actor for BBC animation Rastamouse. In 2021, Yates released his first feature film as Writer/Director, Pirates.", "target": "British actor, television presenter and radio DJ", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11863696", "label": "HMS Nonpareil", "source": "The destroyer HNLMS Tjerk Hiddes was a British built, Dutch warship of World War II. She was laid down on 22 May 1940 as a British N-class destroyer and launched on 25 June 1941 as HMS Nonpareil, but on 27 May 1942, she was transferred to the Royal Dutch Navy. The ship was commissioned in 1942 as HNLMS Tjerk Hiddes, named after the 17th century Dutch admiral, Tjerk Hiddes de Vries. Much of her war service was with the Royal Navy and United States Navy in the Indian Ocean and Australia. Following the war, the destroyer was sold to Indonesia and renamed RI Gadjah Mada. She was scrapped in 1961.", "target": "British destroyer", "baseline_candidates": ["destroyer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6732862", "label": "Mahakali Caves", "source": "The Mahakali Caves, also Kondivite Caves, are a group of 19 rock-cut monuments built between 1st century BCE and 6th century CE.This Buddhist monastery is located in the eastern suburb of Andheri in the city of Mumbai (Bombay) in western India. The monument consists of two groups of rock-cut caves – 4 caves more to the north-west and 15 caves more to the south-east. Most caves are viharas and cells for monks, but Cave 9 of the south-eastern group is chaitya. Caves in the northwest have been created mainly in the 4th – 5th century, while the south-eastern group is older. The monument contains also rock-cut cisterns and remnants of other structures. Caves are carved out of a solid black basalt rock,(volcanic trap breccias, prone to weathering). The largest cave at Kondivite (Cave 9) has seven depictions of the Buddha and figures from Buddhist mythology but all are mutilated.It is located near the junction between the Jogeshwari-Vikhroli Link Road and SEEPZ. The road that connects these monuments to Andheri Kurla Road is named Mahakali Caves Road after it. The caves are located on a hill that overlooks the Jogeshwari-Vikhroli Link Road and the SEEPZ++ area. A Direct bus run by the BEST links the caves with Andheri station. The caves were in danger of being encroached upon, but now it is steel fenced on the roadside and walled on the hillside.", "target": "Caves in Maharashtra state of India", "baseline_candidates": ["cave"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2674304", "label": "Kalenberg, Overijssel", "source": "Kalenberg (Low Saxon: Kaelebarg) is a tourist hamlet within the De Weerribben-Wieden National Park in the Dutch province of Overijssel. The hamlet belongs to the municipality of Steenwijkerland. It was first mentioned in 1845 as Kalemberg, and means \"bare hill\". Kalenberg started as a peat excavation village. Later, it became an agricultural community. In 1840, it was home to 272 people. Nowadays, the economy is mainly based on tourism due to its location inside the Weerribben-Wieden National Park.", "target": "farm village in the Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "populated place in the Netherlands"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26775349", "label": "Sulejman Krpić", "source": "Sulejman Krpić (born 1 January 1991) is a Bosnian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Bosnian Premier League club Tuzla City.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22988245", "label": "Boronia thedae", "source": "Boronia thedae, commonly known as the Theda boronia, is a plant in the citrus family, Rutaceae and is endemic to a small area in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It is an erect shrub when young, later a prostrate shrub with many branches, pinnate leaves, four white to cream-coloured or pale pink sepals and four similarly coloured petals, the sepals longer and wider than the petals.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18045494", "label": "LINC01590", "source": "Long intergenic non-protein coding RNA 1590 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the LINC01590 gene.", "target": "non-coding RNA in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["gene", "non-coding RNA"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64010224", "label": "Scott Brewer", "source": "Scott Brewer is a former North Carolina District Court judge who also served as a North Carolina House of Representatives member. He was appointed to the legislature on May 1, 2019, to complete the unexpired term of Ken Goodman, who accepted an appointment from Governor Roy Cooper to serve on the state Industrial Commission. Brewer represented House District 66 (Montgomery, Richmond and Stanly counties) from 2019 until 2021. In 2020 Brewer ran for re-election to a full term, but he was defeated by Republican Ben Moss. According to a news article, Brewer grew up in Durham and received his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his law degree from Campbell University. He worked in the district attorney’s office and as a district court judge for Judicial District 20A (which covers Richmond, Anson, and Stanly counties) from late 1987 until 2014. He was chief district court judge for Judicial District 20A and later 16A (Richmond, Anson, Scotland, and Hoke counties) from 2015 until his retirement in November 2018. He opened a private law office in Rockingham in March 2019.", "target": "American judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16240266", "label": "pickpocketing", "source": "Pickpocketing is a form of larceny that involves the stealing of money or other valuables from the person or a victim's pocket without them noticing the theft at the time. It may involve considerable dexterity and a knack for misdirection. A thief who works in this manner is known as a pickpocket.", "target": "form of larceny that involves the stealing from off of a victim's body without their notice", "baseline_candidates": ["theft", "occupation", "activity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10957529", "label": "Kaikaatti", "source": "Kaikatty is a small place in Palakkad district of Kerala state, south India. It is 26 km from Nemmara village.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7199895", "label": "Piz Scalotta", "source": "Piz Scalotta is a mountain of the Oberhalbstein Alps, located west of Bivio in the canton of Graubünden. It lies north of Piz Surparé.", "target": "mountain in Switzerland", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1191926", "label": "Myself ; Yourself", "source": "Myself ; Yourself (マイセルフ;ユアセルフ, Maiserufu ; Yuaserufu) is a Japanese visual novel developed by Regista which was released on December 20, 2007 for the PlayStation 2. Takumi Nakazawa, the main scenario writer for the Infinity series (Ever17, Remember11), is the principal writer for Myself ; Yourself. Character design for the game is provided by Mutsumi Sasaki, who also produced the original character design for Memories Off, Happy Lesson, and Futakoi. Before the game's release, a light novel based on the story, written by Takumi Nakazawa, and illustrated by Wadapen, was serialized in the Japanese bishōjo magazine Dengeki G's Magazine between March and November 2007, published by MediaWorks. An anime television series adaptation by Doga Kobo aired in Japan from October to December 2007 on TV Kanagawa and contained thirteen episodes. A spin-off sequel to the visual novel was developed by the previous staff entitled Myself ; Yourself: Sorezore no Finale and was released on May 28, 2009 for the PlayStation 2.", "target": "Japanese visual novel, light novel and anime series", "baseline_candidates": ["anime television series", "light novel", "video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19938155", "label": "Derek Aikman", "source": "Derek Aikman (15 November 1959 - 2 March 2019) was a Belizean politician. He served in the Belize House of Representatives as an area representative for the Freetown constituency in the 1980s and early 1990s.", "target": "Belizean politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85812283", "label": "University of Ladakh", "source": "University of Ladakh or Ladakh University, is a public university located in Ladakh, India. It was established on 16 December 2018 by The University of Ladakh Act, 2018 (Governor Act No. LVI of 2018) of Government of Jammu and Kashmir. It is a cluster university comprising degree colleges of Leh, Kargil, Nubra Valley, Zanskar, Dras and Khalatse.", "target": "university in Ladakh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16556313", "label": "landing operation", "source": "A landing operation is a military action during which a landing force, usually utilizing landing craft, is transferred to land with the purpose of power projection ashore. With the proliferation of aircraft, a landing may refer to amphibious forces, airborne forces, or a combination of both.", "target": "type of military action", "baseline_candidates": ["military operation", "military tactics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7105882", "label": "Oscar Bianchi", "source": "Oscar Bianchi (Oscar Bianchi, born 1975 in Milan) is a Gaudeamus Laureate composer of Italian and Swiss citizenships. He is a recipient of several international prizes and honors. He is noted for his large scale works, in particular his cantata Matra for six voices and large ensemble and his opera Thanks to My Eyes.", "target": "composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15725611", "label": "Polyhexanide", "source": "Polyhexanide (polyhexamethylene biguanide, PHMB) is a polymer used as a disinfectant and antiseptic. In dermatological use, it is spelled polihexanide (INN) and sold under the names Lavasept, Serasept, Prontosan, and Omnicide. PHMB has been shown to be effective against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Candida albicans, Aspergillus brasiliensis, enterococci, and Klebsiella pneumoniae.Products containing PHMB are used for inter-operative irrigation, pre- and post-surgery skin and mucous membrane disinfection, post-operative dressings, surgical and non-surgical wound dressings, surgical bath/hydrotherapy, chronic wounds like diabetic foot ulcer and burn wound management, routine antisepsis during minor incisions, catheterization, first aid, surface disinfection, and linen disinfection. PHMB eye drops have been used as a treatment for eyes affected by Acanthamoeba keratitis.It is sold as a swimming pool and spa disinfectant in place of chlorine or bromine based products under the name Baquacil. PHMB is also used as an ingredient in some contact lens cleaning products, cosmetics, personal deodorants and some veterinary products. It is also used to treat clothing (Purista), purportedly to prevent the development of unpleasant odors. The PHMB hydrochloride salt (solution) is used in the majority of formulations.", "target": "polymer", "baseline_candidates": ["polymer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61698443", "label": "Vaceuchelus entienzai", "source": "Vaceuchelus entienzai is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Chilodontaidae.", "target": "species of sea snail", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16383952", "label": "Koçkar", "source": "Koçkar is a village in the Kemah District of Erzincan Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Kemah, Erzincan Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1975074", "label": "Raja Rao", "source": "Raja Rao (8 November 1908 – 8 July 2008) was an Indian-American writer of English-language novels and short stories, whose works are deeply rooted in metaphysics. The Serpent and the Rope (1960), a semi-autobiographical novel recounting a search for spiritual truth in Europe and India, established him as one of the finest Indian prose stylists and won him the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1964. For the entire body of his work, Rao was awarded the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1988. Rao's wide-ranging body of work, spanning a number of genres, is seen as a varied and significant contribution to Indian English literature, as well as World literature as a whole.", "target": "Indian-born English writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q723715", "label": "Tom Wedberg", "source": "Tom Wedberg (born 26 November 1953) is a Swedish chess grandmaster. He is the son of Swedish philosopher Anders Wedberg.", "target": "Swedish chess grandmaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2023774", "label": "Holden Beach", "source": "Holden Beach is a seaside town in Brunswick County, North Carolina, United States. The population was 575 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Myrtle Beach metropolitan area.", "target": "town in Brunswick County, North Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21197314", "label": "Union Lake", "source": "Union Lake is a lake in Rice County, in the U.S. state of Minnesota.Union Lake was so named for the fact two streams flow into the lake where their waters are \"united\".", "target": "lake of Rice County, Minnesota, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14510025", "label": "Tà Lài", "source": "Tà Lài is a rural commune (xã) of Tân Phú District in Đồng Nai Province.Most of the residents are the Ma and X'tieng ethnic minorities, who were re-settled after the establishment of Cát Tiên National Park.", "target": "xã in Southeast, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["rural commune of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4602794", "label": "2004 Fiesta Bowl", "source": "The 2004 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, played on January 2, 2004, was the 33rd edition of the Fiesta Bowl. The game pitted #7 Ohio State against #8 Kansas State. It was a match-up between a perennial powerhouse in Ohio State, and a school that was only recently accustomed to winning in Kansas State. Despite Kansas State's historically losing record, head coach Bill Snyder had turned around the program in the decade before the bowl game, and K-State was actually making its second Fiesta Bowl appearance in 7 years. Kansas State was the Big 12 Conference champion, and came into the game on a seven-game win streak, winning those games by an average of 39–9. In the game immediately before the Fiesta Bowl, Kansas State had soundly defeated #1-ranked Oklahoma 35–7 in the Big 12 Championship Game. However, the K-State team was badly distracted one night before the bowl game when its quarterback and team leader Ell Roberson was accused of sexual assault. (No charges were ultimately filed against Roberson.) In fact, it was not known whether Roberson would play until game time. Kansas State had been favored to win by 7 points, but some casinos pulled the line over the uncertainty about Roberson. Despite being outgained 378–337 in the bowl game, and has a turnover margin of -1, Ohio State prevailed 35–28. It was Ohio State's second straight Fiesta Bowl win; they went on to win another one in 2006.", "target": "college bowl game", "baseline_candidates": ["bowl game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47915971", "label": "Leiinae", "source": "Leiinae is a subfamily of fungus gnats in the family Mycetophilidae. There are at least 4 genera and about 7 described species in Leiinae.", "target": "subfamily of flies", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5187786", "label": "Crooked Business", "source": "Crooked Business is a feature film by Chris Nyst, a criminal lawyer. It is a comedy of errors set in Australia's Gold Coast. It opened in Australia on 15 October 2008.", "target": "2008 film by Chris Nyst", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8053325", "label": "Yew Tree, West Bromwich", "source": "The Yew Tree Estate is a residential area of Walsall and West Bromwich located at the border with both Sandwell and the Walsall Borough in the West Midlands County, England. The Sandwell Ward is called Great Barr with Yew Tree with which at the 2011 census had a population of 12,597.The area compromises of housing, small shops, a church, a community centre and healthcare centre.", "target": "residential area in the West Midlands", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q162329", "label": "1. FC Mülheim", "source": "FC Mülheim is a German association football club based in Mülheim an der Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia.", "target": "German association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5861996", "label": "Berimvand, Qarah Su", "source": "Berimvand (Persian: بريموند, also Romanized as Berīmvand) is a village in Qarah Su Rural District, in the Central District of Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 259, in 53 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4699715", "label": "Ajgaon", "source": "Ajgaon is a village in the state of Maharashtra, India. It is located in the Sawantwadi taluk of Sindhudurg district in Maharashtra. Ajgaon lies about 13 km south of Vengurla, in Sindhudurg District. It is the last major settlement along the highway before the road enters North Goa District of Goa. Arambol is the nearest village on the other side of the border. Sawantwadi is 43 km north-east of Ajgaon Shri Vetaleshwar Temple at Ajgaon Parshuram Temple – Aajgaon, Sawantwadi Konkan is also known as Land of Lord Parshuram. One temple of Lord Parshuram is situated at Sindhudurg district (in Sawantwadi Taluka) in Ajgaon village and the other temple is at Chiplun in Ratnagiri district.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5909041", "label": "Hossein Hafezian", "source": "Hossein Hafezian is an Iranian political scientist and author specializing in the role of women in Muslim countries.", "target": "political scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5180563", "label": "Crafts Street City Stable", "source": "The Crafts Street City Stable is a historic redbrick public works building located at 90 Crafts Street near Ashmont Avenue in Newton, Massachusetts. Designed for $375 by Boston-based architect and Newton resident William F. Goodwin in the Colonial Revival style of architecture, it was built in 1895 for the city of Newton at a cost of $25,000 to serve as additional stable for its then Highway Department. Over the years, it was converted to a city garage and is now called the Crafts Street Garage. It forms the focal point for the city's Department of Public Works complex. On December 18, 2009, the building along with a 20-foot perimeter strip around it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.", "target": "building in Massachusetts, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10865764", "label": "Sanguansi", "source": "Sanguansi Township (simplified Chinese: 三官寺乡; traditional Chinese: 三官寺鄉; pinyin: Sānguānsì Xiāng) is a rural township in Cili County, Hunan Province, People's Republic of China.", "target": "rural township in Cili County, Zhangjiajie, Hunan Province, People's Republic of China", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic township"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6170876", "label": "Jean Ikellé-Matiba", "source": "Jean Ikellé-Matiba (April 26, 1936–1984) was a Cameroonian writer born in the Sanaga-Maritime division, Littoral Province, Cameroon. He studied in Paris and worked in France and Germany.", "target": "Cameroonian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18671528", "label": "Jacob Youde William Lloyd", "source": "Jacob Youde William Lloyd (1816–1887) was an English Anglican cleric, Catholic convert, antiquarian and genealogist. To 1857 his name was Jacob Youde William Hinde.", "target": "British antiquarian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5717421", "label": "Henry Arthur Goddard", "source": "Henry Arthur Goddard, (13 December 1869 – 24 October 1955) was an Australian Army colonel and temporary brigadier general in the First World War. Born in England, Goddard immigrated to Australia in 1890. He started an importing business and also became involved in the militia, being commissioned into the Queensland Defence Force in 1899. Following the outbreak of the First World War, he joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) after being in charge of the defences of Brisbane, where he lived. He commanded an infantry battalion during the Gallipoli Campaign. He suffered health issues and was repatriated to Australia but recovered and was soon serving as commander of the 35th Battalion on the Western Front. He led it through major engagements at Messines, Broodseinde and Passchendaele. During the German spring offensive of 1918 he temporarily commanded the 9th Brigade at the First Battle of Villers-Bretonneux and Second Battle of Morlancourt. He became the brigade's permanent commander in late-May 1918, leading it through to the end of the war. After the war, he returned to the militia, retiring as a brigadier general in 1931. He died in Sydney in 1955.", "target": "Australian general (1869-1955)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q850403", "label": "multi-role combat aircraft", "source": "A multirole combat aircraft (MRCA) is a combat aircraft intended to perform different roles in combat. These roles can include air to air combat, air support, aerial bombing, reconnaissance, electronic warfare, and suppression of air defenses.", "target": "military aircraft intended to perform different roles in combat", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft functional class", "combat aircraft", "multi-role aircraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5814421", "label": "Drysdale", "source": "Drysdale is a census-designated place (CDP) in Yuma County, Arizona, United States. The population was 272 at the 2010 census.", "target": "location in Arizona, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55956086", "label": "Muhammad Mubeen Khilji", "source": "Muhammad Mobeen Khan is a Pakistani politician who is member-elect of the Provincial Assembly of the Balochistan.", "target": "politician in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6422368", "label": "Knighton, Stafford, Staffordshire", "source": "Knighton is a hamlet part of the parish of Adbaston in the county of Staffordshire, England. Knighton is situated close to the Staffordshire/Shropshire border in undulating agricultural land featuring a not inconsiderable number of endemic hardwood trees. Another feature is the Shropshire Union Canal, which passes through the hamlet at the point of a cutting and substantial embankment. Adjacent to the canal is the Knighton Reservoir, the function of which is to replenish its waters. Although a fundamentally agricultural community there is a food processing and packaging plant belonging to the food manufacturer Knighton Foods Ltd which processes and packs a wide range of products including Hot Beverages, Instant Desserts, Custards and Whips, Bakery Ingredients, Instant Milks, Coffee Creamers and Fat Powders. The factory maintains a social club, the facilities of which are available to the wider community for social events. The club's football pitch is home ground to the amateur Sunday football team Woodseaves FC, from the nearby village of Woodseaves, who play in the Stafford and District Sunday League. The hamlet of Knighton has a royal decree attached to it, the effect of which is that all denizens shall be free of tax and tythe for ever more. Unfortunately over time this right has been slowly eroded to a point where now only denizens living within Knighton and engaged in agriculture can avail themselves of the rights bestowed by the decree. William Adams, who founded a grammar school at Newport, Shropshire in 1656, endowed this school with a large agricultural 900-acre (3.6 km2) estate.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q764355", "label": "August Verhaegen", "source": "August Verhaegen (5 August 1941 – 7 September 2012) was a Belgian racing cyclist. He rode in the 1963 Tour de France.", "target": "Belgian bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3736831", "label": "Valga Keskstaadion", "source": "Valga Keskstaadion (Central stadium of Valga) is a multi-use stadium in the town of Valga, Estonia. It is currently used mostly for football matches and hosts the matches of FC Valga Warrior. The stadium holds 653 people and was opened in 1956.", "target": "stadium in Valga, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["stadium", "sports venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6428197", "label": "Etheostoma rafinesquei", "source": "The Kentucky darter (Etheostoma rafinesquei) is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish, a darter from the subfamily Etheostomatinae, part of the family Percidae, which also contains the perches, ruffes and pikeperches. It is endemic to the eastern United States, where it occurs in the upper Green and Gasper River systems in Kentucky. It inhabits rocky pools and adjacent riffles of creeks and small rivers. It has a diet that mainly consists of mayflies, larval blackflies, midges and occasionally various insect larvae. This species can reach a length of 6.5 cm (2.6 in).The Kentucky darter was first formally described in 1982 by Lawrence M. Page and Brooks Burr with the type locality being given as Barren Run, tributary of The North Fork of the Nolin River, 2 kilometers northwest of town of Barren Run, Kentucky. The specific name honours the French naturalist Constantine Samuel Rafinesque (1783-1840) who was Professor of Botany and Natural History at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky and described many species of fish from Kentucky.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7726585", "label": "The Code Conspiracy", "source": "The Code Conspiracy is a 2002 American thriller film written and directed by Hank Whetstone and starring Jim Fitzpatrick, Maria Conchita Alonso, and David Warner for The Asylum. The film had a preliminary release at the 2000 New York Independent Film and Video Festival.", "target": "2001 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7213071", "label": "Yaakov Aryeh Guterman", "source": "Grand Rabbi Yaakov Aryeh Guterman (1792-1874) was the founding admor of the Radzymin Hasidic Dynasty. He was called the \"Sabba Kadisha (Holy Grandfather) of Radzymin\".", "target": "Polish Rabbi (1792-1874)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3707594", "label": "Digimon Battle Spirit", "source": "Digimon Battle Spirit is a fighting video game originally published by Bandai and developed by Dimps for the Japanese-only WonderSwan Color handheld system under the name Digimon Tamers: Battle Spirit (デジモンテイマーズ バトルスピリット, Dejimon Teimāzu Batoru Supiritto). It was later ported to Nintendo's Game Boy Advance for international releases in North America and Europe two years later. The game features characters and Digimon that were included in the first three seasons of the animated series of the same name in a somewhat simplistic fighting scenario, and also has slightly arranged samples of the show's soundtrack.", "target": "2001 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6423225", "label": "Knowing and the Known", "source": "Knowing and the Known is a 1949 book by John Dewey and Arthur Bentley.", "target": "book by John Dewey", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7174869", "label": "Peter J. Genova", "source": "Peter J. Genova (born June 17, 1944) is an American Republican Party politician who was elected to two full terms in the New Jersey General Assembly, serving in office from 1985 to 1990, where he represented the 21st Legislative District. Genova was elected to the General Assembly in a special election in 1985 to fill the seat left vacant by the death of Edward K. Gill in February 1985. Genova was elected to a full term in the Assembly together with running mate Chuck Hardwick in 1985, defeating Democrats Livio Mancino and Andrew K. Ruotolo Jr. Genova and Hardwick ran successfully together again in 1987, defeating challengers Robert Blitz and Brian W. Fahey. Genova had won a spot on the Republican ticket in the June 1989 primary, but stepped aside to leave a spot for Hardwick to run for re-election to the Assembly after Hardwick lost the Republican nomination for Governor of New Jersey to Jim Courter. After Genova stepped aside from running for re-election, Hardwick was chosen by acclamation at a July 1989 special convention of Republican county committee members to fill the now-vacant ballot spot. In the 1989 general election, Hardwick won re-election, but Democrat Neil M. Cohen won the other seat in the district over former Westfield, New Jersey Mayor Ronald J. Frigerio.In 1987, Genova sponsored a bill targeted at the increasing use of the Spanish language by Hispanic immigrants to the state that would make English New Jersey's official language, stating that \"Spanish has just grown too prominent in New Jersey\". Genova.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2074073", "label": "Peter Bowness, Baron Bowness", "source": "Peter Spencer Bowness, Baron Bowness, (born 19 May 1943) is a British politician, solicitor, and life peer. Since 1996, he has been a member of the House of Lords.", "target": "British politician (born 1943)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q749986", "label": "Bell 222", "source": "The Bell 222 is an American twin-engine light helicopter built by Bell Helicopter. The Bell 230 is an improved development with different engines and other minor changes.", "target": "1976 utility helicopter family by Bell", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft family", "helicopter"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38081510", "label": "Bayrick", "source": "Bayrick is a rural locality in the Blackall-Tambo Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, Bayrick had a population of 9 people.", "target": "locality in Queensland, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7086806", "label": "Oligobunis", "source": "Oligobunis is an extinct genus of mustelids, which existed during the Miocene epoch. The genus was first described by E. D. Cope in 1881. Cope assigned the genus to the family Mustelidae, and J. A. Baskin assigned it to the subfamily Oligobuninae in 1998. Two species have been identified in the genus: O. crassivultus and O. floridanus. Three more - O. gemmarosae, O. lepidus, and O. vantasselensis - were later assigned to the genus Promartes. O. floridanus was a medium-sized badger type mustelid carnivore that filled the niche of small cats during the \"cat gap\" of the early to middle Miocene in North America. Its fossils have been discovered in Florida, Nebraska, and Oregon.", "target": "genus of mammals", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3521353", "label": "Kancha Ilaiah", "source": "Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd (born 5 October 1952) is an Indian political theorist, writer and a Dalit rights activist. He writes in both English and Telugu languages. His main domain of study and activism is the annihilation of caste.", "target": "Indian scholar, activist and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7625662", "label": "Strzeblewo", "source": "Strzeblewo [stʂɛˈblɛvɔ] (German: Streblow) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rymań, within Kołobrzeg County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) north-east of Rymań, 22 km (14 mi) south of Kołobrzeg, and 90 km (56 mi) north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "target": "village in West Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q554961", "label": "Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma", "source": "Alessandro Farnese (10 January 1635 – 18 February 1689) was an Italian military leader, who was Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1678 until 1682. He is not to be confused with his better known great-grandfather Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma. This Alessandro was often called Alessandro di Odoardo (son of Odoardo). His title was Prince of Parma. His elder brother Ranuccio II was the sixth Duke of Parma and Piacenza .", "target": "Spanish politician and military personnel (1635-1689)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7056375", "label": "North Point Light", "source": "The North Point Lighthouse Museum is a lighthouse built in 1888 in Lake Park on the East Side of Milwaukee in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, United States to mark the entrance to the Milwaukee River. The lighthouse was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. It was also added to the Library of Congress Historic American Buildings Survey as survey HABS WI-358.", "target": "lighthouse in Wisconsin, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["lighthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19794890", "label": "Enemies In-Law", "source": "Enemies In-Law (Korean: 위험한 상견례 2; RR: Wiheomhan Sanggyeonrye 2; lit. \"Dangerous Meeting of In-Laws 2\" or \"Clash of the Families 2\") is a 2015 South Korean film directed by Kim Jin-young, starring Jin Se-yeon and Hong Jong-hyun.It is a spin-off (or thematic sequel) to Meet the In-Laws (2011).", "target": "2015 film by Kim Jin-yeong", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54349360", "label": "Erin Kellyman", "source": "Erin Mae Kellyman (born 17 October 1998) is an English actress, best known for her work as Enfys Nest in Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018), as Eponine Thénardier in the BBC adaptation of the Victor Hugo novel Les Misérables (2019) and as Karli Morgenthau in the Disney+ series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2021), which is set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q758179", "label": "California State Route 161", "source": "State Route 161 (SR 161) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that runs along the California–Oregon state line in Siskiyou County. It begins at U.S. Route 97 north of Dorris and goes east to the intersection of SR 139 and Oregon Route 39 north of Tulelake. SR 161 is part of the Volcanic Legacy Scenic Byway.", "target": "highway in California", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5107760", "label": "Chris Piechocki", "source": "Kristof \"Chris\" Piechocki (born 14 August 1979, in Gdańsk, Poland), is an Australian actor.", "target": "Australian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25066448", "label": "1980 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix", "source": "The 1980 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix was a women's singles tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the Tennis Sporthalle Filderstadt in Filderstadt in West Germany. The event was part of the AAA category of the 1980 Colgate Series. It was the third edition of the tournament and was held from 3 November through 9 November 1980. First-seeded Tracy Austin won the singles event, her third successive singles title at the event, and the accompanying $22,000 first-prize money.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1338565", "label": "Estonia men's national floorball team", "source": "The Estonia men's national floorball team is the national floorball team of Estonia, and a member of the International Floorball Federation. Estonia has competed in 7 out of 12 World Championships (1996, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016 and 2018). Their best result is 7th place in 2010.", "target": "men's national floorball team representing Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["national floorball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2081060", "label": "Bryan Mahon", "source": "Bryan Thomas Mahon, (2 April 1862 – 29 September 1930) was an Irish born general of the British Army, a senator of the short-lived Senate of Southern Ireland, and a member for eight years of the Irish Free State Senate until his death.", "target": "British Army general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7723056", "label": "The Cinnamon Peeler", "source": "The Cinnamon Peeler is a lyric poem by Canadian writer Michael Ondaatje. The poem is about love but also about writing. The speaker of the poem travels through vastly different temporalities, wishing for different outcomes in a subjunctive past and settling on the hope given him as he is in dialogue with his memory. Speaking to someone (a memory) who is incapable of being touched, he is drawn more and more to other senses, to the words of his memory, which finally acknowledge that touching is impossible, by saying \"I am the Cinnamon Peeler's Wife. Smell me.\" Smell being the critical sense here. It is similar to another Ondaatje poem about turtles.", "target": "book by Michael Ondaatje", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7327762", "label": "Richard Meade, 3rd Earl of Clanwilliam", "source": "Richard Charles Francis Christian Meade, 3rd Earl of Clanwilliam GCH (15 August 1795 – 7 October 1879), styled Lord Gillford between 1800 and 1805, was a British diplomat and politician.", "target": "Irish noble (1795-1879)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16383169", "label": "Kaçakköy, Refahiye", "source": "Kaçakköy is a village in the Refahiye District of Erzincan Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5723410", "label": "Henry Hugh Peter Deasy", "source": "Henry Hugh Peter Deasy (29 Jun 1866 – 24 Jan 1947) was an Irish army officer, founder of the Deasy Motor Car Company and a writer.", "target": "British Army officer and businessman (1866-1947)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5568824", "label": "Glenn Goodart", "source": "Ira Glenn Goodart (August 5, 1885 – November 8, 1948) was an American railroad conductor, hotel manager, county commissioner and county treasurer. Goodart was raised in Friendsville, Illinois, a small community outside of Mount Carmel, Illinois, in a German Catholic family. After trying a variety of menial jobs Goodart took a position on the New York Central Railroad as a conductor. He held the position with the New York Central until he lost his right leg during a violent train crash in the early 1920s. After a period of joblessness and a period of time as an alcoholic, Goodart found employment as a hotel manager at the Grand Rapids Hotel and during his tenure he increased the hotel's notability. He stayed five years and much of the time the hotel was in severe debt due to unsuccessful events planned by Goodart and flooding. In 1929, Goodart burned down the hotel under suspicious circumstances. Earlier that year the United States Senate Committee on Commerce had decided to remove the dam at Grand Rapids, which attracted many tourists to the hotel. After the hotel fire, Goodart became a politician and was elected to public offices in Wabash County. Goodart served as an elected official for 19 consecutive years in various positions with the county and city of Mount Carmel. During his political career Goodart was a member of the Democratic Party and served as county treasurer, county commissioner, county assessor and ran multiple times, but was never elected, for constable and sheriff. Goodart died in November 1948, one.", "target": "American businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75451574", "label": "Brigida Haraldsdotter", "source": "Bridget Haraldsdotter, also Brigida (Swedish: Birgitta Haraldsdotter) (c. 1131 – c. 1208) was Queen of Sweden as the spouse of King Magnus II. Brigida Haraldsdotter was the illegitimate daughter of King Harald IV of Norway. Her mother is unknown, but she was possibly Tora Guttormsdotter, long-term lover of her father and the mother of King Sigurd II of Norway. Her Irish first name was the same as that of her father's Irish mother, Brigida O'Brien (d. 1138). According to legend, she was first married to King Inge the Younger, but this is not considered possible; likely, her first marriage was to the Swedish Earl Karl Sunesson. She was married to Magnus Henriksen, son of her stepmother Ingrid Ragnvaldsdotter and Ingrid's first husband, Henrik Skadelår. Her spouse claimed the Swedish throne through his mother in 1160–61. After his death in 1161, she remarried the Swedish jarl Birger Brosa of Bjelbo. The daughter she had during her marriage to Brosa, Ingegerd Birgersdotter of Bjelbo, was to be Queen of Sweden in 1200. In 1174, the Norwegian throne claimant Øystein Møyla, who claimed to be her nephew, asked for the support of her and her husband, which they also granted. In 1176, the Norwegian throne claimant Sverre of Norway did the very same thing. He was turned away at first, but in 1177, they advised the Birkebeiner to acknowledge Sverre as their King and gave him the support of them and of the Swedish King. Bridget's son Filippus would also join Sverre's service. Brosa died in 1202. In 1205,.", "target": "Norwegian princess", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2352322", "label": "Greater Khorasan", "source": "Greater Khorāsān, or Khorāsān (Middle Persian: Xwarāsān; Persian: خراسان [xoɾɒːˈsɒːn] (listen)), is a historical eastern region in the Iranian Plateau between Western and Central Asia. The name Khorāsān is Persian and means \"where the sun arrives from\" or \"the Eastern Province\". The name was first given to the eastern province of Persia during the Sasanian Empire and was used from the late Middle Ages in distinction to neighbouring Transoxiana. Greater Khorasan is today sometimes used to distinguish the larger historical region from the former Khorasan Province of Iran (1906–2004), which roughly encompassed the western half of the historical Greater Khorasan.Khorasan comprised the present territories of northeastern Iran, parts of Afghanistan and southern parts of Central Asia. The province was often subdivided into four quarters, such that Nishapur (present-day Iran), Marv (present-day Turkmenistan), Herat and Balkh (present-day Afghanistan) were the centers, respectively, of the westernmost, northernmost, central, and easternmost quarters. In a strict sense of the term, Khorasan stretched as far as the Amu Darya (Oxus) river. However, the name has often been used in a loose sense to include a wider region that included most of Transoxiana (encompassing Bukhara and Samarqand in present-day Uzbekistan), extended westward to the Caspian coast and to the Dasht-e Kavir (Great Salt Desert), southward to Sistan, and eastward to the Pamir Mountains.Khorasan was first established as an administrative division in the 6th century (approximately after 520) by the Sasanians, during the reign of Kavad I (r. 488–496, 498/9–531) or Khosrow I (r. 531–579), which comprised the eastern and northeastern part of.", "target": "historical region of greater iran", "baseline_candidates": ["administrative territorial entity", "historical region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4773143", "label": "Anthony Moris", "source": "Anthony Moris (born 29 April 1990) is a professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Belgian First Division A club Union SG. Born in Belgium, he plays the Luxembourg national team.", "target": "Luxembourgian-Belgian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5464787", "label": "Followin' a Feelin'", "source": "Followin' a Feelin' is the third studio album by Australian country music artist Sherrié Austin. It was released in 2001 by WE Records and peaked at No. 43 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. The album's only charted single was a cover of Dolly Parton's \"Jolene\". Austin's version of the song reached No. 55 on the Hot Country Songs charts in July 2001.", "target": "album by Sherrié Austin", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7194907", "label": "Pinchas Stolper", "source": "Pinchas Aryeh Stolper (October 22, 1931 – May 25, 2022) was an American Orthodox rabbi and writer, who was a spokesman for Jewish Orthodoxy through his writings and books popularizing Orthodox Judaism..", "target": "American rabbi", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17019020", "label": "Land & Sea", "source": "Land & Sea is the fifth studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter and pianist Sarah Slean, released on September 27, 2011. It is a double album consisting of the more pop-oriented tunes of Land, and the mellow and orchestral songs of Sea. The album debuted at No. 48 in Canada.", "target": "album by Sarah Slean", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2079696", "label": "Muribeca", "source": "Muribeca is a municipality located in the Brazilian state of Sergipe. Its population was 7,639 (2020) and its area is 79 km².", "target": "human settlement in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31496012", "label": "Savinskoye, Kirillovsky District, Vologda Oblast", "source": "Savinskoye (Russian: Савинское) is a rural locality (a village) in Nikolotorzhskoye Rural Settlement, Kirillovsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 10 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Kirillovsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2743553", "label": "Vélo d'or français", "source": "The Vélo d'Or français (French for \"French Golden Bicycle\") is a cycle racing award, created in 1992 by the French cycling magazine Vélo Magazine. The award is given annually to the French rider considered to have performed the best over the year. It is given to the winner at the same time then the \"Vélo d'Or\" given to the international rider.", "target": "cycling award", "baseline_candidates": ["award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13583028", "label": "Nenad Jakšić", "source": "Nenad Jakšić (Serbian Cyrillic: Ненад Јакшић; born 12 October 1965) is a Serbian former professional footballer who played as a forward.", "target": "Serbian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7551930", "label": "Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras B", "source": "Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras B, usually called Palmeiras B, was a Brazilian football team from São Paulo. They were the reserve team of Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras and stopped their activities in 2013. Palmeira B's last match was a draw home against Sertãozinho.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39050873", "label": "Treadwell", "source": "Treadwell is an unincorporated community in Murray County, in the U.S. state of Georgia.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7915482", "label": "Varattu Pallam Dam", "source": "Varattu Pallam Dam is an artificial dam constructed in hills 12 km (7.5 mi) from Anthiyur in the Erode District. This dam irrigates nearby areas. A mountain road from Anthiyur leads to Kollegal. Storage capacity of this reservoir is 1.39 TMC. This is the one of place who Hits 1200 MM rain in erode district.", "target": "dam in India", "baseline_candidates": ["dam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89866447", "label": "WISE 1506+7027", "source": "WISEPC J150649.97+702736.0 (designation abbreviated to WISE 1506+7027, or WISE J1506+7027) is a brown dwarf star of spectral class T6, located in constellation Ursa Minor. It is one of the Sun's nearest neighbors, at a distance of 16.85 light-years. Brown dwarfs closer to the Sun include Luhman 16 and WISE 0855−0714. Other brown dwarfs that may be closer to the Sun include ε Indi Ba and ε Indi Bb at 11.8 light-years and WISE 0350-5658 at 12.1+5.2−1.3 light-years.", "target": "Star in the constellation Ursa Minor", "baseline_candidates": ["brown dwarf", "star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97704232", "label": "Abi Daré", "source": "Abimbola \"Abi\" Daré is a Nigerian author who now lives in Essex, England. In 2018 she won the Bath Novel Award, and was a finalist in the Literary Consultancy Pen Factor 2018. Her debut novel The Girl With the Louding Voice was published in 2020.", "target": "Nigerian author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19825695", "label": "Duan Tianjie", "source": "Duan Tianjie (Chinese: 段天杰; pinyin: Duàn Tiānjié) is a major general in the People's Liberation Army (PLA). He was placed under investigation by PLA's anti-corruption agency in November 2014 and transferred to the military judicial organ in January 2015. Previously he served as deputy director of the Political Department of PLA National Defence University.Duan Tianjie was also a columnist in Liberation Army Daily (解放军报), and he once served as president of Zhanyou Bao (战友报).", "target": "Chinese writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7524187", "label": "Sings Like Hell", "source": "Sings Like Hell is an album by American singer-songwriter Peter Case, released in 1993. In 1996 the album title gave rise to a monthly music series, Sings Like Hell (Music Series), staged at the Lobero Theater in Santa Barbara, California.", "target": "album by Peter Case", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28209741", "label": "droloxifene", "source": "Droloxifene (INN, USAN) (former developmental code names FK-435, ICI-79280, K-060, K-21060E, RP-60850), also known as 3-hydroxytamoxifen, is a nonsteroidal selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) of the triphenylethylene group that was developed originally in Germany and later in Japan for the treatment of breast cancer, osteoporosis in men and postmenopausal women, and cardiovascular disorders but was abandoned and never marketed. It reached phase II and phase III clinical trials for these indications before development was discontinued in 2000. The drug was found to be significantly less effective than tamoxifen in the treatment of breast cancer in two phase III clinical trials.Droloxifene is an analogue of tamoxifen, specifically 3-hydroxytamoxifen, but has been said to have 10- to 60-fold increased affinity for the estrogen receptor and reduced partial estrogen agonistic activity. The affinity of droloxifene for the estrogen receptor ranges from 0.2 to 15.2% relative to estradiol in different studies. For comparison, the ranges are 0.06 to 16% for tamoxifen and 0.1 to 12% for clomifene. Droloxifene causes a dose-dependent decrease in luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone levels, indicating that it has antigonadotropic activity, and dose-dependently increases sex hormone-binding globulin levels, indicating that it has estrogenic activity in the liver. Similarly to tamoxifen, droloxifene has partial estrogenic effects in the uterus. Unlike tamoxifen, droloxifene does not produce DNA adduct or liver tumors in animals.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35462913", "label": "Sungai Aimau", "source": "Wiriagar or Aimau River is a river in southern West Papua province, Indonesia.", "target": "river in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1353706", "label": "Stefano Margoni", "source": "Stefano Margoni (born May 12, 1975 in Pozza di Fassa, Italy) is an Italian professional ice hockey player who participated at the 2010 IIHF World Championship as a member of the Italian National men's ice hockey team. He also competed at the 1998 Winter Olympics and the 2006 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Italian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18374988", "label": "Love Today", "source": "\"Love Today\" is the second single released by London-based singer Mika, taken from his debut studio album Life in Cartoon Motion (2007). The song was produced by Greg Wells at Rocket Carousel studios and engineered by Drew Pearson. It was released in the United Kingdom on 16 April 2007 as a digital download, with the official physical release appearing on 23 April 2007. It has since peaked at number six. The single was released in Australia on 23 July 2007, peaking at number three on the ARIA Singles Chart, and was used for Austereo radio station network advertising. The song was nominated for a Grammy for Best Dance Recording at the 50th Grammy Awards but lost to Justin Timberlake's \"LoveStoned/I Think She Knows\".", "target": "2007 single by Mika", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4404667", "label": "The Gardener", "source": "The Gardener (Russian: Садовник) is a 1987 Soviet drama film directed by Viktor Buturlin.", "target": "1987 film by Viktor Buturlin", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18088583", "label": "Psammotis", "source": "Psammotis is a genus of moths of the family Crambidae. The genus was erected by Jacob Hübner in 1825.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18638051", "label": "Scarlett Stevens", "source": "Scarlett Stevens is an Australian singer/drummer from the indie band San Cisco, The Flairz and grunge band Ghetto Crystals. She has performed on recordings by Bob Evans and Illy. She is the daughter of Phil Stevens, co-founder of Jarrah Records and manager of John Butler Trio and The Waifs.", "target": "Australian musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6186855", "label": "Jesse Solomon", "source": "Jesse William Solomon (born November 4, 1963) is a former American football linebacker in the National Football League for the Minnesota Vikings, Dallas Cowboys, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Atlanta Falcons, and Miami Dolphins. He played college football at Florida State University.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5341293", "label": "educational music", "source": "Educational music, is a genre of music in which songs, lyrics, or other musical elements are used as a method of teaching and/or learning. It has been shown in research to promote learning. [1][2] Additionally, music study in general has been shown to improve academic performance of students. [3][4][5]Music used for learning can be in many formats, including video recordings, audio recordings, sheet music, and improvised music. Most of the time, music is added to an existing lesson plan or story. Songs are usually easy to sing and catchy, so that they can be repeated for later learning. Some children's music is considered Educational, and, historically, most educational music is geared towards children. Prominent examples include songs from LazyTown, Sesame Street, Schoolhouse Rock, Smart Songs' educational rap videos on YouTube, and Tom Lehrer's songs for the PBS show The Electric Company. Some educational songs also have become popular hits such as \"Low Bridge (Fifteen Years/Miles On The Erie Canal)\" and \"The Battle Of New Orleans\". Recent developments have extended music's use to secondary and collegiate education, with Cornel West breaking new ground in this regard. [6].", "target": "genre of music in which songs, lyrics, or other musical elements are used as a method of teaching and/or learning", "baseline_candidates": ["functional music", "music genre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3823052", "label": "La mazurka del barone, della santa e del fico fiorone", "source": "La mazurka del barone, della santa e del fico fiorone (lit. 'The Mazurka of the Baron, the Saint and the Early Fig Tree') is a 1975 Italian black comedy film co-written and directed by Pupi Avati. It is considered one of the most atypical commedia all'italiana films.The film marked Avati's return to filmmaking after a six-year absence, during which he worked as director of TV commercials.", "target": "1975 film by Pupi Avati", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19519548", "label": "Guo Tianqian", "source": "Guo Tianqian (born 1 June 1995 in Shijiazhuang) is a Chinese athlete specialising in the shot put. She is the 2011 youth and 2014 junior champion in the event. She won her first major senior medal, a bronze, at the 2014 Asian Games. Her personal best is 18.08 metres outdoors (Jinan 2014) and 16.96 metres indoors (Nanjing 2013).", "target": "Chinese shot putter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7544862", "label": "Smith's Hundred", "source": "Smith's Hundred or Smythe's Hundred was a colonial English settlement in the Province of Virginia, in the modern United States of America. It was one of the original James River plantations named after the treasurer of the Virginia Company, Sir Thomas Smith. It was settled by the English in 1617 and after 1620, was known as Southampton Hundred in honor of the Earl of Southampton. The site was originally home to a village of the Paspahegh Indians. They were located along the north bank of James River. Smith's Hundred was located eight miles above the English fort at Jamestown and extended from Weyanoke Hundred to the south bank of Chickahominy River on the north bank of James River. The settlement was abandoned after the Powhatan Uprising of 1622. The area is now called Sandy Point in Charles City County, Virginia. The first General Assembly (which became the House of Burgesses) in 1619 included two representatives for Smythe's Hundred Plantation: Captain Thomas Graves and Walter Shelley.", "target": "human settlement in Virginia, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6421582", "label": "Klára Andrássy", "source": "Countess Klára Andrássy de Csíkszentkirály et Krasznahorka (Kája; 18 January 1898 – 12 April 1941) was a Hungarian noblewoman, who later became a Czechoslovak Communist and revolutionist. She joined Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. She organized sabotages against Nazi road and rail consignments. She was critically wounded, losing both legs, in an Italian air raid over Dubrovnik in 1941, eventually succumbing to her injuries.", "target": "Hungarian noblewoman, politician (1898-1941)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q778079", "label": "Marie Claire", "source": "Marie Claire is a French-British international monthly magazine first published in France in 1937, followed by the United Kingdom in 1941. Since then various editions are published in many countries and languages. The feature editions focuses on women around the world and several global issues. Marie Claire magazine also covers health, beauty, and fashion topics.", "target": "women's magazine", "baseline_candidates": ["women's magazine", "magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q410862", "label": "mucin", "source": "Mucins () are a family of high molecular weight, heavily glycosylated proteins (glycoconjugates) produced by epithelial tissues in most animals. Mucins' key characteristic is their ability to form gels; therefore they are a key component in most gel-like secretions, serving functions from lubrication to cell signalling to forming chemical barriers. They often take an inhibitory role. Some mucins are associated with controlling mineralization, including nacre formation in mollusks, calcification in echinoderms and bone formation in vertebrates. They bind to pathogens as part of the immune system. Overexpression of the mucin proteins, especially MUC1, is associated with many types of cancer.Although some mucins are membrane-bound due to the presence of a hydrophobic membrane-spanning domain that favors retention in the plasma membrane, most mucins are secreted as principal components of mucus by mucous membranes or are secreted to become a component of saliva.", "target": "glycoprotein", "baseline_candidates": ["glycoprotein", "mucoproteins"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17019166", "label": "Old Guard", "source": "The Old Guard was an Australian anti-communist organisation which was founded in 1930 and was primarily active in New South Wales. Its exact origins are disputed. At least one historian has claimed that it existed as early as 1917. It has been described as a paramilitary, quasi-official, vigilante, anti-communist organisation. The group was primarily concerned with the social conditions arising from the Great Depression, and the actions of the Labor state government in New South Wales led by Premier Jack Lang. Neither the Old Guard, nor its offshoot, the New Guard, supported the Australia First Movement. In response to rumours that fires would be started by agitators, the Old Guard was a driving force behind the more effective organisation of country bush fire brigades in New South Wales. As fears of a communist takeover subsided, the Old Guard lacked purpose and was dissolved sometime in the 1950s.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6753846", "label": "Maple City", "source": "Maple City is a unincorporated community in Cowley County, Kansas, United States.", "target": "unincorporated community in Cowley County, Kansas", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q334447", "label": "Kratos", "source": "In Greek mythology, Kratos (or Cratos) is the divine personification of strength. He is the son of Pallas and Styx. Kratos and his siblings Nike ('Victory'), Bia ('Force'), and Zelus ('Glory') are all essentially personifications of a trait. Kratos is first mentioned alongside his siblings in Hesiod's Theogony. According to Hesiod, Kratos and his siblings dwell with Zeus because their mother Styx came to him first to request a position in his regime, so he honored her and her children with exalted positions. Kratos and his sister Bia are best known for their appearance in the opening scene of Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound. Acting as agents of Zeus, they lead the captive Titan Prometheus on stage. Kratos compels the mild-mannered blacksmith god Hephaestus to chain Prometheus to a rock as punishment for his theft of fire.Kratos is characterized as brutal and merciless, repeatedly mocking both Hephaestus and Prometheus and advocating for the use of unnecessary violence. He defends Zeus' oppressive rule and predicts that Prometheus will never escape his bonds. In Aeschylus' Libation Bearers, Electra calls upon Kratos, Dike (\"Justice\"), and Zeus to aid her brother Orestes in avenging the murder of their father Agamemnon. Kratos and Bia appear in a late fifth-century BC red-figure Attic skyphos of the punishment of Ixion, possibly based on a scene from a lost tragedy by Euripides. They also appear in late eighteenth and nineteenth-century Romantic depictions and adaptations of the binding of Prometheus.", "target": "Titan from Greek mythology", "baseline_candidates": ["titan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19204733", "label": "Juan Carlos Oyarzún", "source": "Juan Carlos Oyarzún (6 June 1951 – 11 December 2021) was an Argentine politician. As a member of the Fueguian People's Movement, he served in the Argentine Senate from 1992 to 1998.", "target": "Argentinian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27817940", "label": "The Tamrons", "source": "The Tamrons were an American garage rock band from Concord, North Carolina, near Charlotte who were active in the 1960s. They became one of the most popular bands in Concord and the Charlotte area during the mid-1960s and enjoyed a regional hit with their single, \"Wild Man\" backed with \"Stop, Look, Listen\" recorded at Arthur Smith's studio in Charlotte and released on his Pyramid label. They broke up in 1968. In the intervening years their work has become highly regarded by garage rock enthusiasts and has appeared on several compilations.", "target": "American garage rock band from North Carolina", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13122950", "label": "Gulf of Aden", "source": "The Gulf of Aden (Arabic: خليج عدن, Somali: Gacanka Cadmeed 𐒅𐒖𐒐𐒕𐒌 𐒋𐒖𐒆𐒗𐒒) is a deepwater gulf between Yemen to the north, the Arabian Sea to the east, Djibouti to the west, and the Guardafui Channel, Socotra and Somalia to the south. In the northwest, it connects with the Red Sea through the Bab-el-Mandeb strait, and it connects with the Arabian Sea to the east. To the west, it narrows into the Gulf of Tadjoura in Djibouti. The ancient Greeks regarded the gulf as one of the most important parts of the Erythraean Sea. It later came to be dominated by Muslims, as the area around the gulf converted to Islam. From the late 1960s onwards, there started to be an increased Soviet naval presence in the Gulf. The importance of the Gulf of Aden declined when the Suez Canal was closed, but it was revitalized when the canal was reopened in 1975, after being deepened and widened by the Egyptian government. The waterway is part of the important Suez Canal shipping route between the Mediterranean Sea and the Arabian Sea in the Indian Ocean, with 21,000 ships crossing the gulf annually. This route is often used for the delivery of Persian Gulf oil, making the gulf an integral waterway in the world economy. Important cities along the Gulf of Aden include the namesake Aden in Yemen. Other Yemeni cities are Zinjibar, Shuqrah, Ahwar, Balhaf, Mukalla. On the Horn African side, the cities of Djibouti, Berbera and Bosaso. Despite a lack of large-scale commercial fishing facilities, the.", "target": "a gulf between the Horn of Africa and Yemen in the Arabian Peninsula", "baseline_candidates": ["bay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4828762", "label": "Cevizlik", "source": "Cevizlik is a village in the District of Yusufeli, Artvin Province, Turkey. As of 2010, it had a population of 252 people.", "target": "village in Yusufeli, Artvin Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2051295", "label": "Parada", "source": "Parada is a civil parish in the municipality of Paredes de Coura, Portugal. The population in 2011 was 298, in an area of 5.90 km².", "target": "civil parish in Paredes de Coura", "baseline_candidates": ["freguesia of Portugal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22096216", "label": "1949 Rice Owls football team", "source": "The 1949 Rice Owls football team was an American football team that represented Rice University during the 1949 college football season. The Owls were led by 10th-year head coach Jess Neely and played their home games at Rice Field in Houston, Texas. The team competed as a member of the Southwest Conference, winning the conference with an unbeaten record of 6–0. They ended the regular season with an overall record of 9–1, and were ranked fifth in the final AP Poll. Rice was invited to the 1950 Cotton Bowl Classic, where they defeated Southern Conference champion North Carolina.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1650833", "label": "Calcena", "source": "Calcena is a municipality located in the province of Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 69 inhabitants.", "target": "human settlement in Zaragoza Province, Aragon, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4664566", "label": "Abu Malik Abd al-Wahid", "source": "Abu Malik Abd al-Wahid (Arabic: أبو عبدالملك عبدالواحد المريني) (died 1339) (also known as Abomelique) was a son of the Marinid sultan of Morocco, Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Othman. Although he had lost an eye, Malik was a capable military commander and served as governor of Algeciras and the Marinids' principal general in Al Andalus. He captured Gibraltar from Castile in June 1333 and participated in his father's campaign against rebels in the Kingdom of Tlemcen the following year. He was killed by Castilian forces in 1339 after being ambushed on the way back from a raid against the Castilian-held town of Jerez de la Frontera.", "target": "Son of Marinid sultan of Morocco (died 1339)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3678827", "label": "Cladonia asahinae", "source": "Cladonia asahinae, the pixie cup lichen or Asahina's cup lichen, is a species of cup lichen in the Cladoniaceae family. It grows on moss, particularly Chorisodontium aciphyllum, Polytrichum strictum, and Andreaea species. C. asahinae occurs in Europe, North America, and the southernmost part of South America. It also grows in the Antarctic.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2492012", "label": "Swedish Army", "source": "The Swedish Army (Swedish: svenska armén) is the land force of the Swedish Armed Forces.", "target": "Land branch of the Swedish Armed Forces", "baseline_candidates": ["military branch", "army"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25241752", "label": "1975 Bulgarian Cup Final", "source": "The 1975 Bulgarian Cup Final was the 35th final of the Bulgarian Cup (in this period the tournament was named Cup of the Soviet Army), and was contested between Slavia Sofia and Lokomotiv Sofia on 21 June 1975 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. Slavia won the final 3–2.", "target": "football match", "baseline_candidates": ["association football match of club teams", "association football final"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16384812", "label": "İyidere", "source": "İyidere is a neighbourhood in the İspir District of Erzurum Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Western Armenia", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16875274", "label": "Sanchaman Limboo", "source": "Sanchaman Limboo (15 January 1947 – 8 November 2020) was the fourth Chief Minister of Sikkim. He was Chief Minister in Sikkim for 179 days. During his period the central act of Other Backward Classes (OBC) was enforced in Sikkim. Limboo died on 8 November 2020 after a long illness at the age of 73.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10382181", "label": "Thomas Draxe", "source": "Thomas Draxe (died 1618) was an English divine, a theological and classical author.", "target": "English divine and author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6926545", "label": "Move Your Shadow", "source": "Move Your Shadow: South Africa, Black and White, written by Joseph Lelyveld and published by Times Books in 1985, won the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction as well as the 1986 Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Current Interest.", "target": "book by Joseph Lelyveld", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q822550", "label": "One from the Vault", "source": "One from the Vault is a live album by the Grateful Dead, recorded on August 13, 1975 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco, California, and released April 15, 1991 on Grateful Dead Records, the personal record label of the band. The concert was broadcast on FM radio, widely traded by fans on cassettes, and sold in bootleg LP versions under the titles Urubouros Deedni Mublasaron and Make Believe Ballroom. But it was not until the Grateful Dead released it on their eponymous record label, Grateful Dead Records, that high quality versions of the songs appeared. It was the first complete concert recording released commercially by the band. The concert also marked the first time that the then recently released album Blues for Allah was performed live in its entirety, albeit with a few other songs thrown in.", "target": "1991 live album by Grateful Dead", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27985955", "label": "Cyclone", "source": "Cyclone is an unincorporated community in east central McDonald County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. The community is located on Big Sugar Creek west of Powell.", "target": "unincorporated community in McDonald County, Missouri, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4693547", "label": "Agonum scitulum", "source": "Agonum scitulum is a species of ground beetle in the Platyninae subfamily. It is found in European countries like Belarus, Belgium, Estonia, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Netherlands, Romania, Russia, and Switzerland.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2813027", "label": "1989 in architecture", "source": "The year 1989 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.", "target": "overview of the events of 1989 in architecture", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6011575", "label": "In haec verba", "source": "In haec verba (meaning \"in these words\") is a phrase in Latin legal usage, that refers to incorporating verbatim text into a complaint, pleading, or other instrument, rather than by attaching a copy to the pleading or instrument. For example, Delaware Code, tit. 8, § 102(b)(2) permits a corporation to enter into a compromise with its creditors if the corporation has included the specific language of the statute in haec verba in its certification of incorporation; thus, the exact language of the statute must be recited verbatim in the certificate of incorporation in order to take advantage of this statutory provision.", "target": "Latin legal phrase", "baseline_candidates": ["phrase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6210150", "label": "Joe Habie", "source": "José Habie Nigrin (November 14, 1956 – September 28, 2012), better known as Joe or Joey Habie, was a Guatemalan businessman. He was the owner of the Liztex Corporation, one of the five largest exporters of fabrics in Latin America. He also owned the Tikal Futura business and hotel complex in Guatemala City. Habie died in a helicopter crash in Guatemala City on September 28, 2012. He was the sole occupant of the aircraft.", "target": "Guatemalan businessman (1956-2012)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7703587", "label": "Terri Dwyer", "source": "Teresa \"Terri\" Dwyer (born 31 July 1973) is a British television presenter and actress, best known for her role as Ruth Osborne in the British soap opera Hollyoaks. She has also presented the ITV home makeover show 60 Minute Makeover.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1337945", "label": "White Island", "source": "White Island (Cornish: Ar Nor, \"facing the mainland\" or Enys Wynn \"white island\" ) is one of the larger unpopulated islands of the Isles of Scilly, part of the United Kingdom, and lies off the coast of the northernmost populated island of the group, St Martin's, to which it is joined by a tidal causeway, or isthmus. The island is designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and a Geological Conservation Review site and is managed by the Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust on behalf of the Duchy of Cornwall.Access to the island can be dangerous when the rocky causeway is covered by the sea, as there are strong currents across it.This White Island should not be confused with a much smaller island of the same name, which lies off the coast of Samson.", "target": "island in Isles of Scilly, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21094795", "label": "Abbas Huseynov", "source": "Abbas İsrafil oğlu Hüseynov (born on 13 June 1995) is an Azerbaijani footballer who plays as a defender for Qarabağ FK and the Azerbaijan national team.", "target": "Azerbaijani association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3886478", "label": "Tyaskin", "source": "Tyaskin is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Wicomico County, Maryland, United States. Its population was 236 as of the 2010 census. It is part of the Salisbury, Maryland-Delaware Metropolitan Statistical Area. Beaudley was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.", "target": "census-designated place in Wicomico County, Maryland", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6208245", "label": "Joe-E", "source": "Joe-E is a subset of the Java programming language intended to support programming according to object-capability discipline.The language is notable for being an early object-capability subset language. It has influenced later subset languages, such as ADsafe and Caja/Cajita, subsets of Javascript. It is also notable for allowing methods to be verified as functionally pure, based on their method signatures.The restrictions imposed by the Joe-E verifier include: Classes may not have mutable static fields, because these create global state. Catching out-of-memory exceptions is prohibited, because doing so allows non-deterministic execution. For the same reason, finally clauses are not allowed. Methods in the standard library may be blocked if they are deemed unsafe according to taming rules. For example, the constructor new File(filename) is blocked because it allows unrestricted access to the filesystem.Cup of Joe is slang for coffee, and so serves as a trademark-avoiding reference to Java. Thus, the name Joe-E is intended to suggest an adaptation of ideas from the E programming language to create a variant of the Java language. Waterken Server is written in Joe-E.", "target": "subset of Java to support programming according to object-capability discipline", "baseline_candidates": ["programming language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q107734", "label": "Peter Thomann", "source": "Peter Thomann (born 1940) is a German photographer who worked as a staff photographer for Stern magazine.", "target": "German photographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6805369", "label": "Aspergillus flaschentraegeri", "source": "Aspergillus flaschentraegeri is a species of fungus in the genus Aspergillus. It is from the Cremei section. The species was first described in 1964.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1351164", "label": "Piotr Adamczyk", "source": "Piotr Aleksander Adamczyk (Polish: [ˈpjɔtr aˈdamt͡ʂɨk]; born March 21, 1972) is a Polish film, television, voice and theatre actor. He is known for portraying pianist and composer Frédéric Chopin in the biographical film Chopin: Desire for love (2002), Pope John Paul II in the TV miniseries Karol: A Man Who Became Pope (2005) and its sequel Karol: The Pope, The Man (2006) and Tomas in the Marvel Cinematic Universe Disney+ series Hawkeye (2021).", "target": "Polish actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3947988", "label": "Acropora horrida", "source": "Acropora horrida is a species of acroporid coral that was first described by James Dwight Dana in 1846. Found in tropical, shallow reefs in marine environments, it occurs near fringing reefs around turbid water, at depths of 5 to 20 m (16 to 66 ft). It is listed as a vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List, and it is thought to have a decreasing population. It is not common and found over a large area, and is listed under CITES Appendix II.", "target": "species of cnidarian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5432168", "label": "Fall of a Kingdom", "source": "Fall of a Kingdom is the first novel in the Farsala Trilogy by American author Hilari Bell. It was previously published under the name Flame. The series it was in was also referred to as the \"Book of Sorahb\".", "target": "book by Hilari Bell", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3525101", "label": "Thomas Ewing, Jr.", "source": "Thomas Ewing Jr. (August 7, 1829 – January 21, 1896) was an attorney, the first chief justice of Kansas and leading free state advocate, Union Army general during the American Civil War, and two-term United States Congressman from Ohio, 1877–1881. He narrowly lost the 1879 campaign for Ohio Governor.", "target": "Union Army general (1829-1896)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14943868", "label": "Haunted Summer", "source": "Haunted Summer is a 1988 drama film directed by Ivan Passer.", "target": "1988 film by Ivan Passer", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6767062", "label": "Mark Child", "source": "Mark Sheard Child FRS (born 17 August 1937) is a British chemist, and Emeritus Fellow of St Edmund Hall, Oxford.", "target": "British chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14715393", "label": "Azariah Newton House", "source": "The Azariah Newton House is an historic house at 44 Silver Hill Road in Milford, Massachusetts. It is a 1+1⁄2-story wood-frame Cape style house, with a side-gable roof, clapboard siding, and large central chimney. The interior has retained substantial interior finishing, including floors, fireplaces, and room layout. The house was built in 1747 by Azariah Newton, one of the area's early settlers, and is one of Milford's oldest houses.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.", "target": "historic house in Massachusetts, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16094554", "label": "Korean Agency for Technology and Standards", "source": "Korean Agency for Technology and Standards (KATS) is the government standards organization for South Korea. It is part of the Ministry of Knowledge Economy. It is authorized to regulate and manage the legal measures of South Korea by the current Measures Act.KATS is a member of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), as well as the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC).", "target": "مثبت سبز", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4035289", "label": "Boletus subvelutipes", "source": "Boletus subvelutipes, commonly known as the red-mouth bolete, is a bolete fungus in the family Boletaceae. It is found in Asia and North America, where it fruits on the ground in a mycorrhizal association with both deciduous and coniferous trees. Its fruit bodies (mushrooms) have a brown to reddish-brown cap, bright yellow cap flesh, and a stem covered by furfuraceous to punctate ornamentation and dark red hairs at the base. Its flesh instantly stains blue when cut, but slowly fades to white. The fruit bodies are poisonous, and produce symptoms of gastrointestinal distress if consumed.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3444178", "label": "Knocking at Your Back Door: The Best of Deep Purple in the 80's", "source": "Knocking at Your Back Door: The Best of Deep Purple in the 80's is a compilation album by the British hard rock band Deep Purple. The album was released in 1992. It is a compilation of tracks from three albums, Perfect Strangers (1984), The House of Blue Light (1987), and the live album Nobody's Perfect (1988).", "target": "compilation album by Deep Purple", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5067886", "label": "Chain Letters", "source": "Chain Letters was a British television game show produced by Tyne Tees and Barry & Enright Productions. The show was recorded at their City Road studios in Newcastle Upon Tyne and first broadcast on ITV in the United Kingdom from 7 September 1987 to 6 July 1990, then again from 2 January 1995 to 25 April 1997. Three contestants competed to win money by changing letters in words to form new words. Its original host was Jeremy Beadle, followed by Andrew O'Connor, Allan Stewart, Ted Robbins, Vince Henderson and Dave Spikey. A computer named Wordsworth generated words and checked their validity, and occasionally provided the host with definitions of unusual words that came up during the game.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55600257", "label": "2019 Valencian regional election", "source": "The 2019 Valencian regional election was held on Sunday, 28 April 2019, to elect the 10th Corts of the Valencian Community. All 99 seats in the Corts were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with the April 2019 Spanish general election. This was the first early regional election ever held in the Valencian Community, as well as the first Valencian election to not be held concurrently with other regional elections.The Socialist Party of the Valencian Country (PSPV) and Coalició Compromís formed a minority coalition government in 2015, relying on confidence and supply support from Podemos, an arrangement which was dubbed the \"Botànic Agreement\" and forced the governing People's Party (PP) into opposition after dominating Valencian politics during the previous 20 years. The political landscape experienced some changes during the next four years, with the PP losing support to the emerging liberal Citizens (Cs) party and the right-wing populist Vox, while on the left, United Left of the Valencian Country (EUPV) formed an electoral alliance with Podemos called Unides Podem. The election resulted in a reduced majority for the left-wing parties. The PSPV emerged as the largest party for the first time since 1991, whereas the PP suffered the worst result in its history. Cs and Vox benefited from the PP's losses, the latter entering the Corts for the first time. Compromís and Unides Podem had disappointing finishes, losing seats and ending up in fourth and sixth place, respectively. These results led to a continuation of the 2015 Botànic Agreement, though this time Podemos and.", "target": "municipal election in Valencia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["Valencian regional election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3481639", "label": "Shawn Weller", "source": "Shawn Weller (born July 8, 1986) is an American professional ice hockey forward who is currently playing for the Adirondack Thunder of the ECHL. He attended Clarkson University and graduated from South Glens Falls. Weller was drafted in the third round, 77th overall by the Ottawa Senators in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft.", "target": "American ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17521163", "label": "Algerian People's National Armed Forces", "source": "The Algerian People's National Army (Arabic: الجيش الوطني الشعبي الجزائري, romanized: Aljaysh alwataniu alshaebiu aljazayiriu; French: Armée nationale populaire) is the military force of the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria. It is the direct successor of the National Liberation Army (ALN), the armed wing of the nationalist National Liberation Front, which fought French colonial rule during the Algerian War of Independence (1954-1962). The People's National Army include the Algerian Land Forces, the Algerian Air Force, the Navy (the Marine de la République Algérienne), and the Algerian Air Defence Force. The antecedents of the army were the conventional military units formed in neighbouring Morocco and Tunisia during the war of independence from France. Except for clashes with Morocco in 1963 and 1976, the armed forces have not been involved in hostilities against a foreign power. Their combat capabilities in defence of the country has thus remained untested, however the Algerian military is arguably recognized to be one of the most professional and well-trained militaries in both Africa and the Arab world.", "target": "Combined military forces of Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["armed forces"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24521648", "label": "The Loxleys and the War of 1812", "source": "The Loxleys and the War of 1812 is a 2012 Canadian graphic novel about a family's experiences in Upper Canada during the War of 1812, originally published in print by Renegade Arts Entertainment, and produced as an interactive tablet app by the National Film Board of Canada in partnership with the Department of Canadian Heritage.The story follows the adventures of four generations of the fictional Loxley family, who own a large farmstead in Queenston, Upper Canada, in the Niagara area. The Loxleys are United Empire Loyalists who moved from the American territory following the U.S. War of Independence. The story incorporates a number of narrative elements, including journal entries by female family members, letters home by several of the men in battle, spoken text, as well as drawings from a family member.", "target": "Canadian graphic novel", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work", "comics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29419422", "label": "Bettina Lemström", "source": "Bettina Lemström (born 29 March 1966) is a Finnish sailor. She competed in the women's 470 event at the 1988 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Finnish sailor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2465087", "label": "Piotr Wiwczarek", "source": "Piotr Paweł Wiwczarek (born 22 October 1965 in Olsztyn, Poland), also known as Peter, (ex nickname Behemoth) is a Polish musician who is the vocalist and lead guitarist for the death metal band Vader, as the only constant member of the band since its inception. He has also collaborated with Kazimierz \"Para\" Paraszczuk on his tribute album, Bandid Rockin', and is the producer of several of Vader's releases. He is also the founder and guitarist of a side-project, named Panzer X. Wiwczarek also became a producer for the first time in 1999, when producing the Polish death metal band Decapitated's first release, Winds of Creation.", "target": "Polish musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96211139", "label": "2021 Dakar Rally", "source": "The 2021 Dakar Rally was a rally raid event held in Saudi Arabia and the 43rd edition of the Dakar Rally. The event was held for 14 days, starting from 3 January and ended 15 January 2021. It was the second time Saudi Arabia had hosted the event, with support from the Saudi Automobile and Motorcycle Federation. The race started and ended in Jeddah, allowing the competitors to venture through the desert and alongside the Red Sea. The route consists of one prologue stage and 12 normal stages, with one rest day in Ha'il on 9 January. The rally was originally intended to run through 2–3 additional countries, with Egypt and Jordan being rumoured likely candidates. However, due to travel and border restrictions implemented in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the route stayed entirely within Saudi Arabian territory.", "target": "rally raid event", "baseline_candidates": ["Dakar Rally"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1347001", "label": "Jean Baptiste Loeillet of Ghent", "source": "Jean Baptiste Loeillet (6 July 1688 – c. 1720), who later styled himself Loeillet de Gant, was a Flemish composer, born in Ghent. He spent the largest part of his life in France in service to the archbishop of Lyon, Paul-François de Neufville de Villeroy. He wrote many works for recorder, including trio sonatas, unaccompanied sonatas for 2 recorders, and solo sonatas. He died in Lyon around 1720. Jean Baptiste Loeillet was a member of the large and musical Loeillet family, and the son of Pieter Loeillet and his first wife Marte (née Nortier). Loeillet added \"de Ghent\" to his surname to avoid confusion with his cousin, Jean-Baptiste Loeillet of London (1680–1730), who was a well-known musician and composer in London. The similar names have often caused confusion and mis-attribution of works, such as Alexandre Beón's arrangement of the C minor Piano trio for recorder, oboe, and basso continuo for modern instruments (the Piano Trio in B minor, now reprinted by International) incorrectly attributed to Loeillet de Ghent. Forty-eight sonatas for recorder and continuo were printed in Amsterdam in 1710 and 1717 and, \"clearly popular\" per musician, composer and historian John W. Duarte, were re-printed in London by Walsh & Hare in 1712 and 1722. Duarte called the sonatas \"in the style of Corelli\" and placed the composer's work in the baroque period.", "target": "Belgian composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13046366", "label": "Stanley County", "source": "Stanley County is a county in the U.S. state of South Dakota. As of the 2020 census, the population was 2,980. Its county seat is Fort Pierre. The county was created in 1873, and was organized in 1890. It is named for David S. Stanley, a commander at Fort Sully from 1866 to 1874, which was located nearby.Stanley County is included in the Pierre, SD Micropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "county in South Dakota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of South Dakota"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1090267", "label": "inferior rectus muscle", "source": "The inferior rectus muscle is a muscle in the orbit near the eye. It is one of the four recti muscles in the group of extraocular muscles. It originates from the common tendinous ring, and inserts into the anteroinferior surface of the eye. It depresses the eye (downwards).", "target": "muscle in the orbit", "baseline_candidates": ["extraocular muscle", "muscle organ", "medical term"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20807720", "label": "Adam Bowman", "source": "Adam Bowman (4 August 1880 – 4 February 1937) was a Scottish professional footballer who played in the Football League for Blackburn Rovers, Leeds City and Everton as an inside left or centre forward.", "target": "British association football player (1880-1937)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12448556", "label": "Rangeli Municipality", "source": "Rangeli is a Municipality and rural market town in Morang District in the Koshi Zone of south-eastern Nepal. This municipality was formed merging existing four villages i.e.Amgachhi, Babiabirta, Darbesa and Rangeli itself since May 2014.At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 12,325 people living in 2463 individual households.It is in the centre of a fertile agricultural region and there are numerous factories surrounding the town such as brick kilns and rice mills. Rangeli is linked by regular buses to the industrial city of Biratnagar. Rangeli was once the district headquarters of Morang district, and was in the past a historically important trading town, although its role has declined over the last half a century with the growth of Biratnagar. Nevertheless, it remains an important market centre serving south-eastern Morang district.", "target": "municipality in Morang District, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7749522", "label": "The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter", "source": "The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter: A Treasury of Myths, Legends, and Fascinating Facts is a guide to the fictional Harry Potter universe, written by David Colbert. It explores the references to history, legends, and literature in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter novels. Colbert conceived the idea for The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter while quizzing his nephew and nieces about the mythological references in the novels. He later wrote the book while teaching a seminar on self-publishing to graduate students at the University of North Carolina. The book was published in March 2001, without approval from Rowling, and has since received positive reviews from critics. An updated version of The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter was published in 2004 by Berkley Books.", "target": "guide book to the fictonal universe of Harry Potter", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7027573", "label": "Nick Morgan", "source": "Nick Morgan (born Nicholas H. Morgan in 1953): 2 is an American speaking coach and author.Morgan received his A.B. in English from Princeton University in 1976 after completing a 140-page long senior thesis titled \"The Artistry of Form: Dickens' Great Expectations and Our Mutual Friend.\" He earned his M.A. and Ph.D. in English literature and rhetoric at the University of Virginia in 1977 and 1981, respectively. He taught Shakespeare and Public Speaking at the University of Virginia and Princeton University. At University of Virginia, he also served as Assistant Vice President and Provost. He first started writing speeches for Virginia Governor Charles S. Robb and went on to found his own communications consulting organization, Public Words, in 1997.: 229 Individual clients include former Yahoo! executive and author Tim Sanders, mountaineer Susan Ershler, Emmy Award-winning talk show host Montel Williams, reality TV star Les Gold (Hardcore Pawn), and online marketing strategist David Meerman Scott. Corporate clients include IBM, Kaiser Permanente, and Royal Dutch Shell.He has written hundreds of articles for local and national publications, including Forbes.Harvard Business Review cited his article How to Become an Authentic Speaker as one of ten \"must read\" articles on communication.Morgan is an expert in non-verbal communications skills for public speakers, and has coached and written extensively on this topic. His interest in body language was particularly fueled by three life events at age 17: \"First, I read a book about the Dalai Lama ... Second, I learned my father was gay. And third, I died. \"His expertise encompasses not only traditional.", "target": "American speaking coach and author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39050845", "label": "Edward Rich, 8th Earl of Warwick", "source": "Edward Henry Rich, 10th Baron Rich, 8th Earl of Warwick and 5th Earl of Holland (1695–1759), of Holland House, Kensington, Middlesex, was an English peer.", "target": "British peer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7253066", "label": "Prunum batabanoense", "source": "Prunum batabanoense is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Marginellidae, the margin snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4838424", "label": "Baby What About You", "source": "\"Baby, What About You\" is a song written by Josh Leo and Wendy Waldman, and recorded by American country music artist Crystal Gayle. It was released in June 1983 as the third single from the album True Love. The song was Gayle's twelfth number one on the country chart. The single went to number one for one week and spent a total of twelve weeks on the country chart.", "target": "1983 single by Crystal Gayle", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75371911", "label": "Fereydoun Ala", "source": "Fereydoun Ala (born 17 March 1931 in Paris, France) is an Iranian physician and academician, specialised in internal medicine, haematology, blood transfusion and haemostasis, who established the first Clinical Haematology Department, and the first Haemophilia Centre in Iran at the Tehran University Medical Faculty. He was the founder of the Iranian National Blood Transfusion Service (INBTS), a centralised, state-funded organisation, established in 1974, for the recruitment of healthy, voluntary, non-remunerated blood donors.", "target": "Peerage person ID=94449", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3748774", "label": "2002 SEAT Open – doubles", "source": "Elena Bovina and Daniela Hantuchová were the defending champions, but none competed this year. Bovina decided to focus on the singles tournament, while Hantuchová competed in Linz at the same week. Kim Clijsters and Janette Husárová won the title by defeating Květa Hrdličková and Barbara Rittner 4–6, 6–3, 7–5 in the final.", "target": "2002 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5545026", "label": "George T. Bye", "source": "George Thurman Bye (né George Thurman Bindbeutel, October 21, 1887 - November 24, 1957) was the literary agent of Frank Buck and Eleanor Roosevelt. A prominent figure in the literary world before World War II, Bye rose to fame as the agent of people in the news and amateur authors with something timely or sensational to say, so called \"stunt books\".", "target": "American literary agent", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65083890", "label": "Olympic Pylon", "source": "Olympic Pylon is a 1956 ceramic sculpture by Australian artist Arthur Boyd. It was included on the Victorian Heritage Database on 7 May 2001.", "target": "1956 ceramic sculpture by Arthur Boyd", "baseline_candidates": ["sculpture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17068068", "label": "Kumbh Karan", "source": "Kumbh Karan is an Indian-animated television series broadcast by the Indian kids channel Pogo. The show was released on 1 June 2010. The show earned a budget of more than $300,000.", "target": "Indian animated telivision series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5179866", "label": "Cox-Parks House", "source": "Cox-Parks House is a historic home located at Charleston, West Virginia. Emma Cox, the wife of Frank Cox, leader of several coal companies in the Kanawha Valley, had this home built for herself in about 1925 when she gave the old \"Home Hill\" to her daughter's family. It is an elaborate bungalow in the Prairie School-style. The exterior features clean white stucco and green tile and a double entrance and flanking double windows, housed by a recessed porch.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 as part of the South Hills Multiple Resource Area.", "target": "historic house in Charleston, West Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7120471", "label": "Pennsylvania Railroad D3", "source": "The Pennsylvania Railroad's steam locomotive class D3 (formerly Class C, pre-1895) comprised sixty-seven 4-4-0 locomotives intended for general passenger and freight service, constructed at the railroad's own Altoona Works (now owned by Norfolk Southern) during 1869–1881. They were the third standardized class of locomotives on the railroad and the most numerous of the early standard types; they shared many parts with other standard classes.This design differed from the Class A (later D1) mainly in its smaller drivers for greater tractive effort for freight haulage. Like all the early standardized 4-4-0s on the PRR, the Class C had a wagon-top boiler with steam dome and a firebox between the two driving axles.", "target": "class of 67 American 4-4-0 locomotives", "baseline_candidates": ["locomotive class", "tender locomotive"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6733439", "label": "Maharshi", "source": "Maharshi is a 1987 Indian Telugu-language drama film directed by Vamsy who co-wrote the film with Vemuri Satyanarayana and Tanikella Bharani. The film stars Raghava, Nishanti, C. V. L. Narasimha Rao, and Krishna Bhagavan, with music composed by Ilaiyaraaja and S. P. Balasubrahmanyam as the playback singer. The film marks Raghava's debut who later prefixed the film's title to his name.", "target": "1988 film directed by Vamsy", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94854292", "label": "Alexander Scott", "source": "Dr Alexander Scott FRS FRSE PCS (28 December 1853–10 March 1947) was a 19th/20th century Scottish chemist who served as Director of Scientific Research at the British Museum. He was President of the Chemical Society from 1915 to 1917. He determined the atomic weights of several elements: potassium (1879), sodium (1879), manganese (1881), carbon -re-evaluation (1897), tellurium (1902), nitrogen (1905).", "target": "British chemist (1853-1947)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7342016", "label": "Robert Bemborough", "source": "Sir Robert Bemborough (d.1351) was a medieval knight who led the Montfortist faction during the Combat of the Thirty. This was an arranged battle between thirty knights from both sides during the Breton War of Succession, a struggle for control of the duchy between the House of Montfort and the House of Blois. Bemborough was killed in the battle. The battle was greatly renowned. Bemborough was subsequently depicted by chroniclers as a model of chivalry.", "target": "English knight", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2117363", "label": "Chloropterus", "source": "Chloropterus is a genus of leaf beetles in the subfamily Eumolpinae. It is distributed in Eastern Europe, West to Central Asia and North Africa.The genus was originally established under the name Heterocnemis by the Russian entomologist Ferdinand Morawitz in 1860 for a single species, Heterocnemis versicolor. However, the name Heterocnemis had already been used for a genus of flower chafers (Cetoniinae), so Morawitz renamed his genus to Chloropterus the following year.", "target": "genus of leaf beetles", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6551534", "label": "Linda Eastman", "source": "Linda Anne Eastman (July 7, 1867 – April 5, 1963) was an American librarian. She was selected by the American Library Association (ALA) as one of the 100 most important librarians of the 20th century.Eastman served as the head Librarian of the Cleveland Public Library from 1918 to 1938 and president of the ALA from 1928 to 1929. At the time of her appointment in Cleveland, she was the first woman to head a library system the size of Cleveland's. She was also a founding member and later president of the Ohio Library Association, and a professor of Library Science at Case Western Reserve University.", "target": "American librarian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28913881", "label": "Facundo Cangiani", "source": "Facundo Cangiani (born 23 April 1991) is an Argentine handball player. He plays for MMT Balonmano Zamora and competed for the Argentine national team at the 2015 World Men's Handball Championship in Qatar and 2017 World Men's Handball Championship in France.", "target": "Argentine handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2705802", "label": "Provespa", "source": "Provespa is a small genus of Vespidae, made up of nocturnal wasps from Southeast Asia, sometimes referred to as \"night wasps\" or \"night hornets\", though they are not true hornets (genus Vespa). They are the only nocturnal members of the subfamily Vespinae, and also the only vespines where new colonies are formed by swarming (one queen attended by a large number of workers, similar to honey bees). They tend to build their nests from fibrous plant material, making them a uniform greyish brown colour which is often difficult to locate.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19824591", "label": "Blood to Bone", "source": "Blood to Bone is the third album from New Zealand alternative rock singer Gin Wigmore. Recorded during a two-week period in California, the album has a different sound from its predecessors, relying mostly on electronic beats, and introspective lyrics where Wigmore reflected in her life choices since predecessor Gravel & Wine, such as breaking an engagement to a long-time lover and moving from Australia to Los Angeles. Upon its release on 24 June 2015, Blood to Bone received positive reviews and was Wigmore's third straight chart-topper at the Official New Zealand Music Chart. It also debuted at No. 13 at the ARIA Charts, her biggest Australian performance.", "target": "album by Gin Wigmore", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25110527", "label": "2016–17 NLA season", "source": "The 2016–17 National League A season was the tenth ice hockey season of Switzerland's top hockey league, the National League A. Overall, it was the 79th season of Swiss professional hockey.SC Bern went on to win its 15th NLA title as the defending champions by defeating EV Zug. It was the first time since the 2000–01 season when the defending champions (ZSC Lions) won back-to-back titles.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3495953", "label": "Stade d'Issia", "source": "Stade d'Issia is a multi-use stadium in Issia, Côte d'Ivoire. It is currently used mostly for football matches and it also has facilities for athletics and was Côte d'Ivoire Premier Division, also was part of CAF Confederation Cup 2008. The stadium is the home place from Issia Wazi.", "target": "building in Ivory Coast", "baseline_candidates": ["stadium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2625788", "label": "Dienerella filum", "source": "Dienerella filum, the common plaster beetle, is a species of fungus beetle in the family Latridiidae. It is found in damp conditions in buildings throughout the world, feeding on mould growing on the walls, and on poorly-stored products.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19828998", "label": "John Ramage", "source": "John Ramage (born February 7, 1991) is a Canadian-American professional ice hockey defenceman currently playing for Schwenninger Wild Wings of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL). Ramage was a fourth-round selection of the Calgary Flames (103rd overall) at the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. Ramage played four seasons of college hockey with the University of Wisconsin Badgers and has twice won a medal as a member of the American junior national team: Gold at the 2010 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, and bronze as captain of the American junior national team that won the bronze medal at the 2011 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. He turned professional in 2013 and made his NHL debut in 2015.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5706797", "label": "Guleh, Sardasht", "source": "Guleh (Persian: گوله, also Romanized as Gūleh) is a village in Gavork-e Sardasht Rural District, in the Central District of Sardasht County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 364, in 61 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30865751", "label": "Brasheedah Elohim", "source": "Brasheedah Elohim (Hebrew: בראשידה אלוהים, born November 1, 1980) is an American-Israeli basketball player and tennis player. During her professional women's basketball career in Israel, she played for Ramat HaSharon, Ashdod, Ramla, and Jerusalem. She was a member of the 2016 Israel women's national basketball team.", "target": "American-Israeli backetball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5250768", "label": "Yoshinori Doi", "source": "Yoshinori Doi (土居 義典, Doi Yoshinori, born April 2, 1972) is a former Japanese football player.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65122797", "label": "Nola", "source": "Nola is an unincorporated community in Scott County, in the U.S. state of Arkansas.", "target": "unincorporated community in Scott County, Arkansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49093645", "label": "Mirjapur, Narayani", "source": "Mirjapur is a village development committee in Parsa District in the Narayani Zone of southern Nepal. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, it had a population of 4,229 people living in 690 individual households. There were 2,189 males and 2,040 females at the time of the census. Mirjapur is the ward number 1 of the Chhipaharmai rural municipality.", "target": "human settlement in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q372804", "label": "Mike Bossy", "source": "Michael Dean Bossy (January 22, 1957 – April 15, 2022) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player with the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League. He spent his entire NHL career, which lasted from 1977 to 1987, with the Islanders, and was a crucial part of their four consecutive Stanley Cup championships in the early 1980s. Bossy won the Calder Memorial Trophy in 1978 as NHL rookie of the year when he set the then-record for most goals by a rookie with 53. He won the Conn Smythe Trophy in the 1982 Stanley Cup playoffs as the most valuable player and the Lady Byng Trophy for combining high quality play with sportsmanship three times. He led the NHL in goals twice and was second three further times. Bossy was voted to the league's first all-star team as right wing five times, with three further selections to the second all-star team. He is one of two players to score consecutive Stanley Cup-winning goals (1982 and 1983) and the only player to record four game-winning goals in one playoff series (1983 Conference Final). Bossy is the NHL's all-time leader in average goals scored per regular season game, holds the NHL's third-highest all-time average points scored per regular season game, and is the second of five players to score 50 goals in 50 games, being the first to accomplish this feat 36 years after Maurice Richard did so. He tied for the record for most 50-goal seasons with Wayne Gretzky and Alexander Ovechkin with nine, though his.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5884376", "label": "Grandmaster", "source": "The Grandmaster (En Dwi Gast) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in The Avengers #69. The Grandmaster is one of the ageless Elders of the Universe and has mastered most civilizations' games of skill and chance. Different media appearances depict him as the brother of the Collector. Jeff Goldblum portrays the character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe film Thor: Ragnarok (2017) and in a cameo during the closing credits of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017), and will reprise the role in Thor: Love and Thunder (2022). Additionally, Goldblum voices alternate universe versions in the animated series What If...? (2021).", "target": "Marvel Comics character", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16503987", "label": "KFUM Borås", "source": "KFUM Borås is a Swedish multi-sport club based in Borås. The club's basketball team, known as Borås Basket, play in the Swedish top division Basketligan in 2017–18. KFUM is a translation of the English language YMCA. The club's handball team were promoted to the highest league, Allsvenskan, in 1964. The team that won promotion mainly consisted of local players. A major reason for their success was the physical shape of the players. Coach Arne Eriksson, a former Swedish military pentathlon champion, made the players regularly practise long-distance running. This gave the team an advantage over technically more skilled opponents. In their debut season in the top-flight, Borås finished second, a single point behind champions Redbergslids IK. They did this with largely the same team that had won promotion. They had an average attendance around 2400 during the season. However, the club was relegated in the following season and never returned to the top division. During this time, the team played their home matches in Boråshallen, the same arena that is currently used by the basketball team. In 1984, KFUM Borås's handball department merged with three other clubs to form Borås HK 84. In 2017, Borås HK 84 discontinued its men's first team.The club used to have a tennis department. In 2012 it merged with two other clubs and the organisation that operates the courts to form Elfsborg Tennis.", "target": "Swedish sport club", "baseline_candidates": ["handball team", "basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q145902", "label": "Poland at the 1936 Summer Olympics", "source": "Poland competed at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany. 144 competitors, 127 men and 17 women took part in 55 events in 15 sports.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7379818", "label": "Rune Klan", "source": "Rune Klan (born 15 October 1976 in Silkeborg) is a Danish comedian and magician. He has released an instructional video for magicians called Three Pieces of Silver. Klan has lived in the Middle East and in Canada and has toured in the U.S. where he has taught other magicians. In 2008 he was awarded the Tribini Prize by Bakken, for \"his extraordinary ability to combine stand-up comedy with magic (...) and has managed to renew traditional entertainment, and also being able to convey it to the younger generation\" Klan and Mick Øgendahl have together made the show Tak for i aften and Tak for i aften on Tour. Klan had a show called Hokus Fucking Pokus, which was broadcast on Danish TV, on Channel 5 in 2009.In 2009, Klan hosted the show \"Zulu Award\"..Author Joshua Jay wrote Rune's World, published by Vanishing Inc. Magic in April 2010.Klan has toured Denmark with \"Det Røde Show\", \"Rune Klan Går Large\", \"Det Blå Show\" and \"Det Stribede Show\". All of which displayed his unique combination of magic and stand-up comedy.", "target": "Danish magician and comedian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28873652", "label": "Kenneth E. Scott", "source": "Kenneth E. Scott (1928–2016) was an American lawyer, having been the Ralph M. Parsons Professor Emeritus of Law and Business at Stanford Law School.", "target": "American lawyer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5830748", "label": "Vazak-e Moradi", "source": "Vazak-e Moradi (Persian: وزك مرادي, also Romanized as Vazak-e Morādī) is a village in Khafri Rural District, in the Central District of Sepidan County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 65, in 22 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12501504", "label": "Oscar Torp", "source": "Oscar Fredrik Torp (8 June 1893 – 1 May 1958) was a Norwegian politician for the Norwegian Labour Party. He was party leader from 1923 to 1945, and mayor of Oslo in 1935 and 1936. In 1935 he became the acting minister of Defence in the government of Johan Nygaardsvold. He was also the minister of Social Affairs from 1936 to 1939, and then the minister of Finance from 1939 to 1942. He was appointed Minister of Defence again in 1942 in the London-based Norwegian exile government. He continued until the election in 1945 when he became the minister of Provisioning and Reconstruction until 1948. Hailing from Skjeberg, he was first elected to the Parliament of Norway representing Oslo in 1936, but did not take a seat in the Parliament until 1948. He then became the faction leader for the Labour Party in Parliament. He became the 23rd prime minister of Norway in 1951 when Einar Gerhardsen stepped down from this position; the move was reversed in 1955 when Torp became the president of the Storting. He held this position until his death.", "target": "23rd Prime Minister of Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14955337", "label": "Bertil Stridh", "source": "Bertil Stridh (1931-2013) was an international speedway rider from Sweden.", "target": "Swedish speedway rider", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7409182", "label": "Same Airstrip", "source": "Same Airstrip (ICAO: HTSE) is an airstrip serving the town of Same in the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. The runway is 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) northeast of the town, near the Mkomazi National Park. There is rising and mountainous terrain in all quadrants except east. The Kilimanjaro VOR-DME (Ident: KV) is located 55 nautical miles (101.9 km) northwest of the airstrip.", "target": "airport in Tanzania", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19667698", "label": "Charles F. Montgomery", "source": "Charles Franklin Montgomery (1910–1978) was an American art connoisseur, teacher, and scholar.", "target": "American art educator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1856983", "label": "2005–06 Russian Superleague season", "source": "The 2005–06 Russian Superleague season was the tenth season of the Russian Superleague, the top level of ice hockey in Russia. 18 teams participated in the league, and Ak Bars Kazan won the championship. This year, the league decided to expand the playoff field from 8 teams to 16, and did away with the third place series.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15316", "label": "Earth's crust", "source": "Earth's crust is a thin shell on the outside of Earth, accounting for less than 1% of Earth's volume. It is the top component of the lithosphere, a division of Earth's layers that includes the crust and the upper part of the mantle. The lithosphere is broken into tectonic plates whose motion allows heat to escape from the interior of the Earth into space. The crust lies on top of the mantle, a configuration that is stable because the upper mantle is made of peridotite and is therefore significantly denser than the crust. The boundary between the crust and mantle is conventionally placed at the Mohorovičić discontinuity, a boundary defined by a contrast in seismic velocity. The temperature of the crust increases with depth, reaching values typically in the range from about 100 °C (212 °F) to 600 °C (1,112 °F) at the boundary with the underlying mantle. The temperature increases by as much as 30 °C (54 °F) for every kilometer locally in the upper part of the crust.", "target": "Earth's outer layer", "baseline_candidates": ["crust"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58371764", "label": "Kayla Iacovino", "source": "Kayla Iacovino is an American volcanologist, noted for her widespread fieldwork and experimental petrology. She was the first woman to do her field work in North Korea and has international experience and recognition. Originally from Arizona in the United States, she has worked in countries including Chile, North Korea, China, Costa Rica, Antarctica, Italy, Japan and Ethiopia.", "target": "American volcanologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q856085", "label": "Marree", "source": "Marree (formerly Hergott Springs) is a small town located in the north of South Australia. It lies 589 kilometres (366 mi) North of Adelaide at the junction of the Oodnadatta Track and the Birdsville Track, 49 metres (161 ft) above sea level. Marree is an important service centre for the large sheep and cattle stations in northeast South Australia as well as a stopover destination for tourists traveling along the Birdsville or Oodnadatta Tracks.The area is the home of the Dieri Aboriginal people. At the 2011 census, the Marree census district which includes the entire northeastern corner of South Australia had a population of 634, with 70% of the population being male. The town of Marree has a population of approximately 150 persons. The major areas of employment are mining, agriculture and accommodation services. The town was home to Australia's first mosque, which was made of mud brick and built by the Afghan cameleers employed at Marree's inception. At the turn of the 20th century the town was divided in two, with Europeans on one side and Afghans and Aborigines on the other.", "target": "town in South Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7387561", "label": "S. Jegadhiswaran", "source": "Shanmugan Jegadhiswaran (also spelt Shanmugam Jegatheeswaran, Sanmugan Jegadeeswaran) is a Sri Lankan politician, a former member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and a former government minister.", "target": "Sri Lankan politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16981964", "label": "Cleon F. Thompson", "source": "Cleon Franklin Thompson Jr. is an American educator best known for holding office as the seventh chancellor of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and the eighth chancellor of Winston-Salem State University.", "target": "American academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7359376", "label": "Rogersville Parish", "source": "Rogersville (originally Rogerville) is a civil parish in Northumberland County, New Brunswick, Canada.For governance purposes it is divided between the village of Rogersville and the local service districts of Collette and the parish of Rogersville, all of which are members of the Kent Regional Service Commission (KRSC).In May 2022, it was announced that the municipality would take the name of Nouvelle-Arcadie after its amalgamation with the LSDs of Acadieville, Rogersville Parish and Collette.", "target": "parish in New Brunswick, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["parish in New Brunswick"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7957033", "label": "WVTL", "source": "WVTL (1570 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station broadcasting a classic country radio format to the Mohawk Valley in the U.S. state of New York. It is licensed to Amsterdam, New York, and is owned by Roser Communications Network, Inc. WVTL's radio studios and offices are in Florida, New York. By day, WVTL is powered at 1,000 watts, non-directional. But 1570 AM is a Canadian clear channel frequency. So at night, to reduce interference, WVTL cuts its power to 204 watts. Programming is also heard on 250 watt FM translator 104.7 W284BZ.", "target": "classic country radio station in Amsterdam, New York, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20303147", "label": "Al Miftah District", "source": "Al Miftah District is a district of the Hajjah Governorate, Yemen. As of 2003, the district had a population of 31,691 people.", "target": "district of Yemen", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Yemen"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18482446", "label": "Apasionada", "source": "Apasionada is a 1993 Argentine telenovela produced by Televisa for Canal 13. It is a remake of the Chilean telenovela La Colorina.", "target": "1993 Argentine telenovela", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60742089", "label": "Powellton, Illinois", "source": "Powellton is an unincorporated community in Sonora Township, Hancock County, Illinois, United States. The community is located along County Route 15 6.2 miles (10.0 km) east of Nauvoo.", "target": "unincorporated community in Illinois, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30260552", "label": "Lilongwe university of Agriculture and Natural Resources", "source": "The Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources (LUANAR) is a university outside Lilongwe, Malawi. It was formed in 2011 by a merger between Bunda College of Agriculture of the University of Malawi and Natural Resources College (NRC).", "target": "education organization in Lilongwe, Malawi", "baseline_candidates": ["architectural structure", "educational institution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24006305", "label": "Mike Te'o", "source": "Michael Paseka Te'o (born July 23, 1993) is an American professional rugby player who plays for Utah Warriors of Major League Rugby (MLR). He also represents the America as a member of the United States national rugby union team. He previously played for London Scottish in the RFU Championship England's second tier competition. Te'o debuted for the U.S. at the 2016 Americas Rugby Championship, playing mostly at scrum-half, but also at fullback.", "target": "American professional rugby player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4388210", "label": "Fukata Station", "source": "Fukata Station (深田駅, Fukata-eki) is a railway station on the Yodo Line in Kihoku, Kitauwa District, Ehime Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Shikoku and has the station number \"G41\".", "target": "railway station in Matsuno, Kitauwa district, Ehime prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26539955", "label": "New London Synagogue", "source": "New London Synagogue is a Masorti synagogue and congregation in St John's Wood, London, in the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1964 by followers of Rabbi Dr Louis Jacobs, following the \"Jacobs Affair\" in which Rabbi Jacobs was refused employment in the United Synagogue due to alleged heresy. It is the founding synagogue of the Masorti movement in the UK, which was established in 1985. Its congregation is made up of approximately 500 households. The current rabbinic leadership are Rabbi Jeremy Gordon and Rabbi Natasha Mann.", "target": "synagogue in City of Westminster, Greater London, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["synagogue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2132284", "label": "Naked Ambition", "source": "Naked Ambition (Chinese: 豪情, literally \"Wanton Emotions\") is a 2003 Hong Kong sex comedy film directed by Chan Hing-ka and Dante Lam, and starring Louis Koo (who also co-produced), Eason Chan and Josie Ho. Ho went on to win the Best Supporting Actress award at the 23rd Hong Kong Film Awards. Based on a true story the film is set in the world of Hong Kong's pornography and prostitution business. It was followed in 2014 by a sequel in name, Naked Ambition 2, however the two films share no characters or settings.", "target": "2003 film by Dante Lam", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65073942", "label": "William and Estella Adair Farm", "source": "The William and Estella Adair Farm, named the Broadacre Farm in 1922, is a 115-acre dairy farm in Carnation, Washington that illustrates the evolution of a typical dairy farming operation in the Snoqualmie Valley. Established in 1910, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.", "target": "historic place in Carnation, Washington, US", "baseline_candidates": ["farm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48969485", "label": "Macrosoma napiaria", "source": "Macrosoma napiaria is a moth-like butterfly in the family Hedylidae. It was described by Achille Guenée in 1857.", "target": "species of butterfly", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49108489", "label": "San Pedro de Lloc District", "source": "San Pedro de Lloc District is one of five districts of the province Pacasmayo in Peru.", "target": "district in La Libertad, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14104213", "label": "Pilimyia", "source": "Pilimyia is a genus of tachinid flies in the family Tachinidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q282893", "label": "Rauna Parish", "source": "Rauna Parish (Latvian: Raunas pagasts) is an administrative unit of Smiltene Municipality in the Vidzeme region of Latvia (Prior to 2009, it belonged to the former Cēsis District). The administrative center is the village of Rauna.", "target": "parish of Latvia", "baseline_candidates": ["parish of Latvia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17986697", "label": "Covit House", "source": "The Covit House is a historic house on Goshen Center Road in Goshen, New Hampshire. Built about 1800, it is one of the oldest surviving and best-preserved plank-frame houses in the town. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.", "target": "historic house in New Hampshire, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16546595", "label": "Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum", "source": "Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (Arabic: محمد بن راشد آل مكتوم; Muḥammad bin Rāshid ʾĀl Maktūm; born 15 July 1949) is the vice president, prime minister, and minister of defence of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as well as the ruler of Dubai. He is the third son of Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum, former vice president of the UAE and ruler of Dubai. Mohammed succeeded his brother Maktoum as vice president and ruler following the latter's death in 2006.A billionaire, Mohammed generates most of his income from real estate and is described as \"one of the world's most prominent real estate developers\". Land which is owned by him is managed as an asset of the state. There is a blurred line between the assets of the Government of Dubai and those of the ruling Al Maktoum family. He oversaw the growth of Dubai into a global city, as well as the launch of a number of government-owned enterprises including Emirates Airline, DP World, and the Jumeirah Group. Some of these are held by Dubai Holding. Sheikh Mohammed has overseen the development of certain projects in Dubai including the creation of a technology park, a free economic zone, Dubai Internet City, Dubai Media City, the Dubai International Finance Centre, the Palm Islands and the Burj Al Arab hotel. He also drove the construction of Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world.Mohammed is the absolute ruler of Dubai and Prime Minister of UAE, a position appointed by the president. The government is autocratic, as.", "target": "Emir of Dubai Emirate", "baseline_candidates": ["billionaire", "human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q209420", "label": "Villebramar", "source": "Villebramar (French pronunciation: ​[vilbʁamaʁ]; Occitan: Vilabramar) is a commune in the Lot-et-Garonne department in south-western France.", "target": "commune in Lot-et-Garonne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3729024", "label": "Law & Order, season 19", "source": "The 19th season of Law & Order premiered on NBC on November 5, 2008, and concluded on June 3, 2009. This was the third time in the series where there were no changes in the cast from the previous season and the last season to air on Wednesday nights at 10PM/9c, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit has claimed the slot off-and-on (SVU often placed at 9PM/8c to lead other programming that later gets moved or taken off schedule) from Fall 2009 to present. The series had a decline in the ratings from being in competition with CBS's CSI: NY. Certain episodes spiking when CSI: NY episodes were repeats (or replaced with other programming) when Law & Order episodes were new.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6994304", "label": "Neozatrephes", "source": "Neozatrephes is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae. The genus was erected by Herbert Druce in 1893.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2127985", "label": "Musina Reka", "source": "Musina Reka is a village situated in Kraljevo municipality in Serbia.", "target": "village in Raška District, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17138975", "label": "Eryngium bourgatii", "source": "Eryngium bourgatii, the Mediterranean sea holly, is a species of flowering plant in the family Apiaceae native to Morocco, Lebanon, Turkey, France, and Spain. It is a herbaceous perennial growing to 15–45 cm (6–18 in) tall. The spherical blue flowerheads have spiny bracts.The plant was named for a French medical doctor named Bourgat who collected plants in the Pyrenees in the company of Antoine Gouan, the author of the species, in 1766–67.Numerous cultivars have been produced for garden use, of which 'Oxford Blue' has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q853547", "label": "MSX", "source": "MSX is a standardized home computer architecture, announced by Microsoft and ASCII Corporation on June 16, 1983. It was initially conceived by Microsoft as a product for the Eastern sector, and jointly marketed by Kazuhiko Nishi, then vice-president at Microsoft and director at ASCII Corporation. Microsoft and Nishi conceived the project as an attempt to create unified standards among various home computing system manufacturers of the period, in the same fashion as the VHS standard for home video tape machines.MSX systems were popular in Japan and several other countries. Eventually, 9 million MSX units were sold worldwide, including 7 million in Japan alone. Despite Microsoft's involvement, few MSX-based machines were released in the United States. The very first commercial MSX for the public was a Mitsubishi ML-8000, released on October 21, 1983, thus marking its official \"release date\".The meaning of the acronym MSX remains a matter of debate. In 2001, Kazuhiko Nishi recalled that many assumed that it was derived from \"Microsoft Extended\", referring to the built-in Microsoft Extended BASIC (MSX BASIC). Others believed that it stood for \"Matsushita-Sony\". Nishi said that the team's original definition was \"Machines with Software eXchangeability\", although in 1985 he said it was named after the MX missile. According to his book in 2020, he considered the name of the new standard should consist of three letters like VHS. He felt \"MSX\" was fit because it means \"the next of Microsoft\", and it also contains first letters of Matsushita (Panasonic) and Sony.Before the success of Nintendo's Family Computer, MSX was the.", "target": "family of standardized home computer architectures released between 1983 and 1990", "baseline_candidates": ["product model", "technical standard", "home computer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7854635", "label": "Turbonilla stylina", "source": "Turbonilla stylina is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7897214", "label": "Uno Laur", "source": "Uno Laur (born June 8, 1961, in Rakvere), also known as Kohtla-Järve Uno (a nickname derived from his hometown Kohtla-Järve), is an Estonian-Jewish anarchist and the iconoclastic ex lead singer of the Must Mamba and Röövel Ööbik, \"the oldest punk in Estonia\".", "target": "Estonian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55594084", "label": "Bronwyn Katz", "source": "Bronwyn Katz (born 1993) is a South African sculptor and visual artist. She is a founding member of iQhiya Collective, a network of young black female artists based in Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa.", "target": "South African artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3444238", "label": "Professor", "source": "Professor is a 1962 Hindi film, produced by F. C. Mehra and directed by Lekh Tandon. The film stars Shammi Kapoor, Kalpana, Bela Bose, Lalita Pawar, Tun Tun and Iftekhar. The film's music is by Shankar Jaikishan. The film became a box office hit. The film was remade in Tamil as Nadigan (1990), in Telugu twice as Bhale Mastaru (1969), Peddinti Alludu (1991) and in Kannada as Gopi Krishna The rights to this film are owned by Shah Rukh Khan's Red Chillies Entertainment.", "target": "1962 film by Lekh Tandon", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q733730", "label": "Mickey Smith", "source": "Mickey Smith is a fictional character portrayed by Noel Clarke in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. The character is introduced as the ordinary, working class boyfriend of Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), a London shopgirl who becomes a travelling companion to the Ninth and Tenth incarnations of an alien Time Lord known as the Doctor. Mickey first appears in the first episode of the 2005 revival, \"Rose\". Initially someone who struggles in the face of danger, Mickey nevertheless acts as an Earth-based ally to the Doctor and Rose. In the second series he joins the pair as a second companion of the Doctor's, though leaves during the 2006 series to pursue his own adventures. He returns to aid the Doctor and Rose in the series finale later that year, and then again for the 2008 finale \"Journey's End,\" as well as fleetingly in 2010 in the Tenth Doctor send-off \"The End of Time\". Executive producer Russell T Davies created the character alongside Rose's mother Jackie (Camille Coduri) in order to provide a home context for Rose. The character's dubious personality traits were made evident; both Davies and Clarke postulated that the character \"deserved to lose his girlfriend\". Though Clarke felt his character was initially \"a clown\" he enjoyed having the chance to mature Mickey into a more heroic character in his later appearances. Television commentators generally reacted positively to this character growth. In 2007 the entertainment and media news website Digital Spy highlighted him as a \"Cult Spy Icon\".", "target": "character in the Doctor Who Universe", "baseline_candidates": ["character in the Doctor Who Universe", "television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64187", "label": "Ulrike von Levetzow", "source": "Theodore Ulrike Sophie von Levetzow, known as Baroness Ulrike von Levetzow (4 February 1804 – 13 November 1899) was a friend and the last love of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. She was born at Löbnitz (today a part of Groitzsch) in Saxony, the daughter of the ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin chamberlain and later Hofmarschall Joachim Otto Ulrich von Levetzow and his wife Amalie. The seventeen-year-old girl first met Goethe in 1821 at Marienbad and again at Carlsbad in 1822 and 1823. The poet, then 72, was so carried away with her wit and beauty that he thought for a time of marrying her and urged Grand Duke Karl August of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach to ask for her hand in his name. Rejected, he left for Thuringia and addressed to her the poems which he afterward called Trilogie der Leidenschaft. These poems include the famous Marienbad Elegy. Ulrike later confessed she was not prepared to marry and angrily denied a liaison with Goethe. She remained unmarried all her life and died at the age of 95 at Trziblitz Castle in Bohemia, which she inherited after the death of her mother.", "target": "Lover of Goethe", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2211482", "label": "Rattling frog", "source": "The rattling frog (Cophixalus crepitans) is a species of frog in the family Microhylidae. It is endemic to Australia. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "Australian species of frog", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3609576", "label": "Alexeyevskaya, Volgograd Oblast", "source": "Alexeyevskaya (Russian: Алексе́евская) is a rural locality (a stanitsa) and the administrative center of Alexeyevsky District in Volgograd Oblast, Russia. Population: 4,204 (2010 Census); 4,196 (2002 Census).", "target": "human settlement in Alexeyevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["stanitsa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11976278", "label": "Hybomitra ciureai", "source": "Hybomitra ciureai is a Palearctic species of horse fly in the family Tabanidae. Continental authorities apply the name solstitialis to the coastal species Hybomitra ciureai of British authorities and regard British solstitialis as var. collini of Hybomitra bimaculata.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q482421", "label": "United States Army Special Forces", "source": "The United States Army Special Forces (SF), colloquially known as the \"Green Berets\" due to their distinctive service headgear, are a special operations force of the United States Army.The Green Berets are geared towards nine doctrinal missions: unconventional warfare, foreign internal defense, direct action, counterinsurgency, special reconnaissance, counterterrorism, information operations, counterproliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and security force assistance. The unit emphasizes language, cultural, and training skills in working with foreign troops; recruits are required to learn a foreign language as part of their training and must maintain knowledge of the political, economic and cultural complexities of the regions in which they are deployed.Other Special Forces missions, known as secondary missions, include combat search and rescue (CSAR), counter-narcotics, hostage rescue, humanitarian assistance, humanitarian demining, information operations, peacekeeping, and manhunts. Other components of the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) or other U.S. government activities may also specialize in these secondary missions. The Special Forces conduct these missions via seven geographically focused groups. Many of their operational techniques are classified, but some nonfiction works and doctrinal manuals are available.As special operations units, Special Forces are not necessarily under the command authority of the ground commanders in those countries. Instead, while in theater, SF units may report directly to a geographic combatant command, USSOCOM, or other command authorities. The Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA) highly secretive Special Activities Center, and more specifically its Special Operations Group (SOG), recruits from U.S. Army Special Forces. Joint CIA–Army Special Forces operations go back to the unit MACV-SOG during the Vietnam War,.", "target": "United States Army special operations service branch", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit branch-type class", "United States special operations forces", "United States Army formation", "branch of service"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85988708", "label": "Benjamin E. Park", "source": "Benjamin E. Park is an American historian concentrating on early American political, religious, and intellectual history, history of gender, religious studies, slavery, anti-slavery, and Atlantic history. Park is an assistant professor at Sam Houston State University.", "target": "American historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6435380", "label": "Kozubata", "source": "Kozubata [kɔzuˈbata] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Urszulin, within Włodawa County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 2 kilometres (1 mi) south of Urszulin, 32 km (20 mi) south-west of Włodawa, and 46 km (29 mi) east of the regional capital Lublin.", "target": "village in Lublin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2978709", "label": "Clay Marzo", "source": "Clay Marzo (born July 17, 1989) is an American professional surfer known for his unique \"double-jointed\" style of turns and spins. He was raised in Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii where he currently resides. Marzo has been acclaimed for his creativity and innovation as a young surfer, and featured in several films.", "target": "American surfer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4790625", "label": "Arikady", "source": "Arikady is a village in Kasaragod district in the state of Kerala, India.", "target": "village in Kasargod District, Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6146558", "label": "Jamie Anderson", "source": "Jamie Anderson is an American/Canadian female singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist from Tucson, Arizona, best known as a performer of women's music. She is based in Ottawa, Ontario. Since 1987 she has played her original songs in hundreds of venues in four countries including forty-seven US states. Anderson first began touring the U.S. in 1987, and released her debut album in 1989. She was voted Favorite New Performer by Hot Wire in 1990 and 1991, and played many women's music festivals through the decade of the 1990s through today.Anderson teaches music on line, YouTube, arts centers, festivals, and her studio.Anderson's memoir, Drive All Night, was published in 2014. Her second book, An Army of Lovers: Women’s Music of the Seventies and Eighties, was published in 2019. She has written book chapters, articles and CD reviews in Acoustic Guitar, Curve, SingOut! and more. She is openly lesbian.", "target": "American singer, musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1336229", "label": "Sergei Maitakov", "source": "Sergei Vladimirovich Maitakov (Russian: Серге́й Владимирович Майтаков) (born 7 January 1990 in Mezhdurechensk, Kemerovo Oblast) is a Russian olympic alpine skier.", "target": "Russian alpine skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5623458", "label": "Gwen Shepherd", "source": "Gwendolyn J. Shepherd (also known as Gwen Shepherd) is an American actress. In the late 1970s and 1980s she performed in a number of musical theatre productions. From 1989 onwards she had a number of minor parts in prominent television series.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6252561", "label": "John Pergine", "source": "John Samuel Pergine (born September 13, 1946 in Norristown, Pennsylvania) is a former American football linebacker in the National Football League for the Los Angeles Rams and the Washington Redskins. He played college football at the University of Notre Dame and was drafted in the eleventh round of the 1968 NFL Draft. His nine collegiate career interceptions are the most ever by an Notre Dame linebacker.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1081586", "label": "Moigny-sur-École", "source": "Moigny-sur-École (French pronunciation: [mwaɲi syʁ ekɔl] (listen)) is a commune in the Essonne department in Île-de-France in northern France. Inhabitants of Moigny-sur-École are known as Moignacois.", "target": "commune in Essonne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5284447", "label": "Mace", "source": "Mace Group Ltd, commonly known as Mace, is a global consultancy and construction firm headquartered in London, United Kingdom, employing approximately 5,000 people, across five continents with a turnover in excess of £2 billion.", "target": "global consultancy and construction firm headquartered in London, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["global enterprise", "business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3699516", "label": "1998–99 Moldovan Cup", "source": "The 1998–99 Moldovan Cup was the 8th season of the Moldovan annual football cup competition. The competition ended with the final held on 27 May 1999.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24636056", "label": "1921 Tulsa Orange and Black football team", "source": "The 1921 Tulsa Orange and Black football team represented the University of Tulsa during the 1921 college football season. In their third year under head coach Francis Schmidt, the Orange and Black compiled a 6–3 record and outscored their opponents by a combined total of 257 to 95. The team won its first two games by scores of 92–0 over East Central and 75–13 over the Chilocco Indian Agricultural School. Schmidt was later inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q765635", "label": "Villa", "source": "Villa is a village in Rõuge Parish, Võru County in Estonia.", "target": "village in Rõuge Rural Municipality, Võru County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q385588", "label": "Poptún", "source": "Poptún is a municipality in the El Petén department of Guatemala. It covers an area of 1,128 km2, and had a population of 35,663 at the 2002 Census; the latest official estimate (as at mid-2012) was 64,988. It is some 385 km from Guatemala City. Since 1989, Military Zone 23 in Poptún has been the home of the Guatemalan Army's elite Kaibiles special operations force.", "target": "municipality of Petén Department, Guatemala", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Guatemala"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67185799", "label": "Joint Space Command", "source": "The French Space Command (French: Commandement de l'Espace, CdE) is a formation of the French Air and Space Force, which deals with space issues. It supersedes the Joint Space Command, which was created in 2010.", "target": "French military organization", "baseline_candidates": ["space command"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4810373", "label": "Assumption Junior College", "source": "Assumption Junior College (聖母被昇天学院女子短期大学, Seibo Hishōten Gakuin Joshi Tanki Daigaku) was a junior college in Minoh, Osaka, Japan. It was founded in 1967, and closed in 2005.", "target": "Osaka Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["college"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q495318", "label": "Mammut Sports Group", "source": "Mammut Sports Group AG is a Swiss multinational mountaineering and trekking company headquartered in Seon, Switzerland. The company was founded in 1862 by Kaspar Tanner in Dintikon. Until 2021, Mammut belonged to Conzzeta AG (now known as Bystronic AG), at which point they were sold to Telemos Capital. Amongst others, Raichle (mountain and trekking shoes), Ajungilak (sleeping bags) and Toko (ski wax) belong to Mammut Sports Group.In 2011, Mammut obtained a sales volume of 210.8 million CHF. Mammut has about 200 employees at its headquarters and runs many establishments all over the world. The central repository for Europe is in Memmingen, Germany, which has been expanded several times.", "target": "Swiss multinational mountaineering and trekking company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6348487", "label": "Kaiserin Augusta Gymnasium", "source": "The Kaiserin Augusta Gymnasium Berlin was a German school based in Charlottenburg, a locality of Berlin. It started in 1818 as a private school, founded by Ludwig Cauer. In 1869, it expanded and became a gymnasium. In 1876 it was named after Empress Augusta, wife of William I. After World War II it merged with the Mommsen-Gymnasium. A new building was erected in 1956 and a new name was given, Erich-Hoepner-Gymnasium after Erich Hoepner. Since 2008, the name of the school is Heinz-Berggruen-Gymnasium after Heinz Berggruen.", "target": "school in Berlin", "baseline_candidates": ["school", "gymnasium", "primary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4754200", "label": "Anderson Township", "source": "Anderson Township is a township located southeastern Hamilton County along the Ohio and Little Miami Rivers, approximately 13 miles southeast of downtown Cincinnati. The 2010 census found 43,446 people in the township, making it one of the most populous townships in the state of Ohio.", "target": "township in Hamilton County, Ohio, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Ohio"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1635060", "label": "Hugo Geiger", "source": "Hugo Geiger (1 July 1901 – 8 July 1984) was a German politician of the Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU) and former member of the German Bundestag.", "target": "politician (1901-1984)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20644298", "label": "Russia at the 2015 Summer Universiade", "source": "Russia participated at the 2015 Summer Universiade, in Gwangju, South Korea. Of around 669 people, 471 were athletes, the rest coaches, managers and masseurs. Eight athletes were Merited Masters of Sport, 108 world-class Masters of Sport, 236 Masters of Sport and 114 candidates. The delegation was composed of people from 58 subjects of the Russian Federation, the majority coming from Moscow (112 people), Republic of Tatarstan (40 people) and Saint Petersburg (30 people).", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17080324", "label": "Nugganatti", "source": "Nugganatti is a village in Belgaum district of Karnataka, India.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7712925", "label": "The Air Force", "source": "The Air Force is the fifth album by Xiu Xiu. It was released on September 12, 2006, and is produced by Greg Saunier of Deerhoof, who also performs on the album with band members Caralee McElroy and Jamie Stewart.", "target": "album by Xiu Xiu", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3166339", "label": "Jean-Jacques Manget", "source": "Jean-Jacques Manget (or Johann Jacob Mangetus) (1652–1742) was a Genevan physician and writer. He was known for his work on epidemic diseases such as bubonic plague and tuberculosis. In addition to his own researches, he assiduously compiled preceding medical literature. With Théophile Bonet, he is considered one of the \"great compilers\" of knowledge in the areas of medicine, surgery and pharmacology. : 357 He also published a major collection of alchemical works, the Bibliotheca Chemica Curiosa (1702).", "target": "Genevan writer and physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27831060", "label": "Andrey Makarov", "source": "Andrey Makarov (Андрей Макаров; born (1972-04-11)11 April 1972 in Shyrgys Qazaqstan) is a Kazakhstani male weightlifter, competing in the 94 kg category and representing Kazakhstan at international competitions. He participated at the 1996 Summer Olympics in the 91 kg event and at the 2000 Summer Olympics in the 94 kg event. He competed at world championships, most recently at the 2003 World Weightlifting Championships.", "target": "Kazakhstani weightlifter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q552811", "label": "Ōhara Station", "source": "Ōhara Station (大原駅, Ōhara-eki) is a junction passenger railway station in the city of Isumi, Chiba, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) and the third-sector railway operator Isumi Railway.", "target": "railway station in Isumi, Chiba prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18739871", "label": "Kermit A. Sande", "source": "Kermit A. Sande (born February 23, 1943) is an American politician and attorney in the state of South Dakota. He served as Attorney General of South Dakota from 1973 to 1975, as a Democrat.", "target": "American politician (1943-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51487665", "label": "Ayuthia spectabile", "source": "Ayuthia spectabile, commonly known as the milky cicada or white ghost cicada, is a cicada species found in Southeast Asia. The species has been reported from It was described by William Lucas Distant in 1919.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61624528", "label": "Terence Coderre", "source": "Terence J. Coderre is Professor of Medicine and the Harold Griffith Chair in Anaesthesia Research at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He is an investigator at the Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain at McGill University and the McGill University Health Centre Research Institute in Brain Repair and Integrative Neuroscience (BRaIN) Program.", "target": "Canadian scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q557242", "label": "Oskar Lüthy", "source": "Oskar Wilhelm Lüthy (26 June 1882 – 1 October 1945) was a Swiss painter of still lifes, landscapes and religious art. He co-founded Der Moderne Bund (\"The Modern Covenant\"), a group of Swiss modernist artists. Lüthy briefly studied architecture at the Berne School of Applied Arts. From 1903 to 1907 he lived in the Valais, where he painted pictures of mountain landscapes en plein air. After his stay in Valais, he took private painting classes with Hans Lietzmann in Munich, where he came into contact with religious art. In 1911 he co-founded the artist group Der Moderne Bund in Weggis with sculptor Jean Arp and painter Walter Helbig. They aimed to bring the avant-garde to a wider audience and \"sought expression of their personalities in the realm of Expressionism\". Paul Klee, Wilhelm Gimmi and Hermann Huber joined the group soon after. Lüthy attended three exhibitions with Der Moderne Bund. After traveling to Italy and Paris, he settled in Zurich, where from 1918 to 1920 he participated in exhibitions of the \"New Life\" artists' association. In 1920 he signed the Dada Manifesto. Through his friendship with the painter Otto Meyer-Amden he turned increasingly to Anthroposophy and Christian mysticism. In 1925 the Dresden City Museum bought a Madonna of Lüthy's. The museum was seized by the Nazis in 1933 and the painting was shown as an example of \"Degenerate Art\" at the Eintartete Kunst exhibitions. Lüthy received many commissions from by Swiss religious institutions, his last major work was the altarpiece for the Church of Christ in Oerlikon.", "target": "Swiss painter (1882-1945)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12540692", "label": "1,2-dichloroethane", "source": "The chemical compound 1,2-dichloroethane, commonly known as ethylene dichloride (EDC), is a chlorinated hydrocarbon. It is a colourless liquid with a chloroform-like odour. The most common use of 1,2-dichloroethane is in the production of vinyl chloride, which is used to make polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipes, furniture and automobile upholstery, wall coverings, housewares, and automobile parts. 1,2-Dichloroethane is also used generally as an intermediate for other organic chemical compounds, and as a solvent. It forms azeotropes with many other solvents, including water (at a boiling point of 70.5 °C or 158.9 °F or 343.6 K) and other chlorocarbons.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["carcinogen", "occupational carcinogen", "chemical compound", "Class IB flammable liquid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3183400", "label": "Jonathan Kerrigan", "source": "Jonathan Kerrigan (born 14 October 1972) is an English actor well known for various leading roles on TV including In The Club, The Five, Casualty, Heartbeat, Merseybeat and Reach For The Moon. Films include Diana, FLiM, The Somnambulists and The Best Possible Taste. He is also a musician and has composed for both television and film.", "target": "British actor and composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13547439", "label": "Hagnagora guatica", "source": "Hagnagora guatica is a species of moth of the family Geometridae first described by William Schaus in 1927. It is found in Guatemala. It is the smallest Hagnagora species, lacking the typical striation on the underside of the hindwing found in all other members of the Hagnagora mortipax clade.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8049529", "label": "Yarramalong", "source": "Yarramalong (cedar country) is a township and suburb of the Central Coast region of New South Wales, Australia, located 20 kilometres (12 mi) upstream from Wyong along the Wyong River. It is part of the Central Coast Council local government area. The Yarramalong township has: Rural Fire Station, two cemeteries, public school (which closed down recently and is now used for community purposes), general store/petrol station, bottle shop/guest house and a hall which was originally an art hall but is now also used for community purposes. Busways now only operates a school bus service between Yarramalong and Wyong. It was acquired from Yarramalong Bus Lines in 2008.Yarramalong Valley is the home of many horse studs, turf farms, citrus crops as well as a macadamia nut farm and a lavender farm. The Great North Walk also passes through Yarramalong to Cedar Brush Creek to the north and Kulnura.", "target": "locality in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3742903", "label": "Jaan Koort", "source": "Jaan Koort (6 November 1883, Sootaga Parish (Äksi), Tartu – 14 October 1935 in Moscow) was an Estonian sculptor, painter and ceramicist. Born on 6 November in Tartu, he was the thirteenth child of village farmers Susanna-Marie and Jaan Koort. He studied at Orge village school. During the period from 1896 to 1900 he studied at the Tartu city school. In 1901, he participated in the German Craftsmen Society's drawing courses. His studies continued at the Saint Petersburg Stieglitz State Academy of Art and Design (1902–1905), where he studied painting and sculpture. During the Revolution of 1905 he left St. Petersburg, and later moved back to Estonia, then later to Finland, and from there to Paris.", "target": "Estonian sculptor (1883-1935)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11643111", "label": "Syzygium samarangense", "source": "Syzygium samarangense is a species of flowering plant in the family Myrtaceae, native to an area that includes the Greater Sunda Islands, Malay Peninsula and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, but introduced in prehistoric times to a wider area and now widely cultivated in the tropics. Common names in English include wax apple, Java apple, Semarang rose-apple and wax jambu.", "target": "species of Asian apple-like fruit tree", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5089730", "label": "Chek Chek-e Shomali", "source": "Chek Chek-e Shomali (Persian: چكچكشمالي, also Romanized as Chek Chek-e Shomālī; also known as Chak Chak and Chek Chek) is a village in Mehregan Rural District, in the Central District of Parsian County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 48, in 11 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25573695", "label": "1569", "source": "Year 1569 (MDLXIX) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7208161", "label": "Point Salubrious Historic District", "source": "Point Salubrious Historic District is a national historic district located at Lyme near Chaumont in Jefferson County, New York. The district includes 11 contributing buildings and four contributing structures. It includes a farmhouse, a boarding house, five seasonal bungalows, five associated outbuildings (one non-contributing), one remnant shed, and six pumphouse structures (two non-contributing).It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.", "target": "historic district in New York, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85633", "label": "Anton Walter", "source": "Gabriel Anton Walter (5 February 1752 – 11 April 1826) was a builder of pianos. The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians describes him as \"the most famous Viennese piano maker of his time\".", "target": "Austrian piano maker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6074195", "label": "Irv Wisniewski", "source": "Irvin C. \"Whiz\" Wisniewski (January 8, 1925 – February 26, 2014) was an American football and basketball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Hillsdale College in 1951, tallying a mark of 2–6. Wisniewski was also the head basketball coach at Hillsdale from 1950 to 1952 and at the University of Delaware from 1954 to 1966, compiling a career college basketball record of 124–179.", "target": "College athletic coach (1925-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5472276", "label": "Fort Wayne Community Schools", "source": "The Fort Wayne Community Schools (FWCS) corporation is the Fort Wayne, Indiana area public school district, and is the largest in Indiana. The second largest is the Indianapolis Public Schools. It operates five high schools, ten middle schools, one intermediate school (1-8 grades) and over thirty elementary schools, serving 30,992 students (nearly 3% of Indiana's K-12 population) in 2012-2013. FWCS's current superintendent is Dr. Mark Daniel. FWCS is divided into several departments, including Technology, Transportation, Academic Services, Continuing Education, Nutrition Services, and Public Affairs.", "target": "school district in Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school district in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3421445", "label": "Target for Killing", "source": "Target for Killing (German: Das Geheimnis der gelben Mönche, Italian: Tiro a segno per uccidere) is a 1966 Austrian-German-Italian crime film directed by Manfred R. Köhler and starring Stewart Granger. It was shot between Maghreb, Yugoslavia and Rome.", "target": "1966 film by Manfred R. Köhler", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49288192", "label": "Gmina Przedbórz", "source": "Gmina Przedbórz is an urban-rural gmina (administrative district) in Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. Its seat is the town of Przedbórz, which lies approximately 31 kilometres (19 mi) east of Radomsko and 83 km (52 mi) south of the regional capital Łódź. The gmina covers an area of 189.94 square kilometres (73.3 sq mi), and as of 2006 its total population is 7,595 (out of which the population of Przedbórz amounts to 3,758, and the population of the rural part of the gmina is 3,837). The gmina contains part of the protected area called Przedbórz Landscape Park.", "target": "urban-rural gmina of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["urban-rural municipality of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q103268", "label": "Gregory III", "source": "Pope Gregory III (Latin: Gregorius III; died 28 November 741) was the bishop of Rome from 11 February 731 to his death. His pontificate, like that of his predecessor, was disturbed by Byzantine iconoclasm and the advance of the Lombards, in which he invoked the intervention of Charles Martel, although ultimately in vain. He was the last pope to seek the consent of the Byzantine exarch of Ravenna for his election, and the last non-European pope until the election of Pope Francis on 13 March 2013, more than 1,271 years later.", "target": "90th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83320090", "label": "Namibia at the 2019 Military World Games", "source": "Namibia competed at the 2019 Military World Games held in Wuhan, China from 18 to 27 October 2019. In total, athletes representing Namibia won one gold medal and the country finished in 31st place in the medal table.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3688", "label": "Nouakchott", "source": "Nouakchott (; French: [nwakʃɔt]; Arabic: نواكشوط; Berber: Nwakcoṭ, originally derived from Berber: Nawākšūṭ, \"place of the winds\") is the capital and largest city of Mauritania. It is one of the largest cities in the Sahel. The city also serves as the administrative and economic center of Mauritania. Nouakchott was a mid-sized village of little importance until 1958 when it was chosen as the capital of the nascent nation of Mauritania. At the time, it was designed and built to accommodate 15,000 people. However, beginning in the 1970s, a vast number of Mauritanians began moving to Nouakchott because environmental conditions in their home villages had become too harsh due to drought and increasing desertification. As of 2013, the city had a population of just under a million people. Many of the newcomers settled in slum areas of the city that were poorly maintained and extremely overcrowded. However, more recently, the living conditions of some of these inhabitants have improved. The city is the hub of the Mauritanian economy. It is home to a deepwater port and Nouakchott–Oumtounsy International Airport, one of the country's two international airports. It also hosts the University of Nouakchott and several other more specialized institutions of higher learning.", "target": "capital of Mauritania", "baseline_candidates": ["big city", "million city", "city", "capital city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2398260", "label": "Terrier-Rouge", "source": "Terrier-Rouge (Haitian Creole: Tèrye Wouj) is a commune in the Trou-du-Nord Arrondissement, in the Nord-Est department of Haiti. It has 21,328 inhabitants.", "target": "commune in Nord-Est, Haiti", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Haiti"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16077", "label": "Rheinfelden", "source": "Rheinfelden (Alemannic German: Badisch-Rhyfälde, pronounced [ˈb̥ad̥ɪʃ ʁifæld̥ə]) is a town in the district of Lörrach in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is situated on the right bank of the Rhine, across from Rheinfelden, Switzerland, and 15 km east of Basel. The population is 32,469 as of 2006, making it the second most populated town of the district after Lörrach.", "target": "town in Lörrach, Baden-Württemberg, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["urban municipality of Germany", "border town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14594011", "label": "Arge melanochroa", "source": "Arge melanochroa is a species of the family Argidae, subfamily Arginae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65432218", "label": "Longlands", "source": "Longlands is a rural community in the Hastings District and Hawke's Bay Region of New Zealand's North Island. The area is on the southern and western outskirts of Hastings city. The Longlands Estate occupied much of the land around 1880, but was broken up into smaller farms and a freezing works in the early 20th century.The area is a centre for growing fruit and vegetables.", "target": "locality in Hastings District, Hawke's Bay Region, New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19263645", "label": "Good Luck", "source": "Good Luck (Chinese: 百岁大吉) is a Lunar New Year drama serial produced by MediaCorp Studios and aired on Channel 8. The show aired at 9pm on weekdays and had a repeat telecast at 8am the following day. Music call for this series was announced in 2014. Hong Huifang portrays a centenarian who is a matriarch of a 4-generation family in the series; other characters include Chen Shucheng, Chen Liping, Rayson Tan, Romeo Tan, Chris Tong, Kym Ng, Terence Cao, Zhang Zhenhuan, Paige Chua and Aloysius Pang. The series began production in September 2014 and wrapped up its filming in November 2014. It began on 2 February 2015 with a total of 20 episodes. This series is about an estranged family and how they reconcile their conflicts and differences to reunite in time to welcome a new year and celebrate longevity, happiness and wealth. The series is partly sponsored by the Media Development Authority of Singapore. The Series is repeated at 5.30pm on Channel 8 on weekdays.", "target": "Singaporean TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5920891", "label": "Howard Smith", "source": "Howard Smith (December 10, 1936 – May 1, 2014) was an American Oscar-winning film director, producer, journalist, screenwriter, actor and radio broadcaster.", "target": "American film director (1936-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q904507", "label": "Plavecké Podhradie", "source": "Plavecké Podhradie (Hungarian: Detrekőváralja) is a village and municipality in western Slovakia in the Malacky District in the Bratislava region.", "target": "municipality of Slovakia", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Slovakia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2093119", "label": "Twin Dragons", "source": "Twin Dragons (also known as Shuang long hui and Brother vs. Brother) is a 1992 Hong Kong action comedy film directed by Ringo Lam and Tsui Hark, and starring Jackie Chan in a double role as identical twin brothers separated at birth.", "target": "1992 film directed by Ringo Lam and Tsui Hark", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2095356", "label": "Wildcats", "source": "Wildcats, sometimes rendered WildCats or WildC.A.T.s, is a superhero team created by the American comic book artist Jim Lee and writer Brandon Choi.", "target": "superhero team", "baseline_candidates": ["fictional group of characters", "superhero team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17021428", "label": "Porcelain", "source": "Porcelain is the third studio album released by English musician Matt Cardle. The album was released on 25 October 2013 in Ireland, and on 28 October in the United Kingdom. Recording locations include London, Los Angeles and New York. It is primarily written by Cardle but, as with his previous albums, he worked with various songwriters, including Conner Reeves and American R&B artist Brian McKnight. Cardle has also produced the album and played the majority of the instruments. The lead single was a duet with Spice Girl Melanie C, called \"Loving You\" which was released on 18 August 2013 and reached number 14 on the UK Singles Chart. A second single, \"When You Were My Girl\", was released on 13 October 2013. The album was released on digital download and physical CD as well as a very limited number of vinyl copies available through Cardle's official website. Porcelain is Cardle's first album to be released worldwide. The Porcelain Tour in support of the album took place over the UK and Ireland in April 2014. The album received largely positive reviews. It reached number 11 on the UK Albums Chart, number 3 in the Independent Album Chart and number 22 on the Scottish Album Chart.", "target": "album by Matt Cardle", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16490090", "label": "Anania hortulata", "source": "Anania hortulata, the small magpie, is a species of moth of the family Crambidae. It is found in Europe and North America. The wingspan is 24–28 millimetres (0.94–1.10 in) The head and thorax are deep ochreous-yellow, black-spotted. Forewings are yellowish-white, markings blackish ; base blackish, with two ochreous-yellow marks ; a suffused costal streak ; lines thick, first irregular, second tending to form spots, curved, narrowest below middle ; small orbicular and large round discal spots, touching costal streak ; a terminal fascia tending to form spots, edge parallel to second line. Hind wings with colour, second line, and terminal fascia as in forewings ; a blackish discal spot. The larva is whitish ; dorsal line dull green, white-edged ; head and plate of 2 black.The moth flies from June to July depending on the location.The larvae feed on Stachys, mint and nettle.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5634612", "label": "HMS Thames", "source": "HMS Thames was a Mersey-class protected cruiser built for the Royal Navy (RN) in the 1880s. The ship was placed in reserve upon her completion in 1888 and was converted into a submarine depot ship in 1903. She was sold out of the navy in 1920 and was purchased by a South African businessman to serve as a training ship for naval cadets under the name SATS General Botha. The ship arrived in South Africa in 1921 and began training her first class of cadets in Simon's Town the following year. General Botha continued to train cadets for the first several years of World War II, but the RN took over the ship in 1942 for use as an accommodation ship under her original name. She was scuttled by gunfire in 1947 and is now a diveable wreck.", "target": "Mersey-class protected cruiser", "baseline_candidates": ["shipwreck", "protected cruiser", "training ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5658099", "label": "Hark", "source": "Hark is a 1985 album by clarinetist Buddy DeFranco, featuring the pianist Oscar Peterson.", "target": "album by Buddy DeFranco", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95873105", "label": "Mark Reed", "source": "Mark Reed (born February 19, 1969) is an American professional stock car racing driver. He has raced in the NASCAR Winston Cup Series. He is the father of fellow driver Ryan Reed.", "target": "racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1654282", "label": "Kalmansky District", "source": "Kalmansky District (Russian: Калма́нский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-nine in Altai Krai, Russia. It is located in the northern central part of the krai. The area of the district is 1,820 square kilometers (700 sq mi). Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Kalmanka. Population: 14,331 (2010 Census); 14,871 (2002 Census); 15,801 (1989 Census). The population of Kalmanka accounts for 24.0% of the district's total population.The district is bordered on the north by Pavlovsky District and the City of Barnaul, on the east by Pervomaysky District, on the south and west by Topchikhinsky District.", "target": "human settlement in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["second-level administrative country subdivision", "municipal district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q40672074", "label": "Ndidi Madu", "source": "Ndidi Madu (born March 17, 1989) is an American-born Nigerian basketball player who last played basketball for Broni and the Nigerian national team.", "target": "American-born Nigerian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29110882", "label": "Chris Harwood", "source": "Chris Harwood (born 1 October 1994) is an American-born cricketer. He made his first-class debut for Leeds/Bradford MCCU against Sussex on 5 April 2016.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4560991", "label": "1921 Centre vs. Harvard football game", "source": "The 1921 Centre vs. Harvard football game, played October 29, 1921, was a college football game between Centre College and Harvard University. Centre beat Harvard 6–0, in what is widely considered one of the greatest upsets in college football history.", "target": "American college football game", "baseline_candidates": ["American football game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3076265", "label": "José Antonio Ocampo", "source": "José Antonio Ocampo Gaviria (born 20 December 1952) is, since July 2007, Professor of Professional Practice in International and Public Affairs and Director of the Economic and Political Development Concentration at the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University. Prior to his appointment, Ocampo served in a number of positions in the United Nations and the Government of Colombia, most notably in the United Nations as Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs and Executive Secretary for the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, and in Colombia as Minister of Finance and Public Credit and Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development.On 23 March 2012, Ocampo was nominated by Brazil as a candidate to lead the World Bank. Ocampo's native Colombia declined to endorse his bid, however, and with limited backing he withdrew from the race on 13 April 2012 and swung his support behind Nigerian Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.", "target": "Colombian economist and politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47024", "label": "People's Artist of the RSFSR", "source": "People's Artist of the RSFSR (Russian: Народный артист РСФСР, Narodnyj artist RSFSR) was an honorary title granted to Soviet Union artists, including theatre and film directors, choreographers, music performers, and orchestra conductors, who had outstanding achievements in the arts, and who lived in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR). This title was one rank below Meritorious Artist of the RSFSR and one above People's Artist of the USSR. The title was introduced on 10 August 1931. In 1992, after the RSFSR was renamed as the Russian Federation, it was replaced with People's Artist of Russia.", "target": "Soviet title of honor", "baseline_candidates": ["title of honor", "official honorary title of the Soviet Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6779721", "label": "Mary Harriman Rumsey", "source": "Mary Harriman Rumsey (November 17, 1881 – December 18, 1934) was the founder of The Junior League for the Promotion of Settlement Movements, later known as the Junior League of the City of New York of the Association of Junior Leagues International Inc. Mary was the daughter of railroad magnate E.H. Harriman and sister to W. Averell Harriman, former New York State Governor and United States Diplomat. In 2015 she was posthumously inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.", "target": "American activist (1881-1934)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6364779", "label": "Kansas City Journal-Post", "source": "The Kansas City Journal-Post was a newspaper in Kansas City, Missouri, from 1854 to 1942. It was the oldest newspaper in the city when it went out of business. It started as a weekly, The Kansas City Enterprise, on September 23, 1854, a year after the city's founding and shortly after The Public Ledger went out of business. Kansas City's first mayor, William S. Gregory, and future mayors Milton J. Payne and E. Milton McGee, along with city fathers William Gillis, Benoist Troost, Thompson McDaniel, Robert Campbell and Kansas City's first bank and biggest store, Northrup and Chick, pooled $1,000 to start it. William A. Strong was its first editor, and David K. Abeel the first publisher. It operated above a tavern at Main Street and the Missouri River in the River Market neighborhood. In 1855, Strong enlisted another future mayor, Robert T. Van Horn, to take over the paper. Van Horn bought it for $250 and retained Abeel as publisher. In 1857 it became The Western Journal of Commerce, and in 1858 it became The Kansas City Daily Western Journal of Commerce. Before the American Civil War the paper espoused the popular Missouri view that the status quo should be maintained, that Missouri should remain in the Union and remain a slave state. When the war began, Van Horn enlisted in the Union Army, and the paper became staunchly Republican. The paper encouraged city officials to persuade the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad to build the first bridge across the Missouri River at Kansas City.", "target": "American newspaper (1928–1942)", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6844749", "label": "Miguel Ramos", "source": "Miguel Pedro Caetano Ramos (born 26 September 1971 in Porto) is a Portuguese racing driver. He is a former Spanish and Italian GT champion, and has raced in the FIA GT1 World Championship and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. In 2012 he races for V8 Racing, driving a Chevrolet Corvette C6.R in the International GT Open. In 2015 and 2016 he races for Teo Martín Motorsport in the International GT Open.", "target": "Portuguese racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12953316", "label": "Yaul", "source": "Yaul, also known as Ulwa, is a severely endangered Keram language of Papua New Guinea. It is spoken fluently by fewer than 700 people and semi-fluently by around 1,250 people in four villages of the Angoram District of the East Sepik Province: Manu, Maruat, Dimiri, and Yaul. According to Barlow (2018), speakers in the Maruat, Dimiri, and Yaul villages speak similar versions of Ulwa while those in Manu speak a considerably different version. Thus, he postulates that there are two different dialects of Ulwa.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "Mongol–Langam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3825878", "label": "Lago della Malgina", "source": "Lago della Malgina is a lake in the Province of Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy.", "target": "lake in the Bergamo Alps, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7791048", "label": "Thomas J. Drennan", "source": "Thomas J. Drennan (1877 – July 15, 1928) was appointed the tenth New York City Fire Commissioner by Mayor John F. Hylan.", "target": "American Fire commissioner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2550908", "label": "Acantholycosa dudkorum", "source": "Acantholycosa dudkorum is a species of wolf spider only known from the south-central Altai Mountains in Russia. This spider is up to 9.8 mm in length. It is dark brown with a black head and yellow-brown spots on the upper legs. It is very similar to Acantholycosa dudkoromani and they may be conspecific.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12049467", "label": "Ritero Xaperle Bax", "source": "Ritero Xaperle Bax is the seventh album by the Slovak punk rock/comedy rock band Horkýže Slíže, released in October 2004.", "target": "album by Horkýže Slíže", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7996643", "label": "Whitmore Square", "source": "Whitmore Square, also known as Iparrityi (formerly Ivaritji), is one of five public squares in the Adelaide city centre, South Australia. Occupying 2.4ha (24,000 m2), it is located at the junction of Sturt and Morphett Streets in the south-western quarter of the Adelaide city grid. It is one of six squares designed by the founder of Adelaide, Colonel William Light, who was Surveyor-General at the time, in his 1837 plan of the City of Adelaide which spanned the River Torrens Valley, comprising the city centre (South Adelaide) and North Adelaide. The square was named in 1837 by the Street Naming Committee after William Wolryche-Whitmore, a British politician who had introduced the South Australia Act 1834 to the British House of Commons. In 2003, as part of the dual naming initiative of the Adelaide City Council, a second name, Ivaritji (later corrected to Iparrityi), was assigned in the Kaurna language of the original inhabitants. Iparrityi (c.1847—1929), also known as Amelia Taylor, was the last full-blood Kaurna person and last speaker of the Kaurna language.", "target": "square in Adelaide, South Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["square"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5445717", "label": "Festival Internacional de Santander", "source": "The Festival Internacional de Santander (FIS) is one of Spain's oldest music festivals. Each year, during the month of August it presents two to three operas as well as performances from visiting ballet and theatre companies, solo recitals, and choral, symphonic, and chamber music concerts. Its largest and main performing space is the Palacio de Festivales on the Calle Gamazo in Santander. However, performances are also held in fifty churches, cloisters, and parks both in Santander and in smaller towns in the Cantabria region. From 1952 to 1990 the festival's main performance space was a gigantic tent in Santander's Plaza Porticada. The final performance there was a concert by the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra and Mstislav Rostropovich on August 30, 1990. Upon its completion in 1991, the Palacio de Festivales, became the festival's new home. It was inaugurated with a performance by the King's Consort of Handel's oratorio, Joshua. The building was designed by Francisco Javier Sáenz de Oiza. Its main auditorium, the Sala Argenta, is noted for its transparent and natural-sounding acoustics and has a seating capacity of 1670. Unusually, the backdrop of its stage is a large window looking out onto the Bay of Santander. The auditorium is named in honour of the Spanish conductor Ataúlfo Argenta, who played a major role in the establishment of the festival. The festival had its beginnings in 1948 as a programme providing cultural entertainment to the foreign students at the Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo. By 1952 it had become a fully fledged international music festival with José Manuel.", "target": "Spanish music festival", "baseline_candidates": ["music festival"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61917825", "label": "Kim Eagles", "source": "Kim Eagles (born 15 December 1976) is a Canadian sport shooter. Eagles won a gold medal at the 1999 Pan American Games in the 10 metre air pistol event. She also participated in the 2000 Summer Olympics in the 10 metre air pistol event.She first competed at the Commonwealth Games in 1998, winning a bronze medal in the 25 metre sport pistol event. She went on to win a gold medal at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in the 10 metre air pistol pairs event with Dorothy Ludwig and three bronze medals at the 2006 Commonwealth Games in the 25 metre sport pistol, 25 metre sport pistol pairs with Avianna Chao and the 10 metre air pistol events.", "target": "Canadian sports shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26254706", "label": "Baja, Sultanpur Lodhi", "source": "Baja is a village in Sultanpur Lodhi tehsil in Kapurthala district of Punjab, India. It is located 25 kilometres (16 mi) from the city of Sultanpur Lodhi, 20 kilometres (12 mi) away from district headquarter Kapurthala. The village is administrated by a Sarpanch who is an elected representative of village as per the constitution of India and Panchayati raj (India).", "target": "village in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21388605", "label": "Amanda Reid", "source": "Amanda \"Mandy\" Louise Reid is an Australian taxonomist and malacologist who works as a departmental collection manager at the Australian Museum. She is a published researcher and author. Her work in taxonomy has resulted in the description of many species of velvet worms and cephalopods.", "target": "Australian malacologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58030231", "label": "Amy Arnell", "source": "Amy Arnell was an American singer, best known for her work with Tommy Tucker and his orchestra.", "target": "American singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5084665", "label": "Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo", "source": "Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo is a 1937 American movie directed by Eugene Forde. The main character is Charlie Chan, a Chinese-Hawaiian detective. This was the sixteenth and final Charlie Chan film with Warner Oland portraying Chan. The film features Keye Luke as Charlie's son Lee and character actor Harold Huber as a French police inspector. Warner Oland contracted bronchial pneumonia during his visit to Sweden and died there on August 6, 1938, at age 57. The series continued at Fox for another eleven entries with Sidney Toler. In 1942 Fox sold it to Monogram Pictures, and it continued on even after Toler's death in 1947 with Roland Winters in the role through six films into 1949.", "target": "1937 film by Eugene Forde", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4728863", "label": "All I Need Is a Miracle", "source": "\"All I Need Is a Miracle\" is a song performed by English pop rock band Mike + The Mechanics. Written by guitarist Mike Rutherford and producer Christopher Neil, it was first included on their 1985 self-titled debut album, and later released as a single in early 1986 in the USA, where it reached number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was sung by Paul Young on both the original recording and the 1996 re-recording for the band's Hits compilation album.In an interview prior to the song's release as a single, Rutherford commented, \"The thing that makes 'Miracle' different, to me, is that it's a happy song – or it's primarily a happy song. It's 'up'. And I don't do that very often. ...It may not be optimistic, but it's a positive attitude to life.\".", "target": "Mike + The Mechanics song", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86718499", "label": "Andrea Barnwell Brownlee", "source": "Andrea Barnwell Brownlee is an American art curator and author. She is the current CEO of the Cummer Museum. She is the former director of the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. Her work has historically focused on the promotion of female African-American artists. She has published four books on artists and film.", "target": "American art curator, gallery director and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4686469", "label": "Adventtoppen", "source": "Adventtoppen is a mountain on the east side of Adventfjorden in the northern part of Nordenskiöld Land on the island of Spitsbergen in Svalbard, Norway. It is 786 metres (2,579 ft) tall. In 1901, Bergen-Spitsbergen Kullgrube-kompani started mining coal in Adventtoppen. During their first summer season, they mined 5 tonnes (4.9 long tons; 5.5 short tons). They lived on board their ship and freighted the coal with a row-boat. In 1903, they produced 40 tonnes (39 long tons; 44 short tons). The mountain was first ascended by A. Hoel in 1916. It was ascended again by W. Solheim and M. Abrahamsen on 23 July 1922 for triangulation and photgrammetric work.", "target": "mountain in Svalbard", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5833608", "label": "Garmab, Firuzeh", "source": "Garmab (Persian: گرماب, also Romanized as Garmāb) is a village in Taghenkoh-e Jonubi Rural District, Taghenkoh District, Firuzeh County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,220, in 968 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63440893", "label": "Levi Ham", "source": "Levi Jefferson Ham (November 16, 1805 – June 11, 1887) was an American politician and surgeon. Ham was born in Shapleigh, Maine, on November 16, 1805, to a family of Scottish descent. Ham graduated from Dartmouth College in 1828, and received his medical degree from Bowdoin College in 1831. He worked as a doctor in York County, Maine from 1831 until 1845 and then in Erie County, New York from 1846 until 1859, when he relocated to South Bend. Ham maintained a medical practice until 1871.Ham won election to the Maine Senate in September 1835 and served between 1837 and 1838. During Ham's term in the state senate, he served as senate president and was involved in establishing an insane asylum in Maine. He also served on its board. Ham had a role in negotiating the border dispute with Britain. He eventually moved to New York and then South Bend. During the American Civil War, Ham was attached to the 48th Indiana Infantry Regiment. He had extensive service as a surgeon overseeing hospitals and care at various military posts. He was a reluctant mayor of South Bend who served from 1880 to 1884. As mayor of South Bend, he was a member of the Democratic Party.Ham had a son and a daughter. His son M. M. Ham ran the Dubuque Herald and served on the Iowa Senate. Levi J. Ham died on June 11, 1887.", "target": "American physician and politician (1805-1887)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7341104", "label": "Robby Wells", "source": "Robert Carr Wells Jr. (born April 10, 1968) is an American politician, perennial candidate and former college football coach. He was the head football coach at Savannah State University in Savannah, Georgia for the 2008 and 2009 seasons.Wells unsuccessfully sought the Constitution Party's nomination for President of the United States in the 2012 presidential election. He ran as an independent in the 2016 presidential election. He was a candidate in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries.", "target": "football coach and perennial candidate", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30670032", "label": "Els", "source": "Els is a Dutch-language feminine given name, usually a short form of Elisabeth. People with the name include Els Aarne (1917–1995), Estonian composer and pedagogue Els Beerten (born 1959), Flemish writer of children's literature Els Belmans (born 1983), Belgian track cyclist Els Bongers (born c.1966), Dutch soprano Els Borst (1932–2014), Dutch government minister Els van Breda Vriesman (born 1942), Dutch sports executive Els Callens (born 1970), Belgian tennis player Els Coppens-van de Rijt (born 1943), Dutch artist and author Els de Schepper (born 1965), Flemish actress, comedian and writer Els De Temmerman (born 1962), Belgian journalist Els Decottenier (born 1968), Belgian racing cyclist Els Demol (born 1958), Belgian politician Els Dietvorst, Belgian artist, filmmaker and shepherd Els Dottermans (born 1964), Belgian actress Els von Eystett, 15th-century German prostitute Els Goulmy (born 1946), Dutch biologist Els de Groen (born 1949), Dutch author and politician Els van den Horn (1927–1996), Dutch diver Els Iping (born 1953), Dutch politician Els Mertens (born 1966), Belgian racing cyclist Els Moor (1937–2016), Dutch literary historian Els Moors (born 1976), Flemish poet and writer Els van Noorduyn (born 1946), Dutch shot putter (Elsemia) Els Pelgrom (born 1934), Dutch writer of children's literature Els Pynoo (born 1968), Belgian pop singer Els Rens (born 1983), Belgian long-distance runner Els Schelfhout (born 1967), Belgian politician Els Smekens (born 1986), Belgian dancer Els Ingeborg Smits (1944–2011), Dutch actress, director and playwright Els Vader (born 1959), Dutch sprinter Els Vandesteene (born 1987), Belgian volleyball player Els Vandevorst (born 1962), Dutch film producer Els Vanheusden, Belgian physician Els Witte.", "target": "feminine given name short for Elisabeth", "baseline_candidates": ["given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7852042", "label": "Tulihe", "source": "Tulihe (simplified Chinese: 图里河; traditional Chinese: 圖裡河; pinyin: Túlǐhé) is a town under the administration of Yakeshi City in far northeastern Inner Mongolia, China, located 150 kilometres (93 mi) northeast of Yakeshi and 35 km (22 mi) south-southeast of Genhe. As of 2011, it has two residential communities (社区) under its administration.", "target": "town in Yakeshi", "baseline_candidates": ["town in China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33713719", "label": "Saint-Lambert-de-Lauzon", "source": "Saint-Lambert-de-Lauzon is a municipality in La Nouvelle-Beauce Regional County Municipality in Quebec, Canada. It is part of the Chaudière-Appalaches region and the population is 6,177 as of the Canada 2011 Census. Prior to June 22, 2013 it was a parish municipality.It is named after Pierre Lambert, a land surveyor who planned neighbouring Lévis. Lauzon refers to the seigneurie of Lauzon, the first to be established on the south shore of the Saint Lawrence River in 1636.", "target": "municipality in Quebec, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13849496", "label": "Ablabesmyia cinctipes", "source": "Ablabesmyia cinctipes is a species of midge in the family Chironomidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12417758", "label": "Katihar Junction railway station", "source": "Katihar Junction railway station serves Katihar city in Katihar district in the Indian state of Bihar. It is an A Category railway station of Katihar Division. The Katihar Junction railway station is connected to most of the major cities in India by the railway network. Katihar lies in between Barauni–Katihar section of Barauni–Guwahati lineKatihar–Siliguri line which serves the city with numerous trains to Guwahati, Kolkata, Delhi, Muzaffarpur, Patna, Gorakhpur, Lucknow and with many other cities. It is ISO certified ISO 14001:2015 for its clean and green environment throughout the station premises.", "target": "railway station in Bihar", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1072663", "label": "Chikushi District", "source": "Chikushi (筑紫郡, Chikushi-gun) was a district located in Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. As of 2003, the district had an estimated population of 46,540 and a density of 620.62 persons per square kilometer. The total area was 74.99 km2.", "target": "former district in Fukuoka prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["former district of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5338137", "label": "Edinburgh", "source": "Edinburgh was a burgh constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1708 to 1801 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 until 1885.", "target": "Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1832-1885", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the House of Commons"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17062770", "label": "Passengers", "source": "\"Passengers\" is a science fiction short story by American writer Robert Silverberg. It was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Short Story 1970, and won the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 1969.", "target": "short story by Robert Silverberg", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6594366", "label": "Valaghuz", "source": "Valaghuz (Persian: ولاغوز, also Romanized as Valāghūz; also known as Lāghūz) is a village in Chaharkuh Rural District, in the Central District of Kordkuy County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,376, in 1,398 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5231025", "label": "David Bachrach House", "source": "The David Bachrach House, also known as Gertrude Stein House, is a historic home located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a late 19th-century Victorian style frame structure consisting of two stories plus a mansard roof in height. It was constructed about 1886 and occupied by David Bachrach (1845-1921), a commercial photographer who figures prominently in the annals of American photographic history. Also on the property is a one-story brick building on a high foundation that was built for Ephraim Keyser (1850-1937) as a sculpture studio about 1890 and a one-story brick stable. Ephraim Keyser and Fannie (Keyser) Bachrach were brother and sister. Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) was a niece of Mrs. David Bachrach [Fannie (Keyser) Bachrach] and lived in this house for a short time in 1892.The David Bachrach House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.", "target": "also known as Gertrude Stein House, Baltimore, Maryland, NRHP-listed", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4636659", "label": "3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment", "source": "The 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, also known as the Iron Rakkasans, is a battalion of the US Army 187th Infantry Regiment. The battalion was activated on 25 February 1943 and first saw action in the Pacific Theater of the Second World War, during the battle to regain US control of the Philippines. Troops from the battalion then served in the four-year occupation of Japan, where they earned their nickname \"Rakkasans\" (meaning \"falling down umbrellas\"), before stationing in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The battalion served in the Korean War from 1950 as the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team and participated in 12 major missions during the Vietnam War, emerging from that conflict as the US's most highly decorated airborne battalion. In 1992 they were designated as the \"Iron\" Rakkasans by Lieutenant Colonel David Petraeus due to his iron Rakkasan physical fitness test that added a fourth element of pull-ups to the standard APFT. The battalion has received numerous awards and commendations, including six Presidential Unit Citations and four Valorous Unit Awards.", "target": "U.S. Army battalion", "baseline_candidates": ["infantry battalion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28452558", "label": "A Night in Tunisia", "source": "A Night in Tunisia is a live album by saxophonist Art Pepper recorded in California in 1977 by and originally released on the Japanese Trio label in 1983 as Volume 4 of the Art Pepper Memorial Collection before being rereleased on the Storyville label in 1988.", "target": "album by Art Pepper", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7229568", "label": "Poppy Factory", "source": "The Poppy Factory is a factory in Richmond, London, England, where remembrance wreaths are made. It was founded in 1922 to offer employment opportunities to wounded soldiers returning from the First World War, creating remembrance poppies and wreaths for the Royal Family and The Royal British Legion’s annual Poppy Appeal. It is operated by a company that is a registered charity which provides employment support to veterans with health conditions across England and Wales. The factory's production team continues to make remembrance wreaths by hand today. The corresponding organisation in Scotland is Lady Haig's Poppy Factory in Edinburgh, which was established in 1926 and makes approximately five million remembrance poppies each year.", "target": "manufacturer of Remembrance Day poppies", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1046160", "label": "Brunswick Pro Bowling", "source": "Brunswick Pro Bowling is a video game developed by Point of View, Inc. and published by Crave Entertainment. The game features many Brunswick -labeled products such as Brunswick bowling balls and pinsetters. The game was released for the Wii, PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable on August 28, 2007. A version for iOS was released in October 2009 but was later removed. It was replaced by the FarSight Studios version in February 2015, also being released on Android as well. FarSight Studios developed versions of the game for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, which support the PlayStation Move and Kinect respectively. An updated version developed and published by Alliance Digital Media for the PlayStation 4, and Xbox One was released on November 23, 2015. The Wii U version was released on January 21, 2016.", "target": "video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25571950", "label": "Thai Airways", "source": "Thai Airways International Public Company Limited, trading as THAI (SET: THAI, Thai: บริษัท การบินไทย จำกัด (มหาชน)) is the flag carrier airline of Thailand. Formed in 1961, the airline has its corporate headquarters in Vibhavadi Rangsit Road, Chatuchak District, Bangkok, and primarily operates from Suvarnabhumi Airport. THAI is a founding member of the Star Alliance. The airline is the second-largest shareholder of the low-cost carrier Nok Air with a 15.94 per cent stake (2020), and it launched a regional carrier under the name Thai Smile in the middle of 2012 using the new Airbus A320 aircraft.Thai operate from its main hub at Suvarnabhumi Airport and secondary hub at Phuket International Airport, the airline and its subsidiaries fly to over 101 destinations in 37 countries, using a fleet of 36 aircraft, that consist of wide-body aircraft from both Boeing and Airbus, while the subsidiary Thai Smile operates narrow body aircraft. As of 2013, services between Bangkok and Los Angeles were served via Incheon International Airport near Seoul. However, it ended its service to the US on 25 October 2015. Thai's route network is dominated by flights to Europe, East Asia, and South/Southwest Asia, though the airline serves five cities in Oceania. Thai was the first Asia-Pacific airline to serve Heathrow Airport. Among Asia-Pacific carriers, the company has one of the largest passenger operations in Europe. As of 2021, the longest route Thai operates is the Suvarnabhumi Airport (VTBS) to Heathrow Airport (LHR) (5,950 mi). As of the end of 2019, 1,438 of its 22,054 employees were pilots.", "target": "flag carrier airline of Thailand", "baseline_candidates": ["airline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7950694", "label": "WIKE", "source": "WIKE (1490 AM) is a commercial radio station located in Newport, Vermont. It is owned by Vermont Broadcast Associates, Inc. and it broadcasts a classic rock format, simulcast from 106.3 WMTK in Littleton, New Hampshire. Both stations call themselves \"The Notch.\" WIKE's programming is also heard on translator station W276DK (103.1 FM) in Derby Center.", "target": "classic rock radio station in Newport, Vermont, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5139767", "label": "Varichaetadrilus", "source": "Varichaetadrilus is a genus of annelids belonging to the family Naididae.The species of this genus are found in Eurasia and Northern America.Species: Varichaetadrilus bizkaiensis Rodriguez & Giani, 1984 Varichaetadrilus fulleri Brinkhurst & Kathman, 1983.", "target": "genus of annelids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31915985", "label": "Blautopf", "source": "The Blautopf (German for Blue pot) is a spring that serves as the source of the river Blau in the karst landscape on the Swabian Jura's southern edge. It is located in Blaubeuren, Alb-Donau-Kreis, Baden-Württemberg, Germany (approximately 16 km (9.9 mi) west of Ulm).", "target": "karst source of the river Blau in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["spring", "geotope", "natural monument in Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3790032", "label": "I Am", "source": "\"I Am\" is the third and final single from Train's self-titled debut album. The song was first featured on the album Road Songs (Seismic) in 1996.", "target": "2000 song by Train", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12752669", "label": "Kačandol", "source": "Kaçandoll (in Albanian) or Kačandol (in Serbian; Качандол) is a village in the municipality of Mitrovica in the District of Mitrovica, Kosovo. According to the 2011 census, it had 119 inhabitants, all of whom were Albanian.", "target": "village in Kosovo", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11975888", "label": "Hotel St. Pauli", "source": "Hotel St. Pauli is a 1988 Norwegian drama film by Svend Wam, based upon the novel Jord! by Erland Kiøsterud. The movie is set in Copenhagen, Hamburg and the roads in between. It is about sex and violence in the Hamburg red light district of St. Pauli.", "target": "1988 Norwegian film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5710522", "label": "Seyyedabad-e Akrad", "source": "Seyyedabad-e Akrad (Persian: سيداباداكراد, also Romanized as Seyyedābād-e Āḵrād; also known as Seyyedābād) is a village in Miyan Jovin Rural District, Helali District, Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 373, in 80 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2397634", "label": "Giovanni Battista Contini", "source": "Giovanni Battista Contini (1641–1723) was an Italian architect of the Baroque period. He trained in Rome under Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini, but imbibed the influence of Francesco Borromini. He designed churches both in Lazio and the Marche. He designed two churches for the Oratorian order in Macerata and Cingoli.", "target": "Italian architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13529168", "label": "Tower Hotel", "source": "The Tower Hotel is a large hotel situated on the north bank of the River Thames, on the east side of Tower Bridge, in London. The hotel was designed by the Renton Howard Wood Partnership, constructed by Taylor Woodrow for owners J. Lyons & Co., and opened in September 1973 by the Constable of the Tower of London, Sir Richard Hull. It was built in a Brutalist style and was voted the second most hated building in London in a 2006 BBC poll.J. Lyons operated the hotel until July 1977 when it was sold for £6.5m to EMI Leisure. In 1980, EMI Leisure properties, including the Tower Hotel, were sold to Trusthouse Forte. The hotel was later acquired by the Thistle Hotels group. The hotel has 801 rooms, as well as 19 meeting rooms with capacity for up to 600 people. It also has a gym, restaurant, coffee bar, and licensed premises. The hotel is ultimately owned by Singapore-based GuocoLeisure which shifted the hotel into a separate luxury brand called Guoman Hotels, now GLH Hotels.It is frequently used for roof top filming due to its high level view of a skyline including Tower Bridge, Tower of London and the river.The nearest London Underground station is Tower Hill. Tower Gateway DLR station is also nearby.", "target": "hotel in London", "baseline_candidates": ["hotel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16755764", "label": "Mordella kreusei", "source": "Mordella kreusei is a species of beetle in the genus Mordella of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea. It was discovered in 1864.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16958832", "label": "1993–94 Roller Hockey Champions Cup", "source": "The 1993–94 Roller Hockey Champions Cup was the 30th edition of the Roller Hockey Champions Cup organized by CERH. Igualada won their second consecutive title.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19944230", "label": "sfumato", "source": "Sfumato (Italian: [sfuˈmaːto], English: ) is one of the canonical painting modes of the Renaissance, and is a painting technique for softening the transition between colours, mimicking an area beyond what the human eye is focusing on, or the out-of-focus plane. Leonardo da Vinci was the most prominent practitioner of sfumato, based on his research in optics and human vision, and his experimentation with the camera obscura. He introduced it and implemented it in many of his works, including the Virgin of the Rocks and in his famous painting of the Mona Lisa. He described sfumato as \"without lines or borders, in the manner of smoke or beyond the focus plane\".According to the theory of the art historian Marcia B. Hall, which has gained considerable acceptance, sfumato is one of four modes of painting colours available to Italian High Renaissance painters, along with cangiante, chiaroscuro, and unione.", "target": "painting technique", "baseline_candidates": ["painting technique"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4995538", "label": "Bulbophyllum pungens", "source": "Bulbophyllum pungens is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum. Its petals are often blue-green.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q796489", "label": "Eversmann's Redstart", "source": "Eversmann's redstart (Phoenicurus erythronotus), also known as the rufous-backed redstart, is a passerine bird belonging to the genus Phoenicurus. It was formerly classified in the thrush family Turdidae but is now placed in the Old World flycatcher family Muscicapidae. It was described by the German biologist Eduard Friedrich Eversmann who is commemorated in the bird's English name. It is one of the larger redstarts, 15 to 16 cm long with a wingspan of 25.5 to 27 cm. The bill and legs are black. The male in breeding plumage has a black mask and grey crown and nape. The back and rump are rufous and the tail is also rufous apart from the darker central feathers. The wings are dark with white patches on the scapulars and primary-coverts. The underparts are mainly rufous with white on the belly and undertail-coverts. Non-breeding and first-winter males are similar but much duller and browner. Females are mostly grey-brown. They have a rufous tail with a dark centre, a pale eye-ring, two buff wingbars and buff edges to the tertials. The song is loud and lively. The birds also have a soft, croaking call and a whistling call. The tail is often flicked up and down. It breeds in the mountains of Central Asia and southern Siberia from the Tien Shan range to the Tarbagatay and Altay Mountains and near Lake Baikal. Some birds move downhill for the winter while others, especially in the north-east of the range, migrate longer distances. The wintering range extends from southern Iraq through Iran and.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7274584", "label": "R33 World's Fair", "source": "The R33S (also known as R33 World's Fair or R33WF) was a New York City Subway car that was built by St. Louis Car Company in 1963 for the IRT A Division. They were purchased for service on the IRT Flushing Line (7 and <7> trains), which was the closest line to the 1964 New York World's Fair. A total of 40 cars were built, arranged as single cars. While in regular service, each R33S was coupled to five two-car consists of R36 cars to make 11-car trains for the 7 and <7> routes. The R33S fleet entered service on September 26, 1963, and was originally painted in a light blue turquoise \"Bluebird\" scheme. The fleet was overhauled in the mid-1980s, during which the cars were painted red, leading to the nickname \"Redbirds\". The R33S fleet was replaced in the early 2000s with the delivery of the R142 and R142A cars, with the last train of R33S and R36s running on November 3, 2003. After being retired, some R33S cars were preserved, but most were kept for work service; many of the work cars were scrapped in the 2010s.", "target": "class of New York City Subway car", "baseline_candidates": ["subway car", "rolling stock class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q70199141", "label": "Sid Lewis", "source": "Sidney Scot Lewis (born May 30, 1964) is a former American football defensive back. He had played for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL) in 1987. He played college football at Penn State University.", "target": "American football defensive back", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3639186", "label": "Oikopleura", "source": "Oikopleura is a genus of Tunicata (sea-squirts) in the class Appendicularia. It forms a mucus house every four hours at 20 degrees Celsius. This house has a coarse mesh to keep out big particles, and a fine mesh that collects the small particles, down to the nanoplankton that includes (pelagic) bacteria. Abandoned mucus houses sink to the deep, collecting organic particles during their descent. They make an important contribution to marine snow, since Oikopleura is abundant and is a very active filterer, using powerful strokes of its tail. Its abundance is less obvious from preserved samples (that are usually analyzed) because the gelatinous body disappears in the preservation process while leaving hardly any trace. Species of Oikopleura have the smallest genomes in the animal kingdom, only about 75Mb. Oikopleura contains bioluminescent species. About half of Oikopleura species are bioluminescent.", "target": "genus of chordates", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2444681", "label": "When You're Mad", "source": "\"When You're Mad\" is a song by American singer-songwriter Ne-Yo. It was written by Ne-Yo and Shea Taylor for Ne-Yo's debut album, In My Own Words (2006), while production was overseen by Taylor. Released as the album's third single in March 2006, the song peaked at number 15 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and reached the top five on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. Worldwide, \"When You're Mad\" charted only in Australia, peaking at number 81 in November 2006.", "target": "2006 single by Ne-Yo", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2867219", "label": "production assistant", "source": "A production assistant, also known as a PA, is a member of the film crew and is a job title used in filmmaking and television for a person responsible for various aspects of a production. The job of a PA can vary greatly depending on the budget and specific requirements of a production as well as whether the production is unionized. Production assistants on films are sometimes attached to individual actors or filmmakers.", "target": "person responsible for various aspects of a film or TV production", "baseline_candidates": ["profession", "film crew member", "filmmaking occupation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25100268", "label": ".blog", "source": "The domain name .blog is a generic top level domain (gTLD) in the Domain Name System of the Internet. Added in 2016, it is intended to be used for blogs. Anyone can sign up for a dot blog domain name at the regular available prices. People can currently purchase .blog domains at a variety of domain registrars. However, there are some restrictions regarding trademark names.", "target": "generic top-level Internet domain", "baseline_candidates": ["generic top-level domain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13625493", "label": "Euproctinus abjectus", "source": "Euproctinus abjectus is a species of ground beetle in the family Carabidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q53799419", "label": "Peter Grassberger", "source": "Peter Grassberger (born 17 May 1940) is a professor well known for his work in statistical and particle physics. He is most famous for his contributions to chaos theory, where he introduced the idea of correlation dimension, a means of measuring a type of fractal dimension of the strange attractor.", "target": "Austrian physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29051351", "label": "Louis the Child", "source": "Louis the Child is an electronic music group consisting of Robby Hauldren and Frederic J. Kennett.", "target": "American DJ duo", "baseline_candidates": ["musical duo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12844026", "label": "Prunus fruticosa", "source": "Prunus fruticosa, the European dwarf cherry, dwarf cherry, Mongolian cherry or steppe cherry is a deciduous, xerophytic, winter-hardy, cherry-bearing shrub. It is also called ground cherry and European ground cherry, but is not to be confused with plants in the distinct \"Groundcherry\" genus of Physalis.Prunus fruticosa is native to Ciscaucasia, western Siberia, Kazakhstan, Xinjiang China, western Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Czech Republic, Germany, Belarus, Moldova, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, Serbia, Austria, and Italy.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q994738", "label": "Jean-Antoine Nollet", "source": "Jean-Antoine Nollet (French: [ʒɑ̃ ɑ̃twan nole]; 19 November 1700 – 25 April 1770) was a French clergyman and physicist who did a number of experiments with electricity and discovered osmosis. As a deacon in the Catholic Church, he was also known as Abbé Nollet.", "target": "French clergyman and physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2770044", "label": "Ramanlal Soni", "source": "Ramanlal Pitambardas Soni (25 January 1908 – 20 September 2006), also known by his pen name Sudamo, was a children's writer, translator, and social worker from Gujarat, India. He authored primarily in Gujarati language.", "target": "Indian Gujarati author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5356099", "label": "Wentworth", "source": "Wentworth was an electoral district for the Legislative Assembly in the far south west of the Australian state of New South Wales and named after and including the town of Wentworth. It established in 1880 and partly replacing Lachlan. From 1885 until 1889 it elected two members. The population in Wentworth had grown significantly since the 1880 redistribution, especially as a result of the growth of mining at Broken Hill, with the electoral roll growing from 1,901 in 1880 to 5,617 in 1887. Under the formula for seats, Wentworth was due to return 3 members, however because of the large area covered by the district, in 1889 it was split into 3, Wentworth, Sturt and Wilcannia. Wentworth retained the eponymous town, along with the towns of Menindie and Pooncaira. Sturt contained the mining boom towns of Broken Hill, Silverton and Milparinka while Wilcannia was the only town in that district. The district was abolished in 1904 due to the re-distribution of electorates following the 1903 New South Wales referendum, which required the number of members of the Legislative Assembly to be reduced from 125 to 90. It was replaced by a re-created district of The Murray along with parts of The Lachlan and the abolished district of Hay.", "target": "state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["electoral district of New South Wales"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7959485", "label": "Wagawaga", "source": "Wagawaga is an Oceanic language spoken on the southeastern tip of Papua New Guinea. The Gamadoudou, Soma’a, and Sileba dialects may be a separate language, Yaleba.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["Papuan Tip", "language", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7287891", "label": "Ralph Munroe", "source": "Ralph Middleton Munroe (April 3, 1851 – August 20, 1933) was an American yacht designer and early resident of Coconut Grove in south Florida. His home, now The Barnacle Historic State Park, is the oldest house in Miami-Dade County still standing in its original location.", "target": "American yacht designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q957814", "label": "Hiroaki Samura", "source": "Hiroaki Samura (沙村 広明, Samura Hiroaki, born February 17, 1970) is a Japanese manga artist, known for Blade of the Immortal, as well as several other short works. He has also done various illustrations for magazines and ero guro work.", "target": "Japanese manga artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30326149", "label": "Fujian Museum", "source": "Fujian Museum (Chinese: 福建博物院) is the provincial museum of Fujian province in China established in 1933. It is located in the city capital of Fuzhou at No. 96, Hutou Jie next to the West Lake Park. The museum was completed in October 2002, covering an area of 6 hectares and a building area of 36,000 square meters. The total investment of the museum's complex is 270 million Yuan. As a national first-class museum, the Fujian Museum has a collection of more than 170,000 relics and natural specimens.", "target": "provincial museum of Fujian province in China", "baseline_candidates": ["museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16887234", "label": "Oleksiy Zozulya", "source": "Oleksiy Zozulya (Ukrainian: Олексій Володимирович Зозуля; born 15 April 1992) is a professional Ukrainian football defender who plays for Lviv on loan from Kolos Kovalivka in the Ukrainian Premier League. Zozulya is the product of the FC Dynamo Kyiv School System. He signed a contract with the Ukrainian Premier League club FC Metalurh Zaporizhzhia, but did not appear for the main team. In March 2012 he signed a deal with the Ukrainian First League club FC Poltava.", "target": "Ukrainian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7608438", "label": "Stephanie Young", "source": "Stephanie Young-Brehm is an American voice actress and singer primarily known for her voice-over work in English-language dubs for Japanese anime. Her best-known roles include Nico Robin in the Funimation dub of One Piece, Arachne in Soul Eater, Towa in Dragon Ball Xenoverse 2, Clare in Claymore and Olivier Armstrong in Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. Young graduated from Baylor University with a degree in theatre performance and was nominated twice for the Dallas Theatre League's Leon Rabin Award. She has also appeared in various TV and film projects, including the Lifetime film and web series Inspector Mom.", "target": "American voice actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q435816", "label": "John Arbuthnot", "source": "John Arbuthnot FRS (baptised 29 April 1667 – 27 February 1735), often known simply as Dr Arbuthnot, was a Scottish physician, satirist and polymath in London. He is best remembered for his contributions to mathematics, his membership in the Scriblerus Club (where he inspired both Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels book III and Alexander Pope's Peri Bathous, Or the Art of Sinking in Poetry, Memoirs of Martin Scriblerus, and possibly The Dunciad), and for inventing the figure of John Bull.", "target": "Scottish physician, satirist and polymath in London; (1667–1735)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2342843", "label": "The Deposition", "source": "The Deposition (also called the Bandini Pietà or The Lamentation over the Dead Christ) is a marble sculpture by the Italian High Renaissance master Michelangelo. The sculpture, on which Michelangelo worked between 1547 and 1555, depicts four figures: the dead body of Jesus Christ, newly taken down from the Cross, Nicodemus (or possibly Joseph of Arimathea), Mary Magdalene and the Virgin Mary. The sculpture is housed in the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo in Florence and is therefore also known as the Florentine Pietà.According to Vasari, Michelangelo originally made the sculpture to decorate his tomb in Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome. He later sold it however, prior to completion of the work after intentionally damaging Christ's left arm and leg and removing several components for reasons still under debate. Some experts believe it was because the marble was flawed and the sculpture could not be completed without the addition of a piece of marble from another block (\"piecing\").Vasari noted that Michelangelo began to work on the sculpture around the age of 72. Without commission, Michelangelo worked tirelessly into the night with just a single candle to illuminate his work. Vasari wrote that he began to work on this sculpture to amuse his mind and to keep his body healthy. After 8 years of working on it, Michelangelo would go on and attempt to destroy the work in a fit of frustration. This marked the end of Michelangelo's work on the sculptural group, which found itself in the hands of Francesco Bandini, who hired an apprentice sculptor, by.", "target": "sculpture by Michelangelo", "baseline_candidates": ["sculpture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2685261", "label": "Lepocinclis", "source": "Lepocinclis is a genus of algae belonging to the family Phacaceae.The genus has cosmopolitan distribution.", "target": "genus of algae", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q994195", "label": "Mercedes-Benz in motorsport", "source": "Throughout its long history, Mercedes-Benz has been involved in a range of successful motorsport activities, including sportscar racing, touring car racing, Grand Prix racing, and rallying. It is currently active in GT racing, Formula E and Formula One.", "target": "overview of the role of Mercedes-Benz in motorsport", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikipedia article covering multiple topics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16079028", "label": "Joachim Gruppelaar", "source": "Joachim Joseph Gruppelaar (24 October 1911 – 12 July 1971) was a Dutch equestrian. He competed at the 1948 Summer Olympics in jumping and finished in 20th place. Gruppelaar held a military rank of major in 1948.", "target": "Dutch equestrian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8007604", "label": "William Darlington", "source": "William Darlington (April 28, 1782 – April 23, 1863), was an American physician, botanist, and politician who served as a Democratic-Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives for Pennsylvania's 2nd congressional district from 1819 to 1823.: 67.", "target": "American politician (1782-1863)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3438099", "label": "Ostrožno pri Ponikvi - del", "source": "Ostrožno pri Ponikvi (pronounced [ɔˈstɾoːʒnɔ pɾi ˈpoːnikʋi]) is a settlement northeast of Ponikva in the Municipality of Šentjur, eastern Slovenia. The settlement, and the entire municipality, are included in the Savinja Statistical Region, which is in the Slovenian portion of the historical Duchy of Styria.", "target": "village in the Municipality of Šentjur, eastern Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4859271", "label": "Barbara Roy", "source": "Barbara Roy was born in Kinston, North Carolina and is a dance music singer famed for her beautiful and powerful voice as well as her exquisite enunciation. She scored several big hits on the Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart during the 1970s as the lead vocalist for Ecstasy, Passion & Pain, then went on to have more success as a solo artist. In 1986, Roy hit number one on the dance chart with \"Gotta See You Tonight\". It had a two-week run at the top of the chart, while also charting on the Hot Black Singles chart, peaking at number eighty-three.Barbara Roy is a devout Christian and has extended her professional name to Barbara Roy Gaskins. Based in Washington DC, Barbara now performs contemporary gospel music and released a new album, \"Climbing\", in 2002.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15429666", "label": "Ronald C. Kennedy", "source": "Ronald C. Kennedy (December 3, 1954 – June 29, 2011) was a virus immunologist at Texas Tech University. Prior to his appointment there he was affiliated with Baylor University, where he had previously done postdoctoral studies. Furthermore, when he switched affiliations to Texas Tech, he was also an adjunct, associate and full professor in the Departments of Microbiology and Pediatrics at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. After his tenure in San Antonio, he switched affiliations to the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center's department of microbiology and immunology. In the 1980s he was affiliated with the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, during which time he published some research pertaining to SV40 and intracellular protein transport. More recently, Kennedy has published some research regarding DNA vaccination, mostly in the journal Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy.", "target": "American immunologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57339464", "label": "Nasir Mehmood", "source": "Nasir Mehmood is a Pakistani politician who is a member of the Provincial Assembly of Punjab.", "target": "politician in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12454116", "label": "Shikaar", "source": "Shikaar is a 2004 Bollywood action thriller film directed by Darshan Bagga. The film stars Jaz Pandher and Kanishka Kapoor in lead roles with Raj Babbar, Danny Denzongpa, Prem Chopra, Shakti Kapoor, Ashish Vidyarthi, Tej Sapru, Shweta Menon and Saadhika Randhawa in supporting roles.", "target": "2004 Hindi film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61062989", "label": "Radojka Francoti", "source": "Radojka Francoti (born 20 August 1952) is a Yugoslav athlete. She competed in the women's long jump at the 1972 Summer Olympics and the 1976 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Yugoslavian athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56524203", "label": "Isaac Angking", "source": "Isaac Emmanuel Angking (born January 24, 2000) is a Puerto Rican professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for MLS Next Pro club Columbus Crew 2 and the Puerto Rico national team.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10946479", "label": "An Guo", "source": "An Guo (simplified Chinese: 安国; traditional Chinese: 安國; pinyin: Ān Guó; 1481–1534 AD), was a Chinese scholar, inventor, printer, and antique collector from Wuxi, Jiangsu Province during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 AD). He was considered one of the wealthiest persons throughout the Ming Dynasty. An Guo is best known for improving the techniques of bronze movable type, and his broad collection of antiques and art pieces. Due to the large amount of money and land in his possession, he was nicknamed \"Millionaire An\" (安百万).", "target": "Chinese scholar, inventor, printer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7599004", "label": "Stanislav Igolinsky", "source": "Stanislav Igolinsky (born 1954, in Saratov) is a Russian pianist. In 1971 he finished Magnet musical school at the Leningrad Conservatory in class of Volf M.V. (piano) and in class of Volfenzon S.J. (composition). In 1976 Igolinsky graduated from the Moscow State Conservatory, and then from the Postgraduate study-training in class of Professor Voskresensky M.S. In 1972 Igolinsky took the 1 prize at the Fourth All-Union competition of pianists in Minsk. In 1974 he received the 2 premium at the Fifth International competition named after Tchaikovsky in Moscow. In 1975 he took the 2 prize at the International competition named after Queen Elizabeth in Brussels. Stanislav Igolinsky gave concerts almost in 200 cities of CIS, and also in Belgium, Holland, Austria, Switzerland, Japan, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, Spain, and Taiwan. He acted with such well-known conductors as Svetlanov, Gergiyev, Kitayenko, Katz, Dmitriyev, Janson, Domarkas, Sondetskis, Sinaisky, Dimitriadi, Kersies, Hofman, Oberfrank, Segestriom, Stryia, Bentsi, Zanderling, Beloglavek. In repertoire of him are the works of Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven (almost all sonatas), Schubert, Schuman, Liszt, Chopin (almost all works), Brahms, Grieg, Debussy, Ravel, Musorgsky, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Skryabin, Prokofiev, Shostakovich, more than 30 concerts for piano with orchestra, piano quartets and quintets, sonatas for violin and piano. The pianist also acts with the violinist Vladislav Igolinsky, with the State quartet after the name of Taneyev. From 1979 till 2000 Stanislav Igolinsky was the soloist of St.-Petersburg-Concert. From 1984 till 1991, from 2002 till 2005 he taught at the St.-Petersburg Conservatory. Since 2005 Igolinsky works as.", "target": "Russian pianist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67840", "label": "Richard Mühlfeld", "source": "Richard Bernhard Herrmann Mühlfeld (February 28, 1856 – June 1, 1907) was a German clarinettist who inspired Johannes Brahms and Gustav Jenner to write chamber works including the instrument. The pieces that Brahms wrote for him are the Clarinet Trio, the Clarinet Quintet, and the Clarinet Sonatas. Born in Bad Salzungen, where as a youth he played in the spa orchestra, Mühlfeld originally joined the Meiningen Court Orchestra (Hofkapelle) as a violinist and changed to the clarinet three years later. Following the completion of Brahms's String Quintet No. 2 in G Major, Op. 111, the composer decided to end his compositional career. After Brahms listened to Mühlfeld play Weber's Clarinet Concerto No. 1 in F Minor, Mozart's Clarinet Quintet and some of Ludwig Spohr's works, his sound quality and musicianship inspired Brahms to start composing again. Brahms later wrote letters to his old friend Clara Schumann about the skill level he saw in this clarinettist's playing. Mühlfeld and Brahms soon became close friends. In appreciation of Mühlfeld's relationship to him, Brahms gave him a set of fine silver teaspoons with a monogram to the musician. Although Mühlfeld played the Quintet along with the Trio in a concert at London, the debuts for those pieces were held at the Court of Meiningen in November 1891, with the Joachim Quartet playing the Quintet's string parts. Both Sonatas were performed for the Meiningen Circle at the Palace of Berchtesgaden in the summer of 1894, with Johannes Brahms playing piano.", "target": "German clarinettist (1856-1907)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16897698", "label": "Ynakhsyt", "source": "Ynakhsyt (Russian: Ынахсыт) is a rural locality (a selo), the only inhabited locality, and the administrative center of Kangalassky Rural Okrug of Nyurbinsky District in the Sakha Republic, Russia, located 62 kilometers (39 mi) from Nyurba, the administrative center of the district. Its population as of the 2010 Census was 608, of whom 289 were male and 319 female, up from 606 as recorded during the 2002 Census.", "target": "human settlement in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7453178", "label": "Serenata en Acapulco", "source": "Serenade in Acapulco (Spanish: Serenata en Acapulco) is a 1951 Mexican musical comedy film directed by Chano Urueta and starring Martha Roth, Roberto Romaña and Óscar Pulido. The film's art direction was by Ramón Rodríguez Granada.", "target": "1951 film by Chano Urueta", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6499156", "label": "Laura Maczka", "source": "Laura Gibbs Maczka Jordan was the Mayor of Richardson, Texas from 2013 to 2015. She had previously become the first woman elected to the post of Mayor Pro Tem in the City's 57-year history as a home rule city. Maczka was initially elected to the Richardson City Council, Place 4 in May 2011, defeating Karl Voigtsberger by 74.97% to 25.03%. She is believed to be only the 6th woman elected to the city council in the last 40 years. In 2013, Maczka was elected mayor in the first direct election of the mayor since the city became a home rule city in 1956. Following her resignation in a corruption scandal, Maczka was convicted of bribery and wire fraud. Her conviction, along with her husband's, was vacated over misconduct allegations by a court bailiff. However, a second jury in 2021 acquitted former mayor of honest services wire fraud and conspiracy to commit honest services wire fraud, charges of which she was convicted during the first trial, instead, convicting her only of bribery and tax fraud. She faces a 10-year prison sentence.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3349197", "label": "Odette Kahn", "source": "Odette Kahn (1923–1982) was a leading authority on wine and editor of the La Revue du vin de France (Review of French wine) and of Cuisine et Vins de France (Food and Wines of France). She was a judge at the historic Paris Wine Tasting of 1976. Kahn was outraged at the results of the tasting, unsuccessfully demanded her ballot back, refused later to speak to organizer Steven Spurrier after the event, claimed fraud, and wrote disparagingly about the wine competition. This event was later portrayed in the movie Bottle Shock.", "target": "French wine critic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5208050", "label": "Dadeh Khan", "source": "Dadeh Khan (Persian: دده خان, also Romanized as Dadeh Khān) is a village in Qushkhaneh-ye Bala Rural District, Qushkhaneh District, Shirvan County, North Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 281, in 63 families.", "target": "village in North Khorasan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4568397", "label": "1955 Masters Tournament", "source": "The 1955 Masters Tournament was the 19th Masters Tournament, held April 7–10 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. It was the last one before CBS began televising the tournament the following year. Cary Middlecoff shot a 65 in the second round, including a then-record 31 on the first nine, to win his only Masters, seven strokes ahead of runner-up Ben Hogan, and the second of his three major championships. After a third round at even-par 72, Middlecoff entered the final round with a four shot lead over Hogan, the champion in 1951 and 1953. The victory margin of seven strokes was a tournament record for ten years, until Jack Nicklaus won by nine strokes over Arnold Palmer and Gary Player in 1965, later increased to twelve in 1997 by Tiger Woods. The previous record was five strokes, set in 1948 by Claude Harmon and tied by Hogan in 1953. The runner-up finish was Hogan's fourth at the Masters. Arnold Palmer, a professional for less than a year, finished tied for tenth in his first Masters.The Sarazen Bridge, approaching the left side of the 15th green, was dedicated on Wednesday to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Gene Sarazen's double eagle in 1935. Included was a contest to duplicate the 232-yard (212 m) shot, with the closest by Fred Haas at 4 feet 1 inch (1.24 m) away.", "target": "golf tournament held in 1955", "baseline_candidates": ["Masters Tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3600416", "label": "2003 AAPT Championships", "source": "The 2003 AAPT Championships was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Adelaide in Australia and was part of the International Series of the 2003 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 30 December 2002 through 5 January 2003. Unseeded Nikolay Davydenko won the singles title.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Brisbane International (men)", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q299873", "label": "2004 ATP Tour", "source": "The 2004 ATP Tour was the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2004 tennis season. The ATP Tour is the elite tour for professional tennis organised by the ATP. The ATP Tour includes the four Grand Slam tournaments, the Tennis Masters Cup, the ATP Masters Series, the International Series Gold and the International Series tournaments.", "target": "tennis circuit", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tour edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4692796", "label": "Aglaia luzoniensis", "source": "Aglaia luzoniensis is a species of plant in the family Meliaceae. It is found in Indonesia and the Philippines. It can grow up to 10 meters tall and its bole can be up to 15 centimeters of diameter.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3669788", "label": "San Clemente Church", "source": "The church of Saint Clement (Italian: Chiesa di San Clemente) lies in the territory of the Vezza d'Oglio comune in Valcamonica, Brescia province. It can be reached by following an unpaved road from central Vezza until reaching a spur of rock offering a wide view on the underlying valley. Only the bell tower, adorned by a double row of mullioned windows, remains of the original medieval structure; the body of the church was rebuilt in the 16th century. It is believed that a religious guest accommodation was located in the neighborhood of the church, which, although itself located some height above the valley bottom, once lied on the hillside transit route. According to Gregorio Brunelli this church was the original parish church of Vezza d'Oglio, but contemporary scholars believe this interpretation to be wrong. In 1580, cardinal Carlo Borromeo ordered a complete renewal of the icanttype church: the date on the architrave, 1585, suggests this was completed in a relatively short time.", "target": "church building in Vezza d'Oglio, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56704411", "label": "Guðrún Erlendsdóttir", "source": "Guðrún Erlendsdóttir (born 1936) is an Icelandic lawyer and judge. In 1970, she was the first woman to become a judge in Iceland, serving in the Supreme Court from 15 September 1982. In 1991–92, she first served as President of the Supreme Court under a system of rotating presidencies, serving for a second term in 2002–03.", "target": "Icelandic judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5111154", "label": "Christine Quinn-Brintnall", "source": "Christine Quinn-Brintnall (1952 – May 19, 2014) was an American jurist. Quinn-Brintnall took office in November 2000 after being elected to the Washington State Court of Appeals, Division II, which covers Pierce County and 12 other counties. Between 2004 - 2007, she served as the court's chief judge.", "target": "American judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1332919", "label": "Gillaumé", "source": "Gillaumé is a commune in the Haute-Marne department in north-eastern France.", "target": "commune in Haute-Marne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3534316", "label": "1988 Pilkington Glass Championships", "source": "The 1988 Pilkington Glass Championships was a women's tennis tournament played on grass courts at the Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club in Eastbourne in the United Kingdom and was part of Category 4 tier of the 1988 WTA Tour. The tournament ran from 13 June until 19 June 1988. First-seeded Martina Navratilova won the singles title, her seventh at the event.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Eastbourne International", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4962689", "label": "Brewers–Cubs rivalry", "source": "The Brewers–Cubs rivalry is a Major League Baseball (MLB) rivalry between the Milwaukee Brewers and Chicago Cubs. Both clubs are members of MLB's National League (NL) Central Division. The rivalry is also sometimes known as the I-94 Rivalry, because the two teams' ballparks are located only 83 miles (134 km) from each other off Interstate 94 (I-94). The Brewers and Cubs have been playing each other in spring training Cactus League games since the Brewers franchise began as the Seattle Pilots in 1969. However, the rivalry did not begin until 1998, when the Brewers moved from the American League (AL) Central Division to the National League Central. Until then, the Brewers had a rivalry with Chicago's AL team, the White Sox. The Brewers-Cubs rivalry has been ranked among the best and most competitive in baseball. The teams have never met in the postseason.", "target": "Major League Baseball rivalry", "baseline_candidates": ["team rivalries in sports"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5977715", "label": "I Just Wanna Be Loved", "source": "\"I Just Wanna Be Loved\" is the first single from English new wave band Culture Club's fifth album, Don't Mind If I Do (1999). The song was released in the United States in August 1998 to promote the band's reformation US tour and the live album and compilation VH1 Storytellers/Greatest Moments. It failed to generate interest on US radio. The song was then released worldwide in late 1998 and entered at No. 4 on the UK Singles Chart during a week when the top five positions were held by new entries for the first time. Additionally, it was a Top 20 hit in Iceland and on the Eurochart Hot 100, and reached the Top 100 in Australia and Germany.", "target": "song by Culture Club", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1762919", "label": "Merry Christmas", "source": "Merry Christmas is a compilation album by Bing Crosby that was released in 1945 on Decca Records. It has remained in print through the vinyl, CD, and downloadable file eras, currently as the disc and digital album White Christmas on MCA Records, a part of the Universal Music Group, (reissued in June 1995) and currently on vinyl as Merry Christmas on Geffen Records (re-issued in September 2014). It includes Crosby's signature song \"White Christmas\", the best-selling single of all time with estimated sales of over 50 million copies worldwide. The album was certified 4× Platinum by RIAA for selling over 4 million copies in United States. The original 1945 release and subsequent re-releases and re-packages spent a total of 39 weeks at no. 1 on the Billboard pop albums chart.", "target": "1945 compilation album by Bing Crosby", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12027279", "label": "Pëllumb Jusufi", "source": "Pëllumb Jusufi (Macedonian: Пелумб Јусуфи; born 10 February 1988) is a Croatian-Macedonian football player. The midfielder currently plays for the fourth-tier NK Cres. He is of Albanian descent.", "target": "Croatian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1766428", "label": "Pierre Roche", "source": "Pierre Roche (Paris, 2 August 1855 – Paris, 18 January 1922), pseudonym of Pierre Henry Ferdinand Massignon, was a French sculptor, painter, ceramist and medallist. He was the father to Louis Massignon. Roche first studied medicine and chemistry in Paris, but then switched to studying painting at the Académie Julian 1873–1878 under Alfred Roll, and exhibited at the Paris Salon 1884–1889.In 1888 Roche tried sculpture to compete for a monument to Georges Danton, leading to encouragement by sculptor and teacher Jules Dalou. He went on to produce a number of commissioned works, like the fountain April (1906) in the Musée Galliera gardens, and L'Effort (c.1898) in the Jardin du Luxembourg.His works are collected in the Musée d'Orsay, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Courtauld Institute of Art, and Harvard University Art Museums.", "target": "French sculptor and painter (1855-1922)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6134108", "label": "James Foulis, 3rd Baronet", "source": "James Foulis of Colinton, Lord Retfurd or Redford (c. 1645–1711), was a Scottish judge and politician. He was one of the main investors in the Company of Scotland and their Darien Expedition.", "target": "Scottish judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3693114", "label": "2006 Norwegian Football Cup", "source": "The 2006 Norwegian Football Cup was the 101st edition of the Norwegian annual football knock-out tournament. The tournament started on 10 May and was contested by 128 teams, going through 7 rounds before a winner could be declared. The final match was played on 12 November at Ullevaal Stadium, and marked the end of the 2006 Norwegian football season.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5998402", "label": "Ilisha Jarret", "source": "Ilisha Keisha Marie Jarrett (born January 8, 1977) is an American retired professional basketball player.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7347514", "label": "Robert McFarland", "source": "Robert McFarland (born January 1, 1961) is a retired American football coach. He served as the head football coach at Stephen F. Austin State University from 2005 to 2006, compiling a record of 9–13.", "target": "American football coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49062063", "label": "Protobothrops cornutus", "source": "Protobothrops cornutus, commonly known as the horned pit viper or Fan-Si-Pan horned pitviper, is a venomous pit viper species found in northern and central Vietnam and in southern China (Guangdong). No subspecies are currently recognized.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31072941", "label": "Megaloglossus azagnyi", "source": "The Azagnyi fruit bat (Megaloglossus azagnyi), also called the western Woermann’s fruit bat, is a species of megabat found in Africa.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19605639", "label": "Middlewich Urban District", "source": "Middlewich Urban District is a former Urban District in Cheshire, based in the town of Middlewich. It was created in 1894 and abolished in 1974 when it was incorporated into the Borough of Congleton, which was itself abolished in 2009. The archives are with Cheshire Archives and Local Studies.", "target": "local government area in the UK, abolished 1974", "baseline_candidates": ["urban district of Great Britain and Ireland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28447206", "label": "1939 Washington State Cougars football team", "source": "The 1939 Washington State Cougars football team was an American football team that represented Washington State College in the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) during the 1939 college football season. Fourteenth-year head coach Babe Hollingbery led the team to a 4–5 record (3–5 in PCC, sixth); they were outscored 138 to 67, held scoreless three times, and recorded two shutouts.The Cougars' three home games were played on campus at Rogers Field in Pullman. Longtime assistant coach Karl Schlademan moved on to Michigan State after this season.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61366667", "label": "Akhiok", "source": "Akhiok (Kasukuak in Alutiiq; Russian: Акхиок) is a second-class city in Kodiak Island Borough, Alaska, United States. Akhiok is Kodiak's southernmost village. The population was 63 at the 2020 census. Akhiok, which does not have a post office, is a rural location in postal code 99615 that belongs to Kodiak. The village is sometimes called Alitak, after a nearby bay.", "target": "city in Kodiak Island Borough, Alaska, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6515208", "label": "Lee Sung-woon", "source": "Lee Sung-woon (born December 25, 1978) is a South Korean retired football player. He formerly played for Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma, Daejeon Citizen, and Busan IPark.", "target": "South Korean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55638901", "label": "2005–06 Moldovan \"B\" Division", "source": "The 2005–06 Moldovan \"B\" Division (Romanian: Divizia B) was the 15th season of Moldovan football's third-tier league. There are 24 teams in the competition, in two groups, 12 in the North and 12 in the South.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20749797", "label": "DEL16P12.1P11.2", "source": "Chromosome 16p12.2-p11.2 deletion syndrome is a protein that in humans is encoded by the DEL16P12.1P11.2 gene.", "target": "genetic element in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28223449", "label": "2005 Tashkent Open – doubles", "source": "Adriana Serra Zanetti and Antonella Serra Zanetti were the defending champions, but chose not to participate that year. Maria Elena Camerin and Émilie Loit won in the final 6–3, 6–0 against Anastasia Rodionova and Galina Voskoboeva.", "target": "2005 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6698805", "label": "Ludington State Park", "source": "Ludington State Park is a public recreation area located two miles north of Ludington, Michigan, occupying 5,300 acres (2,100 ha) between the shores of Lake Michigan and Hamlin Lake. The state park is crossed by a one-mile stretch of the Big Sable River and is home to the 112-foot-high (34 m) Big Sable Point Lighthouse, which dates from 1876.", "target": "state park in Michigan, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["Michigan state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89641593", "label": "1969 Macdonald Brier", "source": "The 1969 Macdonald Brier, Canada's national men's curling championship was held March 3–7 at the Oshawa Civic Auditorium in Oshawa, Ontario. The Ron Northcott rink representing Alberta won their third title, having gone undefeated. It was the first time a team had gone undefeated since 1957. It was also the 11th title for Alberta. British Columbia were runners-up, with an impressive 9-1 record, which was usually good enough to win. Both Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island tied for third place at 7-3 records. It was tied for the best ever result for PEI, which also finished third the previous year.", "target": "Canadian men's curling championship edition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q642221", "label": "Tomchei Temimim", "source": "Tomchei Tmimim (Hebrew: תומכי תמימים, \"supporters of the complete-wholesome ones\") is the central Yeshiva (Talmudical academy) of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement. Founded in 1897 in the town of Lubavitch by Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn, it is now an international network of institutions of advanced Torah study, the United Lubavitcher Yeshivoth.", "target": "Chabad Lubavitch yeshiva", "baseline_candidates": ["yeshiva"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96096835", "label": "Royal Forest Department BTS station", "source": "Royal Forest Department Station (Thai: สถานีกรมป่าไม้, RTGS: Sathani Krom Pa Mai, pronounced [sā.tʰǎː.nīː krōm pàː máːj]) is a BTS Skytrain station, on the Sukhumvit Line in Bangkok, Thailand. It is located in front of the headquarters of the Royal Forest Department, Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment. The station is part of the northern extension of the Sukhumvit Line and opened on 5 June 2020, as part of phase 3.", "target": "Mass transit station", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97750586", "label": "Miyu Takahira", "source": "Miyu Takahira (born 4 November 1999) is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a defender for WE League club MyNavi Sendai.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25401365", "label": "Tayr Debba", "source": "Tayr Debba (Arabic: طير دبّا) is a village in the Tyre District in the South Governorate of Lebanon, located 88 kilometers south of Beirut. Its total land area consists of 578 hectares and its average elevation is 200 meters above sea level. There are two schools, one public and the other private, in Tayr Debba which collectively enrolled a total of 607 students in 2006.", "target": "human settlement in Lebanon", "baseline_candidates": ["village/town/city in Lebanon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65301868", "label": "Delahey", "source": "Delahey is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 20 kilometres (12 mi) north-west of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Brimbank local government area. Delahey recorded a population of 8,339 at the 2016 census.", "target": "suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["gazetted locality of Victoria", "suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21095441", "label": "The Legend of Ben Hall", "source": "The Legend of Ben Hall is a 2016 Australian bushranger film. Written and directed by Matthew Holmes, it is based on the exploits of bushranger Ben Hall and his gang. The film stars Jack Martin in the title role, Jamie Coffa as John Gilbert, and William Lee as John Dunn. Holmes' goal with The Legend of Ben Hall was to produce an historically accurate film that focuses on the last nine months of Hall's life, when he was a well-established bushranger along with his accomplices Gilbert and Dunn. It explores the relationships within the gang and depicts many of their robberies and clashes with the police. The film also explores the details surrounding Hall's betrayal and his controversial death at the hands of the police on 5 May 1865. The film was shown on 12 October 2017 at the 7º Almería Western Film Festival.", "target": "2016 film by Matthew Holmes", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28816081", "label": "Kamel Larbi", "source": "Kamel Larbi (born 5 March 1976) is an Algerian judoka. He competed in the men's heavyweight event at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Algerian judo practitioner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26963266", "label": "Say You Won't Let Go", "source": "\"Say You Won't Let Go\" is a song by English singer and songwriter James Arthur. The song was released as a digital download on 9 September 2016 in the United Kingdom by Columbia Records as the lead single from his second studio album Back from the Edge (2016). The single peaked at the top of the UK Singles Chart, a position it maintained for three weeks. Outside the United Kingdom, the single has topped the charts in Australia, New Zealand, Sweden and the Republic of Ireland. It also became his breakthrough hit in the US, peaking at number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100. In early March, it had gone double platinum in the UK. In May 2018, it was reported that The Script had launched legal proceedings against Arthur due to alleged copyright infringement in regards to the song.In response to claims that the song sounds similar to The Script's \"The Man Who Can't Be Moved\", the song's writers initially decided not to pursue legal action. However, following a claim in May 2018, they were successfully awarded a songwriting credit.", "target": "2016 single by James Arthur", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q213224", "label": "Menen", "source": "Menen (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmeːnə(n)] (listen); French: Menin [mənɛ̃]; West Flemish: Mêenn [ˈmeːnən] or Mêende [ˈmeːndə]) is a municipality located in the Belgian province of West Flanders. The municipality comprises the city of Menen proper and the towns of Lauwe and Rekkem. The city is situated on the French/Belgian border. On January 1, 2006, Menen had a total population of 32,413. The total area is 33.07 km² which gives a population density of 980 inhabitants per km². The city of Menen gives its name to the Menin Gate in Ypres, which is a monument to those killed in World War I. The gate is so called as the road from that gate is the road to Menen. The town hall of Menen, with its large belfry, was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1999 as part of the Belfries of Belgium and France site, because of its civic importance and architecture.", "target": "city in West Flanders, Belgium", "baseline_candidates": ["Belgian municipality with the title of city", "municipality of Belgium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89618347", "label": "2020 COVID-19 pandemic in the Gambia", "source": "The COVID-19 pandemic in The Gambia is part of the worldwide pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The virus was confirmed to have reached The Gambia in March 2020.", "target": "viral pandemic in the Gambia", "baseline_candidates": ["disease outbreak"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1701024", "label": "Lobos de Tlaxcala", "source": "Lobos de Tlaxcala is a football team that plays in the Tercera División de México out of group 3. The club was established after the franchise was moved from Oaxaca in 2009.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3088799", "label": "Västerfärnebo", "source": "Västerfärnebo (Swedish pronunciation: [vɛstɛrˈfæ̂ːɳɛbʊ] (listen)) is a locality situated in Sala Municipality, Västmanland County, Sweden with 477 inhabitants in 2010.", "target": "urban area in Sala Municipality, Sweden, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21015778", "label": "Lawyers' Association for Human Rights of Nepalese Indigenous Peoples", "source": "Lawyers' Association for Human Rights of Nepalese Indigenous Peoples or LAHURNIP is an organization that protects and defends the human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples in Nepal.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q304768", "label": "Will Alsop", "source": "William Allen Alsop (12 December 1947 – 12 May 2018) was a British architect and Professor of Architecture at University for the Creative Arts's Canterbury School of Architecture. He was responsible for several distinctive and controversial modernist buildings which are usually distinguished by their use of bright colours and unusual avant-garde forms. In 2000, Alsop won the Stirling Prize, the most prestigious architecture award in the United Kingdom, for the Peckham Library in London.", "target": "British architect (1947-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16221594", "label": "Mark Simms", "source": "Mark Simms (born 1981) is a Canadian filmmaker, community activist and martial artist.", "target": "Canadian journalist and activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4300977", "label": "Euphorbia bicolor", "source": "Euphorbia bicolor is a species of flowering plant in the genus Euphorbia, native to the continental United States. According to a study, E. bicolor latex extract can induce long-lasting, non-opioid peripheral analgesia in a rat model of inflammatory pain.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5991897", "label": "Church of San Román", "source": "The Church of San Roman (Spanish: Iglesia de San Román) is a medieval church in Sariego, Asturias, Spain. San Román is one of three parishes in the municipality of Sariego. The building is Romanesque in appearance but has older origins, as evidenced in the fenestration (a window is dated to the 10th century).", "target": "Medieval church in Asturias, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3521577", "label": "The Light", "source": "The Light is a 1987 composition by Philip Glass, his first score for a full symphony orchestra. The work was commissioned for the Michelson-Morley Centennial Celebration held at Case Western Reserve University. The musical structure is inspired by the 1887 Michelson–Morley experiment, an investigation of the speed of light that marked a turning point in modern science.", "target": "composition by Philip Glass commemorating the Michelson-Morley experiment", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q938548", "label": "Tuzla", "source": "Tuzla is a municipality in the province of Istanbul, Turkey on the Asian side of the city next to the municipality of Pendik. Tuzla is on a headland on the coast of the Marmara Sea, at the eastern limit of the city. The mayor is Şadi Yazıcı (AKP).", "target": "district and municipality of Istanbul province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality", "district of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22936196", "label": "history of Malappuram", "source": "Malappuram is one of the 14 districts in the South Indian state of Kerala. The district has a unique and eventful history starting from pre-historic times. During the early medieval period, the district was the home to two of the four major kingdoms that ruled Kerala. Perumpadappu was the original hometown of the Kingdom of Cochin, which is also known as Perumbadappu Swaroopam, and Nediyiruppu was the original hometown of the Zamorin of Calicut, which is also known as Nediyiruppu Swaroopam. Besides, the original headquarters of the Palakkad Rajas were also at Athavanad in the district.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6117015", "label": "Jackson County Airport", "source": "Jackson County Airport (FAA LID: 1A7) is a county-owned, public-use airport located 3 nautical miles (6 km) northeast of the central business district of Gainesboro, in Jackson County, Tennessee, United States.", "target": "airport in Tennessee", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7604930", "label": "Stawisza", "source": "Stawisza [staˈvʲiʂa] (Rusyn: Ставиша, Stavysha) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Uście Gorlickie, within Gorlice County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland, close to the border with Slovakia. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) south-west of Uście Gorlickie, 18 km (11 mi) south of Gorlice, and 104 km (65 mi) south-east of the regional capital Kraków.", "target": "village in Lesser Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51802956", "label": "Women's Baltic Football League", "source": "The Women's Baltic Football League is an international women's football confronting the two top teams in Estonia's Meistriliiga, Latvia's Sieviešu Ligas and Lithuania's A Lyga within a round robin format, with no fixtures between both teams from each country. It was first played in 2017, from June to September.The tournament was also held in 2006–2008 with different rules.", "target": "Baltic women's football club tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["international association football clubs competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13647226", "label": "Malaya Selmenga", "source": "Malaya Selmenga (Russian: Малая Сельменга) is a rural locality (a village) in Nyuksenskoye Rural Settlement, Nyuksensky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 26 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Nyuksensky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2707040", "label": "Gerarda prevostiana", "source": "Gerarda prevostiana, commonly known as the cat-eyed water snake, Gerard's water snake, or the glossy marsh snake, is a species of snake in the family Homalopsidae. The species is endemic to Asia. It is the only species in the genus Gerarda.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4792610", "label": "Armaki", "source": "Armaki (Persian: ارمكي, also Romanized as Armakī) is a village in Moqam Rural District, Shibkaveh District, Bandar Lengeh County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 68, in 11 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q542065", "label": "Tigranes VI of Armenia", "source": "Tigranes VI, also known as Tigran VI or by his Roman name Gaius Julius Tigranes (Greek: Γαίος Ιούλιος Τιγράνης, before 25 – after 68) was a Herodian Prince and served as a Roman Client King of Armenia in the 1st century. He was the child born to Alexander by an unnamed wife. His mother was a noblewoman that flourished in the reigns of the first two Roman emperors Augustus and Tiberius. He was the namesake of his paternal uncle Tigranes V, who served as a previous King of Armenia during the reign of Augustus. His father's parents were Alexander and Glaphyra. Tigranes appears to be the only grandchild born to his paternal grandparents. His paternal grandfather Alexander was a Judean Prince of Jewish, Nabataean and Edomite descent and was a son of King of Judea, Herod the Great and his wife Mariamne. His paternal grandmother Glaphyra was a Cappadocian Princess of Greek, Armenian and Persian descent. She was the daughter of the King Archelaus of Cappadocia and her mother was an unnamed Princess from Armenia, possibly a relation of the Artaxiad Dynasty. Tigranes’ name is a reflection of his Armenian and Hellenic lineage. The name Tigranes was the most common royal name in the Artaxiad Dynasty and was among the most ancient names of the Armenian Kings. Josephus states that his ancestral line had been kings of Armenia. Like his father and paternal uncle, Tigranes was an apostate to Judaism. It is unlikely that Tigranes attempted to exert influence on Judean Politics. Little is known on.", "target": "1st century AD Herodian Prince who was a Roman Client King of Armenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20875732", "label": "Love the Life", "source": "\"Love the Life\" is the 1992 debut single by the Australian act Bass Culture, featuring vocalist and songwriter Gina Gardiner, who was credited as Geena before becoming more internationally known as Gina G. The single was taken from the group's debut album BC Nation, which was released in 1993. Although the single peaked outside the top 100 on the ARIA Charts, the song and its video (featuring the act performing in a field of sunflowers) would find renewed interest in the wake of Gina G's global success, prompting Mushroom Records to re-release the song and retitle Geena's billing to Gina G in 1996.", "target": "1992 song performed by Gina G", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61594869", "label": "Na-Kel Smith", "source": "Na-Kel Allah Smith (born July 22, 1994) is an American skateboarder, rapper, songwriter and actor. Originally a skateboarder from the Los Angeles area, he was known for his association with the hip hop collective Odd Future, appearing in music videos, vlogs and their Adult Swim TV show Loiter Squad, and performing live with the collective and its members.", "target": "American skateboarder and musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7273043", "label": "Quy Joq, Golestan", "source": "Quy Joq (Persian: قويجق, also Romanized as Qūy Joq and Qūyjeq) is a village in Tamran Rural District, in the Central District of Kalaleh County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 211, in 45 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2500204", "label": "Jeyhun Sultanov", "source": "Ceyhun Oqtay oğlu Sultanov (born 12 June 1979) is a retired Azerbaijani footballer who last played as a central midfielder for Azerbaijan Premier League club Gabala. He was voted Azerbaijani Footballer of the Year in 2006. Sultanov has made 16 appearances for the Azerbaijan national football team.", "target": "association football player from Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85758821", "label": "El Paso and Southwestern Railroad Depot", "source": "The El Paso and Southwestern Railroad Depot is a historic building in Tucson, Arizona. It was designed in the Classical Revival style, and built in 1912 by the Phelps-Dodge Corporation. It was used as a railroad depot until 1924. In 1978, it was remodelled as a restaurant. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 12, 2004.", "target": "railway station in Tucson, the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21017050", "label": "Barnabus Manchester", "source": "Barnabus is a Manchester-based Christian charity that offers support to homeless and vulnerable people through its drop-in centre. The charity has a small team of staff including support workers and around 70 volunteers.", "target": "English charity", "baseline_candidates": ["charity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q267054", "label": "Broseley", "source": "Broseley is a market town in Shropshire, England, with a population of 4,929 at the 2011 Census and an estimate of 5,022 in 2019. The River Severn flows to its north and east. The first iron bridge in the world was built in 1779 across the Severn, linking Broseley with Coalbrookdale and Madeley. This contributed to the early industrial development in the Ironbridge Gorge, which is now part of a World Heritage Site.", "target": "town and civil parish in Shropshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3824063", "label": "San Clemente District", "source": "San Clemente District is one of eight districts of the province Pisco in Peru.", "target": "district in Ica, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6816412", "label": "Menahem ben Aaron ibn Zerah", "source": "Menahem ben Aaron ibn Zerah (Hebrew: מנחם בן אהרן בן זרח; died 1385) was a Spanish rabbi and codifier born in the Kingdom of Navarre, probably at Estella, in the first third of the 14th century.", "target": "Spanish rabbi", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30275644", "label": "Lumbini Province", "source": "Lumbini Province (Nepali: लुम्बिनी प्रदेश, romanized: Lumbinī pradēśa) is a province in western Nepal. It borders Gandaki Province and Karnali Province to the north, Sudurpashchim Province to the west, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar of India to the south. Lumbini is the third largest and the third most populous province among the Nepali provinces. Lumbini's capital, Deukhuri, is near the geographic centre of the province; it is a small town which is currently being developed to meet the prerequisite of provincial capital. The major cities in this province are Butwal and Siddharthanagar in Rupandehi District, Nepalgunj in Banke District, Tansen in Palpa District, and Ghorahi and Tulsipur in Dang District. The province is home to the World Heritage Site of Lumbini, where according to the Buddhist tradition, the founder of Buddhism, Gautama Buddha was born.", "target": "province of Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["province of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12819035", "label": "Shaken Ajmanov", "source": "Shaken Kenzhetaiuly Aimanov (Kazakh: Шәкен Кенжетайұлы Айманов; born Shahkarim Kenzhetaiuly Aimanov, Kazakh: Шаһкерім Кенжетайұлы Айманов; 15 October 1914 – 23 December 1970) was a Kazakh Soviet actor and film director. He is considered to be the father of Kazakh cinematography, as well as an iconic film director and actor. He directed eleven films between 1954 and 1970.", "target": "film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4744943", "label": "American School of Palestine", "source": "The American School of Palestine (Arabic: مدرسة فلسطین الامیرکیة) is a K-12 bilingual (English and Arabic) school in al-Bireh and Ramallah, West Bank, Palestine.", "target": "private school in Ramallah, Palestine", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5180008", "label": "Coychurch", "source": "Coychurch (Welsh: Llangrallo) is a small village that sits between Pencoed and Bridgend in Wales, bordering with Bridgend Industrial Estate, where many residents are employed. It is part of the community of Coychurch Lower.", "target": "village in Bridgend, Wales, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7539633", "label": "Stable block, Sledmere House", "source": "Sledmere House is a Grade I listed Georgian country house, containing Chippendale, Sheraton and French furnishings and many fine pictures, set within a park designed by Capability Brown. It is located in the village of Sledmere, between Driffield and Malton, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The present house was begun in 1751, extended in the 1790s, and rebuilt after a fire in 1911. It was once the home of Colonel Sir Mark Sykes, 6th Baronet, noted English traveller and diplomatic advisor, and is now the home of Sir Tatton Sykes, 8th Baronet. The house is built in Nottinghamshire ashlar on three storeys to an H-shaped plan.", "target": "Grade I listed historic stable block at Sledmere House in East Riding of Yorkshire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["English country house", "historic house museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13561416", "label": "2010 GB174", "source": "2010 GB174 is a detached object, discovered on 12 April 2010 on data taken at the Canada France Hawaii Telescope as part of the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey. It never gets closer than 48.5 AU from the Sun (about the outer edge of the Kuiper belt). Its large eccentricity strongly suggests that it was gravitationally scattered onto its current orbit. It is, like all detached objects, outside the current influence of Neptune, so how it got its current orbit is unknown. 2010 GB174 has the third highest Tisserand parameter relative to Jupiter of any Trans-Neptunian object, after Sedna and 2012 VP113. It has not been observed since 2015. It comes to opposition in late March each year in the constellation of Virgo. Precovery images have been found back to 26 June 2009.It reached perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) in mid-1951 and has moved beyond 70 AU in September 2014. It is possibly a dwarf planet.", "target": "detached object", "baseline_candidates": ["detached object"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64562117", "label": "Gabriel J. Martín", "source": "Gabriel José Martín Martín (San Fernando, July 12, 1971) is a Spanish gay and intersex psychologist, writer and activist.", "target": "Spanish psychologist, writer and LGBTI activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26790878", "label": "Begoña Vila", "source": "María Begoña Vila Costas (born 1963) is a Spanish astrophysicist specializing in the study of spiral galaxies. She currently resides in Washington, D.C. and works as a systems engineer at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. She is the lead engineer for the Fine Guidance Sensor and Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (FGS-NIRISS) on the James Webb Space Telescope – the Hubble's successor – in addition to being in charge of the final cold test of the group of instruments before their integration with the telescope.", "target": "Spanish astrophysicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83617100", "label": "Drosophila tripunctata species group", "source": "The Drosophila tripunctata species group is a species group of fruit flies in the subgenus Drosophila.", "target": "species group of flies in subgenus Drosophila", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16729563", "label": "Kazim Yazdani", "source": "Haji Kazim Yazdani (Dari: حاجی کاظم یزدانی) a historical researcher and a writer, was born in a Hazara family in central Afghanistan. He is among the top historical researchers and writers in the country. His work has been published in many articles and books. He is a well-respected writer as he did not use his research and written work as a way to earn income.", "target": "Writer and historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14209297", "label": "Pato Branco", "source": "Pato Branco (\"White Duck\" in English) is a city in the southwest part of the Brazilian state Paraná. The municipality covers 537,8 km² (206.7 mi²) and has a population of 83,843 (2020 IBGE estimate). Pato Branco started off as a village in 1942 and was given status as a city December 14, 1952. It has two private colleges, Faculdade Mater Dei and Faculdade de Pato Branco, and a campus of the Federal University of Technology - Paraná. The city has experienced a positive economic development throughout the last few years. Pato Branco is located 760 meters above sea level and has a sub-tropical climate with warm summers and mild winters, morning frost being usual during the winter season. Occasional snowfall. There is no defined period of drought. The coldest month of the year is July with an average temperature of 14.2°C (57.6°F). January is the warmest month with an average of 22.5°C (72.5°F). The current mayor (elected for 2013-2016) is Augustinho Zucchi. The city has a small general aviation airport (Juvenal Loureiro Cardoso Airport). Former Brazil International footballer, Alexandre Pato is from the city. He notably played in Europe for the likes of Chelsea FC & AC Milan.", "target": "Brazilian city", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1282396", "label": "Ed Lewis", "source": "Robert H. Friedrich (June 30, 1891 – August 8, 1966), better known by the ring name Ed \"Strangler\" Lewis, was an American professional wrestler and trainer. During his wrestling career, which spanned four decades, Lewis was a four-time World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion and overall recognised officially as a five-time world champion. Considered to be one of the most iconic and recognizable sports stars of the 1920s, often alongside boxer Jack Dempsey and baseball player Babe Ruth, Lewis notably wrestled in over 6,000 matches (many of which were real contests) and lost only 32 of them.He was posthumously inducted as a charter member into the following hall of fames: Wrestling Observer Newsletter, Professional Wrestling, George Tragos/Lou Thesz and WWE's Legacy Wing. One of the most legitimately feared grapplers of all time, Lewis was known for his catch wrestling prowess and trained many future champions, most notably Lou Thesz, Danny Hodge, Dick Hutton and Gene LeBell.", "target": "American professional wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75279563", "label": "Henry Cole", "source": "Colonel Henry Arthur Cole (14 February 1809 – 2 July 1890) was an Anglo-Irish politician, cricketer and army officer.", "target": "British politician, cricketer and army officer (1809-1890)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24039058", "label": "BlackByrd", "source": "BlackByrd is a South Africa pop trio from Cape Town. Formed in 2012, the group currently consists of Tarryn Lamb, Axene Chaberski and Tamsyn Maker. BlackByrd’s sound is firmly rooted in pop-country with ballads about love and heartbreak. The band formed after Tarryn Lamb posted an advert on Gumtree in 2012, looking for other musicians to start an all-girl group. Within a couple of months, they were signed by EMI and released their debut album, Strong. BlackByrd have released two studio albums and have performed as opening acts for international artist, such as Mike + The Mechanics, Patrizio Buanne and Jamiroquai. They have won two South African Music Awards for their albums, including Best Duo or Group Award.", "target": "South African music group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1292092", "label": "Edward E. Boynton House", "source": "The Edward E. Boynton House (1908) was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in Rochester, New York. This privately owned prairie-style home was commissioned by widower Edward Everett Boynton and his teenage daughter Beulah Boynton. According to Beulah Boynton (recounted to Times Union reporter William Ringle in 1955) it cost her father between $45,000 - $50,000 for the house, the lot and the contents - a staggering sum in 1908. This two-story, approximately 5,500 square foot home, was originally situated on an acre lot in the city of Rochester. Seventeen pieces of original Frank Lloyd Wright furniture remain in the house.", "target": "architectural structure", "baseline_candidates": ["single-family detached home"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35261860", "label": "Popigay River", "source": "The Popigay (Russian: Попигай) is a river in Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia. It s a right tributary of the Khatanga. The length of the river is 532 kilometers (331 mi). The area of its drainage basin is 50,300 square kilometers (19,400 sq mi). The river has its source in the Anabar Plateau. It freezes up in October and breaks up in June. Its main tributaries are the Rassokha and Fomich.The river passes by the Popigay crater, about 900 kilometers (560 mi) northeast of Norilsk.", "target": "river in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21104289", "label": "Keith John Smith", "source": "Keith John Smith (19 March 1940 – 4 January 2008) was a British jazz trumpeter, principally active on the trad jazz and Dixieland revival scenes. He was born in Isleworth, Middlesex, England. Smith originally intended to pursue studies in engineering, but began playing trumpet at the age of 15 and soon after began playing in local amateur ensembles, including Norrie Cox's band and the New Teao Brass Band (the latter including Chris Barber and Ken Colyer). His first professional gig came in 1960 as a member of Mickey Ashman's Ragtime Jazz Band. In 1962, he started the Climax Jazz Band and began recording.In 1964, Smith visited New Orleans for the first time, where he played with George Lewis. Intending to move to the US permanently, he worked briefly in New Orleans before spending time in California and New York. In 1966, he organized an all-star band to tour Canada and Europe, which included Pops Foster, Jimmy Archey, and Alvin Alcorn. He moved to Denmark in 1972 and remained there until 1975, playing with Papa Bue in his Viking Jazz Band. After 1975 he returned to England, where he founded a new band, Hefty Jazz; this group was in existence for over a decade, touring internationally and featuring, at times, George Chisholm, Mick Pyne, Peanuts Hucko, Nat Pierce, Johnny Mince, and Barrett Deems. Concurrently, he was named leader of the Louis Armstrong All-Stars in 1981, and in 1984 served as producer for Stardust Road, a televised film made as a tribute to Hoagy Carmichael. Late in his.", "target": "musical artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1877063", "label": "Luke Whitelock", "source": "Luke Charles Whitelock (born 29 January 1991) is a New Zealand rugby union player who currently plays as a loose forward for Canterbury in New Zealand's domestic Mitre 10 Cup and the Highlanders in the international Super Rugby competition.Whitelock has Captained Canterbury, the Highlanders and New Zealand's international team, the All Blacks throughout his professional career. Whitelock was capped for New Zealand 7 times between his international debut in 2013 and his final test in 2018. Whitelock has previously played for the Crusaders, New Zealand's U20 team, a World XV team and the Barbarian F.C. rugby club, internationally.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96371386", "label": "Abdur Rouf", "source": "Abdur Rouf is a Bangladesh Awami League politician and the former Member of Parliament of Nilphamari-1.", "target": "Bangladeshi politician from Nilphamari District", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32730983", "label": "Schönbach", "source": "Schönbach (Eifel dialect: Schimich) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Daun, whose seat is in the like-named town.", "target": "municipality in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3444305", "label": "Neend Hamari Khwab Tumhare", "source": "Neend Hamari Khwab Tumhare is a 1966 Indian Hindi-language film directed by Shiv Sahni and produced by Hans Choudhary. It stars Shashi Kapoor and Nanda in pivotal roles.", "target": "1967 Hindi film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16203072", "label": "Diarmuid Cloonan", "source": "Diarmuid Cloonan (born 1980) is an Irish hurler who played as a full-back for the Galway senior team.Born in Athenry, County Galway, Cloonan first played competitive hurling whilst at school at Athenry Vocational School. He arrived on the inter-county scene at the age of seventeen when he first linked up with the Galway minor team, before later joining the under-21 side. He joined the senior panel for the 2001 championship. Cloonan went on to play a bit part for Galway for the next few years, and won one National Hurling League medal. He was an All-Ireland runner-up as a non-playing substitute on one occasion.As a member of the Connacht inter-provincial team at various times, Cloonan won a Railway Cup runner-up on one occasion. At club level he is a two-time All-Ireland medallist with Athenry. In addition to this he also won four Connacht medals and four championship medals.Cloonan's retirement came following the conclusion of the 2007 championship.His brother, Eugene, also played at all levels with Galway, and is regarded as one of the county's greatest-ever forwards.", "target": "Irish hurler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7449634", "label": "Semiramide riconosciuta", "source": "Semiramide riconosciuta (Semiramis recognized or revealed) is an opera libretto by Pietro Metastasio (1698–1782), written in 1729. It is for opera seria, and accordingly consists of recitatives and da capo arias. It tells a story of the legendary Semiramis, wife of the Biblical Nimrod.", "target": "libretto by Pietro Metastasio", "baseline_candidates": ["libretto"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q944346", "label": "Schmidt Island", "source": "Schmidt Island (Russian: Остров Шмидта) is one of the islands of the Severnaya Zemlya group in the Russian Arctic and was named after Soviet scientist and first head of the Chief Directorate of the Northern Sea Route, Otto Schmidt. It is located at the far northwestern end of the archipelago and lies slightly south of the Arctic Cape on Komsomolets Island.", "target": "island", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16058422", "label": "Nathan S. Joseph", "source": "Nathan Solomon Joseph (London, 17 December 1834–1909) was an English philanthropist, social reformer, architect, and Jewish communal leader.Joseph collaborated on the design of a number of important synagogues, including the Garnethill Synagogue, New West End Synagogue, and Hampstead Synagogue. He was also noted for his work in designing improved housing for the poor.Joseph published widely on Jewish and social reform issues. Among his books are Religion Natural and Revealed: A Series of Progressive Lessons for Jewish Youth (1879) and The Persecution of the Jews in Russia (1890). He signed his published work N.S. Joseph.", "target": "British philanthropist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2965331", "label": "Christian Godefroy", "source": "Christian H. Godefroy (25 October 1948 - 17 November 2012) was a French author of self-improvement books.Godefroy's books included Mind Dynamics, How to write a letter that sells, Time management System, Expressive learning system and Infopreneur. He also started a publishing company and founded CORESPRIT, an annual gathering of self-improvement motivators.", "target": "French writer (1948-2012)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16300666", "label": "Guilherme Marinato", "source": "Guilherme Alvim Marinato (Russian: Гилье́рми Алви́н Марина́ту; born 12 December 1985) or simply Guilherme (Brazilian Portuguese: [ɡiˈʎɛʁmi]) is а professional footballer who plays for FC Lokomotiv Moscow as a goalkeeper. Born in Brazil, Guilherme naturalized as a Russian citizen and represents the Russia national football team.", "target": "Russian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4850551", "label": "Baldwin Girls High School", "source": "Baldwin Girls' High School (BGHS), founded in 1880, is an all-girls Methodist school and one of the oldest in Bangalore, India. The school follows the Indian Certificate of Secondary Education syllabus and has classes from pre-nursery up to the tenth grade. The school has an enrollment of more than 5000 students and prepares them for the ICSE examinations in the tenth grade. Baldwin Girls' High School, a member of the Baldwin group of Institutions, is run by the Methodist Church in India under the Chairmanship of Bishop of the South India Regional Conference of the Methodist Church in India. The Baldwin Women's’ Degree College also shares the same campus. Baldwin Boys' High School is the brother school and is a five-minute walk away from Richmond Road. The school has an Opportunity School for specially gifted children. Baldwin Opportunity School is an institution in the field of Special Education, founded by Miss Anne Tillou, an American missionary, in 1964. It is an extension of the Baldwin Girls' High School and a Unit of Baldwin Methodist Education Society. The School is for children who are Intellectually Challenged in mild and moderate category. The classes are divided into Pre-Primary, Primary, Intermediate, Senior I, Senior II, Learning Lab, Home Maker's Class and Pre-Vocational Unit.", "target": "private school, boarding school in Bangalore, Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4905421", "label": "Big Card", "source": "Big Card is an unincorporated community located in Pike County, Kentucky, United States.", "target": "unincorporated community in Pike County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3883765", "label": "Sakakita Station", "source": "Sakakita Station (坂北駅, Sakakita-eki) is a train station in the village of Chikuhoku, Higashichikuma District, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "target": "railway station in Chikuhoku, Higashichikuma district, Nagano Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6316653", "label": "Just in Case", "source": "Just in Case is a young-adult novel by Meg Rosoff published by Penguin in 2006. Its adolescent protagonist David Case spends the majority of the book attempting to avoid fate. Rosoff won the annual Carnegie Medal, recognising the year's best children's book published in the U.K. In a press release announcing the award, the librarians called it \"a story about death, depression, sex, choice and survival. \"Just in Case also won the German Jugendliteraturpreis and made the shortlists for the Booktrust Teenage Prize and the 2006 Costa Book Awards. Random House (Wendy Lamb Books) published the first U.S. edition, also in 2006.", "target": "young adult novel by Meg Rosoff", "baseline_candidates": ["young adult novel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20425603", "label": "Harvey Smith", "source": "Harvey Smith (born 1966) is an American video game designer and writer, working at Arkane Studios. Smith has lectured in various places around the world on topics such as level design, emergent gameplay, leadership, game unit differentiation, future trends and interactive narrative. At the Game Developers Conference in 2006, Smith won the Game Designer's Challenge: Nobel Peace Prize, for his design featuring a mobile video game that facilitates political social action.", "target": "American video game designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q434562", "label": "Megumi Yokota", "source": "Megumi Yokota (横田 めぐみ, Yokota Megumi) (born 5 October 1964) is a Japanese girl who was abducted by a North Korean agent in 1977 when she was a thirteen-year-old junior high school student. She was one of at least seventeen Japanese citizens kidnapped by North Korea in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The North Korean government has admitted to kidnapping Yokota, but has said that she died in captivity. Yokota's parents and others in Japan have publicly expressed the belief that she is still alive in North Korea and have waged a public campaign seeking her return to Japan.", "target": "Kidnapped Japanese child (1964-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q428464", "label": "Al-Ḥajjāj ibn Yūsuf ibn Maṭar", "source": "Al-Ḥajjāj ibn Yūsuf ibn Maṭar (786–833 CE) was a mathematician and translator.", "target": "Medieval Arab mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4657096", "label": "A Good Day", "source": "A Good Day is an album by singer Jessica Molaskey. She is accompanied by her husband John Pizzarelli (a jazz guitarist); her father-in-law, Bucky Pizzarelli, also played guitar on this recording.", "target": "album by Jessica Molaskey", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q598604", "label": "Terminal Tower", "source": "Terminal Tower is a 52-story, 235 m (771 ft), landmark skyscraper located on Public Square in Downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Built during the skyscraper boom of the 1920s and 1930s, it was the second-tallest building in the world when it was completed. Terminal Tower stood as the tallest building in North America outside of New York City from its completion in 1927 until 1964. It was the tallest building in the state of Ohio until the completion of Key Tower in 1991, and remains the second-tallest building in the state. The building is part of the Tower City Center mixed-use development, and its major tenants include Forest City Enterprises, which maintained its corporate headquarters there until 2018, and Riverside Company.", "target": "Landmark skyscraper in Downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["skyscraper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52538", "label": "Lampovo", "source": "Lampovo (Russian: Лампово) is a holiday village located in Gatchinsky District, Leningrad Oblast, Russia. Its geographical coordinates are 59° 17' 0\" N, 30° 4' 0\" E. It has a population of 1487 people (2010 census) The center of the town is 97 meters above sea level.", "target": "human settlement in Druzhnogorskoye urban settlement, Gatchinsky District, Leningrad Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21086830", "label": "iodine pit", "source": "The iodine pit, also called the iodine hole or xenon pit, is a temporary disabling of a nuclear reactor due to buildup of short-lived nuclear poisons in the reactor core. The main isotope responsible is 135Xe, mainly produced by natural decay of 135I. 135I is a weak neutron absorber, while 135Xe is the strongest known neutron absorber. When 135Xe builds up in the fuel rods of a reactor, it significantly lowers their reactivity, by absorbing a significant amount of the neutrons that provide the nuclear reaction. The presence of 135I and 135Xe in the reactor is one of the main reasons for its power fluctuations in reaction to change of control rod positions. The buildup of short-lived fission products acting as nuclear poisons is called reactor poisoning, or xenon poisoning. Buildup of stable or long-lived neutron poisons is called reactor slagging.", "target": "problem in nuclear reactor start-up", "baseline_candidates": ["concept", "breakdown"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7784612", "label": "Thinking of You", "source": "\"Thinking of You\" is a song released as a single by Sister Sledge in 1984 that became a hit in the UK. It was originally recorded for their 1979 album, We Are Family, and was included as the B-side to their UK top 20 single \"Lost in Music\". \"Thinking of You\" was written and produced by Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards, and, like many Sister Sledge hits, was built on the rhythmic foundations of their famous guitar and bass line arrangements.", "target": "original song written and composed by Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers; first recorded by Sister Sledge", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6330195", "label": "KHLM-LD", "source": "KHLM-LD, virtual channel 12 (VHF digital channel 10), is a low-powered CTN owned-and-operated television station licensed to Houston, Texas, United States. The station is owned by the Clearwater, Florida-based Christian Television Network. KHLM-LD's transmitter is located near Missouri City, in unincorporated northeastern Fort Bend County.", "target": "silent LPTV station in Houston", "baseline_candidates": ["television station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5075652", "label": "Charles Blewitt", "source": "Charles Percy Blewitt (15 October 1877 – 15 December 1937) was an English cricketer who played a single first-class match, for Worcestershire against Kent in late June 1912. His one appearance at this level was not a success, as he made only 4 and 3. He was born at Kates Hill, Worcestershire, and died in Danesford, Shropshire at the age of 60.", "target": "English cricketer (1877-1937)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6833822", "label": "Michael Restovich", "source": "Michael Jerome Restovich (born January 3, 1979) is an American / Serbian former professional baseball first baseman and outfielder.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27964195", "label": "Emily Lowe", "source": "Helen Emily Lowe (died 21 March 1882 in Torquay) was a British travel writer. Lowe made travels to Scandinavia and southern Europe together with her mother. Her experiences were published in two books: Unprotected Females in Norway, or the Pleasantest Way of Travelling there, Passing through Denmark and Sweden. 1857, G. Routledge & Co. and Unprotected Females in Sicily, Calabria and on the Top of Mount Aetna. 1859, G. Routledge & Co. When travelling, Lowe intentionally brought a minimum of luggage. In her first book she writes: “The only use of a gentleman in travelling is to look after the luggage, and we take care to have no luggage.” Lowe appears, sometimes as Emily and sometimes as Helen, in several essays and books on women and travelling in the 19th Century, such as: Arcara, Stefania. \"The Serpent and the Dove: Emily Lowe, an Unprotected Victorian Traveller in No Need of Protection.\" Journal of Gender Studies, Vol. 3, Issue 1 1994. McVicker, Mary F. 2008. Women Adventurers, 1750-1900. A Biographical Dictionary. McFarland & Co, Inc. Jefferson, North Carolina and London. Balducci, Temma & Heather Belnap Jensen. (Ed.) 2014. Women, Femininity and Public Space in European Visual Culture 1789-1914. Ashgate Publ. Ltd.: Farnham. Saunders, Clare Broome. (Ed.) 2014. Women, Travel Writing, and Truth. Routledge; Taylor & Francis Group. Mulen, Richard & James Munson. 2009. The Smell of the Continent: the British Discover Europe. Pan Books. McFadden, Margaret H. 1999. Golden Cables of Sympathy: the Transatlantic Sources of Nineteenth-Century Feminism. The University Press of Kentucky. Reilly, Catherine W. 2000.", "target": "British travel writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25368962", "label": "Rhynchopus", "source": "Rhynchopus is a genus of flagellate excavates in the class Diplonemea. They usually have flagella of different lengths and a single subapical opening with the flagellar pocket openings and adjacent feeding apparatus merging into one. When food is scarce, mobile flagellated cells are produced, suggesting the presence of a fully flagellated and dispersive phase in the life cycle, serving to distinguish Rhynchopus from Diplonema. Most species are free-living, others are symbionts and R. coscinodiscivorus is an intracellular parasite of diatoms.", "target": "genus of Maxillopoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17033327", "label": "Warm Machine", "source": "\"Warm Machine\" is a song by British rock band Bush. It was released on 11 February 2000 as the second single from the band's third album, The Science of Things (1999).", "target": "2000 single by Bush", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7755822", "label": "The Oyster Box", "source": "The Oyster Box is a luxury five-star hotel in Umhlanga, just north of Durban, South Africa. It is known for its spa and the outdoor pools which have views on the Indian Ocean.", "target": "building in South Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5448108", "label": "Fiji Broadcasting Corporation", "source": "The Fijian Broadcasting Corporation (FBC) is one of the two radio broadcasters in Fiji. It was known as Fiji Broadcasting Commission when it began. It traces its history to 1935 when it first began operating under licence from the Posts and Telegraphs Department with the call sign ZJV. At the end of 1952, the legislative council passed the Broadcasting Commission Bill. The commission members were appointed in June 1953. On 1 July 1954, the commission's first programme was broadcast as part of the official opening ceremony. In January 1998 the Fiji Broadcasting Commission was corporated under the government's public sector reform programme and renamed Island Networks Corporation Limited. In June 1999, the new Government led to another change in name – this time to the Fiji Broadcasting Corporation Limited. Today it operates six radio stations; two in each of the major local languages (Fijian, Hindustani, and English) and its first free-to-air television FBC TV was launched on 25 November 2011. The CEO of FBC is Riyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, a former Fiji Television journalist. In November 2019, they relaunched with a new name and logo, Fijian Broadcasting Corporation.", "target": "radio broadcaster", "baseline_candidates": ["broadcaster", "television channel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q458531", "label": "Marit Bergman", "source": "Liv-Marit Bergman (born 21 May 1975) is a Swedish pop musician.", "target": "Swedish singer and musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14946856", "label": "C. E. M. Hansel", "source": "Charles Edward Mark Hansel (12 October 1917 – 28 March 2011) was a British psychologist most notable for his criticism of parapsychological studies.", "target": "British psychologist most notable for his criticism of parapsychological studies.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95971503", "label": "Pete Crow-Armstrong", "source": "Peter Crow-Armstrong (born March 25, 2002) is an American professional baseball outfielder in the Chicago Cubs organization.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16035060", "label": "Let's Get It On", "source": "\"Let's Get It On\" is a song and hit single by soul musician Marvin Gaye, released June 15, 1973, on Motown-subsidiary label Tamla Records. The song was recorded on March 22, 1973, at Hitsville West in Los Angeles, California. The song features romantic and sexual lyricism and funk instrumentation by The Funk Brothers. The title track of Gaye's album of the same name, it was written by Marvin Gaye and producer Ed Townsend. \"Let's Get It On\" became Gaye's most successful single for Motown and one of his most well-known songs. With the help of the song's sexually explicit content, \"Let's Get It On\" helped give Gaye a reputation as a sex symbol during its initial popularity. \"Let's Get It On\" is written and composed in the key of E-flat major and is set in time signature of common time with a tempo of 82 beats per minute.", "target": "single by Marvin Gaye", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7257669", "label": "Public Works Management Policy", "source": "Public Works Management and Policy is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes papers four times a year in the field of Public Administration. The journal's editor is Richard G. Little (University of Southern California). It has been in publication since 1996 and is currently published by SAGE Publications in association with the Section on Transportation Policy and Administration of the Administration of the American Society for Public Administration.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal", "academic journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7590934", "label": "St. Patrick's Church", "source": "The Church of St. Patrick is a parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located in Richmondtown, Staten Island, New York City. The church was established at the county seat in 1862 as a mission of St. Joseph's, Rossville, becoming the fifth Catholic church on Staten Island. Prior to construction of the church, the Catholic community in the area was served by the founding pastor John Barry, a priest from Rossville, as well as by James Roosevelt Bayley, a future archbishop. The early Romanesque Revival-style building was built in 1862, and a steeple was added in 1898.St. Patrick's became an independent parish in 1884. During 1914–1922, St. Patrick's established four Staten Island mission churches that grew to become independent parishes: St. Margaret Mary, Our Lady Queen of Peace, St. Clare, and St. Charles. The church was declared an official city landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission on February 20, 1968.", "target": "church building in New York, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64374404", "label": "Long George Devenish", "source": "Long George Devenish (11 May 1871 – 1 February 1943) was a South African international rugby union player who played as a halfback. He made 1 appearance for South Africa against the British Lions in 1896.", "target": "South African rugby union player (b. 1871, d. 1943)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1086238", "label": "Olympic Delivery Authority", "source": "The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) was a non-departmental public body of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, responsible for ensuring the delivery of venues, infrastructure and legacy for the 2012 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games in London. Together with the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG), the ODA was one of the two main agencies that organised the London Olympic Games. The authority was established by the London Olympic Games and Paralympic Games Act 2006. In advance of the formal establishment of the ODA, the London Development Agency (LDA) and Transport for London (TfL) were asked to undertake the development work necessary for the Olympic Park and the transport infrastructure which will serve the Games, and to build up an interim team. The ODA was based alongside LOCOG at One Churchill Place in Canary Wharf. The ODA appointed a delivery company, CLM, to manage the delivery of the Olympic Park and its associated infrastructure. CLM was a consortium of CH2M Hill, Laing O'Rourke and Mace. CLM's organisation included teams responsible for the design and construction of the venues, structures bridges and highways as well as logistics and security.", "target": "non-departmental public body of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport in the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["government organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q165036", "label": "Irschenberg", "source": "Irschenberg is a municipality in the district of Miesbach in the German state of Bavaria, about 46 km (29 mi) southeast of Munich. It consists of numerous hamlets situated on the Irschenberg hill range. The hill is a notorious ascent of the Bundesautobahn 8 motorway running from Munich to Salzburg laid out from 1934 on. A rest area and a motel were attached in 1951. The name was formerly rendered as \"Irish mountain\", referring to the monk Marinus, who settled in the area in the course of the Hiberno-Scottish mission under Pope Eugene I and, according to legend, about 697 was martyred by burning at the stake (see the coat of arms). His grave is marked by the pilgrimage church of Wilparting, visible from the motorway and a popular photo scene. Actually Irschen may stem from ursus (\"bear\"). Originally a part of the Bishopric of Freising, the area fell into possession of the Lords of Hohenwaldeck at Miesbach until their county was incorporated into the Bavarian Electorate in 1734.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6024332", "label": "India–Syria relations", "source": "Bilateral relations between the India and Syria are historic where the two have ancient civilisational ties. Both countries were on the silk route through which civilisational exchanges took place for centuries.", "target": "bilateral relations between Syria and India", "baseline_candidates": ["bilateral relation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60787471", "label": "Green Limousine", "source": "\"Green Limousine\" is a song by Australian rock and pop band the Badloves and released in December 1993 as the third single from the band's debut studio album Get On Board. The song peaked at number 35 on the Australian ARIA Charts in January 1994. On the album liner notes, the band says \"This song offers a wry comment on the willingness of certain celebrities to jump on the bandwagon of any fashionable cause. Doffing their collective caps to the traditions of 60s soul, the band took 12 hours to record the piece... it started as a pop, soul thing and we progressively stripped it back.\".", "target": "1993 single by The Badloves", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q163481", "label": "Keweenaw National Historical Park", "source": "Keweenaw National Historical Park is a unit of the U.S. National Park Service. Established in 1992, the park celebrates the life and history of the Keweenaw Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. As of 2009, it is a partly privatized park made up of two primary units, the Calumet Unit and the Quincy Unit, and 21 cooperating \"Heritage Sites\" located on federal, state, and privately owned land in and around the Keweenaw Peninsula. The National Park Service owns approximately 1,700 acres (690 ha) in the Calumet and Quincy Units. Units are located in Baraga, Houghton, Keweenaw, and Ontonagon counties. The Congressional legislation establishing the Park stated, among other things, that: (1) The oldest and largest lava flow known on Earth is located on the Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan. This volcanic activity produced the only place on Earth where large scale economically recoverable 97 percent pure native copper is found. (2) The Keweenaw Peninsula is the only site in the country where prehistoric aboriginal mining of copper occurred. Artifacts made from this copper by these ancient Indians were traded as far south as present day Alabama.", "target": "U.S. national park in Michigan", "baseline_candidates": ["National Historical Park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2532045", "label": "Trebija", "source": "Trebija (pronounced [tɾeˈbiːja]; in older sources also Terbija, German: Terbia) is a settlement in the Municipality of Gorenja Vas–Poljane in the Upper Carniola region of Slovenia. It lies on the left bank of the upper course of the Poljane Sora River.", "target": "place in Upper Carniola, Slovenia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4484645", "label": "October 1969 Scottish League Cup Final", "source": "The 1969–70 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, who were contesting their first major national cup final, and cup holders Celtic. Celtic retained the cup for another year by winning the match 1–0, with Bertie Auld scoring the only goal.", "target": "association football match", "baseline_candidates": ["final", "association football final"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24006341", "label": "Kaushik Reddy", "source": "Kaushik Reddy (born 21 December 1984) is an Indian former cricketer. He played fifteen first-class matches for Hyderabad between 2004 and 2007.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5093558", "label": "Chester Fritz Auditorium", "source": "The Chester Fritz Auditorium (CFA) is a performance facility on the campus of the University of North Dakota (UND) located in the city of Grand Forks, North Dakota. \"The Fritz,\" as it is commonly known, has a maximum capacity of 2,384 and is used for many events including concerts, dance recitals, and popular Broadway musicals. The auditorium also plays host to university events including some commencement ceremonies, lectures, and conferences. The building measures 85 feet in height and the facade is constructed mainly of brick and pre-cast concrete sections. It sits on the banks of the English Coulee, which meanders its way through the UND campus. Chester Fritz (March 25, 1892 - July 28, 1983), a notable alumnus of UND, gave the university $1 million in 1965 for the construction of a \"distinctive auditorium\" on the campus. The finished auditorium cost $3 million, with additional funds received from the state of North Dakota and private donations. The Chester Fritz Library, the main library at UND, is also named after Chester Fritz.", "target": "theater on the campus of the University of North Dakota (UND) in Grand Forks, North Dakota", "baseline_candidates": ["theater", "performing arts center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10760168", "label": "Flamencopsis", "source": "Flamencopsis is a genus of mygalomorph spiders, with only one species, Flamencopsis minima, found in Chile. The specific name was given because it is the smallest member of the tribe Diplothelopsini.", "target": "genus of spiders", "baseline_candidates": ["monotypic taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28233879", "label": "Swan 43", "source": "The Swan 43 is a Sailboat designed by Olin Stephens and built by Nautor's Swan and was one of the initial two models launched in the companies founding year alongside the Swan 36.", "target": "Sailboat designed by Olin Stephens and built by Nautor's Swan", "baseline_candidates": ["sailboat class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6317869", "label": "Justin McCareins", "source": "Justin Morgan McCareins (born December 1, 1978) is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League. He was drafted by the Tennessee Titans in the fourth round of the 2001 NFL Draft. He also played for the New York Jets. He played college football at Northern Illinois.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3990720", "label": "Thomas Solvoll", "source": "Thomas Solvoll (born 22 November 1980) is a former Norwegian football goalkeeper. He joined Hønefoss in 2004, having previously played for IF Birkebeineren, Mjøndalen IF as well as Strømsgodset IF in the Norwegian Premier League. Solvoll played 166 games for Hønefoss before leaving in 2011.", "target": "Norwegian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5569117", "label": "Glenn Spencer", "source": "Glenn Spencer is an American political and anti-illegal-immigration activist who serves as president of American Border Patrol.In the 2000s Spencer gained media attention when he converted his ranch on the Arizona and Mexico border into a research and testing facility, seeking low-cost ways to improve border security, such as infrared cameras, aerial drones and motion detectors. Spencer's researchers developed a system for greatly improving the sensitivity and accuracy of seismic detectors, called SEIDARM, which he patented and offered for sale to the US federal government.In 2001, he started warning of a “Mexican takeover of the southwestern United States,” and made a video titled Immigration: Threatening the Bonds of Our Union, which he delivered to every member of Congress.The Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League have accused American Border Patrol of being a hate group. Spencer disputes this accusation. He has promoted anti-semitic conspiracy theories.", "target": "American activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5384164", "label": "Equality; or, A History of Lithconia", "source": "Equality; or, A History of Lithconia is a utopian fantasy novel. It is the first American utopian novel. The author is unknown, though Donald H. Tuck speculates that it could be Dr. James Reynolds, a zealous liberal crusader. The novel was originally serialized in 8 parts in the weekly newspaper, The Temple of Reason, beginning in 1802. It was first published in book form by the Liberal Union in 1837.", "target": "first American utopian novel, of unknown authorship", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13532198", "label": "Phryganopsis plumosa", "source": "Phryganopsis plumosa is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae first described by Paul Mabille in 1900. It is found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Malawi, Madagascar, South Africa, Algeria. and southern Spain.The holotype was collected in 1898 in Madagascar's Antongil Bay by A. Mocquerys.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3783093", "label": "They Have Changed Their Face", "source": "They Have Changed Their Face (Italian: ...Hanno cambiato faccia) is a 1971 Italian horror film directed by Corrado Farina and starring Adolfo Celi. The film won the Golden Leopard award for the Best First Feature at the Locarno International Film Festival in 1971.", "target": "1971 film by Corrado Farina", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4751858", "label": "Anastasia Ganias", "source": "Anastasia Ganias is an American actress, best known for her role as Tracy Togs on HBO's True Blood.", "target": "actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61508892", "label": "Lazare Garreau", "source": "Lazare Garreau (16 March 1812 – 15 November 1892) was a French botanist, pharmacist and military physician. Garreau established through experimentation that plants could absorb water through the leaves. He also examined plant respiration and nutrition.", "target": "French botanist (1812-1892)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4421094", "label": "Roman Sitko", "source": "Roman Sitko (30 March 1880 – 12 October 1942) was a Polish Catholic priest. In 1941 he was arrested by the Nazis and then murdered at Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. He is considered a martyr and was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 13 June 1999.", "target": "Polish Catholic priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20012256", "label": "Moon Landing World Tour", "source": "The Moon Landing World Tour is the fourth concert tour by British recording artist James Blunt. Launched in support of his fourth studio album, Moon Landing (2013), the tour began in January 2014. It continued into 2014 and 2015 with over 150 shows in the Americas, Europe, Australasia, Asia and Africa.", "target": "concert tour by James Blunt", "baseline_candidates": ["concert tour"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7137676", "label": "Park Chan-yong", "source": "Park Chan-yong (born 1 January 1980) is a Korean handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics and in the 2008 Summer Olympics.", "target": "South Korean handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3940626", "label": "2002 Open Romania", "source": "The 2002 Open Romania was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Arenele BNR in Bucharest in Romania and was part of the International Series of the 2002 ATP Tour. It was the 10th edition of the tournament and was held from 9 September through 15 September 2002. Unseeded David Ferrer won the singles title.", "target": "tennis tournament edition", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition", "BRD Năstase Țiriac Trophy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q598130", "label": "Ralph Erskine", "source": "Ralph Erskine (18 March 1685 – 6 November 1752) was a Scottish churchman.Ralph Erskine was the son of Henry Erskine. He was also the younger brother of another prominent churchman, Ebenezer Erskine. He was chaplain and tutor to the 'Black' Col. John Erskine from 1705 to 1709. After studying at the University of Edinburgh, Ralph was ordained assistant minister at Dunfermline in 1711. He ratified the protests which his brother laid on the table of the assembly after being rebuked for his synod sermon, but he did not formally withdraw from the establishment till 1737. He was also present at, though not a member of, the first meeting of the \"associate presbytery\". When the severance took place over the oath administered to burgesses, he adhered, along with his brother, to the burgher section. His works consist of sermons, poetical paraphrases and gospel sonnets. The Gospel Sonnets have frequently appeared separately. His Life and Diary, edited by the Rev. D Fraser, was published in 1834. There is a larger than life size bronze statue of Ralph Erskine on a pedestal, not far from the High Street in the centre of Dunfermline.He was a Free Gardener being Initiated in the Dunfermline Lodge of Free Gardeners in 1721.", "target": "Scottish churchman (1685-1752)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20578130", "label": "Aznvadzor", "source": "Aznvadzor (Armenian: Ազնվաձոր) is a town in the Lori Province of Armenia. The village was populated by Azerbaijanis prior to their massacre and exodus after the outbreak of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. In 1988-1989 Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan settled in the village. The town was one of the sites of the Gugark pogrom, where 21 Azerbaijanis were murdered in Aznvadzor.", "target": "village in Lori Province of Armenia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Armenia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39944", "label": "Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies", "source": "The Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies is a five-year university in Pyongyang, North Korea, specializing in language education.", "target": "university", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4896312", "label": "Besla reamensis", "source": "Besla reamensis is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies. The species is one of twelve known within the genus Besla.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19840441", "label": "Mohd Qayyum Marjoni Sabil", "source": "Muhammad Qayyum bin Marjoni Sabil (born 28 March 1994) is a Malaysian professional footballer who plays as a left back for Malaysia Premier League side Kelantan United.", "target": "Malaysian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7404799", "label": "Salisbury Post", "source": "The Salisbury Post is an American, English language daily newspaper, founded in 1905, in Salisbury, North Carolina that serves the city and other municipalities in Rowan County, as well as the county itself. The publisher of the Post is John Carr and its editor is Josh Bergeron. The paper was known as the Salisbury Evening Post (1905-1984).", "target": "newspaper in Salisbury, North Carolina", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65301720", "label": "Chatswood", "source": "Chatswood is a major business and residential district in the Lower North Shore of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia, 10 kilometres north of the Sydney central business district. It is the administrative centre of the local government area of the City of Willoughby. It is often colloquially referred to as \"Chatty\".", "target": "suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["central business district", "suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5994244", "label": "Church of São João Baptista (Cimo de Vila da Castanheira)", "source": "The Church of São João Baptista (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial de Cimo de Vila de Castanheira/Igreja de São João Baptista) is a church in the civil parish of Cimo de Vila da Castenheira, in the municipality of Chaves, in the Portuguese Norte district of Vila Real.", "target": "church building in Chaves Municipality, Vila Real District, Portugal", "baseline_candidates": ["cultural heritage", "church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4577714", "label": "1977 NAPA National 500", "source": "The 1977 NAPA National 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series racing event that was held on October 9, 1977, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina.", "target": "auto race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1977", "baseline_candidates": ["Bank of America Roval 400"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3642768", "label": "Dracaena aletriformis", "source": "Dracaena aletriformis is commonly known as the large-leaved dragon tree. These plants are found in forest in the eastern areas of South Africa from Port Elizabeth to northern and eastern Limpopo. They are also found in Eswatini, but are most common in the coastal and dune forests of KwaZulu-Natal.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2004658", "label": "Ladislav Hlaváček", "source": "Ladislav Hlaváček (26 June 1925 – 21 April 2014; Prague) was a Czechoslovak football forward who played for Czechoslovakia in the 1954 FIFA World Cup. He also played for Dukla Prague.", "target": "Czech footballer (1925-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17404048", "label": "Michael Ponce de Leon", "source": "Michael Ponce de Leon (1922-2006) was an American printmaker and painter.", "target": "American artist (1922-2006)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1200399", "label": "Derwent Bridge", "source": "Derwent Bridge is a rural locality in the local government area (LGA) of Central Highlands in the Central LGA region of Tasmania. The locality is about 101 kilometres (63 mi) north-west of the town of Hamilton. The 2016 census has a population of 23 for the state suburb of Derwent Bridge. It is on the Lyell Highway at the southern edge of the Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park. It is just south of Lake St Clair and the Lake St Clair visitor centre; and it is north of Lake King William and the Butlers Gorge Power Station. It is also the last inhabited location before Linda Valley in the West Coast Range - this section of the highway passes through the Wild Rivers National Park. In the past there were a couple of isolated houses along Lyell Highway that have been removed. Today, Derwent Bridge features not only the bridge alluded to in its name – spanning the Derwent River – but accommodation units, and also a roadside public house. Derwent Bridge was used as a principal filming location for the 2008 film The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce.", "target": "town in Tasmania, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "suburb/locality of Tasmania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18485965", "label": "atencioite", "source": "Atencioite is a calcium iron phosphate mineral with the chemical formula Ca2Fe2+3Mg2Be4(PO4)6(OH)4·6H2O. Its type locality is Divino das Laranjeiras, Minas Gerais, Brazil. It was named after Daniel Atencio, a mineralogy professor at the University of São Paulo.", "target": "phosphate mineral", "baseline_candidates": ["roscherite mineral group", "mineral species"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3930665", "label": "Indofood", "source": "PT Indofood Sukses Makmur Tbk is a major Indonesian company involved in the food industry. The company's headquarters are located in South Jakarta, Jakarta.", "target": "Indonesian company", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11051321", "label": "Adendorp", "source": "Adendorp is a village 8 km south of Graaff-Reinet, in the Sundays River Valley. Named after the former owner of the farm, N J Adendorff, who sub-divided it into smallholdings in about 1858. Municipal status was attained in 1878.", "target": "human settlement in South Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95967001", "label": "Conductores de Venezuela", "source": "Conductores de Venezuela is a giant ceramic mural on a wall outside the Covered Gymnasium at the Central University of Venezuela, facing out to the Francisco Fajardo freeway. It was designed by cartoonist Pedro León Zapata and installed over a period of years in the late 1990s; it depicts cartoon Venezuelan people driving, with several vehicles having important Venezuelans from history behind the wheel.", "target": "1999 mural by Pedro León Zapata", "baseline_candidates": ["mural"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6750256", "label": "Manitou Springs School District 14", "source": "Manitou Springs School District 14 is the main school district of Manitou Springs and its nearby communities (Cascade, Cedar Heights, Chipita Park, and Green Mountain Falls) at the western edge of El Paso County, Colorado. The district currently serves around 1400 students, about 30 percent of these being \"choice\" students who live outside of the district's immediate boundaries (usually coming from elsewhere in El Paso or Teller counties). It has the highest graduation rate in the Pikes Peak Region. The district has a 1-to-1 iPad Initiative for every student in grades five through twelve.", "target": "school in Manitou Springs, Colorado", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q692365", "label": "2006 Open 13", "source": "The 2006 Open 13 was an ATP men's tennis tournament held in Marseille, France. The tournament was held from February 13 to February 20.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Open 13", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16111597", "label": "weighted mean", "source": "The weighted arithmetic mean is similar to an ordinary arithmetic mean (the most common type of average), except that instead of each of the data points contributing equally to the final average, some data points contribute more than others. The notion of weighted mean plays a role in descriptive statistics and also occurs in a more general form in several other areas of mathematics. If all the weights are equal, then the weighted mean is the same as the arithmetic mean. While weighted means generally behave in a similar fashion to arithmetic means, they do have a few counterintuitive properties, as captured for instance in Simpson's paradox.", "target": "type of average", "baseline_candidates": ["type of statistic", "weighted power mean"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17034138", "label": "Watermen: a Dirty Business", "source": "Watermen: A Dirty Business is a British documentary television series that was first broadcast on BBC Two on 15 April 2014. The six-part series follows the employees of United Utilities.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2189633", "label": "Ned Miller", "source": "Henry Ned Miller (April 12, 1925 – March 18, 2016) was an American country music singer-songwriter. Active as a recording artist from 1956 to 1970, he is known primarily for his hit single \"From a Jack to a King\", a crossover hit in 1962 which reached Top 10 on the country music, adult contemporary, and Billboard Hot 100 charts, as well as reaching No.2 in the UK charts. He had several more chart singles in his career, although none matched the success of \"From a Jack to a King\". He also composed and recorded \"Invisible Tears\".", "target": "American country music singer-songwriter (1925-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5138020", "label": "Coalport Branch Line", "source": "The Coalport branch line was a standard gauge London and North Western Railway branch line in Shropshire, England, which ran between Hadley Junction near Oakengates on the Stafford to Shrewsbury line and a terminus at Coalport East railway station on the north bank of the River Severn at Coalport.", "target": "disused railway line in Shropshire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["branch line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11296414", "label": "Gundam Tribute from Lantis", "source": "Gundam Tribute from Lantis (ガンダムトリビュート from Lantis, Gandamu Toribyūto from Lantis) is a tribute album featuring Lantis artists covering songs from the popular Gundam metaseries. It was released in Japan on December 9, 2009, as part of Gundam's 30th anniversary celebrations.", "target": "compilation album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16004121", "label": "Sim Walton", "source": "Simon F. \"Sim\" Walton (4 October 1880 – 27 December 1966) was an Irish hurler who played as a full-forward for the Kilkenny senior team. Born in Tullaroan, County Kilkenny, Walton first arrived on the inter-county scene at the age of twenty-two when made his senior debut in the delayed 1900 championship. Walton went on to play a key part for Kilkenny during the team's breakthrough and first golden age, and won seven All-Ireland medals and nine Leinster medals. An All-Ireland runner-up on one occasion, Walton also captained the team to All-Ireland victory in 1911 and 1912. At club level Walton won seven championship medals with Tullaroan. Walton was regarded as one of the top scorers of his generation and, in spite of an absence of records, it is believed he scored upwards of 30 goals. Throughout his career Walton made 49 championship appearances, a Kilkenny record which stood until 24 July 1977 when it was surpassed by Eddie Keher. His retirement came following Kilkenny's defeat by Dublin in the 1919 championship. Walton's grandnephew, Liam Doyle, was an All-Ireland medallist with Clare in 1995 and 1997.", "target": "Irish hurler (1880-1966)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21598177", "label": "Sonia Gutierrez", "source": "Sonia Gutierrez (born July 8, 1939) is a Puerto Rican educator and Hispanic rights activist. She was principal, counselor and advocate for adult students at the Carlos Rosario International Public Charter School, an adult charter school in Washington, D.C.", "target": "Puerto Rican educator and Hispanic rights activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5796691", "label": "Poshteh-ye Olya", "source": "Poshteh-ye Olya (Persian: پشته عليا, also Romanized as Poshteh-ye ‘Olyā; also known as Poshteh-ye Bālā) is a village in Chalanchulan Rural District, Silakhor District, Dorud County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 79, in 17 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5628198", "label": "H. E. Tester", "source": "Henry E. Tester (1905 – 31 January 1986) was a Danish chemist and philatelist who, in 1982, with Sigurd Ringström, was awarded the Crawford Medal by the Royal Philatelic Society London for parts I and II of The private ship letter stamps of the world.In his Will, Henry Tester donated three philatelic medals to the Royal Philatelic Society, his own Crawford Medal, his Amphilex 1977 Silver-Gilt medal and his 1982 Stampex Gold Medal.", "target": "Danish chemist and philatelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7253641", "label": "Przylasek", "source": "Przylasek [pʂɨˈlasɛk] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Platerówka, within Lubań County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) south-east of Platerówka, 11 kilometres (7 mi) south-west of Lubań, and 129 kilometres (80 mi) west of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has a population of 41.", "target": "village in Lower Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3129081", "label": "Heather Kafka", "source": "Heather Kafka (born July 7, 1972 in Austin, Texas) is an American film, television, and voice actress who is known for playing Chloe in the television sitcom series Austin Stories, Lacy in the independent drama film Joe, and Henrietta Hewitt in the slasher film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003). As a voice actress for ADV Films, her roles have included Hinagiku Tamano/Angel Daisy in the anime Wedding Peach and Jun Hunoo in the anime Mazinkaiser.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q129741", "label": "Martin W. Littleton", "source": "Martin Wiley Littleton (January 12, 1872 – December 19, 1934) was an American attorney known for his involvement in a number of high-profile trials during the early 1900s, including serving as chief defense counsel for Harry Kendall Thaw at his second trial in 1908 for the murder of renowned architect Stanford White, and defending Harry Ford Sinclair, the head of Sinclair Oil, from criminal charges resulting from the Teapot Dome scandal. Littleton also served one term as United States Representative from New York from 1911 to 1913, and was borough president of Brooklyn.Littleton initially supported himself through menial labor and was largely self-educated, never attending college or law school. He eventually became one of the richest lawyers in the world, and has been mentioned as an example of a \"rags to riches\" success story in motivational books and articles.He was the father of attorney Martin W. Littleton, Jr., the district attorney of Nassau County, New York who was involved in the investigation into the death of Starr Faithfull and the murder prosecutions of Everett Applegate and Mary Frances Creighton.", "target": "American politician (1872-1934)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q510693", "label": "Louis II of Lorraine, cardinal of Guise", "source": "Louis II, Cardinal of Guise (6 July 1555, Dampierre – 24 December 1588, Château de Blois), was the third son of Francis, Duke of Guise, and Anna d'Este.", "target": "Catholic cardinal (1555-1588)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5826019", "label": "Sar Garu", "source": "Sar Garu (Persian: سرگرو, also Romanized as Sar Garū) is a village in Qaleh Rural District, in the Central District of Manujan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 132, in 24 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10824020", "label": "Taringa pinoi", "source": "Taringa pinoi is a species of sea slug, a dorid nudibranch, shell-less marine opisthobranch gastropod mollusks in the family Discodorididae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17182818", "label": "Herbert Hice Whetzel", "source": "Herbert Hice Whetzel (September 5, 1877 – November 30, 1944) was an American plant pathologist and mycologist. As a Professor of Plant Pathology, he led the first department of Plant Pathology at an American university, and founded the Cornell Plant Pathology Herbarium (CUP).", "target": "American mycologist and plant pathologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2715272", "label": "1965 Australian Championships", "source": "The 1965 Australian Championships was a tennis tournament that took place on outdoor Grass courts at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, Melbourne, Australia from 22 January to 1 February. It was the 53rd edition of the Australian Championships (now known as the Australian Open), the 15th held in Melbourne, and the first Grand Slam tournament of the year. The singles titles were won by Australians Roy Emerson and Margaret Smith.", "target": "1965 Australian Tennis Championships", "baseline_candidates": ["Australian Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9263331", "label": "Frankowo, Greater Poland Voivodeship", "source": "Frankowo [franˈkɔvɔ] (German: Frankenhofen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Osieczna, within Leszno County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) south-east of Osieczna, 14 km (9 mi) east of Leszno, and 59 km (37 mi) south of the regional capital Poznań.", "target": "village in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23770260", "label": "Bev Pike", "source": "Bev Pike is a Winnipeg-based visual artist who paints large (2.5 x 6.1 m/8 x 20 ft) cinematic baroque landforms. Grottesque, her current work on climate catastrophe, is a series of interconnected underground sanctuaries based on seventeenth century shell grottos. Pike also creates video art and publishes artist's books as well as opinion pieces for CBC, MSN, and the Winnipeg Free Press among others.", "target": "Canadian artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12485519", "label": "Helena of Hungary", "source": "Helena (Ilona) of Hungary (c. 1155 – 25 December 1199), a member of the royal Árpád dynasty, was Duchess of Austria from 1177 and Styria from 1192 to 1194 by her marriage with the Babenberg duke Leopold V of Austria.", "target": "Duchess consort of Austria", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7691558", "label": "Team Performance Management", "source": "Team Performance Management is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Emerald Group Publishing covering research on work-group and team performance management. The journal was established in 1995 and the editor-in-chief is Petru Curseu (Tilburg University).", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8038609", "label": "Wrong", "source": "Wrong is the fourth full-length album by Canadian punk rock band Nomeansno. It was released in 1989 through Alternative Tentacles record label.", "target": "1989 studio album by Nomeansno", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38284204", "label": "Metaxourgeio", "source": "Metaxourgeio or Metaxourgio (Greek: Μεταξουργείο pronounced [me.tak.suɾˈʝio]), meaning \"silk mill\", is a neighbourhood of Athens, Greece. The neighbourhood is located north of the historical centre of Athens, between Kolonos to the east and Kerameikos to the west, and north of Gazi. Metaxourgeio is frequently described as a transition neighbourhood. After a long period of abandonment in the late 20th century, the area is acquiring a reputation as an artistic and fashionable neighbourhood due to the opening of many art galleries, museums, and trendy restaurants and cafes. Moreover, local efforts to beautify and invigorate the neighbourhood have reinforced a budding sense of community and artistic expression. Anonymous art pieces containing quotes and sayings in both English and Ancient Greek have begun springing up throughout the neighbourhood, containing statements such as \"Art for art's sake\" (Τεχνη τεχνης χαριν). Guerrilla gardening has also helped to beautify this area, taking advantage of the ample sunshine in Greece. The heart of the neighborhood is Avdi Square, which draws residents and visitors with its open space, greenery, periodic festivals and gatherings, and adjacent restaurants, theatres and art gallery.", "target": "neighborhood of Athens, Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6859976", "label": "Mills High School", "source": "Mills High School is a public high school in Millbrae, California, one of seven in the San Mateo Union High School District. Mills was established in 1958. Mills High School has been named a California Distinguished School three times (1988, 1996, 2009).", "target": "high school in California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["state school", "high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4247563", "label": "Kupriyanov", "source": "Kupriyanov (Russian: Куприянов) is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Kupriyanova. It may refer to Aleksandr Kupriyanov (born 1952), Russian football player Ludmila Kupriyanova (1914–1987), Russian palynologist Mikhail Kupriyanov (born 1973), Russian football player.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia disambiguation page"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14687186", "label": "Lake Cascade", "source": "Lake Cascade (formerly Cascade Reservoir, is a reservoir in the western United States, on the North Fork of the Payette River in Valley County, Idaho. Located in the Boise National Forest, it has a surface area of 47 square miles (122 km2), and is the fourth largest lake or reservoir in the state. The closest cities are Cascade, Donnelly, and McCall, all in the Long Valley of Valley County. Following a delay due to World War II, the earthen dam was built by the Bureau of Reclamation, completed 74 years ago in 1948. The term \"Lake Cascade\" came into common use in the 1990s, with the federal name change made in 1999.", "target": "reservoir in Valley County, Idaho", "baseline_candidates": ["reservoir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5602852", "label": "Green Mansion House", "source": "Green Mansion House is a historic home located at Kenton, Kent County, Delaware. The house dates to the first quarter of the 19th century, and consists of two sections. The frame section is a two-story, three bay, center hall plan structure. Attached to it is a two-story, two bay stuccoed brick wing. The house was built as part of Philip Lewis' plan for the development of Kenton.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.", "target": "historic house in Delaware, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16241978", "label": "2014 Georgetown Hoyas football team", "source": "The 2014 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2014 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Rob Sgarlata and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 3–8, 1–5 in Patriot League play to finish in last place.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59531956", "label": "Merrill Brockway", "source": "Merrill La Monte Brockway (February 28, 1923 – May 2, 2013) was an American television producer known for producing the PBS television series Dance in America.", "target": "born:1923-02-28|died:2013-05-02|; Brockway, Merrill, 1923-2013", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51007676", "label": "Anton Gottstein", "source": "Anton Gottstein (7 December 1893 – 22 August 1982) was a Czech cross-country skier. He competed in the men's 18 kilometre event at the 1924 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Czech cross-country skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q254895", "label": "Percy Oliver", "source": "Percival Cale Oliver (1 April 1919 – 9 July 2011) was an Australian backstroke swimmer who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics. Oliver was born in Nedlands, Western Australia and attended Hale School. He won 13 freestyle and backstroke Australian titles.At the age seventeen he competed at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, where he finished seventh in the 100-metre backstroke. Two years later he won gold in the 110-yard backstroke at the 1938 British Empire Games in Sydney. He also won a bronze medal as member of the Australian team in the 3x110-yard medley contest and competed in the 110-yard freestyle. Oliver went on to teach at Mt Lawley and Hollywood Senior High Schools before taking over the administration of the Education Department's vacation swimming program.He died on 9 July 2011 at the age of 92.", "target": "Australian swimmer, Empire Games gold medallist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1237805", "label": "Anemone hupehensis", "source": "Eriocapitella hupehensis, a species of flowering plant in the buttercup family Ranunculaceae, is native to Asia. The specific epithet hupehensis, which means \"from Hupeh (Hupei, Hubei) province, China\", refers to a region where the species is known to occur. In Chinese, it is called dǎ pò wǎn huā huā (打破碗花花), which means \"broken bowl flower\".", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1386148", "label": "Tête Jaune Cache", "source": "Tête Jaune Cache () is an unincorporated rural area and the site of an important abandoned historic town in British Columbia, Canada. Its population is approximately 500. It is located on the Fraser River in the Robson Valley at the intersection of Yellowhead Highways 5 and 16. Tête Jaune Cache is located 18 km north of Valemount, B.C., 101 km west of Jasper, Alberta, 241 km east of Prince George, B.C., and 332 km north of Kamloops, B.C., by road.", "target": "unincorporated area in British Columbia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated area", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q788268", "label": "Memphis", "source": "In Greek mythology, Memphis (Ancient Greek: Μέμφις), daughter of river-god Nilus, accordingly a Naiad Nymph. She was the wife to Epaphus and mother of Libya and Anippe or Lysianassa. She and her husband were the legendary founders of Memphis, which bears her name. Some writers called Epaphus' wife Cassiopeia.", "target": "mythological daughter of Nilus", "baseline_candidates": ["mythological Greek character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5705123", "label": "Alikeh", "source": "Alikeh (Persian: عليكه, also Romanized as ‘Alīkeh; also known as ‘Alīgeh) is a village in Gurani Rural District, Gahvareh District, Dalahu County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 81, in 19 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q562739", "label": "Comte George Raphaël Béthenod de Montbressieux", "source": "\"Raph\" was the racing pseudonym of Comte George Raphaël Béthenod de Montbressieux (February 8, 1910 – June 16, 1994), a French-Argentine racing driver. He was sometimes listed using his mother's name, \"de las Casas\".Raph was to be entered in the 1946 Indianapolis 500, but did not arrive.", "target": "French racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16149802", "label": "Nikita Anand", "source": "Nikita Anand is an Indian model, actress, television presenter and former beauty queen who was crowned Miss India Universe 2003. She represented India at Miss Universe 2003 where she was unplaced, ending India's eleven-year streak of consecutive placements in Miss Universe, from 1992 through 2002.", "target": "Indian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7270405", "label": "Queen High", "source": "Queen High is the title of an American pre-Code musical comedy film, produced by Paramount Pictures in 1930. Based upon the 1926 stage musical Queen High that Buddy DeSylva, Lewis Gensler, and Laurence Schwab had adapted from Edward Peple's 1914 farce A Pair of Sixes. The storyline loosely concerns a rivalry between two businessmen that results in a game of poker. Whoever loses the game becomes the winner's servant for a year. The film stars Charlie Ruggles, Frank Morgan, and Ginger Rogers in one of her earliest film appearances. Making her first film appearance in an uncredited bit part is famed tap dancer Eleanor Powell, whose career in musicals would not take off for another five years. Powell was appearing on Broadway in a show entitled Follow Thru at the time, and a segment of the show was filmed for the movie. Both Rogers and Powell were still in their teens.", "target": "1930 film by Fred C. Newmeyer", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4575232", "label": "1972 in India", "source": "Events in the year 1972 in the Republic of India.", "target": "India-related events during the year of 1972", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98929986", "label": "Nikolay Belyayev", "source": "Nikolai Timofeevich Beliaev or Nicholas Timothy Belaiew (26 June 1878 – 5 November 1955) was a Russian metallurgist. He was famous for his studies on Damascus steel and the idea of crystallization in metals and the production of Widmanstatten structures. He also wrote on the history of steel making. Beliaev was born in St. Petersburg to General T. M. Beliaev and Maria Nikolayevna Septjurina. He was educated at Mikhailovskaya Artilleriiskaya Academy and was trained under Dmitry Konstantinovich Chernov and Henry Le Chatelier. He became a professor of metallurgy in 1909. During World War I he was wounded and he was sent to England in 1915. He received a Bessemer Gold Medal in 1937 from the British Institute of Steel and Iron in London. A major contribution was on the studies of crystal structure in steels both man-made and of meteoric origin and examined their mechanical properties. He also took an interest in Icelandic research.", "target": "Russian metallurgist (1878-1955)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14684283", "label": "Zalud House", "source": "The Zalud House is a historic house located at 393 N. Hockett St. in Porterville, California.", "target": "historic house in California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17067316", "label": "Bulat Temirtau", "source": "Bulat Hockey Club (Kazakh: «Болат» хоккей клубы), commonly referred as Bulat Temirtau, was a Soviet and Kazakh ice hockey team based in Temirtau, Kazakhstan. They were active from 1960 to 2005.", "target": "ice hockey team in Temirtau, Kazakhstan", "baseline_candidates": ["ice hockey team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q461219", "label": "Gérardmer", "source": "Gérardmer (French pronunciation: [ʒeʁaʁme] (listen); German: Gerdsee or archaic Geroldsee, and Giraumoué in local Vosgian) is a commune in the Vosges department in Grand Est in northeastern France.", "target": "commune in Vosges, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24844395", "label": "Balu Alaganan", "source": "R. B. Alaganan (1925 – 11 October 2012), better known as Balu Alaganan, was an Indian cricket player, administrator and commentator. He played six first-class matches for Madras and captained the team to its maiden Ranji Trophy title. A well-known radio commentator, he also worked in administrative roles for the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association.", "target": "cricketer (1925-2012)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7359636", "label": "Rogóźno, Zgierz County", "source": "Rogóźno [rɔˈɡuʑnɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zgierz, within Zgierz County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 14 kilometres (9 mi) north of Zgierz and 21 km (13 mi) north of the regional capital Łódź.", "target": "village in Łódź, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4602450", "label": "2004 AFC U-19 Women's Championship", "source": "The 2004 AFC U-19 Women's Championship was the second instance of the AFC U-19 Women's Championship. It was held from May 25 to June 6, 2004 in Suzhou, China PR.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8007134", "label": "William Cornwallis Symonds", "source": "Captain William Cornwallis Symonds (1 August 1810 – 23 November 1841) was a British Army officer who was prominent in the early colonisation of New Zealand. Symonds was born in 1810. He was the eldest son of William Symonds, Surveyor of the Navy, who was a prominent member of the New Zealand Association. Symonds Jr. was commissioned into the 38th Foot. He was promoted Lieutenant in 1832, transferred to the 74th Foot in 1835, and was promoted Captain in 1838.He came to New Zealand in the early 1830s as an agent of the Waitemata and Manukau Land Company and was instrumental in the founding of Auckland and the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi. He was one of Governor William Hobson's closest and most effective officials and was one of the first six Police Magistrates in New Zealand. Symonds was instrumental in convincing Hobson to make Auckland the Capital of New Zealand in 1840. He was Chief Magistrate of Auckland and in 1841 was appointed Deputy Surveyor-General of New Zealand, and laid out Auckland under Felton Mathew. In the late 1830s, Symonds, alongside Theophilus Heale and Dudley Sinclair (son of Scottish aristocrat Sir George Sinclair), attempted to develop a section of coast alongside the Waitākere Ranges as a trading post and timbermill, which Symonds named Cornwallis after his late uncle, Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis. The plan of the township was laid out, however it was never developed. After the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, Symonds was summoned to testify at the Crown.", "target": "New Zealand public servant (1810–1841)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2925901", "label": "Broštica", "source": "Broštica (Macedonian: Броштица) is a village in the municipality of Centar Župa, North Macedonia.", "target": "village in North Macedonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q704333", "label": "Battle of Macau", "source": "The Battle of Macau in 1622 was a conflict of the Dutch–Portuguese War fought in the Portuguese settlement of Macau, in southeastern China. The Portuguese, outnumbered and without adequate fortification, managed to repel the Dutch in a much-celebrated victory on 24 June after a three-day battle. The battle is the only major engagement that was fought between two European powers on the Chinese mainland.", "target": "battle", "baseline_candidates": ["battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4156856", "label": "Victor Daley", "source": "Victor James William Patrick Daley (5 September 1858 – 29 December 1905) was an Australian poet. Daley serves chiefly as an example of the Celtic Twilight in Australian verse. He also serves as a lyrical alternative to his contemporary bush balladists of Henry Lawson, Banjo Paterson, and Will H. Ogilvie.", "target": "Irish-Australian journalist and poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3911961", "label": "German World War II strongholds", "source": "German strongholds during World War II (German: Festung \"fortresses\") were towns and cities designated by Adolf Hitler as areas that were to be fortified and stocked with food and ammunition in order to hold out against Allied offensives. The fortress doctrine evolved towards the end of World War II, when the German leadership had not yet accepted defeat, but had begun to realize that drastic measures were required to forestall inevitable offensives on the Reich. The first such stronghold was Stalingrad.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history", "defence in depth"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q709065", "label": "Groß Oesingen", "source": "Groß Oesingen is a municipality in the district of Gifhorn, in Lower Saxony, Germany. The Municipality Groß Oesingen includes the villages of Groß Oesingen, Klein Oesingen, Mahrenholz, Schmarloh, Texas and Zahrenholz.", "target": "district and municipality in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil", "municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16689838", "label": "Happy Hotel", "source": "Happy Hotel (Chinese: 乐翻天) is a 2012 Chinese comedy film directed and written by Wang Yuelun and produced by Song Guangcheng and Li Xiang. It stars Jiang Wu as Qian Shiqiang, the vice-president of a company, along with Ning Jing as his wife. The film premiered in China on August 2, 2012. The film follows the lives of a couple and their networking at a five-star hotel named Lotte Hotel.", "target": "2012 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18209289", "label": "Amrithavaahini", "source": "Amrithavaahini is a 1976 Indian Malayalam film, directed by J. Sasikumar. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sharada, Thikkurisi Sukumaran Nair and Adoor Bhasi in the lead roles. The film has musical score by A. T. Ummer. The film was a remake of the 1963 Telugu movie Punarjanma which was also remade in Tamil in 1970 as Engirundho Vandhaal and in Hindi in 1970 as Khilona.", "target": "1976 film by J. Sasikumar", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12641511", "label": "Rye", "source": "Rye is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Gila County, Arizona, United States. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 77.Rye is located along Arizona State Route 87, 10 miles (16 km) south of Payson.", "target": "unincorporated community in Arizona", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22702127", "label": "Montauban Lake", "source": "Lake Montauban is crossed by Noire River, in the municipality of Saint-Alban, in the Portneuf Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of the Capitale-Nationale, in the Quebec, in Canada. The area around Lac Montauban is served on the east side by Chemin Antoine-François-Germain and Chemin du Gouverneur-Duquesne. Secondary forest roads serve the other parts. Forestry is the main economic activity in the sector; recreotourism activities, second.The surface of Lac Montauban is usually frozen from the beginning of December to the end of March, however the safe circulation on the ice is generally made from mid-December to mid-March.", "target": "lake in Saint-Alban, in Portneuf MRC, in Quebec, in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5187390", "label": "Crocodile Islands", "source": "The Crocodile Islands are a group of islands belonging to the Yan-nhaŋu people of the Northern Territory of Australia. They are located off the coast of Arnhem Land in the Arafura Sea.", "target": "group of islands off the Northern Australian coast", "baseline_candidates": ["island group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16824242", "label": "A Wonder Like You", "source": "\"A Wonder Like You\" is a song written by Jerry Fuller and performed by Rick Nelson.", "target": "1961 song performed by Ricky Nelson", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14826091", "label": "Nealcidion cereicola", "source": "Nealcidion cereicola is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Fisher in 1936.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q102472", "label": "Thor Kunkel", "source": "Thor Kunkel, a German author, was born in Frankfurt am Main on 2 September 1963. Kunkel claims to have spent his youth associating with drug friends and American soldiers stationed in the then West Germany. In 1981, on a scholarship to the United States, he enrolled in the creative writing programme of the San Francisco Art Institute.Following his return to West Germany, Kunkel joined the staff of advertising agency Young & Rubicam, then in 1988 joined the Swiss GGK in London, England. After marrying Dutch artist Gerda Bakker, he moved to Amsterdam in 1992 and re-joined Young & Rubicam as creative director, quitting in 1996 to take up directing and writing. He now lives in Switzerland and the Netherlands. His first novel, The Blacklight-Terrarium (1999), won him a major German literary prize. His 2011 novel Subs has been put into film and with the same title by director Oskar Roehler.", "target": "German writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18685664", "label": "Lucien Dechene", "source": "Lucien Dechene (born August 17, 1925) is a Canadian retired professional hockey player who played 798 games in the Western Hockey League with the New Westminster Royals, Vancouver Canucks, Brandon Regals, Saskatoon Quakers, and Calgary Stampeders. He also played one season with the Quebec Aces in the American Hockey League. He was named the WHL's Outstanding Goaltender five times, and was twice awarded the league's George Leader Cup as its most outstanding player.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2802303", "label": "Abietinella operculata", "source": "Abietinella is a monotypic genus of cnidarians belonging to the family Zygophylacidae. The only species is Abietinella operculata.The species is found in near Antarctica.", "target": "species of cnidarian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5749129", "label": "Nadbory", "source": "Nadbory [nadˈbɔrɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jedwabne, within Łomża County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 12 kilometres (7 mi) north-east of Jedwabne, 31 km (19 mi) north-east of Łomża, and 54 km (34 mi) north-west of the regional capital Białystok.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19894136", "label": "Moondram Pirai", "source": "The soundtrack of the Tamil film Moondram Pirai (1982) was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.", "target": "album by Ilaiyaraaja", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1262275", "label": "Journal of Physics", "source": "Journal of Physics is peer reviewed scientific journal series; it consists of the following journals Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics (merged with Journal of Physics F) Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics Journal of Physics E: Scientific Instruments (renamed as Measurement Science and Technology) Journal of Physics F: Metal Physics (merged with Journal of Physics C) Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physics Journal of Physics Communications Journal of Physics: Complexity Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter (merger of Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics and Journal of Physics F: Metal Physics) Journal of Physics: Conference Series Journal of Physics: Energy Journal of Physics: Materials Journal of Physics: Photonics.", "target": "scientific journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5591210", "label": "Grace High School Athletics Program", "source": "Grace High School sports one of the most historic and storied athletics program in the state of Idaho.", "target": "high school in Idaho, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q877858", "label": "Chris Daughtry", "source": "Christopher Adam Daughtry (born December 26, 1979) is an American singer, musician, and actor. He is the lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist for the rock band Daughtry, which he formed after placing fourth on the fifth season of American Idol. Released by RCA Records, Daughtry's self-titled debut album became the fastest selling debut rock album in Nielsen SoundScan history, selling more than one million copies within five weeks of release. The album was recorded before the band was officially formed, making him the only official member present on the album. In its ninth week of release, Daughtry reached number one on the Billboard chart. Chris Daughtry is the third most successful American Idol contestant in terms of record sales, behind Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood, who both won their respective seasons. At the 50th Grammy Awards, the band was nominated for Best Rock Song for the single \"It's Not Over\". Since the band's first album, Chris Daughtry has collaborated with several artists, including Slash, Sevendust, Theory of a Deadman, Chad Kroeger, Brad Arnold, Vince Gill, and Carlos Santana. He is known for his powerful vocal belting technique and wide vocal range.", "target": "American musician and American Idol contestant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6965780", "label": "Narendra Jha", "source": "Narendra Jha (21 January 1964 – 14 March 2018) was an Indian actor. He was known for his work in Bollywood productions; his most noted films being Haider, Raees, Ghayal Once Again, Hamari Adhuri Kahani, Mohenjodaro, Shorgul, My Father Iqbal, Force 2, Kaabil, 2016 The End and Doordarshan's Shanti. He last appeared in the action film Race 3. He is known for playing antagonist roles in mythological serials like Ravana and Arjuna.", "target": "Indian actor (1962-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33524261", "label": "Zachełmna", "source": "Zachełmna [zaˈxɛu̯mna] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Budzów, within Sucha County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) north-east of Sucha Beskidzka and 35 km (22 mi) south-west of the regional capital Kraków. The village has an approximate population of 530.", "target": "village in Lesser Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28688157", "label": "Overdose", "source": "Overdose (オーヴァードーズ) is the eighth studio album by Japanese pop band Pizzicato Five. The album was released on October 1, 1994 by the Nippon Columbia imprint Triad. It is their first studio album not to feature founding member Keitarō Takanami, who departed the band earlier in the year. Overdose is the first of several Pizzicato Five albums to be themed around a famous city, in this case New York. The album pays tribute to soul music, and soul singer Stevie Wonder in particular, with several songs incorporating Wonder's signature instrument, the harmonica.Four singles were released from Overdose: \"The Night Is Still Young\", \"Happy Sad\", \"Superstar\" and \"On the Sunny Side of the Street\". The song \"Airplane\" was later re-recorded for the band's 1996 EP Sister Freedom Tapes as \"Airplane '96\". Several tracks from the album appeared on the band's 1995 compilation The Sound of Music by Pizzicato Five. Overdose was reissued by Readymade Records on September 30, 2000 and March 31, 2006.", "target": "album by Pizzicato Five", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24657567", "label": "The Ladies Waldegrave", "source": "The Ladies Waldegrave is a group portrait by Joshua Reynolds from 1780–81, now in the Scottish National Gallery, who acquired it in 1952. It shows the three daughters of James Waldegrave, 2nd Earl Waldegrave, and Maria Walpole – from left to right, Charlotte (holding a skein of silk), Elizabeth (winding Charlotte's skein onto a card) and Anna (producing tambour lace). Exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1781, it was commissioned the previous year by the subjects' mother in the hope of attracting potential suitors for them – all three of them were then unmarried.", "target": "painting by Joshua Reynolds", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19879891", "label": "The Branxton Advocate: Greta and Rothbury Recorder", "source": "The Branxton Advocate: Greta and Rothbury Recorder was an English language newspaper that was published in Branxton, New South Wales Australia. There is only one known issue, which was published on 4 March 1916.", "target": "former newspaper in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper", "periodical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4574131", "label": "1970 Pacific typhoon season", "source": "The 1970 Pacific typhoon season has no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1970, but most tropical cyclones tend to form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between June and December. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean. The scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and west of the International Dateline. Storms that form east of the date line and north of the equator are called hurricanes; see 1970 Pacific hurricane season. Tropical Storms formed in the entire west Pacific basin were assigned a name by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. Tropical depressions in this basin have the \"W\" suffix added to their number. Tropical depressions that enter or form in the Philippine area of responsibility are assigned a name by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration or PAGASA. This can often result in the same storm having two names.", "target": "typhoon season in the Pacific Ocean", "baseline_candidates": ["Pacific typhoon season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28091887", "label": "Constantin Schmid", "source": "Constantin Schmid (born 27 November 1999) is a German ski jumper.Schmid made his World Cup debut in Oberstdorf in December 2016. His best individual World Cup finish is a third place from Râșnov from February 2020. He also has five podiums with the German team, including one win.", "target": "German ski jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q504853", "label": "Remiremont", "source": "Remiremont (French pronunciation: [ʁəmiʁmɔ̃] (listen); German: Romberg or Reimersberg) is a town and commune in the Vosges department, northeastern France, situated in southern Grand Est. The town has been an abbatial centre since the 7th century, is an economic crossroads of the Moselle and Moselotte valleys, and is also a stepping stone for tourists wishing to explore the Vosges and neighbouring Alsace. Remiremont has got a police station, which covers the city and his suburban area. The fire station realizes more than 2000 interventions per year. Remiremont is also known as the La Belle des Vosges. Its inhabitants are known as Romarimontains.", "target": "commune in Vosges, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14191134", "label": "Lata Gouveia", "source": "Lata (born February 19, 1975 in Lisbon) is a singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer. He is a well-known Red Dirt artist in Oklahoma and a reference of Americana music in Luxembourg, Germany, Belgium and the north of France.", "target": "Portuguese musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14693092", "label": "Tobipuranga longicornis", "source": "Tobipuranga longicornis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Henry Walter Bates in 1870.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5174121", "label": "Cosmic Wartoad", "source": "Cosmic Wartoad is an action game developed by Denton Designs for the ZX Spectrum. It was published by Ocean and released in the UK in 1985.", "target": "1985 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7677584", "label": "Ramghat", "source": "Ramghat is a Village Development Committee in Surkhet District in the Bheri Zone of mid-western Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 5581 people residing in 1060 individual households.", "target": "human settlement in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49285488", "label": "Lenghu", "source": "Lenghu (Chinese: 冷湖; pinyin: Lěnghú) is a town in Mangnai, Haixi Mongol and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture. It is located in the northwest of Qinghai province, China, bordering Gansu to the north/northeast and Xinjiang to the northwest.", "target": "town in Qinghai, China", "baseline_candidates": ["town in China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q976488", "label": "Alison Cerutti", "source": "Alison Conte Cerutti (born 7 December 1985) is a Brazilian beach volleyball player. He plays as a blocker. In 2011, along with Emanuel Rego he won the Swatch FIVB World Tour in Prague, Czech Republic. and the silver medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He won the gold medal at the 2015 World Championships in Netherlands. and the gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio alongside teammate Bruno Schmidt. In 2019, Alison partnered with Álvaro Morais Filho. The team won their first gold medal at the FIVB Kuala Lumpur event. The duo also competed in the Tokyo 2020 journey. Since 2021 Alison is playing with Guto Carvalhaes.", "target": "Brazilian beach volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24002671", "label": "Blanes", "source": "Blanes (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈblanəs]) is a town and municipality in the comarca of Selva in Girona, Catalonia, Spain. During Roman rule it was named Blanda or Blandae. It is known as the \"Gateway to the Costa Brava\". Its coast is part of the Costa Brava, which stretches from Blanes to the French border. The township is 18.29 km2 (7.06 sq mi). Blanes is a popular tourist town, and it is known for the Concurs de Focs d'Artifici during the Santa Anna festival; this event includes many fireworks. Other places of interest include botanical gardens, coves such as the Cala Bona, and beaches that are surrounded by mountains. The population in 2017 was 38,813.", "target": "town and municipality in the comarca of Selva in Girona, Catalonia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Catalonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16348546", "label": "Miranda", "source": "Miranda, also designated Uranus V, is the smallest and innermost of Uranus's five round satellites. It was discovered by Gerard Kuiper on 16 February 1948 at McDonald Observatory in Texas, and named after Miranda from William Shakespeare's play The Tempest. Like the other large moons of Uranus, Miranda orbits close to its planet's equatorial plane. Because Uranus orbits the Sun on its side, Miranda's orbit is perpendicular to the ecliptic and shares Uranus' extreme seasonal cycle. At just 470 km in diameter, Miranda is one of the smallest closely observed objects in the Solar System that might be in hydrostatic equilibrium (spherical under its own gravity). The only close-up images of Miranda are from the Voyager 2 probe, which made observations of Miranda during its Uranus flyby in January 1986. During the flyby, Miranda's southern hemisphere pointed towards the Sun, so only that part was studied. Miranda probably formed from an accretion disc that surrounded the planet shortly after its formation, and, like other large moons, it is likely differentiated, with an inner core of rock surrounded by a mantle of ice. Miranda has one of the most extreme and varied topographies of any object in the Solar System, including Verona Rupes, a 20-kilometer-high scarp that is the highest cliff in the Solar System, and chevron-shaped tectonic features called coronae. The origin and evolution of this varied geology, the most of any Uranian satellite, are still not fully understood, and multiple hypotheses exist regarding Miranda's evolution.", "target": "smallest of the large moons of Uranus", "baseline_candidates": ["moon of Uranus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q210614", "label": "Al-Mustanjid", "source": "Abu al-Mahasin Yusuf Al-Mustanjid bi'llah (Arabic: أبو المحاسن يوسف المستنجد بالله), (died 7 April 1479) was the fourteenth caliph of Cairo for the Mamluk Sultanate between 1455 and 1479.", "target": "Abbasid caliph of Cairo, Egypt (1389-1479)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q543644", "label": "Tirent-Pontéjac", "source": "Tirent-Pontéjac is a commune in the Gers department in southwestern France.", "target": "commune in Gers, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59800543", "label": "Kamila Valieva", "source": "Kamila Valeryevna Valieva (Russian: Камила Валерьевна Валиева) born 26 April 2006 is a Russian figure skater. She is the 2022 European champion, 2021 Rostelecom Cup champion, 2021 Skate Canada International champion, 2022 Russian national champion, and 2021 Russian National silver medalist. She is also a provisional 2022 Olympic champion in the team event pending the conclusion of a WADA investigation. During the 2022 Winter Olympics, a sample that Valieva had submitted for a drug test in December tested positive for trimetazidine, which is banned in sports competition for increasing endurance. As of mid-February investigations were ongoing.Valieva is the current world record holder for the women's short program, free skating and total scores. She has set nine world records during her career. She is the first female skater to break the 250-, 260- and 270-point thresholds in the total score (all within one season), the first to break the 170- and 180-point thresholds in the free skate, and the first to break the 90-point threshold in the short program. She is the second woman to land the quadruple toe loop after training partner and teammate Alexandra Trusova, the fourth woman to land a quadruple jump of any kind, the 16th woman to land a triple Axel, and the third woman to land a triple Axel and quadruple jump in the same program after Alysa Liu and training partner and teammate Sofia Akateva. Valieva is also the first female skater to land a quadruple jump in Olympic competition.", "target": "Russian figure skater (born 2006)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q869376", "label": "Plum-throated Cotinga", "source": "The plum-throated cotinga (Cotinga maynana) is a species of bird in the family Cotingidae. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest, subtropical or tropical swamps, and heavily degraded former forest.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16896217", "label": "Orodara Airport", "source": "Orodara Airport (ICAO: DFOR) is a public use airport located 1 nm northwest of Orodara, Kénédougou, Burkina Faso.", "target": "airport in Burkina Faso", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35355841", "label": "Challwamayu", "source": "Challwamayu (Quechua challwa fish, mayu river, \"fish river\", hispaniciced spelling Chalhuamayo) is a river in Peru located in the Huancavelica Region, Huaytará Province, Pilpichaca District. It is an affluent of the Pampas River, the one which flows along the border of the Ayacucho and Huancavelica Regions. The confluence of the rivers is on the border of these regions, near Pukarumi (Pucarume). Challwamayu originates near the mountain Artisayuq (Artisayoc).", "target": "stream in Huancavelica, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["stream", "river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6258592", "label": "John Sparrow", "source": "John Sparrow (by 1516 – 1545/1546), of Ipswich, Suffolk, was an English politician. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Ipswich in 1542.", "target": "English politician; (died 1546)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7399607", "label": "Sahib Singh", "source": "Sahib Singh (Gurmukhi: ਸਾਹਿਬ ਸਿੰਘ) (16 February 1892 – 29 October 1977) was a Sikh academic who made a contribution to Sikh literature. He was a grammarian, author, scholar and theologian. He was born in a Hindu family to father Hiranand and was named Natthu Ram.", "target": "Religious scholar", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65681639", "label": "Stephen O'Meara", "source": "Stephen O'Meara (1854–1918) was a Canadian-born American journalist and political figure who was the first commissioner of the Boston Police Department and editor of The Boston Journal.", "target": "Canadian-born American journalist and political figure (1854-1918)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2594184", "label": "Falsodihammus strandiellus", "source": "Falsodihammus strandiellus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Falsodihammus. It was described by Breuning in 1942.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7363863", "label": "Ron Haigler", "source": "Ronald Haigler (born 1953) is an American former basketball player and current high school basketball coach. He is best known for his collegiate career at the University of Pennsylvania between 1972–73 and 1974–75. A 6'8\" power forward, Haigler helped guide the Quakers to several consecutive Ivy League titles as well as setting numerous offensive statistical records at Penn. He was named the first ever Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year as a senior and was twice named the Philadelphia Big 5 Player of the Year. After college, he was chosen as the 68th overall pick in the 1975 NBA Draft by the Chicago Bulls. He was also chosen in the 1975 ABA Draft by the Memphis Sounds as the 23rd overall pick, but Haigler ultimately did not play in either league. He did play for seven seasons in the Turkish Basketball League for Eczacıbaşı (1978 to 1984) and Efes Pilsen (1984–85). As of 2016, he coaches high school girls basketball in Strawberry Mansion, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.", "target": "former basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1351183", "label": "Saint-Agnan-sur-Erre", "source": "Saint-Agnan-sur-Erre (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃.t‿aɲɑ̃ syʁ ɛʁ] (listen)) is a former commune in the Orne department in north-western France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Val-au-Perche.", "target": "former commune in Orne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France", "delegated commune"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q91095575", "label": "Portrait of a Lady Holding a Fan", "source": "Portrait of a Lady Holding a Fan is a painting by the Italian artist Artemisia Gentileschi. Executed in the mid-1620s, it is part of the collection of The Sovereign Military Order of Malta. There is no firm idea who the sitter is, although some historians have wondered if the portrait is indeed a self-portrait. However, given the rich clothing and jewellery of the sitter, this is unlikely.", "target": "Painting by Artemisia Gentileschi", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21552561", "label": "Richard Haythornthwaite", "source": "Richard Neil Haythornthwaite, known as Rick, (born December 1956) is a British business executive. He has led several companies including being the Chairman of MasterCard and the Creative Industries Federation. He has been appointed as the independent non-executive chairman of Ocado Group, stepping in by the time of the company's May 2021 annual general meeting to replace previous Ocado Chairman Stuart Rose.", "target": "Business; Chairman of Mastercard", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6234736", "label": "John Gallagher", "source": "John Gallagher (born May 27, 1977) is the head men's basketball coach at the University of Hartford. Gallagher was named the tenth head coach in the history of the Hartford Hawks program on April 16, 2010 by Director of Athletics Pat Meiser.", "target": "American basketball player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q619424", "label": "Bad Girls", "source": "\"Bad Girls\" is episode fourteen of season three of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It was written by Doug Petrie, directed by Michael Lange, and first broadcast on February 9, 1999 on the WB network. Buffy gets a new watcher, and Faith lures Buffy into reckless abandon.", "target": "episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q878351", "label": "Haruo Remeliik", "source": "Haruo Ignacio Remeliik (1 June 1933 – 30 June 1985) was a politician from Palau. He served as the first President of Palau from 2 March 1981 until his assassination on 30 June 1985. He is buried at Kloulklubed in his home state of Peleliu. Remeliik was of mixed Japanese and Palauan descent.", "target": "President of Palau (1933-1985)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5976416", "label": "I Can't Go Home", "source": "I Can't Go Home is a 2007 Lebanese film and the third film directed by Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige. This film was selected in the Atelier of the Cinefondation at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival.", "target": "2007 film by Khalil Joreige, Joana Hadjithomas", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6538666", "label": "Li Changping", "source": "Li Changping (Chinese: 李昌平; born 1963) and originally from Dongting Lake, was a rural cadre and is now a researcher in Beijing.Li worked in Qipan, where he became secretary of his local commune in Hubei province in 1983. In 1999 he completed a master's degree in Economics and returned to Hubei as a party secretary. He became famous after writing a letter to then Chinese premier Zhu Rongji complaining about the way local officials were managing farm workers, with many workers paying more tax than officially allowed to support the liefstyles of local officials. The letter was published in the newspaper Southern Weekend, the readers of which voted Li 'Man of the Year'.He gives a first hand account of fighting against corruption in his book I Told the Premier the Truth. An interview with him appears in the book One China, Many PathsLi was described by The Guardian in 2002 as \"China's most famous advocate for peasant rights\".", "target": "Chinese activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10276043", "label": "Pavuna", "source": "Pavuna Station (Portuguese: Estação Pavuna) is a subway station on the Rio de Janeiro Metro that services the neighbourhood of Pavuna in the North Zone of Rio de Janeiro.", "target": "metro station in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5571117", "label": "Glochidion sumatranum", "source": "Glochidion sumatranum known as the umbrella cheese tree is a plant in the family Phyllanthaceae. Although recognized as a distinct species by some sources, others include it within Glochidion zeylanicum. It is found in northern and eastern Australia, New Guinea and Indonesia. The habitat is rainforest, or rainforest margins in swampy areas, sometimes associated with palms. It may grow to 15 metres tall. The most southerly point of natural distribution is Iluka, New South Wales.Glochidion sumatranum presumably is dependent on leafflower moths (Epicephala spp.) for its pollination, like other species of tree in the genus Glochidion.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56578", "label": "Sanʽani Arabic", "source": "Sanʽani Arabic is an Arabic dialect spoken in north of Yemen in the city of Sana'a.", "target": "form of Yemeni Arabic spoken in Sanaa", "baseline_candidates": ["dialect", "language", "Yemeni Arabic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5968758", "label": "IBM Award", "source": "The IBM Award was an award given out to National Basketball Association players from 1984 to 2002. The award was sponsored and calculated by technology company IBM and was determined by a computer formula, which measured a player's statistical contribution to his team. The player with the best contribution to his team in the league received the award. The first recipient was Magic Johnson of the Los Angeles Lakers, and the final recipient was Tim Duncan of the San Antonio Spurs. Most of the players who won the award have been forwards or centers; many finished near the top in rebounding the year they won. The award was given out nineteen times, six times to players on the San Antonio Spurs, three times each to players on the Philadelphia 76ers and Los Angeles Lakers, and twice each to players on the Chicago Bulls and Detroit Pistons. David Robinson won five IBM Awards, Charles Barkley won three, and Michael Jordan and Shaquille O'Neal won two each.As of Tim Duncan's selection to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2020, all IBM Award winners who are eligible for it have been inducted. Jordan, Robinson, Barkley, Johnson, Duncan, Shaquille O’Neal, Karl Malone, and Hakeem Olajuwon also won NBA Most Valuable Player awards during their career; Robinson, O’Neal and Duncan won both awards in the same season. Jordan, Robinson, Olajuwon, Dennis Rodman and Dikembe Mutombo have won the NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award; Olajuwon is the only player to win both in the same season. Grant Hill.", "target": "National Basketball Association award", "baseline_candidates": ["award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5644638", "label": "Hamid Reza Mobarrez", "source": "Hamid Reza Mobarrez (Persian: حمیدرضا مبرز; born February 18, 1981 in Mashhad) is an Iranian Swimmer. Mobarrez competed in 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metre Freestyle and finished 65th.He also represented Iran at the 2004 Rome Championships and 2007 Telstra Grand Prix 2, Canberra In 2007, he held Iran's national record for 100 metres Butterfly with a time of 55:84 seconds. Mobarrez subsequently migrated to Australia, where he became the swimming coach at Kincoppal School. On 11 January 2018, Mobarrez and his family were involved in a head-on car collision at Milton, New South Wales. His wife was killed and his five-year-old son was critically injured. The driver of the other vehicle was charged with dangerous driving occasioning death, two counts of dangerous driving occasioning grievous bodily harm, negligent driving occasioning death and negligent driving occasioning grievous bodily harm.", "target": "Iranian swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15627968", "label": "Rose Fostanes", "source": "Rose \"Osang\" Fostanes (born January 2, 1967) is a Filipina caregiver and singer living in Israel, who on January 14, 2014, won the first season of The X Factor Israel On April 10, 2014, she signed a record contract with Star Records to release her music material in the Philippines. Her debut album My Way was released on June 8, 2014.", "target": "Filipino musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1318605", "label": "Address Unknown", "source": "Address Unknown is a short novel by Kathrine Taylor in 1938. Taylor describes and predicts Germany's political and social situation in 1930s. The story is told entirely in letters between two German friends from 1932 to 1934.", "target": "literary work", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6029828", "label": "Infinite Worlds (book)", "source": "Infinite Worlds: An Illustrated Voyage to Planets Beyond Our Sun is a nonfiction book by Ray Villard and Lynette Cook about extrasolar planets, featuring Lynette Cook's artwork. The book covers topics from the Big Bang, to extrasolar planets (the main focus of the book), and the ultimate fate of the universe. From the book's description on the back cover: The newly discovered planets are boggling astronomers' minds with their bizarre characteristics, including an unimagined diversity of sizes and orbits. In Lynette Cook's illustrations - many newly created for this book - we glimpse the landscapes and atmospheres that might adorn these planets. Ray Villard's text describes the state of astronomy today, imagines where it will take us in the coming years, ponders the chances of success for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), and explores the survivability of life in the context of an evolving and accelerating universe. Infinite Worlds is a cosmic adventure that brings the drama of creation and the beauty of the universe to anyone who has wondered at the night sky.", "target": "book by Ray Villard", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7925701", "label": "Victor Auguste, baron Duperré", "source": "Victor Auguste Duperré (4 August 1825 – 26 March 1900) was a French naval commander. He was born in Paris, and served as Commander of the Naval Division of the Western Coasts of Africa, effectively Colonial head of Gabon (\"Colony of Gorée and Dependencies\") between 1869 and 1870. He later became governor of Cochinchina (1874–77).", "target": "French naval commander (1825-1900)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4415436", "label": "Gennady Semigin", "source": "Gennady Yuryevich Semigin (Russian: Геннадий Юрьевич Семигин; born March 23, 1964) is a Russian politician, the leader of socialist Patriots of Russia party. Born March 23, 1964, in Khmelnitsky, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union, he studied in Riga on the history faculty, and then in the Moscow Institute of Jurisprudence. In the 1990s he ran a successful business. He is also a member of the Russian Academy of Science. In 1999 and 2003 he was elected deputy of the State Duma from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF). In the 2003 election he was the second ranked member on the CPRF list. The following year his ambitions of party leadership led him into conflict with the communist leader Gennady Zyuganov. Many old communists viewed rich Semigin as an opportunist, not a true member of the opposition. They labeled him a \"mole\" and the \"Red oligarch\". Despite this, Semigin was still elected chairman of the “People's Patriotic Union of Russia”, an umbrella organization that united the Communist party with minor opposition parties. Semigin made several attempts to seize power from Zyuganov, including organisation of separate CPRF congress. But VTsIK didn't recognize Semigin's congress and pointed that only the official CPRF congress was legal. This congress voted to expel Semigin and his allies from the party. In the Duma, Semigin moved to the Rodina faction, and at the same time founded his own party Patriots of Russia. He also organized the \"People's Government\" – the group of leftists politicians including Sergey Glazyev, Gennady Seleznyov and Gennady Gudkov.", "target": "Russian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6750283", "label": "Maniyadhalli", "source": "Maniyadhalli is a panchayat union in the Dharmapuri district, Tamil Nadu, India.", "target": "village in Tamil Nadu, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q737693", "label": "Leos Carax", "source": "Alex Christophe Dupont (born 22 November 1960), best known as Leos Carax (French: [leɔs kaʁaks]), is a French film director, critic, and writer. Carax is noted for his poetic style and his tortured depictions of love. His first major work was Boy Meets Girl (1984), and his notable works include Les Amants du Pont-Neuf (1991), Holy Motors (2012) and Annette (2021). For the latter, he won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Director at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival. His professional name is an anagram of his real name, 'Alex', and 'Oscar'.", "target": "French film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3507164", "label": "Sylvanie Morandais", "source": "Sylvanie Morandais (born 14 July 1979) is a retired French athlete who specialized in the 400 metres hurdles. She was born in Pointe-Noire, Guadeloupe. She won the gold medal at the 2005 Jeux de la Francophonie, and the 2005 Mediterranean Games. She also competed without reaching the final at the 2001 World Championships and the 2002 European Championships. In the 4 x 400 metres relay she finished fifth at the 2002 European Championships.Her personal best times are 55.30 seconds in the 400 metres, achieved in May 2006 in Baie-Mahault; and 55.49 seconds in the 400 metres hurdles, achieved in July 2001 in Monaco.", "target": "French athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4048383", "label": "Rocking the USA", "source": "Rocking the USA is the first White Lion live compilation album released in 2005, now better known as Tramp's White Lion or White Lion 2, with all new band members again but still features original lead singer Mike Tramp.", "target": "live album by White Lion", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7711766", "label": "The 13th Spy", "source": "The 13th Spy is the eighth novel in the Killmaster series.Nick Carter is a fictional character appearing in a series of over 250 spy adventures published from 1964 to the 1990s. Carter is a special agent working in AXE - an ultrasecret arm of the US intelligence services. He is the most deadly agent in AXE and holds the rank of Killmaster.", "target": "eighth novel in the Killmaster series", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23001032", "label": "Livin' Lozada", "source": "Livin' Lozada is an American reality television series starring Evelyn Lozada and her daughter, Shaniece Hairston. It premiered on July 11, 2015, on the Oprah Winfrey Network, as part of its Saturday-night reality lineup.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20748261", "label": "Killer Instinct Gold", "source": "Killer Instinct Gold is a 1996 fighting video game based on the arcade game Killer Instinct 2. The game was developed by Rare and released by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64 video game console. As in other series entries, players control characters who fight on a 2D plane set against a 3D background. Players press buttons to punch and kick their opponent in chains of successive hits, known as combos. Large combo successions lead to stronger attacks and brutal, stylistic finisher moves underscored by an announcer. Characters—including a gargoyle, a ninja, and a femme fatale—fight in settings such as a jungle and a spaceship. Killer Instinct Gold includes the arcade release's characters, combos, and 3D, pre-rendered environments, but excludes its full-motion video sequences and some voiceovers due to restrictions of the cartridge media format. The Gold release adds a training mode, new camera views, and improved audiovisuals. Rare was a prominent second-party developer for Nintendo in the 1990s, and their Killer Instinct series was produced as an exclusive partnership in response to the popularity of Mortal Kombat. Following the success of the 1995 Killer Instinct port for the Super NES, Rare began a sequel for the same platform but transitioned development to its successor, the Nintendo 64, upon its unveiling. Gold was scheduled as a launch title for the new console but was delayed until its North American release in November 1996. It was released in other regions in May 1997. Gold was later included in Rare's 2015 Xbox One retrospective compilation, Rare Replay. Reviewers preferred.", "target": "1996 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32253958", "label": "Tà Lùng", "source": "Tà Lùng is a township (thị trấn) of Quảng Hòa District, Cao Bằng Province, Vietnam. It is a border trade town with Shuikou (Vietnamese: Thủy Khẩu) in China.", "target": "township in Northeast, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["commune-level town of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20972090", "label": "Epstein", "source": "The surname Epstein (Yiddish: עפּשטײן, romanized: Epshteyn) is one of the oldest Ashkenazi Jewish family names. It is probably derived from the German town of Eppstein, in Hesse; the place-name was probably derived from Gaulish apa (\"water\", in the sense of a river) and German -stein (\"stone\", in the sense of a hill). Some people with this name include:.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1332489", "label": "Willershausen", "source": "Willershausen is a village and castle in the Gemeinde of Herleshausen in Werra-Meißner-Kreis, Hesse. In 1383, the Treusch von Buttlar were lords of Willershausen and adjacent areas. Already at the end of the 13th Century, the residential tower and the defensive tower of the present castle were built. The Treusch von Buttlar were the owners until the death of Ernst Carl Treusch von Buttlar (see section below) in 1757. The castle came to the von Kutzleben family and the Schwebheim branch of the von Bibra family in 1757. The estate was divided between the two families on 27 September 1817. Ernst von Bibra sold their portion in 1850 to Landgrave Carl August of Hesse. From 1889 to 1992 the Landgraves of Hesse were owner of the property. Today, a golf course is maintained. The church in Willershausen is worth seeing.", "target": "human settlement in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60917507", "label": "Sinbad the Sailor", "source": "Sinbad the Sailor (; Arabic: السندباد البحري, romanized: as-Sindibādu al-Baḥriyy; or Sindbad) is a fictional mariner and the hero of a story-cycle of Middle Eastern origin. He is described as hailing from Baghdad during the early Abbasid Caliphate (8th and 9th centuries A.D.). In the course of seven voyages throughout the seas east of Africa and south of Asia, he has fantastic adventures in magical realms, encountering monsters and witnessing supernatural phenomena.", "target": "fictional sailor", "baseline_candidates": ["adventure film character", "literary character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85747964", "label": "Bob Duff", "source": "Robert Hamilton Duff (5 August 1925 – 11 May 2006) was a New Zealand rugby union player and coach. A lock, Duff represented Canterbury at a provincial level, and was a member of the New Zealand national side, the All Blacks, from 1951 to 1956. He played 18 matches for the All Blacks, two of which were as captain, including 11 internationals. He later was coach of the All Blacks from 1972 to 1973.Duff was elected as a member of the Lyttelton Borough Council, and served as deputy mayor for 12 years. He was also a justice of the peace—the youngest in the country at the time of his appointment—and between 1984 and 1994 served as a member of the New Zealand Racing Authority.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6068613", "label": "Pedro Donoso Velasco", "source": "Pedro H. Donoso Velasco (26 February 1944 – 8 September 2001) was a Chilean chess FIDE master (FM), three-time Chilean Chess Championship winner (1970, 1977, 1978) and Pan American Chess Championship bronze medalist (1977).", "target": "Chilean chess player (1944-2001)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16210715", "label": "Luminites", "source": "Luminites were a four-piece English band from London who rose to fame after reaching the final of the seventh series of Britain's Got Talent in 2013.", "target": "English band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10919915", "label": "Lü Yiwen", "source": "Lü Yiwen (Chinese: 呂宜文; 1897–1950) was a Chinese diplomat who served as the ambassador of Manchukuo to Nazi Germany, since the German recognition of Manchukuo's independence in 1938. He subsequently took part in negotiating Manchukuo's entry into the Anti-Comintern Pact in 1940.", "target": "diplomat of Manchukuo", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1946525", "label": "Mochowo", "source": "Mochowo [mɔˈxɔvɔ] is a village in Sierpc County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Mochowo. It lies approximately 15 kilometres (9 mi) south-west of Sierpc and 115 km (71 mi) north-west of Warsaw. The village has a population of 310.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11295156", "label": "Carvone reductase", "source": "Carvone reductase (EC 1.3.99.25) is an enzyme with systematic name (+)-dihydrocarvone:acceptor 1,6-oxidoreductase. This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction (1) (+)-dihydrocarvone + acceptor ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } (-)-carvone + reduced acceptor (2) (-)-isodihydrocarvone + acceptor ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } (+)-carvone + reduced acceptorThis enzyme participates in the carveol and dihydrocarveol degradation pathway of the Gram-positive bacterium Rhodococcus erythropolis DCL14.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["CH–CH oxidoreductases", "group or class of enzymes", "oxidoreductase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75354513", "label": "Leslie Davidson", "source": "Colonel William Leslie Davidson (31 January 1850 – 3 August 1915) was a Scottish first-class cricketer and British Army officer. After being commissioned into the Royal Horse Artillery in 1869, Davidson's military career consisted of service in Africa during the Anglo-Zulu War and Second Boer War, and the subcontinent during the Second Anglo-Afghan War. He retired from the military in 1907 with the rank of colonel, but returned to the service at the outbreak for the First World War, after which he commanded a base depot in France. He was the oldest first-class cricketer to be killed in the First World War.", "target": "Scottish cricketer and British Army officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21003358", "label": "Los Maitenes de Villa Vieja Airport", "source": "Los Maitenes de Villa Vieja Airport Spanish: Aeropuerto Los Maitenes de Villa Vieja, (ICAO: SCVV) is an airport serving Río Bueno, a town in the Los Ríos Region of Chile. The airport is across the Bueno River, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) northwest of the town. The runway has an additional 250 metres (820 ft) of grass overrun on the north end. The Osorno VOR-DME (Ident: OSO) is 18.3 nautical miles (33.9 km) south-southwest of the airport.", "target": "airport in Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5382345", "label": "Ephraim Ward House", "source": "The Ephraim Ward House is a historic house at 121 Ward Street in Newton, Massachusetts. The two-story wood-frame house was built in 1821, and is one of a few Federal style houses in eastern Newton. This house was built by Ephraim Ward to replace one built by his ancestor, John Ward, in 1661 on the same site. The Wards owned farmland in the area until the early 20th century. The house is five bays wide, with a hip roof and clapboard siding, and a central entrance flanked by pilasters and topped by a paneled entablature.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.", "target": "building in Massachusetts, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4845968", "label": "Birinci Şıxlı", "source": "Birinci Sixli (Birinci Şıxlı) is a populated place (class P - Populated Place) in (Qazax), Azerbaijan (Asia) with the region font code of Russia/ Central Asia. Its coordinates are 41°17'5\" N and 45°9'33\" E in DMS (Degrees Minutes Seconds) or 41.2847 and 45.1592 (in decimal degrees).Birinci Şıxlı (also, Birindzhi-Shikhly, Pervyye Shikhly, Shikhili, Shikhly, and Shykhly Pervyye) is a village and municipality in the Qazakh Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 3,177.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28747948", "label": "Sevvandi Jayakody", "source": "Sevvandi Jayakody is a conservationist and echinodermologist from Sri Lanka, who is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Aquaculture & Fisheries at the Wayamba University of Sri Lanka.", "target": "Sri Lankan echinodermologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16886188", "label": "James Treybig", "source": "James G. Treybig founded Tandem Computers, which designed and manufactured the first fault tolerant computers, in 1974. These pioneering computers were marketed to transaction processing customers, who used them for ATMs, banks, stock exchanges, and military applications.", "target": "American computer specialist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2415989", "label": "Lutuhyne", "source": "Lutuhyne (Ukrainian: Лутугине, Russian: Лутугино) is a city in Luhansk Oblast (region) of Ukraine. It serves as the administrative center of Lutuhyne Raion. Population: 17,134 (2021 est. ), 17,989 (2013 est.). Starting Mid-April 2014 pro-Russian separatists captured several towns in Luhansk Oblast; including Lutuhyne. On 27 July 2014, Ukrainian forces claimed Ukrainian troops had entered the city. Since 2015, Lutuhyne has been administered as a part of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic.", "target": "City in Luhansk Oblast (province) of Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48989519", "label": "Benban Solar Park", "source": "Benban Solar Park is a photovoltaic power station with a total capacity of 1650 MW nominal power which corresponds to an annual production of approximately 3.8 TWh. It is located in Benban (Aswan Governorate) in the western desert, approximately 650 km south of Cairo and 40 km northwest of Aswan. Benban is currently the 4th largest solar power plant in the world.", "target": "Solar park in Egypt", "baseline_candidates": ["photovoltaic power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6869150", "label": "Minor attacks of the Black Hawk War", "source": "After the outbreak of the Black Hawk War, at the Battle of Stillman's Run in May 1832, there were minor attacks and skirmishes throughout the duration of the conflict. The war was fought between white settlers in Illinois and present-day Wisconsin and Sauk Chief Black Hawk. The relatively minor attacks of the war were widely dispersed and often carried out by bands of Native Americans that were unaffiliated with Black Hawk's British Band. Sometime in May 1832 a Methodist minister and his wife disappeared and were subsequently tied to a tree and executed by burning by a band of Potawatomi. Also in May an attack at Holderman's Grove killed another minister, Adam Payne, and an attack at Hollenbeck's Grove drove numerous residents out of the area. In another attack, just before the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, a German immigrant named Henry Apple was killed in a Kickapoo ambush. At Ament's Cabin, near present-day Bureau County, Illinois, an attack left early settler Elijah Phillips dead. Together with other incidents during the war, these attacks helped contribute to an atmosphere of fear in the region during the war.", "target": "indians", "baseline_candidates": ["conflict"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q504810", "label": "Peter Hans Kolvenbach", "source": "Peter Hans Kolvenbach (30 November 1928 – 26 November 2016) was a Dutch Jesuit priest and professor who was the 29th superior general of the Society of Jesus, the largest male Catholic religious order.", "target": "Superior General of the Society of Jesus (1928-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q831415", "label": "Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais", "source": "Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais (French pronunciation: ​[maʁœj syʁ lɛ disɛ]) is a commune in the Vendée department in the Pays de la Loire region in western France.", "target": "commune in Vendée, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1610481", "label": "Doctor Who, season 3", "source": "The third season of British science fiction television series Doctor Who began on 11 September 1965 with the story Galaxy 4 and ended on 16 July 1966 with The War Machines. Only 17 out of 45 episodes survive in the BBC archives; 28 remain missing. As a result, only 3 serials are complete.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5436898", "label": "Fast Charlie... the Moonbeam Rider", "source": "Fast Charlie... the Moonbeam Rider is a 1979 comedy film starring David Carradine and Brenda Vaccaro and directed by Steve Carver.", "target": "1979 film by Steve Carver", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23808445", "label": "Fatehabad Chandrawatiganj Junction railway station", "source": "Fatehabad Chandrawatiganj Junction (station code: FTD) is a railway station in Ujjain. The station was previously used as a metre-gauge station on Ratlam–Indore line. Fatehabad has a connecting route to Ujjain Junction on metre-gauge line. In 2015, Ratlam–Indore was converted into broad-gauge line, directly connecting Indore and Ratlam.Fatehabad and Chandrawati Ganj are two villages on the Indore–Ujjain district border. Fatehabad village is under Ujjain district and Chandrawati Ganj village is under Indore district. As of November 2021, the gauge-conversion of Fatehabad-Ujjain via Chintaman station has been completed and soon trains would start operating on the route.", "target": "railway station in Madhya Pradesh", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6851884", "label": "Milinda Moragoda", "source": "Asoka Milinda Moragoda (Sinhala:අශෝක මිලින්ද මොරගොඩ) (born 4 June 1964) is a Sri Lankan politician and businessman. He is the current Sri Lankan High Commissioner Designate to India and, former Cabinet Minister and Member of Parliament representing the Colombo District from 2001 to 2010, who served as the Minister of Justice and Law Reform (2009-2010), Minister of Tourism (2007–2009); Minister for Economic Reform, Science and Technology and Deputy Minister for Plan Implementation and Development (2002–2004). His last political post was that of Opposition Leader of the Colombo Municipal Council and Senior Adviser to former President Mahinda Rajapakse. In 2007 the Parliamentary Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) accused then opposition parliamentarian Moragoda of large scale corruption during his time as a UNP minister. In a bid to dodge prosecution Moragoda crossed over to the ruling UPFA government and was appointed Minister of Justice and Law Reform.", "target": "Sri Lankan politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16233088", "label": "Skye Dawson", "source": "Skye Dawson (born December 12, 1990) is a former American football wide receiver. He played college football for Texas Christian University. He was signed as undrafted free agent by the Washington Redskins in 2013. He also played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Detroit Lions, Edmonton Eskimos and Calgary Stampeders.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5294094", "label": "Donald Burmister", "source": "Donald M. Burmister (1895 – May 15, 1981) was a professor of civil engineering and a pioneer in the field of soil mechanics and geotechnical engineering.", "target": "American academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6501889", "label": "Lauritz Jenssen Dorenfeldt", "source": "Lauritz Jenssen Dorenfeldt (3 February 1909 – 15 April 1997) was a Norwegian jurist.", "target": "Norwegian lawyer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17115756", "label": "Asplenium", "source": "Asplenium is a genus of about 700 species of ferns, often treated as the only genus in the family Aspleniaceae, though other authors consider Hymenasplenium separate, based on molecular phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequences, a different chromosome count, and structural differences in the rhizomes. The type species for the genus is Asplenium marinum. The most common vernacular name is spleenworts, applied to the more \"typical\" species. A. nidus and several similar species are called bird's-nest ferns, the Camptosorus group is known as walking ferns, and distinct names are applied to some other particularly well-known species.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7565620", "label": "South African Class Experimental AC", "source": "The South African Railways Class Experimental AC of 1978 is an electric locomotive. In 1974 and 1975 the South African Railways placed 100 Class 6E1, Series 5 locomotives with a Bo-Bo wheel arrangement in mainline service. In 1978 one was withdrawn from revenue service for use as an experimental 25 kV AC locomotive. It was rebuilt and reclassified to Class Experimental AC.", "target": "class of 1 South African electric locomotive", "baseline_candidates": ["locomotive class", "electric locomotive"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4840551", "label": "Badam River", "source": "The Badam (Kazakh: Бадам, Badam) is a river of southern Kazakhstan. It is a left tributary of the Arys. It flows through the city Shymkent. One of its tributaries is the Sayramsu.", "target": "river in Kazakhstan", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2803035", "label": "Vossius Gymnasium", "source": "Vossius Gymnasium is a public gymnasium in Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands. It was established in 1926 and is named after Gerardus Vossius. In 2014, it was ranked best VWO school in Amsterdam and 4th in the country by RTL Nieuws. It is also consistently ranked among the best in the country in terms of final exam results.", "target": "Secondary school in Amsterdam, Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["gymnasium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13129056", "label": "Herne", "source": "Herne is a village in South East England, divided by the Thanet Way from the seaside resort of Herne Bay. Administratively it is in the civil parish of Herne and Broomfield in Kent. Between Herne and Broomfield is the former hamlet of Hunters Forstal. Herne Common lies to the south on the A291 road. The hamlet of Bullockstone is about one mile to the west.", "target": "village in Kent, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2662213", "label": "Sergius of Valaam", "source": "Saint Sergius of Valaam (Сергий Валаамский) was a Greek monk and wonderworker credited with bringing Orthodox Christianity to Karelian and Finnish people. Conflicting church traditions place him possibly as early as the 10th century or as late as the 14th. His feast day is celebrated on June 28.Church legends about St. Sergius of Valaam were not committed to writing until the 18th century. In these writings, Sergius is described as an Athonite monk sent by the Byzantine Emperor to enlighten the heathen tribes of Karelia with the light of the Christian faith. He traveled along the trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks, passing the Rus' towns of Kiev, Novgorod and Staraya Ladoga. He arrived on the northern shores of Lake Ladoga, and soon moved to Valaam island, where he would spend the rest of his life preaching. A tradition placing his arrival on Valaam as early as 992 would make him a contemporary of Emperor Basil II. Another pious legend describes Sergius as a disciple of Apostle Andrew who reportedly visited Crimea in the 1st century AD. However, the earliest record of this saint's activity claims that he arrived in Valaam in 1329. His work was carried on by, among others, Herman of Valaam, who may or may not have a contemporary of Sergius. Saints Sergius and Herman are considered the founders of the Valaam Monastery. Yet another church tradition dates his death to 1353, but there are no medieval documents to validate this claim either. The archaeological record places the arrival of Christianity.", "target": "Greek missionary and saint", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5074479", "label": "Chariton School District", "source": "The Chariton Community School District is a rural public school district headquartered in Chariton, Iowa, USA. The district is mostly within Lucas County; a small portion is in Marion County. Its service area includes Chariton, Lucas, Russell, and Williamson.", "target": "public school district in Chariton, Iowa, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16236315", "label": "Betzy Madrid", "source": "Betzy Del Carmen Madrid, is a Panamanian model and a pageant titleholder from Ciudad de Panamá, Panamá who represented the Panamá Centro state in the Bellezas Panamá 2013 pageant, on August 9, 2013, and won the title of Miss Panamá International 2013.Madrid who is 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) tall, represented her country Panamá in the 2013 Miss International beauty pageant, which took place on December 17, 2013, in Shinagawa Prince Hotel Hall, Tokyo, Japan.", "target": "Miss Panama International 2013", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5673562", "label": "Harry Wright", "source": "Herbert Lovegrove Wright (13 April 1870 – 19 March 1950) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Essendon Football Club around and during the years following the formation of the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "target": "Australian rules footballer and cricketer (1870-1950)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30673094", "label": "Yelimunnoli", "source": "Yelimunnoli is a village in Belagavi district in the Indian state of Karnataka. It is a Zilla Panchayat constituency.", "target": "place", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2700420", "label": "Mexican spotted wood turtle", "source": "The Mexican spotted wood turtle (Rhinoclemmys rubida) or Mexican spotted terrapin is a species of turtle in the family Geoemydidae. It is endemic to Mexico.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q44474", "label": "2012 ATP World Tour Finals – singles", "source": "Novak Djokovic defeated the two-time defending champion Roger Federer in the final, 7–6(8–6), 7–5 to win the singles tennis title at the 2012 ATP World Tour Finals.Janko Tipsarević made his debut as a direct qualifier, after playing two matches as an alternate in 2011.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1818002", "label": "Lennart Åberg", "source": "Lennart Åberg (26 February 1942 – 30 September 2021) was a Swedish jazz saxophonist and composer. In 1972, he founded Rena Rama, a Swedish jazz fusion group. He also taught jazz history at the Royal College of Music, Stockholm. He was a member of composer George Russell's ensemble in the 1980s along with Jon Christensen, Arild Andersen, and Jan Garbarek, appearing on The Essence of George Russell (Soul Note 1983). In 2002, he received the Djangodor in the Contemporary Star of Jazz category. In addition to jazz, Aberg also worked in musical styles from India, Africa, and Eastern Europe, as well as contemporary music.", "target": "Swedish saxophonist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2157967", "label": "Robert L. Williams", "source": "Robert Lee Williams (December 20, 1868 – April 10, 1948) was an American lawyer, judge, and the third governor of Oklahoma. Williams played a role in the drafting of the Oklahoma Constitution and served as the first Oklahoma Supreme Court chief justice. He also served as a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and as a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma. As Governor, Williams oversaw the state's response to the United States Supreme Court's ruling against Jim Crow laws and its involvement in World War I. He instituted the Oklahoma State Board of Affairs, which provided central purchasing services to state agencies. Due to his direct administrative role and concentration of power, Williams counteracted the loss of executive power under Governor Lee Cruce.", "target": "Governor of Oklahoma; politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5711390", "label": "Hemiandrus", "source": "Hemiandrus is a genus of wētā in the family Anostostomatidae. In New Zealand they are known as ground wētā due to their burrowing lifestyle. Hemiandrus wētā are nocturnal, and reside in these burrows during the day. Ground wētā seal the entrance of their burrow during the day with a soil plug or door so that their burrow is concealed. This genus was originally said to be distributed in Australia and New Zealand, however, with recent molecular genetic methods, this is under debate. Ground wētā adults are smaller than other types of wētā, with the unusual trait of having both long and short ovipositors, depending on the species. The name of this genus is said to come from this trait as hemi- mean half and -andrus means male, as the species where the female has a short ovipositor can sometimes be mistaken for a male. This genus has a diverse diet, depending on the species.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13446299", "label": "Bucculatrix argentisignella", "source": "Bucculatrix argentisignella is a moth species in the family Bucculatricidae. It was first described by Gottlieb August Wilhelm Herrich-Schäffer in 1855 and is found in France and in disjunct populations in Central, Eastern and Northern Europe.Adults exhibit sexual dimorphism. Males have uniform grey wings, lacking the four silvery spots on the forewings.The larvae feed on Leucanthemum vulgare. They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine starts as a narrow, upper- or lower-surface gallery. Later, the gallery widens, becoming full-depth. The frass is deposited in the center of the corridor. Larvae sometimes leave the mine and continue elsewhere. Pupation takes place outside of the mine. Larvae can be found from May to June and again in July.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31271122", "label": "Anthony Warner", "source": "Anthony Warner (born 1973) is a British chef and food writer and the author of the Angry Chef blog. His first book, The Angry Chef, has been seen as a reaction to and debunking of food faddism.", "target": "British chef, food writer and author (born 1973)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19747563", "label": "January 9", "source": "January 9 is the ninth day of the year in the Gregorian calendar; 356 days remain until the end of the year (357 in leap years).", "target": "day of the year", "baseline_candidates": ["point in time with respect to recurrent timeframe"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4659288", "label": "A Round-Heeled Woman: the play", "source": "A Round-Heeled Woman: the play is a stage adaptation, by British playwright Jane Prowse, of Jane Juska's book A Round-Heeled Woman: my Late-life Adventures in Sex and Romance.", "target": "play written by Jane Prowse", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2545411", "label": "Lambda Aquarii", "source": "Lambda Aquarii, informally known as Hydor (), is a variable star in the equatorial constellation of Aquarius. The name is Latinized from the Bayer designation λ Aquarii. The apparent visual magnitude of this star ranges from 3.57 down to 3.80, which is bright enough to be visible with the naked eye. It lies just 0.39 degrees south of the ecliptic and so is subject to lunar occultations. The star is eclipsed by the sun from about 1-4 March; thus the star can be viewed the whole night, crossing the sky, in early September, in the current epoch. Lambda Aquarii is located at a distance of approximately 310 light-years (95 pc) from the Sun based on parallax, but is drifting closer with a radial velocity of −10.5 km/s.The stellar classification of Lambda Aquarii is M2.5 IIIa Fe–1, indicating this is an aging red giant star with an underabundance of iron showing in its spectrum. This star is on the asymptotic giant branch and is generating energy through the nuclear fusion of hydrogen and helium along concentric shells surrounding an inert core of carbon and oxygen. With 3.6 times the mass of the Sun, it has expanded to 44 times the Sun's radius. It is classified as slow irregular variable and pulsation periods of 24.5, 32.0, and 49.5 days have been identified. On average, it is radiating nearly 700 times the luminosity of the Sun from the photosphere at an effective temperature of 3,835 K.", "target": "star in the constellation Aquarius", "baseline_candidates": ["variable star", "star", "infrared source", "long-period variable star"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18207070", "label": "Minuscule 931", "source": "Minuscule 931 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 1361 (von Soden), is a 13th-century Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament on parchment. It has marginalia and was prepared for liturgical use. The manuscript has not survived in complete condition.", "target": "New Testament manuscript", "baseline_candidates": ["manuscript"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55609152", "label": "David Stevenson", "source": "David Stevenson was a Scottish professional footballer who played in the Scottish League for Cowdenbeath, Hibernian, Bo'ness, Leith Athletic and Dunfermline Athletic as a goalkeeper.", "target": "Scottish association football player (fl. 1913-1928)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1255083", "label": "Judgment of Solomon", "source": "The Judgement of Solomon is a story from the Hebrew Bible in which Solomon ruled between two women both claiming to be the mother of a child. Solomon revealed their true feelings and relationship to the child by suggesting the baby be cut in two, each woman to receive half. With this strategy, he was able to discern the non-mother as the woman who entirely approved of this proposal, while the actual mother begged that the sword might be sheathed and the child committed to the care of her rival. Some consider this approach to justice an archetypal example of an impartial judge displaying wisdom in making a ruling.", "target": "bible story and art theme", "baseline_candidates": ["Bible story", "artistic theme"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6949258", "label": "Myths and Legends of Babylonia and Assyria", "source": "Myths and Legends of Babylonia and Assyria is a book by Donald Alexander Mackenzie published in 1915. The book discusses not only the mythology of Babylonia and Assyria, but also the history of the region (Mesopotamia), Biblical accounts similar to the region's mythology, and comparisons to the mythologies of other cultures, such as those of India and northern Europe.", "target": "book by Donald Alexander Mackenzie", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15877654", "label": "The Enchanted Pose", "source": "The Enchanted Pose is a 1927 painting by René Magritte depicting a side-by-side pair of identical female nudes in a bare interior. It has been lost since the 1930s.In 2013, technicians From MoMa examining Magritte paintings using x-ray fluorescence discovered fragments of the composition concealed under two compositions Magritte painted in the 1930s. One was The Portrait (1935) held at MoMa, the other one was The Red Model (1935) at Stockholm’s Moderna Museet. Sometime between 1927 and the mid-1930s, Magritte had cut the painting into pieces and recycled the canvas, to be painted over. In 2016, a third fragment was identified under a painting entitled The Human Condition (1935) in the Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. In 2017, it was announced that the fourth and final fragment was found under his work God is not a Saint (c. 1935–36), located in the Magritte Museum in Brussels.", "target": "painting by René Magritte", "baseline_candidates": ["lost artwork", "painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96716423", "label": "CeCe Kizer", "source": "Cecelia Anne \"Cece\" Kizer (born August 7, 1997) is an American professional soccer player who plays as a forward or a midfielder for the Kansas City Current of the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL).", "target": "American association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2063710", "label": "Brad Pickett", "source": "Brad Pickett (born 24 September 1978) is a retired English mixed martial artist. He is the former Cage Rage British Featherweight Champion. He competed as a bantamweight in the Ultimate Fighting Championship; Dana White stated that Pickett was one of his favourite fighters to watch. He has also competed for World Extreme Cagefighting and BodogFIGHT, and at the Dynamite!! USA event.", "target": "British martial artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q572528", "label": "Polyptychodon", "source": "Polyptychodon (meaning 'shaped fin tooth') is a genus of pliosaurid found in Middle-Late Cretaceous marine deposits in southern England and Patagonia. It has been considered a nomen dubium in a 2016 review.", "target": "genus of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6437373", "label": "Krishna", "source": "S. Krishna is an Indian cinematographer and film director, who primarily works in Kannada cinema. He gave a new dimension for cinematography through his breathtaking visuals in Mungaru Male. He's an alumnus of Government Film and Television Institute, Bangalore.", "target": "Indian cinematographer, film director and producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q44057", "label": "Millennium Bridge", "source": "The Millennium Bridge, officially known as the London Millennium Footbridge, is a steel suspension bridge for pedestrians crossing the River Thames in London, England, linking Bankside with the City of London. It is owned and maintained by Bridge House Estates, a charitable trust overseen by the City of London Corporation. Construction began in 1998, and it initially opened on 10 June 2000. Londoners nicknamed it the \"Wobbly Bridge\" after pedestrians experienced an alarming swaying motion on its opening day. The bridge was closed later that day and, after two days of limited access, it was closed again for almost two years so that modifications and repairs could be made to keep the bridge stable and stop the swaying motion. It reopened in February 2002. The bridge is located between Southwark Bridge and Blackfriars Railway Bridge. Its southern end is near the Globe Theatre, the Bankside Gallery, and Tate Modern, while its northern end is next to the City of London School below St Paul's Cathedral. The bridge's alignment is such that a clear view (i.e. a \"terminating vista\") of St Paul's south façade is presented from across the river, framed by the bridge supports.", "target": "footbridge in London", "baseline_candidates": ["footbridge", "suspension bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6995667", "label": "Neptune Glacier", "source": "Neptune Glacier (71°44′S 68°17′W) is a glacier on the east coast of Alexander Island, Antarctica, 12 nautical miles (22 km) long and 4 nautical miles (7 km) wide, flowing east into George VI Sound and the George VI Ice Shelf to the south of Triton Point. Although Neptune Glacier is not located within the mountain range Planet Heights, the glaciers name derives from the mountain range along with many other nearby glaciers named after planets of the Solar System. There are also other nearby landforms named in association with these glaciers. The glacier was first sighted from the air by Lincoln Ellsworth on November 23, 1935, and roughly mapped from photos obtained on that flight by W.L.G. Joerg. The mouth of the glacier was positioned in 1936 by the British Graham Land Expedition (BGLE). Named by the United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) for the planet Neptune following a Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS) survey in 1949. The head of the glacier was mapped from air photos taken by the Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition (RARE), 1947–48, by Searle of the FIDS in 1960.", "target": "glacier in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["glacier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1989657", "label": "Nigeria women's national volleyball team", "source": "The Nigeria women's national volleyball team represents Nigeria in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches.Nigeria lastly qualified for the 2021 Women's African Nations Volleyball Championship where the team reached the semifinals.", "target": "national sports team", "baseline_candidates": ["national sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27598436", "label": "Marija Petrovic", "source": "Marija Petrović (born 29 August 1953) is a female chess player who has represented both Yugoslavia and Serbia in international chess championships. She represented Yugoslavia in international chess competitions from 1981 to 1992 until the breakup of Yugoslavia and then went on to represent Serbia at the international level from 1992 until her retirement in 2016. She achieved the Woman International Master title in 1981. Marija is also a two time national champion for Yugoslavia in 1983 and 1984 in the Yugoslav Chess Championship. She won her first Yugoslav Chess Championship national title jointly with her fellow counterpart Suzana Maksimović. She also represented Yugoslavia at the Women's World Chess Championship 1988 and took part in two Olympiad events in 1984 and 1990.", "target": "Serbian chess player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76170415", "label": "George Sleight", "source": "Sir George Frederick Sleight, 1st Baronet (26 March 1853 – 19 March 1921) was an English fishing trawler owner. Sleight claimed that he started his career as a cockle-gatherer on the seashore at Grimsby. He went on to build a fishing empire that boasted the largest fleet of trawling smacks in the world. He was later a pioneer of steam trawlers and also acquired the largest fleet of those in the world. During the First World War almost all his vessels (50–60 of them) were commandeered for mine sweeping and patrol duties and over thirty were sunk. Having previously been knighted, Sleight was created a baronet in the 1920 Birthday Honours.He died aged 68 and was succeeded in the baronetcy by his son, Ernest.", "target": "British Baronet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2964823", "label": "Chris Noffke", "source": "Chris Noffke (born 6 January 1988) is an Australian long jumper. He was born in Ipswich. He attended St Peter's Lutheran College in Brisbane, Queensland. He finished fourth at the 2004 World Junior Championships and won the gold medal at the 2005 World Youth Championships. He also competed at the 2006 World Junior Championships and the 2007 World Championships without reaching the final round.His personal best jump is 8.33 metres, achieved in March 2010 in Perth.", "target": "Australian long jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58656391", "label": "New Mexico State Road 468", "source": "State Road 468 (NM 468) is a 2.51-mile-long (4.04 km) state highway in the US state of New Mexico. NM 468's western terminus is at the end of state maintenance by the entrance to New Mexico Boys School northwest of Springer, and the eastern terminus is at Interstate 25 Business (I-25 Bus.) in Springer.", "target": "highway in New Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q269620", "label": "Gates River", "source": "The Gates River is a short river in the Lillooet Country of the Southern Interior of British Columbia, Canada. Approximately 14.5 km in length, it flows generally northeast from the outlet of Birken Lake (aka Gates Lake or Summit Lake) to its mouth at the head of Anderson Lake. Its main tributaries are Haylmore Creek, from the southeast, and Blackwater Creek, from the northwest, which originates near the head of Birkenhead Lake. Augmented by the waters of McGillivray Creek, Lost Valley Creek and others, its flow becomes the Seton River from the foot of Anderson Lake onwards. The communities of the river's valley are known collectively as the Gates Valley and include Birken, Gates, Devine and D'Arcy (also known by its St'at'imcets language name Nequatque). The valley was part of the route of the Douglas Road and is the eastern half of the section of that route known as the Long Portage or Pemberton Pass.", "target": "river in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3234480", "label": "Trauma Center: New Blood", "source": "Trauma Center: New Blood is a simulation video game developed by Atlus for the Wii. The third entry in the Trauma Center series, the game was published in North America in 2007 by Atlus, and in other regions in 2008 by Atlus (Japan) and Nintendo (Europe and Australia). The story follows doctors Markus Vaughn and Valerie Blaylock, each holding a supernatural ability called the Healing Touch, as they face a man-made parasitic virus called Stigma. Gameplay combines surgical simulation with a story told as a visual novel, with operations controlled exclusively using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk. Development of New Blood began following the completion of Trauma Center: Second Opinion. The North American setting and overall narrative was influenced by the staff of Atlus USA, based on the series' overseas success. Development was supported by Media.Vision. While using many of the systems created for Second Opinion, the staff focused on adding full voice acting and multiplayer. The game met with generally positive reviews; praise was given to its gameplay and cooperative function, but reactions to the story were mixed, and several faulted its high difficulty. It was also described as a commercial success, selling 300,000 copies in North America.", "target": "2007 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4063078", "label": "Alunitdağ", "source": "Alunitdağ (also, Aunitdagh) is a village in the Dashkasan Rayon of Azerbaijan. The village forms part of the municipality of Daşkəsən.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96406044", "label": "Sorsogon's 2nd congressional district", "source": "Sorsogon's 2nd congressional district is one of the two congressional districts of the Philippines in the province of Sorsogon. It has been represented in the House of Representatives of the Philippines since 1916 and earlier in the Philippine Assembly from 1907 to 1916. The district consists of the municipalities of Barcelona, Bulan, Bulusan, Gubat, Irosin, Juban, Matnog, Prieto Diaz and Santa Magdalena. It was represented in the 18th Congress by Bernardita Ramos of the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC).", "target": "House of Representatives of the Philippines legislative district", "baseline_candidates": ["congressional district of the Philippines"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1836739", "label": "Chapman Memorial Field", "source": "Chapman Memorial Field (FAA LID: 6CM) is a privately owned public-use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) southwest of the central business district of Centerburg, in Knox County, Ohio, United States.", "target": "airport in Centerburg, Ohio, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q176139", "label": "Giancarlo Cobelli", "source": "Giancarlo Cobelli (12 December 1929 – 16 March 2012) was an Italian actor and stage director. He was considered one of the most important directors of Italian theatre.", "target": "Italian actor and director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7704335", "label": "Terry Dyson", "source": "Terry Dyson (born 29 November 1934) is a retired footballer who played as a winger.", "target": "English footballer (born 1934)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23139223", "label": "Parapower Parapower", "source": "The Parapower is a Polish paramotor designed and produced by Parapower of Pilchowo for powered paragliding. The aircraft is supplied complete and ready-to-fly.Confusingly, both the manufacturer and its product have the same name.", "target": "Polish paramotor", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19695994", "label": "633", "source": "Year 633 (DCXXXIII) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 633 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5970899", "label": "IF Gnistan", "source": "IF Gnistan (The Spark in English) is a Finnish football club from the city of Helsinki, founded in 1924. The club is currently playing in the Ykkönen, the second tier of the Finnish league system. IF Gnistan play their home matches at Mustapekka Areena. Club's home district is Oulunkylä, which locates in northern part of the capital city. The club is originally Swedish-speaking, but nowadays it is supported by Finnish-speaking majority also. The club was founded by a few Svenska Reallyceum and Åggelby Svenska Samskola students from Oulunkylä in 1924. IF Gnistan were multi-sport club and had several competitive departments including ski, athletics, swim and pesäpallo (Finnish baseball). Football department were founded in 1935, when the club joined Finnish Football Association Helsinki district. Later in the 1950s Gnistan had strong teams in orienteering, women's gymnastics, table tennis and cross country running alongside the classical sports.During the late 1950s the club decided to dissolve all the other departments except for the football teams. When ski and athletics were eliminated, Gnistan turned to a football club, and named Jacob Söderman as their new chairman. They became a significant team in lower leagues of the capital region but never promoted to the top tier. After season 1994, they achieved their place to Ykkönen for the first time. They stayed in the second tier four years and then relegated back to Kakkonen in 1998. They have been in Ykkönen level three occasions.", "target": "association football club in Finland", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6724484", "label": "Mackin", "source": "Mackin is a surname of multiple origins in the British Isles. In Scotland, it originates from the west coast and the Hebrides as MacKin, from the Gaelic Mac Sim or Mac Shimidh meaning \"son of Simon\".In Wales, Mackin is thought to be derived from the village of Machen in Monmouthshire.In Ireland, Mackin was the County Monaghan spelling of MacMaicin, a sept from the Kingdom of Oriel.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5353808", "label": "Elbridge", "source": "Elbridge is a town in Onondaga County, New York, United States. According to the 2010 census, the population of the town was approximately 5,922. The town is named after Elbridge Gerry, the fifth Vice President of the United States, and one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The Town of Elbridge is west of Syracuse, on the western border of the county. The town contains a village which is also named Elbridge.", "target": "town in Onondaga County, New York, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "human settlement", "town of New York"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4348685", "label": "Häckeberga Castle", "source": "Häckeberga Castle (Swedish: Häckeberga slott) is a mansion at Lund Municipality in Scania, Sweden. The estate dates back to the 14th century and is located on one of the seven islets of Lake Häckebergasjön. The manor house was built in French Renaissance style between 1873 and 1875 by Tönnes Wrangel von Brehmer after drawings by Helgo Zettervall (1831-1907). It currently (2022) hosts a boutique hotel, restaurant with former Michelin star chef and conference facility.", "target": "building in Lund Municipality, Skåne County, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2638273", "label": "Sharon Drucker", "source": "Sharon Drucker (Hebrew: שרון דרוקר; born July 26, 1967) is an Israeli professional basketball coach.", "target": "basketball coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19750865", "label": "Zip Code Tour", "source": "Zip Code Tour was a concert tour by English rock band the Rolling Stones. It began on 24 May 2015 in San Diego and travelled across North America before concluding on 15 July 2015 in Quebec City. The tour was announced on 31 March 2015 with tickets going on sale to the general public two weeks later. The name is a reference to the jeans-related artwork for Sticky Fingers, which received a special re-release in 2015, and had its entire track list played during the Zip Code Tour.", "target": "Rolling Stones concert tour", "baseline_candidates": ["concert tour"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17090557", "label": "Minnesota Music Educators Association", "source": "The Minnesota Music Educators Association (MMEA) is the Minnesota state-level affiliate of MENC: The National Association for Music Education. MMEA is a 2000-member professional society for music educators and is one of Minnesota's content education organizations. The program has operated for over sixty years. MMEA's stated mission is to provide \"high quality music education for every student\". MMEA annually conducts live auditions of Minnesota students for seven different All-State performing groups. These groups are Mixed Choir, Men's Choir, Women's Choir, Concert Band, Symphonic Band, Jazz Ensemble and Orchestra groups. The association also publishes a quarterly magazine, Interval.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21535481", "label": "Alice Maude Mofflin", "source": "Alice Maude Mofflin (26 May 1878 – 23 March 1961) was an Australian Methodist lay leader and charity worker. She helped establish the Methodist Children's Home in Victoria, Australia, and oversaw its management as the head of the Women's Auxiliary committee for thirty eight years. She served many other charitable causes through the Methodist church, including serving for thirty years as president of the Victoria chapter of the Methodist Women's Auxiliary to Overseas Missions. For the Queen's birthday honours in 1958, she was appointed a Member of the British Empire. She died on March 23, 1961, at her home in Mount Lawley, Western Australia.", "target": "Australian philanthropist and Methodist lay leader", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17559947", "label": "The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam", "source": "The Oude Stadhuis in Amsterdam is a 1657 painting by Pieter Jansz. Saenredam, based on a drawing he made of the Old Town Hall on Dam Square over six days in 1641 before its demolition. It was bought from the painter in 1658 for 300 guilders by the mayor of Amsterdam for his office in the New Town Hall. It is now in the city's Rijksmuseum.", "target": "painting by Pieter Jansz. Saenredam", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16116990", "label": "Fred Tubby", "source": "Frederick Charles Tubby (born 23 January 1947) is a former Australian politician. The son of Reg Tubby, also an MP, he was born in Morawa, Western Australia, and was a school principal before entering politics. In 1988 he was elected in a by-election to the Western Australian Legislative Assembly as the Liberal member for Dale, moving to the new seat of Roleystone the following year. In 1989 he was appointed Shadow Minister for the Family, Seniors and Consumer Affairs, exchanging Education for Family in 1990 and becoming simply Shadow Minister for Education in 1992. In 1993, following the Liberal election victory, he became a parliamentary secretary, which he remained throughout the two terms of Liberal government. He lost his seat in 2001.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2497882", "label": "Shindand", "source": "Shīnḍanḍ (Pashto: شينډنډ; Persian: شيندند) is a town and the center of the Shindand District, Herat Province, Afghanistan. It is located at 33.3036°N 62.14°E / 33.3036; 62.14 at 1,066 m altitude on the Harut River. The Shindand Air Base is located about 15 miles northeast of the town. Shindand is at the northern end of Zirko Valley, which is one of main centers of poppy production in western Afghanistan. The town is located south of Adriskan, where a large police training facility exists. The population is mixed, includes Pashtuns, Tajiks and others, though Pashtuns make up the majority. The main languages spoken in the area are Pashto and Dari Persian. During the Soviet–Afghan War (1979–1989) the 5th Guards Motor Rifle Division was headquartered in the town.", "target": "place in Herat Province, Afghanistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3086317", "label": "Vetepere", "source": "Vetepere is a village in Järva Parish, Järva County in northern-central Estonia. As of 2011 Census, the settlement's population was 27. With a comparatively large area, Vetepere comprises several bogs including Kakerdaja, Kautla, Kodru and Laeksaare bogs. Vetepere is passed by the Jägala, Ambla and Tarvasjõgi rivers. The place was first mentioned as Karuvõhma (Corgewames) in 1507. In 1538 a manor with the same name was mentioned. In the 1570s when the owner was J. Wetberg, the place gained the name of Vetepere. In 1694 it was merged to Albu manor. In 1782 the Vetepere (Uue-Albu) cattle manor was mentioned.One of the most notable Estonian writers A. H. Tammsaare (1878–1940), was born on one of the bog islands in Vetepere. His notable novel Truth and Justice's (part I) main location Vargamäe farm appears very similar to Tammsaare's birthplace. In 1958, a museum dedicated to Tammsaare was opened there. In the village, there is also Simisalu observation tower and camping area. The tower is 18 metres high.", "target": "village in Järva Rural Municipality, Järva County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5229664", "label": "Dave Rible", "source": "David P. Rible (born August 28, 1967) is an American Republican Party politician, who has served as Director of the New Jersey Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control since July 2017. He had previously served in the New Jersey General Assembly representing the 30th Legislative District from January 10, 2012 until July 17, 2017, when he was appointed as Director of the ABC. Prior to redistricting, he represented the 11th Legislative District in the Assembly from January 8, 2008 to 2012.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3347010", "label": "ABC Radio", "source": "ABC Radio (Bengali: এবিসি রেডিও এফএম ৮৯.২) is the first news-oriented FM radio station in Bangladesh. ABC radio is part of Mediastar Limited of Transcom Limited. It is one of the sister concerns of Transcom Group like The Daily Prothom Alo. The station studio is located at the media area of Karwan Bazar. The Head of Operations of ABC Radio is Kabir Bakul and the Head of Programs is Sagar Shahriar. The station stays on air for 24 hours at FM 89.2 MHz of frequency from Dhaka station. ABC launched its commercial operation on 7 January 2009.", "target": "Bangladeshi radio station", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25893590", "label": "Kayeli", "source": "Kayeli (Indonesian: Bahasa Kayeli) is an extinct Austronesian language once used by the Kayeli people of the Indonesian island Buru. Two dialects were recognized, namely Leliali (Liliali) and Lumaete (Lumaiti, Mumaite, Lumara).", "target": "extinct language from Buru Island, Maluku", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "unwritten language", "extinct language", "dead language", "Austronesian"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1756401", "label": "Pacific Rim National Park Reserve", "source": "Pacific Rim National Park Reserve is a 511 km2 (197 sq mi) national park located in British Columbia, Canada, which comprises three separate regions: Long Beach, the Broken Group Islands, and the West Coast Trail. Its the Pacific Coast Mountains, are characterized by rugged coasts and temperate rainforests. Widespread vegetation found in the park includes western hemlock, Sitka spruce, western red-cedar, deer fern and sword fern. Animal species vary from marine and intertidal species, such as humpback whales and ochre sea star, to terrestrial mammals, such as Vancouver Island wolves. For recreational purposes, Long Beach is used for surfing and windsurfing, the Broken Group for sea kayaking, and the West Coast Trail for hiking, as well as camping in all areas and scuba diving in the winter months in the Long Beach and Broken Group areas. The Wickaninnish Beach Provincial Park formed the nucleus upon which the national park was assembled. After years of negotiation between the federal government and the provincial government of W.A.C. Bennett, a breakthrough was reached after Jean Chrétien took over for Arthur Laing as the federal minister responsible for parks. British Columbia adopted the West Coast National Park Act in 1969, and the two governments signed an agreement in 1970 to create the park through land assembly and extinguishing forestry rights. Following protracted negotiations, the park was finally added to the National Parks Act in 2000, classified as a \"park reserve\" based on an accepted claim of certain rights to the area by the Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council.", "target": "national park of Canada located in British Columbia", "baseline_candidates": ["national park of Canada"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41794362", "label": "Bharatiya Jnanpith", "source": "Bharatiya Jnanpith a literary and research organization, based in New Delhi, India, was founded on February 18, 1944 by Sahu Shanti Prasad Jain of the Sahu Jain family and his wife Rama Jain to undertake systematic research and publication of Sanskrit, Prakrit, Pali and Apabhramsha texts and covering subjects like religion, philosophy, logic, ethics, grammar, astrology, poetics, etc.Its research and publication programme started with the publication of the Dhavala texts. A Jain temple at Moodabidri in Karnataka, southern India, had stored for centuries its manuscript of palm-leaves. It was a 9th-century commentary in Prakrit and Sanskrit, of a 2nd-century CE work, Satkhandagama, in Prakrit on the Jain doctrine of karma. It has published two series of texts: Moortidevi Granthmala Lokodaya Granthmala It annually publishes hundreds of books in Hindi (both original and translated works) and other languages, and also presents India's highest literary awards, the Jnanpith Awards and the Moortidevi Award.", "target": "Publisher", "baseline_candidates": ["nonprofit organization", "publisher"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7170789", "label": "Pert Kelton", "source": "Pert L. Kelton (October 14, 1907 – October 30, 1968) was an American stage, movie, radio, and television actress. She was the first actress who played Alice Kramden in The Honeymooners with Jackie Gleason and earlier, during the 1930s, was a prominent comedic supporting and leading actress in Hollywood films such as Gregory La Cava's Bed of Roses with Constance Bennett and Raoul Walsh's The Bowery with Wallace Beery and George Raft (both released in 1933). She performed in a dozen Broadway productions between 1925 and 1968. However, her career was interrupted in the 1950s as a result of blacklisting, leading to her departure from The Honeymooners.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q920387", "label": "Gauribidanur", "source": "Gauribidanur is a taluk situated in Chikkaballapur district in the Indian state of Karnataka.", "target": "taluk in Kolar district, Bangalore division, Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "Town Municipal Council"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6752968", "label": "Manuel de Andrade", "source": "Manuel de Andrade Fulano de Tal (b. in São Jorge), was an Azorean jurist. He was also a comarta of Velas and a publisher of the review known as Jorgense.", "target": "Portuguese journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96359309", "label": "Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act", "source": "The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA) is a United States federal statute enacted by the 109th United States Congress and signed into law by President George W. Bush on December 20, 2006.The bill was introduced in the United States House of Representatives by Tom Davis, a Republican from Virginia, and cosponsored by Republican John M. McHugh of New York and Democrats Henry Waxman of California and Danny K. Davis of Illinois. As the chair of the Senate Oversight committee, Senator Susan Collins of Maine shepherded the bill's passage through the Senate. The bill was approved during the lame duck session of the 109th Congress, and approved without objection via voice vote.PAEA was the first major overhaul of the United States Postal Service (USPS) since 1970. It reorganized the Postal Rate Commission, compelled the USPS to pay in advance for the health and retirement benefits of all of its employees for at least 50 years, and stipulated that the price of postage could not increase faster than the rate of inflation. It also mandated the USPS to deliver six days of the week. According to Tom Davis, the Bush administration threatened to veto the legislation unless they added the provision regarding funding the employee benefits in advance with the objective of using that money to reduce the federal deficit. When he signed the bill on December 20, 2006, Bush issued a signing statement that says that the government can open mail under emergency conditions, though Waxman asserted that the government cannot do this without a search.", "target": "United States federal statute", "baseline_candidates": ["Act of Congress in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7719777", "label": "The Boys on the Bus", "source": "The Boys on the Bus (1973) is author Timothy Crouse's seminal non-fiction book detailing life on the road for reporters covering the 1972 United States presidential election.The book was one of the first treatises on pack journalism ever to be published, following in the footsteps of Gay Talese's 1969 \"fly on the wall\" look into the New York Times called The Kingdom and the Power. The Boys on the Bus evolved out of several articles Crouse had written for Rolling Stone. When released, the book became a best-seller and is still in print today, often being used as a standard text in many university journalism courses. Several very recognizable reporters, whose bylines could be seen into the 21st century, are at turns critiqued, lampooned and glorified in the book, including R.W. \"Johnny\" Apple, Robert Novak, Walter Mears, Haynes Johnson, David Broder, Hunter S. Thompson, Thomas Oliphant, Curtis Wilkie, Carl Leubsdorf, and Jules Witcover, not to mention the politicians they were covering: Richard Nixon and George McGovern. Later editions of the book contain a foreword by Thompson.", "target": "book by Timothy Crouse", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28317040", "label": "Kingsley Fernandes", "source": "Kingslee Fernandes (born 26 January 1998), is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Churchill Brothers in the I-League.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7991176", "label": "What I Live to Do", "source": "What I Live to Do is the first album by the American country music artist James Bonamy. Released in February 1996, it includes the single \"I Don't Think I Will\", a number 2 hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts, and \"She's Got a Mind of Her Own\" and \"All I Do Is Love Her\". The first single, \"Dog on a Toolbox\", was withdrawn by the label and replaced with \"She's Got a Mind of Her Own\".", "target": "album by James Bonamy", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1630782", "label": "Hotchkiss School", "source": "The Hotchkiss School is a coeducational preparatory school in Lakeville, Connecticut, United States. Hotchkiss is a member of the Eight Schools Association and Ten Schools Admissions Organization. It is also a former member of the G30 Schools group.", "target": "school in Lakeville, Connecticut", "baseline_candidates": ["boarding school", "university-preparatory school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5212380", "label": "Damiany, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "source": "Damiany [daˈmjanɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Moskorzew, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) south-east of Moskorzew, 23 km (14 mi) south of Włoszczowa, and 53 km (33 mi) south-west of the regional capital Kielce.The village has a population of 167.", "target": "village in Świętokrzyskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63057924", "label": "French 75", "source": "French 75 is a cocktail made from gin, champagne, lemon juice, and sugar. It is also called a 75 Cocktail, or in French simply a Soixante Quinze (Seventy Five). The drink dates to World War I, and an early form was created in 1915 at the New York Bar in Paris—later Harry's New York Bar—by barman Harry MacElhone. The combination was said to have such a kick that it felt like being shelled with the powerful French 75mm field gun.", "target": "cocktail made from gin, Champagne, lemon juice, and sugar", "baseline_candidates": ["sparkling cocktail", "IBA official cocktail"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18126738", "label": "Kerala Kesari", "source": "Kerala Kesari is a 1951 Indian Malayalam film, directed by V. Krishnan and produced by Vaikkam Vasudevan Nair. The film stars K. K. Aroor and Durga Varma in lead roles. The film had musical score by Jnanamani.", "target": "1951 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5624180", "label": "Benjamin Dousa", "source": "Benjamin Arif Dousa (born 5 December 1992) is a Swedish politician of the Moderate Party. He was the national chairman of the Moderate Youth League from 2016 to 2020. He was re-elected to the position on 24 November 2018.", "target": "Swedish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30234276", "label": "The African Doctor", "source": "The African Doctor (original title: Bienvenue à Marly-Gomont) is a 2016 French comedy-drama film based on the life of Seyolo Zantoko, the father of the musician Kamini. It was co-written by Kamini and directed by Julien Rambaldi. It stars Marc Zinga and Aïssa Maïga.", "target": "2016 film by Julien Rambaldi", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6743603", "label": "Malek National Museum and Library", "source": "Malek National Museum and Library (Persian: کتابخانه و موزه ملی ملک) is a museum and national library in Tehran, Iran. Malek National Library and Museum Institution (MNLMI) is the first private museum of Iran, and one of the 6 large libraries holding the exquisite manuscripts. The MNLMI collection is a rich trove of the best manuscripts and Iranian historical artworks. The Institution is located in the historical precinct of “Bagh-e Melli”, that is considered the cultural-historical center of Tehran. Usually, the MNLM visitors are numerous university students and researchers, as well as tourists who enjoy its library and museum facilities. It is one of the biggest libraries of precious manuscripts in Iran, built by Hadji Hussein Agha Malek, the richest man in Iran at the time. He built it in a traditional Persian architecture style. One of the biggest contributors is Esat Malek Malek, Hadji Hussein Agha Malek's eldest daughter, who contributed to the museum's development.", "target": "national museum and library in Tehran, Iranian national heritage site", "baseline_candidates": ["national museum", "cultural property", "national library"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6762077", "label": "Mariana Yampolsky", "source": "Mariana Yampolsky (September 6, 1925 – May 3, 2002) was a Mexican-American photographer. A significant figure in 20th-century Mexican photography, she specialized in capturing photos of common people in everyday situations in the rural areas of the country. She was born in the United States, but came to Mexico to study art and never left, becoming a Mexican citizen in 1958. Her career in photography began as a sideline to document travels and work in the arts and politics, but she began showing her photography in the 1960s. From then until her death in 2002, her work was exhibited internationally receiving awards and other recognition both during her lifetime and posthumously.", "target": "Mexican photographer (1925–2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12204680", "label": "Holosteum", "source": "Holosteum is a genus of plants in the family Caryophyllaceae with 3 or 4 species native from southern Europe through central and south western Asia and in Africa. They are herbs with an annual life span, some growing as winter annuals. They have slender roots and thin stems that are upright or ascending. The genus name was given by Linnaeus, and named because of the sprawling nature of the plants: Greek holos, meaning whole or all, and osteon, meaning bone, because of the frailty of the plant. Flowers are bisexual but sometimes also unisexual and pistillate. Flowers are hypogynous, have 5 sepals that are distinct and green in color and lanceolate to ovate in shape and 2.5-4.5 mm long. Typically with no stipules. The flowers have 5 petals that are white to soft pink in color and are clawed. Plants typically are found as small inconspicuous early spring blooming plants with short life spans. Common names for the plants in this genus include jagged chickweeds.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4833627", "label": "B'nai Shalom Day School", "source": "B'nai Shalom Day School is an independent Jewish day school in Greensboro, North Carolina, United States. The school was founded in August 1970 as a Solomon Schechter Day School and originally called the North Carolina Hebrew Academy at Greensboro. In 1979, the name was changed to B’nai Shalom. In the 1980s, B’nai Shalom elected to join the Jewish Community Day School Network.", "target": "Jewish day school in Greensboro, North Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q290998", "label": "Natalia Alimova", "source": "Natalia Adamovna Alimova Trandenkova (born 6 February 1978 in Saint Petersburg), is a volleyball player from Russia. She played for the Russia women's national volleyball team. She participated in the 2005 Women's European Volleyball Championship, and 2007 Women's European Volleyball Championship.", "target": "Russian volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16202833", "label": "J. Spencer Kinard", "source": "J. Spencer Kinard is an American radio and television personality He was a reporter for KSL television when he was invited to replace Richard L. Evans as voice of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Kinard had previously worked for CBS in New York. He spent 18 years as the voice of the choir.", "target": "American musician and journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7567550", "label": "South Island", "source": "South Island is a rock lying 22 nautical miles (43 km) west of McDonald Island, marking the southernmost feature in the McDonald Islands. Surveyed and given this descriptive name by the ANARE (Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions) in 1948.", "target": "island in Heard Island and McDonald Islands, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["rock formation", "island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q640579", "label": "Cosmati", "source": "The Cosmati were a Roman family, seven members of which, for four generations, were skilful architects, sculptors and workers in decorative geometric mosaic, mostly for church floors. Their name is commemorated in the genre of Cosmatesque work, often just called \"Cosmati\", a technique of opus sectile (\"cut work\") formed of elaborate inlays of small triangles and rectangles of colored stones and glass mosaics set into stone matrices or encrusted upon stone surfaces. Bands, panels and shaped reserves of intricate mosaic alternate with contrasting bands, guilloches and simple geometric shapes of plain white marble. Pavements and revetments were executed in Cosmatesque technique, columns were inlaid with fillets and bands, and immovable church furnishings like cathedras and ambones were similarly treated. In addition, members of the Cosmati engaged in commerce in ancient sculptures, some unearthed in the course of excavating for marbles for reuse. More than one ancient Roman sculpture has survived with the name of one of these craftsmen incised in it.The following are the main known Cosmati: Lorenzo (dated works 1190–1210 but probably active earlier) Jacopo (dated works 1205 and 1210) Cosimo (1210–1235) Luca (1221–1240) Jacopo (1213–1293) Deodato (1225–1303) Giovanni (1231 and 1235) The earliest recorded work was executed for a church at Fabieri in 1190 (Lorenzo) (CE). The principal works of the Cosmati in Rome are: ambones of Santa Maria in Aracoeli (Lorenzo) door at San Saba, 1205 door with mosaics at San Tommaso in Formis (Jacopo) chapel of the Sancta Sanctorum, by the Lateran (Cosimo) pavement of San Giacomo alla Lungara the magnificent episcopal.", "target": "Family of artisans in the Middle Ages", "baseline_candidates": ["group of humans"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6890911", "label": "Mohamad Zamri Baba", "source": "Mohamad Zamri Baba is a Grand Prix motorcycle racer from Malaysia. He races in the Asia Road Race Championship in the SS600 class for MuSASHi Boon Siew Honda Racing.In June 2015, Zamri was in a coma after he was hit by another rider after crashing onto the gravel bed during Race 1 of the SuperSports 600cc event, a second round of the FIM Asia Road Racing Championship. In October 2015, four months after the accident, Zamri regained awareness from coma and made a visit with family during Round 8 of the 2015 Petronas AAM Malaysian Cub Prix Championship at the Malaysia Agro Exhibition Park (MAEPS) in Serdang, Selangor.", "target": "Malaysian motorcycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97585747", "label": "Devil Avengers", "source": "Yazawin Yine Thu Myar (Burmese: ရာဇဝင်ရိုင်းသူများ) is a 2017 Burmese drama film starring Pyay Ti Oo, Myint Myat, Patricia and Laila Khan. The film, produced by Sein Htay Film Production premiered in Myanmar on August 11, 2017.", "target": "film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3594575", "label": "Ǹ", "source": "Ǹ, ǹ (n-grave) is a letter in the Yoruba language to place emphasis on the consonant, however this rarely occurs. It is also part of the digraph ǹg in Hokkien Pe̍h-ōe-jī, which is used as a syllabic voiced velar nasal in the third tone (Chinese: 陰去; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: im-khì; lit. 'dark departing').", "target": "letter of the Latin alphabet", "baseline_candidates": ["Latin-script letter"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7545443", "label": "Smithburg", "source": "Smithburg is an unincorporated community located where the municipal boundaries of Freehold, Manalapan and Millstone townships intersect in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States. County Route 527 and Monmouth Road (County Routes 537/524) pass through the center of the quaint village of Smithburg.", "target": "human settlement in Freehold Township, New Jersey, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11617021", "label": "Fu Xiong", "source": "Fu Xiong, courtesy name Yuancai, originally named Pu Xiong (蒲雄), was a Di military general of Former Zhao and Former Qin during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. He was the father of Fu Jiān, the third ruler of Former Qin. During the confusion following Shi Hu's death, he served as a general under his father Pu Hong, and during the reign of his brother Fu Jiàn (note the different pinyin), he was given the role of Prime Minister. Fu Xiong's biggest contribution to the state was when he repelled a major invasion from the Grand Marshal of Jin, Huan Wen, at the Battle of Bailu Plain in 354. After Fu Jiān killed Fu Sheng and took the throne in 357, he was posthumously honoured as Emperor Wenhuan.", "target": "a Di military general of Former Zhao and Grand Chancellor of Former Qin during the Sixteen Kingdoms period", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5097063", "label": "HD 40873", "source": "HD 40873 is a star in the northern constellation of Auriga, a few degrees to the south of Delta Aurigae. Located around 455 light-years distant, it shines with a luminosity approximately 38 times that of the Sun and has an effective temperature of 7,753 K. It is a suspected variable star and has a fairly rapid rotation rate, showing a projected rotational velocity of 134 km/s. Eggen (1985) suggested it is a probable member of the Hyades Supercluster.Samuel Molyneux named this star Telescopica in Auriga. Flamsteed catalogued it as 35 Camelopardali Heveliana, which is the name James Bradley continued to use, although it is within the borders of the modern constellation Auriga. Francis Baily reclassified it to Auriga as star 1924 in the British Association's 1845 Catalogue of 8377 Stars.HD 40873 is considered to be an Am star, a chemically peculiar star with unusually strong absorption lines of metals. It has been given a spectral type of kA5mA7IV, although other catalogues have given more normal classifications such as A7 V or A7 III.", "target": "star in the constellation Auriga", "baseline_candidates": ["variable star", "star", "double star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2501646", "label": "Jan Stokláska", "source": "Jan Stokláska (born February 7, 1983) is a Czech former track and field sprinter and bobsledder. As a sprinter he won two national titles in 2005, over 100 metres and 60 metres. He began competing in bobsleigh from 2007 onwards. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, he finished 12th in the four-man event and 13th in the two-man event. Stokláska's best finish at the FIBT World Championships was sixth in the two-man event at Altenberg, Germany in 2008.", "target": "Czech bobsledder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q366760", "label": "Yevgeni Andreyev", "source": "Yevgeny Nikolayevich Andreyev (Russian: Евгений Андреев; 4 September 1926 – 9 February 2000) was a colonel in the Soviet Air Force. He set an official record for the longest-distance free-fall parachute jump on 1 November 1962, which the Guinness Book of Records put at 24,500 metres (80,400 ft). The previous record holder for highest free-fall jump was Joseph Kittinger. However, Andreyev did not break the record for highest parachute jump, also held by Kittinger, but that jump was stabilized by a drogue parachute and therefore not free-fall. Andreyev was awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union for his feat. Andreyev's record stood until 2012, when Felix Baumgartner broke it with a jump from 36,402.6 metres (119,431 ft).", "target": "Colonel Soviet air force (1926-2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4687447", "label": "Aecidium magellanicum", "source": "Aecidium magellanicum, commonly known as the calafate rust, is a species of rust fungi. This fungus can cause a growth defect known as a witches broom, an excessive growth of stems from a single point on a branch. The species is known to infect the evergreen shrub Berberis buxifolia in Argentina and Chile.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5823834", "label": "Aqech", "source": "Aqech (Persian: اغش, also Romanized as Āqech, Āghesh, Āqej, and Āqanch) is a village in Bam Rural District, Bam and Safiabad District, Esfarayen County, North Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 235, in 82 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6715028", "label": "MCW Metrocab", "source": "The MCW Metrocab is a taxicab that was manufactured between 1987 and 2000 and as the Metrocab TTT from 2000 to 2006. It was designed and originally produced by the British vehicle manufacturing company Metro Cammell Weymann (MCW), with ownership passing to Reliant in 1989, Hooper in 1991 and finally Kamkorp in 2000.", "target": "motor vehicle", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model", "motor car"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16678955", "label": "Tambella Peulh", "source": "Tambella Peulh, also spelt Tambella-Peulh, is a commune in the Andemtenga Department of Kouritenga Province in the Centre-Est region of Burkina Faso. It had a population of 186 in 2006.", "target": "village in Burkina Faso", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Burkina Faso"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6202377", "label": "Jingle Ma", "source": "Jingle Ma Cho Shing (Chinese: 馬楚成; pinyin: Mǎ Chǔchéng; born 1957) is a Hong Kong-based writer and director, best known for his action films such as Tokyo Raiders and Seoul Raiders.", "target": "Chinese cinematographer and film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8082501", "label": "Şevket Süreyya Aydemir", "source": "Şevket Süreyya Aydemir (1897–25 March 1976) was a Turkish writer, intellectual, economist, historian, and one of the founders, publisher and a key theorist of Kadro (\"Cadre\"), an influential left-wing political journal published in Turkey from 1932 to 1934.", "target": "Turkish politician and political theorist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1500579", "label": "Community Rule", "source": "The Community Rule (Hebrew: סרך היחד, Serekh haYahad), which is designated 1QS and was previously referred to as the Manual of Discipline, is one of the first scrolls to be discovered near khirbet (ruin of) Qumran, the scrolls found in the eleven caves between 1947 and 1954 are now referred to simply as the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Rule of the Community is a key sectarian document and is seen as definitive for classifying other compositions as sectarian or non-sectarian (1QpHabakkuk; 1QM; the Hodayot; and CD are other core sectarian documents). Among the nearly 350 documents (900+ manuscripts) discovered, roughly 30% of the scrolls are classified as \"sectarian\".", "target": "One of the Dead Sea Scrolls", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work", "discovered text"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16665920", "label": "Lyudmila Korobova", "source": "Lyudmila Korobova (born 15 May 1942) is a Russian former swimmer. She competed in two events at the 1960 Summer Olympics for the Soviet Union.", "target": "Soviet swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5587517", "label": "Gossweilera", "source": "Gossweilera is a genus of African flowering plants in the daisy family.The genus is named for the Swiss-born Angolan botanist, John Gossweiler (1873-1952), who collected the type specimen of G. lanceolata. SpeciesGossweilera lanceolata S.Moore - Angola Gossweilera paludosa S.Moore - Angola.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13310719", "label": "Hypercompe magdalenae", "source": "Hypercompe magdalenae is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Charles Oberthür in 1881. It is found in Colombia and Bolivia.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97604115", "label": "Raffaello Botticini", "source": "Raffaello Botticini (1474–after 1520) was an Italian Renaissance painter active in Florence and its environs. Raffaello was trained by his father, the more famous Francesco Botticini, whose workshop he inherited. The Tabernacle of the Sacrament for the collegiate church of Sant'Andrea in Empoli, commissioned from Francesco in 1484 and delivered in 1491, was completed by Raffaello in 1504. This work is now in the church's adjoining museum. Raffaello painted other pictures for various churches in Empoli, including two panels of Saint Jerome and Saint Sebastian dated 1500 (now also at the collegiate museum) and an altarpiece of the Pietà (1508) for the chapel of the Compagnia della Veste Nera, destroyed in 1944. These panels show the strong influence of Raffaello's father as well as of Domenico Ghirlandaio and his pupils, Bastiano Mainardi and Francesco Granacci. Other works by Raffaello Botticini include about a dozen paintings of the Virgin and Child. Some of his later altarpieces include the Nativity with Saints Martin and Barbara (1512) for the church of Santi Martino e Barbara in Castelfranco di Sotto (now Saint Petersburg, Hermitage Museum); the Annunciation with Saints Andrew and Francis (1513) for San Salvatore, Fucecchio (now in that town's Museo Civico); and the undated Madonna and Child with Saints Peter, Matthew, Justus and John the Baptist for the church of Santi Martino e Giusto in Lucardo, in the municipality of Montespertoli (in situ).Raffaello died sometime after 1520.", "target": "Italian painter (1477-1520)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7063709", "label": "Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust", "source": "Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (NUH) is one of England's largest acute teaching trusts. It was established on 1 April 2006 following the merger of Nottingham City Hospital and the Queen's Medical Centre NHS Trusts. They provide acute and specialist services to 2.5m people within Nottingham and surrounding communities at the Queen's Medical Centre (QMC) and the City Hospital campuses, as well as specialist services for a further 3-4m people from across the region.A merger with Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust was planned, and Peter Homa, Chief Executive of Nottingham at that time took the same role at Sherwood Forest, but refused to accept responsibility for the trust's £2.5bn private finance initiative contract. In 2016 Homa stepped down from the job at Sherwood Forest and in November 2016 it was announced that the merger would not proceed.", "target": "hospital in England", "baseline_candidates": ["NHS trust"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3424782", "label": "foxes in popular culture", "source": "The fox appears in the folklore of many cultures, but especially European and East Asian, as a figure of cunning, trickery, or as a familiar animal possessed of magic powers, and sometimes associated with transformation. Literature, film, television, games, music, and other forms of cultural expression may reflect the folklore image and reputation. The term \"foxy\" in English (\"having the qualities of a fox\") can also connote attractiveness, sexiness, or being red-haired. The term \"to outfox\" means \"to beat in a competition of wits\", similarly to \"outguess\", \"outsmart\", and \"outwit\".", "target": "Foxes in popular culture", "baseline_candidates": ["cultural depiction"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q164260", "label": "Jim Duggan", "source": "James Edward Duggan Jr. (born January 14, 1954), better known by his ring name \"Hacksaw\" Jim Duggan, is an American professional wrestler. He is signed to WWE on a Legends contract. His best-known character is that of an American patriot, which sees him use a 2x4 length of wood as a weapon, the battle cry \"Hooo!\" and the U-S-A! cheer. In the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now known as WWE), Duggan was the winner of the first ever Royal Rumble match in 1988 and in World Championship Wrestling (WCW), he was a one time United States Heavyweight Champion and a one time (and the final) World Television Champion.In 2011, Duggan was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.", "target": "American professional wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3378762", "label": "Wagnelée", "source": "Wagnelée (Walloon: Wagnlêye) is a village of Wallonia and a district of the municipality of Fleurus, located in the Arrondissement of Charleroi, province of Hainaut, Belgium. The Wagnelée post code is 6223 and the telephone zone code is 071. Wagnelée was its own municipality until the fusion of the Belgian municipalities in 1977 when it merged with Fleurus.", "target": "section of Fleurus, Belgium", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality section"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5289469", "label": "Hresk", "source": "Hresk (Belarusian and Russian: Грэск, Polish: Hresk), is an urban settlement in the Slutsk District of Minsk Region, Belarus, the administrative center of Hresk Selsoviet.", "target": "village in Belarus", "baseline_candidates": ["agrotown"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7331946", "label": "Rickey Bustle", "source": "Rickey Norman Bustle (born August 23, 1953) is an American football coach and former player. He is currently the Head Coach at Athens Christian School in Athens, Ga. Bustle served as the head football coach at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette from 2002 to 2010, compiling a record of 41–65. As a player Bustle was a three-year football letterman at Clemson University. Before going to Louisiana, Bustle was an assistant coach (offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach) at Virginia Tech. Bustle's salary at Louisiana in 2009 was $226,000.", "target": "American football player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13116982", "label": "Gopalganj, Bihar", "source": "Gopalganj is a town, municipality and headquarters of Gopalganj district in the Indian state of Bihar.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3379947", "label": "Philippe Goy", "source": "Philippe Goy (born 1941) is a French science fiction writer. He is a photographer under his real name, but he writes under the pseudo-pen name Philip Goy. An alumnus of l'École normale supérieure, he is now a physics researcher at the CNRS.", "target": "French author and physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7489428", "label": "Sharat Kovakab", "source": "Sharat Kovakab (Arabic: حبل كوكب) is a volcano in Syria.", "target": "mountain in Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29541481", "label": "Bernard Berenson", "source": "Bernard Berenson (June 26, 1865 – October 6, 1959) was an American art historian specializing in the Renaissance. His book The Drawings of the Florentine Painters was an international success. His wife Mary is thought to have had a large hand in some of the writings.Berenson was a major figure in the attribution of Old Masters, at a time when these were attracting new interest by American collectors, and his judgments were widely respected in the art world.", "target": "American art critic and collector", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2660867", "label": "Niels Vandenbroucke", "source": "Niels Vandenbroucke (born 15 March 1991) is a Belgian footballer who currently plays for Sparta Petegem.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3610966", "label": "Spionidae", "source": "Spionidae is a family of marine worms within the Polychaeta. Spionids are selective deposit feeders that use their two grooved palps to locate prey. However, some spionids are capable of interface feeding, i.e. switching between deposit and suspension feeding.Spionids produce tubes by cementing sand grains and detritus material with mucus produced by their glandular pouches. The Spionidae is one of the most studied polychaete families given their biological and commercial importance. Members of this family have been used in regeneration studies and some are capable of boring into calcareous substrate which has destructive implications for commercially important shellfish.", "target": "family of annelids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7917021", "label": "Vasudevanallur block", "source": "Vasudevanallur block is a revenue block in the Tirunelveli district of Tamil Nadu, India. It has a total of 22 panchayat villages.", "target": "Vasudevanallur (revenue) block, in Tirunelveli district, in Tamil Nadu state, in India.", "baseline_candidates": ["community development block in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4971537", "label": "Hanna Ouchterlony", "source": "Hanna Cordelia Ouchterlony (14 September 1838 in Värnamo – 28 February 1924 in Stockholm) was a Swedish officer of the Salvation Army. She introduced the Salvation Army in Sweden in 1882, and in Norway in 1888. She served as the leader of the Swedish Salvation Army from 1882 until 1892.", "target": "Swedish Salvation Army officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28868442", "label": "Luise Reuss-Belce", "source": "Luise Reuss-Belce (24 October 1862 – 5 March 1945) was an Austrian - German operatic soprano. In the last years of her life she worked as an opera director and singing teacher.", "target": "Austrian opera singer (1862-1945)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22095957", "label": "1924 Texas A&M Aggies football team", "source": "The 1924 Texas A&M Aggies football team represented Texas A&M during the 1924 college football season.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20461775", "label": "Qaarsut Airport", "source": "Qaarsut Airport (Greenlandic: Mittarfik Qaarsut) (IATA: JQA, ICAO: BGUQ) is an airport in Qaarsut, a settlement on the Nuussuaq Peninsula in Avannaata municipality in northwestern Greenland. It is a primary airport with a gravel runway, capable of serving STOL aircraft of Air Greenland in all seasons. There is a small cafeteria in the tiny arrivals/departures hall. It is connected by a 4 km (2.5 mi) gravel road to Qaarsut and is 13.5 nautical miles (25.0 km; 15.5 mi) northwest of Uummannaq.", "target": "airport in Avannaata, Greenland", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15593042", "label": "Chrysopsis scabrella", "source": "Chrysopsis scabrella, called the Coastalplain goldenaster, is a North American species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native primarily to Florida with a few isolated populations in North and South Carolina.Chrysopsis scabrella is a biennial herb up to 100 cm (40 inches) tall. Most of the leaves are in a rosette close to the ground. There is usually only one flowering stalk, but it can hold as many as 100 yellow flower heads in a loose array. Heads contain both ray florets and disc florets. The species grows in open areas such as fields, roadsides, and savannahs.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q153530", "label": "Sa Calobra", "source": "Sa Calobra is a small village in the Escorca municipality on the northwest coast of the Spanish Balearic island of Mallorca. The port village is a popular destination for coach trips and road cyclists and is accessible by a single winding road, designed by Italian-Spanish engineer Antonio Parietti and opened in 1933, which features many hairpin bends and a 270° spiral bridge called the tie knot. The climb is officially called the Coll del Reis or the Coll de Cal Reis, the pass on 682 metres (2,238 ft) altitude, though it is often referred to by the name of the village at its base and was built and is considered to be \"as close as one could get to a perfect road for motorsport\". Unconventionally the road was engineered with tourists in mind.", "target": "human settlement in Mallorca", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1184598", "label": "Roberto Gallina", "source": "Roberto Gallina (born 4 January 1940 in La Spezia) is a former Italian Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and racing team owner. His best year was in 1973 when he finished eighth in the 250cc world championship. After his racing career ended, he started his own racing team which proved to be a successful venture. He won two 500cc world championships as a team owner in 1981 and 1982 with riders Marco Lucchinelli and Franco Uncini.", "target": "Italian motorcycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3103871", "label": "Gerald Duckworth", "source": "Gerald de l'Etang Duckworth (29 October 1870 – 28 September 1937) was an English publisher, who founded the London company that bears his name. Henry James and John Galsworthy were among the firm's early authors.", "target": "British publisher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3279305", "label": "House of Châlon-Arlay", "source": "This page is a list of the lords of Chalon-Arlay (in the county of Burgundy) and the principality of Orange. The lords of Chalons and Arlay were a cadet branch of the ruling house of the county of Burgundy, the Anscarids or House of Ivrea.For more details, and a family tree, see below.", "target": "family", "baseline_candidates": ["noble family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4848846", "label": "Bajan Style", "source": "Bajan Style is the debut studio album from Barbados-based pop group Cover Drive, released on 7 May 2012 through Polydor Records. The band enlisted a variety of producers such as Future Cut, Quiz & Larossi, J.R. Rotem, Aliby, Orange Factory and Steve Mac to work on the record. The album is rooted in R&B, pop, reggae fusion, hip hop and synthpop genres. Bajan Style received generally positive reviews from music critics, who complimented Cover Drive's Barbados \"summer\"-feel input to British charts and described the band's songs as \"catchy\". Critics also applauded the group's lead singer Amanda Reifer for her easy ability to perform different song styles, and compared her to recording artist Rihanna, who, like the band, also originates from Barbados. Some compared the album to the work of No Doubt and The Black Eyed Peas. The album charted at number 14 on the UK Albums Chart and on the Scottish Albums Chart at 28. Four singles have been released from the album as of August 2012, three of which have charted within the top ten of the UK Singles Chart. \"Lick Ya Down\" was released as the lead single on 28 August 2011. After receiving heavy airplay on both the radio and music channels in the United Kingdom, the song peaked at number nine on the UK Singles Chart. The second single \"Twilight\", became the group's first single to chart in Ireland, and their first UK number one. \"Sparks\", the third single, charted at number four in the UK and 29 in Ireland. \"Explode\" featuring.", "target": "album by Cover Drive", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q216941", "label": "Xi River", "source": "The Xi River (; Chinese: 西江) or Si-Kiang is the western tributary of the Pearl River in southern China. It is formed by the confluence of the Gui and Xun Rivers in Wuzhou, Guangxi. It originates from the eastern foot of the Maxiong Mountain in Qujing City, Yunnan Province. Then it flows east through Guangdong, and enters the Pearl River Delta just east of the Lingyang Gorge in Zhaoqing. The main branch of the Xi River flows southeast through the delta entering the South China Sea at Modao Men, just west of Macau. The major cities along the Xi include Wuzhou, Zhaoqing, and Jiangmen. The other two main tributaries of Pearl River are the Dong River (literally, the East River) and Bei River (the Northern River). Other transliterations of the river's name include Hsi River and Hsi Chiang. As for other functions, it plays a vital role in carbon storage and transport in Southern China.The Xi River is facing some ecological challenges such as drought, invasive species, and pollution.", "target": "river in Guangdong, China", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14696855", "label": "Thylactus simulans", "source": "Thylactus simulans is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Charles Joseph Gahan in 1890. It is known from Myanmar, India, Vietnam, and Thailand.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1974109", "label": "Sipandi Samarkandi", "source": "Mulla Abdulkarim Sipandi Samarqandi (1829–1909) was a Tajik bilingual poet. He lived in Samarkand, in current-day Uzbekistan. His work consists of ghazal, qit'a, mukhammas, and ruba'i, which were written in the Tajik language. Samarkandi also wrote Hajvi kali Ibrahim.", "target": "Tajikistani poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10335452", "label": "Nancy Vieira", "source": "Nancy Vieira (born 1975) is a Cape Verdean singer who was born in Guinea-Bissau and currently resides in Portugal.", "target": "Cape Verdean singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28070441", "label": "Penrice", "source": "Penrice is a village and community in Swansea county, Wales on the Gower peninsula. It had a population of 451 as of the 2011 UK census and includes the villages of Oxwich and Horton. Penrice has an elected community council. Penrice Castle is nearby as is St Andrew's Church, Penrice.", "target": "village and community in Swansea, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["community", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3640642", "label": "Bjørn Spydevold", "source": "Bjørn Spydevold (8 September 1918 – 30 March 2002) was a Norwegian football player. He was born in Sarpsborg, and played for the sports club Fredrikstad FK. He played for the Norwegian national team at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. He was capped 37 times for Norway between 1946 and 1953, scoring one goal.He was the father of Thor, Knut and Bjørnar Spydevold.", "target": "Norwegian association football player and association football manager (1918-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24908452", "label": "2016–17 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team", "source": "The 2016–17 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team represents Gonzaga University in the 2016–17 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs (also informally referred to as the \"Zags\"), members of the West Coast Conference. The Bulldogs, led by third year head coach Lisa Fortier, the Zags play their home games at the McCarthey Athletic Center on the university campus in Spokane, Washington. They finished the season 26–7, 14–4 in WCC play to win the WCC regular season. They defeat Pacific, San Francisco and Saint Mary's to become champions of the WCC Women's Basketball Tournament to earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they were defeated by Oklahoma in the first round.", "target": "Intercollegiate basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20675564", "label": "Lacey Knowles", "source": "L. Lacey Knowles is an ecologist and evolutionary biologist known for her work with speciation, sexual selection, phylogeography, and evolutionary radiation. As of 2012, she is a professor at the University of Michigan and the curator of insects at the university's museum of zoology. She has been an elected member of the councils for the Society for the Study of Evolution and the Society of Systematic Biology. Knowles received her Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolution from the State University of New York at Stony Brook and had a Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Arizona. Knowles has also served as an associate editor of scientific journals such as Evolution, Molecular Ecology, Systematic Biology, and Heredity. She is the author of Estimating Species Trees: Practical and Theoretical Aspects.", "target": "American ecologist and evolutionary biologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5520677", "label": "Gandheralophus", "source": "Gandheralophus is an extinct genus of isectolophid perissodactyl mammal known from the Eocene of Pakistan, with two known species: G. minor and G. robustus, both described in 2012.", "target": "genus of odd-toed ungulates", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66764340", "label": "Whoever Was Using This Bed", "source": "Whoever Was Using This Bed is a 2016 Australian short film directed by Andrew Kotatko. It is based on the short story by Raymond Carver from his 1988 collection Elephant. The film stars Jean-Marc Barr, Radha Mitchell and features the voice of Jane Birkin. The film was co-produced by Altaire Productions and Midnight Coffee Films, with post-production funds successfully raised via crowdfunding on Kickstarter.Whoever Was Using This Bed won Best Drama in the Australian Film Institute / Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts's 2016 Social Shorts competition.It is Kotatko's second adaptation of Carver's writing, the first being Everything Goes starring Hugo Weaving, Abbie Cornish and Sullivan Stapleton.", "target": "2016 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15678503", "label": "2014 Copa Claro", "source": "The 2014 Copa Claro was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 17th edition of the Copa Claro, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2014 ATP World Tour. It took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from February 8 through February 16, 2014.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["ATP Buenos Aires", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97610137", "label": "John Lyons", "source": "John Stacy Lyons (September 10, 1911 – November 26, 1981) was an American football player. He played college football at Tulsa and professional football in the National Football League (NFL) as a tackle for the Brooklyn Dodgers. He appeared in two NFL games during the 1933 season.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6669220", "label": "Lomatium dasycarpum", "source": "Lomatium dasycarpum is a species of flowering plant in the carrot family known by the common name woollyfruit desertparsley. It is native to California and Baja California, where it is widespread throughout many of the mountain ranges, including the Peninsular, Sierra Nevada, and California Coast Ranges, and in valleys.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18236729", "label": "Parco della Musica", "source": "Parco della Musica is a public music complex in Rome, Italy, with three concert halls and an outdoor theater in a park setting. It was designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano. Jürgen Reinhold of Müller-BBM was in charge of acoustics for the halls; Franco Zagari was landscape architect for the outdoor spaces. Parco della Musica lies where the 1960 Summer Olympic Games were held, somewhat north of Rome's ancient center, and is home to most of the facilities of the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia. The halls are: Sala Santa Cecilia, with about 2800 seats; Sala Sinopoli, in memory of conductor Giuseppe Sinopoli, seating about 1200 people; and Sala Petrassi, in memory of Goffredo Petrassi, with 700 seats. Structurally separated for sound-proofing, they are nonetheless joined at the base by a continuous lobby. Their outer architectural form has led to nicknames such as “the blobs,” “the beetles,” “the turtles” and “the computer mouses”.) The outdoor theater, called the Cavea, recalls ancient Greek or Roman performance spaces and is fan-shaped around a central piazza. During construction, excavations uncovered the foundations of a villa and an oil-press dating from the sixth century BC. Renzo Piano then adjusted his design scheme to accommodate the archaeological remains and included a small museum to house artifacts discovered, delaying the project's completion by a year. Parco della Musica was inaugurated on 21 December 2002. Within a few years it became Europe's most-visited music facility. In 2014, it had over two million visitors, making it the second-most-visited cultural music venue in the world,.", "target": "public music complex in Rome, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["concert hall", "theater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q53783292", "label": "Microhyla kodial", "source": "Microhyla kodial, the Mangaluru narrow-mouthed frog, is a frog species belongs to family Microhylidae. It is likely endemic to a small portion of India, and was discovered in the urban part of Mangalore. This new discovery was published at international journal Zootaxa on Tuesday May 16, 2018.", "target": "A frog in the family Microhylidae", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13041141", "label": "Krotinë", "source": "Krotinë is a village in the former municipality of Cukalat in Berat County, Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Dimal.", "target": "village in Berat County, Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7365914", "label": "Ronnie Lippett", "source": "Ronald Leon Lippett (born December 10, 1960) is a former American professional football player who played eight seasons with the New England Patriots of the National Football League from 1983–1991. A 5'11\", 180 lbs. cornerback from the University of Miami (FL), Lippett was selected by the Patriots in the eighth round of the 1983 NFL Draft.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5020177", "label": "California, Here I Come", "source": "\"California, Here I Come\" is a song interpolated in the Broadway musical Bombo, starring Al Jolson. The song was written by Bud DeSylva, Joseph Meyer, and Jolson. Jolson recorded the song on January 17, 1924, with Isham Jones' Orchestra, in Brunswick Records' Chicago studio. It is often called the unofficial state song of California. It entered the public domain in the year 2020.", "target": "1924 song by Bud DeSylva, Joseph Meyer and Al Jolson", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7988017", "label": "Western League", "source": "The Western League of 1939–1941 was a low-level American circuit in Minor League Baseball. The Class D level league was born when the Nebraska State League changed its identity after the 1938 season. It is not related to the Class A level Western League of 1900–1937 and 1947–1958, a higher-level league that suspended operations during the latter years of the Great Depression through World War II. The 1939–1941 Western League included teams based in Nebraska, South Dakota, Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota and Wyoming. After the United States entered the war, the league did not return for 1942 and was succeeded by its revived Class A namesake in 1947. The Nebraska State League was revived as a Class D circuit from 1956 to 1959.", "target": "defunct Minor League Baseball Class D league in the central United States", "baseline_candidates": ["sports league"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q208716", "label": "Regulus", "source": "A kinglet or crest is a small bird in the family Regulidae. Species in this family were formerly classified with the Old World warblers. \"Regulidae\" is derived from the Latin word regulus for \"petty king\" or prince, and refers to the coloured crowns of adult birds. This family has representatives in North America and Eurasia. There are six species in this family; one, the Madeira firecrest, Regulus madeirensis, was only recently split from common firecrest as a separate species. One species, the ruby-crowned kinglet, differs sufficiently in its voice and plumage to be afforded its own genus, Corthylio.", "target": "genus of birds", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10348252", "label": "Peltaea", "source": "Peltaea is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Malvaceae.Its native range is Southwestern Mexico to Tropical America.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4965002", "label": "Brian Paterson", "source": "Brian Paterson (born 1949) is a British illustrator and author, best known for his work with children's book series Foxwood Tales and Zigby.", "target": "British artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q88103647", "label": "Rkia Damsiria", "source": "Rkia Damsiria (Arabic: رقية الدمسيرية; born January 1, 1948) is a Moroccan Berber singer and poet. She writes and performs in Tashelhit, her native Berber tongue.", "target": "Moroccan Amazigh singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3258939", "label": "London Blitz", "source": "The London Blitz are an American football team based in Finsbury Park, North London, England, who compete BAFA National Leagues Premier Division South, the highest level of British American football. They were formed in 1995 and operate from Finsbury Park Athletics Stadium. They are one of the Britain's most successful teams and are five-time BritBowl winners as well as European Champions following their EFAF Cup triumph in 2011. They have also seven divisional titles to their name. The Blitz also operate a handful of Youth teams as well as fielding a second team in the BAFANL, the London Blitz B were formed in 2015 and are currently members of the SFC 2 South Division, the third level of the British League, Blitz B have made the Play-Offs on several occasions and have won one divisional title.", "target": "British amateur American football team", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3637786", "label": "Belli dentro", "source": "Belli dentro (Beautiful Inside) is an Italian comedy television series, notable for its setting in a prison.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q671428", "label": "Landwehr Canal", "source": "The Landwehr Canal, or Landwehrkanal in German, is a 10.7-kilometre (6.6 mi) long canal parallel to the Spree river in Berlin, Germany, built between 1845 and 1850 according to plans by Peter Joseph Lenné. It connects the upper part of the Spree at the Osthafen (Eastern Harbour) in Friedrichshain with its lower part in Charlottenburg, flowing through Kreuzberg and Tiergarten.", "target": "canal in Berlin, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["canal", "national waterways in Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q540300", "label": "Shrewsbury", "source": "Shrewsbury is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Kanawha County, West Virginia, United States. Shrewsbury is located on the north bank of the Kanawha River along U.S. Route 60. As of the 2010 census, its population was 652.Like the nearby community of Dickinson, Shrewsbury was given its name due to the early history of the Dickinson and Shrewsbury families within the area.Shrewsbury is home to a Liberty gas station and convenience store, the Mason-Dixon Bar, and three churches; The Shrewsbury Church of God, Shrewsbury Community Church and the Shrewsbury Baptist Church.", "target": "census designated place in Kanawha County, West Virginia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5563368", "label": "Gion-shinbashi-kita Station", "source": "Gion-shinbashi-kita Station (祇園新橋北駅) is a HRT station on the Astram Line, located in 4-43-28, Nishihara, Asaminami-ku, Hiroshima.", "target": "railway station in Hiroshima, Hiroshima prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "railway station", "elevated station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2586263", "label": "Striberg", "source": "Striberg (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈstrǐːbærj]) is a locality situated in Nora Municipality, Örebro County, Sweden with 317 inhabitants in 2010. It is the birthplace of composer Dag Wirén.", "target": "urban area in Nora Municipality, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16216713", "label": "Tony Pasin", "source": "Antony \"Tony\" Pasin (born 1 October 1977) is an Australian politician. He is a member of the Liberal Party of Australia for the House of Representatives seat of Barker since the 2013 election.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1040839", "label": "Love Psychedelico", "source": "Love Psychedelico (ラブ・サイケデリコ) is a Japanese rock band, often called Delico for short. They are popular not only in Japan but also Hong Kong and Taiwan.", "target": "band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q705627", "label": "Gröbzig", "source": "Gröbzig is a town and a former municipality in the district of Anhalt-Bitterfeld, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 September 2010, it is part of the town Südliches Anhalt. It is situated southwest of the district capital of Köthen (Anhalt).", "target": "human settlement in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7435810", "label": "Scotstoun", "source": "Scotstoun (Scottish Gaelic: Baile an Sgotaich) is an area of Glasgow, Scotland, west of Glasgow City Centre. It is bounded by Garscadden and Yoker to the west, Victoria Park, Jordanhill and Whiteinch to the east, Jordanhill to the north and the River Clyde (and Braehead beyond) to the south. At the heart of Scotstoun lies Scotstounhill, an enclave of late Victorian and post-war housing centred on Scotstounhill railway station. Scotstoun (along with the Govan shipyard) is home to BAE Systems Surface Ships (formerly Yarrow Shipbuilders), and to the Glasgow Warriors rugby team.", "target": "historic district of Glasgow, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25001741", "label": "XHETA-FM", "source": "XHETA-FM is a radio station on 107.1 FM in Zitácuaro, Michoacán. It is owned by Radio Zitácuaro, S.A. and known as Cuadrante Digital.", "target": "Radio station in Zitácuaro, Michoacán", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10859038", "label": "Audi 100 Coupé S", "source": "The Audi 100 Coupé S is a sports fastback coupe Grand tourer class car manufactured by the German automaker Audi AG. The car was first presented at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1969. Originally 30,687 units were produced.", "target": "Audi 100 Coupé S (C1/F104)", "baseline_candidates": ["racing automobile model", "coachwork type"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5312969", "label": "Duke of Buccleuch collection", "source": "The art collection of the Duke of Buccleuch is mostly European. The holdings, principally collected over a period of 300 years, comprise some 500 paintings, 1,000 miniatures and an enormous selection of objets d'art including furniture, porcelain, armour, jewellery and silverwork. The vast majority of the collection is divided between three principal locations: Bowhill House, Drumlanrig Castle and Boughton House.", "target": "art collection of the Duke of Buccleuch, at Bowhill House, Drumlanrig Castle and Boughton House. Mostly kept in Scotland.", "baseline_candidates": ["art collection"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5635161", "label": "HM Prison Dorchester", "source": "HM Prison Dorchester was a local men's prison, located in Dorchester in Dorset, England. The prison was operated by Her Majesty's Prison Service, and closed in January 2014.", "target": "prison in Dorchester, Dorset, England, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["prison"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7864546", "label": "UFO Interactive Games", "source": "UFO Interactive Games, based in City of Industry, California, is an American publisher of interactive video game content, developing on multiple platforms with a focus on original and mass-market gaming software. As an official third party licensee of Nintendo of America and Sony Computer Entertainment of America, UFO Interactive Games has published numerous titles for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Nintendo DS, Wii, PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable consoles. The company has published titles which are designed to appeal to hardcore gamers and the general public, such as Raiden IV and Balloon Pop, and has also launched a line of titles tailored for more casual gamers, children and families. UFO Interactive Games also has long-standing relationships and affiliates with other developers in Asia and Europe.", "target": "publisher of interactive video game content", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "video game publisher"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5037143", "label": "Castrum Caput Bubali", "source": "Castrum Caput Bubali was a fort in the Roman province of Dacia. It is located in Delinești (commune Păltiniș, Romania).", "target": "Roman fort in Dacia", "baseline_candidates": ["castrum", "ancient Roman structure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q667266", "label": "Lauren Paolini", "source": "Lauren Paolini (born August 22, 1987) is an American female volleyball player. She was part of the United States national team in the 2010 FIVB World Championship and she also won the gold medal in the 2015 Pan American Games. She played with University of Texas at Austin.", "target": "American volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q656142", "label": "Mathematical Research Institute of Oberwolfach", "source": "The Mathematical Research Institute of Oberwolfach (German: Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach) is a center for mathematical research in Oberwolfach, Germany. It was founded by mathematician Wilhelm Süss in 1944. It organizes weekly workshops on diverse topics where mathematicians and scientists from all over the world come to do collaborative research. The Institute is a member of the Leibniz Association, funded mainly by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research and by the state of Baden-Württemberg. It also receives substantial funding from the Friends of Oberwolfach foundation, from the Oberwolfach Foundation and from numerous donors.", "target": "research institute", "baseline_candidates": ["convention center", "research institute"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60794562", "label": "David Blythe Foster", "source": "David Blythe Foster (20 June 1858 – 10 July 1948) was a British politician who served as Lord Mayor of Leeds. Foster was born at Holme-on-Spalding-Moor. A keen Methodist, he was a lay preacher, and volunteered with the Leeds Central Mission. His experiences there led him to write a book, Leeds Slumdom. He ran a dressmakers' warehouse, and from 1893 limited working hours to 48 per week, and paid what he considered to be a living wage.In 1891, Foster was elected as a Liberal Party member of the Holbeck Board of Guardians, but his views proved too radical for the party, which refused to support him the following year. Foster stood down, but ran as an independent progressive in 1894. In 1895, he joined the Independent Labour Party, and stood repeatedly for Leeds Town Council in Armley and Wortley. He decided, in 1897, to live on an average worker's wage.Foster also joined the Labour Church movement in 1895, and supported the Leeds Brotherhood Church. He served as president of the Labour Church Union in 1902/03, but became disillusioned, believing it was insufficiently Christian, and he tried to start his own socialist Christian church in Bradford.Foster became secretary of the Leeds Labour Representation Committee in 1902, and in 1911 he was finally elected to the council, winning a seat in Hunslet. In 1928, he served as Lord Mayor of Leeds.Foster died in Leeds, aged 90.", "target": "British political activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14875444", "label": "Ritz-Carlton Toronto", "source": "The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto is a luxury hotel and residential condominium building in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. At 209.8 metres (688 ft), it is one of the tallest buildings in Toronto. It is located at 181 Wellington Street West, on the western edge of the downtown core and bordering Toronto's entertainment district. The hotel opened on February 16, 2011.", "target": "skyscraper in Toronto, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["skyscraper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16880240", "label": "Mossurize District", "source": "Mossurize District is a district of Manica Province in western Mozambique. The principal town is Espungabera. The district is located in the south of the province, and borders with Sussundenga District in the north, Chibabava District of Sofala Province in the east, Machaze District in the south, and with Zimbabwe in the west. The area of the district is 5,038 square kilometres (1,945 sq mi). It has a population of 195,182 as of 2007.", "target": "district in Manica, Mozambique", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Mozambique"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5328349", "label": "East Fife Ladies", "source": "East Fife Girls and Women's Football Club are a Scottish women's football team based in the Fife coastal town of Leven. The team, established in 2000, were originally named Kirkland Ladies and changed to East Fife Ladies in 2002. They currently compete in the Scottish Women's Football League First Division (North).East Fife won the SWFL North in 2016 and were promoted to the SWPL 2. The team finished in 7th place out of 8 teams in the SWPL 2 in 2017 and were relegated back into the SWFL North for the 2018 season. Following the completion of the 21/22 season East wife finished 2nd in the SWFL championship north and won the play off final winning promotion to the SWPL 2 for the season 22/23.", "target": "women's association football team in Fife, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["women's association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7105717", "label": "Osatsunai Station", "source": "Osatsunai Station (於札内駅, Osatsunai-eki) was a train station in Urausu, Kabato District, Hokkaidō, Japan.", "target": "railway station in Urausu, Kabato district, Hokkaidō, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3412507", "label": "Qobuz", "source": "Qobuz is a French commercial music streaming and downloading service. It was founded in 2007 by Yves Riesel, expanded to a limited range of overseas markets, including the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and Spain, and launched in the US in May 2019. It offers a tiered subscription service and, like its competitor Tidal, provides free-of-charge streaming only for a trial period.", "target": "online music service", "baseline_candidates": ["music streaming service"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48964818", "label": "Big Baller Brand Challenge Games", "source": "Big Baller Brand Challenge Games were a series of friendly basketball games between Vytautas Prienai–Birštonas of the Lithuanian Basketball League (LKL) and five teams in the LKL, National Basketball League (NKL), and Regional Basketball League (RKL). It began on January 9 and ended on January 28, 2018. The games were designed by Vytautas to give more exposure to its new signees, brothers LaMelo and LiAngelo Ball, and resulted in the team's withdrawal from the 2017–18 Baltic Basketball League season. The games were sponsored by Big Baller Brand, an athletic apparel company founded by the brothers' father LaVar Ball, and were streamed on Facebook Live via Ballislife Weekly Showcase. Vytautas won all five games of the exhibition series, and five of its players earned the game's most valuable player honors. Official head coach Virginijus Šeškus coached the team in its first four games, with LaVar Ball being named assistant coach in the fourth game against Dzūkija Alytus. Ball was appointed head coach for the team's final game against Jonava. Under Ball's coaching, LaMelo and LiAngelo Ball played increased minutes and had their top performances of the Big Baller Brand Challenge Games, with the former scoring an event-high 43 points in the fourth game and recording a triple-double in the last game of the event.", "target": "basketball competition in Lithuania", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q604892", "label": "Poniatówek, Greater Poland Voivodeship", "source": "Poniatówek [pɔɲaˈtuvɛk] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Słupca, within Słupca County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5628046", "label": "H. Alden Smith House", "source": "The H. Alden Smith House is a former mansion located within the Harmon Place Historic District near downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota. Designed in the Richardsonian Romanesque style by architect William Channing Whitney, it was completed in 1887 and listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. The house is the sole remnant of the Harmon Place mansion district, an elite residential neighborhood that existed between the 1880s and 1920s.", "target": "historic house in Minnesota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["single-family detached home"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51661554", "label": "What's Wrong with Secretary Kim", "source": "What's Wrong with Secretary Kim (Korean: 김비서가 왜 그럴까; RR: Kimbiseoga Wae Geureolkka) is a 2018 South Korean television series starring Park Seo-joon and Park Min-young. It is based on the novel of the same title by Jung Kyung-yoon which was first published in 2013, which was then serialized into a Webtoon comic by KakaoPage in 2015. The series aired on tvN from June 6 to July 26, 2018, on Wednesdays and Thursdays for 16 episodes.", "target": "2018 South Korean television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3570302", "label": "X-O Manowar", "source": "X-O Manowar (Aric of Dacia) is a fictional superhero co-created by writers Jim Shooter and Steve Englehart, and artists Bob Layton and Barry Windsor-Smith. The eponymous comic book series published by Valiant Comics has sold more than 8 million copies to date. X-O Manowar has also starred in a video game alongside Marvel Comics's Iron Man. X-O Manowar comics have been translated into a number of languages including German, Italian, Spanish, Polish, Norwegian, Filipino, Chinese and Brazilian Portuguese.", "target": "comic book superhero", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character", "television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2075537", "label": "Flimby railway station", "source": "Flimby is a railway station on the Cumbrian Coast Line, which runs between Carlisle and Barrow-in-Furness. The station, situated 29 miles (47 km) south-west of Carlisle, serves the village of Flimby in Cumbria. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by Northern Trains.", "target": "railway station in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3229794", "label": "Leonora Corbett", "source": "Leonora Corbett (28 June 1908 – 29 July 1960) was an English actress, noted for her charm and elegance in stage roles, and for a number of films made in the 1930s.", "target": "British stage actress (1908-1960)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28957364", "label": "Mohammad-Qoli Khan Qajar", "source": "Mohammad-Qoli Khan Qajar was a Safavid military leader and official, who served as the governor (beglarbeg) of Karabakh and Ganja in 1616-1627 and 1633. He was a son of the previous governor of Karabakh, Mohammad-Khan Qajar (1606–1616), and a member of the Ziyādoghlu branch of the Turkoman Qajar clan. Around 1620, when Paykar Khan Igirmi Durt was given a sister of Lohrasb (Luarsab II of Kartli) by then incumbent king Abbas I (r. 1588-1629) on the occasion of him being appointed as the new governor of Kakheti, Mohammad-Qoli Khan Qajar was given a sister of Tahmuras Khan (Teimuraz I of Kakheti). When in 1624, king Abbas I married his granddaughter to Semayun Khan (Simon II), Abd-ol-Ghaffar's wife was a companion to the bride, while Mohammad-Qoli Khan Qajar ordered Paykar Khan Igirmi Durt to host the banquet in the second term of the wedding party.", "target": "safavid military leader and official", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4339793", "label": "1998 Scottish Open", "source": "The 1998 Regal Scottish Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament, that was held in February 1998 at the AECC, Aberdeen, Scotland.Ronnie O'Sullivan won the tournament by defeating John Higgins nine frames to five in the final. The defending champion, Stephen Hendry, was defeated in the last 16 by Marcus Campbell.", "target": "snooker tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["snooker tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3134755", "label": "Het peoples", "source": "The Het were the people of the northern Patagonian pampas west of the Paraná River: The Chechehet, the Diuihet or Didiuhet, and the Taluhet. The easternmost Didiuhet, near modern Buenos Aires and influenced by the Guarani, were called the Querandí (see). It is not clear if these three peoples were related linguistically or only culturally. The Het were neighbored on the north by the Chaná, on the northwest and west by the Mapuche, and on the south by the Puelche.", "target": "indigenous people of the northern Patagonian pampas west of the Paraná River", "baseline_candidates": ["isolated human group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20612712", "label": "Yamagata", "source": "Yamagata Prefecture (山形県, Yamagata-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Tōhoku region of Honshu. Yamagata Prefecture has a population of 1,079,950 (1 June 2019) and has a geographic area of 9,325 km² (3,600 sq mi). Yamagata Prefecture borders Akita Prefecture to the north, Miyagi Prefecture to the east, Fukushima Prefecture to the south, and Niigata Prefecture to the southwest. Yamagata is the capital and largest city of Yamagata Prefecture, with other major cities including Tsuruoka, Sakata, and Yonezawa. Yamagata Prefecture is located on Japan's western Sea of Japan coast and its borders with neighboring prefectures are formed by various mountain ranges, with 17% of its total land area being designated as Natural Parks. Yamagata Prefecture formed the southern half of the historic Dewa Province with Akita Prefecture and is home to the Three Mountains of Dewa, which includes the Haguro Five-story Pagoda, a recognised National Treasure of Japan.", "target": "prefecture of Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["prefecture of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8019849", "label": "William W. Wemple", "source": "William Wallace Wemple (January 19, 1862 Duanesburg, Schenectady County, New York – February 11, 1933 Schenectady, New York) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11980864", "label": "Kjell Noreik", "source": "Kjell Noreik (28 July 1929 – 1 January 2015) was a Norwegian physician. He was born in Oslo. He was appointed professor of social medicine at the University of Oslo from 1986 to 1999. He was frequently used as an expert forensic psychiatrist, and was a member of the Norwegian Board of Forensic Medicine. He resided at Slependen.", "target": "Norwegian physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7489041", "label": "Shantee Orr", "source": "Shantee De'Shjuan Orr (born May 28, 1981) is a former American football linebacker. He was signed by the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent in 2003. He played college football at Michigan. Orr has also played for the Houston Texans, Jacksonville Jaguars and the Cleveland Browns.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4648909", "label": "A16 highway", "source": "The A 16 road is an A-Grade trunk road in Sri Lanka. It connects Beragala with Hali Ela. The A 16 passes through Bandarawela and Demodara to reach Hali Ela.", "target": "road in Sri Lanka", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60509267", "label": "Yalchino", "source": "Yalchino (Russian: Ялчино) is a rural locality (a village) in Irtyubyaksky Selsoviet, Kugarchinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 161 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Irtyubyaksky selsoviet, Kugarchinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1588118", "label": "Hasan Pepić", "source": "Hasan Pepić (born 16 March 1993 in Podgorica) is a Montenegrin footballer of Albanian descent who plays as a left-winger for Bahlinger SC.", "target": "Montenegrin footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7959723", "label": "Wahab Iyanda Folawiyo", "source": "Chief Abdulwahab Iyanda \"Wahab\" Folawiyo, CON (16 June 1928 – 6 June 2008) was a Nigerian businessman and philanthropist. In 1957, he founded Yinka Folawiyo & Sons, which has become the parent company of the Yinka Folawiyo Group of Companies. He was born in Lagos to Pa Tijani, a wealthy local merchant, during the British colonial era. He attended the University of North London in 1951, where he read Management, specialising in Ship Brokerage. He returned to start Yinka Folawiyo & Sons, an import and export business. Folawiyo was also the first African-descended Principal Member of the Baltic Exchange in London.", "target": "Nigerian businessman (1928-2008)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17011772", "label": "I Can Be", "source": "\"I Can Be\" is the debut single by Danish singer Ida who won the fifth Danish series of The X Factor. It was released as a Digital download in Denmark on 31 March 2012. The song entered the Danish Singles Chart at number 1. The song is included on her debut studio album Seize the Day (2013).", "target": "2012 single by Ida", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5521176", "label": "Gangolli", "source": "Gangolli (also Ganguli) is a village in Kundapur Taluk of Udupi district in Karnataka state. It is situated at the estuary of the Panchagangavalli River. It is located on a peninsula on the west coast of Karnataka. It is bordered by the river to the east and by the Arabian Sea to the west. The town was originally spelt as \"Ganguli\", but is now more commonly spelled as \"Gangolli\". The postal seal however still uses the old spelling.", "target": "Town in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26455723", "label": "Richard Erle-Drax-Grosvenor", "source": "Richard Erle-Drax-Grosvenor (born Grosvenor; 5 October 1762 – 8 February 1819) was a British politician. Born a member of the Grosvenor family now headed by the Duke of Westminster, he was the son of Thomas Grosvenor, second son of Sir Robert Grosvenor, 6th Baronet. His mother was Deborah, daughter of Stephen Skynner, while Field Marshal Thomas Grosvenor was his younger brother.Erle-Drax-Grosvenor was returned to parliament as one of two representatives for Clitheroe in 1794, a seat he held until 1796. In 1802 he was elected Member of Parliament for Chester (succeeding his younger brother Thomas), which constituency he represented until 1807. He returned once again to the House of Commons in 1818 when he was returned for New Romney, a seat he held until his death the following year. He was High Sheriff of Dorset for 1800–01. Erle-Drax-Grosvenor died in February 1819, aged 56. He had married Frances, daughter and heiress of Edward Drax, of Charborough Park, Dorset, in 1788, and assumed the additional surnames of Erle-Drax on inheriting Charborough Park on the death of Edward Drax in 1791. They had a son and two daughters. His son, Richard, succeeded him as MP for New Romney.", "target": "British politician (1762-1819)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10819060", "label": "Anomis", "source": "Anomis is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60977308", "label": "Natsumi Kawaguchi", "source": "Natsumi Kawaguchi (川口夏実, Kawaguchi Natsumi, born 28 June 2002) is a Japanese tennis player.She has achieved a career-high ITF juniors ranking of 41 in the world. Kawaguchi and her partner Adrienn Nagy won the 2019 Australian girls' doubles title beating Emma Navarro and Chloe Beck in the final.", "target": "Japanese tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28482702", "label": "Zelyony Ostrov", "source": "Zelyony Ostrov (Russian: Зелёный Остров) is a rural locality (a settlement) in Tsvetnovsky Selsoviet of Volodarsky District, Astrakhan Oblast, Russia. The population was 171 as of 2010. There are 3 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Volodarsky District, Astrakhan Oblast, Astrakhan Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["posyolok"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7093773", "label": "Oneword", "source": "Oneword Radio was a British commercial digital radio station featuring books, drama, comedy, children's programming, and discussion. The station was available in the UK via digital radio (DAB) and digital television (Freeview DVB-T and Sky Digital DVB-S) and was streamed on the internet 24 hours a day worldwide. It was launched on 2 May 2000.Ownership was shared between UBC Media Group and Channel 4 between early 2005 and December 2007. In October 2005, Channel 4 increased its stake to a majority by buying 51% of Oneword for £1 million. At 7.30 on weekday mornings, Oneword carried the Channel 4 Radio daily news broadcast, The Morning Report, which was produced by the Channel 4 news team. Virgin Media removed OneWord from their ex-NTL cable channel lineup on 4 October 2007. Oneword was not on their ex-Telewest lineup at the time. In December 2007, Channel 4 decided to withdraw its funding, selling its share back to UBC Media Group for £1. All programming was replaced by repeats of previous output. On 1 January 2008 the remaining staff were dismissed. Oneword ceased broadcasting on DAB on Friday 11 January 2008.After broadcasting ended, birdsong was broadcast on the channel until a permanent replacement, Amazing Radio, came on air on 1 June 2009. It has been claimed that the audience for the station was higher while the birdsong was playing than when the station was broadcasting normally.", "target": "British commercial digital radio station", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4552037", "label": "16 Biggest Hits", "source": "16 Biggest Hits is a 2006 John Denver compilation album. It is part of a series of similar 16 Biggest Hits albums released by Legacy Recordings.", "target": "2006 compilation album by John Denver", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20088130", "label": "Henrique Couto", "source": "Henrique Couto (born September 10, 1986) is a Portuguese American writer and film director of horror, comedy, family, and western film genres, from Dayton, Ohio, United States. His first feature film to gain national distribution was Faces of Schlock (2009) Known for his outrageous fashion style and overtly positive attitude.", "target": "American film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3551948", "label": "Unspeakable Vault", "source": "The Unspeakable Vault (of Doom) or Weird Tales from the Old Ones is a webcomic by François Launet, which chronicles the \"daily\" lives of the Great Old Ones, including Cthulhu, Nyarlathotep, and Yog-Sothoth, among others. It takes a lighthearted view of H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos to inspire laughter rather than the more usual soul-blasting horror. The comic was used as the basis of the second expansion set to the Cthulhu Mythos themed version of Steve Jackson Games' card game Munchkin.The webcomic's name is often shortened to UVoD.", "target": "webcomic by François Launet", "baseline_candidates": ["webcomic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q573745", "label": "Anthony Pateras", "source": "Anthony Peter Pateras (born 1979) is an Australian-born composer, pianist and electronic musician. He has released several solo albums and collaborated with other artists. Pateras has performed and recorded in Australia, North America and Europe. At the APRA Music Awards' Art Music Awards, he has been nominated three times: 2011 for Performance of the Year for his composition, Refractions, performed by Clocked Out and Speak Percussion; 2012 for Work of the Year – Instrumental for Flesh and Ghost performed by Speak Percussion; and 2015 for Performance of the Year for Beauty Will Be Amnesiac or Will not Be at All performed by Synergy Percussion.", "target": "Australian musician, composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q278656", "label": "David Scott", "source": "David Randolph Scott (born June 6, 1932) is an American retired test pilot and NASA astronaut who was the seventh person to walk on the Moon. Selected as part of the third group of astronauts in 1963, Scott flew to space three times and commanded Apollo 15, the fourth lunar landing; he is one of four surviving Moon walkers and the last surviving crew member of Apollo 15. Before becoming an astronaut, Scott graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point and joined the Air Force. After serving as a fighter pilot in Europe, he graduated from the Air Force Experimental Test Pilot School (Class 62C) and the Aerospace Research Pilot School (Class IV). Scott retired from the Air Force in 1975 with the rank of colonel, and more than 5,600 hours of logged flying time. As an astronaut, Scott made his first flight into space as a pilot of the Gemini 8 mission, along with Neil Armstrong, in March 1966, spending just under eleven hours in low Earth orbit. He would have been the second American astronaut to walk in space had Gemini 8 not made an emergency abort. Scott then spent ten days in orbit in March 1969 as Command Module Pilot of Apollo 9, a mission that extensively tested the Apollo spacecraft, along with Commander James McDivitt and Lunar Module Pilot Rusty Schweickart. After backing up Apollo 12, Scott made his third and final flight into space as commander of the Apollo 15 mission, the fourth crewed lunar landing and the.", "target": "American engineer, retired U.S. Air Force officer, former test pilot, and former NASA astronaut", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q546006", "label": "Sarzbüttel", "source": "Sarzbüttel is a municipality in the district of Dithmarschen, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is known around the world for its famous cheese. Cheesemaker Meiereigenossenschaft Sarzbüttel was founded in 1888.Daniel Popp, a German comedian, was raised in Sarzbüttel.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q371012", "label": "NGC 3172", "source": "NGC 3172 (also known as Polarissima Borealis) is a lenticular galaxy located in the constellation Ursa Minor. It is the closest NGC object to the North Celestial Pole. Discovered by John Herschel in 1831, it is about 285 million (28.5 crores)light-years away and about 85 thousand light-years across.A Type Ia supernova, SN 2010af, was discovered in NGC 3172 in March, 2010.", "target": "galaxy", "baseline_candidates": ["lenticular galaxy", "galaxy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q175801", "label": "Sican culture", "source": "The Sican (also Sicán) culture is the name that archaeologist Izumi Shimada gave to the culture that inhabited what is now the north coast of Peru between about 750 and 1375. According to Shimada, Sican means \"temple of the Moon\". The Sican culture is also referred to as Lambayeque culture, after the name of the region in Peru. It succeeded the Moche culture. There is still controversy among archeologists and anthropologists over whether the two are separate cultures. The Sican culture is divided into three major periods based on cultural changes as evidenced in archeological artifacts.", "target": "archaeological culture", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological culture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21524750", "label": "Gerald Michael Browne", "source": "Gerald Michael Browne (1943 – 30 August 2004) was professor emeritus of classics at the University of Illinois. He was a founding editor, in 1988, of the Journal of Coptic Studies. The principal biographical study of his life is an article by Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei.", "target": "American papyrologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3519893", "label": "The Battlefords—Meadow Lake", "source": "The Battlefords—Meadow Lake was a federal electoral district in Saskatchewan, Canada, that was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1979 to 1997. This riding was created in 1976 from parts of Battleford—Kindersley, Meadow Lake and Saskatoon—Biggar ridings. It was abolished in 1996 when it was redistributed into Churchill River, Battlefords—Lloydminster, Wanuskewin and Saskatoon—Rosetown ridings.", "target": "federal electoral district of Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["federal electoral district of Canada"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7581852", "label": "Spędoszyn", "source": "Spędoszyn [spɛnˈdɔʂɨn] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wartkowice, within Poddębice County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) south-west of Wartkowice, 8 km (5 mi) north of Poddębice, and 38 km (24 mi) north-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "target": "village in Łódź, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6828846", "label": "Michael Brody", "source": "Michael Brody (born 1954) is a Hungarian linguist, and Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at University College London.He was educated at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest (1972-4), Université René Descartes (Sorbonne) (1974-5), University College London (1975–80) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1980–82). In addition to his position at UCL, he has also been a Senior Fellow at Collegium Budapest. He is known for creating the Mirror Theory, which proposes a specific interface between syntax and morphology.", "target": "Hungarian linguist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48699215", "label": "Pat Todd & the Rankoutsiders", "source": "Pat Todd & the Rankoutsiders are a Los Angeles, California-based punk rock band. The group was founded by Pat Todd, the former lead singer of the punk rock band Lazy Cowgirls, after the Cowgirls broke up in 2004. The Rankoutsiders' music is less influenced by cowpunk than was that of the Cowgirls.", "target": "punk rock band from Los Angeles, California", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97236464", "label": "Koosalaane", "source": "Koosalaane is a village in Peipsiääre Parish, Tartu County in Estonia.", "target": "village in Peipsiääre Rural Municipality, Tartu County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1932229", "label": "Scaptia beyonceae", "source": "Scaptia beyonceae is a species of horse fly found in the Atherton Tablelands in north-east Queensland, Australia. Discovered in 1981 but not scientifically described until 2011, the fly is named after American recording artist and actress Beyoncé.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1647847", "label": "Diriá", "source": "Diria is a municipality in the Granada department of Nicaragua.", "target": "municipality in Granada, Nicaragua", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Nicaragua"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8082048", "label": "Śródmieście-Zachód", "source": "Śródmieście-Zachód is a municipal neighbourhood of the city of Szczecin, Poland, in Śródmieście (Centre) District. As of January 2011 it had a population of 15,996.", "target": "municipal neighbourhood in Szczecin, West Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["city district of Szczecin"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85762811", "label": "Gastrothrips", "source": "Gastrothrips is a genus of thrips in the family Phlaeothripidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7108569", "label": "Othello Castle", "source": "Othello Castle (Greek: Πύργος του Oθέλλου, Turkish: Othello Kalesi), also known as Othello's Tower, is a castle in Famagusta, Cyprus. It was built by the Lusignans in the 14th century, and was later modified by the Venetians. The modern name of the castle comes from a stage note in Shakespeare's play Othello.", "target": "Castle in Famagusta, Cyprus.", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31347436", "label": "1967 in Canada", "source": "1967 is remembered as one of the most notable years in Canada. It was the centenary of Canadian Confederation and celebrations were held throughout the nation. The most prominent event was Expo 67 in Montreal, the most successful World's Fair ever held up to that time, and one of the first events to win international acclaim for the country. The year saw the nation's Governor General, Georges Vanier, die in office; and two prominent federal leaders, Official Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker, and Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson announced their resignations. The year's top news-story was French President Charles de Gaulle's \"Vive le Québec libre\" speech in Montreal. The year also saw major changes in youth culture with the \"hippies\" in Toronto's Yorkville area becoming front-page news over their lifestyle choices and battles with Toronto City Council. A new honours system was announced, the Order of Canada. In sports, the Toronto Maple Leafs won their 13th and last Stanley Cup. In mountaineering, the year saw the first ascents of the highest peak in the remote Arctic Cordillera.", "target": "Canada-related events during the year of 1967", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85759633", "label": "Esperanto League of Bosnia and Herzegovina", "source": "The Esperanto League of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Esperanto: La Esperanto-Ligo de Bosnio kaj Hercegovino; Serbo-Croatian: Savez za esperanto Bosne i Hercegovine; Cyrillic: Савез за есперанто Босне и Херцеговине) is the national Esperanto association in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which represents Esperanto speakers, Esperanto societies, and friends. Since its establishment in 1910, it helps advancement of Esperanto language learning and usage in Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "target": "national association linked to the World Esperanto Association (UEA)", "baseline_candidates": ["national section of UEA"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60790408", "label": "Oechalia", "source": "Oechalia or Oichalia (Ancient Greek: Οἰχαλία) was a town in ancient Messenia, in the plain of Stenyclerus. It was in ruins in the time of Epaminondas, and its position was a matter of dispute in later times. Strabo identified it with Andania, the ancient residence of the Messenian kings, and Pausanias with Carnasium, which was only 8 stadia distant from Andania, and upon the river Charadrus. Carnasium, in the time of Pausanias, was the name given to a grove of cypresses, in which were statues of Apollo Carneius, of Hermes Criophorus, and of Persephone. It was here that the mystic rites of the great goddesses were celebrated, and that the urn was preserved containing the bones of Eurytus, the son of Melaneus.According to Greek mythology, King Eurytus of Oechalia had promised the hand of his beautiful daughter Iole to whoever defeated him in an archery competition. Heracles beat him but Eurytus refused to keep his promise, so Heracles sacked the city, killed Eurytus and kidnapped Iole. However, there was great discussion in antiquity about whether this Oechalia referred to this city, or that of Euboea, or one of two located in Thessaly or even to another that was located in Arcadia. Homer calls the Oechalia in Messenia the city of Eurytus in both the Iliad and the Odyssey, and this identification was followed by Pherecydes of Athens and Pausanias. However, Homer also, followed Apollodorus of Athens and Aristarchus of Samothrace, placed it in Thessaly. The author of the epic poem Capture of Oechalia (usually attributed to.", "target": "ancient town of Messenia", "baseline_candidates": ["ancient city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7428753", "label": "Sawyers Hall College", "source": "Sawyers Hall College of Sport and Science (formerly known as The Hedley Walter High School, then Sawyers Hall College of Science & Technology (or SHC)) was a secondary school located in Brentwood, Essex, England. It was a mixed school of non-denominational religion. The school logo was traditionally that of a Griffin. However, when the school achieved specialist college status its motif was modernised; it became a two panelled shield with a griffin above a diagram of an atom.", "target": "comprehensive school in Brentwood, Essex, England", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6068267", "label": "Iraq–United Arab Emirates relations", "source": "Iraqi-Emirati relations are foreign relations between the Republic of Iraq and the United Arab Emirates. Iraq has an embassy in Abu Dhabi and a consulates general in Dubai, while the United Arab Emirates has an embassy in Baghdad. In 1991, the UAE joined the Arab states that opposed the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and supported the use of force to compel Iraq's withdrawal of troops. In June 2008, the Iraqi government announced that the United Arab Emirates would send an ambassador to Baghdad within a few days. This would become the first Arab ambassador in Iraq since the kidnapping and murder of Ihab el-Sherif in July 2005. This announcement was made during a surprise visit by the United Arab Emirates' Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan to Baghdad on 5 June 2008. This marked the first time a high-ranking official from the Gulf Cooperation Council visited Iraq since March 2003.On 31 July 2007 following Iraq's victory of the Asian Cup, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE awarded the Iraq National football team 20 million Dhs, ($5.2 million) for capturing the Asian Cup for the first time in the country's history.", "target": "bilateral relations between the United Arab Emirates and Iraq", "baseline_candidates": ["bilateral relation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18395205", "label": "Valentin Rongier", "source": "Valentin Rongier (born 7 December 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays for Ligue 1 club Olympique de Marseille as a midfielder.", "target": "French footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2777269", "label": "Netuma", "source": "Netuma is a genus of sea catfishes found in the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean where it occurs in marine, brackish and fresh waters from the coasts of Africa to Australia to China. There are currently three described species in this genus.", "target": "genus of fishes", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66354156", "label": "Dwijendra Tripathi", "source": "Dwijendra Tripathi (29 July 1930 – 5 September 2018) was a professor of business history at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad where he worked for more than 25 years. He is considered the \"Father of Business History\" in India.", "target": "Indian historian of business", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5601536", "label": "Grebo IK", "source": "Grebo IK is a Swedish football club located outside Åtvidaberg.", "target": "football club in Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4045394", "label": "No Chris Left Behind", "source": "\"No Chris Left Behind\" is the 16th episode of the fifth season of the animated comedy series Family Guy. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on May 6, 2007. The episode features Chris after he is expelled from James Woods High School for dragging down their test scores, and is forced to attend an upper-class academy that does not take kindly to Chris's economically middle-class and socially lower-class upbringing. In an effort to fit in, he decides to join the academy's Skull and Bones society, but he quickly finds participation in its activities to be too demanding. The episode was written by Patrick Meighan and directed by Pete Michels. It received praise from critics for its storyline and many cultural references, in addition to receiving an Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation. According to Nielsen ratings, it was viewed in 7.95 million homes in its original airing. The episode featured guest performances by Gary Cole, Neil Patrick Harris, Phil LaMarr, Josh Radnor and Tara Strong, along with several recurring guest voice actors for the series.", "target": "episode of Family Guy (S5 E16)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28448091", "label": "1995 Ohio Bobcats football team", "source": "The 1995 Ohio Bobcats football team was an American football team that represented Ohio University in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) during the 1995 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their first season under head coach Jim Grobe, the Bobcats compiled a 2–8–1 record (1–6–1 against MAC opponents), finished in ninth place in the MAC, and were outscored by all opponents by a combined total of 320 to 161.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4868393", "label": "Basudeb Chap", "source": "Basudeb Chap is a village of Gosairhat Upazila under Shariatpur District in the Dhaka Division of southern-central Bangladesh.", "target": "human settlement in Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q982471", "label": "Buğdaylı", "source": "Buğdaylı is a village in the District of Bayburt, Bayburt Province, Turkey. As of 2010, it had a population of 130 people, including Bug Deal.", "target": "village in Bayburt, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5685465", "label": "Ministry of Counter Narcotics (Afghanistan)", "source": "The Ministry of Counter Narcotics (Pashto: د مخدره موادو پر ضد وزارت; Persian: وزارت مبارزه عليه مواد مخدر) is a ministry within the government of Afghanistan. The ministry leads the coordination, policy-making, monitoring and evaluation of all counter-narcotics activities and efforts. All activities are carried out in view of the Constitution of Afghanistan, the Afghan Drug Law and Afghanistan's National Drug Control Strategy (NDCS). The role of Minister of Counter Narcotics has been described as the world's toughest job.", "target": "Afghan government ministry", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3491576", "label": "Souk El Had", "source": "Souk El Had is a town and commune in Relizane Province, Algeria.", "target": "commune and town in Relizane Province, Algeria", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Algeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1158323", "label": "Albrecht", "source": "Albrecht (\"noble\", \"bright\") is a given name or surname of German origin and may refer to:.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name", "family name named after given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q861932", "label": "Cartelègue", "source": "Cartelègue (French pronunciation: ​[kaʁtəlɛɡ]; Occitan: Quartalèga) is a commune in the Gironde department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "target": "commune in Gironde, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86730295", "label": "Gniewkowice", "source": "Gniewkowice [ɡɲɛfkɔˈvit͡sɛ] (German Annahof) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kietrz, within Głubczyce County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland, close to the Czech border. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) west of Kietrz, 17 km (11 mi) south-east of Głubczyce, and 68 km (42 mi) south of the regional capital Opole.", "target": "village in Opole, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15572114", "label": "Iris ludwigii", "source": "Iris ludwigii, with the common name Ludwig iris, is a species in the genus Iris. It is also in the subgenus Iris subg. Limniris and in the series Spuriae. It is a rhizomatous perennial plant with violet-blue flowers. It is native to the Altai Mountains in Central Asia, where Russia, China, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan meet. It is cultivated as an ornamental plant in temperate regions.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14984399", "label": "Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs", "source": "The secretary of state for environment, food and rural affairs, also referred to as the environment secretary, is a secretary of state in the Government of the United Kingdom, with overall responsibility for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). The incumbent is a member of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom, 15th in the ministerial ranking.The office holder works alongside the other Defra ministers. The corresponding shadow minister is the shadow secretary of state for environment, food and rural affairs. The incumbent is George Eustice, following his appointment by Prime Minister Boris Johnson in July 2019.", "target": "United Kingdom government cabinet minister", "baseline_candidates": ["Secretary of State", "environment minister", "position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3268950", "label": "Aaro Pajari", "source": "Aaro Olavi Pajari (17 July 1897 – 14 October 1949) was a Major General in the Finnish Army. During World War II, he became one of the four double recipients of the Mannerheim Cross 2nd Class. His greatest achievement was the Finnish victory at the Battle of Tolvajärvi in the Winter War, where his small Finnish force smashed a far larger Soviet army. Pajari went on to serve throughout the Winter, Continuation, and Lapland wars, becoming famous for his success in leading small unit, and guerrilla style operations.", "target": "Finnish general (1897-1949)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21480895", "label": "PB.DB The Mixtape", "source": "PB.DB The Mixtape is a mixtape by Colombian singer Maluma. It was released on 13 January 2015, by Sony Music Colombia. The mixtape was supported by four singles: \"La Temperatura\", \"La Curiosidad\", \"Carnaval\" and \"Addicted\".", "target": "album by Maluma", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14514673", "label": "Platylabus", "source": "Platylabus is a genus of parasitoid wasps belonging to the family Ichneumonidae.The genus has cosmopolitan distribution.Species: Platylabus abbreviatus Heinrich, 1962 Platylabus alaskae Heinrich, 1962.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3462968", "label": "Saint-Maurice—Laflèche", "source": "Saint-Maurice—Laflèche (previously known as St-Maurice—Laflèche) was a federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada, that was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1935 to 1968. It was created as \"St-Maurice—Laflèche\" riding in 1933 from parts of Champlain and Three Rivers and St. Maurice ridings. In 1947, the riding's English name was changed to \"Saint-Maurice—Laflèche\". The electoral district was abolished in 1966 when it was redistributed into Berthier, Champlain and Saint-Maurice ridings.", "target": "former federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["federal electoral district of Canada"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3339406", "label": "Pretend You Don't See Her", "source": "Pretend You Don't See Her is a 2002 television film directed by René Bonnière and starring Emma Samms, Hannes Jaenicke, Beau Starr, Reiner Schöne, and Kim Poirier. It is based on the novel by Mary Higgins Clark.", "target": "2002 television film directed by René Bonnière", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49110002", "label": "Xiaying District", "source": "Xiaying District (Chinese: 下營區; Hanyu Pinyin: Xiàyíng Qū; Tongyong Pinyin: Siàyíng Cyu; Wade–Giles: Hsia4-ying2 Ch'ü1; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Ē-iâⁿ-khu) is a rural district of about 24,755 residents in Tainan, Taiwan.", "target": "A district in Tainan", "baseline_candidates": ["district", "district of Taiwan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15967", "label": "Sant Pere Sallavinera", "source": "Sant Pere Sallavinera is a municipality in the comarca of the Anoia in Catalonia, Spain.", "target": "municipality in Catalonia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Catalonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7291417", "label": "Rand Beers", "source": "Rand Beers (born November 30, 1942) is an American government official. He served as Deputy Homeland Security Advisor to the President of the United States during the Barack Obama administration. He also served as acting Secretary of Homeland Security following the resignation of Secretary Janet Napolitano on September 6, 2013 until Jeh Johnson assumed that office on December 23, 2013.", "target": "American Presidential advisor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21042575", "label": "Stacy Clinesmith", "source": "Stacy Marie Clinesmith (born April 22, 1978 in Spokane, Washington) is a former professional basketball player in the WNBA and current college assistant coach for Gonzaga University.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5894742", "label": "The Hong Kong Institution of Engineers", "source": "The Hong Kong Institution of Engineers (HKIE, Chinese: 香港工程師學會) is a professional body of engineers in Hong Kong. It was founded in 1947 as the Engineering Society of Hong Kong and was incorporated by the Legislative Council of Hong Kong as The Hong Kong Institution of Engineers in 1975. The institution aims to facilitate the exchange of knowledge and ideas, train the members in new technology and practices, and to raise the standing and visibility of engineers. It has a membership of more than 24,000, as of February 2010, under 19 different engineering disciplines.", "target": "professional body for engineers primarily in Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["regulatory college", "publisher"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q467672", "label": "William Langland", "source": "William Langland (; Latin: Willielmus de Langland; c. 1332 – c. 1386) is the presumed author of a work of Middle English alliterative verse generally known as Piers Plowman, an allegory with a complex variety of religious themes. The poem translated the language and concepts of the cloister into symbols and images that could be understood by a layman.", "target": "English writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61112078", "label": "Nasimul Alam Chowdhury", "source": "Nasimul Alam Chowdhury is a Bangladeshi politician and the incumbent Member of the Bangladesh Parliament from Comilla-8.", "target": "Bangladeshi politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85967043", "label": "2018 NBA All-Star Game", "source": "The 2018 NBA All-Star Game was an exhibition basketball game that was played on February 18, 2018, during the National Basketball Association's (NBA) 2017–18 season. It was the 67th edition of the NBA All-Star Game, and was played at Staples Center in Los Angeles, home of the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers. Team LeBron defeated Team Stephen, 148–145. LeBron James, namesake of Team LeBron, was named the All-Star Game Most Valuable Player for recording 29 points, 10 rebounds, and 8 assists; it was his third time winning the award since the 2008 All-Star Game. This was the sixth time that Los Angeles had hosted the NBA All-Star Game and the first time since 2011. The game was televised nationally by TNT for the 16th consecutive year, and simulcast on TBS for the 4th straight year.", "target": "Exhibition basketball game", "baseline_candidates": ["NBA All-Star Game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4811304", "label": "Astragalus sprucei", "source": "Astragalus sprucei is a species of legume in the family Fabaceae. It is found only in Ecuador. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17080913", "label": "Seh Rud", "source": "Seh Rud (Persian: سه رود, also Romanized as Seh Rūd) is a village in Kahnuk Rural District, Irandegan District, Khash County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 31, in 5 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6302197", "label": "Judaiella", "source": "Judaiella is an extinct genus from a well-known class of fossil marine arthropods, the trilobites. It lived during the Botomian stage, which lasted from approximately 524 to 518.5 million years ago. This faunal stage was part of the Cambrian Period.", "target": "genus of arthropods (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24236455", "label": "Menengai I Geothermal Power Station", "source": "The Menengai I Geothermal Power Station is a 35 MW (47,000 hp) geothermal power plant under construction in Kenya.", "target": "building in Kenya", "baseline_candidates": ["geothermal power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1437913", "label": "Palluaud", "source": "Palluaud (French pronunciation: ​[palɥo]) is a commune in the Charente department in southwestern France.", "target": "commune in Charente, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1573672", "label": "S.L. Benfica", "source": "Sport Luanda e Benfica, commonly known as Benfica de Luanda, or simply as Benfica, is a football club from Luanda, Angola. The club was established as the Luanda affiliate of SL Benfica of Portugal, and shares the same colours. The logo is also very similar to the Portuguese one. The club, as of 2019, has never won the Girabola (the Angolan league first division). The club is nicknamed Águias de Luanda, meaning \"Luanda Eagles\" (the eagle is the symbol of SL Benfica).", "target": "football club from Luanda, Angola", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q213485", "label": "Lerwick", "source": "Lerwick (; Old Norse: Leirvik; Norn: Larvik) is the main town and port of the Shetland archipelago, Scotland. Shetland's only burgh, Lerwick had a population of about 7,000 residents in 2010.Centred 123 miles (200 km) off the north coast of the Scottish mainland and on the east coast of the Shetland Mainland, Lerwick lies 211 miles (340 km) north-by-northeast of Aberdeen; 222 miles (357 km) west of the similarly sheltered port of Bergen in Norway; and 228 miles (367 km) south east of Tórshavn in the Faroe Islands. It is both the most northerly and the most easterly town in Scotland. One of the UK's coastal weather stations is situated there, with the local climate having small seasonal variation due to the maritime influence. Being located further north than Saint Petersburg and the three mainland Nordic capitals, Lerwick's nights in the middle of summer only get dark twilight and winters have below six hours of complete daylight.", "target": "town and port on Shetland, and capital of the Shetland Islands, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "small burgh"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20984789", "label": "Kerry Simmonds", "source": "Kerry Simmonds (born April 3, 1989) is an American rower. She is a twice gold medallist at the World Rowing Championships and she won her first Olympic gold in the women's eight at the 2016 Summer Olympics.", "target": "American rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6745088", "label": "Malvern School District", "source": "Malvern School District, also known as Malvern Special School District (MSSD), is a school district based in Malvern, Arkansas, United States. The district serves more than 2,100 students in childhood, elementary, and secondary education in kindergarten through grade 12. Malvern School District encompasses 456.09 square miles (1,181.3 km2) of land, in Hot Spring, Cleveland, and Dallas counties.Within Hot Spring County it serves Malvern, Perla, Rockport, and a portion of Midway. Within Dallas County it serves Carthage.", "target": "School district in Arkansas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1643555", "label": "British Honduras", "source": "British Honduras was a British Crown colony on the east coast of Central America, south of Mexico, from 1783 to 1964, then a self-governing colony, renamed Belize in June 1973, until September 1981, when it gained full independence as Belize. British Honduras was the last continental possession of the United Kingdom in the Americas. The colony grew out of the Treaty of Versailles (1783) between Britain and Spain, which gave the British rights to cut logwood between the Hondo and Belize rivers. The Convention of London (1786) expanded this concession to include the area between the Belize and Sibun rivers. In 1862, the Settlement of Belize in the Bay of Honduras was declared a British colony called British Honduras, and the Crown's representative was elevated to a lieutenant governor, subordinate to the governor of Jamaica.", "target": "UK possession in Central America between 1862 and 1981, today Belize", "baseline_candidates": ["geographic location", "colony"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2824402", "label": "Adieu", "source": "\"Adieu\" is a song by Canadian singer Cœur de pirate, from her second studio album Blonde (2011). It was released as a single in Canada on March 19, 2011.", "target": "2011 single by Cœur de pirate", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96575146", "label": "Breiden Fehoko", "source": "Breiden Fehoko (born October 15, 1996) is an American football defensive end for the Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for Louisiana State University (LSU) and was part of the 2020 National Championship winning team. He is perhaps best known for performing the Haka, a traditional Maori dance, with family members prior to LSU football games and on Hard Knocks. He is the son of Vili and Linda (Lee) Fehoko .", "target": "American football nose tackle", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13146261", "label": "Jama", "source": "Jama is one of the woredas in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Debub Wollo Zone, Jama is bordered on the southeast by the Qechene River which separates it from the Semien Shewa Zone, on the west by Kelala, on the north by Legahida, and on the northeast by Were Ilu. Towns in Jama include Dagolo, Faj, and Shul Afaf.", "target": "woreda in Amhara", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Ethiopia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65276405", "label": "Duderun", "source": "Duderun (Persian: دودرون, also Romanized as Dūderūn) is a village in Seyyedvaliyeddin Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 21, in 4 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43378698", "label": "Elizabeth Fullerton", "source": "Elizabeth Lillian Fullerton (born 27 December 1953) is an Australian lawyer, specialising in criminal law, who has been a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales since February 2007.", "target": "Australian judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21693663", "label": "Aurora Luque", "source": "Aurora Luque Ortiz (born 20 September 1962) is a Spanish poet, translator, teacher, and writer based in Andalusia.", "target": "Spanish poet, writer, academic and translator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17332577", "label": "Moon-Dominick House", "source": "Moon-Dominick House, also known as the Old Tin House, is a historic home located near Chappells, Newberry County, South Carolina. It was built about 1820, and is a 2+1⁄2-story, frame I-house with Federal style details. It has a high brick basement, gable roof, and exterior end chimneys.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.", "target": "historic house in South Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7990457", "label": "Whakaikai River", "source": "The Whakaikai River is a short river of the West Coast Region of New Zealand's South Island. It flows generally northwest to reach the Tasman Sea five kilometres to the northwest of the mouth of the Wanganui River.", "target": "river in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5436215", "label": "Farragut High School", "source": "Farragut High School, located at 11237 Kingston Pike, serves as a high school in Farragut, a suburb of Knoxville, Tennessee. Knox County Schools, the unified Knox County, Tennessee school district, operates the school. The school serves the majority of Farragut, portions south of Interstate 75.The original Farragut High School, built in 1904, occupied a strip of land adjacent to Kingston Pike, becoming the first consolidated high school in Knox County. In 1976, the school relocated to its current location on a hill overlooking Farragut on the opposite side of Kingston Pike. A supermarket and strip mall dominate the original site, razed after the construction of the new buildings. The school bears the name of Civil War hero David Glasgow Farragut, the Union admiral born in the area.", "target": "American public high school", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q512381", "label": "OLN", "source": "OLN (formerly Outdoor Life Network) is a Canadian English-language Category A specialty channel. OLN primarily broadcasts factual-based and adventure-related reality programming aimed at male audiences. OLN is wholly owned by Rogers Sports & Media, with the \"OLN\" name licensed from Camden Media, owners of the Outdoor Life magazine brand.", "target": "Canadian television channel", "baseline_candidates": ["specialty channel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q899952", "label": "Johann Nepomuk Czermak", "source": "Johann Nepomuk Czermak (17 June 1828 – 16 September 1873) was an Austrian-German physiologist who was a native of Prague. He studied in Prague, Vienna, Breslau and Würzburg. At Breslau he was greatly influenced by the work of physiologist Jan Evangelista Purkyně (1787–1869). He became a professor at Graz in 1855, and proceeded to work at several European universities, including Krakow (1856/57) and Leipzig (from 1869). Just prior to his death in 1873, he founded a physiological institute in Leipzig called the \"Spectatorium\". Czermak was a member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.", "target": "Austrian-German physiologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5130365", "label": "Clayton Windmills", "source": "The Clayton Windmills, known locally as Jack and Jill, stand on the South Downs above the village of Clayton, West Sussex, England. They comprise a post mill and a tower mill, and the roundhouse of a former post mill. All three are Grade II* listed buildings.", "target": "windmill in Hassocks, Mid Sussex, England, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["windmill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3126770", "label": "Hangup", "source": "Hangup, also called Hang Up and later released under the name Super Dude, is a 1974 film directed by Henry Hathaway. It stars William Elliott and Marki Bey. This was the last film directed by Hathaway.The film falls in the blaxploitation subgenre of \"vigilante group cleans up ghetto streets\". The film follows a black policeman seeking revenge on the man who got his girlfriend addicted to heroin. The film was distributed by American International Pictures, one of the many films it targeted to the new youth market. Josiah Howard states that the marketing \"almost makes it look like a spoof of the genre.\" Howard described the film as \"low budget and flashy, but fast-moving and consistently entertaining.\" Leonard Maltin wrote \"Hathaway has done many fine films, but this, his last, isn't one.\".", "target": "1974 film by Henry Hathaway", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6328653", "label": "KESO", "source": "KESO (92.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a classic hits music format. Licensed to South Padre Island, Texas, United States, the station serves the McAllen-Brownsville-Harlingen area. The station is currently owned by MBM Texas Valley LLC.Previously known as \"Alternative 92.7\" and \"Digital 92.7\", the station recently simulcast the Regional Mexican programming of XHRR.", "target": "Radio station in South Padre Island, Texas", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9087176", "label": "The Wanderer", "source": "\"The Wanderer\" is a song by American singer Donna Summer, released as the lead single from her 1980 eighth album of the same name, which was the first for her new label Geffen Records after recording her previous albums with Casablanca Records. Despite the label change, Summer continued to work with Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, who had produced the majority of her hits in the late 1970s. However, it marks a change in style for The Queen of Disco, incorporating new wave styled synth riffs and a shuffling beat. This first 45 from the album became a big hit for Summer in the United States, peaking at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 for 3 weeks. and reaching number two in Cash Box magazine as well. It was Summer's eleventh single to sell over a million copies in the United States. In Canada, the song spent four weeks at number four. A 12\" promotional single was issued, however, unlike all her Top 40 hits prior to this one it was not an extended version.", "target": "song by Donna Summer", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4714200", "label": "Alec Lorimore", "source": "Alec Lorimore (born 1948) is a twice Academy Award-nominated film producer and screenwriter who has concentrated his focus in creating giant screen, Imax documentary films. He is credited as one of the three producers of 1998 Imax film Everest, which had generated over $140 million in worldwide box office, making it the highest grossing Imax documentary film (as of February 2010). He was first nominated (with Greg MacGillivay) for an Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) in 1995 for The Living Sea, and the two men were subsequently nominated for Dolphins in the same Academy category in 2000. Other films include The Magic of Flight (Producer) and At Sea (Writer, Producer), for which he received the Alfred Thayer Mahan Award for Literary Achievement from the Navy League of the United States. From 1993 to 2005, he was Vice President, Production & Development at MacGillivray Freeman Films, a production and distribution entity in the giant screen, 70 mm film industry. Previous to his involvement in the Imax industry he worked for over ten years as a screenwriter, and wrote a number of feature film scripts which were either purchased or commissioned by the major studios, including Warner Brothers, Columbia Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and Paramount Pictures, and worked with such producers as Jerry Bruckheimer, Jonathan Taplin, Ray Stark, and Steve Tisch. He has served on the Informal Science Review Panel of the National Science Foundation (NSF), which determines which media projects receive NSF grants, as well as on the Board of Directors of the Environmental Media Association (EMA),.", "target": "American film producer and screenwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24909985", "label": "Kharak Kalan", "source": "Kharak Kalan is a village in the Bhiwani district of the Indian state of Haryana. It lies approximately 17 kilometres (11 mi) east of the district headquarters town of Bhiwani. As of the 2011 Census of India, the village had 2,444 households with a population of 12,605 of which 6,697 were male and 5,908 female. Dadi Sati Jabade is the primary deity here, and the residents and visitors alike rejoice in the Basant Pachami Mela. There are many other religious places like Dadi Chhabilende, Harsiddhi Devi, Khatu Shyam Temple, Jahar Veer Goga Ji Temple, Arya Samaj Temple, Ancient Shiva Temple, etc. Kharak is also known as the city of saints. Famous Nāgepīra Bābā (नागेपीर बाबा), the most beloved disciple of Lord Shiva Gorakshanath, on whose name is the birthplace of Shri Ranpat and Mandhata. There are camps (डेरे) of mahatmas (saints) all around the village, where all sorrows and pains vanish. Kharak Kalan has its own hospital run by the charitable trust 'Seth Phulchand Memorial'. The attractiveness of the village is enhanced by a large number of ponds. There are three main areas in this village, viz. Rajyan pana, Khandan pana, Mamnan pana. There are many other beautiful temples near Dadi Sati Jabde Temple.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q919651", "label": "Tom Helmore", "source": "Tom Helmore (4 January 1904 – 12 September 1995) was an English film actor. He appeared in more than 50 films between 1927 and 1972, including three directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Helmore was born in London, England and died in Longboat Key, Florida, USA. Helmore worked in his father's accounting firm while working as an extra in films. He subsequently pursued acting as a career, working predominantly on the stage, and later on Broadway, which led to Helmore's Hollywood career. In British and American films, Helmore was mostly employed as a dapper, comedic actor, even if he is best known for his role as the villain Gavin Elster in Vertigo.", "target": "actor from England (1904-1995)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59473937", "label": "Cathy Woan-Shu Chen", "source": "Cathy Woan-Shu Chen (Chinese: 陳婉淑) is a Taiwanese statistician, who works as a distinguished professor of statistics at Feng Chia University and is editor-in-chief of the Journal of Economics and Management. In 2016, she was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. Her research interests include Bayesian methods and economic statistics. In 2020, she was elected as a Fellow of the International Society for Bayesian Analysis. Chen earned a master's degree at the University of California, Riverside, and completed her Ph.D. at National Central University. She joined Feng Chia in 1993, and has been distinguished professor there since 2004. She has also held an adjunct position in the Faculty of Economics at Chiang Mai University since 2007. At Feng Chia, she directed an international degree program in business analytics, the SJSU-FCU Dual Degree Bachelor's Program in Business Analytics, in conjunction with San Jose State University (2016-2018). She was associate dean of International School Technology & Management, Feng Chia University (2018-2020). She has served as co-editor for Computational Statistics since January 2021. Chen is also a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society (elected 2009), and an elected member of the International Statistical Institute (elected 2008).", "target": "Taiwanese statistician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2142806", "label": "Reliques of Ancient English Poetry", "source": "The Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (sometimes known as Reliques of Ancient Poetry or simply Percy's Reliques) is a collection of ballads and popular songs collected by Bishop Thomas Percy and published in 1765.", "target": "anthology by Thomas Percy", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23681699", "label": "André Sloth", "source": "André Sloth (born 20 May 1944) is a French rower. He competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics and the 1968 Summer Olympics.", "target": "French rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1087743", "label": "2006 Premier League Snooker", "source": "The 2006 Betfred Premier League was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that was played from 14 September to 3 December 2006. Ronnie O'Sullivan won in the final 7–0 against Jimmy White.", "target": "snooker tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["snooker tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q325408", "label": "William Laud", "source": "William Laud (LAWD; 7 October 1573 – 10 January 1645) was a bishop in the Church of England. Appointed Archbishop of Canterbury by Charles I in 1633, Laud was a key advocate of Charles I's religious reforms, he was arrested by Parliament in 1640 and executed towards the end of the First English Civil War in January 1645. A firm believer in episcopalianism, or rule by bishops, \"Laudianism\" refers to liturgical practices designed to enforce uniformity within the Church of England, as outlined by Charles. Often highly ritualistic, these were precursors to what are now known as high church views. In theology, Laud was accused of Arminianism, favouring doctrines of the historic church prior to the Reformation and defending the continuity of the English Church with the primitive and mediaeval church, and opposing Calvinism. On all three grounds, he was regarded by Puritan clerics and laymen as a formidable and dangerous opponent. His use of the Star Chamber to persecute opponents such as William Prynne made him deeply unpopular.", "target": "Archbishop of Canterbury", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38804980", "label": "The Lone Mountie", "source": "The Lone Mountie is a 1938 short animated film by Columbia Pictures, and part of the long-running Krazy Kat film series.", "target": "1938 film by Manny Gould", "baseline_candidates": ["animated short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19576883", "label": "Attaque Team Gusto", "source": "Attaque Team Gusto was a Taiwanese UCI Continental cycling team established in 2014. The team folded after the 2017 season, and the sponsor and some team members merged to Team Ljubljana Gusto Xaurum.", "target": "Taiwanese cycling team (2014-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["UCI Continental Team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1779291", "label": "Trond Fausa Aurvåg", "source": "Trond Fausa Aurvåg (born 2 December 1972) is a Norwegian actor, film director, and poet. After graduating from the Norwegian National Academy of Theatre in 2001, he has acted at Oslo Nye Teater since 2001. Here he has acted in plays such as Amadeus, Manndomsprøven and Tatt av kvinnen. As a film actor he is best known for his leading roles in the films Andreaskorset (2004) and Den brysomme mannen (2006). He has also starred in the music video for Lemaitre's song \"We Got U\".He won two Amandas—the main Norwegian film award—in 2006, for best actor for his role in Den brysomme mannen, and for the short film Alene menn sammen, which he directed. He gained some international attention co-starring with Steven Van Zandt in the TV series Lilyhammer, playing Van Zandt's partner in crime. For this role he won the Gullruten Award in 2014 for best actor.Aurvåg lives with his wife, actress Lena Kristin Ellingsen, in Oslo.", "target": "Norwegian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3819077", "label": "Vladimir Galuzin", "source": "Vladimir Vasilyevich Galouzine (Russian: Владимир Васильевич Галузин, Vladimir Galuzin, pronounced [vlɐˈdʲimʲɪr ɡɐˈluzʲɪn]) is a Russian tenor. He has performed in such Russian operas as The Queen of Spades, Boris Godunov and Khovanshchina and has performed the lead roles in Italian operas like Madama Butterfly, Otello, Tosca, Aida, and Manon Lescaut.", "target": "Russian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q919850", "label": "Sebastian Rajalakso", "source": "Per Johan Sebastian Rajalakso (born 23 September 1988) is a Swedish footballer who plays as a midfielder for Syrianska FC.", "target": "Swedish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4617310", "label": "2010 Florida Atlantic Owls football team", "source": "The 2010 Florida Atlantic University Owls football team represented Florida Atlantic University in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Howard Schnellenberger and played their home games at Lockhart Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. This was the tenth season of intercollegiate football at Florida Atlantic University and was its fifth season of competition in the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 4–8, 3–5 in Sun Belt play.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4767193", "label": "Anna Laetitia Waring", "source": "Anna Letitia Waring (or Anna Laetitia Waring; 19 April 1823 – 10 May 1910) was a Welsh poet and Anglican hymn-writer. Her philanthropic support included the Discharged Prisoners' Aid Society. She brought out her first hymn collection in 1850, but much of her work remained unpublished at the time of her death. A 1911 posthumous edition collected most of this, religious and secular.", "target": "Welsh poet (1823-1910)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6437812", "label": "Kristen Vigard", "source": "Kristen Vigard (born May 15, 1963) is an American actress and singer. She is known for being the first actress to play the title role in Annie in its pre-Broadway run and for her two-year run as Morgan Richards on Guiding Light (1980–81). She also had a two-year run on One Life to Live (1984–85). Vigard has appeared in two feature films, The Black Stallion (1979) and The Survivors (1983). Additionally she had roles in two TV movies, Home to Stay (1978) and License to Kill (1984), and also had guest appearances on three TV series. Kristen Vigard released her eponymous debut album in 1988. She recorded and toured as a backup singer with the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Fishbone in the late 1980s and early 1990s, appearing on RHCP's Mother's Milk (1989) and One Hot Minute (1995) and Fishbone's The Reality of My Surroundings (1991) and Give a Monkey a Brain (1993). Vigard sang the lead vocals for Illeana Douglas for the 1996 film Grace of My Heart, including \"God Give Me Strength\", which was nominated for Best Original Song at the 1st Golden Satellite Awards. She released her second album, God, Loves and Angels in 2004. More recently, she was a founding member of the downtempo acoustic rock band New White Trash, which released three albums between 2011 and 2014.", "target": "American actor-singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16233630", "label": "Ruggero Trevisan", "source": "Ruggero Trevisan (born 12 March 1990) is a former Italian rugby union player who played as a fullback. After Aironi collapsed because of financial problems, Trevisan moved to the Italian franchise Zebre, along with many of the Aironi team.", "target": "Italian rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28690662", "label": "Fujikawa Maru", "source": "Fujikawa Maru was a cargo ship originally built in 1938 for the Toyo Kaiun Kisen Kaisha and was requisitioned by the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II for use as an armed aircraft transport or ferry. She was sunk in Truk Lagoon in 1944 during Operation Hailstone and is now a leading wreck diving site for scuba divers.", "target": "ship", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3808934", "label": "Johannes Ducheyne", "source": "Johannes Ducheyne (born 14 November 1933) is a Belgian basketball player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1952 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Belgian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30592676", "label": "Barisal Bulls in 2016", "source": "The Barisal Bulls are a franchise cricket team based in Barisal, Bangladesh, which plays in the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL). They are one of the seven teams that are competing in the 2016 Bangladesh Premier League. The team is being captained by Mushfiqur Rahim.", "target": "Bangladeshi cricket team", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63441152", "label": "Here One Day", "source": "Here One Day is a 2012 documentary film on the life and suicide of Nina Leichter, the wife of politician Franz S. Leichter. It was directed by their daughter, Kathy Leichter.", "target": "2012 documentary film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7559880", "label": "Somerset Hospital", "source": "UPMC Somerset is a non-profit, general acute care community hospital that was founded on January 31, 1921 and is located at 225 South Center Avenue Somerset, Pennsylvania 15501. It has 111 licensed beds and five operating rooms making it the largest hospital in Somerset County.On June 28, 2018, Somerset Hospital announced it was exploring an affiliation with the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), and on November 1, 2018, the two entities announced that they had signed a binding integration and affiliation agreement. Somerset Hospital officially merged with UPMC on February 1, 2019, becoming UPMC Somerset.", "target": "hospital in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6209202", "label": "Joe Conzelman", "source": "Joseph Harrison Conzelman (July 14, 1889 – April 17, 1979) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball. He played for the Pittsburgh Pirates.", "target": "Major League Baseball pitcher (1889-1979)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2889652", "label": "clorgiline", "source": "Clorgiline (INN), or clorgyline (BAN), is a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI) structurally related to pargyline which is described as an antidepressant. Specifically, it is an irreversible and selective inhibitor of monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A). Clorgiline was never marketed, but it has found use in scientific research. It has been found to bind with high affinity to the σ1 receptor (Ki = 3.2 nM) and with very high affinity to the I2 imidazoline receptor (Ki = 40 pM).", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["unsaturated compound", "chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13512792", "label": "Maloka Museum", "source": "The Maloka Museum is an interactive science museum located in Bogotá, Colombia. Visitors interact with a wide variety of exhibits that explore topics in Science and Technology. The museum has 9 rooms, with different science and technology topics; the Telecommunications Room shows interactive games about Binary System, the Computers' language, How does the cellphone work or what's the communication process. The next room is The City, it shows different modules where you can see 3D images of Bogotá with glasses, the development and history of the city and see a model of it where you can see all the buildings in it. The Human is a room where visitors can explore the perfect machine, the human body. The Universe room is one of the most popular rooms in the museum, where visitors can do experiments, such as knowing a person's weight in the planets of Solar System. Petroleum, is other room located in the second floor, there one can see the process of exploring and exploiting that treasure, and its different kinds and characteristics. The Water Room, show you through games the physic and chemical characteristics of that liquid; the others are the Biodiversity and Boys & Girls' room. The museum has an Activity Zone with math games and activities too. The museum has a dome theater where documentaries are shown.", "target": "interactive museum of sciences at Bogotá, Colombia", "baseline_candidates": ["museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7925313", "label": "Vickers 14 inch/45 naval gun", "source": "The Vickers 14 inch 45 calibre gun was designed and built by Vickers and initially installed on the battlecruiser Kongō which it was building for the Imperial Japanese Navy. Guns similar to this Vickers design were also later built in Japan to arm Kongō's sister ships and subsequent Japanese-constructed \"super-dreadnoughts\" which were all built in Japan. Japanese-built versions of the guns were designated 14 inch 41st Year Type, and from 1917 when the Navy went metric they were redesignated 36 cm 41st Year Type.", "target": "type of Naval gun", "baseline_candidates": ["naval artillery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61329994", "label": "Holovkivka", "source": "Holovkivka (Ukrainian: Головківка) is a village in Cherkasy Raion, Cherkasy Oblast, Ukraine. It is situated in a historical region called Kholodnyi Yar (Ukrainian: Холодний Яр), a big forest massif which has historical and environmental significance. Holovkivka belongs to Medvedivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.In the village there is a church named after Ivan Bohuslova and 2 chapels. Until 18 July 2020, Holovkivka was in Chyhyryn Raion. The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, and its area was merged into Cherkasy Raion.", "target": "village in Chyhyryn Raion, Cherkasy Oblast, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Ukraine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2900104", "label": "Nyctereutes", "source": "Nyctereutes (Greek: nyx, nykt- \"night\" + ereutēs \"wanderer\") is a genus of canid which includes only two extant species both known as raccoon dogs; the common raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides) and the Japanese raccoon dog (Nyctereutes viverrinus). Nyctereutes first entered the fossil record 5.5 million years ago (Mya) in northern China. It was one of the earliest canines to arrive in the Old World. All but two species became extinct before the Pleistocene.", "target": "genus of mammals", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3651205", "label": "Cambridge SoundWorks", "source": "Cambridge SoundWorks was a Massachusetts-based consumer audio manufacturer and retailer.", "target": "manufacturer of audio equipment", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1640742", "label": "Nethuns", "source": "In Etruscan mythology, Nethuns was the god of wells, later expanded to all water, including the sea. The name \"Nethuns\" is likely cognate with that of the Celtic god Nechtan and the Persian and Vedic gods sharing the name Apam Napat, perhaps all based on the Proto-Indo-European word *népōts \"nephew, grandson.\" In this case, Etruscan may have borrowed the Umbrian name *Nehtuns (Roman Neptune, who was originally a god of water). Nethuns is mentioned on the Piacenza liver, a third-century BCE bronze model of a sheep's liver used for divinatory rites called haruspicy, as Neθ, an abbreviation for his full name. As a patron god his profile, wearing a ketos (sea monster) headdress, appears on a coin of Vetulonia, circa 215 – 211 BCE; he is accompanied by his trident between two dolphins.NETHUNS is engraved on a bronze Etruscan mirror in the Museo Gregoriano in the Vatican.", "target": "etruscan water god", "baseline_candidates": ["Etruscan deity", "water deity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3647546", "label": "Bush Tower", "source": "The Bush Tower (also the Bush Terminal Building, the Bush Terminal International Exhibit Building and formerly the Bush Terminal Sales Building) is a skyscraper in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City, just east of Times Square. Designed by Frank J. Helmle and Harvey Wiley Corbett of the firm Helmle & Corbett, the building occupies a plot at 130–132 West 42nd Street between Broadway and Sixth Avenue. The Bush Tower was built for Irving T. Bush's Bush Terminal Company, which operated Bush Terminal in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, New York City. The 30-story section of the tower facing 42nd Street was developed between 1916 and 1918 and is 433 feet (132 m) tall. A 10-story wing, completed in 1921, extends south to 41st Street. The Bush Tower's design combined narrowness, height, and Neo-Gothic architecture, and the massing contains several setbacks to comply with the 1916 Zoning Resolution. The facade contains trompe-l'œil brickwork, which creates vertical \"ribs\" with a false \"shade\" pattern to enhance the building's verticality. It originally contained a buyer's club on its three lowest stories and exhibits on its upper stories. The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company foreclosed upon the tower in 1938 and the upper floors were subsequently converted for regular office usage. By the early 1980s, the Bush Tower had deteriorated significantly and the owners considered demolishing the building. It was instead renovated and was designated as a city landmark in 1988 by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. As of 2015, China Vanke has a controlling ownership stake in the Bush.", "target": "Office skyscraper in Manhattan, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["skyscraper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55071985", "label": "Grampian 26", "source": "The Grampian 26 is a Canadian sailboat, that was designed by Alex McGruer and first built in 1967.The Grampian 26 design was developed into the Discovery 7.9 in 1975 and which was built in small numbers.", "target": "sailboat class", "baseline_candidates": ["sailboat class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4387006", "label": "Vyugar Ragymov", "source": "Vugar Hamidullovych Rahimov (also Vyugar Ragymov, Ukrainian: Вьюгар Гамидуллович Рагімов; born February 5, 1986 in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR) is a Ukrainian Greco-Roman wrestler of Azerbaijani descent, who played for the men's featherweight category. He captured a silver medal for his division at the 2011 European Wrestling Championships in Dortmund, Germany, losing out to Armenia's Roman Amoyan. Ragymov is currently a member of the wrestling team for Metallurg Zaporzhye in his current residence Zaporizhia, and is coached and trained by Evgeny Chertkov.Rakhimov represented Ukraine at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he competed for the men's 55 kg class. He lost the qualifying round match to China's Li Shujin, with a three-set technical score (0–4, 2–0, 0–2), and a classification point score of 1–3.", "target": "Olympic wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17020662", "label": "St Andrew the Apostle Greek Orthodox School", "source": "St Andrew the Apostle Greek Orthodox School is an inclusive secondary school which opened in 2013 in the London Borough of Barnet. It is located in the Brunswick Park area of the London Borough of Barnet.It is the first and only state-funded Greek Orthodox secondary school in Britain. The school is named after St Andrew the Apostle. It is located in the Brunswick Park area of the London Borough of Barnet. It serves families form several different boroughs and the wider Greek Orthodox community. The Greek Orthodox element of the school is introduced to students through communal worship in assemblies and a chapel at the school. 50% of the students will come from the Greek Orthodox community, although the school welcomes students of all religions and backgrounds.The school has been established jointly by Russell Education Trust, the Greek Orthodox Church and the Classical Education Trust.The students completed their first GCSEs in 2018 and the school was placed in the top 5% across the country.", "target": "school in Barnet, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["secondary school", "free school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7428377", "label": "Savnas", "source": "Savnas is one of the biggest villages in Khed Taluka at the bank of the Jagbudi River.", "target": "village in Maharashtra, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7330986", "label": "Richmond Secondary School", "source": "Richmond Secondary School, (commonly, Richmond High School and RHS) is a public, co-educational secondary school located in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada, that educates approximately 1200 students from grades 8 to 12. Richmond Secondary is the only school in Richmond that offers the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme and is a magnet school in the region.", "target": "high school in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60395413", "label": "Crithe cassidiformis", "source": "Crithe cassidiformis is a species of very small sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Cystiscidae.", "target": "species of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5287766", "label": "Dodderi", "source": "Dodderi, also known as B.Dodderi or Brahmana Dodderi is a village in Soraba Taluk, Shimoga District in the state of Karnataka, India. The village has a primary school, a post office, a registered group of women called 'Radhika Mahila Mandali'. There is a temple of Lord Gopalakrishna. There are many community of people including Havyaka Brahmins, Vokkaligas, etc. There are two small villages, viz., 'Sannamane' and 'Dalavayi Hosakoppa', which are also considered as part of Dodderi. ).", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22252144", "label": "The Fits", "source": "The Fits is a 2015 American drama film directed by Anna Rose Holmer in her feature debut. The film tells the story of Toni (Royalty Hightower), an 11-year-old tomboy who struggles to fit into a girls’ dance troupe, which begins to suffer from an inexplicable epidemic of violent fits. The film premiered at the 2015 Venice Film Festival and was selected to take part in the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. Oscilloscope Laboratories obtained U.S. distribution rights to the film before its Sundance debut.", "target": "2015 film directed by Anna Rose Holmer", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13153572", "label": "Cook Islands Maori", "source": "Cook Islands Māori is an Eastern Polynesian language that is the official language of the Cook Islands. Cook Islands Māori is closely related to New Zealand Māori, but is a distinct language in its own right. Cook Islands Māori is simply called Māori when there is no need to disambiguate it from New Zealand Māori, but it is also known as Māori Kūki 'Āirani (or Maori Kuki Airani), or, controversially, Rarotongan. Many Cook Islanders also call it Te reo Ipukarea, literally \"the language of the Ancestral Homeland\".", "target": "Polynesian language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "Tahitic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18125819", "label": "2014–15 Genoa C.F.C. season", "source": "The 2014–15 season was Genoa Cricket and Football Club's eighth consecutive season in Serie A following the club's promotion from Serie B at the end of the 2006–07 season. The team competed in Serie A, finishing 6th, and in the Coppa Italia, where the club was eliminated in the fourth round.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1605781", "label": "Henri Ciriani", "source": "Henri (Enrique) Ciriani (born 1936) is a Peruvian architect and teacher. Ciriani was born and worked in Lima, Peru before moving to Paris in 1964. He has worked on modernist experimental living projects in the 1960s and 1970s, such as the San Felipe housing complex in Lima, Peru, and in 1980 on the Noisy II housing plan for Marne-la-Vallée. He also designed the St. Antoine Hospital kitchen building in Paris in 1985, the Museum of the Great War in Peronne in 1992, and the Archaeological Museum in Arles in 1993.", "target": "Peruvian architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13201831", "label": "Odil Irgashev", "source": "Odil Irgashev (Russian: Одил Иргашев; born 10 February 1977) is a Tajikistani footballer who is a defender for Ravshan Kulob.", "target": "Tajikistani footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4748805", "label": "Amsonia tharpii", "source": "Amsonia tharpii is a species of flowering plant in the family Apocynaceae known by the common names Tharp's bluestar and feltleaf bluestar. It is native to New Mexico and Texas in the United States.This plant is a perennial herb with a woody taproot. It grows up to about 20 centimeters tall. The linear to lance-shaped leaves are each up to 3 centimeters long and are whorled about the stem. The leaves lower on the plant are wider than those near the top. The white, pale blue, or greenish flowers are borne in clusters at the stem tips. They are tubular and about 1.5 centimeters long. The fruit is a two-lobed follicle. The cylindrical seeds are about a centimeter long.There are three populations of this plant in New Mexico in Eddy County, and there is a single population in Texas, in Pecos County. The New Mexico and Texas sites are over 160 kilometers apart. The plant is probably a relict species, rare now that conditions have changed since it was more abundant. Today it grows on limestone and gypsum substrates in Chihuahuan Desert scrub vegetation.The plant is threatened by the loss and degradation of its habitat. In New Mexico it is threatened by oil and gas development and the changes that have occurred on the land due to overgrazing, such as erosion and introduced species of plants. In Texas, the plant grows on roadsides and it may be threatened by roadway maintenance.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5897808", "label": "Hook, Line and Sinker", "source": "Hook, Line and Sinker is a 1930 American pre-Code slapstick comedy directed by Edward F. Cline from a screenplay by Ralph Spence and Tim Whelan. It was the third starring vehicle for the comedy team of Wheeler & Woolsey (Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey), and also featured Dorothy Lee. It would be one of the largest financial successes for RKO Pictures in 1930.", "target": "1930 film by Edward F. Cline", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1779560", "label": "Kolmården", "source": "Kolmården (pronunciation) is a long and wide densely forested rocky ridge that separates the Swedish provinces of Södermanland and Östergötland, two of the country's main agricultural areas, from each other, and in historic times, along with Tylöskog and Tiveden, formed the border between the land of the Swedes and the land of the Geats.", "target": "hill in Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["border forest", "forest", "hill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19899052", "label": "Turumunga", "source": "Turumunga is a village located in Patna Block of Kendujhar district in Odisha. The village has a population of 2164 of which 1117 are males while 1047 are females as per the Population Census 2011. The PIN Code of Turumunga is 758046.Turumunga is situated at 26 km from the district headquarters Kendujhar towards Kolkata. Chadheibhol, Rajnagar, Chilida, Khireitangiree, Ukhunda are the nearby villages of Turumunga.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q737586", "label": "Novak Radonić", "source": "Novak Radonić (Serbian Cyrillic: Новак Радонић; Mol, 31 March 1826 – Sremska Kamenica, 11 July 1890) was a painter from modern-day Serbia.", "target": "Serbian painter (1826-1890)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3314738", "label": "Minatec", "source": "Minatec (initially called the Micro and Nanotechnology Innovation Centre) is a research complex specializing in micro-nano technologies in Grenoble, France. The centre was launched in June 2006 as a partnership between LETI (the Electronics and Information Technologies Laboratory of CEA, the French Atomic Energy Commission) and by Grenoble Institute of Technology (Université Grenoble Alpes). The site was already home to LETI, Europe's top centre for applied research in microelectronics and nanotechnology. Minatec combines a physical research campus with a network of companies, researchers and engineering schools. It was launched to foster technology transfer, with real-life applications in energy and communications, among others. The complex is home to 3,000 researchers, 1,200 students, and 600 technology transfer experts on a 20-hectare campus offering 10,000 square metres for cleanroom space. The Minatec campus has dedicated special-events facilities (900 m²), ranging from 20-person conference rooms to a 400-seat amphitheater. These spaces are available to researchers for their scientific events such as the international conference Nanosafe held every two years since 2008.", "target": "Micro and nano technologies", "baseline_candidates": ["building", "research institute"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3103635", "label": "Georges Washington", "source": "Georges Washington (7 September 1827, Marseille - 1910, Douarnenez) was a French Orientalist painter. Most of his works featured soldiers and horses.", "target": "French painter (1827-1910)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61318990", "label": "Tegermensay", "source": "Tegirmen-Say (Kyrgyz: Тегирмен-Сай) is a village in Jalal-Abad Region of Kyrgyzstan. It is part of the Aksy District. Its population was 631 in 2021.", "target": "place in Jalal-Abad Region, Kyrgyzstan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q683621", "label": "Winrich von Kniprode", "source": "Winrich von Kniprode was the 22nd Grand Master of the Teutonic Order. He was the longest serving Grand Master, holding the position for 31 years (1351–1382). Winrich von Kniprode was born in 1310 in Monheim am Rhein near Cologne. He served as the Komtur of Danzig (1338–1341) and Balga (1341–1343). In 1341 he was promoted to the Grand Marshal. Winrich was elected Grand Master in 1351. He constantly fought with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania to gain access to Livonia. He achieved a victory in the Battle of Rudau. Winrich died in 1382 and was buried in Marienburg Castle in the mausoleum under the Chapel of St. Anna.", "target": "German noble", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20541600", "label": "Threecastles Castle", "source": "Threecastles Castle is a National Monument situated near Blessington, County Wicklow, Ireland.", "target": "Irish National Monument", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13781549", "label": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics", "source": "The 48th South American Championships in Athletics were held at the Parque de Atletismo Campo Elías Gutiérrez in Cartagena, Colombia, between July 5-7, 2013.A total of 44 events were contested, 22 by men and 22 by women. Detailed reports on the championships were given by Eduardo Biscayart.", "target": "international athletics championship event", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q368387", "label": "Thomas Worthington", "source": "Thomas Worthington (July 16, 1773 – June 20, 1827) was an American politician who served as the sixth governor of Ohio.", "target": "Governor of Ohio (1773-1827)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q660150", "label": "Juniya", "source": "Juniya is a village and VDC in Gulmi District in the Lumbini Zone of western Nepal. It is surrounded by Johang VDC in the south and East, Bharse in the north and Rupakot VDC in the west. This VDC is located in a wonderful geographical location that is with high hills Lek and low hills Besi. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2827 persons living in 568 individual households.", "target": "village development committee", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1065584", "label": "New Japan Philharmonic", "source": "The New Japan Philharmonic (新日本フィルハーモニー交響楽団, Shin Nihon Firuhāmonī Kōkyōgakudan) is a symphony orchestra based in Tokyo, Japan. It was founded in 1972 with Seiji Ozawa as honorary conductor laureate. The Philharmonic's primary concert venue is the Sumida Triphony Hall. From 2003 to 2013 its music director was Christian Arming. Toshiyuki Kamioka has been the music director since 2016.Their video game performances include songs for the Super Smash Bros. Melee orchestral arrangement soundtrack Smashing...Live!, Resident Evil's music in Resident Evil Orchestra, orchestral arrangements by Kaoru Wada for the Kingdom Hearts Original Soundtrack, the music of Go Shiina from Tales of Legendia, and the first stop, Yokohama, on Final Fantasy's Tour de Japon. On May 6, 2009, the 5th Anniversary Monster Hunter Orchestral Concert took place at the Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre in Ikebukuro, Tokyo. The orchestra is also known for their film soundtrack productions, notably Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle, both soundtracks composed, arranged, conducted and performed by Joe Hisaishi; and a number of works for Neon Genesis Evangelion, composed, arranged and conducted by Shirō Sagisu. The orchestra performed the film score for an English-language animated film, The Brave Little Toaster, composed and conducted by David Newman. The orchestra has done live performances with various musicians, notably Yngwie Malmsteen and his Concerto Suite in Eb Minor. Since 1997, the orchestra has had a relationship with the Mie Prefecture Cultural Center which established a New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra Regional Base, providing a number of services, including yearly performances, guidance to members of the Mie Junior Orchestra and a.", "target": "orchestra", "baseline_candidates": ["orchestra"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17264415", "label": "Perissomerus alvarengai", "source": "Perissomerus alvarengai is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Martins in 1961.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6703671", "label": "Lunar Lander", "source": "The Lunar Lander was a robotic mission intended to send a lander vehicle to the Moon, led by ESA's Human Spaceflight and Operations directorate. The primary objective of the Lunar Lander mission was to demonstrate Europe's ability to deliver payload safely and accurately to the Moon's surface. More specifically the mission would have demonstrated the technologies required to achieve a soft and precise landing while autonomously avoiding surface hazards that can endanger landing and surface mission safety. These technologies will be an asset for future human and robotic exploration missions. However the project was put on hold at the 2012 ESA Ministerial Council.", "target": "proposed 2018 ESA Moon mission", "baseline_candidates": ["space mission", "robotic spacecraft"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23023522", "label": "Stansmore Dean", "source": "Stansmore Richmond Leslie Dean Stevenson (3 June 1866 – 15 December 1944) was a Scottish artist known for her oil paintings. She was a member of a group of women artists and designers known as the Glasgow Girls.", "target": "Scottish painter - A \"Glasgow Girl\"; (1866-1944)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3327203", "label": "Sociedad Hispano-Marroquí de Transportes", "source": "Carranza y Berndhart, S.L., better known by its trading name Sociedad Hispano-Marroquí de Transportes (HISMA) (\"Spanish-Moroccan Transport Company\"), was a Spanish-German dummy company set up by Nazi Party, through the German businessman Johannes Franz Bernhardt, to supply the National faction with arms during the course of the Spanish Civil War.The company was constituted on 31 July 1936 in the city of Tétouan, capital of the Spanish protectorate of Morocco, with an initial investment of 200,000 pesetas.", "target": "Spanish-German dummy company", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7626651", "label": "Stuart Higgins", "source": "Stuart Higgins (born c.1956) is a British public relations consultant and former newspaper editor. In 1972 Higgins left school in Kingswood, on the outskirts of Bristol, and began his career as a reporter at the South West News, an agency founded by Roland Arblaster.He began working for The Sun in 1979 as their West Country reporter. He was arrested in 1982 by the police after being found with a Sun photographer \"testing security\" at Highgrove House, home of Charles, Prince of Wales.At one point, Kelvin MacKenzie printed Higgins' direct phone number in The Sun, billed him as the \"human sponge\" and asked readers to call Higgins to \"get things off their chest\". In 1994, Higgins succeeded MacKenzie as editor of the newspaper. In 1996, Higgins wrote a front page story about an intimate video purporting to feature Diana, Princess of Wales with James Hewitt. The video turned out to be a hoax.Higgins left The Sun in June 1998. On 11 November 2003, Labour MP Clive Soley, using parliamentary privilege, alleged that News International had paid £500,000 'hush money' to a female employee who had accused Higgins of sexual harassment during his time at The Sun. Soley also accused Rebekah Wade (now Brooks), then the newspaper's editor, of writing a threatening letter to the MP in order to discourage him from researching the issue.Higgins subsequently set up his own public relations company, but sold the company in 2007. In February 2013, it was reported that Higgins was in Pretoria, South Africa assisting athlete Oscar Pistorius, accused of.", "target": "British public relations consultant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56010890", "label": "Lina Ben Mhenni", "source": "Lina Ben Mhenni (Arabic: لينا بن مهني) (22 May 1983 – 27 January 2020) was a Tunisian Internet activist, blogger and lecturer in linguistics at Tunis University. She was internationally recognised for her work during the 2011 Tunisian revolution and in the following years.", "target": "Tunisian Internet activist, blogger and journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20010152", "label": "Ottokar", "source": "Ottokar is the medieval German form of the Germanic name Audovacar. People with the name Ottokar include: Two kings of Bohemia, members of the Přemyslid dynasty Ottokar I of Bohemia (c. 1155–1230) Ottokar II of Bohemia (c. 1223–1278) Four Styrian margraves, members of the Otakar dynasty Ottokar I of Styria (died 1075) Ottokar II of Styria (died 1122) Ottokar III of Styria (died 1164) Ottokar IV, Duke of Styria (1163–1192) Ottokar Chiari (1853–1918), Austrian laryngologist Ottokar Czernin (1872–1932), Austro-Hungarian diplomat Ottokar Domma (1924–2007), German journalist and writer Ottokar Fischer (1873–1940), Austrian magician Ottokar Lorenz (1832–1904), Austrian-German historian and genealogist Ottokar Nováček (1866–1900), Austro-Hungarian violinist Ottokár Prohászka (1858–1927), Hungarian Roman Catholic theologian and bishop Ottokar Runze (born 1925), German film producer Ottokar Tumlirz (1856–1928), Austrian physicist Ottokar Weise (fl. 1900), German Olympic sailorFictional charactersKing Ottokar IV of Syldavia, from the Tintin comic book King Ottokar's Sceptre The prince in Carl Maria von Weber's opera Der Freischütz.", "target": "male given name", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25496971", "label": "Alismereti", "source": "Alismereti (Georgian: ალისმერეთი) is a village in Nergeeti Community, Baghdati Municipality of Imereti region, Georgia. It is located North to Meskheti Range, on the right bank of Khanistskali River, 600 meters above sea level. It is located 15 km (9.3 mi) from the town of Baghdati.", "target": "place in Imereti, Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1987812", "label": "Eduardo Urrialde González", "source": "Eduardo Iturralde González (born 20 February 1967 in Arrankudiaga) is a retired Spanish football referee. He frequently served as a referee for European matches in the Europa League and Champions League. Iturralde notably refereed the El Clásico on three occasions, in 1999, 2005 and most recently in November 2010, in which he was praised for his solid and free-flowing performance.Iturralde González was the referee of the Republic of Ireland's 2–1 win over Armenia in the last Euro 2012 qualifying match. Early in the game, he sent off Armenian goalkeeper Roman Berezovsky for a handball, although video replays indicated that the ball hit his chest. Two days after the match, the Football Federation of Armenia officially filed a protest to UEFA over the goalkeeper's dismissal.On 23 March 2012 he announced his retirement from refereeing due to disagreements with the Spanish Technical Committee, although it was already time for him to retire at the end of the 2011–12 season. His last game was Real Betis vs Real Madrid (2–3) on 10 March 2012. He could not finish this game due to a muscle injury, being substituted by the fourth referee, Gorka Sagués Oscoz, during half time.", "target": "Spanish football referee", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1153151", "label": "Pins-Justaret", "source": "Pins-Justaret is a commune in the Haute-Garonne department in southwestern France. Pins-Justaret station has rail connections to Toulouse, Foix and Latour-de-Carol.", "target": "commune in Haute-Garonne, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16972922", "label": "2013 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team", "source": "The 2013 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team represented Lehigh University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Andy Coen and played their home games at Goodman Stadium. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 8–3, 3–2 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for second place.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25125605", "label": "Pontoirakleia", "source": "Pontoirakleia / Vasilitsa (Greek: Ποντοηράκλεια, old name: Greek: Ερεσελή Ereseli / Reseli) is a village in Kilkis regional unit of Central Macedonia, Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Paionia. Its population is almost entirely comprised greeks of pontian descent.", "target": "village in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4715542", "label": "Aleksandr Yermilov", "source": "Aleksandr Yermilov (Hebrew: אלכסנדר ירמילוב; born November 12, 1960) is a Soviet flatwater kayaker/sprint canoer who competed in the early 1980s. He won four medal at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with three golds (K-4 10000 m: 1981 in Nottingham, Great Britain, 1982 in Belgrade, Yugoslavia; 1983 in Tampere, Finland) and a silver (K-4 1000 m: 1981).He was born in Kharkiv, Ukraine. In the 1990s he immigrated to Israel. Then to Canada.", "target": "kayaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16595363", "label": "Redfield", "source": "Redfield is a city in and the county seat of Spink County, South Dakota, United States. The population was 2,214 at the 2020 census. The city was named for J. B. Redfield, a railroad official.", "target": "city and county seat of Spink County, South Dakota", "baseline_candidates": ["county seat", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2395317", "label": "Berrechid Province", "source": "Berrechid Province (Arabic: إقليم برشيد) is a province of Morocco in the Casablanca-Settat Region. The province had a population of 484,518 people in 2014.", "target": "province of Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["province of Morocco"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5962213", "label": "La Biblia En Vivo reina Isabel", "source": "La Biblia En Vivo is the second live album by Argentina rock band Vox Dei. Released in 1987 by B.B. Records, this was the group's first album in nine years.", "target": "1987 live album by Vox Dei", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38291057", "label": "2017–18 Benevento Calcio season", "source": "The 2017–18 season was Benevento Calcio's first-ever season in Serie A, the top-flight of Italian football. The club competed in both Serie A and the Coppa Italia. Following fourteen consecutive defeats to begin the season (an Italian top-flight record), Benevento remained rooted firmly in 20th place during the entirety of the 2017–18 campaign. The club were also eliminated early on in the third round of the Coppa Italia, falling 4–0 to Serie B side Perugia, with Juventus loanee and Italian youth player Alberto Cerri scoring a hat-trick. Malian footballer and former Bordeaux player Cheick Diabaté, a winter signing, finished as the club's top scorer with eight goals, following an excellent end of season, though this would not be enough to save the club from returning immediately to the second division.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7734617", "label": "The Flying Saucer Mystery", "source": "The Flying Saucer Mystery is the 58th volume in the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories series. It was written in 1980 under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene and published by Simon & Schuster under the Wanderer imprint. It was later republished in both Wanderer and Minstrel imprints, each time with a new cover. In 2005, Grosset & Dunlap reprinted it in the yellow hardback \"glossy flashlight\" format. The original edition cover and six internal illustrations were by Ruth Sanderson. These illustrations were removed in the two subsequent printings.", "target": "book by Carolyn Keene", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4704016", "label": "Al Heagy", "source": "Albert B. Heagy (December 3, 1906 – April 1, 1990) was an American chemist, educator, politician, and college lacrosse player and coach. Alongside, Jack Faber, he was the co-head coach of the University of Maryland lacrosse team from 1931 to 1963, and the head coach from 1964 to 1965, and amassed a combined record of 245–57–7. During that time, Maryland secured six outright national championships, two shared national championships, and nine Atlantic Coast Conference championships. He was inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame in 1965. Heagy also served as the Maryland state chemist and the mayor of University Park.", "target": "Chemist and lacross coach (1906-1990)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q697360", "label": "Redekin", "source": "Redekin is a village and a former municipality in the Jerichower Land district, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2010, it is part of the town Jerichow.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3173525", "label": "Olivella biplicata", "source": "Callianax biplicata, common names the \"purple dwarf olive\" \"purple olive shell\" or \"purple olivella\" is a species of small predatory sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Olividae, the olives.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1642662", "label": "Nova Lima", "source": "Nova Lima is a municipality of about 87,000 people, whose downtown is located about 20 kilometers of Belo Horizonte, the capital of the south-eastern Brazilian state of Minas Gerais. Mining is one of the main economical activities of the city, including the extraction of Iron Ore and Gold. The most famous mine in the city is Morro Velho (Old Hill), a gold mine of 2,700 metres (8,900 ft) depth.", "target": "city, municipality in Minas Gerais, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6162242", "label": "Villa Lourdes", "source": "Villa Lourdes is a corregimiento in Los Santos District, Los Santos Province, Panama with a population of 1,075 as of 2010. It was created by Law 58 of July 29, 1998, owing to the Declaration of Unconstitutionality of Law 1 of 1982. Its population as of 2000 was 995.", "target": "corregimiento in Los Santos, Panama", "baseline_candidates": ["corregimiento"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q698763", "label": "Jiangzicui Station", "source": "Jiangzicui (Chinese: 江子翠, formerly transliterated as Chiangtzu Tsui Station until 2003) is a metro station in New Taipei, Taiwan served by Taipei Metro.", "target": "Taipei Metro Bannan Line station", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "station located underground"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q143692", "label": "ISU Speed Skating World Cup", "source": "The ISU Speed Skating World Cup is a series of international speed skating competitions, organised annually by the International Skating Union since the winter of 1985–86. Every year during the winter season, a number of competitions on different distances and on different locations are held. Skaters can earn points at each competition, and the skater who has the most points on a given distance at the end of the series is the winner. Initially not very popular with skaters nor spectators, the World Cup has gradually become more and more popular, and this was due to the creation of the World Single Distance Championships. The results of the separate distances in the World Cup ranking are the main qualifying method for the World Single Distance Championships. The number of races per season per distance varies, but it is usually between five and ten. Ten World Cup titles are awarded every season, five for men (the 500 m, the 1000 m, the 1500 m, the combined 5000 m / 10000 m, and the team pursuit), and five for women (the 500 m, the 1000 m, the 1500 m, the combined 3000 m / 5000 m, and the team pursuit). The team pursuit was added to the World Cup in the 2005–06 season. Between the seasons 2003–04 and 2008–09, the 100 m was also contested for men and women, but this category is now defunct. The mass start was re-introduced for both women and men in the World Cup in Astana in 2011.", "target": "International speed skating competition spanning across the Earth's Northern Hemisphere wintertime season", "baseline_candidates": ["recurring sporting event", "world cup"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q684594", "label": "Porte Saint-Denis", "source": "The Porte Saint-Denis is a Parisian monument located in the 10th arrondissement, at the site of one of the gates of the Wall of Charles V, one of Paris' former city walls. It is located at the crossing of the Rue Saint-Denis continued by the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Denis, with the Boulevard de Bonne-Nouvelle and the Boulevard Saint-Denis.", "target": "Parisian monument", "baseline_candidates": ["city gate", "triumphal arch"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1142421", "label": "Palmer Drought Index", "source": "The Palmer drought index, sometimes called the Palmer drought severity index (PDSI), is a regional drought index commonly used for monitoring drought events and studying areal extent and severity of drought episodes. The index uses precipitation and temperature data to study moisture supply and demand using a simple water balance model. It was developed by meteorologist Wayne Palmer, who first published his method in the 1965 paper Meteorological Drought for the Office of Climatology of the U.S. Weather Bureau. The Palmer Drought Index is based on a supply-and-demand model of soil moisture. Supply is comparatively straightforward to calculate, but demand is more complicated as it depends on many factors, not just temperature and the amount of moisture in the soil but also hard-to-calibrate factors including evapotranspiration and recharge rates. Palmer tried to overcome these difficulties by developing an algorithm that approximated them based on the most readily available data, precipitation and temperature. The index has proven most effective in determining long-term drought, a matter of several months, but it is not as good with conditions over a matter of weeks. It uses a 0 as normal, and drought is shown in terms of negative numbers; for example, negative 2 is moderate drought, negative 3 is severe drought, and negative 4 is extreme drought. Palmer's algorithm also is used to describe wet spells, using corresponding positive numbers. Palmer also developed a formula for standardizing drought calculations for each individual location based on the variability of precipitation and temperature at that location. The Palmer index can therefore be.", "target": "measurement of dryness", "baseline_candidates": ["measure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7063154", "label": "Notocrater gracilis", "source": "Notocrater gracilis is a species of small sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pseudococculinidae, the false limpets.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15616330", "label": "Malcolm Birks", "source": "Malcolm James Birks (born 29 July 1975) is a former cricketer for Cambridge and the Marylebone Cricket Club. A wicket-keeper and right-handed batsman hailing from Keighley, Yorkshire, Birks made twenty-two first-class cricket appearances between 1995 and 2000, scoring 220 runs in total at a batting average of 12.22. He went on to play Surrey Premier League club cricket for Weybridge in 2005, and for the Marylebone Cricket Club between 2002 and 2013. For the MCC he played matches against Slovenia, Japan and Austria.", "target": "English cricketer (born 1975)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7115166", "label": "Oxegen 2010", "source": "Oxegen 2010 was the seventh Oxegen festival to take place since 2004. It took place on the weekend of Friday 9 July, Saturday, 10 July and Sunday, 11 July at Punchestown Racecourse near Naas in County Kildare, Ireland. Eminem, Muse and Arcade Fire headlined. A total of around 150 acts performed over the three days.Oxegen 2010 was Arcade Fire's first Irish appearance since performing in the Phoenix Park and was their first 2010 European show to be confirmed. Drummer Jeremy Gara also admitted it was their first major show since the band's Neon Bible tour and was awestruck at the idea of performing on the Main Stage directly after Jay-Z. Bell X1 gave their only Irish performance of the summer at the event on 11 July. Muse debuted a new song when they headlined the Main Stage on 10 July.The Capitals became the youngest band to play Oxegen in its history. Pop act Jedward, known in the UK for their appearances on The X Factor, asked to be allowed to perform. It was later suggested in an interview that they were due to perform until one of them tore their ligaments open.Jim Carroll of The Irish Times named several Oxegen 2010-bound acts in his \"20 hottest acts playing this summer\" on 28 May 2010: these were Jay-Z, Arcade Fire, The Middle East, Villagers and O Emperor. In a later article in the newspaper he named his \"10 must-see acts on his Oxegen timetable with a big, fat yellow highlighter\": Jay-Z, Arcade Fire, The Prodigy, Florence &.", "target": "seventh Oxegen festival that took place on 9th, 10th and 11th July 2010 at Punchestown Racecourse in County Kildare, Ireland.", "baseline_candidates": ["Oxegen"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12228918", "label": "Isa ibn Aban", "source": "Abu Musa ʿĪsā b. Abān was an early Sunni Islamic scholar who followed the Hanafi madhhab. Although none of his own works have survived to today, he was quoted extensively by early Hanafi scholars such as Al-Jassas in regards to his views on Hanafi usul al-fiqh. Having studied under Abu Hanifa's student, Muhammad al-Shaybani, ibn Abān's views on the sources of law can be assumed to be representative of Abu Hanifa's.", "target": "early Sunni Islamic scholar", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16858680", "label": "Central Mall", "source": "Central Mall is a shopping mall located in Texarkana, Texas, U.S. Opened in 1978, the anchor stores are Dillard's and JCPenney. There is one vacant anchor formerly occupied by Sears.", "target": "shopping mall in Texas, U.S", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75286428", "label": "Sigismund Báthory", "source": "Sigismund Báthory (Hungarian: Báthory Zsigmond; 1573 – 27 March 1613) was Prince of Transylvania several times between 1586 and 1602, and Duke of Racibórz and Opole in Silesia in 1598. His father, Christopher Báthory, ruled Transylvania as voivode (or deputy) of the absent prince, Stephen Báthory. Sigismund was still a child when the Diet of Transylvania elected him voivode at his dying father's request in 1581. Initially, regency councils administered Transylvania on his behalf, but Stephen Báthory made János Ghyczy the sole regent in 1585. Sigismund adopted the title of prince after Stephen Báthory died. The Diet proclaimed Sigismund to be of age in 1588, but only after he agreed to expel the Jesuits. Pope Sixtus V excommunicated him, but the ban was lifted in 1590, and the Jesuits returned a year later. His blatant favoritism towards the Catholics made him unpopular among his Protestant subjects. He decided to join the Holy League against the Ottoman Empire. Since he could not convince the Diet to support his plan, he renounced the throne in July 1594, but the commanders of the army convinced him to revoke his abdication. At their proposal, he purged the noblemen who opposed the war against the Ottomans. He officially joined the Holy League and married Maria Christina of Habsburg, a niece of the Holy Roman Emperor, Rudolph II. The marriage was never consummated. Michael the Brave, Voivode of Wallachia, and Ștefan Răzvan, Voivode of Moldavia, acknowledged his suzerainty. Their united forces defeated an Ottoman army in the Battle of Giurgiu. The triumph.", "target": "Prince of Transylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1151269", "label": "Wakayama Castle", "source": "Wakayama Castle (和歌山城, Wakayama-jō) is a Japanese castle located in the city Wakayama, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. For most of the Edo Period, it was the administrative center of Kishū Domain, which was controlled by a cadet branch of the Tokugawa clan. Due to its size and status,Wakayama Castle was ranked as one of the most important castles under the Tokugawa shogunate. The castle was designated a National Historic Site in 1931,and its Nishi-no-Maru Garden was designated a National Place of Scenic Beauty in 1987.", "target": "fortification", "baseline_candidates": ["Japanese castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4992635", "label": "Toshirō Daigo", "source": "Toshirō Daigo (醍醐敏郎, Daigo Toshirō, 2 January 1926 – 10 October 2021) was a Japanese judoka who was the Chief Instructor at the Kodokan and a manager of the Japanese national team.Before his death, he was one of only three living Kodokan 10th dan (and one of only 15 to have attained this rank), having been promoted at the New Year Kagami biraki Ceremony, 8 January 2006, along with Ichiro Abe and Yoshimi Osawa.", "target": "Japanese judoka", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5343772", "label": "Edward John Burrow", "source": "Edward John Burrow, D.D, F.R.S (1785 – 8 August 1861) was an English divine and miscellaneous writer.", "target": "British divine and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11899616", "label": "Alisma wahlenbergii", "source": "Alisma wahlenbergii, the Baltic water-plantain, is a species of plant in the Alismataceae. It is native to the area around the northern Baltic Sea: Finland, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, and northwestern Russia.Alisma wahlenbergii is classed as a \"threatened\" species.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11825513", "label": "Voyage to the Edge of the World", "source": "Voyage to the Edge of the World (French: Voyage au bout du monde) is a 1976 French nature documentary film directed by Jacques-Yves Cousteau, his son Philippe Cousteau and Marshall Flaum. The film follows a four months expedition through Antarctica undertaken between the end of 1972 and the beginning of 1973. It was Cousteau's third and last full-length film, following The Silent World (1956) and World Without Sun (1964). As a difference with those two earlier Cousteau films, both mainly narrated by Jacques-Yves Cousteau himself, on this film Jacques-Yves' voice-over alternates with co-director Philippe Cousteau's voice.", "target": "1976 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27896123", "label": "sonlicromanol", "source": "Sonlicromanol (KH176) is a clinical-stage oral drug compound developed by Khondrion as a potential treatment for inherited mitochondrial diseases, such as Leigh's Disease, MELAS and LHON. Due to dysfunctional mitochondria, an increased level of cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) is observed in these patients, causing a wide range of symptoms. The active metabolite of Sonlicromanol (KH176m, or KH183) has several mechanisms of action, acting both as antioxidant and as reactive oxygen species (ROS)-redox modulator. Through selective suppression of microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 (mPGES-1), Sonlicromanol even has potency as anti-cancer drug for mPGES-1 overexpressing cancer like prostate cancer. Currently, Sonlicromanol is in phase II clinical trial in the KHENERGYZE, KHENEREXT and KHENERGYC studies as potent candidate in treatment for mitochondrial diseases.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13201861", "label": "Otakhon Latifi", "source": "Otakhon Latifi (Tajik:Отахон Латифи) (March 18, 1936 – September 22, 1998) was a noted journalist and politician from Tajikistan. He was born in the town of Pendjikent. Under the Soviet Union, he was both Pravda and Izvestiya's correspondent in Tajikistan at various times. He also served as head of the Union of Journalists of Tajikistan. Latifi branched into politics in 1989, becoming deputy chairman of the Tajik Council of Ministers. He became involved in the peace process that followed the country's bloody post-independence civil war. In 1992, he became Deputy Prime Minister, as part of Tajikistan's national reconciliation government. Over time, Latifi became a prominent opposition figure, as a senior member in the United Tajik Opposition. This led to a period in exile in Tehran and Moscow between 1992 and 1997. While in Moscow, on August 4, 1994, Latifi was badly beaten outside his Moscow apartment, and key documents relating to the peace process were stolen. On his return to Tajikistan in September 1997, he chaired the panel for legal issues under the National Reconciliation Commission, a role which he continued until his death. On September 22, 1998, at around 8am, Latifi was shot at point blank range outside his apartment in Dushanbe.His murder sparked condemnation from both the government and opposition, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the non-government organization Human Rights Watch. His death was also mentioned in Time Magazine. The murder, which all parties to the conflict agreed was politically motivated, also resulted in the UTO's eventual suspension of their role in the.", "target": "Soviet politician and journalist (1936-1998)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15686927", "label": "1643", "source": "1643 (MDCXLIII) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar, the 1643rd year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 643rd year of the 2nd millennium, the 43rd year of the 17th century, and the 4th year of the 1640s decade. As of the start of 1643, the Gregorian calendar was 10 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["common year starting and ending on Thursday", "calendar year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1526764", "label": "Qigang Chen", "source": "Qigang Chen ([tʂʰə̌n t͡ɕǐkɑ́ŋ]; Chinese: 陈其钢; pinyin: Chén Qígāng; born 8 August 1951) is a Chinese-French composer who has lived in France since 1984 and obtained French citizenship in 1992.", "target": "Chinese composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3540110", "label": "Ardèche's 3rd constituency", "source": "The 3rd constituency of Ardèche is a French legislative constituency in the Ardèche département.", "target": "constituency of the French Fifth Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the French Fifth Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q506319", "label": "generic drug", "source": "A generic drug is a pharmaceutical drug that contains the same chemical substance as a drug that was originally protected by chemical patents. Generic drugs are allowed for sale after the patents on the original drugs expire. Because the active chemical substance is the same, the medical profile of generics is believed to be equivalent in performance. A generic drug has the same active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) as the original, but it may differ in some characteristics such as the manufacturing process, formulation, excipients, color, taste, and packaging.Although they may not be associated with a particular company, generic drugs are usually subject to government regulations in the countries in which they are dispensed. They are labeled with the name of the manufacturer and a generic non-proprietary name such as the United States Adopted Name (USAN) or International Nonproprietary Name (INN) of the drug. A generic drug must contain the same active ingredients as the original brand-name formulation. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires generics to be identical to or within an acceptable bioequivalent range of their brand-name counterparts, with respect to pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties. (The FDA's use of the word \"identical\" is a legal interpretation, not literal.) Biopharmaceuticals, such as monoclonal antibodies, differ biologically from small-molecule drugs. Biosimilars have active pharmaceutical ingredients that are almost identical to the original product and are typically regulated under an extended set of rules, but they are not the same as generic drugs as the active ingredients are not the same as those of their reference products.In.", "target": "pharmaceutical drug that is equivalent to a brand-name product in dosage, strength, route of administration, quality, performance, and intended use", "baseline_candidates": ["drug", "medication"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7442040", "label": "Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway", "source": "The Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway (SLS&E) was a railroad founded in Seattle, Washington, on April 28, 1885, with three tiers of purposes: Build and run the initial line to the town of Ballard, bring immediate results and returns to investors; exploit resources east in the valleys, foothills, Cascade Range, and Eastern Washington in 19th-century style, attracting more venture capital; and boost a link to a transcontinental railroad for Seattle, the ultimate prize for incorporation. The historical accomplishment of the line was Seattle to Sumas at the border, with British Columbia, Canada, connecting with the Canadian Pacific transcontinental at the border at Huntingdon, British Columbia, now part of the City of Abbotsford. In addition to the historical accomplishment, the SLS&E built and ran branches from Seattle through Bothell, on to Woodinville, to Sallal Prairie (just past North Bend); Salmon Bay (the industrial district of the town of Ballard); and Spokane to Davenport. Toward the latter end, one goal was creating a rail connection to North Dakota via Wallula, an outpost on the Columbia River in the early decades of railroad booms, near the present Tri-Cities. Local historian William Speidel reported that Henry Villard, tycoon of the Northern Pacific Railway (NP), had the federal rights and had the line through Wallula built. The SLS&E was first incorporated to build a line from the Seattle harbor in old Downtown, along Elliott Bay to the lumber and fishing town of Ballard.", "target": "defunct railway in Washington state, U.S.", "baseline_candidates": ["railway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18623933", "label": "Stāmeriena Manor", "source": "Stāmeriena Palace (Latvian: Stāmerienas muižas pils; German: Schloss Stomersee) is a palace built in Historicist style from 1835 to 1843 in the historical region of Vidzeme, northern Latvia. Its first owner was Johann Gottlieb von Wolff (1756-1817) and subsequently his descendants.In 1905, during the Russian Revolution, the manor was burned down, but was later renewed by Baron Boris von Wolff (1850-1917) in 1908. Although it was rebuilt in different style it is considered one of the brightest architectural achievements of his time in French Neo-Renaissance style in Latvia. Stāmeriena palace was one of the few manors which were not nationalized after Latvian agrarian reforms in 1920s. So the von Wolff family continued to live there through the 1930s until 1939. The palace was presented as a gift to Andrei Pilar von Pilchau, the first - and homosexual - husband of the palace's owner Alexandra von Wolff-Stomersee. The Sicilian writer Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa lived in the Stāmeriena palace for a few years in the 1930s as he married the palace's owner Alexandra von Wolff-Stomersee (1894-1982) in 1932. After the second world war a technical school of agriculture was located in the palace. Later it was used as the administration building of the local state owned farm (sovkhoz). After the 1992 palace stood empty for six years but in 1998 it became a private property and since then the palace and landscape park around it are being restored and are open to visitors.", "target": "Manor in Latvia", "baseline_candidates": ["manor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q747409", "label": "Trimethylsulfonium-tetrahydrofolate N-methyltransferase", "source": "In enzymology, a trimethylsulfonium-tetrahydrofolate N-methyltransferase (EC 2.1.1.19) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction trimethylsulfonium + tetrahydrofolate ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } dimethylsulfide + 5-methyltetrahydrofolateThus, the two substrates of this enzyme are trimethylsulfonium and tetrahydrofolate, whereas its two products are dimethyl sulfide and 5-methyltetrahydrofolate. This enzyme belongs to the family of transferases, specifically those transferring one-carbon group methyltransferases. The systematic name of this enzyme class is trimethylsulfonium:tetrahydrofolate N-methyltransferase. This enzyme is also called trimethylsulfonium-tetrahydrofolate methyltransferase. This enzyme participates in one carbon pool by folate.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["methyltransferase", "N-methyltransferase", "group or class of enzymes"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7093380", "label": "One Wing", "source": "One Wing is the fifth and final studio album by the American metalcore band The Chariot. The album was released on August 28, 2012 through Good Fight Entertainment and E1 Music. One Wing has been described by the band as being their \"weirdest\" release to date. The album debuted at number 85 on the Billboard 200, their highest position so far.", "target": "album by The Chariot", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12178395", "label": "Had Boumoussa", "source": "Had Boumoussa is a town and rural commune in Fquih Ben Salah Province, Béni Mellal-Khénifra, Morocco. At the time of the 2004 census, the commune had a total population of 41,731 people living in 5959 households.", "target": "rural commune in Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["rural commune of Morocco"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q80211756", "label": "2020 FINA Diving World Cup", "source": "The 2021 FINA Diving World Cup was scheduled to take place in Tokyo, Japan, from 21 to 26 April 2020. It was to be the 22nd edition of the biennial diving competition, and the first time this specific FINA event was to be held in Tokyo and Japan. The venue was to be the Tokyo Aquatics Centre, and the final qualifying diving event for the 2020 Summer Olympics.The event was postponed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, after consulting with the International Olympic Committee. This followed the cancellation of the Beijing stop for the FINA Diving World Series in February 2020, and suspension of all other FINA events in March.The competition was scheduled to take place on 18–23 April 2021. However on 2 April 2021, it was reported by BBC Sport that the event was \"under review\" and likely to be cancelled, citing COVID-19-related concerns and logistical costs, a state of emergency declared over novel SARS-CoV-2 variants, and that the Japanese government \"did not take all the necessary measures\" to ensure a fair and successful competition. On 9 April 2021 it was announced that the 2021 Fina Diving World Cup would take place on 1–6 May.", "target": "2020 edition of the biennial FINA diving competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12141", "label": "Penrose triangle", "source": "The Penrose triangle, also known as the Penrose tribar, the impossible tribar, or the impossible triangle, is a triangular impossible object, an optical illusion consisting of an object which can be depicted in a perspective drawing, but cannot exist as a solid object. It was first created by the Swedish artist Oscar Reutersvärd in 1934. Independently from Reutersvärd, the triangle was devised and popularized in the 1950s by psychiatrist Lionel Penrose and his son, prominent Nobel Prize-winning mathematician Sir Roger Penrose, who described it as \"impossibility in its purest form\". It is featured prominently in the works of artist M. C. Escher, whose earlier depictions of impossible objects partly inspired it.", "target": "impossible object", "baseline_candidates": ["shape", "impossible object"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1225000", "label": "Viola", "source": "Viola is a genus of skippers in the family Hesperiidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20012331", "label": "2016 in Norwegian music", "source": "The following is a list of notable events and releases of the year 2016 in Norwegian music.", "target": "music-related events in Norway during 2016", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q386178", "label": "Jewel Cave National Monument", "source": "Jewel Cave National Monument contains Jewel Cave, currently the third longest cave in the world, with 209.32 miles (336.87 kilometers) of mapped passageways. It is located approximately 13 miles (21 km) west of the town of Custer in Black Hills of South Dakota. It became a national monument in 1908.", "target": "cave in the Black Hills of South Dakota, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["National Monument of the United States", "National Park System unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q134328", "label": "Blaisy-Bas", "source": "Blaisy-Bas (French pronunciation: ​[blɛzi ba]) is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France.", "target": "commune in Côte-d'Or, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21169384", "label": "Hong Kong Museum of Art", "source": "The Hong Kong Museum of Art (HKMoA) is the first and main art museum of Hong Kong, located in Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui. It is managed by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department of the Hong Kong Government. HKMoA has an art collection of over 17,000 items. Admission is free for permanent exhibitions. Its rival is the non-government-managed Hong Kong Arts Centre. These two museums are considered to be the top two art museums in Hong Kong that dictate the discourse of art in Hong Kong.It has an extended branch, the Flagstaff House Museum of Tea Ware, at the Hong Kong Park in Central.", "target": "art museum in Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["art museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5132619", "label": "Cliff Hawkins", "source": "Cliff Hawkins (10 March 1932 - 15 July 2016) was a real estate agent based in Adelaide, South Australia.Commencing work at the Lands Titles Office as a draftsman, at the age of 17 Hawkins became the youngest person in the state to qualify as a licensed land broker (now licensed conveyancer). Hawkins subsequently joined the established real estate firm of KJ Powell as a land broker. Hawkins established his real estate business in Adelaide in 1958. Aside from activity in Adelaide, his business established a presence on Kangaroo Island, South Australia from 1963 and is the longest established real estate business on the island. In 1966 he became the youngest ever councillor in the Real Estate Institute of South Australia, and in 1981 its youngest ever life member. In June 1988, he became a Member of the Order of Australia for his service to the real estate industry and the community.In 2000, the South Australian Attorney General appointed Hawkins to a government review panel to report on the National Competition Policy with respect to land agents.In 2007, Hawkins was recognised by the Real Estate Institute of Australia, being conferred the President's Award honouring outstanding performance, commitment and contributions to the real estate profession.Hawkins received government appointments to the Land Agents' Board, Commercial Tribunal and the board of the State Transport Authority in South Australia. Outside of real estate, Hawkins was President of Sturt Football Club from 1985 to 1986 and is a life member of the council of Westminster School, Adelaide.", "target": "Australian businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16754238", "label": "Lesticus prasinus", "source": "Lesticus prasinus is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Pterostichinae. It was described by Tschitscherine in 1900.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18351090", "label": "Alf Oldham", "source": "Alfred Oldham (16 October 1899 – 26 September 1972) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Melbourne Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "target": "Australian rules footballer (1899-1972)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4357440", "label": "Watanabe-dōri Station", "source": "Watanabe-dōri Station (渡辺通駅, Watanabe-dōri-eki) is a train station located in Chūō-ku, Fukuoka. Watanabe-dōri(ja:渡辺通り) means Mr.Watanabe's avenue in Japanese, because to commemorate Yohatirō Watanabe (渡辺與八郎)) makes efforts to establish the tram line on here in 1911. This station's symbol mark is a tram that used to run here.", "target": "metro station in Fukuoka, Fukuoka prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "station located underground"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14230298", "label": "Fucellia costalis", "source": "Fucellia costalis is a species of root-maggot fly in the family Anthomyiidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2589742", "label": "Wolfgang Graßl", "source": "Wolfgang Graßl (January 11, 1970 – April 12, 2010 in Berchtesgaden) was a German skier, coach and businessman, who represented Germany on the junior level in the 1980s. He died of heart failure.", "target": "German alpine skier (1970-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10276312", "label": "Watlington railway station", "source": "Watlington railway station (formerly known as Magdalen Road) is on the Fen line in the east of England, serving the village of Watlington, Norfolk. It is 90 miles 70 chains (146.2 km) measured from London Liverpool Street and is situated between Downham Market and King's Lynn stations. Its three-letter station code is WTG. The station and most trains calling are operated by Great Northern (with service to and from London King's Cross), with some additional peak services being operated by Abellio Greater Anglia (to and from London Liverpool Street).", "target": "railway station in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65061442", "label": "Followers", "source": "Followers is a Japanese J-Drama streaming television series and the first drama series by the director Mika Ninagawa. The series premiered on Netflix on February 27, 2020.", "target": "Japanese series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67087185", "label": "Lamborghini Sian", "source": "The Lamborghini Sián FKP 37 is a mid-engine hybrid sports car produced by the Italian automotive manufacturer Lamborghini. Unveiled online on 3 September 2019, the Sián is the first hybrid production vehicle produced by the brand.", "target": "car model", "baseline_candidates": ["Super Car", "automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17063578", "label": "taekwondo at the 2013 Mediterranean Games – men's 80 kg", "source": "The men's 80 kg competition of the taekwondo events at the 2013 Mediterranean Games took place on the 22 of June at the Edip Buran Arena.", "target": "taekwondo competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7502334", "label": "Shoshana Johnson", "source": "Shoshana Nyree Johnson (born January 18, 1973) is a Panamanian-born former United States soldier, and the first black female prisoner of war in the military history of the United States. Johnson was a Specialist of the U.S. Army 507th Maintenance Company, 5/52 ADA BN, 11th ADA Brigade. During the Battle of Nasiriyah, she suffered bullet wounds to both of her ankles and was captured by Iraqi forces. She was held prisoner in Iraq for 22 days along with five other members of her unit. She was freed in a rescue mission conducted by United States Marine Corps units on April 13, 2003.", "target": "Recipient of the Purple Heart medal", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31442033", "label": "Cham", "source": "Cham (Cham: ꨌꩌ) is a Malayo-Polynesian language of the Austronesian family, spoken by the Chams of Southeast Asia. It is spoken primarily in the territory of the former Kingdom of Champa, which spanned modern​ Southern Vietnam, as well as in Cambodia by a significant population which descends from refugees that fled during the decline and fall of Champa. The Western variety is spoken by 220,000 people in Cambodia and 25,000 people in Vietnam. As for the Eastern variety, there are about 73,000 speakers in Vietnam, for a total of approximately 320,000 speakers. Cham is the principal and most spoken language among the Chamic languages, which are spoken in parts of mainland Southeast Asia, North Sumatra and on the island of Hainan. Cham is the oldest-attested Austronesian language, with the Đông Yên Châu inscription being verifiably dated to the late 4th century AD.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["Chamic", "language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7712490", "label": "The Adventures of Algy", "source": "The Adventures of Algy is a 1925 Australian film comedy from director Beaumont Smith about a \"silly ass\" Englishman (Claude Dampier) who inherits a sheep station in New Zealand. It is an unofficial follow up to Hullo Marmaduke (1924), which also starred Dampier. Unlike most of Smith's silent films, most of the movie survives today.", "target": "1924 film by Beaumont Smith", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16375643", "label": "Viktor Kosykh", "source": "Viktor Ivanovich Kosykh (Russian: Виктор Иванович Косых; January 27, 1950 – December 22, 2011) was a Soviet and Russian theater and cinema actor. He is probably best known for the role of Danko Schusya in the famous film The Elusive Avengers and in its sequels, The New Adventures of the Elusive Avengers and The Crown of the Russian Empire, or Once Again the Elusive Avengers.He is buried at the Khovanskoye Cemetery.", "target": "Soviet and Russian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10291883", "label": "Hossein Elahi Ghomshei", "source": "Hossein Mohyeddin Ghomshei (Persian: حسین محی‌الدین قمشه‌ای; born 4 January 1940) better known as Elahi Ghomshei, is an Iranian scholar, philosopher, author, and lecturer on literature, art, and mysticism.", "target": "writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2241974", "label": "Spotted lady beetle", "source": "Coleomegilla maculata, commonly known as the spotted lady beetle, pink spotted lady beetle or twelve-spotted lady beetle, is a large coccinellid beetle native to North America. The adults and larvae feed primarily on aphids and the species has been used as a biological control agent. Based on name connotation and to avoid confusion with other species also called \"spotted ladybeetle\", spotted pink ladybeetle is probably the most appropriate common name for this species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15978987", "label": "Overberg branch line", "source": "The Overberg branch line is a railway line in the Western Cape, South Africa. It runs from Cape Town through Somerset West and Caledon to Bredasdorp.", "target": "railway line", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4029123", "label": "169th Rifle Division", "source": "The 169th Rifle Division was formed as an infantry division of the Red Army beginning in late August, 1939, as part of the pre-war Soviet military build-up. It saw service in the occupation force in western Ukraine in September. The German invasion found it still in Ukraine, fighting back to the Dniepr until it was nearly destroyed. The partly-rebuilt division fought again at Kharkov, then was pulled back into reserve and sent deep into the Caucasus where it fought south of Stalingrad throughout that battle. Following another major redeployment the division helped in the liberation of Oryol, and the following race to the Dniepr. In 1944 and 1945 it was in 1st and 2nd Belorussian Fronts, participating successfully in the offensives that liberated Belarus, Poland, and conquered eastern Germany. It ended the war on the Elbe River.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["rifle division", "military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8972032", "label": "Hung Kai-chun", "source": "Hung Kai-chun (Chinese: 黃楷峻; pinyin: Huáng Kǎijùn; born 4 March 1987) is a Taiwanese football player who plays as a midfielder for the Taiwan Power Company.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5745281", "label": "1929 Argentine Primera División", "source": "The 1929 Argentine Primera División was the 38th season of top-flight football in Argentina. The season began on July 21, 1929, and ended on February 9, 1930. This season saw the 35 teams of Primera, divided into two groups. The top 2 of each group qualified for the final stages of the tournament, which was eventually won by Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP). The season was marred by mass abandonment of games, defending Argentine champion Huracán withdrew from 8 of its fixtures leaving them to finish in 14th place in the group. Several other teams withdrew from multiple games. Abandonments of games, discontinuations, and withdrawals were quite common in these early seasons (cf., for instance, the second half of the 1930 season ). Colegiales returned to the first division after winning the Primera B championship last year.", "target": "38th season of top-tier football league in Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24852464", "label": "Dimitri Petemou", "source": "Dimitri Petemou (born 3 August 1980) is a New Caledonian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Thio Sport in the New Caledonia Super Ligue.", "target": "French association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5605680", "label": "Greg Hayward", "source": "Greg Hayward is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1980s. He played for the Newcastle Knights in 1988 during their inaugural season.", "target": "Australian rugby league player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6763116", "label": "Marie Šedivá", "source": "Marie Šedivá (12 October 1908 – 13 December 1975) was a Czech fencer. She competed in the women's individual foil event at the 1936 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Czech fencer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11728386", "label": "Joselito Velázquez", "source": "Joselito Velázquez Altamirano (born 30 September 1993) is a Mexican professional boxer. As an amateur he won gold medals at the 2011 and 2015 Pan American Games, and represented Mexico at the 2016 Olympics.", "target": "Mexican boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q371310", "label": "Bone Machine", "source": "Bone Machine is the eleventh studio album by American singer and musician Tom Waits, released by Island Records on September 8, 1992. It won a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album and features guest appearances by David Hidalgo, Les Claypool, Brain, and Keith Richards. The album marked Waits' return to studio albums, coming five years after his previous effort Franks Wild Years (1987). Recorded in a room in the cellar area of Prairie Sun Recording studios, described by Waits as \"just a cement floor and a hot water heater\", the album is often noted for its rough, stripped-down, percussion-heavy style, as well as its dark lyrical themes revolving around death and chaos. The album cover—a blurry, black-and-white, close-up image of Waits apparently screaming while wearing a horned skullcap and protective goggles—was taken by filmmaker Jesse Dylan, son of Bob Dylan.Bone Machine was included on several \"Best Albums of the 1990s\" lists, being ranked at No. 49 by Pitchfork and No. 53 by Rolling Stone. The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.", "target": "1992 studio album by Tom Waits", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18986807", "label": "Jinghai Station", "source": "Jinghai Station (Chinese: 靖海站), is a metro station on Line 2 and Line 3 of the Wuxi Metro. It started operations on 28 December 2014.", "target": "wuxi Metro station", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "station located underground"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16256073", "label": "Jong-seok", "source": "Jong-seok, also spelled Jong-suk, is a Korean masculine given name. Its meaning differs based on the hanja used to write each syllable of the name. There are 19 hanja with the reading \"jong\" and 20 hanja with the reading \"seok\" on the South Korean government's official list of hanja which may be registered for use in given names.People with this name include: Lee Jong-seok (politician) (born 1958), South Korean politician Lee Jong-suk (born 1989), South Korean actor.", "target": "Korean male given name ()", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7437188", "label": "Scott Salisbury", "source": "Scott Salisbury is a former Australian rules footballer who played over 200 games for Glenelg in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL) during the 1980s and 1990s. Salisbury, who often played in the back pocket, was a member of Glenelg's 1985 and 1986 premiership teams. He represented South Australia regularly at interstate football and in 1987 was awarded All-Australian selection. On the back of this effort, the Sydney Swans recruited Salisbury in the 1987 VFL Draft but he never made a senior appearance in the VFL. He returned to Glenelg and captained the club in both the 1991 and 1992 seasons, including their 1992 SANFL Grand Final loss to Port Adelaide. In 2002 Salisbury was inducted into Glenelg's Hall of Fame.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2878912", "label": "Carlo Vigarani", "source": "Carlo Vigarani (c. 1623 – 17 February 1713) was an Italian scenic designer who worked as \"ingénieur du roi\" and then \"intendant des plaisirs du roi\" at the court of the French king Louis XIV until 1690. He was born in Reggio nell'Emilia and went to Paris with his father Gaspare Vigarani in 1659. He is best known for his design with his father and his brother Lodovico of the Salle des Machines at the Tuileries Palace in Paris. He returned to Paris in 1662, became a French citizen in 1673, and probably died in Paris.", "target": "Italian scenic designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13197090", "label": "Orroli", "source": "Orroli, meaning \"downy oak\" (Arrólli in Sardinian language) is, a comune (municipality) in the Province of South Sardinia in the Italian region of Sardinia, located about 67.4 kilometres (41.9 mi) north of Cagliari. As of 31 December 2010, it had a population of 2,430 and an area of 75.6 square kilometres (29.2 sq mi). Orroli territory hosts one of the most important nuraghi of Sardinia called Nuraghe Arrubiu, the only intact example of a five-tower nuraghe, one of the dam in the Flumendosa river and the dam of the Mulargia, which gave name to the artificial lake. Within the village there are many hostels and bed and breakfasts organized around old lifestyles and ancient traditions. Orroli borders the following municipalities: Escalaplano, Esterzili, Goni, Nurri, Siurgus Donigala.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1509286", "label": "Horus Sa", "source": "Horus Sa (also Horus Za, Sa and Za) was a possible early Egyptian pharaoh who may have reigned during the Second or Third Dynasty of Egypt. His existence is disputed, as is the meaning of the artifacts that have been interpreted as confirming his existence.", "target": "ancient Egyptian ruler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95335888", "label": "Stanley Awramik", "source": "Stanley Awramik (born 1946) is an American biogeologist and paleontologist. He is best known for his work related to the Precambrian. In 2013, he was inducted as a fellow of the Geological Society of America.", "target": "American geologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61070409", "label": "Judit Kovács", "source": "Judit Kovács (born 7 January 1956) is a Hungarian former archer who competed in archery for Hungary at three Olympic Games.", "target": "Hungarian archer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7272168", "label": "Quincy Municipal Airport", "source": "The Quincy Municipal Airport (FAA LID: 2J9) is a public-use airport located 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of the central business district of the city of Quincy in Gadsden County, Florida, United States. The airport is publicly owned. The nearest airline service and jet fuel is 20 miles (32 km) away at Tallahassee International Airport (KTLH). The airport appears on the western edge of the Jacksonville VFR sectional. Taxi service is limited to none at all.", "target": "airport in Florida, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7693647", "label": "Ted Reeve", "source": "Edward Henry Reeve (January 6, 1902 – August 27, 1983) was a multi-sport Canadian athlete and sports journalist. He was on two Grey Cup winning teams as a football player, a Mann Cup championship as a lacrosse player and three Yates Cup championships as a coach for Queen's University. He is a member of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame. As an athlete Reeve was noted for determination and inspiring team-mates. He acquired the nickname \"The Moaner\" in later years after one of the characters in his newspaper columns, Moaner McGruffery.", "target": "Multi-sport athlete and sports journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6688414", "label": "Louis and Mathilde Reuter House", "source": "The Louis and Mathilde Reuter House is a private limestone home in central Austin, Texas, United States, in the historic Travis Heights neighborhood. The home was built by Louis Reuter, a local entrepreneur who moved to Austin in 1918 and later opened the city's first self-service grocery store. The home boasts an unusual U-shaped design that combines Spanish Revival and Mission Revival styling, with Palladian windows. The home was built without a precise blueprint but rather a \"footprint\" on the property which spared the grandiose old oak trees. The home is located at 806 Rosedale Terrace. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987.", "target": "historic place in Austin, Travis County, Texas", "baseline_candidates": ["house", "building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4775164", "label": "Antique Epigraphs", "source": "Antique Epigraphs is a ballet made on New York City Ballet by ballet master Jerome Robbins to an orchestrated version of Debussy's Six épigraphes antiques, L131, for piano, four hands, from 1914: “Pour invoquer Pan, dieu du vent d'été” “Pour un tombeau sans nom” “Pour que la nuit soit propice” “Pour la danseuse aux crotales” “Pour l'égyptienne” “Pour remercier la pluie au matin”and his Syrinx, L129, a melody for unaccompanied flute from 1913. Six épigraphes antiques were originally written to accompany Pierre Louys' Les Chansons de Bilitis, prose poetry which was purported to be a translation of freshly discovered autobiographical verse by a lover and contemporary of Sappho. The premiere took place on February 2, 1984, at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center, with costumes by Florence Klotz and lighting by Jennifer Tipton.", "target": "ballet by Jerome Robbins", "baseline_candidates": ["ballet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60575239", "label": "Serbian Revolution", "source": "The Serbian Revolution (Serbian: Српска револуција / Srpska revolucija) was a national uprising and constitutional change in Serbia that took place between 1804 and 1835, during which this territory evolved from an Ottoman province into a rebel territory, a constitutional monarchy, and modern Serbia. The first part of the period, from 1804 to 1817, was marked by a violent struggle for independence from the Ottoman Empire with two armed uprisings taking place, ending with a ceasefire. The later period (1817–1835) witnessed a peaceful consolidation of political power of the increasingly autonomous Serbia, culminating in the recognition of the right to hereditary rule by Serbian princes in 1830 and 1833 and the territorial expansion of the young monarchy. The adoption of the first written Constitution in 1835 abolished feudalism and serfdom, and made the country suzerain. The term Serbian Revolution was coined by a German academic historiographer, Leopold von Ranke, in his book Die Serbische Revolution, published in 1829. These events marked the foundation of modern Serbia.The period is further divided as follows: First Serbian Uprising (1804–13), led by Karađorđe Petrović Hadži-Prodan's rebellion (1814) Second Serbian Uprising (1815–17), led by Miloš Obrenović Official recognition of the Serbian state (1815–1833)The Proclamation (1809) by Karađorđe in the capital Belgrade probably represented the apex of the first phase. It called for national unity, drawing on Serbian history to demand the freedom of religion and formal, written rule of law, both of which the Ottoman Empire had failed to provide. It also called on Serbs to stop paying taxes to the.", "target": "early 19th century events in the history of Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["historical event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1809924", "label": "Henry Potter", "source": "Henry or Harry Potter (October 4, 1881 – January 24, 1955) was an American golfer who competed in the 1904 Summer Olympics. In 1904 he was part of the American team which won the silver medal. Potter was the best player for his team together with his teammate Francis Newton he placed sixth in this competition. In the individual competition he finished 15th in the qualification and was eliminated in the first round of the match play.", "target": "Amateur golfer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6849092", "label": "Mike Trim", "source": "Mike Trim (born 26 August 1945) is an artist famous for illustrating the cover of Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds, which depicts a Martian tripod striking down the heroic Thunder Child. A book of his illustrations entitled The Future was FAB: The Art of Mike Trim was released in 2006. Trim grew up in Fulham, and from an early age started to show artistic talent. He studied at London's Sir Christopher Wren School. At the London School of Printing, he did a two-year course in graphic design. In 1964, his father saw a newspaper advertisement seeking modelmakers for a film company. Upon hearing this, Trim began an odyssey that would last for more than 40 years. Beginning in the final days of Stingray, he would work as a modelmaker and designer for Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's television series Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, Joe 90, The Secret Service, and UFO, as well as their feature films Thunderbirds Are GO, Thunderbird 6, and Journey to the Far Side of the Sun (a.k.a. Doppelgänger). Starting out in the model shop, Mike eventually became Special Effects director Derek Meddings' assistant in designing the fabulous futuristic vehicles, buildings, and look of the Andersons' imaginative series. Eventually, he would take on the bulk of design work for the series as Meddings became more involved in feature films. Contributing a single (unused) vehicle design and model to Space: 1999, Trim then moved into freelance illustration, creating an iconic cover painting for one of the best selling.", "target": "British special effects designer and illustrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7344500", "label": "Robert Franklin Mehl", "source": "Robert Franklin Mehl (March 30, 1898 – January 29, 1976) was an American metallurgist. Mehl was noted for transforming of nineteenth-century metallurgy into the modern materials science. He was the founder and the head of a division of Physical metallurgy at the Naval Research Laboratory and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. The American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers established a gold medal award in his name in 1973.", "target": "American metallurgist (1898-1976)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5812695", "label": "Katinkan-e Bala", "source": "Katinkan-e Bala (Persian: كتينكان بالا, also Romanized as Katīnkān-e Bālā; also known as Kātīhīkān, Katihkān, Katīkān, Katīkan-e Bālā, and Katīnkān) is a village in Zaboli Rural District, in the Central District of Mehrestan County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 55, in 13 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49370403", "label": "Wales", "source": "Wales is a town in Hampden County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 1,838 at the 2020 census. It is part of the Springfield, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "town in Massachusetts", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8055530", "label": "York River", "source": "The York River is a river in Renfrew County, Hastings County and Haliburton County in Ontario, Canada. The river is in the Saint Lawrence River drainage basin, and flows from the southern extension of Algonquin Provincial Park to the Madawaska River.", "target": "tributary of the Madawaska River in Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1708866", "label": "José", "source": "José is a predominantly Spanish and Portuguese form of the given name Joseph. While spelled alike, this name is pronounced differently in each language: Spanish [xoˈse]; Portuguese [ʒuˈzɛ] (or [ʒoˈzɛ]). In French, the name José, pronounced [ʒoze] (listen), is an old vernacular form of Joseph, which is also in current usage as a given name. José is also commonly used as part of masculine name composites, such as José Manuel, José Maria or Antonio José, and also in female name composites like Maria José or Marie-José. The feminine written form is Josée as in French. In Netherlandic Dutch, however, José is a feminine given name and is pronounced [ˈjoːseː]; it may occur as part of name composites like Marie-José or as a feminine first name in its own right; it can also be short for the name Josina and even a Dutch hypocorism of the name Johanna. In England, Jose is originally a Romano-Celtic surname, and people with this family name can usually be found in, or traced to, the English county of Cornwall, where it was especially frequent during the fourteenth century; this surname is pronounced , as in the English names Joseph or Josephine. According to another interpretation Jose is cognate with Joyce; Joyce is an English and Irish surname derived from the Breton personal name Iodoc, which was introduced to England by the Normans in the form Josse. In medieval England the name was occasionally borne by women but more commonly by men; the variant surname Jose is local to Devon and Cornwall.The.", "target": "male given name", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4703359", "label": "Al-Yateematain", "source": "Al-Yateematain (Arabic: اليتيمتين, The Two Orphans) is a 1949 Egyptian drama film written by Abo El Seoud El Ebiary directed by Hassan Al Imam starring Egyptian actress Faten Hamama. The film was based on the play The Two Orphans by Adolphe d'Ennery and Eugène Cormon.", "target": "1948 film by Hassan al-Imam", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3637542", "label": "Bekim Kuli", "source": "Bekim Kuli (born 19 September 1982 in Kavajë) is an Albanian retired footballer who has played for several teams in the Albanian Superliga.", "target": "Albanian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48989552", "label": "Holcomb Rock Dam", "source": "The Holcomb Rock Dam is a concrete dam across the James River near Lynchburg, Virginia. The project consists of a concrete dam across the river, an earthen embankment canal on the right bank, and a power house where water is discharged to generate electricity. Per the 2008 annual generation report, the project generated 6,089,209 KW-hours.The dam is located downstream of the larger Coleman Falls Dam.", "target": "dam in Bedford County, Virginia, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["dam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5831634", "label": "Rinchinbal Khan", "source": "Rinchinbal, also known by the temple name Ningzong (Emperor Ningzong of Yuan, Chinese: 元寧宗; May 1, 1326 – December 14, 1332), was a son of Kuśala who was briefly installed to the throne of the Yuan dynasty of China, but died soon after he was installed to the throne. Apart from Emperor of China, he is also considered the 14th Great Khan of the Mongol Empire, although it was only nominal due to the division of the empire.", "target": "emperor of the Yuan Dynasty (1326-1332)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3358409", "label": "Hurricane Leslie", "source": "Hurricane Leslie was an Atlantic tropical cyclone that caused minor damage in Bermuda and Atlantic Canada in September 2012. The twelfth tropical cyclone of the annual hurricane season, Leslie developed from a tropical wave located nearly 1,500 miles (2,400 km) east of the Leeward Islands on August 30. About twelve hours later, it strengthened into Tropical Storm Leslie. Tracking steadily west-northwestward, it slowly intensified due to only marginally favorable conditions. By September 2, the storm curved north-northwestward while located north of the Leeward Islands. Thereafter, a blocking pattern over Atlantic Canada caused Leslie to drift for four days. Late on September 5, Leslie was upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane. However, due to its slow movement, the storm causing upwelling, which decreased sea surface temperatures (SST's), weakening Leslie back to a tropical storm on September 7. The storm drifted until September 9, when it accelerated while passing east of Bermuda. Relatively strong winds on the island caused hundreds of power outages and knocked down tree branches, electrical poles, and other debris. Slight re-intensification took place, with Leslie becoming a hurricane again, before transitioning into an extratropical cyclone near Newfoundland on September 11. In Atlantic Canada, the storm brought heavy rainfall to both Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. In the latter, localized flooding occurred, especially in the western portions of the province. Also in Newfoundland, strong winds from Leslie ripped off roofs, destroyed trees, and left 45,000 homes without power. Additionally, a partially built house was destroyed and several incomplete homes were damaged in Pouch Cove. Overall, Hurricane.", "target": "Category 1 Atlantic hurricane in 2012", "baseline_candidates": ["category 1 hurricane"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94896559", "label": "Étienne Rey", "source": "Étienne Rey (1 March 1879 – 16 February 1965) was a French writer, dramatist and literary critic and one of the first best-seller writers of the Grasset publisher.His play La belle aventure, co-written with Robert de Flers and Gaston Arman de Caillavet was premiered in 1913 at the Théâtre du Vaudeville, and played again numerous times. It has been adapted to the screen in 1917, 1932 and 1942 under the title The Beautiful Adventure.", "target": "French writer, playwright and literary criticism (1879-1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2302825", "label": "Sophie Matisse", "source": "Sophie Alexina Victoire Matisse (born February 13, 1965) is an American contemporary artist. Matisse initially gained notice for her series of Missing Person paintings, in which she appropriated and embellished upon, or subtracted from, recognizable works from art history. Media coverage often mentions Matisse's family background, an art pedigree originating with her great-grandfather, the 20th century painter Henri Matisse. The London Sunday Telegraph newspaper in 2003 referred to Matisse as \"art royalty\", a term occasionally paraphrased when discussing Matisse and her artwork.", "target": "American contemporary artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2120836", "label": "Bulpitt", "source": "Bulpitt is a village in Christian County, Illinois, United States. The population was 222 at the 2010 census.", "target": "human settlement in Illinois, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["village in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4255211", "label": "Salvador Laurel", "source": "Salvador Roman Hidalgo Laurel (Tagalog pronunciation: [laʊˈɾɛl], November 18, 1928 – January 27, 2004), also known as Doy Laurel, was a Filipino lawyer and politician who served as the vice president of the Philippines from 1986 to 1992 under President Corazon Aquino and briefly served as the last prime minister from February 25 to March 25, 1986, when the position was abolished. He was a major leader of the United Nationalist Democratic Organization (UNIDO), the political party that helped topple the dictatorship of President Ferdinand Marcos with the 1986 People Power Revolution.", "target": "Philippine politician (1928-2004)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28129727", "label": "2016 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos – singles", "source": "Blaž Rola was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title. Renzo Olivo won the title after defeating Thiago Monteiro 6–4, 7–6(7–5) in the final.", "target": "2016 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75563993", "label": "John Brydges, Marquess of Carnarvon", "source": "John Brydges, Marquess of Carnarvon (15 January 1703 – 7 April 1727), styled Viscount Wilton from 1714 to 1719, was a British Member of Parliament, heir apparent to the Duke of Chandos. John was the fourth, but eldest surviving son of James Brydges, 1st Duke of Chandos and his first wife Mary. He was educated at Westminster School, from which he graduated in 1718. Viscount Wilton, as he then was, matriculated at University of Oxford on 4 November 1719, from which he received a Doctor of Civil Law on 8 April 1721. He also studied at Leyden that year. Carnarvon completed his education with a Grand Tour of Europe from 1721 to 1723.After his return to England, he married Lady Catherine Tollemache, daughter of Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Earl of Dysart, on 1 September 1724. The couple had two children: Lady Catherine Brydges (17 December 1725 – 16 May 1807), married first Capt. William Berkeley Lyon and second Edwyn Francis Stanhope, by the latter of whom she was mother of Sir Henry Edwyn Stanhope, 1st Baronet Lady Jane Brydges (28 April 1727 – 1 March 1776), married James Brydges of Pinner, without issueCarnarvon was returned on his father's electoral interest for the constituency of Steyning in January 1726, at a by-election following the death of John Pepper. However, he died in April 1727 of smallpox. His place was filled by William Stanhope, lately Ambassador to Spain.", "target": "British politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8032394", "label": "Woodbourne Heights", "source": "Woodbourne Heights, Baltimore is a community in northern Baltimore, Maryland. It is served by the Woodbourne Heights Community, the Woodbourne-McCabe Neighborhood and the Beauregard Neighborhood Associations.", "target": "human settlement in Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7462260", "label": "Khuzdûl", "source": "Khuzdul is a fictional language created by J. R. R. Tolkien, one of the languages of Middle-earth, specifically the secret and private language of the Dwarves.", "target": "fictional language of dwarves in the fantasy works of J. R. R. Tolkien", "baseline_candidates": ["languages constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75368647", "label": "Elisabeth von Magnus", "source": "Elisabeth von Magnus (née Countess Elisabeth Juliana de la Fontaine und d'Harnoncourt-Unverzagt; born 29 May 1954 in Vienna) is an Austrian classical mezzo-soprano. The daughter of conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt and violinist Alice Harnoncourt, her professional name comes from her first marriage to Ernst-Jürgen von Magnus. She studied recorder in Vienna, theater at the Mozarteum in Salzburg and voice with Hertha Töpper at the Conservatory of Munich. Her other teachers have included Paul Schilhawsky. Early in her career, she performed as a recorder soloist with the Concentus Musicus Wien. She has also worked for ORF as a presenter and announcer. Von Magnus appeared at the Salzburg Festival first in 1993 in Mozart's Great Mass in C minor as well as in L'incoronazione di Poppea and Vespro della Beata Vergine 1610 of Monteverdi. She took part in several projects with Nikolaus Harnoncourt, such as a production of Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro staged by Jürgen Flimm in Amsterdam. Her US debut in 1991 was in Bach’s St Matthew Passion with the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Peter Schreier. Her recordings include participation in the complete vocal works of Johann Sebastian Bach with Ton Koopman and the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir. She has also appeared in recordings for such labels as Teldec and Deutsche Harmonia Mundi.Her marriage to Ernst-Jürgen von Magnus, from 1981 to 1999, produced three children, and ended in divorce. In 1999, she married the tenor and choral conductor Simon Schouten. Outside of performance, Elisabeth von Magnus also serves as Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Art and International.", "target": "Austrian classical singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1352599", "label": "Fixing a Hole", "source": "\"Fixing a Hole\" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by Paul McCartney and credited to Lennon–McCartney.", "target": "original song written and composed by Lennon-McCartney; first recorded by The Beatles", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7245927", "label": "Pritam Saini", "source": "Dr. Pritam Saini (1927–2003) was a Punjabi journalist, literary critic and history scholar. He served as Research Fellow at Punjabi University, Patiala in Punjab, India and was also a member of academic bodies such as the Punjab History Conference and Indian History Congress.", "target": "Punjabi journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5192622", "label": "Cuesta Benberry", "source": "Cuesta Benberry (September 8, 1923 – August 23, 2007) was an American historian and scholar. Considered to be one of the pioneers of research on quiltmaking in America, she was the pioneer of research on African-American quiltmaking. Her involvement in quilt research spans from founding and participating in various quilt groups to writing articles in renowned quilt magazines and journals. As a quilt scholar, Benberry acquired a collection of important quilts dating from the late 19th century up to the 21st century, as well as an extensive collection of paper documents supplementing quilting exhibitions, books, articles and her personal research.", "target": "American art historian (1923-2007)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31180765", "label": "Yumi's Cells", "source": "Yumi's Cells (Korean: 유미의 세포들; RR: Yumiui Sepodeul) is a South Korean manhwa series written and illustrated by Donggun Lee. This webtoon was released on internet portal Naver WEBTOON from April 1, 2015 until November 13, 2020 with a total 512 chapters. The story revolves around Yumi Kim, a 32 year old office worker, and her brain cells, tiny blue-hooded cells that control her every mood, thought, and action.", "target": "manhwa series", "baseline_candidates": ["manhwa series", "webtoon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39093", "label": "Rottweiler", "source": "The Rottweiler (, UK also ) is a breed of domestic dog, regarded as medium-to-large or large. The dogs were known in German as Rottweiler Metzgerhund, meaning Rottweil butchers' dogs, because their main use was to herd livestock and pull carts laden with butchered meat to market. This continued until the mid-19th century when railways replaced droving. Although still used to herd stock in many parts of the world, Rottweilers are now also used as search and rescue dogs, guard dogs, and police dogs.", "target": "dog breed", "baseline_candidates": ["dog", "dog breed"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27889036", "label": "Chunni Lal Khetrapal", "source": "Chunni Lal Khetrapal (25 August 1937 – 21 July 2021) was an Indian chemical physicist and a vice chancellor of Allahabad University. He was known for his studies in chemical physics, particularly in the field of Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. He was an elected fellow of the Indian National Science Academy and the National Academy of Sciences, India. The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, the apex agency of the Government of India for scientific research, awarded him the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize for Science and Technology, one of the highest Indian science awards, in 1982, for his contributions to chemical sciences.", "target": "Indian chemical physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58409611", "label": "1922 Cincinnati Bearcats football team", "source": "The 1922 Cincinnati Bearcats football team was an American football team that represented the University of Cincinnati as a member of the Ohio Athletic Conference during the 1922 college football season. In their first season under head coach George McLaren, the Bearcats compiled a 1–7–1 record (1–3–1 against conference opponents). Mike Palmer was the team captain. The team played its home games at Carson Field in Cincinnati.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5456163", "label": "Five Tango Sensations", "source": "Five Tango Sensations is a suite of works (Asleep—Loving—Anxiety—Despertar—Fear) for bandoneón and string quartet written in 1989 by Argentine composer Ástor Piazzolla. It was premiered in New York that year and recorded immediately afterwards by the Kronos Quartet and the composer, who played the bandoneón. The record was one of a set of three internationally tinged albums released simultaneously, the Argentine music of this album being accompanied by the music of South-African composer Kevin Volans on Kevin Volans: Hunting:Gathering and the music of Polish composer Witold Lutosławski on Witold Lutosławski: String Quartet.", "target": "album by Kronos Quartet", "baseline_candidates": ["album", "musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96654465", "label": "OGLE-2005-BLG-390L", "source": "OGLE-2005-BLG-390L is a star thought to be a spectral type M (a red dwarf; 95% probability, 4% probability it is a white dwarf, <1% probability it is a neutron star or black hole). This dim magnitude 16 galactic bulge star is located in the Scorpius constellation at a far distance of about 21,500 light years.", "target": "star in the constellation Scorpius", "baseline_candidates": ["star"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5517170", "label": "Gail Simmons", "source": "Gail Simmons (born May 19, 1976) is a food writer and cookbook author. She has served as a permanent judge on Bravo's Emmy-winning series Top Chef, since the show's inception in 2006. Simmons was previously the head critic on Top Chef Duels and host of Top Chef: Just Desserts, Bravo's pastry-focused spin-off of the Top Chef franchise. She was also co-host of The Feed, which aired in 2014 on FYI, A+E's new lifestyle network. In addition to her work on Top Chef, Gail makes frequent television appearances on NBC's Today and ABC's Good Morning America, among others. She has been featured in such publications as New York magazine, Travel + Leisure, GQ, People, Los Angeles Times, and more.", "target": "Canadian food writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73723", "label": "Ksamil Islands", "source": "The Islets of Ksamil (Albanian: Ishuj të Ksamilit or Ishuj të Tetranisit), consist of four rocky islets located in the direct proximity to the Ionian Sea in Southern Albania. The village of Ksamil, after whom the islets are named, is located to the east of the islets. Furthermore, the islands are situated within the boundaries of the Butrint National Park.The islets lie to the extreme south of the Albanian Riviera along the Ionian Sea. They are remote and can only be accessed by boat. The combined areas of the four islands is only 8.9 hectares (22.0 acres). The two outer islands are connected by a narrow strip of sand. In terms of geology, islands has been shaped into its current form over the Jurassic period, with its disjunction of the mainland due to the water activity.The islets falls phytogeographically within the Illyrian deciduous forests terrestrial ecoregion of the Palearctic Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub biome. The vegetation of the islands includes many communities of a Mediterranean type, while the most important habitats include the Mediolitoral and Infralitoral zone. The seagrasses along the coast are dominated by posidonia oceanica, halophila stipulacea and cymodocea nodosa. Posidonia oceanica is mostly abundant in the shallow waters and can extend more down to more than 30 metres in the depth. The forested land area is mostly covered by species such as holly oak, common alder, elm, bay laurel and myrtle. The marine waters are rich in cetacean diversities including such as short-beaked common dolphin and common bottlenose dolphin.", "target": "four small islands located in southern Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["island group", "island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q274568", "label": "Ippolita Trivulzio", "source": "Ippolita Trivulzio (1600 – 20 June 1638) was the Princess of Monaco by marriage to Honoré II of Monaco, and was the first Monegasque consort to bear the title of Princess.", "target": "Princes of Monaco", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76297254", "label": "William Hody", "source": "Sir William Hody (born before 1441, died 1524) of Pilsdon in Dorset, was an English lawyer, judge and politician who served as Attorney General of England and Chief Baron of the Exchequer under King Henry VII.", "target": "English judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16269320", "label": "Pussy versus Putin", "source": "Pussy versus Putin is a 2013 Russian documentary film by the film collective Gogol's Wives chronicling the history of the group Pussy Riot and their struggle with the political regime in Russia. The film received the NTR IDFA Award for Best Mid-Length Documentary at the 2013 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam.The one-hour film includes sequences in which group members discuss their political aims, footage of their guerrilla-style performances during the run-up to the 2012 Russian presidential election as well as the intimidation and physical harassment they face, shot from behind bars and inside prison vans.", "target": "2013 Russian television film about Pussy Riot", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2772325", "label": "Proncycroy", "source": "Proncycroy (Scottish Gaelic: Prannsaidh Cruaidh) is a settlement in the Sutherland region in the Scottish council area of Highland, and is located less than two miles from Dornoch.", "target": "human settlement in Highland, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67436667", "label": "Mabel Addis", "source": "Mabel Addis Mergardt (21 May 1912 – 13 August 2004) was an American writer, teacher and the first female video game designer. She designed The Sumerian Game, programmed by William McKay, for the IBM 7090 in 1964. It inspired similarly-styled kingdom management games such as Hamurabi from the early 1970s.", "target": "American computer games designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28417000", "label": "quantum annealing", "source": "Quantum annealing (QA) is an optimization process for finding the global minimum of a given objective function over a given set of candidate solutions (candidate states), by a process using quantum fluctuations. Quantum annealing is used mainly for problems where the search space is discrete (combinatorial optimization problems) with many local minima; such as finding the ground state of a spin glass or the traveling salesman problem. The term \"quantum annealing\" was first proposed in 1988 by B. Apolloni, N. Cesa Bianchi and D. De Falco as a quantum-inspired classical algorithm. It was formulated in its present form by T. Kadowaki and H. Nishimori (ja) in \"Quantum annealing in the transverse Ising model\" though an imaginary-time variant without quantum coherence had been discussed by A. B. Finnila, M. A. Gomez, C. Sebenik and J. D. Doll, in \"Quantum annealing is a new method for minimizing multidimensional functions\".Quantum annealing starts from a quantum-mechanical superposition of all possible states (candidate states) with equal weights. Then the system evolves following the time-dependent Schrödinger equation, a natural quantum-mechanical evolution of physical systems. The amplitudes of all candidate states keep changing, realizing a quantum parallelism, according to the time-dependent strength of the transverse field, which causes quantum tunneling between states. If the rate of change of the transverse field is slow enough, the system stays close to the ground state of the instantaneous Hamiltonian (also see adiabatic quantum computation). If the rate of change of the transverse field is accelerated, the system may leave the ground state temporarily but produce a.", "target": "method for finding solutions to combinatorial optimisation problems and ground states of glassy systems using quantum fluctuations", "baseline_candidates": ["quantum algorithm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q184793", "label": "computer-aided design", "source": "Computer-aided design (CAD) is the use of computers (or workstations) to aid in the creation, modification, analysis, or optimization of a design. This software is used to increase the productivity of the designer, improve the quality of design, improve communications through documentation, and to create a database for manufacturing. Designs made through CAD software are helpful in protecting products and inventions when used in patent applications. CAD output is often in the form of electronic files for print, machining, or other manufacturing operations. The terms computer-aided drafting (CAD) and computer aided design and drafting (CADD) is also used.Its use in designing electronic systems is known as electronic design automation (EDA). In mechanical design it is known as mechanical design automation (MDA), which includes the process of creating a technical drawing with the use of computer software.CAD software for mechanical design uses either vector-based graphics to depict the objects of traditional drafting, or may also produce raster graphics showing the overall appearance of designed objects. However, it involves more than just shapes. As in the manual drafting of technical and engineering drawings, the output of CAD must convey information, such as materials, processes, dimensions, and tolerances, according to application-specific conventions. CAD may be used to design curves and figures in two-dimensional (2D) space; or curves, surfaces, and solids in three-dimensional (3D) space. : 71, 106 CAD is an important industrial art extensively used in many applications, including automotive, shipbuilding, and aerospace industries, industrial and architectural design, prosthetics, and many more. CAD is also widely used to produce.", "target": "constructing a product by means of computer", "baseline_candidates": ["design", "specialty", "application"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q930979", "label": "Irene", "source": "Irene is a Neoclassical tragedy written between 1726 and 1749 by Samuel Johnson. It has the distinction of being the work Johnson considered his greatest failure. Since his death, the critical consensus has been that he was right to think so.Irene was Johnson's only play, and was first performed on 6 February 1749 in a production by his friend and former pupil David Garrick. The play was a commercial success and earned Johnson more money than anything else he had written up to that point. It was never revived during his lifetime, and there is no subsequent evidence of any other full-scale productions of Irene anywhere until 1999, making it one of the most unsuccessful plays ever written by a major author.", "target": "play by Samuel Johnson", "baseline_candidates": ["play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75337116", "label": "Sir William Younger, 1st Baronet, of Auchen Castle", "source": "Sir William Younger, 1st Baronet (28 June 1862 – 28 July 1937) was a Scottish politician who served as a Member of Parliament (MP) for a total of 11 years between 1895 and 1910.", "target": "British politician (1862-1937)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q105511", "label": "Leopold von Henning", "source": "Leopold August Wilhelm Dorotheus von Henning (originally von Henning auf Schönhoff; 4 October 1791 – 5 October 1866) was a German philosopher associated with the Hegelian Right.", "target": "German philosopher (1791-1866)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17388568", "label": "Pedro Mathey", "source": "Pedro Mathey (13 March 1928 – 8 October 1985) was a Peruvian cyclist. He competed in the individual and team road race events at the 1948 Summer Olympics.", "target": "cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14807366", "label": "Dorcadion suvorovianum", "source": "Dorcadion suvorovianum is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Plavilstshikov in 1916.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q920334", "label": "Jeff Gray", "source": "Jeffrey Michael Gray (born November 19, 1981) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Oakland Athletics, Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox. Seattle Mariners, and Minnesota Twins. He graduated from Lafayette High School in Wildwood, Missouri and attended Southwest Missouri State University.", "target": "American baseball player (1981-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15609", "label": "20000 Varuna", "source": "20000 Varuna, provisional designation 2000 WR106, is a large trans-Neptunian object in the Kuiper belt. It was discovered in December 2000 by American astronomer Robert McMillan during a Spacewatch survey at the Kitt Peak National Observatory. It is named after the Hindu deity Varuna, one of the oldest deities mentioned in the Vedic texts. Varuna's light curve is compatible with the body being a Jacobi ellipsoid, suggesting that it has an elongated shape due to its rapid rotation. Varuna's surface is moderately red in color due to the presence of complex organic compounds on its surface. Water ice is also present on its surface, and is thought to have been exposed by past collisions which may have also caused Varuna's rapid rotation. Although no natural satellites have been found or directly imaged around Varuna, analysis of variations in its light curve in 2019 suggests the presence of a possible satellite orbiting closely around Varuna.", "target": "Kuiper belt object", "baseline_candidates": ["Kuiper belt object", "asteroid", "possible dwarf planet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6966129", "label": "Narosodes", "source": "Narosodes is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae erected by Frederic Moore in 1887.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q945047", "label": "Port St. John", "source": "Port St. John is a census-designated place located between Titusville and Cocoa in Brevard County, Florida. The population was 12,267 at the 2010 United States Census. It is part of the Palm Bay–Melbourne–Titusville Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "census designated place in Brevard County, Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2397131", "label": "Megachile alboscopacea", "source": "Megachile alboscopacea is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae. It was described by Friese in 1903.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60671533", "label": "Mamoudou Karamoko", "source": "Mamoudou Karamoko (born 8 September 1999) is a French professional footballer who plays as a forward for the Danish club F.C. Copenhagen.", "target": "French association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2100784", "label": "Point Pleasant Park", "source": "Point Pleasant Park is a large, mainly forested municipal park at the southern tip of the Halifax peninsula. It once hosted several artillery batteries, and still contains the Prince of Wales Tower - the oldest Martello tower in North America (1796). The park is a popular recreational spot for Haligonians, as it hosts forest walks and affords views across the harbour and out toward the Atlantic. Plays are performed in the park every summer by a professional theatre company called Shakespeare by the Sea. The performances take place at Cambridge Battery, and include both Shakespearean productions and original musicals based on classic fairy tales for audiences of all ages. The company also operates the 80-seat Park Place Theatre in the lower parking lot of the park, which is used as a rain venue during the summer, and for fall/winter indoor productions. Point Pleasant Park is owned by the British government under the administration of the Minister of the Department of Canadian Heritage and is leased to Halifax Regional Municipality for a ceremonial 1 shilling per year. The original lease for the land was negotiated by Sir William Young in 1866.", "target": "large, partially forested municipal park at the southern tip of the Halifax peninsula", "baseline_candidates": ["park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37894713", "label": "Zyuratkul National Park", "source": "Zyuratkul National Park (Russian: Зюраткуль (национальный парк)) is a Russian national park established in 1993 in the southern part of Satkinsky Raion (Chelyabinsk Oblast, Urals). The park lies about 30 km south of Satka and 200 km west of Chelyabinsk.", "target": "Russian national park", "baseline_candidates": ["national park of Russia", "protected area of Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7422933", "label": "Sarah de Gaudemar", "source": "Sarah de Gaudemar, also known professionally as Sarah E. Meyer, is an animator who has worked on the animated television series Moral Orel, Robot Chicken (for which she won an Emmy in 2006), Green Screen Show, Phantom Investigators, Gary & Mike, The PJs, and Celebrity Deathmatch, and the feature film Davey & Goliath's Snowboard Christmas.She is also credited with animating the \"Robot Chicken Universe\" (with fellow Robot Chicken animators Eileen Kohlhepp and Kelly Mazurowski) in the Family Guy episode \"Road to the Multiverse.\".", "target": "American animator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31750372", "label": "Myat Phaya Galay", "source": "Princess Myat Phaya Galay (Burmese: မြတ်ဖုရားကလေး; 25 April 1887 – 3 March 1936) was a Burmese royal princess and senior member of the Royal House of Konbaung. She was the fourth daughter of the last ruling king of Burma, King Thibaw, and his queen Supayalat.", "target": "princess of Burma (1887-1936)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7525387", "label": "Sione Kite", "source": "Sione Kite (born 14 January 1988), also known as John Kite is an Australian rugby league footballer for the Thirlmere Roosters in the Group 6 Rugby League. He previously played for the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs and Melbourne Storm in the National Rugby League and the Widnes Vikings in the Super League. He primarily plays prop and second-row.", "target": "Australian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2296910", "label": "Opisthopterus", "source": "Opisthopterus is a genus of longfin herring in the family Pristigasteridae. There are currently six species in this genus.", "target": "genus of fishes", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q82276670", "label": "2020 Djurgårdens IF season", "source": "The 2020 season was Djurgårdens IF's 120th in existence, their 65th season in Allsvenskan and their 20th consecutive season in the league. In addition to the, Allsvenskan, they will compete in the 2019–20 and 2020–21 editions of the Svenska Cupen and the Champions League where they entered at the first qualifying round. Djurgården entered the league season as defending champions having won their 12th league title, and the first in 14 years, on the final day of the 2019 season.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5976523", "label": "I Can Be", "source": "\"I Can Be\" is a song by British singer-songwriter Taio Cruz, released as the fourth single from his debut album Departure, released in May 2008. The song peaked at number 18 on the UK Singles Chart. The single's B-side, \"Disco Fever\", was written and recorded exclusively for the release, and featured in the television adverts for Britannia High, an ITV1 musical series broadcast in July 2008.", "target": "2008 single by Taio Cruz", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10386434", "label": "USS LST-25", "source": "USS LST-25 was a United States Navy LST-1-class tank landing ship used in the European Theater of Operations and Asiatic-Pacific Theater during World War II.", "target": "U.S Navy tank landing ship", "baseline_candidates": ["tank landing ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14931473", "label": "Hydrochus rufipes", "source": "Hydrochus rufipes is a species of water scavenger beetle in the family Hydrochidae, sometimes treated as a member of the family Hydrophilidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18705906", "label": "Hillside Park High School", "source": "Hillside Park High School, also known as Hillside High School, James A. Whitted Elementary School, and James A. Whitted Junior High School, is a historic school building for African-American students located at Durham, Durham County, North Carolina. The original Classical Revival portion dates to 1922 and is a T-shaped, two-story building on a full basement. A three-story red-brick, T-shaped Modern Movement style addition was built in 1954–1955, with a one-story-on-basement gymnasium rear wing. Also on the property is a contributing greenhouse built about 1960. The school served the African-American student population of Durham until 1970, when the schools were integrated.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013.", "target": "historic school building in North Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14848389", "label": "Thylactomimus albolateralis", "source": "Thylactomimus albolateralis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Thylactomimus. It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1959.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6810910", "label": "Mel and Sue", "source": "Mel Giedroyc (born 5 June 1968) and Sue Perkins (born 22 September 1969), known collectively as Mel and Sue, are an English comedy double act. They are known for hosting the BAFTA Award-winning BBC One cookery series The Great British Bake Off. Previously, they hosted the lunchtime chat shows Light Lunch and Late Lunch on Channel 4.", "target": "English comedy duo", "baseline_candidates": ["duo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4934011", "label": "Bob Slowik", "source": "Bob Slowik (born May 16, 1954) is a gridiron football coach who is currently a defensive assistant coach for the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League (CFL). He was also a defensive coordinator for the Denver Broncos, Green Bay Packers, Cleveland Browns and Chicago Bears in the National Football League (NFL) and for the Montreal Alouettes in the CFL. He has also been a coach for Rutgers, East Carolina University, and the Dallas Cowboys. Bob Slowik's son, Bobby Slowik, is currently the offensive pass game specialist for the San Francisco 49ers.", "target": "American football coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1928494", "label": "education in Indonesia", "source": "Education in Indonesia falls under the responsibility of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology (Kementerian Pendidikan, Kebudayaan, Riset, dan Teknologi or Kemdikbudristek) and the Ministry of Religious Affairs (Kementerian Agama or Kemenag). In Indonesia, all citizens must undertake twelve years of compulsory education which consists of six years at elementary level and three each at middle and high school levels. Islamic, Christian, Catholic, and Buddhist Schools are under the responsibility of the Ministry of Religious Affairs. It is important to understand what the government in Indonesia is doing to ensure that all citizens have a right to education. One such organization that measures this is the Human Rights Measurement Initiative. The Indonesian government is only doing 83.2% of what is possible at its income level, categorizing the government's ability to fulfil the right as \"bad\". To look at this statistic in depth, we can consider primary and secondary school enrolment. For primary school enrolment, Indonesia is doing only 85.2% for what is possible at its income level, and 81.3% for secondary school enrolment. This data reveals that Indonesia could be making better use of its income to ensure that education in the country is good. Education is defined as a planned effort to establish a study environment and educational process so that the student may actively develop his/her own potential in religious and spiritual level, consciousness, personality, intelligence, behaviour and creativity to him/herself, other citizens and the nation. The Constitution also notes that there are two types of education in Indonesia: formal and non-formal.", "target": "overview about the education in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["education in country or region"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17479212", "label": "Shame", "source": "Shame is a 1921 American film directed by Emmett J. Flynn. It is based on the story Clung by Max Brand, which appeared in the magazine All Story Weekly (10 Apr - 15 May 1920 edition). This black and white silent film was distributed and produced by Fox Film Corporation. It is considered a drama and has a runtime of 90 mins. It is presumed to be a lost film.", "target": "1921 film by Emmett J. Flynn", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q143309", "label": "Counts of Louvain", "source": "The Counts of Louvain were a branch of the Lotharingian House of Reginar which from the late 10th century ruled over the estates of Louvain (French) or Leuven (Dutch) in Lower Lorraine.", "target": "former country", "baseline_candidates": ["historical country"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7636366", "label": "Sullington", "source": "Sullington is a village in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England, part of the civil parish of Storrington and Sullington. The village lies on the A283 road west of the A24 road, 20 miles (32 km) south of Horsham. St Mary's Parish Church nave dates back to Saxon times: the chancel and tower are from the 13th century and the church was restored in 1873. The patronage of the parish rested with the lord of the manor of Sullington until 1938, when Evelyn Palmer (Lady Caldecott) passed it to the Diocese of Chichester. The Victorian rectory (built c1845) was sold off as a private residence and later occupied by the writer A J Cronin and the politician Lady Cynthia Asquith. The modern rectory is on Washington Road.Sullington Manor, on Sullington Lane, is a Grade II listed former farmhouse. The manor was held by the Shelley family from the dissolution of the monasteries (1546) until 1789, when it was sold to George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont.A feature is Sullington Warren, which is a woodland area popular among visitors to Sullington.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28449929", "label": "1922 Big Ten Conference football season", "source": "1922 Big Ten Conference football season was the 27th season of college football played by the member schools of the Big Ten Conference (also known as the Western Conference) and was a part of the 1922 college football season. Iowa, under head coach Howard Jones, compiled a perfect 7–0 records and led the conference in scoring offense with 29.7 points per game, and Michigan led the conference in scoring defense with 1.9 points allowed per game. Quarterback Gordon Locke was a consensus first-team All-American. The 1922 Iowa team was retroactively selected as the national champion by the Billingsley Report.Michigan compiled a record of 6–0–1, led the conference in scoring defense at 1.9 points allowed per game, shut out five opponents, and tied for the Big Ten championship. Michigan's lone blemish was a scoreless tie in the 1922 Michigan vs. Vanderbilt football game. Halfback Harry Kipke was a consensus first-team All-American. Left end Bernard Kirk, who also received first-team All-American honors, died of meningitis in December 1922 after sustaining a brain injury in an automobile crash.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6928953", "label": "Mr. Monk Takes Manhattan", "source": "\"Mr. Monk Takes Manhattan\" is the first episode of the third season of the American comedy drama detective television series Monk, and the show's 30th episode overall. The series follows Adrian Monk (Tony Shalhoub), a private detective with obsessive–compulsive disorder and multiple phobias, and his assistant Sharona Fleming (Bitty Schram). In this episode, Monk travels to New York City in an attempt to discover his wife's killer, but may solve the case of the death of the Latvian ambassador. Written by Andy Breckman and directed by Randall Zisk, \"Mr. Monk Takes Manhattan\" was shot in New York. When the episode first aired in the United States on USA Network on June 18, 2004, it was watched by 5.5 million viewers. The episode garnered a mixed reaction from critics, praising the comedy obtained through putting Monk in a scenario that would arouse his fears while criticizing Monk's exaggerated reactions to the setting.", "target": "episode of Monk (S3 E1)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5854309", "label": "Anjireh Vatisheh Kand", "source": "Anjireh Vatisheh Kand (Persian: انجيره وتيشه كند, also Romanized as Ānjīreh Vatīsheh Kand; also known as Anjīreh) is a village in Maspi Rural District, in the Central District of Abdanan County, Ilam Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,142, in 191 families. The village is populated by Kurds.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17134411", "label": "Maloti-Drakensberg Park", "source": "Maloti-Drakensberg Park was established on 11 June 2001 by linking the Sehlabathebe National Park in the Kingdom of Lesotho and the uKhahlamba Drakensberg Park in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. The highest peak is Thaba Ntlenyana rising to 3.482 m. The merged park includes Golden Gate Highlands National Park, QwaQwa National Park and Sterkfontein Dam Nature Reserve, (Free State); uKhahlamba Drakensberg Park and Royal Natal National Park, (KwaZulu-Natal) and Sehlabathebe National Park, (Lesotho). The park is situated in the Drakensberg Mountains which form the highest areas in the sub-region, and supports unique montane and sub-alpine ecosystems. These ecosystems hold a globally significant plant and animal biodiversity, with unique habitats and high levels of endemism. The park is also home to the greatest gallery of rock art in the world with hundreds of sites and many thousands of images painted by the Bushmen (San) people. The transfrontier conservation area was conceived as a Peace park, covering about 8 113 km², made up of 5 170 km² (64%) in Lesotho and 2 943 km² (36%) in KwaZulu-Natal.", "target": "international park in Lesotho and South Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["cultural heritage", "natural heritage"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18706150", "label": "Hidalgo County Courthouse", "source": "The Hidalgo County Courthouse, located at 300 S. Shakespeare St. in Lordsburg, is the county courthouse serving Hidalgo County, New Mexico. The two-story Neoclassical building, designed by architects Thorman & Frazier, was constructed in 1926. The red brick building features concrete spandrels between the first- and second-story windows and a concrete band at the top of the second-story windows. The entrance is topped by a classical pediment and flanked by pilasters with floral medallions. A metal cornice and crested parapet wrap around the building's roof line.The courthouse was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 7, 1987.", "target": "courthouse in Lordsburg, New Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["county courthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18889108", "label": "Northern Hawk Cuckoo", "source": "The rufous hawk-cuckoo or northern hawk-cuckoo (Hierococcyx hyperythrus) is a bird in the family Cuculidae formerly thought to be conspecific with Hodgson's hawk-cuckoo (Hierococcyx fugax) and placed in the genus Cuculus.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83597248", "label": "NOAAS Okeanos Explorer", "source": "NOAAS Okeanos Explorer (R 337) is a converted United States Navy ship (formerly USNS Capable (T-AGOS-16)), now an exploratory vessel for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), officially launched in 2010. Starting in 2010, NOAA entered into a five-year partnership with the San Francisco Exploratorium. The focus is on gathering scientific information about oceans for the public as well as for scientific uses. As much as 95% of the ocean remains unexplored, NOAA officials said. The ship is equipped with cameras and will provide real-time viewing of the ocean floor for scientists and for the public.This is a pioneering use of what NOAA calls \"telepresence technology\". The Okeanos Explorer is the only vessel owned by the U.S. government that is dedicated to exploring the seabed and ocean crust. The ship is named after Okeanos, the Ancient Greek god of the sea, from which also comes the word \"ocean\".", "target": "research ship", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q70702873", "label": "Heidi Weisel", "source": "Heidi Weisel (1961/1962 – January 28, 2021) was an American fashion designer. She was the founder and head of design for Heidi Weisel, a New York City-based women's luxury brand. Weisel's signature was creating modern, timeless evening wear with the simplicity and ease of sportswear. She was known for her unexpected mix of fabrics, often incorporating knitted cashmere, silk chiffon, silk satin, lace, tulle, and leather. A Heidi Weisel chiffon and lace design is in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Weisel was a member of the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA).", "target": "American fashion designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10292980", "label": "Gunnared", "source": "Gunnared is the northern part of Angered, in Gothenburg, Sweden. It was formerly one administrative division, but was split into two parts, Gunnared in the north and Lärjedalen in the south.", "target": "settlement in Gothenburg Municipality,Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7806637", "label": "Timex Ironman", "source": "The Timex Ironman (Ironman-Triathlon) is a digital wristwatch first produced by Timex in 1986 that continues to be made in various styles today.", "target": "digital wristwatch marketed in conjunction with the Ironman Triathlon", "baseline_candidates": ["watch"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4904077", "label": "Biddulph Recordings", "source": "Biddulph Recordings is a record label based in Devon, England specialising in the restoration of historical performances, particularly by string musicians. It was founded in 1989 by violin dealer Peter Biddulph and Eric Wen, a musicologist and historian of string performances. In 2003, Sarah Woodward joined and has since overseen the historical vocal label Romophone. Biddulph Recordings’ honours include the Gramophone 1999 ICRC award for “Historical Recording of the Year.\".", "target": "English record label for classical music", "baseline_candidates": ["record label"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5507454", "label": "Fujine Station", "source": "Fujine Station (藤根駅, Fujine-eki) is a railway station located in the city of Kitakami, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "target": "railway station in Kitakami, Iwate prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7120347", "label": "PRKD3", "source": "Serine/threonine-protein kinase D3 (PKD3) or PKC-nu is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the PRKD3 gene.Protein kinase C (PKC) is a family of serine- and threonine-specific protein kinases that can be activated by calcium and the second messenger diacylglycerol. PKC family members phosphorylate a wide variety of protein targets and are known to be involved in diverse cellular signaling pathways. PKC family members also serve as major receptors for phorbol esters, a class of tumor promoters. Each member of the PKC family has a specific expression profile and is believed to play a distinct role. The protein encoded by this gene is one of the PKC family members. This kinase can be activated rapidly by the agonists of G protein-coupled receptors. It resides in both cytoplasm and nucleus, and its nuclear accumulation is found to be dramatically enhanced in response to its activation. This kinase can also be activated after B-cell antigen receptor (BCR) engagement, which requires intact phospholipase C gamma and the involvement of other PKC family members.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2160367", "label": "BlackBerry Tablet OS", "source": "BlackBerry Tablet OS is an operating system from BlackBerry Ltd based on the QNX Neutrino real-time operating system designed to run Adobe AIR and BlackBerry WebWorks applications, currently available for the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet computer. The BlackBerry Tablet OS is the first tablet running an operating system from QNX (now a subsidiary of RIM). BlackBerry Tablet OS supports standard BlackBerry Java applications. Support for Android apps has also been announced, through sandbox \"app players\" which can be ported by developers or installed through sideloading by users. A BlackBerry Tablet OS Native Development Kit, to develop native applications with the GNU toolchain is currently in closed beta testing. The first device to run BlackBerry Tablet OS was the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet computer.A similar QNX-based operating system, known as BlackBerry 10, replaced the long-standing BlackBerry OS on handsets after version 7.", "target": "operating system", "baseline_candidates": ["operating system"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49133083", "label": "Sayali Sanjeev", "source": "Sayali Chandsarkar, also professionally as Sayali Sanjeev, is an actress from Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. She works in Marathi film and TV shows. She has appeared in Marathi films Basta, Jhimma, Goshta Eka Paithanichi and AB Aani CD.", "target": "Marathi film actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4825343", "label": "Australluma peschii", "source": "Australluma peschii is a species of plant in the family Apocynaceae. It is endemic to Namibia. Its natural habitat is dry savanna. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1658731", "label": "postoperative nausea and vomiting", "source": "Postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) is the phenomenon of nausea, vomiting, or retching experienced by a patient in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU) or within 24 hours following a surgical procedure. PONV affects about 10% of the population undergoing general anaesthesia each year. PONV can be unpleasant and lead to a delay in mobilization and food, fluid, and medication intake following surgery.", "target": "medical condition", "baseline_candidates": ["adverse reactions to anesthesia", "nausea", "postoperative complications", "disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1932155", "label": "2012 PTT Thailand Open", "source": "The 2012 PTT Thailand Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 10th edition of the Thailand Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2012 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand, from 22 September through 30 September 2012. Richard Gasquet won the singles title.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["PTT Thailand Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28747856", "label": "Asaphodes albalineata", "source": "Asaphodes albalineata is a species of moth in the family Geometridae. It is endemic to New Zealand and has been observed on Stewart Island / Rakiura. This species is similar in appearance to Asaphodes oraria but can be distinguished as it has an unusual pattern on the underside of its hindwings. It inhabits open hill tops and adults are on the wing in December.", "target": "species of moth endemic to New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14831765", "label": "Heterachthes hystricosus", "source": "Heterachthes hystricosus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Martins in 1971.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8026602", "label": "Winton", "source": "Winton is a ghost town in Sweetwater County, Wyoming, United States. Winton was 5 miles (8.0 km) north-northeast of Rock Springs. Winton is sometimes referred to as Megeath. Megeath Coal Company owned a Post Office named Winton. Union Pacific bought out Megeath and changed the name to Winton.", "target": "human settlement in Sweetwater County, Wyoming, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["ghost town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q981002", "label": "Ōsumi Province", "source": "Ōsumi Province (大隅国, Ōsumi no Kuni) was an old province of Japan in the area that is today the eastern part of Kagoshima Prefecture. It was sometimes called Gūshū (隅州). Ōsumi bordered on Hyūga and Satsuma Provinces. Osumi's ancient capital was near modern Kokubu. During the Sengoku and Edo periods, Ōsumi was controlled by the Shimazu clan of neighboring Satsuma and did not develop a major administrative center. The Ōsumi region has developed its own distinct local dialect. Although Ōsumi is part of Kagoshima Prefecture today, this dialect is different from that spoken in the city of Kagoshima. There is a notable cultural pride in traditional poetry written in Ōsumi and Kagoshima dialects. Japan's first satellite, Ōsumi, was named after the province.", "target": "province of Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["province of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3766503", "label": "Highfin Shiner", "source": "Highfin shiner (Notropis altipinnis) is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Notropis. It is endemic to the United States, where it is found in the lower Roanoke River drainage from southeastern Virginia, south in Piedmont and Coastal Plain areas to the middle Savannah River drainage in South Carolina.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2018208", "label": "Olavi Laurila", "source": "Olavi Laurila (born 29 December 1940) is a Finnish archer. He competed in the men's individual event at the 1972 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Finnish archer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7767018", "label": "The Strength of Donald McKenzie", "source": "The Strength of Donald McKenzie is a 1916 American silent drama film directed by and starring William Russell and John Prescott. The film also stars Charlotte Burton, Harry Keenan, George Ahern, Nell Franzen, and Margaret Nichols.", "target": "1916 film by Jack Prescott, William Russell", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1237433", "label": "Niccolò Vitelli", "source": "Niccolò Vitelli (1414–1486) was an Italian condottiero of the Vitelli family from Città di Castello. The son of Giovanni Vitelli and Maddalena dei Marchesi di Petriolo, he was orphaned and grew up under the tutelage of his uncle Vitellozzo who introduced him into the political life of the area. He was podestà in some of the major Italian cities, such as Florence, Siena, Genoa and Perugia. He frequently clashed with the Popes Paul II and Sixtus IV for the rule of Città di Castello. In 1474 he was besieged in the city by Giuliano della Rovere (future Pope Julius II) and Federico III da Montefeltro. He had to leave the city, to which he however returned in 1482. The following year he was excommunicated and, in 1484, left Città di Castello again, only to return shortly after Sixtus IV's death. Following his death in 1486, the city's people had the inscription Pater Patriae (\"Father of the Nation\") written on his tomb. Three of his sons, Chiappino, Vitellozzo and Paolo were mercenary captains. The former was also a military leader for Tuscany and Spain. The latter two fought for various Italian forces, but ended up executed by their former paymasters: the Medici of Florence for Paolo, and Cesare Borgia in the case of Vitellozzo.", "target": "Italian condottiero", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4644828", "label": "850th Strategic Missile Squadron", "source": "The 850th Strategic Missile Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the 44th Strategic Missile Wing at Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, where it was inactivated on 25 March 1965. The squadron was first activated in 1943 as the 850th Bombardment Squadron. After training in the United States, it deployed to the European Theater of Operations and participated in the strategic bombing campaign against Germany. Following V-E Day, the squadron returned to the United States, where it was inactivated in November 1945. The squadron was redesignated as an intercontinental ballistic missile squadron, activated in June 1960, and equipped with the SM-68 Titan I intercontinental ballistic missile, with a mission of nuclear deterrence. The squadron was inactivated as part of the phaseout of the Titan I ICBM on 25 March 1965.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q338965", "label": "thiophenol", "source": "Thiophenol is an organosulfur compound with the formula C6H5SH, sometimes abbreviated as PhSH. This foul-smelling colorless liquid is the simplest aromatic thiol. The chemical structures of thiophenol and its derivatives are analogous to phenols except the oxygen atom in the hydroxyl group (-OH) bonded to the aromatic ring is replaced by a sulfur atom. The prefix thio- implies a sulfur-containing compound and when used before a root word name for a compound which would normally contain an oxygen atom, in the case of 'thiol' that the alcohol oxygen atom is replaced by a sulfur atom. Thiophenols also describes a class of compounds formally derived from thiophenol itself. All have a sulfhydryl group (-SH) covalently bonded to an aromatic ring. The organosulfur ligand in the medicine thiomersal is a thiophenol.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["Class II combustible liquid", "chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7911263", "label": "Valerie Eliot", "source": "Esmé Valerie Eliot (née Fletcher; 17 August 1926 – 9 November 2012) was the second wife and later widow of the Nobel prize-winning poet T. S. Eliot. She was a major stockholder in the publishing firm of Faber and Faber Limited and the editor and annotator of a number of books dealing with her late husband's writings.", "target": "British editor; widow of T.S. Eliot", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5292781", "label": "Don Herriman", "source": "Donald Herriman (born January 2, 1946) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey forward. He played 155 games in the World Hockey Association with the Philadelphia Blazers, New York Golden Blades, Jersey Knights and Edmonton Oilers.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38375825", "label": "pneumatology", "source": "Pneumatology refers to a particular discipline within Christian theology that focuses on the study of the Holy Spirit. The term is derived from the Greek word Pneuma (πνεῦμα), which designates \"breath\" or \"spirit\" and metaphorically describes a non-material being or influence. The English term pneumatology comes from two Greek words: πνεῦμα (pneuma, spirit) and λόγος (logos, teaching about). Pneumatology includes study of the person of the Holy Spirit, and the works of the Holy Spirit. This latter category also includes Christian teachings on new birth, spiritual gifts (charismata), Spirit-baptism, sanctification, the inspiration of prophets, and the indwelling of the Holy Trinity (which in itself covers many different aspects). Different Christian denominations have different theological approaches on various pneumatological questions.", "target": "branch of Christian theology that studies the Holy Spirit", "baseline_candidates": ["systematic theology", "branch of theology"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23883997", "label": "Jim Heffernan", "source": "Jim Heffernan is a former NCAA wrestling champion and former wrestling coach at the University of Illinois.", "target": "American wrestler and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3135355", "label": "High & Mighty", "source": "High & Mighty is the seventh studio album by southern rock jam band Gov't Mule. The album was released on August 22, 2006, by ATO Records.", "target": "album by Gov't Mule", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16893773", "label": "La Aguada Airport", "source": "La Aguada Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto La Aguada), (ICAO: SCLG) is an airstrip five kilometres (3.1 mi) north of Pencahue, a town in the Maule Region of Chile.", "target": "airport in Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5644487", "label": "Hameh Kasi, Hamadan", "source": "Hameh Kasi (Persian: همه كسي, also Romanized as Hameh Kasī; also known as Hamakasi and Hamehkasi Shara) is a village in Chah Dasht Rural District, Shara District, Hamadan County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 905, in 200 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87666061", "label": "Kenneth Offit", "source": "Kenneth Offit (born February 19, 1955) is an American cancer geneticist and oncologist. He is currently Chief of the Clinical Genetics Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, a member of the Program in Cancer Biology and Genetics at the Sloan-Kettering Institute, and Professor of Medicine and Healthcare Policy and Research at Weill Cornell Medical College. He is also a member of both the Board of Scientific Counselors of the National Cancer Institute and the Evaluation of Genomic Applications in Practice and Prevention working group of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. In 2016, he was elected as a Member of the National Academy of Medicine. In 2018, he was named a Fellow of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.", "target": "American cancer geneticist and oncologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49348937", "label": "Dziecinów", "source": "Dziecinów [d͡ʑɛˈt͡ɕinuf] is a village in Otwock County, Gmina Sobienie-Jeziory. The village covers an area of 6 km2. It has approximately 704 inhabitants (2007). In the village is Voivodship Road 801, Voivodship Road 799 and Voivodship Road 805 and the sports club Wisła Dziecinów. It lies near the Vistula river. From 1975 to 1998 the village was in Siedlce Voivodeship.", "target": "village in Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3140523", "label": "Hori I", "source": "Hori was an ancient Egyptian High Priest of Osiris at Abydos, during the reign of pharaohs Ramesses II.", "target": "High Priest of Osiris", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18375890", "label": "Okenia pilosa", "source": "Okenia pilosa is a species of sea slug, specifically a dorid nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Goniodorididae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1478715", "label": "Sokol", "source": "Sokol (German Falkenberg) is a cone-shaped peak in the Lusatian Mountains, just south of the frontier between Germany and the Czech Republic. There are traces at the summit of a medieval castle—Starý Falkenburk (Alte Falkenburg).", "target": "mountain", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6064952", "label": "Çukurlar", "source": "Çukurlar is a village in the İvrindi district of Balıkesir province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in İvrindi, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7610125", "label": "Stephen O'Neill", "source": "Stephen O'Neill (born 19 November 1980) is an Irish former Gaelic footballer from Strabane, Northern Ireland, who played at senior level for the Tyrone county team. He won three All-Ireland Senior Football Championship medals, two Under 21 medals, and a Minor medal. He was the 2005 All Stars Footballer of the Year, and won All Stars Awards in 2001, 2005 and 2009. His style of play is quite traditional as a full forward, often getting on the end of passes, and scoring with his preferred left foot. It's his superior physical strength that sets him apart from his peers, coupled with his agility on the ball, making him very difficult to mark. O'Neill announced his retirement from the Tyrone Gaelic football team in January 2008, but made himself available for the All-Ireland final of the same year. Tyrone won the competition, but O'Neill refused to accept the medal, citing the fact that he felt he had not earned it, having not been part of the team on their journey to the final.", "target": "Gaelic football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2695034", "label": "Jona Lendering", "source": "Jona Lendering (born 29 October 1964) is a Dutch historian and the author of books on antiquity, Dutch history and modern management. He has an MA in history from Leiden University and an MA in Mediterranean culture from the Amsterdam Free University, taught history at the Free University, and worked as an archivist employed by the Dutch government, before becoming one of the founders of the history school Livius Onderwijs.", "target": "Dutch historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85739107", "label": "A Change of Heart", "source": "\"A Change of Heart\" is a song by English band the 1975 from their second studio album, I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful yet So Unaware of It (2016). The song was written by George Daniel, Matthew Healy, Adam Hann and Ross MacDonald. Mike Crossey handled the production alongside Daniel and Healy. The song was released on 22 February 2016 by Dirty Hit and Polydor Records as the fifth single from the album. A synth-pop and electropop power ballad, the song features 808 beats, a portamento keyboard riff, pulsing synthesisers and elements of ambient pop, electro, new wave, yacht rock, chillwave and indie rock. The song's melancholic lyrics describe falling out of love and detail the end of a romance, focusing on the theme of technology. Upon release, \"A Change of Heart\" received positive reviews from contemporary music critics, who praised the lyrics and production. The song later appeared on several year-end lists. Commercially, it reached number 127 on the UK Singles Chart, number 47 on the US Billboard Hot Rock & Alternative Songs and number 36 on the Billboard Alternative Airplay charts. The song was later certified silver in the United Kingdom by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). An accompanying music video, written by Healy and directed by Tim Mattia, was released on 21 April 2016. The black and white tragicomic visual is based on Federico Fellini's film I clowns (1970), and follows Healy as a Pierrot-style clown engaging in a short-lived romance at an abandoned carnival.", "target": "2016 single by The 1975", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6156748", "label": "Japan National Route 122", "source": "National Route 122 is a national highway of Japan connecting Nikkō, Tochigi and Toshima, Tokyo in Japan, with a total length of 158.3 km (98.36 mi).", "target": "road in Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4693248", "label": "Agnieszkowo, Masovian Voivodeship", "source": "Agnieszkowo [aɡɲeʂˈkɔvɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szczutowo, within Sierpc County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) south-west of Szczutowo, 11 km (7 mi) west of Sierpc, and 127 km (79 mi) north-west of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9368649", "label": "Victoria Meyer-Laker", "source": "Victoria Meyer-Laker (born 18 March 1988) is a British professional rower and a member of the Great Britain Rowing Team.", "target": "British rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6503006", "label": "Law Council of Australia", "source": "The Law Council of Australia, founded in 1933, is an association of law societies and bar associations from the states and territories of Australia, and the peak body representing the legal profession in Australia. The Law Council represents more than 65,000 lawyers across Australia[] and has its national base in Canberra.", "target": "association of law societies and bar associations in Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["regulatory college"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16153148", "label": "2001–02 Wessex Football League", "source": "The 2001–02 Wessex Football League was the 16th season of the Wessex Football League. The league champions for the second time in their history, and the second consecutive season, were Andover. Runners-up Fleet Town were promoted back to the Southern League at the second attempt, but Swanage Town & Herston finished bottom and were relegated for the second time, the first being in 1996.For sponsorship reasons, the league was known as the Jewson Wessex League.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12597820", "label": "Paik Seung-ho", "source": "Paik Seung-ho (Korean: 백승호, Hanja: 白昇浩, born 17 March 1997) is a South Korean professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors. Starting playing football since May in 2005 in a football academy, Paik was awarded MVP award in juvenile team and MVP award from KFA(Korea Football Association) in youth team for the first time at the age of 11. While he played in FC Barcelona youth team at the age of 13, he was expected to join FC Barcelona A for the first time as Korean player.", "target": "South Korean association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59712751", "label": "rusty crayfish", "source": "The rusty crayfish (Faxonius rusticus) is a large, aggressive species of freshwater crayfish which is native to the United States, in the Ohio River Basin in parts of Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana. Its range is rapidly expanding across much of eastern North America, displacing native crayfishes in the process. The rusty crayfish was first captured in Illinois in 1973, and has been collected at over 20 locations in the northern portion of the state. In 2005, F. rusticus was found for the first time west of the Continental Divide, in the John Day River, Oregon, which runs into the Columbia River.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15310269", "label": "Battle of Beda Fomm", "source": "The rapid British advance during Operation Compass (9 December 1940 – 9 February 1941) forced the Italian 10th Army to evacuate Cyrenaica, the eastern province of Libya. In late January, the British learned that the Italians were retreating along the Litoranea Balbo (Via Balbia) from Benghazi. The 7th Armoured Division (Major-General Sir Michael O'Moore Creagh) was dispatched to intercept the remnants of the 10th Army by moving through the desert, south of the Jebel Akhdar (Green Mountain) via Msus and Antelat as the 6th Australian Division pursued the Italians along the coast road, north of the jebel. The terrain was hard going for the British tanks and Combeforce (Lieutenant-Colonel John Combe), a flying column of wheeled vehicles, was sent ahead across the chord of the jebel. Late on 5 February, Combeforce arrived at the Via Balbia south of Benghazi and set up road blocks near Sidi Saleh, about 30 mi (48 km) south-west of Antelat and 20 mi (32 km) north of Ajedabia. The leading elements of the 10th Army arrived thirty minutes after the British who sprung the ambush. Next day the Italians attacked to break through and continued their attacks into 7 February. With British reinforcements arriving and the Australians pressing down the road from Benghazi, the 10th Army surrendered later that day. Between Benghazi to Agedabia, the British took 25,000 prisoners, captured 107 tanks and 93 guns of the Operation Compass totals of 133,298 men, 420 tanks and 845 guns. On 9 February, Churchill ordered the advance to stop and troops to be.", "target": "battle as part of Operation Compass during World War II", "baseline_candidates": ["conflict"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1789280", "label": "Ângelo Moniz da Silva Ferraz", "source": "Angelo Moniz da Silva Ferraz, Baron Uruguaiana GCC (Valença 3 November 1812 - Petropolis, 18 January 1867) was a magistrate and politician. He served as Prime Minister of Brazil from August 10, 1859 to March 2, 1861.", "target": "Brazilian politician (1812-1867)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39071788", "label": "France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2018", "source": "France participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2018 with the song \"Mercy\" written by Émilie Satt and Jean-Karl Lucas. The song is performed by French duo Madame Monsieur. The French entry for the 2018 contest in Lisbon, Portugal was selected through the national selection Destination Eurovision, organised by the French broadcaster France Télévisions in collaboration with the television channel France 2. The selection consisted of two semi-finals and a final. Madame Monsieur became the winner, placing third with the international juries but winning a landslide share of the vote from the French public, amassing enough points to win the competition. This was the first time France used a national final since 2014. As a member of the \"Big Five\", France automatically qualified to compete in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest.", "target": "French 2018 Eurovision Song Contest preselction", "baseline_candidates": ["France in the Eurovision Song Contest"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19671578", "label": "Rufous-naped Tit", "source": "The rufous-naped tit (Periparus rufonuchalis), also known as the black-breasted tit or dark-grey tit, is an Asian songbird species in the tit and chickadee family (Paridae). It was sometimes considered conspecific with the rufous-vented tit (P. rubidiventris), and was formerly placed in the genus Parus.This tit is a native of the western Himalayas, but has a very large range, occurring in parts of India, China, Pakistan, Turkestan, Kyrgyzstan, and Afghanistan. Widespread and common, it is not considered a threatened species by the IUCN.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2829094", "label": "Akl Awit", "source": "Akl Awit (Arabic: عقل العويط born 1952, Bziza) is a Lebanese poet, critic, literary journalist and academic professor holding a Ph.D degree in modern Arabic literature. All his life, Awit has been passionate about poetry, for it has been the mean for him to express his feelings. His writings have been known to be bold and “daring”. Awit’s work, including individual poetry books and anthologies, has been published not only locally, but also translated and distributed internationally.", "target": "Lebanese writer and academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4738592", "label": "Alyaksandr Mikhnavets", "source": "Alyaksandr Mikhnavets (Belarusian: Аляксандр Міхнавец; Russian: Александр Михновец; born 24 November 1982) is a Belarusian former professional footballer.", "target": "Belarusian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6933257", "label": "environmental law", "source": "Environmental law is a collective term encompassing aspects of the law that provide protection to the environment. A related but distinct set of regulatory regimes, now strongly influenced by environmental legal principles, focus on the management of specific natural resources, such as forests, minerals, or fisheries. Other areas, such as environmental impact assessment, may not fit neatly into either category, but are nonetheless important components of environmental law.", "target": "rules of law, promoting the protection of the natural environment", "baseline_candidates": ["environmental regulation by humans", "academic discipline", "law", "area of law", "natural resources law and international environmental law"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7440333", "label": "Seafarers' Pensions Convention, 1946", "source": "Seafarers' Pensions Convention, 1946 is an International Labour Organization Convention. It was established in 1946, with the preamble stating: Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with regard to seafarers' pensions,...", "target": "International Labour Organization Convention", "baseline_candidates": ["International Labour Organization Convention"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2144816", "label": "René Pomeau", "source": "René Pomeau (20 February 1917 in Beautiran – 26 February 2000 in Clamart) was an eminent French scholar of eighteenth-century French literature generally recognised as one of the most expert authority on Voltaire by the time of his death in 2000. His son is Yves Pomeau.", "target": "French academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12044185", "label": "Pavel Nesleha", "source": "Pavel Nešleha (19 February 1937, Prague – 13 September 2003, Prague) was a Czech painter, illustrator, graphic artist, and photographer. He was a prominent representative of the 1960s art movement and a major figure in Czech non-conformist avant-garde art. His drawings and graphical work earned him several awards and distinctions. Starting in 1965, his work was showcased regularly in group expositions in Czechoslovakia and abroad; he had his first solo show in 1966.", "target": "Czech photographer, graphic and painter (1937-2003)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48672810", "label": "Toc Toc", "source": "Toc Toc is a 2017 Spanish comedy film directed by Vicente Villanueva, starring Rossy de Palma, Paco León, Inma Cuevas, Óscar Martínez, Alexandra Jiménez, Adrián Lastra and Ana Rujas and distributed by Warner Bros. The film portrays a group of patients with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). The film's title is a play on words in Spanish, with “toc” being both the onomatopoeia for “knock” and the abbreviation for OCD in Spanish (trastorno obsesivo compulsivo). It is the film adaptation of a French play by Laurent Baffie.The film was shown during the summer of 2018 as part of the Cine de Verano in Sevilla, Spain.", "target": "2017 film directed by Vicente Villanueva", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11970359", "label": "Frode Scheie", "source": "Frode Scheie (born 19 March 1967) is a Norwegian handball coach and former player. He made his debut on the Norwegian national team in 1995, and played 105 matches for the national team between 1995 and 2002. He participated at the 1999 World Men's Handball Championship where the Norwegian team placed 13th, and he served as captain for Norway at the 2000 European Men's Handball Championship. Scheie has been sports commentator for the television channel TV 2 Norway and for Viasat.", "target": "Norwegian handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5033627", "label": "Canterbury Castle", "source": "Canterbury Castle, also known as Arlington Castle, was a private house located in southwest Portland, Oregon and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Constructed during 1929–1931, the house was designed by Jeter O. Frye to resemble England's Canterbury Castle on the exterior and to evoke the Art Deco styling of Hollywood of the 1920s on the interior. The house included castle features such as a moat, drawbridge and turret and attracted paying tourists immediately following its completion. Canterbury Castle, Portland's only castle structure built in the 1930s, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. The property was also designated as a Portland Historic Landmark. The house underwent major renovation efforts in the 2000s, but those efforts were not completed, and the house was demolished in 2009 after failing to meet municipal safety codes. The razing of Canterbury made Piggott's Castle the city's only remaining castle. Canterbury Castle was removed from the National Register of Historic Places in October 2010.", "target": "former house in Portland, Oregon, U.S", "baseline_candidates": ["villa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4953184", "label": "Brabsterdorran", "source": "Brabsterdorran is an area of the civil parish of Bower in Highland, Scotland. Buildings include Bower Community Hall and the Old Free Church Manse, previously derelict, but now restored and lived in by the Irwin family. The manse was featured on BBC Radio Scotland's \"A House with a Past\" programme. Notable residents have included David Sinclair of Brabsterdorran, who fought for the Jacobite cause in the Battle of Sheriffmuir.", "target": "human settlement in Highland, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15872229", "label": "Platerosida", "source": "Platerosida howdeni is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, the only species in the genus Platerosida.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17916920", "label": "Edward Kresge", "source": "Edward N. Kresge is a retired Exxon scientist, noted for his development of ethylene-propylene viscosity index modifiers, polyolefin thermoplastic elastomers, and tailored molecular weight density EPDM elastomers.", "target": "American scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4897780", "label": "Bethany Rooney", "source": "Bethany Rooney (formally credited as Beth Hillshafer and Bethany Rooney Hillshafer) is an American television director and producer who has worked on over three dozen television series and made-for-television films. Since her directorial debut in 1985 in an episode of St. Elsewhere, she has directed multiple episodes from a vast number of television series, most notably The Wonder Years, Beverly Hills, 90210, Crossing Jordan, Melrose Place, Melrose Place (2009), Ally McBeal, One Tree Hill, Gilmore Girls and She Spies, whilst other credits include Las Vegas, Desperate Housewives, Inconceivable, Dawson's Creek, Boston Public, Ed, Jack & Jill, Grey's Anatomy, Private Practice, Dream On, Castle, Revenge, Arrow among other series.In addition, Rooney has directed various episodes of the American TV series, NCIS. She has also directed a number of made-for-television films, including Locked Up: A Mother's Rage (1991) also released as Other Side Of Love- starring Cheryl Ladd & Jean Smart, Mixed Blessings (1995), Remembrance (1996), Full Circle (1996), She Cried No (1996), When Innocence Is Lost (1997) and The Promise (1999).", "target": "American television director and producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2542785", "label": "Nismo", "source": "Nissan Motorsports International (ニッサン・モータースポーツ・インターナショナル株式会社, Nissan Mōtā Supōtsu Intānashonaru), abbreviated as Nismo, is a division of Nissan Motorsports & Customizing focused in motorsport and performance-oriented car models for Nissan. Nismo was initially a company, Nissan Motorsports International Co., Ltd. (ニッサン・モータースポーツ・インターナショナル株式会社, Nissan Mōtā Supōtsu Intānashonaru Kabushiki-gaisha), formed in 1984 as a result of a merger of two motorsport departments, being the in-house tuning, motorsports and performance subsidiary of Nissan. It has competed in JSPC, JTCC, the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the 24 Hours of Daytona. They currently participate in Super GT and Formula E. Nismo ceased to be a company in April 2022 by being merged with sister Autech into a new Nissan subsidiary, Nissan Motorsport & Customizing.", "target": "motorsport and performance division of automobile manufacturer Nissan", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4288350", "label": "Gniewomierz", "source": "Gniewomierz [ɡɲɛˈvɔmjɛʂ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Legnickie Pole, within Legnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) north-west of Legnickie Pole, 8 kilometres (5 mi) south-east of Legnica, and 58 kilometres (36 mi) west of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has a population of 540.", "target": "village in Lower Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18582778", "label": "Priotrochus", "source": "Priotrochus is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the subfamily Cantharidinae of the family Trochidae, the top snails.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96373363", "label": "Belippo eburnensis", "source": "Belippo eburnensis is a jumping spider species in the genus Belippo that lives in Ivory Coast. It was first identified in 2020. The spider is closely related to Belippo cygniformis and Belippo ibadan.", "target": "species of spider", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60573297", "label": "canine influenza", "source": "Canine influenza (dog flu) is influenza occurring in canine animals. Canine influenza is caused by varieties of influenzavirus A, such as equine influenza virus H3N8, which was discovered to cause disease in canines in 2004. Because of the lack of previous exposure to this virus, dogs have no natural immunity to it. Therefore, the disease is rapidly transmitted between individual dogs. Canine influenza may be endemic in some regional dog populations of the United States. It is a disease with a high morbidity (incidence of symptoms) but a low incidence of death.A newer form was identified in Asia during the 2000s and has since caused outbreaks in the US as well. It is a mutation of H3N2 that adapted from its avian influenza origins. Vaccines have been developed for both strains.", "target": "influenza occurring in canine animals", "baseline_candidates": ["dog disease", "disease", "influenza"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60789334", "label": "Vehicle registration plates of the United States for 1928", "source": "Each of the 48 states of the United States of America plus several of its territories and the District of Columbia issued individual passenger license plates for 1928.", "target": "1928 license plates in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia list article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10384002", "label": "Trade It All", "source": "Trade It All may refer to: Trade It All, 2006 album by Orlando Brown (actor) \"Trade It All\", 2001 single from Fabolous' album Ghetto Fabolous \"Trade It All (Part 2)\", 2002 single from Barbershop (soundtrack) and Fabolous' album Street Dreams (Fabolous album) \"Trade It All\", 2015 single by Demetria McKinney.", "target": "album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7895970", "label": "University of North Georgia", "source": "The University of North Georgia (UNG) is a public senior military college with multiple campuses in Georgia. It is part of the University System of Georgia. The university was established on January 8, 2013 by a merger of North Georgia College & State University (founded 1873) and Gainesville State College (founded 1964). Campus locations include Dahlonega, Oakwood (Gainesville Campus), Watkinsville (Oconee Campus), Blue Ridge, and Cumming. With nearly 20,000 enrolled students, the University of North Georgia is the sixth-largest public university in the state of Georgia. Within UNG, there are five colleges which collectively offer over one hundred bachelor's and associate degrees, as well as thirteen master's degrees and one doctoral degree. Over 600 students are involved in the university's ROTC program in any given year, which has given it the designation as The Military College of Georgia. The university is one of six senior military colleges in the United States.", "target": "public university in Georgia, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2777893", "label": "Vardon", "source": "Vardon (Hebrew: ורדון) is a community settlement in south-central Israel. Located north of Kiryat Gat and south of Kiryat Malakhi, it falls under the jurisdiction of Yoav Regional Council. In 2019 it had a population of 277.", "target": "a community settlement in south-central Israel", "baseline_candidates": ["community settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q722092", "label": "Leone Leoni", "source": "For the early 17th-century composer, see Leone Leoni (composer).Leone Leoni (ca. 1509 – 22 July 1590) was an Italian sculptor of international outlook who travelled in Italy, Germany, Austria, France, Spain and the Netherlands. Leoni is regarded as the finest of the Cinquecento medallists. He made his reputation in commissions he received from the Habsburg monarchs Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II of Spain. His usual medium was bronze, although he also worked in marble and alabaster, carved gemstones and probably left some finished work in wax (in which many of his sculptures were modelled), as well as designing coins. He mainly produced portraits, and was repeatedly used by the Spanish, and also the Austrian, Habsburgs.", "target": "Italian artist (1509-1590)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3133277", "label": "Viktor Balck", "source": "Viktor Gustaf Balck KVO KCMG (25 April 1844 – 31 May 1928) was a Swedish Army officer and sports personality who was one of the original members of the International Olympic Committee and who is often called \"the father of Swedish sports\".", "target": "Original member of the IOC", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7164037", "label": "Pennsylvania Railroad, Connecting Railway Bridge", "source": "Pennsylvania Railroad, Connecting Railway Bridge is a stone arch bridge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, that carries Amtrak Northeast Corridor rail lines and SEPTA and NJT commuter rail lines over the Schuylkill River. It is located in Fairmount Park, just upstream from the Girard Avenue Bridge. It is also known as Pennsylvania Railroad, New York Division, Bridge No. 69. Other names include Connecting Railway Bridge, Connection Bridge, New York Connecting Bridge, New York Railroad Bridge, and Junction Railroad Bridge.", "target": "bridge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["railway bridge", "arch bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4529999", "label": "Natan Eidelman", "source": "Natan Yakovlevich Eidelman (Russian: Ната́н Я́ковлевич Эйдельма́н) (1930 in Moscow – 1989 in Moscow) was a Soviet Russian author and historian. He wrote several books on about the life and work of Alexander Pushkin, Decembrists Sergey Muravyov-Apostol and Mikhail Lunin, and historian Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin.", "target": "Russian historian, writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19960677", "label": "2015 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach", "source": "The 2015 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach was the 41st annual running of the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach and the third race of the 2015 IndyCar Series season. It took place on April 19, 2015, in Long Beach, California on its temporary street circuit. It was won by Scott Dixon for the Chip Ganassi Racing team. Hélio Castroneves took second and Juan Pablo Montoya both of whom race for Team Penske. The top finishing rookie in the race, as in the previous round, was Gabby Chaves, who finished in 16th position.", "target": "motor car race", "baseline_candidates": ["Grand Prix of Long Beach"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5865092", "label": "Shah Vali, Masjed Soleyman", "source": "Shah Vali (Persian: شاه ولي, also Romanized as Shāh Valī) is a village in Tombi Golgir Rural District, Golgir District, Masjed Soleyman County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 27, in 8 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6204242", "label": "Jo Gibb", "source": "JoAnn Gibb is a Scottish theatre actress best known for her role of Rumpleteazer in the 1998 film of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Cats, and as the replacement Pearl the Observation Car in the original production of Starlight Express. She also played Belle in the 2006 UK Productions tour of Beauty and the Beast and appeared as Columbia in the 2000 UK national tour of The Rocky Horror Show.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19679920", "label": "Nehru Gram Bharti University", "source": "Nehru Gram Bharati (Deemed to be University), also known as Nehru Gram Bharati University (NGBU) is a research-based Deem to be University in the city of Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh state of India. The university was established on 26th July, 1962 by the late Jawahar Lal Nehru. All its admissions and courses are carried out in the name of Nehru Gram Bharati University, Allahabad.", "target": "education organization in Allahabad, India", "baseline_candidates": ["educational institution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61357666", "label": "Grünenbach", "source": "Grünenbach is a municipality in the district of Lindau in Bavaria in Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18360843", "label": "388 Arletta Avenue", "source": "388 Arletta Avenue is a 2011 Canadian horror-thriller film written and directed by Randall Cole and starring Nick Stahl and Mia Kirshner as an unhappily married couple who are unknowingly stalked by an intruder. It premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival, had a limited release in Canada in June 2012, and was released on DVD in September 2012.", "target": "2012 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4098739", "label": "Bulanovo", "source": "Bulanovo (Russian: Буланово) is a rural locality (a selo) in Aserkhovskoye Rural Settlement, Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 14 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2351033", "label": "Ricky Sánchez", "source": "Ricardo \"Ricky\" Sánchez Rosa (born July 6, 1987) is a Puerto Rican former professional basketball player. He has played with the Idaho Stampede in the NBA Development League and the Continental Basketball Association, and in the National Superior Basketball League of Puerto Rico, with teams including the Criollos de Caguas, Humacao Grays, Santurce Crabbers, and the Mayaguez Indians, with whom he won a championship in 2012. He was drafted by the Portland Trail Blazers out of IMG Academy with the 35th pick of the 2005 NBA Draft, becoming the fourth Puerto Rican to be drafted by the National Basketball Association, and was immediately traded to the Denver Nuggets for their selection, Jarrett Jack.Sánchez was then traded to the Philadelphia 76ers on September 10, 2007. The 76ers traded the rights to Sánchez on March 15, 2012 for Memphis Grizzlies forward Sam Young. This move inspired the name of Spike Eskin's Sixers podcast, \"The Rights to Ricky Sanchez\", commonly referred to as \"The Ricky\". On February 21, 2013, international rights to Sánchez were traded to the Miami Heat for center Dexter Pittman and a 2013 second round draft pick in an attempt to clear roster space for the Heat.He has played for the Puerto Rican national basketball team.", "target": "Puerto Rican basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5142562", "label": "Coldstream Bridge", "source": "Coldstream Bridge, linking Coldstream, Scottish Borders with Cornhill-on-Tweed, Northumberland, is an 18th-century Category A/Grade II* listed bridge between England and Scotland, across the River Tweed. The bridge carries the A697 road across the Tweed. The bridge is one of three bridges spanning the River Tweed section of the Anglo-Scottish border (the others being the Union Chain Bridge and the Ladykirk and Norham Bridge), and the oldest of the three.", "target": "bridge on the English-Scottish border in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["road bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5537090", "label": "George Bomford", "source": "George Bomford (1780 – March 25, 1848) was a distinguished military officer in the United States Army and an inventor and designer of weapons and defensive installations. He served as the second Chief of Ordnance for the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps.", "target": "Inventor of the Columbiad", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1085410", "label": "Christoph Letkowski", "source": "Christoph Letkowski (born 16 June 1982) is a German actor. He appeared in more than forty films since 2006.", "target": "German actor and musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2141943", "label": "Samba de Amigo", "source": "Samba de Amigo (サンバDEアミーゴ, Sanba de Amīgo) is a rhythm game developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega. The game was released in arcades in December 1999, and for the Dreamcast video game console in 2000. A port for the Wii was also developed by Gearbox Software and Escalation Studios and released in 2008. In Samba de Amigo, the player uses controllers shaped like maracas with the goal of matching a series of patterns displayed on-screen. Samba de Amigo expresses South american music, culture and dancing. The music in Samba de Amigo is made of primarily popular Latin music songs rather than common or traditional samba. The game also features non-Latin pop songs.", "target": "1999 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5843909", "label": "Sarbala, Kerman", "source": "Sarbala (Persian: سربالا, also Romanized as Sarbālā) is a village in Golzar Rural District, in the Central District of Bardsir County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 44, in 11 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22704249", "label": "Clemenz Opening", "source": "The Clemenz Opening is a chess opening beginning with the move: 1. h3This opening is named after Hermann Clemenz (1846–1908), an Estonian player. It is considered an irregular opening, and is classified under the code A00 (miscellaneous first moves by White) in the Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings.", "target": "chess opening", "baseline_candidates": ["chess opening"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q71137611", "label": "Sara Wesslin", "source": "Sara Wesslin (born 7 November 1991) is a Skolt Saami journalist and news anchor from Finland and a strong advocate of the Skolt Sami language, her grandmother Olga's mother tongue. She took on the Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture to secure funding from Finland for the Nordic Resource Centre for the Sami languages.In October 2019, she was one of the \"inspiring and influential women\" featured in the BBC's 100 Women. Wesslin has used her media resources and access to popular culture to help revive the Skolt Sámi language. She has also focused on teaching it to women who she believes play a huge role in keeping the language in their family. In June 2020, she was shortlisted for the One Young World Journalist of the Year Award.", "target": "Skolt Sami-Finnish journalist and broadcaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19713743", "label": "The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi", "source": "The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi (German: Die Ehe des Herrn Mississippi) is a 1961 Swiss-West German comedy film directed by Kurt Hoffmann and starring O.E. Hasse, Johanna von Koczian and Martin Held. It is based on the 1952 play with the same title by Friedrich Dürrenmatt. It was entered into the 11th Berlin International Film Festival. The film was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin, and on location in Zurich. The sets were designed by the art directors Hertha Hareiter and Otto Pischinger.", "target": "1961 film by Kurt Hoffmann", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96381068", "label": "hinokinin", "source": "Hinokinin is a dibenzylbutyrolactone lignan, derived from various species of plants. It is a potential antichagonistic agent and has shown to possess neuroprotective effects as well. It is also found to have anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer, antiviral and antifungal properties.Hinokinin was isolated for the first time by Yoshiki and Ishiguro in 1933 from hinoki wood.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7239472", "label": "Precious Time", "source": "\"Precious Time\" is a popular song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and recorded on his 1999 album, Back on Top. It was released as a single in the UK and charted at No. 36. Since first recording it, Morrison has played it in concert 574 times from March 1998 until June 2008, making it one of his most frequently performed songs.", "target": "1999 single by Van Morrison", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3992029", "label": "tlapallite", "source": "Tlapallite is a rare and complex tellurate mineral with the chemical formula (Ca,Pb)3CaCu6[Te4+3Te6+O12]2(Te4+O3)2(SO4)2·3H2O. It has a Moh's hardness of 3 and it is green in colour. It was named after the Nahua word \"Tlalpalli\", which translates to paint, referring to the paint-like habit of the mineral. Its formula and crystal structure were redefined in 2019, showing it contained a mixed-valence phyllotellurate layer [Te4+3Te6+O12]12−.", "target": "Te(IV) & Te(VI) oxysalt-sulfate complex mineral", "baseline_candidates": ["tellurium oxysalt family", "mineral species"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18476461", "label": "Northern Military Command", "source": "The Northern Military Command is one eight Military Commands the Brazilian Army thee Northern Military Command or comando Militar do Norte cmnis responsible for the defenceBrazil's Northern border the CMN is the youngest Brazil's military commands as it was activated on 13 March 2013 two Infantry Brigades specializing in Jungle warfare and one Military Regional command are subordinated to the CMN Its area responsibility covers the states Maranhão Pará and Amapá and the northernmost area the state Tocantins.", "target": "area command of the Brazilian Army", "baseline_candidates": ["area command"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3171043", "label": "Melody Ranch", "source": "Melody Ranch is a 1940 Western musical film directed by Joseph Santley and starring Gene Autry, Jimmy Durante, and Ann Miller. Written by Jack Moffitt, F. Hugh Herbert, Bradford Ropes, and Betty Burbridge, the film is about a singing cowboy who returns to his hometown to restore order when his former childhood enemies take over the frontier town. In 2002, the film was added to the National Film Registry by the National Film Preservation Board and selected for preservation as being \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.\".", "target": "1940 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16146034", "label": "Ian M. Anderson", "source": "Ian Anderson is an American entrepreneur who founded The Afternoon Company, which includes the record label Afternoon Records.", "target": "American musician and songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17461971", "label": "Maggie Lucas", "source": "Margaret Taylor Lucas (born November 29, 1991) is an American professional basketball player who last played for the Dallas Wings of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). From January 5, 2021, she joined Luleå Basket, playing in the SBL.", "target": "basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7268615", "label": "Qualcomm Hexagon", "source": "Hexagon is the brand name for a family of digital signal processor (DSP) products by Qualcomm. Hexagon is also known as QDSP6, standing for “sixth generation digital signal processor.” According to Qualcomm, the Hexagon architecture is designed to deliver performance with low power over a variety of applications.Each version of Hexagon has an instruction set and a micro-architecture. These two features are intimately related. Hexagon is used in Qualcomm Snapdragon chips, for example in smartphones, cars, wearable devices and other mobile devices and is also used in components of cellular phone networks.", "target": "family of digital signal processor microprocessors", "baseline_candidates": ["brand", "digital signal processor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7070099", "label": "Nurettin Özsü", "source": "Nurettin Özsü also known as Hussein Nureddin Bey or Hussein Nureddin Pasha (1879 in Istanbul – June 9, 1937) was an officer of the Ottoman Army and a general of the Turkish Army.", "target": "ottoman Army officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3025357", "label": "Mordella denudata", "source": "Mordella denudata is a species of beetle in the genus Mordella of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea. It was discovered in 1906.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1897360", "label": "Marie Hall", "source": "Marie Pauline Hall (8 April 1884 – 11 November 1956) was an English violinist.", "target": "British violinist (1884–1956)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6870399", "label": "Minuscule 411", "source": "Minuscule 411 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 1013 (in Soden's numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 10th century. It has been marginalia.", "target": "Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament", "baseline_candidates": ["manuscript"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5989693", "label": "Idris Owen", "source": "Idris Wyn Owen (18 February 1912 – 21 December 2003) was a British Conservative Party politician, and Member of Parliament (MP) for Stockport North 1970–74.", "target": "British politician (1912-2004)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5859230", "label": "Kuhigan-e Bala", "source": "Kuhigan-e Bala (Persian: كوهيگان بالا, also Romanized as Kūhīgān-e Bālā; also known as Kūhegān, Kūhegān-e Bālā, and Kūhīkān) is a village in Damen Rural District, in the Central District of Iranshahr County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 196, in 46 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6467940", "label": "Lac de Chanon", "source": "Lac de Chanon is a lake at Martigna in the Jura department of France.", "target": "body of water", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5118862", "label": "Château de Vézins", "source": "The Château de Vézins is a much-altered castle in the commune of Vézins-de-Lévézou between Millau and Rodez in the Aveyron département of France. It has been in the possession of the Vézins family for 900 years. The first fortress was built in 1120 by Vesian de Vézins to command the Lévezou district. Following a disastrous fire in 1642, the only remains of this original castle are the vaulted rooms of the ground floor. The castle was then redeveloped in the Renaissance style.Modern-day visitors to the horseshoe-shaped château can see the vaulted hall from the Middle Ages and the first floor rooms. Of particular note are the sculpted coats of arms on the chimney places, Aubusson tapestries from the 16th and 17th centuries and a canopied bed. The château was awarded the 2000 Prix du Patrimoine 2000 (heritage prize) for the Midi-Pyrénées region. It is one of a group of 23 castles in Aveyron that have joined to provide a tourist itinerary as the Route des Seigneurs du Rouergue.In 1990, the Château de Vézins was listed as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture.", "target": "Castle in France", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2345478", "label": "Genghis Khan II: Clan of the Gray Wolf", "source": "Genghis Khan II: Clan of the Gray Wolf, originally released as Aoki Ōkami to Shiroki Mejika: Genchou Hishi (蒼き狼と白き牝鹿・元朝秘史), is a 1992 video game developed by Koei. It is part of Koei's Historical Simulation Series of games, and is the sequel to Genghis Khan, though this is the third game in the series. Genghis Khan II was developed and published for MSX2, Nintendo Entertainment System, DOS, X68000, PC-9801, PC-8801, Mega Drive/Genesis, Super NES, Sega CD, PC Engine, and later PlayStation. The Super NES version was also made available on the Wii Virtual Console in North America on June 8, 2009 and in Japan on May 11, 2010.", "target": "1992 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25346365", "label": "El Gran Desafío Femenil - Sin Empate, Sin Indulto", "source": "El Gran Desafío Femenil – Sin Empate, Sin Indulto (Spanish for \"The Great Women's Challenge – No draws, no reprieve\") was a major professional wrestling event produced and scripted by the Mexican Lucha libre promotion International Wrestling Revolution Group (IWRG) on October 22, 2009. The event was held in Arena Naucalpan, IWRG's home arena and the venue for the majority of their shows. IWRG used the El Gran Destafío name for a show in 2009 and a third El Gran Destafio in 2011, but none since then. The main event hosted a rare Lucha de Apuestas, or \"bet match\", between two female luchadoras or professional wrestlers as Mexican native Flor Metálica wrestled and defeated the Japanese wrestler Atsuko Emoto. Afterward Emoto had all her hair shaved off as a result of the Lucha de Apuestas stipulation. IWRG does not normally promote a lot of women's wrestling matches, and the Lucha de Apuestas between Flor Metálica and Emoto is the only IWRG match of its type on record.", "target": "2009 International Wrestling Revolution Group event", "baseline_candidates": ["professional wrestling event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7236854", "label": "Powerstock railway station", "source": "Powerstock was a railway station on the Bridport Railway in the west of the English county of Dorset. The station served the villages of Powerstock, and Nettlecombe, which was nearer the railway. Opened with the branch on 12 November 1857, it was called Poorstock until 1860. Consisting of a single platform and bungalow style building, it had a siding. The station was host to a GWR camp coach from 1936 to 1939. Operated by the Great Western Railway, it was placed in the Western Region when the railways were nationalised in 1948. The branch was threatened with closure in the Beeching report, but narrow roads in the area, unsuitable for buses, kept it open until 5 May 1975. The station was unstaffed in 1966. In its final years train services were usually operated by single carriage Class 121 diesel railcars.", "target": "railway station in Powerstock, the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q311892", "label": "William Petersen", "source": "William Louis Petersen (born February 21, 1953) is an American actor and producer. He is best known for his role as Gil Grissom in the CBS drama series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000–2015), for which he won a Screen Actors Guild Award and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award; he was further nominated for three Primetime Emmy Awards as a producer of the show. He reprised his role as Gil Grissom in the sequel CSI: Vegas, which premiered on October 6, 2021. He also starred in the films To Live and Die in L.A. (1985), Manhunter (1986), Young Guns II (1990), Fear (1996), The Contender (2000), Detachment (2011), and Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (2012).", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8029413", "label": "Wola Czołnowska", "source": "Wola Czołnowska [ˈvɔla t͡ʂɔu̯ˈnɔfska] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Baranów, within Puławy County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) east of Baranów, 22 km (14 mi) north-east of Puławy, and 43 km (27 mi) north-west of the regional capital Lublin.", "target": "village in Lublin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7427681", "label": "Savagaon", "source": "Savagaon is a village in Belgaum district of Karnataka, India.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5268199", "label": "Dewey McDougal", "source": "James H. \"Dewey\" McDougal (September 19, 1871 – April 28, 1935), was a professional baseball player who was a pitcher in the Major Leagues from 1895–1896 for the St. Louis Browns. McDougal was born in Aledo, Illinois and died in Galesburg, Illinois.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q103729", "label": "Anne Onken", "source": "Anne Onken (born 1977 in Oldenburg) is a German radio presenter and comedian. Onken was born the daughter of a priest in Oldenburg and started to imitate voices from an early age. Her first successful radio programme was Die Pisa-Polizei with N-Joy and SWR 3, in which she confronted schoolchildren on the street and asked them difficult questions from various subject areas. In 2005 she began to imitate the voice of politician (and later Federal Chancellor) Angela Merkel on The Gerd Show. Her successful work with Elmar Brandt (who imitated Gerhard Schröder) culminated in the popular song \"Im Wahlkampf vor mir liegt ein Zonenmädchen\", which reached no. 25 in the German charts during the run up to the 2005 German federal elections. Shortly before the elections the television broadcaster Sat.1 showed short sketches with Onken and Brandt. Since then Onken has been acclaimed as the best imitator of Angela Merkel in Germany. In October 2005 The Gerd Show was replaced by a new comedy serial, Angela - Schicksalsjahre einer Kanzlerin - Eine Frau geht seinen Weg. Like The Gerd Show, it was produced by Elmar Brandt and played by Onken using her imitation of Angela Merkel.", "target": "German comedian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1188048", "label": "Barbier's theorem", "source": "In geometry, Barbier's theorem states that every curve of constant width has perimeter π times its width, regardless of its precise shape. This theorem was first published by Joseph-Émile Barbier in 1860.", "target": "theorem that every curve of constant width has perimeter π times its width", "baseline_candidates": ["theorem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15402038", "label": "Christopher Tatsuki Kinjo", "source": "Christopher Tatsuki Kinjo (金城 クリストファー 達樹, Kinjo Christopher Tatsuki, born November 17, 1993) is a former Japanese football player.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5865379", "label": "Durak, Fereydunshahr", "source": "Durak (Persian: دورك, also Romanized as Dūrak) is a village in Poshtkuh-e Mugui Rural District, in the Central District of Fereydunshahr County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 340, in 73 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11336714", "label": "Henry Richard Nau", "source": "Henry R. Nau is professor of political science and international affairs at Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University. He is the author of a theory of American foreign policy known as conservative internationalism and a book by the same name.", "target": "American writer and political scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19811548", "label": "Bolshoy Log", "source": "Bolshoy Log (Russian: Большой Лог) is a rural locality (a village) in Oktyabrsky Selsoviet, Blagoveshchensky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 10 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "human settlement in Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5531845", "label": "General Duke", "source": "General Duke (born 1865) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse who won the second running of the Belmont Stakes in 1868. A son of Lexington, he was bred by Robert A. Alexander in Kentucky. He raced as a two-year-old, winning twice, including a stakes race. As a three-year-old, he raced nine times, winning six races, including several stakes. His final racing record was 18 wins from 32 starts. He was later known as Judge Curtis, and after his racing career ended he was a breeding stallion in Canada before dying in Illinois in 1888. Three of his daughters won stakes races.", "target": "19th-century American Thoroughbred racehorse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6001284", "label": "Iluppaiyur, Tiruchirappalli district", "source": "Iluppaiyur or Eluppaiyur is a small village in Sathanur Panchayat in Tiruchirappalli District in Tamil Nadu, India. This village belongs to Thinnanur Post and Musiri Taluk. Most of the people in this village belongs to the Arunattu Vellalar caste. Iluppaiyur village is located 4 km from Karattampatti (From Trichy to Thuraiyur Main Road SH 62) and approximately 30 km distance from Trichy. The main economy is based on agriculture. Main agriculture product is Rice.The major source of irrigation is Wells. The population of Iluppaiyur is around 500. Presently, around 300 voters dwell in this village. Musiri Panchayat Union Elementary School Iluppaiyur is located here with strength around 60.", "target": "village in Tamil Nadu, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q708460", "label": "Zhang Jianzhi", "source": "Zhang Jianzhi (張柬之) (625-706), courtesy name Mengjiang (孟將), formally Prince Wenzhen of Hanyang (漢陽文貞王), was an official of the Chinese dynasty Tang Dynasty and Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty, serving as chancellor during the reigns of Wu Zetian and her son Emperor Zhongzong. He was a key figure in the coup that overthrew Wu Zetian and restored Emperor Zhongzong in 705, but was later exiled due to false accusations instigated by Wu Zetian's nephew Wu Sansi and died in exile.", "target": "Chinese chancellor (625-706)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59655426", "label": "1933 Colorado Agricultural Aggies football team", "source": "The 1933 Colorado Agricultural Aggies football team represented Colorado Agricultural College (now known as Colorado State University) in the Rocky Mountain Conference (RMC) during the 1933 college football season. In their 23rd season under head coach Harry W. Hughes, the Aggies compiled a 5–1–1 record, tied for the RMC championship, and outscored all opponents by a total of 78 to 26.Four Colorado Agricultural players received all-conference honors in 1933: end Glenn Morris, halfback Wilbur (Red) White, halfback Ralph Maag, and quarterback Bud Dammann.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7606462", "label": "Stefano Marchetti", "source": "Stefano Marchetti (born 26 October 1963 in Fontaniva) is an Italian former football striker. Currently is the general director of A.S. Cittadella in Serie B.", "target": "Association football forward", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17588452", "label": "Pachycentria glauca", "source": "Pachycentria glauca is a small epiphytic shrub in the Melastomataceae family. It has 2 subspecies: P. glauca subsp. glauca and P. glauca subsp. maingayi. The glauca subspecies is endemic to Borneo, the maingayi subspecies is native to Peninsular Malaysia and Thailand, perhaps Sumatra. It grows on trees, other epiphytes (so, a double epiphyte) and rocks in partial shade. It is intimately associated with particular ant species, growing on their gardens, providing a home for them, feeding them and having its seeds dispersed by them.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6437564", "label": "Krishnanagar, Nepal", "source": "Krishnanagar (also known as Jhandenagar) is a municipality in Kapilvastu district of Lumbini Zone in the western terai part of Nepal. The municipality was established on 18 May 2014 by merging the existing Krishnanagar, Sirsihawa, Shivanagar village development committees (VDCs). on Nepal's southern border with India across from Barhani Bazar. Movement of Indian and Nepalese nationals across the border is unrestricted, however there is a customs checkpoint for goods. Goods bound for Dang and Arcghakhanchi cross here. Krishnanagar is connected by F-12 Chandrauta-Krishnanagar to the east-west Mahendra Highway and Postal Highway.", "target": "human settlement in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "border town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11792043", "label": "Niki Sullivan", "source": "Niki Sullivan (June 23, 1937 – April 6, 2004) was an American rock and roll guitar player, born in South Gate, California. He was one of the three original members of Buddy Holly's backing band, the Crickets. Though he lost interest within a few months of his involvement, his guitar playing was an integral part of Holly's early success. He performed on 27 of the 32 songs Holly and The Crickets recorded over his brief career. He co-wrote a number of his own songs. In 2012, Sullivan was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Crickets by a special committee, aimed at correcting the mistake of not including the Crickets with Buddy Holly when he was first inducted in 1986.", "target": "American rock and roll guitar player (1937-2004)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24007363", "label": "Elina Mitrofanova", "source": "Elina Sergeyevna Mitrofanova (Russian: Элина Сергеевна Митрофанова; born 28 January 1992) is a Russian ice hockey player, currently playing with HC Agidel Ufa of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL). She represented Russia at the IIHF Women's World Championships in 2016 and 2017, and medaled at three Winter Universiades, winning silver in 2013 and gold in 2015 and 2017. As a junior player, she was a member of the Russian national under-18 ice hockey team and participated in the IIHF Women's U18 World Championships in 2008, 2009, and 2010.", "target": "Russian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q921187", "label": "Isak Saba", "source": "Isak Mikal Saba (15 November 1875 – 1 June 1921) was a Norwegian Sámi teacher and politician. He was born in 1875 in Nesseby, Norway to Per Sabasen and Bigi Henriksdatter Aikio. Saba married Marie Gunneva Hansdatter Holm (1876–1961), daughter of Hans Holm Olsen and Marit Gulbrandsdatter. On 11 October 1906 he became the first Sámi to be elected to the Stortinget (Norwegian parliament), and he was the representative of Finnmark for the Norwegian Labour Party from 1907 to 1912. He was the mayor of Nesseby from 1914 to 1915. After serving as mayor, he worked as a teacher until his death. Saba wrote the text to Sámi soga lávlla, which the Sámi Conference made the Sami national anthem in 1986.Saba died in 1921 in Vardø.", "target": "Sami politician, teacher, and poet (1875-1921)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q660113", "label": "Danilo Aparecido da Silva", "source": "Danilo Aparecido da Silva (born 24 November 1986), or simply known as Danilo Silva, is a retired Brazilian professional footballer who played as a centre-back. Silva announced his retirement from football on 23 September 2020.", "target": "Brazilian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5029406", "label": "Canada Outdoors", "source": "Canada Outdoors is a Canadian nature television series which aired on CBC Television in 1967.", "target": "Canadian nature television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3368584", "label": "Pat Reidy", "source": "Pat Reidy (born 15 March 1971) is an Australian basketball player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Australian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q69858867", "label": "Buhl Public Library", "source": "Buhl Public Library is the public library serving Buhl, Minnesota, United States. Its building was constructed from 1917 to 1918 with local tax revenue from a mining boom. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 for its local significance in the themes of architecture and education. It was nominated for symbolizing how a company town used local funds to serve the educational and cultural needs of its multi-ethnic populace.", "target": "public library in Buhl, Minnesota, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["main library", "public library"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49355586", "label": "Juan de Mena", "source": "Juan de Mena is a district of Cordillera Department in Paraguay. It is named after the Spanish Renaissance poet Juan de Mena, and is located 88 metres above sea level, surrounded by the lowlands of the Rivers Manduvira, Yhaguy, and Hondo. General Lino Cesar Oviedo, military and politician, was born in this district.", "target": "district of Cordillera Department in Paraguay", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Paraguay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56317085", "label": "Raji", "source": "Raji is the first continuous human cell line of hematopoietic origin. The Raji cell line is widely used as a transfection host.Raji cells were derived from the B-lymphocytes of an 11-year-old Nigerian Burkitt's lymphoma male patient in 1963 by R.J.V. Pulvertaft and was further worked on by B.O. Osunkoya (University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria).The Raji cell line is categorized as lymphoblast-like. The culture medium used to grow Raji cells is RPMI supplemented with serum. Some characteristics of Raji cells include a lack of differentiation, illustrated by the formation of large aggregations of hundreds of individual cells. The cells are relatively small in diameter (5-8 μm), have irregular indented nuclei, and almost extensive cytoplasm with free ribosomes which tend to clump. Raji cells grow as single, non-motile, free-floating (non-adhesion) individuals or doublets to glass. Some cells look elongated, pear-shaped with larger, multinucleate, round cells.The Raji cell line produces an unusual strain of Epstein-Barr virus, which both transforms cord blood lymphocytes and induces early antigens in the cells. Translocations between chromosomes 8 and 22 have occurred in all three variations of the Raji cell line, but some cells synthesize immunoglobulin M with light chains of the kappa type, in contrast to the usual concordance between a translocation involving chromosome 22 and lambda chain synthesis. Both kappa genes and one lambda gene are rearranged. These findings indicate either that translocation may occur as a separate event from immunoglobulin gene rearrangement or that the proposed hierarchical sequence of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements is not always adhered to. The data also imply.", "target": "cell line", "baseline_candidates": ["cell line", "cancer cell line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24809991", "label": "Penelope Brown", "source": "Penelope Brown (born 1944 in Summit, NJ) is an American anthropological linguist who has studied a number of aspects of cross-linguistic, sociolinguistic, and cross-cultural studies of language and cognition.", "target": "American anthropological linguist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5123106", "label": "City Club of Cleveland", "source": "The City Club of Cleveland is a non-partisan debate forum in Cleveland, Ohio. Founded in 1912, the club's home is the City Club Building, formerly the Citizens Building, on Euclid Avenue in Downtown Cleveland. Known as \"America's Citadel of Free Speech,\" it is one of the oldest continuous independent free speech forums in the United States.The mission of the City Club is to \"create conversations of consequence that help democracy thrive.\" Membership is open to anyone and all programs are open to the general public, although members are charged lower prices to attend most forums and given preference in making reservations to certain programs.", "target": "non-partisan debate organization in Cleveland, Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19962971", "label": "Patrick Fabiano", "source": "Patrick Fabiano Alves Nóbrega Luz (born 4 September 1987), commonly known as Patrick Fabiano, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Kuwaiti club Al-Salmiya SC. Having played for clubs in Asia since 2009, he went to represent Timor-Leste internationally in 2014 in order to be registered as an Asian player in his Asian clubs since then, despite having no connection to Timor-Leste. He was declared as ineligible to play for that national team by the Asian Football Confederation in 2017.", "target": "Brazilian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q685883", "label": "The Beauty of Gemina", "source": "The Beauty of Gemina is a Swiss electronic/alternative rock band founded by Michael Sele in 2006.", "target": "band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q166451", "label": "El Aria", "source": "El Aria or El Ariye is a village and rural commune in the Trarza Region of south-western Mauritania.In 2000 it had a population of 7496.", "target": "commune of Mauritania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Mauritania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6167326", "label": "Jay Westbrook", "source": "Jay Lawrence Westbrook (born 1947) is an American politician of the Democratic Party in Cleveland, Ohio. For 34 years, he was a member of Cleveland City Council representing wards on the west side of Cleveland. He was first elected to council in 1980 and served as its president from 1990 to 1999. He retired from Council on December 31, 2013. He currently works for the Thriving Communities program of the Western Reserve Land Conservancy.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19873580", "label": "Miles Crawford Burkitt", "source": "Miles Crawford Burkitt (27 December 1890 – 22 August 1971) was a British archaeologist and prehistorian, who is known for his work, mainly on the Stone Age, in Europe, Asia and especially Africa, where he was one of the first pioneers of African archaeology. He was the first Cambridge University lecturer in Prehistoric Archaeology.He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge, reading Natural Sciences and having Thomas McKenny Hughes as a professor. He excavated in France and Spain with Abbe Breuil and Hugo Obermaier, and served with the YMCA in France during World War I. He lectured in Cambridge in prehistoric archaeology, at first on a voluntarily basis, and finally as a University Lecturer in the Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology. During World War II he was a Lieutenant in the 4th Cambridgeshire Home Guard (1941-1945). He was made a J.P. in 1942, and was a County Councillor in Cambridgeshire between 1939-1964, ending his term of office as Vice-Chairman, 1958-1961, and Chairman, 1961-1964. He was Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire in 1960. He was also an Alderman, 1964-1965. His wife was called May.", "target": "British archaeologist (1890-1971)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5682429", "label": "Haughey's Fort", "source": "Haughey's Fort is a hill fort in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, 2+1⁄4 miles (3.6 km) west of the city of Armagh. It is named after the farmer who owned the land it is situated on in the later 19th century. The large hilltop enclosure that is Haughey's Fort is a Scheduled Historic Monument in the townland of Tray, in Armagh City and District Council area, at grid ref: H8351 4529. It consists of an oval enclosure, 350 metres (1,150 feet) across at its widest point, surrounded by two concentric ditches. Inside the enclosure another ditch encloses an area 150 metres (490 feet) in diameter. Archaeological excavation shows that it was occupied in the late Bronze Age, ca. 1100 to 900 BC, after which it was abandoned, although some artefacts discovered were of Iron Age date, suggesting that it was later reoccupied. It was contemporary with the nearby artificial pool known as the King's Stables but was abandoned before Navan Fort, 0.6 miles (0.97 km) to the east, was occupied.", "target": "hillfort in Armagh", "baseline_candidates": ["multiple enclosure hillfort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4654772", "label": "ATN News", "source": "ATN News is a Bangladeshi Bengali-language satellite and cable 24-hour news television channel. It is the sister channel of ATN Bangla, which is Bangladesh's oldest privately owned television channel. It began broadcasting on 7 June 2010, thus making ATN News Bangladesh's first contemporary news channel.", "target": "Bangladeshi television channel", "baseline_candidates": ["television channel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7839899", "label": "Triadan Gritti", "source": "Triadan Gritti was a 15th-century Venetian nobleman who was the Venetian captain general and commander-in-chief of Scutari.", "target": "Venetian captain-general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q584769", "label": "William Seabrook", "source": "William Buehler Seabrook (February 22, 1884 – September 20, 1945) was an American occultist, explorer, traveler, and journalist, born in Westminster, Maryland. He began his career as a reporter and City Editor of the Augusta Chronicle in Georgia, worked at The New York Times, and later became a partner in an advertising agency in Atlanta. He is well known for his writing on, and engaging in, cannibalism.", "target": "American journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18222413", "label": "Carlos Keosseian", "source": "Carlos Eduardo Keosseián Lagomarsino (born 18 March 1988) is a Uruguayan–born Armenian footballer that currently plays for Atenas in the Uruguayan Primera División.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25056779", "label": "Wijayakusuma Stadium", "source": "Wijaya Kusuma Stadium (Stadion Wijaya Kusuma) is a multi-purpose stadium in the town of Cilacap, Indonesia. The stadium has a capacity of 15,000 people.It is the home base of PSCS Cilacap. The stadium is always full of spectators every time PSCS Cilacap play the home game.", "target": "multi-purpose stadium in Cilacap, Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["stadium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3425311", "label": "A Town Like Alice", "source": "A Town Like Alice is a 1956 British drama film produced by Joseph Janni and starring Virginia McKenna and Peter Finch that is based on the 1950 novel of the same name by Nevil Shute. The film does not follow the whole novel, concluding at the end of part two and truncating or omitting much detail. It was partially filmed in Malaya and Australia.", "target": "1956 film by Jack Lee", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2332385", "label": "palladium(II) bromide", "source": "Palladium(II) bromide is an inorganic compound of palladium and bromine with the chemical formula PdBr2. It is a commercially available, though less common than palladium(II) chloride, the usual entry point to palladium chemistry. Unlike the chloride, palladium(II) bromide is insoluble in water, but dissolves when heated in acetonitrile to give monomeric acetonitrile adducts: PdBr2 + 2 MeCN → PdBr2(MeCN)2The structure of PdBr2 has been determined by X-ray crystallography. It crystallises in the P21/c space group and the structure consists of wavy ribbons of edge-sharing PdBr4 coordination squares.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3339579", "label": "Niccolò dei Conti di Segni", "source": "Niccolo Conti di Segni - Italian cardinal allegedly created by Pope Gregory IX with the title of San Marcello in the consistory of December 1228 (or 1230) and subsequently sent as papal legate to Armenia to mediate in the conflicts between king Hethum I of Armenia and the Principality of Antioch; king Hethum I considered him partial in favor of the Principality of Antioch and asked pope for his recalling. He is said to have died in 1239. Some scholars doubt the existence of this cardinal because he did not subscribe any papal bulls and his legation in Armenia is not attested in the contemporary sources. Agostino Paravicini Bagliani indicates that he's confused with Niccolo da Anagni (1206–72), nephew of Pope Gregory IX, who was only the lower official of the Roman Curia during his pontificate. He was never promoted to the cardinalate, despite serving as camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church under Pope Alexander IV (1254–61).", "target": "Italian priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23039256", "label": "Hans Hach Verdugo", "source": "Hans Hach Verdugo (born 11 November 1989) is a Mexican tennis player. Hach Verdugo has a career high ATP singles ranking of World No. 528 achieved on 20 July 2015. In the ATP doubles ranking he has a career high of World No. 68 achieved on 21 March 2022. Hach Verdugo has won one ATP doubles title, one ITF singles title, one Challenger and 19 ITF doubles titles. In July 2021 he won his maiden ATP doubles title at the 2021 Los Cabos Open partnering John Isner as wildcards.The charismatic player has been sponsored since 2014 by premium activewear brand, Loriet Sports.Hach Verdugo has represented Mexico at the Davis Cup where he has a W/L record of 3–1.", "target": "Mexican tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3000849", "label": "FAMAS Awards", "source": "The Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences Awards (also known as the FAMAS Awards) are the annual honors given by the Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences (FAMAS), an organization composed of prize-winning writers and movie columnists, for achievements in Philippine cinema for a calendar year. Members of the academy including avid movie viewers, fans or enthusiasts will cast their votes on who should win the statuettes on different categories they were nominated. Established in 1952, it the oldest existing film industry award-giving body in the Philippines (as of 2013) and one of the oldest in Asia. The FAMAS Awards, from 1952 to 1982, was the highest Filipino film award a filmmaker or artisan could receive in the local movie industry. In 1982, after the inception of the Film Academy of the Philippines (Luna) Awards, the true Philippine equivalent of the Oscars (where academy members are film professionals who nominate and choose awardees of the year) was mandated by the Philippine government, FAMAS was unofficially relegated as secondary to Luna Awards, but is still held in high regard because of its age and prestige. The FAMAS Award is one of the highly distinguished film award bodies in the country. Others included are the Luna Awards (Film Academy), the Gawad Urian Awards of the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (Filipino Film Critics), and the Star Awards for Movies and Television by the Philippine Movie Press Club. Winning all four of the awards in one category for the same work is considered as winning a \"Grand Slam\".", "target": "Filipino movie awards", "baseline_candidates": ["group of awards", "film award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1657631", "label": "Stolipinovo", "source": "Stolipinovo (Bulgarian: Столипиново) is a district of the Bulgarian city of Plovdiv and the most populous predominantly Romani-inhabited district on the Balkans with a population of about 40,000 people. It is a ghetto located on the outskirts of the city, in its northeastern part on the right bank of the Maritsa. Stolipinovo differs from other Roma communities in Bulgaria as only 5,000 inhabitants identify themselves as Christian and Romani-speaking Roma (\"Dassikane Roma\"), whereas the Muslim and Turkish-speaking majority claims to be of Turkish origin (\"Xoraxane Roma\").Stolipinovo was one of the sites of the 2019 Plovdiv European Capital of Culture program, in which German artists and architects Martin Kaltwasser and Maik Ronz created a concept for building a sustainable, temporary canopy and seating at the Maritsa river bank adjacent to Stolipinovo in cooperation with volunteers and participants from the local Roma community, encouraging to connect the neighbourhood with the rest of the city.", "target": "district of Plovdiv, Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5500894", "label": "Freehand Books", "source": "Freehand Books is a Canadian literary imprint started in 2007 by Broadview Press, a Canadian academic publisher. Freehand publishes literary fiction, literary non-fiction, memoir and poetry.In its first season in 2008, Freehand published Good To A Fault, by Marina Endicott. The novel won the 2009 Commonwealth Writers Prize for Canada and the Caribbean and was shortlisted for the 2008 Giller Prize.Tangles, a graphic memoir by Sarah Leavitt, published in 2010, was the first graphic book shortlisted for the Writers' Trust of Canada non-fiction prize.A 2014 Freehand book, Karyn L. Freedman's One Hour in Paris: A True Story of Rape and Recovery, was the winner of the $40,0000 British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction in 2015. It was also longlisted for Canada Reads in 2017. In 2018, Freehand published Homes: A Refugee Story, by Abu Bakr Al-Rabeeah and Winnie Yeung. It went on to become a finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award for Non-fiction and is a 2019 Canada Reads contender, championed by Chuck Comeau.Writers published by Freehand include Marina Endicott, Susan Olding, Stuart Ross, Clea Roberts, Saleema Nawaz, Clem and Olivier Martini, Jeanette Lynes, Sarah Leavitt, Yasmin Ladha, Paul Hendrick, Joan Crate, Jesse Patrick Ferguson, Ian Williams, Elizabeth Philips, Lorna Crozier, Keith Maillard and Cary Fagan.In 2016 Freehand (under the leadership of JoAnn McCaig) became independent of Broadview, though the two organizations have continued to work together in certain areas following the change in ownership structure. Melanie Little was Freehand's first managing editor; she was succeeded in that role first by Sarah Ivany and.", "target": "literary imprint", "baseline_candidates": ["publisher", "imprint"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4939896", "label": "Bolma mainbaza", "source": "Bolma mainbaza is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Turbinidae, the turban snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q109986", "label": "Aitkin County", "source": "Aitkin County ( AY-kin) is a county in the U.S. state of Minnesota. As of the 2020 census, the population was 15,697. Its county seat is Aitkin. Part of the Mille Lacs Indian Reservation is in the county. The county was created in 1857 and organized in 1871.", "target": "county in Minnesota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Minnesota"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q514782", "label": "Sam Vimes", "source": "His Grace, The Duke of Ankh, Commander Sir Samuel \"Sam\" Vimes is a fictional character in Terry Pratchett's Discworld series. Vimes is depicted in the novels as somewhere between an Inspector Morse-type 'old-school' British policeman, and a film noir-esque grizzled detective. His appearances throughout the Discworld sequence show him slowly and grudgingly rising through the ranks of both police force and society. As of his latest promotion, his full name and title is \"His Grace, His Excellency, The 1st Duke of Ankh; Commander Sir Samuel Vimes\". When serving as Ambassador for Ankh-Morpork, he is also referred to simply as \"His Excellency\", and is also nicknamed \"Blackboard Monitor Vimes\", \"Vimes the Butcher/Butcher Vimes\" and \"Vetinari's Terrier\" (or his hammer, depending upon the occasion). According to his wife, Sybil, Vimes is recognised by many as Lord Vetinari's right-hand man. He first appeared in the novel Guards! Guards!. While no detailed description of his physical appearance shows up in any of the Discworld novels, Pratchett says in the companion work, The Art of Discworld, that he has always imagined Vimes as a younger, slightly bulkier version of late British actor Pete Postlethwaite. Longtime collaborative artist Paul Kidby, who has worked with Pratchett on several works, portrays him instead as resembling Clint Eastwood. Vimes is the Commander of the City Watch, the burgeoning police force of the Discworld's largest city, Ankh-Morpork. His rise from drunk policeman to respected member of the aristocracy, and the simultaneous growth and development of the Watch under his command, have together been one of the.", "target": "fictional character from Terry Pratchett's Discworld novel series", "baseline_candidates": ["Discworld character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8049504", "label": "Yarra Park", "source": "Yarra Park (35.469 hectares) is part of the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Precinct, the premier sporting precinct of Victoria, Australia. Located in Yarra Park is the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) and numerous sporting fields and ovals, including the associated sporting complexes of Melbourne and Olympic Parks. The park and sporting facilities are located in the inner-suburb of East Melbourne. In the late 1850s, many of the earliest games of Australian rules football were played at Yarra Park, which was known at the time as the Richmond Paddock. Tree-lined paths run parallel to Punt Road and Swan Street, and criss-cross the park. Some of the lawns are used for parking for sporting events. Three footbridges allow pedestrians and cyclists to cross the railway lines to the different sporting venues and easy access to the Yarra River Trail. Around the MCG are sculptures of Australian sporting heroes including: Australian rules footballers Ron Barassi and Dick Reynolds; cricketers Donald Bradman and Keith Miller; and athlete Betty Cuthbert. Nearby is an old eucalyptus scar tree which shows a big scar caused by harvesting of bark for a canoe by the original inhabitants of the Yarra River Valley, the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin nation. The adjacent Punt Road Oval, home of the Richmond Football Club features a statue of Tiger legend Jack Dyer.", "target": "park in Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["urban park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31114090", "label": "Multiple enclosure hillfort on Coxall Knoll", "source": "Coxall Knoll is a hill lying on the boundary of Shropshire and Herefordshire, England; it is near Bucknell in Shropshire and Buckton and Coxall in Herefordshire. On the summit is an Iron Age hillfort, a scheduled monument.", "target": "hillfort in Herefordshire", "baseline_candidates": ["contour fort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62005592", "label": "Fangxin Road station", "source": "Fangxin Road (Chinese: 芳芯路) is a station under construction on the future Line 18 of the Shanghai Metro. Located at the intersection of Fangxin Road and Baiyang Road in Pudong, Shanghai, the station is scheduled to open with the rest of phase one of Line 18 in 2021.", "target": "station of Shanghai Metro Line 18", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3187751", "label": "Juan Pablo Avendaño", "source": "Juan Pablo Avendaño (born 10 May 1982 in Laguna Larga, Córdoba Province) is an Argentine footballer who currently plays for Unión de Santa Fe in the Argentine Primera B Nacional.", "target": "Argentine footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q175335", "label": "Mahmut Hanefi Erdoğdu", "source": "Mahmut Hanefi Erdoğdu (born 1 June 1983 in Karasu) is a Turkish footballer playing for the Turkish Super League club Diyarbakirspor. Erdoğdu plays at the Defender position. He is 180 cm tall and weighs 79 kilograms. His playing style and hair type is often similar to Brazilian star Roberto Carlos and is called \"Carlos\" among his teammates.", "target": "Turkish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26758638", "label": "Charles MacTavish", "source": "Charles Carroll MacTavish (January 18, 1818 – March 12, 1868), sometimes known as Carroll MacTavish, was an American landowner who briefly served as an Irish Repeal Association politician in the United Kingdom. MacTavish was the great-grandson of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, an American founding father, and was born into a wealthy family in Maryland. He was named for his great-grandfather, who had a strong influence on his early life, ensuring that he was brought up devoutly Catholic. His mother's family had married into English aristocracy, and with their support, MacTavish began a career with the British diplomatic service. In the 1840s, he became interested in politics, and stood for election as a candidate in an Irish seat at the 1847 general election. He was narrowly elected, but the result was overturned following an election petition, which challenged both the conduct of the election and his status as a British subject. The committee ruled that some votes had been cast illegally, but did not find that it was proven he was ineligible to sit. MacTavish later returned to America, where he married a daughter of General Winfield Scott, and took over a large family plantation in Maryland with around fifty slaves. He remained a slaveholder until the end of the Civil War, when he sold the estate, though he was considered a loyal Union citizen. He died in 1868.", "target": "American landowner and briefly Irish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27984911", "label": "Riccardo Marchizza", "source": "Riccardo Marchizza (born 26 March 1998) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Serie A club Empoli, on loan from Sassuolo.", "target": "Italian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11335718", "label": "MV Lisboa", "source": "MV Lisboa was a Portuguese cruise liner owned by Portuscale Cruises. The ship was designed by Harland & Wolff as a freighter in Belfast built and ran in 1954 as Port Melbourne, a fast cargo liner for Port Line's UK-Australia express service. She was planned to be rebuilt as a car ferry, the Therisos Express, but instead became the cruise ship Danae. In later years, she was named Starlight Express, Baltica, and then Princess Danae.From 1994 until 2012, the ship was operated by Classic International Cruises as the Princess Danae. In late summer of 2012, the ship was detained in Dublin, Ireland for the non-payment of a fuel bill. Early in 2013, she was bought by the recently created Portuguese cruise company Portuscale Cruises and renamed Lisboa. She was scrapped at Aliağa on 24 July 2015. Her sister ship was the Princess Daphne, built as Port Sydney.", "target": "ship", "baseline_candidates": ["cruise ship", "motor ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13863464", "label": "Scopula forbesi", "source": "Scopula forbesi is a moth of the family Geometridae first described by Herbert Druce in 1884. It is found in Cameroon and Nigeria.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q800584", "label": "Brühl station", "source": "Brühl station is a railway station in the city of Brühl in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It consists of a passenger station and a freight yard about a kilometre to the north. Both parts of the station are on the Left Rhine line (German: Linke Rheinstrecke); the freight yard also has a connection via Brühl-Vochem to the Cologne port and freight railway network (Häfen und Güterverkehr Köln AG, HGK).", "target": "railway station in Brühl, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7704421", "label": "Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov", "source": "Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov (1938–2003; also published as Terry G. Jordan) was a professor at the Department of Geography and the Environment at University of Texas at Austin and a specialist in the cultural and historical geography of the United States. He authored several influential scholarly books and articles and a widely adopted introductory textbook. Jordan-Bychkov served as president of the American Association of Geographers (AAG) in 1987 and 1988.", "target": "American academic (1938-2003)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2101347", "label": "Longitarsus petitpierrei", "source": "Longitarsus petitpierrei is a species of beetle in the subfamily Galerucinae that is endemic to Spain.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q882462", "label": "Blue Army", "source": "The Blue Army (Polish: Błękitna Armia; French: Armée bleue), or Haller's Army, was a Polish military contingent created in France during the latter stages of World War I. The name came from the French-issued blue military uniforms worn by the soldiers. The symbolic term used to describe the troops was subsequently adopted by General Józef Haller von Hallenburg himself to represent all newly organized Polish Legions fighting in western Europe. The army was formed on 4 June 1917, and was made up of Polish volunteers serving alongside allied forces in France during World War I. After fighting on the Western Front, the army was transferred to Poland where it joined other Polish military formations fighting for the return of Poland's independence. The Blue Army played a pivotal role in ensuring Polish victory in the Polish–Ukrainian War, and later Haller's troops took part in Poland's defeat of the advancing Bolshevik forces in the Polish–Soviet War. Throughout the fighting on the Ukrainian front, soldiers within the ranks of the Blue Army assaulted segments of the local Jewish residents, assuming that some Jews were co-operating with Poland's enemies.", "target": "French army uniformed Polish military contingent during World War One.", "baseline_candidates": ["army"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29482764", "label": "Castle Farmhouse", "source": "Castle Farm, Raglan, in the county of Monmouth, is prominently sited 100 yards (91 m) east of Raglan Castle. The farm is approached from its own drive and shielded from close public view. It was built just before the English Civil War, probably around 1630 and is one of the earliest brick buildings in South Wales. It was originally a stable-block for the castle and later became a farm with a farm courtyard. Some of the farm buildings have been converted into a cafe which serves visitors to the castle. The building is a Grade II listed building and may have been built for the 5th Earl of Worcester to serve Raglan Castle.", "target": "Grade II listed building in Monmouthshire. Prominently sited adjacent to Raglan Castle the farm is approached from its own drive and shielded from close public view", "baseline_candidates": ["farmhouse", "historic site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q68028", "label": "Onycha", "source": "Onycha is a town in Covington County, Alabama, United States. At the 2020 census, the population was 167.", "target": "town in Covington County, Alabama, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7559838", "label": "Somerset Community College", "source": "Somerset Community College (SCC) is a public community college in Somerset, Kentucky. It is part of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS). The college offers academic, general education, and technical curricula leading to certificates, diplomas, and associate's degrees. Somerset Community College is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS).", "target": "community college in Somerset, Kentucky, U.S.", "baseline_candidates": ["community college", "public educational institution of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4832502", "label": "Kadıncık", "source": "Kadıncık, Şereflikoçhisar is a village in the District of Şereflikoçhisar, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "target": "village in Şereflikoçhisar, Ankara Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey", "mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65042827", "label": "Cruach Innse", "source": "Cruach Innse (857 m) is a mountain in the Grampian Mountains of Scotland. It is located south of the village of Roybridge in Lochaber. A craggy peak, it is usually climbed in conjunction with its southern neighbour Sgùrr Innse, starting at Corriechoile Lodge on the River Spean.", "target": "mountain in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7454838", "label": "Serincia", "source": "Serincia is a genus of moths in the subfamily Arctiinae. The genus was erected by Harrison Gray Dyar Jr. in 1914.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2001828", "label": "Tutti Frutti", "source": "\"Tutti Frutti\" (Italian: \"All fruits\"), sometimes styled as \"Tutti-Frutti\", is a song written by Little Richard and Dorothy LaBostrie that was first recorded in 1955, becoming Little Richard's first major hit record. With its energetic refrain, often transcribed as \"A-wop-bop-a-loo-mop-a-lop-bam-boom!\" (a verbal rendition of a drum pattern that Little Richard had imagined), and its hard-driving sound and wild lyrics, it became not only a model for many future Little Richard songs, but also a model for rock and roll itself. The song introduced several of rock music's most characteristic musical features, including its loud volume, powerful vocal style, and distinctive beat and rhythm.In 2007, an eclectic panel of renowned recording artists ranked \"Tutti Frutti\" at No. 1 on Mojo's \"The Top 100 Records That Changed The World\" and hailed the recording as \"the sound of the birth of rock and roll\". In 2010, the U.S. Library of Congress National Recording Registry added the recording to its registry, claiming the \"unique vocalizing over the irresistible beat announced a new era in music\". In April 2012, Rolling Stone magazine declared the refrain \"the most inspired rock lyric ever recorded\".", "target": "original song written and composed by Little Richard, Dorothy LaBostrie, Joe Lubin", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4355113", "label": "Hou Hanru", "source": "Hou Hanru (Chinese: 侯瀚如; pinyin: Hóu Hànrú; born 1963 in Guangzhou, China) is an international art curator and critic based in San Francisco, Paris and Rome. He is Artistic Director of the MAXXI in Rome, Italy.", "target": "art critic, curator, art director of MAXXI", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87759511", "label": "Rennie K. Tracey", "source": "Rennie K. Tracey (April 30, 1874 – June 30, 1929) was a Canadian politician. He served in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1921 to 1925 as member of the United Farmers.", "target": "former Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58009203", "label": "Tiaan van der Merwe", "source": "Tiaan van der Merwe (born (1998-04-04)4 April 1998) is a South African rugby union player for the Griquas (rugby union) in the Currie Cup. His regular position is hooker.", "target": "South African rugby union footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6903784", "label": "Moshe Zar", "source": "Moshe Zar (born 1938) is a religious Zionist, a former member of the terrorist organization \"Jewish Underground\", and Israeli settler leader in the northern West Bank. He has been buying land from individual Palestinians since 1979. Zar is a long-time friend of former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon from their service in Unit 101. He was wounded in the 1956 Sinai Campaign, and lost his left eye as a result of his injuries. In 1983, he was attacked and stabbed by a group of Palestinians, but survived.In 1984, he was convicted of membership in the terrorist organization the \"Jewish Underground\" of the early 1980s, and sentenced to three years in prison for his part in the assassination of Palestinian mayors, but only spent a few months in jail. His wife Yael is quoted by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as having said at the time: \"The underground is not a stage in the life of the Zar family, but a stage in the life of the nation. \"After one of his eight children, his son Gilad, a security officer of the Shomron Regional Council, was killed in an ambush on May 29, 2001, he vowed that he would establish six settlements in his son's memory, one for each Hebrew letter of his name. The settlement outpost Ramat Gilad was established in 2001, the outpost Havat Gilad was established in 2002 and has been dismantled by the Israeli military forces several times, leading to violent clashes between settlers and security forces.", "target": "Israeli terrorist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5129743", "label": "Clavus putillus", "source": "Clavus putillus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Drilliidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29388256", "label": "Paula Pereira", "source": "Paula Beatriz Pereira (born 11 March 1988) is a Brazilian female badminton player. She competed at the 2007 and 2015 Pan American Games. At the Brazilian National Badminton Championships, she won the women's singles title in 2011; women's doubles title in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012, and 2014; and in the mixed doubles title in 2012.", "target": "badminton player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2209526", "label": "Brétigny (Paris RER)", "source": "Brétigny is a railway station in Brétigny-sur-Orge, Essonne, Paris, France. The station was opened in 1865 and is located on the Paris–Bordeaux railway and Paris–Tours railway. The station is served by Paris' express suburban rail system, the RER. The train services are operated by SNCF. It is 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of the centre of Paris.", "target": "railway station in Brétigny-sur-Orge, France", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station", "S-Bahn station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12315169", "label": "Hannah Schneider", "source": "Hannah Schneider is a Danish musician and composer signed to Sony/Mermaid records in Denmark and Lojinx in the UK. She has released three albums and toured in Europe and America. Schneider is the granddaughter of famed ‘cellist Mischa Schneider, a member of the Budapest String Quartet. Her self-titled debut album was released in Denmark in 2012 followed by Me Vs. I in 2009, both self produced. Her 3rd album, Red Lines, is the first to be released in the UK, following the Lay Of The Land compilation EP in 2014. Schneider co-wrote the song \"The Absence of Your Company\" with Kim Richey, who recorded it for her 2007 album Chinese Boxes. The song was featured in US TV series Grey's AnatomyIn October 2014 Clash Magazine premiered Dreaming Kind as the first video from her forthcoming album Red Lines.She has been nominated for several awards like Zulu Awards, for best female artist and also New Act.Since 2016 Hannah has been part of the electronic duo AyOwA together with Nicolai Kornerup. AyOwA has released two EPs, Eremit (2017) and Farvel (2018). In 2017 AyOwA played Roskilde Festival and Spot Festival.", "target": "Danish musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q615034", "label": "2008–09 FA Cup", "source": "The 2008–09 FA Cup (known as The FA Cup sponsored by E.ON for sponsorship reasons) was the 128th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; the FA Cup. A record 762 clubs were accepted for the competition; one club, South Normanton Athletic, folded before the fixtures were released, leaving 761 clubs to appear in the draw. Two more clubs, Brierley Hill & Withymoor and Stapenhill, folded after the draws for the early rounds were made, giving their opponents a walkover. The competition started on 16 August 2008 with the Extra Preliminary Round and concluded on 30 May 2009 with the Final, held at Wembley Stadium. Because winners Chelsea qualified for the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League by finishing 3rd in the 2008–09 Premier League, losing finalists Everton qualified for the play-off round of the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League. Because Everton also happened to qualify for a Europa League berth by finishing 5th in the Premier League, that berth was awarded to the 6th place team (Aston Villa), whose berth (which was available because 2009–10 Football League Cup winners Manchester United qualified for the Champions League as Premier League winners) was in turn awarded to the 7th place team (Fulham). This season's competition saw the beginning of a new television contract for the tournament, with ITV and Setanta Sports taking over the domestic rights from the BBC and Sky Sports.", "target": "association football tournament concluding in 2009", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6576452", "label": "Late Night with Conan O'Brien, season 14", "source": "This is a list of episodes for Season 14 of Late Night with Conan O'Brien, which aired from September 5, 2006 to August 31, 2007.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20709628", "label": "1906 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team", "source": "The 1906 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1906 college football season. In their fourth year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 7–2–2 record and outscored their opponents 195 to 28.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6532992", "label": "Let There Be Love", "source": "Let There Be Love was an album of songs recorded by Joni James as airchecks, released by Jasmine Records on March 1, 1993. While many of the songs included on the album were hits for Joni James in the 1950s, these are different performances.", "target": "1993 compilation album by Joni James", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6380166", "label": "Kay Cohen", "source": "Kay Cohen (born Kathleen Siddall on 31 December 1952 in Levin, New Zealand) is an Australian fashion designer and business woman based in Sydney, Australia. Cohen has led a number of lingerie design brands, most notably as Founder and Creative Director of Pleasure State and as General Manager and Creative Director of Elle Macpherson's Lingerie label Elle Macpherson Intimates, also Cohen is known as the inventor of the Biofit uplift bra.", "target": "designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q829449", "label": "University of Franche-Comté", "source": "The University of Franche-Comté (UFC) is a pluridisciplinary public French university located in Besançon, Franche-Comté, with decentralized campuses in Belfort, Montbéliard, Vesoul and Lons-le-Saunier. It is a founding member of the community of universities and institutions University of Burgundy - Franche-Comté (COMUE UBFC), headquartered in Besançon and which federates universities and other higher learning institutes in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region. With 28 research labs, 667 PhD students and 788 research professors in 2016–2017, the University of Franche-Comté is well represented in the research community. It collaborates with many organizations (University Hospital of Besançon, CNRS, INSERM, CEA, etc.). It has about 29,000 students, including nearly a third of scholarship students and 12% of foreign students. Its Centre for Applied Linguistics (CLA) is one of the world's leading schools for teaching French as a foreign language and French linguistics.", "target": "French university based in Besançon", "baseline_candidates": ["public university", "university in France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16501234", "label": "Agriphila geniculea", "source": "Agriphila geniculea, the elbow-striped grass-veneer, is a species of moth of the family Crambidae. It was first described by Adrian Hardy Haworth in 1811.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11217262", "label": "DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase II", "source": "DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase II (EC 3.2.2.21) is an enzyme that catalyses the following chemical reaction: Hydrolysis of alkylated DNA, releasing 3-methyladenine, 3-methylguanine, 7-methylguanine, and 7-methyladenineInvolved in the removal of alkylated bases from DNA in Escherichia coli.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["glycosidase", "group or class of enzymes", "DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase I"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q588132", "label": "Anton Bal", "source": "Anton Bal (born 29 November 1963) is a Roman Catholic archbishop from Papua New Guinea. Born in Yuri (Kundiawa), Bal was ordained to the priesthood on 17 December 1991. On 5 June 2007, Bal was appointed auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kundiawa and titular bishop of Tamalluma; he was ordained a bishop on 10 September 2007. He was then appointed bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kundiawa on 12 January 2009. He was then appointed archbishop of the metropolitan Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Madang on 26 July 2019.", "target": "Roman Catholic archbishop from Papua New Guinea born 1963", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5066698", "label": "Piatra Șoimului", "source": "Piatra Șoimului is a commune in Neamț County, Western Moldavia, Romania. It is composed of four villages: Luminiș, Negulești, Piatra Șoimului, and Poieni.", "target": "commune in Neamț County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7792305", "label": "Thomas McGrath", "source": "Thomas Arlow McGrath (1896–1988) was a Northern Irish builder born in Lurgan, County Armagh, who founded Ulster Garden Villages in 1946 with the purpose of planning and building affordable, high quality post-war housing.At least one of these projects, Merville Garden Village in County Antrim, still exists today. He and his two eldest sons emigrated from Lurgan, County Armagh to Canada in 1952 and were later joined by the majority of their family, leaving behind only nieces and nephews.He died in Washington in 1988 at the age of 92. During World War I he utilized his carpentry skills by assisting with the repair of damaged aircraft. During World War II he owned and operated three ammunition factories in the Belfast area.", "target": "Northern Irish builder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4894334", "label": "Bernie Bernthal", "source": "Robert \"Bernie\" Bernthal is an American retired soccer forward who played professionally in Europe and the United States before becoming a professional skier and mountain climber. In 1979, Bernthal signed with FC Limoges. He returned to the United States in 1980 and joined the Hartford Hellions of the Major Indoor Soccer League. In October 1981, Bernthal signed with the Pittsburgh Spirit. In 1983, he moved to FC La Chaux-de-Fonds. Bernthal retired in 1984 and became a professional skier and mountain climber. From 1995 to 2001, he worked as the special events coordinator for The Swatch Group. In 2004, he became the European brand director for K2 Sports.", "target": "American footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q855755", "label": "Shijōnawate Station", "source": "Shijōnawate Station (四条畷駅, Shijōnawate-eki) is a passenger railway station in located in the city of Daitō, Osaka Prefecture, Japan, operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West). Although the station is named \"Shijōnawate\", it is not located in that city, but just across the border in Daitō.", "target": "railway station in Daito, Osaka prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94102238", "label": "Gadi Zelniker", "source": "Gadi Zelniker (12 March 1944 – 1 March 2016) was an Israeli footballer. He played in three matches for the Israel national football team in 1965.", "target": "association football player (1944-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7097085", "label": "Operation Goranboy", "source": "Operation Goranboy was a large-scale military offensive by Azerbaijan in the summer of 1992. Its aims were to take complete control of the entire territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and put a decisive end to the secessionist Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR). This offensive is regarded as a successful breakthrough by the Azerbaijani Army and marked the peak of Azerbaijani success throughout the entire six years of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War. After Azerbaijan's initial military successes, re-grouped Armenian forces repelled the attack, re-capturing most of the seized regions.", "target": "military offensive by Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["conflict"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65939130", "label": "Luxembourg at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships", "source": "Luxembourg competed at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships in Gwangju, South Korea from 12 to 28 July.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q981548", "label": "Ludvig Irgens-Jensen", "source": "Paul Ludvig Irgens-Jensen (13 April 1894 – 11 April 1969) was a Norwegian twentieth-century composer.", "target": "Norwegian composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3387965", "label": "Pierzchały, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "source": "Pierzchały [pjɛʂˈxawɨ] (German: Pettelkau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Płoskinia, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) north-west of Płoskinia, 10 km (6 mi) south of Braniewo, and 72 km (45 mi) north-west of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "target": "village in Warmian-Masurian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30105491", "label": "1933 in motor-sport", "source": "The following is an overview of the events of 1933 in motorsport including the major racing events, motorsport venues that were opened and closed during a year, championships and non-championship events that were established and disestablished in a year, and births and deaths of racing drivers and other motorsport people.", "target": "overview of the events of 1933 in motorsport", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q197183", "label": "Zhang Fei", "source": "Zhang Fei (pronunciation ) (died July or August 221 AD), courtesy name Yide, was a military general serving under the warlord Liu Bei in the late Eastern Han dynasty and early Three Kingdoms period of China. Zhang Fei and Guan Yu, who were among the earliest to join Liu Bei, shared a brotherly relationship with their lord and accompanied him on most of his early exploits. Zhang Fei fought in various battles on Liu Bei's side, including the Red Cliffs campaign (208–209), takeover of Yi Province (212–214), and Hanzhong Campaign (217–218). He was assassinated by his subordinates in 221 after serving for only a few months in the state of Shu Han, which was founded by Liu Bei earlier that year.Zhang Fei is one of the major characters in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms, which dramatises and romanticises the events before and during the Three Kingdoms period. In the novel, Zhang Fei became sworn brothers with Liu Bei and Guan Yu in the fictional Oath of the Peach Garden at the start of the novel and remained faithful to their oath until his death.", "target": "Chinese military general (died 221)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12749948", "label": "Vojislav Jovanović Marambo", "source": "Vojislav M. Jovanović Marambo (October 12, 1884 - June 20, 1968) was a Serbian drama critic, playwright, historian, university professor, diplomat and research scholar. He first made a name for himself as a drama critic, playwright, and historian of literature with a particular emphasis on the study of folklore, then as a translator, journalist, bibliographer, archivist, diplomat, and above all a passionate collector of books and bibliophile. He is often ranked as one of the great playwrights in the tradition of European naturalism and a proponent of the kitchen sink drama, long before it became a trend in 1950.", "target": "serbian writer (1884-1968)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18518938", "label": "Dictyaster", "source": "Dictyaster is a small genus of starfish in the family Echinasteridae in the order Spinulosida.", "target": "genus of echinoderms", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5587552", "label": "Gostkowo, Ostrów Mazowiecka County", "source": "Gostkowo [ɡɔstˈkɔvɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szulborze Wielkie, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) north-east of Szulborze Wielkie, 24 km (15 mi) east of Ostrów Mazowiecka, and 106 km (66 mi) north-east of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58924374", "label": "Colasposoma dauricum", "source": "Colasposoma dauricum is a species of leaf beetle from eastern Asia. It was first described by Carl Gustaf Mannerheim in 1849. It is known as a pest of sweet potatoes.", "target": "species of leaf beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2210175", "label": "United Nations Security Council Resolution 1936", "source": "United Nations Security Council Resolution 1936, adopted unanimously on August 5, 2010, after recalling all previous resolutions on the situation in Iraq, including resolutions 1500 (2003), 1546 (2004), 1557 (2004), 1619 (2005), 1700 (2006), 1770 (2007), 1830 (2008) and 1883 (2009), the Council extended the mandate of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq (UNAMI) for a further period of 12 months, until July 31, 2011.The resolution was sponsored by Japan, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States.", "target": "United Nations Security Council resolution", "baseline_candidates": ["United Nations Security Council resolution"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3431929", "label": "Right Time", "source": "Right Time is the 1976 studio album debut of influential reggae band the Mighty Diamonds. The album, released by Virgin Records after they signed the Mighty Diamonds following a search for talent in Jamaica, is critically regarded as a reggae classic, a landmark in the roots reggae subgenre. Several of the album's socially conscious songs were hits in the band's native Jamaica, with a few becoming successful in the UK underground. Influential and sometimes unconventional, the album helped secure the success of recording studio Channel One Studios, and rhythm team Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare.", "target": "album by Mighty Diamonds", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1530440", "label": "K. C. Wu", "source": "K. C. Wu (Chinese: 吳國楨) (October 21, 1903 – June 6, 1984) was a Chinese political figure and historian. Among other offices, he served as Mayor of Shanghai and as Chairman of the Taiwan Provincial Government.", "target": "Chinese politician and historian (1903-1984)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4134089", "label": "Vladimir Gasparyan", "source": "Vladimir \"Vova\" Sergeyi Gasparyan (Armenian: Վլադիմիր Սերգեյի Գասպարյան, Born September 9, 1958) is a former Chief of the Republic of Armenia's police from November 1, 2011 till his dismissal on May 10, 2018.", "target": "Armenian police chief", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18162969", "label": "Luca Antonio Bistega", "source": "Luca Antonio Bistega or Luca Bestega (21 October 1672 - 8 June 1732) was an Italian painter of quadratura, active mainly in Bologna, Italy.", "target": "Italian painter (1672-1732)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2330300", "label": "1984 NBA All-Star Game", "source": "The 34th National Basketball Association All-Star Game was played on January 29, 1984, at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver. The East All-Stars defeated the West All-Stars. 154–145. Isiah Thomas of the Detroit Pistons was named the MVP of the game. As of 2021, this is the most recent NBA All-Star Game played during the month of January.", "target": "exhibition basketball game", "baseline_candidates": ["NBA All-Star Game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7003759", "label": "Nevasa Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Nevasa Assembly constituency is one of the 288 Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) constituencies of Maharashtra state in Western India. 2009 MLA Shankarrao Gadakh.", "target": "constituency of the Maharashtra legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38223395", "label": "Kellan Gordon", "source": "Kellan Gordon (born 25 December 1997) is an English professional footballer who plays as a defender for Mansfield Town.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5281537", "label": "Disco Inferno", "source": "Disco Inferno is a 1970s jukebox musical written by Jai Sepple. Set in the East End of London in 1976, the show features songs from the era and is loosely based on the story of Faust.", "target": "modern 70s style musical", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1643856", "label": "Niphargus", "source": "Niphargus is by far the largest genus of its family, the Niphargidae, and the largest of all freshwater amphipod genera.Usually, these animals inhabit caves or groundwater. They occur in western Eurasia, in regions that were not covered by the Pleistocene ice sheets. They are found throughout most of Europe with the notable exception of the Nordics and they are also largely missing from Iberia. The genus extends into Asia as far as the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. In their main range – the central Mediterranean region through Central and Eastern Europe to the Ukraine – they are among the most significant organisms inhabiting the groundwater. In the Dinaric Alps alone there are at least 45 species. There are also six species in the British Isles (the northernmost Niphargus): N. aquilex, N. fontanus, N. glenniei and N. kochianus of Great Britain, and N. irlandicus and N. wexfordensis of Ireland. Although the individual species often have very small ranges and only live at a narrow water temperature range, the genus includes both species of cold and relatively warm places, taken to the extreme in N. thermalis from thermal waters.Niphargus are extremely variable in their appearance (more so than even some amphipod families), but are whitish and completely lack eyes. They are fairly small, ranging from about 2 mm (0.08 in) in length in the smallest species to about 35 mm (1.4 in) in the largest. At least some of the species are highly resistant to starvation and able to survive for more than 200 days without food.", "target": "genus of crustaceans", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1065381", "label": "Tinderbox", "source": "Tinderbox is the seventh studio album by English rock band Siouxsie and the Banshees. It was released on 21 April 1986 by Wonderland and Polydor Records in the United Kingdom and by Geffen Records in the United States. It was the band's first full-length effort recorded with then-new guitarist John Valentine Carruthers; Carruthers had previously only added a few parts on the 1984 EP The Thorn. The first recording sessions for the album took place at Hansa by the Wall in Berlin in May 1985. Two songs were released as singles between late 1985 and early 1986, \"Cities in Dust\" and \"Candyman\". Tinderbox peaked at number 13 on the UK Albums Chart and at number 88 on the US Billboard 200.PopMatters included it on their list of the \"12 essential alternative rock albums from the 1980s\", and alternative rock artists including Billy Howerdel of A Perfect Circle, Jean-Benoît Dunckel of Air, Flea of Red Hot Chili Peppers and Rachel Goswell of Slowdive, have cited it as an inspiration. To celebrate the 35th anniversary of Tinderbox, a burgundy color vinyl edition was released in October 2021.", "target": "album by Siouxsie and the Banshees", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4718648", "label": "Alexander Cowie", "source": "Alexander Gordon Cowie (27 February 1889 – 7 April 1916) was an English first-class cricketer, soldier and poet. Cowie was educated at Charterhouse School and Caius College, Cambridge. A tall, strongly built right-arm fast bowler who could bowl \"alarmingly fast\", he made his first-class debut for Cambridge University in 1910 and was awarded his blue. He made nine first-class appearances for Cambridge University in the 1910 and 1911 seasons, taking 43 wickets at an average of 23.25. His best figures were 6 for 87 off 18.5 overs against Sussex in his second match; five of his victims were bowled. In his next match, immediately afterwards, he took 5 for 64 and 4 for 89 (match figures of 37.4–7–153–9) to lead Cambridge to a nine-wicket victory over Yorkshire. Later in 1910 he played two matches for Hampshire in the County Championship, taking 5 for 94 in Lancashire's first innings in the second match. He lost form in 1911. With the onset of the First World War Cowie was commissioned in the British Army. He became a captain in the Seaforth Highlanders. He was wounded in 1915, but returned to active duty. He died on 7 April 1916 after being fatally wounded while serving in Mesopotamia. A short poem of his, titled \"Lines by Captain Alexander Gordon Cowie, Seaforth Highlanders\", appeared after his death in The Lotus Magazine and has since been anthologized in books of war poetry.", "target": "English cricketer (1889-1916)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1835330", "label": "The Hoodlum", "source": "The Hoodlum is a 1951 American film noir crime film directed by Max Nosseck and starring Lawrence Tierney, Allene Roberts, Marjorie Riordan and Lisa Golm.", "target": "1951 film by Max Nosseck", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95628086", "label": "Bruno Lenz", "source": "Bruno Lenz (8 November 1911 – 16 June 2006) was a German painter and violinist. He was assistant concertmaster for 20 years of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.", "target": "German painter, classical violinist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1176110", "label": "David Petrasek", "source": "David Petrasek (born February 1, 1976) is a Swedish former professional ice hockey defenceman who last played with HV71 in the Swedish Elitserien.", "target": "Swedish ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7996840", "label": "Whittemore Glen State Park", "source": "Whittemore Glen State Park is an undeveloped public recreation and wilderness area for hiking and horseback riding covering 242 acres (98 ha) mostly within the town of Naugatuck, Connecticut. Sitting outside the southwestern edge of the city of Waterbury, the state park is the eastern terminus of the Larkin State Park Trail. It entered the roles as Connecticut's forty-eighth state park in the 1945–46 edition of the Connecticut Register and Manual. The park is managed by the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.", "target": "State park in New Haven County, Connecticut", "baseline_candidates": ["Connecticut state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49286343", "label": "Lütetsburg", "source": "Lütetsburg (East Frisian Low Saxon: Lütsbörg) is a municipality in the district of Aurich, in Lower Saxony, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6373421", "label": "Karslı", "source": "Karslı is a village in the District of Seyhan, Adana Province, Turkey.", "target": "village in Adana Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24665018", "label": "Surfleet", "source": "Surfleet is a small village and civil parish in the South Holland district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated on the B1356 road, 3 miles (4.8 km) north of Spalding, in the Lincolnshire fens. The River Glen runs through the village. The village has a population of 1,301 people, increasing to 1,338 at the 2011 census, many of whom commute to regional population centres such as Spalding, Boston and Peterborough.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10863332", "label": "Okabe Domain", "source": "Okabe Domain (岡部藩, Okabe-han) was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan, located in Musashi Province (modern-day Saitama Prefecture), Japan. It was centered on Okabe jin'ya in what is now part of the city of Fukaya, Saitama.", "target": "Japanese historical estate", "baseline_candidates": ["han system"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19893613", "label": "La Promenade", "source": "La Promenade is an oil on canvas, early Impressionist painting by the French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir, created in 1870. The work depicts a young couple on an excursion outside of the city, walking on a path through a woodland. Influenced by the rococo revival style during the Second Empire, Renoir's La Promenade reflects the older style and themes of eighteenth-century artists like Jean-Honoré Fragonard and Jean-Antoine Watteau. The work also shows the influence of Claude Monet on Renoir's new approach to painting.", "target": "painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q165971", "label": "Sinchi Roca", "source": "Sinchi Roca, Sinchi Rocca, Cinchi Roca (in Hispanicized spellings), Sinchi Ruq'a or Sinchi Ruq'a Inka (Quechua for \"valorous generous Inca\") was the second Sapa Inca of the Kingdom of Cusco (beginning around 1230 CE, though as early as 1105 CE according to some) and a member of the Hurin dynasty (first dynasty).", "target": "second Sapa Inca of the Kingdom of Cusco", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q952539", "label": "Curtis Martin", "source": "Curtis James Martin Jr. (born May 1, 1973) is a former American football running back who spent the majority of his career with the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). He played his first three seasons with the New England Patriots, who selected him in the third round of the 1995 NFL Draft. Martin joined the Jets in 1998, where he spent nine seasons before retiring after the 2006 season. A five-time Pro Bowl selection and a first-team All-Pro, Martin is sixth in NFL rushing yards. He was inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2012.", "target": "American football running back", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61890188", "label": "William Manly King", "source": "William Manly King (May 19, 1886 – 1961) was an architect in the United States. He is known for the buildings he designed in Florida, especially West Palm Beach. Several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. King was born in Macon, Mississippi. His family moved to Atlanta and he attended University School for Boys in Stone Mountain, Georgia. He graduated from Georgia Tech with a degree in architecture in 1908.", "target": "American architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15486582", "label": "Ivan Hinderaker", "source": "Ivan Henrik Hinderaker (29 April 1916 – 23 September 2007) was an American educator and academic administrator. He served as the second chancellor of the University of California, Riverside from 1964 to 1979. At the time, Hinderaker was the longest-serving chancellor of any University of California campus (although his record was later surpassed by UCLA's Charles E. Young). Hinderaker Hall at UC Riverside was named in his honor.", "target": "American academic administrator (1916-2007)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10619478", "label": "Parasipyloidea", "source": "Parasipyloidea is a genus of phasmids belonging to the family Lonchodidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76238314", "label": "George Stone", "source": "George Stone (1708 – 19 December 1764) was the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh (Primate of All Ireland) from 1747 to his death.", "target": "Anglican archbishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3215398", "label": "Lac de Castet", "source": "Lac de Castet is a lake in Pyrénées, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France. At an elevation of 423 m, its surface area is 0.4 km².", "target": "lake in France", "baseline_candidates": ["reservoir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2392467", "label": "Soledad, El Paraíso", "source": "Soledad (Spanish pronunciation: [soleˈðað]) is a municipality in the Honduran department of El Paraíso.", "target": "Honduras", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7564128", "label": "Souk-el-Khemis Airfield", "source": "Souk-el-Khemis Airfield is an abandoned World War II military airfield in Tunisia, located approximately 3 km southeast of Bou Salem, and 110 km west-southwest of Tunis. It was a temporary airfield built by the US Army Corps of Engineers, used by the United States Army Air Force Twelfth Air Force and by the Royal Air Force during the North African Campaign. Use by US forces included the 325th Fighter Group during 3–19 June 1943, flying P-40 Warhawks. Use by the RAF was primarily in the first 3 weeks of May 1943, during which time No.255 Squadron maintained a detachment there. Tracing such use can be problematic, because the RAF referred to the airfield only by a codename, which was \"Paddington\".After the 325th moved east, the airfield was dismantled and abandoned. Today, there is little evidence of its existence other than the outlines of the perimeter track being used for agricultural roads.", "target": "abandoned World War II military airfield in Tunisia", "baseline_candidates": ["aerodrome"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96079091", "label": "Christian Viet", "source": "Christian Viet (born 27 March 1999) is a German footballer who plays as a defender or winger for Jahn Regensburg.", "target": "German association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21028303", "label": "Wright Haskell Langham", "source": "Wright Haskell Langham (21 May 1911 – 19 May 1972) was an internationally renowned expert in the fields of plutonium exposure, aerospace and aviation medicine, Eniwetok nuclear tests, the Palomares and Greenland nuclear accidents. Sometimes Langham was referred to as Mr. Plutonium.", "target": "expert in the fields of plutonium exposure, aerospace and aviation medicine, Mr. Plutonium", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12636728", "label": "three-age system", "source": "The three-age system is the periodization of human pre-history (with some overlap into the historical periods in a few regions) into three time-periods: the Stone Age, the Bronze Age, and the Iron Age; although the concept may also refer to other tripartite divisions of historic time-periods. In history, archaeology and physical anthropology, the three-age system is a methodological concept adopted during the 19th century according to which artefacts and events of late prehistory and early history could be broadly ordered into a recognizable chronology. C. J. Thomsen (1788-1865), director of the Royal Museum of Nordic Antiquities in Copenhagen (in office: 1825-1865), initially developed this categorization in the period 1816 to 1825 as a result of classifying the museum's collections chronologically - there resulted broad sequences with artefacts made successively of stone, bronze, and iron. The system appealed to British researchers working in the science of ethnology – they adopted it to establish race sequences for Britain's past based on cranial types. Although the craniological ethnology that formed its first scholarly context holds no modern scientific value, the relative chronology of the Stone Age, the Bronze Age and the Iron Age remains in use in a general public context, and the three-ages concept underpins prehistoric chronology for Europe, the Mediterranean world and the Near East.The structure reflects the cultural and historical background of Mediterranean Europe and the Middle East. It soon underwent further subdivisions, including the 1865 partitioning of the Stone Age into Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic periods by John Lubbock. The schema, however, has little or.", "target": "system for categorizing history", "baseline_candidates": ["classification system"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37214769", "label": "Miss Europe 1982", "source": "Miss Europe 1982 was the 42nd edition of the Miss Europe pageant and the 31st edition under the Mondial Events Organization. It was held in Istanbul, Turkey on June 11, 1982. Nazlı Deniz Kuruoğlu of Turkey, was crowned Miss Europe 1982 by out going titleholder Anne Mette Larsen of Denmark.", "target": "beauty contest", "baseline_candidates": ["beauty pageant edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5696273", "label": "Hechtia galeottii", "source": "Hechtia galeottii is a species of plant in the genus Hechtia. This species is endemic to Mexico.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17625830", "label": "Donald Alexander MacKinnon", "source": "Donald Alexander MacKinnon (22 February 1863 – 20 April 1928) was a Canadian teacher, lawyer, politician, author, and the eighth Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island from 1904 to 1910. Born in Uigg, Prince Edward Island, the son of William and Catherine Nicholson Mackinnon, MacKinnon attended Uigg grammar school and started teaching when he was 14. He later received a first-class teaching licence from the Prince of Wales College in Charlottetown. In 1882, he started articling with the Charlottetown barrister Malcolm McLeod. From 1885 to 1887, he attended Dalhousie Law School where he received a Bachelor of Laws degree. He was called to the Bar an attorney in 1887 and a barrister in 1888. He was created a Queen's Counsel in 1899. He opened a practice in Georgetown, Prince Edward Island in 1887 where he remained until moving to Charlottetown in 1897. In 1900, he became president of the Law Society of Prince Edward Island. From 1893 to 1900, he was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island for the electoral district of 4th Kings. In 1899, he was chosen as attorney general in the cabinet of Donald Farquharson; however, as a result of the appointment, he was required to run for reelection and he was defeated. He was elected to the House of Commons of Canada as the Liberal candidate for the electoral district of East Queen's in the 1900 federal election. In 1901, the election was declared void and MacKinnon was re-elected in the resulting 1901 by-election. In 1904, he was.", "target": "Canadian politician (1863-1928)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5842964", "label": "Taheriabad", "source": "Taheriabad (Persian: طاهري آباد, also Romanized as Ţāherīābād) is a village in Shirvan Rural District, in the Central District of Borujerd County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 224, in 47 families.", "target": "village in Lorestan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12211325", "label": "Darchmezzine", "source": "Darchmezzine, Dar Chmizzine, (Arabic: دارشمزين) is a Lebanese local authority which is located in Koura District, an administrative division of North Lebanon Governorate. The municipality is member of the Federation of Koura Municipalities.", "target": "human settlement in Lebanon", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60817976", "label": "Eneicat Cycling Team", "source": "Eneicat–RBH Global–Martín Villa is a professional cycling team which competes in elite road bicycle racing events such as the UCI Women's World Tour. The team was established in 2018, registering with the UCI for the 2019 season.", "target": "road bicycle racing", "baseline_candidates": ["UCI Women's Team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16400383", "label": "Vanoush Khanamerian", "source": "Vanoush Gerasimich Khanamirian (Armenian: Վանուշ Խանամիրյան, November 5, 1927 – October 5, 2011) was an Armenian ballet, traditional and folkloric dance choreographer.", "target": "Armenian ballet dancer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7395517", "label": "Saab B engine", "source": "The Saab B engine is an inline four-cylinder car petrol engine developed by Saab Automobile. A redesign of the Triumph slant-four engine, the B engine displaced 2.0 L and first appeared in 1972. The B engine was used in the Saab 99 and 900 models. Saab began to phase the engine out in 1981.", "target": "motor vehicle engine", "baseline_candidates": ["engine model", "reciprocating engine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5064338", "label": "Cerithiopsis apicina", "source": "Cerithiopsis apicina is a species of very small sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Cerithiopsidae. This species was described by William Healy Dall in 1927.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q44507389", "label": "Boa Me", "source": "\"Boa Me\" is a single by English singer-rapper Fuse ODG, featuring vocals from Ed Sheeran and Mugeez. The song was released in the United Kingdom as a digital download on 10 November 2017. The song peaked at number 52 on the UK Singles Chart.", "target": "single by Fuse ODG", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48458371", "label": "Into the Woods", "source": "\"Into the Woods\" is the sixth episode of the third season of the American television police sitcom series Brooklyn Nine-Nine. It is the 51st overall episode of the series and is written by Andrew Guest and directed by Linda Mendoza. It aired on Fox in the United States on November 8, 2015. The show revolves around the fictitious 99th precinct of the New York Police Department in Brooklyn and the officers and detectives that work in the precinct. In the episode, Jake and Charles take Terry on a camping trip to help him relieve stress. Amy enlists the help of Gina in trying to convince the NYPD to purchase a product she invented as a child. Meanwhile, Holt tries to help Rosa break up with Marcus. The episode was seen by an estimated 2.65 million household viewers and gained a 1.2/3 ratings share among adults aged 18–49, according to Nielsen Media Research. The episode received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised Beatriz's performance in the episode, Lohank's guest appearance, and the woods section.", "target": "episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S3 E6)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4494585", "label": "Rhagastis olivacea", "source": "Rhagastis olivacea, the olive mottled hawkmoth, is a moth of the family Sphingidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7561954", "label": "Sonneries de la Rose+Croix", "source": "Trois sonneries de la Rose+Croix (\"Three Sonneries of the Rose+Cross\") is a piano composition by Erik Satie, first published in 1892, while he was composer and chapel-master of the Rosicrucian \"Ordre de la Rose-Croix Catholique, du Temple et du Graal\", led by Sâr Joséphin Péladan. Other ways of transcribing the title of this work include Sonneries de la Rose + Croix, Trois sonneries de la Rose-Croix and Sonneries de la Rose†Croix. The composition has three movements, totalling about 11 minutes execution time: Air de l'Ordre (\"Air of the Order\") Air du Grand Maître (\"Air of the Grand-Master\", i.e. Sâr Péladan) Air du Grand Prieur (\"Air of the Grand-Prior\", i.e. Count Antoine de La Rochefoucauld)A composition dated 20 January 1891, having only Modéré (Moderato) marked on the score, is generally known as Première pensée Rose+Croix, after its first publication in 1968. The three sections are written with no bar lines, implying a free metric structure. Each piece is written in an elegant melody/accompaniment chorale style, exhibiting an interplay of two themes in austere but cleverly designed juxtaposition, with repetition and occasional departure from the initial exposition. In 1988, Alan Gillmor of Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, published his Erik Satie. Here was revealed his finding that, in all three movements, the ratios of beat counts of these complementary sections within all three pieces fell close enough to the Golden ratio as to evade mistaking for anything but design intent by the composer. Dr. Gillmor was led to explore this by research which suggested that, around the time of.", "target": "composition by Erik Satie", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4822147", "label": "Aurat", "source": "Aurat (Woman) is a 1953 Hindi movie produced by Munshiram Varma and directed by [[[Bhagwan Das Varma]]. The film stars Prem Nath, Bina Rai and Purnima.", "target": "1953 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65937273", "label": "Sampath Tennakoon", "source": "Sampath Tennakoon (20 June 1959 – 3 December 2021: සම්පත් තෙන්නකෝන් [Sinhala]), was an actor in Sri Lankan cinema, theater and television.", "target": "Sri Lankan actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2156896", "label": "Myrichthys colubrinus", "source": "Myrichthys colubrinus, the banded snake eel, ringed snake eel or harlequin snake eel, is a snake eel from the Indo-Pacific. It occasionally makes its way into the aquarium trade. It grows to a size of 97 cm (38 in) in length.The ringed snake eel resembles the venomous sea snake, Laticauda colubrina which is a form of Batesian mimicry. It also adjusts its behaviour to swim freely during the day, whereas other snake eels tend to stay hidden and roam at night. In 2021, it was first recorded in Hawaii.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2666459", "label": "Guruvayur Temple", "source": "Guruvayur Temple is a Hindu temple dedicated to the Lord Guruvayurappan (four-armed form of the Lord Vishnu),Under the Administration of Guruvayur Devaswom, located in the town of Guruvayur in Kerala, India. It is one of the most important places of worship for Hindus in Kerala and Tamilnadu and is often referred to as Bhuloka Vaikunta (Holy Abode of Vishnu on Earth).The presiding deity of the Guruvayur Temple is Guruvayurappan (Vishnu, worshipped in the form of his avatar Krishna). The central icon is a four-armed standing Vishnu carrying the conch Panchajanya, the discus Sudarshana Chakra, the mace Kaumodaki, and a lotus with a Holy basil garland. This image represents the majestic form of Vishnu as revealed to Krishna's parents Vasudeva and Devaki around the time of Krishna's birth. Worship proceeds according to routines laid down by Adi Shankara and later written formally in the Tantric way, the inter-religious spiritual movement that arose in medieval India, by Chennas Narayanan Nambudiri (born in 1427). The Chennas Nambudiris are the hereditary tantris (high priest) of the Guruvayur Temple.The temple is managed by Guruvayur Devaswom under the control of the Government of Kerala. The main festivals of this temple are the 10-day festival in the Malayalam month of Kumbham starting with flag hoisting on Pooyam star, Shri Krishna Janmashtami (Birthday of Lord Krishna) in the month of Chingam, Ekadasi (11th day) in the shukla paksha (bright fortnight) in the month of Vrischikam, popularly called as Guruvayur Ekadasi and Vishu on the first day of the month of Medam, once a harvest.", "target": "Hindu temple of lord Krishna in the town of Guruvayur, Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["Hindu temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54953724", "label": "2017–18 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball team", "source": "The 2017–18 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball team represents Villanova University in the 2017–18 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by fortieth year head coach Harry Perretta, play their games at Jake Nevin Field House due to renovations at The Pavilion and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 23–9, 12–6 in Big East play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big East Women's Tournament to Georgetown. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated South Dakota State in the first round before losing to Notre Dame in the second round.", "target": "Intercollegiate basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7399290", "label": "Sagitario", "source": "Sagitario (English Sagittarius) is the 2nd studio album by Mexican pop singer Ana Gabriel. It was released on 1986. Once again, she participated in the OTI Festival with the song A tu Lado (By your side) which she achieved the 5th place.", "target": "album by Ana Gabriel", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48977155", "label": "Flutter Away", "source": "Flutter Away (foaled 23 February 1985) was an Irish Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. She showed her best form as a two-year-old in 1987 when she won three of her five races including the Railway Stakes and the Moyglare Stud Stakes and was rated the best filly of her generation in Ireland. She made no impact in two races as a three-year-old and was retired from racing at the end of the year. She was then exported to become a broodmare in Japan where she produced four winners.", "target": "Irish-bred Thoroughbred racehorse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5980246", "label": "iWireless", "source": "Iowa Wireless Services LLC, doing business as iWireless, was a mobile network operator founded in 1997, not related to Kroger's service. Headquartered in Urbandale, Iowa, iWireless was a partnership between T-Mobile US, Inc. and Iowa Network Services Inc. iWireless owned licenses to operate GSM cellular networks in the PCS-1900 and AWS-1700 radio frequency bands covering Iowa, southwestern Wisconsin and northwestern Illinois. iWireless had over 250 full-service company stores and authorized dealers across Iowa, western Illinois, and eastern Nebraska. iWireless was acquired in full by T-Mobile and on October 1, 2018, the service was shut down as customers were encouraged to migrate to T-Mobile plans.", "target": "US American telecommunications company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55137030", "label": "Yorkshire Universities Air Squadron", "source": "The Yorkshire Universities Air Squadron (more commonly known as YUAS) is a Royal Air Force flying training unit that currently operates out of RAF Leeming in North Yorkshire, England. One of fourteen University Air Squadrons, the unit traditionally recruits students from universities across the Yorkshire and Humber region and provides bursaries for those who wish to pursue a career in the Royal Air Force.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7297286", "label": "Ray C. Osborne", "source": "Raymond Claiborne Osborne (September 7, 1933 – March 3, 2011), was a Florida Republican Party politician who served as the first Lieutenant Governor of Florida under the state constitution of 1968 and the state's first lieutenant governor since 1889. Appointed by Republican Governor Claude R. Kirk, Jr., Osborne was sworn in on January 7, 1969, for a term that lasted two years.In 1970, while Kirk sought re-election as governor, Osborne planned to run for the United States Senate in the Republican primary election against U.S. Representative William C. Cramer of St. Petersburg, whose nomination Kirk personally opposed. However, Osborne withdrew from the race when Judge G. Harrold Carswell of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, who had been repudiated by the U.S. Senate for a seat on the Supreme Court, entered the race for senator. Carswell hoped to confront the senators who blocked his appointment. Ultimately, Cramer was nominated for the Senate but lost the general election to the Democrat Lawton Chiles of Lakeland. Years later, Kirk said that he \"should have stuck with Osborne\" and not encouraged Carswell to run. Kirk also said that he had not \"created\" Carswell's candidacy, as many in the media had then depicted.Born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Osborne graduated from North Carolina State University in 1955. He then served in the United States Army from 1955 to 1957. Osborne graduated from the University of North Carolina School of Law in 1961. Osborne moved with his wife to St. Petersburg, Florida. From 1964 to 1968, Osborne served.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12953236", "label": "Tunjung", "source": "Tunjung, or Tunjung Dayak, is an Austronesian language of Borneo.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "Mahakam", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q143701", "label": "National road 1", "source": "National road 1 (Polish: Droga krajowa nr 1) is a route in the Polish national road network. The highway connects the northern and southern regions of Poland, running from Gdańsk to Zwardoń at the Slovak border, traversing the Pomeranian, Kuyavian-Pomeranian, Łódź and Silesian voivodeships. It has four bridges over the Vistula river. Most of the national road 1 is a component of European highway E75. From Gdańsk to Piotrków Trybunalski, the road has a motorway standard and is marked as A1 motorway. From Piotrków Trybunalski to Katowice, it is part of the Gierkówka route - a dual carriageway road constructed in the 1970s not up to motorway standard, marked as National road 1. As of 2019, the reconstruction of its northern half (from Tuszyn to Częstochowa) into A1 motorway has started, forcing closure of one carriageway and diverting the whole traffic to the second carriageway for the time of reconstruction. From Podwarpie near Katowice to Zwardoń the road partially has an expressway standard marked as S1 (the other parts are marked as National road 1).", "target": "trunk highway in Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["national road in Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4753154", "label": "Ancylolomia inornata", "source": "Ancylolomia inornata is a species of moth in the family Crambidae described by Otto Staudinger in 1870. It is found in Spain, Portugal and Italy, North Africa (including Morocco, Algeria, Libya and Tunisia) and Pakistan.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4053425", "label": "YQM-94 B-Gull", "source": "The Boeing YQM-94 B-Gull (also called Compass Cope B) was a developmental aerial reconnaissance drone developed by Boeing. It could take off and land from a runway like a manned aircraft, and operate at high altitudes for up to 24 hours to perform aerial surveillance, communications relay, or atmospheric sampling.", "target": "aerial reconnaissance drone prototype by Boeing", "baseline_candidates": ["unmanned aerial vehicle", "aircraft model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63198806", "label": "Punu", "source": "Punu (Chinese: 蒲奴) was a chanyu of the Xiongnu Empire. Punu came to power in 46 AD when his brother Wudadihou died. At the time the Xiongnu were suffering experiencing a severe drought in their territory as well as raids from the Wuhuan. Punu's uncle Sutuhu offered to act as an agent to ask for aid from the Han dynasty. When Punu's officers heard of this they recommended that Sutuhu be arrested and executed. Sutuhu received warning of their advice to Punu and in retaliation gathered some 50,000 men to attack the officers. Afterwards, Sutuhu moved south to the Ordos region. In the winter of 48/49 AD, Sutuhu gained an alliance with the Han, and proclaimed himself Bi Chanyu.In 49 AD, Bi sent his brother Mo to attack Punu. They captured Punu's younger brother Aojian and returned with 10,000 captives as well as thousands of livestock. Two of Punu's chiefs also defected to join Bi. Punu was forced to relocate north across the Gobi Desert.Punu's brother escaped from Bi but decided to set himself up as another chanyu. He was defeated by Punu within a few months.In 51 AD, Punu sent envoys to negotiate with the Han in Wuwei Commandery, but they were turned back. Punu sent envoys again in 52 and 55 AD to no avail. At the same time Punu subjugated the oasis states of the Western Regions and forced them to send tribute to the Xiongnu court.In 62 AD, the Northern Xiongnu made a major raid but was repelled.In 73 AD, Dou Gu.", "target": "chanyu of the Xiongnu Empire", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19799246", "label": "Nathan Parsons", "source": "Nathan Dean Parsons (born 16 June 1988) is an Australian-born American actor, known for his work in daytime television on the ABC daytime soap opera General Hospital as the character of Ethan Lovett. He also had roles on primetime television shows as vampire James Kent on the seventh and final season of the HBO drama series True Blood, and the role of exiled werewolf Jackson Kenner on The CW drama series The Originals. Recently, he has been on Once Upon a Time as Hansel/Jack/Nick Branson and is currently portraying the lead of Max Evans in The CW series Roswell, New Mexico.", "target": "Australian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7927049", "label": "Victoria Square", "source": "Victoria Square is an unincorporated community in Markham, Ontario, Canada. The community was formed in the early nineteenth century.", "target": "small hamlet in Unionville, Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5521974", "label": "Garba Tula", "source": "Garba Tula (also spelled Garbatulla) is a town in Isiolo County, Northern Kenya. The town has an urban population of about 5,500 [1]. In 2007 it was up-graded to a District status. But with the new administrative sub-divisions of Kenya, Garba Tula is a sub-county of Isiolo County, as well as an administrative ward.The First Settlement of Indians was back in 1900. In the 1940s Garba Tulla was a very small village and only had three shops on the main road. Mr. Joseph Onyango became the first District Commissioner on 17 November 2007. The town has been known for its famous National School run by NCCK. Garba Tula is located 120 km East of Isiolo town. The urban center of Mado Gashi is located about 100 km North East of Garba Tula. It is about 90 km to Maua town via Kinna, up to which the road is an all-weather one, and then tarmac which starts right at the gates of Meru National Park which is about 60 km away from Garba Tula town and about 14 km from Kinna town. The locals of the town are the Boran people of mostly Muslim background.", "target": "town in Isiolo County, Kenya", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5729185", "label": "Henry Thynne", "source": "Henry Thynne (8 February 1675 – 20 December 1708) was an English Tory politician who sat in the English and British House of Commons from 1701 to 1708.", "target": "British politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q90028428", "label": "Pascuala García Martínez", "source": "Pascuala García Martínez is a Spanish physicist and Professor of Optics at the University of Valencia, where her research specialises in developing new optical and digital techniques for pattern recognition and imaging applications. She is a Fellow of the International Society for Optics and Photonics (SPIE).", "target": "Spanish physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21153043", "label": "Tobobé", "source": "Tobobé is a corregimiento in Ngäbe-Buglé Comarca in the Republic of Panama.", "target": "corregimiento in Ngäbe-Buglé Comarca, Panama", "baseline_candidates": ["corregimiento", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2924253", "label": "Breandán Breathnach", "source": "Breandán Breathnach (1 April 1912 – 6 November 1985) was an Irish music collector and uilleann piper. In addition to collecting Irish music, he is known for his Ceol Rince na hÉireann (Dance Music of Ireland) series.", "target": "Irish uilleann piper and music collector (1912-1985)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65949877", "label": "Secrets of the Forbidden Spinjitzu", "source": "Secrets of the Forbidden Spinjitzu is the eleventh season of the computer-animated Ninjago television series (titled Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu before the eleventh season). The series was created by Michael Hegner and Tommy Andreasen. The season aired from 22 June 2019 to 1 February 2020, following the tenth season titled March of the Oni. It is succeeded by the twelfth season titled Prime Empire. The eleventh season marked a significant change in the format of the show. From the eleventh season onwards, the series was animated by WildBrain Studios in Canada and the \"Masters of Spinjitzu\" subtitle was dropped. The runtime for each episode also changed from 22 minutes to 11 minutes. The eleventh season also marked the use of new 2D anime-style segments that were included to add new creativity to the show.Secrets of the Forbidden Spinjitzu is split into two parts titled The Fire Chapter and The Ice Chapter, with each chapter consisting of 15 episodes. Each half follows a separate plot, which combine to form an entire story arc. The Fire Chapter focuses on the threat of a new antagonist named Aspheera and her army of Pyro Vipers. The season introduces a new power called \"Forbidden Spinjitzu\" which is wielded by both Aspheera and the main ninja characters. Secrets of the Forbidden Spinjitzu also introduces the character Clutch Powers into the Ninjago universe, which was a pre-existing Lego character from the 2010 animated film Lego: The Adventures of Clutch Powers. The first half of the season ends in a cliffhanger, in which the.", "target": "eleventh season of Lego Ninjago TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["podcast series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4805546", "label": "Ashley Paris", "source": "Ashley Paris (born September 21, 1987) is an American basketball player. She is the twin sister of former WNBA center Courtney Paris, who last played for the Seattle Storm and is currently an assistant coach at the University of Oklahoma. She has been nationally recognized for her basketball achievements at the University of Oklahoma. She was selected on April 9, 2009 with 22nd overall pick in the 2009 WNBA Draft by the Los Angeles Sparks.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q149058", "label": "Cyprichromini", "source": "Cyprichromini is a tribe of African cichlids, containing seven species in two genera: Cyprichromis and Paracyprichromis. Most species are endemic to Lake Tanganyika; only C. microlepidotus has also been seen in eastern Tanzania. The members of this tribe are small elongated fish found in schools in open waters where they feed on plankton. They are mouthbrooders.", "target": "tribe of African cichlids", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10709267", "label": "Unaspis citri", "source": "Unaspis citri, known generally as citrus snow scale, is a species of armored scale insect in the family Diaspididae. Other common names include the orange chionaspi, orange snow scale, white louse scale, and white snow scale.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49348796", "label": "Duninowo", "source": "Duninowo [duniˈnɔvɔ] (German Dünnow) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ustka, within Słupsk County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) south of Ustka, 16 km (10 mi) north-west of Słupsk, and 120 km (75 mi) west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 630.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q180021", "label": "Christoph Springer", "source": "Christoph Springer (born 30 October 1985 in Oberndorf am Neckar) is a German former cyclist.", "target": "German bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q539035", "label": "Mazda Takeri Concept", "source": "The Mazda Takeri was a concept car made by Mazda. It was a preview to the next generation Mazda6. It was unveiled in 2011 at the Tokyo Motor Show.", "target": "motor vehicle", "baseline_candidates": ["concept car", "vehicle model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2565164", "label": "Journal des débats", "source": "The Journal des débats (French for: Journal of Debates) was a French newspaper, published between 1789 and 1944 that changed title several times. Created shortly after the first meeting of the Estates-General of 1789, it was, after the outbreak of the French Revolution, the exact record of the debates of the National Assembly, under the title Journal des Débats et des Décrets (\"Journal of Debates and Decrees\"). Published weekly rather than daily, it was headed for nearly forty years by Bertin l'Aîné and was owned for a long time by the Bertin family. During the First Empire it was opposed to Napoleon and had a new title imposed on it, the Journal de l'Empire. During the first Bourbon Restoration (1813–1814), the Journal took the title Journal des Débats Politiques et Littéraires, and, under the second Restoration, it took a conservative rather than reactionary position. Under Charles X and his entourage, the Journal changed to a position supporting the liberal opposition represented by the Doctrinaires (Guizot, Royer-Collard, etc.) (1827–1829). The Journal des Débats was the most read newspaper of the Restoration and the July Monarchy, before being surpassed by Émile de Girardin's La Presse and later by Le Petit Journal. The many contributions established the Journal's reputation as a major influence on French culture, and especially French literature for the first half of the 19th century.During the German occupation of France in World War II, the Journal continued to be published, which caused it to be suppressed after the Liberation of Paris in 1944.", "target": "journal français", "baseline_candidates": ["daily newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24452300", "label": "Kalle Ekelund", "source": "Kalle Ekelund (born July 25, 1990) is a Swedish professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing with Vålerenga Ishockey of the Norwegian GET-ligaen (GET).", "target": "Swedish ice hockey player (1990-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17362640", "label": "Kaman Kong", "source": "Kaman Kong (Chinese: 江嘉敏; born 4 November 1994) is a Hong Kong actress currently contracted to TVB. She gained recognition after starring in the drama Tiger Mom Blues (2017).", "target": "Hong Kong actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5254355", "label": "Delos A. Blodgett House", "source": "The Delos A. Blodgett House (also known as 8VO4385) is a historic house located at 404 Ridgewood Avenue in Daytona Beach, Florida.", "target": "Daytona Beach, Florida, built in 1896", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48741308", "label": "Jean Schwarzbauer", "source": "Jean E. Schwarzbauer is an American molecular biologist currently the Eugene Higgins Professor of Molecular Biology at Princeton University. A cited expert in her field, Schwarzbauer's interests are kidney fibrosis, tissue regeneration and repair, cartilage development and tumor formations.", "target": "American molecular biologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q704839", "label": "Unhŭng County", "source": "Unhŭng County is a kun, or county, in Ryanggang Province, North Korea. It was created following the division of Korea from portions of Hyesan and Kapsan.", "target": "county of North Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["county of North Korea"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12438934", "label": "polyvinylidene fluoride", "source": "Polyvinylidene fluoride or polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) is a highly non-reactive thermoplastic fluoropolymer produced by the polymerization of vinylidene difluoride. PVDF is a specialty plastic used in applications requiring the highest purity, as well as resistance to solvents, acids and hydrocarbons. PVDF has low density 1.78 g/cm3 in comparison to other fluoropolymers, like polytetrafluoroethylene. It is available in the form of piping products, sheet, tubing, films, plate and an insulator for premium wire. It can be injected, molded or welded and is commonly used in the chemical, semiconductor, medical and defense industries, as well as in lithium-ion batteries. It is also available as a cross-linked closed-cell foam, used increasingly in aviation and aerospace applications, and as an exotic 3D printer filament. It can also be used in repeated contact with food products, as it is FDA-compliant and non-toxic below its degradation temperature.As a fine powder grade, it is an ingredient in high-end paints for metals. These PVDF paints have extremely good gloss and color retention. They are in use on many prominent buildings around the world, such as the Petronas Towers in Malaysia and Taipei 101 in Taiwan, as well as on commercial and residential metal roofing. PVDF membranes are used in western blots for the immobilization of proteins, due to its non-specific affinity for amino acids. PVDF is also used as a binder component for the carbon electrode in supercapacitors and for other electrochemical applications.", "target": "non-reactive thermoplastic fluoropolymer", "baseline_candidates": ["polymer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56559103", "label": "HeySpace", "source": "HeySpace is a web-based task management application founded in 2018 by Time Solutions. The program is a mix of Slack and Trello, combining an online chat facet of the former with project management of the latter. Time Solutions ─ a system manufacturer of HeySpace ─ is an IT company based in Wrocław, founded in 2009 by Kamil Rudnicki, a 21-years-old student back then. [1] The main investors of Time Solutions are Asseco Poland and Venture Incubator, which financed Time Solutions in 2011.", "target": "web-based task management application", "baseline_candidates": ["collaborative software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6804938", "label": "MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center", "source": "MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center, a member of MedStar Health, is a hospital located in the Rosedale area of eastern Baltimore County, Maryland. It is the third largest hospital in Maryland; with more than 3,500 employees, it is one of the largest employers in Baltimore County. The building is found along Franklin Square Drive, next to the campus of Community College of Baltimore County - Essex, and is used for the clinical training of allied health programs at the college.", "target": "hospital in Maryland, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6555118", "label": "Linville River", "source": "The Linville River is a river in western North Carolina. The river begins in the slopes of Peak Mountain, Sugar Mountain and Flattop Mountain, in the Linville Gap area (also known as Tynecastle). As it goes south through Avery County, it passes through the communities of Grandfather, Linville, Pineola, Crossnore and finally at Linville Falls. After entering Burke County at the community of Linville Falls, the river becomes the centerpiece of the Linville Falls and the Linville Gorge, an area referred to as \"the Grand Canyon of North Carolina.\" After approximately 30 miles (48 km), the river ends at Lake James and the Catawba River; the original confluence with the Catawba River has been flooded by the creation of the reservoir in 1923.In 1975, North Carolina designated 13.0 miles (20.9 km) of the river as Linville State Natural River, including it in the state's Natural and Scenic Rivers System.", "target": "river in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16062952", "label": "John Middleton", "source": "John Middleton (1820–1885) was an English architect of the 19th century. He was born in York, in August 1820.", "target": "English architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1889842", "label": "Manfred Rieger", "source": "Manfred Rieger (born 25 April 1941) is a retired German weightlifter. He competed in three consecutive Summer Olympics, as heavyweight in 1964 and 1968 and super heavyweight in 1972, and finished in eleventh, fourth and fifth place, respectively. Between 1966 and 1970 he won a bronze medal in the super heavyweight category at every European championship (the championships were not conducted in 1967).", "target": "German weightlifter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4572208", "label": "1965–66 Western Football League", "source": "The 1965–66 season was the 64th in the history of the Western Football League. The champions for the second time in their history, and the second season in succession, were Welton Rovers, who completed the season unbeaten.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5337885", "label": "Edgewood College", "source": "Edgewood College is a private Dominican college in Madison, Wisconsin. The college occupies a 55 acres (22 ha) campus overlooking the shores of Lake Wingra.", "target": "Private Dominican liberal arts college in Madison, Wisconsin", "baseline_candidates": ["private not-for-profit educational institution", "college"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5743548", "label": "2011 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships", "source": "The 2011 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships was the 22nd edition of the UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships and was held in Champéry, Switzerland.", "target": "sport competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q229567", "label": "Luzy-Saint-Martin", "source": "Luzy-Saint-Martin (French pronunciation: ​[lyzi sɛ̃ maʁtɛ̃]) is a commune in the Meuse department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.", "target": "commune in Meuse, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q167228", "label": "Roussin de Morgex", "source": "Roussin de Morgex (sometimes known as Rossano Rosso in Italy) is an Italian grape variety, native to the western part of Valle d'Aosta in the municipality of Morgex. It is a pink-skinned teinturier grape that produced a light pink juice. Although it may by used as one of the autochthonous varieties allowed in the red DOC wine from the region, Valle d'Aosta Rosso, in 2010 it was not cultivated commercially; according to wine writer Ian D'Agata nobody had made wine from it in 300 years. Since then, small experimental plantings have been made, and a subsequent 20 bottle batch of pink sparkling wine produced by Cave Mont Blanc in 2014 showed sufficient promise to spur further research and planting.", "target": "varietal", "baseline_candidates": ["grape variety"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3692751", "label": "Jasionowo, Augustów County", "source": "Jasionowo [jaɕɔˈnɔvɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lipsk, within Augustów County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It is located within the historic Suwałki Region (Suwalszczyzna). During the German occupation of Poland (World War II), on August 2, 1943, the Germans pacified the village in an act of anti-Polish revenge after losing an officer in a battle with the Poles. They surrounded the village and shot all the captured villagers, i.e. 58 people, and destroyed houses and outbuildings.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q387389", "label": "Dochū-Kōtsu Prefectural Natural Park", "source": "Dochū-Kōtsu Prefectural Natural Park (土柱高越県立自然公園, Dochū-Kōtsu kenritsu shizen kōen) is a Prefectural Natural Park in northern Tokushima Prefecture, Japan. Established in 2005, the park encompasses a stretch of the Yoshino River, Mount Kōtsu (高越山), the temple of Kōtsu-ji (高越寺) and the earth pillars of Awa-no-Dochū (阿波の土柱).", "target": "national park of Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["National parks of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21066248", "label": "Kiril Popov", "source": "Kiril Popov (Bulgarian: Кирил Попов; born 15 March 1985) is a Bulgarian table tennis player and coach. He is currently one of the highest ranked Bulgarians in table tennis and competes in the top table tennis division of the country. Popov is also a member of the Bulgarian national table tennis team.", "target": "Bulgarian table tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7591206", "label": "St. Paul's United Church of Christ of Laramie", "source": "St. Paul's United Church of Christ of Laramie was founded in 1886 as the first German language congregation in Wyoming. The church building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. The cornerstone was laid on July 13, 1890, three days after statehood. Clergy from Chicago and the local Christian, Methodist, Episcopal, Presbyterian and Baptist Churches participated in the ceremony, with an address by Dr. John Wesley Hoyt, former Governor of Wyoming Territory and at the time first president of the University of Wyoming. The building was completed and dedicated on January 18, 1891. It is the oldest church structure in Laramie continuously used by the same congregation. With its stained glass windows and heavy wooden furnishings, St. Paul's is reminiscent of rural German churches. Those elaborate windows and its many simplified Gothic elements make the building unique among Lutheran churches in Wyoming.The church's several name changes reflect its history. The original name for the congregation (which spoke and worshiped in German) was Deutsche Evangelische Lutherische St. Paulus Gemeinde. The original church building name was St. Paulus Kirche. The congregation joined the Evangelical Synod of North America in 1904 after incorporating the year before as St. Pauls German Evangelical Church of Laramie, Wyoming. (The original corporate name omitted the apostrophe in \"St. Paul's\" because German does not use one.) After the Evangelical Synod merged with the Reformed Church in the United States in 1934, St. Pauls changed its name in 1949 to St. Paul's Evangelical and Reformed Church of Laramie, Wyoming. After the.", "target": "church building in Wyoming, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3277607", "label": "Alpha 21164 chip", "source": "The Alpha 21164, also known by its code name, EV5, is a microprocessor developed and fabricated by Digital Equipment Corporation that implemented the Alpha instruction set architecture (ISA). It was introduced in January 1995, succeeding the Alpha 21064A as Digital's flagship microprocessor. It was succeeded by the Alpha 21264 in 1998.", "target": "microprocessor known by its code name, EV5", "baseline_candidates": ["central processing unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17055663", "label": "Sekolah Menengah Agama Persekutuan Kajang", "source": "Sekolah Menengah Agama Persekutuan Kajang (SMAPK or SMAP Kajang) is a boarding school located in Kajang, Selangor. SMAPK is one of the popular Islamic boarding schools in Malaysia. SMAPK was established on 1 December 1989 as one of the three religious Sekolah Berasrama Penuh (Fully Boarding School, or SBP) under the School Sector and Department of Islamic Education and Moral (JAPIM) in Ministry of Education Malaysia.", "target": "public islamic boarding school in Kajang, Selangor, Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["boarding school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7402050", "label": "Saint Paul School of Theology", "source": "Saint Paul School of Theology (SPST) is a United Methodist seminary in Leawood, Kansas, United States. In addition to the Kansas City area campus at Church of the Resurrection, Saint Paul School of Theology at Oklahoma City University has been offering courses since September 2008. The Oklahoma campus works in a collaboration with Oklahoma City University in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Additionally, the Kansas Campus works in partnership with the United Methodist Church of the Resurrection to serve the Greater Kansas City Metro Area in Leawood, KS. The student body has almost equal numbers of men and women, representing many states and other countries. While most students are United Methodist, several other denominations are represented in the student body each year.", "target": "United Methodist seminary in Kansas, U.S.", "baseline_candidates": ["private not-for-profit educational institution", "seminary"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q74117027", "label": "Yugoslavia at the 1973 World Aquatics Championships", "source": "Yugoslavia competed at the 1973 World Aquatics Championships in Belgrade from August 31 to September 9.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26714889", "label": "Frank Maher", "source": "Francis Xavier Maher Jr. (May 8, 1918 – April 11, 1992) was a professional American football player who played running back for one season in the National Football League (NFL) with the Cleveland Rams and Pittsburgh Steelers. Prior, he served in World War II for the United States Army.", "target": "American football player (1918-1992)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q213783", "label": "Franz Josef Gerstner", "source": "Franz Josef Gerstner (from 1810 Franz Josef Ritter von Gerstner, Czech: František Josef Gerstner; 23 February 1756 – 25 July 1832) was a German-Bohemian physicist, astronomer and engineer.", "target": "Czech physicist and mathematician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3955078", "label": "3-epi-6-deoxocathasterone C-23 hydroxylase", "source": "3-Epi-6-deoxocathasterone 23-monooxygenase (EC 1.14.13.112, cytochrome P450 90C1, CYP90D1, CYP90C1) is an enzyme with systematic name 3-epi-6-deoxocathasterone,NADPH:oxygen oxidoreductase (C-23-hydroxylating). This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction (1) 3-epi-6-deoxocathasterone + NADPH + H+ + O2 ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } 6-deoxotyphasterol + NADP+ + H2O (2) (22S,24R)-22-hydroxy-5alpha-ergostan-3-one + NADPH + H+ + O2 ⇌ {\\displaystyle \\rightleftharpoons } 3-dehydro-6-deoxoteasterone + NADP+ + H2O3-Epi-6-deoxocathasterone 23-monooxygenase takes part in brassinosteroid biosynthesis.", "target": "class of enzymes", "baseline_candidates": ["oxidoreductase, acting on paired donors, with incorporation or reduction of molecular oxygen", "group or class of enzymes", "oxidoreductase", "oxidoreductase, acting on paired donors, with incorporation or reduction of molecular oxygen, NAD(P)H as one donor, and incorporation of one atom of oxygen", "monooxygenase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31546821", "label": "Franconian Jura", "source": "The Franconian Jura (German: Fränkische Alb [ˈfʁɛŋkɪʃə ˈʔalp] (listen), Fränkischer Jura, Frankenalb or Frankenjura) is an upland in Bavaria, Germany. Located between two rivers, the Danube in the south and the Main in the north, its peaks reach elevations of up to 600 metres (2,000 ft) and it has an area of some 7053.8 km2.Large portions of the Franconian Jura are part of the Altmühl Valley Nature Park. The scenic meanders and gorges formed by the river Altmühl draw tourists to visit the region. Geologically, the Franconian Jura is the eastern continuation of the Swabian Jura. The mountain chains are separated from each other by the impact crater of the Nördlinger Ries. The northern part of the Franconian Jura is known as Little Switzerland (German: Fränkische Schweiz).", "target": "mountains in Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range", "non-geologically related mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6490430", "label": "Larry Gross", "source": "Larry Gross (born 1953) is an American screenwriter, producer, and director. He is a visiting professor of film and new media at New York University Abu Dhabi. Best known for his collaborations with Walter Hill, his credits include 48 Hrs. (1982), Streets of Fire (1984), and uncredited contributions to Ralph Bakshi's Cool World (1992). He won the 2004 Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the Sundance Film Festival for We Don't Live Here Anymore (2004). His criticism has appeared in Film Comment and Sight & Sound.Gross attended St Edmund Hall, Oxford and Bard College, from which he graduated in 1974. He later completed an MA in English at Columbia University (where he subsequently served as an adjunct assistant professor of film) and an MA in film studies at New York University.In 2008, Gross published his contemporaneous diary of his days on the set of 48 Hrs. on MovieCityNews.", "target": "Screenwriter, director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75602348", "label": "Henry Williamson Lugard", "source": "Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Williamson Lugard (10 July 1813 – 30 November 1857) was a military engineer of the Corps of Royal Engineers. : 25 He served as architect and engineer in the construction of military, convict and public works in the Colony of New South Wales and Norfolk Island (1835–1840 & 1842–1844), military works in New Zealand (1840–1842) and Ireland (1844–1857), and as Commanding Royal Engineer for the China Expedition of 1857, based in Hong Kong. : 5.", "target": "military engineer and architect (died 1857)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7283062", "label": "Raghuveer Meena", "source": "Raghuvir Singh Meena (born 4 February 1959) is an Indian National Congress leader and member of Congress Working Committee (CWC), the highest decision-making body of the Indian National Congress. He is Vice President of Rajasthan Pradesh Congress Committee. He was Member of 15th Lok Sabha. In 2009, he was elected to the Lok Sabha from Udaipur constituency in Rajasthan state. He is a former member of the Rajasthan Vidhan Sabha and a former minister in the Government of Rajasthan from 2002 to 2003. Raghuveer Singh Meena was State president of Rajasthan Youth Congress from 1997 to 2002.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7954290", "label": "WPGX", "source": "WPGX (channel 28) is a television station in Panama City, Florida, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. The station is owned by Lockwood Broadcast Group, and maintains transmitter facilities on Blue Springs Road in unincorporated Youngstown, Bay County. Its studios are located on West 23rd Street/SR 368 in Panama City, though most of its on-air master control operations originate from Gray Television's WBRC in Birmingham, Alabama, its former sister Fox affiliate until the start of 2019.", "target": "Fox television affiliate in Panama City, Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["television station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2757812", "label": "Cassida butterwecki", "source": "Cassida butterwecki is a species of leaf beetle, situated in the subfamily Cassidinae (tortoise beetles) and the genus Cassida. It was described as a new species in 2007 from specimens collected in Madagascar in 1990.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96083954", "label": "Alan Cain", "source": "Alan Cain (7 December 1922 – 15 May 1998) was an Australian sailor. He competed in the Dragon event at the 1960 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Australian yachtsman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7129982", "label": "1956 Panamanian general election", "source": "General elections were held in Panama on 13 May 1956, electing both a new President of the Republic and a new National Assembly. “The National Patriotic Coalition was almost unopposed in the 1956 election race. The National Liberal Party made the gesture of offering candidates but did not campaign vigorously”. Ernesto de la Guardia Navarro, the government candidate, was a conservative businessman and a member of the oligarchy. The José Antonio Remón Cantera’ government had required parties to enroll 45,000 members to receive official recognition. This membership requirement, subsequently relaxed to 5,000, had excluded all opposition parties from the 1956 elections except the National Liberal Party (PLN) which traced its lineage to the original Liberal Party.", "target": "election", "baseline_candidates": ["Panamanian parliamentary election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11841035", "label": "Amblytropidia mysteca", "source": "Amblytropidia mysteca, the brown winter grasshopper, is a species of slant-faced grasshopper in the family Acrididae. It is found in Central America and North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63351214", "label": "Richard Barnack", "source": "Richard Barnack was an English 16th-century vicar and vice-chancellor at the University of Oxford.He was a doctor of divinity at New College, Oxford. In 1519, he was appointed Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University, continuing until 1520, and was vicar of Adderbury in northern Oxfordshire.", "target": "16th-century vicar and vice-chancellor at the University of Oxford", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q158894", "label": "Poa nemoralis", "source": "Poa nemoralis, the wood bluegrass, is a perennial plant in the family Poaceae. The late-growing grass is fairly nutritious for livestock, which feed on it in the autumn, and it is used as a lawn grass for shady situations.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4323738", "label": "Nove, Kropyvnytskyi municipality", "source": "Nove (Ukrainian: Нове; Russian: Новое) is an urban-type settlement in Kropyvnytskyi Raion of Kirovohrad Oblast in Ukraine. It is located in the steppe about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) west of the center of the city of Kropyvnytskyi. Nove belongs to Kropyvnytskyi urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Population: 8,467 (2021 est. )Until 18 July 2020, Nove belonged to Kropyvnytskyi Municipality. The municipality was abolished as an administrative unit in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Kirovohrad Oblast to four. The area of Kropyvnytskyi Municipality was merged into Kropyvnytskyi Raion.", "target": "urban locality in Kirovohrad Oblast, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["urban-type settlement in Ukraine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75718541", "label": "Richard Grenville", "source": "Richard Grenville (died 1550) lord of the manor of Stowe, Kilkhampton in Cornwall and of Bideford in Devon, was an English soldier, politician, and administrator who served as a Member of Parliament for Cornwall in 1529, and served as Sheriff of Cornwall and Sheriff of Devon.", "target": "English politician (died 1550)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6703002", "label": "Luma Tower", "source": "The Luma Tower is a residential building and former factory in the Greater Govan area of Glasgow, Scotland. It is famous as one of the best preserved examples of Art Deco architecture in the city. It has been protected as a category B listed building since 1988. Designed by Scottish architect Cornelius Armour, who was the in-house architect of the Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society, the style is known as Streamline Moderne which was the last phase of the Art Deco era in the 1930s.", "target": "factory building in Glasgow, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["industrial building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2449543", "label": "Ragdoll Productions", "source": "Ragdoll Productions is a British television production company founded in 1984 by Anne Wood, who had previously worked for Yorkshire Television and TV-am. It is located in Stratford-upon-Avon, and has produced a number of children's programmes, most notably Teletubbies, Rosie and Jim, Brum, Boohbah, Tots TV, In the Night Garden..., and Pob's Programme.", "target": "British television production company", "baseline_candidates": ["television production company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16057144", "label": "1998 Guangzhou Apollo F.C. season", "source": "The 1998 season is the 45th year in Guangzhou Football Club's existence, their 31st season in the Chinese football league and the 5th season in the professional football league. After selling two key players (Peng Weiguo and Hu Zhijun) at the beginning of the season, the club finished the last place of the league in this season and relegated to Jia-B League.", "target": "Guangzhou Apollo F.C. 1998", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1533248", "label": "Gnome watching railway train", "source": "Gnome Watching Railway Train (German: Gnom, Eisenbahn betrachtend) is an 1848 oil-on-wood painting by the German painter Carl Spitzweg.", "target": "Carl Spitzweg painting", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q215999", "label": "Rudolf Wittkower", "source": "Rudolf Wittkower (22 June 1901 – 11 October 1971) was a British art historian specializing in Italian Renaissance and Baroque art and architecture, who spent much of his career in London, but was educated in Germany, and later moved to the United States. Despite having a British father who stayed in Germany after his studies, he was born and raised in Berlin.", "target": "German-American art historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7769861", "label": "The Tragedy of Whispering Creek", "source": "The Tragedy of Whispering Creek is a 1914 American silent short Western film directed by Allan Dwan and featuring Murdock MacQuarrie, Pauline Bush, and Lon Chaney. Chaney expert Jon Mirsalis says Chaney also wrote the screenplay, based on a story by Elliott J. Clawson, but the Blake book says the film's director Allan Dwan wrote the screenplay himself. A print exists in the Deutsche Kinematek film archive, making it Chaney's earliest surviving moving picture. A still exists which shows Chaney in his role as \"The Greaser\".", "target": "1914 film by Allan Dwan", "baseline_candidates": ["short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q208224", "label": "Brandenburg concertos", "source": "The Brandenburg Concertos by Johann Sebastian Bach (BWV 1046–1051), are a collection of six instrumental works presented by Bach to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt, in 1721 (though probably composed earlier). The original French title is Six Concerts à plusieurs instruments, meaning \"Six Concertos for several instruments\". Some of them feature several solo instruments in combination. They are widely regarded as some of the best orchestral compositions of the Baroque era.", "target": "collection of six instrumental works by Johann Sebastian Bach", "baseline_candidates": ["cycle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11838260", "label": "Bonnie Holiday", "source": "Bonnie Holiday was a former American pornographic actress who worked during the 1970s and early 1980s.Holiday worked as a stripper and started out making loops. She then graduated to feature films with Alex de Renzy's Lady Freaks (1973).Holiday was featured in the 1970 adult film documentary A History of the Blue Movie, which showed clips of stag films dating from 1915 to 1970. One of her best-known performances can be found in the XRCO Hall of Fame 1977 film Desires Within Young Girls.", "target": "American pornographic film actress (1952-1988)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20737781", "label": "Thiruvan Heera Prassad Chentharassery", "source": "Thiruvan Heera Prassad Chentharassery (29 July 1928 – 27 July 2018), better known as T. H. P. Chentharasseri, was an Indian historian from Kerala. He was one of the leading Keralan historians on the study of the caste system in India.", "target": "Indian historian (1928-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7495361", "label": "Sherril Huff", "source": "Sherril Huff is a former Director of Elections of King County, Washington.In 1984, Huff ran in the 23rd Legislative race against Ellen Craswell, and got 46% of the vote.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18033213", "label": "MARCO", "source": "Macrophage receptor MARCO also known as macrophage receptor with collagenous structure (MARCO) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the MARCO gene. MARCO is a class A scavenger receptor that is found on particular subsets of macrophages. Scavenger receptors are pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and are most commonly found on immune cells. Their defining feature is that they bind to polyanions and modified forms of a type of cholesterol called low-density lipoprotein (LDL). MARCO is able to bind and phagocytose these ligands and pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), leading to the clearance of pathogens as well as causing downstream effects in the cell that lead to inflammation. As part of the innate immune system, MARCO clears, or scavenges, pathogens and leads to inflammatory responses. The scavenger receptor cysteine-rich (SRCR) domain at the end of the extracellular side of MARCO is responsible for ligand binding and the subsequent immune responses. MARCO expression on macrophages is also associated with diseases since Alzheimer's disease is associated with decreased response within the cell when a ligand binds to MARCO.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6412704", "label": "Kingdomtide", "source": "Kingdomtide was a liturgical season formerly observed in the autumn by the United Methodist Church, in the United States, and some other Protestant denominations.", "target": "liturgical season observed by some Protestant denominations", "baseline_candidates": ["liturgical season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7123969", "label": "Padua Academy", "source": "Padua Academy is an all-girls Catholic high school in Wilmington, Delaware, United States. It is part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wilmington. The school strongly emphasizes college preparation, leadership, civic responsibility, and spirituality. Padua is fully accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and has been recognized as a National Blue Ribbon School of Excellence. It is a four-time winner of the \"Superstars in Education\" Award from the Delaware State Chamber of Commerce. Padua was named one of the Top 50 Catholic High Schools in America by the Cardinal Newman Society in 2012. Padua is a member of the National Catholic Education Association (NCEA) and the Delaware Association of Independent Schools (DAIS). Padua’s Student Council has earned recognition as a Council of Excellence. Padua Academy is consistently recognized for outstanding community service and has merited both a Regional Gold Medal and a National Bronze Medal from the Jefferson Awards-Deloitte Students in Action program.", "target": "private, all-girls school in Wilmington, , Delaware, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["private school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6944246", "label": "Mutwa", "source": "The Mutwa are a Muslim community found in the state of Gujarat in India and a province of Sindh in Pakistan. They are one of a number of communities of Maldhari pastoral nomads found in the Banni region of Kutch.", "target": "Muslim community", "baseline_candidates": ["caste"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15499827", "label": "Pterostylis depauperata", "source": "Pterostylis depauperata, commonly known as the keeled greenhood, is a species of orchid endemic to Queensland. Flowering plants have a rosette of leaves at the base of a flowering stem with a single small white flower with pale green marks, and a few small stem leaves. Non-flowering plants only have a rosette of leaves. All three sepals on the flower have relatively long, thread-like tips.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12252816", "label": "Burmese tit", "source": "The Burmese bushtit (Aegithalos sharpei) is a species of bird in the family Aegithalidae. It is endemic to the Chin Hills of Myanmar. Its natural habitat is temperate forests.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3262100", "label": "Louis Guéymard", "source": "Louis Guéymard (17 August 1822 – July 1880) was a French operatic tenor. Born in Chaponnay, his parents were farmers and he worked on his family's farm until the age of 19. He then received voice training at the Opéra National de Lyon. He made his opera debut there in 1845 and then pursued further voice studies at the Conservatoire de Paris from 1846–1848.", "target": "French opera singer (1822-1880)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34358137", "label": "Malta", "source": "Malta ( (listen) MOL-tə, UK also MAWL-tə, Maltese: [ˈmɐltɐ]), officially known as the Republic of Malta (Maltese: Repubblika ta' Malta [rɛˈpʊbːlɪkɐ tɐ ˈmɐltɐ]), is an island country in the European Union consisting of an archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea, and considered part of Southern Europe. It lies 80 km (50 mi) south of Sicily (Italy), 284 km (176 mi) east of Tunisia, and 333 km (207 mi) north of Libya. The official languages are Maltese and English, and 66% of the current Maltese population is at least conversational in the Italian language. Malta has been inhabited since approximately 5900 BC. Its location in the centre of the Mediterranean has historically given it great strategic importance as a naval base, with a succession of powers having contested and ruled the islands, including the Phoenicians and Carthaginians, Romans, Greeks, Arabs, Normans, Aragonese, Knights of St. John, French, and British, amongst others.With a population of about 516,000 over an area of 316 km2 (122 sq mi), Malta is the world's tenth-smallest country in area and fourth most densely populated sovereign country. Its capital is Valletta, which is the smallest national capital in the European Union by area and population. According to the data from 2020 by Eurostat, the Functional Urban Area and metropolitan region covered the whole island and has a population of 480,134, and according to the United Nations, ESPON and EU Commission, \"the whole territory of Malta constitutes a single urban region\". Malta increasingly is referred to as a city-state, and also listed in rankings concerning cities.", "target": "sovereign state in Southern Europe situated on an archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea", "baseline_candidates": ["Mediterranean country", "sovereign state", "island nation", "country", "unitary state"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17567919", "label": "Ferniehirst Castle", "source": "Ferniehirst Castle (sometimes spelled Ferniehurst) is an L-shaped construction on the east bank of the Jed Water, about a mile and a half south of Jedburgh, in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, and in the former county of Roxburghshire. It is an ancient seat of the Clan Kerr, and after a period of institutional use it was restored for residential use by Peter Kerr, 12th Marquess of Lothian, in the late 20th century.", "target": "castle in Scottish Borders, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2993770", "label": "Vilnius Conference", "source": "The Vilnius Conference or Vilnius National Conference (Lithuanian: Vilniaus konferencija) met between September 18, 1917 and September 22, 1917, and began the process of establishing a Lithuanian state based on ethnic identity and language that would be independent of the Russian Empire, Poland, and the German Empire. It elected a twenty-member Council of Lithuania that was entrusted with the mission of declaring and re-establishing an independent Lithuania. The Conference, hoping to express the will of the Lithuanian people, gave legal authority to the Council and its decisions. While the Conference laid the basic guiding principles of Lithuanian independence, it deferred any matters of political structure of the future Lithuania to the Constituent Assembly, which would later be elected in a democratic manner.", "target": "Conference in 1917 to begin the process of reestablishing a Lithuanian state.", "baseline_candidates": ["convention"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7990281", "label": "Weyauwega, Wisconsin derailment", "source": "The Weyauwega derailment was a railroad accident that occurred in Weyauwega, Wisconsin, United States, in the early morning hours of March 4, 1996. The derailed train was carrying a large quantity of hazardous material, which immediately caught fire. The fire, which involved the train cars and an adjacent feed mill, burned for more than two weeks after the actual derailment, resulting in the emergency evacuation of 2,300 people for 18 days, including the entire city of Weyauwega, with about 1,700 evacuees.", "target": "1996 train accident in Wisconsin, U.S.", "baseline_candidates": ["train wreck"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6055393", "label": "Internationella Engelska Skolan", "source": "Internationella Engelska Skolan (IES), or the International English School, is a Swedish corporation which operates independent schools (or “free schools”). IES was founded in 1993 by the American teacher Barbara Bergström who moved to Sweden in 1968. IES schools are based on the idea of bilingual education, with up to half of teaching being performed in English by native English-speaking teachers recruited from mainly Canada, the US, the UK and South Africa. IES schools are also known for a traditional type of order and structure, contributing to a school environment “in which teachers can teach and students learn”. This is implemented under the concept of “tough love”, which was also the title of a book published in 2018 describing the origin and concepts of IES, written by Hans and Barbara Bergstrom. IES is the largest independent school organisation in Sweden in Grundskolan (the compulsory first nine years of the school system). In 2021-22, IES operates 43 schools in Sweden with around 30,000 students, mainly primary schools with grades 4-9, in Bromma, Borås, Enskede, Eskilstuna, Falun, Gävle, Gothenburg (Krokslätt and Johanneberg) , Halmstad, Helsingborg, Hässelby, Hässleholm, Huddinge, Järfälla, Jönköping, Karlstad, Kista, Kungsbacka, Landskrona, Liljeholmen, Linköping, Lund, Länna, Nacka strand, Sigtuna, Skellefteå, Skärholmen, Solna, Sundbyberg, Sundsvall, Södertälje, Tyresö, Täby, Upplands Väsby, Uppsala, Umeå, Värmdö, Älvsjö, Årsta, Örebro and Östersund. The organisation also operates several schools in Spain. Swedish schools are funded via the national voucher system for education, with money following the family's choice of school. This enables families to apply to attend schools outside the area where.", "target": "School in Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["aktiebolag"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16375135", "label": "Bulancak", "source": "Bulancak (Laz: Bulamç̌xǯ Romeika: Terastios) is a district of Giresun Province on the Black Sea coast of Turkey, near the city of Giresun. Its former name is Terastios. It neighbours the district of Piraziz which used to be a part of Bulancak, Altınordu district and Kabadüz districts of Ordu in the west, Giresun City in the east and the district of Dereli in the south. The municipality was established in 1887 and became a district in 1934. According to the census conducted in 2020, the total population of the district is 68,557. 47,366 of this population live in the urban area of the district. With a population of 68,557 Bulancak is the largest district in the province apart from Giresun City itself and is one of the largest districts on the Turkish Black Sea coast. Because of its closeness to Giresun City, it is easily reachable by public transport and thus Bulancak can be considered a part of Giresun City's metropolitan area. Bulancak's general economy is based on fishing and agriculture. The main agricultural product in the district is hazelnuts, and is traditionally the main means of income for the people of the region. The football club Bulancakspor is from the area.", "target": "district in Giresun Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "district of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q552447", "label": "Nicholas Mystikos", "source": "Nicholas I Mystikos or Nicholas I Mysticus (Greek: Νικόλαος Α΄ Μυστικός, Nikolaos I Mystikos; 852 – 11 May 925) was the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from March 901 to February 907 and from May 912 to his death in 925. His feast day in the Eastern Orthodox Church is 16 May.Nicholas was born in the Italian Peninsula and had become a friend of the Patriarch Photios. He fell into disfavor after Photios' dismissal in 886 and retired to a monastery. Emperor Leo VI the Wise retrieved him from the monastery and made him mystikos, a dignity designating either the imperial secretary or a judicial official. On 1 March 901, Nicholas was appointed patriarch. However, he fell out with Leo VI over the latter's fourth marriage to his mistress Zoe Karbonopsina. Although he reluctantly baptized the fruit of this relationship, the future Constantine VII, Nicholas forbade the emperor from entering the church and may have become involved in the revolt of Andronikos Doukas. He was deposed as patriarch on 1 February 907 and replaced by Euthymios. Exiled to his own monastery, Nicholas regarded his deposition as unjustified and involved Pope Sergius III in the dispute. About the time of the accession of Leo VI's brother Alexander to the throne in May 912, Nicholas was restored to the patriarchate. A protracted struggle with the supporters of Euthymios followed, which did not end until the new Emperor Romanos I Lekapenos promulgated the Tomos of Union in 920. In the meantime Alexander had died in 913 after provoking a war.", "target": "Patriarch of Constantinople", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6245860", "label": "John M. Lilley", "source": "John Mark Lilley (born March 24, 1939) served as the 14th president of the University of Nevada, Reno from 2001 to 2005 and 13th president of Baylor University from 2006 to 2008.", "target": "President of the University of Nevada, Reno and Baylor University", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5370748", "label": "Emergency with Angela Griffin", "source": "Emergency with Angela Griffin is a British Sky One documentary show that aired in two series from 4 May 2011 to 19 September 2012. The show is presented by British actress Angela Griffin, who joined Ambulance Services up and down the country to experience and showcase the work of the Ambulance Service, not just frontline Ambulance crews such as paramedics, but also of Emergency Care Practitioners, Call Handlers, Dispatchers and Community First Responders.Throughout the two series Griffin joined crews from West Midlands Ambulance Service, Welsh Ambulance Service, Scottish Ambulance Service, Devon Air Ambulance,.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16744175", "label": "Things That Go Bump in the Night", "source": "\"Things That Go Bump in the Night\" is the sixth episode of the sixth series of the British television sitcom Dad's Army that was originally transmitted on 5 December 1973. This episode marked the last regular appearance of James Beck (Private Joe Walker) since his death on 6 August 1973.", "target": "episode of Dad's Army", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4849887", "label": "Balakrishna Guruji", "source": "Shri Balakrishna Guruji is a Reiki master and hypnotherapist known for his contributions in alternative medicine. Balakrishna Guruji is best known for popularizing drugless healing sciences like Reiki and hypnosis among health conscious Indians through his TV shows in TV9 Kannada and Kasturi channel.", "target": "Indian hypnotist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31810415", "label": "Page County", "source": "Page County is a county located in the U.S. state of Iowa. As of the 2020 census, the population was 15,211. The county seat is Clarinda. The county is named in honor of Captain John Page of the 4th U.S. Infantry, who was mortally wounded in the Battle of Palo Alto.", "target": "county in Iowa, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["county of Iowa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23008117", "label": "Primosh Perera", "source": "Primosh Perera (born 17 May 1989) is a Sri Lankan first-class cricketer who plays for Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club. In March 2018, he was named in Colombo's squad for the 2017–18 Super Four Provincial Tournament.", "target": "Sri Lankan cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1198223", "label": "Lanshan District", "source": "Lanshan (simplified Chinese: 兰山区; traditional Chinese: 蘭山區; pinyin: Lánshān Qū) is a district of Linyi City, Shandong Province, China. Lanshan District forms the center of Linyi and is the location of the city's government and cultural sites such as the Yinqueshan Han Tombs Bamboo Slips Museum. It was formerly the Linyi County and the Linyi county-level city, before Linyi was upgraded to a prefecture-level city and its urban center was renamed as Lanshan District.", "target": "district of China", "baseline_candidates": ["district of China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4571389", "label": "1963–64 Scottish Second Division", "source": "The 1963–64 Scottish Second Division was won by Morton who, along with second placed Clyde, were promoted to the First Division. Stirling Albion finished bottom.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14875687", "label": "Huntington", "source": "Huntington is a community in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, located in the Cape Breton Regional Municipality on Cape Breton Island.", "target": "human settlement in Nova Scotia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["General Service Area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29830993", "label": "The Massacre of Mankind", "source": "The Massacre of Mankind (2017) is a science fiction novel by British writer Stephen Baxter, a sequel to H. G. Wells' 1898 classic The War of the Worlds, authorised by the Wells estate. It is set in 1920, 13 years after the events of the original novel, as a second Martian invasion is chronicled by Miss Elphinstone, the ex-sister-in-law of the narrator of War of the Worlds. Baxter also wrote an authorised sequel to Wells' novel The Time Machine, called The Time Ships.", "target": "book by Stephen Baxter", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6127536", "label": "Jamal Benomar", "source": "Jamal Benomar (Arabic: جمال بنعمر; born c. April 1957) is a former UN diplomat. He worked at the UN for 25 years, including as a special envoy for Yemen and a special adviser to former Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.", "target": "Special Adviser on Yemen to the United Nations", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5824774", "label": "Ab Garmak, Aligudarz", "source": "Ab Garmag (Persian: اب گرمگ, also Romanized as Āb Garmag; also known as Āb Garmak) is a village in Zaz-e Sharqi Rural District, Zaz va Mahru District, Aligudarz County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 46, in 8 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5417709", "label": "Everybody Got Their Something", "source": "Everybody Got Their Something was the first album released in 2001 by pop/soul singer Nikka Costa. Although she had released several albums internationally as a child, this was her first release in the United States, and was released on May 22, 2001 by Virgin Records. It peaked at #120 on the Billboard 200 in June 2001. As of 2005, it has shifted 250,000 units in United States.", "target": "2001 studio album by Nikka Costa", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48984613", "label": "Gudem Mahipal Reddy", "source": "Gudem Mahipal Reddy is an Indian political activist who is the current member of the Telangana Legislative Assembly from Patancheru constituency. He belongs to Telangana Rashtra Samithi. He won election in 2014 and 2018 General Elections.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4197499", "label": "Ignatovo", "source": "Ignatovo is a village in Valchedram Municipality, Montana Province, northwestern Bulgaria.", "target": "village in northwestern Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3503913", "label": "Janko Smole", "source": "Janko Smole (2 June 1921 – 11 June 2010) served as the president of the executive council of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia from 1965 to 1967. He was a member of the League of Communists of Slovenia. He was preceded by Viktor Avbelj and succeeded by Stane Kavčič. He was Finance Minister of Yugoslavia from 1967 to 1974.", "target": "Slovenian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2527776", "label": "It's Alright", "source": "\"It's Alright\" is a 1993 dance-pop song by English boy band East 17, released as the sixth and last single from their debut album, Walthamstow (1993). The single version, labelled the \"Guvnor mix\", begins with a slow ballad-like intro for the first minute, before converting to the dance sound for the rest of the track. It reached number three on the UK Singles Chart and became a number-one hit in Australia, France, Ireland, Israel, and Switzerland. In 2011, English singer and songwriter Kim Wilde recorded a cover of the song for her 12th album, Snapshots, which charted in Germany.", "target": "song by East 17", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5812820", "label": "Christos Chomenidis", "source": "Christos Chomenidis (Greek: Χρήστος Χωμενίδης) (born 3 August 1966, Athens, Greece) is a Greek novelist. He read Law at the University of Athens and in Moscow and Communication Studies in Leeds. He worked as a lawyer before becoming a full-time writer. His book Νίκη won the 2021 European Book Prize in the Novel category.", "target": "Greek writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1131670", "label": "Unquestionable Presence", "source": "Unquestionable Presence is the second album by the death metal band Atheist. It was released in 1991 and added a new sound by using jazz-like harmonies, subtle Latin rhythms and unusual time signatures.", "target": "album by Atheist", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5147431", "label": "Collinsia greenei", "source": "Collinsia greenei is a species of flowering plant in the plantain family known by the common name Greene's blue-eyed Mary. It is endemic to northern California, where it grows in the coastal and inland mountains, including the North Coast Ranges and the Klamath Mountains. Its habitat includes chaparral and coniferous forest on serpentine soils.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2711390", "label": "Micrurus latifasciatus", "source": "Micrurus latifasciatus is a species of elapid snake, native to southern Mexico and Guatemala. There are no recognized subspecies.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60745771", "label": "Ground Based Strategic Deterrent", "source": "The LGM-35A Sentinel, also known as the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) is a future American land-based intercontinental ballistic missile system (ICBM) currently in the early stages of development. It is slated to replace the aging Minuteman III missiles, currently stationed in North Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Nebraska and Colorado, from 2029 through 2075. In 2020, under the Trump administration, the Department of the Air Force gave the defense contractor, Northrop Grumman, a $13.3 billion sole-source contract for development of the LGM-35 after Boeing withdrew its proposal. Northrop Grumman's subcontractors on the LGM-35 include Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Bechtel, Honeywell, Aerojet Rocketdyne, Parsons, Textron and others.", "target": "type of Intercontinental ballistic missile", "baseline_candidates": ["intercontinental ballistic missile", "weapon model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q711227", "label": "Supercar", "source": "Supercar is a British children's TV show produced by Gerry Anderson and Arthur Provis' AP Films for ATV and ITC Entertainment. Thirty-nine episodes were produced between 1961 and 1962, and it was Anderson's first half-hour series. In the UK it was seen on ITV, in Canada on the CBC, and in the US in syndication (the first Anderson series to be shown overseas) debuting in January 1962. The series uses Supermarionation, based on the complex and difficult Czech style of marionette puppetry. The creation of the show was credited to Gerry Anderson and Reg Hill, but it incorporates elements of Beaker's Bureau, a series proposed to the BBC by Hugh Woodhouse that was never produced. Anderson would later claim that the whole point of having a series based on a vehicle was to minimize having to show the marionettes walking, an action which he felt never looked convincing. The plot of the show centred around Supercar, a vertical-takeoff-and-landing craft invented by Prof. Rudolph Popkiss and Dr. Horatio Beaker, and piloted by Mike Mercury. On land it rode on a cushion of air rather than wheels. Jets in the rear allowed it to fly like a jet and retractable wings were incorporated in the back of the car. Retrorockets on the side of the car slowed the vehicle. The car used \"Clear-Vu\", which included an inside television monitor allowing the occupant to see through fog and smoke. The vehicle was housed in a laboratory and living facility at Black Rock, Nevada, U.S.A. In the show's first episode,.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4757514", "label": "Andrew Johnson", "source": "Andrew W. Johnson (1833–1912) was a Union Army soldier during the American Civil War. He received the Medal of Honor for gallantry during the Siege of Vicksburg on May 22, 1863. Johnson joined the 116th Illinois Infantry in August 1862, and was discharged in February 1865.", "target": "recipient of the Medal of Honor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30634350", "label": "Hatgaon", "source": "Hatgaon is a hamlet in western Bihar, India, probably named given by Munsi Salimuddin, a ruler from the slave dynasty. So the village would have been come in picture around 1266 to 1287 AD. The main religion is Muslim. The village contributed to the Indian freedom struggle. In 1857, its people were persecuted by the British for participating in the rebellion and lynching five horse driven British officers, who came to the village during the rebellion. In retribution, and not knowing who were actual killers, British rulers imposed harsh sanctions and severe hardships for the inhabitants of Hatgaon and four surrounding villages, Kumehia, Gyaspur, Sangora? and Marichgaon. The people of the village suffered a lot as a result for nearly a century till the country gained independence. A madarsa is there named Madarsa islamia hasmi hatgaon founder of it was Munsi Salimuddin. There is a cricket field named kawwa mari stadium. The notable personalities of this village are Sadique Akhter. Ataurrahman. Raju.Tarique Anwer. Basit Anwer.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2302923", "label": "Sophie, Duchess Consort of Pomerania-Barth", "source": "Sophie of Saxony (29 April 1587 – 9 December 1635) was a member of the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin. She was a princess of Saxony by birth and by marriage a Duchess of Pomerania-Stettin.", "target": "Duchess consort of Pomerania-Stettin (1587-1635)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26197251", "label": "Tim Mannek", "source": "Tim Mannek (born 21 May 1997) is a German footballer who plays as a forward for SC Paderborn II.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q946500", "label": "Bare", "source": "Bare is a village in the municipality of Prijepolje, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 56 people.", "target": "village in the municipality of Prijepolje, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8779226", "label": "Alcantarilha railway station", "source": "Alcantarilha is a railway station on the Algarve line which serves Alcantarilha and Armação de Pêra, in the Silves municipality, Portugal. It opened on the 19th of March 1900.", "target": "railway station in Portugal", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5805263", "label": "Hasan Langi-ye Pain", "source": "Hasan Langi-ye Pain (Persian: حسن لنگي پائين, also Romanized as Ḩasan Langī-ye Pā’īn; also known as Ḩasan Langī) is a village in Shamil Rural District, Takht District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 888, in 186 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1368023", "label": "Coxina", "source": "Coxina is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4393586", "label": "call and response", "source": "In music, a call and response is a succession of two distinct phrases usually written in different parts of the music, where the second phrase is heard as a direct commentary on or in response to the first. It corresponds to the call and response pattern in human communication and is found as a basic element of musical form, such as verse-chorus form, in many traditions.", "target": "succession of two distinct phrases usually played by different musicians (in music)", "baseline_candidates": ["chant", "phrase", "musical form"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17515222", "label": "2014–15 Liga EBA season", "source": "The 2014–15 Liga EBA season was the 21st edition of the Liga EBA. This is the fourth division of Spanish basketball. Four teams will be promoted to LEB Plata. The regular season started in October 2014 and finished in March 2015. Promotion playoffs to LEB Plata were played in April 2015.", "target": "21st season of the Liga EBA", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7612491", "label": "Thomas Coke, 4th Earl of Leicester", "source": "Thomas William Coke, 4th Earl of Leicester, (9 July 1880 – 21 August 1949) was a British peer and Army officer, styled Viscount Coke from 1909 to 1941.", "target": "British noble (1880-1949)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q304994", "label": "diffusion of innovations", "source": "Diffusion of innovations is a theory that seeks to explain how, why, and at what rate new ideas and technology spread. Everett Rogers, a professor of communication studies, popularized the theory in his book Diffusion of Innovations; the book was first published in 1962, and is now in its fifth edition (2003). Rogers argues that diffusion is the process by which an innovation is communicated over time among the participants in a social system. The origins of the diffusion of innovations theory are varied and span multiple disciplines. Rogers proposes that five main elements influence the spread of a new idea: the innovation itself, adopters, communication channels, time, and a social system. This process relies heavily on social capital. The innovation must be widely adopted in order to self-sustain. Within the rate of adoption, there is a point at which an innovation reaches critical mass. In the 1991 book \"crossing the chasm\", Geoffrey Moore theorizes that this point lies at the boundary between the early adopters and the early majority. This tipping point between niche appeal and mass (self-sustained) adoption is simply known as \"the chasm\".The categories of adopters are innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards. Diffusion manifests itself in different ways and is highly subject to the type of adopters and innovation-decision process. The criterion for the adopter categorization is innovativeness, defined as the degree to which an individual adopts a new idea.", "target": "theory", "baseline_candidates": ["theory"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26844997", "label": "Emily Quarton", "source": "Emily Beth Quarton (born (1984-08-09)9 August 1984) is a Canadian female weightlifter, competing in the 58 kg category and representing Canada at international competitions. She competed at world championships, most recently at the 2010 World Weightlifting Championships. and won a silver medal at the 2006 Melbourne Commonwealth Games and placed fifth at the 2010 Delhi Commonwealth Games.Quarton lives in Whitehorse, Yukon and is an elementary school teacher.", "target": "Canadian weightlifter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64666658", "label": "Peter Linebaugh", "source": "Peter Linebaugh is an American Marxist historian who specializes in British history, Irish history, labor history, and the history of the colonial Atlantic. He is a member of the Midnight Notes Collective.", "target": "American historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3057351", "label": "Ernst Hans Ludwig Krause", "source": "Ernst Hans Ludwig Krause (27 July 1859, Stade – 1 June 1942, Domjüch/Neustrelitz) was a German physician, botanist and mycologist. He studied medicine and botany in Berlin, where in 1881 he received his medical doctorate. From 1882 to 1893 he served as a naval medical officer, and later spent several years as a physician to an infantry regiment. From 1904 to 1918 he gave lectures on plant systematics and phytogeography at the University of Strasbourg, and afterwards, relocated to the University of Rostock, where from 1921 to 1933, he was an associate professor of botany. From 1933 onward, he worked as a general practitioner in Rostock. In 1942 he was wounded during a bombing attack in Rostock.", "target": "German botanist (1859-1942)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22003174", "label": "David M. Arden", "source": "David M. Arden (born September 6, 1949) is an American concert pianist whose performing and recording career has focused predominantly on contemporary and American classical repertoire, including premiere performances and first recordings of piano works by a number of notable contemporary composers, such as Henryk Górecki, Luciano Berio, Earle Brown, Carson Kievman and David Lang. The Russian composer Galina Ustvolskaya named Arden's recording of her 12 Preludes for Piano as her preferred recording of that work. In addition to his performing career, Arden has been active as a music pedagogue, authoring the early-years piano instruction book Creative Music-Making at the Piano, establishing the New School of Piano in San Francisco, and founding Keys to Achievement Foundation, a nonprofit organization that places music keyboard instruction programs in US public schools.", "target": "US-american pianist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60845758", "label": "Ilia State University", "source": "Ilia State University ISU (Georgian: ილიას სახელმწიფო უნივერსიტეტი) was founded in 2006 as a result of a merger of six different academic institutions with long and varied histories. Currently ISU is one of the leading research and educational institutions in Georgia.", "target": "university in Tbilisi, Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18527645", "label": "George Wallace", "source": "George Wallace FRSE (1727–1805) was a Scottish advocate, jurist and author. In 1783 he was one of the founders of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.", "target": "Scottish jurist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5037597", "label": "Caradjaina", "source": "Caradjaina is a genus of moths of the family Crambidae. It contains only one species, Caradjaina kwangtungialis, which is found in China (Guangdong).", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14825131", "label": "Nyctopais jordani", "source": "Nyctopais jordani is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Per Olof Christopher Aurivillius in 1913. It is known from Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q675859", "label": "Márton Vas", "source": "Márton Vas (born March 2, 1980 in Dunaújváros, Hungary) is a Hungarian former professional ice hockey defenceman. He was a member of the Hungarian national team His brother, János Vas, is also a professional ice hockey player and member of the Hungarian national team.", "target": "Hungarian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q666968", "label": "Die Reklamation", "source": "Die Reklamation (German: The Complaint) is the debut studio album by German band Wir sind Helden, released on 7 July 2003 by Labels, a subsidiary of EMI. It sold over 800,000 copies in Germany and reached four times Platinum. The album follows lead singer Judith Holofernes' limited self-produced solo album Kamikazefliege, which had already included two tracks from this album: “Aurélie” and “Außer dir”.", "target": "album by Wir sind Helden", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14933319", "label": "Pachybrachis macronychus", "source": "Pachybrachis macronychus is a species of case-bearing leaf beetle in the family Chrysomelidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5348339", "label": "Egypt at the 1972 Summer Paralympics", "source": "Egypt sent a delegation to compete at the 1972 Summer Paralympics in Heidelberg, West Germany.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Paralympics delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7856582", "label": "Turznica, West Pomeranian Voivodeship", "source": "Turznica [tuʐˈnit͡sa] (German: Forsthaus Arneburg) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Police, within Police County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland, close to the German border.For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "target": "settlement in West Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15966750", "label": "Rahul Banerjee", "source": "Arunoday Banerjee, known as \"Rahul\", (born 16 October 1983), is an Indian Bengali actor. He has worked in films and TV. Banerjee made his stage appearance at the age of three with his father's (Biswanath Banerjee) theater troupe Bijoygarh Atmaprakash play entitled Raj Darshan. Since then, he has acted in almost 450 stage shows, with his father's troupe and with Theatron. He was married to co-actress Priyanka Sarkar. His first film, Chirodini Tumi Je Amar, directed by Raj Chakraborty, was a box-office success. He has subsequently appeared in films including Love Circus, Shono Mon Boli Tomay and Poti Poromesshor. His television debut was in the series Tumi Asbe Bole. He has received a number of awards such as Anandalok Award for the Best Actor for his role in Chirodini Tumi Je Amar.", "target": "Indian film actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7956945", "label": "WVOK", "source": "WVOK (1580 AM, \"Oldies 1580\") is a radio station broadcasting Westwood One's Good Time Oldies satellite music format. Licensed to Oxford, Alabama, United States, the station serves the Anniston–Oxford metropolitan area. The station is currently owned by Woodard Broadcasting Company, Inc.", "target": "Radio station in Oxford–Anniston, Alabama", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1889290", "label": "Cevizköy", "source": "Cevizköy (Greek: Τσόγγαρα) is a village in Pınarhisar district of Kırklareli Province, Turkey, It is situated in the eastern Thrace (Trakya) plains. The distance to Pınarhisar is 11 kilometres (6.8 mi). The population of the village is 894 as of 2011. The old name of this village is Çongara. It was a Bulgarian village during the Ottoman Empire era. But after the Second Balkan War the Bulgarian population was forced to leave the settlement.", "target": "village in Pınarhisar district of Kırklareli Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5044988", "label": "Caroline Bray", "source": "Caroline Bray, known as Cara Bray, née Hennell (4 June 1814 – 21 February 1905) was a British writer of children's stories and school textbooks. With her husband Charles Bray, she was a Freethinker and friend of George Eliot.", "target": "English writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5776815", "label": "Daniel Gunnarsson", "source": "Daniel Gunnarsson (born April 15, 1992) is a Swedish professional ice hockey player. He currently plays for Leksands IF in the Swedish Hockey League (SHL). He was selected in the fifth round, 128th overall, by the Minnesota Wild in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft.", "target": "Swedish ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6440595", "label": "Kręczki", "source": "Kręczki [ˈkrɛnt͡ʂki] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ożarów Mazowiecki, within Warsaw West County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) north-west of Ożarów Mazowiecki and 15 km (9 mi) west of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21010808", "label": "Mira", "source": "The Mira is a district and shopping center that opened in 2008 in the Munich district Nordhaide at Schleißheimer Straße which borders the municipalities of Milbertshofen-Am Hart and Feldmoching-Hasenbergl.", "target": "building in Upper Bavaria, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20641323", "label": "Mildrey Pineda", "source": "Mildrey Carolina Pineda Echeverri (born 1 October 1989) is a Colombian international football player who plays for local club América Femenino as a midfielder.", "target": "Colombian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22110624", "label": "Gustavo Orcés V. Natural History Museum", "source": "Gustavo Orcés V. Natural History Museum (Spanish: Museo de Historia Natural Gustavo Orcés V.) is a natural history museum in Quito, Ecuador. It was established in 2005.", "target": "natural history museum in Quito, Ecuador", "baseline_candidates": ["museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34795317", "label": "Cinco Bayou", "source": "Cinco Bayou is a town in Okaloosa County, Florida, United States. The population was 383 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Fort Walton Beach–Crestview–Destin Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "human settlement in Okaloosa County, Florida, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q320676", "label": "City West", "source": "City West (formerly known as Neuer Westen (\"New West\") or Zooviertel (\"Zoo Quarter\")) is an area in the western part of central Berlin. It is one of Berlin's main commercial areas, and was the commercial centre of former West Berlin when the city was divided by the Berlin Wall.", "target": "area in Berlin", "baseline_candidates": ["Ortsteil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q748649", "label": "A.C. Bastia 1924", "source": "A.C. Bastia 1924 is an Italian football club based in Bastia Umbra, Umbria. The club played in Serie D from 1956 to 1958, 1988 to 1995 and from 2012 to 2015; currently, the club is back in Serie D after winning promotion in 2018.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35953048", "label": "Wafadar", "source": "Wafadar Momand (born 1 February 2000) is an Afghan cricketer. He was one of the eleven cricketers to play in Afghanistan's first ever Test match, against India, in June 2018.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q930222", "label": "Sir-Tech", "source": "Sir-Tech Software, Inc. was a video game developer and publisher based in the United States and Canada.", "target": "United States based video game developer and publisher", "baseline_candidates": ["video game developer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q990099", "label": "Tallaght", "source": "Tallaght ( TAL-ə; Irish: Tamhlacht, IPA: [ˈt̪ˠəul̪ˠəxt̪ˠ]) is the largest settlement, and county town, of South Dublin, Ireland, and the largest satellite town of Dublin. The central village area was the site of a monastic settlement from at least the 8th century, which became one of medieval Ireland's more important monastic centres.Up to the 1960s, Tallaght was a small village in the old County Dublin, linked to several nearby rural areas which were part of the large civil parish of the same name - the local council estimates the population then to be 2,500. Suburban development began in the 1970s and a \"town centre\" area has been developing since the late 1980s. There is no legal definition of the boundaries of Tallaght, but the 16 electoral divisions known as \"Tallaght\" followed by the name of a locality have, according to the 2016 census, a population of 76,119, up from 69,454 over five years. There have been calls in recent years for Tallaght to be declared a city.The village core of the district is located north of, and near to, the River Dodder, and parts of the broader area within South Dublin are close to the borders of Dublin City, County Kildare, Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown and County Wicklow. Several streams flow in the area, notably the Jobstown or Tallaght Stream (a tributary of the Dodder), and the Fettercairn Stream (a tributary of the River Camac), while the Tymon River, the main component of the River Poddle (Liffey tributary), rises in Cookstown, near Fettercairn. Tallaght is also the name.", "target": "county town of South Dublin, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q153499", "label": "431 Nephele", "source": "Nephele (minor planet designation: 431 Nephele) is a large Themistian asteroid. It is spectral C-type and is probably composed of carbonaceous material. It was discovered by Auguste Charlois on 18 December 1897 in Nice.", "target": "main-belt asteroid", "baseline_candidates": ["asteroid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1989067", "label": "Cries from the Heart", "source": "Cries from the Heart (also known as Touch of Truth) is a 1994 American made-for-television drama film directed by Michael Switzer and starring Patty Duke and Melissa Gilbert, who had co-starred together in two prior films.", "target": "1994 television film directed by Michael Switzer", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55220454", "label": "Eucerceris canaliculata", "source": "Eucerceris canaliculata is a species of wasp in the family Crabronidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28520529", "label": "Podgornoye", "source": "Podgornoye (Russian: Подго́рное) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Chainsky District in Tomsk Oblast, Russia. Population: 4,983 (2010 Census); 5,009 (2002 Census); 6,230 (1989 Census).", "target": "human settlement in Chainsky District, Tomsk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["subdivisions of Russia", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q705298", "label": "Al Feuerbach", "source": "Allan \"Al\" Dean Feuerbach (born January 14, 1948) is a former American track and field athlete. He competed in the shot put at the 1972 and 1976 Olympics and finished in fifth and fourth place, respectively. He missed the 1980 Games due to the boycott by the United States. He did however receive one of 461 Congressional Gold Medals created especially for the spurned athletes.On May 5, 1973, he broke Randy Matson's seven-year-old world record in the shot put by throwing 21.82 meters (71' 7\") at the San Jose Invitational at San Jose State College. Just weeks later, competing in a different sport, olympic-style weight lifting, he finished first in the heavyweight division at the U.S. weightlifting championships. Feuerbach currently works as a freelance audio technologist. He was a four time American champion in the shot put, plus he added three indoor championships and a AAA Championships. In 2016, he was elected into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame.He later became a sound engineer, working with CNBC.", "target": "American shot putter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4896288", "label": "Besiekierz Rudny", "source": "Besiekierz Rudny [bɛˈɕɛkʲɛʂ ˈrudnɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zgierz, within Zgierz County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 12 kilometres (7 mi) north of Zgierz and 19 km (12 mi) north of the regional capital Łódź.", "target": "village in Łódź, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q995666", "label": "Flåm", "source": "Flåm is a village in the Flåmsdalen valley which is located at the inner end of the Aurlandsfjorden, a branch of Sognefjorden. The village is located in Aurland Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. In 2014 its inhabitants numbered 350.", "target": "village in Aurland, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2432944", "label": "Tignes Dam", "source": "The Tignes Dam, also known as the Chevril Dam, is an arch dam on the Isère in the municipality of Tignes in the Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France. In planning since the 1920s and under the protest of locals, the dam was constructed between 1948 and 1952 with the purpose of hydroelectric power. At the time of its completion, it was the tallest dam in Europe. Water from the dam's reservoir, Lac du Chevril, feeds two power stations, the 96 MW Brevieres Power Station and the 332 MW Malgovert Power Station, for a total installed capacity of 428 MW. The yearly average combined output of the two power stations is 94 MW. Brevieres is located about 1 km (0.62 mi) downstream of the dam and Malgovert is also located downstream, 17 km (11 mi) to the northwest at 45°37′04.28″N 6°47′25.31″E. The dam was designed by Coyne & Bellier and is currently owned and operated by Électricité de France. Lac du Chevril flooded the town of Tignes which was relocated nearby. In 1989, in preparation for the 1992 Winter Olympics, Jean-Marie Pierret painted a fresco of the Olympian figure Hercules on the dam's face. The feat, by Pierret and eight other painters, took 60 days.The dam plays an important part in the French supernatural drama television series The Returned.", "target": "dam in Tignes", "baseline_candidates": ["arch dam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18760899", "label": "FS Pascal", "source": "Pascal was a protected cruiser of the French Navy built in the 1890s, the second and final member of the Descartes class. The Descartes-class cruisers were ordered as part of a construction program directed at strengthening the fleet's cruiser force. At the time, France was concerned with the growing naval threat of the Italian and German fleets, and the new cruisers were intended to serve with the main fleet, and overseas in the French colonial empire. Pascal was armed with a main battery of four 164.7 mm (6.5 in) guns, was protected by an armor deck that was 20 to 40 mm (0.79 to 1.57 in) thick, and was capable of steaming at a top speed of 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph). Pascal had a fairly short and uneventful career; after entering service in 1897, she was sent to French Indochina, where she served for the next seven years. During this period, she was part of the French squadron that responded to the Boxer Uprising in Qing China. In poor condition by 1904, she saw little further use and was struck from the naval register in 1911, thereafter being broken up.", "target": "protected cruiser of the French Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["protected cruiser"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17153378", "label": "Choanograptis paragrapha", "source": "Choanograptis paragrapha is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in New Guinea.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q93038189", "label": "William Henry Powell", "source": "William Henry Powell FRIBA (1847 - 7 June 1900) was an architect primarily based in London and South Africa.", "target": "British architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7949357", "label": "WFLF-FM", "source": "WFLF-FM (94.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting in Panama City, Florida, owned and operated by iHeartMedia.", "target": "news/talk radio station in Parker, Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27926059", "label": "Yoshiki Tsukamoto", "source": "Yoshiki Tsukamoto (塚本 好喜, Tsukamoto Yōshiki, born 17 October 1991) is a Japanese male badminton player.", "target": "badminton player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16189541", "label": "Ken Taylor", "source": "Kenneth John Taylor (born 30 November 1957) is a former New Zealand rugby union player. He was successful at provincial level for Hawke's Bay and in the New Zealand Colts team, but only played a single non-test match for the All Blacks.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1079343", "label": "Magnus Heinason", "source": "Magnus Heinason (Mogens Heinesøn) (1548 – 18 January 1589) was a Faroese naval hero, trader and privateer. Magnus Heinason served William the Silent and his son Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange for 10 years as a privateer, fighting the Spanish in the Dutch Revolt. Magnus Heinason was given the trading rights to the Faroe Islands by King Frederick II of Denmark and Norway from 1559 to 1588. Later he received letters of marque to sink or capture pirate ships and English merchant ships. Magnus built the first fortifications in Tórshavn. Only one year later, he was captured and sent to Copenhagen on the orders of the Danish treasurer and statholder, Christoffer Walkendorf (1525–1601) who was ruling Denmark after the sudden death of Frederick II. Magnus Heinason was tried, and was beheaded 18 January 1589. His widow, Sofie von Günsterberg, and his business partner Hans Lindenov (d. 1610) contested this act and brought the matter to an assembly of nobles (Herrendag) at the seaport of Kolding. Magnus Heinason's death sentence was declared void on 6 August 1590 and posthumously he was rehabilitated. Valkendorff was suspended from his duties and was forced to pay 3,000 Reichsthaler to the heirs. Magnus Heinason's remains were exhumed and taken to Ørslev Kloster (Ørslevkloster) on Lindenov's estate where they lie under the floor of the monastery church until this day.", "target": "Faroese naval hero", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q287921", "label": "The Arrival", "source": "The Arrival is the ninth studio album by Swedish death metal band Hypocrisy, released on 16 February 2004. It is the last album with their long-time drummer, Lars Szöke. The song \"Eraser\" was made into a music video. The album was also released in a strictly limited boxset (cat. no. NB 1230-5) containing \"The Arrival\", eight postcards and a bonus DVD of Hypocrisy's complete live show at Summer Breeze Festival in 2002. Dan Swanö (tracks 1, 3, 4, 7-9) and Silenoz (track 5) wrote lyrics for the album. The band wrote lyrics for track 2 and Tägtgren also wrote lyrics for tracks 4–6.", "target": "2004 album by Hypocrisy", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5321235", "label": "Dłużek-Kolonia", "source": "Dłużek-Kolonia [ˈdwuʐɛk kɔˈlɔɲa] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Lubsko, within Żary County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) south-west of Lubsko, 20 km (12 mi) north-west of Żary, and 45 km (28 mi) south-west of Zielona Góra.", "target": "settlement in Lubusz, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12831344", "label": "Taran-Bazar", "source": "Taran-Bazar (Kyrgyz: Таран-Базар) is a village in the Jalal-Abad Region of Kyrgyzstan. It is part of Suzak District. It was known as Dmitrievka until June 2003. Its population was 3,522 in 2021.", "target": "place in Jalal-Abad Region, Kyrgyzstan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27830917", "label": "Mario Rodríguez", "source": "Mario Andres Rodriguez Jr. (born May 12, 1994) is an American soccer player.", "target": "American association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1399235", "label": "Kaspar Kokk", "source": "Kaspar Kokk (born August 3, 1982 in Tartu) is an Estonian cross-country skier. He competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin. He represents Estonia at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Kokk's best finish was 14th in the 4 x 10 km relay at the 2010 Games. His best finish was the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships was eighth in the 4 x 10 km relay at Liberec in 2009. Kokk's best World Cup finish was 11th in a 4 x 10 km relay at Norway in November 2009 while his best individual finish was 16th in a 15 km +15 km double pursuit event in Germany in 2006.", "target": "Estonian cross-country skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5147656", "label": "Colm Bonnar", "source": "Colm Bonnar (born 12 June 1964) is an Irish hurling manager and former player. He is the current manager of the Tipperary senior hurling team having been appointed in September 2021. He is the former manager of the Carlow senior hurling team. Bonnar played for club sides Cashel King Cormacs and Dunhill and was a member of the Tipperary senior hurling team for 13 seasons, during which time he usually lined out at midfield. Bonnar began his hurling career at club level with Cashel King Cormacs. He broke onto the club's top adult team after championship success in the minor and under-21 grades. Bonnar enjoyed his greatest success when he captained the club to the 1991 Munster Club Championship. He later transferred to the Dunhill club in Waterford. At inter-county level, Bonnar was part of the successful Tipperary minor team that won the All-Ireland Championship in 1982 before later winning back-to-back Munster Championships with the under-21 team in 1983 and 1984. He joined the Tipperary senior team in 1985. From his debut, Bonnar was ever-present as a midfielder and made numerous National League and Championship appearances in a career that ended with his last game in 1998. During that time he was part of two All-Ireland Championship-winning-winning teams – in 1989, 1991. Bonnar also secured five Munster Championship medals and a National Hurling League medal. Bonnar won an All-Star in 1988. At inter-provincial level, Bonnar was selected to play in five championship campaigns with Munster and won Railway Cup medals in 1995, 1996 and 1997. After.", "target": "Irish hurler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5543185", "label": "George Pape", "source": "Sir George Augustus Pape (29 January 1903 – 15 June 1987) was an Australian lawyer and judge. He became a Queen's Counsel in 1955 and a judge in the Supreme Court of Victoria in 1957. He was knighted in 1968 and retired from the Supreme Court in 1975.", "target": "Australian judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6776791", "label": "Martin Vorhees Bergen, Jr.", "source": "Martin Vorhees \"Mike\" Bergen Jr. (January 29, 1872 – July 8, 1941) was an American football player, coach, and lawyer. He served as the head football coach at Grinnell College (1894–1895, 1902–1903, 1905) and at the University of Virginia (1896–1897), compiling a career college football record of 38–22–6. Bergen died of a heart attack at the age of 69 on July 8, 1941 in his apartment at the Racquet Club in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Christopher A. Bergen, United States Congressman who represented New Jersey's 1st congressional district from 1889 to 1893.", "target": "American football player and coach (1872-1941)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8064503", "label": "Zagrody, Kielce County", "source": "Zagrody [zaˈɡrɔdɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sitkówka-Nowiny, within Kielce County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) north-west of Osiedle-Nowiny and 9 km (6 mi) south-west of the regional capital Kielce.The village has a population of 380.", "target": "village in Świętokrzyskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1202130", "label": "Robot Entertainment", "source": "Robot Entertainment is an American video game development and publishing company created by the founders of the defunct Ensemble Studios, after being shut down by Microsoft. Other members of the company founded another studio, Bonfire Studios. Robot Entertainment was responsible for maintaining and updating Halo Wars until February 28, 2010, when Microsoft Studios assumed control of the game servers and updates. Also, in January 2011, Microsoft Studios took over updates and servers for Age of Empires III. Robot Entertainment have since released games including Orcs Must Die!, Orcs Must Die! 2, Hero Academy, Echo Prime, Orcs Must Die! Unchained, Hero Academy 2 and ReadySet Heroes.", "target": "American video game development company", "baseline_candidates": ["video game developer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87490167", "label": "Mariela Jiménez", "source": "Mariela Jiménez Mirón (born 13 December 1997) is a Mexican footballer who plays as a forward for Liga MX Femenil side Club Universidad Nacional and the Mexico women's national team.", "target": "Mexican footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6542223", "label": "Libertyville High School", "source": "Libertyville High School, or LHS, is a public four-year high school located in Libertyville, Illinois, a northern suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. Located at the intersection of Park Avenue (IL Rte 176) and Dawes Street, it sits on the shore of Butler Lake and is part of Community High School District 128, which also includes Vernon Hills High School.", "target": "high school in Illinois, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24673988", "label": "Humberton", "source": "Humberton is a hamlet and civil parish in the Harrogate district of North Yorkshire, England. It is situated 2 miles (3.2 km) east from Boroughbridge and on the north side of the River Ure. The hamlet lies about one mile to the west of the Swale, and comprises 2,320 acres (9 km2) of land. The Ure, which separates the township from Aldborough, was crossed by a wooden bridge, at Milby, before the Conquest, and some remains of the bridge are still visible when the water is low. The name Humberton means 'Hund's fortified farm/settlement' or 'Hundr's fortified farm/settlement'. The population was estimated at 50 in 2013.", "target": "village in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18781715", "label": "Kotovo, Ustyuzhensky District, Vologda Oblast", "source": "Kotovo (Russian: Котово) is a rural locality (a village) in Nikiforovskoye Rural Settlement, Ustyuzhensky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 2 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Ustyuzhensky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q84176903", "label": "Hjelmeland og Fister", "source": "Hjelmeland og Fister is a former municipality in Rogaland county, Norway. The municipality existed from 1859 until its dissolution in 1884. It encompassed the area of today's Hjelmeland municipality plus the eastern islands in today's Stavanger municipality. The administrative centre of the municipality was the village of Hjelmelandsvågen. There were two churches in the municipality: Fister Church and Hjelmeland Church.", "target": "former municipality in Rogaland, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["former municipality of Norway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26510169", "label": "Dogdyke Engine", "source": "The Dogdyke Engine is a drainage engine near Tattershall, Lincolnshire, in England. The drainage of 2,500 acres (1,012 ha) of land around Tattershall was authorised in 1796, and came under the control of the Witham Third District commissioners in 1844The building dates to 1856 when a rotative beam engine was built to replace windmill style engines possibly dating to 1540 and draining land between the rivers Bain and Witham. The engine discharged into the River Witham, but has a long fetch from a drain parallel to the river called The Dogdyke engine drain originating just south of Kirkstead at a place called Parkbeck.1856 is relatively late and Wheeler does say that the 1856 engine replaces one installed in 1841, but the location of that is unknown. The building is a grade II listed ancient monument.", "target": "pumping station in Tattershall, East Lindsey, Lincolnshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["museum building", "pumping station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13687350", "label": "Pandoflabella nigrilunalis", "source": "Pandoflabella nigrilunalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Pandoflabella. It is found in Guyana.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95963276", "label": "Leofgar of Hereford", "source": "Leofgar (or Leovegard; died 1056) was a medieval Bishop of Hereford. Leofgar was consecrated in March 1056. He had previously been the chaplain to Harold Godwineson, and it was probably Harold who persuaded King Edward the Confessor to appoint him to the bishopric. The appointment was disapproved of by the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, mainly for the warlike character of Leofgar. However, because of the Welsh raids, and the damage the diocese had taken in the previous year, it was felt that a more martial man was needed to help protect the area. Significantly, while a bishop he retained his mustache, a symbol of a warrior.Leofgar was killed by Gruffydd ap Llywelyn on 16 June 1056 at Glasbury-on-Wye during a battle with the Welsh. Along with Leofgar, many English were killed, which set back the English efforts to pacify the Welsh frontier. After Leofgar's death, the diocese of Hereford was administered by Ealdred, who was Bishop of Worcester, until Walter of Lorraine was elected in 1060.", "target": "Bishop of Hereford", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4121073", "label": "Chilean naval mutiny of 1931", "source": "The Chilean naval mutiny of 1931 (Spanish: Sublevación de la Escuadra) was a violent rebellion of Chilean Navy enlisted men against the government of Vice President Manuel Trucco.", "target": "revolt by sailors of the Chilean Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["mutiny", "coup d'état"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q87688730", "label": "David MacMillan", "source": "Sir David William Cross MacMillan (born 16 March 1968) is a Scottish chemist and the James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Chemistry at Princeton University, where he was also the chair of the Department of Chemistry from 2010 to 2015. He shared the 2021 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Benjamin List \"for the development of asymmetric organocatalysis\".", "target": "British chemist (1968-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q305602", "label": "Acilius duvergeri", "source": "Acilius duvergeri is a species of beetle in family Dytiscidae. It is found in Algeria, Italy, Morocco, Portugal, and Spain.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2367578", "label": "Heshmat Tabarzadi", "source": "Heshmatollah Tabarzadi (Persian: حشمت‌الله طبرزدی; born March 21, 1959) is an Iranian democratic activist. Tabarzadi has been arrested several times on charges related to his political activities, most recently in December 2009. In October 2010, a court sentenced him to nine additional years in jail and 74 lashes, a sentence that was reduced to eight years on appeal.", "target": "Iranian activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18829", "label": "Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal", "source": "Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal (SMBC) is a webcomic by Zach Weinersmith. The gag-a-day comic features few recurring characters or storylines, and has no set format; some strips may be a single panel, while others may go on for ten panels or more. Recurring themes in SMBC include science, research, superheroes, religion, romance, dating, parenting and the meaning of life. SMBC has run since 2002 and is published daily.Weinersmith's webcomic was recognized in 2006 and 2007 with the Web Cartoonists' Choice Award for Outstanding Single Panel Comic, and received nominations in 2003 and 2008.", "target": "online comic strip", "baseline_candidates": ["webcomic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6721830", "label": "MacDonald P. Jackson", "source": "MacDonald Pairman Jackson FNZAH is a New Zealand scholar of English literature. Most of his work is on English Renaissance drama; he specializes in authorship attribution. He is also internationally recognized for his work on Shakespeare's texts.", "target": "New Zealand literature scholar", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1076203", "label": "Akihiro Miwa", "source": "Akihiro Maruyama (丸山 明宏, Maruyama Akihiro, born May 15, 1935), better known by his stage name Akihiro Miwa (美輪 明宏, Miwa Akihiro), is a Japanese singer, actor, director, composer, author and drag queen.", "target": "Japanese singer, actor, drag queen, director, composer and author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5447617", "label": "Fifty-Second Army", "source": "The Japanese 52nd Army (第52軍, Dai-gojyūni gun) was an army of the Imperial Japanese Army during the final days of World War II.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17159188", "label": "Wesley Sulzberger", "source": "Wesley Sulzberger (born 20 October 1986) is an Australian former professional cyclist, who rode professionally between 2009 and 2016.", "target": "road bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27306731", "label": "Momar Ndoye", "source": "Momar Ndoye (born 10 March 1992) is a Senegalese professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Gibraltarian club Boca Gibraltar.", "target": "Senegalese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q157091", "label": "Gézaincourt", "source": "Gézaincourt (French pronunciation: ​[ʒezɛ̃kuʁ]) is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.", "target": "commune in Somme, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7454940", "label": "Serjão", "source": "Serjão (meaning \"big Sergio\" in Portuguese) is a nickname of people with given name Sergio and may refer to: Sérgio Luis Gardino da Silva (born 1979), Brazilian footballer Sérgio Ricardo de Jesus Vertello (born 1975), Brazilian footballer Sergio Luis Maciel Lucas (born 1979), Brazilian born Azerbaijani futsal player.", "target": "nickname", "baseline_candidates": ["nickname"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q978968", "label": "Solon", "source": "Solon ( SOH-lən) is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States, and is a suburb of Cleveland. It is part of Northeast Ohio's combined Cleveland–Akron–Canton metropolitan area, the 15th-largest combined statistical area in the country. According to the 2020 census, the population of Solon was 24,262 .The city had been recognized by Money in its list of \"Best Places to Live\", placing 23rd in 2009, 3rd in 2011, and 10th in 2015. The city has been rated as one of the safest in Ohio, has a highly rated public school system, and was ranked as one of the \"best places to raise kids\" by Bloomberg Businessweek.Solon has a strong economy and in 2013 and 2014 was granted a Google eCity award, recognizing it as the city with the strongest online business community in Ohio.", "target": "city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1756386", "label": "Yamaha XTZ 750 Super Ténéré", "source": "The Yamaha XTZ 750 Super Ténéré was a dual-sport motorcycle, produced by Yamaha beginning in 1989. It was named after Yamaha's lighter, single-cylinder models, which in turn were named after the notorious Ténéré desert stage of the former Paris-Dakar Rally in northeastern Niger.", "target": "A twin cylinder dual-sport motorcycle, produced by Yamaha in the 1990s.", "baseline_candidates": ["motorcycle model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18811183", "label": "Ian Hepburn", "source": "Ian Hepburn (29 May 1902 – 3 July 1974) was a British schoolmaster, botanist, ecologist and author.", "target": "British schoolmaster, botanist, ecologist and author (1902-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3398022", "label": "United States Population Clock", "source": "The U.S. and World Population Clock presents the United States Census Bureau's continuously active approximations of both the population of the United States and the world's total population. The population totals are based on the latest census information and national population estimates, which are used in the algorithms that run the two clocks. In July 2021, the Census Bureau gives the current population of the United States as over 332 million.", "target": "displays real-time of U.S. and world populations", "baseline_candidates": ["web page"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13159949", "label": "Puttur Narasimha Nayak", "source": "Puttur Narasimha Nayak is a Kannada and Konkani singer and vocalist from Karnataka. He sings devotional songs, chiefly Haridasa compositions, and Carnatic classical music. To his credit, he has rendered in Kannada, mainly devotional songs and kirthanas by Purandara Dasa, Kanaka Dasa and has given many public concerts all over the world. His \"Pavamana Jagada Prana\" album was extremely popular.", "target": "Indian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6285507", "label": "Joseph Mendenhall", "source": "Joseph Abraham Mendenhall (January 15, 1920 – January 5, 2013) was a United States State Department official, known for his advisory work during the Kennedy administration on policy towards Vietnam and Laos. He was best known for his participation in the Krulak Mendenhall mission to South Vietnam in 1963 with General Victor Krulak. Their vastly divergent conclusions led U.S. President John F. Kennedy to ask if they had visited the same country. Mendenhall continued his work in the Indochina region after Lyndon B. Johnson assumed the presidency in wake of Kennedy's assassination.", "target": "American diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55064502", "label": "Sunnyday", "source": "Sunnyday is the fifteenth single released by the Japanese hip-hop group Lead. It was their second single of 2008, their previous single, Stand Up!, was released five months earlier in February. The single failed to break the top 20 on Oricon, charting at No. 34 and remaining on the charts for two weeks. \"Sunnyday\" was used as the theme song to the second season of the anime series Blue Dragon.", "target": "single by Lead", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19932755", "label": "Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly", "source": "Prince Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly (German: Fürst Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly; 27 December [O.S. 16 December] 1761 – 26 May [O.S. 14 May] 1818) was an Imperial Russian soldier of Baltic German and Scottish origin, who was commander-in-chief and Minister of War of the Russian Empire during Napoleon's invasion in 1812 and the War of the Sixth Coalition. Barclay implemented a number of reforms during this time that improved supply system in the army, doubled the number of army troops, and implemented new combat training principles. He was also the Governor-General of Finland. He was born into a German-speaking noble family from Livonia, who were of Scottish descent. His father was the first of his family to be accepted into the Russian nobility. Barclay joined the Imperial Russian Army at a young age in 1776. He served with distinction in the Russo-Turkish War (1787–92), the Russo-Swedish War (1788–90), and the Kościuszko Uprising (1794). In 1806, Barclay began commanding in the Napoleonic Wars, distinguishing himself at the Battle of Pułtusk that same year. He was wounded at the Battle of Eylau in 1807 while his troops were covering the retreat of the Russian army. Because of his wounds, he was forced to leave command. The following year, he carried out successful operations in the Finnish War against Sweden. Barclay led a large number of Russian troops approximately 100 km across the frozen Gulf of Bothnia in winter during a snowstorm. For his accomplishments, Barclay de Tolly was appointed Governor-General of the Grand Duchy of Finland.", "target": "Baltic German general (1761-1818)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21539", "label": "Plobsheim", "source": "Plobsheim (French pronunciation: ​[plɔbsaim] or [plɔpsaim]; Alsatian: Plobse) is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.", "target": "commune in Bas-Rhin, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3702766", "label": "Darko Nikač", "source": "Darko Nikač (Serbian Cyrillic: Дарко Никач; born 15 May 1990) is a Montenegrin footballer who plays as a forward for Montenegrin side FK Sutjeska Nikšić. He debuted for Montenegro's national team in 2013.", "target": "Montenegrin footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2411207", "label": "The Eyeliners", "source": "The Eyeliners are an all-woman American pop punk band from Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.", "target": "punk rock band from Albuquerque, New Mexico, US", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4898429", "label": "BetterZip", "source": "BetterZip is a trialware file archiver developed by Robert Rezabek, and first released in May 2006.It is developed solely for the macOS platform. Unlike the built-in Archive Utility from Apple it includes the ability to extract and compress in many archive formats, as well as the ability to view an archive and selectively extract files without automatically extracting the entire contents.", "target": "file compression software", "baseline_candidates": ["file archiver"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18603470", "label": "Jan Josef Horemans the Younger", "source": "Jan Josef Horemans the Younger (baptised 15 January 1714 - 9 February 1792) was an 18th-century Flemish painter. He is mainly known for his genre scenes but also painted harbor views, equestrian paintings, portraits and still lifes.", "target": "Flemish painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14229532", "label": "Pļaviņas", "source": "Pļaviņas (pronunciation ; German: Stockmannshof) is a town in Aizkraukle Municipality in Latvia. The town is located on the Daugava river. The population in 2020 was 2,974. Latvian law defines the town of Pļaviņas as belonging partly to the Vidzeme region and partly to Latgale.", "target": "city in Latvia", "baseline_candidates": ["city under municipality jurisdiction in Latvia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4811998", "label": "Aswinpur", "source": "Aswinpur is a village in Chandpur District in the Chittagong Division of eastern Bangladesh.", "target": "human settlement in Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17149360", "label": "Worth", "source": "Worth is an American financial, wealth management and lifestyle magazine founded in 1986 and re-launched by Sandow in 2009. The magazine addresses financial, legal and lifestyle issues for high-net-worth individuals. Each issue is organized into four sections: \"Make\" focuses on making money and entrepreneurship; \"Grow\" centers on wealth management and investing; \"Live\" highlights philanthropy, lifestyle and passion investing; and \"Creator\" covers luxury products, services and experiences.", "target": "magazine", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14394381", "label": "Compulsion", "source": "Compulsion is a 2013 Canadian psychological thriller film directed by Egidio Coccimiglio and starring Heather Graham, Carrie-Anne Moss, Kevin Dillon, and Joe Mantegna. The movie is based on the South Korean film 301, 302 directed by Park Chul-soo, which also serves as a remake. It focuses on two women occupying neighboring apartments, each one grappling with psychological disorders that begin to overtake their lives. According to the film’s press release: \"With images of sumptuous food and sensual enjoyment, the film explores the intimacy between the two through their connection with food, eating disorders and sex. In a battle of wills, one woman overflows with illusions and fearlessly faces life while the other withdraws from everything and fearlessly faces death. \"The movie opened for limited release on June 21, 2013.", "target": "2013 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19869837", "label": "1971 Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council election", "source": "The 1971 Richmond upon Thames Council election took place on 13 May 1971 to elect members of Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council in London, England. The whole council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "target": "1971 local election in England, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3969483", "label": "Cork Kent railway station", "source": "Kent Station (Irish: Stáisiún Cheannt) is an Iarnród Éireann railway station in Cork, Ireland. Originally opened in 1893, the station operates as a hub for Intercity services to Dublin and Tralee and commuter services to Mallow, Cobh and Midleton. In 2016, Kent Station was the fifth busiest station in the Republic of Ireland, as well as the busiest outside of Dublin.", "target": "railway station in Cork, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5646116", "label": "Hampstead Norris railway station", "source": "Hampstead Norris railway station was a station on the Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway in England. It served the village of Hampstead Norreys in Berkshire (note spelling differentiation). The station closed in 1962.", "target": "railway station in Hampstead Norreys, the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1816695", "label": "Maynardville", "source": "Maynardville (originally named Liberty) is a city in and the county seat of Union County, Tennessee, United States. The city was named to honor Horace Maynard, who successfully defended the creation of Union County from a challenge from Knox County. Its population was 2,413 at the 2010 census, up from 1,782 at the 2000 census. It is included in the Knoxville metropolitan statistical area.", "target": "city in Tennessee, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6914538", "label": "Morten Skogstad", "source": "Morten Skogstad (born 26 June 1962) is the drummer in the Norwegian hard rock/glam metal band Stage Dolls. He joined the band in 1993, replacing Steinar Krokstad.Skogstad was the drummer in the Norwegian hard rock band TNT from 1988 to 1989. During his tenure in TNT, he used the stage name Kenneth Odiin.", "target": "Norwegian musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5051210", "label": "Catalan American", "source": "Catalan Americans (Catalan: Català americà) are Americans of Catalan descent. The group is formed by Catalan-born naturalized citizens or residents, their descendants and, to a lesser extent, citizens or residents of Catalan descent who still acknowledge Catalan ancestry. The Catalan or Catalonian ancestry is identified with the code 204 in the 2000 U.S. Census, with the name Catalonian, which is in the group 200-299 Hispanic categories (including Spain). A total of 1,738 individuals who received the long-form Census questionnaire (which is given to 1 in 6 households) self-identified as Catalan Americans. In the same survey 1,660 people aged 5 or older indicated being able to speak the Catalan language, also with the name Catalonian. Because the long-form samples a sixth of the population, that figure puts the estimate of Catalan speakers in the US in 2000 at around 10,000 people. However, 22,047 people born in Catalonia live in the United States of America. Catalonians self-identify as White American or Hispanic American. However, in the U.S. Census white (along with black, Asian, and such) is defined as a \"racial\" category and Hispanic/Latino as an \"ethnic\" category so it is possible to identify as both.", "target": "americans of Catalan birth or descent", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q946002", "label": "Don Carlos", "source": "Don A. Carlos (born March 3, 1944) is a retired American basketball player. Born in Columbus, Ohio, Carlos played collegiately for the Otterbein College. He was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in the 8th round (83rd pick overall) of the 1967 NBA Draft. He played for the Houston Mavericks (1968–69) in the ABA for 56 games.", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7986491", "label": "West Side", "source": "The West Side of Jersey City is an area made up of several diverse neighborhoods on either side of West Side Avenue, one of the city's main shopping streets. Parallel and west of Kennedy Boulevard, West Side Avenue carries two county route designations.West Side Avenue at its northern end begins in the Marion Section as a dead end at the PATH trains, though there is no station there After crossing Broadway and Sip Avenue it passes Holy Name Cemetery on the west and nearby Saint Peter's College to the east. \"The Bubble\", an air-supported structure that is part of Yanitelli Center, is visible on the slope of Montgomery Street. Lincoln Park is one of the largest county parks in Hudson County and includes recreational facilities (tennis, track, athletic fields, golf range, biking, running) and picnicking areas. Overpasses provide pedestrian access over Truck 1-9 from the older, more urban eastern section of the park to the more natural west section on the Hackensack River. The streets ascending from the park contain an eclectic mix architectural styles including Victorian and Edwardian mansions, and pre-war and Art Deco apartment buildings in the Bergen Section. St Aloyius Church is a prominent landmark near the park. At Communipaw Avenue the street enters the heart of West Bergen. West Bergen is so called in reference Bergen-Lafayette Section and in the 19th century was part of Bergen Township and Bergen. (The name Bergen is from the original Bergen, New Netherland centered on Bergen Square). One of the very few older residential districts of.", "target": "neighborhood of Jersey City", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5045678", "label": "Carpenter", "source": "Carpenter is an unincorporated community in New Castle County, Delaware, United States. Carpenter is located where Delaware Route 92 crosses the former Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (now CSX Transportation's Philadelphia Subdivision), 6.5 miles northeast of Wilmington.", "target": "human settlement in Delaware, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6741257", "label": "Laura of Euthymius", "source": "The Monastery of Euthymius started as a lavra-type monastic settlement in the Judaean desert, founded by Saint Euthymius the Great (377–473) in 420, known as the Laura or Lavra of Euthymius. After its final abandonment in the 13th century, it was repurposed as a caravanserai and became known as Khan el-Ahmar, the Red Caravanserai, khan being an originally Persian word for inn or caravanserai. Its ruins still stand a short distance south of today's main Jerusalem-Jericho highway in the West Bank. It should not be confused with the nearby Khan al-Hatruri, better known to visitors as the Good Samaritan Inn, which sometimes also used to be called Khan al-Ahmar.", "target": "laura in the present-day West Bank founded by Saint Euthymius the Great in 420", "baseline_candidates": ["monastery", "protected area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3545547", "label": "Mercedes Molto", "source": "Mercedes Molto (born Mercedes Moltó Contreras on February 21, 1974 in Barcelona, Spain) is a Spanish-born Mexican actress.", "target": "Mexican-Spanish actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7448526", "label": "Seljord IL", "source": "Seljord Idrettslag is a Norwegian sports club from Seljord, Telemark. It has sections for association football, team handball, Nordic skiing and equestrianism. It was founded in 1880, and is thus among the oldest sports clubs in Norway. In 1953 it lacked a section for equestrianism, but had a section for track and field.The men's football team played in the Third Division, the fourth tier of Norwegian football, from 1999 to 2004. The men's team played in the Fifth Division in 2010, but pulled the team mid-season. From 2013 the team plays in the Sixth Division.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24944571", "label": "Chittoor revenue division, Andhra Pradesh", "source": "Chittoor revenue division is an administrative division in the Chittoor district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It is one of the 4 revenue divisions in the district with 10 mandals under its administration and its headquarters at Chittoor. The division has 1 municipal corporation.", "target": "place in Andhra Pradesh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["revenue division"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2347864", "label": "quattrino", "source": "The quattrino is an ancient Italian currency denomination largely used in Central Italy, especially in Tuscany and Rome. Its name derives from the Latin quater denari, because its value was equal to four denari. Consequently, its value was one third of a soldo. It disappeared after the unification of Italy in 1861, when the Italian lira was introduced as an equivalent of the french franc.", "target": "ancient Italian currency denomination", "baseline_candidates": ["currency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13455914", "label": "Caridina linduensis", "source": "Caridina linduensis is a species of freshwater shrimp in the family Atyidae, endemic to Lake Lindu and its effluent stream in Sulawesi. It was known only from the type series, collected in 1904, and was recorded again in 2011 in a survey around Lake Lindu and is found in shallow littoral habitats of leaf litter, macrophytes, and dead wood. In the effluent stream it is found on soft substrates and slow flowing water, and is less common in the lake itself. The type locality of Lake Lindu was designated as a Recreation Park in 1978, and is part of the larger Lore Lindu National Park and UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. It is listed under IUCN criterion B1ab(iii,v) as Critically Endangered due to threats from introduced species of fish (Cyprinus carpio, Clarias batrachus, & Oreochromis spp. ), land conversion to agriculture, logging, and shore disturbance caused by the grazing of water buffalo. Surveys are required to find the full distribution of C. linduensis, primarily its habitat in the effluent stream. C. linduensis is also sympatric with the recently described species Caridina dali and Caridina kaili.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4730518", "label": "Allan Casey", "source": "Allan Casey is a Canadian writer, whose book Lakeland: Journeys into the Soul of Canada, won the Governor General's Award for English non-fiction in 2010. The book was also a shortlisted nominee for the Edna Staebler Award.Born in Regina, Saskatchewan, and raised in Prince Albert, Casey has written for a variety of publications, including Adbusters, Canadian Business, Canadian Geographic, Canadian Living, Reader's Digest and Books in Canada.", "target": "Canadian writer of regional nonfiction", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13626388", "label": "Peter Millar", "source": "Peter Millar (21 April 1951 – 17 June 2013) was a Scottish footballer who played as a defender or midfielder. Millar is best known for his time at Motherwell where he made 178 league appearances from 1972 to 1979; he also played for Arbroath, Dunfermline Athletic and Dundee before rounding off his career in the United States where he played for Phoenix Inferno and Cleveland Force.Millar died on 17 June 2013, having been suffering from a brain tumour.", "target": "Scottish footballer (1951-2013)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17025708", "label": "Mine Would Be You", "source": "\"Mine Would Be You\" is a song written by Jessi Alexander, Connie Harrington, and Deric Ruttan and recorded by American country music artist Blake Shelton. It was released in July 2013 as the third single from Shelton's 2013 album Based on a True Story…. The song reached number one the US Billboard Country Airplay chart.", "target": "single by Blake Shelton", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1399656", "label": "Ulrich of Richenthal", "source": "Ulrich of Richenthal (died c. 1438) was a chronicler of the Council of Constance. Ulrich was a citizen of Konstanz (Constance). He was a landowner and a layman, perhaps a son of the town clerk of Constance, Johannes Richenthal, who lived in the second half of the fourteenth century. During the session of the Ecumenical Council of Constance, Ulrich frequently came into connection with the fathers assembled. He met the papal delegates who had to provide quarters for the members of the council. He was employed in business matters by princes who were present in the city during the council, and a bishop lived in his house. Ulrich followed the council, the great events that took place in it, the festivities, and all the celebrations of which his native town was the theatre. He wrote in the German dialect of Konstanz an exact and careful account of all, introducing much statistical matter. This chronicle is preserved in several manuscripts, of which one at St. Petersburg is in Latin. The manuscripts contain coats-of-arms and other historically valuable illustrations. This article incorporates text from the public domain Catholic Encyclopedia.", "target": "chronicler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20591123", "label": "Tiger Salim", "source": "Tiger Salim is a 1978 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Joshiy and produced by S. R. Shaji. The film stars Sudheer, Vincent, Ravi Kumar, etc. in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Shyam.", "target": "1978 film directed by Joshiy", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q289889", "label": "Lexovii", "source": "The Lexovii (Gaulish: *Lexsouioi, 'the leaning, lame'), were a Gallic tribe dwelling immediately west of the mouth of the Seine, around present-day Lisieux, during the Iron Age and the Roman period.", "target": "Celtic people on the coast of Gallia", "baseline_candidates": ["Gauls", "isolated human group", "Ancient Celts"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2510270", "label": "Barchnowy", "source": "Barchnowy [barxˈnɔvɨ] (German: Barchnau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Starogard Gdański, within Starogard County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) south-east of Starogard Gdański and 48 km (30 mi) south of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 130.", "target": "village in Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q652455", "label": "Saatlen", "source": "Saatlen is a quarter in the district 12 of Zürich, located in the Glatt Valley (German: Glattal). It was formerly a part of Schwamendingen municipality, which was incorporated into Zürich in 1934. The quarter has a population of 6,727 distributed on an area of 1.13 km².", "target": "quarter of the city of Zurich, Switzerland", "baseline_candidates": ["statistical neighborhood of Zürich"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7492565", "label": "Sheffield, Cornwall", "source": "Sheffield is a hamlet in Cornwall, England, situated near the village of Paul.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4586864", "label": "1991 Gold Coast IndyCar Grand Prix", "source": "The 1991 Gold Coast IndyCar Grand Prix was the opening round of the 1991 CART PPG Indy Car World Series, held on 17 March 1991 on the Surfers Paradise Street Circuit, Queensland, Australia. This was the first ever race for the North American–based Champ Car World Series held in the Southern Hemisphere.", "target": "motor car race", "baseline_candidates": ["Nikon Indy 300"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3433428", "label": "Williams sisters rivalry", "source": "The Williams sisters rivalry is a modern-day tennis rivalry between sisters Venus Williams and Serena Williams (born June 17, 1980, and September 26, 1981, respectively), widely regarded as two of the greatest tennis players of all time. They have met 31 times in professional tournaments (most recently at the 2020 Top Seed Open), and Serena leads their head-to-head 19–12. Both sisters have been ranked world No. 1 in singles: Venus for a total of 11 weeks, beginning in February 2002; Serena for a total of 316 weeks, beginning in July 2002. Venus has won 49 singles titles over the course of her career, and Serena has won 73. The Williams sisters are the only two women during the Open Era to contest four consecutive Grand Slam finals: from the 2002 French Open to the 2003 Australian Open. Serena won all four of these finals. The sisters are nonetheless personally very close. They have won 22 titles when playing doubles together, including 14 Grand Slam titles and 3 Olympic gold medals.", "target": "tennis singles rivalry between Venus and Serena Williams", "baseline_candidates": ["team rivalries in sports", "rivalry"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3851266", "label": "Massimo Garavaglia", "source": "Massimo Garavaglia (born 8 April 1968) is an Italian politician who is currently serving as the Italian Minister of Tourism.", "target": "Italian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48814807", "label": "In and Out", "source": "In and Out is an album by American guitarist James Blood Ulmer recorded in 2009 and released on the German In+Out label.", "target": "album by James Blood Ulmer", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85722672", "label": "1947 South Carolina State Bulldogs football team", "source": "The 1947 South Carolina State Bulldogs football team was an American football team that represented South Carolina State University during the 1947 college football season. In its second season under head coach Oliver C. Dawson, the team compiled a 7–1–2, defeated Allen in the Pecan Bowl, and outscored all opponents by a total of 123 to 46. The team ranked No. 10 among the nation's black college football teams according to the Pittsburgh Courier and its Dickinson Rating System. The team's only loss was to No. 5 Shaw.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q959230", "label": "Ilja Venäläinen", "source": "Ilja Venäläinen (born 27 September 1980) is a retired Finnish football player. He played for FF Jaro and FC KooTeePee and most recently for Kuopion Palloseura (KuPS), in the Finnish Premier League.", "target": "Finnish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q221345", "label": "Batman Forever", "source": "Batman Forever is a 1995 American superhero film directed by Joel Schumacher and produced by Tim Burton, based on the DC Comics character Batman by Bill Finger and Bob Kane. The third installment of Warner Bros.' initial Batman film series, it is a sequel to Batman Returns starring Val Kilmer and replacing Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne / Batman, alongside Tommy Lee Jones, Jim Carrey, Nicole Kidman, Chris O'Donnell, Michael Gough, and Pat Hingle. The plot focuses on Batman trying to stop Two-Face and the Riddler in their scheme to extract information from all the minds in Gotham City while adopting an orphaned acrobat named Dick Grayson—who becomes his sidekick, Robin—and developing feelings for psychologist Dr. Chase Meridian. Schumacher mostly eschewed the dark, dystopian atmosphere of Burton's films by drawing inspiration from the Batman comic books of the Dick Sprang era, as well as the 1960s television series, but without the campiness of the next film. Batman's alter ego, Bruce Wayne is much more prominent in the film, and like in Batman: The Animated Series, he is shown to be actively involved in the management of Wayne Enterprises. After Keaton chose not to reprise his role, William Baldwin and Ethan Hawke were considered as a replacement before Val Kilmer joined the cast. Batman Forever was released on June 16, 1995, to mixed reviews from critics, who praised the cinematography, music, action sequences and performances of Carrey and Jones, but criticized the CGI, costume designs, and tonal departure from previous films. The film was a box office.", "target": "1995 film directed by Joel Schumacher", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10368678", "label": "Saving My Face", "source": "\"Saving My Face\" is a song performed by Scottish singer KT Tunstall. The song was written by Tunstall and produced by Steve Osborne for the Tunstall's second album Drastic Fantastic (2007). The song's lyrics were inspired by a documentary Tunstall watched on the Discovery Channel \"about old women having really disturbing amounts of plastic surgery to look very, very young.\".", "target": "single", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20623817", "label": "Baffin Island", "source": "Baffin Island (formerly Baffin Land), in the Canadian territory of Nunavut, is the largest island in Canada and the fifth-largest island in the world. Its area is 507,451 km2 (195,928 sq mi)—slightly larger than Spain, its population was 13,039 as of the 2021 Canadian census, and is located at 68°N 70°W. It also contains the city of Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut.", "target": "mostly Arctic island in Nunavut, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5367356", "label": "Elroy-Sparta State Trail", "source": "The Elroy-Sparta State Trail is a 32.5-mile (52.3 km) Wisconsin State rail trail between Elroy and Sparta, Wisconsin. Considered to be the first rail trail when it opened in 1967, it was designed for foot, bicycle, equestrian and light motorized traffic. Designated a multi-use trail, it offers recreational access to the routes and is open to the public. The trail is part of the larger Wisconsin bike trail system operated by the state of Wisconsin. It passes through rural scenery and three tunnels. It is one of six connecting trails in west-central Wisconsin. It was added to the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy hall of Fame in September 2008. It is one of the most popular trails in Wisconsin.", "target": "State Trail in Wisconsin", "baseline_candidates": ["rail trail"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42938147", "label": "Christine Pfitzinger", "source": "Christine Joy Pfitzinger (née Hughes; born 24 January 1959) is a former New Zealand female middle-distance runner. She represented New Zealand at the 1988 Summer Olympics, where she competed in the 3000 metres. She won nine New Zealand national athletic championship titles: the 800 metres in 1982 and 1987; the 1500 metres in 1986, 1987, 1990 and 1999; and the 3000 metres in 1984, 1988 and 1990.Her husband, Pete Pfitzinger, is a former American marathon runner who represented the United States at the 1984 and 1988 Summer Olympics.", "target": "New Zealand athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7600647", "label": "Star Boulevard", "source": "Star Boulevard (Traditional Chinese: 星光大道; Simplified Chinese: 星光大道; pinyin: xīng guāng dà dào) is a China's first TV musical series. It is also called Walk of Fame. This 20-episode series, sponsored by Starlight International Media Co. Ltd, featured some of Hong Kong's well-known stars including Jordan Chan, Eric Tsang and Ruby Lin. The show also featured newcomers Huang Yida, Yang Ziting, Lu Jiejun and Li Xuan.", "target": "Chinese TV musical series", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia disambiguation page"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4597049", "label": "2/4th Machine Gun Battalion", "source": "The 2/4th Machine Gun Battalion was an Australian Army unit raised for service with the all volunteer Second Australian Imperial Force (2nd AIF) during the Second World War. Formed in late 1940 as part of the 8th Division, the battalion was established to provide direct fire support to the division's infantry brigades. It was the fourth, and last, such unit raised within the 2nd AIF. The unit's personnel were largely drawn from the state of Western Australia and after formation, the battalion concentrated near Perth for basic individual training before moving to the Adelaide Hills to complete more advance manoeuvres. In late 1941, amidst concerns of war in the Pacific, the unit was deployed north to Darwin in the Northern Territory, where they undertook garrison duties in the weeks following Japan's entry into the war. Following Japanese landings in Malaya, the 2/4th embarked from Darwin and were transferred to Malaya, arriving in Singapore in the final days of the fighting on the peninsula. In the wake of the withdrawal of British and Commonwealth forces to the island, the battalion was hastily deployed in support of the two Australian brigades—the 22nd and 27th Brigades—in the north-western sector of the island. During the initial Japanese landing, elements of the battalion were heavily engaged around the landing beaches but they were outnumbered and over the course of the week the defenders were pushed back towards the centre of the island, towards the city of Singapore. They suffered heavy casualties during this time, before subsequently becoming prisoners of war after.", "target": "Australian Army unit", "baseline_candidates": ["infantry battalion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15216846", "label": "Eslamabad, Dowreh", "source": "Eslamabad (Persian: اسلام اباد, also Romanized as Eslāmābād) is a village in Teshkan Rural District, Chegeni District, Dowreh County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 197, in 37 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20744969", "label": "Mariana Larroquette", "source": "Mariana Valeria Larroquette (born 24 October 1992) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a forward for Kansas City in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) and the Argentina national team.", "target": "Argentinian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47491950", "label": "Isaac Brassington", "source": "Isaac Brassington (1870 – 13 December 1932) was a British trade unionist and political activist. Born in Sutton on the Hill in Derbyshire, Brassington began working on the railways, and joined the General Railway Workers' Union (GRWU). By 1906, he was based in Leeds and active in the Independent Labour Party (ILP). He was elected to Leeds City Council in 1907, representing East Hunslet. In 1908, he became editor of the GRWU's journal, Railway Worker, then in 1911 he became an organiser for the GRWU. The union became part of the National Union of Railwaymen, and Brassington became its organiser for the Lancashire area, moving to Manchester.In Manchester, Brassington became associated with the left-wing of the ILP, and was on the Hands Off Russia committee. He stood in Warrington at the 1918 United Kingdom general election, taking third place with 22.6% of the vote. After the election, he argued that the ILP should affiliate to the Third International. Although this position was defeated, Brassington remained active in the ILP and was elected to Manchester City Council in 1921, representing the Labour Party in St Mark's. By the 1930s, he was the chair of the council's transport committee, but he resigned from the ILP after voting to cut wages for car workers, in contravention of party policy. He retired from union duties in 1930, and stood down from the council in 1932.Brassington spent his final months in Mickleover in Derbyshire, and died at the end of 1932.", "target": "British trade unionist and political activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q276163", "label": "Visit Mallorca Stadi", "source": "Visit Mallorca Stadium is a football stadium located in Palma de Mallorca, Balearic Islands, Spain, and serves as the home ground of RCD Mallorca. It is the largest stadium in the Balearic Islands and the 26th largest in Spain. The stadium was renamed during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic in a conjoined effort with Consell de Mallorca, and other public entities to reactivate tourist activities on the island, its main resource. The stadium is located in the Can Valero industrial zone in north-west Palma, 3 km from the city center and 13 km from the airport. It can be seen from the Vía de Cintura, Palma's urban motorway. Previously known as the Son Moix Stadium (Catalan: Estadi de Son Moix, Spanish: Estadio de Son Moix), the Iberostar Stadium (Catalan: Iberostar Estadi) and the Ono Estadi, the stadium was built for the 1999 Summer Universiade. In 1999, RCD Mallorca obtained an agreement with the city council to use it for the next 50 years, replacing their previous stadium, Estadio Lluís Sitjar. The stadium can hold 23,142 spectators, making it the biggest stadium in the Balearic Islands. It has a bowl shape design with two of the stands having two tiers. The stadium was designed to allow for further development of both ends, eventually creating a fully two-tiered stadium with a capacity of over 40,000. These plans now look unlikely as further detailed below. A small temporary stand is sometimes erected on the athletics track; this can be removed for athletics events.", "target": "football stadium", "baseline_candidates": ["association football venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22277150", "label": "Derrick Bragg", "source": "Derrick Bragg is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly in the 2015 provincial election. He represents the electoral district of Fogo Island-Cape Freels as a member of the Liberal Party.He was re-elected in the 2019 provincial election. On September 13, 2019, he was appointed Minister of Municipal Affairs and Environment in the Ball government.On August 19, 2020, he was appointed Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure, and Minister Responsible for the Public Procurement Agency in the Furey government. He was re-elected in the 2021 provincial election. On April 8, 2021, he was appointed Minister of Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6652875", "label": "Littlebeck", "source": "Littlebeck is a hamlet in the Eden District in the English county of Cumbria, located near the small village of King's Meaburn, the hamlet of Lankaber and the village of Morland. The nearest town is Appleby-in-Westmorland. Littlebeck farmhouse is a Grade II listed building.", "target": "village in England, Britain", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66975177", "label": "First Church of Christ, Scientist, Perth", "source": "First Church of Christ, Scientist, Perth is a Christian Science church located at 264 St Georges Terrace, on the corner of Elder Street, in Perth, Western Australia.", "target": "church in Perth, Western Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "heritage site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3062917", "label": "Strutter", "source": "Strutter is a television series that was broadcast on MTV in Europe. It stars Paul Kaye as American lawyer Mike Strutter and Thaila Zucchi as his wife. The show focuses on clips of people getting hurt, Strutter making fun of music videos of indie bands, emo bands and boy bands, a German couple who like to mix extreme sports with sexual intercourse, and mock commercials promoting fictitious \"Struttergear\" merchandise. The show was produced by the Objective Productions comedy office, where Peep Show was made. The character of Mike Strutter originally appeared in a Dennis Pennis video release named Dennis Pennis RIP: Too Rude to Live in which he \"killed off \" the Pennis character. Kaye had wanted to do something with the character for years, so he and comedy writer Paul Garner developed a format, with Garner writing the series and appearing as an actor in it. Garner has said in interviews he would sit at home watching TV making his own Strutter-style voiceovers. The show aired two full series for a total of 16 episodes, in 2006 and 2007.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29587008", "label": "1989–90 Clydebank F.C. season", "source": "The 1989–90 season was Clydebank's twenty-fourth season in the Scottish Football League. They competed in the Scottish First Division and finished 3rd. They also competed in the Scottish League Cup and Scottish Cup.", "target": "Clydebank F.C. 1989-90 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16200876", "label": "Kunal Ghosh", "source": "Kunal Ghosh (Kunal Kumar Ghosh [Bengali: কুণাল কুমার ঘোষ]; born 20 June 1968) is an Indian journalist and politician. He is a member of the All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) and a former member of the Parliament of India, representing West Bengal in the Rajya Sabha.", "target": "Indian politician, Journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q90341638", "label": "James Nazroo", "source": "James Nazroo, PhD, MBBS FBA FaCSS, is Professor of Sociology at the University of Manchester. He is the founding and Deputy Director of the ESRC Centre of Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE), co-Principal Investigator (PI) of the Synergi Collaborative Centre, which is investigating ethnic inequalities in severe mental illness, and founding and co-Director of the Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing (MICRA). Issues of inequality, social justice and underlying processes of stratification have been the primary focus of his research activities, centring on ethnicity/race, ageing, gender, and the interrelationships between these. Central to his work on ethnicity/race has been developing an understanding of the links between ethnicity, racism, class and inequality. This work has covered a variety of elements of social disadvantage, how these relate to racialised identities and processes of racism, and how these patterns have changed over time. He has also explored the role of access to and quality of health services, including a critical examination of mental health services. His research on ageing has been concerned to understand the patterns and determinants of social and health inequalities in ageing populations. He has conducted studies on quality of life for older people among different ethnic groups in the UK, on inequalities in health at older ages, and on routes into retirement and the impact of retirement on health and well-being. He was PI of the fRaill programme, an interdisciplinary study of inequalities in later life, and is co-PI of the English Longitudinal Study of Aging (ELSA) which is a multi-disciplinary panel study of those.", "target": "British sociologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5199559", "label": "Cymindis babaulti", "source": "Cymindis babaulti is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Harpalinae. It was described by Andrewes in 1924.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2218506", "label": "Kineshemsky District", "source": "Kineshemsky District (Russian: Ки́нешемский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-one in Ivanovo Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the oblast. The area of the district is 1,583 square kilometers (611 sq mi). Its administrative center is the town of Kineshma (which is not administratively a part of the district). Population: 23,258 (2010 Census); 27,650 (2002 Census); 30,805 (1989 Census).", "target": "area in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["municipal district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q508016", "label": "Penwortham", "source": "Penwortham () is a town in South Ribble, Lancashire, England, on the south bank of the River Ribble facing the city of Preston. The town is at the most westerly crossing point of the river, with major road and rail links crossing it here. The population of the town at the 2011 census was 23,047.", "target": "town in South Ribble, Lancashire, England", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18631692", "label": "Randy Frese", "source": "Randy Frese is a Republican member of the Illinois House of Representatives who represents the 94th district. The 94th district, located in Western Illinois along the Mississippi River, includes all or parts of Adams, Henderson, Hancock and Warren counties. He succeeded Jil Tracy, who chose not to run for re-election to be Kirk Dillard's running mate in the 2014 gubernatorial election. Prior to being elected to the Illinois House of Representatives, he served as the Adams County Circuit Clerk from 2004 until 2012 when he opted to run against John M. Sullivan for State Senate instead of running for re-election.Frese served as an Illinois co-chair for the John Kasich's 2016 presidential campaign.", "target": "American politician in Illinois", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65305276", "label": "Secunda, Mpumalanga", "source": "Secunda (from Latin: second, secund, secundi meaning second/following) is a town built amidst the coalfields of the Mpumalanga province of South Africa. It was named for being the second Sasol extraction refinery producing oil from coal, after Sasolburg, some 140 kilometres (87 mi) to the west.", "target": "city in South Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16329809", "label": "Kallinikos Stavrovouniotis", "source": "Father Kallinikos Stavrovouniotis (Greek: Καλλίνικος Σταυροβουνιώτης), birth name Kostas P. Mammous (Greek: Κώστας Π. Μαμμούς; 11 November 1920 – 23 January 2011), the icon painter, was an Orthodox monk, ascetic in Cyprus, and was one of the most important Byzantine icon painters of the modern age.", "target": "Cypriot hagiographer (1920-2011)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27266822", "label": "Dolsando", "source": "Dolsando or Dolsan Island is tenth-largest island in South Korea and largest island in Yeosu city. It is the principal island of Dolsan town, on the southeastern coast of South Jeolla province, South Korea.", "target": "island of South Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5508045", "label": "Full Force", "source": "Full Force is the debut album by the Brooklyn, New York-based R&B group Full Force.", "target": "album by Full Force", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15212192", "label": "Cunningham", "source": "Cunningham is an unincorporated community in Carlisle County, Kentucky, United States. It is the home to the Cunningham Strawberry Festival.", "target": "unincorporated community in Carlisle County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19561425", "label": "George Mathen", "source": "George Mathen, also known as Appupen, is a noted graphic novelist and artist from Bangalore, India.", "target": "Indian artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1824561", "label": "Impermanence", "source": "Impermanence is the twelfth album by Meredith Monk, released on March 18, 2008 through ECM New Series.", "target": "2008 studio album by Meredith Monk", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2699635", "label": "The Army of Crime", "source": "The Army of Crime (French: L'Armée du crime) is a 2009 French drama-war film directed by Robert Guédiguian and based on a story by Serge Le Péron, who is also one of three credited for the screenplay. It received a wide release in France on 16 September 2009 and opened in the United States in 2010. The film deals with the development of the Manouchian Group, a 23-member resistance unit led by an Armenian exile. They were captured in 1944, tried by a German military court and executed. The title of the film was taken from a propaganda poster known as L'Affiche Rouge (red poster), in which the Nazis sought to present these French Resistance fighters as foreign criminals. The caption read \"Liberators? Liberation by the army of crime\".", "target": "2009 film by Robert Guédiguian", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q611783", "label": "Funing County", "source": "Funing County (simplified Chinese: 阜宁县; traditional Chinese: 阜寧縣; pinyin: Fùníng Xiàn) is under the administration of Yancheng, Jiangsu province, China. The county borders the prefecture-level city of Huai'an to the west. It has a population of 1.08 million, with 180,000 in the urban area, and a jurisdiction area of 1,436 km2. It is under the jurisdiction of Yancheng municipality. The county was incorporated in 1731. Its seat of government is located at Fucheng Town. Funing is a 400-km drive from Shanghai up the Ningjingyan Expressway. Funing is famous for being a revolutionary area of the Chinese Communist Party. It is also home to the Jiangsu Funing Economic Development Zone.", "target": "county", "baseline_candidates": ["county of China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q868042", "label": "Ella Kaabachi", "source": "Ella Kaabachi (Arabic: ايلا كعباشي; born 15 May 1992) is a footballer who plays as a forward for ASJ Soyaux. Born in France, she represents Tunisia at international level.", "target": "Tunisian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5913857", "label": "House at 107 William Street", "source": "The House at 107 William Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts, is a well-preserved early Greek Revival cottage. Built in the 1820s, it is a 1+1⁄2-story wood-frame house, five bays wide, with a side-gable roof, clapboard siding, and a granite foundation. It has a projecting central entry and an ell on its east side, set on a brick foundation. The ell has a second entry, indicating it may have been used as a shop. The main entry has sidelights, and both entries have a narrow transom. It is one of a small number of surviving buildings of a larger cluster that once stood near the junction of William and Main Streets.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.", "target": "building in Massachusetts, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1429014", "label": "Flo & Eddie", "source": "Flo & Eddie is a comedy rock duo consisting of Mark Volman (Flo, short for Phlorescent Leech) and Howard Kaylan (Eddie). The two were the original founding members of the Top 40 mid-to late 1960s rock and pop group The Turtles. After the Turtles dissolved in 1970, Volman and Kaylan first joined Frank Zappa's band The Mothers of Invention as Phlorescent Leech & Eddie. Contractual restrictions imposed early in their career prevented Volman and Kaylan from using the name The Turtles, as well as their own names, in a musical context.", "target": "American comedic musical duo", "baseline_candidates": ["musical duo", "double act"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2228759", "label": "Tiko", "source": "Tiko, originally called ‘Keka’ by the Bakweris, is a town and important port in the southwest region of Cameroon. The settlement grew as a market town for Duala (or Douala) fishermen, Bakweri (Kpwe people) farmers and hunters from Molyko, Bwenga, Bulu and Bokova. The core quarters in Tiko include Streets 1 to 7, Motombolombo, Down Beach, New Quarter, P&T quarters, New Layout, Long Street, Likomba, Golf Club, Mutengene, Ombe. As of 2010, the town is estimated to have a population of 55,914.Tiko is a popular destination for tourists visiting Cameroon. The town is also an industrial area which is mostly occupied by the CDC (Cameroon Development Co-operation), which produces rubber, banana, and palm oil. Tiko hosts the Tiko Golf Club, which is a popular destination for golf lovers. The Likomba Golf Course is located in Likomba which has 18 holes. During the dry season, major golf tournaments are held there, as it is one of only 2 golf courses in Cameroon. Tiko also hosts the special forces, which explains the peace and security enjoyed by the inhabitants. Mutengene, a small town west of Tiko, is a cross roads leading to Buea and Limbe, Cameroon (Formerly called Victoria). The closest towns with coordinates: Mutengene (10 km or 6 mi W) Buea (17.9 km or 11+1⁄8 mi W/NW) Limbe, Cameroon (21 km or 13 mi W/SW) Muyuka (24 km or 15 mi N/NE) Bonabéri (33.2 km or 20+5⁄8 mi E) Dibombari (34.7 km or 21+1⁄2 mi E/NE) Douala (37.7 km or 23+3⁄8 mi E) Idenao or Idenau (46.7.", "target": "commune of Cameroon", "baseline_candidates": ["city", "commune of Cameroon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83393254", "label": "A Soldier's Heart", "source": "A Soldier's Heart is a 2020 Philippine action drama television series broadcast by Kapamilya Channel. Directed by Richard V. Somes, it stars Gerald Anderson, Carlo Aquino, Vin Abrenica, Elmo Magalona, Jerome Ponce, Yves Flores, Nash Aguas, Sue Ramirez and Sid Lucero. The series aired on ABS-CBN's Primetime Bida evening block and worldwide via The Filipino Channel from January 20 to September 25, 2020, replacing The Killer Bride and was replaced by Walang Hanggang Paalam.", "target": "2020 Philippine action military drama series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12234409", "label": "Saint Mary Cayon Parish", "source": "Saint Mary Cayon is one of 14 administrative parishes that make up Saint Kitts and Nevis. It is located on the main island of Saint Kitts and the parish capital is Cayon.", "target": "parish of Saint Kitts and Nevis", "baseline_candidates": ["parish of Saint Kitts and Nevis"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7636222", "label": "Sulfur Springs Mountain", "source": "Sulphur Springs Mountain (or Sulfur Springs Mountain) is a mountain in southwestern Solano County, California. The slopes can be accessed via hiking trails emanating from Blue Rock Springs Park in the city of Vallejo. Cinnabar deposits were extracted from this location in the early 1900s at Hastings Mine and St. John's Mine. Both mines are classified as medium priority mine from the standpoint of environmental oversight for California inactive mines. The highest peak on Sulfur Springs Mountain stands at an elevation of 1,112 feet (339 m), and affords expansive views of the northern San Francisco Bay as well as the Napa River. The rock outcroppings which occur in the Sulphur Springs area are composed of basaltic lava; however, there are also serpentine outcrops, which soils are known to provide habitat for many rare and endangered species in Northern California.", "target": "mountain in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49791739", "label": "Crowder Canyon", "source": "Crowder Canyon, originally Coyote Canyon, is a valley in San Bernardino County, California. Its mouth was at an elevation of 2,999 feet / 914 meters at its confluence with Cajon Canyon. Its source was at an elevation of 4200 feet at 34°21′02″N 117°26′04″W near Cajon Summit. The canyon runs southward just west of the top of Cajon Pass then turns southwestward to meet Cajon Canyon.", "target": "Valley in San Bernardino County, California", "baseline_candidates": ["valley"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q84813459", "label": "Filip Lichý", "source": "Filip Lichý (born 25 January 2001) is a Slovak footballer who plays for Ružomberok of the Fortuna Liga as a midfielder, on loan from Slovan Bratislava.", "target": "football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7045607", "label": "Nobby Clark", "source": "Patrick Joseph \"Nobby\" Clark (June 18, 1897 – August 5, 1966) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman, most notably for the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League, for whom he played five games in the 1927–28 season. He was born in Orillia, Ontario.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey defenceman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31092171", "label": "New Start", "source": "New Start (Hungarian: Új Kezdet), also known as UK, is a political party in Hungary founded by György Gémesi, mayor of Gödöllő. The party adheres to a centrist Third Way political philosophy.", "target": "political party in Hungary", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7872167", "label": "USS Neal A. Scott", "source": "USS Neal A. Scott (DE-769) was a Cannon-class destroyer escort in service with the United States Navy from 1944 to 1946. She was sold for scrapping in 1969.", "target": "Cannon-class destroyer escort", "baseline_candidates": ["destroyer escort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q782381", "label": "Filip Filipović", "source": "Filip Filipović (Serbian Cyrillic: Филип Филиповић; 21 June 1878 – April 1938) was a Serbian mathematician, communist politician and revolutionary.", "target": "Serbian politician (1878-1938)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48989129", "label": "1976 XII FIBA International Christmas Tournament", "source": "The 1976 XII FIBA International Christmas Tournament \"Trofeo Raimundo Saporta\" was the 12th edition of the FIBA International Christmas Tournament. It took place at Sports City of Real Madrid Pavilion, Madrid, Spain, on 24, 25 and 26 December 1976 with the participations of Real Madrid (runners-up of the 1975–76 FIBA European Champions Cup), Tennessee Volunteers, Cavigal Nice and Africa Selection.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4765655", "label": "Anita Vogel", "source": "Anita Vogel (born November 24, 1969, California) is an American news reporter for the Fox News Channel.", "target": "American news reporter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7425887", "label": "Satan's School for Girls", "source": "Satan's School for Girls is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by David Lowell Rich, and produced by Aaron Spelling. The film has been named as one of the most memorable television movies of the 1970s.", "target": "1973 television film directed by David Lowell Rich", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7854252", "label": "Turbonilla ista", "source": "Turbonilla ina is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7343127", "label": "Robert Coryndon", "source": "Sir Robert Thorne Coryndon, (2 April 1870 – 10 February 1925) was a British colonial administrator, a former secretary of Cecil Rhodes who became Governor of the colonies of Uganda (1918–1922) and Kenya (1922–1925). He was one of the most powerful of colonial administrators of his day.", "target": "British colonial administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q437414", "label": "coat of arms of the Falkland Islands", "source": "The coat of arms of the Falkland Islands is the heraldic device consisting of a shield charged with a ram on tussock grass in a blue field at the top and a sailing ship on white and blue wavy lines underneath. Adopted in 1948, it has been the coat of arms of the Falkland Islands since 29 September of that year, except for the two-month occupation of the territory during the Falklands War in 1982. The escutcheon is featured on the flag of the territory. The ram represents the territory's past primary industry of sheep farming, while the ship symbolises the Desire which reportedly first sighted the islands at the end of the 16th century. The grass indicates the vegetation of the Falklands.", "target": "coat of arms", "baseline_candidates": ["coat of arms"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7969901", "label": "Warped by Success", "source": "Warped by Success is the sixth studio album by English musical group China Crisis. It was released on CD, LP and Cassette in 1994.", "target": "album by China Crisis", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7514151", "label": "Silas Feitosa Jose De Souza", "source": "Silas Feitosa Jose De Souza (born March 8, 1985) known as Silas, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for São Bernardo. He formerly played for clubs including Gostaresh Foolad F.C.", "target": "Brazilian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4970964", "label": "British Refugee", "source": "\"British Refugee\" is a single released by the 1970s Liverpool punk band The Spitfire Boys, on RKO Records on 7 October 1977. It was the only disc released by this line-up, who comprised vocalist Paul Rutherford, guitarist David Littler, bassist Pete Griffiths and drummer Peter Clarke. At the time, they were one of the few punk bands from Merseyside who released a record, apart from Big In Japan and Chuddy Nuddies (later known as Yachts). Two months after its release, the band split up, but was reformed in Wales by 1979 by David Littler along with other ex-Nylonz members. Paul Rutherford formed 1980s pop band Frankie Goes To Hollywood and Peter Clarke became known as Budgie and joined Big In Japan, Slits, and Siouxsie and the Banshees, later marrying with Siouxsie Sioux in 1991. The original version of the single was originally issued without a picture sleeve, but it was later added for the German edition in 1978.The A-side of the single explained about the life of a Northern Irish immigrant in England, who escaped from the British occupation of his country, and lived poor working-class conditions. For the single each member was credited with nickname or stage name, so Rutherford was named as Maggot, Littler as Jones, Griffiths as Zero, and Clarke as Blister.", "target": "1977 single by The Spitfire Boys", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3166625", "label": "Jean-Louis Beaudry", "source": "Jean-Louis Beaudry (March 27, 1809 – June 25, 1886) was a Canadian entrepreneur and politician. Beaudry served as mayor of Montreal three times, from 1862 to 1866, from 1877 to 1879, and from 1881 to 1885 for a total time served as mayor of ten years.", "target": "former mayor of Montreal, Quebec (1862-1866,1877-1879,1881-1885)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1757860", "label": "The Swellers", "source": "The Swellers were an American punk band from Flint, Michigan. Their music is influenced by melodic punk rock bands as well as alternative and indie rock from the 1990s.", "target": "band that plays punk rock", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18715989", "label": "Pavel Mach", "source": "Pavel Mach (born 1886, date of death unknown) was a Czech sports shooter. He competed in the team clay pigeon event at the 1924 Summer Olympics.", "target": "sport shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3504241", "label": "Karel Liebscher", "source": "Karel Liebscher (24 February 1851, Prague - 20 April 1906, Prague) was a Czech landscape painter and illustrator. His brother was the history painter Adolf Liebscher.", "target": "Czech painter (1851-1906)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85994033", "label": "Ryan Sessegnon", "source": "Kouassi Ryan Sessegnon (born 18 May 2000) is an English professional footballer who plays as a left-back or left winger for Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur. Sessegnon made his breakthrough in the Fulham senior side in 2016, aged 16. He made an instant impact, becoming the first footballer born in the 2000s to score a goal in a first-team game in the professional English leagues, and the youngest player to score in a Championship match. In 2017–18, his second season, Sessegnon helped Fulham achieve promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, scoring fifteen goals and winning numerous personal awards. He totalled 120 games and 25 goals for Fulham, before joining Tottenham for a £25 million fee in 2019.", "target": "English association football player (born 2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5481883", "label": "Francis Matthews", "source": "Major General Francis Raymond Gage Matthews CB DSO (26 January 1903 – 26 May 1976) was a British Army officer who served in the Second World War and later was Commander of British Forces in Hong Kong.", "target": "British Army general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7262208", "label": "Puthantheru", "source": "Puthantheru is a small town on the coastline between Tirur and Tanur Malappuram district of Kerala state, South India. Previously it was called Theru, but as the town developed its name became Puthantheru (\"New Street\"). It comes under Tanalur Gram panchayat.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67667871", "label": "2017 in ONE Championship", "source": "The year 2017 is the 7th year in the history of the ONE Championship, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Singapore.", "target": "ONE Championship MMA events in 2017", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25694951", "label": "Anne Hugon", "source": "Anne Hugon (born 1965) is a French historian specialising in the history of African exploration.", "target": "French Africanist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4896913", "label": "Best of Dolly Parton", "source": "Best of Dolly Parton was a 1975 compilation album of Dolly Parton's early 1970s work that has long been regarded by critics as the definitive representation of Parton's most influential period. The album reached # 5 on the U.S. country albums chart, and contained the title tracks to the previous six Parton albums, as well as the tracks \"I Will Always Love You\" and \"Travelin' Man\".", "target": "1975 compilation album by Dolly Parton", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15994607", "label": "Roderick MacSween", "source": "Sir Roderick Norman McIver MacSween (2 February 1935 – 11 December 2015) was a Scottish pathologist, professor of pathology at University of Glasgow, 1984 to 1999. His \"Pathology of the liver\" (ISBN 0443100128) has reached its 5th edition. MacSween was a past President of the Royal College of Pathologists (1996–99), a member of the General Medical Council (1998-2001) and was knighted for services to medicine and to pathology in 2000.He was a chairman of Tenovus Scotland, which annually award the Sir Roddy MacSween prize and medal to a medical student of the University of Glasgow for outstanding performance in pathology.He also chaired investigations into diseases affecting farmed fish.", "target": "British pathologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7819779", "label": "Tommy Polley", "source": "Tommy William Polley (born January 18, 1978) is a former American football player who spent six seasons in the NFL. He originally played for the St. Louis Rams from 2001 to 2004 before signing with the Ravens as a free agent in 2005. He played only one season with the Ravens before signing with the Saints on June 2, 2006. Polley grew up in Baltimore and played football for Dunbar High School. He was a Top 50 Basketball prospect according to Hoop Scoop.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1233491", "label": "Dobrochov", "source": "Dobrochov is a village and municipality (obec) in Prostějov District in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 2.52 square kilometres (0.97 sq mi), and has a population of 274 (as at 3 July 2006). Dobrochov lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) south of Prostějov, 26 km (16 mi) south-west of Olomouc, and 209 km (130 mi) east of Prague, at the international road E462 / highway D46.", "target": "village in Prostějov District of Olomouc region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5465653", "label": "Foolin' Myself", "source": "Foolin' Myself is an album of trio performances by the American jazz pianist Jaki Byard recorded in 1988 and released on the Italian Soul Note label.", "target": "album by Jaki Byard", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30122131", "label": "Mark Spain", "source": "Mark Spain (b 1971) is an Australian former child actor. His performance in the TV series The Restless Years won him a Logie.", "target": "Australian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86011264", "label": "propiverine", "source": "Propiverine is an anticholinergic drug used for the treatment of urinary urgency, frequency and urge incontinence, all symptoms of overactive bladder syndrome. It is a muscarinic antagonist. A modified release preparation is also available, taken once daily.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q509501", "label": "Askersund Municipality", "source": "Askersund Municipality (Askersunds kommun) is a municipality in Örebro County in central Sweden. Its seat is located in the city of Askersund. The present municipality was created in 1971, when the former City of Askersund was merged with the rural municipalities Hammar and Lerbäck.", "target": "municipality in Örebro County, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17102154", "label": "Artyom Loginov", "source": "Artem Loginov (born 23 June 1991) is a visually impaired Russian sprinter. Competing in the T12 classification, Loginov competed at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, winning a gold and bronze medal. He is also a multiple World and European Championships winner, taking twelve medals over five tournaments.", "target": "Russian Paralympic sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21228317", "label": "Furnishina", "source": "Furnishina is an extinct genus of conodonts in the family Furnishinidae from the Cambrian. The genus name is a tribute to American paleontologist William M. Furnish.", "target": "genus of fishes (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1396957", "label": "Nymfes", "source": "Nymfes (Greek: Νύμφες meaning nymphs) is a village in the northern part of the island of Corfu, Greece. It was the seat of the municipality of Thinali. In 2011 its population was 642 for the village and 995 for the community, which includes the village Platonas. Nymfes is situated in green hills, 4 km from the coast, and is home to Corfu's only waterfall. It is 3 km west of Episkepsi and 19 km northwest of Corfu (city).", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2441699", "label": "Caius", "source": "Caius, Presbyter of Rome (also known as Gaius) was a Christian author who lived and wrote towards the beginning of the 3rd century. Only fragments of his works are known, which are given in the collection entitled The Ante-Nicene Fathers. However, the Muratorian fragment, an early attempt to establish the canon of the New Testament, is often attributed to Caius and is included in that collection.For the existing fragments from Caius' \"Dialogue or Disputation Against Proclus,\" we are indebted to Eusebius, who included them in his Ecclesiastical History. In one of these fragments, Caius tells Proclus, \"And I can show the trophies of the apostles. For if you choose to go to the Vatican or to the Ostian Road, you will find the trophies of those who founded this church. \"This is described by the Catholic Encyclopedia as \"a very valuable evidence of the death of Sts. Peter and Paul at Rome, and the public veneration of their remains at Rome about the year 200. \"There is also another series of fragments Eusebius gives from a work called \"Against the Heresy of Artemon,\" although the Ante-Nicene Fathers note says regarding the authorship only that it is \"an anonymous work ascribed by some to Caius. \"Caius was also one of the authors to whom the \"Discourse to the Greeks concerning Hades\" was ascribed at one time. (It was also attributed, much more famously, to Josephus and still appears in editions of the William Whiston translation of his collected works, but is now known to be excerpted from.", "target": "Christian author (3rd c.)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19700922", "label": "Egon Schiele", "source": "Egon Leo Adolf Ludwig Schiele (German: [ˈeːɡɔn ˈʃiːlə] (listen); 12 June 1890 – 31 October 1918) was an Austrian Expressionist painter. Gustav Klimt, figurative painter of the early 20th century, was a mentor. His work is noted for its intensity and its raw sexuality, and the many self-portraits the artist produced, including nude self-portraits. The twisted body shapes and the expressive line that characterize Schiele's paintings and drawings mark the artist as an early exponent of Expressionism.", "target": "Austrian painter (1878-1918)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4209306", "label": "New Zealand one-dollar coin", "source": "The New Zealand one-dollar coin ($1) is a coin of the New Zealand dollar. The current circulating coin was introduced on 11 February 1991 to replace the existing $1 note. There had previously been occasional issues of commemorative \"silver dollars\", but they are rarely seen in circulation. The depiction of a kiwi on the reverse helps give the New Zealand dollar the colloquial name \"Kiwi (dollar)\", although the term was in use before the $1 coin was introduced.", "target": "coin of the New Zealand dollar", "baseline_candidates": ["denomination", "coin"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16980757", "label": "Find Your Man", "source": "Find Your Man is a 1924 American silent action/drama film starring Rin Tin Tin and June Marlowe. It was directed by Mal St. Clair who persuaded Warner Bros. to hire his friend, Darryl F. Zanuck, to write the screenplay; this began a long association between Zanuck and Rin Tin Tin. Filming took place in Klamath Falls, Oregon. This film survives. It was transferred onto 16mm film by Associated Artists Productions in the 1950s and shown on television.", "target": "1924 film by Malcolm St. Clair", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12367700", "label": "Kullamaa Manuscript", "source": "Kullamaa Manuscript (Estonian: Kullamaa käsikiri) is a manuscript which is considered to be the oldest source containing longer texts (in total about 150 words) in Estonian language. These texts are written ca 1524-1532 by clergymen Johannes Lelow and its successor Konderth Gulerth.Manuscript consists two prays (\"Pater noster\" and \"Ave Maria\") and one credo (\"Credo\").The texts were discovered in 1923 by Paul Johansen. The texts are reposited in Tallinn City Archives.", "target": "manuscript considered to be the oldest source containing longer texts in the Estonian language", "baseline_candidates": ["manuscript"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4980178", "label": "Bryan J. Baptiste", "source": "Bryan J. Baptiste (October 15, 1955 – June 22, 2008) was an American politician and member of the Republican Party. He served as mayor of the County of Kauai in Hawaii from 2002 until his death.", "target": "American mayor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4941658", "label": "Boneh-ye Mirza", "source": "Boneh-ye Mirza (Persian: بنه ميرزا, also Romanized as Boneh-ye Mīrzā) is a village in Shahi Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 36, in 7 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7801709", "label": "Tigrillos Dorados MRCI", "source": "Tigrillos Dorados MRCI was a football club that plays in the Tercera División de México. The club was based in Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5103300", "label": "Chmielowszczyzna", "source": "Chmielowszczyzna [xmjɛlɔfʂˈt͡ʂɨzna] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szudziałowo, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7508744", "label": "Sidi Ifni Airport", "source": "Sidi Ifni Airport (Arabic: مطار سيدي إيفني) (IATA: SII, ICAO: GMMF) is an airport serving Sidi Ifni, a city in the Guelmim-Oued Noun region in Morocco.", "target": "airport in Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1452991", "label": "Firozabad", "source": "Firozabad is a city near Agra in Firozabad district in the state of Uttar Pradesh in India. It is the centre of India's glassmaking industry and is known for the quality of the bangles and also glasswares produced there. During the reign of Akbar, revenue was brought through the city, which was looted by the afghans. Akbar sent his army led by Firoz Shah Mansab Dar to make the city a cantonment to collect taxes and the city of Chandrawar was renamed as Firozabad after him. The tomb of Firoz Shah is still present today. From early times, it had glass and bangle works, and small scale industry. The landowners of Firozabad hail from the Siddiqui, Sayed, Manihar, Pathan and the Hindu Rajput castes. Firozabad is located in north central India, in Uttar Pradesh, 37 km from Agra and around 230 km away from Delhi, at the northern edge of the Deccan Plateau, at 27°09′N 78°24′E. It is located 164 meters (540 ft). \\ above sea level. The boundaries of Firozabad district touch Etah district in north and Mainpuri and Etawah districts in the east. The Yamuna river makes its southern boundary. The area of the district is about 0.8% of the total area of Uttar Pradesh, and the population is 1.1% of the state's total population. Approximately 73.6% of the population lives in rural areas. More than half of the workforce is engaged in manufacturing activities. The city is also an important market centre. It has moderate to severe winter and summer seasons. Child labour.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20872343", "label": "Ingrid Oliveira", "source": "Ingrid de Oliveira (born 7 May 1996) is a Brazilian competitive diver. She competed in the 10 metre platform, individual, and synchronized events at the 2015 Pan American Games and 2015 World Aquatics Championships, and won a silver medal in the synchronized event at the Pan American Games. She qualified in both events for the 2016 Summer Olympics.She represented Brazil at the 2020 Summer Olympics. Her overall ranking after dives 1 though 5 were 10, 7, 8, 14 and 24, respectively.", "target": "Brazilian diver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q89635110", "label": "Sholokhovo, Chagodoshchensky District, Vologda Oblast", "source": "Sholokhovo (Russian: Шолохово) is a rural locality (a village) in Izboishchskoye Rural Settlement, Chagodoshchensky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2002.", "target": "human settlement in Chagodoshchensky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16050636", "label": "Michael Jackson: The Life of an Icon", "source": "Michael Jackson: The Life of an Icon is a documentary film about pop singer Michael Jackson produced by his friend, David Gest. The film features footage of the beginning of The Jackson 5, Jackson's solo career and the child molestation accusations made against him. It also has interviews with Jackson's mother, Katherine, and siblings, Tito and Rebbie Jackson, as well as other artists—who were inspired by him and had met him before his death—including Whitney Houston, Smokey Robinson and Dionne Warwick. The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on November 2, 2011.", "target": "2011 documentary film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97688359", "label": "Saint-Gérand-de-Vaux", "source": "Saint-Gérand-de-Vaux (French pronunciation: ​[sɛ̃ ʒeʁɑ̃ də vo]) is a commune in the Allier department in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes in central France.", "target": "commune in Allier, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18635812", "label": "It Seems Like You're Ready", "source": "\"It Seems Like You're Ready\" is a song by musician R. Kelly, on his debut solo studio album titled 12 Play. It is the fourth song on the album and was charted at #59 on the Billboard airplay chart, number 29 on the Rhythmic Top 40 charts and number 29 at the Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs charts.", "target": "song performed by R. Kelly", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79847", "label": "SupremeSAT", "source": "SupremeSAT (Pvt) Ltd. is the first and only Sri Lankan satellite operator. It has partnership with satellite manufacturing institution China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC). SupremeSAT deployed the first Sri Lankan satellite, Supreme SAT-I on November 12, 2012, launched on Long March 3B from Xichang, China. Supreme SAT-I is jointly owned by China's CGWIC and SupremeSAT. SupremeSAT becomes the 27th private company in the world to own a satellite. SupremeSAT is planned to invest over US$320 million, and planning to launch Sri Lanka's first ever communications satellite. It will be called SupremeSAT-III. The SupremeSAT-III will be providing all types of telecommunications services to Sri Lanka.SupremeSAT has laid foundation stone for the first 'Space Academy' at the Kandy BOI (Board of Investment). An investment of US$20 million on Space Academy, which is targeting to train Sri Lankans in space and satellite technology. Also, a satellite ground station is to be built in Kokkala area to oversee satellite operations.", "target": "company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2094009", "label": "Sebastián Saavedra", "source": "Sebastián Saavedra (born 2 June 1990) is a Colombian racing driver from Bogotá. In 2014, he drove for KVSH Racing in the Verizon IndyCar Series before being replaced by former GP2 Series driver Stefano Coletti.", "target": "Colombian racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5240770", "label": "David Waisman", "source": "David Waisman Rjavinsthi (born 4 May 1937) is a Peruvian politician who served as the Second Vice President of Peru from 2001 to 2006. He also served as Congressman from 2000 to 2011.", "target": "Peruvian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4036774", "label": "2005 Cup of Russia", "source": "The 2005 Cup of Russia was the fifth event of six in the 2005–06 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Ice Palace in Saint Petersburg on November 24–27. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2005–06 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Yankee Polka.", "target": "figure skating competition", "baseline_candidates": ["figure skating competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15382023", "label": "Voacanga grandifolia", "source": "Voacanga grandifolia is a plant found in many countries including Papua New Guinea. It is native to Malesia to Queensland. It is also introduced to India.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96213378", "label": "Lunara Syzdykova", "source": "Lunara Syzdykova (born 20 January 2000) is a Kazakhstani handball player for USC Dostyk and the Kazakhstani national team. She represented Kazakhstan at the 2019 World Women's Handball Championship.", "target": "Kazakhstani handball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30602320", "label": "South Western Railway", "source": "First MTR South Western Trains Limited, trading as South Western Railway (SWR), is a British train operating company owned by FirstGroup (70%) and MTR Corporation (30%) that operates the South Western franchise. It operates commuter services from its Central London terminus at London Waterloo to South West London. SWR provides suburban services in the counties of Surrey, Hampshire and Dorset, as well as regional services in Devon, Somerset, Berkshire and Wiltshire. Its subsidiary Island Line operates services on the Isle of Wight. SWR was awarded the South Western franchise in March 2017, and took over from South West Trains on 20 August 2017.", "target": "British train operating company", "baseline_candidates": ["train operating company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19898108", "label": "Two's Company", "source": "Two's Company is an album by pianist Joe Albany and bassist Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen recorded in 1974 and released on the SteepleChase label.", "target": "album by Joe Albany", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31470050", "label": "Pogost-Bykovo", "source": "Pogost-Bykovo (Russian: Погост-Быково) is a rural locality (a selo) in Seletskoye Rural Settlement, Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 12 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.", "target": "village in Suzdalsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23023044", "label": "Beautiful Life", "source": "Beautiful Life is a studio album by American jazz singer Dianne Reeves released in 2014 by Concord label. It won a Grammy Award for \"Best Jazz Vocal Album\".", "target": "album by Dianne Reeves", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10619828", "label": "Paratettix brevipennis", "source": "Paratettix brevipennis, the short-winged pygmy grasshopper, is a species of pygmy grasshopper in the family Tetrigidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q796182", "label": "Fenya", "source": "Fenya (Russian: феня, IPA: [ˈfʲenʲə]) or fen'ka (Russian: фенька, IPA: [ˈfʲenʲkə]) is a Russian cant language used among criminals. In modern Russian language it is also referred to as blatnoy language (Russian: блатной язык), where \"blatnoy\" is a slang expression for \"professional criminal\". It is also widely used in \"thieves' songs\".", "target": "a Russian cant language used among criminals", "baseline_candidates": ["cant language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4671902", "label": "acanthochronology", "source": "Acanthochronology is the study of cactus spines or Euphorbia thorns grown in time ordered sequence (i.e. in series). Physical, morphological or chemical characteristics and information about the relative order or absolute age of the spines or thorns is used to study past climate or plant physiology. For example, columnar cactus spines grow from the apex of the plant. After several weeks the spines stop growing and have been moved to the side of the stem. The old spines remain in place for decades as new spines are created at the continually growing apex. The result is that along each external \"rib\" of the cactus is a series of spines arranged in the order they grew in – the oldest spines are at the bottom and the youngest spines are at the top. These spines can be dated using bomb-spike Carbon-14 and isotopes of carbon (Carbon-13) and oxygen (Oxygen-18) may be used to infer past climate (e.g. precipitation or temperature), plant stem growth or plant physiology (e.g. photosynthetic processes). Alternatively, the width of small transverse bands in the spine may be used to infer daily information about cloud cover or plant productivity, although this remains to be tested. It has also been shown that regular waxy banding on the sides of a Costa Rican cactus (Lemaireocereus aragonii) indicate annual growth and can be used as temporal chronometers. This sub-discipline of paleoclimatology and ecophysiology is relatively new. Acanthochronology is closely related to dendrochronology, dendroclimatology and isotope geochemistry and borrows many of the methods and techniques from these sub-disciplines.", "target": "study of cactus spines and the chronology of their growth", "baseline_candidates": ["branch of botany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4232591", "label": "Korabelnoye", "source": "Korabelnoye (Russian: Корабельное) is a rural locality (an inhabited locality) in administrative jurisdiction of the closed administrative-territorial formation of Ostrovnoy in Murmansk Oblast, Russia, located beyond the Arctic Circle on the Kola Peninsula at a height of 27 meters (89 ft) above sea level. As of the 2010 Census, its population was 10.", "target": "human settlement in Ostrovnoy Urban Okrug, Murmansk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "subdivisions of Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3165606", "label": "Jean-François Fortin", "source": "Jean-François Fortin (born September 12, 1973) is a Canadian politician. He was elected to represent the riding of Haute-Gaspésie—La Mitis—Matane—Matapédia in the 2011 federal election as a member of the Bloc Québécois, and was chosen interim parliamentary leader of the Bloc on February 26, 2014.On August 12, 2014, Fortin quit the party to sit as an independent, saying that the Bloc Québécois he had joined no longer exists and that new party leader Mario Beaulieu had destroyed its credibility.On October 21, 2014, Fortin, along with Jean-François Larose, the NDP MP for Repentigny, announced that they were forming Strength in Democracy, a new Quebec-centred political party dedicated to representing the province's regions. In the 2015 federal election he ran for the new riding of Avignon—La Mitis—Matane—Matapédia and lost to Liberal Rémi Massé.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25933616", "label": "thoracic endometriosis syndrome", "source": "Thoracic endometriosis is a rare form of endometriosis where endometrial-like tissue is found in the lung parenchyma and/or the pleura. It can be classified as either pulmonary, or pleural, respectively. Endometriosis is characterized by the presence of tissue similar to the lining of the uterus (the endometrium) forming abnormal growths elsewhere in the body. Usually these growths are found in the pelvis, between the rectum and the uterus, the ligaments of the pelvis, the bladder, the ovaries, and the sigmoid colon. The cause is not known. The most common symptom of thoracic endometriosis is chest pain occurring right before or during menstruation. Diagnosis is based on clinical history and examination, augmented with X-ray, CT scan, and magnetic resonance imaging of the chest. Treatment options include surgery and hormones.", "target": "rare form of endometriosis", "baseline_candidates": ["endometriosis", "thoracic disease", "health problem", "rare disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5384141", "label": "Equal Scary People", "source": "Equal Scary People is the first album by the American singer-songwriter Sara Hickman, released in 1988 on Four Dots. It was rereleased in 1989 on Elektra Records.", "target": "album by Sara Hickman", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q328460", "label": "Jean-Pierre Yvaral", "source": "Jean-Pierre Vasarely (1934–2002), professionally known as Yvaral, was a French artist working in the fields of op-art and kinetic art from 1954 onwards. He was the son of Victor Vasarely, who was a pioneer of op-art.", "target": "French painter (1934-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20416332", "label": "public finance", "source": "Public finance is the study of the role of the government in the economy. It is the branch of economics that assesses the government revenue and government expenditure of the public authorities and the adjustment of one or the other to achieve desirable effects and avoid undesirable ones. The purview of public finance is considered to be threefold, consisting of governmental effects on: The efficient allocation of available resources; The distribution of income among citizens; and The stability of the economy.Economist Jonathan Gruber has put forth a framework to assess the broad field of public finance. Gruber suggests public finance should be thought of in terms of four central questions: When should the government intervene in the economy? To which there are two central motivations for government intervention, Market failure and redistribution of income and wealth. How might the government intervene? Once the decision is made to intervene the government must choose the specific tool or policy choice to carry out the intervention (for example public provision, taxation, or subsidization). What is the effect of those interventions on economic outcomes? A question to assess the empirical direct and indirect effects of specific government intervention. And finally, why do governments choose to intervene in the way that they do? This question is centrally concerned with the study of political economy, theorizing how governments make public policy.", "target": "public finance in economics", "baseline_candidates": ["general economics", "academic discipline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13130286", "label": "Mursley", "source": "Mursley is a small village in and also a civil parish in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located about three miles east of Winslow and about seven miles south west of Central Milton Keynes.The village name is Old English in origin, and is thought to mean 'Myrsa's woodland clearing'. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the village was recorded as Muselai, with the form Murselai being attested from the thirteenth century.The village was at one time a more important place; it was once a market town, by virtue of a royal charter granted in 1230, and the centre of the local deanery. \"The prosperity of the town continued until well into the 17th century\" but around the middle of the 18th century, Mursley was described as having \"dwindled into a neglected village', being 'small and depopulated', the parish having about 66 families and 258 souls. \"There was at one time a manor in the locality called \"Salden\", within which stood a manor house built by the Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir John Fortescue (d. 1629), which was visited by King James I and Anne of Denmark in 1603. This house has since disappeared. Actor David Tomlinson, who played George Banks in Mary Poppins and Mr. Emelius Browne in Bedknobs and Broomsticks, lived and raised his children in Mursley until his death on 24 June 2000. Tomlinson became notorious around the village for flying very low in his Tiger Moth and on one occasion he crash landed in a field near his house and was tried for, but.", "target": "village and civil parish in Buckinghamshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97009680", "label": "Pavilhão da Maria Fumaça", "source": "The Pavilhão da Maria Fumaça (Steam Train Pavilion) is a tourist attraction in Guarujá, Brazil. It houses the steam locomotive that took tourists from a station in the Itapema estuary to the front of the Grande Hotel on Pitangueiras beach. At the end of the 1910s, the branch on which the aforementioned steam locomotive - \"Maria Fumaça\" - was deactivated and a highway was built. Until 2017, the Maria Fumaça pavilion was symmetrically paired with the Santos-Dumont hearse pavilion, but in 2017 the city council chose to remove the car from the pavilion.", "target": "tourist attraction in Guarujá, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["steam locomotive", "tourist attraction"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9391998", "label": "Polskie Zoo", "source": "Polskie Zoo was a popular Polish satirical TV program, produced by Marcin Wolski, and aired every Saturday night by Telewizja Polska station TVP1 between 1991–1994. It was focused on the political reality and the leading politicians in the country; and arranged as a puppet show with animals living in a Zoo. The screenplay was written by Marcin Wolski with puppets designed by Jacek Frankowski. The music was composed by Włodzimierz Korcz.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6850143", "label": "Mikołajew, Łęczyca County", "source": "Mikołajew [mikɔˈwajɛf] (German Neu-Schwedelbach) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łęczyca, within Łęczyca County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-west of Łęczyca and 42 km (26 mi) north-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "target": "village in Łódź, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24013508", "label": "Berrocal", "source": "Berrocal is a city located in the province of Huelva, Spain. According to the 2005 census, the city has a population of 371 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality in Huelva Province, Andalusia, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2763017", "label": "Robin Hofman", "source": "Robin Hofman (born 3 May 1986) is a Dutch former professional footballer who played as a forward. He made one appearance in the Eerste Divisie for Excelsior Rotterdam.", "target": "Dutch footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q319958", "label": "Thomas Schröder", "source": "Thomas Schröder (born 23 August 1962 in Waren, Bezirk Neubrandenburg) is a retired East German sprinter who specialized in the 100 and 200 metres.", "target": "German sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6414449", "label": "Jeyran Mangeh", "source": "Jeyran Mangeh (Persian: جيران منگه, also Romanized as Jeyrān Mangeh, and also known as Jeyrān Mīngeh) is a village in Zarrineh Rural District, Karaftu District, Divandarreh County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 332, in 61 families. The village is populated by Kurds.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2576761", "label": "Grote Spectrum Encyclopedie", "source": "The Grote Spectrum Encyclopedie (\"Great Spectrum Encyclopedia\") (published by Het Spectrum, Utrecht between 1974 and 1980) is a Dutch encyclopedia which treats subjects in 5000 large and comprehensive articles (like the Encyclopædia Britannica) with a clear accent on the social sciences.", "target": "Dutch encyclopedia", "baseline_candidates": ["encyclopedia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7045236", "label": "No ha parado de llover", "source": "\"No Ha Parado de Llover\" (English: \"It Has Not Stopped Raining\") is a song from Mexican band Maná's fourth studio album Cuando los Ángeles Lloran (1995). The song was written by band members Fher Olvera and Alex González, who handled production alongside Jose L. Quintana. It was released as the second single from the album in 1995. A Latin rock ballad, its lyrics deal with the singer unable to move on from his former lover. Commercially, the song peaked at number eight on the Hot Latin Songs chart and number one on the Latin Pop Airplay chart in the United States. A music video was directed by Gustavo Garzón and features the band performing the song shirtless. It was a recipient at the ASCAP Latin Awards in 1996. In 2019, Maná re-recorded \"No Ha Parado de Llover\" with Colombian singer Sebastián Yatra with new musical arrangements. The collaboration came about when the band heard Yatra perform the song live in 2018. At the 2021 Lo Nuestro Awards, it was nominated in the category of Pop Song of the Year. This version reached the top five on the Monitor Latino pop charts in the Dominican Republic and Mexico and number 23 on the Latin Pop Airplay chart in the US. The video for the new version was directed by Pablo Croce where it narrates two different protagonists going through loss.", "target": "single by Maná", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5265008", "label": "Desportivo Manica", "source": "Grupo Desportivo de Manica is a traditional football club based in Manica Province, Mozambique, which currently competes in the Moçambola 2 and Manica Provincial League. The club was founded in 1980. Desportivo Manica reached the Interprovincial Stage of the Taça de Moçambique in 2009. Desportivo Manica won three consecutive Manica Provincial League championships from 2006 to 2008.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60182422", "label": "Elathur railway station", "source": "Elathur Railway Station is a major railway station serving the city of Kozhikode in the Kozhikode District of Kerala. It lies in the Shoranur–Mangalore section of the Southern Railways. Trains halting at the station connect the town to prominent cities in India such as Thiruvananthapuram, Kochi, Chennai, Kollam, Bangalore, Kozhikode, Coimbatore, Mangalore, Mysore and so forth.", "target": "railway station in Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q148178", "label": "Upper Volta at the 1972 Summer Olympics", "source": "The Republic of Upper Volta (as Upper Volta) competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany. This was the first and only time the country participated under that name at the Olympic Games. However, the first Upper Voltan athletes took part in the Olympics at the 1924 Games as part of the French contingent. André Bicaba was the only athlete representing Upper Volta in 1972, who participated in the men's 100 metres but did not progress past his heat. Upper Volta initially sought to send athletes to the 1976 Summer Olympics, but boycotted it with other Africa nations. By the time it returned to the Games in 1988, the nation was known as Burkina Faso.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5715130", "label": "Surben, Babol", "source": "Surben (Persian: سوربن, also Romanized as Sūrben) is a village in Gatab-e Shomali Rural District, Gatab District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 441, in 109 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6811330", "label": "Mel Owen", "source": "Melanie \"Mel\" Owen (also Healy and Beale) is a fictional character from the BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by Tamzin Outhwaite. Mel was introduced by executive producer Matthew Robinson and made her first appearance on 19 October 1998. Outhwaite made her departure on 12 April 2002. Outhwaite's return to the series was announced in October 2017 and she returned on 9 January 2018. The actress chose to leave the soap again in July 2019 and her final episode aired on 14 November 2019 when Mel was killed-off. Outhwaite proved popular in the role, winning multiple awards and critical acclaim for her portrayal of Mel as the character became prominent in the show. During her original tenure in the soap, Mel was featured in high-profile storylines, such as a wedding to local businessman Ian Beale (Adam Woodyatt) to mark the Millennium Eve celebrations on New Year's Eve 1999; a problematic and dangerous marriage to criminal Steve Owen (Martin Kemp); a one-night stand with Steve's nemesis Phil Mitchell (Steve McFadden); and a close friendship with Phil's estranged girlfriend Lisa Fowler (Lucy Benjamin). Writers also placed Mel at the centre of a storyline marking the show's increase to four weekly episodes in 2001, when she is kidnapped by her ex-lover Dan Sullivan (Craig Fairbrass) after Steve and Phil conspired to frame him for the latter's shooting (see Who Shot Phil?). Throughout her time on the show, especially since her 2018 return, when Mel became more of a villain, she has become somewhat more \"wicked\" and has a harder edge,.", "target": "fictional character from the British soap opera EastEnders", "baseline_candidates": ["television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2994084", "label": "Ivan Neville", "source": "Ivan Neville (born August 19, 1959) is an American multi-instrumentalist musician, singer, and songwriter. He is the son of Aaron Neville and nephew to members of The Neville Brothers.", "target": "musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4812507", "label": "At the End of the Day: The Sue Rodriguez Story", "source": "At the End of the Day: The Sue Rodriguez Story is a 1998 Canadian television film about the life of Canadian right to die advocate Sue Rodriguez. The film was written by Linda Svendsen based on the book by Lisa Hobbs Birnie and directed by Sheldon Larry.", "target": "1998 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17134238", "label": "Coco Brown", "source": "CoCo Brown is an American rapper, DJ and former pornographic actress.", "target": "American pornographic actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7665239", "label": "Sálvame", "source": "\"Sálvame\" (English: \"Save Me\") is the third single released by the Mexican pop group RBD from their debut album, Rebelde (2004). It became a number one hit all over Ibero-America. Anahí sings lead while the rest of the band sing background vocals on the chorus. The song became their third consecutive number-one single in Mexico. On July 22, 2006, the song was used to promote the third season of the soap opera Rebelde. The song's sequel, \"Algún Día\", was recorded in 2006 and is featured on RBD's third Spanish studio album, Celestial (2006). \"Save Me\" is the English version of \"Sálvame\" and is featured on RBD's 2006 English studio album, Rebels (2006). Anahí was the main singer on this later English version as she was on the original Spanish version. A Portuguese version of this song was released as a single in Brazil with the name \"Salva-Me\", along with \"Solo Quédate En Silencio\", on a double A-Side single.", "target": "RBD", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6274217", "label": "Jonathan Rebolledo", "source": "Jonathan Eduardo Rebolledo Ardiles (Spanish pronunciation: [xoˈnatan reβoˈʎeðo], born 22 October 1991) is a Chilean footballer.", "target": "Chilean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18373946", "label": "James Guillaume", "source": "James Guillaume (February 16, 1844, London – November 20, 1916, Paris) was a leading member of the Jura federation, the anarchist wing of the First International. Later, Guillaume would take an active role in the founding of the Anarchist St. Imier International.", "target": "Swiss anarchist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1089240", "label": "Mercerville-Hamilton Square", "source": "Mercerville-Hamilton Square is a census-designated place and unincorporated community located within Hamilton Township, in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2000 United States Census, the CDP's population was 26,419. As part of the 2010 Census, the area was split into two CDPs, Mercerville and Hamilton Square.", "target": "census designated place in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place", "former entity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q426826", "label": "Kurume Domain", "source": "Kurume Domain (久留米藩, Kurume-han) was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. It was associated with Chikugo Province in modern-day Fukuoka Prefecture on the island of Kyushu. In the han system, Kurume was a political and economic abstraction based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields. In other words, the domain was defined in terms of kokudaka, not land area. This was different from the feudalism of the West.", "target": "Japanese historical estate in Chikugo province", "baseline_candidates": ["han system"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q630198", "label": "Rocco Valenti", "source": "Rocco Valenti (born in 1895, date of death unknown) was a New York City gangster and prominent member of the Camorra in New York during the early 1910s.He is often confused with contemporary Mafioso Umberto Valenti.", "target": "American mobster (1895-after 1919)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1442416", "label": "Bad Brains", "source": "Bad Brains (also known as The Yellow Tape or Attitude: The ROIR Sessions) is the debut studio album recorded by American hardcore punk/reggae band Bad Brains. Recorded in 1981 and released on the cassette-only label ROIR on February 5, 1982, many fans refer to it as \"The Yellow Tape\" because of its yellow packaging, much in the way that the Beatles' self-titled record is often called \"The White Album\". Though Bad Brains had recorded the 16 song Black Dots album in 1979 and the 5-song Omega Sessions EP in 1980, the ROIR cassette was the band's first release of anything longer than a single.", "target": "album by Bad Brains", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6110508", "label": "Jacaré River", "source": "The Jacaré Grande River (Portuguese: Rio Jacaré Grande) is a river of Pará state in north-central Brazil. It is considered an extension of the Rio Pará distribution channel. The Jacaré Grande River rises on the island of Marajó in the delta region where the Amazon and Tocantins rivers empty into the Atlantic Ocean. It is contained within the Marajó Archipelago Environmental Protection Area.", "target": "river of Pará state in north-central Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20630469", "label": "Mosaab Al-Otaibi", "source": "Mosaab Bander Al-Otaibi (Arabic: مصعب بندر العتيبي; born 3 March 1992) is a Saudi professional footballer who most recently played for Al-Adalh. He primarily plays as a winger or as an attacking midfielder.", "target": "Saudi Arabian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63992513", "label": "Calvin Raatsie", "source": "Calvin Owen Harm Raatsie (born 9 February 2002) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Eerste Divisie team Jong Ajax.", "target": "Dutch association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16953738", "label": "2012–13 Angola Basketball Cup", "source": "The 2012–13 Angola men's basketball cup was contested by 13 teams and ran from February 3 to April 19, 2013, whereas the four-team women's tournament ran from January 22 to February 2.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6929403", "label": "Mr G", "source": "Hellen \"Greg\" Gregson, best known as Mr G, is a fictional character portrayed by Chris Lilley in the Australian mockumentary series Summer Heights High. The character also appeared in the sketch comedy series Big Bite.", "target": "fictional character in Summer Heights High portrayed by Chris Lilley", "baseline_candidates": ["television character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96361199", "label": "1922 United States Senate election in California", "source": "The 1922 United States Senate election in California was held on November 7, 1922. Incumbent Republican Senator Hiram Johnson was re-elected to his second term in office. His greatest challenge came from fellow Republican Charles C. Moore, a citrus and olive rancher.", "target": "election", "baseline_candidates": ["United States Senate election in California"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24436126", "label": "Block Island School", "source": "Block Island School is a K-12 school in Block Island, Rhode Island. It was built in 1933, replacing five one roomed schools. Today, the Block Island School educates about 160 students, kindergarten through senior year. A regular school day, Monday through Thursday, runs from 7:50 am – 2:50 pm. Every Friday, school dismisses at 12:22 pm to allow for student-athletes to travel for sporting events either on, or off the island.", "target": "public school in Block Island, Rhode Island, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18129329", "label": "Perfect Blue", "source": "Perfect Blue: Yume Nara Samete (PERFECT BLUE 夢なら醒めて……) is a 2002 Japanese fantasy suspense film directed by Toshiki Satō and based on the novel Perfect Blue: Kanzen Hentai by Yoshikazu Takeuchi. It was released on August 24, 2002.", "target": "2002 Japanese movie directed by Toshiki Satō", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18398308", "label": "Cornatzer", "source": "Cornatzer is an unincorporated community in Davie County, North Carolina, United States. It is located at the intersection Cornatzer Road (SR 1606/SR 1616) and Milling Road (SR 1600). The community is named after the Cornatzer family who resided in what was then Advance, NC and sold their farm to R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7557105", "label": "solastalgia", "source": "Solastalgia () is a neologism, formed by the combination of the Latin words sōlācium (comfort) and the Greek root -algia (pain, suffering, grief), that describes a form of emotional or existential distress caused by environmental change. It is best described as the lived experience of negatively perceived environmental change. A distinction can be made between solastalgia linked to distress about what is in the process of negatively perceived change and eco-anxiety linked to what may happen in the future (associated with \"pre-traumatic stress\", in reference to post-traumatic stress). The word was coined by philosopher Glenn Albrecht in his 2003 book Solastalgia: a new concept in human health and identity. He describes it as \"the homesickness you have when you are still at home\" and your home environment is changing in ways you find distressing. In many cases this is in reference to global climate change, but more localized events such as volcanic eruptions, drought or destructive mining techniques can cause solastalgia as well. Differing from nostalgic distress on being absent from home, solastalgia refers to the distress specifically caused by environmental change while still in a home environment. In 2015, an article in the medical journal The Lancet included solastalgia as a contributing concept to the impact of climate change on human health and well-being. More recent approaches have connected solastalgia to the experience of historic heritage threatened by the climate crisis, such as the ancient cities of Venice, Amsterdam, and Hoi An.", "target": "mental or existential distress caused by environmental change", "baseline_candidates": ["suffering", "anxiety", "Psychological impact of climate change"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2347528", "label": "Llantwit Major", "source": "Llantwit Major (Welsh: Llanilltud Fawr) is a town and community in Wales on the Bristol Channel coast. It is one of four towns in the Vale of Glamorgan, with the third largest population (13,366 in 2001) after Barry and Penarth, and ahead of Cowbridge. It is 4+1⁄2 miles (7.2 km) from Cowbridge, 9 miles (14 km) from Bridgend, 10 miles (16 km) from Barry, and 15 miles (24 km) from Cardiff. It had a population of 9,486 in 2011. Llanilltud Fawr, named for the Llan of Saint Illtud, was home to the Monastery of Illtud and the college known as Bangor Illtyd. It became one of the most esteemed centres of Christian culture in the Celtic world. At its peak it had over 2000 students, including princes, eminent clergymen, and revered saints. The institutions were destroyed by the raiding Vikings in 987, but Norman rebuilt the monastery in 1111 and it continued to be a centre of learning until it was disbanded in 1539 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The 13th-century St Illtyd's Church, near the ancient monastery, is a Grade I listed building and one of Wales' oldest parish churches. In the 20th century, the modern town developed rapidly to accommodate Royal Air Force personnel from the St Athan base. The medieval cobbled streets and buildings of the 15th and 16th centuries remain. Colhugh Beach is a popular surfing venue and has the remnants of an Iron Age fort and some of Wales' finest examples of Jurassic Period fossils. The pebble beach and its.", "target": "town and community in the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "community"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25396665", "label": "John Dalton", "source": "John Dalton, O.S.F., (c. 1821 – May 5, 1869) was an Irish-born Friar Minor who served as the first Roman Catholic Bishop of Harbour Grace, Newfoundland, from 1856 to 1869.", "target": "Franciscan priest and Roman Catholic Bishop of Harbour Grace, Newfoundland", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6867043", "label": "Ministry of Foreign Affairs", "source": "The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and African Integration is the Benin government ministry which oversees the foreign relations of Benin.", "target": "Beninese government ministry", "baseline_candidates": ["foreign affairs ministry", "ministry"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6031846", "label": "hypochlorite ion", "source": "In chemistry, hypochlorite is an anion with the chemical formula ClO−. It combines with a number of cations to form hypochlorite salts. Common examples include sodium hypochlorite (household bleach) and calcium hypochlorite (a component of bleaching powder, swimming pool \"chlorine\"). The Cl-O distance in ClO− is 1.69 Å.The name can also refer to esters of hypochlorous acid, namely organic compounds with a ClO– group covalently bound to the rest of the molecule. The principal example is tert-butyl hypochlorite, which is a useful chlorinating agent.Most hypochlorite salts are handled as aqueous solutions. Their primary applications are as bleaching, disinfection, and water treatment agents. They are also used in chemistry for chlorination and oxidation reactions.", "target": "anion", "baseline_candidates": ["monoanion", "chlorine oxoanion"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16960680", "label": "Dickinson-Moore House", "source": "The Dickinson-Moore House is a historic house at 707 Robert S. Moore Avenue in Arkansas City, Arkansas. This 1+1⁄2-story Craftsman style house was built c. 1915, probably for a member of the locally prominent Dickinson family, one of its early occupants. The house is distinctive for being built on a brick foundation 5 feet (1.5 m) high, for protection against floods that regularly visited the area. (Despite this precaution, the house was under eight feet of water in a major 1927 flood.) The house has retained its original siding and windows, and exhibits typical Craftsman details such as exposed rafter ends and large knee brackets in the eaves.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011.", "target": "Arkansas City, Arkansas, NRHP-listed", "baseline_candidates": ["house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15874067", "label": "Cornelis de Gijselaar", "source": "Cornelis \"Kees\" de Gijselaar (9 February 1751 - 29 May 1815) was a Dutch politician and patriot, and a leader in the rebellion during the Dutch Republic against the House of Orange.", "target": "Dutch politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7370624", "label": "Rotozoa", "source": "Rotozoa is a single-player exclusive puzzle video game published by Nintendo for the Wii video game console. The game revolves around a colour-matching concept, with a mechanic similar to that of Snake, taking place within a diffuse world of microorganisms. Developed by skip Ltd., the game is the fifth WiiWare installment in the Art Style series. It was initially released in Europe on May 28, 2010, under the alternative title Penta Tentacles, and followed in North America on June 21, 2010. It was eventually also released in Japan on October 18, 2011, both preserving the launch title of the PAL release and being the final WiiWare game to be released in the former.", "target": "2010 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1871113", "label": "Brosmophycis marginata", "source": "The Red brotula (Brosmophycis marginata) is a species of viviparous brotula found along the North American Pacific coast from Alaska to Baja California. This fish is often displayed in public aquariums. This species grows to a length of 46 centimetres (18 in) TL. The red brotula is the only known member of its genus.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4902099", "label": "Bhudeo Choudhary", "source": "Bhudeo Choudhary (alternatively Bhudev Choudhary; born 1 February 1960) is an Indian politician and former member of parliament. He has been the state president of the Rashtriya Lok Samata Party in Bihar till September 2020. Prior to the Bihar Assembly Elections 2020, he joined Rashtriya Janata Dal. He has also been the representative of the Dhauraiya constituency in the Bihar Legislative Assembly from 2000 to 2009. Choudhary was elected to the Indian parliament in 2009 for one term as the representative of the Jamui constituency. He is a former member of the Janata Dal (United).", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1319626", "label": "The Bourne Legacy", "source": "The Bourne Legacy is a 2004 spy fiction thriller written by Eric Van Lustbader. It is the fourth novel in the Jason Bourne series created by Robert Ludlum and the first to be written by Lustbader. He has also written other novels in the series, The Bourne Betrayal, The Bourne Sanction, The Bourne Deception, The Bourne Objective, The Bourne Dominion, The Bourne Imperative, The Bourne Retribution, The Bourne Ascendancy, The Bourne Enigma, The Bourne Initiative and The Bourne Nemesis.", "target": "novel by Eric Van Lustbader", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1068997", "label": "cheilitis", "source": "Cheilitis is a medical condition characterized by inflammation of the lips. The inflammation may include the perioral skin (the skin around the mouth), the vermilion border, or the labial mucosa. The skin and the vermilion border are more commonly involved, as the mucosa is less affected by inflammatory and allergic reactions.Cheilitis is a general term, and there are many recognized types and different causes. According to its onset and course, cheilitis can be either acute or chronic. Most cheilitis is caused by exogenous factors such as dryness (chapping) and acute sun exposure. Allergic tests may identify allergens that cause cheilitis.", "target": "inflammation of the lips", "baseline_candidates": ["disease (class)", "inflammation", "lip disease"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2725632", "label": "Surrey County Cricket Club", "source": "Surrey County Cricket Club (Surrey CCC) is a first-class club in county cricket, one of eighteen in the domestic cricket structure of England and Wales. It represents the historic county of Surrey, including areas that now form South London. Teams representing the county are recorded from 1709 onwards; the current club was founded in 1845 and has held first-class status continuously since then. Surrey have played in every top-level domestic cricket competition in England, including every edition of the County Championship (which began in 1890).The club's home ground is The Oval, in the Kennington area of Lambeth in South London. They have been based there continuously since 1845. The club also has an 'out ground' at Woodbridge Road, Guildford, where some home games are played each season. Surrey's long history includes three major periods of great success. The club was unofficially proclaimed as \"Champion County\" seven times during the 1850s; it won the title eight times in nine years from 1887 to 1895 (including the first official County Championship in 1890); and won seven consecutive titles from 1952 to 1958. Surrey won 23 of its 28 county matches in 1955, the most wins by any team in the County Championship and a record which can no longer be beaten (as fewer than 23 matches have been played each season since 1993). Surrey have won the County Championship 19 times outright (and shared once), a number exceeded only by Yorkshire, with their most recent win being in 2018. The club's badge is the Prince of Wales's feathers,.", "target": "English cricket club", "baseline_candidates": ["cricket team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28089539", "label": "Looney Creek", "source": "Looney Creek (sometimes called Looneys Creek) is a stream in Shelby County in the U.S. state of Missouri. It is a tributary of the North River. Looney Creek has the name of Peter Looney, an early settler.", "target": "watercourse in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["stream", "watercourse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16984719", "label": "2014–15 VfL Bochum season", "source": "The 2014–15 VfL Bochum season was the 77th season in club history.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21477357", "label": "Mount Cameron", "source": "Mount Cameron (71°20′S 66°30′E) is a small mountain about 5 nautical miles (9 km) south of Mount Woinarski in the Prince Charles Mountains. Plotted from ANARE (Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions) air photos taken in 1956 and 1960. Named by Antarctic Names Committee of Australia (ANCA) for Dr. A. S. Cameron, medical officer at Mawson Station in 1965.", "target": "mountain in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2060579", "label": "Paul Kelly", "source": "Paul Kelly (June 19, 1940 – October 4, 2012) was an American singer-songwriter. He is best known for the soul songs \"Stealing in the Name of the Lord\", which was a major hit in 1970, and \"Hooked, Hogtied & Collared\". He also wrote \"Personally\", which has been widely covered, and was a hit for soul singer Jackie Moore and singer-songwriter Karla Bonoff and country singer Ronnie McDowell. Other songs have been covered by gospel artists, including the Mighty Clouds of Joy and The Staple Singers.", "target": "United States singer-songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22975474", "label": "Tony Drake (hiker)", "source": "Tony Drake (Antony John Drake MBE (25 January 1923 – 7 March 2012) was an English Rambler perhaps best known for his pioneering work on the Cambrian Way, a mountain walk through Wales from Cardiff to Conwy. He was closely involved with surveying a suitable route and in promoting the route amidst considerable disagreement and opposition. The route was eventually published in his guidebook entitled Cambrian Way – The Mountain Connoisseur's Walk and it became the definitive route of the way. Much of his life was dedicated to footpaths both in his native county of Gloucestershire and also in Wales, where much of his walking and mountain climbing took place. He was first recorded as Footpath Secretary to the Gloucestershire Ramblers in 1951, at the age of 28 and he continued in the office until his retirement in 2008. He was also a major contributor to the creation of the Cotswold Way, which acquired National Trail status in 2007, and he was also an active member of the Youth Hostel Association. In 2001 he was awarded an MBE for Services to rights of way.", "target": "British hiker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11304760", "label": "Republika Srpska national football team", "source": "The Republika Srpska football team (Serbian: Фудбалска репрезентација Републике Српске, romanized: Fudbalska reprezentacija Republike Srpske) is the official team of Republika Srpska, an entity within Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is not affiliated with FIFA or UEFA. The football team was formed in 1992, following the creation of Republka Srpska as a political entity. The Football Association of Republika Srpska (FSRS) was established on 5 September 1992 in spite of war in Bosnia and Herzegovina which had escalated earlier that year. The main task of FSRS in that period was to organize and manage competitions in the territory of Republika Srpska. The competitions were played in different league formats throughout wartime.", "target": "national association football team", "baseline_candidates": ["national sports team", "national association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97177874", "label": "Patriarch Joannicius of Alexandria", "source": "Joannicius served as Greek Patriarch of Alexandria between 1645 and 1657.", "target": "Greek Patriarch of Alexandria 1645–1657", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1640912", "label": "Plymouth", "source": "Plymouth is a city in Wayne County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 9,132 at the 2010 census. The city of Plymouth is surrounded by Plymouth Township, but the two are administered autonomously. Plymouth is a western suburb of Metro Detroit and is located about 10 miles (16.1 km) west of the city of Detroit.", "target": "city in Wayne County, Michigan, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4503436", "label": "Valeri Tsvetkov", "source": "Valeri Vladimirovich Tsvetkov (Russian: Валерий Владимирович Цветков; born 5 November 1977) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player. He made his professional debut in the Russian Second Division in 2000 for FC Pskov.", "target": "Russian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3427818", "label": "Social responsibility", "source": "Social responsibility is an ethical framework in which an individual is obligated to work and cooperate with other individuals and organizations for the benefit of the community that will inherit the world that individual leaves behind.Social responsibility is a duty every individual has to maintain. A balance between the economy and the ecosystem one lives within. A trade-off might perhaps exist between economic development, in the material sense, and the welfare of the society and environment, Social responsibility pertains not only to business organizations but also to everyone whose actions impact the environment. It aims to ensure secure healthcare for the people living in rural areas and eliminate barriers like distance, financial condition, etc. Another example is keeping the outdoors free of trash and litter by using the ethical framework combining the resources of land managers, municipalities, non-profits, educational institutions, businesses, manufacturers, and individual volunteers will be required to solve the ocean microplastics crisis. One can be socially responsible passively, by avoiding engaging in socially harmful acts, or actively, by performing activities that advance social goals. Social responsibility must be intergenerational since the actions of one generation have consequences on those following.", "target": "ethical theory that an entity, be it an organization or individual, has an obligation to act to benefit society at large", "baseline_candidates": ["responsibility", "Business and human rights"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q720411", "label": "Munaily District", "source": "Munaily District (Kazakh: Мұнайлы ауданы, مۇنايلى اۋدانى, Mūnaily audany) is a district of Mangystau Region in south-western Kazakhstan. The administrative center of the district is selo of Mangistau.", "target": "district of Kazakhstan", "baseline_candidates": ["third-level administrative country subdivision", "district of Kazakhstan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54318152", "label": "Zolita", "source": "Zoë Montana Hoetzel (born September 23, 1994), known professionally as Zolita, is an American singer-songwriter. She gained viral success with the music video for \"Explosion\", which has over sixteen million views on YouTube as of December 2020. Following its success, she released the music videos for the singles \"Holy\" (2016) and \"Fight Like a Girl\" (2017) directed by herself. On October 13, 2015 she released independently her debut extended play Immaculate Conception, and on May 18, 2018 she released her second extended play Sappho.", "target": "American singer-songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98664", "label": "Ischnothele", "source": "Ischnothele, also known as scatter-web spiders is a genus of spiders in the family Ischnothelidae. It was first described by Anton Ausserer in 1875.", "target": "genus of spiders", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q333652", "label": "Cledwyn Hughes, Baron Cledwyn of Penrhos", "source": "Cledwyn Hughes, Baron Cledwyn of Penrhos, (14 September 1916 – 22 February 2001) was a Welsh Labour Party politician, usually associated with the moderate wing of the party. He was also regarded, particularly in later years, as a non-political figure of stature in Wales having held posts of importance in bodies such as the University of Wales.", "target": "British politician (1916-2001)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2346927", "label": "St John's Ashfield", "source": "St John the Baptist Anglican Church is an active Anglican church located between Alt and Bland Streets, Ashfield, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Founded in 1840, on land donated by Elizabeth Underwood, the church building is the oldest authenticated surviving building in Ashfield, having been built at the time when subdivision increased the population density sufficiently to turn Ashfield into a town. It was also the first church built along the Parramatta Road which linked the early colonial towns of Sydney and Parramatta. The earliest remaining parts of the building are one of the first Sydney designs by the colonial architect Edmund Blacket, who later became renowned for his ecclesiastical architecture. : p. 51 The expansive church grounds contain a cemetery dating back to 1845 that contains the remains of many notable Ashfield residents. Australia's only memorial to Australian Air Force Cadets occupies a prominent position near the entrance to the church. The St John's site has been listed on the Local Environment Plan Heritage Schedule, and the Register of the National Trust of Australia.St John's is one of three churches, along with St Albans, Five Dock, and St Oswald's, Haberfield, which make up Christ Church Inner West, operating within the parish of Ashfield, Five Dock, and Haberfield, as part of the South Sydney Region of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. The church has had 18 rectors, including William George Hilliard who later became the Bishop of Nelson. Andrew Katay has been rector since early 2005.", "target": "Anglican church in Ashfield, Sydney, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["parish church", "historical cultural heritage site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7800075", "label": "Tiago Mesquita", "source": "Tiago Manuel Oliveira Mesquita (born 23 November 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Académico de Viseu F.C. as a right back.", "target": "Portuguese footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15265633", "label": "Patakata", "source": "Patakata is a village in Pirojpur District in the Barisal Division of southwestern Bangladesh.", "target": "human settlement in Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3675542", "label": "Behram Pasha Mosque", "source": "Behrem Pasha Mosque (Turkish: Behrem Paşa Camii, Kurdish: Mizgefta Behram Paşa) is a 16th-century Ottoman mosque located in the town of Diyarbakır in southeast Turkey. It was commissioned by the Ottoman governor-general Behram Pasha.", "target": "Ottoman mosque", "baseline_candidates": ["congregational mosque"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14437936", "label": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final", "source": "The 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final was the 12th final of the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the international championship tournament for CONCACAF, the governing body of soccer in North and Central America. The match took place on 28 July 2013 at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The final was between the United States and Panama.The match was a rematch of the 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final. This was first time since 2005 that the Gold Cup Final did not include Mexico. With the win, the United States advanced to the one-game playoff played on October 10, 2015 against the champion of the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup, which turned out to be Mexico. The winner of the play-off would qualify to represent CONCACAF in the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup in Russia.", "target": "CONCACAF Gold Cup Final 2013", "baseline_candidates": ["association football final"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5117075", "label": "Church of San Andrés", "source": "The Church de San Andrés (Spanish: Iglesia de San Andrés) is a church in Madrid, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1995.It was built using the ruins that had a previous church in the same place. The primitive church in turn was previously occupied by a mosque located next to the albarrana tower in what was later the Palacio de Laso de Castilla, residence of the Catholic Monarchs and Cardinal Cisneros when they were in Madrid. The previous church had been frequented as a parish church by the patron saint of Madrid, St. Isidore the Laborer, and his wife Santa María de la Cabeza, who lived nearby. The adjacent chapel of San Isidro was built at the site of the saint's house. Its construction began in 1657, after the saint was canonized in 1622. Further reconstructions were performed in 1663 and 1669, and later in 1783 and 1789. The initial construction in Baroque style was fashioned by José de Villarreal, and later Pedro de la Torre and Juan de Lobera. Much of the internal decoration, including paintings, was destroyed at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War by the Communist and Socialist forces.", "target": "cultural property in Madrid, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "monument"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19588363", "label": "Senain Kheshgi", "source": "Senain Kheshgi is a Pakistani-American film director, writer and producer. She is best known for her documentary films, Project Kashmir and The Diplomat.", "target": "Pakistani-American filmmaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3870602", "label": "Natale Chiaudani", "source": "Natale Chiaudani (born 13 September 1960) is an Italian former equestrian. He competed in two events at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Italian equestrian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4661973", "label": "Aaron Doering", "source": "Aaron Doering (born 1971 in Good Thunder, Minnesota) is an American explorer, author, public speaker, and adventure learning pioneer. He was a full professor at the University of Minnesota until 2019, and the director and co-founder of the Learning Technologies Media Lab. Doering is a laureate of the humanitarian Tech Awards, and was a fellow for the University of Minnesota Institute on the Environment. He is also a fellow for the Royal Canadian Geographical Society.", "target": "American educator, explorer, and author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6767357", "label": "Mark Dever", "source": "Mark E. Dever (born August 28, 1960) is a theologian and the senior pastor of the Capitol Hill Baptist Church in Washington, D.C., and the president of 9Marks (formerly known as the Center for Church Reform), a Christian ministry he co-founded \"in an effort to build biblically faithful churches in America. Dever also taught for the faculty of Divinity at the University of Cambridge and also served for two years as an associate pastor of Eden Baptist Church in Cambridge.\".", "target": "American pastor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2245908", "label": "Ptychadena cooperi", "source": "Ptychadena cooperi is a species of frog in the family Ptychadenidae. It is endemic to Ethiopia. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist montane forest, subtropical or tropical high-altitude grassland, rivers, intermittent rivers, freshwater marshes, intermittent freshwater marshes, pastureland, rural gardens, urban areas, and seasonally flooded agricultural land. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "target": "species of amphibian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7460284", "label": "shade-tolerant plant", "source": "In ecology, shade tolerance is a plant's ability to tolerate low light levels. The term is also used in horticulture and landscaping, although in this context its use is sometimes imprecise, especially in labeling of plants for sale in commercial nurseries.Shade tolerance is a complex, multi-faceted property of plants. Different plant species exhibit different adaptations to shade, and a particular plant can exhibit varying degrees of shade tolerance, or even of requirement for light, depending on its history or stage of development.", "target": "plants that can grow in low light conditions", "baseline_candidates": ["shade tolerant garden plants", "plant", "ecological group of plants"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3941476", "label": "1996 Rosenborg BK season", "source": "During the 1996 Norwegian football season, Rosenborg won the Norwegian Premier League.", "target": "Rosenborg 1996 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1156957", "label": "music of Vietnam", "source": "Traditional Vietnamese music encompasses a large umbrella of Vietnamese music from antiquity to present times, and can also encompass multiple groups, such as those from Vietnam's ethnic minority tribes. Throughout its history, Vietnam has been most heavily influenced by traditional Chinese music, along with Korea, Mongolia and Japan.", "target": "music and musical traditions of Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["music of Southeast Asia", "music by country or region", "music genre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5498329", "label": "Frederick M. Franks, Jr.", "source": "Frederick Melvin Franks Jr. (born 1 November 1936) is a retired general of the United States Army. He commanded the Gulf War coalition VII Corps in the highly successful \"Left Hook\" maneuver against fourteen Iraqi divisions, a number of which were Iraqi Republican Guard, defeating or forcing the retreat of each with fewer than 100 American casualties lost to enemy action.", "target": "Recipient of the Purple Heart medal", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16154672", "label": "1889 U.S. National Championships – men's doubles", "source": "Henry Slocum and Howard Taylor won the title by defeating Valentine Hall and Oliver Campbell in the final.", "target": "1889 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16898907", "label": "Purisima Hills", "source": "The Purisima Hills are a northwest-to-southeast trending low mountain range of the Outer Southern California Coast Ranges, located in Santa Barbara County, California. They divide the Santa Ynez Valley on the south from the Los Alamos Valley on the north. They are the location of the economically important Lompoc Oil Field. The Purisima Hills are the southernmost location in the current natural range of the coast Douglas-Fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii).", "target": "Mountain range in Southern California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["hill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6906655", "label": "Montville", "source": "Montville is an unincorporated community in central Montville Township, Geauga County, Ohio, United States. It has a post office with the ZIP code 44064. It lies at the intersection of U.S. Route 6 with State Route 528. A post office called Montville has been in operation since 1825. The area of Montville was named for its lofty elevation.", "target": "unincorporated community in Geauga County, Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5488793", "label": "Frank Okell", "source": "Frank Jackson Okell (3 February 1887 – 7 October 1950.) was the inaugural Bishop of Stockport whose 11-month tenure from November 1949, until October 1950, was one of the shortest in the Anglican Communion. He was educated at Rugby School and Trinity College, Oxford. Ordained in 1914 he was a curate at Bolsterstone before wartime service as a temporary chaplain. Following the Armistice he was a Minor Canon at Sheffield Cathedral then Rector of Bangor Monachorum. A sideways move to Eccleston, Cheshire led to promotion to be Rural Dean of Malpas and finally, before his appointment to the episcopate, Archdeacon of Macclesfield. He was ordained and consecrated a bishop on All Saints' Day (1 November) at York Minster.", "target": "Bishop of Stockport; British Anglican bishop (1887-1950)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5188316", "label": "Cross Inn railway station", "source": "Cross Inn railway station was situated on the line between Treforest and Llantrisant, about half a mile (0.8 km) to the east of Llantrisant village. Typically for this line, the station had a single passenger platform a few goods sidings.", "target": "railway station in Llantrisant, the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station", "former railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85761295", "label": "Fleet Street", "source": "Fleet Street (also known as Cheese for its distinctive album artwork), released in 2004, is the eleventh studio album by the collegiate comedy a cappella group the Stanford Fleet Street Singers. It was the first entirely original album in collegiate a cappella, for which it received critical recognition.", "target": "first entirely original collegiate a cappella album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q354088", "label": "Adelans-et-le-Val-de-Bithaine", "source": "Adelans-et-le-Val-de-Bithaine is a commune in the Haute-Saône department in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in eastern France.", "target": "commune in Haute-Saône, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25688932", "label": "lidocaine", "source": "Lidocaine, also known as lignocaine and sold under the brand name Xylocaine among others, is a local anesthetic of the amino amide type. It is also used to treat ventricular tachycardia. When used for local anaesthesia or in nerve blocks, lidocaine typically begins working within several minutes and lasts for half an hour to three hours. Lidocaine mixtures may also be applied directly to the skin or mucous membranes to numb the area. It is often used mixed with a small amount of adrenaline (epinephrine) to prolong its local effects and to decrease bleeding.If injected intravenously, it may cause cerebral effects such as confusion, changes in vision, numbness, tingling, and vomiting. It can cause low blood pressure and an irregular heart rate. There are concerns that injecting it into a joint can cause problems with the cartilage. It appears to be generally safe for use in pregnancy. A lower dose may be required in those with liver problems. It is generally safe to use in those allergic to tetracaine or benzocaine. Lidocaine is an antiarrhythmic medication of the class Ib type. This means it works by blocking sodium channels and thus decreasing the rate of contractions of the heart. When injected near nerves, the nerves cannot conduct signals to or from the brain.Lidocaine was discovered in 1946 and went on sale in 1948. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. It is available as a generic medication. In 2019, it was the 219th most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["amide", "medication", "essential medicine", "chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6927717", "label": "Moyna Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Moyna Assembly constituency is an assembly constituency in Purba Medinipur district in the Indian state of West Bengal.", "target": "West Bengal Legislative Assembly constituency", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78796263", "label": "Martin Olofsson", "source": "Martin Olofsson (10 November 1891 – 11 October 1991) was a Swedish weightlifter. He competed at the Summer Olympics in 1920 and 1924.", "target": "Swedish weightlifter (1891-1991)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12724731", "label": "Doclin", "source": "Doclin (Hungarian: Doklény) is a commune in Caraș-Severin County, western Romania with a population of 2.047 people. It is composed of three villages: Biniș (Bényes), Doclin and Tirol (Királykegye; German: Königsgnad).", "target": "commune in Caraș-Severin County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5336362", "label": "Eddie O'Connor", "source": "Edward O’Connor (born 2 October 1964) is an Irish hurling manager and former player who played for Kilkenny Senior Championship club Glenmore. He played for the Kilkenny senior hurling team for eight seasons, during which time he usually lined out as a right corner-back. O'Connor began his hurling career at club level with Glenmore. He broke onto the club's top adult team, having earlier lined out for the club's junior team, and enjoyed his greatest success when was at right corner-back on Glenmore's All-Ireland Club Championship-winning team in 1991. O'Connor's club career also saw him claim two Leinster Club Championship titles and five Kilkenny Senior Championship titles. At inter-county level, O'Connor was part of the successful Kilkenny minor team that won the All-Ireland Minor Championship in 1981 before later winning an All-Ireland Under-21 Championship with the under-21 team in 1984. He joined the Kilkenny senior team in 1991. From his debut, O'Connor was ever-present as a defender and made 23 Championship appearances in a career that ended with his last game in 1998. During that time he was part of two All-Ireland Championship-winning teams – in 1992 and as captain of the team in 1993. O'Connor also secured three successive Leinster Championship medals and a National Hurling League medal. He was joined on the Kilkenny senior team by his brother, Willie O'Connor.", "target": "Irish hurler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6967160", "label": "Nasirabad, Dasht-e Zarrin", "source": "Nasirabad (Persian: نصيراباد, also Romanized as Naşīrābād) is a village in Dasht-e Zarrin Rural District, in the Central District of Kuhrang County, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 546, in 111 families. The village is populated by Lurs.", "target": "village in Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18331356", "label": "Paul Bernard Malone", "source": "Paul Bernard Malone (May 8, 1872 – October 16, 1960) was a highly decorated officer in the United States Army with the rank of major general. Following his graduation from the United States Military Academy (USMA), he participated in the Spanish–American and Philippine–American Wars and commanded an Infantry Brigade in the last year of the World War I. Malone reached the rank of Brigadier general during that conflict and distinguished himself during the Battle of Soissons.He received the Distinguished Service Cross and the Distinguished Service Medal and several foreign decorations. Malone remained in the Army following the war and completed his service as Commanding general, Fourth United States Army in 1936.", "target": "U.S. Army Major General", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25136758", "label": "The Rose and Crown", "source": "The Rose and Crown is a 1956 Australian television play.", "target": "film directed by Raymond Menmuir", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6586893", "label": "Madenler", "source": "Madenler is a village in Çaycuma District, Zonguldak Province, Turkey.", "target": "köy in Çaycuma, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39181522", "label": "Janet Howell Clark", "source": "Janet Howell Clark (January 1, 1889 – February 12, 1969) was an American physiologist and biophysicist.", "target": "American physiologist and biophysicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1313360", "label": "Donacia obscura", "source": "Donacia obscura is a species of leaf beetle native to Europe.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5105432", "label": "Chou Ssu-Chi", "source": "Chou Ssu-chi (Chinese: 周思齊; born 26 October 1981 in Hualien County, Taiwan) is a Taiwanese professional baseball outfielders for the CTBC Brothers of Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL). At the end of 2008, when the dmedia T-REX folded in a gambling scandal, he was picked by the Brother Elephants in the third round of the redistribution draft.", "target": "Taiwanese baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5284691", "label": "Divuma", "source": "Divuma (or Diongo) is a town in the Lualaba province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, near the border with Zambia.", "target": "town in Democratic Republic of the Congo", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13566954", "label": "Nik Turley", "source": "Nikolas Carlyle Turley (born September 11, 1989) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). He has played in Major League Baseball for the Minnesota Twins in 2017 and Pittsburgh Pirates in 2020.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2492005", "label": "Ohio State Route 154", "source": "State Route 154 (SR 154) is a 16.27-mile-long (26.18 km) Ohio State Route that runs between Lisbon and the Pennsylvania state line in the US state of Ohio. Some of the highway is listed on the National Highway System. Most of the route is a rural two-lane highway and passes through both farmland and woodland. The highway was first signed in 1923 on a route that is now SR 517 and SR 558. SR 154 was rerouted in 1926 to its current alignment. Two section of the highway was paved in 1929, with the rest of the route was paved in 1933.", "target": "highway in Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3634008", "label": "Master Tara Singh", "source": "Master Tara Singh (24 June 1885 – 22 November 1967) was an Indian Sikh political and religious leader in the first half of the 20th century. He was instrumental in organising the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabhandak Committee and guiding the Sikhs during the partition of India, which he strongly opposed. He later led their demand for a Sikh-majority state in East Punjab. His daughter, the Indian journalist and politician Rajinder Kaur, was killed by Sikh militants in Bathinda.", "target": "Sikh political and religious leader", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16930398", "label": "Radhia Cousot", "source": "Radhia Cousot (6 August 1947 – 1 May 2014) was a French computer scientist known for inventing abstract interpretation.", "target": "Inventor of abstract interpretation", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6770308", "label": "Mark Wheeler", "source": "Mark Anthony Wheeler (born April 1, 1970) is a former American football defensive tackle who played eight seasons in the National Football League for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, New England Patriots, and the Philadelphia Eagles. He started in Super Bowl XXXI for the Patriots. Wheeler played college football at Texas A&M University and was drafted in the third round of the 1992 NFL Draft.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10499844", "label": "Fujientomon primum", "source": "Fujientomon primum is a species of proturan in the family Fujientomidae. It is found in Southern Asia.", "target": "species of arthropods", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5083278", "label": "Charles W. Woodward High School", "source": "Charles W. Woodward High School is a former U.S. high school located in North Bethesda, Maryland, near Rockville. The building housed a middle school until the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent relocation of the school.", "target": "school building in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["school building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7409431", "label": "Samigue Eman", "source": "Samigue Eman (born March 12, 1981) is a Filipino former professional basketball player. He last played for the Alaska Aces of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).Eman was the 2nd overall draft pick of the Magnolia Beverage Masters in the 2007 PBA draft. In 2004, following his participation in the \"Try-Outs ng Bayan\" program, the University of Mindanao released Eman to join the Philippine National Men's team RP-Cebuana Lhuillier.On his first two years and a conference with the San Miguel Beermen, he only played sporadically. But, after being acquired by the Aces during the 2010 PBA Fiesta Conference, he was able to showcase his skills as a rebounder and low-post defender and played more minutes. During the 2011–12 Philippine Cup and part of the Commissioner's Cup, he wore number 33, possibly given permission by Bogs Adornado.", "target": "Filipino basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48804615", "label": "Independent Office for Police Conduct", "source": "The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) is a non-departmental public body in England and Wales which, since 8 January 2018, is responsible for overseeing the system for handling complaints made against police forces in England and Wales. Most allegations of police misconduct are investigated by police forces' own professional standards departments (with oversight by the IOPC). However the IOPC does conduct independent investigations of serious allegations of misconduct or criminal offences by police officers and other law enforcement officers. 'Mandatory' referrals are usually made to the IOPC should a person die or sustain serious injuries following police contact. Additionally, a force's professional standards department may also make a 'voluntary' referral – in which a force will ask the IOPC to consider if they wish to investigate independently, supervise a force professional standards investigation, or decline and refer the investigation back to the force to investigate without any IOPC input. The office received over 4300 referrals from police forces and completed about 700 investigations in the 2019/20 year.", "target": "police oversight organisation in England", "baseline_candidates": ["police complaints authority"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q263094", "label": "Elizabeth Stride", "source": "Elizabeth \"Long Liz\" Stride (née Gustafsdotter; 27 November 1843 – 30 September 1888) is believed to have been the third victim of the unidentified serial killer known as Jack the Ripper, who killed and mutilated at least five women in the Whitechapel and Spitalfields districts of London from late August to early November 1888.Unlike the other four canonical Ripper victims, Stride had not been mutilated following her murder, leading some historians to suspect Stride had not actually been murdered by Jack the Ripper. However, Stride's murder occurred less than one hour before the murder of the Ripper's fourth canonical victim, Catherine Eddowes, within walking distance, and her act of murder is suspected to have been disturbed by an individual entering the crime scene upon a two-wheeled cart. In addition, both women had been murdered by slash wounds to the throat, leading most authors and researchers to consider Stride to be the third of the Ripper's canonical five victims.Stride was nicknamed \"Long Liz\". Several explanations have been given for this pseudonym; some believe it sources from her married surname (a stride being a reference to a long step), while others believe this is a reference to either her height, or her general facial structure.", "target": "Whitechapel murder victim", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25248333", "label": "Second St. Joseph County Courthouse", "source": "Old Courthouse, also known as the Second St. Joseph County Courthouse, is a historic courthouse located at South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana. It was designed by architect John M. Van Osdel (1811-1891) and built in 1853. It is a two-story, Greek Revival style stone building. The building measures 61 feet wide and 93 feet deep. It features a projecting front portico supported by Doric order columns and a front gable roof topped by a cupola. It was moved to its present site in 1896. Following construction of the Third St. Joseph County Courthouse, the building housed the local G.A.R. chapter and historical museum. : 2–3 The building now houses office of the Traffic and Misdemeanor Court and Small Claims Court.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970. It is located in the West Washington Historic District.", "target": "historic courthouse in South Bend, Indiana, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["county courthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7794214", "label": "Thomas Stockham", "source": "Thomas Greenway Stockham (December 22, 1933 – January 6, 2004) was an American scientist who developed one of the first practical digital audio recording systems, and pioneered techniques for digital audio recording and processing. He also led the development of the Digital Audio Tape (DAT) system.", "target": "Digital audio pioneer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49100397", "label": "Agatu", "source": "Agatu is a Local Government Area of Benue State, North Central Nigeria. It was created in 1996. It used to be the Agatu district of the old Otukpo division. The headquarters of the local government is at Obagaji; it is one of nine local government areas in the southern senatorial zone of Benue State which is mainly occupied by the Idoma people of Benue State. The resident population are mainly farmers. On 21 Jan 2014, 20 civilians and 5 soldiers were killed in an Agatu in an attack by Fulani herdsmen.Agatu was the scene of more attacks over two years later, in 2016.", "target": "LGA in Benue State, Nigeria", "baseline_candidates": ["Local Government Area in Nigeria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7759291", "label": "The Railroad To Freedom: A Story of the Civil War", "source": "The Railroad to Freedom: A Story of the Civil War is a children's book by Hildegarde Swift. It is a fictionalized biography of Araminta Ross (later known as Harriet Tubman) telling of her life in slavery and her work on the Underground Railroad. The book, illustrated by James Daugherty, was first published in 1932 and was a Newbery Honor recipient in 1933.", "target": "book by Hildegarde Swift", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6113719", "label": "Jack Logan", "source": "Jack Logan (born February 8, 1959) is an American singer-songwriter born in Greenville, Mississippi and raised in Lawrenceville, Illinois. He began recording, however, after moving to Winder, Georgia. He created two comic books in the 1980s, starring Peter Buck of R.E.M. as a superhero, and the connection to Peter Buck led to Twin/Tone Records' Peter Jesperson's interest in releasing some of Logan's material. He also drew a comic book that was included with LP copies of the Coolies second album, Doug. His first release was the critically acclaimed Bulk which contained 42 songs from the approximately 600 Logan had recorded from 1979 to 1993. Both Bulk and Logan's next album, Mood Elevator, received four stars in Rolling Stone. Logan has worked with Kelly Keneipp, Vic Chesnutt, Bob Kimbell, Kevin Lane, Aaron Phillips and Rob Keller. The backing band for his albums Buzz Me In and Monkey Paw albums was The Possibilities. His most recent release is 2013's Bones in the Desert, a self-released vinyl LP recorded with Scott Baxendale. Logan guest-starred as himself on a 1997 episode of Cartoon Network's Space Ghost Coast to Coast.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96415577", "label": "Wrath of Denethenor", "source": "Wrath of Denethenor is a top-down role-playing video game originally written for the Apple II and ported to the Commodore 64. Both versions were published by Sierra On-Line in 1986. Many reviewers noted similarities in themes and game mechanics to the Ultima series.", "target": "1986 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16874888", "label": "Sievwright", "source": "The following people have the surname Sievwright, or Sievewright: Charles Sievwright (1800 - 1855 ) British army officer and Assistant Protector of Aborigines in New South Wales. George Sievwright (born 1937), Scottish footballer James Sievewright (1783–1852) minister and Free Church moderator John Sievewright (born 1846), Canadian politician and teacher Margaret Sievwright (1844 – 1905), New Zealand political activist Nikki Sievwright (1943-2018), model Robert Sievwright (1882 – 1947), Scottish cricketer.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5950210", "label": "Juan José Cuadros Pérez", "source": "Juan José Cuadros Perez (Palencia, October 9, 1926 - Madrid, May 27, 1990) was a Spanish writer of poetry and prose. His father, Juan José Cuadros, was a native of Beas de Segura (Jaén), which, in the 1920s met and married Josefa Perez Palencia. John Joseph was the oldest of four children. He grew up in Beas de Segura (Jaén), a town that belongs to the Sierra de Segura, in Andalusia. In 1941 he moved to Baeza, to continue high school. It is from 1945 when part to Madrid and began to study sciences in the Faculty of Sciences, then had to leave school, posing as opposition to the Body of Surveyors and taking place in the National Geographic Institute, finally settling to live in the capital, combining his work with the surveyor of his fondness for the prose and poetry. In Madrid met Maruja Fernandez de Ayala, pharmaceutical, whom he married and born of the marriage was born the only daughter, Almudena. Thanks to the work of his wife, meet other poets associated with the branch of pharmacy, as in the case of Federico Muelas and later to Rafael Palma, organized in their respective reboticas gatherings attended by among others José García Nieto, Santiago Ammon, Ramon Garciasol etc.After the death of his mother in 1958, feels a special nostalgia for his homeland, and frequent visits to Palencia, where he met other poets soon permeating and integrating them in the group's magazine from Rocamador. that date onwards when dialing an intense period of publications in different.", "target": "Spanish writer (1926-1990)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14701750", "label": "Styloleptus variabilis", "source": "Styloleptus variabilis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Fisher in 1925.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1049099", "label": "Maygashta", "source": "Maygashta (Russian: Майгашта) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Burangulovsky Selsoviet, Abzelilovsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 234 as of 2010. There are 7 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Abzelilovsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31898165", "label": "Bad Tennstedt", "source": "Bad Tennstedt (German: [baːt ˈtɛnˌʃtɛt] (listen)) is a town in the Unstrut-Hainich-Kreis district, in Thuringia, Germany. It is situated 27 km east of Mühlhausen, and 24 km northwest of Erfurt. The Romantic poet Novalis worked here from 1794 until 1796. During his stay he met Sophie von Kühn, his later fiancée.", "target": "municipality in Thuringia, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["urban municipality of Germany", "designated spa town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17612555", "label": "Jessie Bonstelle", "source": "Laura Justine \"Jessie\" Bonstelle (November 1871 – October 14, 1932) was an American theater director, actress, and drama company manager. Encouraged by her mother, she sang and performed in the theater from a young age; she went on to become a famous leading lady and made several performances on Broadway. Later she became a director, managing many stock companies, directing Broadway productions and training many young performers who went on to be famous actors. In 1925 she founded her own theater in Detroit. Reorganized in 1928 as the Detroit Civic Theatre, it was one of America's first civic theaters, and her methods influenced community theater projects elsewhere. She has been described as \"one of the pioneering women stage directors in the early twentieth century\".", "target": "American theater manager, director and actress (1870-1932)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18054943", "label": "C14orf39", "source": "Chromosome 14 open reading frame 39, abbreviated C14orf39, and also known as Six6os1, is a protein that in humans is encoded by the SIX6OS1 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6969067", "label": "Nat Fyfe", "source": "Nathan Fyfe (born 18 September 1991) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the Fremantle Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). He received a nomination for the 2010 AFL Rising Star award in Round 9 of the 2010 season. Fyfe is a dual Brownlow Medallist, dual Leigh Matthews Trophy recipient, three-time All-Australian (including as captain in the 2019 team) and three-time Doig Medallist. He has served as Fremantle captain since the 2017 season.", "target": "Australian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2220096", "label": "Peoples Township", "source": "Peoples Township is one of seventeen townships in Boone County, Iowa, USA. As of the 2000 census, its population was 346.", "target": "township in Boone County, Iowa", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Iowa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q669216", "label": "Artyom Yenin", "source": "Artyom Valeryevich Yenin (Russian: Артём Валерьевич Енин; born 6 August 1976) is a former association football player.", "target": "Russian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7145303", "label": "Patriarch Nicholas IV of Alexandria", "source": "Nicholas IV served as Greek Patriarch of Alexandria between 1412 and 1417.", "target": "Greek Patriarch in 1412–1417", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86751002", "label": "TCG Hızırreis", "source": "Two submarines of the Turkish Navy have borne the name TCG Hızırreis; both were former US Navy vessels: TCG Hızırreis (S344), ex USS Mero (SS-378), transferred on loan under the Military Assistance Program to Turkey on 20 April 1960. Sold outright to Turkey, 1 August 1973. Disposed of in 1980.TCG Hızırreis (S342), ex USS Gudgeon (SS-567), leased to Turkey on 21 March 1980, sold on 6 August 1987, and decommissioned in 31 January 2004.", "target": "list of ships with the same or similar names", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia set index article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1964954", "label": "Napoleon McCallum", "source": "Napoleon Ardel McCallum (born October 6, 1963) is a former American college and professional football player who was a running back in the National Football League (NFL) for six seasons during the 1980s and 1990s. McCallum played college football for the U.S. Naval Academy, and then played professionally for the Los Angeles Raiders of the NFL. He is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame.", "target": "All-American college football player, professional football player, running back, College Football Hall of Fame member", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18530149", "label": "John Blankett", "source": "Rear-Admiral John Blankett, (c. 1740 – 14 July 1801) was a Royal Navy officer of the late eighteenth century who served in three major wars, but was best known for his service in the Red Sea during the late stages French Revolutionary Wars when he blocked French ambitions in the Indian Ocean.", "target": "British naval officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5828238", "label": "Ganehdar", "source": "Ganehdar (Persian: گنه دار, also Romanized as Ganehdār and Genehdār) is a village in Kani Bazar Rural District, Khalifan District, Mahabad County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 104, in 13 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5421594", "label": "Exposing Homelessness", "source": "Exposing Homelessness is a 2006 American documentary film created by Kerri Gawryn.", "target": "2006 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19672136", "label": "Dhagari Pipal", "source": "Dhagari Pipal is a village development committee in Salyan District in the Rapti Zone of western-central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 3834 people living in 668 individual households.", "target": "village development committee in Rapti Zone, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16210544", "label": "Chelsea Lariviere", "source": "Chelsea Lariviere is a paralympic athlete from Canada competing mainly in category T34 sprint events.", "target": "Canadian paralympian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1743290", "label": "Peter May", "source": "Peter May (born 20 December 1951) is a Scottish television screenwriter, novelist, and crime writer. He is the recipient of writing awards in Europe and America. The Blackhouse won the U.S. Barry Award for Crime Novel of the Year and the national literature award in France, the CEZAM Prix Litteraire. The Lewis Man won the French daily newspaper Le Télégramme's 10,000-euro Grand Prix des Lecteurs. In 2014, Entry Island won both the Deanston's Scottish Crime Novel of the Year and the UK's ITV Crime Thriller Book Club Best Read of the Year Award. May's books have sold more than two million copies in the UK and several million internationally.", "target": "Scottish writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39078611", "label": "John Ormsby Vandeleur", "source": "John Ormsby Vandeleur (17 April 1767 – 3 November 1822) was an Irish politician. He sat in the Irish House of Commons as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Granard from 1790 to 1798.", "target": "Irish politician (1767-1822)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7770082", "label": "The Tree That Remembers", "source": "The Tree That Remembers is a 2002 animated documentary by Iranian filmmaker Masoud Raouf, exploring the lives of former political prisoners like himself who had been active in the democratic movement during the days of the Shah of Iran, only to face imprisonment and torture under the Islamic regime after the 1979 Iranian revolution.Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, awards for the film included the Silver Award for Best Canadian Documentary at Hot Docs, as well as a Golden Sheaf Award for Best Social Documentary at the Yorkton Film Festival.", "target": "2002 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3072909", "label": "Firmino Bernardino", "source": "Firmino Bernardino (born 19 March 1950) is a Portuguese racing cyclist. He rode in the 1975 Tour de France.", "target": "Portuguese bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3838519", "label": "Luciano Baldessari", "source": "Luciano Baldessari (1896–1982) was an Italian artist, architect and designer. Baldessari was born on 10 December 1896 in Rovereto, Italy. In 1913, Baldessari began his career as a visual artist after studying in the Scuola Reale Elisabettiana. He participated in the Futurist movement among contemporaries including Fortunato Depero. In 1919, Baldessari moved to Milan where he studied architecture at Milan Polytechnic; he completed his degree in 1922.In 1923 Baldessari moved to Berlin where he worked as a set designer. In 1926, he returned to Milan and began his career in rationalist architecture. During this period, Baldessari designed a number of influential buildings including the Bernocchi Pavilion at the 10th International Fair of Milan and the Craja Bar in Milan (in collaboration with Luigi Figini, and Gino Pollini, Fausto Melotti and Marcello Nizzoli).Baldessari died in 1982 in Milan.", "target": "Italian architect and scenographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1017766", "label": "Buster Brown", "source": "Buster Brown is a comic strip character created in 1902 by Richard F. Outcault. Adopted as the mascot of the Brown Shoe Company in 1904, Buster Brown, Mary Jane, and his dog Tige, were well known to the American public in the early 20th century. The character's name was also used to describe a popular style of suit for young boys, the Buster Brown suit, that echoed his own outfit.", "target": "comic strip character created in 1902 by Richard Felton Outcault", "baseline_candidates": ["advertising character", "comics character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5337189", "label": "Edgar Craven Bredin", "source": "Edgar Craven Bredin (16 April 1886 – 5 August 1950) was an Irish mechanical and locomotive engineer and later a railway manager. Bredin was born in Canterbury on 16 April 1886 and educated at Mountjoy School in Dublin. In 1905 he was apprenticed to Fielding & Platt in Gloucester.", "target": "Mechanical Engineer, Locomotive Engineer, Railway Manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5134046", "label": "Clinton-Sampson County Airport", "source": "Clinton–Sampson County Airport (IATA: CTZ, ICAO: KCTZ, FAA LID: CTZ) is a public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) southwest of the central business district of Clinton, a city in Sampson County, North Carolina, United States. It is owned by the city and county. This airport is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015, which categorized it as a general aviation facility. It was formerly known as Sampson County Airport.", "target": "airport in North Carolina, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5317088", "label": "Dustin Corea", "source": "Dustin Clifman Corea Garay (born March 21, 1992) is an American-born Salvadoran international footballer, who plays as a winger for Deportivo Mixco.", "target": "Salvadorian soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14629131", "label": "Newell Toll Bridge", "source": "The Newell Toll Bridge is a privately owned suspension bridge over the Ohio River on the Golding Street Extension between Newell, West Virginia and East Liverpool, Ohio, United States. It carries two lanes of roadway and a pedestrian path along the west side. Tolls are charged for all road users at varying rates depending upon vehicle; pedestrians are also tolled. The bridge is one of the last suspension bridges on the Ohio River.", "target": "bridge in East Liverpool and Newell, West Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["toll bridge", "road bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5329061", "label": "East Norwalk station", "source": "East Norwalk station is a commuter rail station on the Metro-North Railroad New Haven Line, located in the East Norwalk neighborhood of Norwalk, Connecticut. The station building was constructed by Metro-North in the 1980s.The Founder's Stone Monument, which formerly located at East Avenue and Fitch Street, is adjacent to the station. It marks the earliest Norwalk settlement and adjacent first Meeting House (seat of government), which were located at its former site.", "target": "railway station in Norwalk, Connecticut", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3523125", "label": "The Twin Bracelets", "source": "Twin Bracelets is a film produced in 1990 by Cosmopolitan Film Productions Co., a Hong Kong-based company that forms part of the film production conglomerate run by the Shaw brothers who are the owners of the Shaw Brothers Studio. S.L.Wei notes that \"Twin Bracelets was shown at international film festivals.\" It has \"won the 1992 San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Film Festival Award for Best Feature.\" John Charles called Twin Bracelets \"(a) somber, engrossing drama\" that is \"marred only by the inevitability of its narrative.\" The film has been labeled a ‘lesbian’ film, but also a ‘feminist’ film. Some critics have also focused on what they took to be its ethnological aspects. Such aspects do indeed form the background of Zhaohuan Lu's short story ‘The Twin Bracelets’ (1986) which served as the basis of the film script written by the film director, Huang Yu-shan. Huang Yushan who initially worked for Central Motion Picture Company (CMPC) and for the Shaw Bros. is a director who has made a choice in favor of independent film. In her life and work she is attached to feminism. According to Bérénice Reynaud, she is \"one of the rare women to work in the Taiwanese film industry.\" Prof Lai has called Huang Yu-shan \"Taiwan's major feminist director.\" S.L. Wei sees Huang as \"an important voice in Taiwanese women's cinema. The fact that her film Twin Bracelets received relatively much attention \"enabled Huang to have in-depth discussions with American independent filmmakers and feminist directors. From then on she began to push consciously forward.", "target": "1991 film by Huang Yu-shan", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3091563", "label": "Federation for National Education", "source": "The Federation of the National Education (Fédération de l'Education nationale or FEN) was a French federation of teaching unions. It succeeded the General Federation of Teaching (Fédération générale de l'enseignement) founded in 1929 and affiliated to the General Confederation of Labour (Confédération générale du travail or CGT). After World War II the CGT split, and the reformist wing created Workers' Force. In 1948, the teaching federation voted to leave the CGT and become independent. A minority of members retained dual membership with the CGT, and formed a new CGT Federation of Education.The FEN was dominated by the group called \"Unity, independence and democracy\" close to the Socialists. The minority groups were \"Unity and action\", influenced by the Communists, and \"Emancipated school\" close to the far left. The FEN was nicknamed the \"fortress of teachers\" and advocated secular education. Its power and mobilization capacity were dreaded by the government, but it imploded due to its political divisions. At the beginning of the 1990s, faced with the growth of \"Unity and action\", the Socialist majority proposed that the union should affiliate to a non-CGT national union confederation. The unions dominated by \"Unity and action\" were ejected and founded the Fédération Syndicale Unitaire (FSU, United Trade Union Federation). The FEN and other reformist unions of civil servants created the National Union of Autonomous Trade Unions (Union nationale des syndicats autonomes or UNSA). In 2000, the FEN became UNSA Education. However, UNSA Education today represents a minority in the teaching world and has largely been surpassed by the FSU.", "target": "trade union of France", "baseline_candidates": ["labor union"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7181622", "label": "Phiditia", "source": "Phiditia is a genus of moths of the family Phiditiidae erected by Heinrich Benno Möschler in 1883.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64733046", "label": "William Keatinge", "source": "William Keatinge (1 August 1869 – 21 February 1934) was an English prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Chaplain to the Forces, 1st Class, arriving in France 18 August 1914 and was Bishop of the Forces from 1917 to 1934. He was awarded the Military Cross in the 1915 Birthday Honours. Born in London on 1 August 1869, he was ordained to the priesthood on 27 May 1893. He was appointed the Bishop of the Forces and Titular Bishop of Metellopolis by the Holy See on 30 October 1917. His consecration to the Episcopate took place on 25 February 1918, the principal consecrator was Cardinal Gaetano de Lai, and the principal co-consecrators were Archbishop Giuseppe Palica and Bishop Algernon Charles Stanley.He died in office on 21 February 1934, aged 64.", "target": "Catholic bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6829274", "label": "Michael Clanchy", "source": "Michael Thomas Clanchy (28 November 1936 – 29 January 2021) was Professor Emeritus of Medieval History at the Institute of Historical Research, University of London and Fellow of the British Academy.", "target": "British historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5472688", "label": "Fortnight", "source": "Fortnight was a monthly political and cultural magazine published in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The magazine was founded in 1970 with the aim of providing analysis and criticism of politics, culture, and the arts from those from both inside and outside the local mainstream. Fortnight was read by and contributed to by people from all over the spectrum. Gerry Adams is credited as saying \"A month without Fortnight would be twice as long. \"Previous contributors include politicians and journalists. Most notably, David Trimble - ex-leader of the Ulster Unionists and Mary Robinson, later President of Ireland - contributed material to Fortnight. Other politicians who wrote for the magazine included Peter Robinson.Other notable contributors include: Newton Emerson (who spawned the popular satirical website Portadown News), Ed Moloney, Eamonn McCann, Fionnula O'Connor, Brian Trench, Gene Kerrigan, Mary Holland, Douglas Gageby (the former editor of The Irish Times), Barry White of The Belfast Telegraph, Conor O'Clery, John Cooney, Dick Walsh and Nell McCafferty.Editors have included Tom Hadden, Andy Pollak (1981-1985), Leslie Van Slyke, Robin Wilson (later to found the Democratic Dialogue thinktank), John O'Farrell and Malachi O'Doherty. Literary editors have included the poets James Simmons and Medbh McGuckian. Cartoonist Martyn Turner has been a regular contributor since the magazine was founded, and also edited the magazine for a number of years.Fortnight was supported by grants from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. It won the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize for 1982. In late 2011, it was announced Fortnight would cease publication. The final issue was published in 2012.In September 2020.", "target": "former monthly political and cultural magazine published in Belfast, Northern Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22192318", "label": "Embers", "source": "Embers is a 2015 American independent science fiction film directed by Claire Carré as her feature debut, and written and produced by Claire Carré and Charles Spano. It features Jason Ritter, Iva Gocheva, Greta Fernández, Tucker Smallwood, Karl Glusman, and Silvan Friedman. The film world premiered at Oldenburg International Film Festival and US co-premiered at the Chicago International Film Festival and New Orleans Film Festival where it won Best Feature. Embers was selected as Closing Night Film at Slamdance Film Festival. Slamdance Presents acquired theatrical rights and The Orchard acquired global digital distribution rights to the film, releasing it in 2016.", "target": "2015 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5971168", "label": "II25,1", "source": "In mathematics, II25,1 is the even 26-dimensional Lorentzian unimodular lattice. It has several unusual properties, arising from Conway's discovery that it has a norm zero Weyl vector. In particular it is closely related to the Leech lattice Λ, and has the Conway group Co1 at the top of its automorphism group.", "target": "the even 26-dimensional Lorentzian unimodular lattice", "baseline_candidates": ["finite group", "simple group", "group", "sporadic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4653762", "label": "ARIA Music Awards of 2012", "source": "The 26th Annual Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards (generally known as ARIA Music Awards or simply The ARIAs) were a series of award ceremonies which included the 2012 ARIA Artisan Awards, ARIA Hall of Fame Awards, ARIA Fine Arts Awards and ARIA Awards. The latter ceremony took place on 29 November at the Sydney Entertainment Centre, and was telecast on Nine Network's channel Go! at 7:30pm. The final nominees for ARIA Award categories were announced on 3 October as well as nominees and winners for Fine Arts Awards and Artisan Awards. There was no peer judged \"Single of the Year\" category this year due to replacing it to \"Song of the Year\", although the \"Album of the Year\" category returned. The Highest Selling Single and Album categories were removed as they were in 2010.For the third time in ARIA Awards history, public votes were being used for the categories, \"Song of the Year\", \"Best Australian Live Act\" and \"Best International Artist\"; and for the first time for the category \"Best Video\", which was moved from the Artisan Awards. The nominees for \"Song of the Year\" are the ten highest selling Australian single releases during the eligibility period. Sales from different releases by the same artist cannot be aggregated, and artists are only allowed to be nominated once, even if they have more than one song in the top ten. Songs must also have been released as singles during the eligibility period. The nominees for \"Best Australian Live Act\" were selected by a Judging School specifically.", "target": "Annual Australian music awards", "baseline_candidates": ["award ceremony"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q879765", "label": "Björn Ziegenbein", "source": "Björn Ziegenbein (born 30 April 1986) is a German former professional footballer who played as a midfielder.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5947074", "label": "Jafarabad, Khomeyn", "source": "Jafarabad (Persian: جعفراباد, also Romanized as Ja‘farābād and Ja’farrābād) is a village in Salehan Rural District, in the Central District of Khomeyn County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 199, in 61 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15243022", "label": "Lower Broadway Neighborhood", "source": "Lower Broadway Neighborhood is a neighborhood located on the northern edge of the central business district in Newark, New Jersey, USA.", "target": "human settlement in Newark, New Jersey, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood", "unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6749648", "label": "Manikya Lal Verma", "source": "Manikya Lal Verma Born on 4th December 1897 in a Mathur kayastha family was a member of Constituent Assembly of India in 1949. He was prime minister of Rajasthan, India before full formation of the state. He was elected to Lok Sabha in 1957 from Chittorgarh and in 1952 from Tonk. He was recipient of Padma Bhushan in 1965.He played pivotal role in Bijolia movement, a farmers agitation raised between 1919 and 1923 in Bhilwara. He remained in prison for several year's being a freedom fighter. Verma was an untiring social activist. He played a vital role in promoting education among Tribes , other backward classes and women in southern Rajasthan. He founded Vimukt Janjaati sangh to promote social conditions of notified casts . This organisation established several hostels for notified cast students in Rajasthan . In Western border district's Simant (सीमान्त) Chatrawas were established on his initiative. He died on 14 January 1969. His wife Smt. Narayni Devi was a member of Rajya Sabha and son Deen Bandhu Verma was a member of Loksabha from Udaipur constituency. His son in Law Shiv Charan Mathur was also Chief Minister of Rajasthan for two terms . The Manikya Lal Verma Textile and Engineering College was named after him. A huge garden at bank of Pichola lake , udaipur is also named behind him . other details as per loksabha.nic.in ... Social and Political worker; Secretary, Vidya Pracharini Sabha, Bijolia (1916); Organised Peasant Satyagraha against taxes and forced labour in 1918; Imprisoned in 1919, also 1923, thrice in.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q446903", "label": "Marrit Leenstra", "source": "Marrit Leenstra (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmɑrɪt ˈleːnstraː]; born 10 May 1989) is a Dutch former long track speed skater.", "target": "Dutch speed skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6231780", "label": "John Endres", "source": "John J. Endres was a civil engineer known for designing the Monongahela Incline, the first passenger incline in the United States, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The incline was originally steam powered and ran on wooden tracks. Born in Prussia and educated in Europe, Endres had immigrated to the United States and settled in Cincinnati, Ohio. His daughter, Caroline Endres, born and educated in the US, became one of the first women engineers in the country. She assisted him on the Monongahela Incline. While the two were working in Pittsburgh, they met fellow engineer Samuel Diescher, who was born in Hungary and had immigrated to the US in 1866. Diescher and John Endres became friends and business partners. Samuel and Caroline married in 1872, and resided in Pittsburgh. They had six children together, including three sons who became engineers and went into business with their father. Endres returned to Cincinnati after constructing the Monongahela Incline. He returned to Pittsburgh in 1883 to help Diescher design the Monongahela Freight Incline, completed the following year.", "target": "Prussian civil engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18210487", "label": "Taroudant Airport", "source": "Taroudant Airport (ICAO: GMMO) is an airport serving Taroudant, Morocco. The airport is mainly used for skydiving; the airport has a school to teach skydiving skills and also has a small hangar for the planes used for this sport. The local authorities are planning to invest more in the airport such as paving the current runway to encourage tourism and skydiving in the city.", "target": "airport in Morocco", "baseline_candidates": ["glider airfield"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60286973", "label": "Desiré Ollo", "source": "Desiré Ollo (born 8 May 1965) is a Gabonese boxer. He competed in the men's lightweight event at the 1984 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Gabonese boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4972675", "label": "Brochocki BKB-1", "source": "The Brochocki BKB-1 was a Canadian mid-wing, single-seat, experimental tailless glider that was designed and constructed by Stefan Brochocki with assistance from Witold Kasper and A. Bodek. The designation indicated the contributions of all three men. The aircraft was intended to study flight above the stall angle.", "target": "single-seat Canadian glider, 1959", "baseline_candidates": ["aircraft type", "sailplane"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19975007", "label": "Norman C. Deck", "source": "Norman C Deck (1882 – 1980) was a photographer, dentist and missionary.", "target": "Australian photographer, dentist and missionary", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6006070", "label": "Çanlı Kilise", "source": "Çanlı Kilise, meaning \"bell church\" or \"church with a bell\", is a Byzantine-era ruin site located about 15 km southeast of the city of Aksaray in Turkey. : xix, 6 It consists of a large rock-cut settlement surrounding a prominent masonry church which lends its name to the whole site. : 6 A rare masonry church from the historical region of Cappadocia, the church is one of the best examples of Byzantine masonry architecture in central Anatolia and is frequently cited in textbooks on Byzantine architecture. : 17 Surrounding the church is a series of rock-carved houses carved into the south side of a hill (locally called Manastırtepe, or \"monastery hill\") over a distance of about one kilometer. : 7 : 302 Across the broad valley to the south, the peaks of Hasan Dağı are visible. : 7 Çanlı Kilise is accessible by a road winding its way from Akhisar, 4 km to the west on the plain below, up through a rugged hilly area en route to Çeltek, which is 6 km north of Çanlı Kilise on the same road. : 7 Based on its architecture and the styles of the paintings, Çanlı Kilise appears to primarily date from the 10th and 11th centuries. : 302 It then went into a period of gradual decline before being abandoned altogether, perhaps as late as the 14th century. : 302 There is a high concentration of large \"courtyard\" houses, indicating that it was a prosperous agricultural settlement or kome, with many affluent landowners. : 302 Çanlı Kilise.", "target": "church building in Aksaray Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21778986", "label": "Povalikha", "source": "Povalikha (Russian: Повалиха) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Povalikhinsky Selsoviet, Pervomaysky District, Altai Krai, Russia. The population was 3,089 as of 2013. There are 37 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Pervomaysky District, Altai Krai, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17010418", "label": "The Robert Verdi Show", "source": "The Robert Verdi Show is an American reality series that aired from February 10 until April 14, 2010.", "target": "US television program", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20900288", "label": "biblical judge", "source": "The biblical judges are described in the Hebrew Bible, and mostly in the Book of Judges, as people who served roles as military leaders in times of crisis, in the period before an Israelite monarchy was established.", "target": "authority in the early history of Israel", "baseline_candidates": ["era", "historical period", "position", "public office", "biblical character", "Shophet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6521813", "label": "Len Heard", "source": "Leonard \"Len\" Heard (born 18 January 1942) is a former English–American professional darts player who currently played members in the British Darts Organisation from 1970s 1980s and 1990s. He was nickname Lenny.", "target": "English-American professional darts player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7985235", "label": "West Goscote", "source": "West Goscote was a hundred of Leicestershire, that arose from the division of the ancient Goscote hundred into two. It covers the north west of the county, an area broadly corresponding to the western part of Charnwood district along with North West Leicestershire. The hundred's main town was Loughborough. Other settlements include Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Coalville and Overseal (now in Derbyshire). The hundred was created by the subdivision of the Goscote hundred in 1346.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24572293", "label": "Jennifer Monserrate", "source": "Jennifer Monserrate is an Indian Politician from the state of Goa. She is a second term member from Taleigao Constituency of the Goa Legislative Assembly. She is the incumbent Cabinet Minister for Revenue, IT, Labour and Employment under the Chief Minister of Dr. Pramod Sawant. She assumed office of Minister of Revenue and IT in July 2019. She succeeds Mr. Rohan Khaunte who was earlier the Minister of Revenue & IT. She is the only women Minister in Dr. Pramod Sawant's Cabinet as well as the first women MLA to be elected from Taleigao Assembly for two successive terms. She was one of the ten members of Indian National Congress who joined Bharatiya Janata Party in July 2019.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66459238", "label": "Dylan Fage", "source": "Dylan Raphaël Colette Fage (born 18 March 1999) is a French professional footballer who plays for English club Oldham Athletic, as a midfielder. He will become a free agent on 30 June 2022.", "target": "French association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q142855", "label": "Portugal at the 1956 Summer Olympics", "source": "Portugal competed at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia and Stockholm, Sweden (equestrian events). A total delegation of twelve competitors (five in Melbourne, seven in Stockholm) participated in two sports, however no medals were conquered by this nation.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7627729", "label": "Student Press Initiative", "source": "The Student Press Initiative (SPI) at Teachers College, Columbia University, is a professional development program for teachers, which uses publication as a tool to teach literacy skills. Publication, or \"Going Public,\" entails everything from publishing professionally bound books of student writing and organizing community-based panel discussions to developing downloadable MP3s and staging theatrical performances. This not-for-profit educational organization partners with schools to transform classrooms into mini-publishing houses that celebrate student voice, activism and achievement. Founded in 2002, SPI provides intensive consultation and curriculum planning resources to classroom teachers in its partner schools, and publishes the culminating student-authored projects. According to the organization’s website, SPI has partnered with over 60 schools over the past seven years. The goal of the partnerships is to link Teachers College resources with classrooms across the nation. Through these partnerships, SPI provides teachers with the tools and support they need to create projects that culminate in the publication of student-written books and teacher-written curriculum guides. SPI has published student-authored texts written across the disciplines, including math, science, English language Arts, ELL and bilingual studies. Over the years, the organization has hosted public performances of student work at various community venues, including Barnes & Noble and Borders bookstores, the Samsung Experience at the Time Warner Center in Manhattan, and the Rikers Island Correctional Facility. In 2008, SPI partner teachers received one of four Tribute WTC Visitor Center Annual Teacher Awards for the book Yesterday’s Issues, Today’s Perspectives, Tomorrow’s Lessons written by students from the Academy for Young Writers.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66109851", "label": "Sandy Fife Wilson", "source": "Sandy Fife Wilson (born 1950) is a Muscogee (Creek) art educator, fashion designer and artist. After graduating from the Institute of American Indian Arts and Northeastern Oklahoma State University, she became an art teacher, first working in the public schools of Dewey, Oklahoma. When Josephine Wapp retired as the textile instructor at the Institute of American Indian Arts, Wilson was hired to teach the design courses. After three years, in 1979, she returned to Oklahoma and taught at Chilocco Indian School until it closed and then worked in the Morris Public School system until her retirement in 2009. In 1976, Wilson and her sisters formed the Fife Collection focusing on designing contemporary fashion, but incorporating traditional Southeastern Woodlands techniques and motifs. Their works were shown at many museum venues and festivals, like the Coconino Center for the Arts, Southern Plains Indian Museum, and Red Earth Festival. Her later career has included works of traditional Creek split-cane baskets, shell carvings, and fingerweavings. Wilson has participated in numerous art and fashion shows throughout her career, winning first place honors in 1972 at the Scottsdale National Indian Arts Exhibition, the Grand Heritage Award of the Five Civilized Tribes Museum in 1995 and placing 2nd in the traditional objects category of the Santa Fe Indian Market in 2016.", "target": "Muscogee fashion designer, artist and art instructor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4783752", "label": "Arahatti", "source": "Arahatti is a village in Dharwad district of Karnataka, India.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5834937", "label": "Aliabad, Falavarjan", "source": "Aliabad (Persian: علي اباد, also Romanized as ‘Alīābād and Alīābād) is a village in Garkan-e Shomali Rural District, Pir Bakran District, Falavarjan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 117, in 29 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5291021", "label": "Dominion", "source": "Dominion is an original novel written by Nick Walters and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Eighth Doctor, Sam and Fitz.", "target": "original novel written by Nick Walters", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work", "Doctor Who spin-offs"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6503887", "label": "Lawrence Buck", "source": "Lawrence Buck (1865—1929) was a successful and influential Chicago area residential and commercial architect, artist and landscape painter, associated with the Prairie School and the American Arts and Crafts Movement.", "target": "American architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5193862", "label": "Cumberland County", "source": "The Cumberland County, until 21 March 1778, known as the Unity County, was a county in Vermont Republic. It was established on 17 March 1778, being formed from the counties of Cumberland and Gloucester from the state of New York, United States, that were acquired by Vermont. It existed until 1781, when it got partitioned into three other counties: Orange, Windham, and Windsor.", "target": "county of the Republic of Vermont", "baseline_candidates": ["former administrative territorial entity", "county"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q752375", "label": "extreme value theorem", "source": "In calculus, the extreme value theorem states that if a real-valued function f {\\displaystyle f} is continuous on the closed interval [ a , b ] {\\displaystyle [a,b]} , then f {\\displaystyle f} must attain a maximum and a minimum, each at least once. That is, there exist numbers c {\\displaystyle c} and d {\\displaystyle d} in [ a , b ] {\\displaystyle [a,b]} such that: The extreme value theorem is more specific than the related boundedness theorem, which states merely that a continuous function f {\\displaystyle f} on the closed interval [ a , b ] {\\displaystyle [a,b]} is bounded on that interval; that is, there exist real numbers m {\\displaystyle m} and M {\\displaystyle M} such that: This does not say that M {\\displaystyle M} and m {\\displaystyle m} are necessarily the maximum and minimum values of f {\\displaystyle f} on the interval [ a , b ] , {\\displaystyle [a,b],} which is what the extreme value theorem stipulates must also be the case. The extreme value theorem is used to prove Rolle's theorem. In a formulation due to Karl Weierstrass, this theorem states that a continuous function from a non-empty compact space to a subset of the real numbers attains a maximum and a minimum.", "target": "theorem that states that the image of real function having real closed interval as domain, has maximum and minimum", "baseline_candidates": ["theorem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4576840", "label": "Nevernes Church", "source": "Nevernes Church (Norwegian: Nevernes kirke) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Rana Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Nevernes. It is the church for the Nevernes parish which is part of the Indre Helgeland prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1893 using plans drawn up by the architect Andreas Grenstad. The church seats about 250 people.", "target": "church in Rana, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "cultural property"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6203786", "label": "Jiří Pokorný", "source": "Jiří Pokorný (born 27 November 1953) is a former ice dancer who represented Czechoslovakia. Together with Eva Peštová he competed at the 1976 Winter Olympics and finished in 11th place. Their best ISU Championship placement was eighth at the 1976 World Championships.", "target": "Czech figure skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5801904", "label": "Beyg Rezai", "source": "Beyg Rezai (Persian: بيگ رضائي, also Romanized as Beyg Reẕā’ī; also known as Şeyed Ayāz-e Beyg Reẕā'ī) is a village in Gowavar Rural District, Govar District, Gilan-e Gharb County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 643, in 143 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1007895", "label": "Robert de Grandmesnil", "source": "Robert de Grantmesnil (de Grandmesnil) also known as Robert II, was a Norman nobleman; a member of a prominent Norman family. He first became a monk, then abbot at the Abbey of Saint-Evroul in Normandy and later Bishop of Troina in the Norman Kingdom of Sicily.", "target": "Italian bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2746914", "label": "Tarek El-Sayed", "source": "Tarek El Sayed (Arabic: طارق السيد; born 9 October 1978) is a retired Egyptian football player who played for El Zamalek for most of his football career. He also played for Itesalat, and he played for Tersana in the Egyptian Second Division and retired after one season. El Sayed made several appearances for the Egypt national football team, including nine qualifying matches for various FIFA World Cups.", "target": "Egyptian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64692280", "label": "James Smith", "source": "James August Smith (1841–1928) was a Roman Catholic bishop who served as the Archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh in Scotland from 1900 to 1928. Born in Edinburgh on 18 October 1841, he was ordained a priest on 31 March 1866. He was appointed the Bishop of Dunkeld by the Holy See on 14 August 1890, and consecrated to the Episcopate on 28 October 1890. The principal consecrator was Archbishop William Smith, and the principal co-consecrators were Bishop John McLachlan and Bishop (later Archbishop) Angus MacDonald. He was translated to the Archdiocese of St. Andrews and Edinburgh as archbishop on 30 August 1900. He died in office on 25 November 1928, aged 87.", "target": "Archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5374429", "label": "Empowerment South Early College High School", "source": "South Early College High School (SECHS), formerly Empowerment South Early College High School and Empowerment College Preparatory High School, is a college-preparatory high school in Houston, Texas, US. It is a part of the Houston Independent School District. It was previously located on the campus of Albert Thomas Middle School and then at Jones High School The school opened in August 2005. Empowerment merged with South Early College High School in 2010.Its current location, at 1930 Airport Boulevard, is on the South Campus of Houston Community College began construction in 2014 and opened in August 2016.The school offers its students the opportunity to earn an associate degree while concurrently achieving a high school degree.", "target": "high school in Texas, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q44980", "label": "Alex Ferguson", "source": "Sir Alexander Chapman Ferguson (born 31 December 1941) is a Scottish former football manager and player, best known for managing Manchester United from 1986 to 2013. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest football managers of all time and has won more trophies than any other manager in the history of football. Ferguson is often credited for valuing youth during his time with Manchester United, particularly in the 1990s with the \"Class of '92\", who contributed to making the club one of the richest and most successful in the world.Ferguson played as a forward for several Scottish clubs, including Dunfermline Athletic and Rangers. While playing for Dunfermline, he was the top goalscorer in the Scottish league in the 1965–66 season. Towards the end of his playing career he also worked as a coach, then started his managerial career with East Stirlingshire and St Mirren. Ferguson then enjoyed a highly successful period as manager of Aberdeen, winning three Scottish league championships, four Scottish Cups and the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1983. He briefly managed Scotland following the death of Jock Stein, taking the team to the 1986 World Cup. Ferguson was appointed manager of Manchester United in November 1986. During his 26 years with Manchester United he won 38 trophies, including 13 Premier League titles, five FA Cups, and two UEFA Champions League titles. He was knighted in the 1999 Queen's Birthday Honours list for his services to the game. Ferguson is the longest-serving manager of Manchester United, having overtaken Sir Matt Busby's record.", "target": "Scottish association football manager and player (born 1941)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2483088", "label": "Sibi District", "source": "Sibi (Urdu and Balochi: سبی) is a district in the Balochistan province of Pakistan. The main mountain ranges are Zen, Bambore and Dungan. The climatic and topography of Sibi District is quite varied compared to other districts of Balochistan. It is also known as the \"Hot spot\" of Pakistan where the temperatures in the summer exceed 52.6 °C (126.7 °F). Until 2013 the district had two sub-divisions, Sibi and Lehri, further organized into Tehsils and sub-tehsils: Sibi, Lehri, Kutmandi and Sangan. Lehri was rejoined with Sibi district in 2018.", "target": "district of Balochistan, Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Pakistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1764776", "label": "Fjell-Ljom", "source": "Fjell-Ljom (The Mountain Echo), originally spelled Fjeld-Ljom, is a local weekly Norwegian newspaper published in Røros in Sør-Trøndelag county. Fjell-Ljom has been published since January 8, 1886. In 1979 the newspaper went into bankruptcy after losing out to its competitor Arbeidets Rett, and it stopped appearing. Thanks to local interests, the newspaper was relaunched in 1993, when it was resumed as a weekly publication. The newspaper was long associated with the Liberal Party, and it was shut down from 1943 to the end of the Second World War. Fjell-Ljom has been associated with a number of prominent cultural figures throughout its existence, the best-known being the author Johan Falkberget. Fjell-Ljom is published by the company A/S Avisdrift, the largest shareholder of which is Arbeidets Rett. The newspaper's chief editor and general manager is Bjørn Tore Hindklev.Fjell-Ljom was previously edited and printed in facilities along the Hyttelva, the river running through the center of Røros. The newspaper and its printing press were located there for 88 years, and since 1986 the facility has been the Fjeld-Ljom Newspaper Museum.", "target": "newspaper", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6505436", "label": "Laya, Guinea", "source": "Laya or Layah is a village in the Forécariah Prefecture in the Kindia Region of southwestern Guinea.", "target": "human settlement in Guinea", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4982420", "label": "HC Lipovci", "source": "Hockey Club Lipovci, commonly referred to as HC Lipovci or simply Lipovci is Slovenian field hockey team and is based in Lipovci, Slovenia. The club was founded in 1965, making it the oldest active field hockey club in Slovenia.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["field hockey team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q312730", "label": "Ka", "source": "Ka, also (alternatively) Sekhen, was a Predynastic pharaoh of Upper Egypt belonging to Dynasty 0. He probably reigned during the first half of the 32nd century BC. The length of his reign is unknown.", "target": "Predynastic pharaoh of Upper Egypt", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2221233", "label": "Ogema Township", "source": "Ogema Township is a township in Pine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 298 at the 2000 census. Ogema is a name derived from the Ojibwe language ogimaa meaning \"chief\".", "target": "township in Pine County, Minnesota", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Minnesota"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9138704", "label": "Acajete Municipality", "source": "Acajete Municipality is a municipality located in the central zone in the state of Veracruz, about 20 km from state capital Xalapa. It has a surface of 90.48 km2. It is located at 19°58′N 97°00′W. In the middle of 1586 this village was formed, on one of the adjoining old men of Tlacolulan's dominion. The decree N ° 64 of November 3, 1893, extinguished the municipality of La Hoya, annexing its territory to San Salvador Acajete. On November 5, 1932, the municipal head-board San Salvador Acajete changes the name to Acajete.", "target": "in Veracruz State, Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Mexico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7114161", "label": "Ovill McKenzie", "source": "Ovill McKenzie (born 26 November 1979) is a Jamaican-born British former professional boxer who competed from 2003 to 2015. He challenged once for the IBF cruiserweight title in 2015. At regional level, he held the Commonwealth light heavyweight title twice between 2006 and 2013, and the British and Commonwealth cruiserweight titles from 2014 to 2015.", "target": "Jamaican boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3460871", "label": "Myxoderma", "source": "Myxoderma is a genus of sea stars belonging to the family Zoroasteridae.The species of this genus are found on the coasts of Pacific Ocean.Species: Myxoderma acutibrachia Aziz & Jangoux, 1984 Myxoderma longispinum (Ludwig, 1905).", "target": "genus of echinoderms", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3445305", "label": "Mate Dragičević", "source": "Mate Dragičević (born 19 November 1979) is a Croatian former football striker.", "target": "Croatian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25549736", "label": "Saint Andrew", "source": "Saint Andrew is a parish, situated in the southeast of Jamaica in the county of Surrey. It lies north, west and east of Kingston, and stretches into the Blue Mountains. In the 2011 census, it had 573,369, the highest population of any of the parishes in Jamaica. George William Gordon (d. 1865), one of Jamaica's seven National Heroes, was born in this parish. It contains many attractions, historical sites, famous residents, and the country's financial capital. The parish has a rich musical tradition, with numerous well-known musicians and developing popular types of Jamaican music. The Studio One studio founded by Clement \"Coxsone\" Dodd is in Saint Andrew. Mavado, Sean Paul, Buju Banton, Elephant Man, The Mighty Diamonds, Monty Alexander, Beres Hammond, Lady Saw, Sugar Minott, Bounty Killer, Mr. Vegas, Richie Spice are some of the parish's current musician residents. The area of Trenchtown became famous for such residents as The Wailers (Bunny Wailer, Peter Tosh and Bob Marley), and Toots Hibbert, who created reggae music. Waterhouse is another hometown to many musicians, including Keith Hudson, King Tubby's, U Roy, Sir Jammy's, Black Uhuru, Dennis \"Senitor\" Allen, Early B. Super Cat, Shabba, and Beenie Man. It is also the home of Olympic gold medalist, Shelly-Ann Fraser. The residence built in 1881 by George Stiebel, Jamaica's first black millionaire, is known as Devon House. Steibel gained his wealth in Venezuela and returned to Jamaica. He was appointed as the Custos, a high civic post, of Saint Andrew. His residence has been restored and is operated as a house.", "target": "parish of Jamaica", "baseline_candidates": ["parish of Jamaica"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7914385", "label": "Vandemataram Srinivas", "source": "Kanneboina Srinavasa Rao Yadav, known professionally as Vandemataram Srinivas, is an Indian music director and playback singer who works predominantly in Telugu cinema. He has won two Filmfare Awards and six Nandi Awards. He got the prefix \"Vandemataram\" from the title song of the film Vande Mataram (1985).", "target": "Indian composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q891692", "label": "Margate F.C.", "source": "Margate Football Club, originally called Margate Town, is an English football club based in the seaside resort of Margate, Kent. The club's first team play in the Isthmian League Premier Division. The club was known during the 1980s as Thanet United. The club was founded in 1896 and joined the Southern Football League in 1933. After a spell in the Kent League after World War II the team returned to the Southern League in 1959 and remained there until 2001 when they gained promotion to the Football Conference, the highest level of English non-League football. Their stay at this level saw the team forced to groundshare with other clubs due to drawn-out and problematic redevelopment work at their Hartsdown Park stadium. The stadium has been the home of Margate FC since 1929, the same year the park itself opened to the public, and during the three years spent away from their own ground, they were expelled from the Conference National and subsequently relegated to the Isthmian League. The team, nicknamed \"The Gate\", have to date reached the third round proper of England's premier cup competition, the FA Cup, on two occasions. On the second of these occasions they played Tottenham Hotspur, a First Division team and the reigning UEFA Cup holders.", "target": "british football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8013991", "label": "William Kidston", "source": "William Kidston (17 August 1849 – 25 October 1919) was an Australian bookseller, politician and Premier of Queensland, from January 1906 to November 1907 and again from February 1908 to February 1911.", "target": "Australian politician (1849-1919)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52044891", "label": "Pterostylis orbiculata", "source": "Pterostylis orbiculata, commonly known as the coastal banded greenhood, is a plant in the orchid family Orchidaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. The plants either have a rosette of leaves in the years when not flowering or stem leaves on a flowering spike. When flowering, it has up to twenty flowers that are reddish brown, greenish brown or green with a reddish or brownish labellum with short stiff hairs.", "target": "species of plant in the family Orchidaceae", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21472198", "label": "Slessor Glacier", "source": "The Slessor Glacier is a glacier at least 140 km (75 nmi) long and 90 km (50 nmi) wide, flowing west into the Filchner Ice Shelf to the north of the Shackleton Range. First seen from the air and mapped by the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (CTAE) in 1956. Named by the CTAE for RAF Marshal Sir John Slessor, chairman of the expedition committee.", "target": "glacier in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["glacier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6468500", "label": "Çukuroba", "source": "Çukuroba is a village in the Yenice district of Çanakkale Province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in Yenice, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4633818", "label": "2nd Nebraska Cavalry", "source": "The 2nd Nebraska Cavalry Regiment was a cavalry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23784221", "label": "2016–17 National League B season", "source": "The 2016–17 National League B season is the 70th ice hockey season of Switzerland's second tier hockey league, the National League B.HC Ajoie is the defending champions as they have not handed in their application for a promotion to this year's NLA season.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23959225", "label": "Ilet", "source": "Ilet (Mari: Элнет, Elnet, Russian: Илеть, Ilet, Tatar: Cyrillic Илләт, Latin İllät) is a river in Mari El, Russia. It is 204 kilometres (127 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 6,450 square kilometres (2,490 sq mi). Major tributaries are the Ashit, Yushut, Voncha and Petyalka. Minimum mineralization is 1000–1400 mg/l. Tourism and rafting are popular.", "target": "river in Mari El, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19368775", "label": "ratatouille", "source": "Ratatouille ( RAT-ə-TOO-ee, French: [ʁatatuj] (listen)), Occitan: ratatolha [ʀataˈtuʎɔ] (listen), is a French Provençal dish of stewed vegetables, originating in Nice, and sometimes referred to as ratatouille niçoise (French: [niswaz]). Recipes and cooking times differ widely, but common ingredients include tomato, garlic, onion, courgette (zucchini), aubergine (eggplant), capsicum (bell pepper), and some combination of leafy green herbs common to the region.", "target": "French dish", "baseline_candidates": ["stew", "dish", "recipe"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98896775", "label": "Mark Turner", "source": "Mark Paul Michael Turner (born August 1983) is an Australian politician and former Northern Territory Police negotiator. He was elected as the Labor member for the electoral division of Blain in the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly at the 2020 Northern Territory election. Turner was raised in West London, by his mother (a nurse) and father (an officer in the Metropolitan Police). Turner also served in the Metropolitan Police at the Southall, Ealing and Acton Police Stations before transferring to the Territorial Support Group then emigrating to Australia. He joined the Western Australia Police who had been heavily recruiting officers from the United Kingdom and after serving in the Kimberley Region of Western Australia he moved across the border joining the Northern Territory Police. Turner served in the township of Katherine and several locations around Arnhem Land before being transferred to Darwin after an injury on duty for surgery to reconstruct a tendon in his left hand. In September 2019, police negotiators Turner and Linda Farrand were awarded the National Police Bravery Award by the Police Federation of Australia for preventing a suicide on Darwin Esplanade. Later that month, Turner was preselected by the Labor Party to contest the electoral division of Blain at the 2020 Northern Territory general election in August. In November 2019, it was reported that there was an ongoing workers compensation process progressing with the Police, Fire & Emergency Services for worker's compensation of medical costs incurred from the aforementioned tendon ruptured in the line of duty resulting in Turner losing the use.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7177402", "label": "Peter Tsiamalili", "source": "Peter Sobby Tsiamalili (1952 or 1953 – 15 April 2007) was the Papua New Guinean civil servant who served as the first chief administrator of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville (ABG) following successful elections in June 2005. Tsiamalili also served as a diplomat and ambassador representing Papua New Guinea abroad in Fiji and Belgium.", "target": "Papua New Guinea diplomat/politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q53532", "label": "Kosmos 394", "source": "Kosmos 394 (Russian: Космос 394 meaning Cosmos 394), also known as DS-P1-M No.2 is a satellite which was used to demonstrate technology for future satellites which would be used as targets for tests of anti-satellite weapons. It was launched by the Soviet Union in 1971 as part of the Dnepropetrovsk Sputnik programme. Following the completion of testing it was intercepted and destroyed by Kosmos 397 on 25 February.", "target": "Soviet satellite", "baseline_candidates": ["DS-P1-M"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97836070", "label": "Leovigildo Júnior Reis Rodrigues", "source": "Leovigildo Júnior Reis Rodrigues (born 26 December 1995), commonly known as Juninho, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Goiás EC, on loan from Zorya Luhansk.", "target": "Brazilian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50821703", "label": "212 Warrior", "source": "212 Warrior (also known as Wiro Sableng 212 and Wiro Sableng Pendekar Kapak Maut Naga Geni 212) is a 2018 Indonesian action-comedy film based on the Wiro Sableng novel series by Bastian Tito. The movie is the first collaboration between an Indonesian studio with Fox International Production.A teaser for the film was released on 21 December 2017 throughout Indonesian theaters. It was uploaded online on a week later. The first trailer was released on 12 May 2018 and debuted on the LINE communications app. The film was released on 30 August 2018. The movie is the final film from Fox International Productions before was shut down in 2017 and transferred to 20th Century Studios & Buena Vista International (after was acquired by Disney in 2019).", "target": "2018 film directed by Angga Dwimas Sasongko", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4160884", "label": "Dzongkhul Monastery", "source": "Dzongkhul Monastery or Zongkhul Gompa is located in the Stod Valley of Zanskar in Ladakh, northern India. Like the Sani Monastery, it belongs to the Drukpa school of Tibetan Buddhism Dzongkhul has traditionally been home to famous yogins. It is sited near the foot of a wide valley which leads to the pass known as the Umasi-la which joins Zanskar and Kishtwar.", "target": "Tibetan Buddhist monastery, Zanskar, India", "baseline_candidates": ["Tibetan Buddhist monastery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97179619", "label": "Lesedi Kapinga", "source": "Lesedi Alton Kapinga (born 25 May 1995) is a South African professional soccer player who plays as a midfielder for South African Premier Division side Mamelodi Sundowns.", "target": "South African association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6931237", "label": "Alanköy", "source": "Alanköy is a village in the Bigadiç district of Balıkesir province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q965972", "label": "Diego García", "source": "Diego García Corrales (October 12, 1961 – March 31, 2001) was a long-distance athlete from Spain, who finished in 9th position (2:14.56) in the men's marathon at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain. Four years later, when Atlanta, United States hosted the Games, he ended up in 53rd place, clocking 2:22:11. He was born in Azkoitia, Gipuzkoa and died in Azpeitia.", "target": "Spanish athletics competitor (1961-2001)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1493208", "label": "Strizh", "source": "Strizh (Стриж meaning swift) is a space suit that was originally developed for the crew of the Soviet/Russian Buran-class orbiters. It resembled the Sokol space suit worn by Soyuz crew members. It was designed to protect cosmonauts during a possible ejection from the spacecraft at altitudes of up to 30 km and speeds of up to Mach 3; the Buran-class orbiters were designed to incorporate ejection seats similar to those found on the Space Shuttle Enterprise and Columbia (the latter later having the seats removed after the STS-4 mission). The Strizh suits were constructed from olive drab colored nylon canvas with silver trim and lined with rubberized fabric and fitted with connectors for electrical, air and coolant umbilicals. They had an attached pressurized hood with a hinged visor fastened to an anodized aluminum flange. The sleeves had adjustable articulating cables fitted in the upper arms, while a support sling wrapped from chest to back by means of webbing belts and a metal harness. The gloves were detachable and fitted with rubber fingers and leather palms. The suit also had pleated knee sections. Utility pockets on the suit's thighs were intended to hold survival gear, such as a folding knife, a pistol and other items. A pressure gauge was fitted on the left sleeve and a pressure equalisation valve on the chest. The Strizh spacesuit and the Buran ejection seat were tested during the ascent of a Soyuz booster in a series of five Progress launches (Progress 38 through 42) during 1988-1990. The Strizh pressure suit, like.", "target": "Soviet/Russian spacesuit to use on Buran-class orbiters", "baseline_candidates": ["space suit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27050156", "label": "Sun Ruiping", "source": "Sun Ruiping (born (1981-01-05)5 January 1981) is a Chinese weightlifter, competing in the 75 kg category and representing China at international competitions. She competed at world championships, most recently at the 2002 World Weightlifting Championships.She set a new world record in the Clean & Jerk with 152.5 kg and also a new world record with a total score of 270.0 kg, both on 7 October 2002 in Busan, South Korea.", "target": "Chinese weightlifter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2527579", "label": "Gattyana pohaiensis", "source": "Gattyana pohaiensis is a scale worm described from the Yellow Sea at depth down to 26 m.", "target": "species of annelid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43209", "label": "King genet", "source": "The king genet (Genetta poensis) is a small carnivoran native to the Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Liberia, Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. As it has not been recorded since 1946, it is listed as Data Deficient on the IUCN Red List. It probably inhabits only tropical rainforest.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2279443", "label": "Tommy Shannon", "source": "Tommy Shannon (born Thomas Lafitte Smedley; April 18, 1946) is an American bass guitarist, who is best known as a member of Double Trouble, a blues rock band led by Stevie Ray Vaughan. Born in Tucson, Arizona, Shannon moved to Dumas, Texas when he was nine, where he originally started as a guitarist, though he started playing bass at the age of 21. He appeared with Johnny Winter at Woodstock in 1969. He later joined Double Trouble in 1981 and became a permanent member of Double Trouble until Vaughan's death in 1990. Shannon and bandmate Chris Layton later formed supergroups such as the Arc Angels.", "target": "American bass guitarist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98686338", "label": "Junius S. Mobley", "source": "Junius S. Mobley (died January 2, 1904), also known as June Mobley, was a politician in South Carolina. He was considered an ultra-radical, and was one of South Carolina's 1868 Radical Republican members of the Legislature. He reportedly became a preacher after the Reconstruction era. Mobley was a political leader during the Reconstruction era in South Carolina and was involved in the distribution of ammunition to freedmen. He was part of the Union Brotherhood that replaced the Union League in 1872. Mobley was from Union County, South Carolina. John Schreiner Reynolds wrote about Mobley and other African American legislators in 1905. He was not a fan of Mobley's, and described him as \"mulatto\" and said he gave incendiary speeches causing bloodshed for the \"men of his own race\". He also referred to Mobley as a \"vicious and mouthy Negro\".", "target": "South Carolinian politician (died 1904)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2305099", "label": "Joe Maross", "source": "Joseph Raymond Maross (February 7, 1923 – November 7, 2009) was an American stage, film, and television actor whose career spanned over four decades. Working predominantly on television in supporting roles or as a guest star, Maross performed in a wide variety of series and made-for-television movies between the early 1950s and mid-1980s.", "target": "American actor (1923-2009)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25750", "label": "The Casual Vacancy", "source": "The Casual Vacancy is a 2012 novel written by J. K. Rowling. The book was published worldwide by the Little, Brown Book Group on 27 September 2012. A paperback edition was released on 23 July 2013. It was Rowling's first publication since the Harry Potter series, her first apart from that series, and her first novel for adult readership.The novel is set in a suburban West Country town called Pagford and begins with the death of beloved parish councillor Barry Fairbrother. Subsequently, a seat on the council is vacant and a conflict ensues before the election for his successor takes place. Factions develop, particularly concerning whether to dissociate with a local council estate, 'the Fields', with which Barry supported an alliance. However, those running for a place soon find their darkest secrets revealed on the Parish Council online forum, ruining their campaign and leaving the election in turmoil. Major themes in the novel are class, politics, and social issues such as drugs, prostitution and rape. The novel was the fastest-selling in the United Kingdom in three years and had the second best-selling opening week for an adult novel there since Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol. It became the 15th best-selling book of 2012 during its first week of release. Within the first three weeks the book's total sales topped one million copies in English in all formats across all territories, including the US and the UK. The book also set a Goodreads record for the all-time biggest 'started reading' day, later winning the Best Fiction category.", "target": "2012 novel by J.K. Rowling", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21913", "label": "Hagondange", "source": "Hagondange (French pronunciation: ​[aɡɔ̃dɑ̃ʒ]; German: Hagendingen; Lorraine Franconian: Hoendéngen/Hoendéng) is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.It is located 20 km (12 mi) north of Metz and 20 km (12 mi) south of Thionville. La Tour de Guet, a tower from the twelfth century, is found within the commune.", "target": "commune in Moselle, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3194919", "label": "Kelly Sweet", "source": "Kelly Melissa Sweet (born March 29, 1988), also known professionally as Haliene (; stylized as HALIENE), is an American electropop singer-songwriter currently living in Los Angeles. As Haliene, she is known for her vocal collaborations with EDM artists Armin van Buuren, Seven Lions, ATB, Ferry Corsten, Aly & Fila and her song with Gareth Emery & Standerwick, \"Saving Light\", which won the A State of Trance award, \"Tune of the Year,\" by Armin van Buuren.", "target": "American singer, recording artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q690871", "label": "Constance Cumbey", "source": "Constance Cumbey (born February 29, 1944) is an American lawyer and activist Christian author.", "target": "American lawyer, activist and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8013974", "label": "William Kerr", "source": "William Kerr (1809 – August 11, 1853), served as Mayor of Pittsburgh from 1846 to 1847.William Kerr was born in St. Clair Township. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. He opened an office on Liberty Avenue in 1833, and was also the owner of an apothecary.During Mayor Kerr's term as mayor, the Pennsylvania Railroad was founded, as well as Mercy Hospital. After his term in office, Kerr moved to Chartiers Township, which is now the West End of Pittsburgh. There exists today a Kerr Street in the city neighborhood of Elliott. Kerr died in 1853 and is buried in Allegheny Cemetery.A son, also named William, was a co-owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates during the 1890s.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23021718", "label": "Rivière des Poitras", "source": "The rivière des Poitras is a tributary of the south bank of the Morigeau River which flows on the south-eastern bank of the rivière du Sud (Montmagny) ; the latter flows north-east to the south shore of the St. Lawrence River. The Poitras river flows in the municipalities of Saint-Pierre-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud and Saint-François-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud, in the Montmagny Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Chaudière-Appalaches, in Quebec, in Canada.", "target": "river in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2067403", "label": "Streptopus amplexifolius", "source": "Streptopus amplexifolius (twistedstalk, clasping twistedstalk, claspleaf twistedstalk, white twisted-stalk, or watermelon berry) is a species of flowering plant in the family Liliaceae, native to North America, Europe and Asia. It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 40–100 cm tall, with alternate, oblong-lanceolate leaves 5–14 cm long. The greenish-white flowers hang from axils on 1–2 cm thin kinked pedicels, each flower with six white tepals, 9–15 mm long. The plants leaves completely encircle the stem, and the stems have a kink at each leaf axil giving the plants stem a \"twisted\" and wiry appearance. The plants grow in a creeping habit in moist, dense undergrowth.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13899645", "label": "Nodaria nodosalis", "source": "Nodaria nodosalis is a species of moth of the family Erebidae. It is found in tropical Africa, Yemen, Oman, North Africa, Portugal, southern France, Italy, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Lebanon and Israel. In Mediterranean Basin there are two generations per year. In the subtropics and tropics there are multiple generations. The larvae feed on Ipomoea and Lactuca species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59388189", "label": "Warm", "source": "Warm is the second studio album by American musician Jeff Tweedy, released on November 30, 2018 by dBpm Records. It is his first solo album of entirely new material.It was released shortly after the release of Tweedy's memoir, Let's Go (So We Can Get Back).", "target": "album by Jeff Tweedy", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1130169", "label": "St Alban's Head", "source": "St Alban's Head (corruption of St Aldhelms Head) is a headland located 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) southwest of Swanage, on the coast of Dorset, England. It is the most southerly part of the Purbeck peninsula, and comprises an outcrop of Portland Stone from the overlying Lower Purbeck Stone. It is part of the Jurassic Coast, a World Heritage Site. It is designated a Special Area of Conservation under the European Union's Habitats Directive. The Norman St. Aldhelm's Chapel, dedicated to St Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne stands on the head. On the bluff of the headland is a monument to the development of radar during World War II, by the Telecommunications Research Establishment at nearby RAF Worth Matravers. There is also a coastguard station, now maintained by the National Coastwatch Institution (not to be confused with HM Coastguard) and some former coastguard cottages.The western side of St Alban's Head contains a Royal Marines Memorial. The memorial is set with a small memorial garden which overlooks Chapman's Pool.St Alban's Head has been heavily quarried and there is a defunct sea-cliff quarry underneath the coastguard station. St Aldhelms Quarry just inland is still in active use.", "target": "Headland in Dorset", "baseline_candidates": ["cape"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55302752", "label": "Sicincin railway station", "source": "Sicincin Station (SCN, formerly Sitjintjin Station) is a railway station located in Sicincin, 2x11 Enam Lingkung, Padang Pariaman Regency. The station, which is located at an altitude of +89 m, is included in the Regional Division II West Sumatra. To support railbus transportation that runs on the Lubuk Alung–Kayu Tanam railway segment, this station together with the Kayu Tanam Station have undergone a complete overhaul. Only one train service that stop at this station, namely the Lembah Anai railbus, for Kayu Tanam and the destination for Lubuk Alung, was inaugurated on 1 November 2016. Starting 6 March 2019, the railbus has been extended to Minangkabau International Airport.", "target": "railway station in Padang Pariaman Regency, Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q609981", "label": "Goring Hotel", "source": "The Goring Hotel is a 5-star hotel in Belgravia, London. It is located near Buckingham Palace. Its restaurant, The Dining Room, holds one Michelin Star.", "target": "hotel", "baseline_candidates": ["hotel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1405397", "label": "Miguel Cabello de Balboa", "source": "Miguel Cabello de Balboa (1535 in Archidona, Málaga – 1608 in Camata) was a Spanish secular priest and writer. In 1566 he emigrated to Peru in South America; from here he went to Quito, Ecuador, where he began to write the Miscelánea Antárctica, finishing it at Lima in 1586. In the years 1602–1603, he wrote a letter giving valuable details concerning the regions of Pelechuco and Apolobamba in eastern Bolivia, between the Andes and the Beni River. In this letter he does not explicitly state that he visited those districts, but the information imparted is such as to imply this. The letter is taken from a book written by Father Cabello of which nothing else is known. He is also an important source on the northern Andean region, especially the Pacific shore and the forested regions running inland up to the cordilleras of what are now northern Ecuador and southern Colombia. An exemplary edition of the whole Miscellanea Antarctica was published by San Marcos University (Peru) in 1951, supplanting previous partial editions. The original was (1853) in possession of the historiographer Don Joaquin Garcia Ycazbalceta at Mexico. A complete copy also exists at the Lenox Branch of the New York Public Library. It contains alleged Amerindian traditional records of the coming to South America of white men who are said to have preached the gospels to the aborigines; also a theory that the Indians of Patagonia and Chile are the descendants of pirates of Macassar. The legendary history of the Inca civilization is expounded at length,.", "target": "Spanish secular priest and writer.", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18374985", "label": "Baby, It's Ok", "source": "\"Baby, It's OK\" is a song recorded by German group Follow Your Instinct featuring Romanian recording artist Alexandra Stan for their debut studio album, Animal Kingdom (2016), and the latter's Alesta. It was made available for digital and physical consumption on 16 August 2013 through Epic Records, Sony Music and Cat Music in Germany and Romania. The recording was written by Harry Wayne Casey, Davon Dixon, Patrick Greska, Addis Mussa, Manuela Necker, Andrei Nemirschi, Prodan, David Ritter, Marcian Alin Soare and Rainer Wetenkamp, while production was managed by Greska, Mussa, Ritter and Wetenkamp. Musically, \"Baby, It's OK\" is a dance song that samples elements of KC and the Sunshine Band's \"Give It Up\" (1983). While being generally well received by music critics for being \"catchy\" and \"anthemic\", the song experienced moderate success in European territories; it peaked at number seventeen in Germany and within the top fifty in Austria and Switzerland. \"Baby, It's OK\" was accompanied by the release of a music video shot in Marabella, Spain, which presents the group and Stan performing to the track near a body of water. For further promotion, Follow Your Instinct also made various appearances for media and television.", "target": "2013 song by Follow Your Instinct ft. Alexandra Stan", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4797343", "label": "Artanema", "source": "The genus Artanema is a small group of flowering plant species in the Linderniaceae. It was formerly included in the Plantaginaceae, but reclassified based on genetic evidence.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2110307", "label": "Dylan McGrath", "source": "Dylan McGrath (born 4 August 1977) is an Irish celebrity head chef. He was the owner of the now defunct Michelin starred restaurant Mint in Dublin which closed as a result of the economic downturn. In August 2010 he opened 'Rustic Stone Restaurant by Dylan McGrath' on South Great George's Street in Dublin's city centre. In 2011 Dylan was announced by RTÉ One as the judge on the Irish version of the show Masterchef. He also appeared in the 2008 RTÉ One television series Guerrilla Gourmet and in the fly on the wall series The Pressure Cooker. Derry Clarke has called him a \"brilliant young chef\".", "target": "Irish chef", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7375302", "label": "Roz Kaveney", "source": "Roz Kaveney (born 9 July 1949) is a British writer, critic, and poet, best known for her critical works about pop culture and for being a core member of the Midnight Rose collective. Kaveney's works include fiction and non-fiction, poetry, reviewing, and editing. Kaveney is also a transgender rights activist. She has contributed to several newspapers such as The Independent and The Guardian. She is also a founding member of Feminists Against Censorship and a former deputy chair of Liberty. She was deputy editor of the transgender-related magazine META.", "target": "British writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55609828", "label": "Don't Look Any Further (album)", "source": "Don't Look Any Further is the debut solo album by American R&B singer Dennis Edwards, former lead singer of the Temptations. The album was released in 1984 through Gordy Records.", "target": "1984 studio album by Dennis Edwards", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1111225", "label": "Banatska Dubica", "source": "Banatska Dubica (Serbian Cyrillic: Банатска Дубица) is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the Sečanj municipality, in the Central Banat District, Vojvodina province. The village has a Serb ethnic majority (85.28%) and its population numbering 428 people (2002 census).", "target": "village in Sečanj municipality, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q688172", "label": "Patrick Gretsch", "source": "Patrick Gretsch (born 7 April 1987) is a German former professional cyclist, who rode professionally between 2006 and 2016 for the Thüringer Energie Team, HTC–Highroad, Argos–Shimano and AG2R La Mondiale teams.", "target": "German racing cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11092422", "label": "full moon", "source": "The full moon is the lunar phase when the Moon appears fully illuminated from Earth's perspective, though there's still some dark spot when there isn't a lunar eclipse. This occurs when Earth is located between the Sun and the Moon (when the ecliptic longitudes of the Sun and Moon differ by 180°). This means that the lunar hemisphere facing Earth – the near side – is completely sunlit and appears as a circular disk. The full moon occurs roughly once a month. The time interval between a full moon and the next repetition of the same phase, a synodic month, averages about 29.53 days. Therefore, in those lunar calendars in which each month begins on the day of the new moon, the full moon falls on either the 14th or 15th day of the lunar month. Because a calendar month consists of a whole number of days, a month in a lunar calendar may be either 29 or 30 days long.", "target": "lunar phase: completely illuminated disc", "baseline_candidates": ["planetary phase", "phase of the moon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6211997", "label": "Joe Richardson", "source": "Joseph Richardson (24 August 1908 – 1977) was an English professional footballer who played as a right back.Richardson joined Blyth Spartans from local side New Delaval Villa. His form with Spartans was impressive enough to earn a £250 move to Newcastle United in 1929. He went on to play over 200 league games for the Magpies, and after ending his playing career in 1938 joined the coaching staff where he remained until 1977, serving the club for 48 years. He died in 1977.", "target": "English footballer (1908-1977)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q218350", "label": "Empetrum rubrum", "source": "Empetrum rubrum, known as red crowberry or diddle-dee (Chilean Spanish: Murtilla de Magallanes), is a species of plant in the family Ericaceae with a distributional range in Chile from Talca (35°S) to Cape Horn (55°S); in areas of adjacent Argentina; in the Falkland Islands; and in Tristan da Cunha. One of its northernmost natural growing places is Laguna del Maule. In Chile this species often grows in high altitude areas close to the tree line and can tolerate alpine conditions such as strong winds and high sun exposure. In the Falkland Islands it is the dominant species across large areas of lowland and upland dwarf shrub heath, and is referenced in the islands' unofficial national anthem. Its fruits are edible.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7343818", "label": "Robert E. L. Taylor", "source": "Robert E. Lee Taylor Jr. (June 8, 1913 – July 2, 2009) was an American publisher and chairman of the Philadelphia Bulletin in the years leading up to the paper's demise. He was jailed in 1963 for his refusal to testify before a grand jury about his paper's reporting, and was released after the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that his actions were protected under the state's shield law.", "target": "American newspaper publisher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7207852", "label": "Poile Sengupta", "source": "Poile Sengupta (nee Ambika Gopalakrishnan) (born 1948) is a notable Indian writer in English. She is especially well-known as a playwright and writer for children. Her formal first name is Ambika but she writes, and is known, as Poile. Sengupta has been a college lecturer, a senior school teacher, an educational consultant, a communication and language skills consultant, a consultant editor for a market research firm, and a teacher for Montessori school children.", "target": "Indian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75317563", "label": "Alessandro, 1st Duke of Castel Duino", "source": "Prince Alessandro della Torre e Tasso, 1st Duke of Castel Duino, full German name: Alexander Karl Egon Theobald Lamoral Johann Baptist Maria, Prinz von Thurn und Taxis (8 July 1881 in Schloss Mzell, Mzell, Kingdom of Bohemia, Austria-Hungary – 11 March 1937 in Castel Duino, Duino, Kingdom of Italy) was a member of the Bohemian branch of the princely House of Thurn and Taxis. Alessandro was created Prince della Torre e Tasso and first Duke of Castel Duino by Victor Emmanuel III of Italy after relocating to the Kingdom of Italy in 1923.", "target": "1st Duke of Castel Duino", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8026733", "label": "Wiram Knowlton", "source": "Wiram Knowlton (January 24, 1816 – June 27, 1863) was an American politician and jurist from Wisconsin. He was a Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge and ex officio Justice of the pre-1853 Wisconsin Supreme Court (the Wisconsin Supreme Court before 1853 was composed of the state's elected Circuit Court Judges).", "target": "American politician (1816-1863)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1346522", "label": "Nazz", "source": "The Nazz was an American rock band formed in Philadelphia in 1967. The group was founded by guitarist and principal songwriter Todd Rundgren and bassist Carson Van Osten. Drummer Thom Mooney and vocalist/keyboardist Robert \"Stewkey\" Antoni joined soon after. The group's first major concert had them opening for the Doors in 1967. The group is best known for their debut single \"Open My Eyes”, and \"Hello It's Me\". Their name was derived from the Yardbirds' song \"The Nazz Are Blue\". Between 1968 and 1971, the Nazz released three albums (Nazz, Nazz Nazz, and Nazz III). Following the group's disbandment in 1969, Rundgren pursued a solo career, and in 1972, recorded a new version of \"Hello It's Me\" that reached number 5 on the U.S. charts.", "target": "American musical group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6647", "label": "Lalitpur", "source": "Lalitpur Metropolitan City, historically Patan (Sanskrit: पाटन Pātan, Nepal bhasa : 𑐫𑐮‎ Yela, ), is the fourth most populous city of Nepal after Kathmandu, Pokhara and Bharatpur, and it is located in the south-central part of Kathmandu Valley, a new metropolitan city of Nepal. Lalitpur is also known as Manigal. It is best known for its rich cultural heritage, particularly its tradition of arts and crafts. It is city renowned for its festival and feast, fine ancient art, and the making of metallic and stone carved statues. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 226,728 in 54,748 individual households. The city received extensive damage from an earthquake on 25 April 2015.", "target": "city in Kathmandu Valley, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["city", "big city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1410229", "label": "Táxi", "source": "Taxi are a Portuguese rock band, one of the most influential and biggest of all time in Portugal. The band originated it the '80s, influenced by ska and the new wave of Police. The band is originally from Oporto, and was formed in 1979 by João Grande, (a.k.a. Big John) (b.1954) (voice), Henrique Oliveira (b.1957) (guitar), Rodrigo Freitas (b. 1958) (drums), and Rui Taborda (a.k.a. The Rock!) (b. 1958) (bass). Being strongly influenced by the London punk scene they initially composed and sang in English, but this would change after a concert in German School of Porto, when two elements of Polygram discovered them and invited them to record an album, the only condition being that they would have to sing in Portuguese. They released four albums via PolyGram and made other contributions to the Portuguese music scene. To this day, their first hit Chiclete (1981), its still one of the most played tunes on the radio, and one of the icons of the Portuguese '80s music scene. They have been mostly inactive since 1998, but meet up occasionally for the odd gig.", "target": "Portuguese musical group; rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25325303", "label": "QPACE2", "source": "QPACE 2 (QCD Parallel Computing Engine) is a massively parallel and scalable supercomputer. It was designed for applications in lattice quantum chromodynamics but is also suitable for a wider range of applications..", "target": "massively parallel and scalable supercomputer", "baseline_candidates": ["supercomputer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23016854", "label": "Lighthouse", "source": "\"Lighthouse\" is a song by Croatian singer Nina Kraljić released on March 9, 2016. It represented Croatia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2016.", "target": "2016 single by Nina Kraljić", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12641146", "label": "Rensselaer", "source": "Rensselaer is a city in Rensselaer County, New York, United States, and is located on the east side of the Hudson River, directly opposite of Albany. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 9,392. Rensselaer is on the western border of Rensselaer County. The area now known as the City of Rensselaer was settled by the Dutch in the 17th century. The city has a rich industrial history stretching back to the 19th century, when it became a major railroad hub; In 2020, Albany-Rensselaer was the ninth busiest Amtrak station in the country. Rensselaer was one of the earliest locations of the dye industry in the United States, and was the first American location for the production of aspirin.", "target": "city in New York, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["city in the state of New York", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5154019", "label": "Commune of Kibago", "source": "The commune of Kibago is a commune of Makamba Province in southern Burundi. The capital lies at Kibago.", "target": "commune in Makamba Province, Burundi", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Burundi"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11973318", "label": "Gunnar Nygaard", "source": "Gunnar Nygaard (24 December 1897 – 25 January 1997) was a Norwegian broadcasting pioneer. He was born in Kristiania. He was educated in telegraphy, and a pioneer in the technical development of broadcasting in Norway. He took part in the first experimental broadcasting from Tryvasshøgda, starting in 1923. From 1933 he worked for the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. During the German occupation of Norway Nygaard established and operated a Norwegian short-wave transmitter in the United States, in particular targeting Norwegian sailors. Back in Norway he established a short-wave radio for seamen, which opened in Fredrikstad in 1948. He was awarded the St. Olav Medal in 1964.", "target": "Norwegian broadcaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5199633", "label": "Cymindis klapperichi", "source": "Cymindis klapperichi is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Harpalinae. It was described by Jedlicka in 1956.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5982379", "label": "Lucrezia Borgia", "source": "Lucrezia Borgia (Spanish:Lucrecia Borgia) is a 1947 Argentine historical film directed by Luis Bayón Herrera and starring Olinda Bozán, Héctor Quintanilla and Gogó Andreu. The film portrays the life of Lucrezia Borgia (1480-1519). The film's sets were designed by the art director Juan Manuel Concado.", "target": "1947 film by Luis Bayón Herrera", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22115815", "label": "70th (Sussex) Searchlight Regiment, Royal Artillery", "source": "70th (Sussex) Searchlight Regiment Royal Artillery was an air defence unit of Britain's Territorial Army (TA) raised just before the outbreak of World War II, which served as part of Anti-Aircraft Command during and after the war.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7766838", "label": "The Story of the Great Heroes", "source": "The Great Heroes, also known as The Story of the Great Heroes, is a four-part Hong Kong film adapted from Louis Cha's novel The Return of the Condor Heroes. Parts 1 and 2 were released in 1960, and parts 3 and 4 were released in 1961.", "target": "1960 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8004228", "label": "William Albertini", "source": "William Reynolds James Albertini (21 January 1913 – 2 May 1994) was an English first-class cricketer. Albertini's batting and bowling styles are unknown. He was born at Kensington, London as William Reynolds James Diaz-Albertini, later changing his name to William Reynolds James Albertini. Later in his life he would revert to his birth name. He was educated at Tonbridge School. Albertini was his debut for Berkshire in the 1936 Minor Counties Championship against Hertfordshire. He played Minor counties cricket for the county till 1938, making a total of twenty appearances. He was also a part of Sir Theodore Brinckman's team which toured Argentina in 1937/38, making three first-class appearances on the tour against the Argentine national team. He scored a total of 50 runs in these three matches, which came at an average of 16.66, with a high score of 15 not out. With the ball, he took 3 wickets at a bowling average of 38.00, with best figures of 1/20.He died on 2 May 1994 at Barnard, Vermont, United States of America. He is buried at the Christ Church Frederica Cemetery in St. Simons, Georgia.", "target": "cricketer (1913-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q68101417", "label": "Clan", "source": "Clan is a Spanish free-to-air television channel owned and operated by Televisión Española (TVE), the television division of state-owned public broadcaster Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE). It is the corporation's television channel for kids, and is known for its programming for children between the ages of four and twelve. It was launched on 12 December 2005 and until 1 January 2007 it had time-shared with TVE 50 Años which has since closed. The service now broadcasts 24 hours a day. Clan is available free on digital terrestrial television (known as TDT in Spain) and on major subscription platforms. Although the channel primarily screens programming for children aged from four to twelve, programming for older audiences is shown during the evening and night. A mixture of Spanish and foreign programming is shown, all in Spanish language, both live-action and animated. It is also available in English in Africa, French in France and Italian in Italy. Some programs feature a sign-language interpreter as well. Because of this, the channel is regarded as a useful platform for primary school teachers. Musical programs such as Operacion Triunfo, the Eurovision Song Contest and Junior Eurovision Song Contest are also broadcast in the channel.", "target": "Public Spanish children's television network", "baseline_candidates": ["specialty channel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58401587", "label": "NA-230 Badin-II", "source": "NA-230 (Badin-II) (Urdu: این اے-۲۲۵، بدين-۲) is a constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan.", "target": "constituency of the National Assembly of Pakistan created in the 2018 delimitation exercise", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the National Assembly of Pakistan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5353229", "label": "Elaine Jensen", "source": "Elaine Beryl Jensen (born 18 March 1955 in Feilding, New Zealand) is a former field hockey goalkeeper from New Zealand, who finished in eighth position with the National Women's Team at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.", "target": "New Zealand field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6388647", "label": "Ken Vining", "source": "Kenneth Edward Vining (born December 5, 1974) is a former Major League Baseball (MLB) pitcher. Vining played for the Chicago White Sox during the 2001 season. In 8 career games, he posted an 0–0 record and an earned run average (ERA) of 17.55. Vining batted and threw left-handed.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19695641", "label": "2008 Summer Olympics", "source": "The 2008 Summer Olympics (Chinese: 2008年夏季奥运会; pinyin: Èr Líng Líng Bā Nián Xiàjì Àoyùnhuì), officially the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (Chinese: 第二十九届夏季奥林匹克运动会; pinyin: Dì Èrshíjiǔ Jiè Xiàjì Àolínpǐkè Yùndònghuì) and also known as Beijing 2008 (Chinese: 北京2008; pinyin: Běijīng èr líng líng bā), were an international multisport event held from 8 to 24 August 2008, in Beijing, China. A total of 10,942 athletes from 204 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) competed in 28 sports and 302 events, one event more than those scheduled for the 2004 Summer Olympics. This was the first time China had hosted the Olympic Games, and the third time the Summer Olympic Games had been held in East Asia, following the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, and the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. These were also the second Summer Olympic Games to be held in a communist state, the first being the 1980 Summer Olympics in the Soviet Union (with venues in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Estonia). Beijing was awarded the 2008 Games over four competitors on 13 July 2001, having won a majority of votes from members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) after two rounds of voting. The Government of the People's Republic of China promoted the 2008 Games and invested heavily in new facilities and transport systems. 37 venues were used to host the events, including twelve constructed specifically for the 2008 Games. The equestrian events were held in Hong Kong, making these the third Olympics for which the events were held under the jurisdiction of two different.", "target": "Games of the XXIX Olympiad, held in Beijing in 2008", "baseline_candidates": ["Summer Olympic Games"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14875170", "label": "Harvey, Ontario", "source": "Harvey is a small community in Thunder Bay District, Ontario, Canada. It is located on the Canadian National Railway transcontinental mainline 1.6 kilometres (1.0 mi) east of Flindt Landing, and is the location of a railway siding.", "target": "human settlement in Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2710609", "label": "Eye bolt", "source": "An eye bolt is a bolt with a loop at one end. They are used to firmly attach a securing eye to a structure, so that ropes or cables may then be tied to it.", "target": "hardware fastener with a threaded bolt and a loop on one end", "baseline_candidates": ["bolt", "threaded fastener"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25631494", "label": "B-2 Spirit", "source": "The Northrop (later Northrop Grumman) B-2 Spirit, also known as the Stealth Bomber, is an American heavy strategic bomber, featuring low observable stealth technology designed for penetrating dense anti-aircraft defenses. Designed during the Cold War, it is a flying wing design with a crew of two. The bomber is subsonic and can deploy both conventional and thermonuclear weapons, such as up to eighty 500-pound class (230 kg) Mk 82 JDAM GPS-guided bombs, or sixteen 2,400-pound (1,100 kg) B83 nuclear bombs. The B-2 is the only acknowledged aircraft that can carry large air-to-surface standoff weapons in a stealth configuration. Development started under the \"Advanced Technology Bomber\" (ATB) project during the Carter administration; its expected performance was one of the President's reasons for the cancellation of the Mach 2 capable B-1A bomber. The ATB project continued during the Reagan administration, but worries about delays in its introduction led to the reinstatement of the B-1 program. Program costs rose throughout development. Designed and manufactured by Northrop, later Northrop Grumman, the cost of each aircraft averaged US$737 million (in 1997 dollars). Total procurement costs averaged $929 million per aircraft, which includes spare parts, equipment, retrofitting, and software support. The total program cost, which included development, engineering and testing, averaged $2.13 billion per aircraft in 1997.Because of its considerable capital and operating costs, the project was controversial in the U.S. Congress. The winding-down of the Cold War in the latter portion of the 1980s dramatically reduced the need for the aircraft, which was designed with the intention of penetrating Soviet airspace.", "target": "bomber aircraft family by Northrop", "baseline_candidates": ["airplane with 4 jet engines", "strategic bomber", "stealth aircraft", "flying wing", "aircraft family", "aircraft model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7371813", "label": "Rowan Smith", "source": "Rowan Quentin Smith (8 August 1943 – 23 May 2018) was a Dean of St. George's Cathedral, Cape Town.", "target": "Anglican priest and Dean of Cape Town (1943-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4824142", "label": "Australian Field Ornithology", "source": "Australian Field Ornithology is an online peer-reviewed ornithological journal published by BirdLife Australia. It covers topics relating to Australasian birds, including behaviour and ecology, with an emphasis on observations and data gained in the field.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["periodical"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7277949", "label": "RTÉ Television Centre", "source": "The RTÉ Television Centre is a television studio complex which is owned by Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) and has been home to Ireland's national public service broadcaster since 1961. It is situated at Donnybrook, Dublin 4. The building houses the main production studios for RTÉ Television, the control rooms for all RTÉ's TV channels, and RTÉ's main newsroom.", "target": "broadcasting campus for Irish network Raidió Teilifís Éireann", "baseline_candidates": ["architectural structure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65150172", "label": "1809 in science", "source": "The year 1809 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.", "target": "natural science-related events during the year of 1809", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13071401", "label": "Carallia brachiata", "source": "Carallia brachiata is a large tree in the family Rhizophoraceae, that grows to a height of 25 metres (82 ft) and found from Australia, Malesia, Indochina through to the Western Ghats. It is the host plant of the moth Dysphania percota in India and Dysphania numana in Australia.", "target": "tree in the family Rhizophoraceae", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2865222", "label": "Arthur Mailey", "source": "Alfred Arthur Mailey (3 January 1886 – 31 December 1967) was an Australian cricketer who played in 21 Test matches between 1920 and 1926.Mailey used leg-breaks and googly bowling, taking 99 Test wickets, including 36 in the 1920–21 Ashes series. In the second innings of the fourth Test at Melbourne, he took nine wickets for 121 runs, which is still the Test record for an Australian bowler.In first-class cricket at Cheltenham during the 1921 tour, he took all ten Gloucestershire wickets for 66 runs in the second innings. His 1958 autobiography was accordingly titled 10 for 66 and All That (an allusion to the humorous book of English history, 1066 and All That). He also holds the record for the most expensive bowling analysis in first-class cricket. Bowling for New South Wales at Melbourne in 1926–27 as Victoria scored the record first-class total of 1107, Mailey bowled 64 eight-ball overs, did not manage a maiden and took 4 for 362. He said that his figures would have been much better had not three sitters been dropped off his bowling – \"two by a man in the pavilion wearing a bowler hat\" and one by an unfortunate team-mate whom he consoled with the words, \"I'm expecting to take a wicket any day now.\" Beginning his working life at the age of 13 as a trouser presser, then was a glass blower and subsequently a Water Board labourer, he became a talented writer and artist. Between 1920 and 1953, he published a number of booklets of cartoons of.", "target": "Australian cricketer (1886-1967)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76363937", "label": "Sam Tarry", "source": "Samuel Peter Tarry (; born 27 August 1982) is a British politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Ilford South since 2019. He is a member of the Labour Party.", "target": "British politician (born 1982)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q136291", "label": "Saltasauridae", "source": "Saltasauridae (named after the Salta region of Argentina where they were first found) is a family of armored herbivorous sauropods from the Upper Cretaceous. They are known from fossils found in South America, Asia, North America, and Europe. They are characterized by their vertebrae and feet, which are similar to those of Saltasaurus, the first of the group to be discovered and the source of the name. The last and largest of the group and only one found in North America, Alamosaurus, was thirty-four metres (112 feet) in length and one of the last sauropods to go extinct. Most of the saltasaurids were smaller, around fifteen metres (49 feet) in length, and one, Rocasaurus, was only eight metres (26 feet) long. Like all sauropods, the saltasaurids were quadrupeds, their necks and tails were held almost parallel to the ground, and their small heads had only tiny, peg-like teeth. They were herbivorous, stripping leaves off of plants and digesting them in their enormous guts. Although large animals, they were smaller than other sauropods of their time, and many possessed distinctive additional defenses in the form of scutes along their backs.", "target": "family of reptiles (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5029251", "label": "Canada's Worst Driver 5", "source": "Canada's Worst Driver 5 was the fifth season of the Canadian reality TV show Canada's Worst Driver, which aired on the Discovery Channel. As with previous years, eight people, nominated by their family or friends, enter the Driver Rehabilitation Centre to improve their driving skills. This year, the Driver Rehabilitation Centre is located at CFB Borden, the military base previously used as the rehab centre for Canada's Worst Driver 2; however, it is only referred to on-air by Andrew as an \"undisclosed military location.\" The focus of this season was on Driver's Boot Camp. The series launch was set to coincide with the launch of a new law in Ontario prohibiting the use of handheld electronic devices while driving. Similar bans have been instituted in Atlantic Canada and Quebec, with Manitoba and Saskatchewan considering similar laws. The initial drive started in Barrie, Ontario and the final road test occurred in Toronto, Ontario for the second year in a row and third in the last four seasons. This season will also be the second to be featured on the iTunes Store and the first to have new episodes one day after first airing.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13080670", "label": "2011 Van earthquake", "source": "The 2011 Van earthquakes occurred in eastern Turkey near the city of Van. The first earthquake happened on 23 October at 13:41 local time. The shock had a Mww magnitude of 7.1 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). It occurred at a shallow depth, causing heavy shaking across much of eastern Turkey and lighter tremors across neighboring parts of the South Caucasus and Levant. According to Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency on 30 October, the earthquake killed 604 and injured 4,152. At least 11,232 buildings sustained damage in the region, 6,017 of which were found to be uninhabitable. The uninhabitable homes left as much as 8,321 households with an average household population of around 7.6 homeless in the province; this could mean that at least around 60,000 people were left homeless. The other 5,215 have been damaged but are habitable. A separate earthquake within the same earthquake system happened on 9 November at 21:23 local time (19:23 UTC). 40 people were killed and 260 people were injured in the 9 November earthquake.", "target": "earthquake in eastern Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["earthquake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63167141", "label": "Joel Chew", "source": "Joel Chew Joon Herng (born 9 February 2000) is a Singaporean professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Singapore Premier League club Young Lions, on loan from Tampines Rovers.", "target": "Singaporean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5704411", "label": "Helgalunden", "source": "Helgalund, Helgalunden, or Tjurberget, is a neighbourhood on the island Södermalm in Stockholm, Sweden. The picturesque area was designed by architect and city planner Per Olof Hallman, c. 1930. The neighbourhood is located on the hill Tjurberget with parks in the north and south. At the centre of Helgalund is Allhelgonakyrkan, the \"Church of all saints,\" in the grove Helgalunden, from which the area takes its name. The eight groves of Rosenlundsparken, Tjurbergsgatan, Blekingegatan, Götgatan, Dalslandsgatan, Tjurberget, Assesorsgatan, and Grindsgatan roughly make up the borders of the area.", "target": "park and street in Södermalm, Stockholm, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban park", "neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18205637", "label": "Boustead Heavy Industries Corporation Berhad", "source": "Boustead Heavy Industries Corporation Berhad, (MYX: 8133) known for its subsidiary Boustead Naval Shipyard and often abbreviated as BHIC and BNS is a Malaysian industrial group specialised in naval and commercial shipbuilding as well as ship-related services. Its primary focus is shipbuilding, fabrication of offshore structures, as well as repair and maintenance of vessels and aircraft. The company is a public limited company and the largest shareholder is Lembaga Tabung Angkatan Tentera, a government statutory body which provides retirement benefits and a savings scheme for officers of the Malaysian Armed Forces, with a 58.69% stake. The second largest shareholder is Kumpulan Wang Persaraan, a company created by the Malaysian Government as an investment company, with a stake of 7.17%. The parent company is Boustead Holdings.", "target": "Malaysian shipyard company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7851504", "label": "Tufi Duek", "source": "Tufi Duek (born May 31, 1954, in Nilópolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is a Brazilian fashion designer and creator of the Triton and Forum (marketed outside Brazil as Tufi Duek) brands, which have an international following.", "target": "Brazilian fashion designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3065101", "label": "Disney family", "source": "The Disney family is an American family that gained notoriety when brothers Roy and Walt began creating films through the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio, today known as mass media and entertainment conglomerate The Walt Disney Company. The Disney family's influence on American culture grew with successful feature films such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937 and the opening of the Disneyland theme park in 1955. Other Disney family members have been involved in the management and administration of the Disney company, filmmaking, and philanthropy.", "target": "American family whose second and third generations were filmmakers", "baseline_candidates": ["family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3953624", "label": "2012 Seattle Seahawks season", "source": "The 2012 season was the Seattle Seahawks' 37th in the National Football League and their third under head coach Pete Carroll. The Seahawks had a three-way quarterback competition with Tarvaris Jackson, Matt Flynn and rookie Russell Wilson. Jackson was traded to the Bills, and Wilson won the job. The Seahawks finished 11–5, an improvement from a 7–9 record in 2011, and it marked Seattle's first winning season since 2007. The team was 4–0 during the preseason. Their 11 victories was the third best in franchise history. The Seahawks went undefeated at home for the third time in franchise history, after 2003 and 2005. Additionally, with their victory over the Washington Redskins at FedExField in the Wild Card round, the Seahawks won their first road playoff game in almost 30 years. However, despite holding a lead with just 30 seconds left in regulation, the Seahawks lost to the Atlanta Falcons in the Divisional round by a score of 30–28.", "target": "37th season in franchise history; first with QB Russell Wilson", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6887829", "label": "Mockingbird Foundation", "source": "The Mockingbird Foundation is a charitable organization founded by fans of the jam band Phish in 1996 (legally incorporated the following year) to support music education for children. Unconventional in structure, it exists almost entirely online, allowing a higher percentage of income to be distributed directly to deserving organizations. Projects include the publication of The Phish Companion and the production of the Phish tribute album Sharin' in the Groove. As of August, 2021, the foundation had provided over 510 disbursements (through grants and other awards) totalling over $1,960,000; sold over 70,000 copies of The Phish Companion; and sold over 25,000 copies of Sharin' in the Groove. The organization was recognized officially by Phish when, in 2004, the band donated all proceeds from their Livephish download service to the Mockingbird Foundation.", "target": "nonprofit organization associated with Phish, 1996-", "baseline_candidates": ["organization", "cultural organization", "nonprofit organization", "educational organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5829390", "label": "Elian Parrino", "source": "Elian Franco Parrino (born 3 September 1988) is an Argentinian footballer who currently plays as a defender for Spanish club CD Benicarló.Born in Rosario, he started his career with Estudiantes de La Plata and holds an Italian passport which permits him to play within the European Union.", "target": "Argentine footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19665799", "label": "Jung Kil Kim", "source": "Jung Kil Kim (born February 23, 1936), also known as Tiger Kim, is a martial arts practitioner. A native of the nation of South Korea he won numerous titles including the Asian Martial Arts Championship Tournament.", "target": "South Korean taekwondo practitioner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1152924", "label": "Cabinet of Alojz Peterle", "source": "1st Government of Slovenia was elected on 16 May 1990 and was in office until 14 May 1992, when 2nd Government (1st of Janez Drnovšek) was elected. Prime Minister was Lojze Peterle. Government was formed by the coalition Democratic Opposition of Slovenia (Demos), which composed of five parties: Slovene Christian Democrats (SKD), Slovenian Social Democratic Union (SDZS), Slovenian Democratic Union (SDZ), Farmers' Alliance (SLS) and Greens of Slovenia (ZS).", "target": "Slovenian government", "baseline_candidates": ["Cabinet of Slovenia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39054617", "label": "Champdani Municipality", "source": "Champdany Municipality is the civic body that governs Champdani and its surrounding areas in Chandannagore subdivision of Hooghly district, West Bengal, India.", "target": "Municipal Corporation in West Bengal, India", "baseline_candidates": ["municipal corporation in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13638527", "label": "Fusiturricula jaquensis", "source": "Fusiturricula jaquensis, common name the Surinam turrid, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Drilliidae.", "target": "species of mollusc (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16126460", "label": "ilium", "source": "The ilium () (plural ilia) is the uppermost and largest part of the hip bone, and appears in most vertebrates including mammals and birds, but not bony fish. All reptiles have an ilium except snakes, although some snake species have a tiny bone which is considered to be an ilium.The ilium of the human is divisible into two parts, the body and the wing; the separation is indicated on the top surface by a curved line, the arcuate line, and on the external surface by the margin of the acetabulum. The name comes from the Latin (ile, ilis), meaning \"groin\" or \"flank\".", "target": "uppermost and largest part of the hip bone, and appears in most vertebrates (including mammals and birds), but not bony fish or snakes", "baseline_candidates": ["zone of hip bone", "bone", "medical term"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23734009", "label": "Putheri Gram Panchayat", "source": "Putheri is a village and gram panchayat located in Rajakkamangalam block of Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu, India. The panchayat has total of seven panchayat constituencies. Out of these seven panchayat members are elected.", "target": "village in kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu", "baseline_candidates": ["Gram panchayat"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18155326", "label": "Socket FP3", "source": "The Socket FP3 or µBGA906 is a CPU socket for laptops that was released in June 2014 by AMD with its mobility APU products codenamed Kaveri. \"Kaveri\"-branded ULV products combine Steamroller with Crystal Series (GCN), UVD 4.2 and VCE 2 video acceleration, AMD TrueAudio audio acceleration and AMD Eyefinity-based multi-monitor support of up to two non-DisplayPort- or up to four DisplayPort monitors. ECC DIMMs are supported on Socket FP3, mixing of ECC and non-ECC DIMMs within a system is not supported. There are 3 PCI Express cores: one 2 x16 core and two 5 x8 cores, for a total of 64 lanes. There are 8 configurable ports, which can be divided into 2 groups: Gfx-group: contains 2 x8 ports. Each port can be limited to lower link widths for applications that require fewer lanes. Additionally, the two ports can be combined to create a single x16 link. GPP-group: contains 1 x4 UMI and 5 General Purpose Ports (GPP).All PCIe links are capable of supporting PCIe 2.x data rates. In addition, the Gfx link is capable of supporting PCIe 3.x data rate. The FP3 package supports two different voltage levels on the VDDP rail. At the 1.05 V nominal setting, the Gfx link can support PCI Express 3.x data rate, while at the 0.95 V setting, the maximum data rate supported by the Gfx link is PCI Express 2.x The FP3 package supports two different voltage levels on the VDDR rail. At the 1.05 V nominal setting, the maximum speed of DDR3-2133 can be supported while at.", "target": "CPU socket for laptop AMD CPUs", "baseline_candidates": ["CPU socket", "ball grid array"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22977282", "label": "The Sleep", "source": "The Sleep (Romanian Somnul) is an oil painting by Corneliu Baba, from 1959.", "target": "painting by Corneliu Baba", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3389146", "label": "Benedict Arnold", "source": "Benedict Arnold (October 5, 1780 – March 3, 1849) was an American politician from New York, and a member of the House of Representatives.", "target": "American congressman for New York", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6145438", "label": "James White Award", "source": "The James White Award is an annual short story competition open to writers from around the world. It was established in 2000 to commemorate the life and work of Irish science fiction author James White. The competition was created to encourage new writers and is not open to professional authors. \"Professional author\" is defined as one who is eligible for active membership of the Science Fiction Writers of America – that is, a writer with three short story sales to qualifying markets or one novel sale to a qualifying market. Entries must be 6,000 words or less and written in English. The winning story receives a cash prize and publication in Interzone magazine. The award is sponsored by Interzone and the British Science Fiction Association, who took over the administration of the award in 2010.", "target": "speculative fiction short story competition for amateur writers", "baseline_candidates": ["award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62021924", "label": "Chaim Hames", "source": "Chaim (Harvey) J. Hames (Hebrew: חיים היימס; born 8 July 1966) is a professor of history at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU), in Beer-Sheva, Israel, and the incumbent of the David Berg and Family Chair in European History. On August 1, 2018, he assumed office as Rector of BGU. Hames' research focuses on medieval history, with a particular interest in inter-religious encounters, particularly between Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. He also works on religious conversion, inter-religious polemics, mysticism, philosophy, apocalypticism, and magic.", "target": "researcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1460952", "label": "Alfredo Bordonali", "source": "Alfredo Bordonali (born December 4, 1919) was an Italian professional football player. He spent one season in the Serie A with A.S. Roma. He also played for B.P.D. Colleferro in Serie C.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q165148", "label": "Hevelli", "source": "The Hevelli or Hevellians/ Navellasîni (sometimes Havolane; German: Heveller or Stodoranen; Polish: Hawelanie or Stodoranie; Czech: Havolané or Stodorané) were a tribe of the Polabian Slavs, who settled around the middle Havel river in the present-day Havelland region of Brandenburg in eastern Germany from the 8th century onwards. West Slavic tribes (\"Wends\") had settled in the Germania Slavica region from the 7th century onwards. The Hehfeldi as they were called by the Bavarian Geographer about 850 built their main fortification at Brenna (later to become Brandenburg an der Havel) and a large eastern outpost at the current site of Spandau. In 906 the Hevelli princess Drahomíra married the Přemyslid duke Vratislaus I of Bohemia. Baçlabič was the prince of Hevelli from 921-936. Brenna was occupied by the German king Henry the Fowler in his 928/29 Slavic campaign and incorporated into the Marca Geronis. Henry's successor Otto I in 948 established the Bishopric of Brandenburg in order to Christianize the pagan population. These efforts were aborted in the course of the 983 Great Slav Rising in the Northern March, which again defied German control over the region. Together with the neighbouring Sprevane in the east, the Hevelli waged war against not only the German Saxon forces to the west, but also other Slavic tribes. The baptized Hevelli prince Pribislav (died 1150) finally bequested his lands to the Ascanian count Albert the Bear. Albert until 1157 could re-conquer the territory of the former Northern March, whereafter he established the Margraviate of Brandenburg. The Slavic Hevelli were gradually assimilated.", "target": "ethnic group", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group", "tribe", "Polabian Slavs"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4724388", "label": "Alguien Te Mira", "source": "Alguien te mira (literally Someone’s watching you) is a telenovela from Televisión Nacional de Chile. Directed by María Eugenia Rencoret, produced by Daniela Demichelli and written by Pablo Illanes and Nona Fernández. The telenovela marked a change in themes from earlier night time productions from the state channel, being that this time the main themes were not troubled couple relationships and sex, but this time the main theme was associated with a serial killer, who kills women by taking their hearts. The debut date was April 30, 2007, and the last episode took place on August 16 of the same year.", "target": "Chilean television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q154325", "label": "Heinrich Lenz", "source": "Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz (; German: [lɛnts]; also Emil Khristianovich Lenz, Russian: Эмилий Христианович Ленц; 12 February 1804 – 10 February 1865), usually cited as Emil Lenz or Heinrich Lenz in some countries, was a Russian physicist of Baltic German descent who is most noted for formulating Lenz's law in electrodynamics in 1834.", "target": "Baltic German physicist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4982397", "label": "Buccaneer", "source": "The Buccaneer 18, also called the Buccaneer dinghy and the Gloucester 18, is an American planing sailing dinghy that was designed in 1966 by Rod Macalpine-Downie and Dick Gibbs as a one-design racer and day sailer. The prototype was first shown in 1967 at Yachting's \"One of a Kind\" Regatta, in which it placed second.", "target": "dinghy", "baseline_candidates": ["yal", "sailboat class", "monohull"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7969080", "label": "Ward Weaver III", "source": "Ward Francis Weaver III (born April 6, 1963) is an American convicted murderer. He is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole for sexual assault, rape, attempted murder, and the murders of Ashley Pond and Miranda Gaddis in Oregon City, Oregon.Raised in Northern California by his mother, Weaver had a tumultuous childhood; his father, Ward Weaver Jr., was convicted in 1984 of a double-murder. After a stint in the U.S. Navy Reserve, Weaver was convicted of assaulting two teenage girls in Fairfield, California in 1988. In January 2002, twelve-year-old Ashley Pond disappeared en route to her bus stop in Oregon City, near Weaver's residence. Two months later, Pond's classmate, thirteen-year-old Miranda Gaddis, also vanished under mysterious circumstances. The disappearances received international media attention, and were profiled on various television programs, including Unsolved Mysteries. The remains of both girls were discovered on Weaver's property in August 2002 during an investigation into the rape of his son's girlfriend, also committed by Weaver. In 2004, Weaver was sentenced to life without parole for the sexual assault and murder of both girls.", "target": "American rapist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8075200", "label": "Zulu Sofola", "source": "Zulu Sofola (22 June 1935 – 5 September 1995) was the first published female Nigerian playwright and dramatist. Sofola was also a university teacher and became the first female Professor of Theater Arts in Africa.", "target": "Nigerian writer, First Female professor of Theatre Arts (1935-1995)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4565163", "label": "1942–43 Chicago Black Hawks season", "source": "The 1942–43 Chicago Black Hawks season was the team's 17th season in the National Hockey League, and they were coming off a 4th-place finish in 1941–42, and lost to the Boston Bruins in the opening round of the playoffs. The NHL would lose another team, as the Brooklyn Americans would fold, leaving the league with only 6 clubs. The league also increased its schedule from 48 games to 50. With World War II going on, every team in the league would lose some players who left to fight in the war. Black Hawks general manager Frederic McLaughlin, who had been the GM since the Black Hawks entered the league in 1926, retired before the season began, and Bill Tobin was hired to take over. The Black Hawks would finish just under .500, as they had a 17–18–15 record, good for 49 points and 5th place in the standings, missing the playoffs for the first time in 4 years. Chicago would score a club record 179 goals, which was the 4th highest in the league, however, they also allowed a team record 180 goals, the 3rd highest total in the league. Chicago would have a very strong home record, going 14–3–8, but would win only 3 road games, and miss the playoffs by a single point. Doug Bentley would become the first Black Hawk to lead the NHL in scoring, as he set team records in goals (33) and points (73), while younger brother Max Bentley would set a team record with 44 assists, and finished with.", "target": "NHL ice hockey team season", "baseline_candidates": ["ice hockey team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16122982", "label": "Amina Najiba Khanum Effendi", "source": "Emina Ilhamy (Arabic: امینه الهامی; Turkish: Emine İlhami; 24 May 1858 – 19 June 1931) also Amina Ilhami, was an Egyptian princess, and a member of the Muhammad Ali Dynasty. She was the first Khediva of Egypt from 1879 to 1892 as the wife of Khedive Tewfik Pasha, and Walida Pasha to their son Khedive Abbas Hilmi II from 1892 to 1914.", "target": "Egyptian princess (1858-1931)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q118296", "label": "Thomas Heise", "source": "Thomas Heise (born August 22, 1955 in East Berlin), is a German documentary filmmaker.", "target": "German film and theatre director and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q233289", "label": "Atal Bihari Vajpayee", "source": "Atal Bihari Vajpayee (25 December 1924 – 16 August 2018) was an Indian politician and diplomat who served three terms as the prime minister of India, first for a term of 13 days in 1996, then for a period of 13 months from 1998 to 1999, followed by a full term from 1999 to 2004. Vajpayee was one of the co-founders and a senior leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). He was a member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a Hindu nationalist volunteer organisation. He was the first Indian prime minister not of the Indian National Congress to serve a full term in office. He was also a renowned poet and a writer. He was a member of the Indian Parliament for over five decades, having been elected ten times to the Lok Sabha, the lower house, and twice to the Rajya Sabha, the upper house. He served as the Member of Parliament for Lucknow, retiring from active politics in 2009 due to health concerns. He was among the founding members of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS), of which he was president from 1968 to 1972. The BJS merged with several other parties to form the Janata Party, which won the 1977 general election. In March 1977, Vajpayee became the minister of external affairs in the cabinet of Prime Minister Morarji Desai. He resigned in 1979, and the Janata alliance collapsed soon after. Former members of the BJS formed the BJP in 1980, with Vajpayee its first president. During his tenure as prime minister, India.", "target": "10th Prime Minister of India (1924-2018)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4860126", "label": "Bardeni", "source": "Bardeni is a village in Tryavna Municipality, in Gabrovo Province, in northern central Bulgaria.", "target": "village of Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q962930", "label": "J. Evan Bonifant", "source": "J. Evan Bonifant (born August 19, 1985) is an American actor. As a child actor, he played small parts on television shows such as One Life to Live and starred in several films, including the lead role in Todd Haynes's Dottie Gets Spanked in 1993. His most notable role was that of Tum Tum, for which he was nominated the Young Artist Award in 1995 in 3 Ninjas Kick Back. He portrayed ten-year-old Buster Blues in Blues Brothers 2000. In 2008, Bonifant portrayed the role of Jerko Phoenix in the Disney series Wizards of Waverly Place.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42000794", "label": "Grand Tower", "source": "The Grand Tower (formerly Tower 2) is a high-rise in the Europaviertel quarter in Frankfurt, Germany. The tower, completed in 2020 is Germany's tallest residential building at a height of 180 m (590 ft), exceeding the 147 m (482 ft) Colonia-Haus in Cologne built in 1973. The tower is located next to the Skyline-Plaza shopping center. The developer states the total investment at around 250 million euros.The Grand Tower is considered to be the first high-rise residential building in Germany to be marketed globally; with the Asian, Arab and North American markets being the main focus.", "target": "high-rise in the Europaviertel quarter in Frankfurt, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["residential tower"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7947637", "label": "WCBV-LP", "source": "WCBV-LP (105.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to Lima, Ohio, United States; the station serves the Lima area, broadcasting a southern gospel format. The station is currently owned by Calvary Bible Church.WCBV is a Conservative Christian Radio station operated by Calvary Bible Church, an independent, fundamental Baptist church. It operates 24 hours daily featuring Conservative Christian music, teaching and preaching. The format of the station represents the church which does not use any form of rock music, contemporary Christian music or Southern Gospel music.", "target": "radio station in Lima, Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17812838", "label": "Hypericum vacciniifolium", "source": "Hypericum vacciniifolium is a species of flowering plant in the flowering plant family Hypericaceae. It was first described by August von Hayek and Walter Siehe in the Ann. K. K. Naturhist. Hofmus. journal in 1914 from a specimen collected by Siehe in 1912.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6375608", "label": "Kate Longworth", "source": "Kate Longworth is a reporter for Fox Sports Arizona covering the Arizona Diamondbacks since April 2015.", "target": "Sportscaster", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16976723", "label": "WULK", "source": "WULK 94.7 FM is a radio station licensed to Crawfordville, Georgia. The station broadcasts a country music format and is owned by Paul and Suzanne Stone's Southern Broadcasting, through licensee Wyche Services Corporation.", "target": "radio station in Crawfordville, Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3748273", "label": "potassium formate", "source": "Potassium formate, HCO2K, HCOOK, or CHKO2, is the potassium salt of formic acid. This strongly hygroscopic white solid is an intermediate in the formate potash process for the production of potassium. Potassium formate has also been studied as a potential environmentally friendly deicing salt for use on roads. It has also been suggested for use in a less corrosive liquid desiccant. A 52% solution of potassium formate has a freezing point of −60 °C (−76 °F). Potassium formate brines are sometimes used for heat transfer, despite being much more corrosive than many other liquid coolants, especially to zinc and aluminum but even to many steels, though some formulations are compatible with aluminum and steels.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21211467", "label": "Lévon Zékian", "source": "Archbishop Boghos Lévon Zékiyan (Armenian: Պօղոս-Լեւոն Զէքիեան; born October 21, 1943 in Constantinople) is an Armenologist, philosopher, Professor of Armenian Language and Literature at Ca' Foscari University of Venice, Pontifical Oriental Institute of Rome and Istanbul University, a member of the Academy of Venice, Foreign member of Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Corresponding member of the Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti (1992). He is the Armenian Catholic Archeparch of Istanbul. Zekiyan is the Founding President of the Associazione \"Padus-Araxes\", the director of Summer Intensive Course of the Armenian Language and Culture at the University of Venice (since 1986), and former editor of Hye Endanik (1974–82) and Bazmavep (1980-1985) periodicals.", "target": "Armenian Catholic archbishop of Istanbul", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21447960", "label": "Vermetoidea", "source": "The Vermetoidea, the worm snails or worm shells, are a taxonomic superfamily of small to medium-sized sea snails, marine gastropod molluscs in the order Littorinimorpha.The shells of species in the family Vermetidae are extremely irregular, and do not resemble the average snail shell, hence the common name \"worm shells\" or \"worm snails\".", "target": "superfamily of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25465796", "label": "Béla Lengyel", "source": "Béla Lengyel (born 29 October 1990) is a Hungarian attacking midfielder who plays for Budaörs.", "target": "Hungarian footballer (1990-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23423659", "label": "Glacier Kwong", "source": "Glacier Chung Ching Kwong (Chinese: 鄺頌晴, c. 1996) is a political activist from Hong Kong. She is a PhD candidate in law at the University of Hamburg. She is also currently the Digital Rights Research Fellow at Hong Kong Democracy Council (HKDC), a leading organization for the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong and Hong Kongers overseas led by fellow activist Samuel Chu. Previously, she was the spokesperson of the non-governmental organization (NGO) Keyboard Frontline, monitoring privacy abuses and censorship on the web.Following the enactment of the Hong Kong national security law in 2020, Kwong is living in self-imposed exile in Germany.", "target": "Hong Kong human rights activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60040344", "label": "Susan Keefe", "source": "Susan Elaine Emley Keefe (born 1947) is an American anthropologist and author. She is a professor emerita at Appalachian State University. Keefe has published books on Mexican-American culture and Appalachian health issues.", "target": "American anthropologist and author", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60753715", "label": "The Simulation", "source": "The Simulation is the fifth studio album by American band Born of Osiris, released on January 11, 2019 through Sumerian Records. It was originally announced as the first of two Born of Osiris albums planned for release in 2019, though the second album remained unreleased for the rest of that year. In July 2018, the ensemble released a lyric video for \"Silence the Echo\", the first single from the album. In November 2018 \"The Accursed\", the second single from the album, was released. On January 10, 2019; the third single \"Cycles of Tragedy\" was released.", "target": "album by Born of Osiris", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6488840", "label": "Larder Lake", "source": "Larder Lake is an incorporated municipal township and eponymous constituent dispersed rural community in Timiskaming District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It is located along Ontario Highway 66 and Ontario Highway 624 at the north-western part of the lake bearing the same name. The area of the township is 229.65 km2 (88.67 sq mi) and includes the geographic townships of Hearst, McVittie and Skead.Located within the \"Larder Lake-Cadillac Fault Zone\", a geologic region rich in precious metals, the town was the site of the first gold rush in northeastern Ontario.", "target": "incorporated township and community in Timiskaming District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["single-tier municipality", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9070378", "label": "Rogelio Sinan", "source": "Rogelio Sinán (born on Taboga Island in 1902; died in 1994) was the pseudonym of Panamanian writer Bernardo Domínguez Alba. He went to universities in Chile and Italy before becoming a consul to Calcutta. He has written plays, short stories and novels, but is best known for his poetry. His work has been termed Avant-garde and he is a winner of the Premio Ricardo Miró.", "target": "Panamanian Writer Known In Latin America For Writing His Masterpiece \"The Red Beret\"", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5992743", "label": "Ignatius Jerome Strecker", "source": "Ignatius Jerome Strecker (November 23, 1917 – October 16, 2003) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Kansas City in Kansas from 1969 to 1993.", "target": "Catholic archbishop (1917-2003)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19830316", "label": "Gorki, Andreyevskoye Rural Settlement, Alexandrovsky District, Vladimir Oblast", "source": "Gorki (Russian: Горки) is a rural locality (a village) in Andreyevskoye Rural Settlement, Alexandrovsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 10 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3763357", "label": "Gianmaria Dal Maistro", "source": "Gianmaria Dal Maistro (born 4 December 1980) is a visually impaired Italian male paralympic alpine skier who won medals at the Paralympic Games.", "target": "Italian alpine skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33810131", "label": "Flamengos", "source": "Flamengos is a Portuguese civil parish (Portuguese: freguesia) on the island of Faial in the archipelago of the Azores. Its name was derived from the grouping of Flemish settlers who made their homes in this landlocked valley, in the municipality of Horta. The population in 2011 was 1,604, in an area of 14.62 km². It contains the localities Cruz do Bravo, Farrobo, Lameiro Grande, Rua Nova, São Lourenço and Tafoneiro.", "target": "civil parish in Horta", "baseline_candidates": ["freguesia of Portugal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4837744", "label": "Babelomurex macrocephalus", "source": "Babelomurex macrocephalus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2470015", "label": "USS Luce (DD-522)", "source": "USS Luce (DD-522), a Fletcher-class destroyer, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for Rear Admiral Stephen B. Luce (1827–1917). Luce was laid down by Bethlehem Steel Co., Staten Island, N.Y., 24 August 1942; launched 6 March 1943, sponsored by Mrs. Stephen B. Luce, Jr., wife of Rear Adm. Stephen B. Luce's grandson; and commissioned 21 June 1943.", "target": "Fletcher-class destroyer", "baseline_candidates": ["destroyer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7331751", "label": "Rick Smith", "source": "Richard David Smith (born March 13, 1948) is a former American college football coach. He was formerly the defensive coordinator and secondary coach at East Carolina University (ECU), a position he held until December 2016 when he retired after 36 years as a coach.", "target": "American football coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6742031", "label": "Malaysian Rubber Board", "source": "The Malaysian Rubber Board (MRB; Malay: Lembaga Getah Malaysia) is the custodian of the rubber industry in Malaysia. Established on 1 January 1998, it has under its fold three agencies (RRIM, MRRDB and MRELB), which are now merged into one. The R&D work in natural rubber, accomplished by the Rubber Research Institute of Malaysia, has been used by the Malaysian natural rubber industry and other NR producing countries. The objective of MRB is to assist in the development and modernization of the Malaysian rubber industry from cultivation of the rubber tree, the extraction and processing of its raw rubber, the manufacture of rubber products and the marketing of rubber and rubber products. The Director General of MRB is Dato' Dr Zairossani Mohd Nor.", "target": "Government agency in Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5489259", "label": "Frank Rogers", "source": "Frank Rogers is a fictional character from the British Channel 4 soap opera Brookside, played by Peter Christian. The character made his first on-screen appearance during the episode broadcast 1 December 1987 and remained in the show for an additional six years, being killed off in the episode aired on 5 November 1993.", "target": "Fictional character from the British Channel 4 soap opera Brookside", "baseline_candidates": ["fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17332438", "label": "Calliclytus macoris", "source": "Calliclytus macoris is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Lingafelter in 2011.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7546396", "label": "Smooth Love", "source": "Smooth Love is a budget compilation album by American R&B/soul singer Luther Vandross, released in 2000 (see 2000 in music).", "target": "compilation album by Luther Vandross", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5886341", "label": "Inge Johansson", "source": "Inge Rolf Johansson () (born May 10, 1977) is a Swedish musician. He is best known for his time playing bass in bands such as Against Me! and The (International) Noise Conspiracy, of which he was a founding member. Before forming The (International) Noise Conspiracy, Johansson was one of the many bass players that played in hardcore band Refused.", "target": "Swedish musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4570597", "label": "1961–62 Greek Cup", "source": "The 1961–62 Greek Football Cup was the 20th edition the Greek Football Cup.", "target": "football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6240134", "label": "John Howell Collier", "source": "John Howell Collier (8 September 1899 – 21 April 1980) was a lieutenant general in the United States Army. He was notable as a commander of 2nd Armored Division units in World War II and as the Army's Chief of Armor.", "target": "United States general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8982840", "label": "Phil Lam", "source": "Phil Lam Yik-hong (Chinese: 林奕匡, born 12 June 1985 as Lam Hon Fai) is a Canadian-born Hong Kong artist and sing-songwriter. Born in Nanaimo and raised in Qualicum Beach, he signed a contract with Sony Music Hong Kong in 2009. He rose to fame in Hong Kong in 2014 with the song Hills and Valleys (Chinese: 高山低谷), which earned him a Top 20 Gold Song Award in the 2014 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation.", "target": "Hong Kong singer-songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4631415", "label": "22nd People's Choice Awards", "source": "The 22nd People's Choice Awards, honoring the best in popular culture for 1995, were held on March 10, 1996, at Universal Studios Hollywood, in Universal City, California. They were hosted by Brett Butler, and broadcast on CBS. Michael Douglas received a special award for his work in the motion picture industry.", "target": "award ceremony", "baseline_candidates": ["award ceremony"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3159119", "label": "Jacques Houplain", "source": "Jacques Houplain (10 September 1920 – 22 February 2020) was a French painter and engraver.", "target": "French painter (1920-2020)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4497706", "label": "Anisentomon", "source": "Anisentomon is a genus of proturans in the family Eosentomidae.", "target": "genus of arthropods", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2061304", "label": "Battle of Garigliano", "source": "The Battle of Garigliano was fought in 915 between Christian forces and the Saracens. Pope John X personally led the Christian forces into battle. The aim was to destroy the Arab fortress on the Garigliano River, which had threatened central Italy and the outskirts of Rome for nearly 30 years.", "target": "915 conflict", "baseline_candidates": ["battle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43082807", "label": "Janss Marketplace", "source": "Janss Marketplace is an outdoor shopping mall in Thousand Oaks, California. Previously known as Janss Mall, it opened in September 1961 as Village Lane. It was the first mall established in the city, and Thousand Oaks' only shopping center until The Oaks was built in 1978. 39 businesses are located here as of 2022. Conejo Valley Art Museum is also located here. It is home to well-known anchoring stores - Nordstrom Rack, and Old Navy. - along with specialty shops and fast food establishments. It has a nine-screen movie theater and is surrounded by neighborhood restaurants.A big attraction here in the 1960s was its 854-seat Fox Conejo movie theater. The theater opened in May 1963 with a gala premiere of the movie A Gathering of Eagles (1963). Celebrities such as Lee J. Cobb, Barbara Eden, Gary Crosby and Annette Funicello attended the opening gala.In 2015, Sears Holdings spun off 235 of its properties, including the Sears at Janss Marketplace, into Seritage Growth Properties. Sears downsized its store from 171,000 square feet (15,900 square meters) to 68,750 square feet (6,387 square meters) to make way for Nordstrom Rack, DSW, and Sports Authority, which closed in 2016. The Reign of Terror Haunted House is located here, which is a 25,000 square feet (2,300 square meters) house open for tours on and around Halloween.Toys \"R\" Us closed in June 2018. On June 28, 2018, it was announced that Sears would be closing as part of a plan to close 78 stores nationwide. The store closed in September 2018. The.", "target": "shopping mall in Thousand Oaks, California", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6410206", "label": "Kimo", "source": "Kimo (formerly known as Eskimo) are a New Zealand-based alternative musical group consisting of David Mulcahy (ex JPS Experience, Superette and solo electronic project Mulchzoid) and Rob Mayes (Failsafe Records, dolphin). They released the album loverbatim under the name Eskimo in 2004. In 2007 they changed their name from Eskimo to Kimo in to differentiate themselves from a number of other artists also using that former name. The band performed a series of concerts through 2004 and 2005 with the inclusion of Drummer Michael Daly (YFC) Kimo have release their second album Surrender in October 2008 on Failsafe Records.", "target": "alternative music group from New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21857598", "label": "Yeni Alat", "source": "Yeni Alat (Azerbaijani: Yeni Ələt) is a village in the municipality of Alat in the Garadagh raion of Baku, Azerbaijan.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6886014", "label": "Mniopamea", "source": "Mniopamea is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58935636", "label": "Belmont, Lyme Regis", "source": "Belmont is a Grade II* listed country house near Lyme Regis, South West England. The house was occupied for many years by the English novelist John Fowles, and is now part of the Landmark Trust.", "target": "country house in England", "baseline_candidates": ["country house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12304622", "label": "Bukaiši Parish", "source": "Bukaiši Parish (Latvian: Bukaišu pagasts) is an administrative unit of Dobele Municipality in the Semigallia region of Latvia. At the beginning of 2014, the population of the parish was 745. The administrative center is Bukaiši village.", "target": "parish of Latvia in Tērvete Municipality", "baseline_candidates": ["parish of Latvia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22081150", "label": "Suruí River", "source": "The Suruí River (Portuguese: Rio Suruí) is a river of Rio de Janeiro state in southeastern Brazil.", "target": "river in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1379024", "label": "Eva-Karin Westin", "source": "Eva-Karin Westin (born 24 June 1972) is a Swedish biathlete. She competed at both the 1994 Winter Olympics and the 1998 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Swedish biathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q302086", "label": "Cosimo Aldo Cannone", "source": "Cosimo Aldo Cannone (born 20 March 1984) is a retired Italian Endurance S One racing driver and a two-time World Champion, who has been racing for Cannone. Cosimo Aldo Cannone (Brindisi, March 20, 1984) is an Italian pilot boat, in the world of sport is also nicknamed Alcan (from \"Aldo Cannone\").", "target": "Italian Powerboating driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25183454", "label": "Made in Chelsea, series 11", "source": "The eleventh series of Made in Chelsea, a British structured-reality television programme, was confirmed on 1 March 2016 to begin on 11 April 2016 on E4 and concluded on 27 June 2016 following eleven regular episodes and a \"The Aftermath\" special hosted by Rick Edwards. This is the first series not to feature original cast member Spencer Matthews following his departure during the previous series, as well as long running cast member Oliver Proudlock. Ahead of the series, it was confirmed that Jessica Dixon and Olivia Bentley had joined the series as new cast members, however Jessica only appeared in four episodes. They were joined by Frankie Gaff and Matt Draper midway through the series. This is the final series to feature long-serving cast member Lucy Watson, as well as, James Dunmore, Nicola Hughes, Millie Wilkinson and Tallulah Rufus-Isaacs. The series focused heavily on the fallout between Lucy and Stephanie and the consequences it had for the remaining cast, as well blossoming romance between Jamie and Frankie despite cheating allegations. It also featured Sam and Tiff's turbulent relationship hit a number of obstacles, and the breakdown of Binky and JP's relationship.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4718147", "label": "Alexander", "source": "Alexander (Greek: Αλέξανδρος), known by the title comes (Greek: ο κόμης), was a Byzantine diplomat. He was active in the reign of Justinian I (r. 527–565). The main sources about him are Procopius, John Malalas and Theophanes the Confessor.", "target": "Byzantine diplomat (6th c.)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5726533", "label": "Henry Osborn", "source": "Henry Osborn (7 August 1823 – date of death unknown) was an English cricketer. Osborn's batting and bowling styles are unknown. He was born at Pulborough, Sussex. Osborn made his first-class debut for Petworth against Hampshire in 1845 at Petworth Park New Ground. He made a second first-class appearance for Petworth in the same season in the return fixture at Days Ground, Southampton. In his two first-class appearances for the team, he scored 28 runs at an average of 9.33, with a high score of 11. With the ball, he took 5 wickets at an average of 6.60, with best figures of 3/9. He made his first-class debut for Sussex against Kent in 1848 at the Royal Brunswick Ground, Hove. He made three further first-class appearances for Sussex, twice against Surrey in 1849 at The Oval and Petworth Park New Ground, and eleven years later against Kent at the Royal Brunswick Ground. In his four first-class appearances for the county, he scored 17 runs at an average of 2.83, with a high score of 7. With the ball, he took a single wicket for the county.", "target": "English cricketer (1823-?)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q92800953", "label": "Ariana Gonçalves", "source": "Ariana Gonçalves Correia (born 23 September 1999) is an Andorran footballer who plays as a midfielder for ENFAF and the Andorra women's national team.", "target": "Andorran footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3339773", "label": "Nick McDonald", "source": "Nicholas James McDonald (born June 27, 1987) is an American football center who is currently a free agent. McDonald was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Green Bay Packers in 2010. In that year, he won Super Bowl XLV with the team against the Pittsburgh Steelers. He played college football at Grand Valley State University.", "target": "American football player, offensive guard/center", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q314306", "label": "Antoine Jérôme Balard", "source": "Antoine Jérôme Balard (30 September 1802 – 30 April 1876) was a French chemist and one of the discoverers of bromine.", "target": "French chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5479920", "label": "Francis A. Teall", "source": "Francis Augustus Teall (born in Fort Ann, New York, 16 August 1822; died 16 November 1894) was a United States editor.", "target": "American editor (1822-1894)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q975641", "label": "San Francisco, Antioquia", "source": "San Francisco is a town and municipality in Antioquia Department, Colombia. Part of the subregion of Eastern Antioquia.", "target": "Colombian municipality of the department of Antioquia", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Colombia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18210092", "label": "V for Vaselines", "source": "V for Vaselines is the third studio album by the Scottish alternative rock band The Vaselines. It was recorded at Castle of Doom studios in Glasgow and was released in the UK on 29 September 2014 and in the US on 7 October 2014 through The Vaselines' own label, Rosary Music. The album's sound was partially inspired by the Ramones, after Eugene Kelly went to see a Ramones cover band in Glasgow. Kelly stated that they wanted to \"write some really short punk rock songs, just get into people’s ear really straight away, and then get out of there really quickly.\" McKee was also surrounded by punk music, as her children were discovering the Ramones and The Stooges at the time the album was being madeThe first single from the album, \"One Lost Year\" was released online on 28 May 2014 along with the announcement of the album. It was made available to download for free from the band's SoundCloud page. A second single followed in August, \"High Tide Low Tide\", which was released as a download and on limited edition blue vinyl, accompanied by the non-album B-side \"Cardinal Sin\". A music video for third single, \"Crazy Lazy\", was released in November. The band toured in support of the album with shows in the US and Europe into 2015. The album's lyrics were inspired by many current events including the death of Margaret Thatcher, the Leveson Inquiry and the popularity of MP3 downloads. The Vaselines have also noted that a seriousness and sense of maturity has.", "target": "album by The Vaselines", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16616130", "label": "Tomas Nido", "source": "Tomás E. Nido Vicéns (born April 12, 1994) is a Puerto Rican professional baseball catcher for the New York Mets of Major League Baseball (MLB). He made his MLB debut in 2017.", "target": "Puerto Rican professional baseball catcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2848372", "label": "André Ostier", "source": "André Ostier (1906–1994) was a French photographer well known for his artists' portraits and photo reports on \"la vie parisienne\".", "target": "French photographer (1906-1994)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q474877", "label": "Christopher Gäng", "source": "Christopher Gäng (born 10 May 1988) is a German former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5375100", "label": "Stranded", "source": "En rade (English: Becalmed, A Haven or Stranded) is a novel by the French writer Joris-Karl Huysmans. It first appeared as a serial in the magazine Revue Indépendante between November 1886 and April 1887. It was published in book form on 26 April 1887 by Tresse et Stock. En rade followed Huysmans' most famous novel, A rebours, and was a commercial failure since neither critics nor the public could understand its mixture of brutal realism and fantasy. Later on, the Surrealists were more appreciative and André Breton included extracts from the novel in his Anthology of Black Humour.", "target": "novel by Joris-Karl Huysmans", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5373305", "label": "Emmanuel Ngobese", "source": "Emmanuel Asanda \"Scara\" Ngobese (3 June 1980 – 11 May 2010) was a South African soccer player who last played as a midfielder for Kaizer Chiefs FC in the Premier Soccer League. He was born in Katlehong, Gauteng and died in Johannesburg. Ngobese was affectionately known to his supporters as \"Scara\"managed by Edgar O.", "target": "Association footballer (1980-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98381066", "label": "Felix Wagner", "source": "Felix Wagner (born (1965-10-21)21 October 1965) is a Swiss wheelchair curler.He participated in the 2018 Winter Paralympics where Swiss team finished on sixth place.", "target": "Swiss male wheelchair curler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5892019", "label": "Heyoka", "source": "The heyoka (heyókȟa, also spelled \"haokah,\" \"heyokha\") is a kind of sacred clown in the culture of the Sioux (Lakota and Dakota people) of the Great Plains of North America. The heyoka is a contrarian, jester, and satirist, who speaks, moves and reacts in an opposite fashion to the people around them. Only those having visions of the thunder beings of the west, the Wakíŋyaŋ, and who are recognized as such by the community, can take on the ceremonial role of the heyoka. The Lakota medicine man, Black Elk, described himself as a heyoka, saying he had been visited as a child by the thunder beings.", "target": "Lakota trickster-figure, playful contrarian, sacred clown, or jester", "baseline_candidates": ["thunder god"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17089821", "label": "Cassandra Pickett Durham", "source": "Cassandra Pickett Windsor Durham (May 21, 1824 – October 18, 1885) was an American physician and the first woman to earn a medical degree in the state of Georgia.", "target": "American physician (1824-1885)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6178213", "label": "Jennifer Coate", "source": "Jennifer Ann Coate (born 8 February 1953) is an Australian jurist. Coate was a Judge of the Family Court of Australia and one of the six Royal Commissioners appointed by the Australian government Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.", "target": "Australian judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q488542", "label": "Ministry of National Defense of South Korea", "source": "The Ministry of National Defense (MND, Korean: 국방부) is a department within the government of South Korea (ROK) and responsible for the military branches of South Korea.", "target": "South Korean government ministry responsible for military and national defense affairs", "baseline_candidates": ["defence ministry"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7107305", "label": "Osokinai Station", "source": "Osokinai Station (晩生内駅, Osokinai-eki) was a railway station on the Sasshō Line in Urausu, Kabato District, Hokkaidō, Japan, operated by Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaido).", "target": "railway station in Urausu, Kabato district, Hokkaidō, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4797119", "label": "Art Tucker", "source": "Arthur Tucker (born January 29, 1959) is a heavyweight boxer from Newark, New Jersey. He started boxing while incarcerated in Rahway State Prison, N.J. for 12 years. Art Tucker, nicknamed Champ, launched his career after being released in 1987 with 15 wins in a row. At one point during this time, he was rumored to be a possible opponent for heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield, but this fight never materialized. Since 1989 he suffered severe losses to Riddick Bowe, Tommy Morrison and Tim Witherspoon. He ultimately retired in 1993 after a win against Mark Young. His record in 27 professional fights shows 21 wins (15 K.O. ), 5 losses (5 K.O.) and 1 draw. For some time he was trained by Teddy Atlas, who also coached former heavyweight world-champion Michael Moorer.", "target": "American boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q176968", "label": "Foreign government advisor in Meiji Japan", "source": "The foreign employees in Meiji Japan, known in Japanese as O-yatoi Gaikokujin (Kyūjitai: 御雇い外國人, Shinjitai: 御雇い外国人, \"hired foreigners\"), were hired by the Japanese government and municipalities for their specialized knowledge and skill to assist in the modernization of the Meiji period. The term came from Yatoi (a person hired temporarily, a day laborer), was politely applied for hired foreigner as O-yatoi gaikokujin. The total number is over 2,000, probably reaches 3,000 (with thousands more in the private sector). Until 1899, more than 800 hired foreign experts continued to be employed by the government, and many others were employed privately. Their occupation varied, ranging from high salaried government advisors, college professors and instructor, to ordinary salaried technicians. Along the process of the opening of the country, the Tokugawa Shogunate government first hired, German diplomat Philipp Franz von Siebold as diplomatic advisor, Dutch naval engineer Hendrik Hardes for Nagasaki Arsenal and Willem Johan Cornelis, Ridder Huijssen van Kattendijke for Nagasaki Naval Training Center, French naval engineer François Léonce Verny for Yokosuka Naval Arsenal, and British civil engineer Richard Henry Brunton. Most of the O-yatoi was appointed through government approval with two or three years contract, and took their responsibility properly in Japan, except some cases.As the Public Works hired almost 40% of the total number of the O-yatois, the main goal in hiring the O-yatois was to obtain transfers of technology and advice on systems and cultural ways. Therefore, young Japanese officers gradually took over the post of the O-yatoi after they completed training and education at the.", "target": "Modernisation between 1868 and 1912", "baseline_candidates": ["advisor", "position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6773530", "label": "Marshall County School District", "source": "The Marshall County School District is a public school district based in Marshall County, Mississippi (USA). The district serves the towns of Byhalia and Potts Camp as well as most rural areas in Marshall County.", "target": "school district in Mississippi", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49352989", "label": "Górzno", "source": "Górzno [ˈɡuʐnɔ] (German: Gorzno, 1939-45: Görzberg) is a town in Brodnica County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland, with 1,369 inhabitants (2006).", "target": "city of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Poland", "city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18358360", "label": "Billy Whitehouse", "source": "Billy Haywood Whitehouse (born 13 June 1996) is an English professional footballer who plays as a winger or full back. He turned professional at Doncaster Rovers in May 2014, and made his first team debut five months later at 18 years of age. He was loaned out to FC Halifax Town in February 2016, before he was bought by Leeds United for a fee rumoured to be around £400,000 in August 2016, he was named man of the match in his last game for Doncaster. He had a brief spell on loan at Guiseley, before he was released by Leeds in May 2017. After brief trials at Port Vale and Shamrock Rovers, Billy signed for Tadcaster Albion in December 2018. The following year after a good start to the season - the likes of Leicester, Cardiff, Bournemouth and Reading enquired about his availability, he finished the season on 34 assists and 12 goals. Billy signed for The New Saints for an undisclosed fee in January 2019.", "target": "Footballer (born 1996)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20466083", "label": "RAF Wattisham", "source": "Royal Air Force Station Wattisham or more simply RAF Wattisham (ICAO: EGUW) is a former Royal Air Force station located in East Anglia just outside the village of Wattisham, south of Stowmarket in Suffolk, England. During the Cold War it was a major front-line air force base, operating Quick Reaction Alert (South), before closing in 1993 and is now operated by the British Army as Wattisham Airfield.", "target": "former Royal Air Force station in Suffolk, England", "baseline_candidates": ["airbase", "Royal Air Force station", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q682591", "label": "Un tour ensemble", "source": "Un tour ensemble is a live album of music written and sung by Jean-Jacques Goldman. It was released by Columbia Records in 2003. It was also released on DVD. It was certified platinum in France for sales of 300,000 copies.", "target": "2003 live album by Jean-Jacques Goldman", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61659856", "label": "Luigi Galli", "source": "Luigi Galli or Giovanni Galli (Latin: Ioannes Aloysius Galli) (died 1657) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Ancona e Numana (1622–1657) and Apostolic Nuncio to Savoy (1627–1629).", "target": "Roman Catholic bishop (d. 1657)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7033908", "label": "Nightmare Danny Davis", "source": "Daniel Briley (born June 30, 1952), better known by the ring name \"Nightmare\" Danny Davis, is an American retired professional wrestler and referee. He is the founder and former owner of Ohio Valley Wrestling.", "target": "American professional wrestler and referee", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18811215", "label": "Robert Wyndham", "source": "Robert Henry Wyndham ( 8 April 1814 – 16 December 1894) was a British actor-manager. From 1851 to 1875 he was actor-manager in Edinburgh, where notable plays of the day were performed and where Henry Irving's early career took place.", "target": "British actor and theatre manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31473411", "label": "Yelansky", "source": "Yelansky (Russian: Еланский) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Bukanovskoye Rural Settlement, Kumylzhensky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 39 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Kumylzhensky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16135729", "label": "Kozhikode Municipal Corporation", "source": "The Kozhikode Corporation, is the municipal corporation that administers the city of Kozhikode (Calicut), Kerala. Established in 1962, it is in the Kozhikode parliamentary constituency. The first mayor was H. Manjunatha Rao. Its four assembly constituencies are Kozhikode North (State Assembly constituency) , Kozhikode South (State Assembly constituency) , Beypore (State Assembly constituency) and Elathur (State Assembly constituency). The Corporation is headed by a Mayor and council, and manages 118.58 km2 of the city of Kozhikode, with a population of about 609,224 within that area. Kozhikode Municipal Corporation has been formed with functions to improve the infrastructure of town.", "target": "municipal corporation in Kozhikode district of Kerala, India", "baseline_candidates": ["municipal corporation in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14664334", "label": "Elaphromyia siva", "source": "Elaphromyia siva is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Elaphromyia of the family Tephritidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3081902", "label": "Tony Marchant", "source": "Anthony John Marchant , also known as \"Tippy\" Marchant (born 28 August 1937) is a former Australian track cyclist who along with Ian Browne won the 2000 m tandem event at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne. Marchant had little formal training and only took up the sport at the age of 16 because his friends liked the sport. In 1955, Marchant shot to prominence after only two years in the sport, winning the 500 m time trial and the 5 mile event at the Junior Australian Championships. This resulted him being approached by Browne to team up in early 1956 and they promptly won the tandem event at the national championships to earn national selection. The pair were eliminated after losing their first two races but were given a reprieve when the Soviet Union pair were hospitalised in a crash and forced to withdraw. Thereafter Marchant and Browne were unbeaten and progressed to an unlikely Olympic gold. In 1957, Marchant retired to play Australian rules football, again basing his decision on his friends' interests. In 1958 he made a brief comeback as a professional, but with only sporadic success, he retired in 1961.", "target": "Australian Olympic cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q293309", "label": "Barbara Marianowska", "source": "Barbara Marianowska, née Zabłocka (29 May 1947 – 9 February 2012) was a Polish politician. Barbara Marianowska was born in 1947 in Diddington Resettlement Camp, England. Her parents were soldiers in the Polish Armed Forces in the east. After her arrival in Poland, she lived in Tarnow, Karwodrza and Tuchow. She then moved to Kraków where she completed her secondary education. She holds a master's degree in economics, which she completed at the Academy of Economics in Kraków. Marianowska is married with two sons. In 1980, she became a member of NSZZ Solidarity. During the Cold War, she worked for the underground weekly publication \"Lesser Poland\" in Kraków. Between 1992 and 1994 she was NSZZ's Treasury leader. She has also worked at the highest level in the Treasury at the Chambers of Commerce in Kraków. Marianowska possesses the best of qualifications and is a proficient manager. She is an experienced financial advisor in Cracow as well as an active member of three committees: the National Chamber of Commerce, the Association of Polish Accountants, and the Institute of Public Safety She was elected to the Sejm on 25 September 2005, getting 12,498 votes in 15 Tarnów district as a candidate from the Law and Justice list. She was also a member of Sejm 2001-2005. She died in Koźmice Wielkie, aged 64.", "target": "Polish politician (1947-2012)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15904024", "label": "Colgan Air Flight 3407", "source": "Colgan Air Flight 3407 (marketed as Continental Connection Flight 3407 under a codeshare agreement with Continental Connection), was a scheduled passenger flight from Newark, New Jersey, to Buffalo, New York, which crashed on Thursday, February 12, 2009. The aircraft, a Bombardier Q400, entered an aerodynamic stall from which it did not recover, and crashed into a house at 6038 Long Street in Clarence Center, New York, at 10:17 pm EST (03:17 UTC), killing all 49 passengers and crew on board, as well as one person inside the house.The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) conducted the accident investigation and published a final report on Tuesday, February 2, 2010, which found the probable cause to be the pilots' inappropriate response to the stall warnings. Flight 3407 is the most recent aviation incident involving a U.S.-based airline that resulted in multiple casualties.Families of the accident victims lobbied the U.S. Congress to enact more stringent regulations for regional carriers, and to improve the scrutiny of safe operating procedures and the working conditions of pilots. The Airline Safety and Federal Aviation Administrative Extension Act of 2010 (Public Law 111–216) required some of these regulation changes.", "target": "aviation accident", "baseline_candidates": ["aviation accident"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3816819", "label": "Los Stompers", "source": "Los Stompers are an Irish music group based in Barcelona, Spain. Formed in 1997, the group refers to itself as post-Irish. They have established themselves as a point of reference on the Catalan music scene, developing from Irish folk beginnings towards a more personalised stance expressed by what they call the Barcelona Irish Sound. The group seek to demystify Irish Traditional Music and in general all forms of folk music by drawing on a variety of styles injected with a healthy dose of irony.", "target": "Spanish musical group playing Irish music", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1388933", "label": "Pilimpikou Department", "source": "Pilimpikou is a department or commune of Passoré Province in north central Burkina Faso. Its capital lies at the town of Pilimpikou.", "target": "department of Burkina Faso", "baseline_candidates": ["department of Burkina Faso"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2788345", "label": "Shoreswood", "source": "Shoreswood is a place and civil parish about 6 miles from Berwick-upon-Tweed, in the county of Northumberland, England. The parish includes the hamlets of Shoresdean and Thornton. In 2011 the parish had a population of 148. The parish touches Ancroft, Duddo, Horncliffe, Norham and Ord.", "target": "hamlet and civil parish in Northumberland, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16960187", "label": "Lecture 1", "source": "\"Lecture #1\" is a mixtape released by English rapper Professor Green via his original record label, The Beats. The Mixtape was released on March 18, 2006, long before his mainstream breakthrough with Alive Till I'm Dead. The Mixtape features guest vocals from the likes of Nyomi Gray, Loudmouth, Skinnyman and Chynaman. Three singles were released from the Mixtape: \"Before I Die\", \"Stereotypical Man\" and the double A-side of \"Hard Night Out\" and \"Upper Clapton Dance\". \"Upper Clapton Dance\" later went on to be included as a bonus track on Green's second official studio album, At Your Inconvenience.", "target": "extended play by Professor Green", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5571914", "label": "Glossodia", "source": "Glossodia is a semi-rural suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Glossodia is located 68 kilometres north-west of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of the City of Hawkesbury.", "target": "suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14821977", "label": "Eunidia dolosoides", "source": "Eunidia dolosoides is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Téocchi, Jiroux and Sudre in 2004.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4699905", "label": "Ajmer Jain Temple", "source": "The Ajmer Jain temple, also known as Soniji Ki Nasiyan, is an architecturally rich Jain temple. It was built in the late nineteenth century. The main chamber, known as the Swarna Nagari \"City of Gold\", has several gold-plated wooden figures, depicting several figures in the Jain religion. This golden chamber of the temple uses 1000 kg of gold to carve out a depiction of Ayodhya.Kurt Titze, in his book, \"Jainism: A Pictorial Guide to the Religion of Non-Violence\" (1998, p. 143), writes on Soniji Ki Nasiyan: \"Ajmer's main attraction is - for the Jainas - the prominently situated Nasiayan Digambara Temple, or rather the two-storied Svarana Nagara Hall behind the temple, better known as the Museum. Both the temple and the museum were built and are still owned by the Soni family of Ajmer. The temple, dedicated to Rishabha or Adinatha in 1865, was constructed of red sandstone in a matter of a few years, but it took twenty-five years, from 1870 to 1895, to fashion - by artisans at Jaipur - the thousands of individual parts required to assemble a three-dimensional replica of the story of Rishabha in accordance with an old manuscript by Acharya Jinasena. The thought to have such a three-dimensional model for educational purposes occurred to Seth Moolchand Soni, who was born in 1830, only after the completion of the temple. His death in 1891 prevented him from seeing his ambitious work in its finished state. In many Jaina temples one sees painted or figurative representations of the 'five auspicious events' (pancha-kalyanak).", "target": "building in India", "baseline_candidates": ["Jain temple"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17628879", "label": "Red Like the Sky", "source": "Red Like the Sky (Italian: Rosso come il cielo) is a 2005 Italian coming-of-age drama film written and directed by Cristiano Bortone and starring Luca Capriotti and Paolo Sassanelli. It is based on the childhood experiences of sound editor Mirco Mencacci.The film won the Audience Awards at the São Paulo International Film Festival and at the Sydney Film Festival. It also won the David di Donatello of the Youth.", "target": "2006 film by Cristiano Bortone", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3129337", "label": "chaos game", "source": "In mathematics, the term chaos game originally referred to a method of creating a fractal, using a polygon and an initial point selected at random inside it. The fractal is created by iteratively creating a sequence of points, starting with the initial random point, in which each point in the sequence is a given fraction of the distance between the previous point and one of the vertices of the polygon; the vertex is chosen at random in each iteration. Repeating this iterative process a large number of times, selecting the vertex at random on each iteration, and throwing out the first few points in the sequence, will often (but not always) produce a fractal shape. Using a regular triangle and the factor 1/2 will result in the Sierpinski triangle, while creating the proper arrangement with four points and a factor 1/2 will create a display of a \"Sierpinski Tetrahedron\", the three-dimensional analogue of the Sierpinski triangle. As the number of points is increased to a number N, the arrangement forms a corresponding (N-1)-dimensional Sierpinski Simplex. The term has been generalized to refer to a method of generating the attractor, or the fixed point, of any iterated function system (IFS). Starting with any point x0, successive iterations are formed as xk+1 = fr(xk), where fr is a member of the given IFS randomly selected for each iteration. The iterations converge to the fixed point of the IFS. Whenever x0 belongs to the attractor of the IFS, all iterations xk stay inside the attractor and, with probability 1,.", "target": "method of creating a fractal, using a polygon and an initial point selected at random inside it", "baseline_candidates": ["algorithm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16950036", "label": "1987 Western Soccer Alliance", "source": "Final league standings for the 1987 Western Soccer Alliance season.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2634435", "label": "Forest City London", "source": "FC London is a Canadian semi-professional soccer club based in London, Ontario. The club was founded in 2008 and plays in the League1 Ontario men's and women's divisions. The team plays home games at German Canadian Club of London Field, which seats 1,000 spectators. The team was founded in 2008 as Forest City London Soccer Club, and were a member of the Premier Development League from 2009 to 2015; they won the 2012 PDL title, their first championship during this time. They re-branded to FC London following their move to League1 Ontario in 2016, being officially named Football Club London. In 2017, the club partnered with Toronto FC. FC London's youth teams were renamed London TFC, while the senior team retained the name FC London, but changed its colours to red to match those of Toronto FC.", "target": "football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43316242", "label": "Richard C. Thompson", "source": "Richard Charles Thompson is a marine biologist who researches marine litter. At the University of Plymouth he is director of the Marine Institute; professor of Marine Biology; and leads the International Marine Litter Research Unit. Thompson coined the term \"microplastics\" in 2004.", "target": "British marine biologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q516876", "label": "Poon Lok Yan", "source": "Isis Poon Lok Yan (Chinese: 潘樂恩; Jyutping: pun1 lok6 jan1, born 22 August 1991) is a badminton player from Hong Kong. She competed at the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics in women's doubles event. Together with Tse Ying Suet, she has received her best competitive results in Women's Doubles. Their breakout performance was at the 2011 India Super Series where they reached the semifinals. They matched that result at the 2011 Japan Super Series and qualified for the 2012 London Olympics. At 2012 Japan Super Series, she together with Tse Ying Suet won the champion of women's doubles by beating 4 Japan pairs consecutively.", "target": "badminton player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5226668", "label": "Dasht-e Ashkara", "source": "Dasht-e Ashkara (Persian: دشت اشكارا, also Romanized as Dasht-e Ashkārā) is a village in Ashkara Rural District, Fareghan District, Hajjiabad County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,240, in 277 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7527900", "label": "Sir John Lowther, 2nd Baronet, of Swillington", "source": "Sir John Henry Lowther, 2nd Baronet (23 March 1793 – 23 June 1868) was a Tory MP in the British Parliament. He was the eldest son of Sir John Lowther, 1st Baronet, whom he succeeded on 11 May 1844. He represented Cockermouth in 1816–1826, Wigtown Burghs in 1826–1831, Cockermouth again in 1831–1832, and York in 1835–1847. He then served as High Sheriff of Yorkshire for 1852–53.He died unmarried, and was succeeded by his brother Charles Hugh Lowther.", "target": "British politician (1793-1868)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10538417", "label": "Ithytrichia", "source": "Ithytrichia is a genus of insects belonging to the family Hydroptilidae.The species of this genus are found in Europe and America.Species: Ithytrichia aquila Gonzalez & Malicky, 1988 Ithytrichia bosniaca Murgoci, Botnariuec & Botosaneanu, 1948.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7850252", "label": "Tsuru-bunkadaigaku-mae Station", "source": "Tsurubunkadaigakumae Station (都留文科大学前駅, Tsurubunkadaigakumae-eki) is a railway station on the Fujikyuko Line in the city of Tsuru, Yamanashi, Japan, operated by Fuji Kyuko (Fujikyu).", "target": "railway station in Tsuru, Yamanashi prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9288949", "label": "International Braille Chess Association", "source": "The International Braille Chess Association (IBCA) is organization for blind and visually impaired chess players. The IBCA is a FIDE-affiliated chess organization as well as a part of the International Blind Sports Federation. The International Braille Chess Association originated informally in 1951 with the organization (by Reginald Walter Bonham) of the first international correspondence chess tournament for blind players; the tournament included 20 players representing 10 countries. It first organized an over-the-board tournament in 1958, with representatives from seven countries. Today, it has grown to encompass over 50 member nations around the world. The IBCA hosts two major competitions: the Blind Chess Olympiad and the Blind World Chess Championship.", "target": "organization for blind and visually impaired chess players", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4827048", "label": "Tekçam", "source": "Tekçam is a village in the District of Hamamözü, Amasya Province, Turkey.", "target": "köy in Hamamözü, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6175121", "label": "Jeff Tallon", "source": "Jeff Tallon is a Canadian contemporary artist who presently lives and works in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He is noted for synthesizing mobile technology with traditional oil painting and publicly displayed Canada’s first QR Code painting at the 2010 Toronto International Art Fair.", "target": "Canadian artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1808438", "label": "Chulyshman", "source": "The Chulyshman (Russian: Чулышман) is a river in Altai Republic in Russia. The river is 241 kilometres (150 mi) long, and its drainage basin covers 16,800 square kilometres (6,500 sq mi). The Chulyshman flows into Lake Teletskoye. It freezes up during late October through early December and stays icebound until late March through early May. Its main tributary is the Bashkaus.", "target": "river in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13416294", "label": "Steiria", "source": "Steiria (Ancient Greek: Στείρια) was a deme of ancient Attica on the east coast, between Prasiae and Brauron. Stiris in Phocis is said to have been founded by the inhabitants of this deme. The road from Attica to Steiria and the harbour of Prasiae was called the Στειριακὴ ὁδός. Steiria was the deme of Theramenes and Thrasybulus. Steiria is located west of Porto Rafti.", "target": "ancient Athenian deme", "baseline_candidates": ["deme"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2582559", "label": "Batkhela", "source": "Batkhela (Pashto: بټ خيله, Urdu: بٹ خیلہ) is the main tehsil, city and capital of Malakand District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. According to the 6th Population & Housing Census - 2017 Census of Pakistan, the population of Batkhela was recorded 68,200. Batkhela is a popular business city in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. One water canal that pours into a small dam in Jabban area is main source of electricity production. Batkhela General Civil Headquarters Hospital is the main hospital of the district Malakand. Batkhela main bazaar is more than 2 kilometres long; there are no intersections (junctions) so no traffic lights. Therefore, it is the longest bazaar in Pakistan also in Asia that has no traffic lights or junctions (intersections) on it.", "target": "human settlement in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q977", "label": "Djibouti", "source": "Djibouti, officially the Republic of Djibouti, is a country located in the Horn of Africa. It is bordered by Somalia in the south, Ethiopia in the southwest, Eritrea in the north, and the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden in the east. Across the Gulf of Aden is Yemen. The country has a total area of 23,200 km2 (8,958 sq mi).In antiquity, the territory together with Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somaliland was part of the Land of Punt. Nearby Zeila, now in Somaliland, was the seat of the medieval Adal and Ifat Sultanates. In the late 19th century, the colony of French Somaliland was established following treaties signed by the ruling Dir Somali sultans with the French and its railroad to Dire Dawa (and later Addis Ababa) allowed it to quickly supersede Zeila as the port for southern Ethiopia and the Ogaden. It was subsequently renamed to the French Territory of the Afars and the Issas in 1967. A decade later, the Djiboutian people voted for independence. This officially marked the establishment of the Republic of Djibouti, named after its capital city. The new state joined the United Nations the same year, on 20 September 1977. In the early 1990s, tensions over government representation led to armed conflict, which ended in a power-sharing agreement in 2000 between the ruling party and the opposition.Djibouti is a multi-ethnic nation with a population of over 921,804 inhabitants (the smallest in mainland Africa). French and Arabic are the country's two official languages, Afar and Somali are national languages. About 94%.", "target": "sovereign state in Africa", "baseline_candidates": ["country", "sovereign state"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4570817", "label": "1962 Oregon State Beavers football team", "source": "The 1962 Oregon State Beavers football team represented Oregon State University as an independent during the 1962 NCAA University Division football season. In their eighth season under head coach Tommy Prothro, the Beavers compiled a 9–2 record and outscored their opponents 279 to 148. They played three home games on campus at Parker Stadium in Corvallis and three at Multnomah Stadium in Portland. Quarterback Terry Baker won the Heisman Trophy, Maxwell Award, and was the Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year. The team captain was guard George Gnoss and the Beavers won the Liberty Bowl over Villanova in Philadelphia. The Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) disbanded in the spring of 1959; this was the fourth of five years that Oregon State and Oregon competed as independents.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56735513", "label": "8th Psychological Operations Group (Airborne)", "source": "The 8th Psychological Operations Group (Airborne) or 8th POG(A) is one of the United States Army's active Psychological Operations units alongside the 4th Psychological Operations Group (Airborne). The unit was activated August 26, 2011. The activation ceremony was held on Meadows Field at the U.S. Army Special Operations Command headquarters. Lt. Gen. John F. Mulholland, Jr., served as a host. The 8th Group assumed responsibility for the 1st, 5th and 9th Psychological Operations battalions. The unit is based at Fort Bragg, North Carolina and is a part of the 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne). As of June 2015, both the 4th POG(A) and the new 8th POG(A) are operational. However, the group's former parent unit (originally envisioned as a Brigadier General-level command) known as Military Information Support Operations Command (MISOC) (Airborne) and created at the same time as 8th MISG, in 2011, enjoyed only a very brief operational existence before being dissolved in 2014. The MISOC(A) exists now only as a historical footnote. The 4th POG(A) and 8th POG(A) were subsequently reassigned under the newly established 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne) (SFC(A)), under U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC).", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16953800", "label": "MPI MP14B", "source": "The MPI MP14B is a low-emissions diesel switcher locomotive built by MotivePower. It is powered by two Cummins QSK19C I6 engines with each one developing 700 horsepower (522 kW) and creating a total power output of 1,400 horsepower (1,040 kW).The MPI MP14B is nearly identical to the MPI MP21B except that it has one fewer engine.", "target": "model of American diesel-electric locomotive", "baseline_candidates": ["locomotive class", "diesel-electric locomotive"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3967314", "label": "Spurius Servilius Priscus", "source": "Spurius Servilius Structus was a Roman consul in 476 BC.Following their defeat of the Roman army at the Battle of the Cremera in 477 BC, the Veientes marched on Rome and had occupied the Janiculum. There they remained at the beginning of Servilius' consulship. Both consuls, Servilius and his colleague Aulus Verginius, remained in Rome to deal with the threat.The Veientes marched from the Janiculum and crossed the Tiber, and assaulted the camp of Servilius. His force successfully repulsed the Veientes, who retreated to the Janiculum. The following morning Servilius' army took position at the foot of the Janiculum, and marched up the slope to attack the enemy. The battle went badly for the Romans, until a force led by the other consul Verginius attacked the Veientes from the rear, whereupon the Veientes were cut off and soundly defeated.In 475 BC, immediately after Servilius' term as consul had ended, the tribunes Lucius Caedicius and Titus Statius brought charges against him for his poor conduct of the war against the Veientes. According to Livy, Servilius spoke boldly in defence of the charges. In particular, Servilius upbraided the assembly for convicting Titus Menenius Lanatus the previous year, leading to his death from shame. Servilius' consular colleague, Verginius, also spoke in Servilius' defence, and Servilius was acquitted. In the same year Servilius served as legate under the consul Publius Valerius Poplicola.", "target": "5th century BC Roman senator, consul and general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2305536", "label": "Kazungula", "source": "Kazungula is a small border town in Zambia, lying on the north bank of the Zambezi River about 70 kilometres (45 mi) west of Livingstone on the M10 Road. At Kazungula, the territories of four countries (Zambia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Namibia) come close to meeting at a quadripoint. It has now been agreed that the international boundaries contain two tripoints joined by a short line roughly 150 metres (490 ft) long forming a boundary between Zambia and Botswana, now crossed by the Kazungula Bridge. The ever-shifting river channels and the lack of any known agreements addressing the issue before 2000 led to some uncertainty in the past as to whether or not a quadripoint legally existed. Thus, Botswana has only about 150 metres (490 ft) of river frontage on the Zambezi, being sandwiched on the south bank between the extreme tip of Namibia's Caprivi Strip and Zimbabwe. The Chobe River, which divides Namibia and Botswana, enters the Zambezi near Kazungula. Kazungula is an important trade destination to both Zambia and Botswana.", "target": "human settlement in Zambia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "border town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16959704", "label": "Lake Barracoota", "source": "Lake Barracoota is a naturally forming permanent freshwater lake located in the East Gippsland region in the Australian state of Victoria. The lake is located entirely within the Croajingolong National Park and when full, the surface area of the lake is 240 hectares (590 acres). The eastern shoreline of the lake lie against a granite spur of the Howe Range but all other shorelines are backed by dune sand or swamp deposits. Beaches at the eastern and western shores and spits along the southern shore are formed from sand blown into the lake from coastal dunes and which is being moved by wave and wave currents. Sand is spilling into the lake from active parabolic dunes at two points along the southern shore. Other lake shorelines are fringed by Baumea rubiginosa, Eleocharis sphacelata and Trigloching procera, with Phragmites australis at points of fresh water inflow. Behind the reeds and sedges are extensive thickets.", "target": "lake in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6557749", "label": "Lisa-Marie Allen", "source": "Lisa-Marie Allen (born September 16, 1960 in Glendale, California) is an American former figure skater. In 1979, she won gold at the inaugural Skate America (then titled Norton Skate). She is also the 1978 Skate Canada International champion, 1975 Nebelhorn Trophy champion, 1979 NHK Trophy Silver Medalist, and a four-time U.S. national medalist (three silver, one bronze). She competed at the 1980 Winter Olympics, placing fifth. After retiring from amateur competition, Allen became the World Professional champion in 1990 and American Open Professional champion in 1997. She was the assistant choreographer for the feature film Blades of Glory (as well as making a cameo appearance) and assistant choreographer for the opening and closing ceremonies of the Salt Lake Olympic Games.", "target": "American figure skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5019059", "label": "Caldermeade railway station", "source": "Caldermeade was a railway station on the South Gippsland line in South Gippsland, Victoria. The station operated until the 1960s. None of this station remains intact, however the track still in reasonable condition.", "target": "former railway station in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station", "former railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1801725", "label": "Lampung people", "source": "The Lampung or Lampungese (Ulun Lampung (in Lampung Api); Jamma Lappung (in Lampung Nyo)) are an indigenous ethnic group native to Lampung and some parts of South Sumatra (especially in Martapura region of Empat Lawang Regency, Muaradua district of South Ogan Komering Ulu Regency, Kayu Agung district of Ogan Komering Ilir Regency, Tanjung Raja district of Ogan Ilir Regency), Bengkulu (in Merpas district of Kaur Regency), as well as in the southwest coast of Banten (in Cikoneng of Serang Regency). They speak the Lampung language, a Lampungic language estimated to have 1.5 million speakers.", "target": "indigenous group native to Lampung", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group", "Indonesians", "ethnic group in Indonesia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16735371", "label": "Tatyana Zhistova", "source": "Tatyana Zhistova is a Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the mid-1980s. She won two silver medals at the 1986 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Montreal, earning them in the K-2 500 m and K-4 500 m events.", "target": "Soviet canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54980", "label": "Mąż swojej żony", "source": "Husband of His Wife (Polish: Mąż swojej żony) is a Polish comedy from 1960 directed by Stanisław Bareja and based upon the play by Jerzy Jurandot.", "target": "1960 film by Jakub Goldberg, Stanisław Bareja", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19718456", "label": "Mahawewa Divisional Secretariat", "source": "Mahawewa Divisional Secretariat is a Divisional Secretariat of Puttalam District, of North Western Province, Sri Lanka.", "target": "Divisional Secretariat in North Western Province, Sri Lanka", "baseline_candidates": ["third-level administrative country subdivision", "human settlement", "Divisional Secretariat of Sri Lanka"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6789352", "label": "Matt Sloan", "source": "Matthew Sloan (born March 24) is an American voice actor, director, writer, and YouTuber from Madison, Wisconsin. He and his friend Aaron Yonda are notable as the co-creators of the web series Chad Vader: Day Shift Manager, in which he voices the title character. Additionally, he appears in season one as the main antagonist, Clint. He later appeared in the first few episodes of the second series as Champion J. Pepper, Clint’s father. Since Chad Vader, he has gone on to voice Darth Vader in various Star Wars media as the sound double for James Earl Jones. He hosts a movie reviewing and discussion show on YouTube called Welcome to the Basement with his friend Craig Johnson. Furthermore, he leads regularly with colleague friend Aaron Yonda in the web series Beer and Board Games.", "target": "American director, voice actor, comedian and YouTuber", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54086344", "label": "Peak", "source": "Peak is one of the 15 constituencies of the Central and Western District Council, Hong Kong. The seat elects one member of the council every four years. The seat is currently held by Jeremy Young Chit-on of the Liberal Party. The constituency covers the Victoria Peak and Mid-Levels area with the estimated population of 19,447.", "target": "constituency of the Central and Western District Council of Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["Council Constituency of Central and Western District"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14708609", "label": "Mount Zion Baptist Church (Tulsa)", "source": "Mount Zion Baptist Church is a historically significant church in the Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 5, 2008. The original building was burned during the Tulsa race massacre on June 1, 1921. According to the Tulsa Preservation Commission, \"... Mount Zion Baptist Church remains a testimony to the perseverance and tenacity of its congregants and the black community in Greenwood.\" The church building was rebuilt in 1952 on its original site.", "target": "church building in Oklahoma, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49363331", "label": "Rainsburg", "source": "Rainsburg is a borough in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 133 at the 2010 census.", "target": "borough of Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["borough of Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49277004", "label": "Zhongtie Township", "source": "Zhongtie Township (simplified Chinese: 中铁乡; pinyin: Zhōngtiĕ Xiāng; literally China Railway Township) is a township in southeast Xinghai County, Hainan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Qinghai, China with its administrative area bordering Tongde County to the east and Maqên County of Guoluo Prefecture to the south, Longzang Township to the west and Qushang Township to the north. Alternative Latin names for Zhongtie Township include Jilang, Kyiling, Zhongtie, Zhongtie Xiang, ji lang, zhong tie, zhong tie xiang. Alternative Mandarin names include 中铁 and 吉浪.Zhongtie Township has mix between a monsoon-influenced subarctic climate (Dwc) and a continental climate on the Köppen climate classification system.Zhongtie Township has jurisdiction over the following 7 villages: Duzong Village Jilang Village Qiaqing Village Douhoutang Village Ranmao Village Longwulong Village Heminzu Village or 'Ethnic Village' (Zhongtie Township's local government operates from here).", "target": "township in Qinghai, People's Republic of China", "baseline_candidates": ["township of the People's Republic of China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6008235", "label": "Imran Shah", "source": "Imran Shah (born 25 September 1988) is a field hockey player from Pakistan. He plays as a goal keeper.", "target": "Pakistani field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39078714", "label": "Scott Frantz", "source": "Scott A. Frantz (born June 7, 1996) is an American former college football player who was an offensive tackle for the Kansas State Wildcats. He earned second-team all-conference honors in the Big 12 as a senior in 2019. Frantz attended Free State High School in Lawrence, Kansas, before committing to play at Kansas State University. In 2017, Frantz publicly came out as gay, joining My-King Johnson as two of the first openly gay players in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). Later that same year, Frantz became the first openly gay college football player to play in a game for an FBS school. He started 51 straight games for the Wildcats and was named second-team All-Big-12 in his senior year in 2019.He went undrafted in the 2020 NFL draft.", "target": "American-football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6516482", "label": "Leesville", "source": "Leesville is an unincorporated community in Campbell County, in the U. S. state of Virginia.The town of Leesville is situated at the confluence of Goose Creek and the Staunton River, just below the lower dam of Leesville Lake. The town used to be a thriving regional hub in the late 19h century, having its own train station, post office, stores, and even a hotel. It's heyday was short-lived however as the automobile largely replaced train travel and the rail stop was relocated to \"Lynch's\", becoming Lynch Station, and then later relocated to Altavista, Virginia. Mount Airy was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.", "target": "unincorporated community in Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q835059", "label": "Pál Bornemissza", "source": "Pál Bornemissza was the Roman Catholic bishop of Transylvania in the Kingdom of Hungary from 1553 and 1556. King Ferdinand I appointed him to the episcopal see after years of vacancy, although the Transylvanian nobles had proposed an other candidate, Márton Kecseti. Bornemissza could not stop the spread of Reformation in his diocese and he left Transylvania in 1554. Two years later, he abdicated the bishopric. After his abdication, the Transylvanian bishopric was left vacant for more than 100 years.", "target": "politician (1499-1579)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1557426", "label": "MCH Arena", "source": "The MCH Arena is an association football stadium situated in the south of Herning, Denmark, that is part of MCH Messecenter Herning complex and owned by MCH Group A/S. It has been the home ground of FC Midtjylland since March 2004. An integrated part of the arena is a main building housing the club's administration and offices for the official fan club (named Black Wolves), and includes player and referee facilities, a restaurant, a VIP lounge, press and sky boxes, and a club shop (named Ulveshoppen). The total capacity during domestic matches is 11,432 spectators with 7,070 seatings (western and eastern grand stands and partly north stand) making it the 9th largest football stadium in Denmark. At international FIFA and UEFA matches, the capacity of the four covered single-tiered stands is reduced to 9,430, when the terraces at the north and south stands are converted to an all-seater mode. The stadium's current attendance record of 11,763 spectators dates back to a 2007–08 Danish Superliga match on 11 November 2007, when FC Midtjylland drew 2–2 against FC Copenhagen.During the construction period and the first couple of months after the official opening on 27 March 2004, it was called Stadion ved Messecenter Herning (or Messecenter Herning Stadion). On 5 August 2004, it was announced that Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) had acquired the naming rights of the stadium in a sponsorship arrangement, and the stadium was officially known as SAS Arena until 30 June 2009 — the first sponsorship of its kind in Denmark. The current name, MCH Arena, was.", "target": "football stadium in Denmark", "baseline_candidates": ["association football venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4492640", "label": "Irwin Freundlich", "source": "Irwin Freundlich (1908–1977) was a prominent teacher at Juilliard starting in 1935. He studied with James Friskin and Edward Steuermann at the Institute of Musical Art, which merged with the Juilliard Graduate School in 1926 to become the current Juilliard School of Music. His wife, Lillian Freundlich (13 March 1912 – 1999) was a graduate of Juilliard and taught at the Peabody Conservatory of Music. The husband and wife team performed recitals together featuring pieces for one piano for 4 hands.", "target": "American musician (1908-1977)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5871031", "label": "history of veterinary medicine in Pennsylvania", "source": "The history of veterinary medicine in Pennsylvania officially began with the development of the profession in the early 1800s.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2700607", "label": "Cardioglossa cyaneospila", "source": "Cardioglossa cyaneospila is a species of frog in the family Arthroleptidae. It is endemic to the Albertine Rift area in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, southwestern Uganda, Rwanda, and southwestern Burundi. It was described in 1950 by Raymond Laurent based on specimens collected in 1949. No new records were published until 2011. Recent research has uncovered both old unpublished records and several new records, and the conservation status was changed from \"data deficient\" to \"near threatened\" in 2016. Common names Bururi long-fingered frog and Mukuzira long-fingered frog have been coined for this species.", "target": "species of amphibian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q875282", "label": "Moguai", "source": "André Tegeler (born 9 August 1973), known by his stage name Moguai (stylised as MOGUAI), is a German music producer and DJ. In the early 1990s, he took the alias Moguai and began organising his own club nights and parties in Ruhrgebiet and Münsterland. He became one of the first techno DJs in Germany, sharing a platform with the likes of Paul van Dyk, Westbam and Sven Väth. In more recent years, however, Moguai's sound has developed to include a combination of tech-house, progressive house, big beat and electro house. He has also worked in more mainstream areas of the music industry, producing for the likes of the Sugababes, Girls Aloud and 2Raumwohnung, which earned him double platinum and gold disc awards.", "target": "German DJ and music producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56974252", "label": "Nancy Bertler", "source": "Nancy Bertler is an Antarctic researcher, who has led major initiatives to investigate climate history using Antarctic ice cores, and best known for her leadership of the Roosevelt Island Climate Evolution Programme (RICE). She is an associate professor at the Antarctic Research Centre at Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand.", "target": "Antarctic researcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28509171", "label": "Ulakh-An", "source": "Ulakh-An (Russian: Улах-Ан) is a rural locality (a selo), the only inhabited locality, and the administrative center of Zhersky Rural Okrug of Khangalassky District in the Sakha Republic, Russia, located 16 kilometers (9.9 mi) from Pokrovsk, the administrative center of the district. Its population as of the 2010 Census was 838, up from 834 recorded during the 2002 Census.", "target": "human settlement in Khangalassky District, Sakha Republic, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6145714", "label": "James Winchester", "source": "James Winchester (February 26, 1752 – July 26, 1826) was an officer in the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783) and a brigadier general during the War of 1812 (1812–1815). He commanded the American forces at the Battle of Frenchtown, which led to the Massacre of the River Raisin.", "target": "American military figure and politician (1752–1826)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86798", "label": "Ruth Weiss", "source": "Ruth F. Weiss (December 11, 1908 – March 6, 2006), also known by her Chinese name, Wèi Lùshī (Chinese: 魏璐诗), was an Austrian-Chinese educator and journalist. She was the last surviving European eyewitness of the Chinese Communist Revolution and the beginnings of the People’s Republic of China.", "target": "Chinese-Austrian journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q538493", "label": "Seekirch", "source": "Seekirch (German pronunciation: [ˈzeːkɪʁç]) is a town in the district of Biberach in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.", "target": "municipality in Baden-Württemberg, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26972987", "label": "Priskila Siahaya", "source": "Priskila Siahaya (born 7 December 1996) is an Indonesian badminton player. She is now representing Germany in the international tournaments.", "target": "badminton player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27828444", "label": "Daviesia microcarpa", "source": "Daviesia microcarpa, commonly known as Norseman pea, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to two small areas of inland Western Australia. It is a sprawling shrub with tangled stems and crowded, needle-shaped, sharply-pointed phyllodes, and orange and pinkish-red flowers.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5606713", "label": "Gregorio Barradas Miravete", "source": "Gregorio Barradas Miravete (8 February 1982 – 8 November 2010) was a Mexican politician for the National Action Party. He was born in Juan Rodríguez Clara, Veracruz, in 1982. On 8 November 2010, Miravete was kidnapped and killed in Isla, Veracruz.", "target": "Mexican politician (1982-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q129631", "label": "Athens Charter", "source": "The Athens Charter for the Restoration of Historic Monuments is a seven-point manifesto adopted at the First International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Monuments in Athens in 1931.", "target": "manifesto on restoration of historic monuments", "baseline_candidates": ["manifesto"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7679446", "label": "Talgua River", "source": "The Talgua River (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtalɣwa]) or Río Talgua is a river in the Catacamas of Honduras.", "target": "river in Honduras", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50934910", "label": "Gorum", "source": "Gorum, or Parengi, is a nearly-extinct minor Munda language of India.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "Munda"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q938447", "label": "Gabriel Mendoza", "source": "Gabriel Rafael Mendoza Ibarra (born 22 May 1968 in Graneros), commonly known as Coca Mendoza for his similarity with the television actress Coca Guazzini, is a former Chilean footballer that played in the position of right back and central midfielder. Mendoza was member of Colo-Colo's historic squad that achieved 1991 Copa Libertadores.", "target": "Chilean footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7451661", "label": "Seoul Girls' High School", "source": "Seoul Girls' High School (서울여자고등학교) is a high school located in Yeomni-dong, Mapo district, Seoul. It was established in 1958 as Mapo Girls' High School, and took its present name in 1960. The school was divided into separate junior high and high schools in 1968.", "target": "public school in Seoul, South Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["girls' high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17241447", "label": "Lampranthus zeyheri", "source": "Lampranthus zeyheri, the trailing iceplant (a name it shares with other members of its family), is a species of flowering plant in the family Aizoaceae, native to the eastern Cape Provinces of South Africa. It is occasionally planted as an ornamental.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49746075", "label": "Eek Airport", "source": "Eek Airport (IATA: EEK, ICAO: PAEE, FAA LID: EEK) is a state-owned public-use airport serving the city of Eek in the Bethel Census Area of the U.S. state of Alaska.As per Federal Aviation Administration records, this airport had 3,759 passenger boardings (enplanements) in calendar year 2007, an increase of 16% from the 3,241 enplanements in 2006.", "target": "airport in Alaska, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["commercial traffic aerodrome", "airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26265923", "label": "Thonakal Gopi", "source": "Thonakal Gopi aka Thanackal Gopi (born 24 May 1988) is an Indian athlete who has qualified to represent India at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the marathon event. He is also in the Indian Army. He is the first and so far the only Indian athlete to win gold medal in Asian Marathon Championship.", "target": "Indian athlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4681746", "label": "Adelaide Miethke", "source": "Adelaide Laetitia \"Addie\" Miethke, (8 June 1881 – 4 February 1962), was a South Australian educator and teacher who was pivotal in the formation of the School of the Air using the existing Royal Flying Doctor Service radio network.", "target": "Australian schoolteacher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26197315", "label": "Seye Ogunlewe", "source": "Adeseye \"Seye\" Akinola Ogunlewe (born 30 August 1991) is a Nigerian track and field sprinter who specialises in the 100 metres. He was a finalist in the 100 m and 4 × 100 m at the 2015 All-Africa Games. He won the 100 m at the Nigerian Championships in 2015 and 2016.He was born in Lagos, Nigeria, the last child of Adeseye and Kemi Ogunlewe. He attended Atlantic Hall School, Epe. He initially started out playing football but was advised to sprint by his teacher. He moved to Ireland in 2008 and won the Irish Schools Championships in 2009 and 2010. Ireland and Nigeria were in a race to get him to represent them at the World Junior Championships in 2010. He however eventually missed the championships. He is a Law and Politics graduate of the University of Essex. He placed second in the 60 m at the British Universities & Colleges Sport (BUCS) Indoor championships in 2011 behind Sven Knipphals. He remained the second-place finisher in 2012 and 2013 but eventually won the title in 2014. He was also the 2013 BUCS champion in the 100 m. In 2014, he was not successful in defending his title as he placed second behind Adam Gemili.Ogunlewe represented his country at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, running in the 200 m. He finished 4th in his heat and did not progress to the semifinals. He ran the anchor leg for Nigeria in the 4 × 100 m final at the 2015 Brazzaville African Games. The team finished second but.", "target": "Nigerian male sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86000003", "label": "Mucenieks", "source": "Mucenieks (Old orthography: Mutzeneek; feminine: Muceniece) is a Latvian occupational surname, derived from the Latvian word for \"cooper\". Individuals with the surname include: Aina Muceniece (1924–2010), Latvian doctor, inventor of the RIGVIR virotherapy Guntars Mucenieks, Latvian musician from Līvi Aivars Mucenieks, mayor of Ventspils Municipality, Latvia (as of 2013) Elvijs Mucenieks, Latvian sidecarcrosser Jēkabs Mucenieks, Brand designer.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20311706", "label": "2005 in Rwanda", "source": "The following lists events that happened during 2005 in Rwanda.", "target": "Rwanda-related events during the year of 2005", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4819229", "label": "Auburn", "source": "Auburn is an unincorporated community in Wake County, North Carolina, United States, just southeast of Raleigh. It lies approximately halfway between Garner and Clayton along Garner Road, a former alignment of US 70. The borders of the community are not well defined, but it is centered along Garner Road between Auburn Church Road and Guy Road.", "target": "community in North Carolina, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25619655", "label": "Leiktho", "source": "Leiktho (Burmese: လိပ်သိုမြို့) is a town in Thandaunggyi Township, Hpa-an District, in Kayin State, Myanmar. In the 2014 census, the town had a population of 48606.", "target": "Human settlement in Myanmar", "baseline_candidates": ["human-geographic territorial entity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4776785", "label": "Antonio Martorell", "source": "Antonio (\"Toño\") Martorell Cardona (born 18 April 1939) is a Puerto Rican painter, graphic artist and writer. He regularly exhibits in Puerto Rico and the United States and participates in arts events around the world. He spends his time between his workshops in Ponce, Hato Rey, and New York City, his presentations worldwide and his academic work in Cayey, Puerto Rico.", "target": "Puerto Rican painter, graphic artist, writer and radio and television personality", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14501885", "label": "Trechus chalybeus", "source": "Epaphius chalybeus is a species of beetle in the family Carabidae. It is found in North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31177990", "label": "New hermeneutic", "source": "New hermeneutic is the theory and methodology of interpretation (hermeneutics) to understand biblical texts through existentialism. The essence of new hermeneutic emphasizes not only the existence of language but also the fact that language is eventualized in the history of individual life. This is called the event of language. Ernst Fuchs, Gerhard Ebeling, and James M. Robinson are the scholars who represent the new hermeneutics. And it is said that language event (German: Sprachereignis, the word event) occurs continuously, not that the interpreter insists on the text, but the text continually asserts the interpreter. Fuchs' concern is not to ask for the meaning of the text, but to learn how to listen to unobtrusive language about human beings' existence according to the hermeneutical help given with the text itself. Fuchs' achievement lay in bringing the insights of Karl Barth, Rudolf Bultmann, and Martin Heidegger into fruitful conjunction. He sought to bridge Barth's Calvinist emphasis on the revealed Word of God with Rudolf Bultmann's Lutheran emphasis on the nature of human existence before God by employing a phenomenology of language derived in part from Heidegger's later position, arguing that both human existence and the being of God are ultimately linguistic-made available in language - and that theology is thus properly \"faith's doctrine of language\"(Sprachlehre des Glaubens). Theology's task is essentially hermeneutical, i.e., theology translates Scripture into contemporary terms and contemporary existence into scriptural terms. Fuchs' interest is language event with existential philosophy. Conversely, the reality of God's love is verbalized in Jesus' word and deeds recorded in.", "target": "theory of biblical interpretation", "baseline_candidates": ["theory"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4985122", "label": "Budki, Łuków County", "source": "Budki [ˈbutki] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Krzywda, within Łuków County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) west of Krzywda, 23 km (14 mi) south-west of Łuków, and 69 km (43 mi) north-west of the regional capital Lublin.", "target": "village in Lublin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q498079", "label": "Pretty Rhythm", "source": "Pretty Rhythm (プリティーリズム, Puritī Rizumu) is a Japanese multimedia franchise produced by Syn Sophia and Takara Tomy Arts aimed at girls in elementary school. The Pretty Rhythm franchise was first launched in July 2010 with the rhythm and dress-up arcade game Pretty Rhythm: Mini Skirt. After the original Pretty Rhythm games ended service in July 2014, Takara Tomy began publishing the PriPara spin-off series from 2014 to 2018. It was then followed up by Kiratto Pri Chan in 2018, with all series grouped under the collective name Pretty Series (プリティーシリーズ, Puritī Shirīzu). A spinoff media franchise, King of Prism, was launched in 2016 focusing on the male characters featured in the 2013 anime Pretty Rhythm: Rainbow Live, which was aimed at an older female audience. The popularity of the series has led to several anime and manga adaptations. In addition, the Pretty Rhythm franchise has also inspired a junior apparel brand, Prism Stone. In 2012, one of their fashion events previously held the Guinness World Records for having the most models modeling on the catwalk.", "target": "arcade game series", "baseline_candidates": ["media franchise"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27989279", "label": "Railroad Wash", "source": "Railroad Wash is a tributary ephemeral stream or wash (or arroyo) of Gold Gulch in Cochise County, Arizona. Its mouth is below its confluence with Gold Gulch, at an elevation of 3,852 feet / 1,174 meters near Creighton Reservoir. Its source is located at an elevation of 4,439 feet, at 32°20′16″N 109°44′34″W on a hill on the south side of Railroad Pass.", "target": "Waterway in Cochise County, Arizona", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3464872", "label": "1928–29 Montreal Canadiens season", "source": "The 1928–29 Montreal Canadiens season was the team's 20th season, and 12th in the National Hockey League (NHL). The team repeated its first-place finish in the Canadian Division and qualified for the playoffs. The Canadiens lost in the semi-finals against the Boston Bruins.", "target": "NHL hockey team season", "baseline_candidates": ["ice hockey team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2408770", "label": "Javier Aquino", "source": "Javier Ignacio Aquino Carmona (Spanish pronunciation: [xaˈβjeɾ aˈkino], born 11 February 1990) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Liga MX club Tigres UANL. He is an Olympic gold medalist.Aquino made his debut with Cruz Azul in 2010, playing in over 70 league matches until his transfer to Spanish Liga Adelante club Villarreal in January 2013, with whom he gained promotion to La Liga that same season. In 2014, he was loaned out to Rayo Vallecano. After a quiet performance with Rayo Vallecano, in 2015 he returned to Mexico to join Tigres UANL. Aquino has been called up to the Mexico U-23 national team, where he was a part of the squads playing at the 2011 Copa América, the 2011 Pan American Games, and the 2012 Summer Olympics, where Mexico won the gold medal. He made his debut with the senior national team in 2011, and participated in the 2013 and 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup, as well as the 2014 and 2018 FIFA World Cup.", "target": "Mexican footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7201436", "label": "Planorbidella depressa", "source": "Planorbidella depressa is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Neomphalidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56514791", "label": "Combahee River", "source": "The Combahee River ( kəm-BEE) is a short blackwater river in the southern Lowcountry region of South Carolina formed at the confluence of the Salkehatchie and Little Salkehatchie rivers near the Islandton community of Colleton County, South Carolina. Part of its lower drainage basin combines with the Ashepoo River and the Edisto River to form the ACE Basin The Combahee empties into Saint Helena Sound near Beaufort, which in turn empties into the Atlantic Ocean.", "target": "river in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q212501", "label": "Grove, Germany", "source": "Grove is a municipality in the district of Lauenburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1710850", "label": "Luís de Almeida Sampaio", "source": "Luís de Almeida Sampaio (Portuguese pronunciation: [luˈiʃ dɨ aɫˈmɐjdɐ sɐ̃ˈpaju] (listen)) (born Caetano Luís Pequito de Almeida Sampaio, December 16, 1957 in Porto, Portugal) is a Portuguese career diplomat. He currently serves as the Permanent Representative of Portugal in the North Atlantic Council, the principal political decision-making body within NATO.", "target": "Ambassador, Portuguese diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7922298", "label": "Vernonia School District 47J v. Acton", "source": "Vernonia School District 47J v. Acton, 515 U.S. 646 (1995), was a U.S. Supreme Court decision which upheld the constitutionality of random drug testing regimen implemented by the local public schools in Vernonia, Oregon. Under that regimen, student-athletes were required to submit to random drug testing before being allowed to participate in sports. During the season, 10% of all athletes were selected at random for testing. The Supreme Court held that although the tests were searches under the Fourth Amendment, they were reasonable in light of the schools' interest in preventing teenage drug use.", "target": "United States Supreme Court case", "baseline_candidates": ["United States Supreme Court decision", "legal case"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5418815", "label": "Evteev Glacier", "source": "Evteev Glacier (78°57′S 161°12′E) is a glacier flowing from the southeast slopes of the Worcester Range to the Ross Ice Shelf, west of Cape Timberlake. It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names in 1964 for Sveneld A. Evteev, a glaciologist and Soviet exchange observer at McMurdo Station in 1960.", "target": "glacier in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["glacier"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16987888", "label": "Petalocrinidae", "source": "Petalocrinidae is an extinct family of cladid crinoids from the Early Ordovician to Lower Devonian. Fossils of petalocrinoids have been found in China, Europe and the United States. All petalocrinoids have five, flattened arms formed through the fusion of the branches of the ancestral crinoid arm, an Ordovician crinoid possibly similar to the Silurian Gissocrinus or Arachnocrinus. The shape of these fused arms varies from genus to genus, and from species to species. The upper surface of the arms had distinctive patterns of grooves which are thought to have born captured food particles towards the mouth. The purpose of the arms, themselves, remain unknown, though, some researchers suspect that they may deterred predators by presenting a would-be attacker with a largely inedible chunk of calcite.", "target": "family of crinoid", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56231441", "label": "Party Monegasque", "source": "Party Monegasque (Parti Monégasque) is a Monegasque political party that exists in a form of association. It was formed in 2006 by Christine Pasquier-Ciulla.Parti Monégasque has a loose structure and looks more like a study circle with the emphasis not on the actual number of members, but on exchanging ideas. The party has one representative on the National Council, Christine Pasquier-Ciulla, and around 30-50 supporters and sympathizers.", "target": "political party in Monaco", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7988758", "label": "Westfield Tea Tree Plaza", "source": "Westfield Tea Tree Plaza is a large shopping centre located in Modbury serving as a shopping hub for Adelaide's growing north eastern suburbs, it’s linked to the city by Adelaide's unique O-Bahn Busway, which terminates at the Tea Tree Plaza Interchange. There is a smaller shopping centre building called Tea Tree Plus slightly to the north of the main centre. Major tenants include Myer, Harris Scarfe, Target, Kmart, Big W, Woolworths, Coles, Aldi and Hoyts. With 245 stores, Tea Tree Plaza is the second largest shopping centre in Adelaide, only Westfield Marion is larger.", "target": "shopping mall in Modbury, South Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16623982", "label": "Çetin", "source": "Çetin (Turkish pronunciation: [tʃeˈtin]) is a common masculine Turkish given name. In Turkish, \"Çetin\" means \"Tough\", \"Robust\", \"Strong\", \"Hard\", and/or \"Arduous\".", "target": "male given name (Turkish)", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22063246", "label": "Japaratuba", "source": "Japaratuba is a municipality located in the Brazilian state of Sergipe. Its population was 18,907 (2020) and its area is 360 km².", "target": "municipality of Sergipe, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47374", "label": "Veniano", "source": "Veniano (Comasco: Venian [ʋeˈnjãː]) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Como in the Italian region Lombardy, located about 30 kilometres (19 mi) northwest of Milan and about 14 kilometres (9 mi) southwest of Como. As of 31 December 2010, it had a population of 2,859 and an area of 3.2 square kilometres (1.2 sq mi).Veniano borders the following municipalities: Appiano Gentile, Fenegrò, Guanzate, Lurago Marinone.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2668449", "label": "Dorbozy", "source": "Dorbozy [dɔrˈbɔzɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Obsza, within Biłgoraj County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi) north of Obsza, 27 km (17 mi) south-east of Biłgoraj, and 104 km (65 mi) south of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 198.", "target": "village in Lublin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6303232", "label": "Judith", "source": "Judith is the third in a series of historical novels set in late eighteenth-century England written by the Irish-based author Brian Cleeve. Like its predecessors, Judith features as its protagonist a young independent-minded woman who tries to make her way in a largely inhospitable and sometimes terrifying world. It was among Cleeve's most financially successful novels, especially in the United States.", "target": "novel by Brian Cleeve", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3536790", "label": "Treaty of Fort Stanwix", "source": "The Treaty of Fort Stanwix was a treaty finalized on October 22, 1784, between the United States and Native Americans from the six nations of the Iroquois League. It was signed at Fort Stanwix, in present-day Rome, New York, and was the first of several treaties between Native Americans and the United States after the American victory in the Revolutionary War. Following the Revolutionary War, the British ceded their claims in North America to the American government, against the desire of their Native American allies. As a result, the status of Indian lands was ignored in the Treaty of Paris, which was the peace and land settlement between the British and the American colonies. Iroquois League fled to Canada after the Revolution in order to continue receiving British support. Later, some of the Iroquois returned to their home in the Ohio region. Those that returned often got into violent conflict with colonists trying to settle the area. The Treaty of Fort Stanwix was intended to serve as a peace treaty between the Americans and the Iroquois, as well as secure other Indian lands farther west, which the Iroquois had gained by conquest during the Beaver Wars in the last century. Joseph Brant was the leading Indian at the start of negotiations. He said, \"But we must observe to you, that we are sent in order to make peace, and that we are not authorized, to stipulate any particular cession of lands.\" Brant had to leave early for a planned trip to England. The leading Indian representatives.", "target": "1784 treaty between the United States and representatives of the Iroquois Confederacy", "baseline_candidates": ["cession", "treaty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64487588", "label": "William Temple", "source": "Lieutenant Colonel William Temple VC (7 November 1833 – 13 February 1919) was a British Army officer and an Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.", "target": "Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross and photographer (1833-1919)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26229", "label": "Asparagales", "source": "Asparagales (asparagoid lilies) is an order of plants in modern classification systems such as the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) and the Angiosperm Phylogeny Web. The order takes its name from the type family Asparagaceae and is placed in the monocots amongst the lilioid monocots. The order has only recently been recognized in classification systems. It was first put forward by Huber in 1977 and later taken up in the Dahlgren system of 1985 and then the APG in 1998, 2003 and 2009. Before this, many of its families were assigned to the old order Liliales, a very large order containing almost all monocots with colorful tepals and lacking starch in their endosperm. DNA sequence analysis indicated that many of the taxa previously included in Liliales should actually be redistributed over three orders, Liliales, Asparagales, and Dioscoreales. The boundaries of the Asparagales and of its families have undergone a series of changes in recent years; future research may lead to further changes and ultimately greater stability. In the APG circumscription, Asparagales is the largest order of monocots with 14 families, 1,122 genera, and about 36,000 species. The order is clearly circumscribed on the basis of molecular phylogenetics, but it is difficult to define morphologically since its members are structurally diverse. Most species of Asparagales are herbaceous perennials, although some are climbers and some are tree-like. The order also contains many geophytes (bulbs, corms, and various kinds of tuber). According to telomere sequence, at least two evolutionary switch-points happened within the order. The basal sequence is formed by.", "target": "order of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5039730", "label": "Cariyapitaka", "source": "The Cariyapitaka (cariyāpiṭaka; where cariya is Pali for \"conduct\" or \"proper conduct\" and pitaka is usually translated as \"basket\"; abbrev. Cp) is a Buddhist scripture, part of the Pali Canon of Theravada Buddhism. It is included there in the Sutta Pitaka's Khuddaka Nikaya, usually as the last of fifteen books. It is a short verse work that includes thirty-five accounts of the Buddha's former lives (similar to Jataka tales) when he as a bodhisattva exhibited behaviors known as \"perfections,\" prerequisites to buddhahood. This canonical text, along with the Apadana and Buddhavamsa, is believed to be a late addition to the Pali Canon and has been described as \"hagiographical.\".", "target": "a part of Khuddaka Nikaya in the Pali Canon; a short hagiographic work of 35 verse accounts of the Buddha's former lives when he as a bodhisattva exhibited perfections, which are prerequisites to buddhahood", "baseline_candidates": ["Buddhist text"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2342264", "label": "Golden Sun: The Lost Age", "source": "Golden Sun: The Lost Age, released under different names in some regions, is a 2002 role-playing video game for the Game Boy Advance, developed by Camelot Software Planning and published by Nintendo, as well as their last game released before Hiroshi Yamauchi retired as President of Nintendo. It is the second installment in the Golden Sun series and was released on June 28, 2002, in Japan, and through 2003 in North America and Europe. Picking up the story during the events of the previous game, The Lost Age puts the player into the roles of the previous games' antagonists, primarily from the perspective of magic-attuned \"adepts\" Felix and his allies as they seek to restore the power of alchemy to the world of Weyard. Along the way, the player uses psynergy to defeat enemies and discover new locations, help out local populations, and find elemental djinn which augment the characters' powers. Players can transfer their characters and items from Golden Sun to The Lost Age by means of a password system or Game Link Cable, and players are rewarded for fully completing both games.Upon release, The Lost Age was positively received by critics and audiences. IGN ranked the game as the eighth-best Game Boy Advance title of 2003 and the 22nd-best GBA game of all time. It has sold over 680,000 units. It was eventually followed by a third installment, titled Dark Dawn, released in 2010 and set thirty years after the two original games. Like its predecessor, The Lost Age was re-released for the Wii.", "target": "2002 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5617669", "label": "Gulich Township", "source": "Gulich Township is a township in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 1,235 at the 2010 census.", "target": "township in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18371980", "label": "Colemak", "source": "Colemak is a keyboard layout for Latin-script alphabets, designed to make typing more efficient and comfortable by placing the most frequently used letters of the English language on the home row. Created in 2006, it is named after its inventor, Shai Coleman. Most major modern operating systems such as Mac OS, Linux, Android, Chrome OS, and BSD support Colemak natively. A program to install the layout is available for Microsoft Windows. On Android and iOS, the layout is offered by several virtual keyboard apps like GBoard and SwiftKey, as well as by many apps which support physical keyboards directly.", "target": "keyboard layout", "baseline_candidates": ["keyboard layout"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3225371", "label": "Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Art Direction", "source": "The Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Production Design (previously known as the Critics' Choice Award for Best Art Direction) is one of the Critics' Choice Movie Awards given to people working in the film industry by the Critics Choice Association. It was first given out as a juried award in 2001 and then competitively in 2010 onward.", "target": "award given by the Broadcast Film Critics Association", "baseline_candidates": ["film award category", "award for best production design", "Critics' Choice Movie Award"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5155561", "label": "Company of Thieves", "source": "Company of Thieves were an American indie rock band from Chicago, Illinois, founded by Genevieve Schatz (vocals) and Marc Walloch (guitar). Their first album, Ordinary Riches, was released independently in 2007 and re-released in 2009. Their second album, Running from a Gamble, was released in 2011. The band announced they had no plans to record any new music as of January 2014, but announced a reunion in May 2017.", "target": "American rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4756279", "label": "Andrew Barclay Sons & Co.", "source": "Andrew Barclay Sons & Co., currently operating as Brodie Engineering, is a builder of steam and later fireless and diesel locomotives. The company's history dates to foundation of an engineering workshop in 1840 in Kilmarnock, Scotland. After a long period of operation the company was acquired by the Hunslet group in 1972 and renamed Hunslet-Barclay; in 2007 the company changed hands after bankruptcy becoming Brush-Barclay as part of the FKI Group. In 2011 Brush Traction and Brush-Barclay were acquired from FKI by Wabtec. The site was acquired by Brodie Engineering Ltd in July 2020.", "target": "rolling stock manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11732009", "label": "Fembe", "source": "Fembe, or Agala, is a Trans–New Guinea language of New Guinea, spoken in the plains east of the Strickland River.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "East Strickland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7367072", "label": "Rosa Lesser", "source": "Rosa Lesser was an Austrian luger who competed during the early 1950s. She won the bronze medal in the women's singles event at the 1953 European championships in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.", "target": "Austrian luger", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15975984", "label": "Indonesia–Yemen relations", "source": "Indonesia–Yemen relations are current and historical bilateral relations between Indonesia and Yemen. Indonesia and Yemen shared similarity as the Muslim majority countries, Indonesia is the most popular Muslim country in the world, while Yemen also a Muslim majority nation. Indonesia has an embassy in Sana'a, while Yemen has an embassy in Jakarta. Both the countries have many cultural proximities and similar view on international issues and these nations are members of the Non-Aligned Movement and Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC). Islam came to Indonesia through Yemeni merchants, the indigenous ruled by Hindu kings converted by seeing the modest of Yemenis, Islam spread through trade in south east Asia archipelago. History of Yemen and Indonesia goes back hundreds of years but because of the colonial-era relationship between the two came to decline. Arab Indonesians (Arabic: عربٌ إندونيسيون) or Hadharem (حضارم; sing., Hadhrami, حضرمي), informally known as Jama'ah, are Indonesian citizens primarily of mixed Arab — mainly Hadhrami — and Indonesian descent. The group also includes those of Arab descent from other Middle Eastern Arabic speaking nations. Restricted under Dutch East Indies law until 1919, the community elites later gained economic power through real estate investment and trading. Currently found mainly in Java, especially West Java and South Sumatra, they are almost all Muslims. Hadhrami is from the south of the Arabian peninsula mostly in southern Yemen.", "target": "bilateral relations between Yemen and Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["bilateral relation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28450746", "label": "The Wern", "source": "The Wern is a sports stadium in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales. It is the home of rugby union club Merthyr RFC and was, for a short period in 2017, also home of rugby league club South Wales Ironmen. The stadium is located on Cae'r Wern in the east of Merthyr Tydfil, around 10 minutes walk from the town centre. Opened in 1958, there has been expansion and improvements made to facilities in recent years, including the addition of an artificial turf pitch and the construction of additional stands. The stadium is a combination of seating and standing with a total capacity of 4,500. The stadium is one of two in the town, along with Penydarren Park, home of Merthyr Town F.C.", "target": "rugby stadium in Merthyr Tydfil", "baseline_candidates": ["rugby union venue", "rugby league venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3717108", "label": "Fusidaphne bullata", "source": "Pleurotomella bullata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Raphitomidae.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6123990", "label": "Jaimie D'Cruz", "source": "Jaimie D'Cruz is a British documentary film producer and director. D'Cruz started as a music journalist, and founded the hip hop magazine TOUCH, which he edited between 1990 and 1998. In 1998, he began to make TV documentaries for the British television station Channel 4. His first documentary film not made for TV was Exit Through the Gift Shop, directed by Banksy and co-produced by D'Cruz with Holly Cushing and James Gay-Rees. In 2011, he co-founded alongside Francesca Newby an independent production company called \"Acme Films\" which specializes in producing films related to popular contemporary culture.", "target": "documentary film producer and director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66133710", "label": "Byzantine–Bulgarian wars", "source": "The Byzantine–Bulgarian wars were a series of conflicts fought between the Byzantines and Bulgarians which began when the Bulgars first settled in the Balkan peninsula in the 5th century, and intensified with the expansion of the Bulgarian Empire to the southwest after 680 AD. The Byzantines and Bulgarians continued to clash over the next century with variable success, until the Bulgarians, led by Krum, inflicted a series of crushing defeats on the Byzantines. After Krum died in 814, his son Omurtag negotiated a thirty-year peace treaty. Simeon I, who ruled Bulgaria from 893 to 927 had multiple successful campaigns against the Byzantines. His son Peter I negotiated another long-lasting peace treaty. His rule was followed by a period of decline of the Bulgarian state. In 971 John I Tzimiskes, the Byzantine emperor, subjugated much of the weakening Bulgarian Empire, facing wars with Russians, Pechenegs, Magyars and Croatians and by defeating Boris II and capturing Preslav, the Bulgarian capital. Samuel managed to stabilize the Bulgarian state with a center around the town of Prespa but at the end of his rule, the Byzantines got the upper hand again. Constantinople under Basil II completely conquered Bulgaria in 1018 as a result of the 1014 Battle of Kleidion. There were rebellions against Byzantine rule from 1040 to 1041, and in the 1070s and the 1080s, but these failed. In 1185, however, Theodore Peter and Ivan Asen started a revolt, and the weakening Byzantine Empire, facing internal dynastic troubles of its own, was unable to prevent the revolt from being.", "target": "series of conflicts fought between the Byzantines and Bulgarians", "baseline_candidates": ["conflict"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16897072", "label": "Caerleon Roman Fortress and Baths", "source": "The Caerleon Roman Fortress and Baths museum (Welsh: Caer a Baddonau Rhufeinig Caerllion Amgueddfa) is a historical site located in the town of Caerleon, South Wales. Near to the city of Newport, it is run by the Welsh historic environment service Cadw.", "target": "archaeological museum in Newport, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85763992", "label": "Goniopora columna", "source": "Goniopora columna is a species of colonial stony coral in the family Poritidae.", "target": "species of cnidarian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q319300", "label": "Tetrapolitan Confession", "source": "The Tetrapolitan Confession (Latin: Confessio Tetrapolitana, German: Vierstädtebekenntnis), also called the Strasbourg Confession or Swabian Confession, was an early Protestant confession of faith drawn up by Martin Bucer and Wolfgang Capito and presented to the Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Augsburg on 9 July 1530 on behalf of the four south German cities of Konstanz, Lindau, Memmingen and Strasbourg. (The name \"Tetrapolitan\" means \"of the four cities\".) The confession was based on an early draft of the Augsburg Confession to which Bucer and Capito had secretly obtained access, but amended in the direction of Zwinglianism. Its purpose was to prevent a schism within Protestantism. It is the oldest confession of the Reformed tradition produced in Germany. Bucer and Capito were called to the Diet of Augsburg by the envoys of Strasbourg, who were aware that Philipp Melanchthon was working on a Saxon Confession that would represent the Lutheran position. The north Germans (Lutherans) and the south Germans and Swiss had been divided in opinion since 1524 on the subject of the Lord's Supper, with the Lutherans supporting sacramental union (the physical presence of Christ's body in the sacrament) and the Zwinglians memorialism (the sacrament as a spiritual memorial only). This division had reached is high point in the Marburg Colloquy between Zwingli and Luther in 1529.The original version of the confession contained the claim, probably authored by Capito, that \"Christ the Lord is truly in the Supper and gives his true body truly to eat and his blood truly to drink, but especially to.", "target": "early Protestant confession of faith drawn up by Martin Bucer and Wolfgang Capito", "baseline_candidates": ["work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q462828", "label": "Beñat Intxausti", "source": "Beñat Intxausti Elorriaga (born 20 March 1986) is a Spanish former professional road bicycle racer, who rode professionally between 2007 and 2019 for the Nicolas Mateos, Fuji–Servetto, Euskaltel–Euskadi, Movistar Team, Team Sky and Euskadi–Murias teams.", "target": "Spanish road bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6528488", "label": "Leptostylus leucopygus", "source": "Leptostylus leucopygus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Henry Walter Bates in 1872.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65441", "label": "Qajars", "source": "The Qajars (Azerbaijani: Qacarlar, Persian: ایل قاجار), also spelled Kadjars, Kajars, Kadzhars, Cadzhars, Cadjars, Ghajars, etc.) are an Oghuz Turkic clan of Bayat tribe who lived variously, with other tribes, in the area that is now Armenia, Azerbaijan and northwestern Iran. With the end of the Safavid era, they had split into several fractions. These included the Ziyādoghlu (Ziādlu), associated with the area of Ganja and Yerevan, as well as the Qoyunlu (Qāvānlu), and Davālu (Devehlu) the latter two associated with the northern areas of contemporary Iran.", "target": "turkoman tribe", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4881294", "label": "Being Digital", "source": "Being Digital is a non-fiction book about digital technologies and their possible future by technology author, Nicholas Negroponte. It was originally published in January 1995 by Alfred A. Knopf. In 1995, Nicholas Negroponte outlines the history of digital technologies in his book, Being Digital. Along with the general history, he also predicts possibilities for the future of these technologies and where he sees their focus on advancement lacking such as his belief that high-definition television becomes obsolete in comparison to its transition to a digital medium. Being Digital provides a general history of several digital media technologies, many that Negroponte himself was directly involved in developing. The message in Nicholas Negroponte's, Being Digital, is that eventually, we will move toward an entirely digital society (be it newspapers, entertainment, or sex). Being Digital also introduces the \"Daily Me\" concept of a virtual daily newspaper customized for an individual's tastes. This prediction has also come to pass with the advent of web feeds and personal web portals.", "target": "1995 book by Nicholas Negroponte", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2771338", "label": "Labhshankar Thakar", "source": "Labhshankar Jadavji Thakar, also known by his pen names Lagharo and Vaidya Punarvasu (14 January 1935 – 6 January 2016), was a Gujarati poet, playwright and story writer from India. Educated in languages and Ayurveda, he taught at colleges before starting practice of Ayurveda. He had a modernist approach in literature and was heavily influenced by absurd theatre and the traditions of experimental literature. He chiefly wrote plays and poetry.", "target": "Gujarati language author from India", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2044611", "label": "Sindh Ibex", "source": "The Sindh ibex or Turkman wild goat (Capra aegagrus blythi) is a vulnerable subspecies of wild goat endemic to southern Pakistan.", "target": "subspecies of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4868940", "label": "Bath Road Reservoir", "source": "Bath Road Reservoir is an underground reservoir complex in the town of Reading in the English county of Berkshire. Located to the North-West of the Bath Road in West Reading, the complex covers 5.38 acres (2.18 ha). It comprises two underground reservoirs, covered entirely by vegetation, together with a water tower that is listed as a grade II listed building.", "target": "water tower in Reading, Berkshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["water tower", "architectural structure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5677198", "label": "Eunice", "source": "Eunice is a city in Lea County, New Mexico, United States. The population was 2,922 at the 2010 census.", "target": "city in Lea County, New Mexico, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21523101", "label": "Alick Lindsay Poole", "source": "Alick Lindsay Poole (4 March 1908 – 2 January 2008) was a New Zealand botanist and forester.", "target": "New Zealand botanist (1908-2008)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q353139", "label": "Moslem Malakouti", "source": "Grand Ayatollah Moslem Malakouti (Persian: مسلم ملکوتی, 5 June 1924 in Sarab, East Azerbaijan – 24 April 2014 in Tehran) was an Iranian Shiite cleric, Marja and third imam Jumu'ah for Tabriz. His son Ali Malakouti is member of the Assembly of Experts.", "target": "Iranian cleric", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11969890", "label": "Frank D. Williams", "source": "Frank D. Williams (March 21, 1893 – October 15, 1961) was a pioneering cinematographer who was active in the early days of the motion picture industry. He developed and patented the traveling matte shot.", "target": "American cinematographer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5179634", "label": "Cowdray House", "source": "Cowdray House consists of the ruins of one of England's great Tudor houses, architecturally comparable to many of the great palaces and country houses of that time. It is situated in the Parish of Easebourne, just east of Midhurst, West Sussex standing on the north bank of the River Rother. It was largely destroyed by fire on 24 September 1793, but the ruins have nevertheless been Grade I listed.", "target": "ruins of one of England's great houses, outside the West Sussex town of Midhurst", "baseline_candidates": ["ruins", "historic house museum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19803805", "label": "Agra Rural Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Agra Rural Assembly constituency is one of the 403 constituencies of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly, India. It is a part of the Agra district and one of the five assembly constituencies in the Fatehpur Sikri (Lok Sabha constituency). First assembly election in this assembly constituency was conducted in 2012 after the constituency came into existence in the year 2008 as a result of the \"Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order, 2008\".", "target": "constituency of the Uttar Pradesh legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28957200", "label": "Caroline Burghardt", "source": "Caroline Asenath Grant Burghardt (June 10, 1834 – February 6, 1922) was a Union nurse during the American Civil War, who later practiced a medical doctor in Washington D.C.", "target": "American physician (1834-1922)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q626757", "label": "Dedication of Nikandre", "source": "The Dedication of Nikandre is a Greek marble sculpture, made approximately around 650 BCE, held in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens, Greece (Inv. 1). Nikandre, a woman from the island of Naxos, dedicated the statue in the temple of Artemis at Delos, the birthplace of Apollo and Artemis. The statue, which was found during archaeological excavation in the 19th century, is one of the earliest surviving korai, or statues of women, and displays one of the oldest inscriptions of Ancient Greek in stone. Its representation and its placement within the existing stylistic periods of Greek sculpture have become the subject of extensive scholarship.", "target": "sculpture", "baseline_candidates": ["statue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22343713", "label": "Boris Carmeli", "source": "Boris Carmeli (23 April 1928 – 31 July 2009) was a Polish operatic basso profondo known for his \"fervent rich hued tones\" and extensive repertory of more than 70 operas and 60 oratorios. During his long career, he appeared regularly at La Scala in Milan and other major opera houses internationally. In addition to the classical bass repertoire, he performed contemporary music including major works by Krzysztof Penderecki and Karlheinz Stockhausen. He appeared at international music festivals, on Italian television, and in many opera films.", "target": "Operatic bass", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1003313", "label": "Nieu-Bethesda", "source": "Nieu-Bethesda (Afrikaans for New Bethesda) is a village in the Eastern Cape at the foot of the Sneeuberge, approximately 50 kilometres (31 mi) from Graaff Reinet. It was founded in 1875 as a church town, like many other Karoo villages, and attained municipal status in 1886. The name is of biblical origin (John 5:2–4) and means \"place of flowing water\".", "target": "town", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6063238", "label": "Ion Oncescu", "source": "Ion Oncescu (born April 25, 1978 in Bucharest) is a professional Romanian armwrestler, a multiple time world and European champion for both the left and the right hand. He was inducted in March 2011 in the World's Hall of Fame \"The 50 Greatest Armwrestlers In History\".", "target": "Romanian arm wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14714001", "label": "Dewitt", "source": "Dewitt is an unincorporated community in Fayette County, West Virginia, United States.", "target": "unincorporated community in Fayette County, West Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25222706", "label": "Sacramento Wash", "source": "The Sacramento Wash (California) is the drainage southward, then east from the Lanfair Valley of extreme eastern San Bernardino County, California. The drainage combines with the Piute Wash-(mostly of Nevada) at the south terminus of the Dead Mountains, and immediately enters the Colorado River, just north of Needles, California. Another Sacramento Wash occurs across the Colorado, as an eastern drainage from northwest Arizona, also at Needles, CA. The Lanfair Valley and Sacramento Wash are at the eastern perimeter region of the Mojave National Preserve.", "target": "river in California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22448432", "label": "Ex Coelis Mountain", "source": "Ex Coelis Mountain is a 2,545-metre (8,350-foot) mountain with five peaks located in the North Saskatchewan River valley of the Canadian Rockies of Alberta, Canada. It is situated south of Abraham Lake and just outside the eastern boundary of Banff National Park. Its nearest higher peak is Hatter Peak, 8.0 km (5.0 mi) to the southeast. Ex Coelis Mountain can be seen from the David Thompson Highway east of Saskatchewan Crossing. Ex Coelis Mountain is composed of sedimentary rock laid down from the Precambrian to Jurassic periods that was pushed east and over the top of younger rock during the Laramide orogeny.", "target": "mountain in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11797951", "label": "Ol'ha Holodna", "source": "Olha Holodna (Ольга Анатоліївна Голодна; born 14 November 1991 in Mryn, Nosivka Raion) is a Ukrainian shot putter.", "target": "Ukrainian athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4664519", "label": "Abd-Allah ibn Numayr", "source": "Abd-Allah ibn Numayr (died 199 AH/814) was a narrator of hadith.", "target": "Muslim scholar of Islam", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q489424", "label": "Tal Farlow", "source": "Talmage Holt Farlow (June 7, 1921 – July 25, 1998) was an American jazz guitarist. He was nicknamed \"Octopus\" because of how his large, quick hands spread over the fretboard. As Steve Rochinski notes, \"Of all the guitarists to emerge in the first generation after Charlie Christian, Tal Farlow, more than any other, has been able to move beyond the rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic vocabulary associated with the early electric guitar master. Tal's incredible speed, long, weaving lines, rhythmic excitement, highly developed harmonic sense, and enormous reach (both physical and musical) have enabled him to create a style that clearly stands apart from the rest.\" Where guitarists of his day combined rhythmic chords with linear melodies, Farlow placed single notes together in clusters, varying between harmonically enriched tones. As music critic Stuart Nicholson put it, \"In terms of guitar prowess, it was the equivalent of Roger Bannister breaking the four-minute mile.\".", "target": "American jazz guitarist (1921-1998)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5626179", "label": "Górka, Leszno County", "source": "Górka [ˈɡurka] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Osieczna, within Leszno County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-east of Osieczna, 18 km (11 mi) north-east of Leszno, and 53 km (33 mi) south of the regional capital Poznań.", "target": "village in Greater Poland, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4626758", "label": "2012 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season", "source": "The 2012 Season was Palmeiras's 98th season, and their 97th in Brazil's first division. Palmeiras also played in the usual state league, Campeonato Paulista, the national cup, Copa do Brasil and the continental cup, the Copa Sudamericana. Due to the renovations taking place at Palestra Itália, since 2010, for the construction of the new Arena, Palmeiras played all of their home matches in the 2012 season at the Pacaembu Stadium. This season was the first one, in 20 years, without the services of Palmeiras' idol goalkeeper, Marcos, after he announced his retirement from football on 4 January 2012, at the age of 38.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1136888", "label": "1993–94 Asian Club Championship", "source": "The 1993–94 Asian Club Championship was the 13th edition of the annual international club football competition held in the AFC region (Asia). It determined that year's club champion of association football in Asia. Thai Farmers Bank FC from Thailand won that final and become Asian champions for the first time.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9346688", "label": "Quedara basiflava", "source": "Quedara basiflava, the yellow-base flitter or golden flitter, is a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae and is endemic to India's Western Ghats.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q751704", "label": "Wallowa Mountains", "source": "The Wallowa Mountains () are a mountain range located in the Columbia Plateau of northeastern Oregon in the United States. The range runs approximately 40 miles (64 km) northwest to southeast in southwestern Wallowa County and eastern Union County between the Blue Mountains to the west and the Snake River to the east. The range is sometimes considered to be an eastern spur of the Blue Mountains, and it is known as the \"Alps of Oregon\". Much of the range is designated as the Eagle Cap Wilderness, part of the Wallowa–Whitman National Forest.", "target": "mountain range", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5519753", "label": "Gambyapur", "source": "Gambyapur is a village in Dharwad district of Karnataka, India.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5330898", "label": "Eastridge High School", "source": "Eastridge High School is an American public high school located in Irondequoit, New York. The School is an IB (International Baccalaureate) world school. It also offers Honors and AP classes. Its current principal is Timothy Heaphy. This is the main high school in the East Irondequoit Central School District. The school also features a marching band, indoor percussion ensemble and drama club for yearly shows. On May 7, 2015, Eastridge High School was named one of ten schools chosen as a School of Opportunity by the National Education Policy Center (NEPC). More than 80 schools applied and four were awarded “Gold Recognition” and six earned “Silver Recognition”. Eastridge is one of the schools awarded Silver Recognition.", "target": "public high school in Irondequoit, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42723554", "label": "91st Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery", "source": "91st Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery (91st HAA Rgt) was a part-time unit of Britain's Territorial Army (TA) formed in the West Riding of Yorkshire just before the outbreak of World War II. Its service during the war included Home Defence during the Battle of Britain and The Blitz, and a length period in Middle East Forces. Postwar it continued to serve in the TA in the air defence role until 1955.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28137213", "label": "Lutho Sipamla", "source": "Lutho Sipamla (born 12 May 1998) is a South African professional cricketer who plays domestic cricket for Eastern Province. He made his international debut for the South Africa cricket team in February 2019.", "target": "cricketer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39066323", "label": "Nicholas A. Kotov", "source": "Nicholas A. Kotov (born August 29, 1965, Moscow, USSR) is the Irving Langmuir Distinguished Professor of Chemical Sciences and Engineering at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI, USA. Prof. Nicholas Kotov demonstrated that the ability to self-organize into complex structures is the unifying property of all inorganic nanostructures. He has developed a family of bioinspired composite materials with a wide spectrum of properties that were previously unattainable in classical materials. These composite biomimetic materials are exemplified by his nacre-like ultrastrong yet transparent composites, enamel-like, stiff yet vibration-isolating composites, and cartilage-like membranes with both high strength and ion conductance.", "target": "American chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q184300", "label": "Juniperus oxycedrus", "source": "Juniperus oxycedrus, vernacularly called Cade, cade juniper, prickly juniper, prickly cedar, or sharp cedar, is a species of juniper, native across the Mediterranean region from Algeria and Portugal, north to southern France, east to westernmost Iran, and south to Lebanon and Israel, growing on a variety of rocky sites from sea level up to 1,600 metres (5,200 feet) in elevation. The specific epithet oxycedrus means \"sharp cedar\" and this species may have been the original cedar or cedrus of the ancient Greeks.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2669275", "label": "Osoet Pegua", "source": "Osoet Pegua or Soet Pegu (1615–1658), was a Thai businesswoman. She acted as the business agent between the Ayutthaya Kingdom and the Netherlands in the mid-17th century, during which she had a very influential position and enjoyed a de facto monopoly to the trade between the two nations.", "target": "Thai businesswoman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54933091", "label": "Arvada Ridge station", "source": "Arvada Ridge is a Regional Transportation District (RTD) commuter rail station on the G Line between Denver Union Station and Wheat Ridge, Colorado. The station is located in western Arvada, Colorado, on the west side of Kipling Parkway and near Red Rocks Community College's Arvada campus. It includes bus bays, a 200-stall park and ride, and a pedestrian underpass connecting the platform to Ridge Road and the park and ride. Public art at the station includes \"Chromatic Harvest\", a kaleidoscopic mural wall with geometric imagery of agriculture. The station opened on April 26, 2019.The Arvada Ridge area has been the site of the city's \"education-focused\" transit-oriented development, which has included new apartment buildings and retailers to the south of the park and ride. RTD plans to begin new bus service between the Arvada Ridge and Olde Town Arvada stations when the G Line opens on April 26, 2019.", "target": "railway station in Arvada, the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4821379", "label": "Augustus Barrows", "source": "Augustus R. Barrows (July 30, 1838 – December 20, 1885) was an American lumberman, rancher, and pioneer settler of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Montana. He served one term in the Wisconsin State Assembly as a member of the Greenback Party. He served as speaker of the Assembly during his term as part of a negotiated coalition with the Democratic caucus. He was the only Greenback legislator to serve as speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly. He was also the 3rd mayor of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. In contemporaneous sources, his name is often abbreviated as A. R. Barrows.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1612218", "label": "Polje, Slunj", "source": "Polje is a village in Croatia, under the Slunj township, in Karlovac County.", "target": "village in Slunj, Croatia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39055358", "label": "Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass Greatest Hits", "source": "Greatest Hits is a 1970 album by Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass. It was the group's first compilation album, with all selections coming from its first five albums. The album was released a few months after Alpert had disbanded the group. It rose to #43 on the U.S. charts, and to #8 in the U.K. The album was eventually certified gold in the spring of 1971.Greatest Hits was released during Alpert's four-year sabbatical from performing, when he concentrated instead on producing records for other artists signed to his A&M label.", "target": "album by Herb Alpert", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q571748", "label": "Erbach", "source": "Erbach (German pronunciation: [ˈɛʁbax] (listen)) is a town and the district seat of the Odenwaldkreis (district) in Hesse, Germany. It has a population of around 13,000.", "target": "seat of Odenwaldkreis and town in Hesse, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["urban municipality of Germany", "Gemarkung", "district capital", "residenz"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3565476", "label": "Kryoneri, Thessaloniki", "source": "Kryoneri (Greek: Κρυονέρι) is a village and a community of the Lagkadas municipality. Before the 2011 local government reform it was part of the municipality of Sochos, of which it was a municipal district. The 2011 census recorded 991 inhabitants in village and 1,310 inhabitants in the community. The community of Kryoneri covers an area of 58.655 km2.", "target": "village in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29949154", "label": "Johann Christian Carl Günther", "source": "Johann Christian Carl Günther (1769 – 1833) was a German botanist, pharmacist, batologist, and author.", "target": "botanist (1769-1833)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8081842", "label": "Ściborowice", "source": "Ściborowice [ɕt͡ɕibɔrɔˈvit͡sɛ] (German: Stiebendorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Krapkowice, within Krapkowice County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.", "target": "village in Opole, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16897336", "label": "Svoboda", "source": "Svoboda is a village in Kameno Municipality, in Burgas Province, in southeastern Bulgaria.", "target": "village in Burgas Province, Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12735105", "label": "Marty Balin", "source": "Martyn Jerel Buchwald (January 30, 1942 – September 27, 2018), known as Marty Balin (), was an American singer, songwriter, and musician best known as the founder/leader and one of the lead singers and songwriters of Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship.", "target": "American singer, songwriter, and musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20177423", "label": "Amy Mason", "source": "Amy Mason (born 17 May 1982) is a British comedian, novelist and theatre maker from Bristol, England. Her debut novel The Other Ida won the 2014 Dundee International Book Prize.", "target": "British novelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12326435", "label": "Matthew O'Callaghan", "source": "Matthew O'Callaghan (born August 31, 1966) is an American film director, animator, writer, and storyboard artist whose credits include directing the 2006 film Curious George and co-creating the television series Life with Louie.", "target": "American animator and film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17649674", "label": "Fort Grange", "source": "Fort Grange is one of the Palmerston Forts, in Gosport, England. After Gomer and Elson forts had been approved in 1852, further consideration led to a decision to fill the gap between them by three more forts, and Grange is the most southerly of the three. Work began in 1858 and it was completed in 1863. Built as part of the outer defence line for Gosport along with Fort Brockhurst, Fort Elson and Fort Rowner to the North East and Fort Gomer to the South West. In 1914 23 (Siege) Company Royal Garrison Artillery was based at the Fort. It was used to create number 3 and 4 Siege Batteries Royal Garrison Artillery.The fort is a Grade II Listed Building and is virtually identical with Forts Brockhurst and Rowner.In 1917, the Fort Grange Aerodrome became the home to Robert Smith-Barry's School of Special Flying.There are many surviving details and the main structure is intact, however the earthworks have been much reduced and much of the moat is infilled. In 1916 it was armed with a 1-pounder heavy anti aircraft gun on a travelling carriage. The fort was used as a military headquarters from 1910 and was derelict by 1983. In 1984 Fort Grange became the home of HMS Sultan Royal Naval Volunteer Cadet Corps, and continues to fulfil this role today.", "target": "fort in Gosport, Hampshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["Palmerston fort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6762299", "label": "Mariano Acevedo", "source": "Mariano Elí Acevedo Fúnez (born 9 January 1983) is a Honduran footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Marathón in the Honduran Premier League.", "target": "Honduran footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7844562", "label": "Triumph Township", "source": "Triumph Township is one of thirty-one townships in Custer County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 100 at the 2000 census. A 2006 estimate placed the township's population at 97.", "target": "township in Custer County, Nebraska", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Nebraska"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37791578", "label": "February 2015", "source": "February 2015 was the second month of that common year. The month, which began on a Sunday, ended on a Saturday after 28 days.", "target": "month of 2015", "baseline_candidates": ["February", "calendar month of a given year", "month starting on Sunday"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20844476", "label": "Maieru", "source": "Maieru (Hungarian: Major; German: Meierhof) is a commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of two villages, Anieș (Dombhát) and Maieru.", "target": "commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5230233", "label": "Impages", "source": "Impages is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Terebridae, the auger snails.This genus has become a synonym of Hastula H. Adams & A. Adams, 1853.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7964726", "label": "Walter E. Mooney", "source": "Walter E. Mooney (June 6, 1925 – March 1, 1990) was a MIT educated engineer, aircraft designer, pilot and model aircraft designer who lived in San Diego, California. He was well known professionally for his full scale aircraft efforts for Convair division of General Dynamics but more popularly known for the many plans and articles published in the magazines Model Airplane News, Boys' Life, and Aero Modeller in the 1960s. He was once featured as a daredevil glider pilot on the 1973 TV series Thrill Seekers. He designed the ROHR Two-175 Experimental Aircraft almost put in production to compete against the Cessna 172 in 1971. The Flying Aces model club of Washington has held a Walt Mooney Memorial model airplane meet named in his honor.", "target": "American model aircraft designer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29791390", "label": "Bajro Gegić", "source": "Bajro Gegić (Serbian Cyrillic: Бајро Гегић; born December 15, 1954) is a politician in Serbia from the country's Bosniak community. He was a member of the Party of Democratic Action of Sandžak (Stranka demokratske akcije Sandžaka; SDA) for many years and has served two terms in the National Assembly of Serbia. Gegić is also a member of the Bosniac National Council.", "target": "Serbian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18034852", "label": "OSBPL2", "source": "Oxysterol-binding protein-related protein 2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the OSBPL2 gene.This gene encodes a member of the oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP) family, a group of intracellular lipid receptors. Most members contain an N-terminal pleckstrin homology domain and a highly conserved C-terminal OSBP-like sterol-binding domain, although some members contain only the sterol-binding domain. This encoded protein contains only the sterol-binding domain. In vitro studies have shown that the encoded protein can bind strongly to phosphatic acid and weakly to phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate, but cannot bind to 25-hydroxycholesterol. The protein associates with the Golgi apparatus. Transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been described.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7008331", "label": "New Hampshire Union Leader", "source": "The New Hampshire Union Leader is a daily newspaper from Manchester, the largest city in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. On Sundays, it publishes as the New Hampshire Sunday News. Founded in 1863, the paper was best known for the conservative political opinions of its late publisher, William Loeb, and his wife, Elizabeth Scripps \"Nackey\" Loeb. The paper helped to derail the candidacy in 1972 of U.S. Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine, who unsuccessfully sought the Democratic presidential nomination. Loeb criticized Muskie's wife, Jane, in editorials. When he defended her in a press conference, there was a measured negative effect on voter perceptions of Muskie within New Hampshire.Over the decades, the Loebs gained considerable influence and helped shape New Hampshire's political landscape. In 2000, after Nackey's death on January 8, Joseph McQuaid, the son and nephew of the founders of the New Hampshire Sunday News, Bernard J. and Elias McQuaid, took over as publisher.", "target": "daily newspaper from Manchester, New Hampshire", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21931877", "label": "Andy Rinehart", "source": "Andy Rinehart (born 1960) is an American balladeer, composer and multi instrumentalist.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q976077", "label": "Hyphessobrycon coelestinus", "source": "Hyphessobrycon coelestinus is a species of South American tetra, belonging to the family Characidae.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16853791", "label": "Agostino Melissi", "source": "Agostino Melissi (1615 in Florence – 1683 in Florence) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active mainly in Florence.", "target": "Italian painter (1615-1683)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7125642", "label": "Pakistan National Alliance", "source": "The Pakistan National Alliance (Urdu: پاکستان قومی اتحاد, Acronym: PNA), was a populist and consolidated right-wing political alliance, consisting of nine political parties of the country. Formed in 1977, the country's leading right-wing parties agreed upon to run a political campaign as a single bloc against the left oriented PPP in the 1977 general elections. Despite each parties standing with a different ideology, PNA was noted for its large physical momentum and its right-wing orientation, originally aimed to oppose Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and the PPP. Despite its right-wing populist agenda, the alliance performed poorly in the 1977 general election and levelled accusations of rigging the elections. After months of spontaneous violent political activism, the martial law came in effect under chief of army staff General Zia-ul-Haq who made call for a political retribution. By 1978, the alliance met its end when parties diverged in each of its agenda. The left-wing parties later would form the MRD alliance under PPP to oppose President Zia-ul-Haq in the 1980s and the right-wing forming the IDA alliance under PML.", "target": "political party in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["political coalition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13044988", "label": "Reutigen", "source": "Reutigen is a municipality in the administrative district of Thun in the canton of Bern in Switzerland.", "target": "Reutigen is a municipality in the administrative district of Thun in the canton of Bern in Switzerland.", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Switzerland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24255812", "label": "The Shoe Bird", "source": "The Shoe Bird is a 1964 children's novel by Southern writer Eudora Welty. The novel tells the story of a parrot in a shoe store, as he talks to other birds about shoes. Welty, who had never written any children's literature before, wrote it to satisfy a contractual obligation with her publisher Harcourt Brace and to pay for a new roof on her house.An orchestral ballet was composed by Lehman Engel and performed by the Jackson Ballet Guild in 1968. A 2002 choral piece was also commissioned by the Mississippi Boy Choir and composed by composer Samuel Jones.", "target": "Children's Novel", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6076970", "label": "Isaac R. Harrington", "source": "Isaac R. Harrington (December 7, 1789 - August 20, 1851) was a prominent businessman and entrepreneur in Burlington, Vermont and Buffalo, New York. He became active in politics as a Whig and served as mayor of Buffalo from 1841 to 1842.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49280312", "label": "Sanford", "source": "Sanford is a city in the central region of the U.S. state of Florida and the county seat of Seminole County. As of the 2020 census, its population was 61,051. Known as the \"Historic Waterfront Gateway City\", Sanford sits on the southern shore of Lake Monroe at the head of navigation on the St. Johns River. Native Americans first settled the area thousands of years before the city was formed. The Seminoles arrived in the area in the 18th century. During the Second Seminole War in 1836, the United States Army established Camp Monroe and built a road now known as Mellonville Avenue. Sanford is about 20 miles (32 km) northeast of Orlando. Sanford is home to Seminole State College of Florida and the Central Florida Zoo and Botanical Gardens. Its downtown attracts tourists with shops, restaurants, a marina, and a lakefront walking trail. The Orlando Sanford International Airport, in the heart of the town, functions as the secondary commercial airport for international and domestic carriers in the Orlando metropolitan area.", "target": "county seat of Seminole County, Florida, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5349451", "label": "Eileen Sheehan", "source": "Eileen Sheehan, (Born Eileen Flynn) is an Irish poet based in Killarney, County Kerry. She was born in the nearby town of Scartaglin in 1963. Her poetry is written from a benevolent pagan perspective. Her work has been published in several journals and anthologies, including The Stinging Fly, The Kerry Anthology, Breacadh, and she was featured in I Am Of Kerry.She has won both the Listowel Writers’ Week inaugural Poetry Slam 2004, and The Brendan Kennelly Poetry Award 2006. Her book of poetry, Song of the Midnight Fox, was published in 2004. She is on the Poetry Ireland Éigse Éireann Writers in Schools Scheme and is currently employed by County Kerry VEC teaching Creative Writing at Killarney Technical College.", "target": "Irish poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14684149", "label": "Topanga State Park", "source": "Topanga State Park ( (listen)) is a California state park located in the Santa Monica Mountains, within Los Angeles County, California. It is part of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. The park is located adjacent to the community of Topanga, within the City of Los Angeles. Covering 11,000 acres (45 km2), with thirty-six miles of trails and unimproved roads, the park's boundaries stretch from Topanga Canyon to Pacific Palisades and Mulholland Drive. There are more than 60 trail entrances. Topanga State Park is not only the largest park in the Santa Monica Mountains, but it is also considered the largest park located in the limits of a city.", "target": "state park in Los Angeles County, California, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["California state park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7718465", "label": "The Black Tulip", "source": "The Black Tulip is a 1937 British, black-and-white historical drama film directed by Alex Bryce and starring Patrick Waddington, Ann Soreen, Campbell Gullan and Bernard Lee. The film is based on the novel The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas. It was produced by Fox-British Pictures at Wembley Studios as a quota quickie.", "target": "1937 film by Alex Bryce", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4012735", "label": "Villa di Geggiano", "source": "The Villa di Geggiano is a neoclassical-style rural palace located on Via di Geggiano 1, in the neighborhood of Pianella of the commune of Castelnuovo Berardenga, in province of Siena, region of Tuscany, Italy.", "target": "villa in the territory of Castelnuovo Berardenga", "baseline_candidates": ["villa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33773", "label": "Convention of Moss", "source": "The Convention of Moss (Mossekonvensjonen) was a ceasefire agreement signed on 14 August 1814 between the King of Sweden and the Norwegian government. It followed the Swedish-Norwegian War due to Norway's claim to sovereignty. It also became the de facto peace agreement and formed the basis for the personal union between Sweden and Norway that was established when the Norwegian Storting (Parliament) elected Charles XIII of Sweden as king of Norway on 4 November 1814. The Union lasted until Norway declared its dissolution in 1905.", "target": "1814 ceasefire agreement between Sweden and Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["peace treaty", "armistice"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11732680", "label": "Kwerisa", "source": "Kwerisa, or Taogwe, is a nearly extinct Lakes Plain language of Irian Jaya, Indonesia. Most of the Kwerisa people have shifted to Kaiy, which is closely related.", "target": "language in Papua", "baseline_candidates": ["Tariku", "language", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q71857555", "label": "2019 Syed Modi International Badminton Championships", "source": "The 2019 Syed Modi International Badminton Championships (officially known as the Ecogreen Syed Modi International Badminton Championships 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at the Babu Banarasi Das Indoor Stadium in Lucknow, India, from 26 November to 1 December 2019 and had a total prize of $150,000.", "target": "badminton championships", "baseline_candidates": ["Syed Modi International Badminton Championships"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q768140", "label": "Glaucous-winged Gull", "source": "The glaucous-winged gull (Larus glaucescens) is a large, white-headed gull. The genus name is from Latin Larus which appears to have referred to a gull or other large seabird. The specific glaucescens is New Latin for \"glaucous\" from the Ancient Greek, glaukos, denoting the grey color of its wings.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16256299", "label": "Gyeong-hui", "source": "Kyung-hee, also spelled Kyong-hui or Gyong-hui, is a Korean unisex given name. The meaning differs based on the hanja used to write each syllable of the name. There are 54 hanja with the reading \"kyung\" and 25 hanja with the reading \"hee\" on the South Korean government's official list of hanja which may be registered for use in given names. Kyung-hee was the ninth-most popular name for baby girls in South Korea in 1950, rising to third place by 1960.People with this name include:.", "target": "Korean female given name ()", "baseline_candidates": ["female given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1646663", "label": "Neon levis", "source": "Neon levis is a jumping spider with palearctic distribution, occurring in Southern and Western Europe, northern Africa and Xinjiang (China). Females reach a size of up to 3 mm, males up to 2.5 mm. They are of a light yellowish-brown color, the legs having light-dark annulation. Adult animals can be found in Germany from March to July.These spiders occur in sunny, dry locations with little vegetation. In Germany the species is considered endangered.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4346943", "label": "Betty Helsengreen", "source": "Betty Helsengreen (26 October 1914 – 29 December 1956) was a Danish stage and film actress.", "target": "Danish actress (1914-1956)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15219318", "label": "Līči Station", "source": "Līči Station is a railway station on the Ventspils I – Tukums II Railway.", "target": "railway station in Latvia", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7063159", "label": "Notocrater ponderi", "source": "Notocrater ponderi is a species of small sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pseudococculinidae, the false limpets.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7293596", "label": "Ranunculus allenii", "source": "Ranunculus allenii, commonly known as Allen's buttercup, is a flowering plant in the crowfoot or buttercup family, Ranunculaceae. Generally found in wetlands in northern latitudes, it bears yellow flowers in summer, which are pollinated by insects.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1503716", "label": "curing", "source": "Curing is any of various food preservation and flavoring processes of foods such as meat, fish and vegetables, by the addition of salt, with the aim of drawing moisture out of the food by the process of osmosis. Because curing increases the solute concentration in the food and hence decreases its water potential, the food becomes inhospitable for the microbe growth that causes food spoilage. Curing can be traced back to antiquity, and was the primary method of preserving meat and fish until the late-19th century. Dehydration was the earliest form of food curing. Many curing processes also involve smoking, spicing, cooking, or the addition of combinations of sugar, nitrate, and nitrite. Meat preservation in general (of meat from livestock, game, and poultry) comprises the set of all treatment processes for preserving the properties, taste, texture, and color of raw, partially cooked, or cooked meats while keeping them edible and safe to consume. Curing has been the dominant method of meat preservation for thousands of years, although modern developments like refrigeration and synthetic preservatives have begun to complement and supplant it. While meat-preservation processes like curing were mainly developed in order to prevent disease and to increase food security, the advent of modern preservation methods mean that in most developed countries today, curing is instead mainly practised for its cultural value and desirable impact on the texture and taste of food. For lesser-developed countries, curing remains a key process in the production, transport and availability of meat. Some traditional cured meat (such as authentic Parma ham.", "target": "food preservation with salt", "baseline_candidates": ["food preservation", "food processing"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29971272", "label": "Crying in the Club", "source": "\"Crying in the Club\" is the debut solo single recorded by Cuban-born American singer Camila Cabello, released on May 19, 2017. It was written by Cabello, Sia, Benny Blanco and Happy Perez, with production handled by Blanco, Perez and Cashmere Cat. The song contains an interpolation of Christina Aguilera's 1999 single \"Genie in a Bottle\". A mid-tempo tropical pop and dance track, it was originally intended to be the lead single from Cabello's debut studio album, which was originally titled The Hurting. The Healing. The Loving. It was later removed from the track listing and featured on Side A of the 7-inch eponymous extended play released on July 14, 2017. The song reached number three in Bulgaria, as well as the top forty in eleven additional countries. \"Crying in the Club\" is certified Platinum in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and Italy. It is Cabello's first completely solo single since her departure from American girl group Fifth Harmony.", "target": "2017 single by Camila Cabello", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48850562", "label": "4-fluoroisobutyrfentanyl", "source": "4-Fluoroisobutyrylfentanyl (also known as 4-FIBF and p-FIBF) is an opioid analgesic that is an analog of butyrfentanyl and structural isomer of 4-Fluorobutyrfentanyl and has been sold online as a designer drug. It is closely related to 4-fluorofentanyl, which has an EC50 value of 4.2 nM for the human μ-opioid receptor. 4-fluoroisobutyrylfentanyl is a highly selective μ-opioid receptor agonist whose analgesic potency is almost ten times of that reported for morphine.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3615731", "label": "Andrea Fulvio", "source": "Andrea Fulvio (in his Latin publications and correspondence Andreas Fulvius; c. 1470–1527) was an Italian Renaissance humanist, poet and antiquarian active in Rome, who advised Raphael in the reconstructions of ancient Rome as settings for his frescoes. Fulvio was Raphael's companion and cicerone as they explored the ruins, Fulvio showing Raphael what was essential to be drawn and ex temporising on them. Fulvio published two volumes. One contained the first attempts at identifying famous faces of Antiquity from numismatic evidence, his richly illustrated Illustrium imagines of 1517, the portrait heads possibly by Giovanni Battista Palumba. The other was a guide to the city's antiquities, Antiquitates Urbis, published in the disastrous year 1527. For a more popular market, his Antiquitates Urbis were translated into Italian by Paolo Del Rosso and published at Venice in 1543 with the title Opera delle antichità della città di Roma & delli edificij memorabili di quella. It proved so useful as a guidebook in Italian that it was updated by Girolamo Ferrucci and reprinted at Venice in 1588 with the title L'antichità di Roma di nuovo con ogni diligenza corretta & ampliata. Antiquitates Urbis furnished more than a new guide to the antiquities of Rome seen by a humanist's critical eye, the first of a genre of antiquarian topographical studies that extends to our time. It also remarked upon the introduction of printing to Rome in the previous generation and identified a few collections, such as Angelo Colocci's antiquities in his villa beside the Aqua Virgo and Andrea Cardinal della Valle's Roman.", "target": "Italian Renaissance humanist, poet and antiquarian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3161451", "label": "James Topping", "source": "James “Jimmy” Topping (born December 18, 1974) is an Irish rugby former player and current coach. As a player, he won eight caps for the Ireland national rugby union team between 1996 and 2003, playing on the wing. Topping was born in Belfast and played his club rugby for Ballymena and Ulster.Topping also played sevens for the Ireland national rugby sevens team. He played at the 2001 Rugby World Cup Sevens and also played several legs on the World Rugby Sevens Series. Since retiring from playing, Topping has been involved in coaching, including Ulster youth rugby, and the Ireland national rugby sevens team.", "target": "rugby union player from Northern Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7498463", "label": "Shire of Mount Rouse", "source": "The Shire of Mount Rouse was a local government area about 270 kilometres (168 mi) west of Melbourne, the state capital of Victoria, Australia. The shire covered an area of 1,407 square kilometres (543.2 sq mi), and existed from 1860 until 1994.", "target": "local government area in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["Category:Former local government area of Australia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5083515", "label": "Charles Widman", "source": "Charles Henry Widman (June 17, 1879 – December 19, 1944) was an American football player. He was born in Rochester, New York in either 1878 or 1879. He was the son of John C. Widman and Lena (Widman) Keifhaber. His father was a manufacturer of furniture who moved to Detroit and operated under the name J.C. Widman & Co., furniture manufacturers. Widman attended Detroit High School and enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1898 as a freshman in the law school. He was the starting left halfback on the undefeated 1898 Michigan Wolverines football team that won the school's first Western Conference championship. He scored both of Michigan's touchdowns in the 1898 championship game against the University of Chicago. His 65-yard touchdown run against Chicago was described as follows in The Michigan Alumnus in December 1898:Widman's now famous run of sixty-five yards through Chicago's territory for a touchdown clinched the victory which Michigan was bound to win and was perhaps the feature of the game. As the result of his dash down the field with the whole Chicago team after him Michigan has a new football hero and the history of western football is enriched by the story of a run as thrilling as was ever made on any gridiron.\" Louis Elbel, a University of Michigan student, was so inspired by Widman's sixty-five yard run and the subsequent outcome of the game that he went to his sister's house that afternoon immediately following the game and composed \"The Victors,\" which is the University of Michigan's.", "target": "American football player (1879-1944)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7174650", "label": "Peter Heseltine", "source": "Peter Anthony William Heseltine (born 5 April 1965) is a former English cricketer. Heseltine was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm off break. He was born at Barnsley, Yorkshire. Heseltine made his first-class debut for Sussex against the touring Pakistanis in 1987. He made nineteen further first-class appearances for the county, the last of which came against Surrey in the 1988 County Championship. In his twenty first-class appearances, he took 22 wickets at an average of 48.59, with best figures of 3/33. With the bat, he scored a total of 186 runs at a batting average of 10.94, with a high score of 26. He made three List A appearances for Sussex during the course of the 1987 season, twice against Surrey and once against Northamptonshire. He took four wickets in his three List A matches for the county, which came at an average of 13.50, with best figures of 2/12. He left Sussex at the end of the 1988 season. He later joined Durham in 1991, playing a single List A match against Glamorgan in the NatWest Trophy, in which he took the wicket of Ravi Shastri, to finish with figures of 1/37 from 12 overs in Glamorgan's total of 345/2. In Durham's innings of 305/9, he ended the innings unbeaten on 5 runs, with Glamorgan winning by 40 runs. He also played a single Minor Counties Championship match that season against Staffordshire. Durham gained first-class status and were admitted to the County Championship for the 1992 season, though Heseltine wasn't retained by Durham. His.", "target": "cricketer (born 1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2522709", "label": "Iran at the 1972 Summer Olympics", "source": "Iran competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany. Iran sent a delegation of 50 competitors, all men, who participated in 33 events in 7 sports. Two competitors in the football tournament did not take part in any matches.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11371013", "label": "Kamenokoyama Kofun", "source": "Kamenokoyama Kofun (亀甲山古墳) is a Kofun period burial mound located in the Den-en-chōfu neighborhood of Ōta, Tokyo in the Kantō region of Japan. It is one of 54 kofun in the Ebaradai kofun cluster along the banks of the Tama River, and received protection as a National Historic Site in 1928.", "target": "burial mound in Tokyo", "baseline_candidates": ["kofun"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q594767", "label": "Hontianske Trsťany", "source": "Hontianske Trsťany (Hungarian: Hontnádas) is a village and municipality in the Levice District in the Nitra Region of Slovakia.", "target": "municipality of Slovakia", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Slovakia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41555603", "label": "Matt Houlbrook", "source": "Matthew Houlbrook ( HOHL-bruuk), known professionally as Matt Houlbrook, is a British academic historian who is Professor of Cultural History at the University of Birmingham.", "target": "British academic historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q959449", "label": "RAAF Base Edinburgh", "source": "RAAF Base Edinburgh (ICAO: YPED) is a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) military airbase located in Edinburgh approximately 28 km (17 mi) north of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia and forms part of the Edinburgh Defence Precinct. The base is primarily home to No 92 Wing and their Lockheed AP-3C Orion and Boeing P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft that conduct surveillance operations throughout Australia's region of interest. The base is also the home of the Air Warfare Centre which is responsible through its Air Force Ranges Directorate for the Woomera Test Range. The base has over the past decade become home to elements of the 1st Brigade of the Australian Army.", "target": "Royal Australian Air Force air base in Edinburgh, South Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["airbase"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6945893", "label": "My Little Duckaroo", "source": "My Little Duckaroo is a 1954 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies theatrical cartoon short directed by Chuck Jones and written by Michael Maltese. The cartoon was released on November 27, 1954 and stars Daffy Duck and Porky Pig.This cartoon in many ways resembles the 1951 short directed by Chuck Jones entitled Drip-Along Daffy. In this animated piece, upon seeing a wanted poster with a reward of $10,000.00 for the dead or alive capture of Nasty Canasta, Daffy sets out alongside his companion Porky and his trusty steed to retrieve the villain and collect the money. The cartoon can be found on the sixth volume of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, as well as the second volume of its Blu-ray Disc successor, the Platinum Collection (along with Drip-Along Daffy and Barbary Coast Bunny).", "target": "1954 film by Chuck Jones", "baseline_candidates": ["animated short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61046108", "label": "Fanti drongo", "source": "The Fanti drongo (Dicrurus atactus) is a species of bird in the family Dicruridae. It is found in sub-Sahara Africa from Sierra Leone to southwestern Nigeria. The Fanti drongo was described by the American ornithologist Harry C. Oberholser in 1899 from a specimen collected in the Fanti district of Ghana. He considered it as a subspecies of the velvet-mantled drongo (Dicrurus modestus) and introduced the trinomial name Dicrurus modestus atactus. The specific epithet atactus is from the Ancient Greek ατακτος ataktos \"disorderly\" or \"lawless\". Based on the results of a molecular phylogenetic study published in 2018, it is now treated as a separate species.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q935140", "label": "2008 Tour de Pologne", "source": "The 2008 Tour of Poland cycling road race took place from 14 to 20 September 2008.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour de Pologne"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20807715", "label": "Haiti national under-23 football team", "source": "The Haiti national under-23 football team represents Haiti in international football competitions and qualifications for the Olympic Games. The selection is limited to players under the age of 23, except three overage players. The team is controlled by the Fédération Haïtienne de Football (FHF).", "target": "team that represents Haiti in international football competitions and qualifications for the Olympic Games", "baseline_candidates": ["national association football team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28201792", "label": "DM", "source": "DM is the third studio album by Mexican singer and songwriter Dulce María, released on March 10, 2017 through the Universal Music Latin Entertainment. Completed in August 2016, the album was originally intended to be released in its recording year but was postponed until 2017. Produced by Ettore Grenci, Andres Saavedra and Predikador, it was recorded during sessions that took place in Los Angeles in 2016 and Mexico City. The title of the album was revealed on December 16, 2016, during a Facebook Live stream.", "target": "album by Dulce María", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85875864", "label": "NBA ShootOut 2004", "source": "NBA ShootOut 2004 is a video game developed by 989 Sports and published by Sony Computer Entertainment America for the PlayStation and PlayStation 2 in 2003.", "target": "2003 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6243863", "label": "John Lambe", "source": "John Lambe (born 1944 in Fordingbridge, Hampshire) otherwise known as the M5 rapist is a British serial rapist who worked as a builder and lorry driver. From 1975 until his arrest in 1980, he was responsible for a string of sex attacks on women aged between 15–74 in the Bristol and Taunton areas which adjoin the M5 motorway in South West England. He was arrested after the husband of one of his victims recognised him and his vehicle leaving the scene of the crime in Taunton. In 1981, he was found guilty of twelve counts of rape and six charges of attempted rape and jailed for life. The prosecution at his trial alleged that the motivation for his crimes stemmed from a vitriolic hatred of the police against whom he had waged a personal vendetta since a conviction for aggravated burglary in 1975.", "target": "British rapist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8059168", "label": "Youth Association of Kuwait", "source": "The Youth Association of Kuwait (Arabic: رابطة الشباب الكويتي) is the mainstream leftist youth organization in Kuwait which was founded in 2006 under the name National Democratic Youth Association. It aims to build a new generation of Kuwaitis that are interested in community service and help youth achieve their goals. Also, the association is interested in youth issues such as education, unemployment and youth activism.", "target": "Kuwaiti youth organization", "baseline_candidates": ["youth organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55234563", "label": "William E. Carlson", "source": "William E. Carlson (August 30, 1912 – March 13, 1999) was an American politician, educator, and businessman.", "target": "- \"Bill\" House 1947-52 (District 41)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2714553", "label": "The Entity", "source": "The Entity is a 1982 American supernatural horror film directed by Sidney J. Furie, and written by Frank De Felitta, who adapted his 1978 novel of the same name. The film stars Barbara Hershey as a single mother in Los Angeles who is raped and tormented by an invisible assailant. Like the novel, the film is based on the 1974 case of Doris Bither, a woman who claimed to have been repeatedly sexually assaulted by an invisible entity, and who was observed by doctoral students at the University of California, Los Angeles. Despite being filmed and planned for a release in 1981, the movie was not released in worldwide theaters until September 1982 and February 1983 in the United States.", "target": "1982 film by Sidney J. Furie", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7165362", "label": "Penwartha", "source": "Penwartha is a hamlet between Perranzabuloe and Perrancoombe in Cornwall, England.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73918294", "label": "1943–44 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team", "source": "The 1943–44 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team represented the University of Cincinnati during the 1943–44 NCAA men's basketball season. The head coach was Bob Reuss, coaching his first season with the Bearcats. The team finished with an overall record of 6–5.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season of a sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18363962", "label": "Colt Comrades", "source": "Colt Comrades is a 1943 American Western film directed by Lesley Selander and written by Michael Wilson. The film stars William Boyd, Andy Clyde, Jay Kirby, Teddi Sherman, Victor Jory, George Reeves and Douglas Fowley. The film was released on June 18, 1943, by United Artists.", "target": "1943 film by Lesley Selander", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61096621", "label": "Comox", "source": "Comox or Éy7á7juuthem is a Coast Salish language historically spoken in the northern Georgia Strait region, spanning the east coast of Vancouver Island and the northern Sunshine Coast and adjoining inlets and islands. More specifically, ʔayajuθəm was traditionally spoken in Bute Inlet (also known as Church House), in Squirrel Cove (also known as Cortez Island), and in Sliammon, located in the area now known as Powell River. It has two main dialects, Island Comox, associated with the K'ómoks First Nation, and Mainland Comox. Whereas there Comox speaks (Vancouver Island) Island dialect, the Sliammon, Klahoose, and Homalco peoples speak ʔayajuθəm, which is referred to by some as \"Mainland Comox dialect\". As of 2012, the Island Comox dialect has no remaining speakers. The term comox is not a Comox word, but rather a Kwak'wala term meaning \"plenty\", \"abundance\", or \"wealth”. So Comox is not an ʔayajuθəm term, but is Wakashan based. ʔayajuθəm means “the language of our people” in Sliammon, Klahoose, and Homalco languages. Efforts to revitalize, rejuvenate, and revive ʔayajuθəm. In Powell River, Campbell River, and Cortez island have started projects to help save ʔayajuθəm. Children in daycare, preschool are being taught ʔayajuθəm in schools on Cortez Island, Campbell River (the current city where many of the Homalco people have resettled) and is now being taught in school district #47 (Powell River). ʔayajuθəm is also being accepted as a second language that fulfills graduation requirements. In Powell River, ʔayajuθəm is taught from daycare through grade 12. A community accord was signed in 2003 between Sliammon First Nation.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["Coast Salish", "language", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8019001", "label": "William Swanson", "source": "William Swanson (1819 – 23 April 1903) was a 19th-century Member of Parliament in Auckland, New Zealand. He represented the Newton electorate from 1871 to 1884, when he retired. He was a minister in the Vogel Ministry, 1876 and Grey Ministry 1877–1879 as a Member of the Executive Council. He was then appointed to the Legislative Council in 1885, a position he held until his death.In the 1870s he won a bet with John Sangster Macfarlane who had claimed that a certain politician would soon be in Mt Eden (gaol), and used to display the cheque for £80 which he received from Macfarlane but did not cash.", "target": "New Zealand shipbuilder, timber merchant, politician 1819:1903", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7108722", "label": "Oti Fossae", "source": "Oti Fossae is a group of fossae (troughs) in the Phoenicis Lacus quadrangle on Mars, located at 9.3° S and 116.8° W. It is 370 km long and was named after a classical albedo feature.", "target": "fossae on Mars", "baseline_candidates": ["fossa"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1942327", "label": "inferential", "source": "The inferential mood (abbreviated INFER or INFR) is used to report a nonwitnessed event without confirming it, but the same forms also function as admiratives in the Balkan languages (namely Albanian, Bulgarian, Macedonian and Turkish) in which they occur. The inferential mood is used in some languages such as Turkish to convey information about events which were not directly observed or were inferred by the speaker. When referring to Balkan languages, it is often called renarrative mood; when referring to Estonian, it is called oblique mood. The inferential is usually impossible to be distinguishably translated into English. For instance, indicative Bulgarian той отиде (toy otide) and Turkish o gitti will be translated the same as inferential той отишъл (toy otishal) and o gitmiş—with the English indicative he went. Using the first pair, however, implies very strongly that the speaker either witnessed the event or is very sure that it took place. The second pair implies either that the speaker did not in fact witness it take place, that it occurred in the remote past or that there is considerable doubt as to whether it actually happened. If it were necessary to make the distinction, then the English constructions \"he must have gone\" or \"he is said to have gone\" would partly translate the inferential.", "target": "grammatical mood expressing that an event is inferred rather than witnessed, and is not confirmed", "baseline_candidates": ["epistemic modality", "grammatical mood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2513822", "label": "Rayman: Hoodlums' Revenge", "source": "Rayman: Hoodlums' Revenge (alternatively Rayman: Hoodlum's Revenge) is a game that was released for the Game Boy Advance in 2005. It takes place shortly after the events of Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc and, like its predecessor, pokes fun at the platform game genre.", "target": "2005 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20278499", "label": "Raymond IV, Count of Toulouse", "source": "Raymond IV, Count of Toulouse (c. 1041 – 28 February 1105), sometimes called Raymond of Saint-Gilles or Raymond I of Tripoli, was a powerful noble in southern France and one of the leaders of the First Crusade (1096–1099). He was the Count of Toulouse, Duke of Narbonne and Margrave of Provence from 1094, and he spent the last five years of his life establishing the County of Tripoli in the Near East.", "target": "Occitan noble", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48817638", "label": "Wy Yung", "source": "Wy Yung is a town in Victoria, Australia, located on Great Alpine Road, in the Shire of East Gippsland near Bairnsdale. The town's name means wild duck in the local indigenous language. White settlers moved to the district in the 1860s and by the next decade there was enough population for two schools and a hotel to be opened in the 1870s, it remained a farming district until the 1970s when demand for urban housing began.", "target": "town in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55120138", "label": "San Martino", "source": "San Martino is a Neoclassical-style, Roman Catholic church located on in the town of Castione Andevenno in the province of Sondrio, region of Lombardy, Italy.", "target": "church building in Castione Andevenno, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "architectural ensemble"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14620281", "label": "August Schønemann", "source": "August Schønemann (né Pettersen; 30 May 1891 – 18 February 1925) was a Norwegian singer, actor and comedian. From the mid-1910s up to his death in 1925, he was among the most popular entertainers in Norway. He was father of Aud Schønemann. August was born in Kristiania. He made his staged debut at Østre Theater in 1906, and performed at various theatres over the years. He had his breakthrough in early 1915 with the song \"Neutralitetsværnet\" in the revue Futt at Benno Singer's Theatre Moderne. His most famous act was possibly a duet with Lalla Carlsen at Chat Noir, in a Hamlet parody in the revue Uten en tråd. He also starred in one film production, the four-reel comedy Kjærlighet paa pinde (1922), directed by Erling Eriksen.Schønemann died in February 1925 as a result of pernicious anemia, being at the height of his popularity, at the age of 33.", "target": "Norwegian actor and singer (1891-1925)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11649564", "label": "Iron group", "source": "In chemistry and physics, the iron group refers to elements that are in some way related to iron; mostly in period (row) 4 of the periodic table. The term has different meanings in different contexts. In chemistry, the term is largely obsolete, but it often means iron, cobalt, and nickel, also called the iron triad; or, sometimes, other elements that resemble iron in some chemical aspects. In astrophysics and nuclear physics, the term is still quite common, and it typically means those three plus chromium and manganese—five elements that are exceptionally abundant, both on Earth and elsewhere in the universe, compared to their neighbors in the periodic table. Titanium and vanadium are also produced in Type 1a supernovae.", "target": "chemical series", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikipedia article covering multiple topics", "chemical series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7079896", "label": "Ogden", "source": "Ogden is a small community in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, located in the Municipality of the District of Guysborough in Guysborough County.", "target": "human settlement in Nova Scotia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3392804", "label": "Juanmi García", "source": "Juan Miguel García Inglés (born 9 March 1971), known as Juanmi, is a Spanish retired professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Over 12 seasons – 18 as a professional in total – he appeared in 267 La Liga matches, mainly in representation of Zaragoza (nine years).", "target": "Spanish football player/coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4768445", "label": "Anne Hill", "source": "Anne Hill (78°14′S 162°43′E) is the most prominent hill on Radian Ridge in the Royal Society Range of Victoria Land. It rises to 2,079 metres (6,820 ft) at the east side of Lava Tongue Pass. It was named after Anne C. Wright (later Anne Wright-Grassham), a geologist with, firstly, the New Zealand Geological Survey field party in this area, 1977–78, then with United States Antarctic Research Program field parties, 1982–83, 1983–84, and 1985–86 seasons, with work at Ross Island, Minna Bluff, Mount Discovery, Mount Morning, and Mason Spur.", "target": "mountain in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["hill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17033040", "label": "Wamberal Lagoon", "source": "Wamberal Lagoon, an intermittently closed intermediate saline coastal lagoon, is located on the Central Coast region of New South Wales, Australia. Wamberal Lagoon is located between the beachside settlements of Forresters Beach and Wamberal, and adjacent to the east coast, about 87 kilometres (54 mi) north of Sydney.", "target": "lake in Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11989838", "label": "Mona Elisabeth Brøther", "source": "Mona Elisabeth Brøther (born 9 January 1952) is a Norwegian diplomat. She is a cand.mag. by education and started working for the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1979. She served as subdirector from 1995 and head of department briefly in 2000. However, she soon became Norway's ambassador to Chile from 2000 to 2004, then returned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as senior adviser for five years and head of department for three years. From 2012 to 2015 she served as the Norwegian ambassador to Canada, then served as senior adviser for one more year before retiring.", "target": "Norwegian diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q601818", "label": "Henderson–Hasselbalch equation", "source": "In chemistry and biochemistry,the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation relates the pH of a chemical solution of a weak acid to the numerical value of the acid dissociation constant, Ka, of acid and the ratio of the concentrations, [ Base ] [ Acid ] {\\displaystyle {\\frac {[{\\ce {Base}}]}{[{\\ce {Acid}}]}}} of the acid and its conjugate base in an equilibrium. H A ( a c i d ) ⇋ A − ( b a s e ) + H + {\\displaystyle \\mathrm {{\\underset {(acid)}{HA}}\\leftrightharpoons {\\underset {(base)}{A^{-}}}+H^{+}} } For example, the acid may be acetic acid C H 3 C O 2 H ⇋ C H 3 C O 2 − + H + {\\displaystyle \\mathrm {CH_{3}CO_{2}H\\leftrightharpoons CH_{3}CO_{2}^{-}+H^{+}} } The Henderson–Hasselbalch equation can be used to estimate the pH of a buffer solution by approximating the actual concentration ratio as the ratio of the analytical concentrations of the acid and of a salt, MA. The equation can also be applied to bases by specifying the protonated form of the base as the acid. For example, with an amine, R N H 2 {\\displaystyle \\mathrm {RNH_{2}} } R N H 3 + ⇋ R N H 2 + H + {\\displaystyle \\mathrm {RNH_{3}^{+}\\leftrightharpoons RNH_{2}+H^{+}} }.", "target": "Equation used to estimate the pH of a weak acid or base solution", "baseline_candidates": ["equation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28124222", "label": "William and Agnes Gilkerson Farm", "source": "The William and Agnes Gilkerson Farm, also known more recently as the Kitchel Hill Farm, is a historic farmstead on Kitchel Hill Road in Barnet, Vermont. Established in the late 18th century by Scottish immigrants, it includes one of the finest known examples of a rubblestone farmhouse in the region. The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.", "target": "building in Vermont, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16901380", "label": "Tees Marshalling Yard", "source": "Tees Marshalling Yard is a railway marshalling yard, used to separate railway wagons, located near Middlesbrough in North Yorkshire, Northern England.", "target": "railway marshalling yard in Middlesbrough, England", "baseline_candidates": ["classification yard"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7679372", "label": "Tales of a Courtesan", "source": "Tales of a Courtesan (Oirantan) is the third recording of the Toshiko Akiyoshi – Lew Tabackin Big Band. It is also sometimes referred to by the title HANA KAI TAN (花魁譚) in rōmaji listings of the Japanese album title. All tracks from this album are also included on the 2008 Mosaic 3 CD compilation, Mosaic Select: Toshiko Akiyoshi - Lew Tabackin Big Band.", "target": "album by Toshiko Akiyoshi – Lew Tabackin Big Band", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3891602", "label": "Palazzo di Riserva", "source": "The Palazzo di Riserva, also known as the Palazzo delle Poste because for long it hosted the offices of the Postal Service, is a Neoclassical-style palace in central Parma, region of Emilia Romagna, Italy. The large structure now hosts the Museo Glauco Lombardi displaying collections from 19th-century Parma, as well as offices of the postal service, the provincial forestry service, a literary club, and several shops. It has been much altered over the years.", "target": "building in Parma, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["palace", "building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20832118", "label": "Sânmihaiu de Câmpie", "source": "Sânmihaiu de Câmpie (Hungarian: Mezőszentmihály) is a commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of six villages: Brăteni (Mezőbarátfalva), La Curte (Köbölkútitanyák), Sălcuța (Fűzkút), Sânmihaiu de Câmpie, Stupini (Mezősolymos) and Zoreni (Lompérd). The commune is located in the southern part of the county, on the Transylvanian Plateau. It lies 43 km (27 mi) from the county seat, Bistrița, close to the borders with Mureș and Cluj counties; Târgu Mureș is 62 km (39 mi) to the south, while Cluj-Napoca is 78 km (48 mi) to the west. Sânmihaiu de Câmpie is traversed by county roads DJ151 and DJ162. The commune has a train station that serves the Căile Ferate Române Line 406, which comes from Bistrița Bârgăului and Bistrița North and leads to the town of Luduș in Mureș County. Sights include the wooden church from Sălcuța and the wooden church from Zoreni. At the 2011 census, Sânmihaiu de Câmpie had a population of 1,459. According to the census, 85.74% of inhabitants are Romanians, 8.7% Roma, and 2.26% Hungarians.", "target": "commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Romania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23664030", "label": "Jonathan Scott", "source": "Jonathan Silver Scott (born April 28, 1978) is a Canadian reality television personality, construction contractor, illusionist, and television and film producer. He is best known as the co-host, with his twin brother Drew, of the TV series Property Brothers, as well as the program's spin-offs such as Buying and Selling, Brother Vs. Brother, Forever Homes and Property Brothers: At Home, which are broadcast in the U.S. on HGTV. Scott is also co-founder and executive producer of Scott Brothers Entertainment, which creates TV, film, and digital content for North American and international broadcasters. The brothers have written a home-improvement how-to book, a memoir, and children's books about construction. In 2020, they released a magazine related to their brand, called Reveal. Keeping with their brand, the twins have launched the home goods line Scott Living and its extension, Dream Homes—a consulting and construction firm for luxury home upgrades. Jonathan studied performance magic since childhood and, through college and until his career in television began, he performed illusions professionally, eventually relocating to Las Vegas. He and Drew have released two country singles as the group The Scott Brothers. He lives in Las Vegas, Nevada, in a home he co-owns with Drew, who himself lives in Beverly Hills, Ca.", "target": "Canadian television personality", "baseline_candidates": ["twin", "human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3035300", "label": "Dominique Lokoli", "source": "Dominique Lokoli (born 29 January 1952) is a French former professional footballer who played as a defender.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7563872", "label": "Sosnowa", "source": "Sosnowa [sɔsˈnɔva] (German: Wolmsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kamieniec Ząbkowicki, within Ząbkowice Śląskie County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "target": "village in Lower Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55665887", "label": "Darien Times", "source": "The Darien Times is a weekly newspaper that focuses on local news of Darien, CT. The paper covers Darien's news, politics, sports, schools, and feature stories. The paper publishes a monthly section on arts and entertainment, as well. It also includes columns from local voices. It is distributed every Thursday. The paper is published by Hersam Acorn Newspapers, a community news and multimedia firm in more than 20 communities in Connecticut, New York, and Vermont. The assistant editor, DesRoches was named the New England Newspaper and Press Association's journalist of the year.", "target": "newspaper published in Darien, Connecticut", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25651689", "label": "Shahzadeh Ahmad", "source": "Shahzadeh Ahmad (Persian: شاهزاده احمد, also Romanized as Shāhzādeh Aḩmad and Shahzādeh Ahmad; also known as Āstāneh-ye Shāhzādeh Aḩmad and Āstāneh-ye Shāhzādeh-ye Aḩmad) is a village in Mazu Rural District, Alvar-e Garmsiri District, Andimeshk County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 84, in 19 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6144528", "label": "The Girl Is Mine", "source": "\"The Girl Is Mine\" is a song recorded by American singer Michael Jackson and English musician Paul McCartney. The track was written by Jackson and produced by Jackson and Quincy Jones. It was released as the first single for Jackson's sixth solo album, Thriller (1982). The song was recorded at Westlake Studios, Los Angeles, from April 14 to 16, 1982. The year before, Jackson and McCartney had recorded \"Say Say Say\" and \"The Man\" for the latter's fifth solo album, Pipes of Peace (1983). Although \"The Girl Is Mine\" was released as a single, Jackson never performed the song live. However, he sang a part of the song during a 1993 deposition in Mexico. \"The Girl Is Mine\" achieved success in the music charts. Aside from topping the R&B singles chart, the single peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 and number eight in the UK. The song also reached number one in Spain. By 1985, it had sold 1.3 million copies, and was eventually certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, for shipments of 1,000,000 units. Despite the song's success, it received generally mixed reviews from critics who considered it to be the weakest song on Thriller. \"The Girl Is Mine\" has been the subject of two plagiarism lawsuits, the first in 1984 and the latter in 1993. Both instances required Jackson to testify in court, and each lawsuit was decided in favor of the singer and his record label. In 2008, for the 25th anniversary edition of Thriller, Black Eyed.", "target": "original song written and composed by Michael Jackson; first recorded by Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q611150", "label": "Billiard Congress of America Hall of Fame", "source": "This is the list of people inducted into the Billiard Congress of America's hall of fame. Many of these were inducted based on their excellence as world-class players (the \"Greatest Players\" category), while others (marked with \"•\" below) were inducted for their contributions to the game or the billiards industry (the \"Meritorious Service\" category). The year of induction is listed after the name.", "target": "Sports award, honor", "baseline_candidates": ["sports award", "sports hall of fame", "Billiard Congress of America"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5970581", "label": "IES Ltd", "source": "IES, Ltd. was a supply chain management software company that developed software for freight forwarders, customs brokers, 3PLs, importers, exporters, NVOCCs and other intermediaries to submit entries to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Canada Border Services Agency and other agencies. Customers included Kühne + Nagel, Crowley Maritime, FedEx. IES was acquired by The Descartes Systems Group Inc. on June 15, 2012. Descartes is a publicly traded company, ticker symbol TSX: DSG, NASDAQ: DSGX. Prior to the acquisition by Descartes Systems Group, the software company was originally established in October 1989 and was headquartered in Midland Park, New Jersey, United States, with offices and locations in Hong Kong, Boston and Atlanta. IES was featured in numerous industry publications such as The Washington Post, The Journal of Commerce, American Shipper, Inbound Logistics, DC Velocity and more.", "target": "Supply chain management company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51667840", "label": "Lee Shallat-Chemel", "source": "Lee Shallat Chemel (born June 15, 1943, in Los Angeles, California), sometimes credited as Lee Shallat, is an American film and television director and television producer. She began her professional directorial career at the South Coast Repertory theatre in Costa Mesa, California, while working at the same time as the head of the theatre's conservatory program. She also directed at the Shakespeare|Summerfest Orange County (originally the Grove Shakespeare Festival in Garden Grove, California and the Matrix Theatre in Hollywood. After a meeting with producer Gary David Goldberg, she made her television directorial debut in 1984 on the NBC television show Family Ties. Her career has included directing a multitude of shows including: Diff'rent Strokes, Murphy Brown, Mad About You, Suddenly Susan, Becker, Sydney, George Lopez, That's So Raven, Arrested Development, and The Middle, among other series. She has been nominated for three Emmy Awards, in 1992, 1994 and 1995. From 1996 to 1997, she directed twenty-three out of the first twenty-four episodes of Spin City.She became a producer in 1993, producing 30 episodes in the first two seasons of The Nanny, as well as 22 episodes of Gilmore Girls. In 2005, she directed the film Greener Mountains with a cast that included Kimberly McCullough and Curtis Armstrong. She has also directed a few television films.", "target": "Film/television director, television producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6719698", "label": "MV Kooringa", "source": "MV Kooringa was the world's first fully cellular purpose-built container ship and was built by Australian company, Associated Steamships in partnership with McIlwraith, McEacharn & Co and commissioned in May 1964. It was built at the New South Wales State Dockyard in Newcastle as a \"custom-designed cellular container ship to handle 20-ton containers\".The 6,750-ton ship was designed to handle 10,000 tons of containerised cargo in 36 hours by being loaded and unloaded simultaneously. It entered the Melbourne-Fremantle trade in 1964, arriving at Fremantle Harbour on 19 June that year. Two more purpose built container ships, MV Kanimbla and MV Manoora joined the regular service in 1969 and the three ships continued to operate until 1975 when competition from rail freight made the service non-viable. The ship was named after the now closed mining town of Kooringa in South Australia.", "target": "Australian ship", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60786389", "label": "Osman Niyazi Burcu", "source": "Osman Niyazi Burcu (1875 – 17 June 1955) was a Turkish Kemalist politician, and a prominent member of the CHP.", "target": "Turkish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3697953", "label": "1997 Croatian Bol Ladies Open – doubles", "source": "Laura Montalvo and Paola Suárez were the defending champions but only Montalvo competed that year with Henrieta Nagyová. Montalvo and Nagyová won in the final 6–3, 6–1 against María José Gaidano and Marion Maruska.", "target": "1997 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6239416", "label": "John Hislop", "source": "John Hislop (7 December 1821 – 19 May 1904) was a New Zealand teacher, school inspector, educationalist and public servant. He was born in Lasswade, Midlothian, Scotland on 7 December 1821. His son, Thomas William Hislop, became Minister of Education.", "target": "New Zealand teacher, school inspector, educationalist, public servant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4933346", "label": "Bob McGregor", "source": "Robert McGregor was a Scottish footballer who played professionally in Scotland and the American Soccer League. McGregor played for Morton from 1919 to 1923, winning the 1922 Scottish Cup with them. In 1923, he left Scotland to join Bethlehem Steel in the American Soccer League. He played for Bethlehem until 1930, serving as team captain during the last few years with the team. During his time with Bethlehem Steel, the team won the 1924 American Cup, 1926 National Challenge Cup, two league titles and one league cup. In 1930, McGregor moved to the Newark Americans for at least one season.", "target": "Scottish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4598693", "label": "2001 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I – Pool C", "source": "Group C of the 2001 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I of the 2001 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team advancing to the play-offs and the bottom team being relegated down to Group II for 2002.", "target": "Group C of the 2001 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27995100", "label": "Fox Creek", "source": "Fox Creek is a south flowing stream in Douglas and Wright counties of the southern Missouri Ozarks. It is a tributary to Bryant Creek. The stream source is about three quarters of a mile east of Missouri Route C just southeast of the town of Norwood in southern Wright County. The stream flows in a meandering southerly direction past Denlow on Missouri Route 76; east of Champion; just west of Gentryville on Missouri Route 14; and Bertha to its confluence with Bryant Creek just south of Bertha. The elevation of the confluence is 722 ft (220 m).", "target": "creek in Southern Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16007998", "label": "Ashton B. Collins, Sr.", "source": "Ashton Budd Collins Sr. (September 14, 1885 – December 16, 1976) was an American inventor and marketer. He was the creator of Reddy Kilowatt, a popular corporate trade symbol for the electric utility industry for much of the 20th century.", "target": "American inventor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q201056", "label": "Yungay", "source": "Yungay is a Chilean town and commune in Diguillín Province, Ñuble Region. The commune spans an area of 823.5 km (512 mi).", "target": "commune in Ñuble Region, Chile", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "commune of Chile"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2071019", "label": "Amara Morikè Kallé", "source": "Amara Dit Morikè Kallé (born 19 September 1990 in Bamako) is a Malian football (soccer) defender, who plays for AJ Auxerre.", "target": "Malian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75152711", "label": "Raghabpur", "source": "Raghabpur is a census town in the Ranaghat I CD block in the Ranaghat subdivision of the Nadia district in the state of West Bengal, India.", "target": "census Town in West Bengal, India", "baseline_candidates": ["census town of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2750312", "label": "Beechworth", "source": "Beechworth is a well-preserved historical town located in the north-east of Victoria, Australia, famous for its major growth during the gold rush days of the mid-1850s. At the 2016 census, Beechworth had a population of 3,859. Beechworth's many historical buildings are well preserved and the town has re-invented itself and evolved into a popular tourist destination and growing wine-producing centre.", "target": "town in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["town"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7352363", "label": "Robin Donkin", "source": "Robert Arthur \"Robin\" Donkin, FBA (1928–2006) was an English historian and geographer who served as a reader in historical geography in the University of Cambridge's Department of Geography in 1990. A fellow of the British Academy, Donkin published works on a wide range of subjects, including Cistercian monasteries, agricultural terracing, the history of pearls and pearl fishing, the Muscovy duck, the Guinea fowl, and the history of spices and aromatics.", "target": "British historical geographer (1928-2006)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65070019", "label": "1943 Cleveland mayoral election", "source": "The Cleveland mayoral election of 1943 saw the reelection of Frank Lausche.", "target": "1943 mayoral election in Cleveland, Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3184245", "label": "Fernand Fafard", "source": "Joseph-Fernand Fafard (25 August 1882 – 14 May 1955) was a Laurier Liberal then a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in L'Islet, Quebec and became a land surveyor. Fafard attended L'Islet College and fr:Collège de Lévis. In 1901, he surveyed land in Alberta and Saskatchewan for his probationary course and in 1905 earned his diploma. He was the first to conduct a land survey of the Abitibi region and also became vice-president of the Quebec Land Surveyors Association.He was first elected to Parliament under the Laurier Liberals party banner at the L'Islet riding in the 1917 general election and re-elected under the Liberal Party there in 1921, 1925, 1926 and 1930. With riding boundary changes, Fafard was re-elected for the Liberals in 1935 at the Montmagny—L'Islet riding. In 1940, after completing his term in the 18th Canadian Parliament, Fafard was appointed to the Senate for the De la Durantaye, Quebec division and continued in that role until his death on 14 May 1955 in Quebec City following an unidentified brief illness.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5000658", "label": "Burston railway station", "source": "Burston railway station was on the Diss to Norwich line and served the village of Burston. Only the station building remains; very little evidence of the platforms exist.The railway line still passes through it on a level crossing. The original signal box is no longer there. A cottage between the railway line and the station master's house also no longer exists. There are no longer any sidings on the site (two sidings are shown on the 1:2500 scale 1928 O.S. map).", "target": "railway station in South Norfolk, the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5571483", "label": "Gloria Whelan", "source": "Gloria Whelan (born November 23, 1923) is an American poet, short story writer, and novelist known primarily for children's and young adult fiction. She won the annual National Book Award for Young People's Literature in 2000 for the novel Homeless Bird. She also won the 2013 Tuscany Prize for Catholic Fiction for her short story What World Is This? and the work became the title for the independent publisher's 2013 collection of short stories. Whelan's books include many historical fiction novels, including a trilogy set on Mackinac Island and a quartet series set in communist Russia. Whelan is also the author of short stories which have appeared in The Ontario Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, The Gettysburg Review, and other literary quarterlies. Her collection of short stories, Playing with Shadows, was published by the Illinois Press. Her stories have appeared in several anthologies and in Prize Stories: the O. Henry Awards. Whelan is, according to Liz Rosenberg in the Chicago Tribune, \"an accomplished, graceful, and intelligent writer.\".", "target": "British children's writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5000390", "label": "Burrator and Sheepstor Halt railway station", "source": "Burrator and Sheepstor Halt railway station was located on the 10.5 mile long single track branch railway line in Devon, England, running from Yelverton to Princetown with eventually four intermediate stations. The station was opened as Burrator Platform and became Burrator Halt when it was opened to the public, the name being changed again in 1929 to Burrator and Sheepstor Halt.Opened as Burrator Platform on Monday 4 February 1924 the station at first only catered for workmen employed on the raising of the Burrator and Sheepstor Dams when Burrator Reservoir was enlarged. This service consisted of a morning train that left Princetown at 6:27 am for Dousland and Yelverton and then, after collecting workmen off the 6:20 am from Millbay Station, left Yelverton Station at 6:58 am, stopping at Burrator and Sheepstor Platform at 7:05 am to set them down. On Mondays to Fridays the 4:05 pm from Princetown called at Burrator at 4:30 pm to pick up workmen for the homeward journey. On Saturday mornings the 12:25 pm from Princetown called at 12:50 pm to collect workers and the later train would then not stop.From Thursday 6 November 1924 the early morning trains ran only on Monday mornings. The 4:05 pm from Princetown no longer called, but the return journey, the 4:55 pm from Yelverton did. For the remainder of the week the 7:38 am from Princetown conveyed the workmen to Burrator. Burrator and Sheepstor Platform was opened to the general public as from Monday 18 May 1925 and was served by trains during daylight.", "target": "former railway station in Devon, England", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19269672", "label": "Tales of Dunk and Egg", "source": "Tales of Dunk and Egg is a series of fantasy novellas by George R. R. Martin, set in the world of his A Song of Ice and Fire novels. They follow the adventures of \"Dunk\" (the future Lord Commander of the Kingsguard, Ser Duncan the Tall) and \"Egg\" (the future king Aegon V Targaryen), some 90 years before the events of the novels. Three novellas have been published – The Hedge Knight (1998), The Sworn Sword (2003), and The Mystery Knight (2010) – and Martin has stated his intention to continue the series. A collection of the existing three novellas, with illustrations by Gary Gianni, was published as A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms on October 6, 2015.", "target": "series of novellas by George R. R. Martin", "baseline_candidates": ["book series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7081351", "label": "Oil Region National Heritage Area", "source": "Oil Region National Heritage Area is a federally designated National Heritage Area in the northwestern portion of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. The national heritage area commemorates and promotes the region surrounding Edwin Drake's oil well of 1859 near Titusville, which gave rise to the modern oil industry.The national heritage area includes all of Venango County and a portion of Crawford County, including Titusville and Oil Creek TownshipThe Oil Region National Heritage Area was established by Public Law 108-447 in 2004. It is administered by the Oil Region Alliance.", "target": "United States National Heritage Area in Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["National Heritage Area"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5922079", "label": "Howie Menard", "source": "Howard Hubert Ménard (born April 28, 1942) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who played 151 games in the National Hockey League. He played for the Detroit Red Wings, Los Angeles Kings, Chicago Black Hawks and the Oakland Seals between 1964 and 1970. Most of his career, which lasted from 1962 to 1977, was spent in the minor American Hockey League (AHL). Howie is the brother of Hillary Menard. Howie continues to hold the record for most points in a playoff game (7) in the AHL Calder Cup, with four goals and three assists against the Cleveland Barons on April 12, 1972, while playing for the Baltimore Clippers. Only two players have tied his record since that time. Howie was the Captain of the 1961-62 Memorial Cup Champions, Hamilton Red Wings.", "target": "Canadian ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q191356", "label": "Icelanders", "source": "Icelanders (Icelandic: Íslendingar) are a North Germanic ethnic group and nation who are native to the island country of Iceland and speak Icelandic.Icelanders established the country of Iceland in mid 930 AD when the Althing (Parliament) met for the first time. Iceland came under the reign of Norwegian, Swedish and Danish kings but regained full sovereignty and independence from the Danish monarchy on 1 December 1918, when the Kingdom of Iceland was established. On 17 June 1944, the monarchy was abolished and the Icelandic republic was founded. The language spoken is Icelandic, a North Germanic language, and Lutheranism is the predominant religion. Historical and DNA records indicate that around 60 to 80 percent of the male settlers were of Norse origin (primarily from Western Norway) and a similar percentage of the women were of Gaelic stock from Ireland and peripheral Scotland.", "target": "are a mix of Celtic and Norse ethnic group native to Iceland; citizens or residents or Iceland", "baseline_candidates": ["human population", "European people", "nation", "Scandinavians", "inhabitant", "Western Europeans"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7175228", "label": "Peter Kivy", "source": "Peter Kivy (October 22, 1934 – May 6, 2017) was professor emeritus of musicology and philosophy at Rutgers University. He studied particularly the philosophy of music.", "target": "American musicologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q281736", "label": "Bare-eared squirrel monkey", "source": "The bare-eared squirrel monkey (Saimiri ustus) is a squirrel monkey endemic to Brazil and possibly eastern Bolivia.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11902435", "label": "William Lehtinen", "source": "Uuno Wilhelm \"William\" Lehtinen (1895—1975) was a Finnish forester and business executive, most notable for his long career at the Finnish state-owned forestry and paper company Enso-Gutzeit (now part of Stora Enso), which he steered to become the largest manufacturer of paperboard in Europe.", "target": "Finnish forestry executive", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1582583", "label": "An American Dream", "source": "An American Dream (also known as See You in Hell, Darling) is a 1966 Technicolor drama film directed by Robert Gist and starring Stuart Whitman and Janet Leigh. It was adapted from the 1965 Norman Mailer novel of the same name. The film received an Oscar nomination for Best Song for \"A Time for Love,\" music by Johnny Mandel and lyrics by Paul Francis Webster.", "target": "1966 film by Robert Gist", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4777793", "label": "Anumeta asiatica", "source": "Anumeta asiatica is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Wiltshire in 1961. It is found in south-western Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Oman, the United Arab Emirates and in the Arava Valley in Israel. There is one generation per year. Adults are on wing from May to August. The larvae probably feed on Calligonum species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2351501", "label": "Evil Zone", "source": "Evil Zone, stylized as EVIL Z♀NE in the PAL region, is a fighting game developed by Yuke's Future Media Creators for the PlayStation in 1999. The player can choose from ten characters to fight in several game modes including story mode, arcade mode, versus mode, practice and survival mode.", "target": "1999 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6224047", "label": "John Burton", "source": "John Wear Burton (2 March 1915 – 23 June 2010) was an Australian public servant, High Commissioner and academic.", "target": "Australian diplomat and academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1052356", "label": "Cecil Spring-Rice", "source": "Sir Cecil Arthur Spring Rice, (27 February 1859 – 14 February 1918) was a British diplomat who served as British Ambassador to the United States from 1912 to 1918, as which he was responsible for the organisation of British efforts to end American neutrality during the First World War. He was also a close friend of US President Theodore Roosevelt, and served as best man at his second wedding.He is best known as the writer of the lyrics of the patriotic hymn, \"I Vow to Thee, My Country\".", "target": "British diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5084640", "label": "Charles H. Byrne", "source": "Charles H. Byrne (September 1843–January 4, 1898) was a New York realtor who was one of the original founders of the team that became the Brooklyn Dodgers (now the Los Angeles Dodgers). Byrne was a graduate of St. Francis Xavier College, and after graduation he worked as a writer for a newspaper.Byrne, his brother-in-law Joseph Doyle, New York Herald editor George J. Taylor, and Rhode Island casino owner Ferdinand Abell formed a group that raised the money to found the Brooklyn ball club in 1883, known originally as simply the \"Brooklyns\". They leased land on Fifth Avenue in Brooklyn to build Washington Park, the team's original home, which cost $30,000. In its first year, the team played in the minor-league Inter-State Association of Professional Baseball Clubs, winning the league championship. Having attracted a following, the owners moved the franchise in 1884 to the American Association (AA), a competitor to the more established National League (NL), that catered to a more working-class crowd.After managing the team from 1885 to 1887, Byrne saw the franchise join the National League in 1890, and remained in the ownership group until his death in 1898. Under his tenure, the team, known variously as the Brooklyns, Bridegrooms and Grooms, posted a record of 567-506 and won two league championships (the AA in 1889 and the NL in 1890).Byrne was in ill health at the time of the National League meeting in November 1897, but he insisted on making the journey from Virginia, where he had been recovering, to the event in Philadelphia.", "target": "American baseball manager (1843-1898)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6301077", "label": "Láhpoluoppal", "source": "Láhpoluoppal is a village in Kautokeino Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. The village is located at the southern end of the large lake Láhpojávri, along the Norwegian National Road 92. The small village lies on the vast Finnmarksvidda plateau, about half-way between the villages of Masi and Kautokeino. The Láhpoluoppal Chapel is located in the village.", "target": "village in Kautokeino, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7859933", "label": "Tyler, The Creator production discography", "source": "The following list is a discography of production by Tyler, the Creator, an American rapper and record producer. Note: Tyler, The Creator's unreleased projects will not be included.", "target": "production discography", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia production discography"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7783629", "label": "They're a Weird Mob", "source": "They're a Weird Mob is a popular 1957 Australian comic novel written by John O'Grady under the pseudonym \"Nino Culotta\", the name of the main character of the book. The book was the first published novel by O'Grady, with an initial print run of 6,000 hardback copies. In less than six months, the book had been reprinted eight times and sold 74,000 copies. In the first year of publication, over 130,000 copies were sold. By the time of O'Grady's death in 1981, They're A Weird Mob was in its forty-seventh impression, with sales approaching the one million mark. Published by Ure Smith, the manuscript had been earlier rejected by publisher Angus & Robertson, and is reputedly the result of a ten pound bet between O'Grady and his brother, novelist Frank O'Grady.", "target": "Australian comic novel", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6073739", "label": "Irresistible", "source": "Irresistible was the only solo album for Tammi Terrell, which was released in January 1969 by Motown Records. Due to complications with a malignant brain tumor in 1968 which caused her death in March 1970, Terrell did not record a subsequent solo album. This album compiles solo recordings Terrell made for Motown between 1965 and 1968. Two of the tracks included on this album were dubbed with vocals from Terrell's frequent singing partner Marvin Gaye to create album tracks for the duo's joint albums. These tracks were \"Hold Me Oh My Darling\" (on 1967's United) and \"I Can't Believe You Love Me\" (on 1969's Easy). A re-recorded version of \"Come On and See Me\" appears on the 1968 Gaye/Terrell album You're All I Need. \"This Old Heart of Mine (is Weak for You)\" is a remake of the 1966 Isley Brothers' hit by the same name. Irresistible reached No. 39 on the Billboard R&B albums chart in March 1969.Terrell's singles from Irresistible and other unreleased songs were re-released on compact disc entitled Tammi Terrell: The Essential Collection by Motown in 2001.", "target": "album by Tammi Terrell", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76381247", "label": "Tecolote road station", "source": "Tecolote Road station is a San Diego Trolley station in San Diego, California. The station is located adjacent to the 5 Freeway/Tecolote Road interchange. It was developed as a station for the Mid-Coast Trolley extension project, which is an extension for the Blue Line. The station has 279 parking spaces.", "target": "train station in San Diego, California", "baseline_candidates": ["tram stop"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6297954", "label": "Jozef Štafura", "source": "Jozef Štafura (born 11 September 1948 in Pavlovce nad Uhom, Czechoslovakia) is a former Slovak football midfielder who played for Strážske and mostly for VSS Košice (1969–80). He played overall 251 games and scored 26 goals during his ten seasons at the Czechoslovak First League. He was a part of the legendary VSS midfield from the 1970s, including trio Štafura – Daňko – Pollák. On 2 May 1973, Štafura made his only appearance for the Czechoslovakia national football team in a 1–1 away draw against Denmark at the 1974 FIFA World Cup qualification. After his playing career he was an assistant coach of 1. FC Košice and the Slovakia national under-21 football team (1993–97) alongside Milan Lešický.", "target": "Czechoslovak soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16840707", "label": "1874 Hackney by-election", "source": "The 1874 Hackney by-election was fought on 24 April 1874. The byelection was fought due to the void Election of the incumbent Liberal MP, John Holms. It was retained by Holms.", "target": "UK Parliamentary by-election", "baseline_candidates": ["by-election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2726906", "label": "Kočino Selo", "source": "Kočino Selo is a village in the municipality of Jagodina, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 952 people.", "target": "selo in Pomoravlje District, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q796100", "label": "Ecologist Green Party", "source": "The Ecologist Green Party (Romanian: Partidul Verde Ecologist), formerly known as the Ecologist Party of Moldova \"Green Alliance\" (Romanian: Partidul Ecologist din Moldova \"Alianța Verde\", PEMAV) is a green political party in Moldova.", "target": "political party in Moldova", "baseline_candidates": ["Green party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76330466", "label": "Elsie Masson", "source": "Elsie Rosaline Masson (1890–1935) was an Australian photographer, writer and traveller, best known as the wife of Polish-British anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski. She published An Untamed Territory: The Northern Territory of Australia in 1915.She was the daughter of David Orme Masson. She and Malinowski had three daughters, Józefa, Wanda and Helena. : 336 : 138 Their daughter Helena Malinowska Wayne would conduct research and publish several works about the life her father.", "target": "Australian photographer, writer and traveller", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7730265", "label": "The Dirty Dozen", "source": "The Dirty Dozen is a Cato Institute book, written by Robert A. Levy and William Mellor and released in May 2008, about twelve U.S. Supreme Court decisions that were viewed as greatly undermining individual freedom by expanding the power of government. The book was the subject of many reviews and much press. It was released around the time that Levy gained media attention as the organizer and financier behind District of Columbia v. Heller.", "target": "book by Robert A. Levy and William Mellor", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18554503", "label": "giant cell arteritis", "source": "Giant cell arteritis (GCA), also called temporal arteritis, is an inflammatory autoimmune disease of large blood vessels. Symptoms may include headache, pain over the temples, flu-like symptoms, double vision, and difficulty opening the mouth. Complication can include blockage of the artery to the eye with resulting blindness, aortic dissection, and aortic aneurysm. GCA is frequently associated with polymyalgia rheumatica.The cause is unknown. The underlying mechanism involves inflammation of the small blood vessels that supply the walls of larger arteries. This mainly affects arteries around the head and neck, though some in the chest may also be affected. Diagnosis is suspected based on symptoms, blood tests, and medical imaging, and confirmed by biopsy of the temporal artery. However, in about 10% of people the temporal artery is normal.Treatment is typical with high doses of steroids such as prednisone or prednisolone. Once symptoms have resolved, the dose is decreased by about 15% per month. Once a low dose is reached, the taper is slowed further over the subsequent year. Other medications that may be recommended include bisphosphonates to prevent bone loss and a proton-pump inhibitor to prevent stomach problems.It affects about 1 in 15,000 people over the age of 50 per year. The condition mostly occurs in those over the age of 50, being most common among those in their 70s. Females are more often affected than males. Those of northern European descent are more commonly affected. Life expectancy is typically normal. The first description of the condition occurred in 1890.", "target": "human disease", "baseline_candidates": ["secondary glomerular disease", "disease (individual)", "disease (class)", "autoimmune disease of cardiovascular system", "central nervous system vasculitis", "autoimmune disease of the nervous system", "designated intractable/rare diseases", "predominantly large-vessel vasculitis"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16891988", "label": "Guzun", "source": "Guzun (Persian: گوزون) is a village in the Khwahan District of Badakhshan in north-eastern Afghanistan.", "target": "human settlement in Afghanistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6648993", "label": "Little Bampton", "source": "Little Bampton is a village in Cumbria situated 6 miles outside the market town of Wigton and 8 miles west of Carlisle, England. The village itself comprises approximately 40 houses, some dating back to the 18th century. The village does not have a hall, Church, but its main meeting place is the Pub called 'The Tam O'Shanter'. In 1870-72 the township had a population of 172.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6011450", "label": "In a Quiet Room II", "source": "In a Quiet Room II is the twelfth album released by country music artist Dan Seals and his only album on the TDC label. This album is his second album of acoustic versions of his older songs and a sequel to his previous album, In a Quiet Room. No singles were released from this album. Alison Krauss and Pam Tillis sing background vocals on several songs.", "target": "album by Dan Seals", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16059182", "label": "Charles Layard", "source": "Sir Charles Peter Layard (5 December 1849 – 8 June 1915) was the 18th chief justice of Ceylon from 1902 to 1906. Charles Peter Layard was born on 5 December 1849 in Colombo, the youngest of nine children, to Charles Peter Layard (1806–1893) and Louisa Anne née Edwards (1809–1886), who hailed from a distinguished family, whose earlier relatives migrated to Ceylon. His father was a civil servant and first mayor of Colombo.Layard was appointed chief justice on 21 March 1902, upon the retirement of John Winfield Bonser, and took up the position on 26 April 1902. He was one of the first chief justices produced by the local bar, and served until he was succeeded by Joseph Turner Hutchinson in June 1906.", "target": "British colonial judge (1849-1916)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q552668", "label": "Sundeved", "source": "Sundeved is a peninsula on the east coast of the Jutland peninsula in south Denmark. It lies between Åbenrå Fjord and Als Fjord to the north, Alssund to the east and Flensborg Fjord to the south. The westernmost part of the city of Sønderborg is located on the peninsula. Most of Sønderborg is on the island of Als. Until December 31, 2006 Sundeved (German: Sundewitt) was also the name of a municipality in the former South Jutland County The municipality covered an area of 69 km2, and had a total population of 5,298 (2005). Its last mayor was John Solkær Pedersen. The main town and the site of its municipal council was the town of Sønderborg, in neighboring Sønderborg municipality. Towns in the municipality included Avnbøl, Ballebro, Blans, Stenderup, Ullerup, Vester Sottrup, and Øster Sottrup. Ferry service connects the former municipality at the town of Ballebro over Als Fjord to the town of Hardeshøj. The municipality was created in 1970 as the result a kommunalreform (\"Municipality Reform\") that merged a number of existing parishes: Nybøl (German: Nübel) Parish Sottrup (German:Satrup) Parish Ullerup (German:Ulderup) ParishSundeved municipality ceased to exist as the result of Kommunalreformen (\"The Municipality Reform\" of 2007). It was combined with existing Augustenborg, Broager, Gråsten, Nordborg, Sydals, and Sønderborg municipalities to form the new Sønderborg Municipality. This created a municipality with an area of 499 km2 and a total population of over 70,000 people (2005). The new municipality belongs to the new Region of Southern Denmark.", "target": "peninsula in Denmark", "baseline_candidates": ["peninsula"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7182873", "label": "2003 Philadelphia mayoral election", "source": "The 2003 Philadelphia mayoral election was a contest between Democratic incumbent John F. Street and Republican businessman Sam Katz. Pennsylvania Governor and former Mayor of Philadelphia Ed Rendell played a key role for Street by ensuring that business interests did not support Katz.The race was covered in the documentary film The Shame of a City. This was the last election prior to the 2019 election that saw a Republican nominee carry a ward, with Katz carrying several.", "target": "2003 mayoral election in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["mayoral election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28229419", "label": "Italian training ship Caroly", "source": "Caroly is a yawl, active as a sail training vessel for the Italian Navy.", "target": "military training ship", "baseline_candidates": ["ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4670710", "label": "Abvel", "source": "Abvel is a village in Kapadvanj Taluk, Kheda District, Gujarat State, India. Abvel is 114.8 km from its district main city Kheda and 45 km from its state main city Gandhinagar.", "target": "village in Gujarat, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14706328", "label": "Hart House (Burlingham, New York)", "source": "Hart House, also known as Hart Residence, is a historic home located at Burlingham in Sullivan County, New York. It was built in 1825 and is a narrow, rectangular, 1+1⁄2-story wood-frame building with clapboard siding on a slightly raised stone foundation. It measures approximately 42 feet by 21 feet. The property used to have three seasonal cottages dating to the early 20th century. They were destroyed by the local fire department in a controlled burn.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.", "target": "listed on the NRHP in Sullivan County, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["historic house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4458923", "label": "Oleksandr Tkachenko", "source": "Oleksandr Vladyslavovych Tkachenko (Ukrainian: Олекса́ндр Владисла́вович Ткаче́нко, born 22 January 1966) is a Ukrainian journalist, CEO and politician who has served as Ukraine's Minister of Culture and Information Policy since 4 June 2020.Prior to his Ministership Tkachenko was a Ukrainian media manager, journalist, producer and the long-term CEO of the 1+1 Media Group.Tkachenko won a parliamentary seat in the July 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election with the party Servant of the People.", "target": "Ukrainian politician, journalist, media-manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61329718", "label": "Korsun-Shevchenkivskyi", "source": "Korsun-Shevchenkivskyi (Ukrainian: Ко́рсунь-Шевче́нківський, pronounced [ˈkɔrsʊnʲ ʃeu̯ˈtʃɛnkiu̯sʲkɪj]; Polish: Korsuń Szewczenkowski; Russian: Корсунь-Шевченковский) is a small city located in Cherkasy Raion of Cherkasy Oblast (province) in central Ukraine. It hosts the administration of Korsun-Shevchenkivskyi urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. The city rests on the banks of the Ros River. Population: 17,474 (2021 est.).", "target": "city of Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["city ​​in Ukraine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4878600", "label": "Beck Foot", "source": "Beck Foot is a hamlet in Cumbria, England, situated on the B6257 road south of Lowgill, the West Coast Main Line and M6 motorway. The disused Lowgill Viaduct is close by.", "target": "village in Cumbria, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4908112", "label": "Bill Benulis", "source": "Bill Benulis (November 5, 1928 - May 30, 2011) was an American comic book artist in the 1950s. His style is distinctive, and he signed his work, he drew 146 stories in a variety of genres. He was associated with artist Jack Abel who inked much of his work. His work appears in war comics, horror comics, and science fiction comics, and was reprinted in the Marvel Comics reprint series, War Is Hell, as well as in several of the reprints of fifties comic books published under the IW imprint in the sixties. His work is also collected in several reprints in the Marvel Masterworks: Atlas Era series (Strange Tales, Battlefield and Journey into Mystery).", "target": "American comic book artist (1928-2011)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94761913", "label": "Skip Phoenix", "source": "Skip Phoenix (born 19 August 1948) is a Canadian diver. He competed in the men's 3 metre springboard event at the 1976 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Canadian diver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19286102", "label": "indie pop", "source": "Indie pop (also typeset as indie-pop or indiepop) is a music genre and subculture that combines guitar pop with DIY ethic in opposition to the style and tone of mainstream pop music. It originated from British post-punk in the late 1970s and subsequently generated a thriving fanzine, label, and club and gig circuit. Compared to its counterpart, indie rock, the genre is more melodic, less abrasive, and relatively angst-free. In later years, the definition of indie pop has bifurcated to also mean bands from unrelated DIY scenes/movements with pop leanings. Subgenres include chamber pop and twee pop.", "target": "genre of alternative pop music", "baseline_candidates": ["independent music", "alternative rock", "music genre", "pop music"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6303841", "label": "judo at the 1987 Pan American Games", "source": "The Judo Competition for men and women at the 1987 Pan American Games was held from August 7 to August 23, 1987 in Indianapolis, United States. There were eight weight divisions for both men and women.", "target": "judo competition", "baseline_candidates": ["judo at the Pan American Games"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16066755", "label": "John Baptist de Faria", "source": "John Baptist de Faria was born in 1871, in Portugal. He was a graduate of the School of Medicine and Surgery, Lisbon, 1896, and interned at the Maternity and Hospital for Women at Lisbon. Following his hospital work there, he served on the staffs of civil and military hospitals in the Portuguese possessions of Portuguese Cape Verde and Portuguese Guinea, Africa. Later he went to the United States with his wife and children and settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts. In 1902 Dr. de Faria arrived in Honolulu and was licensed to practice in September of that year. His office and residence was located on Alakea Street; and he specialized in obstetrics and diseases of women.", "target": "Portuguese physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6530050", "label": "Les Townsend", "source": "Leslie Hyde Townsend (born 4 October 1914 at Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; died 30 January 1986) was an Australian cricket Test match umpire. He umpired one Test match between Australia and England at Melbourne on 13 February to 18 February 1959, won by Australia by 9 wickets with a century to Colin McDonald and 5 wickets each to Alan Davidson and Richie Benaud. Townsend’s partner in this match was Ron Wright.", "target": "Australian cricket umpire (1914-1986)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q471973", "label": "Amir Ansari", "source": "Amir Ansari (Persian: امیر انصاری) is an American Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder of Prodea Systems. Along with his sister-in-law Anousheh Ansari, he made a multimillion-dollar contribution to the Ansari X Prize foundation on May 5, 2004, the 43rd anniversary of Alan Shepard's sub-orbital spaceflight. The X Prize was officially renamed the Ansari X Prize in honor of their donation. Born in 1970 in Tehran, Iran, Ansari immigrated to the United States before the Iranian Revolution. He received his Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering and computer science at George Mason University. Amir, along with his brother Hamid and Anousheh, founded Telecom Technologies, Inc. (TTI) in 1993, and served as the company's CTO. TTI was acquired by Sonus Networks, Inc. in January 2001. Prodea has announced the formation of a partnership with Space Adventures, Ltd. and the Federal Space Agency of the Russian Federation (FSA) to create a fleet of suborbital spaceflight vehicles for global commercial use.", "target": "Co-founder:venture capital firm Prodea Systems Inc", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12722947", "label": "Bretannio", "source": "Saint Bretannio (also Bretanion, Bretannion, Vetranio, Vetranion) was a bishop of Tomi (today Constanţa, Romania) during the fourth century. Of Cappadocian origin, he occupied the see of Tomi from 360.According to Sozomen, during the campaign against the Goths in this region, the emperor Valens stopped at Tomi and urged the populace to convert to Arianism and reject the Nicene Creed. Bretannio spoke out against this and for this he was exiled. However, due to public outcry over the bishop's exile, he was allowed to return.Basil the Great requested of the ruler of Scythia Minor, Junius Soranus (Saran), that he should send him the relics of saints of that region. Basil was sent the relics of Sabbas the Goth in Caesarea, Cappadocia, in 373 or 374 accompanied by a letter entitled the 'Epistle of the Church of God in Gothia to the Church of God located in Cappadocia and to all the Local Churches of the Holy Universal Church'. The sending of Sabbas' relics and the writing of the actual letter has been attributed to Bretannio. He may have represented Tomi at the council held in Constantinople in 381, but his name may have been confused with the name of the bishop Gerontius (Terentius) of Tomi, who may have been the actual participant at this council. Baronio, in compiling his martyrology, seems to have arbitarirly assigned him the feast day of January 25.", "target": "Bishop of Tomi in Romania", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4923470", "label": "Blacktoft Sands RSPB reserve", "source": "Blacktoft Sands RSPB reserve is a nature reserve in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, which leases the site from Associated British Ports.", "target": "RSPB nature reserve in England", "baseline_candidates": ["nature reserve"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1122965", "label": "Swissquote", "source": "Swissquote Group Holding SA is a Swiss banking group specialising in the provision of online financial and trading services. The Group's shares have been listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange under the ticker symbol “SQN” since 29 May 2000. The Group's headquarters are located in Gland, Switzerland. The company also has offices in Zurich, Bern, London, Dubai, Hong Kong, Malta, Singapore and Luxembourg. The Group has 722 employees.", "target": "public company", "baseline_candidates": ["public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31812637", "label": "Newington", "source": "Newington is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States. Located 8 miles (13 km) south of downtown Hartford, Newington is an older, mainly residential suburb located in Greater Hartford. As of the 2020 census, the population was 30,536. The Connecticut Department of Transportation has its headquarters in Newington. Newington is home to Mill Pond Falls, near the center of town. It is celebrated each fall during the Waterfall Festival. The American Radio Relay League is headquartered in Newington, with a call sign of W1AW.", "target": "town in Connecticut, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16971131", "label": "1946–47 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team", "source": "The 1946–47 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6167173", "label": "Jay Seals", "source": "Jay Seals (born March 23, 1976) is an American actor, known for his recurring role in the television drama Mad Men on AMC from 2010 to 2015. Some of his other credits include the 2012 American television police procedural fantasy drama Awake, as a police tech, Nat, who is considered to be a \"tech-savvy cop\". He also appeared in numerous other television series and films.Seals was scheduled to appear in the television pilot Metro, from the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) by Oscar-winning writer Stephen Gaghan, but that pilot was not picked up, which led to the actor being cast in Awake. In response to this, Seals said \"It's just amazing how one job leads to another which leads to another.\".", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5059742", "label": "Center for Law and Social Policy", "source": "The Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP) is an American organization, based in Washington, D.C., that advocates for policies aimed at improving the lives of low-income people.", "target": "nonprofit organization in Washington D.C., United States", "baseline_candidates": ["nonprofit organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49295541", "label": "Bastianøyane", "source": "The Bastian Islands (Norwegian: Bastianøyane) are a group of islands in Hinlopen Strait, Svalbard. The islands are located southeast of Wilhelm Island. The islands are named after German explorer Adolf Bastian. The Bastian Islands are the northern islands of a larger group, and the southern islands of this group are called the Rønnbeck Islands.", "target": "island group", "baseline_candidates": ["island group", "island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16889804", "label": "Jamirah Patra Gaon", "source": "Borboruah lahon Gaon is a village in Dibrugarh district of Assam state of India.", "target": "village in Assam, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3595912", "label": "Tinospora cordifolia", "source": "Tinospora cordifolia (common names gurjo, heart-leaved moonseed, guduchi or giloy) is a herbaceous vine of the family Menispermaceae indigenous to tropical regions of the Indian subcontinent. It has been used in Ayurveda to treat various disorders, but there is no clinical evidence for the effectiveness of such treatment.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4800225", "label": "Arthur Samuel Atkinson", "source": "Arthur Samuel Atkinson (20 October 1833 – 10 December 1902) was a 19th-century Member of Parliament from the Taranaki Region, New Zealand.", "target": "New Zealand politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q604155", "label": "Blink", "source": "Blink is a 1993 American neo-noir thriller film directed by Michael Apted and written by Dana Stevens starring Madeleine Stowe and Aidan Quinn. Director Michael Apted was nominated for a Crystal Globe award for the film at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, and screenwriter Dana Stevens was nominated for Best Motion Picture at the Edgar Allan Poe Awards. Emmy Award-winning actress Laurie Metcalf also had a role in the film. Chicago rock band The Drovers played a support role as themselves, contributing three songs to the soundtrack. Stowe's character, Emma, is a fiddler in the group. Some scenes were filmed in Chicago, Illinois.", "target": "1994 American thriller film directed by Michael Apted", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1031987", "label": "Canada Life Building", "source": "The Canada Life Building is a historic office building in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The fifteen-floor Beaux Arts building was built by Sproatt & Rolph and stands at 285 feet (87 m), 321 feet (97.8 m) including its weather beacon. It is located at University and Queen Street in the city's downtown core. Work on the new headquarters of the Canada Life Assurance Company began in 1929 and it opened in 1931. It was the fourth building to serve as the headquarters of Canada Life, Canada's oldest, and at the time largest insurance company. Previously it had been housed in offices at Bay and King Street. The Beaux Arts structure was the first of a series of planned structures along University Avenue, but the Great Depression halted these plans. When it was completed it was one of the tallest buildings in Toronto. It remains one of the largest office buildings in Toronto with windows that can be opened by its occupants. The Canada Life Campus has been expanded several times over the last few decades and now consists of five structures: 330 University Avenue, 190 Simcoe Street, 180 Simcoe Street, 180 Queen Street West and a 5-storey parking garage at 206 Simcoe Street. In addition, the Campbell House Museum was moved to the South-East corner of the Campus in 1972.", "target": "architectural structure", "baseline_candidates": ["office building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23890527", "label": "Luunja Rural Municipality", "source": "Luunja Parish is a rural municipality in Tartu County, Estonia.", "target": "municipality of Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["rural municipality of Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2099451", "label": "X-Men: Next Dimension", "source": "X-Men: Next Dimension (alternatively titled X-Men: Mutant Academy 3) is a fighting game, released in 2002 for the PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube video game consoles. It is the third installment in the X-Men: Mutant Academy fighting game series, following X-Men: Mutant Academy and X-Men: Mutant Academy 2. Next Dimension expands upon the concept of the first two games by adding several new characters, 3D maps, and a story mode, which allows the player to fight a series of battles in between short movies that move the plot along. The game's plot serves as a sequel to the events of the comic story \"Operation: Zero Tolerance\".", "target": "2002 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97189", "label": "Segoe", "source": "Segoe ( SEE-goh) is a typeface, or family of fonts, that is best known for its use by Microsoft. The company uses Segoe in its online and printed marketing materials, including recent logos for a number of products. Additionally, the Segoe UI font sub-family is used by numerous Microsoft applications, and may be installed by applications (such as Microsoft Office 2007 and Windows Live Messenger 2009). It was adopted as Microsoft's default operating system font beginning with Windows Vista, and is also used on outlook.com, Microsoft's web-based email service. In August 2012, Microsoft unveiled its new corporate logo typeset in Segoe, replacing the logo it had used for the previous 25 years.The Segoe name is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation, although the typeface was originally developed by Monotype.", "target": "Family of sans-serif typefaces", "baseline_candidates": ["typeface"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65044944", "label": "Rüstem Pasha Caravanserai", "source": "Rüstem Pasha Caravanserai (Turkish: Rüstem Paşa Kervansarayı) is a caravanserai located in Ereğli, Konya, Turkey, commissioned by Ottoman statesman and grand vizier Rüstem Pasha and built by court architect Mimar Sinan in 1552.", "target": "caravanserai in Konya, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["caravanserai"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7383874", "label": "Ryan Benjamin", "source": "Ryan Arthur Benjamin (born November 17, 1977) is a former American football long snapper of the National Football League. He was signed by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent in 2001. He played college football at South Florida. He won a Super Bowl ring as a member of the 2002 Tampa Bay Buccaneers.", "target": "player of American football", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14950394", "label": "Padamu Jua", "source": "\"Padamoe Djoea\" (Republican Spelling: \"Padamu Djua\"; Perfected Spelling: \"Padamu Jua\"; Indonesian for \"To You Alone\") is a 28-line poem by Amir Hamzah which was included in his 1937 collection Nyanyi Sunyi. Hamzah's best-praised work, readings have generally focused on religious themes – mainly from an Islamic perspective, although Christian influences have been suggested.", "target": "poem", "baseline_candidates": ["poem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1638958", "label": "Mordellistena obscuriventris", "source": "Mordellistena obscuriventris is a species of beetle in the genus Mordellistena of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea. It was discovered in 1927.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25416254", "label": "volleyball at the 2004 Summer Olympics", "source": "Volleyball at the 2004 Summer Olympics consisted of indoor volleyball held at the Peace and Friendship Stadium and beach volleyball held at the Faliro Olympic Beach Volleyball Centre, in the southern portion of the Roth Pavilion; both were located at the Faliro Coastal Zone Olympic Complex.", "target": "volleyball events at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["volleyball at the Summer Olympics", "Olympic sports discipline event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6113807", "label": "Jack MacDonald", "source": "Jack MacDonald (born 16 May 1927) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Hawthorn in the Victorian Football League (VFL).McDonald, from Carey Grammar originally, came to Hawthorn from Camberwell. He had initially trained with Melbourne, but Hawthorn made a claim for him as he was in their residential zone.After finishing second to Pat Cash in the Hawthorn goal-kicking in his first season, he topped the list in 1952, with 25 goals.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5464869", "label": "Folsom Site", "source": "Folsom Site or Wild Horse Arroyo, designated by the Smithsonian trinomial 29CX1, is a major archaeological site about 8 miles (13 km) west of Folsom, New Mexico. It is the type site for the Folsom tradition, a Paleo-Indian cultural sequence dating to between 9000 BC and 8000 BC. The Folsom Site was excavated in 1926 and found to have been a marsh-side kill site or camp where 32 bison had been killed using distinctive tools, known as Folsom points. This site is significant because it was the first time that artifacts indisputably made by humans were found directly associated with faunal remains from an extinct form of bison from the Late Pleistocene. The information culled from this site was the first of a set of discoveries that would allow archaeologists to revise their estimations for the time of arrival of Native Americans on the North American continent.", "target": "archaeological type site", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2306479", "label": "Toqtaqiya", "source": "Little is known about Toqtaqiya except that he was a son of Urus Khan and was Khan of the White Horde for less than a year. In this time, he defeated his cousin Toqtamish and drove him from Sabran. He died shortly after this victory, just a few months after Urus.", "target": "Khan of the White Horde", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30656368", "label": "Ith", "source": "The Ith (German: [iːt] (listen)) is a ridge in Germany's Central Uplands which is up to 439 m high. It lies about 40 km southwest of Hanover and, at 22 kilometres, is the longest line of crags in North Germany.", "target": "mountain range", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1779762", "label": "Kolšov", "source": "Kolšov is a municipality and village in Šumperk District in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 700 inhabitants. Kolšov lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) south of Šumperk, 41 km (25 mi) north-west of Olomouc, and 183 km (114 mi) east of Prague.", "target": "village in Šumperk District of Olomouc region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16845510", "label": "Hummer", "source": "\"Hummer\" is the second single by Foals and is the first single with Yannis Philippakis on lead vocals (the previous lead vocalist was Andrew Mears). It was released on 12 March 2007. It was recorded and mixed by producer Gareth Parton at the Fortress and Metropolis recording studios, London. It was released as a digital download and on vinyl on 23 April 2007. Although initially released as a non-album single, it was added as a bonus track to later editions of Foals' first album Antidotes. The song was used in the second series of Skins.", "target": "2007 single by Foals", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18922863", "label": "James A. Field", "source": "James Alfred Field (May 26, 1880 – July 16, 1927) was an American economist and Professor of Political Economy at the University of Chicago, known as one of the proponents of institutional economics and as demographer, who contributed to the theory of population and its history.", "target": "American economist (1880-1927)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7786155", "label": "This Moment", "source": "This Moment is the fourteenth studio album by the Christian singer Steven Curtis Chapman. It was released on October 23, 2007, through Sparrow Records. \"Cinderella\" was released as a radio single and became popular in the United States, charting in the Top 10 on Christian Radio. Other radio singles were \"Yours\", which became a No. 1 single, and \"Miracle of the Moment\", which charted in the Top 10. A Special Edition was released later, featuring acoustic versions of four of the songs from the album.", "target": "2007 studio album by Steven Curtis Chapman", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3176618", "label": "Socialist Party of the Valencian Country", "source": "The Socialist Party of the Valencian Country (Valencian: Partit Socialista del País Valencià; Spanish: Partido Socialista del País Valenciano, PSPV–PSOE) is a social-democratic political party in the Valencian Community, and is a regional branch of the national Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). The PSPV was originally a small nationalist and leftist Valencian party, mostly confined to the academic world within the University of Valencia. In 1978, they decided to merge with the much larger national PSOE, to which they integrated. Their name remains in the name of the Valencian branch of the PSOE, officially called PSPV-PSOE, even though it is usually reduced to PSOE only by the party itself. This Valencian branch of the PSOE, unlike their Catalan counterpart, does not have a record of having acted independently from the national executive of the Spanish-wide PSOE.", "target": "Political party in Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["political organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20985892", "label": "Dick Stapel", "source": "Dick Simon Stapel (born 10 August 1942) is a Dutch portrait painter known for his portraits mounted on large format, painted with a light touch.", "target": "Dutch painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1491624", "label": "Hellanodikai", "source": "The Hellanodikai (Ancient Greek: Ἑλλανοδίκαι, literally meaning Judges of the Greeks; sing. Ἑλλανοδίκας ) were the judges of the Ancient Olympic Games, and the success of the games was attributed to their efforts. It was their sacred duty to maintain the standards and legacy of the games, as well as uphold the rules.", "target": "sacred judges at the ancient Olympic games", "baseline_candidates": ["position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12178099", "label": "Abu Abdillah bin Al-A'rabi", "source": "Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn Ziyād (ابو عبد الله محمد بن زياد), surnamed Ibn al-Aʿrābī (ابن الاعرابى) (ca. 760 – 846, Sāmarrā); a philologist, genealogist, and oral traditionist of Arabic tribal poetry. A grammarian of the school of al-Kūfah, who rivalled the grammarians of al-Baṣrah in poetry recital. He was famous for his knowledge of rare expressions and for transmitting the famous anthology of ancient Arabic poetry, Al-Mufaḍḍalīyāt.The meaning of the word A'rābī, and its difference to the word Arabī, is explained by the exegete al-Sijistānī, in his book on rare Qur’ānic terms: A'rābī is a non-Arab desert inhabitant, whereas Arabī is a non-desert dwelling Arab.", "target": "8th c. Iraqi philooger and poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27703147", "label": "Goodbye Christopher Robin", "source": "Goodbye Christopher Robin is a 2017 British biographical drama film about the lives of Winnie-the-Pooh creator A. A. Milne and his family, especially his son Christopher Robin. It was directed by Simon Curtis and written by Frank Cottrell-Boyce and Simon Vaughan, and stars Domhnall Gleeson, Margot Robbie, and Kelly Macdonald. The film premiered in the United Kingdom on 29 September 2017. It received mixed reviews from critics and grossed $7.2 million at the box office.", "target": "2017 film by Simon Curtis", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14914809", "label": "Kelu-1", "source": "Kelu-1 is a system of two brown dwarfs of spectral types L2 and L4 located in constellation Hydra at approximately 60.6 light-years from Earth. It is among the first free-floating later-than-M-type brown dwarfs discovered, and sometimes considered as prototype of L-type brown dwarfs.", "target": "star in the constellation Hydra", "baseline_candidates": ["brown dwarf", "multiple star", "star", "high proper-motion star", "variable star", "astronomical radio source", "carbon star", "double star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1837022", "label": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Cerignola-Ascoli Satriano", "source": "The Italian Roman Catholic Diocese of Cerignola-Ascoli Satriano (Latin: Dioecesis Ceriniolensis-Asculana Apuliae) in Apulia, has existed under this name since 1986. Its bishop is a suffragan of the Archbishop of Foggia-Bovino. Historically the Diocese of Ascoli Satriano was a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Benevento, and changed its name to Diocese of Ascoli Satriano e Cerignola in 1819.", "target": "diocese of the Catholic Church in Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["diocese of the Catholic Church"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16251573", "label": "The House of a Thousand Candles", "source": "The House of a Thousand Candles is a 1936 American thriller film directed by Arthur Lubin and starring Phillips Holmes, Mae Clarke and Irving Pichel. It is based on the 1906 novel by Meredith Nicholson. The novel had been filmed twice before, once in 1915 (as The House of a Thousand Candles) and again in 1919 by Henry King (under the title Haunting Shadows).A British secret service agent is sent to try to prevent a plot to derail a peace conference in Geneva and threaten international peace.", "target": "1936 film by Arthur Lubin", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13231118", "label": "Aeolochroma rhodochlora", "source": "Aeolochroma rhodochlora is a moth of the family Geometridae first described by Gilbert M. Goldfinch in 1929. It is found in New South Wales, Australia.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q876650", "label": "photographic filter", "source": "In photography and cinematography, a filter is a camera accessory consisting of an optical filter that can be inserted into the optical path. The filter can be of a square or oblong shape and mounted in a holder accessory, or, more commonly, a glass or plastic disk in a metal or plastic ring frame, which can be screwed into the front of or clipped onto the camera lens. Filters modify the images recorded. Sometimes they are used to make only subtle changes to images; other times the image would simply not be possible without them. In monochrome photography, coloured filters affect the relative brightness of different colours; pink lipstick may be rendered as anything from almost light yellow to almost black with different filters. Others change the colour balance of images, so that photographs under incandescent lighting show colours as they are perceived, rather than with a reddish tinge. There are filters that distort the image in a desired way, diffusing an otherwise sharp image, adding a starry effect, etc. Linear and circular polarising filters reduce oblique reflections from non-metallic surfaces. Many filters absorb part of the light available, necessitating longer exposure. As the filter is in the optical path, any imperfections – non-flat or non-parallel surfaces, reflections (minimised by optical coating), scratches, dirt – affect the image. There is no universal or reliably standard naming or labelling system for filters. The Wratten numbers adopted in the early twentieth century by Kodak, then a dominant force in film photography, are used by several manufacturers, but the.", "target": "camera accessory consisting of an optical filter", "baseline_candidates": ["photographic technique", "photo equipment", "filter"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17017460", "label": "Pebble Mill at One", "source": "Pebble Mill at One is a British television magazine programme that was broadcast live on weekdays at one o'clock on BBC1, from 2 October 1972 to 23 May 1986, and again from 14 October 1991 to 29 March 1996. It was transmitted from the Pebble Mill studios of BBC Birmingham, and uniquely was hosted from the centre's main foyer area, rather than a conventional television studio.", "target": "British television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85744488", "label": "Azaleothrips", "source": "Azaleothrips is a genus of thrips in the family Phlaeothripidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q647173", "label": "sporophyte", "source": "A sporophyte () is the diploid multicellular stage in the life cycle of a plant or alga. It develops from the zygote produced when a haploid egg cell is fertilized by a haploid sperm and each sporophyte cell therefore has a double set of chromosomes, one set from each parent. All land plants, and most multicellular algae, have life cycles in which a multicellular diploid sporophyte phase alternates with a multicellular haploid gametophyte phase. In the seed plants, the largest groups of which are the gymnosperms and flowering plants (angiosperms), the sporophyte phase is more prominent than the gametophyte, and is the familiar green plant with its roots, stem, leaves and cones or flowers. In flowering plants the gametophytes are very reduced in size, and are represented by the germinated pollen and the embryo sac. The sporophyte produces spores (hence the name) by meiosis, a process also known as \"reduction division\" that reduces the number of chromosomes in each spore mother cell by half. The resulting meiospores develop into a gametophyte. Both the spores and the resulting gametophyte are haploid, meaning they only have one set of chromosomes. The mature gametophyte produces male or female gametes (or both) by mitosis. The fusion of male and female gametes produces a diploid zygote which develops into a new sporophyte. This cycle is known as alternation of generations or alternation of phases. Bryophytes (mosses, liverworts and hornworts) have a dominant gametophyte phase on which the adult sporophyte is dependent for nutrition. The embryo sporophyte develops by cell division of.", "target": "diploid multicellular stage in the life cycle of a plant or alga", "baseline_candidates": ["developmental stage of plant"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7597684", "label": "Stan Heptinstall", "source": "Stanley Heptinstall (born 21 August 1946) is an Emeritus Professor of the University of Nottingham, Director of Platelet Solutions Ltd (a spinout company of the University of Nottingham), and local government councillor on Nottinghamshire County Council.Previously he was professor of Thrombosis and Haemostasis at the University of Nottingham, retiring in 2011. Professor Heptinstall served as Head of the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine in the School of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.He has been a local government councillor for 25 years, serving on Broxtowe Borough Council and Nottinghamshire County Council. He retired as a borough councillor in 2015, having served as the Mayor of the Borough of Broxtowe in the year 2014/15.", "target": "British mayor and academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q53553611", "label": "Patience Darton", "source": "Patience Darton (married name: Patience Edney; 11 August 1911 in Orpington, England – 6 November 1996 in Madrid, Spain) was a British nurse and political activist active during the Spanish Civil War. Darton was born into a middle-class family and hoped to study medicine, but her father's bankruptcy led her to work as a nanny and in a tea shop while saving up for the admissions fees into a nursing program. Darton studied to be a midwife at University College Hospital, London. Her experiences working in London's impoverished East End radicalized her and she joined the Labour Party. She also worked at the British Hospital for Mothers and Babies in London.Darton volunteered her services as a nurse upon the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. She arrived in Spain in February 1937 and worked in medical units at medical units in Aragón, Brunete, Teruel and Ebro. Despite working in difficult conditions (including a hospital inside a cave during the Ebro offensive), Darton re-diagnosed incorrectly diagnosed patients, saving them with correct treatment.While in Spain, Darton met American writer Ernest Hemingway and English poet Stephen Spender and wrote in a letter of Hemingway, \"He can’t say what he wants to say and he talks just like his books, in bursts.\" She fell in love with a German member of the International Brigades named Robert Aaquist; Aaquist was killed in 1938.She was evacuated from Spain with the rest of the International Brigades in October 1938.Once back in London in 1938, Darton joined the British Communist Party. She would remain.", "target": "British nurse in the Spanish Civil War and political activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19862894", "label": "Sons of the Harpy", "source": "\"Sons of the Harpy\" is the fourth episode of the fifth season of HBO's fantasy television series Game of Thrones, and the 44th overall. The episode was written by Dave Hill, and directed by Mark Mylod. It aired on May 3, 2015. Prior to airing, this episode was leaked online along with the first three episodes of the season.The episode received a nomination for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series at the 67th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards. The episode was met with generally positive reviews, but received heavy criticism for the decision to kill off Ser Barristan Selmy, who in the novels is still alive and is a major supporting character.", "target": "episode of Game of Thrones (S5 E4)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7897312", "label": "Unpredictable", "source": "Unpredictable is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter and actor Jamie Foxx. It was released on December 27, 2005, by J Records. The album was supported by four singles: \"Extravaganza\" featuring Kanye West, the title track \"Unpredictable\" featuring Ludacris, \"DJ Play a Love Song\" featuring Twista, and \"Can I Take U Home\". Upon its release, Unpredictable received generally mixed reviews from music critics, who were ambivalent towards its lyrical content and production. The album debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 597,000 copies in its first week and has since peaked at number one on the chart. The album was certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).", "target": "album by Jamie Foxx", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5205386", "label": "DJ Muggs production discography", "source": "The following is a production discography of American record producer DJ Muggs. It includes a list of songs produced, co-produced and remixed by year, title, artist and album.", "target": "production discography", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia production discography"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2596357", "label": "Rune Öberg", "source": "Rune Ewert Öberg (26 December 1922 – 17 April 2002) was a Swedish water polo player who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics. In 1948 he was part of the Swedish team which finished fifth in the water polo tournament. He played six matches.", "target": "Swedish water polo player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5274637", "label": "Diego Duarte", "source": "Diego Duarte or Jacob Duarte (1612–1691) was a 17th-century Portuguese jeweler, banker, composer, organist and art collector living in Antwerp, who owned paintings by Jan Vermeer, Raphael and others. Duarte was born in Antwerp, the son of Gaspar Duarte I, a Christian diamond and art dealer of Jewish descent in Antwerp, who was befriended with e.g. Constantijn Huygens. Gaspar was the son of Diego Duarte I, and was born in 1584 in Antwerp. He later became the consul of Portugal in Antwerp. In 1635, Diego was appointed \"jeweller in ordinary\" by Charles I of England, but he returned to Antwerp in 1642. He received a part of the art collection of his father on his death in 1653, and continued collecting throughout his life. Part of his collection was sold in Amsterdam in 1682. Diego had a long correspondence and friendship with Constantijn Huygens Jr. The house of the Duarte's in Antwerp was called the Antwerp Parnassus, a meeting place for intellectuals to enjoy art and music. William III of England repeatedly stayed at the house between 1674 and 1678. Diego's brother Gaspar Duarte II was an art collector as well, and his sister Leonora was a composer. After the childless death of Diego Duarte in 1691, no Duartes remained in Antwerp. Some 200 paintings of Diego's collection were inherited by his nephew Manuel Levy Duarte. Most were sold between 1693 and 1696.", "target": "Portuguese jeweler and banker from Antwerp (1612-1691)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18042062", "label": "MBNL3", "source": "Muscleblind-like protein 3 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the MBNL3 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25004479", "label": "1977 Maryland Terrapins football team", "source": "The 1977 Maryland Terrapins football team represented the University of Maryland in the 1977 NCAA Division I football season. In their sixth season under head coach Jerry Claiborne, the Terrapins compiled an 8–4 record (4–2 in conference), finished in a tie for third place in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and outscored their opponents 254 to 179. The team ended its season with a 17–7 victory over Minnesota in the Hall of Fame Classic. The team's statistical leaders included Larry Dick with 1,351 passing yards, George Scott with 894 rushing yards, and Vince Kinney with 505 receiving yards.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q933062", "label": "Hariharananda Giri", "source": "Hariharananda Giri (Bengali: স্বামী হরিহরানন্দ গিরী) (27 May 1907 – 3 December 2002), was an Indian yogi and guru who taught in India as well as in western countries. He was born Rabindranath Bhattacharya in Nadia district, West Bengal. He was the head of the Kriya Yoga Institute, United States, and founder worldwide Kriya Yoga Centers. According to some sources, Hariharananda was a direct disciple of Yukteswar Giri.", "target": "Indian Yogi (1907-2002)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12840669", "label": "Kayqubad I of Shirvan", "source": "Keykubad (died 1348) was the 31st ruler of Shirvan who overthrew Mongol rule. Not much information about him is known.", "target": "shah of Shirvan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1980323", "label": "Max Burnett", "source": "Max Burnett (born July 24, 1969, in Dallas, Texas) is a screenwriter, director, and producer who has been active in film and television since 1991. He directed the football sleeper hit Possums in 1998. In 2008 he created and executive produced the Nickelodeon series \"The Troop\" along with Chris Morgan and Greg Coolidge. Filmed in Vancouver, The Troop started airing in the fall of 2009. He won a Writers Guild of America Awards 2009 for his pilot script of The troop entitled \"Welcome to the Jungle\" and was nominated for another Writers Guild of America Awards 2011 for his Troop script \"Oh, Brother.\" Max is the older brother of composer Justin Burnett. As a producer of Alexa & Katie he was nominated for two Daytime Emmy Awards in 2019 and 2020 and won a Television Academy Honor in 2019.", "target": "American film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5039550", "label": "Caridina serratirostris", "source": "Caridina serratirostris is a species of freshwater shrimp that lives in the Indo-west Pacific region, from Madagascar to Fiji, including northern Queensland, Australia, which may be a different subspecies. Its common name in the aquarium trade, \"ninja shrimp\", comes from its ability to quickly change colour and disappear into its surroundings like a ninja. Adults grow to a length of 25–35 millimetres (1.0–1.4 in).", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6756902", "label": "Yeol Man-hwa", "source": "Yeol Man-hwa or Lie Wanhua (Chinese: 烈萬華; Korean: 열만화) (?–976, r. 938–976) was the first king of Jeongan (Ding'an), a successor state to the kingdom of Balhae (Bohai), centered near the Yalu River.", "target": "King of Jeongan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14656943", "label": "Perrinia squamicarinata", "source": "Perrinia squamicarinata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Chilodontidae.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18631752", "label": "Scott Secor", "source": "Scott Secor (born April 3, 1992) is a former American football Placekicker for the Ball State Cardinals. Finished the regular season ranked 2nd in the FBS 1-A with 25 field goals made behind Josh Lambert from WVU with 27. With 25 field goals 2014 Secor is tied for 1st place in Ball State history with the most field goals in a single season, 2014 (John Diettrich 1985 & Steven Schott 2012). With 60 extra points in 2013, Secor is 2nd in Ball States record book behind Ian McGarvey, 2008.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7091159", "label": "On The Border", "source": "On the Border is a 1930 all-talking drama with songs that stars Rin Tin Tin. It was adapted from a story by Lillie Hayward who also wrote the screenplay. Armida sings two songs in the picture.", "target": "1930 film by William C. McGann", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5080479", "label": "Charles M. Oberly, III", "source": "Charles Monroe Oberly III (born November 9, 1946) is an attorney in Delaware. He had served as United States Attorney for the District of Delaware from 2010 to 2017 and had served as Attorney General of Delaware from 1983 to 1995.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5400319", "label": "Hackman Plc", "source": "Hackman was a cutlery and cookware company founded in Finland in 1790. The Hackman brand is now owned by Iittala Group, which was acquired by Fiskars Corporation in 2007.In a 2008 survey which included both Finnish and international brands, it was the fifth most respected brand among consumers.The Hackman butterfly knife (Finnish: Linkkupuukko, \"latch-knife\") was a type of butterfly knife produced by Hackman. The knife was marketed by Hackman as a retkiveitsi (\"camping knife\") and later as Eräpuukko (\"wilderness puukko\"). The knives were also sold in the United States, and some researchers state they were issued by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency during the Vietnam War.", "target": "former Finnish business", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8051434", "label": "Yelahar", "source": "Yelheri is a panchayat village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. Administratively, Yelahar is under Yadgir Taluka of Yadgir District in Karnataka. The village of Yelheri is 6 km by road west of the village of Konkal, and 10 km by road south-southeast of the village of Paspool. The nearest railhead is in Yadgir.There are four villages in the gram panchayat: Yelheri, Ghanpur, Nawaburz, and Totlur.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3190304", "label": "Just for Love", "source": "Just for Love is the fourth album by American psychedelic rock band Quicksilver Messenger Service. Released in August 1970, it marks the culmination of a transition from the extended, blues- and jazz-inspired improvisations of their first two albums to a more traditional rock sound. Founding member Dino Valenti, who returned to the band after a stint in prison on drug charges, was largely responsible for the new sound. Valenti's influence is readily apparent throughout; he composed eight of the album's nine tracks under the pen name Jesse Oris Farrow. Despite the marked change in the band's sound, it was their third straight album to reach the Top 30 on the Billboard charts, peaking at number 27. The only single culled from the album, \"Fresh Air\", became the band's biggest hit, reaching number 49.", "target": "album by Quicksilver Messenger Service", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15728180", "label": "Hikari no Signal", "source": "\"Hikari no Signal\" (光のシグナル) is a single by Japanese boy band Kis-My-Ft2. Hikari no Signal was used as a theme song for the film Doraemon: New Nobita's Great Demon—Peko and the Exploration Party of Five. It was released on March 5, 2014. It debuted in number one on the weekly Oricon Singles Chart and reached number one on the Billboard Japan Hot 100. It was the 5th best-selling single in Japan in March 2014, with 237,696 copies. It was the 26th best-selling single of 2014 in Japan, with 244,808 copies.", "target": "2014 single by Kis-My-Ft2", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1218172", "label": "The In Crowd", "source": "The In Crowd is a 2000 American teen thriller film directed by Mary Lambert and starring Susan Ward, Lori Heuring, Matthew Settle, and Nathan Bexton.", "target": "2000 film by Mary Lambert", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5059621", "label": "Center for Environmental Technology", "source": "The Center for Environmental Technology or CET, formerly known as the Environmental Technology Laboratory of NOAA, US Department of Commerce, is a joint center between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the University of Colorado, which designs some of the most sensitive radio receivers in the world for active and passive microwave observation of terrestrial and atmospheric phenomena.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1591915", "label": "Hayes & Yeading United F.C.", "source": "Hayes & Yeading United Football Club is an association football club based in Hayes, in the London Borough of Hillingdon, England. The club was formed in 2007 from a merger of Hayes Football Club (founded in 1909) and Yeading Football Club (founded in 1960). It currently competes in the Southern League Premier Division South and plays its home matches at the Skyex stadium.", "target": "association football club in Hayes, England", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q530341", "label": "2006–07 Icelandic Hockey League season", "source": "The 2006-07 Icelandic Hockey League season was the 16th season of the Icelandic Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Iceland. Three teams participated in the league, and Skautafelag Reykjavikur won the championship.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16018930", "label": "Rolf Normann Torgersen", "source": "Rolf Normann Torgersen (17 August 1918 – 15 January 2010) was a Norwegian jurist and civil servant. He was born in Kristiania, finished his secondary education in 1936 and took the cand.jur. degree in 1941. He studied at Cambridge University from 1947 to 1948, the Hague Academy of International Law in 1947 and 1952 and at Columbia University from 1952 to 1953. He was a deputy judge and junior solicitor in his early career, and after the Second World War he was a secretary in the Compensation Department of the Ministry of Justice. The Compensation Department was tasked with returning or otherwise compensating for items that had been confiscated during the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. Torgersen was also present at the Nuremberg Trials of 1945 and 1946, and wrote the process document Germany's Crimes against Norway together with Finn Palmstrøm.From 1948 to 1962 Torgersen was an assistant secretary in the Ministry of Justice. From 1961 to 1963 he aided the Ministry of Transport and the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Transport with working out the new Public Roads Act. From 1962 to 1971 he was a head of department in the Norwegian Directorate of Public Roads. From 1971 to 1981 he was the director of the Secretariat on Traffic Safety in the Ministry of Transport, and from 1981 to 1988 he was a special adviser. After his official retirement at age 70, he became an adviser in the Ministry of Consumer Affairs and Administration, where he worked for six years.When turning 70 years old, Torgersen.", "target": "Norwegian jurist and civil servant (1918-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q348791", "label": "Admiral Makarov National University of Shipbuilding", "source": "The Admiral Makarov National University of Shipbuilding in Mykolaiv is a higher education institution which trains specialists for the shipbuilding and allied industries of Ukraine. The university is named after Russian admiral Stepan Makarov, who was born in the city.", "target": "university", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27375502", "label": "Ghayath Almadhoun", "source": "Ghayath Almadhoun (Arabic: غياث المدهون) born 19 July 1979 is a Palestinian, Syrian, and Swedish poet.", "target": "Swedish poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1410336", "label": "Vienne Cathedral", "source": "Vienne Cathedral (French: Cathédrale Saint-Maurice de Vienne) is a medieval Roman Catholic church in the city of Vienne, France. Dedicated to Saint Maurice, it was the episcopal see of the primate of the ancient Septem Provinciae and of the Archdiocese of Vienne until its abolition confirmed by the Concordat of 1801. It today serves as co-cathedral of the Diocese of Grenoble-Vienne. The present-day building, erected from 1130 onwards, was classified a French national heritage site (monument historique) in the list of historic monuments of 1840.", "target": "cathedral located in Isère, in France", "baseline_candidates": ["Catholic cathedral"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3225160", "label": "The Palace of Love", "source": "The Palace of Love (1967) is a science fiction novel by American writer Jack Vance, the third in his Demon Princes series. It is about a wealthy man, Kirth Gersen, who is obsessed with seeking vengeance on the remaining Demon Princes who killed his family many years ago. To get access to the elusive and secretive Viole Falushe, one of the Demon Princes, Gersen poses as a journalist and wrangles a rare invitation to Falushe's hedonistic Palace of Love.", "target": "novel by Jack Vance", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4930810", "label": "Blurton", "source": "Blurton is a district in the south of Stoke on Trent, in the English county of Staffordshire. Hollybush, Old Blurton, Blurton Farm and Newstead are the names of the areas in which make up the town known as Blurton.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97347697", "label": "Rainis Ruusamäe", "source": "Rainis Ruusamäe (8 September 1965 – 4 March 2020) is an Estonian politician. He was a member of IX Riigikogu.He was born in Võru.", "target": "Estonian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2947122", "label": "This Could Be the Night", "source": "This Could Be the Night is a 1957 MGM comedy-drama film directed by Robert Wise and starring Jean Simmons and Paul Douglas. Anthony Franciosa made his debut in the film, which is based on the short stories by Cornelia Baird Gross.", "target": "1957 film by Robert Wise", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10847223", "label": "Beijing–Shanghai high-speed train", "source": "The Beijing–Shanghai high-speed train (京沪高速动车组列车) are high-speed train services operated by CR Beijing and CR Shanghai on Beijing–Shanghai HSR in China. The services provide high-speed train connections between Beijing, the capital of China, and Shanghai, the economic center and largest city of the country. Currently, 41 pairs of G-series trains are operated daily.", "target": "The high-speed train services between Beijing and Shanghai", "baseline_candidates": ["China Railway train service"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25610715", "label": "Bolshoye Gorodishche", "source": "Bolshoye Gorodishche (Russian: Большое Городище) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Bolshegorodishchenskoye Rural Settlement, Shebekinsky District, Belgorod Oblast, Russia. The population was 724 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "target": "village in Shebekinsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24060894", "label": "Agustin Cartagena Diaz", "source": "Agustin Cartagena Diaz was born in Puerto Rico and a Lieutenant colonel with the Puerto Rico Police who became the 17 Superintendent of the police of Puerto Rico elected in the first year of the administration of Sila Maria Calderon from 2003-2005.", "target": "former Superintendent of the Puerto Rico Police Department", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3811447", "label": "Juron Criner", "source": "Juron Criner (born December 12, 1989) is a former American football wide receiver. Born in Las Vegas, Nevada, Criner attended Canyon Springs High School and played college football at the University of Arizona. He played for the Oakland Raiders and New York Giants of the National Football League, and for the Ottawa Redblacks and Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian Football League.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5070729", "label": "Dombabinə", "source": "Üçüncü Tala (known as Dombabinə until 2015; Avar: БитIди Тала) is a village and municipality in the Zaqatala Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 2,042. The municipality consists of the villages of Dombabinə, Mamqabinə, Bozbinə, Mücəkbinə, Masqarabinə, Həsənbinə, and Xanmədbinə.", "target": "human settlement in Azerbaijan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7064495", "label": "Novato meteorite", "source": "The Novato meteorite is an ordinary chondrite which entered the earth's atmosphere and broke up over Northern California at 19:44 Pacific Time on 17 October 2012. The falling bolide created a bright fireball and sonic booms and fragmented into smaller pieces as the intense friction of passing through the atmosphere heated it and absorbed its kinetic energy. The meteoroid was about 35 centimeters (14 in) across.", "target": "meteorite", "baseline_candidates": ["meteorite"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5285180", "label": "DJ Trevi", "source": "Treavor Alvarado (born June 27, 1990), better known by his stage name DJ Trevi, and under other pseudonyms such as Martin Treavor, is an American and Mexican electronic music, DJ, music producer, composer, reality show personality, and actor. He appeared in the independent film Left at the Rio Grande and 12 Corazones, the second season of Telemundo's long-running reality television series.His first single, \"Love\", scored him his first top ten. It peaked at number 9 on MTV Jango Radio Airplay. In 2012 his debut album EP, Apocalypse 2012, was released on CS Recordings.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16191073", "label": "Kevin Quinn", "source": "Kevin Quinn (born 1965) is a British neo-Nazi and the current leader of the November 9th Society (N9S).", "target": "English neo-Nazi", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1678066", "label": "Jacques Pelzer", "source": "Jacques Pelzer (24 June 1924 – 6 August 1994) was a Belgian musician. He played alto saxophone and flute. Notably, his performance with Chet Baker was included on Baker's quintet's Brussels 1964 album.", "target": "Belgian musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1152238", "label": "Mexico City Metro Line 5", "source": "Line 5, also known as the Yellow Line from its color on the system map, is a rapid transit line of the Mexico City Metro network. It travels 15.6 kilometers (9.7 mi) along the boroughs of Gustavo A. Madero, Cuauhtémoc and Venustiano Carranza in northern, northeastern and eastern Mexico City, serving thirteen stations. The line was inaugurated on 19 December 1981, going from Pantitlán to Consulado station. In 1982, the line was expanded twice, first from Consulado to La Raza station on 1 July, and later from La Raza to Politécnico station on 30 August. Line 5 was built by Mexican construction company Empresas ICA and it runs at grade and underground levels. The interchange stations are Instituto del Petróleo (Line 6), La Raza (Line 3), Consulado (Line 4), Oceanía (Line B), and Pantitlán (Lines 1, 9 and A). The line serves the Mexico City International Airport (AICM) at Terminal Aérea station and connects with other transport systems in the city, including the trolleybus, the Metrobús and the Mexibús systems. In 2019, Line 5 had a total ridership of 86,512,999 passengers, averaging 237,021 passengers per day and making it one of the least used lines on the network.", "target": "metro line", "baseline_candidates": ["rapid transit railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4090352", "label": "Winnett Boyd", "source": "Winnett Boyd (October 17, 1916 – January 30, 2017) was a Canadian engineer who made major contributions to the development of the jet engine and nuclear reactor design.", "target": "Canadian engineer (1916-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6742083", "label": "Malaysia–Philippines border", "source": "The Malaysia–Philippines border is a maritime boundary located in the South China, Sulu and Celebes Seas. It separates the Malaysian state of Sabah, which is on the island of Borneo, and the Sulu Islands of the southern Philippines. The boundary is the result of the division of the Sulu Sultanate through the cession of its territories to colonial powers. The British gained control of the northeast shores of Borneo, which became known as North Borneo and subsequently Sabah, while the rest of the Sulu Islands fell under Spanish control and later United States rule. The Philippines still officially claim the eastern part of Sabah as part of its territory, arguing the validity of the cession by the heirs of the Sultan of Sulu.Malaysia and the Philippines are also parties to the multinational claims over the Spratly Islands and both countries have overlapping claims over some islands of the archipelago. The historical connections of the people living on both sides of the border has resulted in the border being extremely porous, with a lot of illegal immigration from the Philippines to Malaysia occurring. The porous border has also resulted in several incidents of cross-border raids and kidnapping by armed groups from the Philippines on Malaysian towns and resorts on the east coast of Sabah.", "target": "international maritime border", "baseline_candidates": ["maritime boundary", "international border"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q244024", "label": "557 BC", "source": "The year 557 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. In the Roman Empire, it was known as year 197 Ab urbe condita. The denomination 557 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["year BC"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30504949", "label": "Ol'ha Mazničenko", "source": "Olga Maznichenko (born July 24, 1991) is a Ukrainian basketball player for Montbrison Féminin and the Ukrainian national team.She participated at the EuroBasket Women 2017.", "target": "Ukrainian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16732814", "label": "James F. Moore", "source": "James F. Moore studies co-evolution in social and economic systems. He is best known for pioneering the Business ecosystem approach to studying networks of organizations that together constitute a system of mutual support and that co-evolve contributions. The business ecosystem is a form of organization distinct from and parallel to markets and firms. Moore argues that Business ecosystem is an essential unit of analysis for competition law, economics, sociology and management—a concept and unit of analysis that has been found necessary and helpful in business strategy and practice for many years.His recent work involves an in-depth study of the multiple and interconnected nano science, semiconductor, System-on-Chips, global telecommunications services, smartphones and Internet-of-things devices, and app ecosystems.", "target": "American businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3481680", "label": "She Went to the Races", "source": "She Went to the Races is a 1945 American comedy film directed by Willis Goldbeck and starring James Craig, Frances Gifford and Ava Gardner. The screenplay concerns a team of scientists who discover a seemingly foolproof way of discovering the winner of horse races.", "target": "1945 film by Willis Goldbeck", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3629055", "label": "Atsuko Yamano", "source": "Atsuko Yamano (山野 敦子, Yamano Atsuko) (born February 22, 1964) is a Japanese musician, best known as a member of the pop-punk band Shonen Knife. She formed the band in 1981 at age 17, along with her sister Naoko Yamano and Michie Nakatani. In the first incarnation of the band she played drums, but switched to bass when Nakatani departed in 1999. Yamano is also a fashion designer and creates many of the band's stage outfits. Yamano retired from Shonen Knife in 2006 to marry, and moved to Los Angeles. During the next several years she occasionally toured with the band but did not play on their studio albums. She returned to the band as a full-time member in 2016.", "target": "Japanese musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1692536", "label": "Romain Pelletier", "source": "Romain Pelletier (sometimes spelled Peltier) (22 August 1875 – 24 November 1953) was a Canadian organist, choir conductor, composer, and music educator. His compositional output consists entirely of works for solo organ and motets. He was a founding member of the Société des artistes musiciens de Montréal and was a much admired teacher of counterpoint, fugue, and the organ.", "target": "Canadian organist, choir conductor, composer, and music educator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6973472", "label": "Uku", "source": "Uku is a village development committee in Darchula District in the Mahakali Zone of western Nepal right bank of Kali river. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 3931. It is a Historical place being an ancient kingdom of kings of Pal dynasty.", "target": "village development committee in Darchula District in the Mahakali Zone of Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1089310", "label": "Champlin", "source": "Champlin (French pronunciation: ​[ʃɑ̃plɛ̃]) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.", "target": "commune in Ardennes, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13039699", "label": "Sunnah salat", "source": "A Sunnah prayer (Arabic: صلاة السنة) is an optional or supererogatory salah (ritual prayer) that can be performed in addition to the five daily salah, which are compulsory for all Muslims. Sunnah prayer have different characteristics: some are done at the same time as the five daily compulsory prayers, some are done only at certain times (e.g. late at night), or only for specific occasions (e.g. during a drought); some have their own name (e.g. Tahajjud) and some are identified by how they are performed (e.g. \"4 (rakat) before Zuhr and 2 after\"). The length of Sunnah prayer also varies.While the five daily salah are wajib/fard (obligatory), Sunnah prayer (and other sunnah deeds) are Mustahabb (encouraged) -- those who perform them will earn a reward in the afterlife, but there will be no punishment for neglecting them. Sunnah (in mainstream Islam), means the traditional customs and practices that (are believed to) follow the example of the Prophet of Islam Muhammad. According to the stories, narrations, interpretations, of Muslim tradition, all of these prayers were originally performed by Muhammad (in addition to the five daily obligatory prayers).", "target": "optional Islamic prayers that were performed regularly by Muhammad", "baseline_candidates": ["salah", "prayer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16233375", "label": "Kyle Martin", "source": "Kyle Martin (born 17 September 1990) is an Australian rules football player who was recruited by the Collingwood Football Club of the Australian Football League (AFL) with draft pick #13 in the 2013 Rookie Draft after winning the 2012 best & fairest award for Frankston in the Victorian Football League (VFL). He made his AFL debut in Round 10, 2013, against Brisbane Lions at the Gabba. In 2009, at the age of 19, Martin caught the attention of recruiters following a breakout year playing in Melbourne's Eastern Football League for the Noble Park Football Club where he won the club's best & fairest award. Martin spent a further two seasons at Noble Park before joining Frankston in 2012, going on to win the club champion trophy in his first season.In his first season at Collingwood, Martin played 4 senior games, scoring 6 goals, and also won the Joseph Wren Memorial Trophy as the best and fairest of Collingwood's VFL side. He repeated the feat in 2014, claiming a second consecutive Joseph Wren award after managing just two games for the senior side that season.On 4 October 2014, Martin announced his departure from Collingwood and the AFL to return to the Noble Park Football Club in 2015 after deciding the full-time demands of professional sport were not for him.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19875326", "label": "Odette Lusien", "source": "Odette Lusien (11 November 1927 – 12 March 2007) was a French swimmer who competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics and in the 1956 Summer Olympics.", "target": "French swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66751", "label": "Vanessa Petruo", "source": "Vanessa Anneliese Petruo-Zink (born 23 October 1979) is a German former singer, songwriter, actress and television personality. Born and raised in Berlin within a family of actors, she had minor roles in television and as a voice actress before she rose to fame as one of the members of the girl group No Angels, which were formed in 2000 on the German television talent show Popstars, becoming one of the best-selling girl groups of European origin of all time. Throughout her musical career, Petruo scored four number-one hits, including \"Something About Us\", which she co-wrote, and sold over five million albums and singles worldwide.Following her departure, Petruo scored a top 20 hit with her solo debut single \"Drama Queen\" and released her only solo album, Mama Lilla Would (2005) to major critical but minor commercial success. In addition, she lent her voice to several animation films such as Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001), Lilo & Stitch (2002), and Boo, Zino & the Snurks (2004) and starred in the RTL action series Wilde Engel as well as the comedy film Where Is Fred? (2006). While she continued working as a songwriter throughout the late 2000s, further musical projects failed to materialize, and she retired from the recording business in favor of an academic career.", "target": "German former singer and actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2025310", "label": "Theridion michelbacheri", "source": "Theridion michelbacheri is a species of cobweb spider in the family Theridiidae. It is found in the United States.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13822826", "label": "Mecyclothorax perstriatus", "source": "Mecyclothorax perstriatus is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Psydrinae. It was described by Sharp in 1903.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q689207", "label": "2012 Tour de Suisse", "source": "The 2012 Tour de Suisse was the 76th running of the Tour de Suisse cycling stage race. It started on 9 June with an individual time trial in Lugano and ended on 17 June, in Sörenberg after nine stages. It was the 17th race of the 2012 UCI World Tour season. The race was won by Movistar Team rider Rui Costa, who claimed the leader's yellow jersey after winning the second stage, and maintained the lead of the race until its conclusion holding off attacks from his rivals during the final two stages. Costa's winning margin over runner-up Fränk Schleck of RadioShack–Nissan – the 2010 winner – was fourteen seconds, and Omega Pharma–Quick-Step's Levi Leipheimer, the defending champion, completed the podium, seven seconds down on Schleck and twenty-one behind Costa.In the race's other classifications, Ag2r–La Mondiale rider Matteo Montaguti won the mountains classification, Liquigas–Cannondale's Peter Sagan comfortably won the white jersey for the points classification, having won four stages during the race including the race-opening time trial stage. Astana finished at the head of the teams classification, winning two of the last three stages through Fredrik Kessiakoff's seventh stage time trial victory and Tanel Kangert winning the final stage.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour de Suisse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22022767", "label": "1922 Illinois Fighting Illini football team", "source": "The 1922 Illinois Fighting Illini football team was an American football team that represented the University of Illinois during the 1922 Big Ten Conference football season. In their tenth season under head coach Robert Zuppke, the Illini compiled a 2–5 record and finished in sixth place in the Big Ten Conference. End David D. Wilson was the team captain.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8018043", "label": "William Sage Rapson", "source": "William Sage Rapson (14 August 1912 – 25 June 1999) was a New Zealand and South African chemist. His initial career was in organic chemistry but he moved into inorganic chemistry with particular emphasis on gold. His research interests ranged from fish oil through coal liquefaction to X-ray diffraction.", "target": "New Zealand-South African chemist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q254577", "label": "Heniochus", "source": "Heniochus is a genus of marine ray-finned fish, butterflyfishes from the family Chaetodontidae. They are native to the Indo-Pacific. Though very similar in appearance to the Moorish idol (Zanclus cornutus), the members of this genus are not closely related to it.", "target": "genus of fishes in the family Chaetodontidae", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7590964", "label": "St. Patrick's Institution", "source": "St. Patrick's Institution, North Circular Road, Dublin 7, was an Irish penal facility for 16- to 21-year-old males. It had a capacity of 217 beds and had an average inmate population of 221 in 2009. It was a closed, medium security prison.", "target": "former prison for young offenders in Dublin, Ireland (1850–2013)", "baseline_candidates": ["prison"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15870053", "label": "Eburiaca", "source": "Eburiaca sinopia is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, the only species in the genus Eburiaca.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5156687", "label": "Component station", "source": "Component is a light rail station operated by Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority. The station is located in San Jose, California in the center median of 1st Street near Component Drive. The station's street address is 2540 N. First Street. Component has a split platform. The northbound platform is located just north of Component Drive, the southbound platform is located just south of Component Drive. This station is served by the Blue and Green lines of the VTA Light Rail system.", "target": "light rail station in San Jose, California", "baseline_candidates": ["tram stop"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30592274", "label": "Mexican Federal Highway 90D", "source": "Federal Highway 90D is a toll highway between Zapotlanejo and Guadalajara, Jalisco. The road is operated by Red de Carreteras de Occidente, which charges cars 70 pesos to travel Highway 90D. RCO operates the segments of Mexican Federal Highway 15D and Mexican Federal Highway 80D that connect into the road.", "target": "highway in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5636483", "label": "Haaken Severin Mathiesen", "source": "Haaken Severin Mathiesen (3 October 1926 – 12 September 1997) was a Norwegian landowner and businessperson in the forestry sector. He was a son of landowner Jørgen Arthur Mathiesen, and as such a grandson of Haaken L. Mathiesen and great-grandson of Haaken C. Mathiesen and Anders Ferrand Kiær.In 1946 he became a co-owner in the family company Mathiesen Eidsvold Værk. He was appointed as manager of the company in 1953. From 1963 to 1969 he was the sole owner of the company, but he passed it on to his sons Haaken Eric Mathiesen and Willem Frederik Mathiesen.He was decorated as a Knight, First Class of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav and a Knight of the Order of the Falcon. He was also an honorary member of Foreningen Norden and the sports club Eidsvold Værks SK.", "target": "Norwegian businessman (1926-1997)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2819298", "label": "American National Standard for Extended Latin Alphabet Coded Character Set for Bibliographic Use", "source": "ANSEL, the American National Standard for Extended Latin Alphabet Coded Character Set for Bibliographic Use, was a character set used in text encoding. It provided a table of coded values for the representation of characters of the extended Latin alphabet in machine-readable form for thirty-five languages written in the Latin alphabet and for fifty-one romanized languages. ANSEL adds 63 graphic characters to ASCII, including 29 combining diacritic characters. The initial revision of ANSEL was released in 1985, and before 1993 it was registered as Registration #231 in the ISO International Register of Coded Character Sets to be Used with Escape Sequences. The standard was reaffirmed in 2003 although it has been administratively withdrawn by ANSI effective 14 February 2013.The requirement of hardware capable of overprinting accents doomed this from ever becoming a popular extended ASCII.", "target": "character set", "baseline_candidates": ["coded character set"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q764299", "label": "Ernest Barberolle", "source": "Ernest Barberolle (16 October 1861 – 5 September 1948) was a French coxswain who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He won a silver medal, along with Gabriel Poix and Maurice Monney-Bouton in the coxed pair in Antwerp. Monney-Bouton was his son-in-law.", "target": "French rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11743233", "label": "ATP", "source": "ATP (formally, the Agreement on the International Carriage of Perishable Foodstuffs and on the Special Equipment to be used for such Carriage (ATP)) is a 1970 United Nations treaty that establishes standards for the international transport of perishable food between the states that ratify the treaty. It has been updated through amendment a number of times and as of 2016 has 50 state parties, most of which are in Europe or Central Asia. It is open to ratification by states that are members of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and states that otherwise participate in UNECE activities. \"ATP\" is derived from the French name of the treaty: Accord relatif aux transports internationaux de denrées périssables et aux engins spéciaux à utiliser pour ces transports. ATP was concluded in Geneva on 1 September 1970 under the aegis of the UNECE. It was signed by Austria, West Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, and Switzerland. The treaty entered into force on 21 November 1976 after it had been ratified by five states. ATP was intended to replace the Agreement on Special Equipment for the Transport of Perishable Foodstuffs and on the Use of such Equipment for the International Transport of some of those Foodstuffs, which was concluded in 1962 but never received enough ratifications to enter into force.ATP mandates that certain types of equipment be used to transport perishable food across borders and that such equipment will be regularly inspected. (For instance, equipment may need to be refrigerated, heated, or insulated.) ATP applies to transport by.", "target": "agreement on the International Carriage of Perishable Foodstuffs and on the Special Equipment to be used for such Carriage", "baseline_candidates": ["contract", "treaty"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3230697", "label": "The Burnt Theatre", "source": "The Burnt Theatre, or Les Artistes du Théâtre Brûlé, is a 2005 French-Cambodian docudrama directed and co-written by Rithy Panh. A blend of fact and fiction, based on the actual lives of the actors, the film depicts a troupe of actors and dancers struggling to practise their art in the burned-out shell of Cambodia's former national theatre, the Preah Suramarit National Theatre in Phnom Penh. The Burnt Theatre premiered at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival as an official selection in the out-of-competition main programme, and has been screened at several other film festivals.", "target": "2005 film by Rithy Panh", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q338434", "label": "history of Moscow", "source": "The city of Moscow gradually grew around the Moscow Kremlin, beginning in the 14th century. It was the capital of the Grand Duchy of Moscow (or Muscovy) and then the Tsardom of Russia until the capital was moved to Saint Petersburg by Peter the Great. Moscow was the capital of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic from 1918, which then became the Soviet Union (1922 to 1991), and since 1991 has served as capital of the Russian Federation.Situated on either bank of the eponymous Moskva River, the city during the 16th to 17th centuries grew up in five concentric divisions, formerly separated from one another by walls: the Kremlin (\"fortress\"), Kitaigorod (\"walled town\", but interpreted as \"Chinatown\" by folk etymology), Bielygorod (\"white town\"), Zemlianoigorod (\"earthworks town\"), and Miestchanskygorod (\"bourgeois town\") outside the city walls. After the fire of 1812, the city ramparts were replaced with the Boulevard Ring and Garden Ring roads, replacing the walls around Bielygorod and Zemlianoigorod, respectively. The city's population grew from 250,000 to over a million in the 19th century, and from one to ten million in the 20th century, putting it among the top twenty of the world's most populous cities today.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["history of a city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66678462", "label": "David Keays", "source": "David Anthony Keays (born 15 March 1976) is an Australian neuroscientist who studies magnetoreception and neurodevelopment. He is currently Chair of Organismal and Developmental Neurobiology at the Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU) in Munich, and a Principle Research Associate at the University of Cambridge. He was formerly a group leader at the Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP) in Vienna, Austria,.", "target": "Australian neuroscientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17158766", "label": "Aspidophoroides monopterygius", "source": "The Alligatorfish (Aspidophoroides monopterygius, also known commonly as the Aleutian alligatorfish and the Atlantic alligatorfish) is a fish in the family Agonidae (poachers). It was described by Marcus Elieser Bloch in 1786. It is a marine, temperate water-dwelling fish which is known from the northwestern Atlantic Ocean, including western Greenland; Labrador, Canada; and Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA. It dwells at a depth range of 0–695 metres, most often around 60–150 m, and inhabits sand and mud bottoms mostly on the lower continental shelf all year. It prefers a temperature range of -1.07 to 2.52 °C. Males can reach a maximum total length of 22 centimetres, but more commonly reach a TL of 14.2 cm.The Alligatorfish is preyed on by the Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus) and the Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis). Its own diet consists primarily of benthic crustaceans and bottom fauna.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4356066", "label": "Premonition", "source": "Premonition is the first live album released by John Fogerty as a solo artist. He performs many hits by his earlier band, Creedence Clearwater Revival, as well as songs composed as a solo artist. It was recorded with a live audience at Warner Bros. Studios Stage 15 on December 12 & 13th, 1997, and is available on CD and DVD (with four additional tracks on the DVD).", "target": "John Fogerty album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q496967", "label": "Alliance of Small Island States", "source": "Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) is an intergovernmental organization of low-lying coastal and small island countries. AOSIS was established in 1990, ahead of the Second World Climate Conference. The main purpose of the alliance is to consolidate the voices of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) to address global warming. These island countries are particularly vulnerable to climate change and its related effects on the ocean, including sea level rise, coastal erosion and saltwater intrusion. The members are among the nations least responsible for climate change, having contributed less than one percent to the world's greenhouse gas emissions. These states advocate for international policy and mechanisms for addressing the inequity of climate impacts.", "target": "intergovernmental organization of low-lying coastal and small island countries", "baseline_candidates": ["intergovernmental organization", "geopolitical group", "international organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q581019", "label": "NGC 3766", "source": "NGC 3766 (also known as Caldwell 97) is an open star cluster in the southern constellation Centaurus. It is located in the vast star-forming region known as the Carina molecular cloud, and was discovered by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille during his astrometric survey in 1751–1752. At a distance of about 1745 pc, the cluster subtends a diameter of about 12 minutes of arc.There are 137 listed stars, but many are likely non-members, with only 36 having accurate photometric data. It has a total apparent magnitude of 5.3 and integrated spectral type of B1.7. NGC 3766 is relatively young, with an estimated age of log (7.160) or 14.4 million years, and is approaching us at 14.8 km/s. This cluster contains eleven Be stars, two red supergiants and four Ap stars.36 examples of an unusual type of variable star were discovered in the cluster. These fast-rotating pulsating B-type stars vary by only a few hundredths of a magnitude with periods less than half a day. They are main sequence stars, hotter than δ Scuti variables and cooler than slowly pulsating B stars.", "target": "open cluster in the constellation Centaurus", "baseline_candidates": ["open cluster", "asterism", "interstellar medium", "stellar association"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75380012", "label": "Johan Jongkind", "source": "Johan Barthold Jongkind (3 June 1819 – 9 February 1891) was a Dutch painter and printmaker. He painted marine landscapes in a free manner and is regarded as a forerunner of Impressionism.", "target": "Dutch painter and printmaker regarded as a forerunner of Impressionism (1819-1891)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1631587", "label": "Saint-Léger-de-Montbrun", "source": "Saint-Léger-de-Montbrun is a commune in the Deux-Sèvres department in western France.", "target": "commune in Deux-Sèvres, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5593181", "label": "Graham Richardson", "source": "Graham Richardson is a Canadian television journalist who currently anchors CTV Ottawa's 6 o'clock newscast on CJOH-DT.", "target": "Canadian journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4815258", "label": "athletics at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics – girls' 100 metre hurdles", "source": "The girls' 100 metres hurdles event at the 2010 Youth Olympic Games was held on 17–21 August 2010 in Bishan Stadium.", "target": "Girls' 100 metre hurdles", "baseline_candidates": ["Youth Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4802344", "label": "Arvada Downtown", "source": "Olde Town Arvada, the 15.1 acres (6.1 ha) historic district in Arvada, Colorado bounded by Ralston Road, Teller Road, Grandview Avenue and Yukon Street. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998. The listing included 42 contributing buildings. Its 1998 NRHP nomination stated:The district is characterized by a variety of building types, including some of the most significant historic residences in the city, the largest concentration of historic business buildings in the city, the oldest Grange hall in the state, one of the few historic industrial facilities established in Arvada, and three substantial historic churches. Many of the buildings within the district were designed to fulfill more than onex function, such as business blocks which had commercial space on the ground floor and living quarters or community halls on the upper floor. This combination of building functions within the downtown area typified Arvada's early history. Diversity of function led to the variety of construction materials, styles, landscaping, and setbacks within the district. It includes: A.L. Davis Block building (1916), at 5600 Wadsworth Boulevard, a garage and Dodge and Chevrolet dealership, built of red brick, later expanded to absorb the 1882 school building that was to its north First National Bank of Arvada (1903), at 7530 Grandview Avenue moreIt is home to many local restaurants, breweries, taverns, and shops. The RTD commuter rail G-Line has a stop in Olde Town.", "target": "United States historic place", "baseline_candidates": ["historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23415428", "label": "Carolyn Bennett", "source": "Carolyn Bennett (born May 22, 1962) is a Canadian comedian and writer.", "target": "Canadian novelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1466614", "label": "Roberto Breda", "source": "Roberto Breda (born 21 October 1969) is an Italian football coach and former player. He was most recently the manager of Serie B club Pescara.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7138287", "label": "Parker Case", "source": "Parker Case is an American musician and drummer, mostly known from his involvement in the bands JamisonParker and Say Anything. Other than Max Bemis himself, Case was a part of Say Anything longer than any other member.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7539831", "label": "Sleepin' with the Radio On", "source": "\"Sleepin' with the Radio On\" is a song written by Stephen Allen Davis, and recorded by American country music artist Charly McClain. It was released in August 1981 as the second single from the album Surround Me with Love. The song reached #4 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.", "target": "1981 single by Charly McClain", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q619435", "label": "Middle Nevka", "source": "The Middle Nevka or Srednyaya Nevka (Russian: Сре́дняя Не́вка) is a branch of the Neva river delta in St. Petersburg, Russia. Flowing between Yelagin, Kamenny and Krestovsky islands, it empties into the Neva Bay.", "target": "river in Saint Petersburg, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3648707", "label": "Abul-Samsari Range", "source": "Samsari Range (Georgian: სამსრის ქედი) is a volcanic range in southern Georgia, 120 km (75 mi) to the southwest of Tbilisi. It is a part of the Highland of Southern Georgia and rises above the Javakheti and Tsalka Plateaus. The range itself is 42 km (26 mi) long and runs north to south from the Ktsia to the Paravani River Gorges. There is archaeological evidence of ancient forts on some of the peaks.", "target": "a mountain range in Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain range"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3524", "label": "Teleocichla", "source": "Teleocichla is a genus of fish in the family Cichlidae found in the Tapajós, Xingu, Tocantins and Jari River basins, which are part of the Amazon River Basin in Brazil. All species are rheophilic, and highly elongated in shape. They generally are smaller than 9 cm (3.5 in) in length, making them some of the smallest cichlids of the Americas. Only T. preta can grow larger, reaching about 12 cm (4.7 in). Since restricted to areas with fast currents (such as cataracts and rapids), they are particularly vulnerable to the building of dams, and the Belo Monte Dam may cause the extinction of T. centisquama. Other species recognized as threatened by Brazil's Ministry of the Environment are T. cinderella, T. prionogenys and T. wajapi.", "target": "genus of fishes", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61913745", "label": "Sabine Hyland", "source": "Sabine Hyland (born Campbell, August 26, 1964) is an American anthropologist and ethnohistorian working in the Andes. She is currently Professor of World Christianity at the University of St Andrews. She is best known for her work studying khipus and hybrid khipu-alphabetic texts in the Central Andes and is credited with the first potential phonetic decipherment of an element of a khipu. She has also written extensively about the interaction between Spanish missionaries and the Inca in colonial Peru, focusing on language, religion and missionary culture, as well as the history of the Chanka people.Hyland's research has appeared in media outlets around the world, such as the BBC World Service, National Geographic, Scientific American, and Slate. In 2011, National Geographic filmed a documentary about her research on khipu boards as part of their series Ancient X-Files.", "target": "American anthropologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9287831", "label": "Henry Fuller", "source": "Herbert Fuller (28 December 1902 – 15 October 1993) was a British cyclist. He competed in the sprint event at the 1924 Summer Olympics.", "target": "British cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5574211", "label": "Gneomar", "source": "Gneomar is a German given name, which is of Mecklenburgian origin and derived from Slavic. It is an old given name derived from the Slavic elements: \"gniew\" (anger) and \"mir\" (peace, glory or world).", "target": "male given name", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1767647", "label": "Farako", "source": "Farako is a small town and commune in the Cercle of Kolondieba in the Sikasso Region of southern Mali. In 1998 the commune had a population of 9,769.", "target": "commune and town in Sikasso Region, Mali", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Mali"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12897392", "label": "Solen", "source": "Solen is a city in Sioux County, North Dakota, United States and on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. The population was 83 at the 2010 census.The town has a gas station and automotive repair shop called Hoffman's Garage which has been family owned and operated since the early 1900s as well as a local bar, Last Chance Saloon.", "target": "city in Sioux County, North Dakota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9389654", "label": "Zdzisław Dobrucki", "source": "Zdzisław Dobrucki (26 November 1944 – 21 May 2021) was an international speedway rider from Poland.", "target": "Polish speedway rider", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6354150", "label": "Kalno", "source": "Kalno [ˈkalnɔ] (German: Kallendorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Żarów, within Świdnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) east of Żarów, 12 kilometres (7 mi) north-east of Świdnica, and 43 kilometres (27 mi) south-west of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has an approximate population of 320.", "target": "village in Lower Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7196260", "label": "Pinlaung", "source": "Pinlaung is a town 1,510 metres (4,950 ft) above sea level and seat of Pinlaung Township, in the Pa-O Self-Administered Zone of Shan State of eastern-central Burma. It lies along National Road 54, north-west by road from Loikaw. Running through the city center is a rail line connecting Loikaw to Kalaw, two major tourist towns in the area.", "target": "human settlement in Myanmar", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6785621", "label": "Masturah", "source": "Masturah is a village in Al Madinah Province, in western Saudi Arabia.", "target": "human settlement in Saudi Arabia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23035585", "label": "Frederick Arthur Bagg", "source": "Frederick Arthur Bagg (1871 - March 1, 1932) was the engineer who surveyed the route for the New York State Canal System. He was the chief engineer for the Johnstown, Fonda, and Gloverville Railroad.", "target": "Canal Engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18202787", "label": "Noureddine Moukrim", "source": "Noureddine Moukrim (born 16 February 1966) is a Moroccan footballer who played as a defender.", "target": "Moroccan association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7070622", "label": "Nuveen Investments", "source": "Nuveen is an American asset manager and wholly owned subsidiary of financial planning firm TIAA, itself known for its legacy focus on managing money for not-for-profit institutions such as universities and their employees. As a consequence of integration efforts over the last several years, Nuveen (or branded sub-affiliates) now manage the entirety of TIAA's own capital as well as all capital sourced from third parties. It is one of a limited number of non-sovereign money managers globally that have exceeded one trillion dollars in assets under management in recent years, and one of only a few that are not part of a larger organization offering retail or institutional banking at scale. Nuveen was founded in Chicago, Illinois in 1898 and originally focused solely on municipal bond underwriting and investments. While its investments today span nearly all major areas of capital markets, it is known for its size and influence in domestic fixed income generally, tax advantaged municipal bonds in particular and private real estate. The firm also runs several sustainable investing strategies that feature prominently in its marketing and media efforts. The firm's three major offices globally are Chicago (headquarters of Nuveen proper), Charlotte and New York (headquarters of parent TIAA). Over a dozen smaller offices are maintained around the world to support regionally specific concerns.", "target": "American asset management company", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "subsidiary"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7204600", "label": "Pleophragmia leporum", "source": "Pleophragmia is a genus of fungi in the family Sporormiaceae. This is a monotypic genus, containing the single species Pleophragmia leporum.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5441382", "label": "Feelin' You", "source": "\"Feelin' You\" is the debut single released by American R&B singer-songwriter Solange from her debut album Solo Star.", "target": "2002 single by N.O.R.E. and Solange", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5395971", "label": "Eruption", "source": "Eruption was a short-lived German krautrock or experimental music super group founded by former Tangerine Dream member and then current Kluster member Conrad Schnitzler.", "target": "German band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94920639", "label": "David Herbert Lloyd", "source": "David Herbert Lloyd (1899-1967) was the Archdeacon of St Davids from 1963 to his death. Lloyd was educated at St David's College, Lampeter. He was ordained deacon in 1922, and priest in 1923. After curacies in Swansea and Tycroes he held incumbencies in Marloes, Fishguard, Llanbadarn Fawr and Prendergast.", "target": "Welsh Anglican priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15635907", "label": "Chandigarh Fire and Emergency Services", "source": "The Chandigarh Fire and Emergency Services is the fire brigade wing of the Chandigarh Municipal Corporation.As of 2012, the department had seven fire stations across the city and plans were afoot to build six more.In 2009, a proposal was mooted in the Chandigarh Municipal Corporation to allow women into the fire services.The department also sets up temporary fire stations during festive seasons to ensure that no mishaps occur.", "target": "Indian fire department", "baseline_candidates": ["fire department"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16758163", "label": "Rhyzodiastes alveus", "source": "Rhyzodiastes alveus is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Rhysodinae. It was described by R.T. & J.R. Bell in 1985. It is found in Vietnam.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5590171", "label": "Goya ovaliger", "source": "Goya ovaliger is a species of snout moth in the genus Goya. It was described by André Blanchard in 1975 and is known from the US state of Texas.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95204934", "label": "Zoë Beck", "source": "Zoë Beck (born 12 March 1975 as Henrike Heiland in Ehringshausen in the Lahn-Dill district) is a German writer, publisher, translator, dialogue book author and dubbing director. She has won multiple awards for her books and translations.", "target": "German author, translator and publisher", "baseline_candidates": ["pseudonym", "human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4668105", "label": "Abmerk Shindjuu", "source": "Abmerk Shindjuu (born 21 November 1981 in Windhoek, Namibia) is a Namibian professional boxer from Windhoek. He is the Namibian flyweight champion and has fought for the Commonwealth flyweight title.Shindjuu began his first fighting experience with professionals opposed to Petanena Elago. He beat Petanena in his hometown of Oranjemund with a points victory.He participated in four fights against Simon Negodhi, Negodhi won once, drew twice but Shindjuu then beat Negodhi to win the Namibian title at the Windhoek Country Club Resort in their final fight. Shindjuu lost the belt in his next fight when he was beaten by Joseph Hilongwa on a split decision at the same venue.He encountered Englishman Chris Edwards for the Commonwealth flyweight titles and fell to a defeat in his homeland and home city. He returns to action against Smangaliso Madonsela in Namibia.", "target": "Namibian boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7415872", "label": "Sand Seatrout", "source": "Cynoscion arenarius (sand seatrout, sand weakfish or, as it is also known, white trout) is a common species of drum fish found in the Gulf of Mexico and western Atlantic Ocean. While not especially popular or targeted, it is still known as a sport fish and is often caught by anglers of these waters. Research in biochemistry suggests that the sand seatrout may actually be a subspecies of the weakfish that lacks spots. Often confused with the silver seatrout, the sand seatrout is larger and more often found inshore than its similar-appearing offshore cousin. It also has a slight yellow hue, whereas the silver seatrout is more silver overall. It averages at one pound and is reportedly a good fish for eating.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16018931", "label": "Jack Towers", "source": "Jack Towers (November 15, 1914 – December 23, 2010) was in charge of radio broadcasting at the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 1952 to 1974 and became a noted remastering engineer of musical recordings after his retirement.", "target": "jazz audio engineer (1914-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20068030", "label": "Oleksandr Lakusta", "source": "Oleksandr Lakusta (born August 8, 1991) is a Ukrainian footballer playing with Toronto Falcons in the Canadian Soccer League.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38825", "label": "Montgomeryshire", "source": "Montgomeryshire, also known as Maldwyn (Welsh: Sir Drefaldwyn meaning \"the Shire of Baldwin's town\"), is one of thirteen historic counties and a former administrative county of Wales. It is named after its county town, Montgomery, which in turn is named after one of William the Conqueror's main counsellors, Roger de Montgomerie, who was the 1st Earl of Shrewsbury. Montgomeryshire today constitutes the northern part of the principal area of Powys. The population of Montgomeryshire was 63,779 according to the 2011 census, with a low population density of just 75 people per square mile (29 people per square km). The current area is 2,174 square km (839 square miles). The largest town is Newtown, followed by Welshpool and Llanidloes.", "target": "historic county of Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["historic county of the United Kingdom", "historic county of Wales"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21374940", "label": "Polyommatus sagratrox", "source": "Polyommatus (Plebicula) sagratrox, the Sierra de la Sagra blue, is a species of butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It is endemic to Spain in the south-east of the Iberian Peninsula. Adults are on wing from July (normally) to August. The host plant for the larvae is Anthyllis vulneraria microcephala, an endemic plant from the north-east Andalusia region of south-eastern Spain.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24066333", "label": "Lucus Planum", "source": "Lucus Planum is a region on Mars, named after an albedo feature. Its name was approved by the IAU in 1997. The center latitude of the feature is 4.99 degrees S and the center longitude is 182.83 degrees It lies just to the east and north east of the volcano Apollinaris Patera. Lucus Planum lies in both the Memnonia quadrangle and the Aeolis quadrangles. It is part of a region called the \"Medusae Fossae Formation\" Part of this region is covered with yardangs. They are formed by the action of wind on sand sized particles; hence they often point in the direction that the winds were blowing when they were formed. Views of yardangs in this region are shown below.", "target": "planum on Mars", "baseline_candidates": ["planum"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6406684", "label": "Kilcrea Friary", "source": "Kilcrea Friary (Irish: Prióireacht Chill Chré) is a ruined medieval abbey located near Ovens, County Cork, Ireland. Both the friary and Kilcrea Castle, located in ruin to the west, were built by Observant Franciscans in the mid 15th century under the invitation of Cormac Láidir MacCarthy, Lord of Muskerry, as protection from English troops.The friary was sacked by the English army a number of times in the late 1500s, during which it sustained considerable damage, but remained occupied by friars until the 1620s. MacCarthy was killed in battle in 1494 and is buried at the site. The site has remained in continuous use as a burial ground, and contains, among others, the remains Art Ó Laoghaire, who was the subject of an epic poem written by Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill. The abbey's main features include an aisle, a transept on the south-side, and cloisters at the north end. The narrow tower is ascended via a series of steep and winding stairs. The areas around the tower were once dormitories, day rooms and kitchens. The name Kilcrea is derived from the from Irish: Cill Chré, meaning 'Cell of Cyra'. Cyra was an early medieval abbess who reputedly founded a nunnery to the east of the friary in the parish of St Owen's (Ovens).", "target": "church in County Cork, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["abbey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10336757", "label": "Nicolas Santos", "source": "Nicolas Santos (born January 5, 1988) is a tennis player from Brazil. He was the number 2 ranked junior player in the world in 2006.Santos has a career high ATP singles ranking of World No. 457, achieved on 29 April 2013. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of World number 349, achieved on 31 January 2011.", "target": "Brazilian tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5242449", "label": "Dawn Gibbons", "source": "Dawn Gibbons (born March 9, 1954) is an American politician. She was a member of the Nevada Assembly, as well as the First Lady of Nevada from 2007 to 2010, until her divorce from Governor Jim Gibbons on July 21, 2010.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q40544", "label": "Ala Archa National Park", "source": "The Ala-Archa Nature Park (Kyrgyz: Ала-Арча кыргыз мамлекеттик жаратылыш паркы, Russian: Государственный природный национальный парк Ала-Арча) is an alpine national park in the Tian Shan mountains of Kyrgyzstan, located approximately 35 km south of the capital city of Bishkek. Established in 1976, it currently covers 16,485 hectares.", "target": "alpine national park in the Tian Shan mountains of Kyrgyzstan", "baseline_candidates": ["state nature national park of Kyrgyzstan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21782949", "label": "Ploski", "source": "Ploski (Bulgarian: Плocки) is a village in the municipality of Sandanski, in Blagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria. It is situated to the West of the Pirin mountain, 17km away from the town of [Sandanski]. The village sits 500-699m above sea level and has a population of 695. There are remains from Thracian, Roman and Middle Ages. The village of Ploski has an elementary school, a community center, a church, a football stadium and several shops. The church Svetoto Uspenie Bogorodichno is built at the higher part of the village.", "target": "village in Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2337692", "label": "Stefan Schwoch", "source": "Stefan Schwoch (born 19 October 1969) is an Italian former professional footballer who played as a striker. He works as sporting director of Vicenza.", "target": "Italian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2864978", "label": "Arthur Alexander", "source": "Arthur Alexander (May 10, 1940 – June 9, 1993) was an American country soul songwriter and singer. Jason Ankeny, music critic for AllMusic, said Alexander was a \"country-soul pioneer\" and that, though largely unknown, \"his music is the stuff of genius, a poignant and deeply intimate body of work on par with the best of his contemporaries.\" Alexander's songs were covered by such stars as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Gerry and the Pacemakers, Otis Redding, Tina Turner, Pearl Jam, and Jerry Lee Lewis.", "target": "American country songwriter and soul singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16385393", "label": "Dark Curse", "source": "Dark Curse is a 2008 dark fantasy vampire novel written by American author Christine Feehan, and a part of the Dark Series saga.", "target": "A novel written by the American author Christine Feehan", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61334022", "label": "Berezove", "source": "Berezove (Ukrainian: Березове; Russian: Берёзовое) is a village in Marinka Raion (district) in Donetsk Oblast of eastern Ukraine, at 36 km SW from the centre of Donetsk city. The War in Donbass, that started in mid-April 2014, brought both civilian and military casualties. In a clash between Ukrainian and pro-Russian troops, that took place near the village on 10 November 2014, three Ukrainian servicemen were killed and three others wounded. A 30-year-old female civilian was killed by explosion of a booby trap near the village on 8 September 2015. Two Ukrainian servicemen were killed near the village on 11 March 2017.", "target": "village in Volnovakha Raion, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Ukraine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18719364", "label": "David Gourlay", "source": "David Gourlay is a Scottish (and former Australian) international lawn & indoor bowler from the Prestwick Bowling Club and Crookston Bowling Club. He is also a Commonwealth Games medal winning coach.", "target": "Scottish and Australian lawn and indoor bowler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27663008", "label": "Kamen Dimitrov", "source": "Kamen Dimitrov (Bulgarian: Камен Димитров) (born 18 January 1962) is a retired Bulgarian discus thrower. He won the 1981 European Junior Championships and won the Balkan Championships in 1984, 1986 and 1988. He competed at the 1986 European Championships, the 1987 World Championships, the 1990 European Championships and the 1991 World Championships without reaching the final.He became Bulgarian champion in 1985, 1988, 1989 and 1991. His toughest competitors were Georgi Georgiev and Nikolai Kolev. His personal best throw was 65.40 metres, achieved in May 1986 in Plovdiv.", "target": "Bulgarian discus thrower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3174614", "label": "Arizona Wildcats", "source": "The Arizona Wildcats are the athletic teams that represent the University of Arizona, located in Tucson. The Wildcats compete at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I (Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) for college football) level as a member of the Pac-12 Conference. Arizona's chief intercollegiate rival is the Arizona State Sun Devils, and the two universities' athletic departments compete against each other in multiple sports via the State Farm Territorial Cup Series.", "target": "intercollegiate sports teams of the University of Arizona", "baseline_candidates": ["university and college sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15720322", "label": "Manali", "source": "Manali is a town in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. It is situated in the northern end of the Kullu Valley, formed by the Beas River. The town is located in the Kullu district, approximately 270 kilometres (170 mi) north of the state capital of Shimla and 544 kilometres (338 mi) northeast of the national capital of Delhi. With a population of 8,096 people recorded in the 2011 Indian census Manali is the beginning of an ancient trade route through Lahaul and Ladakh, over the Karakoram Pass and onto Yarkand and Hotan in the Tarim Basin of China. Manali is a popular tourist destination in India and serves as the gateway to the Lahaul and Spiti district as well as the city of Leh in Ladakh.", "target": "town of Himachal Pradesh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["city of India", "hill station", "municipal corporation in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6433890", "label": "Kotasi", "source": "Kotasi is a former Maidu village in Plumas County, California. Kotasi was located 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Greenville, but its precise location is unknown.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28820474", "label": "2017 Trofeo Faip–Perrel", "source": "The 2017 Trofeo Faip–Perrel was the twelfth edition of a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was part of the 2017 ATP Challenger Tour, and took place in Bergamo, Italy between 20 and 26 February 2016.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["ATP Challenger Bergamo", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q465865", "label": "Gert-Jan Liefers", "source": "Gerrit Jan 'Gert-Jan' Liefers (born 26 September 1978 in Apeldoorn, Gelderland) is a former Dutch middle distance runner, who came 8th in the 1500 m final at the 2004 Olympics. He was also a finalist in the same event in the 2001 and 2003 World Championships. Liefers finished 8th in the 5000 m final at the 2006 European Athletics Championships in Gothenburg. He is the Dutch record holder at 1500 m, the mile and 3000 m.", "target": "Dutch middle distance runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7660253", "label": "Sydor Rey", "source": "Sydor Rey born Izydor Reiss (6 September 1908 – 15 November 1979) was a Polish poet and novelist. During the Interbellum he worked in the Jewish orphanage of Janusz Korczak in Warsaw. He dedicated his short story Anioł-Stróż (\"Guardian Angel\"; 1957), part of his book Księga rozbitków, to the memory of Janusz Korczak. A bisexual author, Sydor Rey did not frequently tackle gay subjects in his writings.", "target": "Polish poet and novelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22032232", "label": "Canal Road", "source": "Canal Road (Chinese: 鵝頸) is one of the 13 constituencies in the Wan Chai District of Hong Kong. It was created in 1994. The constituency loosely covers Canal Road in Hong Kong Island with the estimated population of 12,512.", "target": "constituency of the Wan Chai District Council of Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["Council Constituency of Wan Chai District"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65420963", "label": "1586", "source": "1586 (MDLXXXVI) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar, the 1586th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 586th year of the 2nd millennium, the 86th year of the 16th century, and the 7th year of the 1580s decade. As of the start of 1586, the Gregorian calendar was 10 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.", "target": "year", "baseline_candidates": ["common year starting and ending on Wednesday", "calendar year"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16192667", "label": "Nazif Cungu", "source": "Nazif Cungu (Montenegrin: Назиф Цунгу, born 13 May 1958) is a Montenegrin Albanian politician, the leader of the biggest Albanian political party in Montenegro FORCA.", "target": "Montenegrin politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1859561", "label": "Tinkinswood", "source": "Tinkinswood or its full name Tinkinswood Burial Chamber (Welsh: Siambr Gladdu Tinkinswood), also known as Castell Carreg, Llech-y-Filiast and Maes-y-Filiast, is a megalithic burial chamber, built around 6,000 years ago, during the Neolithic period, in the Vale of Glamorgan, near Cardiff, Wales. The structure is called a dolmen, which was the most common megalithic structure in Europe. The dolmen is of the Severn-Cotswold tomb type, and consists of a large capstone on top, with smaller upright stones supporting it. The limestone capstone at Tinkinswood weighs approximately 40 long tons and measures 24 feet (7.3 m) x 14 ft (4.3 m); it is thought to be the largest in Britain, and also in Europe. It would have taken some 200 people to lift the stone into the correct position. It was originally all covered by a mound of soil, which has been removed over time. The remaining mound behind the structure measures approximately 130 ft (40 m) x 59 ft (18 m) in size.", "target": "neolithic dolmen in Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site", "dolmen"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13582087", "label": "Cephalotes basalis", "source": "Cephalotes basalis is a species of arboreal ant of the genus Cephalotes, characterized by an odd shaped head and the ability to \"parachute\" by steering their fall if they drop off of the tree they're on. Giving their name also as gliding ants.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15636093", "label": "Xanthoparmelia pokornyi", "source": "Xanthoparmelia pokornyi is a lichen species in the family Parmeliaceae. It contains the depsides gyrophoric acid and stenosporic acid.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3998250", "label": "Tremors", "source": "The Tremors franchise consists of a series of American monster comedy-horror films and a spin-off television show, with a plot centered around attacks from subterranean worm-like creatures known as Graboids. It began in 1990 with the release of Tremors, which spawned a series of direct-to-video films and the titular television series. In 2017, a second television series was ordered to air on Syfy, and a pilot was shot, but the project was ultimately cancelled.", "target": "media franchise", "baseline_candidates": ["media franchise"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6775527", "label": "Martin Gilbert", "source": "Martin James Gilbert FRSE (born 13 July 1955) is a British businessman, and the vice chairman of Standard Life Aberdeen and chairman of Aberdeen Standard Investments. He was chief executive (CEO) of Aberdeen Asset Management, an international investment management company, which he co-founded in 1983. He was chairman of FirstGroup from April 1995 to January 2014. He became a patron of The Aberdeen Law Project in 2010.", "target": "British businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q33106420", "label": "Jean-René Farthouat", "source": "Jean-René Farthouat (26 June 1934 – 11 January 2020) was a French lawyer who served as Bâtonnier of the Paris Bar Association from 1994 to 1995.", "target": "French lawyer (1934-2020)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41569646", "label": "Goffredo Malaterra", "source": "Gaufredo (or Geoffrey, or Goffredo) Malaterra (Latin: Gaufridus Malaterra) was an eleventh-century Benedictine monk and historian, possibly of Norman origin. He travelled to the southern Italian peninsula, passing some time in Apulia before entering the monastery of Sant'Agata at Catania, on the isle of Sicily. Malaterra indicates that, prior to his arrival in Catania, he had spent an undefined period away from monastic life, in the worldly service of \"Martha\".", "target": "Italian historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61347195", "label": "Pysmenne", "source": "Pysmenne (Ukrainian: Письменне; Russian: Письменное) is an urban-type settlement in Synelnykove Raion of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast in Ukraine. It belongs to Vasylkivka settlement hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Population: 1,164 (2021 est. )Until 18 July 2020, Pysmenne belonged to Vasylkivka Raion. The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast to seven. The area of Vasylkivka Raion was merged into Synelnykove Raion.", "target": "Urban-type settlement in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["urban-type settlement in Ukraine", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6305483", "label": "Väinö Markkanen", "source": "Väinö Markkanen (born 9 May 1929) is a Finnish sports shooter and Olympic champion. He won the gold medal in the 50 metre pistol at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.", "target": "sport shooter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4949218", "label": "Bouaké Department", "source": "Bouaké Department is a department of Gbêkê Region in Vallée du Bandama District, Ivory Coast. In 2014, its population was 680,694, making it the most populous department in the country. The seat of the department is the city of Bouaké. The sub-prefectures of the department are Bouaké-SP, Bouaké-Ville, Bounda, Brobo, Mamini, and N'Djébonouan.", "target": "department in Vallée du Bandama, Ivory Coast", "baseline_candidates": ["third-level administrative country subdivision", "department of Ivory Coast"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5074134", "label": "Charaxes zelica", "source": "Charaxes zelica, the zelica untailed charaxes, is a butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It is found in Guinea, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, the Republic of the Congo, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Sudan, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania and possibly Sierra Leone. The habitat consists of forests with altitudes of 800–1,000 metres (2,600–3,300 ft). Adult males feed on otter and bird droppings and both sexes are attracted to fermented fruit. The larvae feed on Pterocarpus santalinoides, Paullinia pinnata, Albizia zygia, Lonchocarpus cyanescens, Dalbergia, Millettia, Dichapetalum and Trachyphrynium species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19807841", "label": "Niwai Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Niwai Legislative Assembly constituency is one of the 200 Legislative Assembly constituencies of Rajasthan state in India.It is part of Tonk district and is reserved for candidates belonging to the Scheduled Castes.", "target": "constituency of the Rajasthan legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q971341", "label": "Austrosteenisia", "source": "Austrosteenisia is a genus of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae. It belongs to the subfamily Faboideae.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q843584", "label": "Pinkeye", "source": "\"Pinkeye\" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American animated television series South Park. It originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on October 29, 1997. In \"Pinkeye,\" Kenny is killed, and brought back to life as a zombie through a freak accident, terrorizing South Park residents who believe the rise of the living dead is an epidemic of \"pinkeye.\" The episode was written by series co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, along with writer Philip Stark. The episode was the first of a new slate of South Park episodes Parker and Stone made after Comedy Central agreed to permanently pick up the show. The duo were not happy with the episode, particularly the ending, and were surprised by the positive response it received from fans. Parker said he also wanted the episode to convey, in part, that Halloween is a positive holiday for children. \"Pinkeye\" received generally positive reviews and has been described as one of the classic episodes of South Park. It was viewed by 1.75 million households the week it aired, an unusually high amount for Comedy Central at the time. The episode introduced the recurring character Principal Victoria. When Cartman dresses as Adolf Hitler, Victoria removes Cartman's costume and attempts to dress him as a ghost, but inadvertently makes Cartman resemble a member of the Ku Klux Klan. The costumes initially worried Comedy Central executives, but the negative feedback received was minimal.", "target": "episode of South Park (S1 E7)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11662159", "label": "Aomori Bay", "source": "The Aomori Bay (青森湾, Aomori-wan) is a bay located north of the island of Honshu, in Japan. It is considered to be part of the larger Mutsu Bay.", "target": "Bay of Japan area", "baseline_candidates": ["bay"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15253031", "label": "Mengkuang Titi", "source": "Mengkuang Titi is a small Malay village in Central Seberang Perai District, Penang, Malaysia. It is located not too far from the Mengkuang Dam. The village has a population of about 800, and still retains the rustic feel ideal for the development of agricultural and cottage industries.", "target": "human settlement in Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["kampong"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21486596", "label": "Mount Hayne", "source": "Mount Hayne (70°16′S 65°2′E) is a mountain 2 nautical miles (4 km) northwest of Moore Pyramid on the north side of Scylla Glacier, in the Prince Charles Mountains of Antarctica. It was plotted from Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions air photos of 1965, and was named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for J.R. Hayne, a photographic officer with the Antarctic Division, Melbourne, and a member of the Prince Charles Mountains survey party in 1969.", "target": "mountain in Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18712610", "label": "Vettai", "source": "Vettai is Singapore Tamil language police procedural drama television series created by Anuratha Kanderaju and Abbas Akbar for the Singapore Tamil Channel, MediaCorp Vasantham. The series' first season was on-air from November 23, 2010 to March 30, 2011, every Monday to Thursday, 10.30 pm and the second season was on-air from January 4, 2012 to May 11, 2013. Meanwhile, the third season started to air on Deepavali 2014 and end by Spring 2015 and the fourth season started to air from December 11, 2017 to March 29, 2018, every Monday to Thursday at 10.00 pm This long-form drama series was directed by Anuratha Kanderaju and Abbas Akbar. Meanwhile, the third season were directed by Anuratha Kanderaju, Kumaran Sundaram and Don Arvind. And the 4th Season was directed by Kumaran Sundaram and SS Vikneshwaran. The series is one of the most watched television series in Singapore.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7299197", "label": "Raymond Township", "source": "Raymond Township (T10N R4W) is located in Montgomery County, Illinois, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 1,200 and it contained 545 housing units.", "target": "township in Montgomery County, Illinois", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Illinois"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5496878", "label": "Freddy King Sings", "source": "Freddy King Sings is an album by blues singer and guitarist Freddie King. Released in 1961, it was King's first album and includes four singles that appeared in Billboard magazine's R&B and Pop charts. In 2008, Freddy King Sings was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in the \"Classics of Blues Recordings\" category.", "target": "album by Freddie King", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55614054", "label": "Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (Prevention and Control) Act, 2017", "source": "The Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (Prevention and Control) Act, 2017, often shortened to the HIV/AIDS Prevention Act, is an act of the Parliament of India that provides for controlling and preventing of HIV/AIDS and securing the rights of individuals diagnosed with HIV/AIDS. The bill for the act was introduced in the Rajya Sabha on 11 February 2014 and was referred to a Standing Committee on 24 February 2014, which submitted its report on 29 April 2015. After few amendments to the original 2014 bill, it was passed by the Rajya Sabh on 21 March 2017 and the Lok Sabha on 11 April 2017. It received Presidential assent on 20 April 2017, and became effective from 10 September 2018. The HIV/AIDS Prevention Act originated from a draft bill submitted by Lawyers Collective, a non-governmental organization, to the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) in 2006. The act penalises propagation of hate against HIV/AIDS affected persons, ensures the right of HIV/AIDS affected minors to shared household, protects non-disclosure of HIV/AIDS status in the absence of court order and mandates informed consent to disclose HIV/AIDS positive identity, inter alia. However, civil society organisations and HIV/AIDS affected persons criticised the act on certain legal language issues, as it mandates the state to provide HIV/AIDS affected persons with medical services \"as far as possible\". This aspect was absent from the draft bill submitted to NACO. Post enactment, India reportedly came to become the first country in south Asia to statutorily prohibit discrimination against people diagnosed with HIV/AIDS. The.", "target": "Act of the Parliament of India", "baseline_candidates": ["Act of the Parliament of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20311496", "label": "A Season in Hell", "source": "\"A Season in Hell\" is a 1964 Australian TV movie broadcast on the ABC which originally aired as an episode of Wednesday Theatre. It was directed by Henri Safran from a script by Patricia Hooker and was shot at the ABC's Gore Hill Studios in Sydney.It was arguably the first depiction of a gay relationship in Australian TV drama.", "target": "1964 television film", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q745914", "label": "Offa's Dyke Path", "source": "Offa's Dyke Path (Welsh: Llwybr Clawdd Offa) is a long-distance footpath loosely following the Wales–England border. Officially opened on 10 July 1971, by Lord Hunt, it is one of Britain's National Trails and draws walkers from throughout the world. About 60 miles (97 km) of the 177-mile (285 km) route either follows, or keeps close company with, the remnants of Offa's Dyke, an earthwork traditionally thought to have been constructed in the late 8th century on the orders of King Offa of Mercia.", "target": "UK long-distance path", "baseline_candidates": ["National Trail", "long-distance trail"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7488349", "label": "Shang-a-Lang", "source": "Shang-a-Lang was a children's pop music TV series starring the Scottish band, the Bay City Rollers. It was produced in Manchester by Granada Television for the ITV network and ran for one 20-week series in 1975. It featured the band in comedy sketches and performing their songs to a live studio audience made up of their teenage fans. This resulted in chaotic scenes at times as some members of the audience attempted to run onto the studio floor to meet their heroes, resulting in security officers having to forcibly restrain or even eject them from the studio. Guest stars performing their latest releases and hits included Cliff Richard, Marc Bolan, Lynsey de Paul, Lulu, David Cassidy, Linda Lewis, Gary Glitter, Olivia Newton-John, Slade, Sparks, Alvin Stardust, Showaddywaddy, The Rubettes, Alan Price and Gilbert O'Sullivan and The Marionettes.The show's theme song \"Shang-a-Lang\", was a hit single for the group, peaking at number 2 in 1974 in the UK Singles Chart.", "target": "TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q173548", "label": "flag of Mauritius", "source": "The national flag of Mauritius, also known as the Four Bands and Les Quatre Bandes (French for \"the four bands\"), was adopted upon independence, March 12, 1968. It consists of four horizontal bands of equal width, coloured (from top to bottom) red, blue, yellow, and green. The flag was recorded at the College of Arms in London on 9 January 1968. The flag was designed by Gurudutt Moher whose contribution was recognised posthumously in March 2018 in the form of the national title Member of the Star and Key of the Indian Ocean (MSK). Moher, who was a retired school teacher, died of a heart attack on October 7, 2017, at the age of 93. The civil ensign (for private vessels) and government ensign (for state vessels) are red and blue flags, respectively, each with the national flag in the canton and the coat of arms of Mauritius in the fly. The naval ensign (used by coast guard vessels) is an unusual design consisting of red, white, and blue vertical stripes of unequal widths defaced by a central anchor/key emblem.", "target": "flag", "baseline_candidates": ["national flag"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15059982", "label": "MOJO", "source": "MOJO, stylized as M.O.J.O., is an Android-based video game microconsole manufactured by Mad Catz.The system runs unmodified Android and connects directly to the Google Play online store. As such, it can play any game designed or previously purchased for Android instead of those specifically designed for the console. The console was released on December 10, 2013, in the United States and United Kingdom.", "target": "Android-based video game microconsole", "baseline_candidates": ["product model", "microconsole"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4686979", "label": "Adé Sapara", "source": "Adé Sapara (born 1964) is an English actor, mainly in supporting roles in films and TV series.", "target": "actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6224355", "label": "John C. Curtis", "source": "John Calvin Curtis (April 17, 1845 – January 17, 1917) was a Lieutenant of the Ninth Regiment Connecticut Volunteer Infantry in the American Civil War, and a Medal of Honor recipient. Curtis was born on April 17, 1845 in Bridgeport, Connecticut. He enlisted in the Ninth Regiment on August 17, 1861. On August 5, 1862, as a Sergeant-Major at age 17, he became instrumental in repulsing a Confederate attack aimed at recapturing Baton Rouge, Louisiana. During heavy firing, he \"voluntarily sought the line of battle and alone and unaided captured 2 prisoners, driving them before him to regimental headquarters at the point of the bayonet.\" For this act, Curtis received the Medal of Honor on December 16, 1896, the only soldier from the Ninth to be so honored. Curtis was later promoted to First Lieutenant. He died on January 17, 1917, and was buried at Mountain Grove Cemetery in Bridgeport.", "target": "United States Army Medal of Honor recipient", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86762231", "label": "2020 Oracle Challenger Series – Indian Wells – women's singles", "source": "Viktorija Golubic was the defending champion but chose not to participate. Irina-Camelia Begu won the title, without losing a set throughout the tournament, defeating Misaki Doi in the final, 6–3, 6–3.", "target": "tennis event", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34792893", "label": "Chevy Chase Village", "source": "Chevy Chase Village, Maryland is an incorporated municipality in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, bordering Washington, D.C. It is made up of sections 1, 1a, and 2 of Chevy Chase, as originally designated by The Chevy Chase Land Company. The population was 1,953 as of the 2010 census. The town is the wealthiest in Maryland, with a median income of over $250,000, the highest income bracket listed by the census bureau, and a median home value of $1,823,800.Chevy Chase Village includes 721 homes. It is known for its speed limit enforcement actions, which produce 24% of its annual revenue.The suburb was created to be all-white; it remains overwhelmingly so more than a century later.Chevy Chase Village is the location of the Chevy Chase Club, a private country club with an initiation fee of over $50,000.", "target": "town in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16755987", "label": "Myrmecia hirsuta", "source": "Myrmecia hirsuta is a species of bull ant, belonging to the 90 species in the genus Myrmecia. The species was described in 1951 by John Clark. Myrmecia hirsuta is distributed across the whole country of Australia, with their distribution is in most Australian states.Workers are 21-33 millimetres long, and could be bigger. The head, jaws, antennae, thorax, legs, and most of their features are in a brownish red colour, with some black colouring as well. Their jaws are longer than their own head, like many other bull ant species.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q844415", "label": "Pternistis", "source": "Pternistis is a genus of galliform birds formerly classified in the spurfowl group of the partridge subfamily of the pheasant family. They are described as \"partridge-francolins\" in literature establishing their phylogenetic placement outside the monophyletic assemblage of true spurfowls. All species are endemic to Sub-Saharan Africa, excepted the double-spurred spurfowl (also present in Morocco). They are commonly known as spurfowls or francolins, but are closely related to jungle bush quail, Alectoris rock partridges, and Coturnix quail. The species are strictly monogamous, remaining mated indefinitely. They procure most of their food by digging. Spurfowls subsist almost entirely on roots, beans of leguminous shrubs and trees, tubers, and seeds, and feasting opportunistically on termites, ants, locusts, flowers, and fruit. Important predators are jackals, caracals, servals, and birds of prey, as well as herons and marabou storks. The genus Pternistis was introduced by the German naturalist Johann Georg Wagler in 1832. The name is from the Ancient Greek pternistēs meaning \"one who strikes with the heel\". The type species was designated by the English zoologist George Robert Gray in 1841 as the Cape spurfowl (Pternistis capensis).Most of the species within the genus formerly included \"francolin\" in their common name. Beginning in 2004 various ornithologists have recommended that it would be clearer to restrict the use of \"francolin\" to members of the genus Francolinus and closely related genera (Peliperdix, Ortygornis, Campocolinus, Scleroptila) and to use \"spurfowl\" for all members of the genus Pternistis. Both are in different tribes within the subfamily Pavoninae: Pternistis is placed with the Old World quails.", "target": "genus of birds", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22249009", "label": "On écrit sur les murs", "source": "\"On écrit sur les murs\" (English: \"We Write on the Walls\") is a 1989 song by Greek singer Demis Roussos from the album Voice and Vision. Written by Romano Musumarra and Jean-Marie Moreau, it was released as first single from the album in January 1990 and achieved success in France where it peaked at number four. In 2015, Kids United covered the song on the album Un monde meilleur.", "target": "1989 single by Demis Roussos", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15235419", "label": "Kelvin", "source": "Kelvin is an unincorporated community in Pinal County, Arizona, United States. Kelvin is located near the Gila River, 24.6 miles (39.6 km) east-northeast of Florence. The community was founded on the north side of the Gila River across from the Riverside Stage Stop that sat on the south side of the Gila, where the town of Riverside still exists. The town was named Kelvin, after Kelvin Grove in Scotland, in 1900. The railroad company later founded Ray Junction immediately north of the Kelvin Bridge on account of the development of Ray, Arizona, and it was the place where the railroad branched from the main line of the Arizona Eastern Railway heading up to the Ray mine. The post office and original old west town site retained the name of Kelvin. This group of small communities are all located within a two-mile circumference from each other and many of the old foundations of Kelvin's original town site still exist. The ruins of the massive mill are still plainly visible. The ruins of the adobe post office are still partly standing near the junction of the Florence / Kelvin Highway and Ray Road. The Kelvin Bridge and the Mineral Creek Bridge, which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, are located near Kelvin.", "target": "unincorporated community in Arizona", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12265464", "label": "Palau at the 2012 Summer Olympics", "source": "The Oceanic island nation of Palau competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London from 27 July to 12 August 2012. This was the nation's fourth consecutive appearance at the Olympics. Five Palauan athletes were selected to the team, competing only in athletics, judo, swimming, and weightlifting; all of them had participated in their first Olympics. Sprinter Rodman Teltull, the youngest male athlete of the team, was the nation's flag bearer at the opening ceremony. Palau, however, has yet to win its first Olympic medal.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic delegation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7996399", "label": "Whitey Glazner", "source": "Charles Franklin \"Whitey\" Glazner (September 17, 1893 – June 6, 1989) was a professional baseball player. He was a right-handed pitcher over parts of five seasons (1920–24) with the Pittsburgh Pirates, and Philadelphia Phillies. For his career, he compiled a 41–48 record, with a 4.21 earned run average, and 266 strikeouts in 783+2⁄3 innings pitched. He was born in Sycamore, Alabama, and died in Orlando, Florida, at the age of 95.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5820022", "label": "Edward Sandford Burgess", "source": "Edward Sandford Burgess (January 19, 1855 – February 23, 1928) was an American botanist and professor.", "target": "U.S. botanist (1855–1928)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5262247", "label": "Derek Pagel", "source": "Derek L. Pagel (born October 24, 1979) is a former American football safety in the National Football League (NFL) for the New York Jets and Dallas Cowboys. He was drafted by the New York Jets in the fifth round of the 2003 NFL Draft. He played college football at the University of Iowa.", "target": "player of American football", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12481211", "label": "Demi Cinta Belahlah Dadaku", "source": "Demi cinta belahlah dadaku is a 1991 Indonesian drama film directed by Nasri Cheppy.", "target": "1991 film by Nasri Cheppy", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29252451", "label": "Bjarne Bassøe", "source": "Bjarne Bassøe (18 April 1892 – 24 February 1975) was a Norwegian engineer. Bassøe was born in Kristiania to colonel Hans Christian Bassøe and Elisabeth Haslund, and married Johanne Margrete Boye Semb in 1927. He graduated as construction engineer from the Norwegian Institute of Technology in 1914, and subsequently worked as railway engineer and in water supply. From 1931 to 1957 he served as secretary-general for the trade union Den Norske Ingeniørforening (NIF), (except for 1941-45). In June 1941, during the German occupation of Norway he was dismissed from his position as secretary-general, and a Nazi collaborator took his place. Bassøe was imprisoned and held at the Grini detention camp in 1941 and from 1942 to 1944. He was decorated Knight, First Class of the Order of St. Olav in 1951, and Knight of the Swedish Order of the Polar Star. He died in 1975.", "target": "Norwegian engineer (1892-1975)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6728002", "label": "Madison High School", "source": "Madison High School is a public high school located in Madison, Ohio, United States. The only high school in the Madison Local School District, it was established in 1895.", "target": "public high school in Madison, Ohio, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["state school", "high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7756975", "label": "The Phoenix Throne", "source": "The Phoenix Throne is the third full-length release from Chicago-based metalcore band Dead to Fall. The album contains some of the longest songs the band has recorded to date.", "target": "album by Dead to Fall", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75492046", "label": "Sir Kildare Borrowes, 3rd Baronet", "source": "Sir Kildare Borrowes, 3rd Baronet (c. 1660 – May 1709) was an Irish politician. He was the son of Sir Walter Borrowes, 2nd Baronet and his first wife Lady Eleanor FitzGerald, daughter of George FitzGerald, 16th Earl of Kildare and Lady Joan Boyle. His mother's family were the richest in County Kildare and this cemented the position of the Borrowes family in the local landed gentry. In 1685, Borrowes succeeded his father as baronet. He was High Sheriff of Kildare in 1697 and again in 1707. Borrowes sat in the Irish House of Commons for Kildare County from 1703 until his death in 1709. His owned Barretstown Castle, which he inherited from his mother, but his main residence was at Gilltown.He married Elizabeth Dixon, eldest daughter of Sir Richard Dixon and Mary Eustace of Calverstown, County Kildare. She died in 1745 They had two sons and three daughters. Borrowes was buried at Gilltown and was succeeded in the baronetcy by his eldest son Walter. Walter also inherited the Dixon estate at Calverstown from his cousin Robert Dixon. \"Borrowes\" was pronounced \"burrows\".", "target": "Irish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q109897", "label": "149 Medusa", "source": "Medusa (minor planet designation: 149 Medusa) is a bright-coloured, stony main-belt asteroid that was discovered by French astronomer J. Perrotin on September 21, 1875, and named after the Gorgon Medusa, a snake-haired monster in Greek mythology. It is orbiting the Sun at a distance of 2.17 AU with a period of 3.21 years and an eccentricity of 0.065. The orbital plane is tilted slightly at an angle of 0.94° to the plane of the ecliptic.When it was discovered, Medusa was by far the smallest asteroid found (although this was not known at that time). Since then, many thousands of smaller asteroids have been found. It was also the closest asteroid to the Sun discovered up to that point, beating the long-held record of 8 Flora. It remained the closest asteroid to the Sun until 433 Eros and 434 Hungaria were found in 1898, leading to the discovery of two new families of asteroids inward from the 4:1 Kirkwood gap which forms the boundary of the main belt.Photometric observations of this asteroid at the Organ Mesa Observatory in Las Cruces, New Mexico, during 2010 gave a light curve with a rather long rotation period of 26.038 ± 0.002 hours and a brightness variation of 0.56 ± 0.03 in magnitude.", "target": "main-belt asteroid", "baseline_candidates": ["asteroid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6681798", "label": "Loryma aridalis", "source": "Loryma aridalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Loryma. It was described by Rothschild in 1913. It is found in Algeria.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20712831", "label": "Kilbroney", "source": "Kilbroney is a civil parish in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is situated mainly in the historic barony of Iveagh Upper, Upper Half, with one townland in Iveagh Upper, Lower Half. It is also a townland of 575 acres.", "target": "civil parish in County Down, Northern Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["civil parishes of Ireland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6965483", "label": "Narayan Meghaji Lokhande", "source": "Narayan Meghaji Lokhande (1848–1897) was the father of trade union movement in India. He is remembered not only for ameliorating the working conditions of textile mill-hands in the 19th century but also for his courageous initiatives on caste and communal issues. Apart from this he was also awarded the title of Rao Bahadur in 1895 for his work during riots between Hindus and Muslims. \"Justice of peace\" was awarded with great respect to him by the then British Indian Government. The Government of India issued a postage stamp with his photograph in 2005.", "target": "Founder of labour movement, Activist of Satyshodhak Samaj", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15184568", "label": "Aqa Morad", "source": "Aqa Morad (Persian: اقامراد, also Romanized as Āqā Morād) is a village in Arshaq-e Markazi Rural District, Arshaq District, Meshgin Shahr County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 31, in 7 families.", "target": "village in Ardabil, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48835979", "label": "Mangelia perligera", "source": "Mangelia perligera is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mangeliidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6825425", "label": "Metsantan Pass", "source": "Metsantan Pass, 1,270 metres (4,167 ft), is a mountain pass in the Metsantan Range of the Omineca Mountains in the Northern Interior of British Columbia, Canada. It is located between Metsantan Lake, in the drainage basin of the Stikine River (NW) and the headwaters of the Toodoggone River (SE), a tributary of the Finlay River which is part of the Peace-Mackenzie River drainage area, and therefore is located along the Continental Divide.", "target": "mountain pass in British Columbia, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain pass"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18362051", "label": "Bless You", "source": "\"Bless You\" is a song written by John Lennon that was first released on his 1974 album Walls and Bridges. It is a ballad expressing his love for his wife Yoko Ono, even though they were separated at the time. Alternative versions appeared on the compilation albums Menlove Ave. and John Lennon Anthology.", "target": "song performed by John Lennon", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16732817", "label": "Julie Moore", "source": "Dame Julie Moore (born 18 August 1958) was the Chief Executive of University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust from 2006 to 2018. She is a Director of the Prince of Wales's Charitable Foundation and the Board of the 2022 Commonwealth Games which will be held in Birmingham.She spent ten years as a nurse in clinical practice before moving into nursing management. She became a director of Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust in 1998. In 2002 she moved to University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation trust as Chief Operating Officer, and was appointed as Chief Executive in 2006.She was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2012 New Year Honours and was one of the top ten Chief Executives in the NHS in 2013 according to the Health Service Journal. In 2013, she was awarded an Honorary Chair at Warwick University, and was included in the BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour list of the 100 most powerful women in the UK. In 2015 she was said to be the 31st most influential person in the English NHS. and the same year the Health Service Journal judged her as the third to top Chief Executive in the National Health Service, and in 2016 the second. Dame Julie has honorary degrees from the University or Birmingham, Birmingham City University, Oxford Brookes University and Aston University.She has spoken on various radio and TV programmes including Newsnight.Dame Julie is currently a non executive director at Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust which she joined on 1 October.", "target": "British health administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q161298", "label": "Juncus ensifolius", "source": "Juncus ensifolius is a species of rush known by the common names swordleaf rush, sword-leaved rush, and three-stamened rush. It is native to much of western North America from Alaska to central Mexico, and into eastern Canada. It is present in Japan and far eastern Russia, and it has been introduced to many other regions of the world, including Europe, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Australia. It is a plant of wet areas in many types of habitat. This is a rhizomatous perennial herb forming clumps of stems 20 to 60 centimeters tall. The flat but curving leaves are mostly located at the base of the stems and are variable in length. The inflorescence is an array of many rounded clusters of many flowers each. Each flower has a number of dark brown to black tepals a few millimeters long and usually three small stamens enclosed between them. The fruit is an oblong capsule with a small beak on the tip.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2633411", "label": "Rodovia dos Bandeirantes", "source": "The Rodovia Bandeirantes (official designation SP-348) is a highway in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. Once the traffic capacity of the Anhangüera Highway was exceeded in the 1960s, the state government decided to build another highway, with a much higher capacity and modern design, directly connecting São Paulo City to Jundiaí, Campinas and merging into the Anhangüera just after Campinas. Among the first six-lane highways in Brazil, it opened to traffic in 1978. It has always been a toll road, and since 1998, the highway is managed by a state contract with a private company, AutoBan. Subsequently, in 2001 it was extended to Santa Bárbara d'Oeste merging with the Washington Luis Highway, to Rio Claro, São Carlos, Araraquara and São José do Rio Preto. In 2006, it was widened to 4 lanes each way between São Paulo and Jundiaí. It is today the major thoroughfare between several mighty industrial cities around São Paulo and Campinas, and the Viracopos Airport, the second busiest cargo airport in the country.The highway is named after the bandeirantes, audacious explorers of the Brazilian hinterlands in the 16th and 17th centuries, whose treks through the rain forests become the templates for the major thoroughfares of the São Paulo highway system.", "target": "highway in São Paulo", "baseline_candidates": ["controlled-access highway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14712439", "label": "Stenygra angustata", "source": "Stenygra angustata is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Olivier in 1790.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18039788", "label": "DNTTIP2", "source": "Deoxynucleotidyltransferase terminal-interacting protein 2 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the DNTTIP2 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51316833", "label": "Hussain Abdurahman", "source": "Hussain Abdulrahman (Arabic:حسين عبد الرحمن) (born 31 October 1994) is an Emirati footballer who plays as a midfielder for Ajman.", "target": "association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3032018", "label": "Zota District", "source": "Zota District is one of eight districts located in Bong County, Liberia.", "target": "subdivision of Bong County, Liberia", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Liberia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6428148", "label": "Cottus czerskii", "source": "Cherskii's sculpin (Cottus czerskii) is a species of fish in the family Cottidae. It is found in rivers flowing into the Sea of Japan from Primorsky Krai to Korea. It reaches a maximum length of 19.5 cm.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49090966", "label": "Maria Berny", "source": "Maria Berny, née Waćkowska (born 7 August 1932 in Trościanka, Wołyń) is a Polish politician, activist and senator of the 3rd and 5th republic in Poland.", "target": "Polish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19950309", "label": "Manuel Mantero", "source": "Manuel Mantero is a Spanish professor and writer (born in Seville on July 29, 1930). In 1969, Mantero moved to the United States and continued his work as a professor.", "target": "Spanish writer and literary critic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q530360", "label": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League", "source": "The 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time.", "target": "football tournament edition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34648166", "label": "Candor", "source": "Candor is a town in Tioga County, New York, United States. The population was 5,305 at the 2010 census. The Town of Candor has a village named Candor. The town is south of Ithaca.", "target": "town in Tioga County, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "human settlement", "town of New York"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3312994", "label": "Nanum", "source": "Nanum or Nanium, according to the Sumerian King List, was one of four rivals (the others being Ilulu, Igigi, and Imi) vying to be king of the Akkadian Empire during a three-year period following the death of Shar-kali-sharri. This chaotic period came to an end when Dudu consolidated his power over the realm.", "target": "2127 BCE monarch", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4823859", "label": "Karahallı", "source": "Karahallı, Nazilli is a village in the District of Nazilli, Aydın Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 565 people.", "target": "village in Aydın Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4701425", "label": "Akköse", "source": "Akköse is a village in the Dernekpazarı district of Trabzon Province, Turkey, close to the town of Trabzon. It is situated in between high mountains, in a lush and largely untouched environment. Districts of Zeno ( akkose) village:Liso, Lisako, Aksilisa, Agorgor, Gaylorashi, Siseno.", "target": "village in the Dernekpazarı district of Trabzon Province, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61062945", "label": "Pedro Goić", "source": "Petar \"Pedro\" Goić (23 March 1896 – 19 January 1995) was a Croatian-Chilean track and field athlete who specialised in the hammer throw. He competed in the men's hammer throw at the 1936 Summer Olympics, representing Yugoslavia.After migrating to Chile, he won the silver medal in the hammer behind Federico Kleger at the 1927 South American Championships in Athletics, before going on to best Kleger to the gold medal at the 1931 South American Championships in Athletics. Upon his return to Yugoslavia he placed ninth at the 1934 European Championships.", "target": "Chilean-Croatian athlete (1896-1995)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20066727", "label": "Oleksandr Danylyuk", "source": "Oleksandr Danylyuk (born July 22, 1975) is a Ukrainian politician who served as the Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council (2019), the Minister of Finance of Ukraine (2016-2018). Danylyuk is a co-founder and the Head of the Center for National Resilience and Development.", "target": "finance minister of Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15339925", "label": "Quercus microphylla", "source": "Quercus microphylla is a Mexican species of oak in the beech family. It is widespread from Oaxaca as far north as Chihuahua, Coahuila, and Tamaulipas.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60744024", "label": "2018 Grand Prix of Portland", "source": "The 2018 Grand Prix of Portland was the 16th round of the 2018 IndyCar Series season. The race was held on September 2 at Portland International Raceway, in Portland, Oregon. 2018 Indy 500 champion Will Power qualified on pole position, while 2017 Indy 500 champion Takuma Sato took victory in the 105-lap race.", "target": "motor car race", "baseline_candidates": ["Grand Prix of Portland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4271036", "label": "Lviv Academic Gymnasium", "source": "Lviv Academic Gymnasium at the National University \"Lviv Polytechnic\" (Ukrainian: Львівська академічна гімназія) - the oldest high school in Lviv, Ukraine based on the order of Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, on October 24, 1784.Lviv Academic Gymnasium is considered one of the best secondary schools in Ukraine.Among the pupils of the gymnasium (at different times) were Mykola Ustyianovych, Yevhen Petrushevych, Stanyslav Lyudkevych, Yevhen Konovalets and Roman Shukhevych.The building of the Gymnasium located on the street Stepan Bandera, 14 on the left of the main building of Lviv Polytechnic. Vasyl Il'nyts'ky was the first director of gymnasium.", "target": "school in Lviv, Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["academic gymnasium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16849383", "label": "Jam Factory", "source": "Jam Factory was an American soul group from Syracuse, New York, active between 1970 and 1972. The six-man band was founded by Howie Wyeth of Syracuse University and featured Steve Marcone and Earl Ford on brass, Mark Hoffmann on guitar, Kent DeFelice on bass, Joe English on drums, and Gene McCormick on keyboards. The band played the Schaefer Music Festival in 1970. After leaving Jam Factory, Joe English went on to be the drummer for Paul McCartney and Wings.", "target": "musical artist", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2150248", "label": "Richard Müller-Freienfels", "source": "Richard Müller-Freienfels (1882–1949) was a German philosopher, psychologist and social critic. He was \"one of the most important mediators of empirical psychology\" to poetics.", "target": "German psychologist and philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54082348", "label": "Cheung Chau South", "source": "Cheung Chau South was one of the constituencies in the Islands District in the New Territories, Hong Kong. The constituency returned one district councillor to the Islands District Council, with an election every four years. Cheung Chau South constituency was loosely based on the southern part of the island of Cheung Chau with an estimated population of 11,108.", "target": "constituency of the Islands District Council of Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["Council Constituency of Islands District"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10555795", "label": "Lecanora luteomarginata", "source": "Lecanora luteomarginata is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling) and crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae. Found in India, it was formally described as a new species in 2006 by Sanjeeva Nayaka, Dalip Kumar Upreti, and H. Thorsten Lumbsch. The type specimen was collected in the trail from Gaurikund to Rambara in the valley of the Mandakini River (Chamoli district, Uttaranchal) at an elevation ranging from between 1,980 and 2,800 m (6,500 and 9,190 ft). It is only known from the type locality. Characteristics of the lichen include its thin, smooth thallus, dark brown apothecia with bright yellow margins, melacarpella-type amphithecia and glabrata-type epihymenia. The specific epithet luteomarginata refers to the yellow-coloured apothecial margins. Secondary compounds in the lichen include arthothelin, atranorin, chloroatranorin, and thiophanic acid.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3235363", "label": "Eight Immortals of the Wine Cup", "source": "The Eight Immortals of the Wine Cup or Eight Immortals Indulged in Wine (Chinese: 飲中八仙; pinyin: yǐnzhōng bāxiān) were a group of Tang Dynasty scholars who are known for their love of alcoholic beverages. They are not deified and xiān (\"immortal; transcendent; fairy\") is metaphorical. The term is used in a poem by Du Fu, as well as in the biography of Li Bai in the New Book of Tang. They appeared in Du's poem in the following order: He Zhizhang (賀知章 Hè Zhīzhāng) Li Jin (李璡 Lǐ Jìn) Li Shizhi (李適之 Lǐ Shìzhi) Cui Zongzhi (崔宗之 Cuī Zōngzhī) Su Jin (蘇晉 Sū Jìn) Li Bai (李白 Lǐ Bái) Zhang Xu (張旭 Zhāng Xù) Jiao Sui (焦遂 Jiaō Suì).", "target": "group of Tang Dynasty scholars", "baseline_candidates": ["octet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6198351", "label": "Jim Stones Coaches", "source": "Jim Stones Coaches was a bus operator that operated a number of commercial and supported routes on behalf of Transport for Greater Manchester in Leigh, Greater Manchester. The main hub was Leigh bus station.", "target": "Bus operator in Leigh, Greater Manchester", "baseline_candidates": ["bus company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12645281", "label": "Wood River", "source": "Wood River is a city in Madison County, Illinois, United States. The population was 10,657 according to the 2010 census.", "target": "city in Illinois, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4561230", "label": "Scapholeberis", "source": "Scapholeberis is a genus of small freshwater crustaceans in the family Daphniidae. The genus was described in 1858 by Schoedler and its members have a cosmopolitan distribution.", "target": "genus of arthropods", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3327791", "label": "Rodolfo Martín Villa", "source": "Rodolfo Martín Villa (born 3 October 1934) is a Spanish engineer and politician, who served in various capacities in the cabinets of the Spanish transition to democracy, including interior minister and first deputy prime minister. He is being investigated in Argentina for aggravated homicide and crimes against humanity committed during the 1976 Vitoria massacre.", "target": "Spanish politician and businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4741189", "label": "Ambedkar University, Delhi", "source": "Dr. B. R. Ambedkar University Delhi, formerly Bharat Ratna Dr. B. R. Ambedkar University Delhi and Ambedkar University Delhi, and simply AUD, is a state university established by the Government of the NCT of Delhi through an Act of the Delhi Legislature. The university began functioning in August 2008. It is a Unitary non-affiliating University whose main focus is on undergraduate and postgraduate studies and on research in the Humanities and the Social Sciences. It is completely funded by the State Government of the NCT of Delhi. The university is now declared eligible to receive Central Government Assistance. The university has been graded 'A' by National Assessment and Accreditation Council. It is named after the polymath B. R. Ambedkar, the architect of the Indian Constitution and one of the founding fathers of India.", "target": "public funded university in Delhi, India, named after Dr. B. R. Ambedkar", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1976707", "label": "Benedikt Livshits", "source": "Benedikt Konstantinovich Livshits (Russian: Бенеди́кт Константи́нович Ли́вшиц, 24 December 1886 (Old Style)/6 January 1887 (New Style) – 21 September 1938) was a poet and writer of the Silver Age of Russian Poetry, a French–Russian poetry translator.", "target": "Russian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6384629", "label": "Keith Law", "source": "Keith Law is an American baseball writer for The Athletic. He previously wrote for ESPN.com and ESPN Scouts, Inc from 2006 – 2019. He was formerly a writer for Baseball Prospectus and worked in the front office for the Toronto Blue Jays. He is a member of the Baseball Writers' Association of America.", "target": "American sportswriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30097564", "label": "Musomishta", "source": "Musomishta is a village in Gotse Delchev Municipality, in Blagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria. It is situated in the valley of Gotse Delchev, just 2 kilometers south-southeast of the town of Gotse Delchev and 75 kilometers southeast of Blagoevgrad.", "target": "village in Blagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22162762", "label": "Surchandra Singh", "source": "Surchandra Singh (born 5 January 1994), is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for I-League club Real Kashmir.", "target": "Indian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7893020", "label": "1828 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania", "source": "The 1828 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania took place between October 31 and December 2, 1828, as part of the 1828 United States presidential election. Voters chose 28 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President. Pennsylvania voted for the Democratic candidate, Andrew Jackson, over the National Republican candidate, John Quincy Adams. Jackson won Pennsylvania by a margin of 33.32%. Even 193 years later, this was the Democratic Party's best performance in Pennsylvania as of 2021. It was also the last time Union County, Pennsylvania voted Democratic.", "target": "selection of Pennsylvania's presidential electors", "baseline_candidates": ["United States presidential election in Pennsylvania"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55389", "label": "Maciej Kozłowski", "source": "Maciej Kozlowski (8 September 1957 – 11 May 2010) was a Polish actor, mostly known for his roles in Kingsajz, Psy, Kiler, With Fire and Sword and Schindler's List and the TV series M jak miłość. Kozlowski was born in Kargowa, and was a graduate of the National Film School in Łódź. He also played as a defender in the Polish Artists Football Team. He died in Warsaw, aged 52; the cause of death was cirrhosis of the liver caused by hepatitis C virus. His funeral was attended by: Daniel Olbrychski, Bogusław Linda, Zbigniew Zamachowski, Piotr Zelt, Michał Milowicz, Małgorzata Kożuchowska, Grażyna Wolszczak, Tomasz Karolak, Wiktor Zborowski, Marian Opania, Olaf Lubaszenko, Jan Englert, Robert Więckiewicz, Michał Żebrowski, Artur Żmijewski.", "target": "Polish actor (1957-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2679058", "label": "Kyzyl-Töbö", "source": "Kyzyl-Döbö (Kyrgyz: Кызыл-Дөбө [qɯzɯldøβø]) is a village in Kochkor District of Naryn Region in Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 2,239 in 2021.", "target": "village in Kyrgyzstan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6892554", "label": "Mohammad Zubair Khan", "source": "Dr. Mohammad Zubair Khan has a doctorate in political economy from Johns Hopkins University. After working briefly for the World Bank, he worked at the International Monetary Fund from 1981 to 1992, assigned to a wide range of countries, including industrial countries in northern Europe and Turkey, developing countries in south Asia, the oil producing countries in the Middle East and countries in the South Pacific region. Since returning to Pakistan, he has been consulting for the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, UNDP, JBIC and other international organizations on a range of issues, such as macroeconomic stabilisation policies, monetary policy, trade and exchange rate issues, fiscal and external debt sustainability, fiscal federalism, tax administration and poverty related issues. He also lectures at the Central Banks of Egypt and Sri Lanka, the National Institute of Public Administration (NIPA) campus in Lahore, the Pakistan Administrative Staff College, and the National Defence University in Islamabad. He has been Commerce Minister of Pakistan and represented Pakistan at the first ministerial conference of the World Trade Organization. Currently, in addition to consulting, Khan is a member of the National Finance Commission, the Advisory Board of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Government of Pakistan, a member of the board of directors of Bank of Khyber, and a member of the Provincial Finance Commission of the Government of North-West Frontier Province. He is also a member of the Boao Boao Forum for Asia in Hainan, China. Khan is currently managing director of Financial Techniques International. Because of his straight talk and knowledge.", "target": "Commerce Minister of Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q371550", "label": "Visayan Miniature Babbler", "source": "The Visayan miniature babbler (Micromacronus leytensis) is a bird species in the family Cisticolidae. It was for a long time the only member of the genus Micromacronus, but the Mindanao miniature babbler, formerly included in M. leytensis as a subspecies, is now usually held to be a distinct species, M. sordidus. M. leytensis is endemic to the Philippines. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest and subtropical or tropical moist montane forest. Its status is insufficiently known.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6984454", "label": "Neasden Depot", "source": "Neasden Depot is a London Underground depot located in Neasden in the London Borough of Brent, between Neasden and Wembley Park stations on the Metropolitan line. It is the largest depot on the London Underground, and is currently responsible for maintenance and overhaul of the 191 S Stock trains used on the Circle, District, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines.", "target": "railway depot on the Metropolitan Line in the UK", "baseline_candidates": ["motive power depot"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1240235", "label": "1940 Mestaruussarja – Finnish League Competition", "source": "The 1940 season was the 11th completed season of Finnish Football League Championship but was played as a cup competition.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5129515", "label": "Claus Jørgensen", "source": "Claus Jørgensen (born 15 March 1974 in Randers, Midtjylland) is a retired male race walker from Denmark, who was affiliated with MK Nørrevang during his career. His personal best time of 1:22:18 in the 20 kilometres road walk is the Danish record for the event. He made his first and only Olympic appearance at the 1996 Summer Olympics, where he was 29th in the men's 20 km walk. He also represented Denmark at the World Championships in Athletics in 1997 and 1999. He is a four-time participant in the IAAF World Race Walking Cup.", "target": "athletics competitor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85969", "label": "Otto Louis of Salm-Kyrburg-Mörchingen", "source": "Otto Louis of Salm, Wild- and Rhinegrave of Kyrburg and Mörchingen (13 October 1597 – 6 October 1634, Speyer) was a Swedish general during the Thirty Years' War. He was governor in the Alsace and Commander of the Swedish troops in the Upper Rhine. He died of the plague at Speyer and was buried in Strasbourg Cathedral. His parents were John IX of Salm-Kyrburg-Mörchingen (1575–1623) and Anna Catherine, Baroness of Criechingen (d. 1638).", "target": "Swedish general in the Thirty Years' War", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27866005", "label": "John Kirkbride", "source": "John Christopher Kirkbride (born 24 March 1947) is a retired British international middle-distance runner. He competed in the men's 1500 metres at the 1972 Summer Olympics.He also represented England in the 1,500 metres, at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, Scotland. Four years later he competed once again in the 1,500 metres at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games in Christchurch, New Zealand.", "target": "British middle-distance runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1756309", "label": "Felixlândia", "source": "Felixlândia is a Brazilian municipality located in the northeast of the state of Minas Gerais. Its population as of 2020 was 15,433 living in a total area of 1,553 square kilometres (600 sq mi). The city belongs to the statistical mesoregion of Central Mineira and to the statistical microregion of Curvelo. It became a municipality in 1948.", "target": "town and municipality in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1883942", "label": "Hypleurochilus", "source": "Hypleurochilus is a genus of combtooth blennies found throughout the Atlantic Ocean.", "target": "genus of combtooth blennies", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5885817", "label": "Holy Name University", "source": "Holy Name University is a private, Catholic, research, co-educational basic and higher education institution run by the Philippine Southern Province of the Society of the Divine Word in Tagbilaran City, Bohol, Philippines. It was founded by Fr. Alphonse G. Lesage, SVD a Divine Word Missionary in 1947. It offers programs in elementary, secondary and tertiary levels. Its tertiary offerings include courses in Arts and Sciences (CAS), Education (COED), Nursing, Medical Technology, Radiologic Technology (CHS),Commerce and Accountancy (CBA), Computer Science, Engineering, Information Technology (COECS) and Law (COL) Aside from instruction, HNU engages in research and community extension.It is accredited by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), and the Philippine Accrediting Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities (PAASCU).The school originally had two campuses in Tagbilaran City: the main building (also called Lesage Campus) at the corner of Lesage and Gallares streets and the Janssen Heights Campus in Dampas district. After the October 2013 7.2 magnitude earthquake, the whole operation of the university has been transferred to the Janssen Heights Campus due to the structural damage suffered by the Lesage Campus main building.", "target": "Catholic university in Tagbilaran City, Bohol, Philippines", "baseline_candidates": ["university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5240047", "label": "ski jumping at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2009", "source": "At the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2009 in Liberec, Czech Republic, four ski jumping were held with three for men and one for women. It was the first time women's ski jumping took place and was so successful that FIS President Gian Franco Kasper hoped to include the event for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia with possible inclusion into a team event. American Lindsay Van was the first winner of the women's individual normal hill event, the first North American to medal in ski jumping at the world championship, and the first American woman to medal at the world championships. The three World Cup leaders each won a medal in the men's individual normal hill event with 2008-09 Four Hills Tournament winner Wolfgang Loitzl of Austria earning gold, the first individual of his career at the world championships. Loitzl's teammate Gregor Schlierenzauer would win silver in the same event with both teaming up to win gold in the team large hill event, given the Austrians three medals. Norway would also win three medals with a silver in the team large hill and bronzes from Anders Jacobsen (men's individual large hill) and Anette Sagen (women's individual normal hill). Switzerland and Germany each won two medals. Overall, six nations won medals, including Japan, who had the same team that had won the bronze medal in the team large hill at the previous championships in Sapporo, Japan.", "target": "none", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q372613", "label": "Phill Lewis", "source": "Phillip David \"Phill\" Lewis (born February 14, 1968) is an American actor, comedian and director who is best known for his role as hotel manager Mr. Moseby on the Disney Channel series The Suite Life of Zack & Cody and its spin-off, The Suite Life on Deck. Lewis has also appeared in series such as Lizzie McGuire, Friends, The Wayans Bros., Yes, Dear, Scrubs and How I Met Your Mother.", "target": "Ugandan-American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7970466", "label": "Warren S. George", "source": "Warren S. George is an American union activist and International President Emeritus of the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU), one of the largest and most politically active unions in the AFL-CIO. From 2003 to 2010, George served as the International President of the ATU. George is mentioned in the song \"Workin' for the MTA\" on Justin Townes Earle's 2010 Harlem River Blues album. The lyrics read: \"Yeah, them hard times are going around, hard times are goin' around, hard times are goin' around, bringin' hard luck on New York town. But I'm bankin' on the ATU, bankin' on the ATU, I'm bankin' on the ATU, Brother George is gonna see me through.\".", "target": "American labor leader", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19948784", "label": "Grendel", "source": "Grendel is a character in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf (700–1000). He is one of the poem's three antagonists (along with his mother and the dragon), all aligned in opposition against the protagonist Beowulf. Grendel is feared by all in Heorot but Beowulf. A descendant of Cain, Grendel is described as \"a creature of darkness, exiled from happiness and accursed of God, the destroyer and devourer of our human kind\". He is usually depicted as a monster or a giant, although his status as a monster, giant, or other form of supernatural being is not clearly described in the poem and thus remains the subject of scholarly debate. The character of Grendel and his role in the story of Beowulf have been subject to numerous reinterpretations and re-imaginings.", "target": "fictional character in the poem Beowulf", "baseline_candidates": ["fictional character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30642132", "label": "We Love Machine", "source": "We Love Machine is the fourth studio album by English electronic music duo Way Out West, released on 21 September 2009 by Hope Recordings. The album is considered the group's move away from the trip hop genre and a further venture into their progressive house style, and gathered generally positive reviews. It features the lead single and EP \"Only Love\", and web exclusive release, \"Future Perfect\". On 19 April 2010, a remix album was released, titled We Love Machine – The Remixes.", "target": "album by Way Out West", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20512494", "label": "Gagik Sargsyan", "source": "Gagik Sargsyan (Armenian: Գագիկ Խորենի Սարգսյան; 6 April 1926, in Yerevan – 25 August 1998, in Yerevan) was an Armenian historian, who served as the vice president of the Armenian Academy of Sciences.", "target": "Armenian historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6651529", "label": "Little Red Walking Hood", "source": "Little Red Walking Hood is a 1937 Merrie Melodies cartoon supervised by Fred Avery. The short was released on November 6, 1937, and features the first appearance of an early character who later became Elmer Fudd.", "target": "1937 film by Tex Avery", "baseline_candidates": ["animated short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q477299", "label": "Dead Snow", "source": "Dead Snow (Norwegian: Død snø) is a 2009 Norwegian comedy horror film directed by Tommy Wirkola, starring Charlotte Frogner, Stig Frode Henriksen, Vegar Hoel, Jeppe Laursen, Evy Kasseth Røsten, Jenny Skavlan, and Lasse Valdal. The film centers on a group of students surviving a zombie Nazi attack in the mountains of Norway. The premise of the film is similar to that of the draugr, a Scandinavian folkloric undead greedily protecting its (often stolen) treasures. NYAV Post has produced an English dub of this film for the home media release.", "target": "2009 film by Tommy Wirkola", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5836684", "label": "Nileh, Lorestan", "source": "Nileh (Persian: نيله, also Romanized as Nīleh and Neyleh) is a village in Kuhdasht-e Shomali Rural District, in the Central District of Kuhdasht County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 239, in 52 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17074864", "label": "Quishuar, Ancash", "source": "Quishuar (Quechua for Buddleja incana) is an archaeological site in Peru. It is situated in the Ancash Region, Yungay Province, in the south of the Yanama District.", "target": "archaeological site in the Yungay Province, Ancash Region, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13152190", "label": "Madarsha Union", "source": "Madarsha Union (Bengali: মাদার্শা ইউনিয়ন) is a union parishad of Satkania Upazila in the Division of Chittagong, Bangladesh. It has an area of 21.29 km2.", "target": "union council of Satkania Upazila in Chittagong District", "baseline_candidates": ["union council of Bangladesh"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5218398", "label": "Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse", "source": "The Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse is a courthouse in Manhattan. At 500 Pearl Street in Foley Square in the Civic Center neighborhood of lower Manhattan in New York City, it houses the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.", "target": "federal courthouse in Manhattan, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["courthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6118591", "label": "Jacob Erskine", "source": "Emmanuel Jacob Kenneth Erskine (born 13 January 1989), more commonly known as Jacob Erskine, is an English footballer who last played as a striker for Dulwich Hamlet. Earlier in his career, he made some Football League appearances for Gillingham.", "target": "British footballer (born 1989)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q558889", "label": "2002 European Men's Handball Championship", "source": "The 2002 Men's European Handball Championship was the fifth edition of the tournament and took place from 25 January to 3 February 2002 in Sweden.", "target": "2002 edition of the European Men's Handball Championship", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65122152", "label": "Sodium borate", "source": "Sodium borate is a generic name for any salt of sodium with an anion consisting of boron and oxygen, and possibly hydrogen, or any hydrate thereof. It can be seen as a hydrated sodium salt of the appropriate boroxy acid, although the latter may not be a stable compound. Many sodium borates have important industrial and household applications; the best known being borax, (Na+)2[B4O5(OH)4]2−·8H2O = Na2B4H20O17. The ternary phase diagram of the Na2O–B2O3–H2O phase diagram in the 0–100 °C temperature range contains 13 unique hydrated crystalline sodium borates, including five important industrial products.Sodium borates, as well as boroxy acids, are often described as mixtures xNa2O·yB2O3·zH2O = Na2xB2yH2zOx+3y+z{}, with x, y, and z chosen to fit the elemental formula, or a multiple thereof. Thus, for example, borax Na2B4H20O17 would be 1Na2O·2B2O3·10H2O, and boric acid B(OH)3 would be 0Na2O·1B2O3·1H2O = 2[B(OH)3]. The elemental formula was often intrepreted as a z-hydrate of a salt without any hydrogen, namely Na2xB2yO3y·zH2O. However, later research uncovered that many borates have hydroxyl groups HO− bound covalently to the boron atoms in the anion. Thus borax, for example, is still often described as a decahydrate Na2B4O7·10H2O, with the implied anion [B4O7]2−, whereas the correct formula is Na2B4O5(OH)4·8H2O, with anion [B4O5(OH)4]2−. The following table gives some of the crystalline sodium borates in this family. Some of the borates above may have more than one isomeric or crystalline form. Some may decompose when dissolved in water. Note that the anion of the \"anhydrous borax\" is different from that of its \"hydrates\". Some of the anhydrous borates.", "target": "index of chemical compounds with the same name", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia set index article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7337760", "label": "River Road", "source": "River Road is an American country music band composed of Tony Ardoin (guitar, vocals), Mike Burch (drums, vocals), Richard Comeaux (steel guitar), Steve Grisaffe (lead vocals, bass guitar), and Charles Ventre (keyboards, vocals). Founded in 1989, the band signed to Capitol Records Nashville in 1997, releasing their self-titled debut album that year and charting three singles on the Billboard country charts, including the top 40 hit \"Nickajack\". By 1998, River Road had transferred to Virgin Records Nashville, charting a fourth single and recording an unreleased album (Somethin' in the Water). Ventre and Grisaffe each began solo careers in the 2000s, but they reunited with Ardoin and Burch in 2011 to release a new extended play.", "target": "musical group", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7265170", "label": "Płowizny", "source": "Płowizny [pwɔˈvʲiznɨ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bełżyce, within Lublin County, Lublin Voivodeship, in Eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) west of Bełżyce and 28 km (17 mi) west of the regional capital Lublin.", "target": "village in Lublin Voivodeship, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18711572", "label": "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon", "source": "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon is a tactical shooter video game developed by Next Level Games and published by Ubisoft exclusively for the Wii. The game, set in modern day Norway and Russia, follows the efforts of two United States Army Rangers in toppling a fictional ultranationalist Russian regime.", "target": "2010 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12565803", "label": "pollination", "source": "Pollination is the transfer of pollen from an anther (male part) of a plant to the stigma (female part) of a plant, later enabling fertilisation and the production of seeds, most often by an animal or by wind. Pollinating agents can be animals such as insects, birds, and bats; water; wind; and even plants themselves, when self-pollination occurs within a closed flower. Pollination often occurs within a species. When pollination occurs between species it can produce hybrid offspring in nature and in plant breeding work. In angiosperms, after the pollen grain (gametophyte) has landed on the stigma, it germinates and develops a pollen tube which grows down the style until it reaches an ovary. Its two gametes travel down the tube to where the gametophyte(s) containing the female gametes are held within the carpel. After entering an ovum cell through the micropyle, one male nucleus fuses with the polar bodies to produce the endosperm tissues, while the other fuses with the ovule to produce the embryo. Hence the term: \"double fertilization\". This process would result in the production of a seed made of both nutritious tissues and embryo. In gymnosperms, the ovule is not contained in a carpel, but exposed on the surface of a dedicated support organ, such as the scale of a cone, so that the penetration of carpel tissue is unnecessary. Details of the process vary according to the division of gymnosperms in question. Two main modes of fertilization are found in gymnosperms. Cycads and Ginkgo have motile sperm that swim directly to.", "target": "biological pollination process occurring in plants", "baseline_candidates": ["reproductive process", "biological process"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15949982", "label": "Mirq'imarka", "source": "Mirq'imarka (Aymara mirq'i old, broken, destroyed, marka village, \"old or destroyed village\", Hispanicized and mixed spellings Merquemarca, Merke Marka, Merquemarka) is an archaeological site in Peru. It is located in the Puno Region, Moho Province, Moho District. The site was declared a National Cultural Heritage (Patrimonio Cultural) of Peru by the National Institute of Culture.", "target": "Archaeological site in Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["archaeological site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2516918", "label": "Vona", "source": "Vona is a Statutory Town in Kit Carson County, Colorado, United States. The population was 103 at the 2018 census.", "target": "human settlement in Kit Carson County, Colorado, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25408322", "label": "Nestor Mendez", "source": "Nestor Mendez (born January 21, 1971) is a Belizean diplomat and politician. He is currently the Assistant Secretary General of the Organization of American States.", "target": "Belizean diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14733799", "label": "Recchia fonsecai", "source": "Recchia fonsecai is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Lane in 1939.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2169698", "label": "Route nationale 31", "source": "The Route nationale 31 is a motorway in northern France. It connects the town of Rouen to Reims, it is also the European Route 46.", "target": "road in France", "baseline_candidates": ["route nationale"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4957039", "label": "Brandon Road Lock and Dam", "source": "The Brandon Road Lock and Dam is a lock and dam complex along the Des Plaines River in Joliet, Illinois. The complex was built from 1927 to 1933 in conjunction with the construction of the Illinois Waterway, which allowed for barge travel between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi River. The lock and dam are also used to regulate water levels on the river between Lockport and Joliet. The lock at the complex is 110 by 600 feet (34 by 183 m) and has four Miter gates, with a 34-foot (10.3 meter) drop. The dam is 2,372 feet (723 m) long and includes concrete and earthen segments. The complex also includes a disused junction lock for the Illinois and Michigan Canal, the control station for the lock, and a modern pump house.The complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places as the Brandon Road Lock and Dam Historic District on March 10, 2004.", "target": "lock & dam on the Des Plaines River in Joliet Township, Will County, Illinois", "baseline_candidates": ["lock", "historic district", "dam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21582227", "label": "José Alberto Azeredo Lopes", "source": "José Alberto de Azeredo Lopes (born 20 June 1961) is a Portuguese politician who served as Minister of National Defence from November 2015 to October 2018. Azeredo Lopes previously served as the president of the Regulatory Authority for the Media and was a law professor at the Catholic University of Portugal. He announced his resignation as National Defence Minister on 12 October 2018 amid an investigation into a theft of weapons from a military base, and was succeeded by João Gomes Cravinho on 15 October 2018. In 2019, he was brought to trial over his alleged role in a suspected army cover-up of a theft of grenades, anti-tank rockets, other explosives and ammunition from a military arms depot in 2017; he himself has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.", "target": "Portuguese politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5082747", "label": "Charles Stuart", "source": "Charles Stuart (December 18, 1959 – January 4, 1990) was an American murderer whose 1989 killing of his pregnant wife, Carol, generated national headlines. Stuart falsely alleged that Carol was shot and killed by an African-American assailant. Stuart's brother confessed to police that Stuart killed his wife to collect life insurance, and Stuart subsequently died by suicide.", "target": "American murderer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q45319410", "label": "East Riding Royal Garrison Artillery", "source": "The East Riding Royal Garrison Artillery (ERRGA) was a part-time unit of Britain's Royal Artillery based at Hull in the East Riding of Yorkshire. It provided coastal defence artillery along the Humber Estuary from 1908 to 1956, manned siege batteries on the Western Front during World War I at the Somme and Ypres and played a role in the pursuit of the German army during the Hundred Days Offensive. It served as infantry in Allied-occupied Germany after World War II. Its successor units in the Territorial Army included anti-aircraft artillery and field engineers.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2651871", "label": "Gunnar Höjer", "source": "Gunnar Fredrik Höjer (27 January 1875 – 13 March 1936) was a Swedish gymnast who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics. He was part of the Swedish team that won the all-around gold medal. Aged 33, he was the oldest member of the team.", "target": "gymnast (1875-1936)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20721685", "label": "Tagetes iltisiana", "source": "Tagetes iltisiana is a Bolivian species of marigolds in the family Asteraceae. It is native to La Paz Department and Cochabamba Department in Bolivia.Tagetes iltisiana is an annual herb up to 25 cm (10 inches) tall. Stem is thin. Leaves are highly divided, up to 4 cm (1.6 inches) long. Flower heads are yellow, each containing 1-2 ray florets and 4-5 disc florets.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16984316", "label": "history of GLONASS", "source": "The satellite navigation system GLONASS was conceived in the late 1960s, and formal requirements were completed in 1970. The government of the Soviet Union made a decision to develop the system in 1976. Design work was carried out by specialists led by Vladimir Cheremisin at NPO PM in Krasnoyarsk-26. The first launch took place in 1982. Until its dissolution in 1991, the Soviet Union launched 43 GLONASS-related satellites. Work on the system was continued by the Russian Federation which brought it its full operational capability in 1995. In the following years, the system fell into disrepair due to the economic crisis in the country and diminished space funding. Starting from 2000, the government under President Vladimir Putin made the restoration of GLONASS a top priority; its funding was doubled and after a lull of several years, launches were restarted again. In 2003, a new satellite design, GLONASS-M, was introduced. By early 2011, GLONASS had 22 operational satellites, two short of the required constellation of 24 to provide global coverage. The latest and significantly improved satellite type, GLONASS-K, is set to be launched in February 2011.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57775081", "label": "Angelika Kalt", "source": "Angelika Kalt is a Swiss professor of petrology and geodynamics who was at The University of Neuchâtel from 2000 to 2008. She started at the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) in 2008 and in April 2016, became its director.While at University of Neuchâtel, she started a cross-university doctoral school in mineralogy. At the SNSF, her team includes 59% of women.In 2017 Kalt became an ordinary member of the governing board of Science Europe.", "target": "Director of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3605154", "label": "2012–13 Adelaide United season", "source": "The 2012–13 Adelaide United FC season was the club's eighth A-League season. It includes the 2012–13 A-League season as well as any other competitions of the 2012–13 football season, including the 2012 AFC Champions League. Adelaide United will compete in the continental competition for the fourth time, progressing past the Group Stage by topping the group for the third time, thus making the club the most successful Australian club in Asia. Adelaide United's 2012–13 season was John Kosmina's first full season as permanent coach since being appointed in a caretaker role from Rini Coolen in December 2011. The season was also Kosmina's first in charge at Adelaide since the 2006–7 season. The offseason and preseason saw the signings of Fábio Ferreira from Sydney-based Dulwich Hill FC, Marcelo Carrusca, Daniel Bowles and Jake Barker-Daish. The club begin a new deal with kit supplier Kappa and local solar panel firm Unleash Solar, who joined the club as front-of-kit sponsor. The club's home and away season began away to Newcastle Jets on 7 October 2012 just four days after being eliminated from the 2012 Asian Champions League. The match saw Adelaide win 2–0, with goals from Dario Vidosic and Iain Ramsay, as well as the debuts of Ferreira, Carrusca, Bowles and Barker-Daish for Adelaide. Adelaide followed this up a week later with a 1–0 win over Western Sydney Wanderers FC in their first away trip, the lone goal to Neumann, thus dealing Western Sydney their first loss and first goal conceded. In Round 3 Adelaide played Melbourne Victory at.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q98801439", "label": "2020–21 Swiss Cup", "source": "The 2020–21 Swiss Cup is the 96th season of Switzerland's annual football cup competition. The competition began on 29 August 2020 with the first games of Round 1 and ended on 24 May 2021. BSC Young Boys are the title holders.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5953204", "label": "First Iranian national anthem", "source": "\"The Royal Salute\" (Persian: سلام شاه, romanized: Salâm-e Šâh [sælɒːˈme ʃɒːh]), also known as \"The Health of the Shah\" (Persian: سلامتی شاه, romanized: Salâmati-ye Shâh [sælɒːmætiːˈje ʃɒːh]) was the royal and national anthem of Qajar Iran between 1873 and 1909. The French musician Alfred Jean Baptiste Lemaire composed this anthem in 1873 on the orders of Naser al-Din Shah. It had no lyrics. Salâm-e Shâh was played in official ceremonies during the reigns of Naser al-Din Shah, Mozaffar ad-Din Shah and Mohammad Ali Shah. It was also played as the Persian (Iranian) national anthem during Naser al-Din Shah’s and Mozaffar ad-Din Shah’s European tours. In 1909, after the fall of Mohammad Ali Shah, the anthem was abolished, and after the coronation of his son and successor Ahmad Shah in 1914, Salute of Sublime State of Persia was adopted as the Iranian national anthem.", "target": "national anthem", "baseline_candidates": ["national anthem"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6448398", "label": "Kuter Trophy", "source": "The Air Force–Hawaii football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Air Force Falcons and the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors.", "target": "American college football rivalry", "baseline_candidates": ["team rivalries in sports"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q948234", "label": "Henry Darrow", "source": "Henry Darrow (born Enrique Tomás Delgado Jiménez; September 15, 1933 – March 14, 2021) was an American character actor of stage and film known for his role as Manolito \"Mano\" Montoya on the 1960s television series The High Chaparral. In film, Darrow played the corrupt and vengeful Trooper Hancock in The Hitcher. During the 1970s and 1980s, he was seen in numerous guest starring television roles. Darrow replaced Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as Zorro's father Don Alejandro de la Vega in the 1990s television series Zorro.", "target": "American-born Puerto Rican actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6523550", "label": "Leo Bebb", "source": "Leo Bebb is a fictional clergyman who is featured in The Book of Bebb, a tetralogy by Frederick Buechner. Cynthia Ozick calls him a \"lustily flawed hero\".", "target": "fictional character", "baseline_candidates": ["fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6176773", "label": "Jelger Wiegersma", "source": "Jelger Wiegersma (born 4 December 1981) is a Dutch Magic: The Gathering player. Though no longer a professional player, he still regularly attends Pro Tours. He won Pro Tour Seattle 2004 as a member of team Von Dutch with teammates Jeroen Remie and Kamiel Cornelissen. He also won two Grand Prix, in 2003 and 2008. In 2008, he was elected to the Magic: The Gathering Hall of Fame.", "target": "Dutch player of Magic: The Gathering", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18158137", "label": "objectivism", "source": "Objectivism is a philosophical system developed by Russian-American writer Ayn Rand. Rand first expressed Objectivism in her fiction, most notably The Fountainhead (1943) and Atlas Shrugged (1957), and later in non-fiction essays and books. Leonard Peikoff, a professional philosopher and Rand's designated intellectual heir, later gave it a more formal structure. Rand described Objectivism as \"the concept of man as a heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute\". Peikoff characterizes Objectivism as a \"closed system\" insofar as its \"fundamental principles\" were set out by Rand and are not subject to change. However, he stated that \"new implications, applications and integrations can always be discovered\".Objectivism's main tenets are that reality exists independently of consciousness, that human beings have direct contact with reality through sense perception (see direct and indirect realism), that one can attain objective knowledge from perception through the process of concept formation and inductive logic, that the proper moral purpose of one's life is the pursuit of one's own happiness (see rational egoism), that the only social system consistent with this morality is one that displays full respect for individual rights embodied in laissez-faire capitalism, and that the role of art in human life is to transform humans' metaphysical ideas by selective reproduction of reality into a physical form—a work of art—that one can comprehend and to which one can respond emotionally. A limited number of academic philosophers support Rand's philosophy, most others ignore or reject.", "target": "philosophy created by Ayn Rand", "baseline_candidates": ["philosophy", "cultural movement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1139473", "label": "Personal File", "source": "Personal File is the 92nd album by American music icon Johnny Cash. The two CD set was released posthumously on May 23, 2006, by Legacy Recordings. Personal File contains 49 unreleased tracks on two CDs recorded between 1973 and 1982. Given that all tracks on the album were previously unreleased, Personal File is considered both a posthumous album and a compilation. Recovered from a vault of material housed at the House of Cash studios, Personal File includes \"Tin Pan Alley hits, traditional folk and gospel tunes, new originals and favorite covers\" [4] – by Carter Family, Louvin Brothers, Johnny Horton, John Prine, Rodney Crowell, and Carlene Carter. The album was compiled and produced by Gregg Geller with liner notes by Greil Marcus. On most of the tracks, Cash performs alone, accompanying himself on guitar, and on many tracks Cash prefaces the song with remarks about its history and what it means to him. In 2007, Legacy released a sequel, More Songs from Johnny's Personal File, featuring additional private recordings. The first album was reissued in 2011 by Legacy under the revised title Bootleg Vol. 1: Personal File, which was followed by three more volumes of unreleased or rare recordings. (As of 2015, however, More Songs from Johnny's Personal File has yet to be reissued under this brand.).", "target": "compilation album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q156977", "label": "76 Freia", "source": "Freia (minor planet designation: 76 Freia) is a very large main-belt asteroid. It orbits in the outer part of the asteroid belt and is classified as a Cybele asteroid. Its composition is very primitive and it is extremely dark in color. Freia was discovered by the astronomer Heinrich d'Arrest on October 21, 1862, in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was his first and only asteroid discovery. It is named after the goddess Freyja in Norse mythology. The sidereal orbital period of this asteroid is commensurable with that of Jupiter, which made it useful for ground-based mass estimates of the giant planet. A shape model for the asteroid was published by Stephens and Warner (2008), based upon lightcurve data. This yielded a sidereal rotation period of 9.968240±0.000009 h. They found two possible solutions for the spin axis, with the preferred solution in ecliptic coordinates being (λ, β) = (139°±5°, 25°±5°).", "target": "outer main-belt asteroid", "baseline_candidates": ["asteroid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15428974", "label": "Rupert Costo", "source": "Rupert Costo (1906 – October 20, 1989) was a Cahuilla writer, publisher, philanthropist and founder of the American Indian Historical Society. He had many careers and avocations throughout his life, including farmer, cattle rancher, surveyor, and mineralogist. He also served as an engineer for the California Division of Highways for nearly 20 years.", "target": "Native American author, publisher, philanthropist, engineer, rancher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q609070", "label": "Sandaucourt", "source": "Sandaucourt (French pronunciation: [sɑ̃dokuʁ] (listen)) is a commune in the Vosges department in Grand Est in northeastern France.", "target": "commune in Vosges, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4862121", "label": "Baron Astley", "source": "Baron Astley (1295) was created by writ of summons dated 23 June 1295 for a family which had lived at Astley, Warwickshire, England since the time of Henry I. Sir Thomas de Astley who was killed in the Battle of Evesham in 1265 married twice. From Sir Thomas's first marriage to Joan de Blois descended the Barons Astley. Andrew de Astley, 1st Baron Astley, (1295–1301) Nicholas de Astley, 2nd Baron Astley, (1301–c.1315) Sir Giles de Astley, younger brother of Nicholas, (died before 1316) Sir Thomas Astley, 3rd Baron Astley, son of Sir Giles, (c.1315–1370) William Astley, 4th Baron Astley (1370? )The 4th Baron left an only child and sole heiress Joan Astley, who married Reginald Grey, 3rd Baron Grey de Ruthyn and died in 1448. Their son Edward Grey (who was the second surviving son of his father) married Elizabeth Ferrers, 6th Baroness Ferrers of Groby and Edward was thereby summoned to Parliament as Baron Ferrers of Groby. He died on 18 December 1457. Elizabeth died in 1483. Whether the Barony of Astley passed to Joan Astley and her son Edward Grey is open to dispute. The Complete Peerage entries on the Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset and Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset and on Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk do not include Baron Astley with their other titles; indeed the last person listed as a holder of the title in the entry on Baron Astley is William Astley, 4th Baron Astley. The entry continues \"After his death, the Barony of Astley, if.", "target": "British peerage", "baseline_candidates": ["noble title"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96384791", "label": "Juan Frias", "source": "Juan Frias (born 24 September 1918, date of death unknown) was a Mexican sailor. He competed in the Dragon event at the 1964 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Mexican sailor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22703717", "label": "Joch Pass", "source": "The Joch Pass (German: Jochpass) is a mountain pass of the Uri Alps, located between the Bernese Oberland and Central Switzerland, at the foot of the Titlis. The pass crosses the col between the peaks of Graustock and Jochstock, at an elevation of 2,207 m (7,241 ft) and at the border between the cantons of Bern and Nidwalden.The pass is traversed by a mule track, now used by hikers and mountain bikers, which connects the town of Engelberg, in the canton of Obwalden and at an elevation of 1,000 m (3,300 ft), with the town of Meiringen, in the canton of Bern and at an elevation of 595 m (1,952 ft). The track forms part of the Alpine Pass Route, a long-distance hiking trail across Switzerland between Sargans and Montreux.", "target": "mountain pass in Switzerland, connecting Innertkirchen in the canton of Bern with Engelberg in the canton of Obwalden", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain pass"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5280820", "label": "Dirk Gringhuis", "source": "Richard H. Gringhuis (September 22, 1918 – March 1974) was an American artist and illustrator. Born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, he studied from 1939 to 1941 at the American Academy of Art in Chicago, lived in New York for a year, then moved back to Michigan. He wrote and illustrated 28 books, half of them on Michigan history. He also was producer-host for the television series, “Open Door to Michigan.” He served as Curator of Exhibits at the Museum and Associate Professor in Elementary Education at Michigan State University. He received special awards for his work on Michigan, including the Governor’s Award, A National Educational Television Award, and an Award of Merit from the Michigan Historical Society. He was closely associated, as a contract author and artist, with the Mackinac Island State Park system from 1958 until his death. During that time he wrote and illustrated four publications on the Mackinac region, illustrated many others and painted exhibit murals. Having moved to East Lansing in 1952, he painted the Michigan Folklore Mural at the East Lansing Public Library.His books include Here Comes the Bookmobile (1952), Were-Wolves and Will-o-the-Wisps: French Tales of Mackinac Retold (1974), Lore of the Great Turtle (1970), and The Young Voyageur (1955). He illustrated three volumes in the Boxcar Children series by Gertrude Chandler Warner—#4, Mystery Ranch; #5, Mike's Mystery; and #6, Blue Bay Mystery. He illustrated The Hidden Valley of Oz in 1951.", "target": "American artist (1918-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3702552", "label": "Dario Alioto", "source": "Dario Alioto (born 1984) is a professional poker player from Palermo, Italy. Alioto's first major success in poker came at the European Poker Tour 2005 Barcellona main event, where he finished in 7th place and earned €52,000. Right after this score, he started grinding PLO cash games that became his best poker game, rapidly becoming one of the best Italian professional players. Later on in his career, he won his first World Series of Poker bracelet in the £5,000 Pot Limit Omaha event at the 2007 World Series of Poker Europe. Alioto earned £234,390 for his finish. He has also had success at the 2008 World Series of Poker, where he has earned over $230,000 from four cashes. A well-respected cash game player online and live, he played most of the many televised Italian high-stakes cash games in the last few years. He now plays a wide variety of games and is now considered one of the best all-around players in Europe. In 2009, Alioto has been the captain of the Sisal Poker Team Pro, which was voted the #1 Team Pro in Italy for 2009 and 2010.", "target": "poker player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2405379", "label": "The First Beautiful Thing", "source": "The First Beautiful Thing (Italian: La prima cosa bella) is a 2010 Italian drama film directed by Paolo Virzì, produced by Medusa Film, Motorino Amaranto and Indiana Production, released in Italy on 15 January 2010. The film stars Micaela Ramazzotti, Valerio Mastandrea, Claudia Pandolfi and Stefania Sandrelli. On 9 November 2010 the film opened at the Cinema Italian style Film Festival in Los Angeles.", "target": "2010 film by Paolo Virzì", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65070188", "label": "Nobody's Fool", "source": "Nobody's Fool is a 1921 American silent comedy film written and directed by King Baggot and starring Marie Prevost, Helen Harris and Vernon Snively.", "target": "1921 film directed by King Baggot", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5868178", "label": "history of materials science", "source": "Materials science has shaped the development of civilizations since the dawn of mankind. Better materials for tools and weapons has allowed mankind to spread and conquer, and advancements in material processing like steel and aluminum production continue to impact society today. Historians have regarded materials as such an important aspect of civilizations such that entire periods of time have defined by the predominant material used (Stone Age, Bronze Age, Iron Age). For most of recorded history, control of materials had been through alchemy or empirical means at best. The study and development of chemistry and physics assisted the study of materials, and eventually the interdisciplinary study of materials science emerged from the fusion of these studies. The history of materials science is the study of how different materials were used and developed through the history of Earth and how those materials affected the culture of the peoples of the Earth. The term \"Silicon Age\" is sometimes used to refer to the modern period of history during the late 20th to early 21st centuries.", "target": "aspect of history", "baseline_candidates": ["aspect of history"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5613391", "label": "Gualete", "source": "Gualete is a town in the Puerto Plata province of the Dominican Republic.", "target": "human settlement in the Dominican Republic", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2589512", "label": "Wolfgang Eder", "source": "Wolfgang Eder (born 1952) is an Austrian businessman who has been serving as chairman and chief executive officer of Voestalpine AG since 2014.", "target": "Austrian businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4770594", "label": "Anselm Berrigan", "source": "Anselm Berrigan (born 1972 in Chicago, Illinois) is a poet and teacher.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5607418", "label": "1976 Grenadian general election", "source": "General elections were held in Grenada on 7 December 1976. The result was a victory for the Grenada United Labour Party of Eric Gairy, which won nine of the 15 seats, whilst the opposition People's Alliance (a coalition of the New Jewel Movement, the Grenada National Party and the United People's Party won the remainder. However, the elections were marred by fraud (and branded fraudulent by international observers), as Gairy's secret police, known as the Mongoose Gang, had been threatening the opposition. Voter turnout was 65.2%.Three years later Gairy was overthrown by the New Jewel Movement, a move which was supported by the majority of the population.", "target": "General elections in Grenada held on 7 December 1976", "baseline_candidates": ["Grenadian general election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3084794", "label": "François Grudé", "source": "François Grudé (born 1552, Le Mans), lord of la Croix du Maine, was a French writer and bibliographer. He wrote under the Latin pseudonym Grucithanius.", "target": "French writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16924030", "label": "Muse", "source": "Muse Residences is an apartment building condo development in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida. The 47-story condo building with 68 units was developed by Property Markets Group and S2 Development. Each unit includes a sculpture by Heidon Xhixha. The tall and narrow building was designed by Carlos Ott. The building maxes out the permitted height for Sunny Isles Beach at 649 feet (198 m) above sea level. Completed in 2018, making it the tallest building in Sunny Isles Beach and the tallest of Florida outside Miami.", "target": "apartment building in Sunny Isles, Florida", "baseline_candidates": ["revenue house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14730115", "label": "Adejeania corpulenta", "source": "Adejeania corpulenta is a species of parasitic fly in the family Tachinidae. It is found in Mexico.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10486143", "label": "Epichloë sylvatica", "source": "Epichloë sylvatica is a haploid sexual species in the fungal genus Epichloë. A systemic and seed-transmissible grass symbiont first described in 1998, Epichloë sylvatica forms a clade within the Epichloë typhina complex. Epichloë sylvatica is found from Europe to Asia, where it has been identified in association with two grass species, Brachypodium sylvaticum and Hordelymus europaeus.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5883633", "label": "Gorillini", "source": "Gorillini is a taxonomic tribe containing three genera: Gorilla and the extinct Chororapithecus and Nakalipithecus.", "target": "tribe of mammals", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6275031", "label": "Jonda Iman Gunda", "source": "Junda Iman Gunda is a 2007 Assamese language romantic comedy film starring Bikram Rajkhowa and Angoorlata in the lead. The film was directed by Chandra Mudoi and released on 7 September 2007. The songs from this movie received good appreciation, including one by Debojit Saha.", "target": "2007 Assamese language film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4632539", "label": "279th Infantry Regiment", "source": "The 1st Battalion, 279th Infantry Regiment is headquartered in Sand Springs, Oklahoma. It is a part of the 45th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Oklahoma Army National Guard. The 279th Infantry shares a portion of its lineage with the 180th Infantry Regiment. The unit, under these two designations, saw action during World War II and the Korean War as part of the 45th Infantry Division and again in Afghanistan and Iraq as part of the 45th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["military unit"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q589489", "label": "Green Left", "source": "The Green Left (Hungarian: Zöld Baloldal; ZB), was a green eco-socialist political party in Hungary, founded in 2009.", "target": "political party", "baseline_candidates": ["Green party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15708590", "label": "Danny Bejarano", "source": "Danny Bryan Bejarano Yañez (born 3 January 1994) is a Bolivian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Greek Super League club Lamia.", "target": "Bolivian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23015782", "label": "WrestleMania 33", "source": "WrestleMania 33 was the 33rd annual WrestleMania professional wrestling event produced by WWE. It was held for wrestlers from the promotion's Raw and SmackDown brand divisions. The event aired on pay-per-view (PPV) and was available to stream on the WWE Network. It took place on April 2, 2017, at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida. WrestleMania 33 was the first WrestleMania since WrestleMania XXVII in 2011 to feature multiple brands (while a brand extension is in effect) as the brand split had ended that year, but was reintroduced in July 2016. Current wrestlers The New Day (Big E, Kofi Kingston, and Xavier Woods) served as the hosts of the event. Thirteen matches were contested at the event, including three on the Kickoff pre-show. For the first time since WrestleMania 29 in 2013, two world championships were contested: Raw's Universal Championship and SmackDown's WWE Championship; it marked the first time that the Universal Championship, SmackDown Women's Championship, and new Cruiserweight Championship were defended at WrestleMania. In the main event, Roman Reigns defeated The Undertaker in a No Holds Barred match, giving Undertaker his second loss at WrestleMania. In the main match for the Raw brand, Brock Lesnar defeated Goldberg to win the Universal Championship, thus becoming the first wrestler to win both the WWE and Universal titles, and in the main match from SmackDown, Randy Orton defeated Bray Wyatt to win his ninth WWE Championship. The event also marked the surprise return of The Hardy Boyz (Jeff Hardy and Matt Hardy), who won the Raw Tag Team.", "target": "professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event", "baseline_candidates": ["wrestling event", "recurrent event edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14931072", "label": "Hydrochara lineata", "source": "Hydrochara lineata is a species of water scavenger beetle in the family Hydrophilidae. It is found in Central America and North America.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28123552", "label": "Marquette Hotel", "source": "Marquette Hotel, also known as the Springfield Business College and Hotel State, is a historic hotel building located in Springfield, Missouri, United States. Built about 1906, it is a three-story, brick commercial building. It has a recessed entrance. It originally housed a business college, then converted to a hotel in 1918. It continued as a hotel until the mid-1980s.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.", "target": "listed on the NRHP in Greene County, Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["hotel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22953738", "label": "Edwina Hume Fallis", "source": "Edwina Hume Fallis (November 15, 1876 – September 14, 1957) was an American educator, writer, poet, and toy designer. Her memoir for children, When Denver and I Were Young (1956), went through two printings, and she published over 100 poems. She was posthumously inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 1989.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q622549", "label": "Allendorf", "source": "Allendorf (Eder) (German: [ˈaləndɔʁf] (listen)) is a municipality which situated in the north west of Hesse, Germany. The municipality is within the Waldeck-Frankenberg district in a rural region called the upper Eder Valley. The Burgwald range is located west of Allendorf while the Breite Struth hills are in Allendorf's east. With regard to towns, Allendorf lies to the east of Frankeberg/Eder (12,2 km) and to the west of Battenberg (2,6 km) and Biedenkopf (21 km). In the north of Allendorf are Hallenberg (11.9 km), Winterberg (26,4 km), and Korbach (38,8 km). In its south is the university city Marburg (31,8 km). Allendorf is internationally known because of the heating company Viessmann, which has its headquarters in Allendorf/Eder. Moreover, the FC Ederbergland - an amalgamation of the football divisions of the SV Allendorf and the TSV Battenberg - successfully plays in the Hessian regional league. Allendorf is also attractive to tourists because of its half-timbered houses and the surrounding idyllic landscape.", "target": "municipality in Landkreis Waldeck-Frankenberg in Hesse, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1789893", "label": "1923 Norwegian Football Cup", "source": "The 1923 Norwegian Football Cup was the 22nd season of the Norwegian annual knockout football tournament. The tournament was open for all members of NFF. Brann won their first title, having beaten Lyn in the final. Odd were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Lyn in the semifinal.", "target": "football tournament season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7831235", "label": "Tracey Kelusky", "source": "Tracey Kelusky (born September 9, 1975) is a Canadian former lacrosse player and current head coach of Panther City LC. Kelusky played for the Columbus Landsharks, Montreal Express, Calgary Roughnecks, Buffalo Bandits and Philadelphia Wings. While with the Roughnecks, Kelusky was named captain and lead them to titles in 2004 and 2009.", "target": "lacrosse player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7694088", "label": "Teddy Sandland", "source": "Edwin Thomas Sandland (1873 – 1939) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Stoke.", "target": "English footballer (1870-1939)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6715985", "label": "MID1", "source": "MID1 is a protein that belongs to the Tripartite motif family (TRIM) and is also known as TRIM18. The MID1 gene is located on the short arm of the X chromosome and loss-of-function mutations in this gene are causative of the X-linked form of a rare developmental disease, Opitz G/BBB Syndrome.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7107678", "label": "Osthelderiella", "source": "Osthelderiella is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q448946", "label": "HD 136118", "source": "HD 136118 is a star in the Serpens Caput section of the Serpens constellation. The star is too dim to be readily visible to the naked eye, having an apparent visual magnitude of 6.93. It is located at a distance of 168 light years from the Sun based on parallax, and is drifting closer with a radial velocity of −3 km/s.This object is an F-type main-sequence star with a stellar classification of F7V. The absolute visual magnitude of this star suggests that it has begun to evolve away from the main sequence. The abundances of the stellar atmosphere are similar to the Sun, and it has only a modest level of chromospheric activity. HD 136118 has 84% more mass compared to the Sun, and is 70% larger in radius. The star is an estimated 3.5 billion years old and is spinning with a projected rotational velocity of 8.5 km/s.", "target": "star", "baseline_candidates": ["F-type main-sequence star", "high proper-motion star", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7967006", "label": "Wan Khara", "source": "Wan Khara is a town and Union Council of Kasur District in the Punjab province of Pakistan. It is part of Chunian Tehsil and is located at 31°3'0N 73°57'0E with an altitude of 187 metres (616 feet).", "target": "human settlement in Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56249759", "label": "Kaito Taniguchi", "source": "Kaito Taniguchi (谷口 海斗, Taniguchi Kaito, born September 7, 1995) is a Japanese professional footballer who plays for Albirex Niigata as a forward.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6840053", "label": "Microseris bigelovii", "source": "Microseris bigelovii is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae known by the common name coastal silverpuffs. It is native to the west coast of North America, where its range extends from the southern tip of Vancouver Island to the northern coast of California.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2708311", "label": "Tepuihyla edelcae", "source": "Ayarzaguena's tree frog (Tepuihyla edelcae) is a species of frog in the family Hylidae found in Venezuela and possibly Guyana. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical high-altitude shrubland, swamps, freshwater marshes, and intermittent freshwater marshes.", "target": "species of amphibian", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18031470", "label": "SCG5", "source": "Neuroendocrine protein 7B2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the SCG5 gene. The protein expressed by this gene is widely distributed in neuroendocrine tissues. It functions as a chaperone protein for the proprotein convertase PC2 by blocking the aggregation of this protein, and is required for the production of an active PC2 enzyme. It is an intrinsically disordered protein that may also function as a chaperone for other aggregating secretory proteins in addition to proPC2 (Helwig et al. 2013). 7B2 has been identified in vertebrates and in invertebrates as low as flatworms (Protein ID: AIZ72728.1) and insects (PMID 10749852). It is also called Sgne1 and Secretogranin V. In C. elegans, it was originally called e7B2 (PMID 972625) and then renamed Seven B Two (gene name sbt-1). There is a Pfam entry for this protein: Secretogranin_V (PF05281).", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10850890", "label": "Happy Ending", "source": "Happy Ending (Korean: 해피 엔딩; RR: Haepi Ending) is a 2012 South Korean television series starring Choi Min-soo, Shim Hye-jin and Lee Seung-yeon. It aired on JTBC from April 23 to July 16, 2012.", "target": "South Korean TV series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24862461", "label": "Renka", "source": "Renka (蓮花) is a former Japanese pop singer and songwriter under the Being label.", "target": "Japanese singer and songwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5519282", "label": "Galong railway station", "source": "Galong is a heritage-listed closed railway station located on the Main South railway line in New South Wales, Australia. It served the village of Galong. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.", "target": "railway station in Harden LGA, New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59252204", "label": "Neuregulin", "source": "Neuregulins or neuroregulins are a family of four structurally related proteins that are part of the EGF family of proteins. These proteins have been shown to have diverse functions in the development of the nervous system and play multiple essential roles in vertebrate embryogenesis including: cardiac development, Schwann cell and oligodendrocyte differentiation, some aspects of neuronal development, as well as the formation of neuromuscular synapses.Included in the family are heregulin; neu differentiation factor; acetylcholine receptor synthesis stimulator; glial growth factor; and sensory and motor-neuron derived factor. Multiple family members are generated by alternate splicing or by use of several cell type-specific transcription initiation sites. In general, they bind to and activate the erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases (erbB2 (HER2), erbB3 (HER3), and erbB4 (HER4)), functioning both as heterodimers and homodimers.", "target": "protein family", "baseline_candidates": ["protein", "signaling receptor binding protein", "protein family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24039207", "label": "The Fleece Hotel", "source": "The Fleece Hotel, Westgate Street, Gloucester is a timber framed building dating from the 15th century, which incorporated a 12th-century stone undercroft. The building is part grade I and part grade II listed with Historic England.", "target": "Grade I listed hotel in Gloucester, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["pub", "hotel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5410201", "label": "Euphaedra (Gausapia) melpomene", "source": "Euphaedra melpomene, the scarce striped forester, is a butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It is found in Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Ivory Coast. The habitat consists of forests.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6433814", "label": "Kota Samarahan", "source": "Kota Samarahan, formerly known as Muara Tuang, is a town and the administrative seat of the Samarahan District in Samarahan Division, Sarawak, Malaysia. It is also a satellite town for Kuching due to its proximity to the city part of Greater Kuching area. Kota Samarahan is gearing towards being the medical and education hub for the State of Sarawak, and is colloquially known as the \"Town of Knowledge\". The Kota Samarahan Municipal Council (MPKS) exercises local authority over Samarahan and Asajaya districts, as well as Sadong Jaya subdistrict. As of 2010, the Kota Samarahan town has a total population of 12,724, and the population of all towns managed by Kota Samarahan Municipal Council is 85,495.", "target": "human settlement in Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "district of Malaysia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4003287", "label": "Uluazapa", "source": "Uluazapa is a municipality in the San Miguel department of El Salvador. The town is located approximately 30 minutes from San Miguel and is known for its musical atmosphere. Many refer to it as a \"cradle of musicians\" for its emphasis on musical education. The name \"Uluazapa\" stands for \"Stony place of the Ulúas\" in Nauathl, which were Indian tribes that inhabited the area pre-Columbian time. The municipality is made up of surrounding cantons, hamlets, and neighborhoods. The Uluazapa Central Park is located in the middle of the town, next to the colonial \"San Pedro Apostal\" church and the municipal hall. Surrounding the park are local shop, restaurants, and businesses. It also has a large sport center equipped with a soccer field and basketball courts. The town has a population of 3,351 Inhabitants.", "target": "municipality in San Miguel Department, El Salvador", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of El Salvador"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21513391", "label": "Zamperini", "source": "Zamperini is an Italian surname that may refer to: Alessandro Zamperini (born 1982), Italian football player Louis Zamperini (1917–2014), American Olympic distance runner, US Air Forces Captain and inspirational speaker Zamperini Field, an airport in California, U.S., named after Louis.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24885464", "label": "Chryseobacterium taeanense", "source": "Chryseobacterium taeanense is a Gram-negative bacteria from the genus of Chryseobacterium which has been isolated from the roots of the plant Elymus mollis near Tae-an in Korea.", "target": "species of bacterium", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q818749", "label": "Paramushir", "source": "Paramushir (Russian: Парамушир, romanized: Paramushir, Japanese: 幌筵島, romanized: Paramushiru-tō, Ainu: パラムシㇼ, romanized: Para=mu=sir) is a volcanic island in the northern portion of Kuril Islands chain in the Sea of Okhotsk in the northwest Pacific Ocean. It is separated from Shumshu by the very narrow Second Kuril Strait in the northeast 2.5 km (1.6 mi), from Antsiferov by the Luzhin Strait (15 km (9.3 mi)) to the southwest, from Atlasov in the northwest by 20 km (12 mi), and from Onekotan in the south by the 40 km (25 mi) wide Fourth Kuril Strait. Its northern tip is 39 km (24 mi) from Cape Lopatka at the southern tip of the Kamchatka Peninsula. Its name is derived from the Ainu language, from “broad island” or “populous island”. Severo-Kurilsk, the administrative center of the Severo-Kurilsky district, is the only permanently populated settlement on Paramushir island.", "target": "island in Kuril Islands, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2007044", "label": "Damascus Governorate", "source": "Damascus Governorate (Arabic: مُحافظة دمشق Muḥāfaẓat Dimashq) is one of the fourteen governorates (provinces) of Syria. Completely surrounded by the Rif Dimashq Governorate, it consists only of the city of Damascus, the capital of Syria, and the suburb of Yarmouk Camp. The governorate's area is around 107 km2, encompassing the area of the city of Damascus and the Yarmouk Camp, while the population is around 1,711,000.", "target": "governorate of Syria", "baseline_candidates": ["governorate of Syria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1030333", "label": "Shire of Campaspe", "source": "The Shire of Campaspe is a local government area in Victoria, Australia, located in the northern part of the state. It covers an area of 4,519 square kilometres (1,745 sq mi) and in June 2018 had a population of 37,592.It includes the towns of Girgarre, Echuca, Kyabram, Rochester, Tongala and Rushworth. It was formed in 1995 from the amalgamation of the City of Echuca, Shire of Deakin, Shire of Rochester, Shire of Waranga, Town of Kyabram and part of the Shire of Rodney.The Shire is governed and administered by the Campaspe Shire Council; its seat of local government and administrative centre is located at the council headquarters in Echuca, it also has service centres located in Kyabram, Rochester, Rushworth and Tongala. The Shire is named after the Campaspe River, a major geographical feature that meanders through the LGA.", "target": "local government area in Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["local government area of Victoria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21176740", "label": "Winifred Ryle", "source": "Winifred Maddock (née Winifred Ryle, 3 February 1897 - 3 October 1987) was a British architect. She was one of the first women to attend the Architectural Association School of Architecture, and would go on to publish an article about Women as Architects in the Architectural Association Journal.", "target": "British architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1143360", "label": "TKO Major League MMA", "source": "TKO Major League MMA is a Canadian mixed martial arts promotion established in 2000, it was originally broadcast on RDS and later on Fight Network. Formerly known as the Universal Combat Challenge(UCC), it was the first mixed martial arts promotion in Canada, before eventually rebranding to TKO Major League MMA in 2003. For years it was the largest MMA promotion in Canada, before eventually going on hiatus for 8 years. Returning in 2016, since then it has signed a deal with the UFC to be broadcast on the promotion's streaming service UFC Fightpass.", "target": "Canadian MMA promotion broadcast on UFC Fightpass", "baseline_candidates": ["sports league", "company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62010150", "label": "Gromia dubia", "source": "Gromia dubia is a species of testate rhizarian animal in the family Gromiidae. It is known from a single specimen discovered in 1884 by Gruber, and no other specimens have been found. Gruber did not actually make a proper description of the species itself.", "target": "species of protist", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10589878", "label": "Mucomassariaceae", "source": "The Mucomassariaceae are a family of fungi in the Ascomycota phylum. This family can not yet be taxonomically classified in any of the ascomycetous classes and orders with any degree of certainty (incertae sedis). It contains the single genus Mucomassaria.", "target": "family of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7178847", "label": "PetroBakken Energy", "source": "Ridgeback Resources Inc. is a Calgary, Alberta-based private oil exploration and production company focused on light oil in the Bakken and Cardium resource plays, in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. On December 29, 2016, Lightstream Resources Ltd. announced the closing of its asset sale to Ridgeback Resources Inc.", "target": "Canadian oil exploration and production company", "baseline_candidates": ["business", "public company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16210308", "label": "Garin Hovannisian", "source": "Garin K. Hovannisian (Armenian: Կարին Հովհաննիսյան; born 1986) is an Armenian American writer, filmmaker, and producer. He is the director of the award-winning films 1915 (2015), I Am Not Alone (2019), and Truth to Power (2020), and the author of the book Family of Shadows: A century of murder, memory, and the Armenian American dream. He is also the founder of the arts foundation Creative Armenia.", "target": "American-Armenian writer and film director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6389921", "label": "Kenneth Burton", "source": "Kenneth Burton FRS (26 June 1926 – 22 November 2010) was a British biochemist, and Professor at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He was educated at High Pavement Grammar School (Nottingham), Wath Grammar School and King's College, Cambridge. When elected a Fellow of the Royal Society he was described as 'Distinguished for his contributions to knowledge of DNA structure and the mechanism of synthesis of bacteriophage nucleic acids.'.", "target": "British biochemist (1926-2010)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13581961", "label": "Camponotus thraso", "source": "Camponotus thraso is a species of carpenter ant (genus Camponotus). The type species is found from Sri Lanka.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31864099", "label": "Deedan", "source": "Deedan (Urdu: دیدن) is a Pakistani serial drama television series written by Attiya Dawood and directed by Amin Iqbal. It stars Sanam Saeed and Mohib Mirza in lead roles. It premiered in October 2018 on A-Plus Entertainment.It marks the third on-screen appearance of Sanam and Mohib after Firaaq (TV series) and Lollywood film Bachaana.", "target": "2018 Pakistani television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65117779", "label": "Only Things We Love", "source": "Only Things We Love is the fourth studio album by American electronica band Blaqk Audio, consisting of Davey Havok and Jade Puget of AFI. The album was released on March 15, 2019. Ahead of the album, the duo released \"The Viles\".", "target": "2019 studio album by Blaqk Audio", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6492756", "label": "Las voces de Huayra", "source": "Las voces de Huayra is the debut album by the Argentine singer Jorge Cafrune, released in Argentina in 1957.", "target": "album by Jorge Cafrune", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6527906", "label": "Leptaxis simia", "source": "Leptaxis simia is a species of small air-breathing land snail, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Helicidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2494286", "label": "Unified Code for Units of Measure", "source": "The Unified Code for Units of Measure (UCUM) is a system of codes for unambiguously representing measurement units. Its primary purpose is machine-to-machine communication rather than communication between humans.The code set includes all units defined in ISO 1000, ISO 2955-1983, ANSI X3.50-1986, HL7 and ENV 12435, and explicitly and verifiably addresses the naming conflicts and ambiguities in those standards to resolve them. It provides for representations of units in 7 bit ASCII for machine-to-machine communication, with unambiguous mapping between case-sensitive and case-insensitive representations. A reference open-source implementation is available as a Java applet. Also an OSGi based implementation at Eclipse Foundation.", "target": "system of codes for unambiguously representing measurement units", "baseline_candidates": ["technical standard", "unit ontology", "specialized terminology"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16892674", "label": "Innovation Diploma Plus High School", "source": "Innovation Diploma Plus High School is located on 145 West 84th Street within the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It is also one of the four schools that are located in the Louis D. Brandeis High School Campus.", "target": "high school in New York, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21452631", "label": "Perković", "source": "Perković (also spelled Percovich and Perkovich) is a surname commonly found in Croatia. It is the 26th most common surname in the country. It may refer to: Borimir Perković (born 1967), Croatian football manager Dalibor Perković (born 1974), Croatian science fiction writer John Perkovich (1924–2000), American baseball player Josip Perković (born 1945), former agent of the Yugoslav State Security Service (SDB) Korina Perkovic (born 1987), German tennis player Leo Percovich, Uruguayan footballer Luis Pércovich Roca (1931–2017), Prime Minister of Peru Luka \"Perkz\" Perković (born 1998), Croatian professional gamer Margarita Percovich (born 1941), Uruguayan politician Mariana Percovich (born 1963), Uruguayan playwright, teacher, and theater director Mile Perković (1921–2013), Yugoslav partisan, economist, and sports administrator Marko Perković (born 1966), also known as Thompson, Croatian singer-songwriter Nathan Perkovich (born 1985), American ice hockey player Sandra Perković (born 1990), Croatian discus thrower Vlado Perkovic (born 1969), Australian physician and researcher.", "target": "family name", "baseline_candidates": ["family name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19904029", "label": "Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights", "source": "The Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights (ECESR) is an Egyptian non-governmental legal and research organization which addresses issues of Egyptian and Arabic human rights.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3342025", "label": "Nino", "source": "Nino is considered to be an Italian masculine name that is in use throughout Italy as a diminutive form of several names such as Antonino, Giannino, Saturnino, Severino and all names ending in \"-nino\" as well as names such as Gaetano and Giovanni. It is used in other Mediterranean countries, e.g. Spain and Greece, as well as in nations where these countries have linguistic relations e.g. Latin-America. Nino is considered to be a Georgian name of Assyrian origin that is a popular feminine name in Georgia with possible relation to the story of the husband of Semiramis, founder of the city of Nineveh. It was popularized due to the 4th century A.D. conversion of Georgia to Christianity by a Roman woman, Saint Nino, a relative of St. George, who came from Constantinople. In Slavic languages, the name is often written as Nina, a name that has multiple meanings.", "target": "unisex given name", "baseline_candidates": ["unisex given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25206962", "label": "George Griffiths", "source": "George Griffiths (11 April 1865 – 7 July 1918) was a Welsh amateur football inside left who played for Chirk. He was capped by Wales at international level.", "target": "association football player (1865-1918)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85811753", "label": "Ugar Island", "source": "Ugar Island is an island locality in the Torres Strait Island Region, Queensland, Australia. It consists of a single island, Stephens Island in the Torres Strait. In the 2016 census, Ugar Island had a population of 85 people.", "target": "locality in Queensland, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3990931", "label": "Thunder Warrior", "source": "Thunder Warrior (Italian: Thunder, also known as Drug Traffikers) is an Italian action film written and directed by Fabrizio De Angelis (credited as Larry Ludman). It had two sequels, one released in 1985 and the other in 1988. The premise borrows heavily from First Blood.", "target": "1983 film by Fabrizio De Angelis", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18777859", "label": "Zvyagintsevo, Kursky District, Kursk Oblast", "source": "Zvyagintsevo (Russian: Звягинцево) is a rural locality (Russian: деревня, lit. 'village') in Klyukvinsky Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Kursky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population: 116 (2010 Census); 118 (2002 Census);.", "target": "human settlement in Kursk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41593180", "label": "Thomas Kirsch", "source": "Thomas Lee Kirsch II (born January 25, 1974) is an American attorney and jurist who has served as a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit since December 2020. He was previously the United States attorney for the Northern District of Indiana from October 2017 to December 2020.", "target": "American attorney", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5889218", "label": "Home to You", "source": "\"Home to You\" is a song written by Arlos Smith and Sara Light, and recorded by American country music artist John Michael Montgomery. It was released in July 1999 as the second single and title track from the album Home to You. The song reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.", "target": "1999 single by John Michael Montgomery", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34554", "label": "Villanova Marchesana", "source": "Villanova Marchesana is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Rovigo in the Italian region Veneto, located about 60 kilometres (37 mi) southwest of Venice and about 15 kilometres (9 mi) southeast of Rovigo. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 1,109 and an area of 18.2 square kilometres (7.0 sq mi).The municipality of Villanova Marchesana contains the frazioni (subdivisions, mainly villages and hamlets) Ca' de Rusco, Canalazzo, Canalnuovo, Capo di Sopra, Casette, Cisimatti, and Ponte. Villanova Marchesana borders the following municipalities: Adria, Berra, Crespino, Gavello, Papozze.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q971207", "label": "Peter of Portugal", "source": "Peter I (Portuguese: Pedro, pronounced [ˈpedɾu]) (23 February 1187 - 2 June 1258) was the second son of King Sancho I of Portugal and his wife Dulce, infanta of Aragon, and would eventually become Count of Urgell and Lord of the Balearic Islands.", "target": "Count of Urgell (1187-1258)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1601858", "label": "Helen Newlove, Baroness Newlove", "source": "Helen Margaret Newlove, Baroness Newlove (born 28 December 1961) is a Warrington-based community reform campaigner who was appointed as the Victims' Commissioner by the UK government in 2012. She is currently serving as a Deputy Speaker in the House of Lords. Helen Newlove came to prominence after her husband, Garry Newlove was murdered by three youths in 2007. After his death she set up a number of foundations that aimed to tackle the UK drinking culture as well as providing support to young people. Newlove was given a peerage in the 2010 Dissolution Honours list and sits in the House of Lords as a Conservative.", "target": "British anti-violence campaigner (born 1961)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q74198", "label": "Trinidad", "source": "Trinidad is the home rule municipality that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Las Animas County, Colorado, United States. The population was 8,329 as of the 2020 census. Trinidad lies 21 mi (34 km) north of Raton, New Mexico, and 195 mi (314 km) south of Denver. It is on the historic Santa Fe Trail.", "target": "Home Rule Municipality in Las Animas County, Colorado, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["county seat", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6742284", "label": "Malcolm Donnelly", "source": "Malcolm Douglas Donnelly AM (born 8 February 1943 in Sydney). is an Australian baritone opera singer. Donnelly studied with Marianne Mathy at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and with Vida Harford in London. His career started with the Elizabethan Trust Opera. From there he travelled to London for further study, joining the Scottish Opera in 1971. From 1981 to 1985 he was a member of the English National Opera. During 1984 Malcolm Donnelly returned to Australia, debuting with the Australian Opera in 1985.Since returning to Australia Donnelly has provided Master classes to young singers in Sydney. In 2002, he created the roles of Commissioner/Judge in the world premiere of Moya Henderson's opera Lindy.On 26 January 2005 he was awarded the Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the Australia Day Honours. His citation reads \"For service to the performing arts as an operatic baritone and to the education and mentoring of young singers.\".", "target": "Australian opera singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75610510", "label": "Robert Christie Stewart", "source": "Colonel Sir Robert \"Bobby\" Christie Stewart KCVO CBE TD (1926 – 25 September 2019) was a Scottish landowner who had a military career in the British Army and was a Lord Lieutenant of two counties in Scotland. He was generally referred to in the community as R. C. Stewart.", "target": "Scottish landowner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4895225", "label": "Bert Miller", "source": "Herbert Alexander Miller (October 28, 1875 – June 14, 1937) was a Major League Baseball pitcher. He played in the National League for the 1897 Louisville Colonels.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16523384", "label": "Individual Constituency Tolna County No. 2", "source": "The 2nd constituency of Tolna County (Hungarian: Tolna megyei 02. számú országgyűlési egyéni választókerület) is one of the single member constituencies of the National Assembly, the national legislature of Hungary. The constituency standard abbreviation: Tolna 02. OEVK.Since 2014, it has been represented by Árpád János Potápi of the Fidesz–KDNP party alliance.", "target": "constituency in Hungary (2012-)", "baseline_candidates": ["electoral district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4117996", "label": "Muscat Securities Market", "source": "The Muscat Securities Market (MSM, Arabic: سوق مسقط للأوراق المالية) is the only stock exchange in Oman. It was established by the Royal Decree (53/88) issued on 21 June 1988, to regulate and control the Omani securities market and to participate, effectively, with other organisations for setting up the infrastructure of the Sultanate's financial sector. After ten years of continuous growth, there was a need for a better functioning of the market. Thus MSM has been restructured by two Royal Decrees (80/98) and (82/98).", "target": "Stock exchange located in Muscat, Oman", "baseline_candidates": ["stock exchange"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q859367", "label": "Chozeau", "source": "Chozeau (French pronunciation: ​[ʃozo]) is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France.", "target": "commune in Isère, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5025918", "label": "Camellia railway station", "source": "Camellia railway station, originally Subiaco railway station, was a railway station in Sydney, Australia, that was open between 1885 and 2020. It was located on the Carlingford line, serving the suburb of Camellia and at the time of closure was served by Sydney Trains T6 Carlingford line services.", "target": "railway station in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15613268", "label": "Panasuan", "source": "Panasuan is an Austronesian language spoken in the border area of West Sulawesi and South Sulawesi provinces, Indonesia. Together with Seko Padang, Seko Tengah and Budong-Budong, it belongs to the Seko branch of the South Sulawesi subgroup.", "target": "language", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "South Sulawesi", "modern language"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4036212", "label": "Cicadula", "source": "Cicadula is a genus of true bugs belonging to the family Cicadellidae.The genus was first described by Zetterstedt in 1840.The species of this genus are found in Europe, Northern America, Southern Africa.Species: Cicadula quadrinotata Cicadula quinquenotata.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23822275", "label": "Trébla", "source": "Albert Delvaille, called Trébla (Neuilly-sur-Seine, 30 May 1870 – Paris, October 1943) was a French playwright and novelist. After he finished his studies at École Monge, he joined his father at Sète where he had his first play presented. He was then just 15. After he returned in Paris, his plays were given on numerous stages including the Théâtre Antoine, La Cigale or the Bataclan. He is buried at the Montmartre Cemetery (3rd division).", "target": "French writer (1870-1943)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17425841", "label": "Slaheddine Ben Mbarek", "source": "Slaheddine Ben Mbarek (27 July 1920, in Béja – 22 July 2014) was a Tunisian minister, diplomat and the president of his hometown soccer team Olympique Béja from 1984 until 1985. He was the Ambassador of Tunisia to Belgium as well as Minister of Economy and Commerce from 1977 until 1980.", "target": "Tunisian politician (1936-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2136977", "label": "The Jakarta Post", "source": "The Jakarta Post is a daily English-language newspaper in Indonesia. The paper is owned by PT Niskala Media Tenggara and based in the nation's capital, Jakarta. The Jakarta Post started as a collaboration between four Indonesian media at the urging of Information Minister Ali Murtopo and politician Jusuf Wanandi. After the first issue was printed on 25 April 1983, it spent several years with minimal advertisements and increasing circulation. After a change in chief editors in 1991, it began to take a more vocal pro-democracy point of view. The paper was one of the few Indonesian English-language dailies to survive the 1997 Asian financial crisis and currently has a circulation of about 40,000. The Jakarta Post also features an online edition and a weekend magazine supplement called J+. The newspaper is targeted at foreigners and educated Indonesians, although the middle-class Indonesian readership has increased. Noted for being a training ground for local and international reporters, The Jakarta Post has won several awards and been described as being \"Indonesia's leading English-language daily\". The Jakarta Post is a member of Asia News Network.", "target": "newspaper from Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["daily newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q909447", "label": "human iron metabolism", "source": "Human iron metabolism is the set of chemical reactions that maintain human homeostasis of iron at the systemic and cellular level. Iron is both necessary to the body and potentially toxic. Controlling iron levels in the body is a critically important part of many aspects of human health and disease. Hematologists have been especially interested in systemic iron metabolism because iron is essential for red blood cells, where most of the human body's iron is contained. Understanding iron metabolism is also important for understanding diseases of iron overload, such as hereditary hemochromatosis, and iron deficiency, such as iron-deficiency anemia.", "target": "iron metabolism in the body", "baseline_candidates": ["metabolism"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5307802", "label": "Driscoll Island", "source": "Driscoll Island is a narrow, ice-covered island 30 kilometres (16 nmi) long, lying in Block Bay along the coast of Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. The feature was partially delineated from air photos taken by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition (1928–30) on the flight of December 5, 1929. The island was completely mapped by the United States Geological Survey, 1959–65, and named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names after Lawrence J. Driscoll, U.S.Navy, a Boatswain's Mate aboard USS Glacier along this coast, 1961–62.", "target": "Island in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24667881", "label": "East Quantoxhead", "source": "East Quantoxhead is a village in the district of Somerset West and Taunton, 3 miles (5 km) from West Quantoxhead, 4 miles (6 km) east of Williton, and 13 miles (21 km) west of Bridgwater, within the Quantock Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in Somerset, England.", "target": "village and civil parish in Somerset, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish", "type locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q446015", "label": "Nina Kinert", "source": "Nina Kinert Levahn (born Nina Micaela Kinert, 26 September 1983), is a Swedish musician/artist. Her musical style is a mix between pop, folk and electronic music.", "target": "Swedish singer, songerwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16731929", "label": "Marc Mann", "source": "Marc Mann is an American keyboardist, guitarist, programmer, arranger and conductor. He has a Master's Degree in Music from UCLA. Mann is known for his work with Oingo Boingo, Jeff Lynne and the Electric Light Orchestra. Mann is credited as performer, arranger or producer on 54 albums. He is a long-time collaborator with Danny Elfman in such films as the Men in Black series, Mars Attacks!, Sleepy Hollow, plus many more. He is usually credited for MIDI supervision and some orchestrations. On stage he is recognisable because he usually wears a cap.", "target": "American keyboardist, guitarist, programmer, arranger and conductor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65173438", "label": "(523622) 2007 TG422", "source": "(523622) 2007 TG422, provisional designation 2007 TG422, is a trans-Neptunian object on a highly eccentric orbit in the scattered disc located in the outermost region of the Solar System, approximately 260 kilometers (160 miles) in diameter. It was discovered on 3 October 2007 by astronomers Andrew Becker, Andrew Puckett and Jeremy Kubica during the Sloan Digital Sky Survey at Apache Point Observatory in New Mexico, United States. According to American astronomer Michael Brown, the bluish object is \"possibly\" a dwarf planet. It belongs to a group of objects studied in 2014, which lead to the proposition of the hypothetical Planet Nine.", "target": "Trans-Neptunian object", "baseline_candidates": ["trans-Neptunian object"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5574687", "label": "Go All the Way", "source": "Go All the Way is the eighteenth album released by The Isley Brothers for their T-Neck imprint on April 19, 1980. The album was remastered and expanded for inclusion in the 2015 released CD box set The RCA Victor & T-Neck Album Masters, 1959-1983.", "target": "album by The Isley Brothers", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1809053", "label": "Lesiëm", "source": "Lesiëm is a German musical project created in 1999 by the producers Sven Meisel and Alex Wende and active until 2005. The project's music combines elements of rock, pop, electronica, new age, enigmatic and ambient music, as well as Gregorian chant and other choral music. It is frequently compared to French project Era, German musical project Enigma and the Norwegian artist Amethystium. Lesiëm's website makes extensive reference to the group's mystical and spiritual influences.Lesiëm released its debut album, Mystic Spirit Voices, in 2000. When the album was released in the United States in 2002, it climbed to no. 10 at the U.S. New Age Albums Billboard chart. Lesiëm's second album, Chapter 2, was released in 2001 in Europe, and in the United States in 2003 under the title Illumination, where it reached no. 7. at the New Age Albums Billboard chart.The first two albums were some sort of prelude for the pop-opera Times, which was Lesiëm's third album (released as Auracle in the United States in 2004). The musicians started their work in March 2002 and finished it in the end of July. The single \"Caritas\" (featuring Scottish singer Maggie Reilly and Deutsche Oper Berlin) was presented in December 2002 on the philanthropic TV-show of José Carreras, Carreras Gala. In 2005, Lesiëm released its latest songs for a new version of Times, \"Morgain\" and \"Morgause\", both also collaborations with Maggie Reilly.", "target": "1999 German musical project", "baseline_candidates": ["musical ensemble"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q38276793", "label": "Kazuki Hattori", "source": "Kazuki Hattori (服部 一輝, Hattori Kazuki, born 16 March 1995) is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a goalkeeper for Fukushima United.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12186633", "label": "First Cabinet of Saad Hariri", "source": "On 9 November 2009, after five months of negotiations following the 2009 parliamentary elections, Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri formed a national unity government.", "target": "Lebanese government 2009–11", "baseline_candidates": ["Cabinet of Lebanon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66836369", "label": "Charoula Dimitriou", "source": "Chara Dimitriou (born 12 April 1990) is a Greek footballer who plays as a midfielder and has appeared for the Greece women's national team.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4772106", "label": "Anthony Bernard", "source": "Anthony Bernard (25 January 1891 – 6 April 1963) was an English conductor, organist, pianist and composer.", "target": "English conductor, pianist and composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16974103", "label": "Bay of Quinte Railway", "source": "The Bay of Quinte Railway (reporting mark BQ) is a former short line railway in eastern Ontario, Canada. It was formed as the Napanee, Tamworth and Quebec Railway (NT&QR), chartered in 1878 by Edward Rathbun and Alexander Campbell, with plans to run from Napanee through Renfrew County and on to the Ottawa Valley. Lacking funding from the governments, development never began. Rathburn took over the charter in 1881. He started construction with the shorter Bay of Quinte Railway and Navigation Company (BQR&NC) that ran from his factories in Deseronto to the Grand Trunk Railway mainline at Napanee. Construction on the NT&QR out of Napanee through Yarkers to Tamworth started the same year, but was abandoned by the contractor and Rathburn had to pay the workers out of pocket. The line finally opened to Tamworth in 1884. In 1889 it was extended westward to Tweed while a branch eastward from Yarker to Harrowsmith connected to the Kingston and Pembroke Railway with running rights to Kingston. In 1890 the line was renamed the Kingston, Napanee & Western Railway, and the next year it was leased to the BQR&NC. The eastern branch was extended from Harrowsmith to Sydenham in 1893. In 1897, the two sections were legally merged into the newly formed Bay of Quinte Railway. In 1903 the final expansion was made northwestward from Tweed to connect to the Central Ontario Railway at Bannockburn, with a total of 134 kilometres (83 mi). The line was purchased by the Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR) in 1910, using its line from.", "target": "former railway in Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["railway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7681235", "label": "Tamika Domrow", "source": "Tamika Domrow (born 6 September 1989) is an Australian synchronized swimmer. She competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics, where her team finished seventh and the 2012 Summer Olympics, where Australia finished in eighth.", "target": "Australian female synchronized swimming Olympian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6915850", "label": "Moses Lake High School", "source": "Moses Lake High School is a public high school in Moses Lake, Washington serving 2,417 students in grades 9–12.The current principal is Triscia Hochstatter. The school, built to maintain the needs of roughly 1,500 students, is currently operating at 161% of student capacity.", "target": "High School in Moses Lake, Wa", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6167736", "label": "Jayden Attard", "source": "Jayden Attard (born 27 February 1986) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who played for the Brisbane Lions and the St Kilda Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL) from 2005 to 2008. Of Maltese descent, Attard was recruited as the number 50 draft pick in the 2004 AFL Draft from Chelsea and Dandenong Stingrays. He made his debut for Brisbane in Round 4, 2005 against Hawthorn. Attard was delisted by the Lions at the end of the 2006 season. He was then drafted as a rookie by the St Kilda Football Club in the 2006 AFL Rookie Draft and was elevated to the senior list at the start of the 2007 season and made his debut with the Saints in Round 1. After an impressive first year at the Saints, Attard ruptured his ACL in Round 21 of the 2007 season, continuing the Saints' run of injuries. He missed all the 2008 AFL Season. On 22 October 2008 the St Kilda Football Club announced they would be delisting Attard. In 2009 Attard joined Chelsea Heights Football Club in the Southern Football League as co-captain. He continued with Chelsea Heights as captain until the end of 2013 and then signed for his junior club, Chelsea Seagulls Football Club, for the 2014 season. Attard captained the Seagulls in 2014 & 2015, before joining Toora Football club in 2016.", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5184100", "label": "Cremnophora", "source": "Cremnophora is a monotypic moth genus of the family Noctuidae erected by George Hampson in 1901. Its only species, Cremnophora angasii, was first described by George French Angas in 1847. It is found in South Australia.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31464075", "label": "Alicia", "source": "Alicia, officially the Municipality of Alicia (Cebuano: Munisipyo sa Alicia; Tagalog: Bayan ng Alicia), is a 4th class municipality in the province of Bohol, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 24,374 people. Located 103 kilometres (64 mi) from Tagbilaran, it was formerly part of Mabini and was known as Batuanan (or Batuanon).Alicia celebrates its town fiesta on 26 July in honor of Saint Joachim.", "target": "municipality of the Philippines in the province of Bohol", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Philippines"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13159587", "label": "Orthotomus", "source": "Tailorbirds are small birds, most belonging to the genus Orthotomus. While they were often placed in the Old World warbler family Sylviidae, recent research suggests they more likely belong in the Cisticolidae and they are treated as such in Del Hoyo et al. One former species, the mountain tailorbird (and therefore also its sister species rufous-headed tailorbird), is actually closer to an old world warbler genus Cettia.They occur in the Old World tropics, principally in Asia. These warblers are usually brightly colored, with green or grey upper parts and yellow white or grey under parts. They often have chestnut on the head. Tailorbirds have short rounded wings, short tails, strong legs and long curved bills. The tail is typically held upright, like a wren. They are typically found in open woodland, scrub and gardens. Tailorbirds get their name from the way their nest is constructed. The edges of a large leaf are pierced and sewn together with plant fibre or spider's web to make a cradle in which the actual grass nest is built.", "target": "genus of birds", "baseline_candidates": ["organisms known by a particular common name", "taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26176611", "label": "Farmington", "source": "Farmington is a city in Davis County, Utah, United States. The population was 24,531 at the 2020 census. An amusement park, called Lagoon Amusement Park, is located in Farmington.", "target": "city in and county seat of Davis County, Utah, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10861899", "label": "2013 Giro del Trentino", "source": "The 2013 Giro del Trentino was the 37th edition of the Giro del Trentino cycling stage race. It started on 16 April in Lienz (Austria) and ended on 19 April in Sega di Ala. The race, that was officially presented on 8 April in Trento, consisted of four stages, with the first one divided into two half-stages.The race was won by Astana rider Vincenzo Nibali, who claimed the leader's jersey in the final stage and won the King of the Mountains classification as well. Mauro Santambrogio (Vini Fantini-Selle Italia) was second and Maxime Bouet of Ag2r-La Mondiale completed the podium. In the race's other classifications, Jarlinson Pantano of Colombia won the Sprints classification and Astana's Fabio Aru won the Young Rider classification, with Astana finishing at the head of the Teams classification.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour of the Alps"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q68499036", "label": "Sofya Raskhodnikova", "source": "Sofya Raskhodnikova (born 1976) is a Belarusian and American theoretical computer scientist. She is known for her research in sublinear-time algorithms, information privacy, property testing, and approximation algorithms, and was one of the first to study differentially private analysis of graphs. She is a professor of computer science at Boston University.", "target": "Belarusian and American computer scientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6049160", "label": "Ahmet Yorulmaz", "source": "Ahmet Yorulmaz (1932 – 31 March 2014) was a Turkish journalist, novelist and translator. He was born in Ayvalik to a family of Cretan Turks deported to mainland Turkey as part of the Greek/Turkish population exchange decreed in the Treaty of Lausanne. His best-known novel Savaşın Çocukları (Children of War) deals with the lives of Muslims in Crete before the exchange. He was also translator of Greek literature into Turkish.", "target": "Turkish novelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14404903", "label": "Stolatosoma", "source": "Stolatosoma is a genus of parasitic flies in the family Tachinidae. There is one described species in Stolatosoma, S. cidaris.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q646233", "label": "Heimat trilogy", "source": "Heimat is a series of films written and directed by Edgar Reitz about life in Germany from the 1840s to 2000 through the eyes of a family from the Hunsrück area of the Rhineland-Palatinate. The family's personal and domestic life is set against the backdrop of wider social and political events. The combined length of the 5 films – broken into 32 episodes – is 59 hours and 32 minutes, making it one of the longest series of feature-length films in cinema history. The title Heimat (pronounced [ˈhaɪmat]) is a German word, often translated as \"homeland\" or \"home place\", but it has been alleged that the word has no true English equivalent. Usage has come to include that of an ironic reference to the film genre known as Heimatfilm which was popular in Germany in the 1950s. Heimat films were characterised by rural settings, sentimental tone and simplistic morality. Aesthetically, the series is notable for the frequent switching between colour and black-and-white film to convey different emotional states. In 1987 it won a BAFTA for \"Foreign Television Programme\".The first film was released in 1984 with a followup in 1993. A direct sequel to the original film was released in 2003. Using unused footage and outtakes to create a narrative, in 2006, a film was released focusing on the women, as Hermann's daughter Lulu looks back on her family history. A prequel film to the original was released in 2013.", "target": "1984-2004 Three films directed by Edgar Reitz", "baseline_candidates": ["film trilogy", "miniseries"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27832191", "label": "Saima Manzoor", "source": "Saima Manzoor also known as Saima Waqas (born 24 March 1981) is a Pakistani badminton player. She was the bronze medalists at the 2006 South Asian Games in the mixed doubles and team events. Manzoor won the 2016 Pakistan International tournament in the women's doubles event.", "target": "badminton player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5000990", "label": "Burundi National Radio and Television", "source": "La Radiodiffusion-Télévision Nationale du Burundi (RTNB) (Burundi National Radio and Television) is the national broadcaster of the Central African state of Burundi. Burundi National Radio and Television currently broadcasts in Kirundi, French and Swahili and English.", "target": "Publicly funded broadcaster of Burundi", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35319319", "label": "Mpho Morobe", "source": "Mpho Morobe (born 2 November 1966) is a Lesotho sprinter. He competed in the men's 400 metres at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Mosotho sprinter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16062823", "label": "William James Smythe", "source": "Williams James Smythe (1816–1887) was a general and colonel-commandant of the Royal Artillery and a Fellow of the Royal Society.", "target": "British general", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2950570", "label": "2003–04 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina", "source": "Statistics of Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 2003–2004 season.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17563514", "label": "2014 Hiroshima landslides", "source": "On 20 August 2014, Hiroshima Prefecture in Japan was struck by a series of landslides following heavy rain. Seventy-four people were reported dead. According to the police, the dead included three boys aged two, three and eleven.", "target": "2014 natural disaster in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["landslide"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6519849", "label": "Leila Birch", "source": "Leila Birch (born 1978) is an English actress, known for portraying Teresa di Marco in EastEnders.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21093674", "label": "Architectonica perspectiva", "source": "Architectonica perspectiva, common name the clear or perspective sundial shell, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Architectonicidae, which are known as the staircase shells or sundials.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17318986", "label": "Ptychomnion", "source": "Ptychomnion is a genus of mosses belonging to the family Ptychomniaceae.The species of this genus are found in Australia and South America.Species: Ptychomnion aciculare Mitten, 1869 Ptychomnion cygnisetum Kindberg, 1888.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20657854", "label": "Hollywood", "source": "Hollywood is an unincorporated community in Carver County, in the U.S. state of Minnesota.", "target": "unincorporated community in Carver County, Minnesota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20752041", "label": "Christian Assomo", "source": "Christian M'billi-Assomo (born 26 April 1995) is a Cameroonian-French middleweight boxer. Born in Cameroon, he moved to France in 2006 with his parents. He competed in the 2016 Olympics, but was eliminated in the third bout.", "target": "French boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15821006", "label": "Jesuit Refugee Service", "source": "The Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) is an international Catholic organisation with a mission to accompany, serve, and advocate on behalf of refugees and other forcibly displaced persons, that they may heal, learn, and determine their own future. Founded in November 1980 as a work of the Society of Jesus, JRS was officially registered on 19 March 2000 in Vatican City as a foundation. The impetus to found JRS came from the then superior general of the Jesuits, Pedro Arrupe, who was inspired to action by the plight of Vietnamese boat people. JRS has programmes in over 50 countries. The areas of work are in the field of education, emergency assistance, health care, livelihoods, reconciliation, and psychosocial support. JRS is also involved in advocacy and human rights work. This involves ensuring that refugees are afforded their full rights as guaranteed by the 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and working to strengthen the protection afforded to Internally displaced persons (IDPs). JRS's international headquarters is located in Rome at the Society's General Curia. The International Director is Rev. Thomas H. Smolich SJ.", "target": "aid organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1087779", "label": "58th Golden Globe Awards", "source": "The 58th Golden Globe Awards, honoring the best in film and television for 2000, were held on January 21, 2001. The nominations were announced on December 21, 2000.", "target": "award ceremony", "baseline_candidates": ["Golden Globe Award ceremony"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20813761", "label": "My Coming Day", "source": "My Coming Day is a studio album by Julian Drive. Inpop Records released the album on January 27, 2009. Julian Drive worked with Lynn Nichols, in the production of this album.", "target": "album by Julian Drive", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q107354", "label": "Otto Schirmer", "source": "Otto Schirmer (13 December 1864, Greifswald – 6 May 1918) was a German ophthalmologist from Greifswald. He studied medicine at several universities including the University of Greifswald. In 1896 he attained the chair of ophthalmology at Greifswald, a position earlier held by his father, Rudolf Schirmer (1831-1896). Later he was a professor of ophthalmology at the Universities of Kiel and Strasbourg, and in 1909 emigrated to New York, where he worked at several locations including the Herman Knapp Memorial Eye Hospital. Schirmer conducted histological and biochemical studies of cataract, and also provided a comprehensive description on the pathology of sympathetic ophthalmia. He did a detailed study of rosacea keratitis, and performed extensive research on the physiology and microanatomy of the eye's lacrimal apparatus. His work with sympathetic ophthalmia and the lacrimal system were published in the second edition of the Graefe-Saemisch textbook of ophthalmology- Handbuch der gesamten Augenheilkunde. Schirmer is remembered today for the eponymous \"Schirmer test\", a method used to measure the eye's lacrimal secretion with absorbent paper.", "target": "German ophthalmologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41791594", "label": "Edwin Massucco", "source": "Edwin Massucco (born 15 July 1999) is a French professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Jura Sud Foot in the French Championnat National 2.", "target": "French association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4498821", "label": "Andrei Khodykin", "source": "Andrei Dmitriyevich Khodykin (Russian: Андрей Дмитриевич Ходыкин; born 21 March 1986) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player. He works as a coach at the academy of FC Dynamo Moscow.", "target": "Russian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6374422", "label": "Kashmir, Iran", "source": "Kashmir (Persian: كشمير, also Romanized as Kashmīr) is a village in Piveshk Rural District, Lirdaf District, Jask County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 241, in 62 families.", "target": "village in Hormozgan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6909804", "label": "Mordella bribiensis", "source": "Mordella bribiensis is a species of beetle in the genus Mordella of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea. It was discovered in 1921.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2402153", "label": "San Martín Sacatepéquez", "source": "San Martín Sacatepéquez (Spanish pronunciation: [san maɾˈtin sakateˈpekes]) is one of 24 municipalities in the department of Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. San Martín Sacatepéquez has a surface area of 100 square kilometres (39 sq mi). The center of the town is situated at 2,450 metres (8,040 ft) above mean sea level. According to the most recent government survey, the population of the municipality is 28,926 people.", "target": "municipality of Quetzaltenango Department, Guatemala", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Guatemala"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1171386", "label": "Das klagende Lied", "source": "Das klagende Lied (Song of Lamentation) is a cantata by Gustav Mahler, composed between 1878 and 1880 and greatly revised over the next two decades. In its original form, Das klagende Lied is the earliest of his works to have survived (a fragment, the Piano Quartet movement in A minor, is believed to date from 1876).", "target": "cantata by Gustav Mahler", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1052673", "label": "Windsor International Airport", "source": "Windsor International Airport (IATA: YQG, ICAO: CYQG) is located in the southeast portion of the city of Windsor, Ontario, Canada. The airport serves a mixture of scheduled airline flights and general aviation, and is a popular point of entry into Canada for private and business aircraft. The airspace above the airport is exceptionally busy because of the proximity to Detroit Metropolitan Airport, and Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) arrivals and departures are handled by Detroit approach control. The airport is classified as an airport of entry by Nav Canada and is staffed by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). CBSA officers at this airport can handle aircraft up to 325 passengers, and can handle up to 450 if the aircraft is unloaded in stages.", "target": "airport in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["international airport", "commercial traffic aerodrome"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19750135", "label": "Shivaganj", "source": "Shivganj is a village development committee in Jhapa District in the Province No. 1 of south-eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 13,619 people living in 2,490 individual households.", "target": "village development committee in Mechi Zone, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3271490", "label": "Léonard Defrance", "source": "Léonard Defrance, born at Liège in 1735, was a scholar of J. B. Coclers. He painted historical pieces of large and small dimensions, also landscapes, game, fruit, flowers, and architecture. He was the first professor of design at the Academy of Liège, established by the Prince Velbruck, and afterwards filled the same post in the École Centrale of the department of Ourthe. He died at Liège in 1805.", "target": "Walloon painter (1735-1805)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2721821", "label": "Mala Draguša", "source": "Mala Draguša (Serbian Cyrillic: Мала Драгуша) is a village in the municipality of Blace, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 157 people.", "target": "village in Toplica District, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42587240", "label": "Svetitskhoveli Cathedral", "source": "The Svetitskhoveli Cathedral (Georgian: სვეტიცხოვლის საკათედრო ტაძარი, svet'icxovlis sak'atedro t'adzari; literally the Cathedral of the Living Pillar) is an Orthodox Christian cathedral located in the historic town of Mtskheta, Georgia, to the northwest of the Georgian capital Tbilisi. A masterpiece of the Early and High Middle Ages, Svetitskhoveli is recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. It is currently the second largest church building in Georgia, after the Holy Trinity Cathedral. Known as the burial site of the claimed Christ's mantle, Svetitskhoveli has long been one of the principal Georgian Orthodox churches and is among the most venerated places of worship in the region. Throughout the centuries, the cathedral served as the burial place for kings. The present cross-in-square structure was completed between 1010 and 1029 by the medieval Georgian architect Konstantine Arsukisdze, although the site itself dates back to the early fourth century. The exterior archature of the cathedral is a well-preserved example of typical decorations of the 11th century. Svetitskhoveli is considered an endangered cultural landmark; it has survived a variety of adversities, and many of its priceless frescoes have been lost due to being whitewashed by the Russian Imperial authorities.", "target": "cathedral", "baseline_candidates": ["cultural property", "Eastern Orthodox cathedral"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65064873", "label": "Dialektikê. Cahiers de typologie analytique", "source": "Dialektikê: Cahiers de typologie analytique was an academic journal of archaeology published by the \"Centre de palethnographie stratigraphique d'Arudy\" from 1973 to 1987, with Georges Laplace as the editor-in-chief. It was the successor of an earlier journal entitled Cahiers de typologie analytique, published in 1972. The papers published in Dialektikê were mostly based on the presentations given to the \"International seminars on typology\" that Laplace organised yearly in Arudy. The papers were mostly about the methods and the theory of prehistoric archaeology, with a particular focus on lithic analysis and quantitative methods. However, some articles also addressed issues in geology, climatology, computer science, and linguistics.In 2019, Dialektikê was digitalised and published online on the Zenodo repository and on the Internet Archive.", "target": "journal of prehistoric archaeology", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6245525", "label": "John Lumsden", "source": "Sir John Lumsden KBE (14 November 1869 – 3 September 1944) was an Irish physician. He was famous for his role as Chief Medical Officer of Guinness Brewery, during which time he founded both St James's Gate F.C. and the St John Ambulance Brigade of Ireland. During the Easter Rising of 1916, he was noted for treating anyone who was wounded, regardless of which side they fought for.", "target": "Irish physician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18352441", "label": "Doug Otto", "source": "Douglas B. Otto (born 1951) is a business executive who co-founded Deckers Outdoor Corporation whose portfolio includes the UGG Australia brand.", "target": "Corporate executive", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q45680910", "label": "Jordan Milbrath", "source": "Jordan Milbrath (born August 1, 1991) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Minnesota Twins organization.", "target": "American professional baseball pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates of Major League Baseball", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28844162", "label": "Samuel Robinson", "source": "Samuel Blighton Robinson (born 1878) was an English professional footballer who played as a full-back.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7933774", "label": "Virgil I. Grissom Municipal Airport", "source": "Virgil I. Grissom Municipal Airport (IATA: BFR, ICAO: KBFR, FAA LID: BFR) is a public use airport located three nautical miles (6 km) southeast of the central business district of Bedford, a city in Lawrence County, Indiana, United States.The airport is named in honor of Virgil I. Grissom (1926-1967), an Indiana native and U.S. Air Force pilot who was one of the original NASA Project Mercury astronauts.", "target": "airport in Indiana, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24514618", "label": "The Island of Women", "source": "The Island of Women (Spanish: La isla de las mujeres) is a 1953 Mexican film directed by Rafael Baledón and starring Germán Valdés, Lilia del Valle and Fernando Soto. A man is stranded on a desert island which is ruled by women.", "target": "1953 film by Rafael Baledón", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1752414", "label": "Villanueva del Campo", "source": "Villanueva del Campo (Spanish pronunciation: [biʎaˈnweβa ðel ˈkampo]) is a town located in the Province of Zamora, Castile and León, Spain. In ancient Rome, it was called Intercatia.", "target": "municipality of Zamora Province, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5618212", "label": "Gummy Song Skull", "source": "Gummy Song Skull is an EP released by The Flaming Lips as part of the Flaming Lips 2011 series of monthly music releases. This was a limited release contained on a USB keydrive and placed inside a brain-shaped gummy which was further encased in a gummy skull. The EP was only sold in a few record stores in the US, at a price of $150. It has yet to be officially released on any other format.", "target": "extended play by The Flaming Lips", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5741770", "label": "Hermitage", "source": "Hermitage, Tennessee, is a neighborhood, located in eastern Davidson County, adjacent to – and named in honor of – The Hermitage, the historic home of Andrew Jackson, seventh President of the United States. Although the area is incorporated as part of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, it maintains its own identity as a residential and commercial suburban area. Hermitage is located immediately to the east of Donelson, a Nashville borough named in honor of Andrew Jackson's father-in-law John Donelson, and just to the west of Mount Juliet in adjacent Wilson County. Once a rural area, Hermitage is now a thriving district with a highly developed network of retail stores and typical suburban tract houses, ranging from the \"starter home\" to the \"executive residence\". The technology headquarters of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, one of the Big Four auditors, is located in Hermitage, sprawling across 200,000 square feet (19,000 m2) and employing more than 1,000 people. Also including a range of apartment dwellings, Hermitage is a small example of urban sprawl. Major thoroughfares include U.S. Route 70, Interstate 40, and State Route 45. The neighborhood also has a station on the new Music City Star commuter rail service and is home to the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, the organization that administers junior and senior high school sporting events. Hermitage is divided from Donelson by the Stones River and its bottom lands, Clover Bottom. It has benefited from the impoundment of the Stones by J. Percy Priest Dam, a nearby United States Army Corps of Engineers.", "target": "section of Metropolitan Nashville, Tennessee", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5835308", "label": "Rashenan", "source": "Rashenan (Persian: راشنان, also Romanized as Rāshenān and Rāshnān) is a village in Keraj Rural District, in the Central District of Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,772, in 426 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18374731", "label": "Melrose", "source": "Melrose is a city in Stearns County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 3,598 at the 2010 census. It is part of the St. Cloud Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "city in Stearns County, Minnesota, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2477745", "label": "Stefano Casagranda", "source": "Stefano Casagranda (born March 23, 1973 in Borgo Valsugana) is a former Italian racing cyclist. He rode in 11 Grand Tours.", "target": "Italian bicycle racer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15303490", "label": "Decalogue VI", "source": "Dekalog: Six (Polish: Dekalog, sześć) is the sixth part of Dekalog, the drama series of films directed by Polish director Krzysztof Kieślowski for television, possibly connected to the sixth imperative of the Ten Commandments: \"Thou shalt not commit adultery.\" A naive young man, Tomek (Olaf Lubaszenko), spies on a woman, Magda (Grażyna Szapołowska), and falls in love with her. An extended 86-minute feature version of this film is called Krótki film o miłości (A Short Film About Love).Along with Dekalog: Five, the film screened in the Cannes Classics section at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.", "target": "1988 film from cycle directed by Krzysztof Kieślowski", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7899503", "label": "Upwords", "source": "Upwords (at one time branded as Scrabble Upwords in the United States and Canada; and Topwords Crucimaster, Betutorony, Palabras Arriba or Stapelwoord in other countries) is a board game invented by Elliot Rudell and originally published by the Milton Bradley Company, now a division of Hasbro. Worldwide marketing rights to Upwords have been licensed to Spin Master Inc. by Rudell Design, LLC as of 2018. Upwords is similar to Scrabble or Words With Friends, in that players build words using letter tiles on a gridded gameboard. The point of difference is that in Upwords letters can be stacked on top of other letters already on the gameboard to create new words. The higher the stack of letters, the more points are scored. This typically makes words built in later turns of the game more valuable than earlier words, increasing play intensity and adding a level of strategy unique to Upwords. The memorization of two-letter words is considered a useful skill in this game.Unlike Scrabble, which is manufactured in the U.S. and Canada by Hasbro and elsewhere in the world by Mattel, Upwords is solely controlled by Spin Master. As of August 2019 the game is being relaunched and will be available in other countries around the world. In the past and while under license from Hasbro, Upwords was available in about twenty languages. There have been national tournaments played in Hungary and Turkey.", "target": "Board game", "baseline_candidates": ["board game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86003164", "label": "Faith Babb", "source": "Faith L. Babb OBE was a member of the House of Representatives of Belize representing Collet from 1993 to 1998, for the United Democratic Party. She was Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives and Minister of State of Youth Development and Human Resources during this period.She was appointed as a JP in 1980. She was an executive member of the National Women's Commission which brought about the creation of a women's department in the government, replacing the previous women's bureau. When she was elected in Collet in 1993 it was with a majority of just one vote: 951 to 950, with 10 votes for an independent candidate and 3 rejected ballots.In 2010 she was honoured with the Order of Distinction.She was appointed OBE in the 2020 New Year Honours \"For services to the Community to Politics and to Womens development\".", "target": "Belizean politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q489612", "label": "Vivid: Kissing You, Sparkling, Joyful Smile", "source": "\"Vivid\" is BoA's 26th Japanese single which is BoA's first double A-side single to include two PVs for the A-sides. In addition to the track \"Kissing You\", the single also includes the songs \"Sparkling\" and \"Joyful Smile\". The single was released on June 4, 2008. \"Kissing You\" and \"Joyful Smile\" are R&B songs while \"Sparkling\" is consumed as a breakbeat song. The single debuted at #3 with first-day sales of 7,936 copies, according to the Oricon. \"Kissing You\" was used as the drama Shichinin no Onna Bengoshi's theme song.", "target": "single by BoA", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16185632", "label": "Mardi Tindal", "source": "Mardi Tindal (born 1952) was the 40th Moderator of the United Church of Canada from 2009–2012, only the fourth layperson to take the post since the church was formed in 1925.", "target": "former leader of the United Church of Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17635973", "label": "Shadow Over Elveron", "source": "Shadow Over Elveron is a 1968 television crime drama film directed by James Goldstone and starring James Franciscus, Shirley Knight, and Leslie Nielsen. It aired on NBC in March 1968. The story is based on the novel Shadow Over Elveron by Michael Kingsley.", "target": "1968 television film", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7732201", "label": "Energy and Resources Institute", "source": "The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) is a research institute in New Delhi that specializes in the fields of energy, environment and sustainable development. Established in 1974, it was formerly known as the Tata Energy Research Institute. As the scope of its activities widened, it was renamed The Energy and Resources Institute in 2003.", "target": "research institute based in New Delhi", "baseline_candidates": ["nonprofit organization", "research institute"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q587922", "label": "San Lorenzo Department", "source": "San Lorenzo is a department of Chaco Province in Argentina. The provincial subdivision has a population of about 14,000 inhabitants in an area of 2,135 km2 (824 sq mi), and its capital city is Villa Berthet, which is located around 1,190 km (740 mi) from the Capital federal.", "target": "in Chaco Province, Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["department of Argentina"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6787316", "label": "Mathrubhoomi", "source": "Mathru Bhoomi is a 1939 Indian Tamil-language film directed by H. M. Reddy. It was an adaptation of the Bengali stage play Chandragupta by Dwijendralal Ray.", "target": "1939 film directed by H. M. Reddy", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11926559", "label": "IMP", "source": "IMP is a Spanish-British 3D animated comedy series created by Andy Fielding which takes place in the lair of a minor devil known as \"The Imp\" and his surroundings. Though the Imp tries and declares himself to be the embodiment of pure evil, he is more childish and petty than truly diabolical, and though he tries to fill the world with sin and suffering, he is far too small and incompetent to make a good job of it. Other characters in the show include Bob, the rabbit-eared, highly competent, and rather sardonic caretaker of the lair; the moronic, muscle-bound twin monsters Philippe and Bertrand; a helpful Hand on wheels; Lumen, who, dressed in all white and determined to spread sweetness and light, is regarded by the IMP as his nemesis; the IMP's rival Cat-Thing, who continually seeks to destroy him (unsuccessfully); and the Big Boss (the devil himself, and actually once referred to as \"Satan\"). IMP was also a part of Cartoon Network's Sunday Pants. The Imp was developed in black and white with a minimalist design. The series was created by the Production house, Red Kite Animations, developed with Screen 21 and distributed by BRB Internacional where it aired on TVC and consists of 65 episodes of 90 seconds each. IMP has been issued in major chains from different countries like Cartoon Network, Disney Channel Japan, TVC and Antena 3 in Spain. Voiced by Stephen Mangan (The Imp) and Julian Rhind-Tutt (Bob) from the UK TV series Green Wing.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5853449", "label": "Abbasabad, Kuhbanan", "source": "Abbasabad (Persian: عباس اباد, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Javar Rural District, in the Central District of Kuhbanan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 72, in 19 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60767690", "label": "Labyrinth of Jareth Masquerade Ball", "source": "The Labyrinth of Jareth Masquerade Ball, shortened to LOJ or simply known as the Labyrinth Masquerade Ball, is an annual masquerade ball and cosplay event in Los Angeles, California. The ball was first held in 1997.", "target": "annual costume event in Los Angeles, CA, US", "baseline_candidates": ["recurring event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q829275", "label": "Fabien Lévy", "source": "Fabien Lévy (born 11 December 1968) is a French composer.", "target": "French composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5199483", "label": "Cymbium senegalensis", "source": "Cymbium senegalense is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Volutidae, the volutes.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7683582", "label": "Tanktics", "source": "Tanktics is a strategy video game developed by DMA Design for Microsoft Windows. It was published by Interplay in 1999.The objective of the game is to progress through four time periods, building and controlling tanks from that period to fight the \"evil black tanks\" from a more advanced period. Tanks are constructed by hand out of parts, which are randomly constructed by a factory (the \"Part-o-Matic\") in the player's base when it is provided with resources. Different parts may offer the ability to cross different terrain, offensive capabilities more suitable to current tactics, and so forth. The player's primary control is \"the crane\", a flying magnet (held by, for example, a pterodactyl in the first, ancient time period) which can pick up and drop single parts. A suitable pile of parts becomes a tank, which can be selected and ordered to move by the magnet. The game also has a strong puzzle element. The magnet can also pick up boulders (e.g. for blocking off enemy routes) and sheep (which can be used to increase the factory's production rate, amongst other things), and there are various terrain types with lasting effects. For example, driving a tank through mud will make it dirty, causing them to move more slowly until washed. Some maps have buttons on them which can only be activated by tanks with sufficient combat experience, and it can take considerable foresight to ensure that a tank will be able to survive to that level and be able to reach the button. Dissassembling a tank will.", "target": "1999 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7742151", "label": "The Insider: The Private Diaries of a Scandalous Decade", "source": "The Insider: The Private Diaries of a Scandalous Decade is a book written in diary form by Piers Morgan documenting his time as editor of the News of the World and Daily Mirror. It was serialised by the Daily Mail.Although the book is presented as a diary, many reviewers expressed scepticism that the diaries were actually composed during Morgan's tenure as a tabloid editor. Andrew Anthony of The Observer noted the use of the phrase \"axis of evil\" in an entry two months prior to its use by George W. Bush in his 2002 State of the Union address. The phrase was removed from the subsequent paperback version. Most reviewers were of the opinion that the book was written after the fact at the suggestion of his literary agent and is, consequently, of little use to historians. Sam Leith of The Spectator called the conversations, in particular, \"imaginatively reconstructed – as betrayed in some very weird dialogue\". David Smith of The Observer felt that the book's contents should \"never...be swallowed without a spoonful of salt\".The Insider begins with an account of the story that ultimately resulted his dismissal from Daily Mirror, namely the publication, in 2004, of several photographs purporting to show the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by British troops but which were subsequently found to have been faked. Morgan also recounts a commiseratory dinner marking the paper's decision which was hosted by the Prime Minister and his wife at which Morgan was a guest. Other entries include an account of the theft of text from.", "target": "book by Piers Morgan", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6530766", "label": "Leslie Donovan", "source": "Leslie D. \"Les\" Donovan, Sr. (May 5, 1936) was a Republican member of the Kansas Senate, representing the 27th district from 1997 to 2017. He was the Assistant Majority Leader in 2001 and was a delegate to the National Republican Convention in 2000. He was a Kansas Representative from 1992 to 1997. He is an auto dealer from Wichita.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31793", "label": "Franz Xaver Schwarz", "source": "Franz Xaver Schwarz (27 November 1875 – 2 December 1947) was a high ranking German Nazi Party official who served as Reichsschatzmeister (National Treasurer) of the Party throughout most of its existence. He was also one of the highest ranking members of the Schutzstaffel (SS).", "target": "politician from Germany (1875-1947)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7174948", "label": "Peter Jansen", "source": "Peter Jansen (1852–1923) was a Beatrice, Nebraska sheep rancher and Nebraska state representative and senator.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12478091", "label": "Congregatio Discipulorum Domini", "source": "Congregation of the Disciples of the Lord (also known as, Congregatio Discipulorum Domini also its translation in Latin) is a Catholic religious institute, founded by future Cardinal Celso Costantini, an Italian, on 4 January 1927 at Xuanhua (Süanhwafu) of Hebei Province in China. It was the only Catholic institute to be established in Asia.", "target": "Catholic religious institute", "baseline_candidates": ["religious congregation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60286861", "label": "Gary McDermott", "source": "Gary Don McDermott (born June 9, 1946) is a former American football running back in the American Football League and National Football League who played for the Buffalo Bills and Atlanta Falcons. He played college football for the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.", "target": "American football running back", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17149840", "label": "Nabil Maleh", "source": "Nabil Maleh (September 28, 1936 – February 24, 2016) was a Syrian film director, screenwriter, producer, painter and poet; he is thought to be a father of Syrian cinema. Nabil has published more than 1,000 articles short stories, essays and poems. He is the writer and director of 120 short, experimental and documentary works and 12 feature-length films including The Extras and The Leopard. He has more than 60 awards at international film festivals, including several lifetime achievement awards. Several of his films are in the curriculum of international film schools and he has taught film direction, acting, writing and aesthetics at many universities, centers and associations, including the University of Texas at Austin and the University of California in Los Angeles.", "target": "Syrian film director and painter (1936-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4762564", "label": "Angela Sun", "source": "Angela Sun (born October 19, 1979) is an American journalist, television presenter, sportscaster, and documentary filmmaker.", "target": "American journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q74263217", "label": "Abdul Rahman", "source": "Abdul Rahman (born 22 November 2001) is an Afghan cricketer. He made his first-class debut on 16 April 2019, for Kabul Region in the 2019 Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament. He made his Twenty20 debut on 13 October 2019, for Kabul Eagles in the 2019 Shpageeza Cricket League.In December 2019, he was named in Afghanistan's squad for the 2020 Under-19 Cricket World Cup. In July 2021, Abdul was named in Afghanistan's One Day International (ODI) squad for their series against Pakistan. He made his List A debut on 17 October 2021, for Band-e-Amir Region in the 2021 Ghazi Amanullah Khan Regional One Day Tournament.", "target": "Afghan cricketer born 2001", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66305418", "label": "Bad Frank", "source": "Bad Frank is an independent action film written and directed by Tony Germinario. It stars Kevin Interdonato, Amanda Clayton and Tom Sizemore.", "target": "2017 film by Tony Germinario", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3575375", "label": "Zhang Qinlin", "source": "Zhang Qinlin (1888–1967) was an influential martial artist, teacher, and lineage holder of the Yangjia Michuan (Yang family hidden tradition) style of t’ai chi ch’uan. In 1929, Zhang won the All China Fighting Championship in the unarmed division.", "target": "Chinese martial artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2523325", "label": "Dikenli", "source": "Dikenli is a village in the Korgun district of Çankırı Province in Turkey.", "target": "köy in Korgun, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5596252", "label": "Grant Hedger", "source": "Grant Hedger (Bondi, New South Wales) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1970s. He played in Australia's major competition - the New South Wales Rugby League (NSWRL). Hedger played for the Eastern Suburbs club, progressing through the lower grades he made his 1st grade debut in 1975. The hard working Rugby league Forward played in 36 matches for the Eastern Suburbs Roosters in the years 1975–78. During the 1976 NSWRFL season, Hedger played in the forwards to help Eastern Suburbs claim victory in their unofficial 1976 World Club Challenge match against British champions St. Helens in Sydney. During his first season Hedger was a member of Easts' premiership winning side that defeated St George by a record 38-0 margin.", "target": "Australian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19519638", "label": "Raymond Kysar", "source": "Raymond Lynn Kysar, Jr. (born February 15, 1931) was an American politician who was a Republican member of the New Mexico State Senate from 1989 to 2005. He attended New Mexico State University and worked in the construction, insurance, ranching, and real estate industries. He was inducted into the New Mexico State University College of Business Hall of Fame in 1999.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4134107", "label": "Znaur Gassiev", "source": "Znaur Nikolayevich Gassiyev (Ossetian: Гасситы Никъалайы фырт Знауыр / Gaššite Nikhalaye fert Znawer, Georgian: ზნაურ გასიევი, Russian: Знаур Николаевич Гассиев; 17 March 1925 – 6 March 2016) was a South Ossetian politician, who was one of the leaders of the South Ossetian independence movement in the early 1990s, which culminated in the 1991–1992 South Ossetia War.", "target": "Head of State of South Ossetia, 1991-1992", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55247332", "label": "Moss Landing Power Plant", "source": "The Moss Landing Power Plant is a natural gas powered electricity generation plant located in Moss Landing, California, United States, at the midpoint of Monterey Bay. Its large stacks are landmarks, visible throughout the Monterey Bay Area. The plant is owned and operated by Houston-based Dynegy and currently has a generation capacity of 1020 MW (net) from its two combined cycle generation units. It was once the largest power plant in the state of California, with a generation capacity of 2560 MW, before its two large supercritical steam units were retired in 2016. It is to be the site of a new battery storage power station for grid battery storage of over 567 MW / 2,270 MWh of power, potentially the world's largest when completed.", "target": "Natural gas-fired power station in Moss Landing, California", "baseline_candidates": ["gas turbine power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3180949", "label": "John Avery", "source": "John Edward Avery, Jr. (born January 11, 1976) is a former professional Canadian football and American football player. He last played with the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League, but also played with the National Football League (Miami Dolphins, Denver Broncos and Minnesota Vikings) and the XFL (Chicago Enforcers).", "target": "Player of American and Canadian football", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5528758", "label": "Gayelord Hauser", "source": "Benjamin Gayelord Hauser (May 17, 1895 - December 26, 1984), popularly known as Gayelord Hauser, was an American nutritionist and self-help author, who promoted the 'natural way of eating' during the mid-20th century. He promoted foods rich in vitamin B and discouraged consumption of sugar and white flour. He rose to fame as a self-help author, popular on the lecture and social circuits, and was nutritional advisor to many celebrities. Hauser was supported by many film stars but was often in conflict with the medical community. He promised people they could add years to their life by eating five \"wonder foods\": blackstrap molasses, brewer's yeast, skimmed milk, wheat germ and yogurt. He was criticized as a \"food faddist\" and his dieting ideas were described by medical doctors as pseudoscientific and quackery.", "target": "American nutritionist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q128789", "label": "Řídelov", "source": "Řídelov (Czech pronunciation: [ˈr̝iːdɛlof]) is a village and municipality (obec) in Jihlava District in the Vysočina Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 6.53 square kilometres (2.52 sq mi), and has a population of 92 (as at 3 July 2006). Řídelov lies approximately 22 kilometres (14 mi) south-west of Jihlava and 118 km (73 mi) south-east of Prague.", "target": "village in Jihlava District of Vysočina region", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of the Czech Republic"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55605947", "label": "Brimmon Oak", "source": "The Brimmon Oak is a veteran tree in Newtown, Powys, Wales. An English oak, it is thought to be around 500 years old and has been on land farmed by the same family since the 1600s. The tree was scheduled to be felled as part of the construction of the A483 Newtown Bypass in 2015 but was saved as the result of a petition. The tree was named both Welsh and British Tree of the Year for 2016 and was runner up in the European Tree of the Year awards of 2017.", "target": "pedunculate oak tree near Newtown, Powys, Wales", "baseline_candidates": ["Tree of the year (Wales)", "remarkable tree"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1892995", "label": "mixtape", "source": "A mixtape (alternatively mix-tape, mix tape or mixed tape) is a compilation of music, typically from multiple sources, recorded onto a medium. With origins in the 1980s, the term normally describes a homemade compilation of music onto a cassette tape, CD, or digital playlist. The songs are either ordered sequentially or made into a continuous programme by beatmatching the songs and creating seamless transitions at their beginnings and endings with fades or abrupt edits. Essayist Geoffrey O'Brien described this definition of the mixtape as \"perhaps the most widely practiced American art form\".In hip hop and R&B culture, a mixtape often describes a self-produced or independently released album issued free of charge to gain publicity or avoid possible copyright infringement. However, the term has been applied to a number of releases published for profit in the 2010s, and the line between a release billed as a mixtape and one referred to as a studio album or extended play has become increasingly blurred.", "target": "compilation of songs recorded onto any audio format", "baseline_candidates": ["album", "album type"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5201441", "label": "Czachów, Masovian Voivodeship", "source": "Czachów [ˈt͡ʂaxuf] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jasieniec, within Grójec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) south-east of Grójec and 43 km (27 mi) south of Warsaw.", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2090443", "label": "Carnesville", "source": "Carnesville is a city in Franklin County, Georgia, United States, and the county seat. The population was 577 at the 2010 census.", "target": "county seat in Franklin County, Georgia, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["county seat", "municipality of Georgia", "city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22005374", "label": "Philip Hudson", "source": "Philip Martin Hudson (16 October 1910 – 9 July 2002) was an Australian politician. He was born in North Sydney to manufacturer Tom Johnstone Hudson and Edith Grace Dickison. He attended Melbourne Grammar School and began studying commerce at the University of Melbourne, but he did not complete this as he enlisted in the AIF in 1940, serving in the Middle East, New Guinea and Borneo. After the war he remained in the Citizen Military Forces, rising to the rank of major. On 20 July 1940 he married Hilary Rutherford Hay; they had two sons. From 1949 he was a director of Hudson Industries manufacturing firm, becoming managing director in 1952. He was also a director of the Eno Box Company from 1949. In 1964 he was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly as the Liberal and Country Party member for Toorak. His seat was abolished in 1967 and he retired after a single term. He retired from his business career in 1975 and became chairman of the Victorian League for Commonwealth Friendship, a position he held until 1977. From 1990 to 2000 he was president of the Barwon Heads branch of the Returned and Services League. Hudson died in 2002.", "target": "Australian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3513870", "label": "Stig'o ćumur", "source": "Stig'o ćumur is the third studio album of Bosnian rapper Edo Maajka, which was released 30 March 2006. \"Listen to folk, dance, house, and the rest of the scene. No one is forcing you to listen to me,\" Edo says in the first track of his third album, in which he dedicates the album to Breza's coal miners and the hard life of coal mining.", "target": "album by Edo Maajka", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7592010", "label": "St. Thomas the Apostle's Church", "source": "St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church was a church located at 8363 and 8383 Townsend Avenue in Detroit, Michigan. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989, but was subsequently demolished.", "target": "church building in Detroit, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17071096", "label": "outline of Sikkim", "source": "The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Sikkim: Sikkim – landlocked state of India, the last to give up its monarchy and fully integrate into India, in 1975. With 607,688 inhabitants as of the 2011 census, Sikkim is the least populous state in India and the second-smallest state after Goa in total area, covering approximately 7,096 km2 (2,740 sq mi). Sikkim is nonetheless geographically diverse due to its location in the Himalayas; the climate ranges from subtropical to high alpine, and Kangchenjunga, the world's third-highest peak, is located on Sikkim's border with Nepal.", "target": "overview of and topical guide to Sikkim", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia outline article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5216516", "label": "Daniel Bedemi", "source": "Daniel Bedemi (born 17 July 1988) is a Nigerian professional footballer.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35730950", "label": "Międzylesie", "source": "Międzylesie [mʲɛnd͡zɨˈlɛɕɛ] (German: Mittelwalde) is a town in Kłodzko County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It is the seat of the administrative district (gmina) called Gmina Międzylesie, close to the Czech border. It lies approximately 33 kilometres (21 mi) south of Kłodzko, and 112 kilometres (70 mi) south of the regional capital Wrocław. As at 2019, the town has a population of 2,575.", "target": "city of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Poland", "human settlement", "city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1769848", "label": "Norwegian Parliamentary Intelligence Oversight Committee", "source": "Parliament's Intelligence Oversight Committee (Norwegian: Stortingets kontrollutvalg for etterretnings-, overvåkings- og sikkerhetstjeneste), commonly known as the EOS Committee (Norwegian: EOS-utvalget) is Norway's body responsible for supervising public intelligence, surveillance and security services. The body has seven members and is appointed by the Parliament of Norway. The oversight is aimed at the Norwegian Intelligence Service (NIS), the Norwegian Police Security Service (PST), the National Security Authority (NSM) and the Norwegian Defence Security Service (NORDSS) —these are collectively known as the EOS-services. The committee also oversees intelligence, surveillance and security services that are organized through other public bodies.The work is performed through inspections, both at head offices and at local units. The committee can also investigate matters reported by individuals or on their own initiative. The goal is to safeguard the public by retaining the services within the limits of the law. The committee files an annual report to the parliament, but it is limited due to the amount of classified information that the committee handles. All the members have the highest level of security clearance, both nationally and within NATO.The committee was established in 1996, following the findings and subsequent public debate related to the Lund Commission. It had concluded that the Norwegian Police Security Service had been involved in extensive illegal political surveillance of left-winged organizations and individuals, in particular during the 1960s and 1970s. The establishment of an oversight committee dealt with a political wish to control the EOS-services and to ensure to not repeat past illegalities. The first committee was appointed in March 1996,.", "target": "Reading expands your knowledge", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q567278", "label": "Winterborn", "source": "Winterborn is a municipality in the Donnersbergkreis district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7060656", "label": "Norton Manor Camp", "source": "Norton Manor Camp, also known RM Norton Manor is a Royal Marines base located near Norton Fitzwarren, 2 miles (3.2 km) north west of Taunton, Somerset, in England. It is home to 40 Commando. In 2016, the government announced that Norton Manor Camp would be closed by 2028. However, this decision was reversed in February 2019 following a successful local campaign.", "target": "Royal Marines military camp located in the civil parish of Norton Fitzwarren, Somerset, England", "baseline_candidates": ["military camp"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60771608", "label": "Dororo", "source": "Dororo (Japanese: どろろ) is a 2019 anime television series produced by MAPPA and Tezuka Productions based on the manga of the same name by Osamu Tezuka, and is a re-adaptation of the previous 1969 series. The adaptation departs from the source material in several ways, but follows the basic premise of the manga: a young ronin, named Hyakkimaru, along with a young child, Dororo, must face multiple demons in Sengoku-era Japan who have stolen his various body parts in order to get them back. The remake of Dororo was a production by Manabu Otsuka from MAPPA. The main innovation was the new portrayal of Hyakkimaru, a weaker samurai than the one written by the late Tezuka with director Kazuhiro Furuhashi among other staff member conceiving the alternate of take of the young swordsman becoming a new person following his journey with Dororo in a similar manner to buddy films. The series is also present in English release through Sentai Filmworks and Amazon Prime. The series was well received by critics from anime who often listed it as one of the best anime from 2019. The characterization of Hyakkimaru and Dororo was often praised as well as how they develop as how the former's family is also explored. However, some writers felt some episodic narratives did not have the same appeal as the earlier ones.", "target": "2019 Japanese anime television series", "baseline_candidates": ["anime television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5174744", "label": "NGC 1725", "source": "NGC 1725 is a lenticular galaxy in the constellation Eridanus. The galaxy is listed in the New General Catalogue. It was discovered on November 10, 1885 by the astronomer Edward Emerson Barnard.In 2009, a type Ia supernova was detected within NGC 1725. It was subsequently designated SN 2009F.", "target": "elliptical galaxy in the constellation Eridanus", "baseline_candidates": ["lenticular galaxy", "galaxy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3842760", "label": "Madonna and Child, with Saints Lawrence and Julian", "source": "Madonna and Child with Saints Julian and Lawrence is a c. 1423–1425 tempera and gold leaf on panel painting by Gentile da Fabriano. It is now in the Frick Collection in New York. To the left is saint Lawrence in a deacon's dalmatic and holding the gridiron of his martyrdom, whilst to the right is Saint Julian.It dates from Gentile's Florentine period, between his more Gothic Adoration of the Magi and the Renaissance references of his Quaratesi Polyptych. It is in its original frame, which is also typical of Tuscany, with small pillars, pointed leaves and the inscription \"S[an]c[tus] Laure[n]tius\" e \"S[an]C[tus] Iulianus\" (Saint Lawrence and Saint Julian). The cover of the Madonna's throne is simpler than that of the rich fabrics in the artist's Coronation of the Virgin, instead showing a more sculptural and simple red drape recalling the work of Lorenzo Monaco. The composition of the saints, almost side on, referring to Florentine works such as those of Masaccio, especially the San Giovenale Triptych.", "target": "painting by Gentile da Fabriano", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q404484", "label": "Puyang", "source": "Puyang is a prefecture-level city in northeastern Henan province, People's Republic of China. Located on the northern shore of the Yellow River, it borders Anyang in the west, Xinxiang in the southwest, and the provinces of Shandong and Hebei in the east and north respectively. As of the 2020 census,its total population was 3,772,088 and its built-up (or metro) area made of Hualong district, Puyang County and Qingfeng County largely being conurbated, was home to 2,524,658 inhabitants.", "target": "prefecture-level city in Henan, China", "baseline_candidates": ["million city", "prefecture-level city", "big city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27924959", "label": "William Prosser", "source": "William David Prosser, Lord Prosser QC LLB PC (1934–2015) was a Scottish judge and an advocate for the arts in Edinburgh.", "target": "Scottish judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14286157", "label": "Taylor Vancil", "source": "Taylor Danielle Vancil (born May 18, 1991) is a retired American professional women's soccer player who was a goalkeeper for Chicago Red Stars in the National Women's Soccer League.", "target": "American professional soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14214391", "label": "Londres", "source": "Londres is a small tourist town in the Belén Department of Catamarca Province, Argentina. It is situated at 1,170 m (3,839 ft) above sea level alongside the Ruta Nacional 40. It is at the foot of Shincal mountains, near the Quimivil river and is traditionally divided into two parts \"Arriba\" (Spanish for Upper) and \"Abajo\" (for Lower), divided by the \"Hondo\" River.", "target": "city in Catamarca, Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q324641", "label": "Gauliga Mitte", "source": "The Gauliga Mitte was the highest football league in the Prussian province of Saxony and the German states of Thuringia and Anhalt from 1933 to 1945, all located in the center (German:Mitte) of Germany. Shortly after the formation of the league, the Nazis reorganised the administrative regions in Germany, and the Gaue Thuringia, Magdeburg-Anhalt and Halle-Merseburg replaced the states and Prussian province.", "target": "football league", "baseline_candidates": ["sports competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28948928", "label": "Brenda Miller", "source": "Brenda Miller (born 1941) is an American post-minimalist visual artist. She has shown her work in the 1973 Whitney Biennial, as well as eight exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art. Born in the Bronx, she studied at Parsons and University of New Mexico, and received and MFA from Tulane University in 1967, before moving back to New York City. She received three National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships (1976, 1979, and 1987). Her work is in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, and the Harvard Art Museums.", "target": "American post-minimalist visual artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75708420", "label": "Princess Marilène of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven", "source": "Princess Marilène of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven-van den Broek (née Marie-Hélène Angela van den Broek; 4 February 1970) is the wife of Prince Maurits of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven, and was thereby member of the Dutch Royal House until King Willem-Alexander's accession in 2013 rendered Prince Maurits too distantly related to the reigning monarch. She remains a member of the larger Dutch Royal Family.", "target": "Dutch princess; wife of Prince Maurits of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55218625", "label": "Lauren Ewing", "source": "Lauren Ewing (born 1946) is an American sculptor and installation artist.Ewing grew up in Indiana and earned her Master of Fine Arts degree from Indiana State University (ISU) in 1971. While at ISU, Ewing was influenced by professor Robert Bastian, who worked with and wrote about architectural typology. She has said she is inspired by the social memory of communities, which provide \"a wider reading of our culture.\" Ewing is a former head of the Rhode Island School of Design Department of Sculpture and taught sculpture at Rutgers University for 32 years.Her work is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Brooklyn Museum.", "target": "American artist (born 1946)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q319419", "label": "Maximiliano Hernández Martínez", "source": "Maximiliano Hernández Martínez (20 October 1882 – 15 May 1966) was the President of El Salvador from 4 December 1931 to 28 August 1934 in an acting capacity and again in an official capacity from 1 March 1935 until his resignation on 9 May 1944. He was the leader of El Salvador during World War II. While he served as President Arturo Araujo's Vice President and defense minister, a directorate seized power during a palace coup and afterwards named General Hernández Martínez President of El Salvador. He was President of El Salvador for almost 12 years and ruled the nation with an authoritarian one party state led by the fascistic and anti-communist National Pro Patria Party. His rule was marked by rigged and fraudulent elections and brutality, most notably the 1932 Salvadoran peasant massacre, known as La Matanza (\"The Massacre\"). Under his rule, El Salvador joined the Allied Powers during World War II on 8 December 1941 following the Bombing of Pearl Harbor. He modernized the nation through infrastructure projects such as the Pan-American Highway and the Cuscatlán Bridge. He also established the Central Reserve Bank, but he was eventually forced to resign on 9 May 1944 after a military mutiny the month prior and massive civil unrest.", "target": "president of El Salvador (1878-1966)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q671310", "label": "Jarosławiec Lighthouse", "source": "Jarosławiec Lighthouse (Polish: Latarnia Morska Jarosławiec) is a lighthouse located on the Polish coast of the Baltic Sea. The lighthouse is located in Jarosławiec, West Pomeranian Voivodeship; in Poland.The lighthouse is located in between the Darłowo (15 km to the west), and the lighthouse in Ustka.", "target": "lighthouse in Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["lighthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73425980", "label": "Wadsworth E. Pohl", "source": "Wadsworth Egmont Pohl (born February 13, 1908 in Redlands, California - February 12, 1990 in Los Angeles) was an American engineer and inventor who won a Technical Award in 1964, and was credited with the invention or development of the Sodium vapor process and the bluescreen process.", "target": "patent holder (1908-1990)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19665508", "label": "Issac Koga", "source": "Issac Koga (古賀 逸策, Koga Issaku, December 5, 1899 – September 2, 1982) was an inventor and scientist.", "target": "Japanese electronics researcher/engineer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5719846", "label": "Henry Cotton", "source": "Henry Cotton (1789 –1879) was an Anglo-Irish churchman, ecclesiastical historian and author.", "target": "British historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5319914", "label": "Dzikowo, Gorzów County", "source": "Dzikowo [d͡ʑiˈkɔvɔ] (German: Wildwiese) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lubiszyn, within Gorzów County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-east of Lubiszyn and 20 km (12 mi) north-west of Gorzów Wielkopolski.", "target": "village in Lubusz, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20650066", "label": "You're the One", "source": "You're the One is a 1941 American comedy film directed by Ralph Murphy and written by Gene Markey. The film stars Bonnie Baker, Orrin Tucker, Albert Dekker, Edward Everett Horton, Lillian Cornell, Renie Riano and Jerry Colonna. The film was released on February 19, 1941, by Paramount Pictures.", "target": "1941 film by Ralph Murphy", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23822290", "label": "Douglas Bischoff", "source": "Douglas G. Bischoff (1926–12 May 1991) was a professional optometrist, Republican politician and party worker in Utah. He served as Deputy Chief of Staff to Utah Governor Norman H. Bangerter, after serving as a state senator. He was a leader in the Utah Republican Party, serving as Republican Party Chairman and chairing Ronald Reagan's presidential campaigns in the state. He was elected to the Utah State Senate three times between 1969 and 1976.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22673570", "label": "Diana Mitchell", "source": "Diana Mary Mitchell (née Coates; 16 November 1932 – 8 January 2016) was a Zimbabwean political activist and writer, who was an outspoken critic of the governments of Ian Smith and Robert Mugabe.", "target": "Zimbabwean political activist, historian and writer (1932-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28162886", "label": "Brazil men's national under-23 volleyball team", "source": "The Brazil men's national under-23 volleyball team represents Brazil in international men's volleyball competitions and friendly matches under the age 23 and it is ruled by the Brazilian Volleyball Federation that is a member of South American volleyball body Confederación Sudamericana de Voleibol (CSV) and the international volleyball body government the Federation Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB).", "target": "men's national volleyball team representing Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["national sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24037388", "label": "The Tide, the Thief & River's End", "source": "The Tide, the Thief & River's End is the second studio album by Australian progressive rock band Caligula's Horse. It was released through Welkin Records on 4 October 2013. The album was recorded by Sam Vallen, Dale Prinsse and Zac Greensill at Heaven's Gate Studios in Brisbane. The album was produced by guitarist Sam Vallen.", "target": "album by Caligula's Horse", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q140889", "label": "1569 Evita", "source": "1569 Evita, provisional designation 1948 PA, is a dark background asteroid from the outer regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 36 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 3 August 1948, by astronomer Miguel Itzigsohn at the La Plata Astronomical Observatory in Argentina. The asteroid was named after Eva Perón.", "target": "asteroid", "baseline_candidates": ["asteroid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15632040", "label": "One Airlines", "source": "One Airlines was a Chilean airline that provided air transportation for passengers and regular charters for mining, since October 2013. Initially they used a fleet of two Boeing 737-400s, operated by Xtra Airlines. It was in a semi-operational state, flying for mining operations in northern Chile, operating with a single 737-300 leased from GECAS. It had its headquarters established in the Comodoro Arturo Merino Benítez International Airport in Santiago de Chile. On June 24, 2020, the airline ceased all operations.", "target": "Defunct Chilean Airline", "baseline_candidates": ["airline"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22018671", "label": "Kathleen Hewitt", "source": "Kathleen Hewitt (b. Darjeeling, 11 November 1893 – d. London, 12 June 1980) was a British author and playwright. She wrote more than 20 novels during her lifetime. She also wrote at least one novel under the pseudonym Dorothea Martin, and edited the writing of West African journalist Marjorie Mensah. Hewitt mainly wrote mystery and thriller novels, with a style comparable to Agatha Christie. She was married to the marine painter Neville Sotheby Pitcher, whom she later divorced. Hewitt was also a frequent contributor to Lilliput magazine. Her plays included The Man Who Meant Well and African Shadows. Kathleen Hewitt was part of the 1930s artistic set in London that included Meum Stewart, Jacob Epstein and Dylan Thomas. She was a friend of the poet Roy Campbell and his wife Mary Campbell, a painter, and dedicated her book Decoration to them. She lived at various times in South Africa and Nigeria, in Reading, Berks, and Brighton, Sussex. In London she lived in the Edgware Road and at 2 Coningsby Road, South Ealing.", "target": "British author and playwright", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5479043", "label": "Francesc Ramírez", "source": "Francesc Ramirez (born 7 September 1976) is an Andorran footballer. He has played for the Andorra national team and Santa Coloma.", "target": "Andorran footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1009128", "label": "General Güemes Department, Chaco", "source": "General Güemes is the largest and the northernmost department of Chaco Province in Argentina. The provincial subdivision has a population of about 62,000 inhabitants in an area of 25,487 km², and its capital city is Juan José Castelli, which is located around 1,305 km from the Capital federal.", "target": "department of Argentina", "baseline_candidates": ["department of Argentina"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16168756", "label": "Erik Černák", "source": "Erik Černák (born 28 May 1997) is a Slovak professional ice hockey defenceman for the Tampa Bay Lightning of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was selected by the Los Angeles Kings in the second round, 43rd overall, in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft. Černák won back-to-back Stanley Cup championships with the Lightning in 2020 and 2021.", "target": "Slovak ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6660043", "label": "Liz Barker", "source": "Elizabeth Jane Barker (born 16 May 1975) is an English television presenter, best known for her work on Blue Peter in the early 2000's.", "target": "British journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97247239", "label": "Shahadat Hossain Chowdhury", "source": "Shahadat Hossain Chowdhury is a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and the former Member of Parliament of Chittagong-12.", "target": "Bangladeshi politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19750053", "label": "Lubhoo", "source": "Lubhu (Nepal Bhasa: लुभू) is a place that is part of Mahalaxmi Municipality in Bagmati Province of central Nepal. Lubhu is a sub-urban Newar place situated seven kilometers east of Kathmandu in northern part of Lalitpur, Nepal.", "target": "Village Development Committee in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5094598", "label": "Cheyenne Regional Medical Center", "source": "Cheyenne Regional Medical Center (CRMC) is a hospital located in Cheyenne, Wyoming, USA. CRMC is divided into three campuses.", "target": "healthcare organization in Cheyenne, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["hospital", "medical organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6221589", "label": "John Benson", "source": "Sir John Benson ICE (1812 – 17 October 1874) was an Irish architect, born in Collooney, County Sligo. Although most of his work was in Cork, he was knighted for his design for the Dublin Great Industrial Exhibition.", "target": "Irish architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q184186", "label": "original sin", "source": "Original sin is the Christian doctrine that holds that humans, through the fact of birth, inherit a tainted nature in need of regeneration and a proclivity to sinful conduct. The biblical bases for the belief are generally found in Genesis 3 (the story of the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden), in a line in Psalm 51:5 (\"I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me\"), and in Paul's Epistle to the Romans, 5:12-21 (\"Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned\").The belief began to emerge in the 3rd century, but only became fully formed with the writings of Augustine of Hippo (354–430), who was the first author to use the phrase \"original sin\" (Latin: peccatum originale). Influenced by Augustine, the councils of Carthage (411–418 CE) and Orange (529 CE) brought theological speculation about original sin into the official lexicon of the Church.Protestant reformers such as Martin Luther and John Calvin equated original sin with concupiscence (or \"hurtful desire\"), affirming that it persisted even after baptism and completely destroyed freedom to do good, proposing that original sin involved a loss of free will except to sin. The Jansenist movement, which the Roman Catholic Church declared heretical in 1653, also maintained that original sin destroyed freedom of will. Instead, the Catholic Church declares that \"Baptism, by imparting the life of Christ's grace, erases original sin and turns a man back.", "target": "Christian belief in the state of sin in which humanity has existed since the fall of man", "baseline_candidates": ["Christian views on sin", "religious doctrine", "religious concept"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q245674", "label": "Fire from Heaven", "source": "Fire from Heaven is a 1969 historical novel by Mary Renault about the childhood and youth of Alexander the Great. It reportedly was a major inspiration for the Oliver Stone film Alexander. The book was nominated for the “Lost Man Booker Prize” of 1970, \"a contest delayed by 40 years because a reshuffling of the fledgeling competition’s rules\", but lost out to Troubles by J. G. Farrell.", "target": "book", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10530786", "label": "Hypsalonia", "source": "Hypsalonia is a genus of spur-throated grasshoppers in the family Acrididae. There are at least 6 described species in Hypsalonia.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q80927272", "label": "Sean Brendan Lane", "source": "Sean Brendan Lane (born 16 January 1964) is an English former professional footballer who played mostly as a striker/midfielder for Hereford United FC and Derby County FC. Lane moved to play in the National Soccer League in Australia, playing well over 100 games for Preston Macedonia and Brunswick Juventus. He currently coaches Brisbane Strikers in the Football Queensland Premier League.", "target": "English football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16760461", "label": "Zabrus validus", "source": "Zabrus validus is a species of black coloured ground beetle in the Pterostichinae subfamily that is endemic to Greece.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17861723", "label": "CHD4", "source": "Chromodomain-helicase-DNA-binding protein 4 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the CHD4 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3826086", "label": "1976 Lagos WCT", "source": "The 1976 Lagos WCT, also known as the 1976 Lagos Tennis Classic, was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Lagos Lawn Tennis Club in Lagos, Nigeria. The event was part of the 1976 World Championship Tennis circuit. It was the inaugural edition of the tournament, which was the first professional tennis tournament in Black Africa, and was held from February 9 to 15, 1976. Unseeded Dick Stockton won the singles title.", "target": "tennis tournament edition", "baseline_candidates": ["Lagos Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28170059", "label": "G.koduru", "source": "G. Koduru is a village in Anakapalli district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5253869", "label": "Delia Gonzalez", "source": "Delia 'Chikita' Gonzalez (born November 20, 1971) is an American former flyweight female boxer. She has a record of 13-9-4 with 3 knockout wins, although several of her losses have been controversial.", "target": "American boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3113195", "label": "Graeme Ferguson", "source": "Ivan Graeme Ferguson (October 7, 1929 – May 8, 2021) was a Canadian filmmaker and inventor. He was noted for co-inventing IMAX. He was appointed to the Order of Canada in 1992.", "target": "Canadian filmmaker and inventor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16027010", "label": "Devereux Emmet", "source": "Devereux Emmet (December 11, 1861 – December 30, 1934) was a pioneering American golf course architect who, according to one source, designed more than 150 courses worldwide.", "target": "American golf course architect and amateur golfer (1861-1934)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7422843", "label": "Sarah Travis", "source": "Sarah Travis is a British orchestrator and musical supervisor for theatre and film. She received the Tony Award for Best Orchestrations and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Orchestrations for the 2005 revival of Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd.", "target": "British conductor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4734622", "label": "Alophosoma", "source": "Alophosoma is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae described by Turner in 1929.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2645083", "label": "Point of View", "source": "Point of View is the thirteenth album by the American jazz group Spyro Gyra, released in June 1989 by GRP Records. At Billboard magazine, the album peaked at No. 120 on the Top 200 Albums chart.", "target": "album of Spyro Gyra", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3082659", "label": "Frank Howson", "source": "Frank Michael Howson (born 1952) has had a career in entertainment. He directed Flynn (1996) on the early life of Errol Flynn and Hunting (1991). Howson, with Peter Boyle, helped establish Boulevard Films which produced thirteen films from Boulevard of Broken Dreams (1988) to Flynn; besides producing for Boulevard Films, Howson often wrote scripts and directed.", "target": "Australian filmmaker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32835", "label": "National Transitional Council", "source": "The National Transitional Council of Libya (Arabic: المجلس الوطني الإنتقالي al-majlis al-waṭanī al-intiqālī), sometimes known as the Transitional National Council, was the de facto government of Libya for a period during and after the Libyan Civil War, in which rebel forces overthrew the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya of Muammar Gaddafi. The NTC governed Libya for a period of ten months after the end of the war, holding elections to a General National Congress on 7 July 2012, and handing power to the newly elected assembly on 8 August.The formation of the NTC was announced in the city of Benghazi on 27 February 2011 with the purpose to act as the \"political face of the revolution\". On 5 March 2011, the council issued a statement in which it declared itself to be the \"only legitimate body representing the people of Libya and the Libyan state\". An executive board, chaired by Mahmoud Jibril, was formed by the council on 23 March 2011 after being de facto assembled as an \"executive team\" since 5 March 2011. The NTC issued a Constitutional Declaration in August 2011 in which it set up a road-map for the transition of the country to a constitutional democracy with an elected government. The council gained international recognition as the legitimate governing authority in Libya and occupied the country's seat at the United Nations. In referring to the Libyan state, the council used simply \"Libya\". The UN formally recognized the country as \"Libya\" in September 2011, based on a request from the Permanent Mission of Libya citing.", "target": "de facto government of Libya from 2011 to 2012", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7352429", "label": "Robin Gray", "source": "Robin Trevor Gray (born 1 March 1940) is a former Australian politician who was Premier of Tasmania from 1982 to 1989. A Liberal, he was elected Liberal state leader in 1981 and in 1982 defeated the Labor government of Harry Holgate on a policy of \"state development,\" particularly the building of the Franklin Dam, a hydroelectric dam on the Franklin River. He was only the second non-Labor premier to hold the post in 48 years, and the first in 51 years to govern in majority.", "target": "Australian politician; Premier of Tasmania", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65056356", "label": "Commitment to Europe", "source": "Commitment to Europe (Spanish: Compromiso por Europa, Valencian: Compromís per Europa, CpE) is a Spanish electoral list in the 2019 European Parliament election in Spain made up from regionalist parties. It is the successor of the European Spring in 2014.Since the 2019 election, two member parties, the Valencian Nationalist Bloc and the Caballas Coalition, have dissolved with the members of the parties joining other regionalist parties.", "target": "political party in Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["electoral alliance"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2005768", "label": "Alfred E. Goodey", "source": "Alfred E. Goodey (1878–1945) was a collector of paintings, prints and photographs, especially those connected with the English Midlands town of Derby.", "target": "Philanthropist and art collector (1878-1945)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5623380", "label": "Gwavas", "source": "Gwavas is a residential council estate on the southern outskirts of the town of Newlyn in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is situated immediately west of Gwavas Road and takes its name from nearby Gwavas Farm.", "target": "village in Cornwall, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15966597", "label": "ACS Sepsi SIC", "source": "ACS Sepsi SIC Sfântu Gheorghe or commonly Sepsi SIC is a women's basketball professional club based in Sfântu Gheorghe, Romania. The former club was Sepsi BC, but it was dissolved in 2012 and replaced by Sepsi SIC. The club competes in the Romanian First League and for the first time in the EuroCup Women in the 2013-14 season.", "target": "Romanian women's basketball team", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1892443", "label": "football at the 1983 Pan American Games", "source": "The ninth edition of the Men's Football Tournament at the Pan American Games was held in Caracas, Venezuela, from August 15 to August 27, 1983. Ten teams competed in a first round-robin competition, with Brazil defending the title. After the preliminary round there was a semifinal and a final.Uruguay, coached by Oscar Tabárez, won their first Pan American title after beating Brazil 1–0 in the final.", "target": "international sporting event", "baseline_candidates": ["Football at the Pan American Games"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q72263", "label": "Sepp Wildgruber", "source": "Sepp Wildgruber (born 1 January 1959, in Oberaudorf) is a German former alpine skier who competed in the 1984 Winter Olympics.", "target": "Olympic alpine skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55314885", "label": "Kayla DiCello", "source": "Kayla DiCello ( or di-SELL-o or di-CHELL-o) (born January 25, 2004) is an American artistic gymnast and part of the United States women's national gymnastics team. She is the 2021 World all-around bronze medalist. On the junior level, she is the 2019 Junior World vault champion and the 2019 U.S. Junior national all-around champion. She was an alternate for the 2020 Olympic team.", "target": "gymnast", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31338642", "label": "1981 in the Philippines", "source": "1981 in the Philippines details events of note that happened in the Philippines in the year 1981.", "target": "overview of Philippines-related events during the year of 1981", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15548260", "label": "Moraea macronyx", "source": "Moraea macronyx is a species of plant in the family Iridaceae. It is found in Western Cape, South Africa.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7789107", "label": "Thomas Dunlea", "source": "Thomas Vincent Dunlea (19 April 1894 – 22 August 1970) was an Irish-Australian Catholic priest known for his involvement in charitable works.", "target": "priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q270726", "label": "Olmeta-di-Capocorso", "source": "Olmeta-di-Capocorso is a commune in the Haute-Corse department of France on the island of Corsica. The commune is on the west coast of the Cap Corse peninsula. The Olmeta river flows through the commune and enters the sea in the village of Negru.", "target": "commune in Haute-Corse, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52714795", "label": "Rubo Blanco", "source": "Rubén Blanco Rodríguez (born 15 June 1993), simply known as Rubo Blanco is a Spanish footballer who plays for Bruno's Magpies as a forward.", "target": "Spanish association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1500356", "label": "Seabiscuit", "source": "Seabiscuit (May 23, 1933 – May 17, 1947) was a champion thoroughbred racehorse in the United States who became the top money-winning racehorse up to the 1940s. He beat the 1937 Triple Crown winner, War Admiral, by four lengths in a two-horse special at Pimlico and was voted American Horse of the Year for 1938. A small horse, at 15.2 hands high, Seabiscuit had an inauspicious start to his racing career, winning only a quarter of his first 40 races, but became an unlikely champion and a symbol of hope to many Americans during the Great Depression. Seabiscuit has been the subject of numerous books and films, including Seabiscuit: the Lost Documentary (1939); the Shirley Temple film The Story of Seabiscuit (1949); a book, Seabiscuit: An American Legend (1999) by Laura Hillenbrand; and a film adaptation of Hillenbrand's book, Seabiscuit (2003), that was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.", "target": "champion Thoroughbred racehorse in the United States", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56199885", "label": "Trevor Josephson", "source": "Trevor Josephson (born 31 January 1951) is a Canadian rower. He competed in the men's coxed pair event at the 1972 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Canadian rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20062452", "label": "The Royal Tenenbaums", "source": "The Royal Tenenbaums is a 2001 American comedy-drama film directed by Wes Anderson and co-written with Owen Wilson. It stars Danny Glover, Gene Hackman, Anjelica Huston, Bill Murray, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller, Luke Wilson, and Owen Wilson. Ostensibly based on a nonexistent novel, and told with a narrative influenced by the writing of J. D. Salinger, it follows the lives of three gifted siblings who experience great success in youth, and even greater disappointment and failure in adulthood. The children's eccentric father Royal Tenenbaum (Hackman) leaves them in their adolescent years, then returns to them after they have grown, falsely claiming he has a terminal illness. He works on reconciling with his children and ex-wife (Huston). With a variety of influences, including Louis Malle's 1963 film The Fire Within and Orson Welles' 1942 film The Magnificent Ambersons, the story involves themes of the dysfunctional family, lost greatness, and redemption. An absurdist and ironic sense of humor pervades the film, which features a soundtrack subsequently released in two albums. The Royal Tenenbaums was shot in and around New York City, including a house in Harlem used for the Tenenbaum residence. The filmmakers went to efforts to distinguish the film's backgrounds from a recognizable New York, with fashions and sets combining the appearances of different time periods. After debuting at the New York Film Festival, The Royal Tenenbaums received positive reviews from critics and was Anderson's most financially successful film until 2014's The Grand Budapest Hotel. Hackman won a Golden Globe for his performance, and the screenwriters were.", "target": "2001 film by Wes Anderson", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4518362", "label": "Oleg Chukhontsev", "source": "Oleg Grigoryevich Chukhontsev (Russian: Оле́г Григо́рьевич Чухо́нцев, IPA: [ɐˈlʲeɡ ɡrʲɪˈɡorʲjɪvʲɪtɕ tɕʊˈxontsɨf] (listen); born 1938 in Pavlovskiy Posad) is a Russian poet.", "target": "Russian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12473419", "label": "Lamboya", "source": "Lamboya or Laboya is an Austronesian language spoken on Sumba, Indonesia. The population figure may include Gaura, which Ethnologue counts as a dialect of both Lamboya and Kodi.", "target": "language spoken in Indonesia", "baseline_candidates": ["language", "modern language", "Sumba–Hawu", "Austronesian"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4428182", "label": "Phước Bửu", "source": "Phước Bửu is a township (Thị trấn) and town and capital of Xuyên Mộc District, Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu province, in Vietnam. It is located along National Route 55. A nature reserve is located in the area.", "target": "township in Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["commune-level town of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2063937", "label": "De Bijenkorf", "source": "De Bijenkorf (Dutch pronunciation: [də ˈbɛijə(ŋ)kɔr(ə)f]; literally, \"the beehive\") is a chain of high-end department stores in the Netherlands, with its flagship store on Dam Square in Amsterdam. The chain is owned by Selfridges Group, which also owns Britain's Selfridges and Ireland's Brown Thomas and Arnotts. It has been a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1929 to 2012, with various CEOs acting as presidents of the Association over time.", "target": "chain of department stores in the Netherlands", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7372185", "label": "Rowland Searchfield", "source": "Rowland Searchfield (Roland) (c. 1565 – 11 October 1622) was an English academic and bishop.", "target": "English bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1800389", "label": "Panguipulli Lake", "source": "The Panguipulli Lake ( PANG-gee-POO-yee; Spanish: Lago Panguipulli) is one of the \"Seven Lakes\" in Panguipulli municipality, southern Chile. The lake is of glacial origin and it is enclosed by mountain ranges of the Andes, on all sides except the west, where the town of Panguipulli lies in the Chilean Central Valley. The lake is drained by the Enco River that flows south to Riñihue Lake.", "target": "body of water", "baseline_candidates": ["glacial lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1638601", "label": "Hurricane Howard", "source": "Hurricane Howard was a powerful Category 4 hurricane which produced large swells along the coasts of the Baja California Peninsula and southern California. The cyclone was the eighth named storm, fourth hurricane, and second major hurricane of the 2004 Pacific hurricane season. Howard originated out of a tropical wave off the coast of Mexico on August 30. Traveling towards the northwest, the storm gradually strengthened, becoming a hurricane on September 1 and reaching its peak intensity the following day with winds of 140 mph (220 km/h). Decreasing sea surface temperatures then caused the storm to weaken. By September 4, Howard was downgraded to a tropical storm. The next day, it degenerated into a non-convective remnant low-pressure area which persisted for another five days before dissipating over open waters. Although the storm never made landfall, the fringe effects of the storm produced significant flooding across the Baja California Peninsula which damaged agricultural land and dozens of homes. Howard also produced large swells which reached 18 ft (5.4 m) along the Baja coastline and 10 ft (3 m) along the California coastline. About 1,000 lifeguard rescues took place in California due to the waves. Moisture from the storm also enhanced rainfall in parts of Arizona, leading to minor accumulations.", "target": "Category 4 Pacific hurricane in 2004", "baseline_candidates": ["category 4 hurricane"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q439908", "label": "Jasmin Handanović", "source": "Jasmin Handanović (born 28 January 1978) is a Slovenian retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He is the oldest player to ever play in the Slovenian top division.", "target": "Slovenian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54861395", "label": "Moore Capito", "source": "Moore Capito (born August 30, 1982) is an American attorney and politician who has served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from the 35th district since 2016.Capito earned a Bachelor of Arts from Duke University and a Juris Doctor from the Washington and Lee University School of Law.He is the son of U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito, the grandson of Arch A. Moore Jr. and Shelley Riley Moore, and the cousin of Riley Moore.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10803236", "label": "Orthonevra pictipennis", "source": "Orthonevra pictipennis (Loew ,1863) , the Dusky-veined Mucksucker is an uncommon, species of syrphid fly It has been observed in North America. Hoverflies get their names from the ability to remain nearly motionless while in flight. The adults are also known as flower flies for they are commonly found around and on flowers from which they get both enegy-giving nectar and protein rich pollen. Larvae for this genus are of the rat-tailed type. O. pictipennis larvae have not been described.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16402908", "label": "President of Finland", "source": "The president of the Republic of Finland (Finnish: Suomen tasavallan presidentti; Swedish: Republiken Finlands president) is the head of state of Finland. Under the Constitution of Finland, executive power is vested in the Finnish Government and the president, with the latter possessing only residual powers. The president is directly elected by universal suffrage for a term of six years. Since 1994, no president may be elected for more than two consecutive terms. The president must be a natural-born Finnish citizen. The presidential office was established in the Constitution Act of 1919. The incumbent president is Sauli Niinistö. He was elected for the first time in 2012 and was re-elected in 2018.Finland has, for most of its independence, had a semi-presidential system in which the president had much authority and power over both foreign and domestic policy, but in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the powers of the president have been subject to decrease. In constitutional amendments, which came into effect in 1991, 2000, and 2012, the president's powers have been reduced. The president still leads the nation's foreign politics in conjunction with the Government, and is the commander-in-chief of the Finnish Defence Forces.", "target": "Finland's head of state", "baseline_candidates": ["president", "head of state", "position"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23759382", "label": "Rajabhakti Park", "source": "Rajabhakti Park (Thai: อุทยานราชภักดิ์, RTGS: Utthayan Ratchaphak) is a historically themed park honouring past Thai kings from the Sukhothai period to the current royal house of Chakri. It is in Hua Hin, Prachuap Khiri Khan Province, Thailand. It was built by the Royal Thai Army, on Thai Army property, with approximately one billion baht (US$28 million) in funds donated by the public and private sectors. King Bhumibol Adulyadej gave the historical park the name \"Rajabhakti Park\", which means 'the park that has been built with people's loyalty to the monarchs'. The park occupies an area of 222 rai (355,200 m2 or 36 ha).", "target": "park in Hua Hin, Thailand", "baseline_candidates": ["park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q861660", "label": "Songwriters Hall of Fame", "source": "The Songwriters Hall of Fame (SHOF) is an American institution founded in 1969 by songwriter Johnny Mercer, music publisher/songwriter Abe Olman and publisher/executive Howie Richmond to honor those whose work represents and maintains the heritage and legacy of a spectrum of the most beloved English language songs from the world's popular music songbook. It not only celebrates these established songwriters, but is also involved in the development of new English language songwriting talent through workshops, showcases and scholarships. There are many programs designed to teach and discover new English language songwriters. Nile Rodgers serves as the organization's chairman.The Hall of Fame was formed in 1969, and in 2010 an exhibit was put on display online inside the Grammy Museum at L.A. Live in Los Angeles. The Hall has no permanent place of residence, and because the awards are not televised, there would be no other digital recording of the event for posterity.There are numerous examples of collaborating songwriters being inducted in unison, with each person being considered a separate entrant. The inaugural year featured 120 inductees, many of whom had a professional partnership, such as Rodgers and Hammerstein. Burt Bacharach and Hal David followed in 1972. Betty Comden and Adolph Green were selected in 1980, and Lieber and Stoller were inducted in 1985. John Lennon and Paul McCartney were inducted in 1989 along with Gerry Goffin and Carole King as well as Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil. Motown's Holland-Dozier-Holland team were honored the following year. Elton John and Bernie Taupin were among those chosen in 1992,.", "target": "hall of fame for songwriters", "baseline_candidates": ["award", "hall of fame"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6765941", "label": "Marius Barnard", "source": "Marius Stephanus Barnard (3 November 1927 – 14 November 2014) was a South African cardiac surgeon and inventor of critical illness insurance.Barnard was a member of the team headed by his brother Christiaan Barnard that performed the world's first human-to-human heart transplantation in 1967. Specifically, he was one of the surgeons who removed the heart from donor Denise Darvall at Groote Schuur Hospital. After a 2009 documentary film Hidden Heart suggested that Hamilton Naki removed the donor heart, Barnard was quoted as describing the film as \"rubbish, a joke, it’s a total distortion of the facts\" and as stating that Naki was at the time \"in his bed, about 8 km away from Groote Schuur\".Barnard was motivated by the financial hardship he saw his patients suffer after he had treated their critical illnesses to convince the South African insurance companies to introduce a new type of insurance to cover critical illnesses. Barnard argued that, as a medical doctor, he can repair a man physically, but only insurers can repair a patient's finances. On 6 August 1983 the first critical illness insurance policy was launched.Barnard was a member of the South African parliament between 1980 and 1989, for the Progressive Federal Party - one of the few political parties that opposed apartheid. He later acted as a technical consultant for Scottish Widows. Barnard has received many awards for his contributions to medicine and humanity, and was voted in the top 25 most influential people in the field of health insurance and protection.He died on 14 November 2014.", "target": "South African politician (1927-2014)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1812362", "label": "Spøttrup Municipality", "source": "Until January 1, 2007 Spøttrup municipality was a municipality (Danish, kommune) in the former Viborg County on the Salling Peninsula, a part of the larger Jutland peninsula in northwest Denmark. The municipality covered an area of 189 km², and had a total population of 7,902 (2005). Spøttrup municipality ceased to exist as the result of Kommunalreformen (\"The Municipality Reform\" of 2007). It was merged with Sallingsund, Skive, and Sundsøre municipalities to form the new Skive municipality. This created a municipality with an area of 682 km² and a total population of 48,368 (2005). The new municipality belongs to Region Midtjylland (\"Mid-Jutland Region\"). The municipality was named after Spøttrup Castle (Spøttrup Borg).", "target": "former municipality in Denmark", "baseline_candidates": ["former municipality of Denmark"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q966853", "label": "Salvatore Fiume", "source": "Salvatore Fiume (23 October 1915 – 3 June 1997) was an Italian painter, sculptor, architect, writer and stage designer. His works are kept in some of the most important museums in the world, among which the Vatican Museums, the Hermitage of Saint Petersburg, the Museum of Modern Art of New York City, the Pushkin Museum of Moscow and the Galleria d'Arte Moderna of Milan.", "target": "Italian painter (1915-1997)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10795732", "label": "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy", "source": "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy is the fifth studio album by American rapper and producer Kanye West. It was released by Def Jam Recordings and Roc-A-Fella Records on November 22, 2010, following a period of public controversy for West. Retreating to a self-imposed exile in Hawaii in 2009, he recorded the album at Honolulu's Avex Studio in a communal environment involving numerous contributing musicians. Additional recording sessions took place at Glenwood Place Studios in Burbank, California, and at Electric Lady Studios and Platinum Sound Studios in New York City. The album was produced primarily by West, alongside a variety of high-profile producers such as Mike Dean, No I.D., Jeff Bhasker, RZA, S1, Bink, and DJ Frank E. Critical commentaries note the resulting music's maximalist aesthetic and opulent production style that utilizes various elements from West's previous work, including soul, pop, baroque, electro, and symphonic sounds, as well as progressive rock influences. Thematically, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy explores West's status as a celebrity, consumer culture, race, and the idealism of the American Dream. Guest vocalists on the album include Nicki Minaj, Rihanna, Bon Iver, Jay-Z, Pusha T, Rick Ross, Kid Cudi, John Legend, Elton John, and Raekwon. To help market the album, West released free songs through his weekly GOOD Fridays series and four singles – \"Power\", \"Runaway\", \"Monster\", and \"All of the Lights\" – all of which were top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. West also released a musical short film, Runaway (2010), set to music from the album. In its first week.", "target": "2010 album by Kanye West", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5224249", "label": "Darrall Shelford", "source": "Darrel Shelford is a New Zealand former professional rugby union and rugby league footballer, and coach.", "target": "New Zealand rugby union footballer and coach, and rugby league footballer and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23409591", "label": "Elissandra Regina Cavalcanti", "source": "Elissandra Regina Cavalcanti (born 31 March 1976), commonly known as Nenê, is a female Brazilian former football defender. She was part of the Brazil women's national football team. She competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics, playing 5 matches. On club level she played for Saad EC. Nenê remained in Brazil's squad at the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup, by which time she was playing for São Paulo FC.", "target": "Brazilian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5307853", "label": "Dritt Mansion", "source": "test Dritt Mansion, named after its longest occupants, and also called Pleasant Garden, and current home to the Zimmerman Center for Heritage, is a historic home located at Lower Windsor Township, York County, Pennsylvania. It was built about 1758, and is a 2+1⁄2-story, fieldstone dwelling. It measures 50 feet (15.2 m) long and 40 (12.2 m) feet wide, with a cedar-shingled gable roof. The house has remained virtually unchanged since its construction. The land the house is on was first granted by Lord Baltimore to Thomas Cresap in 1729, who operated a ferry here and claimed the area for Maryland. Cresap was arrested in 1736 and driven away after skirmishes known as \"Cresap's War\"—a dispute finally resolved in 1784 when the Mason–Dixon line was established. Today the home plays host to Heritage Area offices and programs and the Visions of the Susquehanna River Art Collection.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.", "target": "building in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16820990", "label": "2014–15 AHL season", "source": "The 2014–15 AHL season was the 79th season of the American Hockey League. The regular season began in October 2014 and ended in April 2015. The 2015 Calder Cup playoffs followed the conclusion of the regular season.", "target": "sports season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2975985", "label": "River-class", "source": "The River class was a class of six torpedo-boat destroyers operated by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). The design was based on a modified version of the British River-class destroyer, 13 of which were planned under the 1904 Naval Estimates, but were cancelled before orders were placed. The first batch of three ships was ordered for the Commonwealth Naval Forces in 1909, followed later by a second batch of three a few years later. All six vessels are named after Australian rivers. The Rivers saw service during World War I. Ships of the class participated in the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force capture of German New Guinea, and performed patrols in Australian and Malayan waters. In 1917, the class was deployed as a single unit to the Mediterranean, and assigned to anti-submarine patrols of the Adriatic. The destroyers returned to Australia in 1919, and were placed in reserve. All six ships of the class were disposed of by the 1930s. Three were sold for use as accommodation hulks (two to the NSW Penal Department, the third to Cockatoo Island Dockyard) and later sank. The other three were sunk as target ships. The bow and stern sections of HMAS Parramatta were recovered in 1973 and are preserved as memorials.", "target": "1910 class of torpedo-boat destroyers of the Royal Australian Navy", "baseline_candidates": ["torpedo-boat destroyer", "ship class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2605404", "label": "tribes of Israel", "source": "The Twelve Tribes of Israel (Hebrew: שִׁבְטֵי־יִשְׂרָאֵל, romanized: Šīḇṭēy Yīsrāʾēl, lit. 'Tribes of Israel') are, according to Hebrew scriptures, the descendants of the biblical patriarch Jacob, also known as Israel, through his twelve sons through his wives, Leah and Rachel, and his concubines, Bilhah and Zilpah, who collectively form the Israelite nation. Some modern scholars dispute whether there ever were twelve Israelite tribes, and think that the number 12 more likely signifies a symbolic invented tradition as part of a national founding myth.", "target": "Hebrew tribes descended from the 12 sons of Jacob in the Hebrew Bible", "baseline_candidates": ["social group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6536928", "label": "Lewis Ochoa", "source": "Lewis Merryn Ochoa (born 24 June 1991) is an English semi-professional footballer who plays as a midfielder. He began his career in the Football League with Brentford, for whom he made one professional appearance, before dropping into non-League football upon his release in 2009.", "target": "English footballer (born 1991)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55719525", "label": "Sandra Birch Lee", "source": "Sandra Birch Lee Suk-yee (born 9 March 1952) was the Permanent Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food in the Hong Kong Government.As such she and Stella Hung, the Permanent Secretary for Food and Health (Food), are the civil service counterparts to the Secretary for Food and Health, York Chow.Lee was appointed Secretary for Economic Services in 2000. Since the Principal Officials Accountability System was introduced in 2002, she has served as Permanent Secretary for Economic Development (2004)and Labour (Economic Development) (until 2006).She became core member of former Financial Secretary John Tsang's campaign team in the 2017 Chief Executive election.", "target": "Hong Kong civil servant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16068019", "label": "Julia Warhola", "source": "Julia Warhola (Rusyn: Юлія Варгола; born Júlia Justína Zavacká; November 20, 1891 – November 22, 1972) was the mother of the American artist Andy Warhol.", "target": "Andy Warhol's mother", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28094199", "label": "Gaya Lal", "source": "Gaya Lal was an Indian politician and member of the Indian National Congress. Lal was a member of the Haryana Legislative Assembly from the Hodal constituency in Palwal district.Gaya Lal in 1967 changed party thrice in a fortnight first from the Indian National Congress to Janata Party, back to Congress and then within nine hours to Janata Party again. When Gaya Lal decided to quit the United Front and join the Congress, then Congress leader Rao Birendra Singh brought him to Chandigarh press and declared \"Aaya Ram Gaya Ram\". It became the subject of numerous jokes and cartoons. In 1985 the Constitution was amended to prevent such defections. Mr Gaya Lal's son Udai Bhan is presently State President of Haryana unit of Indian National Congress.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q336599", "label": "Bart De Wever", "source": "Bart Albert Liliane De Wever (Dutch: [ˈbɑrt də ˈʋeːvər] born 21 December 1970) is a Belgian politician. Since 2004 De Wever has been the leader of the New Flemish Alliance (N-VA), a political party advocating for the independence of Flanders. He is also a member of the Chamber of Representatives. De Wever played a prominent role in the 2007 Belgian government formation and presided over his party's victory in the 2010 federal elections when N-VA became the largest party in both Flanders and in Belgium as a whole. Since January 2013 he has been Mayor of Antwerp, following the 2012 municipal elections.", "target": "mayor of Antwerp and president of N-VA", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62894557", "label": "Thauera propionica", "source": "Thauera propionica is a Gram-negative and non-endospore-producing bacterium from the genus of Thauera which has been isolated from the Ganges river from Kanpur in India.", "target": "species of bacterium", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12127575", "label": "Solid Geometry", "source": "Solid Geometry is a 2002 short TV film directed by Denis Lawson and starring Ewan McGregor and Ruth Millar. It is based on a short story by Ian McEwan published in collection First Love, Last Rites. It was made for the Scottish Television/Grampian Television New Found Land series, first shown by them on 3 October 2002. Co-financed by Channel 4, it was subsequently shown by them on 28 November 2002. Production on an earlier BBC adaptation was halted at a late stage in 1979.", "target": "2002 television film directed by Denis Lawson", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95703796", "label": "Marina Zudina", "source": "Marina Vyacheslavovna Zudina (Russian: Марина Вячеславовна Зудина; born 3 September 1965) is a Soviet and Russian actress of theatre and cinema.", "target": "Russian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4958728", "label": "Brazilian Film Festival of London", "source": "The Brazilian Film Festival of London is a Brazilian-state-sponsored film festival held annually in London. It is in its second edition after first taking place in 2009. The festival is curated by Inffinito, an organization involved with the promotion and diffusion of Brazilian culture.", "target": "film festival", "baseline_candidates": ["film festival"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7599120", "label": "Stanisław Broniewski", "source": "Stanisław Broniewski alias Stefan Orsza, Witold, K. Krzemień (29 December 1915 – 30 December 2000) was a Polish economist, Chief Scouts of the Gray Ranks and Second lieutenant of the Home Army during the World War II.", "target": "Polish soldier and scoutleader (1915-2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7005193", "label": "New Addington tram stop", "source": "New Addington is a terminal tram stop serving the centre of New Addington, in the London Borough of Croydon, in the southern suburbs of London. The tram stop is served by London Trams, which connects New Addington with central Croydon. The next stop on the line towards central Croydon is King Henry's Drive.", "target": "tram stop in London Borough of Croydon, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["Tramlink stop"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2756084", "label": "Johanneshov", "source": "Johanneshov (pronunciation) is a district in Stockholm located at the intersection of national road 73 and national road 75 in the borough of Enskede-Årsta-Vantör, southern Stockholm, Sweden. The icehockey arena Hovet is located in Johanneshov, its current formal name taken from its former popular name, and short for \"Johanneshovs isstadion\".Slakthusområdet, a former meat packing district, is being developed to an urban city area with small businesses and apartments. The project includes also adjacent areas Gullmarsplan and Globen under the name Vision Söderstaden 2030.Other major landmarks of the district are the Avicii Arena (formerly named Stockholm Globe Arena and Ericsson Globe) and Tele2 Arena. The football clubs Hammarby and Djurgården are based at Tele2 Arena in Johanneshov, a stadium built in 2013.", "target": "urban district in southern Stockholm, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["quarter"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5012608", "label": "CKWS-DT", "source": "CKWS-DT (channel 11) is a television station in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, part of the Global Television Network. Owned and operated by network parent Corus Entertainment, the station maintains studios on Queen Street in downtown Kingston, and its transmitter is located near Highway 95 on Wolfe Island, south of the city.", "target": "Global station in Kingston, Ontario, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["broadcaster"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16121214", "label": "University of Alcalá", "source": "The University of Alcalá (Spanish: Universidad de Alcalá) is a public university located in Alcalá de Henares, a city 35 km (22 miles) northeast of Madrid in Spain and also the third-largest city of the region. It was founded in 1293 as a Studium Generale for the public, and was refounded in 1977. The University of Alcalá is especially renowned in the Spanish-speaking world for its annual presentation of the highly prestigious Cervantes Prize. The university currently enrolls 28,336 students, 17,252 of whom are studying undergraduate degrees which are taught by a teaching staff of 2,608 professors, lecturers and researchers belonging to 24 departments. The administrative tasks is carried out by the Administration and Services, comprising approximately 800 people.One of the university's campuses, located in the city center, is housed partly in historic buildings which were once used by the Complutense University of Madrid, which was located in Alcalá from its medieval origins until it was moved to Madrid in 1836.", "target": "public university, founded in 1977 in Alcala de Henares, Madrid, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["public university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5001346", "label": "Busey v. District of Columbia", "source": "Busey v. District of Columbia, 319 U.S. 579 (1943), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States overturned the conviction of a Jehovah's Witness for unlicensed selling of magazines on public sidewalks.", "target": "1943 United States Supreme Court case", "baseline_candidates": ["legal case"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9141918", "label": "Demetrius Calip", "source": "Demetrius Calip (born November 18, 1969) is an American professional basketball player formerly of the Los Angeles Lakers of the NBA. Born in Flint, Michigan, he helped the University of Michigan Wolverines to the 1989 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship. As a member of the 1988–1989 National Champions, his teammates included Glen Rice, Terry Mills, Loy Vaught, Rumeal Robinson, Sean Higgins, and Rob Pelinka. As a member of the 1990–91 team he led the team in scoring, assists and minutes. Other University of Michigan Wolverine teammates included Eric Riley and Gary Grant. And was coached by grad assistant Joe Czupek Calip has appeared in basketball-themed films: Blue Chips (1994) and Eddie (1996).", "target": "American basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7325963", "label": "Richard Gogan", "source": "Richard P. Gogan (29 November 1899 – 28 April 1982) was a member of the Irish Volunteers who fought in the 1916 Easter Rising. In later life, he became a Fianna Fáil politician. He was the son of William J. Gogan and was married to Kitty Gogan.", "target": "Irish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7267876", "label": "Qingyuan Subdistrict, Shijiazhuang", "source": "Qingyuan Subdistrict (Chinese: 青园街道) is a township-level division of Chang'an District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China.", "target": "subdistrict in Hebei, China", "baseline_candidates": ["subdistrict of China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6959958", "label": "Najeeb Jung", "source": "Najeeb Jung (born 18 January 1951) is a retired Indian Administrative Service officer who served as the 20th Lieutenant Governor of Delhi from July 2013 to December 2016. He previously served as the 13th Vice-Chancellor of the Jamia Millia Islamia from 2009 to 2013.", "target": "Indian civil servant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7292160", "label": "Randy Dedini", "source": "Randy Dedini (born January 7, 1970) is a retired American soccer goalkeeper who played professionally in the USL A-League. He is the head coach of the Sacramento State women's soccer team.", "target": "American soccer player-coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32018190", "label": "Friedeburg", "source": "Friedeburg is a municipality in the district of Wittmund, in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is situated approximately 14 km southeast of Wittmund, and 20 km west of Wilhelmshaven. About 4 kilometers east of the main village of Friedeburg, near the small village named Etzel, one of Europe's largest salt domes is located. This geological feature is part of the 240 million years old Zechstein Group formations. The salt dome, with a volume of 46 million cubic metres, houses important natural gas storages and crude oil storages. In February, 2022, the government of Lower Saxony decided to subsidize the realization of underground hydrogen storages there as well.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7696923", "label": "Televisa San Ángel", "source": "Televisa San Ángel (originally Estudios y Laboratorios San Ángel, S.A.) is a film and television studio located in Mexico City. It was originally built by Jorge Stahl as a motion picture studio, and in the 1970s would be sold to the Azcárraga family, which, through ownership of the Televisa networks, continues to own the studios. It is the headquarters facility of the Centro de Educación Artística (CEA) and the Videocine (formerly Televicine) motion picture production and distribution company. The network's Centro de Post Produccion is also housed at San Ángel. Moreover, it is best known as a motion picture and television studio. It is the oldest movie and television production facility in Mexico and the most famous telenovela studio facility in Latin America. It was one of the four main Mexican film studios along with Estudios Churubusco, Estudios América, and Estudios Tepeyac.", "target": "Film and television studio", "baseline_candidates": ["film studio"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32065235", "label": "Kirchgellersen", "source": "Kirchgellersen is a municipality in the district of Lüneburg, in Lower Saxony, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1158168", "label": "2007 Damallsvenskan", "source": "The 2007 Damallsvenskan was the 20th season of the Damallsvenskan. Matches were played between 11 April and 3 November 2007, with a break due to the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup. Umeå IK won the title for the sixth time, and third time in a row. Djurgården finished second, nine points behind.The previous season, Falköpings KIK and AIK Fotboll (women) were promoted. Falköpings KIK were relegated again, together with QBIK.", "target": "2007 season of Damallsvenskan", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13556", "label": "Heini Salonen", "source": "Heini Salonen (born 11 July 1993 in Helsinki) is a Finnish tennis player. Salonen has a 1–8 record for Finland in Fed Cup competition.", "target": "Finnish female tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24266319", "label": "Birkha Bahadur Muringla", "source": "Birkha Bahadur Muringla (13 April 1943 – 8 June 2022) was one of the eminent writers in Limbu literature from Sikkim, British Raj, now India. He was awarded the Padma Shri by the Government of India in 2017 for his contribution to Limbu language and literature.", "target": "Indian writer (1943–2022)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65079899", "label": "Push Over", "source": "Push Over is an American post-hardcore musical duo composed of American musicians Thomas Erak, of mathcore band The Fall of Troy, and Kurt Travis, of rock band Royal Coda. Formed in 2017, the band released one demo extended play in February 2017 and were originally set to release their debut studio album in 2021, yet was postponed indefinitely. The duo are currently on hiatus and pursuing their respective endeavors.", "target": "American post-hardcore musical duo", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2918715", "label": "Tamasopo Municipality", "source": "Tamasopo is a municipality and town in the Mexican state of San Luis Potosí. The town is located at 21°55′21″N 99°23′33″W. The municipality had an area of 1,329 square kilometres (513 sq mi) and a population of 28,848 in 2010, including the population of the town of Tamasopo with 4,326 people.", "target": "human settlement in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Mexico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3394693", "label": "H. C. Bailey", "source": "Henry Christopher Bailey (1 February 1878 – 24 March 1961) was an English author of detective fiction.", "target": "English writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17016307", "label": "Joyrex Tape", "source": "The Joyrex Tape is the name given to a collection of unreleased tracks from the early 1990s by Richard D. James, best known by his alias Aphex Twin. The original tape was copied from one of James' DATs sometime in the 1990s and was leaked onto the internet in 2011. In January 2015, James uploaded high quality versions of the tracks to SoundCloud as part of a track dump.", "target": "unreleased demo tape by Richard D. James under the pseudonym Aphex Twin", "baseline_candidates": ["demo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5945769", "label": "José Tiburcio López Constante", "source": "José Tiburcio López Constante (< 1790 in Mérida, Yucatán - 25 September 1858, in New Orleans, Louisiana) was governor of Yucatán, Mexico.Yucatan's first constitution was promulgated in 1825. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna was removed as military commander of the area and immediately resigned as governor of Yucatan. At that point, Lopez Constant was appointed by the Congress as the new governor. He took office on April 25, 1825 and the following May 3 issued the call for the first elections were to be held in Yucatan under the new constitution. After performing these on August 21 of that year, the legislature declared Yucatan José Tiburcio Lopez constant as governor for the next four years and Peter de Souza as vice-governor. During this first period constant Lopez lead the government knew relatively peaceful despite the concern that exists in the national context for the struggle between federalists and centralists. Fostered productive activities in the state, particularly those relating to the henequen industry then began to develop. A decade later, in 1844, Lopez was again constant Yucatan governor to be appointed by Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, then president of Mexico, based on the provisions of the Organic Bases, 1843 governing the centralist Mexico then. The designation is given, however, in the context of emergency in which recognized the right to Yucatán to govern independently and free trade also occurring him, what had been a repeated approach the Yucatan since joining the republic .", "target": "Mexican politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3369967", "label": "Patrick D'Arcy", "source": "Patrick Darcy (1598–1668) was an Irish Catholic Confederate and lawyer who wrote the constitution of Confederate Ireland.", "target": "Irish Catholic Confederate and lawyer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19880470", "label": "Foolish Lake", "source": "Foolish Lake is a lake in Fresno County, California, in the United States.Foolish Lake was so named by a biologist who, noting the lack of scenery, wrote \"it would be foolish for anyone ever to revisit it\".", "target": "lake in California", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14201244", "label": "Arta", "source": "Arta (Greek: Άρτα) is a city in northwestern Greece, capital of the regional unit of Arta, which is part of Epirus region. The city was known in ancient times as Ambracia (Ancient Greek: Ἀμβρακία). Arta is known for the medieval bridge over the Arachthos River. Arta is also known for its ancient sites from the era of Pyrrhus of Epirus and its well-preserved 13th-century castle. Arta's Byzantine history is reflected in its many Byzantine churches; perhaps the best known is the Panagia Paregoretissa (Mother of God the Consoling), built about 1290 by Despot Nikephoros I Komnenos Doukas.", "target": "town in Greece", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2043100", "label": "Gare de Thuès-les-Bains", "source": "Thuès-les-Bains station (French: Gare de Thuès-les-Bains) is a railway station in Nyer, Occitanie, southern France. Within TER Occitanie, it is part of line 32 (Latour-de-Carol-Enveitg–Villefranche-Vernet-les-Bains, Train Jaune).", "target": "railway station in Thuès-Entre-Valls, France", "baseline_candidates": ["railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37179171", "label": "John-Patrick Strauß", "source": "John-Patrick Strauß (born 28 January 1996) is a professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for 2. Bundesliga club Hansa Rostock and the Philippines national team.", "target": "German footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7734046", "label": "The Fires of Life", "source": "The Fires of Life is the third full-length album by Christian rock band Cool Hand Luke. It was released in 2004 on Floodgate Records. The album peaked at #12 on the Billboard Internet Albums Chart on June 12, 2004.", "target": "album by Cool Hand Luke", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10317498", "label": "Lepidosaphes newsteadi", "source": "Lepidosaphes newsteadi is a scale insect species in the family Diaspididae that was first described in 1895.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3510860", "label": "Edmund Sparmann", "source": "Edmund Ernst Karl Sparmann (born 16 June 1888 in Vienna, Austria and died June 24, 1951 in Stockholm) was an aircraft designer and aeronautical inventor. He created an aircraft factory in Stockholm, was an aircraft designer, created and patented several aeronautical inventions, served in the Austrian Army flying corps in the first world war and designed and built the P1 Sparmann airplane.", "target": "austrian flyer (1888-1951)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16203901", "label": "Kathleen Ross", "source": "Kathleen Ross, SNJM, is founding president of Heritage University, which opened in 1982.A member of the religious order of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, she graduated from Fort Wright College with a B.A., from Georgetown University with a M.A., and from the Claremont Graduate School with a Ph.D., where she studied with Peter Drucker and Howard Bowen. In 1997 she was a MacArthur Fellow. She is the 2011 CGU Distinguished Alumni Award Recipient. She currently serves on the Board of Trustees of Holy Names University in Oakland, CA.", "target": "American educator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q869508", "label": "Peter Vogel", "source": "Peter Vogel (9 March 1937 – 8 May 2017) was a German artist, best known for his interactive electronic sculptures and sound art pieces.", "target": "German artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7018988", "label": "Newport Seen", "source": "Newport Seen, is an online magazine founded in 2009, covering social, cultural and philanthropic events in Newport, Rhode Island. The first issue went online in June 2009. The site claims to have been accessed from 187 countries (Google Analytics).Coverage of events is online for The Preservation Society of Newport County, The Newport Restoration Foundation, The International Yacht Restoration School, Child & Family Services, Flying Kites and the Redwood Library & Athanaeum. In 2009, Newport Seen broke national stories on the discovery of the Raptorex fossil, beating the New York Times and National Public Radio with its coverage. It also broke the story of the sale of Vanderbilt Hall in Newport to 12-meter yachtsman and club developer Peter de Savary, later picked up by WJAR TV and The Providence Journal, with attribution.Principals are Linda Phillips, editor/photojournalist, author of To The Highest Bidder (ISBN 978-0974355603), and Thomas Roskelly, creative partner, branding expert and graphic designer. Newport Seen was awarded the 2010 \"Best Online Website Creation\" and the 2010 \"Best Online Writing Awards\" from the Connecticut Press Club. It was awarded two 2010 national bronze awards in the same categories by the National League of Press Women.", "target": "online magazine from Newport, Rhode Island", "baseline_candidates": ["online magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6498723", "label": "Laura Boulton", "source": "Laura Boulton (January 4, 1899 – October 16, 1980) was an American ethnomusicologist. She is known for the many field recordings, films and photographs of traditional music and its performances and practitioners from Egypt, the Sudan, Uganda, Kenya and Tanganyika. Boulton also collected traditional musical instruments around the world. In her work with the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) during the Second World War, she is recognized as being a pioneer for women who work in the film industry.", "target": "American ethnomusicologist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22067341", "label": "Comodoro", "source": "Comodoro is a municipality in the state of Mato Grosso in the Central-West Region of Brazil.", "target": "municipality of Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23895149", "label": "TAC Cup Nanjing Challenger", "source": "The TAC Cup Nanjing Challenger is a tennis tournament held in Nanjing, China since 2016. The event is part of the ATP Challenger Tour and is played on outdoor clay courts.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["recurring tennis tournament", "tennis tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1041380", "label": "Squalidus argentatus", "source": "Squalidus argentatus is a species of cyprinid fish endemic to China, Russia, and Taiwan.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22004310", "label": "Edwin Ferdinand", "source": "Edwin Ferdinand (born October 12, 1971) is a St. Lucian former footballer who represented the Saint Lucia national football team.", "target": "Saint Lucian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20684132", "label": "Dimitris Gogos", "source": "Dimitris Gogos (Greek: Δημήτρης Γκόγκος; 28 February 1903 – 18 November 1985) was one of the most influential singers and composers of rebetiko music. Also called Bayianteras (Greek: Μπαγιαντέρας), a nickname that was given to him in 1925 for covering and playing in bouzouki Emmerich Kálmán's operetta, Die Bajadere, Gogos wrote songs that met great success and popularity in occupied Greece.", "target": "Greek singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3935054", "label": "Ricky Jean-Francois", "source": "Ricky Barkley Jean Francois (born November 23, 1986) is a former American football defensive tackle. He was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the seventh round of the 2009 NFL Draft, and played college football at Louisiana State University (LSU). He has also played for the Indianapolis Colts, Washington Redskins, Green Bay Packers, New England Patriots and Detroit Lions.", "target": "American football defensive lineman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13562575", "label": "Lenda Murray", "source": "Lenda Murray (born February 22, 1962) is an American professional female bodybuilding champion.", "target": "American bodybuilder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4748319", "label": "Amphionthe oberthuri", "source": "Amphionthe oberthuri is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Achard in 1913.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1065031", "label": "Starobiktovo", "source": "Starobiktovo (Russian: Старобиктово) is a rural locality (a village) in Novomedvedevsky Selsoviet, Ilishevsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 63 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "human settlement in Ilishevsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28740160", "label": "Sacred Heart Church", "source": "The Sacred Heart Church is the name of a religious building affiliated to the Catholic Church that is located in the main street of the city of Koror in the island and state of the same name in Palau a country of Oceania to the west of the Pacific Ocean. Nearby is the Maris Stella School and the Etpison Museum.The temple follows the Roman or Latin rite and depends on the Diocese of the Caroline Islands (Dioecesis Carolinensium) based in Weno in the Federated States of Micronesia and which was created as a sui juris mission in 1886 and was elevated to its current status in 1979 through the bull \"Tametsi Ecclesiae\" of the then Pope John Paul II. The present structure has its antecedents in the old church of the Sacred Heart (Sagrado Corazón) founded in the time of the Spanish colonization in 1892. A new structure was constructed in 1935 and it took 8 years to finish, to the inauguration attended by local parishioners and Japanese authorities.", "target": "church in Koror, Palau", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7728700", "label": "The Daily Reporter", "source": "The Daily Reporter is a daily newspaper published in Coldwater, Michigan, in the United States. It is owned by Gannett. Former owner GateHouse Media acquired the paper from Independent Media Group in 2000.In addition to Coldwater, the paper covers several other cities and villages in Branch County, Michigan, including Bronson, Quincy and Union City. The newspaper was founded in December 1895.", "target": "American newspaper", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16205427", "label": "Linda Coombs", "source": "Linda Jeffers Coombs is an author and historian from the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah). Coombs is the program director of the Aquinnah Cultural Center.", "target": "writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1300570", "label": "Erich Kestin", "source": "Erich Kestin (25 June 1895 – 22 May 1969) was a German actor. He appeared in more than 50 films shows between 1930 and 1953.", "target": "actor (1895-1969)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22004966", "label": "Çepan", "source": "Çepan is a village and a former municipality in Berat County, central Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision of the municipality Skrapar. The population at the 2011 census was 740.", "target": "municipal unit in Berat, Albania", "baseline_candidates": ["Administrative unit", "komuna"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29108880", "label": "Outside the Law", "source": "Outside the Law is a 2002 American direct-to-video action film, starring Cynthia Rothrock, Seamus Dever, Jessica Stier, Jeff Wincott and Stephen Macht. It was directed by Jorge Montesi.", "target": "2002 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2529157", "label": "Jafar al-Askari", "source": "Ja'far Pasha al-Askari (Arabic: جعفر العسكري;‎ 15 September 1885 – 29 October 1936) served twice as prime minister of Iraq: from 22 November 1923 to 3 August 1924; and from 21 November 1926 to 31 December 1927. Al-Askari served in the Ottoman Army during World War I until he was captured by British forces attacking the Empire from Egypt. After he was released he was converted to the cause of Arab nationalism and joined forces with Amir Faisal and T. E. Lawrence (Lawerence of Arabia), with his brother-in-law, Nuri as-Said, who would also serve as prime minister of Iraq. Al-Askari took part in the conquest of Damascus in 1918 and supported placing Faisal on the Syrian throne. When Faisal was deposed by the French in 1920, he advocated granting him a new throne in Iraq. As a reward for his loyalty, Faisal granted Al-Askari several important cabinet positions, including minister of defense in the first Iraqi government. He served as prime minister twice, and was also minister of foreign affairs. Al-Askari was minister of defense in Yasin al-Hashimi's government when it was overthrown by Chief of Staff Bakr Sidqi in 1936, in Iraq's first coup. Al-Askari was assassinated during the coup.", "target": "3rd and 6th prime minister of Iraq (1885–1936)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16668900", "label": "Parc Pierre Lagravère", "source": "Parc départemental Pierre-Lagravère, often called by its old name, Parc de l'Île Marante, is a public park located on the banks of the river Seine in Colombes, northwest of Paris. It is also the seat of Centre sportif municipal Parc Lagravère, a public multisports complex.Its common name comes from its location on Île Marante, a former island in the Seine. The island's now disappeared English-style garden designed by Claude-Henri Watelet was a favorite getaway for the local nobility during the Ancien Régime. The area was also a popular subject for painters, especially impressionists such as Gustave Caillebotte and Claude Monet, who lived in Colombes and nearby Argenteuil, respectively, and frequently sailed the Seine.The island was joined to the mainland circa 1965 to provide foundations for the building of the A86 autoroute, which today stands between the park and downtown Colombes (several bridges connect both sides). The city of Colombes and the département of Hauts-de-Seine split jurisdiction over the newly accessible land. The city used parts of it to create a second sports and recreation district, separate from the historic Stade Yves-du-Manoir. Meanwhile, the département took over the surrounding areas and remodelled them as a public park loosely inspired by the old Watelet garden. The park opened in 1973, and in 1985 was renamed after Pierre Lagravère, who was the first president of the département upon its creation in 1968.", "target": "park in France", "baseline_candidates": ["park"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9566090", "label": "Acacia latescens", "source": "Acacia latescens, also known as Ball wattle, is a tree in the genus Acacia (in the family Fabaceae and the subgenus Plurinerves). It is native to the Northern Territory where it is common in the Top End.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22073612", "label": "Harry Ford", "source": "Harrison Miller Ford (born December 22, 1982) is an American actor. He starred in the CBS medical drama Code Black as third-year resident Dr. Angus Leighton.", "target": "American actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21006077", "label": "S11 House", "source": "S11 House, located in Petaling Jaya, is Malaysia’s first Green Building Index Platinum rated house that won the Tropical Building Category of the Asean Energy Awards in 2013, designed by Ar. Dr. Tan Loke Mun. This single residential structure was conceptualized along the lines of a large tree canopy and is equipped with 5 KW peak photo-voltaic installation on the roof; rainwater is also collected on the canopy roof drains and is stored in harvesting tanks. Water features and multiple pools are located at the two extreme north-south ends to provide evaporative cooling for the house. The house proves that even in the hot and humid tropical climate of South East Asia, it is possible to lessen a building's reliance on air-conditioning and also minimize its use of other natural resources, most notably water and electricity. A composting yard treats all the household organic and garden wastes and provides high grade compost fertilizer for the vegetable and fruit gardens. It has an overall roof U value of 0.14. The glazing roof comprises 9.38mm thick low-E safety laminated glass which can be opened up to 90%. The overall building envelope OTTV is 29.63.S11 House is a testament to the opportunities available to build green for the architect and owner of this house, Dr. Tan. The successful structure has since been replicated in the S14 House and other commissions of private homes. The hope is that the constant experiments done on these private homes eventually will find their way into the larger consumer and mass market housing industry.", "target": "building in Selangor, Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["architectural structure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q473895", "label": "Kellinghusen", "source": "Kellinghusen is an Amt (\"collective municipality\") in the district of Steinburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Its seat is in Kellinghusen and in the Amt is situated the lesser-populated settlement of the nation, Wiedenborstel.", "target": "place in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["Amt"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65429828", "label": "Eiffelton", "source": "Eiffelton is a lightly populated locality in the Mid-Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island.", "target": "human settlement in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["locality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85627363", "label": "Chung Sum Wai", "source": "Chung Sum Wai (Chinese: 中心圍), sometimes transliterated as Chung Sam Wai, is a Punti walled village in Wang Chau, Yuen Long District, Hong Kong.", "target": "Village of Hong Kong", "baseline_candidates": ["Walled villages of Hong Kong"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22079359", "label": "Chesterfield Pictures", "source": "Chesterfield Motion Pictures Corporation, generally shortened to Chesterfield Pictures, was an American film production company of the 1920s and 1930s. The company head was George R. Batcheller, and the company worked in tandem with its sister studio, Invincible, which was led by Maury Cohen. The production company never owned its own studio and so rented space at other studios, primarily Universal Pictures and RKO.Batcheller's target market was neighborhood theaters that weren't part of the big studios' theater chains. These smaller houses usually showed second- or third-run movies, and couldn't afford to show the newest, expensive feature films. Batcheller serviced these smaller theaters with smaller movies: low-budget productions that cost less than big-studio attractions and could play first-run. This was an ambitious policy in the days before double features and \"B\" pictures, when individual movies were featured as the main attraction in movie theaters. Given Chesterfield's budget constraints, Batcheller could not afford to pay the high salaries commanded by major-studio performers, and relied on less expensive \"name\" talent (former stars of the silent screen, or currently established featured players). He also relied on a small staff of busy directors: Frank R. Strayer, Richard Thorpe, Phil Rosen, and Charles Lamont. Batcheller died in 1938. In 1941 his son, George R. Batcheller, Jr., became head of the PRC studio and used his father's Chesterfield strategy there. Chesterfield was one of a number of Poverty Row studios taken over by Herbert Yates in 1935 and merged into his newly formed Republic Pictures in an attempt to create a studio with.", "target": "defunct film production company", "baseline_candidates": ["company"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4922811", "label": "Pluchea indica", "source": "Pluchea indica is a species of flowering plant in the aster family, Asteraceae. Its common names include Indian camphorweed, Indian fleabane, and Indian pluchea. It is native to parts of Asia and Australia, and it is widespread in the Pacific Islands as an introduced and often invasive species.The species hybridizes with Pluchea carolinensis when the two plants grow together, yielding a hybrid that has been named Pluchea × fosbergii.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94942353", "label": "Willoughby Dickinson, 1st Baron Dickinson", "source": "Willoughby Hyett Dickinson, 1st Baron Dickinson, KBE, PC (9 April 1859 – 31 May 1943), was a British Liberal Party politician. He was Member of Parliament for St. Pancras North from 1906 to 1918. He was an influential proponent of establishing a League of Nations after WWI.", "target": "British politician (1859-1943)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13190884", "label": "Suyt'uqucha (Lampa)", "source": "Suyt'uqucha (Quechua suyt'u, sayt'u rectangular, qucha lake, lagoon, \"rectangular lake\", hispanicized spelling Suitococha, Suito) is a lake in Peru located in the Puno Region, Lampa Province, Santa Lucía District. It is situated at a height of about 4,881 metres (16,014 ft), about 4.33 km long and 0.84 km at its widest point. Suyt'uqucha lies south of the larger lake named Ananta.", "target": "lake in the Lampa Province, Puno Region, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q770989", "label": "Budziska, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "source": "Budziska [buˈd͡ʑiska] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łubnice, within Staszów County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) south-east of Łubnice, 21 km (13 mi) south of Staszów, and 71 km (44 mi) south-east of the regional capital Kielce.The village has a population of 462.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q554978", "label": "Richard Kuklinski", "source": "Richard Leonard Kuklinski (; April 11, 1935 – March 5, 2006), also known as The Iceman, was an American criminal and convicted murderer. Kuklinski was engaged in criminal activities for most of his adult life. He ran a burglary ring and distributed pirated pornography. Kuklinski killed several people he lured with offers of a business deal so that he could rob them of their cash. Law enforcement officials described him as someone who killed for profit. Kuklinski lived with his wife and children in the New Jersey suburb of Dumont. They knew him as a loving father and husband but one who also had a violent temper. They stated that they were unaware of his crimes. He was given the moniker Iceman by authorities after they discovered that he had frozen the body of one of his victims in an attempt to disguise the time of death.Eventually, Kuklinski came to the attention of law enforcement when an investigation into his burglary gang linked him to several murders. An eighteen-month long undercover operation led to his arrest in December 1986. In 1988, he was sentenced to life imprisonment after being convicted of killing two members of his burglary gang and two other associates. In 2003, he received an additional 30-year sentence after confessing to the murder of a mob-connected police officer.After his murder convictions, Kuklinski gave interviews to writers, prosecutors, criminologists, and psychiatrists. He claimed to have murdered anywhere from 100 to 200 men, often in gruesome fashion. Most of these additional murders have not been corroborated.", "target": "American contract killer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49357693", "label": "Newellton", "source": "Newellton is a town in northern Tensas Parish in the northeastern part of the U.S. state of Louisiana. The population is 1,187 in the 2010 census, a decline of 255 persons, or 17 percent, from the 2000 tabulation of 1,482. The average age of the population there is 41 years.Newellton is west of the Mississippi River on Lake St. Joseph, an ox-bow lake. Further south toward St. Joseph, the parish seat of government, is another ox-bow lake, Lake Bruin, a part of which is the popular Lake Bruin State Park.", "target": "human settlement in Louisiana, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "rural municipality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7278073", "label": "RV Thomas G. Thompson", "source": "R/V Thomas G. Thompson (AGOR-23) is a Global-class research vessel owned by the United States Office of Naval Research and operated under a bareboat charterparty agreement by the University of Washington as part of the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System (UNOLS) fleet.", "target": "American oceanographic research vessel operated by the University of Washington", "baseline_candidates": ["oceanographic research vessel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q286173", "label": "Three-striped Hemispingus", "source": "The three-striped hemispingus (Microspingus trifasciatus) is a species of bird in the family Thraupidae. It is found in Bolivia and Peru. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5706843", "label": "Dizaj-e Jamshid Khan", "source": "Dizaj-e Jamshid Khan (Persian: ديزج جمشيدخان, also Romanized as Dīzaj-e Jamshīd Khān) is a village in Dizaj Rural District, in the Central District of Khoy County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 498, in 102 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3809107", "label": "John Bratby", "source": "John Randall Bratby RA (19 July 1928 – 20 July 1992) was an English painter who founded the kitchen sink realism style of art that was influential in the late 1950s. He made portraits of his family and celebrities. His works were seen in television and film. Bratby was also a writer.", "target": "English painter who founded the kitchen sink realism style of art (1928-1992)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q839546", "label": "machine element", "source": "Machine element or hardware refers to an elementary component of a machine. These elements consist of three basic types: structural components such as frame members, bearings, axles, splines, fasteners, seals, and lubricants, mechanisms that control movement in various ways such as gear trains, belt or chain drives, linkages, cam and follower systems, including brakes and clutches, and control components such as buttons, switches, indicators, sensors, actuators and computer controllers.While generally not considered to be a machine element, the shape, texture and color of covers are an important part of a machine that provide a styling and operational interface between the mechanical components of a machine and its users. Machine elements are basic mechanical parts and features used as the building blocks of most machines. Most are standardized to common sizes, but customs are also common for specialized applications.Machine elements may be features of a part (such as screw threads or integral plain bearings) or they may be discrete parts in and of themselves such as wheels, axles, pulleys, rolling-element bearings, or gears. All of the simple machines may be described as machine elements, and many machine elements incorporate concepts of one or more simple machines. For example, a leadscrew incorporates a screw thread, which is an inclined plane wrapped around a cylinder. Many mechanical design, invention, and engineering tasks involve a knowledge of various machine elements and an intelligent and creative combining of these elements into a component or assembly that fills a need (serves an application).", "target": "elementary component of a machine", "baseline_candidates": ["technological component", "type of machine element", "nonbiological component", "artificial physical object"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6411746", "label": "King James's School", "source": "King James's School is located on King James Road, Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, England. King James's is a large non-selective school with a large sixth form.", "target": "school in North Yorkshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["community school", "secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14831237", "label": "Ichthyodes leucostictica", "source": "Ichthyodes leucostictica is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Breuning in 1942.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2492856", "label": "Tyligul River", "source": "Tylihul (Ukrainian: Тилігул) is a river in the Odessa Oblast in southern Ukraine, 168 km long, up to 10–20 m wide, watershed is 3,550 km2. It has origin in the Podolian Upland and flows through narrow (1.0—1.5 km wide) valley to the Black Sea depression, where the valley is wider and has up to 3 km. The river inflows to the Tylihul Estuary. The name of the river comes from the name of the water body into which it flows, the Tylihul Estuary, Turkish: Deli Göl, means 'mad, rabid lake'.", "target": "river in Ukraine", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42912210", "label": "Edgar Urquizo", "source": "Edgar Urquizo Olivares (born January 25, 1989) is a Mexican football manager and former player.", "target": "Mexican association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19871404", "label": "Waqa Blake", "source": "Waqa Blake (born 26 October 1994) is a Fijian professional rugby league footballer who plays as a centre and wing for the Parramatta Eels in the NRL and Fiji at international level. He previously played for the Penrith Panthers in the National Rugby League and New South Wales City.", "target": "Fijian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1138511", "label": "Craig Breedlove", "source": "Craig Breedlove (born March 23, 1937) is an American professional race car driver and a five-time world land speed record holder. He was the first person in history to reach 500 mph (800 km/h), and 600 mph (970 km/h), using several turbojet-powered vehicles, all named Spirit of America.", "target": "American racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4274144", "label": "Empis pennipes", "source": "Empis pennipes is a species of dance flies, in the fly family Empididae. It is included in the subgenus Empis. It is found in most of Europe, except the Balkan Peninsula and the Iberian Peninsula.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q235464", "label": "Elizabeth Garrett Anderson", "source": "Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (9 June 1836 – 17 December 1917) was an English physician and suffragist. She was the first woman to qualify in Britain as a physician and surgeon. She was the co-founder of the first hospital staffed by women, the first dean of a British medical school, the first woman in Britain to be elected to a school board and, as mayor of Aldeburgh, the first female mayor in Britain.", "target": "English physician and feminist (1836-1917)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23015028", "label": "Budimir Jolović", "source": "Budimir Jolović (born October 3, 1959) is a former Macedonian-Serbian professional basketball small forward who last played for Nikol Fert.", "target": "Macedonian-Serbian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48035", "label": "Salgareda", "source": "Salgareda is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Treviso in the Italian region Veneto, located about 30 kilometres (19 mi) northeast of Venice and about 20 kilometres (12 mi) east of Treviso. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 6,102 and an area of 27.2 square kilometres (10.5 sq mi).The municipality of Salgareda contains the frazioni (subdivisions, mainly villages and hamlets) Campodipietra, Campobernardo, and Arzeri e Candolè (solo località riconosciute). Salgareda borders the following municipalities: Cessalto, Chiarano, Noventa di Piave, San Biagio di Callalta, San Donà di Piave, Ponte di Piave, Zenson di Piave.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q40564", "label": "stratocumulus", "source": "A stratocumulus cloud, occasionally called a cumulostratus, belongs to a genus-type of clouds characterized by large dark, rounded masses, usually in groups, lines, or waves, the individual elements being larger than those in altocumulus, and the whole being at a lower height, usually below 2,000 metres (6,600 ft). Weak convective currents create shallow cloud layers because of drier, stable air above preventing continued vertical development. Historically, in English, this type of cloud has been referred to as a twain cloud for being a combination of two types of clouds.", "target": "genus of clouds", "baseline_candidates": ["cloud type", "cumulus", "low-level cloud", "stratus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4664926", "label": "Abderrazak Bounour", "source": "Abderrazak Bounour (born 11 January 1957), also known as Abdel Razzak Bounour, is a retired Algerian long-distance runner who specialized in the 5000 metres. He was born in Annaba, and represented the club USSN. He reached the semi-final of the 1983 World Championships, as well as at the 1984 Olympic Games. He won the 5000 metres at the 1984 African Championships, and the silver medal in the same event at the 1983 Maghreb Championships.His personal best times were 7.49.69 minutes in the 3000 metres, achieved in June 1983 in Tampere; 13.25.26 minutes in the 5000 metres, achieved in June 1984 in Firenze; and 28.00.73 minutes in the 10,000 metres, achieved in July 1985 in Stockholm.", "target": "Algerian distance runner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7433719", "label": "Sciences Library", "source": "The Sciences Library, nicknamed the \"SciLi\" (pronounced “sigh-lie”), at Brown University is a high-rise building in Providence, Rhode Island built in 1971 in the Brutalist style. At 180 feet (55 m), it is tied with One Citizens Plaza as the 16th-tallest building in the city. The building houses Brown University's primary on-campus collections that support study and research in the fields of Medicine, Psychology, Neural Science, Environmental Science, Biology, Chemistry, Geology, Physics, Engineering, Computer Science, and Pure and Applied Mathematics. SciLi is also the home of the Science Center, the Writing Center, the Center for Language Studies, the Map Collection, the Interlibrary Loan office, and the Friedman Study Center. SciLi is one of five on-campus libraries which make up the University Library.", "target": "library at Brown University, US", "baseline_candidates": ["academic library", "high-rise building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58409836", "label": "New Mexico State Road 112", "source": "State Road 112 (NM 112) is a state highway in the US state of New Mexico. Its total length is approximately 44.75 miles (72.02 km). NM 112's southern terminus is at NM 96 north of Regina, and the northern terminus is at U.S. Route 64 (US 64)/ US 84 in Los Ojos.", "target": "highway in New Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1339567", "label": "Rhizopogonaceae", "source": "Rhizopogonaceae are a family of fungi in the order Boletales. The family, first named and described by botanists Ernst Albert Gäumann and Carroll William Dodge in 1928, contains 2 genera and 151 species. The genus Fevansia, formerly thought to belong in the Rhizopogonaceae, was found to belong in the Albatrellaceae in a molecular phylogenetics study.", "target": "family of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11152", "label": "Football League Cup", "source": "The EFL Cup (referred to historically, and colloquially, as the League Cup), currently known as the Carabao Cup for sponsorship reasons, is an annual knockout football competition and major trophy in men's domestic English football. Organised by the English Football League (EFL), it is open to any club within the top four levels of the English football league system – 92 clubs in total – comprising the top level Premier League, and the three divisions of the English Football League's own league competition (Championship, League One and League Two). First held in 1960–61 as the Football League Cup, it is one of the three top-tier domestic football competitions in England, alongside the Premier League and FA Cup. It concludes in February, long before the other two, which end in May. It was introduced by the league as a response to the increasing popularity of European football, and to also exert power over the FA. It also took advantage of the roll-out of floodlights, allowing the fixtures to be played as midweek evening games. With the renaming of the Football League as the English Football League in 2016, the tournament was rebranded as the EFL Cup from the 2016–17 season onwards. The tournament is played over seven rounds, with single-leg ties throughout, except for the semi-finals. The final is held at Wembley Stadium, which is the only tie in the competition played at a neutral venue and on a weekend (Sunday). The first two rounds are split into North and South sections, and a system of byes.", "target": "A knockout competition in English football", "baseline_candidates": ["league cup"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49109574", "label": "Torres Causana District", "source": "Torres Causana District is one of thirteen districts of the Maynas Province in Peru. It is bordered by Ecuador.", "target": "district in Loreto, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25714517", "label": "Zaytsy", "source": "Zaytsy (Russian: Зайцы) is a rural locality (a village) in Vereshchaginskoye Urban Settlement, Vereshchaginsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 56 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Perm Krai, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q919188", "label": "1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games", "source": "The 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games (Welsh: Gemau Ymerodraeth Prydain a'r Gymanwlad 1958) were held in Cardiff, Wales, from 18–26 July 1958. Thirty-five nations sent a total of 1,130 athletes and 228 officials to the Cardiff Games and 23 countries and dependencies won medals, including, for the first time, Singapore, Ghana, Kenya and the Isle of Man. The Cardiff Games introduced the Queen's Baton Relay, which has been conducted as a prelude to every British Empire and Commonwealth Games ever since.", "target": "6th British Empire and Commonwealth Games", "baseline_candidates": ["multi-sport event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2421883", "label": "Alstroemeria aurea", "source": "Alstroemeria aurea is a species of flowering plant in the family Alstroemeriaceae, native to Chile and Argentina, but naturalised in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. It is also widely cultivated as an ornamental. Common names include yellow alstroemeria, though cultivars have been selected in a range of colours. The name Peruvian lily is often applied to this and other species of Alstroemeria, despite the fact that most are not native to that country. Growing to 1 m (3.3 ft) tall by 0.5 m (1.6 ft) broad, it is a herbaceous perennial with brittle, fleshy roots beneath erect stems with narrow leaves. Many orchid-like flowers in brilliant shades of yellow and orange. appear in early to midsummer. The flowers may be heavily spotted or striped with red or brown. If undisturbed, plants will spread rapidly in benign conditions.When cultivated it is one of the hardiest alstroemerias, surviving temperatures of −10 °C (14 °F). It requires a sheltered spot in sun or part shade.The Latin specific epithet aureum means \"golden\".", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51416", "label": "Men in Black", "source": "Men in Black (stylized as MIB: Men in Black) is a 1997 American science fiction action comedy film directed by Barry Sonnenfeld, produced by Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald and written by Ed Solomon. Loosely based on the Men in Black comic book series created by Lowell Cunningham and Sandy Carruthers, the film stars Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith as two agents of a secret organization called the Men in Black, who supervise extraterrestrial lifeforms who live on Earth and hide their existence from ordinary humans. The film featured the creature effects and makeup of Rick Baker and visual effects by Industrial Light & Magic. The film was released in the United States on July 2, 1997, by Columbia Pictures, and grossed over $589.3 million worldwide against a $90 million budget, becoming the year's third highest-grossing film. It received positive reviews, with critics praising its script, set pieces, and the performances of Jones and Smith. The film received three Academy Award nominations—Best Art Direction, Best Original Score, and Best Makeup—winning the lattermost award. The film spawned the Men in Black franchise, including two sequels, Men in Black II (2002) and Men in Black 3 (2012); a spin-off film, Men in Black: International (2019); and an animated series that ran from 1997 to 2001.", "target": "1997 science fiction film directed by Barry Sonnenfeld", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7430000", "label": "Scania-Vabis 335", "source": "The Scania-Vabis 335/345/355 was a series of heavy duty trucks produced by Swedish automaker Scania-Vabis between 1931 and 1944.", "target": "initial heavy duty trucks", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model", "motor car"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2963795", "label": "Chinzei", "source": "The Chinzei-ha (鎮西派) branch, also called the Chinzeigi (西山義, \"Chinzei Lineage\"), of Jōdo-shū Buddhism is the main branch that exists today, and was first established by Benchō a disciple of Hōnen, but formalized into a separate branch by Benchō's disciple Ryōchū. Originally based in Kyushu where Benchō had been exiled, the sect contended with other disciples of Hōnen until it emerged into the dominant branch today. Its origins in Kyushu are also the reason for the sect's name, as Chinzei was an older name for Kyushu and was adopted by Benchō.The famous temple of Chion-in, Hōnen's gravesite, and the temple of Zōjō-ji in Tokyo are all administered by the Chinzei branch.", "target": "main sect of Jōdo Buddhism in Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["school of Buddhism", "Jodo shu"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8190462", "label": "Kayō", "source": "Kayō (賀陽町, Kayō-chō) was a town located in Jōbō District, Okayama Prefecture, Japan. As of 2003, the town had an estimated population of 8,188 and a density of 64.18 persons per km2. The total area was 127.58 km2. On October 1, 2004, Kayō, along with the town of Kamogawa (from Mitsu District), was merged to create the town of Kibichūō (in the newly created Kaga District).", "target": "dissolved municipality in Jōbō district, Okayama prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["dissolved municipality of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16879835", "label": "Kaattar River", "source": "Kaattar is a river flowing in the Tiruvarur district of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.", "target": "river in India", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4603248", "label": "2004 Romanian Figure Skating Championships", "source": "The 2004 Romanian Figure Skating Championships were the national championships of the 2003–04 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles. The results were used to choose the Romanian teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "target": "figure skating competition", "baseline_candidates": ["figure skating competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49521726", "label": "Marina State Beach", "source": "Marina State Beach is a protected beach on Monterey Bay, located in the city of Marina in Monterey County, California.", "target": "protected beach in California", "baseline_candidates": ["California state beach"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5498405", "label": "Frederick Millett", "source": "Frederick William Millett (30 March 1928 – 30 April 1991) was an English cricketer.", "target": "cricketer (1928-1991)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26380665", "label": "St Thomas' Church", "source": "St Thomas’ Church, Brampton is a Grade II listed parish church in the Church of England: 150 in Brampton, Derbyshire.", "target": "church building in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12926274", "label": "Des Plaines", "source": "Des Plaines is a city in Cook County, Illinois, United States. Per the 2020 census, the population was 60,675. The city is a suburb of Chicago and is located just north of O'Hare International Airport. It is situated on and is named after the Des Plaines River, which runs through the city just east of its downtown area.", "target": "city in Cook County, Illinois, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7316994", "label": "Retroactive Records", "source": "Retroactive Records is an independent record label in Keokuk, Iowa. The label was founded in 2002 by Matt Hunt, who had previously operated a small label called Magdalene Records. Originally intended to reissue classic Christian metal, the label has since grown to sign new artists, release original albums by those artists, and release other genres of music. They have also started and acquired several smaller labels.", "target": "American independent record label", "baseline_candidates": ["record label"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12231635", "label": "Faisel Al-Jamaan", "source": "Faisel Al-Jamaan (Arabic: فيصل الجمعان; born June 12, 1986) is a Saudi football player who plays a striker for Al-Jabalain.", "target": "Saudi Arabian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5679387", "label": "Hasnoor Hussein", "source": "Hasnoor Sidang Hussein is a Malaysian politician from the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO). He became prominent in 2006 for his controversial remarks at the UMNO Annual General Assembly as a delegate from Malacca on the subject of racial issues. He later became the first, together with Azimi Daim and Hashim Suboh, to be officially reprimanded by UMNO for a speech made at an UMNO Annual General Assembly.", "target": "Malaysian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14832224", "label": "Goephanes mediovittipennis", "source": "Goephanes mediovittipennis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Breuning in 1961.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86920759", "label": "Gene Waldorf", "source": "Eugene Thomas \"Gene\" Waldorf (February 25, 1936 – February 29, 2020) was an American electrical engineer and politician. Waldorf was born in St. Cloud, Minnesota. He graduated from Cathedral High School in St. Cloud. Waldorf served in the United States Army. Waldorf received his bachelor's degree from University of Minnesota. He lived with his wife and family in Saint Paul, Minnesota and worked as an electrical engineer for the 3M Company. Waldorf served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1977 to 1980 and in the Minnesota Senate from 1981 to 1993. He was a Democrat. In 2010, Waldorf ran as an Independent for the United States House of Representatives.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51883613", "label": "Sir Humphrey Mynors, 1st Baronet", "source": "Sir Humphrey Charles Baskerville Mynors, 1st Baronet (28 July 1903 – 25 May 1989), was Deputy Governor of the Bank of England from 1954 to 1964. He was previously a Director of the Bank of England from March 1949 to 1954 and Deputy Secretary starting in 1938. He subsequently served as the Chairman of the Finance Corporation for Industry and the inaugural Chairman of the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers.Mynors was educated at Marlborough College, and received a BA from Corpus Christi College, Cambridge in 1926 (subsequently promoted to Master of Arts in 1929). He was also an assistant lecturer at Cambridge.In October 1939, he married Lydia Minns, daughter of his fellow academic, Sir Ellis Minns, Disney Professor of Archaeology: the couple had six children. Mynors' twin brother was Roger Mynors, a classical scholar. The brothers lived together with their families at Treago Castle in the latter part of their lives.On his death in 1989, he was succeeded in the Baronetcy by his second son, Richard.", "target": "English Baronet (1903-1989)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5346385", "label": "Edwin Eisendrath", "source": "Edwin Eisendrath (born February 3, 1958) is former CEO of the Chicago Sun-Times and former alderman of the 43rd ward of Chicago (Lincoln Park area).", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16991612", "label": "Cheektowaga Central High School", "source": "Cheektowaga Central High School is a high school in Cheektowaga, New York located at 3600 Union Road and serves grades 9 through 12. The current principal is Mr. Scott Zipp and the current assistant principal is Mr. Michael Fatta. It is part of the Cheektowaga Central School District.", "target": "high school in Cheektowaga, Erie County, New York", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3652555", "label": "Atlantic Records Group", "source": "Atlantic Records Group LLC is an umbrella label owned by Warner Music Group. It oversees several labels assigned to its Atlantic Records unit. In total, the label group has nearly three hundred artists on its roster.", "target": "corporate division of Warner Music Group overseeing several labels assigned to its Atlantic Records unit", "baseline_candidates": ["record company", "record label", "umbrella brand"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5777989", "label": "Per Gustafsson i Benestad", "source": "Per Gustafsson i Benestad (16 October 1880 - 14 April 1942) was a Swedish politician. He was a member of the Centre Party.", "target": "Swedish politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17144443", "label": "John Radzilowski", "source": "John Radzilowski (born 1965) is an American historian, and author of numerous books and articles in the modern history of Poland and in the history of Polish-Americans. He is a professor of history at the University of Alaska Southeast.", "target": "American historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4549301", "label": "139 & Lenox", "source": "139 & Lenox is the second posthumous studio album by American hip hop artist Big L. It was released on August 31, 2010 by Flamboyant. The title of the album refers to the street of Harlem where Big L was raised in. The 12-song collection of rare and unreleased tracks is a tribute to the revered DITC rapper's hallowed Harlem block, featuring production by the late Roc Raida on \"On the Mic (Roc Raida Turntablist Mix)\", as well as Big L's former fellow Rawkus artists Hi-Tek and Buckwild. Previously-unheard early mixes to classic L tracks like \"Ebonics\" and \"Platinum Plus\" and a live version of L's controversial 1st single \"Devil's Son\" can be heard alongside rare classics like \"Furious Anger.\".", "target": "compilation album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4274143", "label": "Magok-i-Attari Mosque", "source": "Maghoki Attori Mosque (Uzbek: Magʻoki Attori masjidi, Tajik: Масҷиди Мағокии Атторӣ, romanized: Masjidi Maghokii Attori, Persian: مسجد مغاکی عطاری, romanized: Masjed-e Maghākī-ye Attārī) is a historical mosque in Bukhara, Uzbekistan. It forms a part of the historical religious complex of Lyab-i Hauz. The mosque is located in the historical center of Bukhara, about 300 meters southwest of Po-i-Kalyan, 100 meters southwest of the Toqi Telpak Furushon trading dome and 100 meters east of Lab-i Hauz. It is a part of UNESCO World Heritage Site Historic Centre of Bukhara. Today, the mosque is used as a carpet museum.", "target": "mosque in Bukhara, Uzbekistan", "baseline_candidates": ["mosque"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27627630", "label": "Nathaniel Prime", "source": "Nathaniel Prime was an American naval officer in command of the 17th US Infantry contingent and received the personal side arms surrendered by Confederate States Navy Lieutenant Charles Read. Prime wrote about the attack and capture in the U.S. government's Official Records of the War of the Rebellion.", "target": "American naval officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7489826", "label": "Shark in the Park", "source": "Shark in the Park is a New Zealand police procedural. It revolved around the professional and private lives of a group of officers at a Wellington police station under the command of Inspector Brian \"Sharky\" Finn. The title came from the informal code term used by officers to indicate that the Inspector was about and they should \"look busy\". The series ran for three series from 1989–92, totalling 38 episodes. Many of the cast had regular roles in the series and several became well known throughout New Zealand as a result of the series. The show also featured many well-known actors in guest roles, among them Lucy Lawless, Michael Hurst, Temuera Morrison and Karl Urban. The series was produced by the Gibson Group and broadcast by Television One – it has since been repeated on TVNZ 6. Writers for the show included Fran Walsh, later to become well known through her association with Peter Jackson and her work on films such as the Lord of the Rings films.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3784208", "label": "1989 Benson and Hedges Open", "source": "The 1989 Benson and Hedges Open was a men's Grand Prix tennis tournament held in Auckland, New Zealand. It was the 22nd of the tournament and was held from 9 January to 16 January 1989. Second-seeded Ramesh Krishnan won the singles title.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["ATP Auckland Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6159801", "label": "Jardin exotique du Fort Napoléon", "source": "The Jardin exotique du Fort Napoléon is a botanical garden specializing in succulents. It is located on the grounds of Fort Napoléon at 120 m altitude above Terre-de-Haut, Îles des Saintes, and is open daily. Fort Napoléon was first erected in 1777 as Fort Louis, destroyed by the British in 1809, rebuilt from 1844, and given its present name during the reign of Napoleon III of France. Today's exotic garden was created in 1984 and paired with the Jardin Exotique de Monaco in 1986, with whom it began plant exchanges in 1987. Today the garden contains a collection of local plants and other succulents including Agavaceae, Cactaceae, succulent Euphorbia, and Liliaceae. Of particular interest are its collections of rare and endangered Cactaceae, including Mammillaria nivosa, Melocactus intortus, Opuntia dillenii, Opuntia rubescens, Opuntia triacantha, Opuntia tuna, Pereskia aculeata, Pilosocereus nobilis, and Selenicereus grandiflorus.", "target": "botanical garden in France", "baseline_candidates": ["botanical garden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q339436", "label": "Marcel Héraud", "source": "Marcel Héraud (5 May 1883 – 17 September 1960) was a French lawyer and politician who was briefly Minister of Health in 1940.", "target": "French lawyer and politician (1883-1960)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7899332", "label": "Upsurge", "source": "Upsurge is a novel by Australian writer J. M. Harcourt. Set in Perth, Western Australia, during the Great Depression, it was the first novel to be banned by the then Commonwealth Book Censorship Board and the first to be prosecuted by police in Australia.", "target": "book by J. M. Harcourt", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19747318", "label": "Khartamchha", "source": "Khartamchha is a village and Village Development Committee in Khotang District in the Sagarmatha Zone of eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2,387 persons living in 497 individual households.", "target": "village development committee in Sagarmatha Zone, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7647052", "label": "Surveillante-class frigate", "source": "The Surveillante class was a type of sixty-gun frigate of the French Navy, designed in 1823 by Mathurin-François Boucher.One of the main innovations with respect to previous design was the disappearance of the gangways, which provided a flush deck capable of harbouring a complete second battery. With the standardisation on the 30-pounder calibre for all naval ordnance that occurred in the 1820s, this design allowed for a frigate throwing a 900-pound broadside, thrice the firepower of the 40-gun Pallas class that constituted the majority of the frigate forces during the Empire, and comparable to that of a 74-gun. By far the best-known ship of the class is Belle Poule, which achieved fame when she transported the ashes of Napoléon back to France in the so-called Retour des cendres; for this occasion, she was painted all black, a colour scheme that she retained later in her career, but which is uncharacteristic of the ships of this type. SurveillanteBuilder: Lorient Begun: Launched: 29 September 1825 Completed: Fate: deleted 22 August 1844.Belle GabrielleBuilder: Cherbourg Begun: Launched: 28 June 1828 Completed: Fate: renamed Indépendante 9 August 1830, deleted 24 October 1860.MelpomèneBuilder: Cherbourg Begun: Launched: 28 July 1828 Completed: Fate: deleted 20 March 1845.HerminieBuilder: Lorient Begun: Launched: 25 August 1828 Completed: Fate: wrecked off Bermuda 3 December 1838.Belle PouleBuilder: Cherbourg Begun: Launched: 26 March 1834 Completed: Fate: deleted 19 March 1861.SémillanteBuilder: Lorient Begun: Launched: 6 February 1841 Completed: Fate: wrecked 16 February 1855 off Bonifacio.AndromaqueBuilder: Lorient Begun: Launched: 8 March 1841 Completed: Fate: deleted 17 August 1869.ForteBuilder: Cherbourg Begun: Launched: 16.", "target": "series of French Navy warships", "baseline_candidates": ["frigate", "ship class"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25647810", "label": "Gowy Daraq-e Sofla", "source": "Gowy Daraq-e Sofla (Persian: گوي درق سفلي, also Romanized as Gowy Daraq-e Soflá; also known as Gowy Daraq-e Pā'īn) is a village in Sarajuy-ye Shomali Rural District, in the Central District of Maragheh County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 59, in 12 families.", "target": "village in East Azerbaijan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23132477", "label": "1972 Washington Star International", "source": "The 1972 Washington Star International was a men's tennis tournament that was played on outdoor clay courts at the Washington Tennis Stadium in Washington, D.C. The event was part of the 1972 World Championship Tennis circuit. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and was held from July 17 through July 23, 1972. Tony Roche won the singles title after surviving a match point in the final against Marty Riessen.", "target": "tennis tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis tournament edition", "Washington Open"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7887014", "label": "doxylamine", "source": "Doxylamine is a first-generation antihistamine used as a short-term sedative and hypnotic (sleep aid) or in combination formulations to provide night-time allergy and cold relief. It provides a calmative effect in preparations containing the analgesics paracetamol (acetaminophen) and codeine. It is prescribed in combination with vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) to prevent morning sickness in pregnant women. Its fetal safety rating is \"A\" (no evidence of risk).It was first described in 1948.", "target": "pair of enantiomers", "baseline_candidates": ["medication", "chemical compound", "pair of enantiomers"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1754203", "label": "Boktai: The Sun Is in Your Hand", "source": "Boktai: The Sun is in Your Hand is an action-adventure role-playing video game released by Konami for the Game Boy Advance in 2003, and the first game in the Boktai series. The player takes the role of Django, a vampire hunter, who uses a weapon called the \"Gun Del Sol\" (Solar Gun), that fires bolts of sunlight at enemies. The game made novel use of a light sensor on the cartridge which encouraged playing parts of the game in direct sunlight.", "target": "2003 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7446350", "label": "Seguenzia elegantissima", "source": "Seguenzia elegantissima is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Seguenziidae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7092958", "label": "One More Kiss", "source": "One More Kiss is a Scottish romantic drama directed by Vadim Jean, starring Valerie Edmond, Gerard Butler and James Cosmo. The film’s story revolves around a cancer-diagnosed woman who decides to live her remaining life to the full, which includes throwing herself into a love triangle with an old flame.", "target": "2000 film by Vadim Jean", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6213722", "label": "Joel Martin", "source": "Joel Martin (born April 22, 1982) is an American former professional ice hockey goaltender who is currently an assistant coach for the Kalamazoo Wings of the ECHL.", "target": "American ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94918719", "label": "Tibor Živković", "source": "Tibor Živković (Serbian Cyrillic: Тибор Живковић; 11 March 1966 – 26 March 2013) was a reputable Serbian academic, historian and Byzantinist who specialised in the period of the Early Middle Ages.", "target": "Serbian historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5719406", "label": "Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses", "source": "Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses is a 2006 computer-animated dance film. It first premiered on Nickelodeon on September 10, 2006, and it was later released to DVD on September 19.The film was directed by Greg Richardson and loosely based on the German fairy tale \"The Twelve Dancing Princesses\". It is the ninth entry in the Barbie film series and features the voice of Kelly Sheridan as the Barbie protagonist. This is the first Barbie film to be distributed by Universal Studios (now Universal Pictures). Music for the film was composed by Arnie Roth. \"Shine\", the end title song written by Roth, Amy Powers and Rob Hudnut, was nominated for a 2007 Emmy Award.", "target": "2006 animated feature film directed by Greg Richardson", "baseline_candidates": ["animated feature film", "film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18716253", "label": "Bradley Walker", "source": "Bradley Walker (October 14, 1877 – February 3, 1951) was a Nashville attorney who, in his youth, was found to be naturally proficient at virtually any sport he tried, including football, baseball, track, boxing, tennis and golf— in all these sports he either set records or won championships or awards. Walker was best known for his college football performance, playing for the University of Nashville in 1896 and 1897, and the Virginia Cavaliers in 1900 and 1901. He was named to an \"All-Southern\" team in 1900. He also set records at Virginia in baseball for the highest batting average over a two-year period. The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega called Walker \"one of the all-time greats in Southern athletic history.\" Describing Walker's football ability, celebrated coach John Heisman said, \"he was undoubtedly one of the twenty-five best men that Dixieland ever saw\". When Walker moved to Nashville to practice law in 1903, he kept his interest in football and officiated football games, including major collegiate games, for 25 years. He was also president of the owners of the Nashville Vols baseball team for two years. He was the first president of the Nashville Tennis Club and won the local championship several times. He was the boxing champion of Nashville in 1899. Walker also won the Tennessee State Amateur Golf Championship, and won his local club championship six times, during which he became a friend and confidante of sportswriter Grantland Rice who had just begun playing the game.", "target": "American football player (1877-1951)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19719514", "label": "Anton de Pasquale", "source": "Anton De Pasquale (born 14 September 1995) is an Australian motor racing driver. He currently drives the No. 11 Ford Mustang GT for Dick Johnson Racing in the Repco Supercars Championship in 2021. He briefly raced in various Formula Renault series in Europe and the Dunlop Super2 Series.", "target": "Australian motor racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5370564", "label": "Emergency Broadcast", "source": "Emergency Broadcast is the fifth album by the Christian rock band White Heart and the band's first with bass guitarist Tommy Sims. The album includes the vocals of Rick Florian, Billy Smiley, and Tommy Sims. The album was produced White Heart, with the executive producer being Randy Moore.", "target": "album by White Heart", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15873016", "label": "Bematistes", "source": "Bematistes is a genus of butterflies in the family Nymphalidae. The genus is often included in Acraea.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q621956", "label": "Chadwick Arboretum", "source": "Chadwick Arboretum is a 62 acres (25 ha) arboretum on the Agriculture campus of The Ohio State University, in Columbus, Ohio, United States. The main arboretum collection is located just across Lane Avenue from the Schottenstein Center with its other collections nearby. The arboretum is open daily without charge. The arboretum proper contains roughly 1,000 trees representing over 120 species that grow throughout Ohio, with special collections of conifers and willows. As of 2005, it contained one Ohio State Champion tree, Abies cephalonica. The arboretum also includes a Learning Garden and specialized gardens for annuals, hostas, perennials, roses, and wildflowers. Taken together, these gardens represent one of the most varied collections of flora in the state, with good selections of native Ohio plants, perennials, tropical plants, wildflowers, woody plants, and more than 400 cultivars of annuals.", "target": "botanical garden", "baseline_candidates": ["botanical garden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7804502", "label": "Tim Wilson", "source": "Tim Wilson is an Australian canoe sailor.Wilson was part of the Australian team (together with Hayden Virtue and Seth Dunbar) that won the 2008 International Canoe Challenge Cup by successfully challenging the current holders Great Britain, represented by Colin Brown, John Robson and Simon Allen.", "target": "Australian canoer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18394343", "label": "Tick", "source": "Tick is a time tracking software operated by Higher Pixels (former The Molehill) headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida, that offers online time tracking and reporting services through their website along with mobile and desktop applications. Tick tracks time based on clients, projects and tasks, either through a timer or through manual entry.", "target": "time tracking software", "baseline_candidates": ["software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4562650", "label": "1930 International University Games", "source": "The 1930 International University Games were organised by the Confederation Internationale des Etudiants (CIE) and held in Darmstadt, Germany. Held from 1–10 August, thirty nations competed in a programme of eight sports. Women competed only in the athletics and swimming events.", "target": "thirty nations competed in a programme of eight sports", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16245986", "label": "DD Uttrakhand", "source": "DD Uttarakhand is a state-owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Uttarakhand, India. It was inaugurated by Venkaiah Naidu. The first news bulletin of DD Uttarakhand was read by Ms. Shikha Tyagi.", "target": "Indian public television channel", "baseline_candidates": ["broadcast network"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52063058", "label": "Amazing Saturday", "source": "DoReMi Market (Korean: 도레미 마켓; RR: Doremi Maket), also known as Amazing Saturday (놀라운 토요일; Nollaun Toyo-il), is a South Korean variety show that airs every Saturday at 19:40 (KST) on tvN. From January 17, 2022, the program is available for streaming on Viu every Monday, starting from episode 195.", "target": "South Korean television program", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7339534", "label": "Road to Forever", "source": "Road to Forever is the second solo studio album by Don Felder, the first since 1983. Road to Forever, was released October 9, 2012. Contributors to the album include Randy Jackson, Crosby, Stills and Nash, Steve Lukather, David Paich and Steve Porcaro of Toto and Tommy Shaw of Styx. It was produced by Felder along with Robin DiMaggio. The album was conceived and written out of the pain Felder felt following the breakup of his marriage in 2000, and his dismissal from the Eagles soon after. On December 17, 2013 the album was reissued as \"Road To Forever - Extended Edition\" on the iTunes Store and Amazon MP3 Store. Two of the four bonus tracks (\"Can't Stop Now\" and \"Southern Bound\") were previously only available on the Japanese pressing of the CD. \"Sensuality\" had been an iTunes Store-exclusive and \"She Runs Free\" had been an Amazon MP3 Store-exclusive. \"Give My Life\", which is the final track on the CD, remains the last track on the Extended Edition and appears after the four bonus tracks. The single \"You Don't Have Me\" made it to #1 and stayed in the top ten for 11 weeks on the Classic Rock Radio charts and the previous single \"Wash Away\" reached #4 between Eric Clapton and The Rolling Stones.", "target": "album by Don Felder", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28407985", "label": "DeBarge discography", "source": "The following is the discography of American music group DeBarge.", "target": "discography", "baseline_candidates": ["discography"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q51546683", "label": "2018–19 Ligue 1", "source": "The 2018–19 Ligue 1 season, also known as Ligue 1 Conforama for sponsorship reasons, was the 81st season since its establishment. The season began on 10 August 2018 and concluded on 24 May 2019. Paris Saint-Germain were the defending champions. On 21 April, Paris Saint-Germain won their second consecutive Ligue 1 title and eighth title overall following Lille's 0–0 draw against Toulouse.", "target": "81st ligue 1 season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7639980", "label": "Sunfire", "source": "Sunfire (foaled 1925 in Kentucky) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse, bred and raced by the co-owner and president of Saratoga Race Course, Richard T. Wilson, Jr.", "target": "American-bred Thoroughbred racehorse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55648484", "label": "Parliamentary Budget Advisory Service", "source": "The Parliamentary Budget Advisory Service was established in South Australia in December 2017 to provide expertise to assist candidates in costing their campaign policies. It was an initiative of the Weatherill Government which preceded the 2018 South Australian election by three months.", "target": "South Australian government agency", "baseline_candidates": ["government agency"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3024005", "label": "Derrière les murs", "source": "Derrière les murs (known as Behind the Walls in the US) is a French supernatural-thriller film written and directed by Julien Lacombe and Pascal Sid.", "target": "2011 film by Julien Lacombe", "baseline_candidates": ["3D film", "film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16232967", "label": "Claudia Tavel", "source": "Claudia Tavel Antelo (born March 11, 1989) is a Bolivian beauty pageant titleholder and model who was crowned Miss Bolivia 2013 and represented her country at Miss Universe 2014.", "target": "Bolivian model", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4751258", "label": "Anand Lal Shimpi", "source": "Anand Lal Shimpi (born June 26, 1982) is a former tech journalist and American businessman who retired at the age of 32 from the publishing industry to join the hardware division at Apple Inc. He is primarily known as the founder of the technology website AnandTech, a hardware news/review site which started as motherboard reviews hosted on GeoCities. At that time Anand was just 14 years old and over a period of 17 years it grew to be one of the most respected sites for tech reviews. He also wrote a book in 2001, named \" The Anandtech Guide to PC Gaming Hardware\".", "target": "American journalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4724795", "label": "Ali Feiruz", "source": "Ali Abdi Feiruz, known as Ali Feiruz, (Somali: Cali Fayruus) was a prominent Somali musician. He belonged to the Habr Awal clan of the Isaaq clan family.", "target": "musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76122491", "label": "Hugh Oge O'Neill", "source": "Hugh Oge O'Neill (died 1586), known fully as Hugh Oge McHugh O'Neill, was the son of Hugh O'Neill of the Clandeboye O'Neill's of eastern Ulster, Gaelic Ireland.", "target": "(died 1586)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22089229", "label": "Troyan Municipality", "source": "Troyan Municipality (Bulgarian: Община Троян) is a municipality (obshtina) in Lovech Province, Central-North Bulgaria, located from the northern slopes of the central Stara planina mountain to the area of the Fore-Balkan. It is named after its administrative centre - the town of Troyan. The municipality embraces a territory of 888.85 km² with a population of 33,827 inhabitants, as of December 2009.The area is best known with the Troyan Monastery - the third biggest in Bulgaria, and the north approach to Beklemeto Pass, also known as Troyan Pass, which is one of the connections between the north and south parts of the country.", "target": "municipality of Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4932629", "label": "Bob Grupp", "source": "Robert William Grupp (born May 8, 1955) is a former American football punter who played for three seasons in the National Football League (NFL). He was selected to the Pro Bowl after the 1979 season as a member of the Kansas City Chiefs. In 1984, he played with the New Jersey Generals of the United States Football League (USFL). Prior to his career in professional football, Grupp was a star quarterback at Neshaminy High School in Langhorne, PA. He also punted and was an all-Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) cornerback at Duke University (class of 1977) where he also lettered as an outfielder on the baseball team during his junior and senior years. He was MVP of the 1977 Duke baseball team.", "target": "American football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q652968", "label": "Kępa Karolińska", "source": "Kępa Karolińska [ˈkɛmpa karɔˈliɲska] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Iłów, within Sochaczew County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1829630", "label": "Java pipistrelle", "source": "The Java pipistrelle (Pipistrellus javanicus) is a species of pipistrelle bat found in South and Southeast Asia, including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. It favors human habitations. A 2010 research paper from the Philippines regarding the prevalence of coronaviruses in bats tested several Java pipistrelle bats.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2790524", "label": "Eyesat-1", "source": "Eyesat-1 is an American experimental communications microsatellite with an store-dump payload. The mission of Eyesat-1 was experimental monitoring of mobile industrial equipment. Eyesat-1 has provided the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Silver Spring, Maryland, with communication services to the South Pole. Eyesat-1 carries an FM repeater for Amateur Radio Research and Development Corporation (AMRAD) called AMRAD OSCAR 27 or OSCAR 27.Eyesat-1 was launched on September 26, 1993 with an Ariane 4 rocket at Guiana Space Centre, Kourou, French Guiana, along with SPOT-3, Stella, Healthsat-2, KITSAT-2, Itamsat and PoSAT-1. After 19 years of operation, the satellite failed on December 5, 2012.In 2020, the satellite was recovered, and its FM repeater became intermittently operational.", "target": "22825", "baseline_candidates": ["amateur radio satellite"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47400839", "label": "Chaudhry Shahbaz Ahmad", "source": "Chaudhry Shahbaz Ahmad is a Pakistani politician who was a Member of the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab, from 2008 to May 2018.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18377392", "label": "Brachymystax tumensis", "source": "Brachymystax tumensis, the blunt-snouted lenok, is a salmonid fish distributed in rivers and lakes in Eastern Asia. It was formerly included in the more widespread species Brachymystax lenok (now known as the sharp-snouted lenok), but more recent research based on differences in morphology and genetics have justified a distinction of the two species.Brachymystax tumensis is found widely in southeastern Russia and more locally in northeastern and central parts of the country (including Sakhalin), as well as northeastern Mongolia (Amur Basin), northern China and Korea (e.g. Tumen River). In some regions, such as the Amur Basin, the range may overlap with that of B. lenok. Earlier authorities have included the South Korean population in B. tsinlingensis instead of B. tumensis and this appears to be supported by mtDNA (although its exact taxonomic position remains to be determined).", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12641660", "label": "San Carlos", "source": "San Carlos (Western Apache: Sengaah) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Gila County, Arizona, United States. The population was 4,038 at the 2010 census, up from 3,716 in 2000. San Carlos is the largest community in and the seat of government for the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation. San Carlos' economy is underdeveloped and is based mainly on retail service industries, construction trades, and public administration.", "target": "census-designated place in Gila County, Arizona, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q101549", "label": "Erich Vermehren", "source": "Erich Vermehren, also known as Erich Vermeeren de Saventhem or Eric Maria de Saventhem, (23 December 1919 – 28 April 2005) was an ardent anti-Nazi, an agent of the Abwehr, the German military intelligence organization, and later a leading Catholic Traditionalist.", "target": "ardent anti-Nazi, an agent of the Abwehr, the German military intelligence organization, and later a leading Catholic Traditionalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5041803", "label": "Carlos Ayala", "source": "Carlos Ernesto Ayala Amaya (born December 23, 1982 in Soyapango, El Salvador) is a Salvadoran professional footballer.", "target": "Salvadoran footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q775669", "label": "Saffres", "source": "Saffres (French pronunciation: ​[safʁ]) is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France.", "target": "commune in Côte-d'Or, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q78112149", "label": "Sullivan M. Cutcheon", "source": "Sullivan M. Cutcheon (October 4, 1833 – April 18, 1900) was a Michigan politician, lawyer, and banker.", "target": "American politician in Michigan", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7332437", "label": "Riddle Run", "source": "Riddle Run is a tributary of the Allegheny River located in Allegheny County in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.", "target": "river in the United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4559758", "label": "1913–14 Istanbul Football League", "source": "The 1913–14 İstanbul Football League season was the ninth season of the İstanbul Football League. Fenerbahçe won the league for the second time. Strugglers FC left the league after their sixth match after refusing to change their original kit. Telefoncular FC also left the league after their fifth match. The remaining matches involving these clubs were ruled a 3–0 win for the opposing side. Progress FC changed its name to Altınordu İdman Yurdu SK during the season.", "target": "ninth season of the Istanbul Football League", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7750570", "label": "The Massive Crush", "source": "The Massive Crush is the fifth album by the South Korean thrash metal band Crash, released in 2003. The song \"Dignity\" is known because appears in Pump It Up dance games series as a selectable song to dance.", "target": "album by Crash", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47437347", "label": "Alastair Mackintosh", "source": "Alastair Campbell Mackintosh (born 21 June 1968), incorrectly listed as Alistair MacIntosh by FISA, is a former New Zealand rower.", "target": "New Zealand rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11793635", "label": "Nowe Sadłowo", "source": "Nowe Sadłowo [ˈnɔvɛ sadˈwɔvɔ] (German: Neusedlau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rypin, within Rypin County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.", "target": "village in Kuyavian-Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q712378", "label": "organ", "source": "In biology, an organ is a collection of tissues joined in a structural unit to serve a common function. In the hierarchy of life, an organ lies between tissue and an organ system. Tissues are formed from same type cells to act together in a function. Tissues of different types combine to form an organ which has a specific function. The intestinal wall for example is formed by epithelial tissue and smooth muscle tissue. Two or more organs working together in the execution of a specific body function form an organ system, also called a biological system or body system. An organ's tissues can be broadly categorized as parenchyma, the functional tissue, and stroma, the structural tissue with supportive, connective, or ancillary functions. For example, the gland's tissue that makes the hormones is the parenchyma, whereas the stroma includes the nerves that innervate the parenchyma, the blood vessels that oxygenate and nourish it and carry away its metabolic wastes, and the connective tissues that provide a suitable place for it to be situated and anchored. The main tissues that make up an organ tend to have common embryologic origins, such as arising from the same germ layer. Organs exist in most multicellular organisms. In single-celled organisms such as bacteria, the functional analogue of an organ is known as an organelle. In plants, there are three main organs.In the study of anatomy, viscera (singular viscus) refers to the internal organs of the abdominal, thoracic, and pelvic cavities. The abdominal organs may be classified as solid organs, or.", "target": "collection of tissues with similar functions", "baseline_candidates": ["anatomical structure", "anatomical structure class type"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19883288", "label": "Alan Brown", "source": "Alan Brown (born 12 August 1970) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Kilmarnock and Loudoun since 2015. Brown served as the SNP Shadow Secretary of State for Transport from 2017 to 2020 and was the SNP Infrastructure and Energy Spokesperson in the House of Commons from 2017 to 2018. He has served as the SNP Shadow Minister for Energy and Climate Change since 2020.", "target": "Scottish politician (born 1970)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60827898", "label": "Kanga", "source": "\"Kanga\" (stylized in all caps) is a song by American rapper 6ix9ine from his debut studio album, Dummy Boy (2018). It features rap artist Kanye West. 6ix9ine teases his signature catchphrase in the song.", "target": "song", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55622850", "label": "Merkez Efendi", "source": "Merkez Efendi was the popular nickname of Musa bin Muslihiddin bin Kılıç (1463–1552), an Ottoman Islamic scholar and Sufi. He is also credited as the founder of \"Mesir macunu\", a therapeutic paste believed to have cured mental diseases amongst many other benefits.", "target": "ottoman Islamic scholar and Sufi", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14306370", "label": "Bêba", "source": "Bêba (Chinese: 百巴; pinyin: Báibā) is a town in the west of Bayi District, Nyingchi, in the southeast of the Tibet Autonomous Region. It lies at an altitude of 3,231 metres (10,603 feet) along China National Highway 318 from Markam to Lhasa, between Bayi and Kongpo Gyamda. The Niyang River, a tributary of the Tsangpo, flows past the town.", "target": "town in Tibet, People's Republic of China", "baseline_candidates": ["town in China"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5546122", "label": "George Weedon", "source": "George G. Weedon (3 July 1920 – 22 February 2017) was a British gymnast who competed at two Summer Olympic Games. In 1948 in London he participated in the Men's Individual All-Around, Team All-Around, Floor Exercise, Horse Vault, Parallel Bars, Horizontal Bar, Rings, and Pommelled Horse, placing 12th out of 16 nations in the team competition, and no higher than 38th individually. In 1952 in Helsinki he competed in the same events, finishing 21st out of 23 countries in the team tournament and no higher than 116th in the individual ones. A lifelong friend was fellow competitor Frank Turner.Weedon was born in Richmond, London and was a member of the Regent Street Polytechnic Gymnastics Club. He married another British Olympic gymnast, Joan Airey, with whom he had three sons and one daughter. One grandchild, Lindsey Weedon, was a British representative modern pentathlete. Before and after retiring from active competition, he taught physical education at various schools including, from 1950 to 1971, the John Lyon School in Harrow on the Hill, MiddlesexIn 2010 he was interviewed by the BBC about his experiences at the 1948 Games, in anticipation of the 2012 Summer Olympics to be held in London, and professed his belief that the city had not been properly prepared to host the earlier edition, due to its insufficient infrastructure. He was the subject of a 2011 short film, Walk Tall, by filmmaker Kate Sullivan. On 11 July 2012 he was a torch bearer during the 2012 Summer Olympics torch relay. Weedon died in February 2017 after.", "target": "British gymnast (1920-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49370998", "label": "Woolsey", "source": "Woolsey is a town in Fayette County, Georgia, United States. The population was 158 at the 2010 census.", "target": "human settlement in Fayette County, Georgia, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States", "municipality of Georgia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6321321", "label": "Jörg Friess", "source": "Jörg Friess (born 27 October 1968) is a retired East German triple jumper, who finished fourth at the 1990 European Championships with a career best jump of 17.01 metres. This result places him tenth on the German all-time performers list, behind Ralf Jaros, Charles Friedek, Volker Mai, Dirk Gamlin, Peter Bouschen, Wolfgang Zinser, Jörg Drehmel, Jörg Elbe and Wolfgang Knabe. Friess had a better indoor result with 17.31 metres, achieved in February 1991 in Mannheim.Friess became East German champion in 1987 and 1990 for the team SC Dynamo Berlin, and won a national silver medal in reunified Germany in 1991 for OSC Berlin.", "target": "German triple jumper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7063852", "label": "Noumea varians", "source": "Verconia varians is a species of colorful sea slug, a dorid nudibranch, a shell-less marine gastropod mollusk in the family Chromodorididae.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42133164", "label": "Kia Steave-Dickerson", "source": "Kia Steave-Dickerson is an American interior designer and property master known for her work on the American reality television series, Trading Spaces. Raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she studied textile management and marketing at the Philadelphia College of Textiles & Science. Steave-Dickerson started K.I.A. Enterprises, which focuses primarily on interior and scenic design and construction. In 1993, she starting working as a set designer and property master on films, commercials, and musical theatre productions, frequently working on M. Night Shyamalan's films. From 2002 to 2004, she appeared on Trading Spaces as part of a revolving cast of interior designers. While planning and decorating rooms for the participants, Steave-Dickerson said that she created specific themes for each participant. Her designs were criticized by Kim Reed of the Today show and others. After Trading Spaces, Steave-Dickerson hosted the short-lived American reality television series Renovate My Place. The show, which aired from 2005 to 2006, focused on renovations for African-American homeowners. After the 2007 birth of her son, she took a seven-year hiatus from work before returning as a property master for Creed (2015) and the third season of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt. A recipient of the NBMBAA-Wells Fargo Entrepreneur Excellence Award, Steave-Dickerson has worked with transitional housing.", "target": "American interior designer and television personality", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4955541", "label": "Brahman", "source": "The Brahman languages, Biyom and Tauya, form a subbranch of the Rai Coast branch of the Madang languages of Papua New Guinea. The family is named after the cattle station and town of Brahman, which lies between the territories of the two languages.", "target": "hypothetical Trans–New Guinea family of languages spoken in Madang Province in Papua New Guinea", "baseline_candidates": ["Southern Adelbert", "language family"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55365916", "label": "Zhang Yizhi and Zhang Changzong", "source": "Zhang Yizhi (張易之; died February 20, 705), formally the Duke of Heng (恆公), nickname Wulang (五郎) and Zhang Changzong (張昌宗; died February 20, 705), formally the Duke of Ye (鄴公), nickname Liulang (六郎), were two brothers who served as officials of Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty and became very powerful late in her reign. Both brothers were killed in a coup that overthrew Wu Zetian in 705.", "target": "brothers who served as officials of Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty", "baseline_candidates": ["sibling duo"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q655987", "label": "Fatbeard", "source": "\"Fatbeard\" is the seventh episode of the thirteenth season of the American animated television series South Park. The 188th overall episode of the series, it originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on April 22, 2009 and in the United Kingdom on April 24, 2009. It was the mid-season finale, marking the final South Park episode for six months. In the episode, Cartman misinterprets news reports about piracy in the Indian Ocean to mean the return of the classic era of swashbuckling pirates, and misleads a handful of South Park boys to voyage to Mogadishu to start a pirate crew. The episode was written and directed by series co-founder Trey Parker, and was rated TV-MA L in the United States for strong to extreme language. \"Fatbeard\" was a reference to increasing international media attention to piracy in the Indian Ocean, and the script depicted the pirates in a sympathetic light. The crew of the USS Bainbridge, the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer which participated in the rescue of the hijacked MV Maersk Alabama, contacted the South Park creators to praise them for the episode. \"Fatbeard\" received generally positive reviews and was seen by 2.59 million households in its original broadcast, making it the most-watched Comedy Central production the week it aired.", "target": "episode of South Park (S13 E7)", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1608381", "label": "Niccolò III d'Este", "source": "Niccolò III d'Este (9 November 1383 – 26 December 1441) was Marquess of Ferrara from 1393 until his death. He was also a condottiero.", "target": "Marquis of Ferrara", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5012720", "label": "CLD chromophore", "source": "CLD-1 is a vibrant blue dye originally synthesized for application in nonlinear electro-optics.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q486580", "label": "Pedra de Lume", "source": "Pedra de Lume is a village in the northeastern part of the island of Sal, Cape Verde. The village is situated on the east coast, about 5 km east of the island capital Espargos. It has a small port and a lighthouse, Farol de Pedra de Lume.", "target": "village in Sal island, Cape Verde", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6530099", "label": "Les William", "source": "J. L. (Les) William (18 January 1915 – 4 June 1994) was an Australian builder of scientific instruments. Born in Melbourne, Australia he was known for his beautiful and precision craftsmanship and was known as one of the best scientific instrument makers in Australia. His equipment can be found in Australian laboratories that existed from the 1930s through to the 1980s. He founded a company situated in the Melbourne suburb of Hughesdale called J.L. William Scientific Instruments. William attended Caulfield Technical School and worked at his brother's firm during the Second World War. Soon after he set up his own instrumentation company. He never married and in his later years suffered from motor neurone disease. Les William liked to recall Lord Kelvin's dictum that one did not truly understand a scientific quantity until one could measure it and provide an accurate numerical value. William's career was closely linked to that of his older brother Austin (1913 - 1985). During the Second World War the two brothers worked together producing electrical meters. After the war, Austin continued on in the manufacture of electrical meters while Les established his own company producing high accuracy standard resistors. He died in Melbourne on 4 June 1994. In his will, William made a substantial bequest to Monash University Department of Physics.A portrait of J. L. (Les) William was commissioned by Monash University's School of Physics. The portrait was painted by the Adelaide artist Ms Avril Thomas. The J. L. William Bequest to the School of Physics specifically mentions \"quantum measurements\", and.", "target": "Australian maker of scientific instruments", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5417794", "label": "Everyday", "source": "\"Everyday\" is a song written by Dave Loggins and J.D. Martin, and recorded by American country music group The Oak Ridge Boys. It was released in July 1984 as the first single from their Greatest Hits 2 compilation album. The song was The Oak Ridge Boys' tenth number one country single. The single went to number one for one week and spent thirteen weeks on the country chart.", "target": "title of song written by Dave Loggins and J.D. Martin, and recorded by American country music group The Oak Ridge Boys", "baseline_candidates": ["single", "song"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18038158", "label": "OR1C1", "source": "Olfactory receptor 1C1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the OR1C1 gene.Olfactory receptors interact with odorant molecules in the nose, to initiate a neuronal response that triggers the perception of a smell. The olfactory receptor proteins are members of a large family of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) arising from single coding-exon genes. Olfactory receptors share a 7-transmembrane domain structure with many neurotransmitter and hormone receptors and are responsible for the recognition and G protein-mediated transduction of odorant signals. The olfactory receptor gene family is the largest in the genome. The nomenclature assigned to the olfactory receptor genes and proteins for this organism is independent of other organisms.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7377793", "label": "Rueben Riley", "source": "Rueben Joseph Riley, Jr. (born September 20, 1984) is a former American football offensive lineman. He was signed by the Carolina Panthers as an undrafted free agent in 2007. He played college football at Michigan. Riley has also been a member of the Miami Dolphins, Washington Redskins, New York Giants and Hartford Colonials.", "target": "player of American football", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96703", "label": "Fritz Bronsart von Schellendorf", "source": "Friedrich (Fritz) Bronsart von Schellendorf (1864–1950) was a German officer and politician. He was the chief of Staff of the Ottoman Army and was one of the many German military advisors assigned to the Ottoman Empire. He replaced Otto Liman von Sanders who was assogned to the Aegean region following disagreements with Enver Pasha. He was instrumental drafting initial war plans for the Ottoman Army. Some historians consider Bronsart von Schellendorf to have been complicit in the Armenian genocide. He was an ardent supporter of Hitler during 1930s also.Schellendorf's comments in 1919: Like the Jew, the Armenian outside his homeland is like a parasite, absorbing the wellbeing of the country in which he is established. This also results in hatred that has been directed against him in a medieval manner as an unwanted people, and has led to his murder.", "target": "German soldier (1864-1950)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5737460", "label": "Club de Rugby Ateneo Inmaculada", "source": "Club de Rugby Ateneo Inmaculada, also known for its acronym CRAI is an Argentine rugby union and field hockey club, located in Santo Tomé, Santa Fe Province. Ateneo Inmaculada is member of the Unión Santafesina de Rugby and currently plays in the Torneo del Litoral. One of Santa Fe's youngest clubs, Ateneo Inmaculada reached the final of the Torneo del Litoral in 2007. Club's main rival is Santa Fe Rugby Club.", "target": "Argentine sports club", "baseline_candidates": ["sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q73014924", "label": "prime editing", "source": "Prime editing is a ‘search-and-replace’ genome editing technology in molecular biology by which the genome of living organisms may be modified. The technology directly writes new genetic information into a targeted DNA site. It uses a fusion protein, consisting of a catalytically impaired Cas9 endonuclease fused to an engineered reverse transcriptase enzyme, and a prime editing guide RNA (pegRNA), capable of identifying the target site and providing the new genetic information to replace the target DNA nucleotides. It mediates targeted insertions, deletions, and base-to-base conversions without the need for double strand breaks (DSBs) or donor DNA templates.The technology is an early-stage, experimental genome editing method that has received mainstream press attention due to its potential uses in medical genetics. It utilizes methodologies similar to precursor genome editing technologies, including CRISPR/Cas9 and base editors. Prime editing has been used on some animal models of genetic disease.", "target": "Experimental genome editing technique", "baseline_candidates": ["emerging technology", "genetic engineering"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3412060", "label": "Adamussium colbecki", "source": "The Antarctic scallop (Adamussium colbecki) is a species of bivalve mollusc in the large family of scallops, the Pectinidae. It was thought to be the only species in the genus Adamussium until an extinct Pliocene species was described in 2016. Its exact relationship to other members of the Pectinidae is unclear. It is found in the ice-cold seas surrounding Antarctica, sometimes at great depths. Adamussium colbecki is a large, slow-growing scallop that lives on the seabed. The shell consists of a pair of ribbed calcareous valves which enclose the soft body and are joined by a ligament at a hinge. It feeds on microscopic green algae and is sometimes present in great numbers. It is able to move around by flapping its valves and to dart backwards to escape threats. The species is an important member of the Antarctic seabed community as the upper valve often acts as a substrate for seaweeds, sponges and other organisms. In addition, juveniles bind themselves by threads to the upper valve of older shells, using these as a base for several years as they grow. The adult scallops have been used in research to study the accumulation of heavy metals in marine organisms.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56682914", "label": "Leah Saunders", "source": "Leah Saunders (born 7 February 1993) is an Australian national representative rower, a medallist at the 2018 and 2019 World Rowing Championships.", "target": "Australian rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5460932", "label": "Florența Albu", "source": "Florența Albu (December 1, 1934 – February 3, 2000) was a Romanian poet.", "target": "Romanian poet (1934-2000)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16018739", "label": "Clarence Faulk", "source": "Clarence Eugene Faulk, Jr. (January 9, 1909 – March 5, 2010), was an American journalist who published from 1931 to 1962 the Ruston Daily Leader, the daily newspaper in Ruston in north Louisiana. Through the ownership of KRUS-AM radio, Faulk was a broadcaster. He was also engaged in real estate and a pioneer of self-storage warehousing, a business that he did not launch until after he was seventy years of age.", "target": "Louisiana publisher and businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43388571", "label": "Trần Tuấn Anh", "source": "Trần Tuấn Anh (born 6 April 1964 in Hanoi) is a Vietnamese politician. His family is originally from Đức Phổ District, Quảng Ngãi Province. He was the Minister of Industry and Trade of Vietnam and a member of the National Assembly of Vietnam 14th term of 2016-2021 of the delegation of the National Assembly of Quảng Ngãi. He attended the Central Economic Commission on February 6, 2021. Before, he had been President of Ho Chi Minh City University of Industry, Vice Chairman of People's Committee of Cần Thơ City and Consul General of Vietnam in San Francisco. Between 2011 and 2013 he was also rector of the Industrial University of Ho Chi Minh City.Anh became member of the Communist Party of Vietnam on November 29, 1996.", "target": "politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7538760", "label": "Slapton Ley", "source": "Slapton Ley is a lake on the south coast of Devon, England, separated from Start Bay by a shingle beach, known as Slapton Sands. Slapton Ley is the largest natural freshwater lake in south-west England being 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long and has two sections; the Lower Ley and the Higher Ley. The ley is fed by streams and a small river, The Gara, that flows into the Higher Ley. The site is a National Nature Reserve, a Site of Special Scientific Interest and a Geological Conservation Review site. The nature reserve covers over 200 hectares (490 acres).The A379 between the Ley and the sea runs along the shingle ridge and was rebuilt after damage by coastal erosion in the early 2000s.", "target": "lake on the south coast of Devon, England", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7601146", "label": "Star Wars PocketModel Trading Card Game", "source": "Star Wars PocketModel Trading Card Game is an out-of-print tabletop game manufactured by WizKids, Inc. that debuted in 2007, based on the Star Wars universe. The game was designed by Mike Elliott and Ethan Pasternack. The game has aspects of both miniatures and collectible card game genres. It is similar to WizKid's Pirates Constructible Strategy Game in some aspects, most notably the styrene constructible game pieces, which makes them both PocketModel games. The core gameplay however differs in many fundamental ways, most notably in how movement is handled, and the addition of cards, which adds the strategic element of deck construction which is most often found in CCGs. It derives its content from the first six Star Wars movies and the franchise's Expanded Universe. The Star Wars PocketModel TCG was announced by WizKids on February 7, 2007, and released in June 2007, after consumers were introduced to the game at Star Wars Celebration IV that May. An expansion to the game, entitled Ground Assault, was released on November 14, 2007. The third 'release', entitled Order 66, was released on March 5, 2008. Several more expansions were slated for release the same year, including Scum and Villainy, Clone Wars, Secret Weapons, and Galaxy at War, as well as a promotional release for the multimedia The Force Unleashed coinciding with the release of the video game; however, only Scum and Villainy and Clone Wars were released before the game was discontinued. The game was produced until November 10, 2008, when Topps terminated the game company's operations. In July.", "target": "board game", "baseline_candidates": ["board game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7255271", "label": "Pseudophilautus semiruber", "source": "Pseudophilautus semiruber, known as Annandale's Shrub Frog, is a species of frog in the family Rhacophoridae that is endemic to Sri Lanka.Pseudophilautus semiruber is one of the smallest frog species in Sri Lanka and it is also one of the world's smallest frogs, measuring less than 15 mm in snout-to-vent length (diminutive species). A single specimen of this species was first discovered in 1911 and described by Annandale in 1913, referring to it as Ixalus semiruber. For the next 95 years since 1913, this species was not again seen alive, and the type specimen on which the original description was made, was confirmed to be lost from a Museum collection by 2001.Extensive field research conducted by Madhava Meegaskumbura in 2005, targeting molecular characterization of the Sri Lankan shrub frog species, lead to the re-discovery of this species from near a small forest reserve (Agra-Bopath) close to the Horton Plains National Park, Sri Lanka.", "target": "species of Amphibia", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6216187", "label": "Johann Philipp Franz von Schönborn", "source": "Johann Philipp Franz von Schönborn (1673–1724) was the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg from 1719 to 1724. His principal claim to fame is his commissioning of the Würzburg Residence, a major work of Baroque architecture.", "target": "German bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5160224", "label": "Confluence Commercial Historic District", "source": "The Confluence Commercial Historic District is located in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.", "target": "historic district in Eau Claire, Wisconsin", "baseline_candidates": ["historic district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q173444", "label": "Gian Carlo Minardi", "source": "Giancarlo Minardi (born 18 September 1947) is the founder and former Managing Director of the now-defunct Minardi Formula One team.", "target": "Formula One team owner", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55701874", "label": "Bulanliq", "source": "Bulanliq (Persian: بولانليق, also Romanized as Būlānlīq; also known as Bolānlīq) is a village in Qezel Uzan Rural District, in the Central District of Meyaneh County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 456, in 84 families.", "target": "village in East Azerbaijan, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6688322", "label": "Louis Vasquez", "source": "Pierre Louis Vasquez also known as Luis Vázquez (October 3, 1798 – September 5, 1868) was a mountain man and trader. He was a contemporary of many famous European-American explorers of the early west and would come to know many of them, including Jim Bridger, Manuel Lisa, Kit Carson and Andrew Sublette, besides his own father Benito Vázquez.", "target": "Spanish mountain man (1798-1868)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18531169", "label": "Willie Doyle", "source": "William Joseph Gabriel Doyle, MC (3 March 1873 – 16 August 1917), better known as Willie Doyle, was an Irish Roman Catholic priest who was killed in action while serving as a military chaplain to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers during the First World War.", "target": "British priest", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1235151", "label": "Eugen von Kahler", "source": "Eugen von Kahler, originally Eugen Kohn (6 January 1882, Prague - 13 December 1911, Prague) was a Bohemian-German painter, graphic artist and writer of Jewish ancestry. Most of his works are in the Expressionist style.", "target": "painter (1882-1911)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5115378", "label": "Chuck Broyles", "source": "Charles Leroy Broyles (born February 5, 1947) is a former American football coach and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Pittsburg State University from 1990 to 2009, compiling a record of 198–47–2 in 20 seasons. His Pittsburg State Gorillas football teams won the NCAA Division II Football Championship in 1991, appeared three other championship games (1992, 1995 and 2004), and captured nine Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association titles. Broyles retired from coaching at Pittsburg State effective December 2, 2009.", "target": "American football player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7189694", "label": "Physics in Medicine and Biology", "source": "Physics in Medicine & Biology is a biweekly peer-reviewed medical journal covering research on the application of physics to medicine, physiology, and biology. It was established in 1956 and is published by IOP Publishing on behalf of the Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine. It is also an official journal of the following medical societies: Canadian Organization of Medical Physics, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Medizinische Physik, Japanese Association of Radiological Physics, European Federation of Organisations for Medical Physics, and the International Organization for Medical Physics. The editor-in-chief is Katia Parodi. According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2020 impact factor of 3.609. It is abstracted and indexed in Inspec, Chemical Abstracts, BIOSIS Previews/Biological Abstracts, Compendex, Embase/Excerpta Medica, PASCAL, Science Citation Index, Current Contents, Index Medicus/MEDLINE/PubMed, and VINITI Database RAS.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal", "medical journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15755235", "label": "Journal of Belgian History", "source": "The Journal of Belgian History is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Centre for Historical Research and Documentation on War and Contemporary Society (Cegesoma). It focuses on the history of Belgium in the 19th and 20th centuries. One of the four yearly issues is published in English, the other three in French and Dutch. The journal is abstracted and indexed in the Arts and Humanities Citation Index.The editors-in-chief are Catherine Lanneau (University of Liège) and Nico Wouters (Cegesoma).", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal", "open-access journal", "history journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10313509", "label": "Junior MasterChef Australia", "source": "Junior MasterChef Australia (known colloquially as MasterChef Kids) is an Australian competitive cooking game show. It is a spin-off of MasterChef Australia, itself an adaptation of the British show MasterChef, and featured contestants aged 8 to 12. The first season of the show began production in July 2010 and included 50 contestants. Over 5,000 children from around the nation auditioned for the series. In contrast to prior series, Junior MasterChef Australia was produced by Shine Australia. The promo was seen during the final episode of the second season of MasterChef Australia. The series premiered on Sunday, 12 September 2010.On 27 April 2020, it was announced that a third season of Junior MasterChef Australia had been commissioned, nine years after the second series aired. Casting was open to children aged between 9 and 14 years old.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31185726", "label": "attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan", "source": "On March 30, 1981, United States president Ronald Reagan was shot and wounded by John Hinckley Jr. in Washington, D.C. as he was returning to his limousine after a speaking engagement at the Washington Hilton. Hinckley believed the attack would impress actress Jodie Foster, with whom he had developed an erotomanic obsession. Reagan was seriously wounded by a .22 Long Rifle bullet that ricocheted off the side of the presidential limousine and hit him in the left underarm, breaking a rib, puncturing a lung, and causing serious internal bleeding. He was close to death upon arrival at George Washington University Hospital but was stabilized in the emergency room, then underwent emergency exploratory surgery. He recovered and was released from the hospital on April 11. No formal invocation of sections #3 or #4 of the Constitution's 25th amendment (concerning the vice president assuming the president's powers and duties) took place, though Secretary of State Alexander Haig stated that he was \"in control here\" at the White House until Vice President George H. W. Bush returned to Washington from Fort Worth, Texas. White House press secretary James Brady, Secret Service agent Tim McCarthy, and DC police officer Thomas Delahanty were also wounded. All three survived, but Brady had brain damage and was permanently disabled. His death in 2014 was considered a homicide because it was ultimately caused by his injury.Hinckley was found not guilty by reason of insanity on charges of attempting to assassinate the president. He remained confined to St. Elizabeth's Hospital, a DC psychiatric facility. In.", "target": "1981 shooting of US President Ronald Reagan and murder of then White House Press Secretary James Brady", "baseline_candidates": ["murder", "assassination attempt"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20805821", "label": "2001 Lehigh Valley Grand Prix", "source": "The 2001 Lehigh Valley Grand Prix, known informally as the 2001 Nazareth 225, was a Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) motor race held on May 6, 2001 at Nazareth Speedway in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, USA. It was the 4th round of the 2001 CART season. Rookie Scott Dixon won the race by just four tenths of a second over Kenny Bräck, while Paul Tracy took third. Dixon scored his first and only CART win after he successfully gambled on a fuel-saving strategy that gave PacWest Racing its last win before the team folded in 2002 as well as its first win since 1997. Bräck's first podium of the season was the prelude to two consecutive wins at Motegi and Milwaukee, putting him solidly in the championship hunt. For Tracy, it was his second podium in three races, but he would not record another for the rest of the season. The race was the first after the Firestone Firehawk 600 fiasco, and there were concerns about the G-Forces experienced at Nazareth that were ultimately unfounded. This would also be the last time that CART raced at the speedway, allowing open-wheel rival Indy Racing League to run its own 225-lap race from 2002-2004.", "target": "motor car race", "baseline_candidates": ["Firestone Indy 225"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55388957", "label": "2018–19 AEK Athens F.C. season", "source": "The 2018–19 season was the 95th season in the existence of AEK Athens F.C. and the 58th competitive season and fourth consecutive in the top flight of Greek football. They competed in the Super League, the Greek Cup and the Champions League. The season begun at 8 August 2018 and finished at 11 May 2019.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1780980", "label": "Sylta", "source": "Sylta is a village situated in Upplands-Bro Municipality, Stockholm County, Sweden with 763 inhabitants in 2005.", "target": "place in Uppland, Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Sweden", "minor locality in Sweden"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18047106", "label": "RNF146", "source": "RING finger protein 146 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the RNF146 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4853250", "label": "Bam Balams", "source": "Bam Balams were an Australian rock band which formed in 1984 and disbanded in 1992. They were led by singer-songwriter and guitarist, Brendan \"Wig\" Kibble (ex-Vampire Lovers). The group issued one album, Genuine Rock & Roll Medicine Show (Green Fez, 1988), an EP and six singles. Their records did well in the Australian independent charts but they did not appear on the ARIA Charts. They toured nationally but did not perform overseas.", "target": "Australian rock band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19724791", "label": "Solanum melongena", "source": "Eggplant (US, Canada, Australia), aubergine (UK, Ireland) or brinjal (Indian subcontinent, Singapore, Malaysia, South Africa) is a plant species in the nightshade family Solanaceae. Solanum melongena is grown worldwide for its edible fruit. Most commonly purple, the spongy, absorbent fruit is used in several cuisines. Typically used as a vegetable in cooking, it is a berry by botanical definition. As a member of the genus Solanum, it is related to the tomato, chili pepper, and potato, although those are of the New World while the eggplant is of the Old World. Like the tomato, its skin and seeds can be eaten, but, like the potato, it is usually eaten cooked. Eggplant is nutritionally low in macronutrient and micronutrient content, but the capability of the fruit to absorb oils and flavors into its flesh through cooking expands its use in the culinary arts. It was originally domesticated from the wild nightshade species thorn or bitter apple, S. incanum, probably with two independent domestications: one in South Asia, and one in East Asia. In 2018, China and India combined accounted for 87% of the world production of eggplants.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["cultivated edible plant", "taxon", "perennial plant"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4667035", "label": "Aberdeenshire Cricket Club", "source": "Aberdeenshire CC is the largest cricket club based in Aberdeen, Scotland. Their ground, Mannofield Park, is located in the Mannofield area of Aberdeen, and was granted One Day International (ODI) status for the first time in 2008. The club has around 800 social and playing members and the current president is David Hays.", "target": "cricket club based in Aberdeen, Scotland", "baseline_candidates": ["sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7576357", "label": "Spergularia macrotheca", "source": "Spergularia macrotheca is a species of flowering plant in the family Caryophyllaceae known by the common name sticky sandspurry. It is native to western North America from British Columbia to Baja California, where it grows in many types of moist coastal and inland habitat, often in alkaline and saline substrates. It may be found in marshes, alkali flats, beaches, meadows, seeps, and vernal pools. It is a perennial herb producing a narrow stem up to 40 centimeters long with a woody, thickened base and taproot. They may grow erect or prostrate across the ground. It is covered in sticky glandular hairs, especially in the inflorescence. The stems are lined with fleshy linear leaves, sometimes tipped with spines. The leaves are accompanied by triangular stipules up to a centimeter long each. Flowers occur in clusters at the end of the stem as well as in leaf axils. The small flowers have five pointed sepals and five oval white to lavender-pink petals. The fruit is a capsule containing tiny reddish brown, winged seeds.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61754603", "label": "George Ainsworth", "source": "George William Bromilow Ainsworth (21 March 1876 – 3 March 1941) was an English first-class cricketer and British Army officer. Ainsworth was born at Freshfield in Lancashire, and was educated at Marlborough College, entering in 1890 and leaving in 1893. He made one appearance in first-class cricket for H. D. G. Leveson Gower's XI against Oxford University at Oxford in 1902. He batted once during the match, scoring 10 runs without being dismissed. He served with the Royal Garrison Artillery during the latter stages of the First World War as a second lieutenant. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in August 1919. He resigned his commission in April 1920, retaining the rank of lieutenant.He died at Bushey in Hertfordshire in March 1941. His brother, Jerry Ainsworth, was also a first-class cricketer.", "target": "English cricketer and British Army officer (1876-1941)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16386423", "label": "It's Fun to Be Free", "source": "\"It's Fun to Be Free\" was the ubiquitous theme song for the World of Motion pavilion at Walt Disney World's Epcot theme park. Composed by Disney staff musician Norman \"Buddy\" Baker with lyrics by Xavier \"X\" Atencio, it is notable among Disney Theme Park music for the sheer number of variations created for the ride, and the song's infectious earworm quality.", "target": "song from the Epcot Center theme park attraction World of Motion, written by Xavier Atencio and Buddy Baker", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16240180", "label": "Ray Keith", "source": "Ray Keith is a British drum and bass DJ and record producer. He is one of the genre's most well known producers and DJs and is regarded as one of the pivotal figures in the early jungle/drum and bass scene.", "target": "DJ", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86736742", "label": "Nahoubé", "source": "Nahoubé (or Naoubé) is a town in the Méguet Department of Ganzourgou Province in central Burkina Faso. The town has a population of 1,095.", "target": "place in Plateau-Central Region, Burkina Faso", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Burkina Faso"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4675304", "label": "acrocallosal syndrome", "source": "Acrocallosal syndrome (also known as ACLS) is an extremely rare autosomal recessive syndrome characterized by corpus callosum agenesis, polydactyly, multiple dysmorphic features, motor and intellectual disabilities, and other symptoms. The syndrome was first described by Albert Schinzel in 1979. Mutations in KIF7 are causative for ACLS, and mutations in GLI3 are associated with a similar syndrome.", "target": "syndrome that is an autosomal recessive disorder, which is characterized by corpus callosum agenesis, polydactyly, multiple dysmorphic features, motor and mental retardation", "baseline_candidates": ["developmental defect during embryogenesis", "syndrome", "disease (class)", "rare disease", "genetic syndromic intellectual disability", "multiple congenital anomalies/dysmorphic syndrome-intellectual disability", "genetic syndrome with corpus callosum agenesis/dysgenesis as a major feature", "syndrome with limb duplication, polydactyly, syndactyly, and/or hyperphalangy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q940679", "label": "1981–82 Denver Nuggets season", "source": "The 1981-82 Denver Nuggets season was their 15th season, and their sixth in the NBA. During the 1981–82 season, they scored at least 100 points in every game and allowed at least 100 points in every game. They returned to the postseason for the first time since the 1978–79 season. In the playoffs, the Nuggets lost to the Phoenix Suns in three games in the First Round.", "target": "NBA professional basketball team season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6153951", "label": "Jangada River", "source": "The Jangada River is a river of Santa Catarina and Paraná states in southeastern Brazil. It is part of the Paraná River basin and a tributary of the Iguazu River.", "target": "river in Paraná, Brazil; tributary of Iguazu River", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5164973", "label": "Contemporary Country", "source": "Contemporary Country was a 22-volume series issued by Time-Life during the early 1990s, spotlighting country music of the 1970s through mid 1990s. Each volume in the series chronicled a specific time period – the early-1970s, the mid-1970s, the late-1970s, the early-1980s, the mid-1980s, the late-1980s, the early-1990s and the mid-1990s. Each volume was issued on a compact disc or cassette. Individual volumes contained 22 tracks, and represented the highlighted time period's most popular and noteworthy tracks. Also included was a booklet, containing liner notes written by some of the most respected historians of the genre, photographs of the artists, and information on the songs (writers, performers and peak position on Billboard magazine's country charts). All told, the entire series contains 484 tracks.", "target": "album by Time Life", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1252177", "label": "Doug Dailey", "source": "Douglas James Dailey MBE (born 1944) is an English racing cyclist, former national road race champion and the former logistics manager of British Cycling. He has also been the national coach and an administrator.", "target": "English racing cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1346824", "label": "The Rock-A-Teens", "source": "The Rock-A-Teens were a short-lived United States rockabilly group from Richmond, Virginia, active in the late 1950s, led by Vic Mizelle.The Rock-a-Teens were one-hit wonders whose lone hit record was \"Woo Hoo\", written by George Donald McGraw and backed with \"Untrue\", released on Roulette Records R 4192. The song hit No. 16 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "target": "band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12305276", "label": "Carl Juel", "source": "Carl Juel (1706–1767), was a Danish statesman and court official, councillor, and diocesan governor.He was a son of statesman and nobleman Knud Juel and the brother of court official Niels Juel. He served as courtier of to the queen, Sophie Magdalene of Brandenburg-Kulmbach, and he married the queen's maid-of-honor Christiane Henriette Louise von Schleinitz in 1738. He was appointed as the Diocesan Governor of Christianssand stiftamt in Norway from 1738 until 1742. They then moved back to Denmark where he and his wife were powerful central figures at the Danish royal court and their careers there took place in parallel: in 1742-43 they served as chamberlain and chief lady-in-waiting to Princess Louise of Denmark (1726–1756), and in 1743 they were appointed to the same position for the new crown princess, Louise of Great Britain. They kept their offices to Louise after she became queen, and were appointed to the same offices to the next queen, Juliana Maria of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, in 1752.In 1754, the Juel couple were ousted from the royal court, reportedly because they were considered a threat by the powerful Johann Hartwig Ernst von Bernstorff. He was then appointed to the position of County Governor of Ringsted amt. He held that post from 1754 until 1760 when he appointed to the position of Diocesan Governor of Fyns stiftamt. He held that job until his death in 1767.", "target": "Danish judge (1706-1767)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10533186", "label": "I kväll jag tänder ett ljus", "source": "\"I kväll jag tänder ett ljus\" is a Christmas song with lyrics and music by Ingvar Hellberg. With lyrics referring to childhood, it references snowy Christmases, probably on the Earth's Northern Hemisphere. It also uses some older Swedish grammar, with the lines och nu när snöflingor falla i julnatten lång. In 1975 the song was recorded by Lennart Duvsjö, who released it as a single with \"Tankar i julekväll\" as B-side. Vikingarna recorded the song for the 1979 album \"Vikingarnas julparty\", and the 1985 Vikingarna Christmas album \"Julens sånger\" 1985. In 1981 Stefan Borsch recorded the song on his Christmas album \"I kväll jag tänder ett ljus\". The same year the song was also recorded by Lasse Stefanz. Even Göran Lindberg, on the 1995 album Sånger i jul, and och Anna-Lena Löfgren at Julens favoriter ; Julens schlager from the same year have recorded the song. In 2011, Tony Strandberg and Strandbergz Orkester recorded the song. During the period 13 December 1987-31 January 1988 Kikki Danielsson scored a Svensktoppen hit with the song, topping the chart on 20 December 1987. Her recording was also included on her 1987 Christmas album \"Min barndoms jular\".In the year 2000 the song was recorded by Christer Sjögren on his Christmas album Ett julkort från förr.", "target": "Christmas song written and composed by Ingvar Hellberg, originally recorded by Lennart Duvsjö and released in 1975", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5619323", "label": "Posielanie", "source": "Posielanie [pɔɕeˈlaɲe] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Augustów, within Augustów County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 11 kilometres (7 mi) north-west of Augustów and 91 km (57 mi) north of the regional capital Białystok.", "target": "village in Podlaskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56247736", "label": "Alan Almand", "source": "Alan Almand (born 19 March 1943), also known as Willy Almand, is a retired British rower. He competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics.", "target": "British rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1561616", "label": "N. J. Crisp", "source": "Norman James Crisp (11 December 1923 – 14 June 2005), known as a writer only by his initials and surname, N. J. Crisp, was a prolific British television writer, dramatist and novelist. In the sixties after writing some single dramas, Crisp moved to writing for serials and turned out scripts for many BBC series including Compact, R3, Dixon of Dock Green, Dr Finlay's Casebook, Colditz and Secret Army. In 1968, he co-created The Expert, a serial about a forensic scientist, with its producer Gerard Glaister. Four years later the pair repeated these roles with the boardroom drama The Brothers. His 1996 play That Good Night starred Donald Sinden, Nigel Davenport, Lucy Fleming, Patrick Ryecart and Julie-Kate Olivier and was directed by Edward Hall. The film of the same title, based on Crisp's play, received its world premiere in June 2017 at the Edinburgh International Film Festival. It was John Hurt's final film, and was nominated for the Michael Powell Award for Best British Feature Film. Crisp's 1987 psychological thriller Dangerous Obsession was filmed in 1999 as Darkness Falls, starring Ray Winstone, Tim Dutton and Sherilyn Fenn. However, Crisp was so appalled at the end result and how his famously intricate plot had been turned on its head without his permission that he insisted on having his name removed from the final print.He was married to Marguerite (née Lowe), had three sons and one daughter and five grandchildren.", "target": "British writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25566683", "label": "Coryne", "source": "Coryne is a genus of hydrozoans belonging to the family Corynidae.", "target": "genus of cnidarians", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1686699", "label": "Jella Haase", "source": "Jella Haase (born 27 October 1992) is a German actress. She began acting in theatre at a very early age. Her film credits include Lollipop Monster, Fack ju Göhte and Kriegerin. She has also appeared on the television shows Polizeiruf 110 and Alpha 0.7 – Der Feind in dir. She won the Bavarian Film Award for Best Young Actress in 2012, the Günter Strack Television Award in 2013 and earned a nomination at the German Film Awards in 2014.", "target": "German actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3794105", "label": "The King's General", "source": "The King's General is a novel, published in 1946, by English author and playwright Daphne du Maurier.", "target": "book by Daphne du Maurier", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5214593", "label": "Dan Wikler", "source": "Daniel I. Wikler (born 1946) is an American public health educator, philosopher, and medical ethicist. He is currently the Mary B. Saltonstall Professor of Population Ethics and Professor of Ethics and Population Health in the Department of Global Health and Population of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston. He is Director and a core faculty member in the Harvard Program in Ethics and Health (PEH). His current research interests are ethical issues in population and international health, including the allocation of health resources, health research involving human subjects, organ transplant ethics, and ethical dilemmas arising in public health practice, and he teaches several courses each year. He is a fellow of the Hastings Center, an independent bioethics research institution.", "target": "American philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4171280", "label": "Nikolai Dukhov", "source": "Nikolai Leonidovich Dukhov (Russian: Николай Леонидович Духов; 8 November [O.S. 26 October] 1904 – 1 May 1964) was a Soviet designer of cars, tractors, tanks and nuclear weapons.", "target": "Soviet engineer (1904-1964)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97777", "label": "Walter Wolfrum", "source": "Walter Wolfrum (23 May 1923 – 26 August 2010) was a German military aviator who served in the Luftwaffe during World War II. As a fighter ace, he flew 424 combat missions and claimed 137 aerial victories—that is, 137 aerial combat encounters resulting in the destruction of the enemy aircraft. This ties him for 43rd place among highest scoring fighter aces. He was also a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, the highest award in the military and paramilitary forces of Nazi Germany during World War II.", "target": "German military and aerobatics pilot", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13157016", "label": "Ballysteen GAA", "source": "Ballysteen GAA is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Ballysteen, Limerick, Ireland. The club participates in competitions organized by Limerick GAA.", "target": "gaelic games club in County Limerick, Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["sports club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26837854", "label": "Patrik Machač", "source": "Patrik Machač (born April 23, 1994) is a Czech professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing for HC Kladno of the Czech Extraliga.Machač made his Czech Extraliga debut playing with HC Kladno during the 2013–14 Czech Extraliga season.", "target": "ice hockey player (1994-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6442993", "label": "Kuliki, Kwidzyn County", "source": "Kuliki [kuˈliki] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Ryjewo, within Kwidzyn County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "target": "settlement in Pomeranian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61942820", "label": "Jacob Merrill Manning", "source": "Jacob Merrill Manning (December 31, 1824 – November 29, 1882) was a prominent Congregational clergyman, active in Boston, Massachusetts.", "target": "American clergyman (1824-1882)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6969440", "label": "Nathan Zuzga", "source": "Nathan Zuzga is a retired American soccer forward who played one season for the Carolina RailHawks in the USL First Division.", "target": "American soccer player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14724270", "label": "Aneflus poriferus", "source": "Aneflus poriferus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Giesbert in 1993.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28406449", "label": "Imagine Me, Imagine You", "source": "\"Imagine Me, Imagine You\" is a 1975 song by pop group Fox. Written by the group's founder Kenny Young, it was taken from their debut album Fox. It reached no. 15 on the UK Singles Chart in June 1975, becoming the band's third highest charting single and ultimately spending 8 weeks in the chart. However, the song reached its highest chart peak on the German chart where it reached no. 7.A contemporary review of the song by Peter Trollope of Liverpool Echo praised lead singer Noosha's vocals and described it as \"another excellent record\" from \"one of the best bands to have appeared on the scene in a long time\". Reviewing Cherry Red's The Fox Box for Louder Than War in 2017, Ian Canty described the song as \"gentle, unusual brilliance\".", "target": "1975 song performed by Fox", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15968430", "label": "Romain Heinrich", "source": "Romain Heinrich (born (1990-01-30)30 January 1990 in Colmar) is a French bobsledder.Heinrich competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics for France. He teamed with driver Loic Costerg in the two-man event, finishing 20th, and in the France-1 sled with Costerg, Florent Ribet and Elly Lefort in the four-man event, finishing 17th.As of April 2014, his best showing at the World Championships is 17th, in the 2013 two-man event.Heinrich made his World Cup debut in December 2011. As of April 2014, his best finish is 14th, in two events in 2013-14.", "target": "French bobsledder", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16156345", "label": "Get Hot or Go Home", "source": "\"Get Hot or Go Home\" is a song recorded by Canadian country music artist Rick Tippe. It was released in 1997 as the fourth single from his second studio album, Get Hot or Go Home. It peaked at number 10 on the RPM Country Tracks chart in February 1998.", "target": "1997 song performed by Rick Tippe", "baseline_candidates": ["musical work/composition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16150855", "label": "Tom Allin", "source": "Thomas William Allin (27 November 1987 – 4 January 2016) was an English cricketer who played for Warwickshire County Cricket Club.Tom Allin was a right-arm medium-fast pace bowler who also batted right-handed. He made his debut for the county in the 2011 Clydesdale Bank 40 against Surrey, and his first-class debut came against Middlesex in May 2013.Allin suffered serious injuries in a road accident in October 2015. He gradually recovered physically, but suffered from mood swings. He committed suicide on 4 January 2016 aged 28 in Bideford, North Devon, by jumping from the A39 River Torridge Bridge.", "target": "cricketer (1987-2016)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q737685", "label": "Chabad Lubavitch", "source": "Chabad, also known as Lubavitch, Habad and Chabad-Lubavitch (Hebrew: חב\"ד), is an Orthodox Jewish Hasidic dynasty. Chabad is one of the world's best-known Hasidic movements, particularly for its outreach activities. It is one of the largest Hasidic groups and Jewish religious organizations in the world. Unlike most ultra-Orthodox groups, which are self-segregating, Chabad operates mainly in the wider world and caters to secularized Jews. Founded in 1775 by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the name \"Chabad\" (חב״ד‎) is an acronym formed from three Hebrew words—Chochmah, Binah, Da'at (the first three sephirot of the kabbalistic Tree of Life) (חכמה, בינה, דעת‎): \"Wisdom, Understanding, and Knowledge\"—which represent the intellectual and kabbalistic underpinnings of the movement. The name Lubavitch derives from the town in which the now-dominant line of leaders resided from 1813 to 1915. Other, non-Lubavitch scions of Chabad either disappeared or merged into the Lubavitch line. In the 1930s, the sixth Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, moved the center of the Chabad movement from Russia to Poland. After the outbreak of World War II, he moved the center of the movement to the United States. In 1951, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson formally accepted the leadership as the seventh Chabad Rebbe. He transformed the movement into one of the most widespread Jewish movements in the world today. Under his leadership, Chabad established a large network of institutions that seek to satisfy religious, social and humanitarian needs across the world. Chabad institutions provide outreach to unaffiliated Jews and humanitarian aid, as well as religious, cultural and educational.", "target": "Chasidic movement Chabad-Lubavitch", "baseline_candidates": ["Hasidism", "Orthodox Judaism", "Hasidic dynasty", "charitable organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14935141", "label": "Fawkner", "source": "Fawkner is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 12 km north of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government areas are the City of Moreland and the City of Hume. At the 2016 census, Fawkner had a population of 14,043. The major portion within the City of Moreland is bounded by Merri Creek on the east, Sydney Road on the west, the Western Ring Road on the north and Boundary Road on the south separating the suburb from Coburg North. The smaller portion within the City of Hume extends north to Camp Road and Mahoneys Road.", "target": "suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["gazetted locality of Victoria", "suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5040218", "label": "Carl Ginet", "source": "Carl Ginet (born 1932) is an American philosopher and Professor Emeritus at Cornell University. His work is primarily in action theory, moral responsibility, free will, and epistemology. Ginet received his BA from Occidental College in 1954, and his Ph.D. from Cornell in 1960 with a dissertation entitled \"Reasons, Causes, and Free Will\". He joined the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell in 1971 and retired in 1999. Before Cornell, Ginet was a faculty member of various universities, including Ohio State University, University of Michigan, and University of Rochester.Ginet is married to Cornell University Professor Emerita Sally McConnell-Ginet.", "target": "American philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5175364", "label": "Coti River", "source": "The Coti River (Portuguese: Rio Coti) is a river of Amazonas state in north-western Brazil, a tributary of the Curuquetê River. The river flows through the Mapinguari National Park, a 1,776,914 hectares (4,390,850 acres) conservation unit created in 2008.", "target": "river in Amazonas, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27075156", "label": "Pogonotriccus chapmani", "source": "Chapman's bristle tyrant (Pogonotriccus chapmani), also known as Chapman's tyrannulet, is a species of passerine bird in the family Tyrannidae. This species is sometimes placed in the genus Phylloscartes. It is found in the tepuis of southern Venezuela. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39047748", "label": "Tulipani, Love, Honour and a Bicycle", "source": "Tulipani, Love, Honour and a Bicycle (Dutch: Tulipani, Liefde, Eer en een Fiets) is a 2017 Dutch comedy film, written by Peter van Wijk and directed by Mike van Diem. It was shortlisted by the EYE Film Institute Netherlands as one of the eight films to be selected as the potential Dutch submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards. However, it was not selected, with Layla M. being chosen as the Dutch entry.", "target": "2017 film by Mike van Diem", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q717217", "label": "Sekihōtai", "source": "The Sekihōtai (赤報隊, \"Red Herald Regiment\") was a group of Japanese political extremists formed in 1868 during the Boshin War.", "target": "Japanese extremist group", "baseline_candidates": [""]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5234695", "label": "David Hand", "source": "The Most Reverend Geoffrey David Hand KBE GCL (11 May 1918 – 6 April 2006) was an Australian-born Papua New Guinean Anglican bishop. He was the first Archbishop of the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea.", "target": "Australian bishop", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2013582", "label": "Verdejante", "source": "Verdejante is a city in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. The population in 2020, according with IBGE was 9,553 inhabitants and the total area is 476.03 km².", "target": "municipality of Pernambuco State, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23012287", "label": "Gila County Courthouse", "source": "The Gila County Courthouse in Globe, Arizona is a four-story courthouse built in 1906, and adjacent three-story jail behind which many were hanged, built 1909. Today, it is the Cobre Valley Center for the Arts.", "target": "courthouse in Globe, Arizona", "baseline_candidates": ["county courthouse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17662963", "label": "Balbir Singh", "source": "Balbir Singh (born 21 September 1945) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics, winning the bronze medal.", "target": "Indian field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2462284", "label": "Blood Bowl", "source": "Blood Bowl is a 2009 fantasy sports video game developed by Cyanide, loosely based on American football, and adapted from the board game of the same name, which is produced by Games Workshop, using the CRP ruleset. It was released for Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360, Nintendo DS, PlayStation Portable, iOS, and Android.", "target": "2009 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64051684", "label": "Kaiser Company, Inc. (Vancouver, Wash.)", "source": "The Vancouver Shipyard was an emergency shipyard constructed along the Columbia River in Vancouver, Washington, to help meet the production demands of the U.S. Maritime Commission in World War II. The shipyard was one of three Kaiser Shipyards in the Pacific Northwest, along with the Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation and the Swan Island Shipyard across the Columbia in Portland, Oregon. The Vancouver Yard began production in early 1942 and totaled nearly 200 acres (81 ha). It produced vessels of five different types, with Casablanca-class escort carriers being its biggest production line.With an initial payroll of 38,000 workers, The nearby city of Vanport, Oregon was constructed to house the workforce that was introduced to the area.The Shipyards were eventually sold to Gilmore Steel for $3.25 million.", "target": "World War II shipyard in Vancouver, Washington, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["shipyard"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6509379", "label": "Lealman", "source": "Lealman, known as East Lealman until 2010, is a census-designated place (CDP) in Pinellas County, Florida, United States. The population was 19,879 at the 2010 census. Prior to 2010, Lealman was part of a larger CDP named West and East Lealman. Community Redevelopment Area In 2015, the Pinellas County Board of County Commissioners created the Lealman Community Redevelopment Area (CRA), the first redevelopment area in unincorporated Pinellas County.", "target": "census-designated place in Pinellas County, Florida", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q178537", "label": "Animal Crackers", "source": "Animal Crackers is the title of several syndicated newspaper comics over the years. The first was a 1930 comic strip signed by an artist known simply as Lane. The second Animal Crackers was a cartoon panel by Dick Ryan and Warren Goodrich (1913–2002) that was published intermittently from 1936 through 1952. In some papers it ran as Animal Krackers. The third began on April 1, 1968 and continues today, distributed by Tribune Content Agency and appearing on Andrews McMeel Universal's GoComics, which is run by Universal Uclick.", "target": "comic strip", "baseline_candidates": ["comic strip"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q361746", "label": "Mario Cotelo", "source": "Mario Gutiérrez Cotelo (born 10 February 1975) is a Spanish retired professional footballer who played as a right midfielder. He amassed La Liga totals of 168 games and six goals over the course of ten seasons, representing in the competition Sporting de Gijón, Sevilla and Getafe.", "target": "Spanish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21373816", "label": "Campodea minor", "source": "Campodea minor is a species of two-pronged bristletail in the family Campodeidae.", "target": "species of Entognatha", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q811308", "label": "Interstate 895", "source": "Interstate 895 (I-895) was a planned 6.4-mile-long (10.3 km) Interstate Highway in New Jersey and Pennsylvania that would have provided a freeway between I-295 near Burlington in Burlington County, New Jersey and I-95 near Bristol in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.", "target": "highway in New Jersey and Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q653550", "label": "Spa Conference", "source": "The Spa Conference was a meeting between the Supreme War Council and the government of the Weimar Republic in Spa, Belgium on 5–16 July 1920. The main topics were German disarmament, coal shipments to the Allies and war reparations.", "target": "negotiations about German reparations", "baseline_candidates": ["international conference"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2674423", "label": "construction engineering", "source": "Construction engineering is a professional discipline that deals with the designing, planning, construction and management of infrastructures such as roads, tunnels, bridges, airports, railroads, facilities, buildings, dams, utilities and other projects. Civil engineering is a related field that deals more with the practical aspects of projects. Construction engineers learn some of the design aspects similar to civil engineers as well as project site management aspects. At the educational level, civil engineering students concentrate primarily on the design work which is more analytical, gearing them toward a career as a design professional. This essentially requires them to take a multitude of challenging engineering science and design courses as part of obtaining a 4-year accredited degree. Education for construction engineers is primarily focused on construction procedures, methods, costs, schedules and personnel management. Their primary concern is to deliver a project on time within budget and of the desired quality. The difference between a construction engineer and a civil engineer is that construction engineering students take basic design courses as well as construction management courses.", "target": "professional discipline dealing with the designing, planning, construction and management of infrastructures", "baseline_candidates": ["field of work", "academic discipline", "branch of engineering"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60789662", "label": "1956–57 Sussex County Football League", "source": "The 1956–57 Sussex County Football League season was the 32nd in the history of the competition.Division 1 was reduced to sixteen teams as Eastbourne United left the league and Rye United being promoted from Division 2. Division 2 now featured fifteen teams from which the winner would be promoted into Division 1.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q572078", "label": "Frencq", "source": "Frencq (West Flemish: Frenk) is a commune in the Pas-de-Calais department in the Hauts-de-France region of France.", "target": "commune in Pas-de-Calais, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94935448", "label": "Susan Calo-Medina", "source": "Susan Calo-Medina was a Filipino television host, actress and writer.", "target": "Filipino television host, actress and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15814128", "label": "Ritesh Batra", "source": "Ritesh Batra (born 12 June 1979) is an Indian film director and screenwriter who is known for his short films. His 2013 film, The Lunchbox broke many records at the box office and even received many awards. Batra is widely known for his debut feature film The Lunchbox starring Irrfan Khan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, and Nimrat Kaur, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2013 and won Rail d’Or (Grand Golden Rail). Batra also won the Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best First Feature Film in 2014. The Lunchbox has been called the highest grossing foreign film in North America, Europe and Australia for the year of 2014 grossing over 25 Million USD/180 Crore INR. Batra was nominated for a BAFTA Award for The Lunchbox in the category Film Not in the English language in 2015.He has directed the English-language film The Sense of an Ending, starring Jim Broadbent. The film is an adaptation of Julian Barnes’ Booker Prize-winning novel The Sense of an Ending. Ritesh has also directed Our Souls at Night starring Jane Fonda and Robert Redford, and Photograph starring Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Sanya Malhotra.", "target": "Indian film director and screenwriter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6400619", "label": "Khardo Hermitage", "source": "Khardo Hermitage is a historical hermitage in Tibet, belonging to Sera Monastery. It is located north of Lhasa, in the Dodé Valley.", "target": "building in Khardo Hermitage, China", "baseline_candidates": ["Tibetan Buddhist monastery"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4566025", "label": "1947 North American Soccer Football League season", "source": "The 1947 North American Soccer Football League season featured a 30-match schedule from 6 April to 30 August, with all six teams scheduled to play 10 matches each. The champion Detroit Wolverines had dropped out of the league, while both the Detroit Pioneers and St. Louis Raiders were added to the league. The Pittsburgh Indians and Toronto Greenbacks finished tied for first place with 14 points each, thus requiring a two-match playoff to decide a champion. The two matches were played in October (after the Fall Season had started), with Pittsburgh winning both matches to claim the championship.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5278586", "label": "Dinokanaga", "source": "Dinokanaga is a small genus of scorpionfly belonging to the extinct family Dinopanorpidae. The six species D. andersoni, D. dowsonae, D. hillsi, D. sternbergi, D. webbi, and D. wilsoni have all been recovered from Eocene fossil sites in British Columbia, Canada, and Washington state, United States.Dinokanaga is a combination of the Greek word deino meaning \"terrible\" or \"monstrous\" and okanaga in reference to the Okanagan highlands fossil sites where the specimens have been recovered. The type description of the genus was first published in 2005 by Dr. Bruce Archibald in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. Description of the new genus was based on the study of over 20 compression fossil specimens from five fossil producing locations in the highlands. Dinokanaga and Dinopanorpa, currently the only known genera in the family Dinopanorpidae, are distinguished by a number of wing vein characters including lack of fine reticulated crossveins in Dinopanorpa, and the \"Rs\" vein branched 3-5 times in Dinokanaga. The fossil specimens of high preservation quality sometimes show the original color patterning, being mostly dark with light to clear areas. Within the genus wing characters are key to separating the species.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6708345", "label": "Lyn McDade", "source": "Brigadier Lyn McDade is a former senior officer in the Australian Army, who held the position of Director of Military Prosecutions. In 2010 she was the centre of widespread media attention within Australia due to charges against three former members of the Special Operations Task Group deployed to Afghanistan.", "target": "senior officer in the Australian Army, Director of Military Prosecutions", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85987647", "label": "Maksym Yermolenko", "source": "Maksym Andriyovych Yermolenko (Ukrainian: Максим Андрійович Єрмоленко; born 14 May 1998) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a centre-forward for Ukrainian club Kramatorsk.", "target": "Ukrainian association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q746006", "label": "A City by the Light Divided", "source": "A City by the Light Divided is the fourth studio album by Thursday, released by Island Records on May 2, 2006.", "target": "album by Thursday", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3313200", "label": "Calango District", "source": "Calango District is one of sixteen districts of the province Cañete in Peru.", "target": "district in Lima, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19571877", "label": "PPMD", "source": "Kevin Nanney, also known by his gamer tag of PPMD and formerly known as Dr. PeePee, is an inactive American professional Super Smash Bros. Melee player. Nanney is one of the \"Five Gods\" of Melee, alongside Jason \"Mew2King\" Zimmerman, Joseph \"Mango\" Marquez, Adam \"Armada\" Lindgren, and Juan \"Hungrybox\" DeBiedma. He is a two-time champion of the Apex tournament series and was ranked as one of the top six players in the world from 2010 to 2015, after which he was removed from rankings due to inactivity. Nanney uses Falco and Marth and is known for his intelligent and patient playstyle. A 2021 list compiled by Melee Stats, which was hosted on PGstats, ranked Nanney as the seventh-greatest Melee player of all time.Nanney entered into a hiatus from professional competition in 2016, citing health issues, and has not entered a singles tournament since. However, Nanney has remained active on social media and Twitch and has insisted that he has not permanently retired from competition.", "target": "American electronic sports player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1347290", "label": "Bahnar people", "source": "The Bahnar or Ba-Na {(Vietnamese pronunciation: [βəna:]) Branch groups of the Bahnar: Jơlơng, Rơngao, Gơlar, KonKde, Tơlô, Kriem, Bơnâm} are an ethnic group of Vietnam living primarily in the Central Highland provinces of Gia Lai and Kon Tum, as well as the coastal provinces of Bình Định and Phú Yên. They speak the Bahnar language that belongs to the Mon–Khmer language family.", "target": "ethnic group", "baseline_candidates": ["ethnic group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3469648", "label": "Imste", "source": "Imste is a village in Kastre Parish, Tartu County in Estonia.", "target": "village in Kastre Rural Municipality, Tartu County, Estonia", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Estonia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5192941", "label": "Culicoides paraensis", "source": "Culicoides paraensis is a species of midge found from the northern United States to Argentina, which acts as the vector of the Oropouche fever virus.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4221823", "label": "Vallo Kirs", "source": "Vallo Kirs (born 23 November 1987) is an Estonian stage, film, and television actor and stage director whose career began as a teenager in 2004. Kirs is possibly best recalled internationally for his role as Kaspar in the 2007 Ilmar Raag-directed feature film drama Klass.", "target": "Estonian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15036034", "label": "100 Biggest Weather Moments", "source": "100 Biggest Weather Moments is a 2007 five-part miniseries on The Weather Channel, that premiered on Sunday, April 15, and aired nightly through Thursday, April 19, the biggest documentary effort in The Weather Channel's 25-year history.The series is hosted by Harry Connick, Jr. and counts down the top weather-related events (mostly from the United States) with commentary from various celebrities. The collection of weather moments is the work of more than 120 meteorologists.A 2nd version of it premiered on June 14, 2020.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2756224", "label": "Liliger", "source": "The liliger is the hybrid offspring of a male lion (Panthera leo) and a female liger (Panthera leo♂ × Panthera tigris♀). In accordance with Haldane's rule, male tigons and ligers are sterile, but female ligers and tigons can produce cubs. The first such hybrid was born in 1943, at the Hellabrunn Zoo.", "target": "hybrid of male lion and female liger", "baseline_candidates": ["Panthera hybrid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5040919", "label": "Carl W. Thompson", "source": "Carl William Thompson (March 15, 1914 – September 19, 2002) was an American lawyer and Democratic politician. He served 26 years in the Wisconsin State Senate and six years in the State Assembly, representing Dane County. He was an unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Wisconsin in 1948 and 1950.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11755118", "label": "Leszek Tokarz", "source": "Leszek Michał Tokarz (born 9 July 1953) is a Polish former ice hockey player. He played for Podhale Nowy Targ, GKS Katowice, and Zagłębie Sosnowiec during his career. Tokarz won the Polish league championship six times, twice with Podhale in 1971 and 1972, and with Zagłębie in 1980 and 1981. He also played for the Polish national team at the 1972 Winter Olympics and multiple World Championships. His brother, Wiesław, also played hockey, and was a teammate at the 1972 Winter Olympics. In 2005 he was awarded the Gold Cross of Merit for his services to sport.", "target": "Polish ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5507926", "label": "Fulham Power Station", "source": "Fulham Power Station was a coal-fired power station on the north bank of the River Thames at Battersea Reach in Fulham, London, not to be confused with Lots Road Power Station, a mile or so downstream in Chelsea.", "target": "Former coal-fired power station in England", "baseline_candidates": ["coal-fired power station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13667998", "label": "Mary, Viscount of Béarn", "source": "Mary (died after 1187) was a Viscountess of Béarn, Gabardan, and Brulhois from 1170 to 1171 in her own right.", "target": "Viscount", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6890959", "label": "Mohamed Abouhalima", "source": "Muhammad Al-Sa'id Abdallah Abouhalima (also Mohamed Abouhalima, Arabic: أبو حليمة محمد السعيد عبد الله ابو حليمة; born November 19, 1993 in Alexandria) is an Egyptian amateur Greco-Roman wrestler, who competes in the men's featherweight category. Abouhalima represented Egypt at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he competed in the 55 kg class. He lost the qualifying match to U.S. wrestler Spenser Mango, who was able to score six points in two straight periods, leaving Abouhalima with a single point.", "target": "Olympic wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7228870", "label": "Poornima Bhagyaraj", "source": "Poornima Bhagyaraj (née Jayaram) is an Indian actress of Malayalam and Tamil films. She has also done a few Hindi and Telugu films. She is best known for her leading roles from 1980 to 1985. She married director K. Bhagyaraj, who directed her in Darling, Darling, Darling.", "target": "Indian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14688221", "label": "Warsaw High School", "source": "Warsaw High School, or WHS, is a public four-year high school located in Warsaw, Illinois, a small city in Hancock County in the Midwestern United States. WHS serves the communities of Warsaw, Basco, Colusa, Nauvoo, Niota, Sutter and Tioga. The campus is located 35 miles (56 km) north of Quincy, 40 miles (64 km) west of Macomb and serves a mostly rural residential community.", "target": "high school in Illinois, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5673059", "label": "Harry Vines", "source": "Harry Doyle Vines (September 12, 1938 – February 11, 2006) was a prominent member of the wheelchair basketball community, winning national and international championships. Born in Caldwell, Arkansas and later residing in Sherwood, Arkansas, he served on several commissions and boards, including the Governor's Commission on People with Disabilities and the Arkansas Community Service Commission.", "target": "American wheelchair basketball coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5809195", "label": "Kohleh-ye Hammam", "source": "Kohleh-ye Hammam (Persian: كهله حمام, also Romanized as Kohleh-ye Ḩammām; also known as Koleh-ye Ḩammām) is a village in Sadat Mahmudi Rural District, Pataveh District, Dana County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 64, in 11 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q804009", "label": "Baitul Mukarram National Mosque", "source": "Baitul Mukarram, also spelled as Baytul Mukarrom (Arabic: بيت المكرّم, Bengali: বায়তুল মোকাররম; lit. 'The Holy House'), is the National Mosque of Bangladesh. Located at the center of Dhaka, capital of Bangladesh, the mosque was completed in 1968. It has a capacity of 42,000+.", "target": "National Mosque of Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["mosque"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7604986", "label": "StayBent Krunk-a-Delic", "source": "Hernst Bellevue Jr. (born March 12, 1974; better known by his stage name Krunk-a-Delic) is an American songwriter, hip hop, R&B, pop music and record producer. Krunk-a-Delic has written and produced gold and platinum records such as Jamie Foxx's \"I Don't Know,\" Ludacris feat. Dtp's \"Dtp For Life,\" (from Disturbing tha Peace) and Ms. Dynamite's \"Afraid to Fly\" (from A Little Deeper). He is a key collaborator on the production of Sean Paul's triple platinum Billboard Hot 100 #1 hit \"Temperature.\" He is also a contributor to Nelly Furtado's Latin Grammy winning and platinum album \"Mi Plan.\" Krunk-a-Delic has written and produced records for Nelly Furtado, N-Dubz, Nina Sky, Lil' Flip, Noel Gourdin, Starboy Nathan, Shawnna, Jimmy Cozier, Alison Hinds, Jazmine Sullivan, I 20, Cory Lee, Chris Webby, City Girls, Lunchmoney Lewis, as well songs recorded by Nas, Mary J. Blige, Jennifer Hudson, Ciara, Rick Ross, and more. In the past he was known to frequently collaboratorate with producer Salaam Remi.", "target": "rapper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18810361", "label": "Conrad Schetz", "source": "Conrad (or Coenraad) Schetz de Grobbendonck, later Conrad d'Ursel (1553–1632) was a nobleman in the Habsburg Netherlands and in 1604–1609 the first ordinary ambassador to England for the Archdukes Albert and Isabella.", "target": "Belgian diplomat (1553-1632)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16974290", "label": "MoneyWiz", "source": "MoneyWiz is a money management application that runs on Microsoft Windows, Google Android, and Apple platforms including iOS and macOS. MoneyWiz is developed by SilverWiz and is the top selling personal finance app outside of the United States as well as a Top 10 Finance App on the U.S. App Store. MoneyWiz has received awards and recognition which include being named the Best Finance App out of the Top 500 Must Have Apps by The Telegraph. It was named a Sleek Personal Finance App by Macworld and rated as one of the Top 5 Best New Year's Resolution Apps for iPhone and iPad in 2012.MoneyWiz tracks income and expenses as well as allows users to set and track budgets. It has the ability to schedule payments and also create reports based on the information input by the user. The app also has its own syncing platform referred to as \"SYNCbits\" which syncs a user's information to any device in which the app is installed. MoneyWiz supports twenty languages and is said to comply with the financial system in the countries where the official language is one of the supported ones.", "target": "money management application", "baseline_candidates": ["software"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18764544", "label": "Avdulovo-1", "source": "Avdulovo-1 (Russian: Авдулово-1) is a rural locality (a selo) in Leontyevskoye Rural Settlement of Stupinsky District, Moscow Oblast, Russia. The population was 11 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "village in Stupinsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7039710", "label": "Nipponaphera habei", "source": "Nipponaphera habei is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cancellariidae, the nutmeg snails.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3127213", "label": "Dobrocice", "source": "Dobrocice [dɔbrɔˈt͡ɕit͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wilczyce, within Sandomierz County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) west of Wilczyce, 14 km (9 mi) north-west of Sandomierz, and 70 km (43 mi) east of the regional capital Kielce.The village has a population of 100.", "target": "village in Świętokrzyskie, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5332605", "label": "Echis carinatus sinhaleyus", "source": "Echis carinatus sinhaleyus is a venomous viper subspecies endemic to Sri Lanka.", "target": "subspecies of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9042437", "label": "Monclova Township", "source": "Monclova Township is one of the eleven townships of Lucas County, Ohio, United States. The 2010 census found 12,400 people in the township.", "target": "township in Lucas County, Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Ohio"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5232248", "label": "David Catherwood", "source": "David Catherwood (born 7 May 1956) is a Northern Irish composer and conductor, with both vocal and choral works currently in print.", "target": "Irish composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7156645", "label": "Payakaraopet Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Payakaraopet Assembly constituency is an SC reserved constituency in Anakapalli district of Andhra Pradesh, representing the state legislative assembly in India. It is one of the seven assembly segments of Anakapalli (Lok Sabha constituency), along with Chodavaram, Madugula, Anakapalle, Yelamanchili and Pendurthi. Golla Baburao is the present MLA of the constituency, who won the 2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election from YSR Congress Party. As of 25 March 2019, there a total of 240,285 electors in the constituency.", "target": "constituency of the Andhra Pradesh legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3656037", "label": "Nikola Todev", "source": "Nikola Todev (Bulgarian: Никола Тодев, pronounced [niˈkɔɫɐ ˈtɔdɛf]; 13 June 1928 – 30 March 1991) was a Bulgarian theater and film actor. Todev is best known with his performances of characteristict types most notably the village mayor in The Hare Census (1973), Kara Kolyo in Manly Times (1977) and the uncle in Ladies Choice (1980).", "target": "Bulgarian actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6753867", "label": "Maple Fork", "source": "Maple Fork is an unincorporated community in Raleigh County, West Virginia, United States.", "target": "unincorporated community in Raleigh County, West Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q95701307", "label": "Zinash Tayachew", "source": "Zinash Tayachew (born 13 January 1978) is an Ethiopian politician, philanthropist and gospel singer. She is the wife of the Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and the fourth First Lady of Ethiopia. Zinash is a devout Protestant Christian ministering at her church as a gospel singer.", "target": "Ethiopian politician, philanthropist, and current First Lady", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3840484", "label": "Luisella Beghi", "source": "Luisella Beghi (1922–2006) was an Italian actress and voice actress.", "target": "Italian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27643281", "label": "Kacey Mottet-Klein", "source": "Kacey Mottet Klein (born 20 October 1998) is a Swiss actor.", "target": "Swiss actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55156291", "label": "San Felice a Ema", "source": "San Felice a Ema is a Roman Catholic church located on the Via of the same name in the neighborhood of Galluzzo, southeast of the urban center of Florence, Italy.", "target": "church building in Florence, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7027498", "label": "Nick Mamatas", "source": "Nick Mamatas (Greek: Νίκος Μαμματάς) (born February 20, 1972) is an American horror, science fiction and fantasy author and editor for Haikasoru's line of translated Japanese science fiction novels for Viz Media. His fiction has been nominated for a number of awards, including several Bram Stoker Awards. He has also been recognised for his editorial work with a Bram Stoker Award, as well as World Fantasy Award and Hugo Award nominations. He funded his early writing career by producing term papers for college students, which gained him some notoriety when he described this experience in an essay for Drexel University's online magazine The Smart Set.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16533028", "label": "Bondarzewia", "source": "Bondarzewia is a widely distributed genus of fungi in the family Bondarzewiaceae. The genus was circumscribed by mycologist Rolf Singer in 1940.", "target": "genus of fungi", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42196735", "label": "Trashing the Planet", "source": "Trashing the Planet: How Science Can Help Us Deal With Acid Rain, Depletion of the Ozone, and Nuclear Waste (Among Other Things) is a 1990 book by zoologist and Governor of Washington Dixy Lee Ray. The book talks about the seriousness about acid rain, the problems with the ozone layer and other environmental issues. Ray co-wrote the book with journalist Lou Guzzo.", "target": "1990 book by Dixy Lee Ray", "baseline_candidates": ["creative work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7374599", "label": "Royal North Shore Hospital", "source": "The Royal North Shore Hospital (RNSH) is a major public teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia, located in St Leonards. It serves as a teaching hospital for Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney and has approximately 700 beds. It is the referral hospital for Northern Sydney. Its primary referral area accommodates 5.7% of the Australian population or 17% of the NSW population.", "target": "teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["teaching hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5495365", "label": "Fred Hando", "source": "Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.", "target": "historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1221833", "label": "Dieter Domke", "source": "Dieter Domke (born 9 February 1987) is a German badminton player.", "target": "German badminton player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4648217", "label": "A. Owen Aldridge", "source": "Alfred Owen Aldridge (December 16, 1915 – January 29, 2005) was a professor of French and comparative literature, founder-editor of the journal Comparative Literature Studies, and author of books on a wide range of literature studies.", "target": "Professor, editor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1003001", "label": "Jemielnica", "source": "Jemielnica (1945-47: Imielnica) [jɛmjɛlˈnit͡sa] (German: Himmelwitz) is a village in Strzelce County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Jemielnica. It lies approximately 9 kilometres (6 mi) north-east of Strzelce Opolskie and 35 km (22 mi) south-east of the regional capital Opole. The village has a population of 3,500. The village, as part of Gmina Jemielnica has been officially bilingual in Polish and German since 2006.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2467526", "label": "Buckner", "source": "Buckner is a census-designated place (CDP) in Oldham County, Kentucky, United States. The population was 4,000 at the 2000 census. Oldham County High School is located in Buckner.", "target": "census-designated place in Oldham County, Kentucky", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2958922", "label": "Charles Dobzynski", "source": "Charles Dobzynski (born 1929 Warsaw - 26 September 2014) was a French poet, journalist and translator.", "target": "French poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8015867", "label": "William Morton", "source": "William Wright Morton DL has been Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin since 2016.Born in 1956 he was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and ordained in 1989. After a curacy at Drumachose he was the incumbent at Conwal before being appointed Dean of Derry in 1997. He remained there for almost 20 years until his appointment to Saint Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. On Monday 9 May 2016, the chapter of St Patrick's cathedral, Dublin elected him as the new dean of St Patrick's. In June 2018, Ulster University announced it would award him with an honorary degree in recognition of his civic contributions.", "target": "Irish dean", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20814335", "label": "Western Suite", "source": "Western Suite is an album by American jazz composer and arranger Jimmy Giuffre which was released on the Atlantic label in 1960.Featuring an unusual trio of clarinet, guitar and valve trombone, the first half of Western Suite is devoted to Giuffre's country music/folk-inspired suite, while the second half features a lengthy and abstract version of the big band standard \"Topsy\" and a Thelonious Monk song.", "target": "album of Jimmy Giuffre (1958)", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18921373", "label": "Charlie Baillie", "source": "Charles Bishop Baillie (born February 14, 1935) is a former Canadian football player who played for the Calgary Stampeders and Montreal Alouettes. His twin brother, Ray Baillie, also played in the CFL.", "target": "Canadian football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q753444", "label": "Willards", "source": "Willards is a town in Wicomico County, Maryland, United States. The population was 958 at the 2010 census. It is included in the Salisbury, Maryland-Delaware Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "town in Wicomico County, Maryland, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2740166", "label": "All That I Love", "source": "All That I Love (Polish: Wszystko, co kocham) is a 2009 Polish film directed by Jacek Borcuch. The film has been selected for competition in the Word Cinema Dramatic Competition at the Sundance Film Festival 2010. It was also selected as the Polish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 83rd Academy Awards but it didn't make the final shortlist.", "target": "2009 film by Jacek Borcuch", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55665642", "label": "Argus-Courier", "source": "The Argus-Courier is an American weekly paid newspaper which serves the city of Petaluma and surrounding Sonoma County, California. It is published weekly on Thursday, with an estimated circulation of 7,400.It is edited by Matt Brown.", "target": "newspaper published in Petaluma", "baseline_candidates": ["newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9043091", "label": "Olive Township", "source": "Olive Township is a township in Decatur County, Kansas, USA. As of the 2000 census, its population was 68.", "target": "township in Decatur County, Kansas", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Kansas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16142152", "label": "Almir Sater", "source": "Almir Eduardo Melke Sater (born 14 November 1956) is a Brazilian singer-songwriter and actor.", "target": "Brazilian singer, composer and violist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5456393", "label": "Fixer Dugan", "source": "Fixer Dugan is a 1939 drama film starring Lee Tracy as a circus promoter who decides to help out an orphaned girl, played by Virginia Weidler. The film was directed by Lew Landers, released by RKO Radio Pictures and is based on the play What's a Fixer For? by H.C. Potter.", "target": "1939 film by Lew Landers", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37785064", "label": "Fatezhsky District", "source": "Fatezhsky District (Russian: Фате́жский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-eight in Kursk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the north of the oblast. The area of the district is 1,281 square kilometers (495 sq mi). Its administrative center is the town of Fatezh. Population: 18,885 (2010 Census); 23,194 (2002 Census); 29,745 (1989 Census). The population of Fatezh accounts for 28.6% of the district's total population.", "target": "human settlement in Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["municipal district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3104336", "label": "Gerry Chiniquy", "source": "Germain Adolph Chiniquy (pronounced \"chin-a-KEE\"; June 23, 1912 – November 22, 1989) was an American animator known for his work with Friz Freleng, at both Warner Bros. and DePatie-Freleng Enterprises. Chiniquy joined Freleng's animation team in the early 1940s. His work can best be seen in the many \"dance numbers\" that Freleng liked to use in his shorts. As crewmembers working on Golden Age Warner Brothers's cartoons were seldom credited, Chiniquy and the other animators would often add their names into the backgrounds of cartoons. Chiniquy's name can be seen in Bugs Bunny Rides Again (1948); look for \"G. Chiniquy, Blacksmith\" painted on a rooftop. Chiniquy also made a cameo appearance in the live action portion of You Ought to Be in Pictures (1940), as the director calling for \"Quiet on the set!\" After the original Warner Bros. Cartoon Studio was shut down, Chiniquy animated for commercials at Playhouse Pictures from 1964 to 1965.Chiniquy followed Freleng to DFE, and soon he was promoted to director. Chiniquy directed many of the theatrical Pink Panther, The Ant and the Aardvark, and Hoot Kloot shorts.", "target": "American animator (1912-1989)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1529819", "label": "Sci Fi Science: Physics of the Impossible", "source": "Sci Fi Science: Physics of the Impossible (also called Science of the Impossible) is an American documentary television series on Science Channel which first aired in the United States on December 1, 2009. The series is hosted by theoretical physicist Michio Kaku and is based on his book Physics of the Impossible. In each episode, Dr. Kaku addresses a technological concept from science fiction and designs his own theoretical version of the technology using currently-known science. He also visits scientists developing technology related to the episode's concept.", "target": "television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4571657", "label": "1964 UMass Redmen football team", "source": "The 1964 UMass Redmen football team represented the University of Massachusetts Amherst in the 1964 NCAA College Division football season as a member of the Yankee Conference. The team was coached by Vic Fusia and played its home games at Alumni Field in Amherst, Massachusetts. The 1964 season was the Redmen's last at Alumni Field, as they would move to the new Alumni Stadium at the south end of campus in 1965. The Redmen repeated as conference champions, and earned an appearance in the 1964 Tangerine Bowl, which at the time served as the NCAA Atlantic Coast Small College Championship. This was the first postseason bowl game in team history. Though the Redmen jumped out to an early 13–0 lead, they tired late and fell to East Carolina, 14–13. UMass finished the season with a record of 8–2 overall and 5–0 in conference play.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85807103", "label": "The Evil One", "source": "The Evil One is a 1981 solo debut album by American psychedelic rock singer Roky Erickson, after his time with the band 13th Floor Elevators. The songs were recorded in 1979 with producer Stu Cook, former bass player of Creedence Clearwater Revival. Some material from those sessions was also released on the 1980 CBS UK album Roky Erickson and the Aliens, later reissued as I Think of Demons. Cook played bass on two tracks, \"Sputnik\" and \"Bloody Hammer.\" The album was re-released on April 16, 2002 by Austin, Texas record label Sympathy for the Record Industry as a double-CD titled The Evil One (Plus One). The second disc is made up of a 48-minute appearance from August 20, 1979 on California radio station KSJO's The Modern Humans Show, on which Erickson plays rough mixes from the album and talks about music and horror films.", "target": "album by Roky Erickson", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5721812", "label": "Henry Gannett", "source": "Henry Gannett (August 24, 1846 – November 5, 1914) was an American geographer who is described as the \"father of mapmaking in America.\" He was the chief geographer for the United States Geological Survey essentially from its founding until 1902. He was also a founding member and president of the National Geographic Society.", "target": "United States geographer (1846-1914)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7717224", "label": "The Best of Simon & Garfunkel", "source": "The Best of Simon and Garfunkel is the fifth compilation album of greatest hits by Simon & Garfunkel, released by Columbia Records in 1999, containing 20 tracks. Shortly after its release, this album was revised and re-issued as an expanded 2-CD version: “Tales from New York: The Very Best of Simon & Garfunkel”.", "target": "1999 greatest hits album by Simon & Garfunkel", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q83567384", "label": "Carnival Imagination", "source": "Carnival Imagination (formerly Imagination) was a Fantasy-class cruise ship operated by Carnival Cruise Line. Built by Kværner Masa-Yards at its Helsinki New Shipyard in Helsinki, Finland, she was floated out on July 1, 1995, and christened Imagination by Jodi Dickinson. During 2007, in common with all of her Fantasy-class sisters, she had the prefix Carnival added to her name.The ship underwent an extensive multimillion-dollar renovation in September 2016.Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Carnival Cruise Line suspended all North American itineraries from March 14 to April 10, 2020. In July 2020, as a result of Carnival Cruise Line reducing fleet capacity, Carnival Imagination entered a long term lay-up status, with no planned date for the ship to enter back into service.By August 26, 2020, the vessel had filed a cruise plan for Aliağa, Turkey, the location of several ship breaking facilities. Some industry sources indicated that the vessel would be scrapped. The vessel arrived in Aliağa on September 14, 2020 and was beached on 16 September.As of April 2022 she remains beached awaiting scrapping some sources claim that an unnamed hotel is currently trying to acquire some of her fittings that would otherwise be damaged or destroyed during the scrapping process.", "target": "Cruise ship", "baseline_candidates": ["cruise ship"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5476195", "label": "Fourth Ward", "source": "Fourth Ward is one of the historic six wards of Houston, Texas, United States. The Fourth Ward is located inside the 610 Loop directly west of and adjacent to Downtown Houston. The Fourth Ward is the site of Freedmen's Town, which was a post-U.S. Civil War community of African-Americans.", "target": "human settlement in Houston, Texas, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2406838", "label": "Tetsuro Nariyama", "source": "Tetsuro Nariyama (成山 哲郎 born November 21, 1947) was born in Yamadera, Yamagata Prefecture and is a Japanese aikido teacher, the technical director of the Shodokan Aikido Federation and chief instructor (Shihan) of the Shodokan Hombu Dojo in Osaka, Japan. He was appointed to the latter position by the creator of this style Kenji Tomiki, one of Morihei Ueshiba's early students. At 9th Dan he is the highest-ranking Shodokan instructor in the world and travels internationally to teach aikido. In addition to his studies with Kenji Tomiki he lived as uchideshi to Hirokazu Kobayashi for six years effectively learning aikido from the founder of aikido Morihei Ueshiba's first and last generation deshi. During that time he introduced Tomiki's randori method to university aikido clubs under Kobayashi's control. He has co-authored the book Aikido Tradition and the Competitive Edge with Fumiaki Shishida.", "target": "aikidoka", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3876313", "label": "Nicola Pende", "source": "Nicola Pende (April 21, 1880 in Noicattaro – June 8, 1970 in Rome) was an Italian endocrinologist.", "target": "Italian endocrinologist and politician (1880-1970)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3085024", "label": "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles & Other Strangeness", "source": "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles & Other Strangeness is a role-playing game based on the comic book created by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird. The core rulebook was first published by Palladium Books in September 1985 – a couple years before the Turtles franchise achieved mass popularity – and featured original comic strips and illustrations by Eastman and Laird. The rules and gameplay are based on Palladium's Megaversal system. Some of these rules, outlining the basics of character creation and providing a short list of animal options, were later incorporated in the second edition of Heroes Unlimited.", "target": "tabletop role-playing game based on the comics", "baseline_candidates": ["tabletop role-playing game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q137474", "label": "Edgeworthia chrysantha", "source": "Edgeworthia chrysantha (common names: Oriental paperbush, mitsumata) is a plant in the family Thymelaeaceae.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7235402", "label": "Pottstown School District", "source": "Pottstown School District is a school district headquartered in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, United States. The district serves the Borough of Pottstown.", "target": "school district in Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["school district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q808616", "label": "Baron Furnivall", "source": "Baron Furnivall is an ancient title in the Peerage of England. It was originally created (by writ) when Thomas de Furnivall was summoned to the Model Parliament on 24 June 1295 as Lord Furnivall. The barony eventually passed to Thomas Nevill, who had married the first baron's descendant Joan de Furnivall, and he was summoned to parliament in her right. Their daughter, Maud de Neville, married John Talbot, who was also summoned to parliament in her right. He was later created Earl of Shrewsbury. On the death of the seventh earl in 1616, the barony fell into abeyance. The abeyance was terminated naturally in favour of the earl's daughter Alethea Howard in 1651 and passed through her to the Dukes of Norfolk. On the death of the ninth Duke in 1777, the barony again fell into abeyance. In 1913 the abeyance was terminated again in favour of Mary Frances Katherine Petre, daughter of Bernard Petre, 14th Baron Petre. Through her father she was a great-great-great-granddaughter of the ninth Baron Petre and his first wife Anne Howard, niece of the ninth Duke of Norfolk (and 18th Baron Furnivall), who became co-heir to the Barony on her uncle's death in 1777. On Lady Furnivall's death in 1968 the barony fell into abeyance for the third time.", "target": "title in the Peerage of England", "baseline_candidates": ["noble title"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q90547", "label": "Israel Meir Freimann", "source": "Israel Meir Freimann (Yiddish: ישראל מאיר פריַימאן, also Israel Meier Freimann; b. 27 September 1830 in Cracow, then the Free City, d. 21 August 1884 in Ostrowo, then Posen Province, Germany) was a Polish-born German rabbi, philosopher, and orientalist.", "target": "Philosopher and rabbi", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21607458", "label": "Johannes Roth", "source": "Johannes Rudolf Roth (September 4, 1815 – June 26, 1858) was a German zoologist and traveler.", "target": "German zoologist (1815-1858)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4132402", "label": "HMS H5", "source": "HMS H5 was a British H-class submarine of the Royal Navy that served in the First World War. The boat, which was launched in June 1915, was lost after being rammed by a British merchant ship off Caernarfon Bay in March 1916. It had been mistaken as a German U-boat and sank with the loss of all hands.", "target": "1918 British Royal Navy H class submarine", "baseline_candidates": ["submarine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20598068", "label": "Marion Junction", "source": "Marion Junction, also known as Bridges, is an unincorporated community in Dallas County, Alabama.", "target": "unincorporated community in Alabama", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28100402", "label": "Final Battle 2016", "source": "Final Battle (2016) was the 15th Final Battle professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Ring of Honor (ROH). It took place on December 2, 2016 at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City, New York.", "target": "2016 Ring of Honor pay-per-view", "baseline_candidates": ["professional wrestling event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21785999", "label": "Mlamolovo", "source": "Mlamolovo is a village in Bobov Dol Municipality, Kyustendil Province, south-western Bulgaria.", "target": "village in Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6939511", "label": "Murray Wallace", "source": "Murray Ian Wallace (13 October 1967, Milton of Campsie, East Dunbartonshire, was a Scottish international rugby union player, who played for Scotland. He was capped three times between 1996 and 1997.Currently lives in Colorado where he coaches rugby at the University of Colorado for the Men's R.F.C., and teaches P.E. at Erie Middle School.", "target": "Scottish rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4603152", "label": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season", "source": "The 2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season was the first in which tropical cyclones were officially named in the basin. Cyclone Onil, which struck Pakistan, was named in late September. The final storm, Cyclone Agni, was also named, and crossed into the southern hemisphere shortly before dissipation. This storm became notable during its origins and became one of the storms closest to the equator. The season was fairly active, with ten depressions forming from May to November. The India Meteorological Department designated four of these as cyclonic storms, which have maximum sustained winds of at least 65 km/h (40 mph) averaged over three minutes. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center also issued warnings for five of the storms on an unofficial basis. In early May, two tropical storms formed on opposite sides of India. The first formed on May 5 and meandered while intensifying, dropping 1,840 mm (72 in) in Aminidivi in the Lakshadweep group offshore western India, which was the highest daily rainfall total in the basin. A week later, a cyclone – the strongest of the season – struck Myanmar, killing 236 people and leaving 25,000 people homeless. Depressions also formed on opposite sides of India in June. A depression in September killed 59 people after dropping torrential rainfall over Bangladesh and adjacent West Bengal. In October, another depression struck the region, killing 273 people. There was also a short-lived cyclonic storm in the Arabian Sea in November.", "target": "cyclone season in the North Indian ocean", "baseline_candidates": ["North Indian Ocean cyclone season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64675", "label": "Paul Falk", "source": "Paul Falk (German pronunciation: [paʊ̯l ˈfalk] (listen); 21 December 1921 – 20 May 2017) was a German pair skater. Born in Dortmund, Germany, he skated with Ria Baran and became two-time World champion and 1952 Olympic champion. Baran and Falk married during their active international figure skating.The pair skated for the club Düsseldorfer EG and had no coach. Until 1951 Baran and Falk were not able to participate in international competitions because Germany was excluded from international sport after World War II. They were the first couple who performed side by side double jumps and they also invented the Lasso-Lift. Baran and Falk were never defeated in amateur competition. In 1951 Falk was voted the male athlete of the year in Germany. After winning the Olympics in 1952 they turned professional and worked for Holiday on Ice. Falk's profession outside athletics was as a precision mechanic. In 1993 pair were inducted into the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame. He died 8 and a half months before Aliona Savchenko and Bruno Massot won the gold medal for pairs skating at the 2018 Winter Olympics.", "target": "German figure skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14203990", "label": "Colina", "source": "Colina is a municipality in the state of São Paulo in Brazil. The population is 18,535 (2020 est.) in an area of 422 km². The elevation is 595 m. Colina is the Horse Capital of Brazil. It is also the large centre of a horse ranch, the Estação Experimental de Zootecnia. In July, there is a party called Festa do Cavalo. Many Lebanese immigrants live in Colina.", "target": "municipality in the state of São Paulo in Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21993377", "label": "Pape-Philippe Amagou", "source": "Pape-Philippe Amagou (born February 27, 1985) is a French-born Ivorian retired basketball player. During his career, he played for several teams in France and Greece and was a member of the Côte d'Ivoire national basketball team. He is a four-time Pro A champion.", "target": "French basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3590486", "label": "Yugoslavia men's national volleyball team", "source": "The Yugoslavia men's national volleyball team was the national team of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.", "target": "national sports team", "baseline_candidates": ["national sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4708188", "label": "Aland", "source": "The Aland was a four-cylinder 2.5-liter 16-valve, single OHC automobile with diagonally connected four-wheel internal expanding brakes and aluminum pistons. It was made in Detroit, Michigan, by the Aland Motor Car Company from 1916 to 1917. Two- and five-seater versions were available for $1500.", "target": "old automobile", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15649778", "label": "Dehram Rural District", "source": "Dehram Rural District (Persian: دهستان دهرم) is a rural district (dehestan) in Dehram District, Farashband County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,630, in 1,078 families. The rural district has 14 villages.", "target": "rural district in Fars, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13555111", "label": "Metarranthis warneri", "source": "Metarranthis warneri, or Warner's metarranthis, is a species of geometrid moth in the family Geometridae. It is found in North America.The MONA or Hodges number for Metarranthis warneri is 6821.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1328423", "label": "Fiat 1300/1500", "source": "The Fiat 1300 and Fiat 1500 are a series of front-engine, rear-drive automobiles manufactured and marketed by Fiat from 1961 to 1967, replacing the Fiat 1400 and Fiat 1200 coupé, spyder and cabriolet. The 1300 and 1500 were essentially identical to each other except for their engine displacement, as indicated by their model names, and were offered in sedan/saloon, station wagon, convertible and coupé body styles which shared little mechanically with the other body styles except the 1500 engine. The 1500 offered a 75 hp engine, lightweight construction, front disc brakes and rear alloy drum brakes.The 1300/1500 and their derivatives were also assembled by Yugoslavia's Zastava and Fiat's German subsidiary, Neckar Automobil AG, as well as in South Africa. The floorpan of the 1500 C was used as a basis for the 1500s replacement, the Fiat 125, while another model, the Polski Fiat 125p, made by the Polish FSO, was created by mating the body of 125 and mechanicals (engines, gearbox, transmission, suspension) of 1300/1500. In the Italian range, the 1300 was replaced by the Fiat 124 in 1966, and the 1500 by the Fiat 125 a year later.In total, 1,900,000 units were produced worldwide.", "target": "car model", "baseline_candidates": ["touring car", "automobile model", "family car"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3056354", "label": "Eric \"Monty\" Morris", "source": "Eric \"Monty\" Morris (born c.1942) is a Jamaican ska singer, known for his work with the Skatalites and hit singles such as \"Sammy Dead Oh\" and \"Oil in My Lamp\".", "target": "Jamaican musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3436432", "label": "Robert Trevors", "source": "Robert Trevors is a Canadian politician who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in the 2010 provincial election. He represented the electoral district of Miramichi Centre as a member of the Progressive Conservatives until the 2014 election, when he was defeated by Bill Fraser in the redistributed riding of Miramichi.", "target": "Canadian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4584038", "label": "1987 World Championships in Athletics – Women's Marathon", "source": "The women's marathon was one of the road events at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics in Rome, Italy. It took place on 29 August 1987; the course started and finished at the Stadio Olimpico and passed several of Rome's historic landmarks. The race was won by Portugal's Rosa Mota in 2:25:17, a new championship record, ahead of Zoya Ivanova of the Soviet Union in second and France's Jocelyne Villeton in third. In warm conditions, the pre-race favourite, Mota, led from the start. Another of the runners expected to do well, Australia's Lisa Martin, was suffering from fatigue after working too hard in training, and she pulled out of the race after 25 kilometres (16 mi). Mota won the race by almost seven and a half minutes, but did not initially realise that she had finished the race, as she thought she still had to run another lap of the track in the stadium.", "target": "Long distance running race at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7054080", "label": "North Battleford (Cameron McIntosh) Airport", "source": "North Battleford Airport (IATA: YQW, ICAO: CYQW) is located 1.5 nautical miles (2.8 km; 1.7 mi) east of North Battleford, Saskatchewan, Canada.", "target": "airport in Saskatchewan, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q45357992", "label": "James Britton Ware", "source": "Senator James Britton Ware was a member of the Georgia Senate from Georgia's 37th District between 1904 and 1905, in the Democratic political party. He was born on June 16, 1830, in Heard County, Georgia and died on January 30, 1918, in Heard County, Georgia.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q548869", "label": "Kizhinginsky District", "source": "Kizhinginsky District (Russian: Кижингинский райо́н; Buryat: Хэжэнгын аймаг, Khejengyn aimag) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-one in the Republic of Buryatia, Russia. It is located in the south of the republic. The area of the district is 7,871 square kilometers (3,039 sq mi). Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Kizhinga. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 16,509, with the population of Kizhinga accounting for 38.6% of that number.", "target": "municipal district in Buryatia, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["second-level administrative country subdivision", "municipal district"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5840846", "label": "Yekkeh Quz-e Bala", "source": "Yekkeh Quz-e Bala (Persian: يكه قوزبالا, also Romanized as Yekkeh Qūz-e Bālā; also known as Yekkeh Qūz and Yakigov) is a village in Aq Su Rural District, in the Central District of Kalaleh County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,808, in 379 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56395073", "label": "İsmail Özden", "source": "İsmail Özden (1952 Şimzê, Beşiri – 15 August 2018), aka Mam Zêki Shingali, was a Yazidi Kurdish member of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (Kurdish: Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê, PKK), famous for the leading role he played in the resistance to the genocide of Yazidis by ISIL. He was killed on 15 August 2018 in a Turkish Air Force airstrike.", "target": "Yazidi Kurdish rebels", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31820037", "label": "Clifton", "source": "Clifton is an upscale and historic seaside locality in Karachi, Pakistan. It is one of the most affluent parts of the city, home to some of Karachi's most expensive real estates. It is home to several foreign consulates, while its commercial centres are amongst the most high-end in Pakistan, with a strong presence of international brands.", "target": "municipality in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4878165", "label": "Beaver River Central School", "source": "Location Beaver River Central School is a small k-12 school in Beaver Falls in northern Lewis County. As of 2011, it had a total enrollment of 893 and a graduating class of 66. in 2011, 68% of graduates went on to two-year colleges, technical schools, or four-year colleges. The superintendent is Todd Green, and the high school principal is Daniel Rains.", "target": "high school in New York, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["high school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q433550", "label": "Michelle Roark", "source": "Michelle Roark (born November 16, 1974) is an American freestyle skier who has competed since 1995, mainly in moguls. She is a two-time Olympian, World Cup Champion, World Champion silver medalist FIS Freestyle World Ski Championships 2003 in Deer Valley, Utah and National Champion. She has a half a dozen World Cup victories and a handful of World Cup podium finishes. Roark was named to the US team for the 2006 Winter Olympics and 2010 Winter Olympics.", "target": "American freestyle skier", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q794973", "label": "Bâlea Lake", "source": "Bâlea Lake (Romanian: Lacul Bâlea or Bâlea Lac, pronounced [ˈbɨle̯a]; Hungarian: Bilea-tó) is a glacier lake situated at 2,034 m of altitude in the Făgăraș Mountains, in central Romania, in Cârțișoara, Sibiu County. There are two chalets opened all the year round, a meteorological station and a mountain rescue (Salvamont) station. It is accessible by car on the Transfăgărășan road during the summer, and the rest of the year by a cable car from the \"Bâlea Cascadă\" chalet. On 17 April 1977. an avalanche killed 23 skiers gathered near the lake; 19 of those were high school students from the Samuel von Brukenthal National College in Sibiu. This was the deadliest avalanche ever in Romania, with the 42nd highest death toll in the world. In 2006, the first ice hotel in Eastern Europe was built in the vicinity of the lake. The hotel has opened for 15 years since then, but not during the 2019–2020 season, due to higher than usual temperatures.", "target": "body of water", "baseline_candidates": ["glacial lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q141019", "label": "(15788) 1993 SB", "source": "(15788) 1993 SB is a trans-Neptunian object of the plutino class. Apart from Pluto, it was one of the first such objects discovered (beaten by two days by (385185) 1993 RO and by one day by 1993 RP), and the first to have an orbit calculated well enough to receive a number. The discovery was made in 1993 at the La Palma Observatory with the Isaac Newton Telescope. Very little is known about the object. Even the diameter estimate of ~130 km is based on an assumed albedo of 0.09.KBO's found in 1993 include: (15788) 1993 SB, (15789) 1993 SC, (181708) 1993 FW, and (385185) 1993 RO. Over one thousand bodies were found in a belt between orbiting between about 30-50 AU from the Sun in the twenty years (1992-2012), after finding 1992 QB1 (named in 2018, 15760 Albion), showing a vast belt of bodies more than just Pluto and Albion. By 2018, over 2000 Kuiper belts objects were discovered.", "target": "trans-Neptunian object", "baseline_candidates": ["asteroid"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24674896", "label": "Caunton", "source": "Caunton is a village and civil parish in the Newark and Sherwood district of Nottinghamshire on the A616, six miles (9.7 km) north-west of Newark-on-Trent, in the NG23 postcode. The population (including Maplebeck and Winkburn) of the civil parish at the 2011 Census was 483.The village is notable for its association with Samuel Hole, who is buried in the churchyard of St. Andrew's Church. He was the village's vicar for a short while before becoming Dean of Rochester and lived in the manor. The manor house now has its own equestrian centre and a mini golf course. The village pubs are The Plough and the country pub, Caunton Beck, both on Main Street. Caunton Mill, also known as Sharp's Mill, was a 43 ft brick tower windmill, with an ogee cap, built before 1825. It was out of use in the 1930s. The mill survives without its cap, machinery and gallery.Caunton was used as a filming location for the majority of the second-series episodes of the popular British comedy drama Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, about a group of seven British migrant construction workers, with Beesthorpe Hall being used as Thornely Manor which was being renovated as part of the storyline.The hamlet of Knapthorpe is to the south of the village and A616 road, and within the parish boundary.HMS Caunton, named after the village, was a Ton-class minesweeper in service from 18 December 1952 to 1970.", "target": "village in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2960162", "label": "Charles Rozoy", "source": "Charles Rozoy (born 4 March 1987 in Chenôve) is a Paralympic swimmer of France who won a gold medal at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in the men's S8 100m butterfly.", "target": "French swimmer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24673935", "label": "Whalsay Airport", "source": "Whalsay Airstrip is located at the village of Skaw in the northern end of the island of Whalsay, Shetland, Scotland. It is the only airfield serving the island and is available for charter flights. The landing surface, which is 18 metres (59 ft) wide and 457 metres (1,499 ft) long, is constructed from rolled gravel.", "target": "airport in the United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["aerodrome"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37957880", "label": "Sharlyk", "source": "Sharlyk (Russian: Шарлык) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Sharlyksky District, Orenburg Oblast, Russia. Population: 7,575 (2010 Census); 8,117 (2002 Census); 8,219 (1989 Census).", "target": "human settlement in Sharlyksky District, Orenburg Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "subdivisions of Russia", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20851202", "label": "Isabelle Arène", "source": "Isabelle Arène (born 5 May 1958) is a French diver. She competed in the women's 3 metre springboard event at the 1980 Summer Olympics.", "target": "French diver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4776209", "label": "Antoni Taulé", "source": "Antoni Taulé (born 1945) is a Spanish painter, architect, and performer. A street artist during the sixties, his art has been labelled as part of hyperrealism and a representative of the “new figurative” movement. He paints classical empty buildings and interiors: ballrooms, office receptions, halls of the Louvre museum, chambers of the Prado, the Palace of Versailles, monumental spaces that fuse reality and fiction under a fleeting atmosphere of light. The building is actually just like a person. It has a heart, lungs, a nervous system, intestines, and eyes ... I am fascinated with what one can see, with the reason why does one look at it or avoid looking, and how one reflects upon what he sees. In one word my work is about how a man functions. His unique creative universe mixes scientific and mathematical concepts and a passion for art from the past, Italian, Dutch and Spanish old masters, especially Diego Velázquez and Francisco Goya. It has inspired numbers of writers and critics, like Jean-Christophe Bailly or Julio Cortázar who, fascinated by Taulé's rooms and tables, wrote the story “Fin de etapa”, in Deshoras, a book published in 1983. From 1982 onwards, Antoni Taulé has created set designs, largely springing from development in his own painting, for some of the great opera and theatre, including Washington Square, Henry James's novel, adapted by Rudolf Nureyev, Enfance and Pour un oui, pour un non (For No Good Reason) by Nathalie Sarraute, or Francis Poulenc and his Dialogues of the Carmelites adapted from a play by.", "target": "Spanish artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1028077", "label": "Károly Grecsák", "source": "Károly Grecsák (15 November 1854 - 17 December 1924) was a Hungarian politician and jurist, who served as Minister of Justice between 1917 and 1918. He was a representative of the Moderate Opposition from 1881 to 1891. He was the founder and an editor of the first German language oppositional newspaper, the Budapester Tageblatt. From 1891 he worked as a judge for the Court of Szeged, later moved to Budapest to the Court. After the ministership he became a lawyer in the capital city. He was the founder and chairman of the Party of Hungarian Order which functioned from 1920 to 1922.", "target": "Hungarian politician (1854-1924)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6838625", "label": "Mickey Fields", "source": "Wilfred \"Mickey\" Fields (1932/33 – January 16, 1995) was a Baltimore-area jazz saxophonist, a local legend who refused to play outside the Baltimore area, although he was asked to leave Baltimore many times to go on the road with many famous bands.He is recognized as one of Baltimore's most well-known jazz saxophonists and was a mentor to many other jazz musicians, including Paul H Brown. Mickey created the \"Monday Night Jam Session\" at the Sportsman's Lounge, which allowed many young up and coming jazz musicians to perform onstage with him. He was also known for his constant encouragement of young artists.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12584303", "label": "Ghostface Killah", "source": "Dennis Coles (born May 9, 1970), better known by his stage name Ghostface Killah, is an American rapper and a member of the hip hop group Wu-Tang Clan. After the group achieved breakthrough success in the aftermath of Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), the members went on to pursue solo careers to varying levels of success. Ghostface Killah debuted his solo career with Ironman, which was well received by music critics, in 1996. He has enjoyed continued success in the years that have followed, releasing critically acclaimed albums such as Supreme Clientele (2000) and Fishscale (2006). His stage name was taken from one of the characters in the 1979 kung fu film Mystery of Chessboxing. He is the founder of his own record label, Starks Enterprises. Ghostface Killah is critically acclaimed for his loud, fast-paced flow, and his emotional stream-of-consciousness narratives containing cryptic slang and non-sequiturs. In 2006, MTV included him as an \"honourable mention\" on their list of the \"Greatest MCs of All Time\", while the editors of About.com placed him on their list of the \"Top 50 MCs of Our Time (1987–2007)\", calling him \"one of the most imaginative storytellers of our time.\" Q magazine called him \"rap's finest storyteller.\" Pitchfork Media has stated that \"Ghostface has unparalleled storytelling instincts; he might be the best, most colorful storyteller rap has ever seen.\" NPR has called him \"a compulsive storyteller\", and asserts that \"his fiction is painterly.\".", "target": "American rapper", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q40953111", "label": "Te Rā / Dagg Sound", "source": "Te Rā / Dagg Sound is a narrow fiord located in Fiordland, New Zealand. It lies south of Doubtful Sound / Patea and north of Te Puaitaha / Breaksea Sound. Whales frequent the waters out from the entrance of the fiord, close to the edge of the continental shelf where the water depth suddenly drops to thousands of metres.The fiord is surrounded by steep cliffs and stretches inland for 13 km (8.1 mi). Anchorage Arm branches off to the north of the fiord. At the eastern end of the fiord there is a short 1.5 km (0.93 mi) portage through to Crooked Arm in Doubtful Sound / Patea.", "target": "fjord in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["fjord"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q55632481", "label": "Sanchi Vidhan Sabha constituency", "source": "Sanchi Assembly constituency is one of the 230 Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) constituencies of Madhya Pradesh state in central India. It is a segment of Vidisha Lok Sabha constituency. Sanchi is known for its Buddhist monuments, called Sanchi Stupa-s. The assembly seat lies in Raisen District.", "target": "constituency of the Madhya Pradesh legislative assembly in India", "baseline_candidates": ["constituency of the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q695702", "label": "Arnold Lobel", "source": "Arnold Stark Lobel (May 22, 1933 – December 4, 1987) was an American author of children's books, including the Frog and Toad series and Mouse Soup. He wrote and illustrated these picture books as well as Fables, a 1981 Caldecott Medal winner for best-illustrated U.S. picture book. Lobel also illustrated books by other writers, including Sam the Minuteman by Nathaniel Benchley published in 1969.", "target": "American children's illustrator and writer (1933-1987)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1008575", "label": "constituency for the Bundestag election Rottweil – Tuttlingen", "source": "Rottweil – Tuttlingen is an electoral constituency (German: Wahlkreis) represented in the Bundestag. It elects one member via first-past-the-post voting. Under the current constituency numbering system, it is designated as constituency 285. It is located in southwestern Baden-Württemberg, comprising the districts of Rottweil and Tuttlingen.Rottweil – Tuttlingen was created for the inaugural 1949 federal election. Since 2021, it has been represented by Maria-Lena Weiss of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU).", "target": "federal electoral district of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["federal electoral district of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16826176", "label": "athletics at the 2006 Central American Games", "source": "Athletics competitions at the 2006 Central American Games were held at the Estadio Olímpico del Instituto Nicaragüense de Juventud y Deporte in Managua, Nicaragua, between March 4-7, 2006. In total, 36 events were contested, 21 by men and 15 by women. A report on the results was given.", "target": "international athletics championship event", "baseline_candidates": ["sport competition at a multi-sport event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65196928", "label": "2020 in television", "source": "2020 in television may refer to 2020 in American television for television related events in the United States. 2020 in Australian television for television related events in Australia. 2020 in Austrian television for television related events in Austria. 2020 in Belgian television for television related events in Belgium. 2020 in Brazilian television for television related events in Brazil. 2020 in British television for television related events in Great Britain. 2020 in Cambodian television for television related events in Cambodia. 2020 in Canadian television for television related events in Canada. 2020 in Chinese television for television related events in China. 2020 in German television for television related events in Germany. 2020 in Indian television for television related events in India. 2020 in Irish television for television related events in Ireland. 2020 in Italian television for television related events in Italy. 2020 in Japanese television for television related events in Japan. 2020 in Mexican television for television related events in Mexico. 2020 in New Zealand television for television related events in New Zealand. 2020 in Philippine television for television related events in the Philippines. 2020 in Russian television for television related events in Russia. 2020 in Scottish television for television related events in Scotland. 2020 in South African television for television related events in South Africa. 2020 in South Korean television for television related events in South Korea. 2020 in Swedish television for television related events in Sweden. 2020 in Tamil television for television related events in Sri Lanka. 2020 in Thai television for television related events in.", "target": "television-related events during the year of 2020", "baseline_candidates": ["events in a specific year or time period"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5073226", "label": "Chaplin", "source": "Chaplin: The Musical, formerly titled Limelight: The Story of Charlie Chaplin, is a musical with music and lyrics by Christopher Curtis and a book by Curtis and Thomas Meehan. The show is based on the life of Charlie Chaplin. The musical, which started at the New York Musical Theatre Festival in 2006, debuted at the La Jolla Playhouse in 2010, and then premiered on Broadway in 2012.", "target": "musical", "baseline_candidates": ["dramatico-musical work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16843422", "label": "Hannah Gladden", "source": "Hannah Gladden is an American wrestler from Alabama who won the 2013 Pan American FILA Wrestling World Championships in Medellín, Colombia.", "target": "American wrestler", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5752", "label": "Peter Kropotkin", "source": "Pyotr Alexeyevich Kropotkin (; Russian: Пётр Алексе́евич Кропо́ткин Russian pronunciation: [ˈpʲɵtr ɐlʲɪkˈsʲejɪvʲɪt͡ɕ krɐˈpotkʲɪn]; 9 December 1842 – 8 February 1921) was a Russian anarchist, socialist, revolutionary, historian, scientist, philosopher, and activist who advocated anarcho-communism. Born into an aristocratic land-owning family, Kropotkin attended a military school and later served as an officer in Siberia, where he participated in several geological expeditions. He was imprisoned for his activism in 1874 and managed to escape two years later. He spent the next 41 years in exile in Switzerland, France (where he was imprisoned for almost four years) and England. While in exile, he gave lectures and published widely on anarchism and geography. Kropotkin returned to Russia after the Russian Revolution in 1917, but he was disappointed by the Bolshevik state. Kropotkin was a proponent of a decentralised communist society free from central government and based on voluntary associations of self-governing communities and worker-run enterprises. He wrote many books, pamphlets and articles, the most prominent being The Conquest of Bread and Fields, Factories and Workshops, but also Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, his principal scientific offering. He contributed the article on anarchism to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition and left unfinished a work on anarchist ethical philosophy.", "target": "Russian zoologist, evolutionary theorist, philosopher, scientist, revolutionary, economist, activist, geographer, writer (1842-1921)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4873734", "label": "Bavor II Veliký", "source": "Bavor II, known as Bavor the Great (Czech: Bavor Veliký), was the feudal ruler of Strakonice, Bohemia (ca. 1260-1279) and Castellan of royal castle Zvíkov, was the son of Bavor I, of the noble House of Strakonice. He held Pořešín, Blatná, Horažďovice, and others, including the Castle Bouzov. He took as his wife Anežka, the illegitimate daughter of Přemysl Ottakar II. He built a new palace, giving his former palace to the Knights Hospitallers. He was a favorite of the Bohemian king and Marshal of Bohemia. Bavor and Anežka had three sons, Bavor III, his heir, Mikuláš and Vilém.", "target": "Bohemian noble", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2643214", "label": "Alexander W. Weddell", "source": "Alexander Wilbourne Weddell (April 6, 1876 – January 1, 1948) was an American diplomat. He served as United States ambassador to Argentina from 1933 to 1939 and to Spain from 1939 to 1942. Weddell was born in Richmond, Virginia, and attended George Washington University. On May 31, 1923, he married a wealthy widow, Virginia Chase Steedman. He served as president of the Virginia Historical Society from 1943 until his death. Weddell was the author or editor of several books, including: A Memorial Volume of Virginia Historical Portraiture (1930) Richmond, Virginia, in Old Prints (1932) Introduction to Argentina (1939) Portraiture in the Virginia Historical Society (1945)Weddell and his wife died in a train accident near Otterville, Missouri on January 1, 1948.", "target": "American diplomat", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5707628", "label": "Shirakan", "source": "Shirakan (Persian: شيركان, also Romanized as Shīrakān) is a village in Margavar Rural District, Silvaneh District, Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 762, in 126 families.", "target": "village in Margavar Rural District, Silvaneh District, Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6898344", "label": "Monastery of Santa Clara", "source": "Monastery of Santa Clara or Convent of Santa Clara in Vila do Conde, Portugal was one of the biggest and richest feminine convents in Portugal, founded in 1318, by Afonso Sanches and his wife, Teresa Martins Telo.The large historical complex includes the Gothic Santa Clara Church (1318), nearby Manueline late Gothic constructions and the current proper monastery, built in the early phase of the neoclassical style in 1777. The Monastery is located in a hilltop and includes large walls that protect the monastery from the east and the Santa Clara Aqueduct, the second largest aqueduct in Portugal. The monastery is considered a fundamental temple of the Portuguese Gothic architecture North of Douro river.", "target": "building in Vila do Conde, Porto District, Portugal", "baseline_candidates": ["cultural heritage", "former convent"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56331980", "label": "Denis Rice", "source": "Denis Rice (born 8 February 1958) is an Irish rower. He competed in the men's coxed pair event at the 1980 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Irish rower", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2837212", "label": "Ruisseau d'Alistro", "source": "The Alistro (French: Rivière d'Alistro, Corsican: Alistru) is a small coastal river in the department of Haute-Corse, Corsica, France. It enters the Tyrrhenian Sea from the east of the island.", "target": "watercourse in France", "baseline_candidates": ["stream"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3409804", "label": "Sanatorium", "source": "Sanatorium is a thrash metal band from Skopje, North Macedonia. It consists of Pero Stefanovski (guitar and vocals), Konstantin Kačev (guitar), Goran Stanković (bass guitar) and Goran Atanasov (drums).", "target": "thrash metal band of the Republic of Macedonia", "baseline_candidates": ["musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11715807", "label": "Jacques Deckousshoud", "source": "Jacques Deckousshoud (born 12 May 1964) is a Gabonese footballer. He played in 25 matches for the Gabon national football team from 1993 to 2000. He was also named in Gabon's squad for the 1996 African Cup of Nations tournament.", "target": "Gabonese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17920901", "label": "UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying Group E", "source": "In Group E of the UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying tournament, Croatia secured qualification to the finals on 17 November 2007 following Israel's 2–1 win against Russia, becoming the seventh team in the whole of the qualification stage to do so. Russia secured qualification to the tournament finals on 21 November 2007 following a 1–0 win against Andorra, and Croatia's 3–2 win against England, becoming the fourteenth and last team in the whole of the qualification stage to do so.", "target": "football tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["association football competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q217291", "label": "Blanford's fox", "source": "Blanford's fox (Vulpes cana) is a small fox native to the Middle East and Central Asia. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.", "target": "species of mammal", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q47487784", "label": "1984 Wimbledon Championships – girls' singles", "source": "Annabel Croft defeated Elna Reinach in the final, 3–6, 6–3, 6–2 to win the girls' singles tennis title at the 1984 Wimbledon Championships.", "target": "1984 tennis event results", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7331961", "label": "Rickey Smith", "source": "Rickey Smith (born 4 November 1975) is a Kiwi former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1990s. He played at representative level for Ireland, and at club level for Bangor Vikings, as a left-centre.", "target": "Irish rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17380424", "label": "Tennessee State Route 197", "source": "State Route 197 (SR 197) is a secondary west-east state road located in West Tennessee.", "target": "state highways in Tennessee, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7129275", "label": "Pamela Uschuk", "source": "Pamela Uschuk is an American poet, and 2011 Visiting Poet at University of Tennessee. She won a 2010 American Book Award, for Crazy Love: New Poems.", "target": "American poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2356536", "label": "Roger Jansson", "source": "Roger Jansson (born 9 August 1943 in Kimito) is a politician in the Åland Islands, an autonomous and unilingually Swedish territory of Finland. He has studied in Åbo Akademi. Member of Ålands lagting (Åland parliament) 2007- Åland Member of the Finnish parliament 2003-2007 Member of Ålands lagting (Åland parliament) 1979-2003 Minister of industry and trade 1999-2001 Lantråd (premier of the government of Åland) 1995-1999 Speaker of Ålands lagting 1994-1995 Second deputy speaker Ålands lagting (Åland parliament) 1983 and 1991–1993.", "target": "Aland Islands politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25482444", "label": "Ai-Petri", "source": "Ai-Petri (Crimean Tatar: Ay Petri, Russian: Ай-Петри, Ukrainian: Ай-Петрі) is a peak in the Crimean Mountains. For administrative purposes it is in the Yalta municipality of Crimea. The name is of Greek origin, and translates as St. Peter (Greek: Άγιος Πέτρος).", "target": "peak in the Crimean Mountains", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5262382", "label": "Derek Steward", "source": "Derek Guy Steward (9 October 1928 – 12 October 2017) was a New Zealand sprinter and hurdler who won a bronze medal representing his country at the 1950 British Empire Games.", "target": "New Zealand sprinter (1928-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7206049", "label": "Pniewo, Pułtusk County", "source": "Pniewo [ˈpɲevɔ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zatory, within Pułtusk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-east of Zatory, 14 km (9 mi) south-east of Pułtusk, and 52 km (32 mi) north of Warsaw. Pniewo was a private church village within the Polish Crown, administratively located in the Masovian Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Polish Crown. During the German invasion of Poland, which started World War II, on September 9, 1939, Wehrmacht troops murdered a dozen or so Poles from the nearby town of Wyszków near the village (see also Nazi crimes against the Polish nation).", "target": "village in Masovian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6709155", "label": "Lynn O'Donnell", "source": "Lynn O'Donnell (died 1996) was an independent film producer, whose works included the award-winning Crumb, Living on Tokyo Time, and a number of specials made for America public television, including films on Nobel Laureate Czesław Miłosz and Argentinian tango superstar Carlos Gardel.O'Donnell collaborated primarily with filmmakers Terry Zwigoff and Steven Okazaki, but worked as well with others, including Irving Saraf and Allie Light. Films on which she worked won two Academy Awards, and most other major cinema awards and honors, and were featured at film festivals around the world. O'Donnell died in 1996 of ovarian cancer. She was married to Lawrence Wilkinson, and they had one daughter, Nora Wilkinson.", "target": "American film producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q924428", "label": "FC Lokomotyv Kupyansk", "source": "FC Lokomotyv Kupyansk was an amateur club from Kupyansk competing at the regional competitions of Kharkiv Oblast. The club was one of the oldest in the country being founded in 1923. With the fall of the Soviet Union, the club was dissolved. In 1997 Lokomotyv Kupyansk was revived, but on 2 March 2016 it was announced that the club is closed.", "target": "association football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6721384", "label": "Mabein Township", "source": "Mabein Township (Burmese: မဘိမ်းမြို့နယ်) is a township of Mongmit District (formerly part of Kyaukme District) in the Shan State of eastern Burma. The principal town is Mabein.", "target": "human settlement in Myanmar", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6801808", "label": "McKenny baronets", "source": "The McKenny Baronetcy was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1831 for Thomas McKenny, Lord Mayor of Dublin in 1819. The title became extinct on the death of the second Baronet on 10 November 1866 at Tremezzo, Lake Como, Italy.", "target": "UK baronetage title", "baseline_candidates": ["baronetcy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20722455", "label": "Pseudotropheus interruptus", "source": "Pseudotropheus interruptus is a species of cichlid in the Cichlidae endemic to Lake Malawi where it is only known from Likoma Island. This species can reach a length of 9.8 centimetres (3.9 in) TL. It can also be found in the aquarium trade.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6994258", "label": "Neotrirachodon", "source": "Neotrirachodon is an extinct genus of therapsids which existed in Russia during the Middle Triassic period. Its type and only species is Neotrirachodon expectatus.It is known from a jaw fossil consisting of the left dentary with postcanines. It was recovered from the Donguz Formation, Orenburg Oblast of Russia. The fossil was first described as belonging to the genus Antecosuchus (as Antecosuchus ochevi), but in 2002 it was placed in its own monotypic genus.It has tentatively been classified as a trirachodontid gomphodont pending further fossil discoveries. Gomphodonts were a group of herbivorous cynodonts which lived during the Triassic. If correct, it would be the first trirachodontid described from Russia.Its classification remains uncertain, however. Other studies treat it as an incertae sedis gomphodont, while others propose that it is more likely to be a bauriid therocephalian rather than a trirachodontid.", "target": "genus of mammals (fossil)", "baseline_candidates": ["fossil taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52704415", "label": "Ritha Paulsen", "source": "Rita Paulsen, born 26 February 1977 in Karagwe, Kagera Region, is a Tanzanian television personality, philanthropist, entrepreneur and founder and chief executive officer of Benchmark Productions, a company that prepares and hosts the Tanzanian television show Bongo Star Search.", "target": "Tanzanian entrepreneur", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15764348", "label": "Dubrovnik Annals", "source": "Dubrovnik Annals is an annual peer-reviewed academic journal established in 1997. It covers all aspects of the history and culture of Dubrovnik and the Dubrovnik Republic. It is published by the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts's Institute for Historical Sciences and the editor-in-chief is Vladimir Stipetić. The annals are yearly presented at a conference in a festive atmosphere.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal", "academic journal", "open-access journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2100922", "label": "Poker table", "source": "A poker table or card table is a table specifically designed for playing card games.", "target": "Table designed for card games", "baseline_candidates": ["table"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5505440", "label": "From Here to Eternity", "source": "\"From Here to Eternity\" is a song recorded by American country music artist Michael Peterson, who co-wrote the song with Robert Ellis Orrall. It was released in September 1997 as the second single from his first album, Michael Peterson, becoming his only number one hit on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) charts that year.", "target": "song by Michael Peterson", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16512724", "label": "Pierre de Marivaux", "source": "Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de Marivaux (4 February 1688 – 12 February 1763), commonly referred to as Marivaux, was a French playwright and novelist. He is considered one of the most important French playwrights of the 18th century, writing numerous comedies for the Comédie-Française and the Comédie-Italienne of Paris. His most important works are Le Triomphe de l'amour, Le Jeu de l'amour et du hasard and Les Fausses Confidences. He also published a number of essays and two important but unfinished novels, La Vie de Marianne and Le Paysan parvenu.", "target": "French novelist and dramatist (1688-1763)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18372296", "label": "Hemiphyllodactylus insularis", "source": "The Philippine slender gecko (Hemiphyllodactylus insularis) is a species of gecko. It is endemic to the Philippines.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16849315", "label": "Thomas Wilkes", "source": "Thomas Wilkes (by 1508 – 1536/37), of Chippenham, Wiltshire, was an English politician. He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Chippenham in 1529.", "target": "English politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6026664", "label": "Township 3", "source": "Township 3 is one of thirteen current townships in Benton County, Arkansas, USA. As of the 2010 census, its total population was 20,037.", "target": "township in Benton County, Arkansas", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Arkansas"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16208319", "label": "Leki Dukpa", "source": "Leki Dukpa is a Bhutanese international footballer, who currently plays for Thimphu City. He made his first appearance for the Bhutan national football team in 2012.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3077961", "label": "Fort Nassau", "source": "Fort Nassau was a factorij in New Netherland between 1627–1651 located at the mouth of Big Timber Creek at its confluence with the Delaware River. It was the first known permanent European-built structure in what would become the state of New Jersey. The creek name is a derived from the Dutch language Timmer Kill as recorded by David Pietersen de Vries in his memoirs of his journey of 1630–1633. The Delaware Valley and its bay was called the \"South River\" (Dutch: Zuyd Rivier); the \"North River\" of the colony was the Hudson River. The factorij was established for the fur trade, mostly in beaver pelts, with the indigenous populations of Susquehannock, who spoke an Iroquoian language, and the Lenape, whose language was of the Algonquian family. They also wanted to retain a physical claim to the territory. While the fort is generally described as being at today's Gloucester City, New Jersey (39°53′41″N 75°07′45″W); analysis places it on the peninsula in the cove, now Brooklawn (39°52′50″N 75°07′36″W). or possibly on the south side of the creek's cove, at today's Westville (39°52′48″N 75°08′19″W). Initially the fort was occupied intermittently, and on occasion used by the local population in seasonal migrations. In 1635, colonists from Virginia Colony occupied the fort. The governor of New Netherland at the time, Wouter van Twiller, sent a force and was successful in retaking the fort. This was the first of conflicts between the English and Dutch in the New World. While thereafter the fort was continuously manned, the location was ill-suited to trade,.", "target": "Dutch trading post and fortification beside the \"South River\" in today's New Jersey", "baseline_candidates": ["factory", "fort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65318764", "label": "Alpha", "source": "Alpha is a 2019 Bangladeshi film starring Alamgir Kabir, Doyel Mash and ATM Shamsuzzaman in lead roles. It is the third direction of Nasiruddin Yousuff. The film was released on 26 April 2019. It was the submission of Bangladesh to the 92nd Academy Awards for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, but was not nominated.", "target": "2019 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7978715", "label": "Webbtown", "source": "Webbtown is an unincorporated community in Clarke County in the U.S. state of Virginia. Webbtown lies to the east of Berryville on Harry Byrd Highway (Virginia State Route 7) at its intersection with Wickliffe Road (VA 608).", "target": "unincorporated community in Virginia", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3979950", "label": "Tabernacle of the Linaioli", "source": "The Tabernacle of the Linaioli (Italian: Tabernacolo dei Linaioli, literally \"Tabernacle of the Linen manufacturers\") is a marble aedicula designed by Lorenzo Ghiberti, with paintings by Fra Angelico, dating to 1432–1433. It is housed in the National Museum of San Marco, Florence, central Italy.", "target": "painting by Fra Angelico in an aedicule by Lorenzo Ghiberti", "baseline_candidates": ["Tabernacle tower", "painting", "triptych"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10818590", "label": "Sarılar, Sur", "source": "Sarılar is a village in the Sur District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19987521", "label": "Person-McGhee Farm", "source": "Person–McGhee Farm is a historic farm complex located at 5631 U.S. Highway 1 in Franklinton, Franklin County, North Carolina, about 4 miles (6 kilometers) north of town. The earliest section of the house was built sometime between 1770 and 1820, and is a three-bay, two-story frame dwelling over a stone-walled cellar. It has double shouldered brick end chimneys. In the 1890s, a large 2 1/2-story Queen Anne / Colonial Revival style section was added to the original Federal period dwelling. Also on the property are the contributing tenant house (1860s-1870s), a water tower, smokehouse, cattle barn, three log tobacco barns, and several sheds.The farm was threatened during a wildfire which occurred on February 10, 2008. Two old sheds were destroyed, but the rest of the property was able to be saved. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.", "target": "historic farm in North Carolina, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["farm"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14833014", "label": "Estoloides fulvitarsis", "source": "Estoloides fulvitarsis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Bates in 1885. It is known from Costa Rica and Panama.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5509115", "label": "Funeral Rites", "source": "Funeral Rites (Pompes funèbres) is a 1948 novel by Jean Genet. It is a story of love and betrayal across political divides, written this time for the narrator's lover, Jean Decarnin, killed by the Germans in World War II. The first edition was limited to 1,500 copies; in 1953 the text was revised by Gallimard, excising some possibly offensive passages, which became the basis for the 1953 English translation by Frechtman.", "target": "book by Jean Genet", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2703494", "label": "96th meridian west", "source": "The meridian 96° west of Greenwich is a line of longitude that extends from the North Pole across the Arctic Ocean, North America, the Gulf of Mexico, the Pacific Ocean, the Southern Ocean, and Antarctica to the South Pole. The 96th meridian west forms a great circle with the 84th meridian east.", "target": "line of longitude", "baseline_candidates": ["meridian"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1772494", "label": "Harpefoss", "source": "Harpefoss is a village in Sør-Fron Municipality in Innlandet county, Norway. The village is located in the Gudbrandsdal valley on the north shore of the Gudbrandsdalslågen river, about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) northwest of the village of Hundorp. The 0.52-square-kilometre (130-acre) village has a population (2021) of 333 and a population density of 640 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,700/sq mi). The Dovrebanen railway line runs through the village.", "target": "village in Innlandet county, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["urban area in Norway", "human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18541290", "label": "Alexandru Lăpușan", "source": "Alexandru Lăpușan (1 February 1955 – 17 May 2016) was a Romanian politician who served as Minister of Agriculture in Nicolae Văcăroiu's Cabinet (1992–1996). He was member of the Chamber of Deputies (1990–1992) for Cluj County, being named by the National Salvation Front. He was also Mayor of Dej in 1991.", "target": "Romanian politician, Minister of Agriculture (1992–1996)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14701270", "label": "Sybra vitticollis", "source": "Sybra vitticollis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Breuning and de Jong in 1941.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5389070", "label": "Erilophodes", "source": "Erilophodes is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae described by Warren in 1894.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7349831", "label": "Robert Sklar", "source": "Robert Anthony Sklar (December 3, 1936 – July 2, 2011) was an American historian and author specializing in the history of cinema. Sklar began his career as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times. He received a Ph.D. in the History of American Civilization from Harvard University in 1965. In 1968, he signed the \"Writers and Editors War Tax Protest\" pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against the Vietnam War.He was a history professor at the University of Michigan, and in 1977, became a professor of cinema in the Department of Cinema Studies at New York University Tisch School of the Arts.", "target": "American historian (1936-2011)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3181458", "label": "Kuze Hirotami", "source": "Kuze Hirotami (久世広民) (1737–1800), also known as Kuze Tango-no-kami Hirotami (久世丹後守広民), was a Japanese politician during late 18th-century Nagasaki bugyō or governor of Nagasaki port, located on southwestern shore of Kyūshū island in the Japanese archipelago. Kuze was one of the Nagasaki bugyō between 1775 and 1784. His childhood name was Shōkurō (称九郎). His only daughter married Uesugi Yoshinaga. As Nagasaki bugyō, Kuze was paired with another shogunate official, each alternately exchanging places in Edo and Nagasaki. For example, the diaries maintained by Dutch East Indies Company (VOC) merchants during this period record that as Tsuchiya Morinao (Tsuchiya Suruga-no-kami) is arriving in Nagasaki to take up his duties as Nagasaki bugyō on September 27, 1783, Kuze is preparing to leave en route to Edo; and they both will swap locations the following autumn. The VOC accounts describe Kuze as a good governor.Kuze is a close relation of one of the Osaka shoshidai in this period, Kuze Hiroakira.In 1783, Kuze was also one of four Shogunal finance administrators or kanjō-bugyō (勘定奉行), along with Akai Tadamasa, Kurihara Morisada, and Matsumoto Hidemochi. Tanuma Okitsugu was Kuze's patron.The oldest surviving letter from Kutsuki Masatsuna to Isaac Titsingh dates from 1789; and this letter mentions prominent mutual friends such as Kuze and Shimazu Shigehide, who was the father-in-law of the eleventh Tokugawa shōgun Ienari.", "target": "Japanese official", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5437097", "label": "Fastigiella", "source": "Fastigiella is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Cerithiidae.", "target": "genus of molluscs", "baseline_candidates": ["monotypic taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16219276", "label": "J. Bertram Read", "source": "J. Bertram Read was an American tennis player active in the late 19th century and early 20th century.", "target": "American tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4945950", "label": "Born to Be Wired", "source": "Born to be Wired was a professional wrestling live event produced by Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) on August 9, 1997. The event was held in the ECW Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States. Excerpts from Born to be Wired aired on episodes #225 and #226 of the syndicated television program ECW Hardcore TV on August 15 and August 22, 1997, while the full event was released on VHS in 1997 and on DVD in 2002. The main event was also included in the 2005 compilation DVD BloodSport - The Most Violent Matches of ECW.Born to be Wired is best known for its main event: a barbed wire match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship between Sabu and Terry Funk.", "target": "1997 Extreme Championship Wrestling live event", "baseline_candidates": ["professional wrestling event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1630729", "label": "Mazuela", "source": "Mazuela is a municipality and town located in the province of Burgos, Castile and León, Spain. According to a 2008 estimate (INE), the municipality has a population of 97 inhabitants. It is about 27 kilometers from Burgos, in the area southwest of the Burgos Province.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28222780", "label": "Rocky Holcomb", "source": "Norman Dewey \"Rocky\" Holcomb III (born 1968) is an American politician who served as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates for the 85th district from 2017 to 2018. He is a member of the Republican Party.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37783021", "label": "Danilovsky District", "source": "Danilovsky District, Moscow (Russian: Дани́ловский райо́н) is an administrative district (raion) of Southern Administrative Okrug, and one of the 125 raions of Moscow, Russia. The area of the district is 12.60 square kilometers (4.86 sq mi).", "target": "district of Moscow, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Moscow"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7650084", "label": "Sutonocrea", "source": "Sutonocrea is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48742184", "label": "Mount Orrey", "source": "Mount Orrey is a mountain range located in Adirondack Mountains of New York located in the Town of Wells west of the hamlet of Wells.", "target": "mountain in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["mountain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1317529", "label": "Historical Social Research", "source": "Historical Social Research is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering political science, social science, cultural studies, and history. It is the official journal of the QUANTUM association and is published by GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences. The journal was established in 1976 as QUANTUM Information and was renamed Historical Social Research/Historische Sozialforschung in 1979, with the inclusion of both English and German titles representing the original bilingual nature of the journal. Due to the internationalization of the journal over the past few decades, it's title was shortened in 2021 to the current one. The editors-in-chief are Wilhelm Heinz Schröder and Heinrich Best.", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["delayed open access journal", "history journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16960629", "label": "Diamond Hill", "source": "Diamond Hill is a large hill on Diamond Hill Road in Cumberland, Rhode Island, which contains a town park and former ski area. The summit is 481 feet above sea level. On a clear day, the Boston skyline and Mount Wachusett are visible. Diamond Hill is a massive outcropping of white quartz with a vertical drop of 350 feet. The hill was named in colonial times and takes its name \"from its sparkling and shining appearance.\" In the colonial era, the Whipple family (the children of John Whipple, Sr.) first settled near Diamond Hill, and during King Philip's War in the 1670s, several skirmishes occurred nearby, including Nine Men's Misery, the memorial of which is now on the grounds of the nearby Cumberland Monastery. In 1877 the Diamond Hill Granite Company founded a granite quarry northwest of Diamond Hill and copper was also mined near the hill. In 1935 \"Philip Allen, C. Faulkner Kendall, and Henry Munroe Rogers offered 235 acres of land on the hill to the State of Rhode Island\" and ski trails were cut shortly thereafter.In the twentieth century, the hill contained two small ski areas, Ski Valley (operating from 1939 to 1981) and Diamond Hill Reservation (operating from the mid-1960s to mid-1980s). In 1939 when the first ski area opened, it was a hike-up and ski-down facility, but operators of the ski areas eventually constructed rope tows, a T-bar, and multiple two person chair lifts. In the 1980s, some of the lifts and equipment were gradually sold, and the ski areas were.", "target": "hill in Cumberland, Rhode Island", "baseline_candidates": ["ski resort"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3933643", "label": "Yuri Ivashchenko", "source": "Yuri Ivashchenko (Ukrainian: Іващенко Юрій Миколайович; born April 12, 1961) is a Ukrainian astronomer.", "target": "Ukrainian astronomer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16197285", "label": "Peter Almond", "source": "Peter Almond is a Trials Division justice at the Supreme Court of Victoria. He was educated at Yarra Valley Grammar and is a graduate of the undergraduate and graduate program in law at the University of Melbourne. During his career as a lawyer he represented clients including the Australian Stock Exchange.", "target": "Australian judge", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1267791", "label": "Đuro Đaković", "source": "Đuro Đaković (30 November 1886 – 25 April 1929) was a Yugoslav metal worker, communist and revolutionary. Đaković was the organizational secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, from April 1928 to April 1929 and one of the most prominent fighters of the working class of Yugoslavia.", "target": "Yugoslavian communist politician (1886–1929)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3518238", "label": "Teofilo Patini", "source": "Teofilo Patini (Castel di Sangro, Abruzzo May 5, 1840 – Naples, November 16, 1906) was an Italian painter, active in a Realist style.", "target": "Italian painter (1840-1906)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21095117", "label": "Sarepta", "source": "Sarepta is a town in Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 891 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Minden Micropolitan Statistical Area. Sarepta was named for the town's first church's benefactor, Sarepta Carter. Local history tells that Mrs. Carter donated a Bible to the community church on the premise that it be named for her. Years later the church split, and the original name became Old Sarepta. The new congregation became New Sarepta.", "target": "town in Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["town of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3662876", "label": "Prince Maui of Silla", "source": "Crown Prince Maui (Korean: 마의태자; Hanja: 麻衣太子; born 912), born Gim Il (Korean: 김일; Hanja: 金鎰) was the last Silla Crown Prince as the son of its last ruler, King Gyeongsun. The name Maui means \"hemp dress\", and comes from the fact that he spent his whole life wearing clothes made of hemp linen. His father was killed in the civil war by a lone warrior. After hearing the news, the prince fled to the southern mountains in Jeolla. He was also the creator and the originator of the Nakan (낙안) Kim clan, which branched out from the Gyeongju Kim Clan. After fleeing to Jeolla, he became a Buddhist monk. There are currently 130 Nakan Kim families in Seoul.", "target": "the last crown prince of Silla", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q94741409", "label": "Hilda Bayley", "source": "Hilda Christabel Bailey (29 June 1888 – 26 May 1971) was a British theatre and film actress. On stage from 1913, she was in both stage and film versions of Carnival in 1918 and 1921, respectively; and in the controversial crime film Cocaine in 1922.", "target": "British actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58010398", "label": "Ben Tollefson", "source": "Benjamin C. Tollefsen (June 14, 1927 – December 16, 2021) was an American politician in the state of North Dakota. He was a member of the North Dakota House of Representatives from 1985 to 2000, and the North Dakota Senate from 2001 to 2008.He died in Minot, North Dakota, on December 16, 2021, at the age of 94.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5764886", "label": "Charles Henry Bellenden Ker", "source": "Charles Henry Bellenden Ker (c.1785–1871) was an English barrister and legal reformer.", "target": "English barrister and legal reformer (1785-1871)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7020041", "label": "Newton", "source": "Newton is a village in the Bolsover district of Derbyshire, England, about a mile south of Tibshelf. Population details are included in the civil parish of Blackwell.", "target": "village in Derbyshire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6162299", "label": "Jason Cullen", "source": "Jason Cullen (born 11 June 1988) is an Irish professional darts player who currently plays in the Professional Darts Corporation events.", "target": "Irish darts player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5574841", "label": "Go Hui-dong", "source": "Go Hui-dong (1886–1965), also known by the pen name Chun-gok, born in Seoul, was the first Korean painter to adopt Western styles. He spent most of his life in Seoul. He studied French there from 1899 to 1903 and briefly took a post with the Korean government. Leaving the post in 1905, he studied Korean painting for several years and then traveled to Japan, where he studied Western-style painting under Kuroda Seiki from 1909 to 1915. He returned to Korea in 1915 and sought to fuse traditional and Korean styles. Currently his house located in Bukchon Village is open to public.", "target": "Korean painter (1886-1965)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18530443", "label": "Natalie Bevan", "source": "Natalie Alice Bevan (née Ackenhausen; 22 May 1909 – 15 August 2007), was a British artist, muse, and collector. She has been called, \"one of the most beautiful and charismatic women of her generation\".", "target": "Bevan [née Ackenhausen], Natalie Alice (1909–2007), artist, muse, and collector", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q790024", "label": "extrasensory perception", "source": "Extrasensory perception or ESP, also called sixth sense, is a claimed paranormal ability pertaining to reception of information not gained through the recognized physical senses, but sensed with the mind. The term was adopted by Duke University psychologist J. B. Rhine to denote psychic abilities such as intuition, telepathy, psychometry, clairvoyance, claireaudience, clairesentience, empathy and their trans-temporal operation as precognition or retrocognition.Second sight is a form of extrasensory perception, whereby a person perceives information, in the form of a vision, about future events before they happen (precognition), or about things or events at remote locations (remote viewing). There is no scientific evidence that second sight exists. Reports of second sight are known only from anecdotal evidence. Second sight and ESP are classified as pseudosciences.", "target": "reception of information via extra senses", "baseline_candidates": ["psychic ability", "superhuman quality", "perception", "superpower"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q929709", "label": "Jean-Claude Lemoult", "source": "Jean-Claude Lemoult (born 28 August 1960) is a French former professional football (soccer) player who played as a midfielder. Lemoult was a member of the French squad that won the gold medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.", "target": "French association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1865148", "label": "Zosis geniculata", "source": "Zosis geniculata sometimes referred to as the humped spider or grey house spider, is a cosmopolitan species with a pantropical distribution. In Australia, it is often seen in buildings near human habitation.", "target": "species of arachnid", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26327010", "label": "Conder Bridge", "source": "Conder Bridge is a Grade II listed single segmental arch bridge spanning the River Conder in the English village of Conder Green, Thurnham, Lancashire. The structure dates to the early 19th century. The bridge carries the vehicular and pedestrian traffic of the A588. The bridge is flanked by piers, with abutments also punctuated by piers. It has a solid parapet with a string course and weathered coping.", "target": "bridge in Thurnham, Lancaster, Lancashire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["bridge"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q675538", "label": "Dictionary of the Spanish language", "source": "The Diccionario de la lengua española (DLE; Spanish pronunciation: [diɣθjoˈnaɾjo ðe la ˈleŋɡwa espaˈɲola]; English: Dictionary of the Spanish language), previously known as Diccionario de la Real Academia Española (DRAE; English: Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy), is produced, edited, and published by the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) with participation of the Association of Academies of the Spanish Language. It was first published in 1780, and subsequent editions have been published about once a decade. The twenty-third edition was published in 2014; it is available online, incorporating modifications to be included in the twenty-fourth print edition.The Dictionary was created to maintain the linguistic purity of the Spanish language; unlike many English-language dictionaries, the DLE is intended to be authoritative and prescriptive, rather than descriptive.", "target": "Dictionary of the Spanish language by the Royal Spanish Academy, first published in 1780", "baseline_candidates": ["written work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q656289", "label": "Guntersblum", "source": "Guntersblum is an Ortsgemeinde– a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Frankfurt/Rhine-Main Metropolitan Region in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q79116157", "label": "Rosario González-Férez", "source": "Rosario González-Férez is a professor in the Department of Atomic, Molecular and Nuclear Physics at the University of Granada. In 2013 she was awarded the Mildred Dresselhaus Award, and in 2018 she as appointed to the IUPAP commission on Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics.", "target": "researcher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18437559", "label": "Željko Burić", "source": "Željko Burić (pronounced [ʒêːʎko bûːritɕ] (listen); born 15 July 1955) is a Croatian ophthalmologist and politician serving as Mayor of Šibenik since 2013. Before taking mayoral office, he served as the director of the General Hospital of Šibenik-Knin County in Šibenik.", "target": "mayor of Šibenik", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q703882", "label": "Carl Georg Barth", "source": "Carl Georg Lange Barth (February 28, 1860 – October 28, 1939) was a Norwegian-American mathematician, mechanical and consulting engineer, and lecturer at Harvard University. Barth is known as one of the foreman of scientific management, who improved and popularized the industrial use of compound slide rules.", "target": "mathematician (1860-1939)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5359306", "label": "Elephant Butte Reservoir", "source": "Elephant Butte Reservoir is a reservoir on the southern part of the Rio Grande in the U.S. state of New Mexico, 5 miles (8.0 km) north of Truth or Consequences. The reservoir is the 84th largest man-made lake in the United States and the largest in New Mexico by total surface area and peak volume. It is the only place in New Mexico that one can find pelicans perched on or alongside the lake. There are also temporary US Coast Guard bases stationed at Elephant Butte. It is impounded by Elephant Butte Dam and is part of the largest state park in New Mexico, Elephant Butte Lake State Park.The reservoir is part of the Rio Grande Project to provide power and irrigation to south-central New Mexico and western Texas. It began to be filled in 1915 and 1916 and at highstand was the largest man-made lake in the world.The reservoir can hold 2,065,010 acre-feet (2.54715×109 m3) of water from a drainage of 28,900 square miles (74,850 km2). It provides irrigation to 178,000 acres (720 km2) of land.Fishing is a popular recreational activity on the reservoir, which contains striped bass, white bass, largemouth bass, crappie, walleye and catfish.", "target": "reservoir on the Rio Grande in New Mexico, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["reservoir"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6791606", "label": "Matthias Simmen", "source": "Matthias Simmen (born in Altdorf, Uri on (1972-02-03)February 3, 1972) is a retired Swiss biathlete.He competed in the 2002, 2006 and 2010 Winter Olympics for Switzerland. His best finish was 9th, as a member of the Swiss relay team in 2010. His best individual performance was 23rd, in the 2006 pursuit.He earned one Biathlon World Cup podium finish, 3rd in the sprint event in the 2006/07 event at Hochfilzen. That was the first podium finish ever for a Swiss biathlete. His best finish at the Biathlon World Championships was 10th, in 2007. His best overall finish in the Biathlon World Cup came in 2006/07, when he placed 29th.Simmen retired after the 2010–11 season.", "target": "Swiss biathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11981865", "label": "Church of the Cross", "source": "The Holy Cross Church (Norwegian: Korskirken) was a small medieval parish church for the northern part of the Old Town of Oslo, Norway. The ruin was rediscovered in 1922 and is now a part of Minneparken containing the ruins of the church and the larger St. Hallvard's Cathedral.", "target": "church building in Oslo, Norway", "baseline_candidates": ["church building", "cultural property"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27897796", "label": "Banksia nivea", "source": "Banksia nivea, commonly known as honeypot dryandra, is a species of rounded shrub that is endemic to Western Australia. The Noongar peoples know the plant as bulgalla. It has linear, pinnatipartite leaves with triangular lobes, heads of cream-coloured and orange or red flowers and glabrous, egg-shaped follicles.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1964912", "label": "Cirrhilabrus flavidorsalis", "source": "The yellowfin fairy-wrasse (Cirrhilabrus flavidorsalis) is a species of wrasse native to the western Pacific Ocean from Indonesia to the Philippines and Palau. It inhabits coral reefs, living in groups among the branches of branching coral. It can be found at depths from 6 to 40 m (20 to 131 ft), though rarely deeper than 28 m (92 ft). This species can reach a total length of 6.5 cm (2.6 in).", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5364945", "label": "Ellen Meade", "source": "Ellen Meade (born c. 1953) is an American beauty pageant titleholder who won Miss Florida 1973.", "target": "American beauty pageant contestant", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22064264", "label": "Cruzeiro do Oeste", "source": "Cruzeiro do Oeste is a municipality in the state of Paraná in the Southern Region of Brazil.", "target": "municipality in Paraná State, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Brazil"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19317445", "label": "Eva Kotamanidou", "source": "Eva Kotamanidou (Greek: Εύα Κοταμανίδου) was a Greek actress.Born on March 16, 1936 in Nea Filadelfeia, Athens, she became most known for O Thiassos (1975), Topio stin omichli (1988) and Alexander the Great (1980). She died on November 26, 2020, aged 84.", "target": "Greek actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6542163", "label": "Liberty Union Party", "source": "The Green Mountain Peace and Justice Party (formerly known as Liberty Union Party LUP) of Vermont is a democratic socialist political party founded in 1970 by former Congressman William H. Meyer, Peter Diamondstone, Dennis Morrisseau and others.The party has had several successes in local elections in Vermont and is the fourth largest in the state after the Democratic, Republican, and Progressive parties. In September 2021, the party renamed itself the Green Mountain Peace and Justice Party.", "target": "political party in Vermont", "baseline_candidates": ["political party"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13420120", "label": "2013–14 Real Madrid C.F. season", "source": "The 2013–14 season was the 110th season in Real Madrid's history and their 83rd consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. It covered a period from 1 July 2013 to 30 June 2014. The team competed for a record 33rd La Liga title and entered the UEFA Champions League for the 17th successive season, competing for a record 10th title. They also entered the Copa del Rey in the round of 32. Real Madrid's shirt sponsor for this season was Emirates, having replaced Bwin.com. The club finished the league campaign in third place (level on points with Barcelona and three behind cross-city rivals Atlético Madrid) after winning the Copa del Rey – against rivals Barcelona – in April. Upon reaching the 2014 UEFA Champions League Final, they defeated then-recently-league winners Atlético Madrid 4–1 a.e.t. to win their tenth European title.", "target": "season of football team", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12906842", "label": "Ikhkhet", "source": "Ikhkhet (Mongolian: Иххэт) is a sum (district) of Dornogovi Province in south-eastern Mongolia. Zülegt fluorspar mine is located in the northern part of the sum. In 2009, its population was 2,176.Sharavyn Gungaadorj, the Prime Minister of Mongolia from March 21 to September 11, 1990, was born in Ikhkhet in 1935.", "target": "sum (district) of Dornogovi Aimag (province), Mongolia", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Mongolia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q873050", "label": "Josef Glaser", "source": "Josef Glaser (11 May 1887 in St. Blasien – 12 August 1969 in Freiburg im Breisgau) was a German amateur footballer who played as a midfielder and competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. He was a member of the German Olympic squad and played one match in the consolation tournament.", "target": "German footballer (1887-1969)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6210111", "label": "Joe Greene", "source": "Joe Greene (born February 15, 1986) in Brooklyn, New York but now resides and trains in Queens is a professional middleweight American boxer. At a height of 5'10 with a Southpaw stance, Greene has a professional record of 22 wins (14 KO's), 1 loss and 0 draws.", "target": "American boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15517214", "label": "Acis ionica", "source": "Acis ionica is a species of flowering plant in the family Amaryllidaceae, native from south-western Albania to western Greece. It was initially confused with what is now Acis valentina, a species found in Spain near Valencia.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7100193", "label": "Orchard Leigh", "source": "Orchard Leigh is a hamlet in the parish of Latimer in Buckinghamshire, England, located along the B4505 about 2 miles east of Chesham. It is in the civil parish of Ashley Green. Chesham Preparatory School, an independent school for children aged 3 to 13, is based in the hamlet.The minister and author Reverend Walter Wynn used to reside in Orchard Leigh.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7794248", "label": "Thomas Stringer", "source": "Thomas Stringer (born 22 February 1873; date of death missing) was an English first-class cricketer who played in one match for Worcestershire in 1909. Born in Lepton, Huddersfield, Stringer played one match for the Yorkshire Second XI in 1902, taking four wickets against Surrey II, but it was only seven years later that he made his solitary first-class appearance, for Worcestershire against Lancashire at Amblecote. Worcestershire were crushed by an innings and 183 runs, and Stringer's only innings of bowling brought him figures of 1-103, his one and only victim in first-class cricket being future Test player Harry Makepeace. With the bat, Stringer made 0 and 0*.", "target": "English cricketer (1873-?)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75239727", "label": "William I, Duke of Bavaria", "source": "William I, Duke of Bavaria-Straubing (Frankfurt am Main, 1330–1389, Le Quesnoy), was the second son of Emperor Louis IV and Margaret II of Hainaut. He was also known as William V, Count of Holland, as William III, Count of Hainaut and as William IV, Count of Zeeland.", "target": "second son of the emperor Louis IV the Bavarian from his second wife Margaret of Holland and Hainaut", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32020804", "label": "Sioma District", "source": "Sioma District is a district of Zambia, located in Western Province on the west bank of the Zambezi River. The capital lies at Sioma.The district was created in 2012 by the then president Michael Sata by the splitting of Shangombo District.", "target": "district in Western Province, Zambia", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Zambia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1274643", "label": "Phoenix Mercury", "source": "The Phoenix Mercury are an American professional basketball team based in Phoenix, Arizona, playing in the Western Conference in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The team was founded before the league's inaugural 1997 season began; it is one of the eight original franchises. The team is owned by Robert Sarver, who also owns the NBA team Phoenix Suns. The Mercury has qualified for the WNBA Playoffs in fifteen of its twenty-four years in Phoenix. The franchise has been home to players such as former UConn Diana Taurasi, Rutgers grad Cappie Pondexter, former Temple power forward Candice Dupree, former Baylor center Brittney Griner, and Australian guard Penny Taylor. In 1998, 2007, 2009, 2014, and 2021 the Mercury went to the WNBA Finals; they lost to Houston in 1998, but won the title in 2007, 2009, and 2014 over Detroit, Indiana, and Chicago respectively.", "target": "Women's basketball team", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7781373", "label": "Thenimalai", "source": "Thenimali Maran is a panchayat town in Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It is a suburb of Thiruvannamalai UA.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3432936", "label": "Do Pinto River", "source": "The Do Pinto River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil. It is part of the Uruguay River basin.", "target": "river in Santa Catarina, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12635801", "label": "Low Mountain", "source": "Low Mountain is a census-designated place (CDP) in Navajo County, Arizona, United States. The population was 757 at the 2010 census.", "target": "human settlement in Arizona, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27733808", "label": "Glenn Wilkes Jr.", "source": "Glenn Wilke Jr. is an American collegiate level basketball coach, with 700 victories in 33 seasons. He initially started coaching in Winter Park, Florida an NCAA Division II school. He is currently a coach for the Rollins College's women's basketball team. where he has a 700–252 record. His father, Glenn Wilkes Sr., is a Hall of Fame basketball coach.", "target": "American basketball coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5078373", "label": "Charles Grant Robertson", "source": "Sir Charles Grant Robertson (1869 – 29 February 1948) was a British academic historian. He was a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and Vice-chancellor of the University of Birmingham.", "target": "British academic", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5676845", "label": "Harvest Threshing", "source": "Le Dépiquage des Moissons, also known as Harvest Threshing, and The Harvesters, is an immense oil painting created in 1912 by the French artist, theorist and writer Albert Gleizes (1881–1953). It was first revealed to the general public at the Salon de la Section d'Or, Galerie La Boétie in Paris, October 1912 (no. 43). This work, along with La Ville de Paris (City of Paris) by Robert Delaunay, is the largest and most ambitious Cubist painting undertaken during the pre-War Cubist period. Formerly in the collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, this monumental painting by Gleizes is exhibited at the National Museum of Western Art, in Tokyo, Japan.", "target": "painting by Albert Gleizes", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7495024", "label": "Sheringham Woodfields School", "source": "Sheringham Woodfields School is a co-educational special school located in Sheringham in the English county of Norfolk.It is a Learning and Cognition Specialist School and has provision for 90 pupils aged 3–19 years with a diverse range of special educational needs who work at different levels of intellectual ability. All pupils at the school have a Statement of Special Educational Needs. The school staff and pupils also operate the Woodfield Den shop in Sheringham. The school has close links with the Holt Hall study centre, where Key Stage 4 pupils spend half a day per week for at least a half-term engaged in environmental work.In March 2011 the school submitted an education bill asking for Emergency Life Support skills, already taught to pupils at the school, to be added to the National Curriculum.", "target": "school in Norfolk, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["school for special needs education"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13632920", "label": "Farrodes", "source": "Farrodes is a genus of mayflies in the family Leptophlebiidae. Like all other members in Leptophlebiidae, Farrodes is characterized by a flat head and lanceolate shaped gills. A key feature in identifying it is the shape of the labrum, which is more rounded at the sides than its close relatives, Thraulodes.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65230903", "label": "Pretender", "source": "\"Pretender\" is a song recorded by Japanese band Official Hige Dandism, released on May 15, 2019, through Pony Canyon in physical single format to serve as the theme song of the 2019 film The Confidence Man JP. Upon release, it was a commercial success, and spent seven weeks at number one on the Billboard Japan Hot 100 and thirty-four weeks at number one on the streaming chart, breaking the record held by \"Marigold\".", "target": "song by Official Hige Dandism", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6176499", "label": "Howard Simons", "source": "Howard Simons (June 3, 1929 - June 13, 1989) was the managing editor of The Washington Post at the time of the Watergate scandal, and later curator of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University.", "target": "American newspaper editor (1929-1989)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5415682", "label": "Evangelical Free Church in Sweden", "source": "The Evangelical Free Church in Sweden (Swedish: Evangeliska frikyrkan is a Baptist Christian denomination in Sweden. The headquarters is in Örebro.", "target": "Baptist denomination in Sweden", "baseline_candidates": ["evangelical church", "religious organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2566469", "label": "Rampur", "source": "Rampur Bushahr is a town and a municipal council in Shimla district in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. It is about 130 km from Shimla and is well connected with NH 5 which passes through Theog, Narkanda and Kumarsain.", "target": "human settlement in India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22026026", "label": "1935 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team", "source": "The 1935 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team was an American football team that represented Wake Forest University during the 1935 college football season. In its third season under head coach Jim Weaver, the team compiled a 2–7 record.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7804531", "label": "Tim Yohannan", "source": "Tim Yohannan (August 15, 1945 – April 3, 1998), also known as Tim Yo, was the founder of Maximum Rocknroll, a radio show and fanzine documenting punk subculture. He also helped in establishing a number of DIY collectives, such as 924 Gilman Street, Blacklist Mailorder, and the Epicenter Zone record store.", "target": "Popularizer of Punk Rock (1945-1998)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29225", "label": "Mu'in ad-Din Unur", "source": "Mu'in ad-Din Unur al-Atabeki (Turkish: Muiniddin Üner; died August 28, 1149) was a Seljuk Turkish ruler of Damascus in the mid-12th century.", "target": "12th century ruler of Damascus", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6205783", "label": "Joanna Bourke", "source": "Joanna Bourke, (born 1963) is a British historian and academic. She is professor of history at Birkbeck, University of London.", "target": "British historian", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4557970", "label": "1902 Cincinnati Reds season", "source": "The 1902 Cincinnati Reds season was a season in American baseball. The team finished with a record of 70–70, fourth in the National League, 33+1⁄2 games behind the Pittsburgh Pirates. In August, principal owner John T. Brush sold his interest in the Reds to a group headed by August \"Garry\" Herrmann.", "target": "Major League Baseball season", "baseline_candidates": ["baseball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13400507", "label": "Aspidoglossa cribrata", "source": "Aspidoglossa cribrata is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Scaritinae. It was described by Putzeys in 1846.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35702500", "label": "Green Lake", "source": "Green Lake is a small lake northeast of Bisby Lodge in Herkimer County, New York.", "target": "lake in Herkimer County, New York, USA", "baseline_candidates": ["lake"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q457290", "label": "Ioan Holender", "source": "Ioan Holender (born Johann Hollaender, Hebrew: יואן הולנדר, born 18 July 1935) is a Romanian born Austrian opera baritone and administrator. Holender was born in Timișoara, Romania. His family is of Jewish ancestry, and growing up, he spoke three languages. His father owned a factory in Timișoara, which was expropriated in 1948. Holender studied mechanical engineering at the Polytechnic University of Timișoara. He worked as a tennis coach and a director's assistant until he and his family emigrated to Austria, where his mother was residing. He intended to continue his engineering studies, but became interested in singing. After completing his music studies, he was an operatic baritone and concert singer with the Klagenfurt Stadttheater. In 1966, he began to work at the Starka theatrical agency, which he eventually took over and whose prestige he increased. In 1988, Eberhard Waechter named Holender as Secretary-General of the Vienna State Opera, effective as of 1991. Eventually, Holender dissociated himself from the Starka business. After Waechter's death in February 1992, Holender became Director of the Vienna State Opera on 1 April 1992. He also led the Vienna Volksoper for 4 years simultaneously. Holender's contract was extended three times and concluded on 31 August 2010. He is the longest-serving general director in the history of the Vienna State Opera. Ioan Holender is advisor of the Metropolitan Opera New York and the Spring Festival Tokyo and artistic director of the George Enescu Festival Bucharest. He is a lecturer at the University of Vienna and at the Danube University Krems. Further he is.", "target": "Austrian opera administrator", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q502004", "label": "Klaarkamp Abbey", "source": "Klaarkamp Abbey (Dutch: Klooster Klaarkamp; Latin: Monasterium beatae Mariae de Claro Campo) was a Cistercian monastery in the community of Dantumadeel, about 4 kilometres southwest of Dokkum and 2 kilometres north of Rinsumageast in the Dutch province of Friesland.", "target": "monastery", "baseline_candidates": ["religious community", "monastery", "destroyed building or structure"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q50862", "label": "Schwanebeck", "source": "Schwanebeck is a small town in the district of Harz, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It is part of the Verbandsgemeinde (\"collective municipality\") Vorharz. The municipal area is situated northeast of Halberstadt, on the Bundesstraße 245 highway to Hamersleben. Since 2010, it also comprises the former municipality of Nienhagen.", "target": "municipality of Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["urban municipality of Germany"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16830239", "label": "Charles William Doyle", "source": "Lieutenant-General Sir Charles William Doyle, GCH, CB (1770 – 25 October 1842) was a British Army officer who served during the Napoleonic Wars.", "target": "British Army officer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5221758", "label": "Daphnusa philippinensis", "source": "Daphnusa philippinensis is a species of moth of the family Sphingidae. It is known from the Philippines.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11080237", "label": "Cantherhines fronticinctus", "source": "Cantherhines fronticinctus, known commonly as the spectacled filefish, is a species of marine fish in the family Monacanthidae. The spectacled filefish is widespread throughout the tropical waters of the Indo/ West Pacific area.The spectacled filefish is a small sized fish that can reach a maximum size of 25 cm length.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q759233", "label": "Acambay Municipality", "source": "Acambay is a town and municipio (municipality) located in northern State of Mexico. The township of Acambay is the municipal seat of the municipio of the same name.", "target": "municipality in Mexico", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Mexico"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65319016", "label": "Ettimadai railway station", "source": "Ettimadai is a railway station in the Coimbatore suburb of Ettimadai, Tamil Nadu, India. It is located between Madukkarai and Walayar. Trains from Coimbatore Junction railway station and Podanur Junction railway station heading to Palakkad Junction railway station passes through this station. It serves primarily for commutators of Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham university campus.", "target": "railway station in Tamil Nadu, India", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q795141", "label": "Haplochromis rudolfianus", "source": "Haplochromis rudolfianus is a species of cichlid endemic to Lake Turkana. This species can reach a length of 5.8 centimetres (2.3 in) SL.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12955114", "label": "Ruché", "source": "Ruché (pronounced in English ROO-kay, Italian: [ruˈke]) is a red Italian wine grape variety from the Piedmont region. It is largely used in making Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato, a small production red varietal wine which was granted Denominazione di Origine Controllata (DOC) status by presidential decree on October 22, 1987, and was granted the more prestigious Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) status in 2010. The current DOC recognized area of production for the wine covers only about 100 acres (40 hectares) of vines around the villages of Castagnole Monferrato, Refrancore, Grana, Montemagno, Viarigi, Scurzolengo and Portacomaro. Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato is, therefore, one of the lowest production varietal wines in Italy. The grape is also grown to some extent in the neighboring province of Alessandria. There is some debate about the origins of the Ruché grape. One theory is that the variety is indigenous to the hills northeast of the town of Asti. Another theory is that the grape is a local variation on a French import. It has been grown in the area for at least one hundred years but has only recently been marketed and consumed outside of the immediate vicinity of its production. Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato tends to be medium bodied with notes of pepper and wild berries and floral aromas on the nose. The wine is often characterized by moderate acidity and soft tannins. In the Piedmont region it is often paired with slow-cooked beef, northern Italian cheeses and mushrooms.", "target": "varietal", "baseline_candidates": ["grape", "grape variety"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5013971", "label": "CRYGS", "source": "Gamma-crystallin S is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CRYGS gene.Crystallins are separated into two classes: taxon-specific, or enzyme, and ubiquitous. The latter class constitutes the major proteins of vertebrate eye lens and maintains the transparency and refractive index of the lens. Since lens central fiber cells lose their nuclei during development, these crystallins are made and then retained throughout life, making them extremely stable proteins. Mammalian lens crystallins are divided into alpha, beta, and gamma families; beta and gamma crystallins are also considered as a superfamily. Alpha and beta families are further divided into acidic and basic groups. Seven protein regions exist in crystallins: four homologous motifs, a connecting peptide, and N- and C-terminal extensions. Gamma-crystallins are a homogeneous group of highly symmetrical, monomeric proteins typically lacking connecting peptides and terminal extensions. They are differentially regulated after early development. This gene encodes a protein initially considered to be a beta-crystallin but the encoded protein is monomeric and has greater sequence similarity to other gamma-crystallins. This gene encodes the most significant gamma-crystallin in adult eye lens tissue. Whether due to aging or mutations in specific genes, gamma-crystallins have been involved in cataract formation.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6116590", "label": "Sabrina", "source": "Roli Alexandra Xanxan Orial (born 30 December 1989), also known by her stage name Sabrina Orial or simply Sabrina and Sabrinatics, is a Filipina recording artist and acoustic singer of cover versions.", "target": "Filipino singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7727852", "label": "The Court Martial of Major Keller", "source": "The Court Martial of Major Keller is a 1961 British film directed by Ernest Morris and written by Brian Clemens. It stars Laurence Payne, Susan Stephen and Austin Trevor. The film recounts the court martial for murder of Major Keller, a British army officer during the Second World War. He is charged with killing his superior officer, but remains silent, refusing to defend himself.", "target": "1961 film by Ernest Morris", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q458001", "label": "CP Ships", "source": "CP Ships was a large Canadian shipping company established in the 19th century. From the late 1880s until after World War II, the company was Canada's largest operator of Atlantic and Pacific steamships. Many immigrants travelled on CP ships from Europe to Canada. The sinking of the steamship RMS Empress of Ireland just before World War I was the largest maritime disaster in Canadian history. The company provided Canadian Merchant Navy vessels in World Wars I and II. Twelve vessels were lost due to enemy action in World War II, including the RMS Empress of Britain, which was the largest ship ever sunk by a German U-boat. The company moved to a model of container shipping from passenger, freight and mail service in the 1960s due to competitive pressure from the airline industry. The company was a part of the Canadian Pacific Ltd. conglomerate. It was spun out as a separate company in 2001. In 2005, it was purchased by TUI AG and is now part of the company's Hapag-Lloyd division. The Atlantic and Pacific passenger liners of Canadian Pacific were always British-flagged and largely British-manned and were not part of the Canadian Merchant Marine, ownership being with the British-registered Canadian Pacific Steamships Ltd. subsidiary.", "target": "Canadian shipping company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4892725", "label": "Bermudian English", "source": "Bermudian English is a regional dialect of English found in Bermuda, a British overseas territory in the North Atlantic. Standard English is used in professional settings and in writing, while vernacular Bermudian English is spoken on more casual occasions. The Bermudian dialect began to develop following settlement in the early 17th century and retains traits of Elizabethan English.Casual observers tend to have difficulty in placing the Bermudian dialect, as it differs from those that are clearly British, American, or Caribbean; they also note that the accent tends to vary between individuals. To Americans, it sounds slightly English, while those from the British Isles find it more American..", "target": "Regional dialect of English", "baseline_candidates": ["dialect", "English"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1078458", "label": "Christianity in Namibia", "source": "Christianity in Namibia comprises more than 90 percent of the population. The largest Christian group is the Lutheran church, which is split into three churches: The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia (ELCIN), which grew out of the work of the Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Mission (earlier known as the Finnish Missionary Society) which began in 1870 among the Ovambo and Kavango people; the Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Republic of Namibia (ELCRN), which grew out of the work of the Rhenish Missionary Society from Germany which began working in the area in 1842; and the German-speaking Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia (ELCIN-GELC). In 2007 the three churches established the United Church Council of the Lutheran Churches in Namibia in an attempt to merge and unify.The second-largest Christian denomination is Roman Catholicism. Smaller numbers are affiliated with the Anglican Church, the Baptist Church, the Methodist Church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), New Apostolic Church, Seventh-day Adventist Church, Branhamism, a number of Zionist Churches (a mixture of traditional African beliefs), and Pentecostal Christianity. The Dutch Reformed Church of Namibia is predominantly made up of members of the Afrikaner ethnic group.", "target": "religion in Namibia", "baseline_candidates": ["Christianity of an area", "Christianity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39059099", "label": "2017 Savannah State Tigers football team", "source": "The 2017 Savannah State Tigers football team represented Savannah State University in the 2017 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Tigers were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). They were led by second-year head coach Erik Raeburn and played their home games at Ted Wright Stadium. They finished the season 3–8, 3–5 in MEAC play to finish in seventh place.", "target": "American college football team season", "baseline_candidates": ["American football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2507527", "label": "Wayland", "source": "Wayland is a city in Allegan County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 4,079 at the 2010 census. The city is located at the northwest corner of Wayland Township, but is politically independent. The city has also incorporated a portion of land in the south of adjacent Leighton Township. U.S. Route 131 forms the western boundary of the city.", "target": "city in Michigan, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["city of the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13689054", "label": "Amedeo Della Valle", "source": "Amedeo Della Valle (born April 11, 1993) is an Italian professional basketball player for Basket Brescia Leonessa of the Italian Lega Basket Serie A. He attended Findlay Prep in Henderson, Nevada before spending two seasons playing college basketball for the Ohio State University.", "target": "Italian basketball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6407090", "label": "Kill Division", "source": "Kill Division is the third album by Dutch thrash metal band Dead Head, released in 1999. The album was produced by Bert Westerhuis at Westerhuis Audio.", "target": "album by Dead Head", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8083986", "label": "Κata Τon Daimona Εaytoy", "source": "Κατά τον δαίμονα εαυτού (transliterated: Katá ton Daímona Eautoú) is the eleventh full-length album by Greek extreme metal band Rotting Christ.", "target": "album by Rotting Christ", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7374441", "label": "Royal Manchester Children's Hospital", "source": "The Royal Manchester Children's Hospital is a children's hospital in Oxford Road, Manchester, England. The Royal Manchester Children's Hospital is managed by the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust.", "target": "children's hospital in Chorlton-on-Medlock, Manchester, England", "baseline_candidates": ["university hospital", "children's hospital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48740436", "label": "Otter Lake, New York", "source": "Otter Lake is a hamlet (and census designated place) located on NY 28 in the Town of Forestport in Oneida County, New York, United States. It is located by Otter Lake.", "target": "hamlet in Oneida", "baseline_candidates": ["human-geographic territorial entity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5085377", "label": "Lipinia semperi", "source": "Semper's lipinia (Lipinia semperi) is a species of skink found in the Philippines.", "target": "species of reptile", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3987543", "label": "The Higher Law", "source": "The Higher Law is a 1911 American silent short film drama directed by George Nichols. The film starred William Garwood and James Cruze.", "target": "1911 film directed by George Nichols", "baseline_candidates": ["short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56867979", "label": "Disappearance", "source": "Disappearance is a 2017 Iranian drama film directed by Ali Asgari. The film had its world premiere at the 74th Venice International Film Festival in the Orizzonti section and later it was screened in the Discovery section at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.", "target": "2017 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7176085", "label": "Peter Newsam", "source": "Sir Peter Anthony Newsam (born 2 November 1928) is an English educationist and a member of the Oxford Education Society. He is also an alumnus of the University of Oxford and of the Department of Education.", "target": "Educationist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5645356", "label": "Hamish Hamilton", "source": "Hamish Hamilton (born Mark Hamilton; 8 April 1966) is a British director. He has directed the Super Bowl halftime show annually since 2010. He has also directed the Academy Awards and the MTV Video Music Awards, and worked with music artists such as Mariah Carey, Eminem, Madonna, The Who and U2. He has directed the opening and closing ceremonies for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games as well as for Tokyo 2020.", "target": "British director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q70283", "label": "Dorf", "source": "Dorf is a municipality in the district of Andelfingen in the canton of Zürich in Switzerland. The German word Dorf means “village”.", "target": "municipality in Switzerland", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Switzerland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q594243", "label": "Róbinson Zapata", "source": "Róbinson Zapata Montaño (born 30 September 1978, Florida, Colombia), is a Colombian football player.", "target": "Colombian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6071242", "label": "Irish Sports Council", "source": "Sport Ireland (Irish: Spórt Éireann), formerly the Irish Sports Council, is a statutory authority that oversees, and partly funds, the development of sport within Ireland. It is located at the National Sports Campus in the townland of Sheephill near Abbotstown House in Dublin. Sport Ireland was established in July 1999 under powers provided by the Irish Sports Council Act. Its remit is to plan, lead and co-ordinate the sustainable development of competitive and recreational sport in Ireland. Sport Ireland comprises eight major divisions including: Finance, High Performance, Local Sports Partnerships, National Governing Bodies, the Anti-Doping Unit, Corporate Services, the National Trails Office, and the Irish Institute of Sport.Sport Ireland is member of the European Platform for Sport Innovation.", "target": "statutory body overseeing and part-funding sport development in Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["sports governing body"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q39046924", "label": "1788–89 United States presidential election in Massachusetts", "source": "The 1788–89 United States presidential election in Massachusetts took place between December 15, 1788, and January 10, 1789, as part of the 1788–1789 United States presidential election to elect the first President. Voters chose 10 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President. Massachusetts unanimously voted for independent candidate and commander-in-chief of the Continental Army, George Washington. The total vote is composed of 17,740 for Federalist electors, all of whom were supportive of Washington.", "target": "election in Massachusetts", "baseline_candidates": ["United States presidential election in Massachusetts"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30591717", "label": "CSBT Alexandria", "source": "Clubul Sportiv Municipal Alexandria, commonly known as CSM Alexandria or simply as Alexandria, is a professional women's basketball team from Alexandria, Romania. The team plays in the Liga Națională. The team was in the final of the Romanian Cup in 2009.In the summer of 2018 CSBT Alexandria was moved to the sports club of Alexandria, CSM Alexandria, club which was founded in the same summer.", "target": "Romanian women's basketball club", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q34914741", "label": "Sakuma Dam", "source": "The Sakuma Dam (佐久間ダム, Sakuma damu) is a dam on the Tenryū River, located on the border of Toyone, Kitashitara District, Aichi Prefecture on the island of Honshū, Japan. It is one of the tallest dams in Japan and supports a 350 MW hydroelectric power station. Nearby a frequency converter station is installed, allowing interchange of power between Japan's 50 Hz and 60 Hz AC networks.", "target": "dam", "baseline_candidates": ["dam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4792993", "label": "Armed Forces Journal", "source": "Armed Forces Journal (AFJ) was a publication for American military officers and leaders in government and industry. Created in 1863 as a weekly newspaper, AFJ was published under various names by various owners in various formats for more than 150 years. The publication went all-digital after the July/August 2013 issue, and last updated its website on April 29, 2014.The brand is currently owned by Sightline Media Group, a holding of private equity firm Regent, which bought the media group in 2016 from Tegna.", "target": "American magazine", "baseline_candidates": ["magazine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22021893", "label": "2015–16 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team", "source": "The 2015–16 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team represented Bowling Green State University during the 2015–16 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Falcons, led by first year head coach Michael Huger, played their home games at the Stroh Center as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 16–18, 5–13 in MAC play to finish in last place in the East Division. They defeated Kent State and Central Michigan to advance to the semifinals of the MAC Tournament where they lost to Akron.", "target": "American college basketball season", "baseline_candidates": ["basketball team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q656382", "label": "Finnish Badminton Championships", "source": "The Finnish National Badminton Championships is a tournament organized to crown the best badminton players in Finland. The tournament started in 1955.", "target": "badminton championships", "baseline_candidates": ["recurring sporting event", "national championship", "badminton tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2486465", "label": "New York State Route 226", "source": "New York State Route 226 (NY 226) is a 19.03-mile-long (30.63 km) north–south state highway in the Finger Lakes region of New York in the United States. The southern terminus of the route is at an interchange with the Southern Tier Expressway (Interstate 86 and NY 17) just west of the Savona village line in the town of Bath. Its northern terminus is at an intersection with NY 14A in the town of Reading.", "target": "highway in New York", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63008542", "label": "Chris Gildon", "source": "Senator Chris Gildon (born 1971) first won election to the Washington State House of Representatives in 2018 and was elected to the Washington State Senate in 2020. He represents the 25th Legislative District which includes Puyallup, South Hill, Fife, Summit-Waller, and part of Parkland. Chris is a 23-year veteran Army Officer with five overseas deployments and two bronze star medals. He serves on the Senate's Human Services, Reentry and Rehabilitation Committee; Housing and Local Government Committee; Rules Committee; and its budget-writing Ways and Means Committee. He is also the Senate Republican deputy floor leader. In addition to his legislative committee assignments, Chris serves as co-chair on the board of directors for the Washington State Institute for Public Policy, which conducts nonpartisan research to inform public policymaking. He also serves on the Joint Committee on Veterans’ and Military Affairs, the Washington State Criminal Sentencing Task Force, and the Legislative-Executive WorkFirst Poverty Reduction Oversight Task Force. Chris earned a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Texas. He also holds a master's degree in public administration from Webster University and a master of strategic security studies from the National Defense University.", "target": "American politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7078065", "label": "Odostomia becki", "source": "Odostomia becki is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q466802", "label": "Colette Deréal", "source": "Colette Deréal (French pronunciation: ​[kɔlɛt dəʁeal]; born Colette Denise de Glarélial; 22 September 1927 – 12 April 1988) was a French actress and singer.", "target": "French singer (1927-1988)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8018351", "label": "William Shearman", "source": "William Shearman (January, 1767 – 21 November 1861), or Sherman, was a British physician and medical writer.", "target": "British doctor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5074490", "label": "Charity", "source": "Charity was a racehorse who won the 1841 Grand National at the second attempt, defeating ten rivals in a time of 13 minutes 25 seconds. William Vevers was the official trainer of Charity. The owner of the horse was William Craven, 2nd Earl of Craven. Charity had previously taken part in the 1839 Grand National, falling at the wall, which was sited roughly where the water jump is situated on the modern course. The mare was remounted by her rider A Powell only to fall again before reaching the Becher's Brook for the second time.", "target": "Race horse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85772147", "label": "Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering", "source": "The Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal established in 1989 by the American Society of Civil Engineers. It covers research and best practices concerns on development, processing, evaluation, applications, and performance of construction materials in civil engineering. It consists of four sections: cementitious material, asphalt, geo-materials, and hybrids (which encompass steel, timber, masonry, and composite materials).", "target": "journal", "baseline_candidates": ["scientific journal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q960700", "label": "West Glendive", "source": "West Glendive is a census-designated place (CDP) in Dawson County, Montana, United States. The population was 1,998 at the 2020 census.", "target": "census designated place in Dawson County, Montana, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["census-designated place"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25443328", "label": "True Blood, season 6", "source": "The sixth season of the HBO supernatural drama series True Blood premiered on June 16, 2013. The season had an abbreviated run of ten episodes, as opposed to the usual twelve, partially to accommodate the pregnancy of lead actress Anna Paquin. It is also the first season not to be primarily based on the corresponding novel in The Southern Vampire Mysteries series (in this case Definitely Dead), instead taking elements from multiple books in the series.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7171116", "label": "Peruru, India", "source": "Peruru is a village located in Amalapuram Mandal, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Konaseema district in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.The village is located 61 km (38 mi) from the district headquarters Kakinada, 5 km (3.1 mi) from Amalapuram and 447 km (278 mi) from Hyderabad. The local language is Telugu. The village was said to be settled by two married children of Tamil Kings. The town is surrounded by coconut groves and water canals and possesses a rich heritage and architecture, including a town temple.", "target": "village in Konaseema district, Andhra Pradesh, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1312163", "label": "Castelldefels train accident", "source": "The Castelldefels train accident occurred on 23 June 2010 when a passenger train struck a group of people who were crossing the railway on the level at Platja de Castelldefels station to the southwest of Barcelona, in Catalonia, Spain. Twelve people were killed, and fourteen injured: all victims but one Romanian were of Latin American origin, with a majority from Ecuador.The accident occurred on St. John's Eve, a major celebration in Spain and in several other European countries. The victims were apparently trying to get to the beach less than 200 metres (660 ft) from the station, where a concert by Ecuadorian singer Rubén de Rey had been organized. It was the worst railway accident in Spain since the Valencia Metro derailment in July 2006 killed 43 and injured 47 others.", "target": "train wreck", "baseline_candidates": ["train wreck", "occurrence"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5060947", "label": "Central District", "source": "The Central District of Sarakhs County (Persian: بخش مرکزی شهرستان سرخس) is a district (bakhsh) in Sarakhs County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 69,404, in 15,867 families. The District has one city: Sarakhs. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Khangiran Rural District, Sarakhs Rural District, and Tajan Rural District.", "target": "district (bakhsh) in Sarakhs County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Iran"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4643354", "label": "74th Delaware General Assembly", "source": "The 74th Delaware General Assembly was a meeting of the legislative branch of the state government, consisting of the Delaware Senate and the Delaware House of Representatives. Elections were held the first Tuesday after November 1st and terms began in Dover on the first Tuesday in January. This date was January 3, 1867, which was two weeks before the beginning of the first administrative year of Governor Gove Saulsbury. Currently the distribution of the Senate Assembly seats was made to three senators for each of the three counties. Likewise the current distribution of the House Assembly seats was made to seven representatives for each of the three counties. The actual population changes of the county did not directly affect the number of senators or representatives at this time. In the 74th Delaware General Assembly session both chambers had a Democratic majority.", "target": "American legislative session", "baseline_candidates": ["legislative term"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7240574", "label": "Prentiss Taylor", "source": "Prentiss Taylor (December 13, 1907 – October 7, 1991) was an American illustrator, lithographer, and painter. Born in Washington D.C., Taylor began his art studies at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, followed by painting classes under Charles Hawthorne in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and training at the Art Students League in New York City. In 1931, Taylor began studying lithography at the League. He became a member of one of the most important printmaking societies in America at that time, the Society of American Graphic Artists. Taylor interacted and collaborated with many writers and musicians in his time in New York in the late 1920s and early 30s. This was in the emergence of the Harlem Renaissance. Among his close friends and colleagues were Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten. Taylor's work is in the collection of numerous institutions such as: the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American Art; The Phillips Collection; Gibbes Museum of Art; Museum of New Mexico; the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Whitney Museum of American Art Fisk University Galleries and Greenville County Museum of Art.", "target": "American illustrator, lithographer and painter (1907-1991)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4119489", "label": "Schineria", "source": "Schineria is a genus of flies in the family Tachinidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3667266", "label": "Duzakh Darreh, Saqqez", "source": "Duzakh Darreh (Persian: دوزخ دره, also Romanized as Dūzakh Darreh) is a village in Sara Rural District, in the Central District of Saqqez County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 743, in 161 families. The village is populated by Kurds.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q85968048", "label": "Oltcit Club", "source": "The Oltcit Club is a supermini automobile developed by Oltcit in co-operation with Citroën of France in the 1980s. It is a small three-door hatchback, based on the Citroën Prototype Y and was built in Craiova, Romania.", "target": "Romanian car model", "baseline_candidates": ["automobile model"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6830810", "label": "Michael Grimm", "source": "Michael Joseph Grimm (born December 30, 1978) is an American singer/songwriter and winner of the fifth season of America's Got Talent.", "target": "American singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14744758", "label": "Pterolophia quadrigibbosipennis", "source": "Pterolophia quadrigibbosipennis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1968. It is known from China.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20979420", "label": "Blake Tower", "source": "Blake Tower is a fictional supporting character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. An attorney who often appears in stories featuring Spider-Man and Daredevil, he first appeared in Daredevil #124 and was created by writer Marv Wolfman and artist Bob Brown. Blake Tower was a main character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) Netflix television series Daredevil where he was portrayed by Stephen Rider. He also appeared in guest appearances in two seasons of the series Luke Cage, and is credited as main for his appearance in the second season.", "target": "comics character", "baseline_candidates": ["comics character", "fictional human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2570975", "label": "Vilen Mitrofanovich Strutinsky", "source": "Vilen Mitrofanovich Strutinsky (Russian: Вилен Митрофанович Струтинский; 16 October 1929 – 28 June 1993) was a Soviet nuclear physicist.Strutinsky graduated from secondary school in 1946 in Odessa (after his family during World War II had been evacuated to Yekaterinburg). He graduated in theoretical physics in 1952 from Kharkov University. From 1953 to 1970 he worked at the department of nuclear theory in the Kurchatov Institute in Moscow. In 1959 he defended his PhD at the National Research Nuclear University MEPhI, and in 1965 he received the habilitation from the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research. He was a visiting scientist in 1956 in the Netherlands, in 1957–1958 at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, in 1960 in Canada, and in 1963–1964 in the United States. In 1966, Strutinsky made a breakthrough concerning the problem of incorporating shell effects into nuclear deformation energies higher than those of the liquid drop model (LDM). For this problem he devised an averaging method, now known as the Strutinsky smoothing method. At a 1969 Symposium in Lysekil, Sweden, he presented the results of applying his shell-correction method to calculating fission barriers, giving a physical explanation of the fission isomer — this was an experimental fact which had not yet been explained theoretically. The Strutinsky energy theorem and Strutinsky shell-corrections are applicable to various many-fermion systems, such as metal clusters and semiconductor quantum dots. In 1967–1970 Strutinsky worked at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen as the head of the group of physicists that was set up to develop his theory of deformed.", "target": "Soviet physicist (1929-1993)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q731585", "label": "Stokes", "source": "Stokes is an impact crater on Mars, located on the Martian Northern plains at 55.9°N latitude and 188.8°W longitude. It measures approximately 62.74 kilometres (38.98 mi) in diameter and was named after Irish-born physicist George Gabriel Stokes (1819–1903). The crater's name was officially adopted by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature in 1973.It is distinctive for its dark-toned sand dunes, which have been formed by the planet's strong winds. Research released in July 2010 showed that is one of at least nine craters in the northern lowlands that contains hydrated minerals. They are clay minerals, also called phyllosilicates.", "target": "crater on Mars", "baseline_candidates": ["Mars crater", "impact crater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12692869", "label": "Gouré Airport", "source": "Goure Airport (ICAO: DRZG) is an airport serving Goure in Niger. It is located 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) southwest of the city centre. Its runway is 1,510 metres (4,950 ft) by 50 metres (160 ft).", "target": "airport in Niger", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21752670", "label": "Madaripur Sadar Upazila", "source": "Madaripur Sadar (Bengali: মাদারিপুর সদর) is an upazila of Madaripur District in the Division of Dhaka, Bangladesh.", "target": "upazila in Dhaka Division, Bangladesh", "baseline_candidates": ["upazila of Bangladesh"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7067765", "label": "Nua Bou", "source": "Nua Bou is a 1962 Indian Odia film directed by Prabhat Mukherjee, which presents the sociocultural scenario of rural village life in India.", "target": "1962 Odia film directed by Prabhat Mukherjee", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1757249", "label": "Osława", "source": "The Osława (Czech: Oslava, German: Oslawa, Ukrainian: Ослава) is a river in South-Eastern Poland. Its name comes from the ancient west Slavic dialect word osła, meaning \"stone\". It begins in the Bieszczady mountains and flows through western Sanok Land. The river ultimately flows into the San near Bykowce, north of Zagórz.", "target": "river in Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25476845", "label": "cycling at the 2016 Summer Olympics – men's cross-country", "source": "The men's cross-country cycling event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro took place at the Mountain Bike Centre on 21 August.The medals were presented by Denis Oswald, IOC member, Switzerland and Brian Cookson, President of the UCI Management Committee.", "target": "men's cross-country cycling events at the Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event", "Cycling at the Summer Olympics – men's cross-country"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6547877", "label": "Lilium hansonii", "source": "Lilium hansonii, known as Hanson's lily and Japanese turk's-cap lily, is an East Asian species of plants in the lily family. It is native to Korea, Japan, and to Jilin Province in northeastern China, as well as being widely cultivated as an ornamental.Lilium hansonii is a vigorous early–flowering stem–rooting true lily. It has elliptic to inversely lanced–shaped leaves, pale green, up to 7 inches (18 cm) long and carried in whorls of 12–20 leaves. In early summer it produces racemes of up 10–14 small, nodding, fragrant, flowers with recurved tepals of a brilliant orange–yellow. The tepals are fleshy and show purplish–brown spots near the base. The plant grows to 3–5 feet (1–1.5 m) tall. Lilium hansonii is named for Peter Hanson (1821–1887), a Danish–born American landscape artist who was an aficionado of tulips and also grew lilies.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4318567", "label": "Niddesa", "source": "The Niddesa (abbrev., \"Nidd\") is a Buddhist scripture, part of the Pali Canon of Theravada Buddhism. It is included there in the Sutta Pitaka's Khuddaka Nikaya. It is in the form of a commentary on parts of the Suttanipata. The tradition ascribes it to the Buddha's disciple Sariputta. It is divided into two parts: Maha Niddesa (mahā-) (abbrev., \"Nidd I\" or \"Nd1\"), commenting on the Atthaka Vagga (\"Octet Chapter,\" Sn 4); Culla or Cula Niddesa (cūḷa-) (abbrev., \"Nidd II\" or \"Nd2\"), commenting on the Parayana Vagga (\"Way to the Far Shore Chapter,\"Sn 5) and Khaggavisana Sutta (\"Rhinoceros Horn Discourse,\" Sn 1.3).This text is believed to have been most likely composed no later than the 1st century BC.", "target": "part of the Khuddaka Nikaya of the Pali Canon; a commentary on parts of the Suttanipata; has 2 parts:Mahā-Niddesa (a commentary on Atthaka Vagga) and Cūḷa-Niddesa (commenting on the Parayana Vagga and Khaggavisana Sutta)", "baseline_candidates": ["commentary", "Buddhist text"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2188556", "label": "Onychohydrus", "source": "Onychohydrus is a genus of beetles in the family Dytiscidae. The genus is found in Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand's North Island. The genus consists of these two species: Onychohydrus hookeri (White, 1846) Onychohydrus scutellaris (Germar, 1848).", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q990174", "label": "Hawai'i Mamo", "source": "The Hawaiʻi mamo (Drepanis pacifica) is an extinct species of Hawaiian honeycreeper. It was endemic to Hawaii. It became extinct due to habitat loss, mosquitoes, introduced predators such as mongoose, and overcollecting.", "target": "species of bird", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon", "extinct taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65088829", "label": "A312 road", "source": "The A312 is an A road in England, running across west London from Hampton to Harrow. Its status varies from a local urban street to a major dual carriageway in Hayes. Part the road has been diverted to make way for Heathrow Airport, while another stretch was originally planned to be Ringway 3, one of four major ring motorways around London.", "target": "Major road in the west of Greater London, England", "baseline_candidates": ["A road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16091455", "label": "Joaquin Fuster", "source": "Joaquin M. Fuster (born 1930) is a Spanish neuroscientist whose research has made fundamental contributions to the understanding of the neural structures underlying cognition and behavior. His several books and hundreds of papers, particularly on memory and the prefrontal cortex, are widely cited.", "target": "Spanish neuroscientist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17000271", "label": "Manukau Rovers RFC", "source": "Manukau Rovers Rugby Football Club is a rugby union club based in Auckland, New Zealand. The club was established in 1885 and is affiliated with the Auckland Rugby Football Union. In 1912, the club seceded to rugby league, although after a few years returned to rugby union. Since 1972, the club have been based at Williams Park in Mangere, fielding numerous senior and junior teams, catering to both men and women.", "target": "rugby team", "baseline_candidates": ["sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16513463", "label": "W. B. Gallie", "source": "Walter Bryce Gallie (5 October 1912 – 31 August 1998) was a Scottish social theorist, political theorist, and philosopher.", "target": "British philosopher", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1931190", "label": "Lacuna Coil", "source": "Lacuna Coil is an EP by the Italian gothic metal band Lacuna Coil, released on April 7, 1998, by Century Media.", "target": "EP by Lacuna Coil", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q23884379", "label": "Jeff Mueller", "source": "Jeff Mueller is an American vocalist and guitarist best known as a member of the math rock bands Rodan, Shipping News and June of 44. His bands have been critically recognized for being key forerunners in the development of post-rock, math rock and post-hardcore. Additionally, Mueller released a single solo album, entitled Fold and Perish, in 1999 on Monitor Records. He lives in New Haven, Connecticut.", "target": "American vocalist and guitarist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7719656", "label": "The Boy Who Stole a Million", "source": "The Boy Who Stole a Million is a 1960 British comedy thriller film directed by Charles Crichton. The film was shot on location in the Spanish city of Valencia, with an international cast list. With multiple street locations it acts as an excellent showcase for the city and a good historical record of the city in the late 1950s (when filmed).", "target": "1960 film by Charles Crichton", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16168073", "label": "The Southern Lights", "source": "\"The Southern Lights\" is the second episode of the second season of the American animated television series The Legend of Korra. It originally aired on Nickelodeon in the United States on September 13, 2013, immediately after the season premiere, \"Rebel Spirit\".", "target": "episode of The Legend of Korra", "baseline_candidates": ["television series episode"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5904406", "label": "Horning", "source": "Horning is a neighborhood in the borough of Baldwin in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States. It was the residence of miners of the Pittsburgh Terminal Railroad and Coal Company #4 Mine, which had a racially integrated workforce, unusual in that era.", "target": "unincorporated community in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2770152", "label": "Rander", "source": "Rander (also known as Rahe Neer or city of mosques) is a town in Surat district in the state of Gujarat, India. Located on the bank of the Tapti River, it is 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from the city of Surat.", "target": "locality and former village of Surat, Gujarat, India", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3642252", "label": "Combretum erythrophyllum", "source": "Combretum erythrophyllum, commonly known as the river bushwillow, is a medium to large-sized, spreading tree found in bush along river banks in southern Africa. It is planted as a shade and ornamental tree in South Africa and the United States, and is propagated by seed.", "target": "African tree species", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1434995", "label": "Primer", "source": "Primer is a 2004 American independent psychological science fiction film about the accidental discovery of time travel. The film was written, directed, produced, edited and scored by Shane Carruth, who also stars with David Sullivan. Primer is of note for its extremely low budget, experimental plot structure, philosophical implications, and complex technical dialogue, which Carruth, a college graduate with a degree in mathematics and a former engineer, chose not to simplify for the sake of the audience. The film collected the Grand Jury Prize at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival, before securing a limited release in the United States, and has since gained a cult following.", "target": "2004 American science fiction drama film directed by Shane Carruth", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97356181", "label": "10", "source": "10 is the ninth studio album (tenth album overall) by American western swing band Asleep at the Wheel. Recorded at Bee Creek Studios in Spicewood, Texas and the Austin Recording Studio in Austin, Texas, it was produced solely by the band's frontman Ray Benson and released in March 1987 as the group's first album back on Epic Records. 10 was the group's first album on a major label since 1980's Framed, and its first to register on the US Billboard charts since 1978's Wheelin' and Dealin'. Following the release of Pasture Prime in 1985, Asleep at the Wheel experienced a resurgence in popularity which led to them re-signing with Epic. The group settled with a new lineup of Benson, steel guitarist John Ely, bassist David Dawson, pianist Tim Alexander, drummer David Sanger, fiddler Larry Franklin and saxophonist Michael Francis, four of whom had featured on the 1985 record. 10 was the band's first album since the departure of Chris O'Connell, although she appears as a guest. 10 was a critical and commercial success. The album was Asleep at the Wheel's second release to reach the top 20 of the US Billboard Top Country Albums chart, peaking at number 16. The collection also spawned four singles, all of which registered on the Hot Country Singles chart, with \"House of Blue Lights\" peaking at number 17 – the band's second to reach the top 20 of the chart. Critical reviews of the album were mainly positive, praising its return to the band's Western swing sound.", "target": "1987 studio album by Asleep at the Wheel", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7741719", "label": "The Incredible Base", "source": "The Incredible Base is the only solo studio album by American rapper Rob Base. It was released on November 17, 1989 via Profile Records. Recording sessions took place at Hillside Sound Studio in Englewood, New Jersey. Production was handled by William Hamilton, Rob Base and David Wynn. The album made it to #50 on the Billboard 200 and #20 on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, and was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America.", "target": "album by Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97253995", "label": "Arnaldo André Serrano", "source": "Arnaldo André (born November 12, 1943) is a Paraguayan actor for soap-operas. He spent most of his career in Argentina, where he has been active since 1964. He earned a Martín Fierro award in 2010, and his most recent work was in the Los únicos TV series.", "target": "Paraguayan actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5128623", "label": "Claud Wilbur Beelman", "source": "Claud W. Beelman (1883 – January 30, 1963), sometimes known as Claude Beelman, was an American architect who designed many examples of Beaux-Arts, Art Deco, and Streamline Moderne style buildings. Many of his buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.", "target": "American architect", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q583882", "label": "Baccara", "source": "Baccara is the debut studio album by Spanish duo Baccara, first released on RCA Victor in Germany in 1977. It contains the European hit singles \"Yes Sir, I Can Boogie\" and \"Sorry, I'm a Lady\". The rights to the RCA-Victor back catalogue are currently held by Sony BMG Music Entertainment - the original Baccara album in its entirety remains unreleased on compact disc. There is an alternative cover for the album from Scandinavia featuring the girls standing with a black background. Some editions of this album feature a limited edition poster. The album was re-released in Germany in 1982 and featured an entirely different picture sleeve.", "target": "1977 debut studio album by Baccara", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q490613", "label": "Raphaël Géminiani", "source": "Raphaël Géminiani (born Clermont-Ferrand; born 12 June 1925) is a French former road bicycle racer. He had six podium finishes in the Grand Tours. He is one of four children of Italian immigrants who moved to Clermont-Ferrand fleeing from fascist violence. He worked in a cycle shop and started racing as a boy. He became a professional and then a directeur sportif, notably of Jacques Anquetil and the St-Raphaël team. His professional career ran from 1946 to 1960. He won the mountains competition in the Tour de France in 1951. His best overall place was second in 1951 behind Hugo Koblet. He won seven stages of the Tour between 1949 and 1955 and wore the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification for four days. He won the national championship in 1953, the mountain competition of the Giro d'Italia in 1951 and third place in the Vuelta a España 1955. In 1955, Géminiani finished in the top 10 of the three big tours (Tour de France, Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a España), equalled only by Gastone Nencini in 1957. It has not been equalled since. In 1977 he called doping checks the \"cancer of cycling\". He recognised that he had used drugs during his career. His strong personality earned him the nickname of Le Grand Fusil, which translates roughly as \"Top Gun\".", "target": "French racing cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3326476", "label": "Kailyard school", "source": "The Kailyard school (1880–1914) is a proposed literary movement of Scottish fiction dating from the last decades of the 19th century.", "target": "literary movement in 19th-century Scotland", "baseline_candidates": ["literary movement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1301883", "label": "Clytra atraphaxidis", "source": "Clytra atraphaxidis is a species of leaf beetles in the subfamily Cryptocephalinae. It can be found in Southern Europe, Asia Minor, Central Asia, Mongolia and Korea.", "target": "species of beetle", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65081050", "label": "Shared Secrets", "source": "Shared Secrets is an album by pianist George Cables that was recorded in 2001 and released by the MuseFX label.", "target": "2001 studio album by George Cables", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7833372", "label": "Trance Nation – Mixed by Above & Beyond", "source": "Trance Nation – Mixed by Above & Beyond is a compilation album in the famous Trance Nation compilation series released by Ministry of Sound. It is mixed and compiled by British Trance DJs Above & Beyond and released on 27 July 2009.The digital download version was released on 26 July 2009 and contains most of the individual songs listed, as well as the full continuous mixes for each CD.", "target": "2009 compilation album by Above & Beyond", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5846755", "label": "Qorutak", "source": "Qorutak (Persian: قروتك, also Romanized as Qorūtak; also known as Gūrūtag, Mīāndār-e Qortak, and Mīāndār-e Qūrtak) is a village in Vizhenan Rural District, in the Central District of Gilan-e Gharb County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 69, in 17 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24944855", "label": "athletics at the 1994 Commonwealth Games – men's discus throw", "source": "The men's discus throw event at the 1994 Commonwealth Games was held on 26 August at the Centennial Stadium in Victoria, British Columbia.", "target": "even at 1994 Commonwealth Games", "baseline_candidates": ["sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6236366", "label": "John Griffith", "source": "John Griffith was the Governor of Bombay from 9 November 1795 to 27 December 1795.", "target": "Governor of Bombay", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21061901", "label": "Bob Kenyon", "source": "Ernest William Henry \"Bob\" Kenyon (16 March 1905 – 15 March 1988) was an English professional golfer. He won the Irish Open in 1931 and 1933 and finished tied for ninth place in the 1939 Open Championship. He won the World Senior Championship in 1956.", "target": "golfer (1905-1988)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7909076", "label": "Val Butnaru", "source": "Val Butnaru (born 17 April 1955, in Chişinău) is a journalist and writer from the Republic of Moldova. He is the founder of Jurnal TV and Jurnal Trust Media.", "target": "Moldovan journalist and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24668411", "label": "Glapthorn", "source": "Glapthorn is a village and civil parish in North Northamptonshire, England. At the time of the 2001 census, the parish's population was 264 people, increasing to 271 at the 2011 Census.The villages name origin is uncertain. 'Glappa's thorn-tree' or 'glaep-thorn' an otherwise obscure plant name.Glapthorn is approximately 1+1⁄2 miles NNW of Oundle, the closest town. North of the village is a small wood, Short Wood, with a Saxon earthwork. After suffering problems from widespread \"Dutch Elm Disease\" tree infection in the 1970s, the woodland is recovering its attraction and is particularly known for its May-time display of bluebell-carpeted open coppice. There are many other species in the woodland, resulting in it being classified as a SSSI. It is publicly accessible as a nature reserve. Glapthorn's church of St Leonard's mostly dates back to the 13th century with the porch and south doorway added in the 14th century. The altar rail and panels in the pulpit were installed during the reign of James I. Other noteworthy items are a Victorian bier, an original pew located at the back of the church, three bells (one of which dates to the 14th century by John Sleyt), and an organ. The church retains traces of medieval paintings of what is believed to be St. Christopher.", "target": "village and civil parish in Northamptonshire, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["village", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6133246", "label": "James E. Whitlock", "source": "James E. Whitlock (known as Jimmie Whitlock; born 1934), is a former Democratic member of the Kentucky House of Representatives from Lebanon, the seat of Marion County, Kentucky.Whitlock was elected to three two-year terms in District 29 in 1961, 1963, and 1965. He did not seek a fourth term in the general election held on November 7, 1967. He was instrumental in developing Community Trust Bank and was CEO for three decades.", "target": "American politician and banker", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6077005", "label": "Bahçeköy, Çermik", "source": "Bahçeköy is a village in the Çermik District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.", "target": "village in Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["mahalle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3524021", "label": "Thibault Dubarry", "source": "Thibault Dubarry (born 24 November 1987 in Chartres, France) is a French professional rugby union player. He plays at Number 8 for Racing Métro in the Top 14.", "target": "rugby union player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19684768", "label": "Doung Khpos Commune", "source": "Doung Khpos Commune (Khmer: ឃុំដូងខ្ពស់) is a khum (commune) in Bourei Cholsar District, Takéo Province, Cambodia.", "target": "commune in Cambodia", "baseline_candidates": ["quarter/commune of Cambodia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7219297", "label": "Someone Else's America", "source": "Someone Else's America (Serbian Cyrillic: Туђа Америка) is a 1995 drama film directed by Goran Paskaljević. The film presents the story of two people, one from Spain, the other from Montenegro, both living in Brooklyn.The film won the Golden Spike at the Valladolid International Film Festival in 1995.", "target": "1995 film by Goran Paskaljević", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2700886", "label": "Samantha Murray", "source": "Samantha Murray (born 25 September 1989) is an English modern pentathlete. She won the silver medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics, and the bronze medal at the 2012 World Championships. In 2014, she won individual gold and team silver medals at the 2014 World Championships. In 2015, Murray reached world number #1 in the Modern Pentathlon World Rankings after taking Gold at the USA World Cup followed by a 5th place at the Berlin World Championships. Murray finished in 8th Place at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, Brazil.", "target": "British modern pentathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3914071", "label": "Wilkie Airport", "source": "Wilkie Airport (TC LID: CKW7) is an abandoned aerodrome that was located adjacent to Wilkie, Saskatchewan, Canada.", "target": "airport in Saskatchewan, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["airport"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61790", "label": "Alexander Waske", "source": "Alexander Waske (born 31 March 1975) is a retired tennis player from Germany. Waske was ranked as high as world No. 16 in doubles, winning four titles. He achieved his career-high singles ranking of world No. 89 in June 2006. In 2010, Waske and his former Davis Cup companion Rainer Schüttler founded the Schüttler Waske Tennis-University, a tennis academy for professional players. Waske twice beat players in the final qualifying rounds of tournaments who later got into the main draw as lucky losers and caused big historical upsets. In the 2002 Wimbledon final qualifying round at Roehampton, Waske beat George Bastl, before lucky loser Bastl later beat Pete Sampras in the second round of the 2002 Wimbledon tournament, in one of the greatest upsets in tennis history. In the final qualifying round for Indian Wells in 2007, Waske beat Guillermo Cañas, before lucky loser Cañas later beat Roger Federer in the second round of the 2007 Indian Wells tournament, ending Federer's 41–match unbeaten run.", "target": "German tennis player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3369287", "label": "Patrick Bricard", "source": "Patrick Bricard (26 April 1940 – 26 January 2019) was a French actor and director.", "target": "French actor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5434866", "label": "Farber's Nerve", "source": "Farber's Nerve is a short animated film by Morgan Miller. The film centers on a retiring dentist in New York City. Dr. Farber, who had a practice on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, reflects on his career, mistakes, frustrations, and greatest challenges. It is a charming film, poignant and funny, showing Dr. Farber's unassuming nature and ability to laugh at himself. He makes some remarks about changes in Health Insurance and Dental coverage that have occurred in the United States over the course of his career. The film is in black and white, animated in a unique style. Farber's Nerve was programmed alongside Who I Am And What I Want by David Shrigley and Chris Shepherd in the 2006 Manhattan Short Film Festival world tour, which spanned 137 screenings across the United States, Canada, the UK, and Europe.", "target": "2006 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18047420", "label": "USP42", "source": "Ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase 42 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the USP42 gene.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7405129", "label": "Sally Faulkner", "source": "Sally Faulkner (born 1944) is an English actress.She is perhaps best known for her film appearances in movies such as The Body Stealers (1969), Layout for 5 Models (1972), Vampyres (1974), Feelings (1975), I'm Not Feeling Myself Tonight (1976), Confessions of a Driving Instructor (1976), The Deadly Females (1976), Prey (1977), Confessions from the David Galaxy Affair (1979) and Jaguar Lives! (1979).Her television credits include Coronation Street, Brookside, Doctor Who, Dixon of Dock Green, Z-Cars, The Sweeney, Target, The Professionals, Bird of Prey, Minder, Sherlock Holmes, House of Cards, EastEnders, Just Good Friends, The Bill, Chancer, Casualty, Pie in the Sky, Grange Hill, Wycliffe, Silent Witness and Doctors.", "target": "actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65162224", "label": "2019 Euro Winners Cup", "source": "The 2019 Euro Winners Cup was the seventh edition of the Euro Winners Cup (EWC), an annual continental beach soccer tournament for men's top-division European clubs. The championship is the sport's version of the better known UEFA Champions League in association football.Organised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the tournament was held in Nazaré, Portugal from 30 May till 9 June 2019, consisting of a preliminary qualifying round and the competition proper.Following the qualifying round, the competition proper began with a round robin group stage. At its conclusion, the best teams progressed to the knockout stage, a series of single elimination games to determine the winners, starting with the Round of 16 and ending with the final. Consolation matches were also played to determine other final rankings. Braga of Portugal were the defending champions and successfully defended their title after beating KP Łódź of Poland 6-0 in the final.", "target": "international football competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21646564", "label": "Jeanne Françoise Ridderbosch", "source": "Françoise-Jeanne Ridderbosch (2 October 1754 – 27 February 1837) was a Belgian painter and engraver. She became known for her engravings and eventually also oil paintings, often with allegorical motifs. She was popular among the nobility of the Austrian Netherlands, where she was favored by Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine, the duke of Ursel and the Louis Engelbert, 6th Duke of Arenberg. Between 1792 and 1832, she often participated in public exhibitions and was a leading member of the artistic elite. In 1803, she painted Napoleon Bonaparte and was given a pension by him. During her final years, she was favored by Louise of Orléans, queen of the Belgians.", "target": "Belgian painter", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q405352", "label": "Ailsa Mellon Bruce", "source": "Ailsa Mellon Bruce (June 28, 1901 – August 25, 1969) was a prominent American socialite and philanthropist who established the Avalon Foundation.", "target": "American art collector (1901-1969)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6126172", "label": "Jalan FELDA Kampung Awah", "source": "Jalan FELDA Kampung Awah, Federal Route 1527, is a main federal road in Bandar Pusat Jengka, Pahang, Malaysia. At most sections, the Federal Route 1527 was built under the JKR R5 road standard, with a speed limit of 90 km/h.", "target": "road in Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3614241", "label": "Amici del Mondo World Friends Onlus", "source": "Amici del Mondo World Friends Onlus is an independent Italian non-profit association of social utility for international cooperationWorld Friends is a Non-Governmental Organization recognized by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs by Law no. 125 of 2014 updated to July 16, 2016, registered in the register of ONLUS and the Register of Legal Persons D.P.R. 361. Recognized by the Government of Kenya as a Non-governmental organization (NGO), in 2011 obtained the same accreditation at the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Established in 2001, the association has its head offices in Rome and has volunteer-based regional offices in Piedmont, Liguria, Lombardy, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Veneto, Emilia-Romagna, Lazio, Sicily. The association's African office is based in Nairobi.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18175403", "label": "1965 Mexico International Badminton Championships", "source": "The II Mexican National Open Championship 1965 was a badminton competition held in November 1965 in Mexico City.In the men's singles event, the semi-finalists were the World number one Erland Kops, Channarong Ratanaseangsuang, Don Paup and Antonio Rangel. Erland Kops defeated (15-2, 15-4) Antonio Rangel, while Channarong Ratanaseangsuang won to Don Paup (15-1, 15-10). In the final, Erland Kops showed off his class against Channarong Ratanaseangsuang.In the men's doubles category, the Mexican brothers Antonio Rangel and Raúl Rangel lost in semi-finals (15-2, 15-4) against the future winners Erland Kops and Don Paup.In the semi-finals of the women's singles category, the American Dorothy O´Neil defeated the Mexican Carolina Allier 7-11, 11-8, 12-11.", "target": "badminton championships", "baseline_candidates": ["Mexico International Badminton Championships"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q54292783", "label": "Munetaka Murakami", "source": "Munetaka Murakami (村上 宗隆, Murakami Munetaka, born February 2, 2000 in Kumamoto, Kumamoto, Japan) is a Japanese professional baseball infielder for the Tokyo Yakult Swallows of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).", "target": "baseball player (2000-)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q59239806", "label": "Ozza Mons", "source": "Ozza Mons is an inactive volcano on planet Venus near the equator.Four temporally variable surface hotspots were discovered at the Ganiki Chasma rift zone near volcanoes Ozza Mons and Maat Mons in 2015, suggestive of present volcanic activity. However, interpreting these types of observations from above the cloud layer correctly is a challenge.", "target": "mons on Venus", "baseline_candidates": ["shield volcano", "mons"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7716226", "label": "The Becket School", "source": "The Becket School is a co-educational secondary Catholic school with academy status in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire, England. It was formed in 1976 by the amalgamation of two schools, Corpus Christi Bi-Lateral School and Becket Grammar School for Boys. It is one of three Catholic secondary schools in the Greater Nottingham area, along with Christ the King and Trinity School. The school moved to its new site, on Wilford Lane, at the beginning of the 2009–10 school year and lies within the Diocese of Nottingham and the Parish of the Holy Spirit, West Bridgford. The school has a large catchment area covering parts of the City of Nottingham, Nottinghamshire and south-eastern Derbyshire, including such places as St Ann's, Carlton, Clifton, Long Eaton and West Bridgford. For Years 7 to 11 there are six forms, designated by the initial letters, B, E, N, P, R, and T, of six saints: Bernadette Soubirous, Edmund Campion, Nicholas Garlick, Patrick, Robert Ludlam and Thérèse of Lisieux.", "target": "school in Nottinghamshire, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["academy school", "Catholic school", "secondary school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5358428", "label": "Loft", "source": "Loft (株式会社ロフト, Kabushiki Gaisha Rofuto) is a Japanese chain store that sells everyday commodities. There are Loft franchise stores in Japan and Thailand. Formerly a subsidiary of the Saison Group (セゾングループ, Sezon Gurūpu), it is currently the subsidiary of Sogo & Seibu.", "target": "household goods retail chain", "baseline_candidates": ["variety store", "business", "retail chain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64869120", "label": "Elizabeth Weed", "source": "Elizabeth Weed (born 1940) is an American feminist scholar, editor and university administrator. She is the cofounder and, from 2000 to 2010, director of the Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, as well as the feminist studies journal differences, cofounded in 1989 with Naomi Schor.", "target": "American feminist theorist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q76275405", "label": "James Forman Jr.", "source": "James Forman Jr. (born James Robert Lumumba Forman; June 22, 1967) is an American legal scholar currently serving as the Professor of Law at Yale Law School. He is the author of Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America, which won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction, and a co-founder of the Maya Angelou School in Washington, D.C.", "target": "American author and professor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10730348", "label": "A. Venkatapura", "source": "A. Venkatapura is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. It is located in the Koratagere taluk of Tumkur district in Karnataka.", "target": "village in Karnataka, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3553544", "label": "Valencia", "source": "Valencia is an American alternative rock band from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.", "target": "band", "baseline_candidates": ["musical ensemble", "musical group"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7903149", "label": "Utricularia pusilla", "source": "Utricularia pusilla, the tiny bladderwort, is an annual, terrestrial carnivorous plant that belongs to the genus Utricularia (family Lentibulariaceae). Its distribution includes ranges in Mexico, the Caribbean and Central and South America: specifically in Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Surinam, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5483807", "label": "Francisco Preciado de la Vega", "source": "Francisco Preciado de la Vega (1713–1789) was a Spanish painter, active mainly in Italy. He was born in Écija, Spain, and initially trained with Domingo Martinez, but he visited Rome in 1733, where he entered the school of Sebastiano Conca. He painted some pictures in Rome, including a Holy Family for the church of the Forty Saints. He was appointed painter to the camera of King Ferdinand VI and director of the Spanish Academy at Rome. He lived most of his life at Rome, where he died. Francisco Preciado de la Vega (1713–1789) was a Spanish painter, active mainly in Italy. He was born in Écija, Spain, and initially trained with Domingo Martinez, but he visited Rome in 1733, where he entered the school of Sebastiano Conca. He painted some pictures in Rome, including a Holy Family for the church of the Forty Saints. He was appointed painter to the camera of King u VI and director of the Spanish Academy at Rome. He lived most of his life at Rome, where he died. He became principe of the Accademia di San Luca in Rome from 1764 to 1767.In 1758, he was appointed director of the newly established Spanish Academy in Rome; he retained the post all his life. He wrote a treatise on painting: Arcadia Pittorica in 1788. His wife, Caterina Cherubini, was also a painter.He was also a member of the Spanish Academia de San Fernando, and for a time painter of the chamber (pintor de cámara) for the King of Spain. He painted.", "target": "Spanish painter (1712-1789)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26043988", "label": "Barbora Průdková", "source": "Barbora Průdková (born 1 February 1996) is a Czech professional racing cyclist. She rode in the women's road race at the 2016 UCI Road World Championships, finishing in 25th place.", "target": "Czech cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86491", "label": "Sieglinde Hofmann", "source": "Sieglinde Hofmann (born 14 March 1945) was a German militant and member of both the Socialist Patients' Collective and the Red Army Faction.", "target": "German militant and member of the Socialist Patients' Collective and the Red Army Faction", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5185997", "label": "Crisp", "source": "Nestlé Crisp is a line of wafer candy bars that are based on existing Nestlé brands and sold in the United States. There are currently three Crisp bars in production: the Butterfinger Crisp, the Baby Ruth Crisp and the Nestlé Crunch Crisp. Each package is made up of two small, individual bars. The Crisp line is an offshoot of the original Butterfinger Crisp that came out in 2004, then later a Nestlé Crunch Crisp and finally the Baby Ruth Crisp. While the original Butterfinger and Nestlé Crunch Crisp were full-size candy bars, all the current Crisps follow the two small, individual bar packaging.", "target": "chocolate bar", "baseline_candidates": ["chocolate bar", "trademark"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q686112", "label": "Pacific Ocean Blue", "source": "Pacific Ocean Blue is the first album by American musician Dennis Wilson, co-founder of the Beach Boys, and the only one released in his lifetime. When released in August 1977, it was warmly received critically, and noted for outselling the Beach Boys' contemporary efforts. Two singles were issued from the album, \"River Song\" and \"You and I\", which did not chart. The album remains a focal point of Wilson's legacy, being referred to as a \"classic\". It was voted number 838 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums. Wilson intended to record a follow-up, entitled Bambu, but the album was left unfinished at the time of his death in December 1983.", "target": "album by Dennis Wilson", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66974690", "label": "Avondale Agricultural Research Station", "source": "Avondale Agricultural Research Station or Avondale Discovery Farm is one of thirteen research farms and stations operated by Western Australia's Department of Agriculture and Food. In addition to its research, Avondale has historical buildings, a farming equipment museum and operates as an agriculture education centre specialising in introducing primary school children to farming, and teaching of its history in Western Australia. Avondale is situated on land where the Dale River joins the Avon River 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) northwest of Beverley. It is located on land originally granted to the first Governor of Western Australia, Captain (later Admiral Sir) James Stirling and Captain Mark Currie RN in 1836. These grants were combined in 1849 and with additional land purchases they became known as Avondale Estate, expanding to in excess of 13,330 acres (53.9 km2). On 4 April 1924 the remaining 1,740 acres (7.0 km2) of Avondale were passed on to the Department of Agriculture and Food. Initially Avondale continued its involvement with the Group Settlement Scheme, it was not until 1926 that research activities commenced. During the 1930s it was to be the laboratory for Dr Harold Bennetts successful research into Bacillus ovitoxicus. As part of Western Australia's 1979 sesquicentennial celebrations a machinery museum was built and the other buildings were restored to original condition.Today, Avondale is managed by the National Trust of Western Australia and is open to the public at varying times throughout the year.", "target": "farm and agricultural research location in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["research station", "heritage site"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19600287", "label": "Aymett Town", "source": "Aymett Town is an unincorporated community in Giles County, Tennessee, in the United States.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20062490", "label": "Believe", "source": "\"Believe\" (stylized in Japanese as \"believe\") is a song recorded by Japanese female trio Kalafina. It was released as a stand-alone single to promote the Japanese anime visual novel Fate/stay night in November 2014. \"Believe\" was the group's second single from their fifth studio album far on the water. The song was written by Yuki Kajiura, who also composed and produced the single, which she has done for the group since their debut. \"Believe\" received positive reviews from most contemporary Japanese music critics, who praised the sound and likened the production values of the song. Commercially, the song charted moderately but managed to achieve wide charting positions in both Oricon and Billboard, equally peaking at number ten.", "target": "single by Kalafina", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4591400", "label": "Wera Sæther", "source": "Wera Sæther (born 19 May 1945) is a Norwegian psychologist, poet, novelist, essayist, writer of books for youth and of documentary books. She made her literary debut in 1974 with the poetry collection Barnet og brødet. Sæther was awarded the Gyldendal's Endowment in 1979 (shared with Cecilie Løveid). She was awarded the Dobloug Prize in 1996.", "target": "Norwegian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16146108", "label": "Randy Asadoor", "source": "Randall Carl Asadoor (born October 20, 1962, in Fresno, California) is a former Major League Baseball infielder. He played part of 1986 for the San Diego Padres.Asadoor attended Bullard High School, which has also seen names like Steve Ellsworth, Dave Meier, Stan Papi and Rex Hudler pass through, before moving on to Fresno State University. In 1982, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Cotuit Kettleers of the Cape Cod Baseball League.Asadoor was originally drafted by the Baltimore Orioles in the 11th round (286th overall) of the 1980 amateur entry draft. He decided not to sign and waited until 1983, when he was drafted by the Texas Rangers in the 3rd round (57th overall)-to sign. From 1983-1986, Asadoor's played in the minor leagues. On September 14, 1986, at the age of 23, Asadoor made his major league debut with the Padres (to whom he had been traded to on April 6, 1985 for Mitch Williams). He hit for a high batting average in his brief stint with the Padres, hitting .364 in 55 at-bats. However, this was the only glimpse of the majors that he would ever get. His poor defense may have been a factor in this, as in only 15 games at third base, he made 5 errors.", "target": "American baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17144637", "label": "King Edward VII School (Taiping)", "source": "King Edward VII School (Malay: Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan King Edward VII; abbreviated KE7) is a premier secondary school for boys (and girls, in Sixth Form) located on Jalan Muzium Hulu, in Taiping, Malaysia. Formerly known as Central School, it is one of the oldest schools in Malaysia. The school is widely known as by its initials \"KE7\". The students are known as Edwardians or Tigers and, as alumni, Old Edwardians.", "target": "all-boys secondary school in Taiping, Perak, Malaysia", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48767441", "label": "Robot Commando", "source": "Robot Commando is a single-player roleplaying gamebook written by Steve Jackson (the American game designer, rather than the series co-creator), illustrated by Gary Mayes and originally published in 1986 by Puffin Books. It forms part of Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone's Fighting Fantasy series. It is the 22nd in the series in the original Puffin series (ISBN 0-14-032152-7).", "target": "Fighting Fantasy book", "baseline_candidates": ["literary work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24951972", "label": "Bachhowal", "source": "Bachhowal is a medium-size village in Phillaur tehsil of Jalandhar District of Punjab State, India. It is located 9.5 km away from Goraya, 43 km from Jalandhar and 117 km from state capital Chandigarh. Bachhowal has postal head office in Bara Pind which is 10 km away from the village. The village is administrated by a sarpanch who is an elected representative of village as per Panchayati raj (India).", "target": "human settlement in Jalandhar district, Jalandhar division, Punjab, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7667976", "label": "T.C.C.P.", "source": "T.C.C.P is the debut release by the Minneapolis punk band The Soviettes. It was released on Pop Riot Records, a Minneapolis label run by Max Peters.It's the only release by the Soviettes featuring Lane Pederson, of the Dillinger Four, on drums instead of Danny Henry. Razorcake magazine described the record as sweet, slashing and heavy and went onto say \"The Soviettes stand out in a lineup against the waves of mediocre bands attempting the same\".", "target": "extended play by The Soviettes", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25136611", "label": "The Girl Who Came Back", "source": "The Girl Who Came Back is a 1935 American crime film directed by Charles Lamont and starring Shirley Grey, Sidney Blackmer, and Noel Madison.", "target": "1935 film by Charles Lamont", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61453620", "label": "Al-Ghazali", "source": "Al-Ghazali (c. 1058 – 19 December 1111; ٱلْغَزَّالِيُّ), full name Abū Ḥāmid Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad aṭ-Ṭūsiyy al-Ġazzālīy (أَبُو حَامِدٍ مُحَمَّدُ بْنُ مُحَمَّدٍ ٱلطُّوسِيُّ ٱلْغَزَالِيُّ), and known in Persian-speaking countries as Imam Muhammad-i Ghazali (Persian: امام محمد غزالی) or in Medieval Europe by the Latinized as Algazelus or Algazel, was a Persian polymath. He is known as one of the most prominent and influential philosophers, theologians, jurists, logicians and mystics.He is considered to be the 5th century's Mujaddid, a renewer of the faith, who, according to the prophetic hadith, appears once every 100 years to restore the faith of the Islamic Community. His works were so highly acclaimed by his contemporaries that al-Ghazali was awarded the honorific title \"Proof of Islam\" (Ḥujjat al-Islām).Al-Ghazali believed that the Islamic spiritual tradition had become moribund and that the spiritual sciences taught by the first generation of Muslims had been forgotten. This belief led him to write his magnum opus entitled Iḥyā’ ‘ulūm ad-dīn (\"The Revival of the Religious Sciences\"). Among his other works, the Tahāfut al-Falāsifa (\"Incoherence of the Philosophers\") is a landmark in the history of philosophy, as it advances the critique of Aristotelian science developed later in 14th-century Europe.", "target": "Persian Sunni Muslim scholar and mystic (c.1058–1111)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q158597", "label": "Anopheles", "source": "Anopheles () is a genus of mosquito first described and named by J. W. Meigen in 1818. About 460 species are recognised; while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas. Anopheles gambiae is one of the best known, because of its predominant role in the transmission of the most dangerous malaria parasite species (to humans) – Plasmodium falciparum. The name comes from the Ancient Greek word ἀνωφελής anōphelḗs 'useless', derived from ἀν- an-, 'not', 'un-' and ὄφελος óphelos 'profit'.Mosquitoes in other genera (Aedes, Culex, Culiseta, Haemagogus, and Ochlerotatus) can also serve as vectors of disease agents, but not human malaria.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6508324", "label": "Yukarıovacık", "source": "Yukarıovacık is a village in the Karakoçan District of Elazığ Province in Turkey. The village is populated by Kurds.", "target": "köy in Karakoçan, Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["village in Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1185440", "label": "Sáránd", "source": "Sáránd is a village in Eastern Hungary, in Hajdú-Bihar county, with a small Romanian population. Olympian József Gyönyörű was born here.", "target": "village in Hungary", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Hungary"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28419449", "label": "Sheikh Shahidul Islam", "source": "Sheikh Shahidul Islam is a Bangladeshi politician who was elected to parliament for Madaripur-3 as a Jatiya Party candidate in 1986, and served as Minister for Education, Public Works, Youth and Sports from 1984 to 1990. He is the current secretary general of the Jatiya Party (Manju).", "target": "Bangladeshi politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q120908", "label": "Heinrich Federer", "source": "Heinrich Federer (6 October 1866 – 29 April 1928) was a Swiss writer and Catholic priest.", "target": "Swiss regional writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10822358", "label": "Swan Township", "source": "Swan Township is an active township in Taney County, in the U.S. state of Missouri.Swan Township was founded in 1839, taking its name from Swan Creek.", "target": "township in Missouri", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Missouri", "township"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6774312", "label": "Martha & Ethel", "source": "Martha & Ethel is a 1994 documentary film directed by Jyll Johnstone. It premiered at the 1994 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. It was subsequently nominated for a Directors Guild of America award, losing to Steve James for Hoop Dreams. The film was distributed in theaters by Sony Pictures Classics and on home video by Columbia TriStar Home Video.", "target": "1994 documentary film directed by Jyll Johnstone", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7021807", "label": "Nga", "source": "Among the Nenets people of Siberia, Nga was the god of death, as well as one of two demiurges, or supreme gods. According to one story, the world threatened to collapse on itself. To try to halt this cataclysm a shaman sought the advice of the other demiurge, Num. The shaman was advised to travel below the earth, to Nga's domain and call upon him. The shaman did as told and was wed with Nga's daughter. After that point he began to support the world in his hand and became known as \"The Old Man of the Earth.\" In another myth, Num and Nga create the world, collaborating and also competing with each other — the myth is an example of dualistic cosmology.", "target": "Siberian deity", "baseline_candidates": ["death deity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1101198", "label": "Matchem", "source": "Matchem (1748 – 21 February 1781), sometimes styled as Match 'em, was a Thoroughbred racehorse who had a great influence on the breed, and was the earliest of three 18th century stallions that produced the Thoroughbred sire-lines of today, in addition to Eclipse and Herod. He was the Leading sire in Great Britain and Ireland from 1772 - 1774.", "target": "race horse", "baseline_candidates": ["horse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27658080", "label": "Āma", "source": "Āma was a medieval Indian king who ruled Kannauj and surrounding areas during the 8th and the 9th centuries. According to the Jain chronicles, he was the son and successor of Yashovarman.", "target": "King of Kannauj", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1332821", "label": "Pyeonghwa Station", "source": "Pyeonghwa Station is a station on the Gyeongjeon Line in South Korea.", "target": "railway station in South Korea", "baseline_candidates": ["station located on surface", "railway station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18250394", "label": "EPHA1", "source": "EPH receptor A1 (ephrin type-A receptor 1) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the EPHA1 gene.This gene belongs to the ephrin receptor subfamily of the protein-tyrosine kinase family. EPH and EPH-related receptors have been implicated in mediating developmental events, particularly in the nervous system. Receptors in the EPH subfamily typically have a single kinase domain and an extracellular region containing a Cys-rich domain and 2 fibronectin type III repeats. The ephrin receptors are divided into 2 groups based on the similarity of their extracellular domain sequences and their affinities for binding ephrin-A and ephrin-B ligands. This gene is expressed in some human cancer cell lines and has been implicated in carcinogenesis.", "target": "protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens", "baseline_candidates": ["protein-coding gene", "gene"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q540281", "label": "Eicher", "source": "Eicher tractor was a manufacturer of tractors, agricultural machinery and engines. The company was founded in 1936 by the brothers Josef and Albert Eicher in the Upper Bavaria town of Forstern. The brand name \"Eicher\" was last used in Europe in 2009 by the Dutch agricultural machinery dealer Hissink & Zonen and is still in use today in India by Eicher Motors, which manufactures tractors & commercial vehicles by this name.", "target": "automobile manufacturer", "baseline_candidates": ["tractor brand", "automobile manufacturer"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26981432", "label": "University of Tokyo", "source": "The University of Tokyo (東京大学, Tōkyō daigaku), abbreviated as Todai (東大, Tōdai) or UTokyo, is a public research university located in Bunkyō, Tokyo, Japan. Established in 1877, the university is the first Imperial University and currently selected as a Top Type university of Top Global University Project by the Japanese government.UTokyo has 10 faculties, 15 graduate schools and enrolls about 30,000 students, about 4,200 of whom are international students. In particular, the number of privately funded international students, who account for more than 80%, has increased 1.75 times in the 10 years since 2010, and the university is focusing on supporting international students. Its five campuses are in Hongō, Komaba, Kashiwa, Shirokane and Nakano. It is considered to be the most selective and prestigious university in Japan. As of 2021, University of Tokyo's alumni, faculty members and researchers include seventeen Prime Ministers, 18 Nobel Prize laureates, four Pritzker Prize laureates, five astronauts, and a Fields Medalist.", "target": "national university in Tokyo, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["national university", "research university", "university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1380171", "label": "William Trelease", "source": "William Trelease (February 22, 1857 – January 1, 1945) was an American botanist, entomologist, explorer, writer and educator. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Trel. when citing a botanical name.Trelease was born in Mount Vernon, New York. He graduated B.S. from Cornell University in 1880. He was instructor in botany at Harvard University 1880–81, instructor in botany at the University of Wisconsin 1881–83, and professor of botany there from 1883 to 1885. He was also special lecturer in botany at Johns Hopkins University, and in charge of the summer school of botany at Harvard, during 1883–84. He was Engelmann professor of botany at Washington University in St. Louis from 1885 to 1913, and appointed director of the Missouri Botanical Garden from 1889 to 1912. He was active in various municipal and professional academic associations: he was the first President of the Botanical Society of America in 1894, and served as president for a second time in 1918. In 1903, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society. From 1913 to 1926 he was professor of botany and head of department at the University of Illinois. Trelease Hall at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is named after William Trelease. Trelease was amongst the scientists on the two-month expedition to Alaska led by Edward Henry Harriman in 1899. In 1932 he led a botanical expedition to the Canary Isles and Spain, and in 1933 an expedition to New Zealand.Trelease wrote many scientific articles and monographs. His work on the Piperaceae of Northern South America, left unfinished.", "target": "American entomologist (1857-1945)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6102157", "label": "Real to Me", "source": "\"Real to Me\" is the debut single of Irish singer Brian McFadden, released in September 2004 from his debut solo album, Irish Son (2004). The song was written by McFadden, Guy Chambers and David Merritt and was produced by Chambers and Richard Flack. It was McFadden's first number-one single, peaking atop the charts of Denmark, Ireland, Norway, and the United Kingdom. In Finland and Sweden, it reached the top five, and following its release in Australia and New Zealand, it peaked at numbers 54 and 16, respectively.", "target": "2004 debut single by Brian McFadden", "baseline_candidates": ["single"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7055643", "label": "North Hills Village Shopping Center", "source": "North Hills Village is a retail complex on McKnight Road in Ross Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States, owned by J.J. Gumberg Co. since 1986. It was opened as a strip mall in 1957, with Gimbels as its center piece anchor tenant. It was enclosed in 1976 before reverting to a strip mall in 1996.In 1984, Gimbels department store, which had been in the complex for 27 years and was the largest store there, announced it would move into Ross Park Mall, then under construction, when its lease expired in 1986. Merchants expressed confidence that the mall would survive the loss although it might become a discount mall. It was confirmed in July 1987 that it would become a \"value-orientated center\" with four anchor stores: Burlington Coat Factory, Hills Department Stores, T.J. Maxx and Marshalls.In 1996, renovation began on the south end of the mall to return it to a strip mall with large speciality stores that had entrances that opened directly onto the parking lot while the northern end of the mall was to remain enclosed; the mall would then have a total of 490,000 square feet (46,000 m2) of retail space. Further work took place to return the mall to a strip mall in 2005 with the mall's center court becoming part of a larger Burlington Coat Factory store. The size of the mall was then 616,460 square feet (57,271 m2) of gross leasable area with the anchor stores being Burlington Coat Factory, Kohl's, Shop 'n Save, Best Buy and Staples. Other stores in.", "target": "shopping mall in Pennsylvania, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["shopping center"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7629637", "label": "Stylidium turbinatum", "source": "Stylidium turbinatum is a dicotyledonous plant that belongs to the genus Stylidium (family Stylidiaceae). S. turbinatum is endemic to Australia and is found in the northern part of Western Australia in the Kimberley region and near Darwin in the Northern Territory. This species is an erect annual herb that stands 6–15 cm tall. A 2–5 cm long stem bearing scattered leaves terminate in a tuft of 1–2 cm long upper leaves. Several scapes appear from these terminal tufts. The inflorescence is a raceme, which produces pink flowers whose petals are vertically paired. The hypanthium of this species is turbinate and is one of the distinguishing characteristics used to identify it. The sepals form ribs around the hypanthium, giving it a turbine-like appearance. Seeds of S. turbinatum are pale orange and around 0.2 mm long.S. turbinatum was first formally described by Allen Lowrie and Kevin F. Kenneally in 1997, with most specimens having been collected and examined in the mid-1990s with one early specimen from 1990. S. turbinatum grows in sandy soils at the margins of creeks and floodways and is closely associated with wet season herb fields.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q968742", "label": "Grandview Township", "source": "Grandview Township is one of fifteen townships in Edgar County, Illinois, USA. As of the 2010 census, its population was 590 and it contained 260 housing units.", "target": "township of Illinois", "baseline_candidates": ["township of Illinois"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30693295", "label": "Horwathia lineolata", "source": "Horwathia lineolata is a species of bugs in the tribe Mirini, family Miridae.", "target": "species of true bug", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2452038", "label": "Eirik Glambek Bøe", "source": "Eirik Glambek Bøe (born 25 October 1975) is a Norwegian musician, writer and vocalist, best known for being part of the indie folk duo Kings of Convenience together with Erlend Øye. He has a degree in psychology from the University of Bergen. Although his native language is Norwegian, many of his writings are in English. He formed the band Skog together with Øye in the 1990s. They formed Kings of Convenience in 1998 and released their first album Quiet Is The New Loud in 2001 (the same year Øye featured in Röyksopp's critically acclaimed debut album Melody A.M.). The duo then went on to release the single Toxic Girl followed by their second album Riot on an Empty Street in 2004. In 2006 he featured in Øye's band The Whitest Boy Alive, and at a lesser degree Kommode, largely made up of the members of Skog. In a rare guest appearance on NPR, Bøe sings on the track \"How My Heart Behaves\" on Feist's 2007 The Reminder. In October 2009 Kings of Convenience released their third studio album Declaration of Dependence on Astralwerks.", "target": "Norwegian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5381832", "label": "Eoparargyractis", "source": "Eoparargyractis is a genus of moths of the family Crambidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1282657", "label": "Zuo Si", "source": "Zuo Si (Chinese: 左思; pinyin: Zuǒ Sī; 250–305), courtesy name Taichong (太沖), was a Chinese writer and poet who lived in the Western Jin dynasty.", "target": "Chinese writer and poet (250–305)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12841428", "label": "Lupinus bingenensis", "source": "Lupinus bingenensis, common name bingen lupine or Suksdorf's lupine, is a plant species native to the US states of Washington, Idaho, Montana and Oregon as well as from British Columbia. Lupinus grows well in mountainous regions. The name honors the city of Bingen, in Klickitat County, Washington.Lupinus bingenensis is a perennial herb up to 100 cm (40 inches)tall, most of the shoots covered with silky hairs. Each leaf has 9-15 leaflets, oblanceolate with pointed tips, both sides green though with whitish hairs on both sides. Flowers are blue to lavender, borne in racemes up to 20 cm (8 inches) long.Several varietal names have been proposed, only two of which are widely recognized at present:Lupinus bingenensis var. bingenensis Lupinus bingenensis var. subsaccatus Suksd.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5488733", "label": "Frank O'Connor", "source": "Frank Henry O'Connor (September 15, 1868 – December 26, 1913) was an American baseball pitcher who played for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1893. He attended Dartmouth College.", "target": "American baseball player (1868-1913)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6844405", "label": "Miguel Altube", "source": "Miguel Altube (born 6 May 1960) is an Argentine former field hockey player who competed in the 1988 Summer Olympics.", "target": "Argentine field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17832779", "label": "Ranunculus dissectifolius", "source": "Ranunculus dissectifolius is a rare species of buttercup found in alpine Australia.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1923865", "label": "1990 London Marathon", "source": "The 1990 London Marathon was the 10th running of the annual marathon race in London, United Kingdom, which took place on Sunday, 22 April. The elite men's race was won by home athlete Allister Hutton in a time of 2:10:10 hours and the women's race was won by Poland's Wanda Panfil in 2:26:31. In the wheelchair races, Sweden's Håkan Ericsson (1:57:12) and Denmark's Connie Hansen (2:10:25) set course records in the men's and women's divisions, respectively. This was the first time that the winning time in the women's wheelchair race surpassed that of the women's able-bodied race.Around 73,000 people applied to enter the race, of which 34,882 had their applications accepted and around 26,500 started the race. A total of 25,013 runners finished the race.", "target": "10th London Marathon", "baseline_candidates": ["London Marathon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6930540", "label": "Mu'izz al-Dawla Thimal", "source": "Muʿizz al-Dawla Abū ʿUlwān Thimāl ibn Ṣāliẖ ibn Mirdās (Arabic: معز الدولة ثمال بن صالح بن مرداس) (died 1062) was the Mirdasid emir of Aleppo from 1042 until 1057, and again from 1061 until his death. He was the son of Salih ibn Mirdas.", "target": "Mirdasid Emir of Aleppo", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1359985", "label": "Ernst Rufli", "source": "Ernst Rufli (12 April 1910 – 14 August 1996) was a Swiss rower who competed at the 1936 Summer Olympics. Rufli was born in 1910. He was initially a goalkeeper for FC Zürich but changed to rowing and sculled for Ruderclub Zürich. In 1935 and 1936 he won the Diamond Challenge Sculls at Henley Royal Regatta in England. Rufli came fifth in the single scull rowing for Switzerland at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin.", "target": "Swiss rower (1910-1996)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13109377", "label": "O", "source": "In Japanese writing, the kana お (hiragana) and オ (katakana) occupy the fifth place, between え and か, in the modern Gojūon (五十音) system of collating kana. In the Iroha, they occupy the 27th, between の and く. In the table at right (ordered by columns, from right to left), お lies in the first column (あ行, \"column A\") and the fifth row (お段, \"row O\"). Both represent [o].", "target": "character of the Japanese alphabet", "baseline_candidates": ["kana character"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q311386", "label": "OpenURL", "source": "An OpenURL is similar to a web address, but instead of referring to a physical website, it refers to an article, book, patent, or other resource within a website. OpenURLs are similar to permalinks because they are permanently connected to a resource, regardless of which website the resource is connected to. Libraries and other resource centers are the most common place to find OpenURLs because an OpenURL can help Internet users find a copy of a resource that they may otherwise have limited access to. The source that generates an OpenURL is often a bibliographic citation or bibliographic record in a database. Examples of these databases include Ovid Technologies, Web of Science, Chemical Abstracts Service, Modern Language Association and Google Scholar. The National Information Standards Organization (NISO) has developed standards for OpenURL and its data container as American National Standards Institute (ANSI) standard ANSI/NISO Z39.88-2004. OpenURL standards create a clear structure for links that go from information resource databases (sources) to library services (targets). A target is a resource or service that helps satisfy a user's information needs. Examples of targets include full-text repositories, online journals, online library catalogs and other Web resources and services. OpenURL knowledge bases provide links to the appropriate targets available.", "target": "standardized format for linking to information resources", "baseline_candidates": ["technical standard"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16253946", "label": "Sasural", "source": "Sasural is a 1984 Hindi movie produced by Biswanath Prasad Shahabadi and directed by Govind Moonis. The film stars Arun Govil, Bharat Bhushan, Arvind Deshpande, Gulshan Grover, Sadhana Singh and Dina Pathak.", "target": "1984 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16254644", "label": "outline of autism", "source": "The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to autism: Autism – neurodevelopmental disorder that affects social interaction and communication, and involves restricted and repetitive behavior.", "target": "overview of and topical guide to autism", "baseline_candidates": ["Wikimedia outline article"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5307832", "label": "Drissa Diallo", "source": "Drissa Diallo (born 4 January 1973 in Mauritania) is a Guinean former professional footballer who most recently played for Cheltenham Town. Although he holds French nationality, he represented Guinea on eight occasions at international level.", "target": "footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q670895", "label": "BKW Energie", "source": "BKW Energie AG (BKW, formerly known as Bernische Kraftwerke AG) is a power production and distribution utility with its headquarters in Bern, Switzerland. It also provides gas and heat through a number of subsidiaries or partner companies. It mainly operates in the Canton of Bern, but is also present in Italy, Germany. and Austria.", "target": "Swiss energy and infrastructure company", "baseline_candidates": ["business"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21005621", "label": "Andrés Díaz Durán", "source": "Andrés Eduardo Díaz Durán (born 4 January 1995), is a Chilean footballer who currently plays as a central midfielder for Deportes Santa Cruz in Primera B de Chile.", "target": "Chilean association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6479078", "label": "Lakeside Cemetery Chapel", "source": "The Lakeside Cemetery Chapel is a historic chapel in Lakeside Cemetery, on North Avenue in Wakefield, Massachusetts. The stone chapel, built 1913, is one of a few Neo-Gothic buildings in the town. Roughly resembling English country churches, the building has a steeply pitched slate roof, with sidewalls containing supporting buttresses. The front and rear of the chapel both have projecting entry sections that repeat the sharply pitched gable.The chapel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.", "target": "historic chapel in Wakefield, Massachusetts", "baseline_candidates": ["historic building", "cemetery chapel"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10362202", "label": "Magé River", "source": "The Magé River is a river of Rio de Janeiro state in southeastern Brazil.", "target": "river in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11915596", "label": "Salvia splendens", "source": "Salvia splendens, the scarlet sage, is a tender herbaceous perennial plant native to Brazil, growing at 2,000 to 3,000 m (6,600 to 9,800 ft) elevation where it is warm year-round and with high humidity. The wild form, rarely seen in cultivation, reaches 1.3 m (4.3 ft) tall. Smaller cultivars are very popular as bedding plants, seen in shopping malls and public gardens all over the world.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4838076", "label": "Babughat", "source": "Babughat (also Babooghat, or Baje Kadamtala Ghat, and Baboo Raj Chandra Ghat) is one of the many ghats built during British Raj, along the bank of Hooghly River on Strand Road, Kolkata at B. B. D. Bagh, Kolkata. The ghat has a tall colonial structure, which is the landing berth of the ghat. It is a fine Doric-Greek style pavilion with huge pillars. The ghat, originally known was Baboo Raj Chandra Ghat, is now only known by first words Baboo-ghat or Babu-ghat. Babu/Baboo in Bengali means Sahib or gentleman. The ghat is named after Babu Raj Chandra Das, husband of Rani Rashmoni and zamindar of Janbazar, who built it in 1830, in memory of her late husband. A marble tablet beneath the pediment implies that some of the credit for the erection of the ghat must go to Lord William Bentinck as he encouraged such spending with a view to improve public amenities. It is second oldest ghat of Kolkata. The pavilion today is completely encroached by vendors and priests. The old colonial structure and stairs leading to the river are in various stages of decay and derelict. A section of ghat originally meant for bathing of ladies has turned into a garbage point now. Even so, the ghat is bustling with crowds since morning till late evening with people who use it for bathing, puja, religious ceremonies, massage and leisure. During Chhat Puja, a huge crowd can be seen on Babughat performing their puja. The ghat is also used during Durga Puja, Saraswati Puja rather.", "target": "ghat of Kolkata, West Bengal, India", "baseline_candidates": ["ghat"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31466243", "label": "Rozhkovo", "source": "Rozhkovo (Russian: Рожково) is a rural locality (a village) in Filippovskoye Rural Settlement, Kirzhachsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 12 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Vladimir Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16539560", "label": "Dennis Olsen", "source": "Dennis Olsen (born 14 April 1996) is a Norwegian racing driver. He is currently a member of the Red Bull Racing Simulator Development Program and a Porsche young professional driver.", "target": "Norwegian racing driver", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10511528", "label": "Jan Pawłowski", "source": "Jan Paweł Pawłowski (born 18 November 1992) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a striker for Jagiellonia Białystok II.", "target": "Polish footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24325146", "label": "Podpesochny", "source": "Podpesochny (Russian: Подпесочный) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Stezhenskoye Rural Settlement, Alexeyevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 53 as of 2010.", "target": "human settlement in Alexeyevsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["khutor"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24572282", "label": "Kiran Kandolkar", "source": "Kiran Kandolkar is an Indian Politician from the state of Goa. He is a first term member of the Goa Legislative Assembly representing the Tivim constituency. He was the president of All India Trinamool Congress Goa state unit.Until his resignation after the defeat of the All India Trinamool Congress in the 2022 Goa Legislative Assembly Election.", "target": "Indian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3825424", "label": "Vilque District", "source": "Willk'i District is one of fifteen districts of the province Puno in Peru. Vilque was the location of the major fair during the nineteenth century of goods from Bolivia and Argentina and especially for mules from Salta.", "target": "district in Puno, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q764800", "label": "T. A. Barron", "source": "Thomas Archibald Barron (born March 26, 1952) is an American writer of fantasy literature, books for children and young adults, and nature books.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5130939", "label": "Clearwater Historical Society", "source": "The Clearwater Historical Society is an organization that researches and preserves the past of the city of Clearwater, Florida. The society was started in 1978 by friends and neighbors that wanted to save the history. In 1983, the society moved to the historic Plumb House, 1380 South Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, Clearwater. In 2014, the society signed a lease with the Pinellas County School Board to lease the old South Ward School. In June 2019, an museum and cultural center was opened with 5 acres (2.0 ha) and six buildings. The front building that houses the museum was built in 1906, the first school paid for with Public Funds. The second building was the first Clearwater High School. It remained a high school until 1924 when the second Clearwater High School was built on Greenwood Ave. The cafeteria was built in 1958 followed by Medis Center (now the Event Center) the kindergarten room, and three smaller buildings in 1971, which now house the office and archives. The museum and cultural center is run by volunteers and donations. The Plumb House is also home of the Plumb House Museum.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1355445", "label": "Naie", "source": "Naie (奈井江町, Naie-chō) is a town located in Sorachi Subprefecture, Hokkaido, Japan. As of September 2016, the town has an estimated population of 5,664. The total area is 88.05 km².", "target": "town in Sorachi district, Hokkaido, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["town of Japan", "municipality of Japan"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12862972", "label": "Galuanta", "source": "Galuanta (Georgian: გალუანთა; Ossetian: Галуантæ) is a settlement in the Gori district of Georgia. Since 1991 settlement is in the Khetagurovo Community, Tskhinvali District of South Ossetia.", "target": "settlement in South Ossetia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5173429", "label": "HD 3", "source": "HD 3 is a single, white-hued star in the northern constellation Andromeda. With an apparent visual magnitude of 6.71, it is below the nominal brightness limit for visibility with the typical naked eye but may still be visible by some observers under ideal viewing conditions. Based upon an annual parallax shift of 6.3137±0.0826 mas, it is located roughly 517 light years away. The star is moving closer with a heliocentric radial velocity of −18 km/s, and will make perihelion in around 2.9 million years at a separation of around 351 ly (107.71 pc).The stellar classification of this star is A1 Vn, indicating it is an A-type main-sequence star with \"nebulous\" lines due to rapid rotation. It is a Lambda Boötis candidate star, being classified as chemically-peculiar by Abt & Morrell (1995). Murphy et al. (2015) list the membership likelihood as uncertain. HD 3 has 2.36 times the mass of the Sun and about 1.9 times the Sun's radius. It is spinning with a projected rotational velocity of 228 km/s. The star is radiating around 43.5 times the Sun's luminosity from its photosphere at an effective temperature of about 9,057 K.HD 3 has two visual companions. Component B is a magnitude 13.70 star at an angular separation of 16″ along a position angle (PA) of 107°, as of 2016. The third star, component C, is magnitude 10.58 and lies at a separation of 21″ along a PA of 235°, also as of 2016.", "target": "star in the constellation Andromeda", "baseline_candidates": ["optical double", "star", "UV-emission source", "infrared source"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3205786", "label": "Syed Ali Nasir Saeed Abaqati", "source": "Syed Ali Nasir Saeed Abaqati Musavi, known as Roohul Millat and Agha Roohi, is a Shia cleric from Lucknow, India.", "target": "Indian Shia cleric", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24953173", "label": "Ben Sisay", "source": "Benjamin Sisay (born 11 March 1956) is a Sierra Leonean boxer. He competed in the men's welterweight event at the 1980 Summer Olympics. At the 1980 Summer Olympics, he lost to Kebede Sahilu of Ethiopia.", "target": "Sierra Leonean boxer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q643263", "label": "Sense and Sensibility", "source": "Sense and Sensibility is a 1995 period drama film directed by Ang Lee and based on Jane Austen's 1811 novel of the same name. Emma Thompson wrote the screenplay and stars as Elinor Dashwood, while Kate Winslet plays Elinor's younger sister Marianne. The story follows the Dashwood sisters, members of a wealthy English family of landed gentry, as they must deal with circumstances of sudden destitution. They are forced to seek financial security through marriage. Hugh Grant and Alan Rickman play their respective suitors. Producer Lindsay Doran, a longtime admirer of Austen's novel, hired Thompson to write the screenplay. She spent five years drafting numerous revisions, continually working on the script between other films as well as into production of the film itself. Studios were nervous that Thompson—a first-time screenwriter—was the credited writer, but Columbia Pictures agreed to distribute the film. Though initially intending to have another actress portray Elinor, Thompson was persuaded to take the role. Thompson's screenplay exaggerated the Dashwood family's wealth to make their later scenes of poverty more apparent to modern audiences. It also altered the traits of the male leads to make them more appealing to contemporary viewers. Elinor and Marianne's different characteristics were emphasised through imagery and invented scenes. Lee was selected as director, both for his work in the 1993 film The Wedding Banquet and because Doran believed he would help the film appeal to a wider audience. Lee was given a budget of $16 million. Sense and Sensibility was released on 13 December 1995, in the United States.", "target": "1995 film directed by Ang Lee", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35705853", "label": "Kuytun, Kuytunsky District, Irkutsk Oblast", "source": "Kuytun (Russian: Куйтун; Buryat: Хүйтэн, Khüiten) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Kuytunsky District of Irkutsk Oblast, Russia. Population: 10,097 (2010 Census); 10,847 (2002 Census); 11,137 (1989 Census).", "target": "human settlement in Kuytunsky District, Irkutsk Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "village", "work settlement of Russia"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3076099", "label": "Vaillancourt Fountain", "source": "Vaillancourt Fountain, sometimes called Quebec libre!, is a large fountain in Embarcadero Plaza in San Francisco, designed by the Québécois artist Armand Vaillancourt in 1971. It is about 40 feet (12 m) high and is constructed out of precast concrete square tubes. Long considered controversial because of its stark, modernist appearance, there have been several unsuccessful proposals to demolish the fountain over the years. It was the site of a free concert by U2 in 1987, when lead singer Bono spray painted graffiti on the fountain and was both praised and criticized for the action.", "target": "fountain in San Francisco", "baseline_candidates": ["fountain", "sculpture"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q29613808", "label": "Zaruhi Bahri", "source": "Zaruhi Shahbaz Bahri (Armenian: Զարուհի Շահբազ Պահրի; 31 May 1880 – 13 May 1958) was a prominent Armenian writer, social worker, and community activist. In 1913, she was one of the founding members of the Armenian Red Cross of Constantinople. In the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide, and having lost several family members, Bahri remained in the Ottoman Empire to assist in the relief effort for those who survived the genocide. She eventually fled to Romania and ultimately to France in 1928 where she remained the rest of her life. While in France, she wrote six novels and continued to engage with the local Armenian community.", "target": "Armenian writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31827059", "label": "society", "source": "A society is a group of individuals involved in persistent social interaction, or a large social group sharing the same spatial or social territory, typically subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural expectations. Societies are characterized by patterns of relationships (social relations) between individuals who share a distinctive culture and institutions; a given society may be described as the sum total of such relationships among its constituent of members. In the social sciences, a larger society often exhibits stratification or dominance patterns in subgroups. Societies construct patterns of behavior by deeming certain actions or concepts as acceptable or unacceptable. These patterns of behavior within a given society are known as societal norms. Societies, and their norms, undergo gradual and perpetual changes. Insofar as it is collaborative, a society can enable its members to benefit in ways that would otherwise be difficult on an individual basis; both individual and social (common) benefits can thus be distinguished, or in many cases found to overlap. A society can also consist of like-minded people governed by their own norms and values within a dominant, larger society. This is sometimes referred to as a subculture, a term used extensively within criminology, and also applied to distinctive subsections of a larger society. More broadly, and especially within structuralist thought, a society may be illustrated as an economic, social, industrial or cultural infrastructure, made up of, yet distinct from, a varied collection of individuals. In this regard society can mean the objective relationships people have with the material world and with.", "target": "group of people related to each other through persistent relations", "baseline_candidates": ["social group", "concept"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17116083", "label": "Grisa nera", "source": "Grisa nera is a red Italian wine grape variety that is grown in the Piedmont wine region of northwest Italy where it is used in both winemaking and as a table grape. The grape is most often used as a minor blending component with wines made from Barbera, Neretta Cuneese and Plassa.", "target": "variety of grape", "baseline_candidates": ["grape variety"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1194788", "label": "Thomas Cup", "source": "The Thomas Cup, sometimes called the World Men's Team Championships, is an international badminton competition among teams representing member nations of the Badminton World Federation (BWF), the sport's global governing body. The championships have been conducted every two years since the 1982, amended from being conducted every three years since the first tournament held in 1948–1949. The final phase of the tournament involves 12 teams competing at venues within the host nation and is played concurrently with the final phase of the world women's team championships, the Uber Cup (first held in 1956–1957). Since 1984, the two Cups have been held jointly at the various stages of play. Thomas Cup and, to a lesser extent, Uber Cup are some of the world's \"biggest\" and most prestigious regularly held badminton events in terms of player and fan interest. Of the 30 Thomas Cup tournaments held since 1948–1949, only six countries have won the title. Indonesia is the most successful team, having won 14 times. China, which did not begin to compete until the 1982, trails Indonesia with 10 titles, while Malaysia has won 5 titles. Japan became the fourth country to win the Thomas Cup after beating Malaysia 3–2 in the 2014 final. Denmark became the first European and the fifth nation overall to win the Thomas Cup after beating Indonesia 3–2 in the 2016 final. This marked the first and only time a non-Asian team won the championship. India is the current champion, having won its first title after beating title holders Indonesia 3-0 in the.", "target": "badminton championships", "baseline_candidates": ["recurring sporting event", "badminton tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4159964", "label": "Ja'far", "source": "Jaʽfar (Arabic: جَعْفَر), meaning in Arabic \"small stream/rivulet/creek\", is a masculine Arabic given name, especially common among Shia Muslims. It may also be transliterated Jafar, Jaffar, Jafer, Jaffer, Jafur or, in Egyptian Arabic pronunciation, Gafar. The Turkish spelling of the name is Cafer, the Azerbaijani Cəfər, the Bosniak Džafer and the Albanian Xhafer.", "target": "male given name", "baseline_candidates": ["male given name"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7830572", "label": "Toyama Chihō Railway Kamidaki Line", "source": "The Kamidaki Line (上滝線, Kamidaki-sen) is a Japanese railway line which connects Minami-Toyama Station in Toyama, Toyama Prefecture with Iwakuraji Station in Tateyama, Toyama Prefecture. It is owned and run by Toyama Chihō Railway. This line and the Toyama Chihō Railway Fujikoshi Line are operated as a single line.", "target": "railway line in Toyama prefecture, Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16235691", "label": "Luther Obi", "source": "Luther Banks St Charles Obi (born (1993-04-29)29 April 1993) is a Nigerian-born South African professional rugby union player for the Griquas in the Currie Cup and the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is as a winger.", "target": "Nigerian-South African rugby union footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q836045", "label": "Washington State Route 26", "source": "State Route 26 (SR 26) is a state highway in central Washington in the United States. It travels east–west for 114 miles (183 km) from Interstate 90 (I-90) near Vantage to U.S. Route 195 (US 195) in Colfax. The highway intersects several major north–south highways, including SR 24, SR 17, US 395, and SR 261 before ending in Colfax. The route serves as a connector between Vantage, Royal City, Othello, Washtucna, La Crosse, and Colfax. The easternmost section of SR 26, between Dusty and Colfax was formerly part of the Inland Empire Highway and US 295 for most of the early 20th century. The rest of modern SR 26 was added to the state highway system in 1937 and 1951 as Secondary State Highway 11B (SSH 11B) from Washtucna to Dusty and SSH 7C from Vantage to Washtucna, respectively. The two highways were combined to form SR 26 in the 1964 state highway renumbering, but several sections of the highway were not completed until the 1970s. SR 26 initially terminated at Dusty, but was extended to Colfax over SR 127 in 1979.", "target": "highway in Washington", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4402708", "label": "demand", "source": "In economics, demand is the quantity of a good that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices during a given period of time. The relationship between price and quantity demand is also called the demand curve. Demand for a specific item is a function of an item's perceived necessity, price, perceived quality, convenience, available alternatives, purchasers' disposable income and tastes, and many other options.", "target": "economic principle", "baseline_candidates": ["economic concept", "effective need", "Wikimedia disambiguation page"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5743552", "label": "Balacra", "source": "Balacra is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7952212", "label": "WLFM-LP", "source": "WTCL-LP, virtual channel 6 (UHF digital channel 20), is a low-power Telemundo-affiliated television station licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Owned by Atlanta-based Gray Television, WTCL-LP also functions as a repeater for its full power Cleveland sister stations—Shaker Heights–licensed CBS affiliate WOIO (channel 19) and Lorain-licensed CW affiliate WUAB (channel 43). This is similar to another sister station, Canton-licensed WOHZ-CD, which also serves as a repeater for WOIO and WUAB, but in the southern part of the market. The stations share studios on the ground floor of the Reserve Square building in Downtown Cleveland; WTCL-LP's transmitter is located on West Ridgewood Drive in suburban Parma, Ohio. Due to its low-power status, its broadcasting radius only covers the immediate Cleveland area. Therefore, WTCL-LP must rely on cable and satellite carriage to reach the entire market.", "target": "LPTV station in Cleveland", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1542952", "label": "Tour de France Femmes", "source": "The Tour de France Femmes is a women's cycle stage race around France. It is organised by Amaury Sport Organization (ASO), which also runs the Tour de France. It is part of the UCI Women's World Tour.", "target": "women's cycling stage race", "baseline_candidates": ["stage race", "2.WWT"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19749434", "label": "Balawa", "source": "Balawa is a municipality in the core of Mahottari District of Janakpur Zone in south-eastern Nepal. The municipality is formed by mixing five VDC like Balawa, padaul, banauta, badiya-banchauri, dhamaura. As balawa was a popular VDC among these VDC that's why this municipality is named as Balawa municipality. The municipality have every infrastructure that a municipality should have. There are hospital, bank, market, Illaka police office, business centre, playground, library, hospital for animal, water tank, Bus stop, and lastly the famous college for which balawa is renowned. The municipality have direct road connection with Janakpur. Balawa bazar is quite more developed than other surrounding bazzar. The municipality have 11 ward having representative of each. As of the 2021 consensus conducted by the Nepalese Government, the Balawa Municipality is home to roughly 50,000 residence, of varying caste, creed, and ethnicity.", "target": "village development committee in Janakpur Zone, Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["village development committee of Nepal"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1718407", "label": "Ralf Wienand", "source": "Ralf Wienand (born March 7, 1963) is a West German sprint canoer who competed in the mid-1980s. At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, he finished fourth in the C-2 1000 m event and sixth in the C-2 500 m event.", "target": "German canoeist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42531266", "label": "Tahiti at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games", "source": "Tahiti, which is a part of French Polynesia, competed in the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games on the behalf of French Polynesia which was held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan.Tahiti sent a delegation consisting of 23 competitors for the multi-sport event. The competitors couldn't receive any medal in the competition. Tahiti made its first appearance in the Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games for the first time (probably this was also the first instance where Tahiti as a separate nation competed in an international multi-sport event) along with other Oceania nations.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at sport competition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q86734954", "label": "2020 Campeonato Paulista Série A3", "source": "The 2020 Campeonato Paulista Série A3 is the 27th season of the third level of the São Paulo state league under its current title and the 67th season overall. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the season was indefinitely suspended on 16 March. Play was resumed on 19 September. Velo Clube were crowned champions, winning promotion alongside EC São Bernardo.", "target": "The 27th season of the third level of the São Paulo state league.", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q568443", "label": "Sir John Lubbock, 3rd Baronet", "source": "Sir John William Lubbock, 3rd Baronet FRS (26 March 1803 – 21 June 1865) was an English banker, barrister, mathematician and astronomer.", "target": "English banker, barrister, mathematician, astronomer (1813–1865)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5402309", "label": "Eswarankoil", "source": "Eswarankoil is a village in the Annavasal revenue block of Pudukkottai district, Tamil Nadu, India.", "target": "village in Tamil Nadu, India", "baseline_candidates": ["village in India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10634592", "label": "Plinthisus brevipennis", "source": "Plinthisus brevipennis is a species of dirt-colored seed bug in the family Rhyparochromidae. It is found in Africa, Europe, and Northern Asia (excluding China).", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16890213", "label": "Chatuk", "source": "Chatuk (Persian: چتوك, also Romanized as Chatūk) is a village in Zaboli Rural District, in the Central District of Mehrestan County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 66, in 17 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement", "village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12729022", "label": "Georgeta Năpăruș", "source": "Georgeta Năpăruș (23 October 1930 – 9 July 1997) was a Romanian modernist painter.", "target": "Romanian painter (1930-1997)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7933123", "label": "Violence Fight", "source": "Violence Fight (バイオレンスファイト), is a 1989 fighting arcade game developed and published by Taito. Violence Fight was later included in Taito Memories Vol. 2 for the PlayStation 2, and Taito Legends 2 for the PlayStation 2, Xbox and Windows. Violence Fight was also followed by a sequel released two years later titled as Solitary Fighter (known in Japan as Violence Fight II (バイオレンスファイトII)).", "target": "1989 video game", "baseline_candidates": ["video game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3809101", "label": "Diaptomus rostripes", "source": "Diaptomus rostripes is a species of calanoid copepod in the family Diaptomidae.", "target": "species of crustacean", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60312868", "label": "11th Jatiya Sangsad", "source": "The Eleventh Jatiya Sangsad (Bengali: একাদশ জাতীয় সংসদ, romanized: ēkadasha jatīẏa saṅsada, lit. 'Eleventh National Parliament') was formed with the elected members of the 2018 Bangladeshi general election. The Parliament was sworn in on the 3rd January 2019. On seventh January the Ministers were sworn in. On the January 30th first session of the parliament took place. Out of the 350 seats 300 members are directly elected by the people and rest 50 seats are reserved for women and are filled by proportional representation. Awami League won 258 seats out of the 300 seats and formed the government under the leadership of Sheikh Hasina Jatiya Party got 22 seats and became the main opposition party.", "target": "legislative term, 2019–", "baseline_candidates": ["legislative term"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18504634", "label": "Villa del Bosco", "source": "Villa del Bosco is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Biella in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 80 kilometres (50 mi) northeast of Turin and about 20 kilometres (12 mi) northeast of Biella. Villa del Bosco borders the following municipalities: Curino, Lozzolo, Roasio, Sostegno.", "target": "Italian comune", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of Italy"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q66685096", "label": "Edward Kalungi", "source": "Kalungi Edward (born 12 October 1977) is a Ugandan retired international footballer who played as a defender for the Uganda national team between 1993 and 2003.", "target": "Ugandan footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49763914", "label": "25.ª División", "source": "The 25th Division was one of the divisions of the Spanish Republican Army that were organized during the Spanish Civil War on the basis of the Mixed Brigades. It participated in the battles of Huesca, Belchite, Teruel and Levante.", "target": "military unit", "baseline_candidates": ["division"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1560226", "label": "Güneş", "source": "Güneş (\"Sun\" in Turkish) is a daily newspaper in Turkey. It was owned by Zeki Yeşildağ's Türk Medya Grup.", "target": "Turkish newspaper", "baseline_candidates": ["daily newspaper"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2357383", "label": "Hulan Road station", "source": "Hulan Road (simplified Chinese: 呼兰路; traditional Chinese: 呼蘭路; pinyin: Hūlán Lù) is a station on Shanghai Metro Line 1. This station is part of the northern extension of that line from Shanghai Railway Station to Gongfu Xincun that opened on 28 December 2004.", "target": "Shanghai Metro station", "baseline_candidates": ["metro station", "station located on surface"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15192764", "label": "sharing economy", "source": "In capitalism, the sharing economy is a socio-economic system built around the sharing of resources. It often involves a way of purchasing goods and services that differs from the traditional business model of companies hiring employees to produce products to sell to consumers. It includes the shared creation, production, distribution, trade and consumption of goods and services by different people and organisations. These systems take a variety of forms, often leveraging information technology (particularly digital platforms) to empower individuals, corporations, non-profits and government with information that enables distribution, sharing and reuse of excess capacity in goods and services.There are two main types of sharing economy initiatives: Non-profit, usually based on the concept of book-lending libraries, in which goods and services are provided for free (or sometimes for a modest subscription). Commercial, in which a company provides a service to customers for profit.", "target": "economic and social systems that enable shared access to goods, services, data and talent", "baseline_candidates": ["economic system", "economic activity"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4039463", "label": "Glaphyrus", "source": "Glaphyrus is a genus of beetles belonging to the family Glaphyridae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20873130", "label": "Bahrain at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics", "source": "Bahrain competed at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics in Beijing, China, from 22 to 30 August 2015.", "target": "sporting event delegation", "baseline_candidates": ["nation at the World Championships in Athletics"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5213947", "label": "Dan Matei", "source": "Dan Marian Matei (born 25 June 1981) is a Romanian former footballer who played as a centre back. In his career, Matei played for teams such as Universitatea Cluj, Gloria Bistrița, FCM Târgu Mureș, UTA Arad or Sănătatea Cluj.", "target": "Romanian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q58466841", "label": "Gregory W. Henry", "source": "Gregory W. Henry is an astronomer and research scientist for Tennessee State University. In 1999, Henry led one of two teams that discovered the first transiting extrasolar planet, HD 209458 b. The other team was led by David Charbonneau. Henry was also involved in the discovery of HD 149026 b. This discovery was important in understanding how planets form and supports solar nebula accretion mode.", "target": "American astronomer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5118212", "label": "Churchill Park", "source": "The neighbourhood of Churchill Park in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador is located in the city's east end. The neighbourhood is bordered by Freshwater Road to the west, Empire Avenue to the south, Kenna's Hill, Kingsbridge and Torbay Roads to the east and Elizabeth Avenue to the north. Its main east-west thoroughfares are Elizabeth Avenue and Empire Avenue, and its main north-south thoroughfares are Portugal Cove Road and Allandale Road. The neighbourhood borders the campus of Memorial University of Newfoundland to the north, and as a result, it is home to a sizable student population. The area is made up of single-family homes, mostly built in the 1950s and 1960s. The area was the first modern suburb of the city of St. John's, and one of the first residential suburbs in all of Canada, with development plans dating back as early as 1944. Initially, it was planned to be a \"garden city,\" with single-family homes on small cul-de-sacs, generous lots, serviced with nearby parks and trails. Post-Confederation, development of the area changed to include social housing blocks and housing cooperatives, which remain today in the west end of Churchill Park. The architecture and design was planned by Paul Meschino.Churchill Park is home to the Churchill Square shopping centre, which is the area's main commercial centre. Bell Aliant's main switching station for the city is located in Churchill Park. City parks include Kelly's Brook Park, Lions' Park, Larch Place Park and St. Patrick's Park, along with its namesake Churchill Park. Due to its proximity to the university.", "target": "neighbourhood in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q80899513", "label": "Los pecados de Bárbara", "source": "Los pecados de Bárbara is a Mexican dramedy web television series produced by Mónica Lozano and Eamon O'Farrill for Televisa. The production of the series began on 11 March 2019, and was announced on 15 March 2019. It is originally developed by Kirén Miret and Beto López. The plot revolves around Bárbara (Diana Bovio) a woman of irreverent personality who, after an absence of 19 years, is forced to return to her hometown, Santa Prudencia.The first season has locations in Huichapan, Hidalgo, and the Mexico City. It originally released via streaming on Blim TV on 15 November 2019. And it is scheduled to premiere on television on 6 January 2020 on Las Estrellas.", "target": "Mexican television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4918945", "label": "Nootsara Tomkom", "source": "Nootsara Tomkom (Thai: นุศรา ต้อมคำ; RTGS: Nutsara Tomkham) is a Thai volleyball player. She has been selected to play for the Thailand women's national volleyball team 39 times.", "target": "Thai volleyball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57087148", "label": "Dorothy Vredenburgh Bush", "source": "Dorothy McElroy Vredenburgh Bush (December 8, 1916 – December 21, 1991) was an American political activist. She was the secretary of the Democratic National Committee from 1944 to 1988. She also became the vice-president of the Young Democratic Clubs of America in 1943, being the first woman to hold that position.", "target": "US administrator, secretary of the Democratic National Committee", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19824743", "label": "Kid Kulafu", "source": "Kid Kulafu is a 2015 Filipino biographical sports drama film produced and released by Star Cinema together with Ten17P owned by the film's director Paul Soriano. The film dramatizes the life of the boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao during his childhood. It stars Buboy Villar, Alessandra De Rossi and Cesar Montano.", "target": "2015 film by Paul Soriano", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q26933278", "label": "2016 Gran Piemonte", "source": "The 100th edition of the Gran Piemonte one-day cycling classic race , also known as the Giro del Piemonte, was held on 20 September 2016, one day after Milano–Torino and two days before Il Lombardia, as part of the Trittico di Autunno. It covered a distance of 209 kilometres (130 mi), starting in Diano d'Alba and ending in Agliè. Italian Giacomo Nizzolo won the race in a bunch sprint before Fernando Gaviria and Daniele Bennati.", "target": "road bicycle race", "baseline_candidates": ["1.HC", "Giro del Piemonte", "recurrent event edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25483937", "label": "Julie Berry", "source": "Julie Berry (born September 3, 1974) is an author of children's and young adults books and winner of several national book awards.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21465983", "label": "Hanna Weil", "source": "Hanna Weil (1921–2011) was a German-born British artist, notable as a painter and teacher.", "target": "German-born British artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7489057", "label": "Shanthi Krishna", "source": "Shanthi Krishna is an Indian actress and dancer known for her leading roles in Malayalam and Tamil films. As a star in the 1980s and 1990s, she won the Kerala State Film Award for Best Actress for her performance as Sharadammini in Chakoram (1994), the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actress – Malayalam for her performance in Njandukalude Nattil Oridavela, and the Kerala state television award for best actress three times in a row.", "target": "Indian actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q37909353", "label": "Harley Island", "source": "Harley Island (Russian: Остров Харли) is an island located in Franz Josef Land, Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russian Federation. This island is part of the Zichy Land subgroup of the central part of the archipelago. This island was named after Scottish physician George Harley by English Arctic explorer Frederick Jackson.", "target": "island in Russia, part of Franz Josef Land", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7207105", "label": "Podrusów", "source": "Podrusów [pɔˈdrusuf] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Susiec, within Tomaszów Lubelski County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It is around 30 km south of Zamość.", "target": "settlement in Lublin, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7116931", "label": "p-form electrodynamics", "source": "In theoretical physics, p-form electrodynamics is a generalization of Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism.", "target": "generalization of classical electromagnetism, wherein the gauge field is a p-form and the field strength is a (p+1)-form", "baseline_candidates": ["gauge theory"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22018873", "label": "Arch Lowe", "source": "William Archibald Burnside Lowe (4 September 1875 – 8 April 1942) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the St. Kilda Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "target": "Australian rules footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2464619", "label": "2011 Strabag Prague Open", "source": "The 2011 Strabag Prague Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 18th edition of the men's tournament which was part of the 2011 ATP Challenger Tour and the 10th edition of the women's tournament, part of 2011 ITF Women's Circuit. It was part of the WTA Tour in the previous year, but was degraded to ITF event this year. It took place in Prague, Czech Republic between 2 and 8 May 2011. The tournament included tennis exhibition involving Karolína Plíšková, Kristýna Plíšková and Martina Hingis and Daja Bedanova.", "target": "Tennis Tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["Sparta Prague Open", "tennis tournament edition"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q655710", "label": "Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola", "source": "The Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola (Latin original: Exercitia spiritualia), composed 1522–1524, are a set of Christian meditations, contemplations, and prayers written by Ignatius of Loyola, a 16th-century Spanish priest, theologian, and founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). Divided into four thematic \"weeks\" of variable length, they are designed to be carried out over a period of 28 to 30 days. They were composed with the intention of helping participants in religious retreats to discern the will of God in their lives, leading to a personal commitment to follow Jesus whatever the cost. : 98 Their underlying theology has been found agreeable to other Christian denominations who make use of them and also for addressing problems facing society in the 21st century.", "target": "1522–1524 set of works by Ignatius of Loyola", "baseline_candidates": ["work"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7586390", "label": "Srikanth Ramu", "source": "Srikanth Ramu (born 28 November 1988) is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a right back for Pune F.C. in the I-League.", "target": "Indian Professional Footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q192364", "label": "Caesalpinia mimosoides", "source": "Hultholia mimosoides is a liana species and the sole species in the genus Hultholia. It was formerly placed in the genus Caesalpinia but phylogenetic studies identified the group to be polyphyletic, leading the placement of Caesalpinia mimosoides in a new genus, Hultholia in the tribe Caesalpinieae. Its distribution includes: Bangladesh, Yunnan in China, India, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.This species is distinct and can be separated from Caesalpinia by the glandular spots covering the stem, calyx, and fruits. The pods are falcate and inflated. The needle-like trichomes on the stem are different from the prickles on stems of species in Mezoneuron and other genera previously placed in Caesalpinia. The genus name commemorates the Cambodian taxonomist Salvamony Hul Thol.Gallic acid can be extracted from the plant. It is a food plant for the caterpillars of Eurema blanda.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4740981", "label": "Ambalaomby", "source": "Ambalaomby is a rural municipality in Anosibe An'ala District, Alaotra-Mangoro Region, Madagascar.", "target": "human settlement in Madagascar", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18111027", "label": "Decachaetophora", "source": "Decachaetophora is a genus of flies in the family Sepsidae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7179172", "label": "Petru Cărare", "source": "Petru Cărare (13 February 1935 – 27 May 2019) was a writer from Moldova. Petru Cărare was born to Profir Cărare and Nadejda Duca. He was forbidden to publish in the 1970s. He translated works by Ivan Krylov, Stepan Oleinik, Samuil Marshak, Rasul Gamzatov, Sebastian Brant, Gianni Rodari, and François Villon.", "target": "Moldovan politician and writer (1935-2019)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7855863", "label": "Turner's Arena", "source": "Turner's Arena was the name given to a 1,800 seat arena, located at 1342 W Street, near the northeast corner of 14th and W Streets, NW in Washington, DC, and originally owned by local wrestling promoter Joe Turner. One of the popular events were bouts featuring local wrestler Swift Eagle and Chief Thunderbird as detailed in the House History Man blog. A photograph and advertisement for the arena appears on page 69 of the book Greater U Street by Paul K. Williams. This venue was an early home to the Capitol Wrestling Corporation, a precursor to WWE, which was started by Vincent J. McMahon in January 1953. McMahon took over the territory from Gabe Menendez, who had succeeded Turner after his death in 1947. In addition, the arena hosted top professional boxing matches promoted by Goldie Ahearn featuring fighters such as Lou Gevinson, Lew Hanbury, and Jimmy Cooper. It was also the birthplace of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association annual basketball tournament, as well as the host to top country music acts and Jazz performances. It was renamed Capitol Arena in 1956 once Capitol Wrestling Corporation began broadcasting a syndicated weekly wrestling show from the arena every Thursday night. The arena was closed and demolished in 1965.", "target": "arena in Washington DC, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["sports venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27980105", "label": "Cornelius N. Nooy", "source": "Cornelius Nicholas Nooy (April 15, 1921 – March 12, 1958) was a United States Navy flying ace of World War II. Nooy ended the war as the highest-scoring fighter pilot operating from a light aircraft carrier (CVL), and tied for fourth-highest-scoring ace in the US Navy (with Patrick D. Fleming and Alexander Vraciu). Nooy served two tours with VF-31's \"Flying Meataxers\" aboard USS Cabot and USS Belleau Wood. The first of these tours set a record for kills by a CVL fighter squadron.", "target": "American fighter ace", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2977083", "label": "Claude Boyer", "source": "Claude Boyer (1618 in Albi – 22 July 1698 in Paris) was a French clergyman, playwright, apologist and poet. Contrary to a popular belief, he was never abbot. Claude Boyer was educated by the Jesuits, where he excelled in rhetoric. His classmate Michel Le Clerc, who like him wrote tragedies and was elected to the French Academy, became one of his closest friends. In 1645, Boyer moved to Paris where he attended exhibitions and produced his first play, The Roman Portia, played at the Hôtel de Bourgogne in 1646. The play was a great success. Throughout his career some thirty plays, most of which were tragedies, experienced great success. The tragedy The Loves of Jupiter and Semele in 1666 was a triumph. When one of the highest literary authorities of the seventeenth century, Jean Chaplain, composed around 1662 a paper on literary men of his time, he thought of Claude Boyer.", "target": "French poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5486029", "label": "Frank Crichlow", "source": "Frank Gilbert Crichlow (13 July 1932 – 15 September 2010) was a British community activist and civil rights campaigner, who became known in 1960s London as a godfather of black radicalism. He was a central figure in the Notting Hill Carnival. His restaurant, The Mangrove in All Saints Road, served for many years as the base from which activists, musicians, and artists organised the event. Crichlow was one of the Black activists known as the Mangrove Nine, who were charged in 1970 with inciting a riot following a protest against repeated police raids of The Mangrove restaurant. They were all acquitted of the most serious charges and the trial became the first judicial acknowledgement of behaviour (the repeated raids) motivated by racial hatred, rather than legitimate crime control, within the Metropolitan Police.", "target": "British activist for Black rights", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q776474", "label": "Lichoca", "source": "Lichoca [liˈxɔt͡sa] is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Myślibórz, within Myślibórz County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1340924", "label": "Endrick Water", "source": "The Endrick Water or River Endrick (Scottish Gaelic: Eunarag) is a river which flows into the eastern end of Loch Lomond, Scotland. Its drainage basin covers a large part of the west of Stirling District. The Burnfoot Burn rising on the southern slopes of the Gargunnock Hills and the Backside Burn rising on the eastern slopes of the Fintry Hills combine to form the Endrick Water which flows south before turning sharply westwards at the foot of the western dam of Carron Valley Reservoir. The river flows through Strathendrick, the village of Fintry and past Balfron and Drymen before entering Loch Lomond.", "target": "watercourse in West Dunbartonshire, Scotland, UK, flows into the east of Loch Lomond", "baseline_candidates": ["watercourse"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5016934", "label": "Caerthillian to Kennack", "source": "Caerthillian to Kennack is a coastal Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) on the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall, UK, noted for both its biological and geological characteristics. It is of great botanical importance, with several Red Data Book of rare and endangered plant species being found on the site, as well as a breeding site for Cornish choughs.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q62603005", "label": "volleyballene", "source": "Volleyballene term refers to a chemical compound that is a new type of 3D hollow molecule composed of carbon and transition metals, the name is a reference to fullerenes. It is the first buckyball compound to be spiked with scandium atoms. The main feature of these substances is that metal atoms are part of the framework and they are not deposited on the surface of the molecule. The incorporation of the metal atoms avoids their clustering and confers to volleyballene with sites to attach hydrogen mainly. The history of volleyballenes dates from its first prediction in 2016 by Jing Wang et al. A further study based on Density functional Theory (DFT) carried out by Tlahuice-Flores in the same year supports the prediction and provides with Infrared, Raman and UV spectra of the structure for its experimental detection. The structure is described as one Sc8 cluster holding 12 scandium atoms linked to six C10 units on each face. The chemical formula C60Sc20 is closely related to C80 fullerene and it has a large HOMO-LUMO gap of 1.47 eV. Further hydrogenation of volleyballene reported a 70-H structure with an adsorption energy of circa -0.11 eV/H2. Moreover, it is expected that the adsorption-desorption reaction can be reached at ambient temperature. Potential use of volleyballenes is hydrogen storage even at ambient conditions.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["chemical compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56181728", "label": "National Union of Teachers", "source": "The National Union of Teachers (NUT; ) was a trade union for school teachers in England, Wales, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man. It was a member of the Trades Union Congress. In March 2017, NUT members endorsed a proposed merger with the Association of Teachers and Lecturers to form a new union known as the National Education Union, which came into existence on 1 September 2017. The union recruited only qualified teachers and those training to be qualified teachers into membership and on dissolution had almost 400,000 members, making it the largest teachers' union in the United Kingdom.", "target": "former trade union for schoolteachers in England, Wales, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man (1870–2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["labor union"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1940021", "label": "medieval theatre", "source": "Medieval theatre encompasses theatrical performance in the period between the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century and the beginning of the Renaissance in approximately the 15th century. The category of \"medieval theatre\" is vast, covering dramatic performance in Europe over a thousand-year period. A broad spectrum of genres needs to be considered, including mystery plays, morality plays, farces and masques. The themes were almost always religious. The most famous examples are the English cycle dramas, the York Mystery Plays, the Chester Mystery Plays, the Wakefield Mystery Plays, and the N-Town Plays, as well as the morality play known as Everyman. One of the first surviving secular plays in English is The Interlude of the Student and the Girl (c. 1300). Due to a lack of surviving records and texts, low literacy in the general population, and the opposition of the clergy, there are few surviving sources from the Early and High Medieval periods. However, by the late period, performances began to become more secularized; larger number of records survive.", "target": "plays and playmaking in the Middle Ages", "baseline_candidates": ["theatrical genre", "theatre"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30921720", "label": "Survivor", "source": "Survivor is the American version of the international Survivor reality competition television franchise, itself derived from the Swedish television series Expedition Robinson created by Charlie Parsons which premiered in 1997. The American series premiered on May 31, 2000, on CBS. It is hosted by Jeff Probst, who is also an executive producer along with Mark Burnett and the original creator, Parsons. The television show places a group of strangers in an isolated location, where they must provide food, fire, and shelter for themselves. The contestants compete in challenges including testing the contestants' physical ability like running and swimming or their mental abilities like puzzles and endurance challenges for rewards and immunity from elimination. The contestants are progressively eliminated from the game as they are voted out by their fellow contestants until only one remains and is given the title of \"Sole Survivor\" and is awarded the grand prize of US$1,000,000 ($2,000,000 in Winners at War). The American version has been very successful. From the 2000–01 through the 2005–06 television seasons, its first eleven seasons (competitions) rated among the top ten most-watched shows. It is commonly considered the leader of American reality TV because it was the first highly-rated and profitable reality show on broadcast television in the U.S., and is considered one of the best shows of the 2000s (decade). The series has been nominated for 63 Emmy Awards, including winning for Outstanding Sound Mixing in 2001, Outstanding Special Class Program in 2002, and was subsequently nominated four times for Outstanding Reality-Competition Program when the category.", "target": "American version of the international Survivor reality competition television franchise", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1650339", "label": "Fuentes de Jiloca", "source": "Fuentes de Jiloca (Aragonese: Fuents de Xiloca) is a municipality on the river Jiloca, located in the province of Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 308 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q934571", "label": "HMS Blonde", "source": "HMS Blonde was the lead ship of her class of scout cruisers built for the Royal Navy in the first decade of the 20th century. She led the 7th Destroyer Flotilla in the Mediterranean Fleet from completion until 1912. The ship was temporarily assigned to the 1st Destroyer Flotilla before she joined the 4th Battle Squadron in 1913. During the First World War, Blonde was assigned to various battleship squadrons of the Grand Fleet. The ship was converted into a minelayer in 1917, but never actually laid any mines. She was reduced to reserve in 1919 and sold for scrap in 1920.", "target": "Blonde class cruiser", "baseline_candidates": ["scout cruiser"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1881080", "label": "M8 motorway", "source": "The M8 is the busiest motorway in Scotland and one of the busiest in the United Kingdom. It connects the country's two largest cities, Glasgow and Edinburgh, and serves other large communities including Airdrie, Coatbridge, Greenock, Livingston and Paisley. The motorway is 60 miles (97 km) long. A major construction project to build the final section between Newhouse and Baillieston was completed on 30 April 2017. The motorway has one service station, Heart of Scotland Services, previously named Harthill due to its proximity to the village.", "target": "motorway in Scotland", "baseline_candidates": ["controlled-access highway"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2384931", "label": "Andrićev Venac", "source": "Andrićev Venac (Serbian Cyrillic: Андрићев венац; pronounced [ǎːndritɕeʋ ʋěːnats]) is a street and the surrounding urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Stari Grad. As the official seat of the President of Serbia is located in it, it became synonymous for the politics of the president.", "target": "urban neighbourhood in Stari Grad, Belgrade, Serbia", "baseline_candidates": ["neighborhood"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q61477340", "label": "Emily Mair", "source": "Emily Jean Mair (16 May 1928 – 15 May 2021) was a Scottish-born New Zealand opera singer, pianist and vocal coach. She trained a number of well-known New Zealand opera singers, including Simon O'Neill and Aivale Cole.", "target": "New Zealand opera singer (1928–2021)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1723117", "label": "Al Milgrom", "source": "Allen L. Milgrom (born March 6, 1950) is an American comic book writer, penciller, inker and editor, primarily for Marvel Comics. He is known for his 10-year run as editor of Marvel Fanfare; his long involvement as writer, penciler, and inker on Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man; his four-year tenure as West Coast Avengers penciller; and his long stint as the inker of X-Factor. He often inks Jim Starlin's work. Milgrom is the co-creator of DC superhero Firestorm.", "target": "American writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1418195", "label": "Robert MacAndrew", "source": "Robert MacAndrew (born 22 March 1802 in Wandsworth, London, died 22 May 1873 in Isleworth, Middlesex) was a British merchant and ship-owner, marine dredger, Fellow of the Royal Society, naturalist and collector of shells.", "target": "British naturalist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7084477", "label": "Old Market Hall", "source": "The Old Market Hall (in recent years branded as the \"OMH\") is an Elizabethan building situated in the town centre of Shrewsbury, the county town of Shropshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building.", "target": "market hall at Shrewsbury", "baseline_candidates": ["arts venue", "market hall", "movie theater"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q25490283", "label": "Black Square", "source": "Black Square (also known as The Black Square or Malevich's Black Square) is an iconic painting by Kazimir Malevich. The first version was done in 1915. Malevich made four variants of which the last is thought to have been painted during the late 1920s or early 1930s. Black Square was first shown in The Last Futurist Exhibition 0,10 in 1915. The work is frequently invoked by critics, historians, curators, and artists as the \"zero point of painting\", referring to the painting's historical significance and paraphrasing Malevich.", "target": "painting by Kazimir Malevich", "baseline_candidates": ["painting"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q42767204", "label": "Auguste Andrade", "source": "Jean (or Jacob) Auguste Andrade (12 August 1793 – 11 January 1843) was a French singer and composer.", "target": "French singer and composer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24011227", "label": "Ciruelas", "source": "Ciruelas is a municipality located in the province of Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 105 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality in Guadalajara Province, Castile-La Mancha, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7596329", "label": "Stadion Radnik", "source": "Gradski Stadion Velika Gorica (Croatian pronunciation: [Gradski stadion Velika Gorica]), also known as Gradski stadion Velika Gorica [grǎtskiː stâdijoːn ʋêlikaː gǒrit͡sa] or Stadion ŠRC Velika Gorica, is an association football stadium in Velika Gorica, Croatia. It is the home stadium for the HNK Gorica football club. The stadium has a capacity of 5,200, all of which is seated.The stadium was built for the 1987 Summer Universiade, held in the nearby Croatian capital Zagreb. It has since been renovated three times, in 1999 for the Military World Games held in Zagreb, in 2010 to meet the requirements for Druga HNL Croatian second-level league and finally in 2019 when the stadium became an all-seater.", "target": "association football stadium in Velika Gorica, Croatia", "baseline_candidates": ["stadium", "sports venue"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q932738", "label": "Castelserás", "source": "Castelserás is a municipality located in the province of Teruel, Aragon, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 818 inhabitants.", "target": "municipality of Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5169680", "label": "Corazón Profundo", "source": "Corazón Profundo (English: Deep Heart) is the thirteenth studio album by Colombian recording artist Carlos Vives, released by Sony Music on April 23, 2013. This was Vives's first studio album since 2009's Clásicos de la Provincia II and the first to feature all-new material since 2004's El Rock de Mi Pueblo. He was also away from the music industry Sony Music and returns after 20 years when he made the album Escalona: Vol. 2 in 1992. The album's first single, \"Volví a Nacer\" was released on September 24, 2012. It peaked at #1 on the Colombian National-Report, US Billboard Latin Pop Songs and US Billboard Hot Latin Songs charts. The second single, \"Como Le Gusta A Tu Cuerpo\", featuring the Brazilian musician Michel Teló, was released on January 22, 2013 and peaked at #3 in the US Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart. The third single from the album, \"Bailar Contigo\", was released on May 5, 2013.", "target": "album by Carlos Vives", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7269756", "label": "Quebec Caribou", "source": "The Quebec Caribou were a rugby union club based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Drawing players from rugby clubs throughout Quebec, the Caribou competed against other provincial teams in the Rugby Canada Super League.", "target": "rugby team", "baseline_candidates": ["sports team"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12795316", "label": "Luka Klasinc", "source": "Luka Klasinc (born 7 March 1973) is a Slovenian figure skater. He competed in the men's singles event at the 1992 Winter Olympics, finishing in 26th place.In 2021, Klasinc was charged with bank fraud and identity theft after attempting to defraud the U.S. Small Business Administration of over $1.5 million.", "target": "Slovene figure skater", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3808606", "label": "Joby Wright", "source": "Joseph \"Joby\" Wright (born September 5, 1950) is an American former college and professional basketball player who was men's basketball head coach at Miami University and at the University of Wyoming.", "target": "American basketball coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7132152", "label": "Paolo Borghese", "source": "Paolo Borghese (1622/24–1646) was an Italian nobleman of the Borghese family. He was the son of Marcantonio II Borghese (1598–1658) and his wife Camilla Orsini. Paolo was the first husband of Olimpia Aldobrandini, whom he married in 1638. They had five children: Giovanni Giorgio Borghese Camillo Borghese Francesco Borghese Giovanni Battista Borghese, Principe Borghese (1639-1717) married Eleonora Boncompagni and had issue (including Camillo Borghese, Prince of Sulmona, husband of Pauline Bonaparte). Maria Virginia Borghese (1642-1718) married Agostino Chigi, Prince of Farnese, Duke of Ariccia and had issue.", "target": "Italian nobleman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7270821", "label": "Queens Sports Club", "source": "Queens Sports Club Ground is a stadium in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. It is used primarily used for cricket matches. The stadium has a capacity of up to 13,000. The stadium is the home ground for the Matabeleland Tuskers, who are the current Logan Cup champions. The other cricket ground in Bulawayo is the Bulawayo Athletic Club.Queen's Sports Club is Zimbabwe's second ground, the first being the Harare Sports Club. It is situated close to the city center is one of international cricket's most picturesque venues, with an old pavilion surrounded by trees which give shade to spectators. Much of the ground consists of grass banking and its capacity of 13,000 is more than enough to cope with demand. Queens Sports Club became Zimbabwe's third Test venue in October 1994. The Zimbabwe national cricket team has had much success at this venue, beating teams like England, West Indies, Australia, Pakistan and the once weak Bangladesh. In recent times however it has been a stadium of horror for the locals, as it was at this venue that Zimbabwe lost to lower ranked Afghanistan. During a Currie Cup match between Eastern Province and Rhodesia in 1954/55, the scorers' box became a mass of smoke and sparks after electrical equipment was struck by lightning.", "target": "stadium in Zimbabwe", "baseline_candidates": ["stadium"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q48738941", "label": "Tripurasundari", "source": "Tripurasundari is a village development committee in Baitadi District in the Mahakali Zone of western Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2,487 and had 491 houses in the village.", "target": "human settlement in Nepal", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6331267", "label": "KIYK", "source": "KIYK (107.3 FM) is an American radio station broadcasting a country music format. Licensed to St. George, Utah, United States, the station is owned by Cherry Creek Radio.KIYK was granted a U.S. Federal Communications Commission construction permit to move to 107.3 MHz and decrease HAAT to 568.4 meters and the frequency shift took place on July 12, 2013.", "target": "radio station in St. George, Utah", "baseline_candidates": ["radio station"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q653420", "label": "Bolnisi", "source": "Bolnisi (Georgian: ბოლნისი), is a city in the country of Georgia, located in the Kvemo Kartli region and capital of the Bolnisi district. It currently has an estimated 13,800 inhabitants.", "target": "city in Georgia", "baseline_candidates": ["city"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2900157", "label": "Betsy Gray", "source": "Elizabeth \"Betsy\" Gray (c. 1778 - 1798), is a folkloric figure in the annals of 1798 Rebellion in Ireland. Ballads, poems and popular histories celebrate her presence in the ranks of the United Irishmen, and her death, on 12 June 1798 at the Battle of Ballynahinch. Contemporary records are unable to confirm the tale that has been told in all its detail, but they do point to the role of women in supporting the insurrection, including as combatants in the field. Contesting ownership of her memory, in 1898 local unionists disrupted Irish nationalist centenary commemorations and destroyed her grave marker.", "target": "Irish folkhero", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4768161", "label": "Anne Benjaminsen", "source": "Anne Benjaminsen (née Veijalainen; born 1964) is a Finnish ski-orienteering competitor and World Champion. She participated at the 1988 World Ski Orienteering Championships in Kuopio, and won a gold medal in the relay with the Finnish team, with the team mates Sirpa Kukkonen and Virpi Juutilainen. She placed fifth in the classic distance, and eight in the short distance.", "target": "Finnish ski orienteer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7996834", "label": "Whittemore's Tavern", "source": "Whittemore's Tavern is a historic building at 473 Auburn Street in the Auburndale village of Newton, Massachusetts. It was operated as a tavern for a time in the 18th century, but it is now a private residence. The 2+1⁄2-story wood-frame house was built c. 1724, probably by William Robinson II, sone of one of Auburndale's early settlers. It served as a tavern in the 1760s, when Auburn Street was a major east–west thoroughfare. The asymmetrical window placement on the front facade suggests that the house may have been built in stages.The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.", "target": "building in Massachusetts, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60180730", "label": "Conasprella boriqua", "source": "Conasprella boriqua is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Conidae, the cone snails and their allies.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17557638", "label": "St Peter's Church, Elford", "source": "St Peter's Church, Elford is a parish church in the village of Elford, Staffordshire in the United Kingdom. The church is situated on the eastern edge of the village on the north bank of the River Tame. The church is a Grade II* Listed Building. A church has stood on the current site since Norman times but the current building predominantly dates from the mid-19th century.", "target": "church in Lichfield, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10949996", "label": "Church of the Discovery of the Holy Cross, Vilnius", "source": "The Church of the Discovery of the Holy Cross (Lithuanian: Šv. Kryžiaus Atradimo bažnyčia) is a Roman Catholic church in Jeruzalė neighborhood of Vilnius, Lithuania. Located on the right bank of Neris River, it is the centerpiece of the Vilnius Calvary, a 35-station Way of the Cross.", "target": "Roman Catholic church in Vilnius, Lithuania", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7852191", "label": "Tullimaar House", "source": "Tullimaar House is a mansion just east of Perranarworthal in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom; it is not visible from the main A39 Falmouth to Truro road, and stands in private grounds. However, the white gate forming the entrance to the property can be seen from the road.", "target": "country house in Perranarworthal, Cornwall, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["English country house"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3439589", "label": "Maxie Vaz", "source": "Maximiano \"Maxie\" Vaz (1923 – 21 July 1991) was an Indian field hockey player who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics.", "target": "field hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4926974", "label": "Nicolaas Matsier", "source": "Nicolaas Matsier (born Krommenie, 25 May 1945) is a Dutch novelist. Nicolaas Matsier is a pseudonym of Tjit Reinsma.", "target": "Dutch novelist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4917217", "label": "Biscathorpe", "source": "Biscathorpe is an ecclesiastical parish and site of Biscathorpe medieval village. It lies in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England, on the River Bain, 1 mile (1.6 km) south-west of Gayton le Wold, 6.5 miles (10.5 km) west of Louth, and to the south of the A157. It is a Conservation Area managed by DEFRA, and is traversed by the Viking Way.Biscathorpe has three buildings adjacent to the site of the medieval village, Biscathorpe House, Church Cottage, converted to luxury holiday accommodation in 2013 and the Grade II* listed Anglican parish church dedicated to St Helen. The church was built in the early 1840s, rebuilt in 1850, and restored in 1913.", "target": "human settlement in United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["deserted medieval village", "hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6142595", "label": "James S. Allen", "source": "James S. \"Jim\" Allen, born Sol Auerbach (1906–1986), was an American Marxist historian, journalist, editor, activist, and functionary of the Communist Party USA. Allen is best remembered as the author and editor of over two dozen books and pamphlets and as one of the party's leading experts on African-American history. Allen is credited with helping to save from execution the young black men charged in the Scottsboro case by his prompt and relentless publicity of the case, which helped make their trial a cause célèbre.", "target": "American Marxist historian, journalist, editor, and political activist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7548223", "label": "Snow Excuse", "source": "Snow Excuse is a 1966 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Robert McKimson. The short was released on May 21, 1966, and stars Daffy Duck and Speedy Gonzales.", "target": "1966 film by Robert McKimson", "baseline_candidates": ["animated short film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6886181", "label": "Mỏ Cày Bắc", "source": "Mỏ Cày Bắc is a rural district (huyện) of Bến Tre province in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam. The district is established in March 2009. Mỏ Cày Bắc borders Mỏ Cày Nam and Giồng Trôm districts to the east, Chợ Lách district to the west, Vĩnh Long province to the south and Châu Thành district and Bến Tre town to the north. Mỏ Cày Bắc has a population of 138,570 and covers an area of 154.6 km2. The district is subdivided into 13 communes (xã): Thanh Tân, Thạnh Ngãi, Tân Phú Tây, Tân Thành Bình, Thành An, Phước Mỹ Trung, Tân Thanh Tây, Tân Bình, Nhuận Phú Tân, Hòa Lộc, Khánh Thạnh Tân, Hưng Khánh Trung A and Phú Mỹ.", "target": "rural district of Ben Tre, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["rural district of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q24897171", "label": "Chryseobacterium oranimense", "source": "Chryseobacterium oranimense is a Gram-negative psychrotolerant, proteolytic, lipolytic, rod-shaped and non-motile bacteria from the genus of Chryseobacterium which has been isolated from raw cow’ milk in Israel.", "target": "species of bacterium", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63485787", "label": "Lyudmila Zhivkova", "source": "Lyudmila Todorova Zhivkova (Bulgarian: Людмила Тодорова Живкова; 26 July 1942 – 21 July 1981) was a senior Bulgarian Communist Party functionary and Politburo member. She was the daughter of Bulgarian Communist leader Todor Zhivkov, and primarily known for her interest in preserving and promoting Bulgarian arts and culture on the international stage. Zhivkova was also a controversial figure within the former Soviet Bloc because of her interests in esoteric Eastern religion and spirituality.", "target": "Bulgarian minister (1942-1981)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q63989", "label": "Johnny Hansen", "source": "Johnny Anker Hansen (born 11 July 1966), known simply as Johnny Hansen, is a Danish former association football player. Born in Odense, he played as a midfielder for Danish clubs Odense BK, Silkeborg IF, and Esbjerg fB, as well as Ajax Amsterdam in the Netherlands. He played 12 games for the Denmark national football team from 1986 to 1991, and was a part of the Danish squad at the 1995 King Fahd Cup. He also represented the Denmark national under-21 football team.", "target": "Danish footballer (born 1966)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3177553", "label": "Cicha, Silesian Voivodeship", "source": "Cicha [ˈt͡ɕixa] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ujsoły, within Żywiec County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland, close to the border with Slovakia. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) south of Ujsoły, 28 km (17 mi) south of Żywiec, and 90 km (56 mi) south of the regional capital Katowice.", "target": "village in Silesian, Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3275367", "label": "Madame de Villette", "source": "Louise Arthemise d'Aubigné (commonly known as Madame de Villette; 1584 – Mursay, 24 January 1663) was a daughter of Agrippa d'Aubigné and Suzanne de Lusignan de Lezay.On 22 October 1610 in Maillezais, she married Benjamin de Valois, Lord of Villette (1582–1661). They had four children: Madeleine (1621), married in 1649 Hélie, Marquis de Sainte-Hermine. Aymée (1623), married in 1658 René Jouslard de Fontmort. Philippe, Marquis de Villette-Mursay (1627–1707), vice-admiral who was highly successful in the Battle of Beachy Head. Marie (1633), married in 1659 Marc-Louis de Caumont d’Adde.She also raised her niece, Françoise d'Aubigné, the future Marquise de Maintenon and second wife of King Louis XIV. She tried to convert Françoise to the Calvinist Reformed Church of France, but this was prevented by her niece's godmother, Madame de Neuillant.", "target": "French noble", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q846046", "label": "Criminal Minds, season 3", "source": "The third season of Criminal Minds premiered on CBS on September 26, 2007 and ended May 21, 2008. The third season was originally to have featured 25 episodes; however, only 13 were completed before the Writers Guild of America strike (2007–08). Seven more episodes were produced after the strike, bringing the total number of episodes to 20 for the third season. Mandy Patinkin wanted to leave the series, since he loathed the violent nature of it. He was replaced by Joe Mantegna several episodes later.", "target": "season of television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television series season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2677502", "label": "Han van Senus", "source": "Antonie Hendrikus Catharinus \"Han\" van Senus (10 October 1900 - 9 December 1976) was a Dutch male water polo player. He was a member of the Netherlands men's national water polo team. He competed with the team at the 1924 Summer Olympics and 1928 Summer Olympics.He was the brother of water polo player Pieter van Senus, who also competed at the 1924 and 1928 Olympics for the national team.", "target": "Dutch water polo player (1900-1976)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3125535", "label": "Hadewijch", "source": "Hadewijch is a 2009 French film directed by Bruno Dumont that, in the person of a troubled teenage girl, explores conflicting interpretations of Catholicism and Islam. It won the International Film Critics' award at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival.", "target": "2009 film by Bruno Dumont", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q43974", "label": "Louis the Pious", "source": "Louis the Pious (German: Ludwig der Fromme; French: Louis le Pieux; 16 April 778 – 20 June 840), also called the Fair, and the Debonaire, was King of the Franks and co-emperor with his father, Charlemagne, from 813. He was also King of Aquitaine from 781. As the only surviving son of Charlemagne and Hildegard, he became the sole ruler of the Franks after his father's death in 814, a position which he held until his death, save for the period 833–34, during which he was deposed. During his reign in Aquitaine, Louis was charged with the defence of the empire's southwestern frontier. He conquered Barcelona from the Emirate of Córdoba in 801 and asserted Frankish authority over Pamplona and the Basques south of the Pyrenees in 812. As emperor he included his adult sons, Lothair, Pepin and Louis, in the government and sought to establish a suitable division of the realm among them. The first decade of his reign was characterised by several tragedies and embarrassments, notably the brutal treatment of his nephew Bernard of Italy, for which Louis atoned in a public act of self-debasement. In the 830s his empire was torn by civil war between his sons, only exacerbated by Louis's attempts to include his son Charles by his second wife in the succession plans. Though his reign ended on a high note, with order largely restored to his empire, it was followed by three years of civil war. Louis is generally compared unfavourably to his father, though the problems he faced were.", "target": "King of the Franks", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q32592472", "label": "Vũ Muộn", "source": "Vũ Muộn is a commune (xã) and village in Bạch Thông District, Bắc Kạn Province, in Vietnam.", "target": "commune and village in Bắc Kạn Province, Vietnam", "baseline_candidates": ["rural commune of Vietnam"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56378632", "label": "Hillary Shield", "source": "The Hillary Shield is contested between England and New Zealand at rugby union. The first match was played on 29 November 2008 at Twickenham Stadium, London. The trophy is named in memory of the New Zealand mountaineer and explorer, Sir Edmund Hillary. The shield was announced on 23 October 2008 by Jock Hobbs, the Chairman of the New Zealand Rugby Union. It was made by silversmiths Thomas Lyte.", "target": "international rugby union competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports league"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16117133", "label": "William F. Aldinger III", "source": "William F. Aldinger III (born June 25, 1947) is an American businessman. Aldinger served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of Capmark (now Ally Financial) from June 2006 to December 2008. He has served as Consultant of Capmark since December 2008.", "target": "American businessman", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13564436", "label": "religious socialism", "source": "Religious socialism is a type of socialism based on religious values. Members of several major religions have found that their beliefs about human society fit with socialist principles and ideas. As a result, religious socialist movements have developed within these religions. Those movements include Buddhist socialism, Christian socialism, Islamic socialism and Jewish socialism. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica Online, socialism is a \"social and economic doctrine that calls for public rather than private ownership or control of property and natural resources. According to the socialist view, individuals do not live or work in isolation but live in cooperation with one another. Furthermore, everything that people produce is in some sense a social product, and everyone who contributes to the production of a good is entitled to a share in it. Society as a whole, therefore, should own or at least control property for the benefit of all its members. [...] Early Christian communities also practiced the sharing of goods and labour, a simple form of socialism subsequently followed in certain forms of monasticism. Several monastic orders continue these practices today\".The teachings of Jesus are frequently described as socialist, especially by Christian socialists. Acts 4:35 records that in the early church in Jerusalem \"[n]o one claimed that any of their possessions was their own\", although the pattern would later disappear from church history except within monasticism. Christian socialism was one of the founding threads of the British Labour Party and is claimed to begin with the uprising of Wat Tyler and John Ball in the 14th century.", "target": "form of socialism based on religious values", "baseline_candidates": ["political ideology", "socialism"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9701", "label": "Emperor Taizong of Tang", "source": "Emperor Taizong of Tang (28 January 598 – 10 July 649), previously Prince of Qin, personal name Li Shimin, was the second emperor of the Tang dynasty of China, ruling from 626 to 649. He is traditionally regarded as a co-founder of the dynasty for his role in encouraging Li Yuan, his father, to rebel against the Sui dynasty at Jinyang in 617. Taizong subsequently played a pivotal role in defeating several of the dynasty's most dangerous opponents and solidifying its rule over China.Taizong is considered to be one of the greatest emperors in China's history and henceforth, his reign became regarded as the exemplary model against which all future emperors were measured. His era, the \"Reign of Zhenguan (Chinese: 貞觀之治; pinyin: Zhēnguàn Zhī Zhì)\" is considered a golden age in ancient Chinese history and was treated as required studying material for future crown princes. Taizong continued to develop imperial examination systems. He asked his officers to become loyal to the policies not people, in order to eliminate corruption. Under the Zhenguan era, Tang China flourished economically and militarily. For more than a century after his death, China enjoyed prosperity and peace brought about by the solidification of imperial protection over the Chinese regions. In territorial extent, it covered most of the territories previously held by the Han dynasty and parts of modern Korea, Vietnam, Xinjiang, and Central Asian regions. This era of consolidation and conquest laid the foundation for Xuanzong's reign, which is considered to be the height of the Tang dynasty. In 630, Emperor.", "target": "Chinese emperor of the Tang Dynasty (598-649) (r. 626-649)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5593422", "label": "Grahame McGifford", "source": "Grahame Leslie McGifford (born 1 May 1955) is an English former footballer, who played at right-back for Huddersfield Town, Hull City, Port Vale and Northwich Victoria.", "target": "British footballer (born 1955)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3191683", "label": "Stripped Live... on Tour", "source": "The Stripped Tour (also known as Stripped Live) was the third concert tour by American singer Christina Aguilera. It was launched in support of her fourth studio album, Stripped (2002). Acting as a continuation of her Justified and Stripped Tour with Justin Timberlake, it reached Europe, Asia and Australia. Aguilera was expected to return to North America in summer 2004, however, the 29 dates were canceled at the last minute due to Aguilera suffering vocal cord injuries.", "target": "third concert tour by Christina Aguilera", "baseline_candidates": ["concert tour"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7733401", "label": "The Far-Out Son of Lung and the Ramblings of a Madman", "source": "The Far-Out Son of Lung and the Ramblings of a Madman is an EP which was released by Future Sound of London in 1995 to promote the album ISDN. Unlike the band's other EPs, there are no variations on a theme here, simply album versions of the tracks segued together in a new way. The only exception is Snake Hips, which appears in an extended version sometimes referred to as \"Snake Hips (Parts 1 & 2)\".", "target": "extended play", "baseline_candidates": ["extended play"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q27866300", "label": "Vera Farmiga", "source": "Vera Ann Farmiga ( far-MEEG-ə; born August 6, 1973) is an American actress best known for portraying paranormal investigator Lorraine Warren in the Conjuring Universe films The Conjuring (2013), The Conjuring 2 (2016), Annabelle Comes Home (2019) and The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021). Farmiga began her professional acting career on stage in the original Broadway production of Taking Sides (1996). She made her television debut in the Fox fantasy adventure series Roar (1997), and her feature film debut in the drama-thriller Return to Paradise (1998). Farmiga's breakthrough came in 2004 with her starring role as a drug addict in the drama Down to the Bone. She received further praise for the drama film Nothing But the Truth (2008), and won critical acclaim for starring in the 2009 comedy-drama Up in the Air, for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Farmiga made her directorial debut in 2011 with the acclaimed drama film Higher Ground, in which she also had a leading role. She also had starring roles in the political thriller The Manchurian Candidate (2004), the crime drama The Departed (2006), the historical drama The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (2008), the science fiction thriller Source Code (2011), the action thriller Safe House (2012), the legal drama The Judge (2014), the biographical drama The Front Runner (2018), and the monster film Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019). In 2021, Farmiga portrayed Eleanor Bishop in Marvel’s Hawkeye. From 2013 to 2017, Farmiga starred as Norma Louise Bates in.", "target": "American actress", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5420727", "label": "Exotica", "source": "Exotica is the first album by Martin Denny, released in 1957. It contained Les Baxter's most famous piece, \"Quiet Village\", and spawned an entire genre bearing its name. It was recorded December 1956 in Webley Edwards' studio in Waikiki (not, as often reported, the Aluminum Dome at Henry J. Kaiser's Hawaiian Village Complex). The album topped Billboard's charts in 1959.The album was recorded in mono. It was re-recorded in stereo in 1958; by then, however, Denny's sideman Arthur Lyman had left the group, and was replaced by Julius Wechter. Denny preferred the original mono version: \"It has the original spark, the excitement, the feeling we were breaking new ground.\".", "target": "album by Martin Denny", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q151820", "label": "Louis-Ferdinand Céline", "source": "Louis Ferdinand Auguste Destouches (27 May 1894 – 1 July 1961), better known by the pen name Louis-Ferdinand Céline ( say-LEEN, French: [selin] (listen)) was a French novelist, polemicist and physician. His first novel Journey to the End of the Night (1932) won the Prix Renaudot but divided critics due to the author's pessimistic depiction of the human condition and his writing style based on working class speech. In subsequent novels such as Death on the Installment Plan (1936), Guignol's Band (1944) and Castle to Castle (1957) Céline further developed an innovative and distinctive literary style. Maurice Nadeau wrote: \"What Joyce did for the English language…what the surrealists attempted to do for the French language, Céline achieved effortlessly and on a vast scale. \"From 1937 Céline wrote a series of antisemitic polemical works in which he advocated a military alliance with Nazi Germany. He continued to publicly espouse antisemitic views during the German occupation of France, and after the Allied landing in Normandy in 1944 he fled to Germany and then Denmark where he lived in exile. He was convicted of collaboration by a French court in 1951, but was pardoned by a military tribunal soon after. He returned to France where he resumed his careers as a doctor and author. Céline is widely considered to be one of the greatest French novelists of the twentieth century, but remains a controversial figure in France due to his antisemitism and activities during the Second World War.", "target": "French writer (1894-1961)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4731450", "label": "Allen's Cider Mill", "source": "Allen's Cider Mill is a historic cider mill at 7 Mountain Road in Granby, Connecticut. With a history extending back to 1783, it was at the time of its listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992 one the few operational cider mills in the state of Connecticut. It is presently abandoned.", "target": "United States historic place", "baseline_candidates": ["cider mill"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28861395", "label": "Magnom", "source": "Joseph Bulley, known professionally as Magnom, is a Ghanaian record producer and recording artist , who produces music ranging from Hiphop, dancehall, and Afrobeats. He gained the attention of Ghanaians after he produced the song \"illuminati\" with Ghanaian BET award winner Sarkodie.", "target": "Ghanaian record producer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7050728", "label": "Nordic Symphony Orchestra", "source": "The Nordic Symphony Orchestra (NSO) (previously Estonian-Finnish Symphony Orchestra) is an international symphony orchestra founded by Anu and Kadri Tali in 1997.", "target": "Estonian orchestra", "baseline_candidates": ["symphony orchestra"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1517961", "label": "Cortinarius armillatus", "source": "Cortinarius armillatus, commonly known as the red-banded cortinarius, is a late summer and autumn (as late as in October) fungus usually found in moist coniferous forests, especially spruced ones. The species grows rarely in North America, but is common in Europe. Elias Magnus Fries described the species in 1838.The cap is bell shaped at first, later flattening out, vividly rust-brown becoming slightly paler with age, with small fibrous scales. The cap grows from 5 to 15 cm in diameter. The gills are dark rust-brown; broad, distant and shallowly sinuate. The spores are also rust-brown. The flesh is light brown.", "target": "species of fungus", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6427034", "label": "Kolanda", "source": "Kolanda is a village in the Assoli Prefecture in the Kara Region of north-eastern Togo.", "target": "place in Kachin State, Togo", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q886742", "label": "gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – men's parallel bars", "source": "The men's parallel bars competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 25 at the Sydney Super Dome. There were 81 competitors from 30 nations; nations competing in the team event could have up to 5 gymnasts in the vault, while other nations could have up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Li Xiaopeng of China, the nation's first victory in the parallel bars. Lee Joo-Hyung earned South Korea's first medal in the event with his silver. Russia also received its first medal since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, with Alexei Nemov's bronze.", "target": "olympic gymnastics event", "baseline_candidates": ["Olympic sporting event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q75406321", "label": "Margareta Timofti", "source": "Margareta Timofti (born 7 January 1956) is a Moldovan lawyer who is the wife of Nicolae Timofti, the 4th President of Moldova. With her husband being President, she served as the First Lady of Moldova during his term.", "target": "First Lady of Moldova", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15984", "label": "Leer", "source": "Leer is a town in the district of Leer, the northwestern part of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is situated on the river Leda, a tributary of the river Ems, near the border with the Netherlands. With 34,958 inhabitants (2021), it is the third largest city in East Frisia after Emden and Aurich. It has a railway and autobahn connection to Groningen, Netherlands, Emden, Bremen and the South (Rheine and the Ruhrpott industrial region).", "target": "town in Lower Saxony, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["urban municipality of Germany", "city", "independent community", "district capital"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q159293", "label": "Epipactis purpurata", "source": "Epipactis purpurata, the violet helleborine, is an orchid found in France, the United Kingdom, Slovenia, and Serbia.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q438127", "label": "Rienzi Melville Johnston", "source": "Rienzi Melville Johnston (September 9, 1849 – February 28, 1926) was an American journalist and politician. He edited the Houston Post from 1885 to 1919, and served a 29-day term in the United States Senate in January 1913 after the resignation of Joseph Weldon Bailey. His term remains the fifth shortest in Senate history. Johnston was a member of the Texas Senate from 1917 to 1920, and also its President pro tempore from 1918.", "target": "American politician (1849-1926)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65172766", "label": "2007 PFC CSKA Moscow season", "source": "The 2007 Russian football season, saw CSKA Moscow competed in the Russian Premier League, Russian Super Cup, Russian Cup, the UEFA Cup and the UEFA Champions League. CSKA were defending Premier League champions but could not successfully defend it, finishing 3rd. They also failed to defend their 2005/06 Cup crown, getting knocked out at the Sixth Round stage by Krylia Sovetov during the 2006/07 Cup. They did however win all their games from the 2007/08 cup that were played in 2007, progressing to the Semi-finals by the end of the 2007 season. CSKA did however retain their Russian Super Cup. After being eliminated to the UEFA Cup during the 2006/07 European campaign, they were knocked out by Maccabi Haifa at the Round of 32. CSKA qualified directly for the group stage of the 2007–08 UEFA Champions League, however they did not make it out of the group, after being drawn with Inter Milan, Fenerbahçe and PSV Eindhoven, finishing bottom of the group with 1 point.", "target": "PFC CSKA Moscow 2007 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15874629", "label": "Douglas Ryder", "source": "Douglas Ryder (born 26 November 1971) is a South African former cyclist, who last worked as the general manager of UCI WorldTeam Team Qhubeka NextHash. He competed in the men's individual road race at the 1996 Summer Olympics.", "target": "cyclist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1097958", "label": "Claudine Meffometou", "source": "Claudine Falonne Meffometou Tcheno (born 1 July 1990) is a Cameroonian football defender who plays for FC Fleury 91 of the Division 1 Feminine and for the Cameroon women's national football team. She has represented her country at the 2012 London Olympics and the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "target": "Cameroonian footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6115262", "label": "Jack Soo", "source": "Jack Soo (born Goro Suzuki, October 28, 1917 – January 11, 1979) was an American singer and actor. He was best known for his role as Detective Nick Yemana on the television sitcom Barney Miller.", "target": "American actor (1917-1979)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6777346", "label": "Stosicia garciai", "source": "Stosicia garciai is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Zebinidae. It is found in the Caribbean Sea.", "target": "species of mollusc", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21257790", "label": "John P. Donnelly", "source": "John P. Donnelly (July 24, 1886 – May 4, 1949) was an American lawyer and politician. Born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Donnelly received his bachelor's degree from Marquette University in 1907 and his law degree from Marquette University Law School in 1911. Donnelly practiced law in Milwaukee and served as an assistant district attorney for Milwaukee County from 1923 to 1932. Donnelly served in the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1915 to 1921 and was involved with the Democratic Party. Donnelly died in a hospital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin from a heart attack.", "target": "American politician (1886-1949)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q818057", "label": "Benny Green", "source": "Benny Green (born April 4, 1963) is an American hard bop jazz pianist who was a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. He has been compared to Bud Powell and Oscar Peterson in style and counts them as influences.", "target": "American musician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q280128", "label": "VV UNA", "source": "Voetbalvereniging UNA (\"Uitspanning Na Arbeid\") is a football club from Zeelst, Netherlands. Founded on 7 November 1929, the club currently competes in the Derde Divisie, the fourth tier of football in the Netherlands, after being relegated from the Tweede Divisie in 2017. `.", "target": "Dutch football club", "baseline_candidates": ["amateur football club", "association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2968035", "label": "Castello Normanno", "source": "The Castello Normanno (\"Norman Castle\"), or alternatively the Castello di Aci (\"Castle of Aci\"; Sicilian: Casteddu di Iaci), is a castle in Aci Castello in the Metropolitan City of Catania in Sicily, southern Italy. The castle is situated on a rocky outcrop jutting out into the sea. Its precise date of construction is uncertain, but it was important to the development of its region during the Middle Ages. During the War of the Sicilian Vespers, it was subject to Roger of Lauria. It was besieged more than once, and was briefly controlled by the Spanish. It is currently a museum.", "target": "building in Aci Castello, Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["castle"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97762799", "label": "Emilie Valenciano", "source": "Emilie Valenciano (born 15 February 1997) is a Costa Rican footballer who plays as a defender for Asheville City SC. She is a member of the Costa Rica women's national football team. She was part of the team at the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "target": "Costa Rican association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q515461", "label": "André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri", "source": "André Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri (French: [ɑ̃dʁe adɔlf øʒɛn dizdeʁi]; 28 March 1819 – 4 October 1889) was a French photographer who started his photographic career as a daguerreotypist but gained greater fame for patenting his version of the carte de visite, a small photographic image which was mounted on a card. Disdéri, a brilliant showman, made this system of mass-production portraiture world famous.", "target": "French photographer (1819-1889)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1363856", "label": "Saint-Remy-sous-Barbuise", "source": "Saint-Remy-sous-Barbuise is a commune in the Aube department in north-central France.", "target": "commune in Aube, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5617216", "label": "Gulabrao Patil", "source": "Gulabrao Raghunathrao Patil (Marathi: गुलाबराव रघुनाथराव पाटील) (16 September 1921 – 21 January 1989) was a Renowned Co-operative Leader, Member of Parliament (MP)-Rajya Sabha India, Maharashtra State Sangli from 1966 to 1978,Member of the Legislative Council (MLC) of Maharashtra 1983−87 and president of Maharashtra Pradesh Congress(I) Committee 1981−82. Patil also served as chairman of Maharashtra State Co-operative Bank in Mumbai from 1980 to 1982, chairman of Sangli District Cooperative Bank Sangli and Secretary of National Co-operative Union of India (NCUI), New Delhi. Gulabrao Patil was regarded as a Maratha Strongman in Maharashtra politics in the 1970s and 1980s. Year 2020-2021 is going to celebrate as Birth Centenary Year of Late. Gulabrao Patil (1921-2021).", "target": "Indian politician (1921-1989)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4762588", "label": "Angela Winstanley-Smith", "source": "Angela Winstanley-Smith (born 5 August 1985) is a British water polo player, and coach. She competed for Great Britain in the women's tournament in the 2012 Summer Olympics. This was the first ever Olympic GB women's water polo team. She competed at the 2013 World Aquatics Championships.She is the head coach of the New Zealand Women's Water Polo team, at the 2017 World Aquatics Championships. She was appointed after taking the Marist Magic to back to back New Zealand titles. This included an undefeated season in 2016.", "target": "British water polo player and coach", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17144094", "label": "The Intruder", "source": "The Intruder is a British drama series made by Granada Television for the ITV network and was broadcast on Sundays from 2 January to 20 February 1972. There were eight episodes made, all of them running 25 minutes. The series was based on the children's book of this same name by John Rowe Townsend, published in 1970. The novel was well received, and won numerous awards, it was adapted for television in 1971, before being shown on television the following year.", "target": "British television series", "baseline_candidates": ["television program"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1286166", "label": "Edmund Deberry", "source": "Edmund Deberry (August 14, 1787 – December 12, 1859) was a U.S. Congressman from North Carolina, from 1829 to 1831, from 1833 to 1845 and from 1849 to 1851. Born in Lawrenceville, North Carolina in Montgomery County, Deberry attended schools at High Shoals, then engaged in agricultural pursuits and also in the operation of cotton and flour mills. He was a member of the North Carolina State Senate 1806–1811, 1813, 1814, 1820, 1821, and 1826–1828 and served as a justice of the peace. He was elected to the 21st United States Congress (March 4, 1829 – March 3, 1831) as an Anti-Jacksonian, was defeated for reelection in 1830. He ran again as a Whig in 1832 and served in the 23rd through the 28th Congresses (March 4, 1833 – March 3, 1845), becoming chairman of the Agriculture Committee. He did not run in 1844 but was elected to one final term in the 31st Congress (March 4, 1849 – March 3, 1851) after which he retired from politics. Deberry resumed his former agricultural and business pursuits and died at his home in Pee Dee Township, Montgomery County, North Carolina, in 1859. He is interred in the family cemetery on his plantation near Mount Gilead.", "target": "American politician (1787-1859)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2655355", "label": "Yurukovo", "source": "Yurukovo is a village in Yakoruda Municipality, in Blagoevgrad Province, in southwestern Bulgaria.", "target": "village in Blagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Bulgaria", "kmetstvo of Bulgaria"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q67181926", "label": "Manik Godghate", "source": "Manik Godghate (Marathi: माणिक गोडघाटे), popularly known by his pen name Grace, was a Marathi prose writer and poet. He is most popular as lyricist of the Marathi song \"Bhaya Ithale Sampat Nahi\", which was sung by Lata Mangeshkar as the title track for the TV serial Mahashweta. His book Vaaryane Halte Raan (Marathi: वार्‍याने हलते रान The forest swings with the wind) was awarded the prestigious Sahitya Akademi Award in 2011. His works include Churchbell and Mitvaa in prose, and Sandhyaakalchya Kavita, Rajputra Aani Darling, Saanjbhayaachayaa Saajani and Chandramadhaviche Pradesh in poetry. Influenced by Ingrid Bergman's acting in the film The Inn of the Sixth Happiness as if she was in grace, Manik Godghate decided to call himself \"Grace\". He revealed this in an interview with Akshaykumar Kale. The long interview (pg. 19 to 98) in published in his book \"Gracevishayi...\". Grace's first book of poetry, Sandhyaakalchya Kavita, is dedicated to Ingrid Bergman.", "target": "writer and poet", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q64010939", "label": "Tatsuhiro Sakamoto", "source": "Tatsuhiro Sakamoto (坂元 達裕, Sakamoto Tatsuhiro, born 22 October 1996) is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Belgian club KV Oostende.", "target": "Japanese association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3469285", "label": "Reeds Spring Junction", "source": "Reeds Spring Junction is an unincorporated community in eastern Stone County, Missouri, United States. It was so named as it was located on U.S. Route 160 at Route 248, a road which continued to the city of Reeds Spring two miles to the west. It had previously been known as Stutts. The community is no longer located on the main highway, as the highway was rebuilt to create a new highway to bypass Reeds Spring proper. The intersection was also moved, and the community is now located at Route 248 and a county road known as Old US Highway 160. Reeds Spring Junction is part of the Branson, Missouri Micropolitan Statistical Area.", "target": "human settlement in United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["unincorporated community in the United States"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5838005", "label": "Now Bahar, Kerman", "source": "Now Bahar (Persian: نوبهار, also Romanized as Now Bahār; also known as Nowbahar Hoomeh) is a village in Qasemabad Rural District, in the Central District of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 59, in 9 families.", "target": "village in Iran", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4592448", "label": "1997 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I – Pool B", "source": "Group B of the 1997 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I of the 1997 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams advancing to the knockout stage.", "target": "Group B of the 1997 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13166002", "label": "Amr Diab", "source": "Amr Diab (Arabic: عمرو دياب, IPA: [ˈʕɑmɾe deˈjæːb]; born on 11 October 1961) is an Egyptian singer, composer, and actor. He has established himself as a globally acclaimed recording artist and author. He is a Guinness World Record holder, the best selling Middle Eastern artist, a seven-times winner of World Music Awards and five-times winner of Platinum Records.", "target": "Egyptian singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1190082", "label": "Dasuya", "source": "Dasuya (Dasua) is a town and a municipal council in Hoshiarpur district in the state of Punjab, India. It is one of the major subdivisions with 398 villages under its jurisdiction.", "target": "human settlement", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30911244", "label": "1964 Tour de Romandie", "source": "The 1964 Tour de Romandie was the 18th edition of the Tour de Romandie cycle race and was held from 7 May to 10 May 1964. The race started and finished in Geneva. The race was won by Rolf Maurer.", "target": "cycling race", "baseline_candidates": ["Tour de Romandie"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1373429", "label": "video editing software", "source": "Video editing software, or a video editor is software used performing the post-production video editing of digital video sequences on a non-linear editing system (NLE). It has replaced traditional flatbed celluloid film editing tools and analog video tape-to-tape online editing machines. Video editing software serves a lot of purposes, such as filmmaking, audio commentary, and general editing of video content. In NLE software, the user manipulates sections of video, images, and audio on a sequence. These clips can be trimmed, cut, and manipulated in many different ways. When editing is finished, the user exports the sequence as a video file.", "target": "software used to digitally cut audio and video files in a non-linear editing system", "baseline_candidates": ["editor", "video software", "software category"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q41795788", "label": "Emily Gerdes", "source": "Emily Gerdes (sometimes credited as Emma Gerdes) was an American character actress active primarily during Hollywood's silent era.", "target": "American actress (1890-1974)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q31284692", "label": "Carcassonne", "source": "Carcassonne () is a tile-based German-style board game for two to five players, designed by Klaus-Jürgen Wrede and published in 2000 by Hans im Glück in German and by Rio Grande Games (until 2012) and Z-Man Games (currently) in English. It received the Spiel des Jahres and the Deutscher Spiele Preis awards in 2001. It is named after the medieval fortified town of Carcassonne in southern France, famed for its city walls. The game has spawned many expansions and spin-offs, and several PC, console and mobile versions. A new edition, with updated artwork on the tiles and the box, was released in 2014.", "target": "board game", "baseline_candidates": ["tile-based game", "board game"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30267943", "label": "Florida Chamber of Commerce", "source": "The Florida Chamber of Commerce is an organization devoted to the advocacy of private businesses in the state of Florida. This Chamber originated in 1912, and included its first continuing group in 1916, the Florida Tick Eradication Committee. As the group expanded and accepted new responsibilities, it became the Florida Development Board, then the Florida State Chamber of Commerce, before assuming its current name in 1975.According to the Florida Chamber of Commerce, they have played a major role in the areas of taxation, transportation, right-to-work laws, tort reform, growth management, economic development, and international trade. The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board criticized the chamber as being nakedly politically biased. \"For the Florida Chamber’s report card, an F is like making the honor roll | Editorial\" In May 2020, The Chamber urged the governor to re-open the state from coronavirus lockdowns, advice which was incongruent with CDC Guidelines in safely reopening businesses that had been forced to close to protect Floridians' lives. Ron DeSantis declared, ‘I’m not singing their tune’ at a press conference on May 14. Then, the very next day, Governor DeSantis changed his tune at another press briefing. On May 15, he ordered a \"full phase 1\" reopening, and then the state moved to \"Phase 2\" on June 3rd, despite rising cases and deaths from the virus. \"I mean ... go enjoy. Have a drink. It’s fine,\" DeSantis said.\".", "target": "nonprofit organization in Tallahassee, United States", "baseline_candidates": ["nonprofit organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3613942", "label": "Ameles fasciipennis", "source": "The spined dwarf mantis (Ameles fasciipennis) is an extinct species of praying mantis that was endemic to Italy.It has only been collected once, probably in 1871 in the Tolentino area, and has not been seen since, despite extensive entomological surveys of the region.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q96408569", "label": "The Cunning Servant", "source": "The Cunning Servant (Kkoejaengi hain) is a comical Korean folktale about a cunning young servant who keeps tricking his master, even into marrying his master’s daughter, and ends up living happily ever after. As a socially underprivileged figure, the protagonist relies solely on his skills to turn the tables and achieve success, which tends to offer a sense of mental liberation from conventions and authority.", "target": "Korean folktale", "baseline_candidates": ["folk tale"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6173618", "label": "Jeff Corsaletti", "source": "Jeffrey Arthur Corsaletti is a former American professional baseball outfielder.", "target": "American professional baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5232718", "label": "David Cunliffe", "source": "David Cunliffe (18 April 1935 – 1 January 2022) was a British television director and producer whose long career, starting in 1961, encompassed numerous television films as well as hundreds of episodes of some of Britain's best remembered television series and miniseries. Born in the outer London village of Cheam, Cunliffe became interested in drama while attending Tiffins High School in Kingston upon Thames. This interest led to his winning, at age 16, a Queen's Scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) after which he worked for several years in repertory theatre around England until he became, in his mid-twenties, one Granada Television's directors during Coronation Street's earliest years. Over the succeeding decades he accumulated a very large body of work as a director, producer-director or executive producer, much at Yorkshire Television, in such programmes as 1962's Before My Time, 1965's The Man in Room 17, the 1969 and 1970 programmes, Great Performances, Ryan International and Dr. Finlay's Casebook, 1971's Kate, 1972's The Onedin Line, 1973's Warship, 1974's Fall of Eagles and Good Girl, 1975's The Main Chance, 1976's Hadleigh, Forget Me Not and Dickens of London, 1977's Raffles and Beryl's Lot, 1979's Flambards and The Sandbaggers, 1981's The Good Companions and Get Lost!, 1982's Airline and ITV Playhouse, 1984's Sorrell and Son and Killer, 1985's The Beiderbecke Affair, 1986's Love and Marriage, 1989's A Bit of a Do, 1995's Oliver's Travels, 2001's Victoria & Albert, 2006's The Shell Seekers and many others.Several of the TV series and other productions which David Cunliffe directed.", "target": "Television producer and director", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q65421480", "label": "Kuşadası", "source": "Kuşadası (pronounced [ˈkuʃadasɯ]) is a large resort town on Turkey's Aegean coast, and the center of the seaside district of the same name within Aydın Province. Kuşadası is 95 km (59 mi) south of İzmir, and about 60 km (37 mi) from Aydın. The municipality's primary industry is tourism. The mayor of the district is Oğuzhan Turan.", "target": "district of Turkey", "baseline_candidates": ["city", "district of Turkey"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q12155951", "label": "Astraea (plant genus)", "source": "Astraea is a plant genus of the family Euphorbiaceae first described as a genus in 1841. It is native to tropical regions of the Western Hemisphere. Species.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4152885", "label": "Vadim Gustov", "source": "Vadim Gustov (Russian: Вадим Анатольевич Густов; born 26 December 1948) is a Russian politician who served as first deputy prime minister of Russia from 1998 to 1999 and a regional leader.", "target": "Russian governor and politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3071520", "label": "Fieldia australis", "source": "Fieldia australis, usually referred to as fieldia, is a small climbing plant or epiphyte found in eastern Australian rainforests. Commonly seen in the cooler rainforests at higher altitudes. It also grows in the warmer rainforests with a high humidity. The plant uses adventitious roots to grip hold of tree trunks, mossy rocks or tree ferns. Leaves are 3 to 7 cm long 1 to 3 cm wide, reverse ovate or elliptical in shape with toothed edges. The leaf stem is around 8 mm long. Flowering occurs mostly in summer or autumn, being an attractive, relatively long thin white flower. The fruit is a whitish berry with some purple markings. Egg-shaped or oblong, 1 to 3 cm long, and around 11 mm in diameter.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["climbing plant", "taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2177339", "label": "Russo-Balt", "source": "Russo-Balt (sometimes Russobalt or Russo-Baltique) was one of the first Russian companies that produced vehicles and aircraft between 1909 and 1923.", "target": "machine-building enterprise of the Russian Empire", "baseline_candidates": ["enterprise", "business", "trademark"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2051419", "label": "Marta Morazzoni", "source": "Marta Morazzoni (born 1950) is an Italian educator and writer.She was born at Gallarate in Lombardy and studied philosophy at the University of Milan. She taught high school literature at Gallarate. She published La Ragazza col turbante (The Girl with the Turban), a group of stories, in 1986; it was translated into nine languages. Her 1988 novel L'invenzione della verità (The invention of truth) was a finalist for the Premio Campiello. The novel Il caso Courrier published in 1997 was awarded the Premio Campiello and the United Kingdom Independent Foreign Fiction Award.", "target": "Italian educator and writer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q14203579", "label": "Cayo District", "source": "Cayo District is a district located in the west part of Belize. It is the most extensive, second-most populous and third-most densely populated of the six districts of Belize. The district's capital is the town of San Ignacio.", "target": "district of Belize", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Belize"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q6813765", "label": "Melting Pot", "source": "Melting Pot is the second studio album by English jazz composer Zoe Rahman, released on 1 July 2006 by Manushi Records.", "target": "album by Zoe Rahman", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q799807", "label": "Strzyżowice, Lublin Voivodeship", "source": "Strzyżowice [stʂɨʐɔˈvit͡sɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Żyrzyn, within Puławy County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland.", "target": "village of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["village of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q49107785", "label": "Pocsi District", "source": "Pocsi District is one of twenty-nine districts of the province of Arequipa in Peru.", "target": "district in Arequipa, Peru", "baseline_candidates": ["district of Peru"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q21329022", "label": "Team B.A.D.", "source": "Sasha Banks and Naomi, originally known as Team B.A.D., are an American professional wrestling tag team that performs in WWE, where they are former WWE Women's Tag Team Champions. The inceptive variation of the team began and ended as a duo consisting of Naomi and Tamina, but for most of its time was a trio also including Banks, who joined in July 2015 as part of the Divas Revolution storyline and left the team in February 2016. Both Naomi and Tamina are members of the Anoaʻi professional wrestling family. In 2022, Naomi and Banks would reunite the team as a duo.", "target": "professional wrestling stable", "baseline_candidates": ["professional wrestling stable"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16834232", "label": "AS Olympique de Messira", "source": "AS Olympique de Messira is a Malian football club based in Bamako. They play in the Malien Première Division.", "target": "Malian football club", "baseline_candidates": ["association football club"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q9280967", "label": "Lathyrus pisiformis", "source": "Lathyrus pisiformis is a species of flowering plant belonging to the family Fabaceae.Its native range is Central and Eastern Europe to Mongolia and Caucasus.", "target": "species of plant", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q8059648", "label": "Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation", "source": "The Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation is a charitable foundation whose aims are to promote Finnish research in economics and medicine and to maintain and support educational and research facilities in Finland. It was established in 1954 by the wife of Yrjö Jahnsson, Hilma Jahnsson. It supports the award of the Yrjö Jahnsson Award and Yrjö Jahnsson Lecture series. These lectures have been delivered by noteworthy economists since 1963. 10 of the Yrjö Jahnsson Lecture series scholars have gone on to win the Nobel prize in economics, making it a top predictor for future recipients.", "target": "Finnish foundation", "baseline_candidates": ["foundation"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q516490", "label": "Erceville", "source": "Erceville is a commune in the Loiret department in north-central France.", "target": "commune in Loiret, France", "baseline_candidates": ["commune of France"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7674884", "label": "Taeniophila", "source": "Taeniophila is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1527212", "label": "Inagh River", "source": "The Inagh River is a river of County Clare, western Ireland. It takes in the Dealagh River and flows into Liscannor Bay at Lahinch after flowing through Lahinch Golf Course. The ruins of Dough Castle lie on its banks on the golf course, as once also did O'Brien's Castle, and it is crossed by a bridge of the same name.", "target": "river in Ireland", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1198553", "label": "relief pitcher", "source": "In baseball and softball, a relief pitcher or reliever is a pitcher who enters the game after the starting pitcher is removed due to fatigue, ineffectiveness, injury, ejection, or for other strategic reasons, such as inclement weather delays or pinch hitter substitutions. Relief pitchers are further divided informally into various roles, such as closers, setup men, middle relief pitchers, left/right-handed specialists, and long relievers. Whereas starting pitchers usually rest several days before pitching in a game again due to the number of pitches thrown, relief pitchers are expected to be more flexible and typically pitch in more games with a shorter time period between pitching appearances but with fewer innings pitched per appearance. A team's staff of relievers is normally referred to metonymically as a team's bullpen, which refers to the area where the relievers sit during games, and where they warm-up prior to entering the game.", "target": "baseball or softball pitcher who relieves a previous pitcher", "baseline_candidates": ["baseball position", "pitcher"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15871580", "label": "Kudekanye", "source": "Kudekanye is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus is Kudekanye suidafrika. It was described by Rice in 2008.", "target": "genus of insects", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q668029", "label": "Alain Geiger", "source": "Alain Geiger (born 5 November 1960) is a Swiss international football manager and a former defender. He is the current manager for Servette FC. He played mainly as a centre-back despite being only 1.80m in a career that lasted 20 years, and made 112 appearances at international level, being Switzerland's second most capped player behind Heinz Hermann. His son, Bastien, is also a professional footballer.", "target": "Swiss footballer and manager", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22000841", "label": "Pavilion of Women", "source": "Pavilion of Women is a 2001 Chinese-American drama film directed by Yim Ho and written by Luo Yan and Paul Collins. The film stars Willem Dafoe, Luo Yan, Sau Sek, John Cho, Yi Ding and Koh Chieng Mun. The film was released on April 20, 2001 in China and on May 4, 2001 in the United States by Universal Focus. It was Universal's first co-production with a Chinese studio.", "target": "2001 film directed by Yim Ho", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2263974", "label": "Zez Confrey", "source": "Edward Elzear \"Zez\" Confrey (3 April 1895 – 22 November 1971) was an American composer and performer of novelty piano and jazz music. His most noted works were \"Kitten on the Keys\" and \"Dizzy Fingers.\" Studying at the Chicago Musical College and becoming enthralled by French impressionists played a critical role in how he composed and performed music.", "target": "American composer and pianist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q97235031", "label": "Karakon", "source": "Qaroqazon (Russian: Кароказон; Tajik: Қароқазон) is a village in Sughd Region, northern Tajikistan. It is part of the jamoat Mehrobod (formerly: Qamishqurghon) in Asht District.", "target": "place in Sughd, Tajikistan", "baseline_candidates": ["human settlement"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q30154226", "label": "2018 Latvian parliamentary election", "source": "Parliamentary elections were held in Latvia on 6 October 2018. Following the elections, a coalition government was formed by Who owns the state?, the New Conservative Party, Development/For!, the National Alliance and New Unity. Despite being from the smallest elected party, Arturs Krišjānis Kariņš of New Unity was chosen as Prime Minister.", "target": "parliamentary election held in Latvia", "baseline_candidates": ["Latvian parliamentary election"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18399836", "label": "Sannomysk", "source": "Sannomysk (Russian: Санномыск) is a rural locality (a selo) in Khorinsky District, Republic of Buryatia, Russia. The population was 408 as of 2010. There are 24 streets.", "target": "village in Khorinsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1625911", "label": "Brincones", "source": "Brincones is a village and municipality in the province of Salamanca, western Spain, part of the autonomous community of Castile-Leon. It is 45 kilometres (28 mi) from the provincial capital city of Salamanca and has a population of 58 people and lies 765 metres (2,510 ft) above sea level.", "target": "municipality in the province of Salamanca, Castile and León, Spain", "baseline_candidates": ["municipality of Spain"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56274140", "label": "1898–99 Celtic F.C. season", "source": "During the 1898–99 Scottish football season, Celtic competed in the Scottish First Division.", "target": "Celtic 1898–99 football season", "baseline_candidates": ["association football team season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2492213", "label": "Ohio State Route 247", "source": "State Route 247 (SR 247) is a 30.49-mile (49.07 km) long north–south state highway in the southern part of the U.S. state of Ohio. SR 247 has its southern terminus at a dead end overlooking the Ohio River 0.35 miles (0.56 km) south of its junction with U.S. Route 52 (US 52), nearly 4.75 miles (7.64 km) northeast of Manchester. The northern terminus of SR 247 is at a signalized intersection with State Route 73 in Hillsboro.", "target": "highway in Ohio", "baseline_candidates": ["road"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60761076", "label": "Nizamabad South Mandal", "source": "Nizamabad South is an administrative division located in the revenue division and city of Nizamabad under Nizamabad Urban Constituency. It is one of the 27 mandals within Nizamabad District in the Indian state of Telangana.On 11 October 2016, the government of Telangana reorganized the districts and mandals of the state. During reorganisation, the erstwhile Nizamabad mandal was divided into four mandals namely Nizamabad North, Nizamabad South, Nizamabad Rural and Mugpal.", "target": "mandal in Telangana, India", "baseline_candidates": ["tehsil of India"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q841811", "label": "The Miracle Worker", "source": "The Miracle Worker is a 2000 American made-for-television biographical film based on the 1959 play of the same title by William Gibson, which originated as a 1957 broadcast of the television anthology series Playhouse 90. Gibson's original source material was The Story of My Life, the 1903 autobiography of Helen Keller. The play was adapted for the screen twice before, in 1962 and 1979. The film is based on the life of Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan's struggles to teach her. The film premiered on ABC as part of The Wonderful World of Disney on November 12, 2000.", "target": "2000 US television film directed by Nadia Tass", "baseline_candidates": ["television film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q557788", "label": "Gmina Dobrzany", "source": "Gmina Dobrzany is an urban-rural gmina (administrative district) in Stargard County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. Its seat is the town of Dobrzany, which lies approximately 27 kilometres (17 mi) east of Stargard and 57 km (35 mi) east of the regional capital Szczecin. The Gmina covers an area of 135.12 square kilometres (52.2 sq mi), and as of 2006 its total population is 5,073 (out of which the population of Dobrzany amounts to 2,420, and the population of the rural part of the gmina is 2,653). The gmina contains part of the protected area called Ińsko Landscape Park.", "target": "urban-rural gmina of Poland", "baseline_candidates": ["urban-rural municipality of Poland"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q57211", "label": "Hasso von Manteuffel", "source": "Freiherr Hasso Eccard von Manteuffel (14 January 1897 – 24 September 1978) was a German baron born to the Prussian noble von Manteuffel family and was a general during World War II who commanded the 5th Panzer Army. He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds of Nazi Germany. After the war, he was elected to the Bundestag (West German legislature) and was the spokesman for defense of the Free Democratic Party. A proponent of rearmament, he was responsible for coining the new name for the post-World War II German armed forces, the Bundeswehr.", "target": "German politician (1897-1978)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16951186", "label": "Consumer Guarantees Act 1993", "source": "The Consumer Guarantees Act (CGA) 1993 is a consumer protection law that was enacted in New Zealand in 1993. Consumer protections were previously in the Sale of Goods Act 1908.", "target": "Act of Parliament in New Zealand", "baseline_candidates": ["New Zealand statute"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1000825", "label": "Jan Dara", "source": "Jan Dara (Thai: จัน ดารา) is a 2001 Thai erotic-period-drama film directed and co-written by Nonzee Nimibutr and co-starring Hong Kong cinema actress Christy Chung. It is based on a novel by Utsana Phloengtham and follows the titular character as he attempts to break free from the cycle of sex and abuse perpetuated in his wealthy household while fulfilling his own pleasures and desires. The film premiered at the 2001 Toronto International Film Festival. In Thailand, the film was controversial because its sex scenes tested the censorship bounds of the 1930 Film Act.", "target": "2001 Thai film directed by Nonzee Nimibutr", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q18640444", "label": "Russell Cox", "source": "Russell Cox is an Australian former rugby league footballer who played in the 1960s and 1970s.", "target": "Australian rugby league footballer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q15235677", "label": "Kerelaw House", "source": "Kerelaw House was part of the former Kerelaw Estate situated on the west coast of Ayrshire, Scotland, in the town of Stevenston.", "target": "building in North Ayrshire, Scotland, UK", "baseline_candidates": ["building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2058491", "label": "The Somatic Defilement", "source": "The Somatic Defilement is the debut album by the American deathcore band Whitechapel. The album was released on July 31, 2007, through Candlelight Records and is their only release through this label before their move to Metal Blade the following year. It is the only album to feature guitarist Brandon Cagle.", "target": "album by Whitechapel", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1751091", "label": "1908 Australasian Championships – singles", "source": "Fred Alexander defeated Alfred Dunlop 3–6, 3–6, 6–0, 6–2, 6–3 in the final to win the men's singles tennis title at the 1908 Australasian Championships.", "target": "tennis tournament held in 1908", "baseline_candidates": ["tennis event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7018794", "label": "Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce", "source": "The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce is a Newport Beach, California-based business organization of almost 1,000 members representing over 25,000 employees. The Chamber consists of five councils, committees, staff and members, and works with city officials, local businesses and the community to promote the local economy.", "target": "organization", "baseline_candidates": ["organization"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q35446384", "label": "cupric sulfate", "source": "Copper(II) sulfate, also known as copper sulphate, is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula CuSO4. It forms hydrates CuSO4·nH2O, where n can range from 1 to 7. The pentahydrate (n = 5) is the most common hydrate of copper(II) sulfate. Older names for the pentahydrate include blue vitriol, bluestone, vitriol of copper, and Roman vitriol.The bright blue pentahydrate CuSO4·5H2O is the most commonly encountered form of copper(II) sulfate. It exothermically dissolves in water to give the aquo complex [Cu(H2O)6]2+, which has octahedral molecular geometry. The structure of the solid pentahydrate reveals a polymeric structure wherein copper is again octahedral but bound to four water ligands. The Cu(II)(H2O)4 centers are interconnected by sulfate anions to form chains. Anhydrous copper sulfate is a light grey powder.", "target": "chemical compound", "baseline_candidates": ["sulfate salt", "chemical compound", "copper compound"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q60504543", "label": "Sitdik-Mullino", "source": "Sitdik-Mullino (Russian: Ситдик-Муллино) is a rural locality (a village) in Kebyachevsky Selsoviet, Aurgazinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 57 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "target": "human settlement in Aurgazinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["hamlet"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5228636", "label": "Havardia", "source": "Havardia is a genus of flowering plants in the family Fabaceae. It belongs to the mimosoid clade of the subfamily Caesalpinioideae.", "target": "genus of plants", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3352", "label": "Miranda", "source": "Miranda, also designated Uranus V, is the smallest and innermost of Uranus's five round satellites. It was discovered by Gerard Kuiper on 16 February 1948 at McDonald Observatory in Texas, and named after Miranda from William Shakespeare's play The Tempest. Like the other large moons of Uranus, Miranda orbits close to its planet's equatorial plane. Because Uranus orbits the Sun on its side, Miranda's orbit is perpendicular to the ecliptic and shares Uranus' extreme seasonal cycle. At just 470 km in diameter, Miranda is one of the smallest closely observed objects in the Solar System that might be in hydrostatic equilibrium (spherical under its own gravity). The only close-up images of Miranda are from the Voyager 2 probe, which made observations of Miranda during its Uranus flyby in January 1986. During the flyby, Miranda's southern hemisphere pointed towards the Sun, so only that part was studied. Miranda probably formed from an accretion disc that surrounded the planet shortly after its formation, and, like other large moons, it is likely differentiated, with an inner core of rock surrounded by a mantle of ice. Miranda has one of the most extreme and varied topographies of any object in the Solar System, including Verona Rupes, a 20-kilometer-high scarp that is the highest cliff in the Solar System, and chevron-shaped tectonic features called coronae. The origin and evolution of this varied geology, the most of any Uranian satellite, are still not fully understood, and multiple hypotheses exist regarding Miranda's evolution.", "target": "smallest of the large moons of Uranus", "baseline_candidates": ["moon of Uranus"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q10906451", "label": "Borsonia symbiotes", "source": "Borsonia symbiotes is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Borsoniidae.", "target": "species of Gastropoda", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q13396861", "label": "Lesticus rectangulus", "source": "Lesticus rectangulus is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Pterostichinae. It was described by Chaudoir in 1868.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1903196", "label": "Lestes garoensis", "source": "Lestes garoensis is a species of spreadwing in the damselfly family Lestidae.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7172318", "label": "Pete Vuckovic", "source": "Peter Bryan Vuckovic (born 1971 in Devon, England) is an English singer-songwriter and bass player.", "target": "English singer", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q17126340", "label": "Owl Hours", "source": "Owl Hours is the second collaborative studio album by American rapper Awol One and Canadian producer Factor. It was released on Fake Four Inc. in 2009.", "target": "album by Awol One", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4236825", "label": "Kochkovatka", "source": "Kochkovatka (Russian: Кочковатка) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Kochkovatsky Selsoviet, Kharabalinsky District, Astrakhan Oblast, Russia. The population was 1,597 as of 2010. There are 20 streets.", "target": "human settlement in Kharabalinsky District, Astrakhan Oblast, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q679945", "label": "Handelshochschule Leipzig", "source": "HHL Leipzig Graduate School of Management, formerly known as Handelshochschule Leipzig, is a private business school based in Saxony, Germany. Established in 1898, it is one of the world's oldest business schools. The school is accredited internationally by AACSB and locally by ACQUIN. HHL Leipzig graduate school of management is authorized to award doctoral and postdoctoral degrees.", "target": "private business school based in Saxony, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["private educational institution", "business school", "university"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3762200", "label": "Giacomo Natoli", "source": "Giacomo Natoli (born 27 August 1846) was an Italian cavalry officer. He was three times sindaco or mayor of Messina, in the Mediterranean island of Sicily. On 11 March 1889 he obtained ministerial recognition of the title of nobility 'Barone di Scaliti'. : 319.", "target": "Italian politician and military patriot (1846-1896)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q577280", "label": "Soyuz TM-11", "source": "Soyuz TM-11 was the eleventh expedition to the Russian Space Station Mir, using a Soyuz-TM crew transport vessel. The mission notably carried a Japanese television reporter from Tokyo Broadcasting System.", "target": "11th expedition to the Mir space station", "baseline_candidates": ["human spaceflight", "Soyuz-TM"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3761290", "label": "Schistura latidens", "source": "Schistura latidens is a species of ray-finned fish, a stone loach, in the genus Schistura. It has been collected on one occasion from a single locality in 1997 from the Xe Banghiang watershed in Laos. It has not been searched for since. It was recorded in strong currents in riffles and rapids over a stony bed.", "target": "species of fish", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q542212", "label": "badminton at the 2000 Summer Olympics", "source": "Badminton at the 2000 Summer Olympics was held at the Pavilion 3, Sydney Olympic Park from 17 – 23 September. Both men and women competed in their own singles and doubles events and together they competed in a mixed doubles event.", "target": "Badminton events during the 2000 Summer Olympics", "baseline_candidates": ["Badminton at the Summer Olympics", "Olympic sports discipline event"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q999649", "label": "Buckfastleigh", "source": "Buckfastleigh is a market town and civil parish in Devon, England situated beside the Devon Expressway (A38) at the edge of the Dartmoor National Park. It is part of Teignbridge and, for ecclesiastical purposes, lies within the Totnes Deanery. It is 18 miles (29 km) east-northeast of Plymouth, 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Exeter and has a population of 3,661. It is a centre of tourism and is home to Buckfast Abbey, the South Devon Railway, the Buckfastleigh Butterfly Farm and Otter Sanctuary, the Tomb of Squire Richard Cabell and The Valiant Soldier. With 13 letters, Buckfastleigh is one of the longest place name in England with no repeated letters, tied with Buslingthorpe, Leeds and Buslingthorpe, Lincolnshire, but exceeded by Bricklehampton with 14 letters.", "target": "town and civil parish in Devon, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["town", "civil parish"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q56705037", "label": "Adrian Fein", "source": "Adrian Fein (born 18 March 1999) is a German professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for 2. Bundesliga club Dynamo Dresden, on loan from Bayern Munich.", "target": "German association football player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q11554052", "label": "Yūsuke Kawada", "source": "Yusuke Kawada (河田 雄祐, Kawada Yusuke, born December 22, 1967 in Nerima, Tokyo, Japan) is a former Japanese Nippon Professional Baseball player.", "target": "Japanese baseball player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5696434", "label": "Anne Wiazemsky", "source": "Anne Wiazemsky (14 May 1947 – 5 October 2017) was a French actress and novelist. She made her cinema debut at the age of 18, playing Marie, the lead character in Robert Bresson's Au Hasard Balthazar (1966), and went on to appear in several of Jean-Luc Godard's films, among them La Chinoise (1967), Week End (1967), and One Plus One (1968). Through her mother, she was the granddaughter of novelist and dramatist François Mauriac.", "target": "French actress (1947-2017)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3080929", "label": "K Records", "source": "K Records is an independent record label in Olympia, Washington founded in 1982. Artists on the label included early releases by Beck, Modest Mouse and Built to Spill. The record label has been called \"key to the development of independent music\" since the 1980s.The label was founded by Beat Happening frontman Calvin Johnson and managed for many years by Candice Pedersen. Many early releases were on the cassette tape format, making the label one of the longest lasting reflections of the cassette culture of the 1970s and early 1980s. Although itself releasing primarily offbeat pop music and indie rock, the DIY label is regarded as one of the pioneers of riot grrrl movement and the second wave of American punk in the 1990s.", "target": "an independent record label in Olympia, Washington", "baseline_candidates": ["record label", "independent record label"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q28976397", "label": "Nate Martin", "source": "Nate Martin (born January 13, 1983) is an American entrepreneur, game designer, and software executive. He is the Co-founder and CEO of Puzzle Break, the first American room escape company. He is often referred to as the \"Founding Father of Escape Rooms.\" He is an alumnus of the DigiPen Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Science in Real-Time Interactive Simulation and Computer Science.", "target": "American entrepreneur, game designer, and software executive", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1410095", "label": "2013 UCI Track Cycling World Championships", "source": "The 2013 UCI Track Cycling World Championships took place in Minsk, Belarus from 20 to 24 February 2013 in the Minsk-Arena. The Championships featured 19 events, the same as 2012. Great Britain, with five gold medals (four in Olympic events), and nine in total topped the medal table. Australia, Germany, France, the United States and Ireland all enjoyed a successful championships. Becky James of Great Britain, debuting at this level, won four medals, including two gold, in a single Championships, the first British cyclist to do so. Sarah Hammer of the United States also won two gold medals from two events, as did Stefan Bötticher of Germany and Michael Hepburn of Australia. Martyn Irvine of Ireland broke a 116-year wait for a male Irish track medal with silver in the individual pursuit, only to return an hour later to take Ireland's first ever track gold medal in the Scratch race. Laura Trott suffered her first major senior track defeat, taking silver in the Omnium behind Hammer, but she retained for a third time her Team Pursuit title with Dani King and debutant and World Junior Road Time Trial champion Elinor Barker.", "target": "cycling competition", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q571131", "label": "Marcel Müller", "source": "Marcel Müller (born July 10, 1988) is German professional ice hockey left winger currently playing with Kölner Haie in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL).", "target": "German ice hockey player", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q471314", "label": "Theaterplatz", "source": "The Theaterplatz (English: Theatre Square) in Dresden is a historic square in the city. It is located in the west of the inner old town.", "target": "square in Dresden, Germany", "baseline_candidates": ["square"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1861237", "label": "Isola di San Secondo", "source": "San Secondo is a small deserted island located in the Venetian Lagoon, northern Italy.", "target": "island in Italy", "baseline_candidates": ["island"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1369584", "label": "Cross of Saint James", "source": "The Cross of Saint James, also called the Santiago cross or the cruz espada, is an heraldic emblem in the form of a cross. It combines a cross fitchy with either a cross fleury or a cross moline.", "target": "heraldic symbol", "baseline_candidates": ["crosses in heraldry"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7273004", "label": "Qutaylah bint Abd-al-Uzza", "source": "Qutaylah bint Abd al-Uzza (Arabic: قتيلة بنت عبدالعزة), was the first wife of Abu Bakr. She was a member of the Amir ibn Luayy clan of the Quraysh in Mecca. : 176 Her marriage to Abu Bakr produced two children, Asmā' and Abdullah. Soon before or soon after Abdullah's birth, Abu Bakr divorced Qutaylah. It was after this that Abu Bakr converted to Islam; Qutaylah remained a polytheist. : 178 Seven years after their daughter Asmā' had migrated from Mecca, Qutaylah came to visit her in Medina. She brought gifts of raisins, clarified butter and qaraz (pods of a species of the sant tree). However, Asmā' did not admit her mother into her house or accept the gifts until she had sent someone to Aisha to ask Muhammad about what her attitude to her unbelieving mother should be. He replied that she should certainly admit her to her house and accept the gifts. : 178 This was the occasion for the first reciting of the following verse of the Qur'an: God forbids you not, with regard to those who do not fight you because of your faith nor drive you out of your homes, from dealing kindly and justly with them. God loves those who are just. God only forbids you with regard to those who fight you for your Faith, and drive you from your homes, and support others in driving you out, from turning to them (for friendship and protection). It is such as turn to them (in these circumstances) that do wrong.", "target": "first wife of Abu Bakr", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4904047", "label": "Biddick Hall", "source": "Biddick Hall is an area in the town of South Shields, in Tyne and Wear, England. biddick Hall is known for its infant and junior school as well as its conveniences and shops. Biddick Hall is a medium-size council estate in the borough of South Tyneside and has many links to South Shields Town Centre and surrounding areas via its bus services run by Stagecoach and Go North East. Biddick Hall is in walking distance to its nearest 'Comprehensive School', Boldon School.", "target": "area in South Shields, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom", "baseline_candidates": ["suburb"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4982223", "label": "Bubble dance", "source": "The bubble dance is an erotic dance made famous by Sally Rand in the 1930s. The dancer (sometimes naked) dances with a huge bubble shaped like a balloon or ball placed between her body and the audience to make some interesting poses. In Tex Avery's cartoon Hollywood Steps Out (1941) which depicted various Hollywood celebrities, a rotoscoped Rand performs her famous bubble dance onstage to an appreciative crowd. A grinning Peter Lorre caricature in the front row comments, \"I haven't seen such a beautiful bubble since I was a child.\" The routine continues until the bubble is suddenly popped by Harpo Marx and his slingshot, with a surprised Rand (her nudity covered by a well-placed wooden barrel) reacting with shock. Rand is referred to as \"Sally Strand\" here. Sally Rand's bubble dance is featured in a short clip in the Sunset Murder Case.", "target": "Type of erotic dance", "baseline_candidates": ["type of dance"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1154992", "label": "2011 Masters", "source": "The 2011 Masters (officially the 20111 Ladbrokes Mobile Masters) was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament held between 9–16 January 2011 at the Wembley Arena in London, England. This was the first time that the Masters was sponsored by Ladbrokes.Mark Selby was the defending champion, but he lost in the first round 4–6 against Mark King.The tournament made history, as it was the first to feature two Asian players in the final, as well as the first Masters final to feature two players not from the United Kingdom. Ding Junhui won in the final 10–4 against Marco Fu.", "target": "snooker tournament", "baseline_candidates": ["snooker tournament"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q3340497", "label": "Nicolas Lazarévitch", "source": "Nicolas Lazarévitch (17 August 1895 – 24 December 1975) was a Belgian-born French electrician, a building worker, a proof-reader and, most consistently, a libertarian-anarchist writer and activist. He was born and grew up in Belgium, the child of Russian exiles.", "target": "Belgian politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q22700940", "label": "Virago Sound", "source": "Virago Sound is a sound on the north coast of the Graham Island in the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada, at the entrance to Naden Harbour. The sound is named for HMS Virago, a Royal Navy sloop-of-war surveying these waters in 1853, under the command of Master George H. Inskip. The Haida name for Virago Sound was \"tin-eye\", meaning \"big\" In 1792 Captain Ingraham of the brig Hope had named these waters Port Crafts after his first mate, John Croft or Cruft: \"In 1791, Captain Joseph Ingraham on the small brig Hope out of Boston, Massachusetts, spent time along the British Columbia coast trading for furs at Native American villages. His first officer was John Cruft. In Ingraham's logbook (original in the Smithsonian Library, Washington, DC) he mentions that he named an anchorage \"Cruft's Cove after my chief officer....\" (volume ii, p.80). This occurred a year (or possibly two) prior to the arrival of Captain Vancouver to the area.\" (Information provided to the BCGNIS January 2008 by John Bakke, Portland, Oregon, descendant of John Cruft).", "target": "river in Canada", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1192468", "label": "Tōkyū Tōyoko Line", "source": "The Tokyu Toyoko Line (東急東横線, Tōkyū Tōyoko-sen) is a major railway line connecting Tokyo (Shibuya) to Yokohama. The line is owned and operated by the private railway operator Tokyu Corporation. The name of the line, Tōyoko (東横), is a combination of the first characters of Tōkyō (東京) and Yokohama (横浜). The Toyoko Line is the mainline of the Tokyu network. The section between Den-en-chōfu and Hiyoshi Station is a quadruple track corridor with the Tōkyū Meguro Line.", "target": "railway line in Japan", "baseline_candidates": ["railway line"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1581780", "label": "2009 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships", "source": "The 2009 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships were held on 9–13 September 2009 at Parc Olímpic del Segre in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain under the auspices of International Canoe Federation. It was the 32nd edition. La Seu d'Urgell hosted the event previously in 1999. A demonstration event for women's single canoe (C1W) took place that was swept by Australia. Slovakia was the top medal winner with six, including three golds. Germany and Great Britain each won four medals with a gold medal each. Host nation Spain won their first medals ever at the championships with four (none gold).", "target": "world championship", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q52151202", "label": "Alex & Me", "source": "Alex & Me is a 2018 American fantasy-sports comedy film written and directed by Eric Champnella in his feature film debut. The film stars soccer player Alex Morgan in her acting debut and Siena Agudong. It was released direct-to-video by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment on June 12, 2018.", "target": "2018 film", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5313540", "label": "Dulwich College Shanghai", "source": "Dulwich College Shanghai Pudong (Dulwich Pudong, Chinese: 上海德威外籍人员子女学校) is a British international school located in Pudong, Shanghai, China. Located 10 miles (16 km) east of the Shanghai city centre, it caters to expatriate children from Toddler to Year 13 (aged 2 – 18 years old). The language of instruction is English and the College is co-educational and non-denominational.", "target": "private international school in JinQiao, PuDong, Shanghai, China", "baseline_candidates": ["school"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5452966", "label": "First English Lutheran Church", "source": "First English Lutheran Church was founded in 1879 Syracuse, New York. The building was designed by Archimedes Russell and built in 1911. It is significant for its mission-inspired architecture. The church's mission statement says that it is \"a safe, spiritual haven for sharing the truth and love of the gospel of Jesus Christ\" and that they \"welcome all people regardless of race, creed, color or sexual orientation for worship and community services,\" that they \"respect the needs of a changing world, maintain a history of our Lutheran roots and heritage, recognize our God given talents, especially the gift of music, grow as we reach out to serve our neighbors, friends of FEL, as well as each other,\" and that they \"hope, trust and pray that we might fulfill God's mission to share our many blessings. \"The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.", "target": "church building in New York, United States of America", "baseline_candidates": ["church building"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7772092", "label": "The Vaudeville Years", "source": "The Vaudeville Years of Fleetwood Mac 1968 to 1970 (or just The Vaudeville Years) is an album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in 1998. It was a compilation of outtakes and unreleased tracks from the band's early line up, none of which had previously been officially released. Available on double vinyl LP and double CD, it came with a booklet of extensive notes and anecdotes (written by Martin Celmins), and was the companion volume to Show-Biz Blues: Fleetwood Mac 1968–70, which was released a few years later. The release included songs originally intended for the second unreleased disc of Then Play On. These included tracks recorded by Jeremy Spencer. There was also a single live performance of \"Oh Well\" with the rest of the collection filled out with various alternative takes of familiar Green, Spencer and Kirwan songs, including an alternative take of Peter Green's \"The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown)\". \"The Vaudeville Years\" was reissued in 2008 as a double CD set with a single DVD, but without the extensive sleeve notes.", "target": "compilation album", "baseline_candidates": ["album"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q202937", "label": "Stevie Ray Vaughan", "source": "Stephen Ray Vaughan (October 3, 1954 – August 27, 1990) was an American musician, singer, songwriter, and record producer, best known as the guitarist and frontman of the blues rock trio Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble. Although his mainstream career only spanned seven years, he is regarded as one of the most influential musicians in the history of blues music, and one of the greatest guitarists of all time. Born and raised in Dallas, Vaughan began playing guitar at age seven, initially inspired by his elder brother, Jimmie Vaughan. In 1972, he dropped out of high school and moved to Austin, where he began to gain a following after playing gigs on the local club circuit. Vaughan joined forces with Tommy Shannon on bass and Chris Layton on drums as Double Trouble in 1978 and established it as part of the Austin music scene; it soon became one of the most popular acts in Texas. He performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1982, where David Bowie saw him play. Bowie contacted him for a studio gig which resulted in Vaughan playing blues guitar on the album Let's Dance (1983), before being discovered by John Hammond who interested major label Epic Records in signing Vaughan and his band to a record deal. Within months, they achieved mainstream success for the critically acclaimed debut album Texas Flood. With a series of successful network television appearances and extensive concert tours, Vaughan became the leading figure in the blues revival of the 1980s. Playing his guitar behind his.", "target": "American guitarist, songwriter and recording artist", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q975791", "label": "Jón Árnason", "source": "Jón Árnason (17 August 1819 — 4 September 1888) was an Icelandic author, librarian, and museum director who made the first collection of Icelandic folktales.", "target": "Icelandic folklorist (1819-1888)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q390630", "label": "Brachetto d'Acqui", "source": "Brachetto d'Acqui (Italian: [braˈketto ˈdakkwi]; Piedmontese: brachet d'Àich [braˌkɛt ˈdɑjk]) is a red Italian wine that is classified as a Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) since 1996 and previously a Denominazione di Origine Controllata (DOC) region since 1969. It is produced in the Piedmont wine region around Acqui Terme in the province of Alessandria with some overlap into the province of Asti. The wine is produced from the Brachetto grape, a variety that is believed to be native to Piedmont, and can be still or sparkling with usually some sweetness.", "target": "wine", "baseline_candidates": ["Italian wine", "wine"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q272103", "label": "Frederuna", "source": "Frederuna (or Frederonne, Fridarun; French: Frédérune or Frérone; 887–917) was the Queen consort of France by marriage to king Charles III of France. She was born in Goslar, Hanover to Dietrich Theodorich von Ringelheim, Duke of Saxony and his wife Gisela of Lotharingia. She was the half-sister of Matilda of Ringelheim, who married Henry the Fowler, King of East Francia, Amalrada, Bia, and a brother, Beuve II, the Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne, and the first wife of King Charles III of France, whom she married in 907. She bore Charles six daughters: Ermentrude, Gisela, Frederuna, Adelais, Rotrude and Hildegarde. Frederuna died in 917 and she was succeeded as queen consort by Eadgifu of England, a daughter of Edward the Elder in 919.", "target": "French queen consort", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q5381946", "label": "Eospilarctia pauper", "source": "Eospilarctia pauper is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Charles Oberthür in 1911. It is found in the Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan.", "target": "species of insect", "baseline_candidates": ["taxon"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q4492448", "label": "The French Guy", "source": "The French Guy (Russian: Француз) is a 2004 Russian comedy film directed by Vera Storozheva.", "target": "2004 film by Vera Storozheva", "baseline_candidates": ["film"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q20988793", "label": "2007–08 Toto Cup Artzit", "source": "The 2007–08 Toto Cup Artzit was the 9th time the cup was being contested. The final was played at Sar-Tov Stadium (HaKufsa) in Netanya on 11 December 2007. The winners were Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata, beating Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv 3–0 in the final.", "target": "football league season", "baseline_candidates": ["sports season"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q16864820", "label": "Sally Benson", "source": "Sally M. Benson is a professor of energy engineering at Stanford University. In 2014, she was appointed as director of the Precourt Institute for Energy, the university's hub of energy research and education. Benson will continue on as director of Stanford's Global Climate and Energy Project (GCEP), a position she has had since 2007.", "target": "American hydrologist, engineer, and professor", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7047147", "label": "Noel O'Flynn", "source": "Noel O'Flynn (born 1 December 1951) is a former Irish politician. A member of Fianna Fáil, he was a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Cork North-Central constituency from 1997 to 2011 and as a local councillor on Cork City Council from 1991 to 2003.", "target": "Irish Fianna Fáil politician", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q1588812", "label": "Hastings River", "source": "Hastings River (Birpai: Doongang), an open and trained intermediate wave dominated barrier estuary, is located in the Northern Tablelands and Mid North Coast districts of New South Wales, Australia.", "target": "river in New South Wales, Australia", "baseline_candidates": ["river"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q2571363", "label": "Wilfried Seyferth", "source": "Wilfried Seyferth (21 April 1908 – 9 October 1954) was a German actor, perhaps best known for Decision Before Dawn.He was married four times, to four actresses, Eva Ingeborg Scholz, Tatjana Iwanow, Irene Naef and Lu Säuberlich. He died in a traffic accident on 9 October 1954 in Wiesbaden, Hesse.", "target": "German actor (1908-1954)", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q19884549", "label": "Kishleyevo", "source": "Kishleyevo (Russian: Кишлеево) is a rural locality (a selo) in Tolpukhovskoye Rural Settlement, Sobinsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 396 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "target": "village in Sobinsky District, Russia", "baseline_candidates": ["village"]} {"wikidata_id": "Q7651834", "label": "Svein Engen", "source": "Svein Engen (born 27 March 1953, in Hønefoss) is a former Norwegian biathlete. He competed at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck and at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.He won five Norwegian biathlon championships.", "target": "Norwegian biathlete", "baseline_candidates": ["human"]}