input
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sentence: The sailors rode the breeze clear of the rocks. | acceptable |
sentence: The weights made the rope stretch over the pulley. | acceptable |
sentence: The mechanical doll wriggled itself loose. | acceptable |
sentence: If you had eaten more, you would want less. | acceptable |
sentence: As you eat the most, you want the least. | unacceptable |
sentence: The more you would want, the less you would eat. | unacceptable |
sentence: I demand that the more John eat, the more he pays. | unacceptable |
sentence: Mary listens to the Grateful Dead, she gets depressed. | acceptable |
sentence: The angrier Mary got, the more she looked at pictures. | acceptable |
sentence: The higher the stakes, the lower his expectations are. | acceptable |
sentence: The more Fred is obnoxious, the less attention you should pay to him. | acceptable |
sentence: John was lots more obnoxious than Fred. | acceptable |
sentence: The more people you give beer to, the more people get sick. | acceptable |
sentence: The more does Bill smoke, the more Susan hates him. | unacceptable |
sentence: The more pictures of him that appear in the news, the more embarrassed John becomes. | acceptable |
sentence: Every senator seems to become more corrupt, as he talks to more lobbyists. | acceptable |
sentence: Who does John visit Sally because he likes? | unacceptable |
sentence: Marianne did not leave. | acceptable |
sentence: He could not] have been working. | acceptable |
sentence: He can not have been working. | acceptable |
sentence: You will believe Bob. | acceptable |
sentence: John has not kissed Mary. | acceptable |
sentence: I said that never in my life had I seen a place like Bangor. | acceptable |
sentence: Mickey looked up it. | unacceptable |
sentence: There tended to be a lot of discussion. | acceptable |
sentence: John tried to be a good boy. | acceptable |
sentence: John is eager. | acceptable |
sentence: We want John to win. | acceptable |
sentence: The box contained the ball from the tree. | unacceptable |
sentence: The tube was escaped by gas. | unacceptable |
sentence: Water bubbled up out of the kettle. | acceptable |
sentence: The tub leaked water. | acceptable |
sentence: What the water did to the bottle was fill it. | unacceptable |
sentence: What the water did to the whole bottle was fill it. | unacceptable |
sentence: The tank leaked the fluid free. | acceptable |
sentence: John lay the ball in the box. | acceptable |
sentence: John owns the book. | acceptable |
sentence: We persuaded Mary to leave and Sue to stay. | acceptable |
sentence: Most people probably consider, even though the courts didn't actually find, Klaus guilty of murder. | acceptable |
sentence: Mary beautifully plays the violin. | unacceptable |
sentence: Clearly, John probably will immediately learn French perfectly. | acceptable |
sentence: Sue gave to Bill a book. | unacceptable |
sentence: The men will all leave. | acceptable |
sentence: John went home. | acceptable |
sentence: They represented seriously to the dean Mary as a genuine linguist. | unacceptable |
sentence: Us love they. | unacceptable |
sentence: It is nice to go abroad. | acceptable |
sentence: Mary intended John to go abroad. | unacceptable |
sentence: I remembered having kissed Mary. | acceptable |
sentence: I can't believe Fred won't, either. | acceptable |
sentence: John wants to read Fred's story, and I also want to. | acceptable |
sentence: We wanted to invite someone, but we couldn't decide who to. | unacceptable |
sentence: Mary will read Fred's story, and Joe will read Holly's. | acceptable |
sentence: Mary claimed that eating cabbage, Holly shouldn't. | acceptable |
sentence: Mary came to be introduced by the bartender and I also came to be. | unacceptable |
sentence: If I can, I will work on it. | acceptable |
sentence: Joe's neuroses bother his patrons, and Sally does too. | acceptable |
sentence: I know which book José didn't read for class, and which book Lilly did it for him. | unacceptable |
sentence: This is the book which Bob reviewed, and this is the one which Fred won't do it. | unacceptable |
sentence: I know which book Mag read, and which book Bob said that you hadn't. | acceptable |
sentence: I know which book Mag read, and which book Bob read my report that you hadn't. | unacceptable |
sentence: I'm sure I would like him to eat fruit more than I would cookies. | acceptable |
sentence: Rusty talked about himself only after Mary did talk about him. | acceptable |
sentence: Fred talked about everything before Rusty did talk about something. | acceptable |
sentence: John often meets Mary. | acceptable |
sentence: The problem perceives easily. | unacceptable |
sentence: A hundred men surrounded the fort. | acceptable |
sentence: We elected me. | acceptable |
sentence: Which report that John was incompetent did he submit? | unacceptable |
sentence: Mary has always preferred lemons to limes. | acceptable |
sentence: He let the cats which were whining out. | acceptable |
sentence: What did Bill buy? | acceptable |
sentence: Mary saw the boy walking toward the railroad station. | acceptable |
sentence: A proof that the claim had been. made was giver that John had lied. | unacceptable |
sentence: He attributed to a short circuit which was caused by an overloaded transducer the fire which destroyed most of my factory. | acceptable |
sentence: The mayor regarded as being absurd the proposal to build a sidewalk from Dartmouth to Smith. | unacceptable |
sentence: I want that Bill left to remain a secret. | unacceptable |
sentence: I know a man who Tom drives as drives. | unacceptable |
sentence: Drowning cats, which is against the law, are hard to rescue. | unacceptable |
sentence: Muriel said nothing else than that she had been insulted. | acceptable |
sentence: Himself is understood by Rutherford. | unacceptable |
sentence: I feel that Arch will show up. | acceptable |
sentence: The proof this set is recursive is difficult. | unacceptable |
sentence: The madrigals which Henry plays the lute and sings sound lousy. | unacceptable |
sentence: Tom picked these grapes, and I washed some turnips, and Suzie will prepare these grapes. | acceptable |
sentence: Where did you go and who ate what? | acceptable |
sentence: Which boy's did we elect guardian's employer president? | unacceptable |
sentence: How sane is Peter? | acceptable |
sentence: I live at the place where Route 150 crosses the River and my dad lives at the place where Route 150 crosses the Hudson River too. | acceptable |
sentence: I live at the place where Route 150 crosses the Hudson River and my dad lives at it too. | unacceptable |
sentence: Who is she trying to make up to now? | acceptable |
sentence: Wind was gotten of a plot to negotiate an honorable end to the war in Vietnam. | unacceptable |
sentence: Mike talked about politics yesterday to my friends. | acceptable |
sentence: It was expected by the reporters that the principal would fire some teacher. | acceptable |
sentence: Which hat did Mike quip that she never wore? | unacceptable |
sentence: Which girl did Mike quip never wore this hat? | unacceptable |
sentence: We donated wire for the convicts to build cages with. | acceptable |
sentence: I won't have some money. | unacceptable |
sentence: Do you believe the claim that somebody was looking for something? | acceptable |
sentence: I won't ask you to believe that he tried to force me to give her any money. | acceptable |
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