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The cup filled water.
0unacceptable
600
The stone knocked the pole into the road.
0unacceptable
601
The tub leaked empty of water.
1acceptable
602
The stone knocked against the pole into the road.
0unacceptable
603
Hail stones broke the window.
1acceptable
604
The force of the wind broke the window.
1acceptable
605
The window broke from hail stones.
0unacceptable
606
The window broke from the force of the wind.
1acceptable
607
What the force of the wind did to the window was break it.
1acceptable
608
John hit the stone against the wall.
1acceptable
609
John hit the wall with the stone.
1acceptable
610
John tapped some wine from a barrel.
1acceptable
611
John tapped a barrel of some wine.
1acceptable
612
John laid the book on the table.
1acceptable
613
John included his name in the list.
1acceptable
614
John loaded the bricks onto the truck.
1acceptable
615
John loaded the truck with bricks.
1acceptable
616
John fed rice to the baby.
1acceptable
617
John fed the baby rice.
1acceptable
618
John fed the baby up with rice.
1acceptable
619
John fed the baby rice up.
0unacceptable
620
The ball lies completely in the box.
1acceptable
621
The box completely contains the ball.
1acceptable
622
The train got to the station fully.
1acceptable
623
The train reached the station fully.
1acceptable
624
Press the stamp against the pad completely.
1acceptable
625
Press the pad with the stamp completely.
1acceptable
626
Spray the paint onto the wall completely.
1acceptable
627
Spray all the paint onto the wall completely.
1acceptable
628
Spray the wall with all the paint.
0unacceptable
629
Spray the whole wall with the paint.
1acceptable
630
What John did to the wall was paint it.
1acceptable
631
What John did to the whole wall was paint it.
1acceptable
632
What John did to the wall was hit it.
1acceptable
633
What the stone did to the wall was hit it.
0unacceptable
634
What the stone did to the whole wall was hit it.
0unacceptable
635
John took Bill to be a fool.
1acceptable
636
John concluded Bill to be a fool.
0unacceptable
637
Give the bottle to the baby full.
1acceptable
638
Give the bottle to the baby awake.
0unacceptable
639
Give the baby the bottle full.
1acceptable
640
Give the baby the bottle awake.
0unacceptable
641
Rub the cloth on the baby torn.
1acceptable
642
Rub the cloth on the baby asleep.
0unacceptable
643
Rub the baby with the cloth torn.
1acceptable
644
Rub the baby with the cloth asleep.
0unacceptable
645
Dry the baby with the cloth asleep.
1acceptable
646
Dry the baby with the cloth torn.
0unacceptable
647
The cup knocked the stone apart.
0unacceptable
648
The stone knocked the cup apart.
1acceptable
649
The cup smashed apart against the stone.
1acceptable
650
The stone smashed the cup apart.
1acceptable
651
The tank filled with petrol out of the pump.
1acceptable
652
The cup emptied of water onto the ground.
1acceptable
653
John included her name in the list.
1acceptable
654
John rolled the ball from the tree to the bush.
1acceptable
655
John tapped the bottle of some water.
1acceptable
656
John gave Bill the book.
1acceptable
657
John got the book from Bill.
1acceptable
658
John gave Bill of the book.
0unacceptable
659
We have someone in the living room.
1acceptable
660
John is very fond of Mary.
1acceptable
661
Mary laughed at John.
1acceptable
662
The ship sank beneath the waves.
1acceptable
663
Mary considers John a fool and Bill a wimp.
1acceptable
664
John regards professors as strange and politicians as creepy.
1acceptable
665
Sue put the books on the table and the records on the chair.
1acceptable
666
Harriet gave a mug to John and a scarf to Vivien.
1acceptable
667
I expect John to win and Harry to lose.
1acceptable
668
You eat the fish raw and the beef cooked.
1acceptable
669
They told Sue who to talk to and Virginia when to leave.
1acceptable
670
Smith loaned, and his widow later donated, a valuable collection of manuscripts to the library.
1acceptable
671
Sue moved, and Mary also transferred, her business to a different location.
1acceptable
672
I succeeded in convincing, even though John had failed to persuade, Mary not to leave.
1acceptable
673
We didn't particularly like, but nevertheless ate, the fish raw.
1acceptable
674
Flo desperately wants, though she doesn't really expect, the Miami Dolphins to be in the play-offs.
1acceptable
675
John learned French perfectly.
1acceptable
676
Bill recited his lines poorly.
1acceptable
677
Mary plays the violin beautifully.
1acceptable
678
John perfectly learned French.
0unacceptable
679
Bill poorly recited his lines.
0unacceptable
680
John learned French immediately.
1acceptable
681
Bill recited his lines slowly.
1acceptable
682
Mary will play the violin soon.
1acceptable
683
John immediately learned French.
1acceptable
684
Bill slowly recited his lines.
1acceptable
685
Mary will soon play the violin.
1acceptable
686
John immediately learned French perfectly.
1acceptable
687
John learned French perfectly almost immediately.
1acceptable
688
John learned French perfectly immediately.
1acceptable
689
John perfectly learned French immediately.
0unacceptable
690
John learned French immediately perfectly.
0unacceptable
691
Clearly, John immediately will probably learn French perfectly.
0unacceptable
692
Immediately, John probably will clearly learn French perfectly.
0unacceptable
693
Clearly, John perfectly will immediately learn French probably.
0unacceptable
694
John perfectly rolled the ball down the hill.
0unacceptable
695
John rolled the ball perfectly down the hill.
1acceptable
696
John rolled the ball down the hill perfectly.
1acceptable
697
John perfectly shot the ball.
0unacceptable
698
John shot the ball perfectly.
1acceptable
699