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The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer: | 126 film |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer: | it was miniaturised |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer: | no |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer:no
Question: How were processed negatives given back?
Answer: | in strips |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer:no
Question: How were processed negatives given back?
Answer:in strips
Question: Was this different from other types of film?
Answer: | yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer:no
Question: How were processed negatives given back?
Answer:in strips
Question: Was this different from other types of film?
Answer:yes
Question: Does it show the frame number?
Answer: | yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer:no
Question: How were processed negatives given back?
Answer:in strips
Question: Was this different from other types of film?
Answer:yes
Question: Does it show the frame number?
Answer:yes
Question: What else does it show?
Answer: | film type |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer:no
Question: How were processed negatives given back?
Answer:in strips
Question: Was this different from other types of film?
Answer:yes
Question: Does it show the frame number?
Answer:yes
Question: What else does it show?
Answer:film type
Question: Can it be used for videos?
Answer: | no |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: 110 is a cartridge-based film format used in still photography. It was introduced by Kodak in 1972. 110 is essentially a miniaturised version of Kodak's earlier 126 film format. Each frame is , with one registration hole. There were 24 frames per cartridge that occasionally enabled the user to capture an extra image due to production variations.
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, which also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type are visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound and is very simple to load and unload. It is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print.
Unlike later competing formats, such as disc and APS film, processed 110 negatives were returned in strips, without the original cartridge. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four frame strip measures 111 mm.
Question: What is 110?
Answer:film
Question: What kind of film?
Answer:cartridge-based
Question: What type of cartridge?
Answer:plastic
Question: When did it start being sold?
Answer:1972
Question: What is its width?
Answer:16 mm
Question: What was it first sold with?
Answer:Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras
Question: Did people buy a lot of them?
Answer:yes
Question: What was a competitor of that type of camera?
Answer:Minolta 16 series
Question: How many pictures could be taken with one roll?
Answer:24 to 25
Question: What company sold it?
Answer:Kodak
Question: Was it based off an earlier product?
Answer:yes
Question: Which one?
Answer:126 film
Question: What was the change?
Answer:it was miniaturised
Question: Is it difficult to use?
Answer:no
Question: How were processed negatives given back?
Answer:in strips
Question: Was this different from other types of film?
Answer:yes
Question: Does it show the frame number?
Answer:yes
Question: What else does it show?
Answer:film type
Question: Can it be used for videos?
Answer:no
Question: How long would a 24 frame strip be?
Answer: | 666 mm |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer: | Dick |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer: | Rover |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer: | Jesse Pelter |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer: | broker |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer: | Anderson Rover |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer:Anderson Rover
Question: Where was he before he vanished?
Answer: | the offices |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer:Anderson Rover
Question: Where was he before he vanished?
Answer:the offices
Question: Did he leave anything?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer:Anderson Rover
Question: Where was he before he vanished?
Answer:the offices
Question: Did he leave anything?
Answer:No
Question: What was he going to talk about earlier in the day?
Answer: | settling up |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer:Anderson Rover
Question: Where was he before he vanished?
Answer:the offices
Question: Did he leave anything?
Answer:No
Question: What was he going to talk about earlier in the day?
Answer:settling up
Question: For what?
Answer: | Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer:Anderson Rover
Question: Where was he before he vanished?
Answer:the offices
Question: Did he leave anything?
Answer:No
Question: What was he going to talk about earlier in the day?
Answer:settling up
Question: For what?
Answer:Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company
Question: Did he arrive?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: CHAPTER XVI
MORE DISCOVERIES
"You settled up with him in full?" gasped Rick.
"Yes-- some time ago."
"Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company."
"I was not talking about the Irrigation Company. That is another affair. Your father was to see us about that on the morning when he-- er-- when he failed to come here. I-- er-- I thought he had gone back home to get certain documents which he stated he did not have with him."
"And you haven't seen or heard of him since?"
"Not a word, Mr. Rover-- I give you my word."
"Did he leave any of his papers with you when he was here last?"
"No." Jesse Pelter took up the telephone on his desk. "Give me 2345 River!" he said to Central. He turned to Dick. "You will have to excuse me, Mr. Rover, I have some important business to transact."
"It isn't as important as finding my father,". answered Dick, bluntly.
"I do not know how I can aid you."
"Perhaps you don't care to try," returned Dick, pointedly, as he arose.
"What do you mean?" demanded the broker, and hanging up the telephone receiver, he, too, arose.
"Never mind what I mean, Mr. Pelter. If you will give me no aid, I'll find my father alone," and having thus spoken, Dick marched from the offices, leaving the broker staring after him curiously.
"Hum! Looks like a smart young man!" murmured Jesse Pelter, to himself. "And I thought Anderson Rover's boys were all school kids! This lad has grown up fast. I wonder what he'll do next? I guess I had better keep my eye on him."
Question: Who wanted to find his father?
Answer:Dick
Question: What's his last name?
Answer:Rover
Question: Who's he questioning?
Answer:Jesse Pelter
Question: What's his occupation?
Answer:broker
Question: Was he helpful?
Answer:No
Question: Who is his father?
Answer:Anderson Rover
Question: Where was he before he vanished?
Answer:the offices
Question: Did he leave anything?
Answer:No
Question: What was he going to talk about earlier in the day?
Answer:settling up
Question: For what?
Answer:Not for that stock in the Sunset Irrigation Company
Question: Did he arrive?
Answer:No
Question: What documents did he not have?
Answer: | certain documents |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Legends about the development of coffee are varied and interesting, involving chance occurrences, political tricks, and the pursuit of wealth and power.
According to one story, a sheepherder named Kaldi, as he tended his sheep, noticed the effect of coffee beans. He noticed that the sheep became excited after eating the red "cherries" from a certain plant when they changed pastures . He tried it himself, and was soon as overactive as his sheep. Another story relates that a monk happened to discover that this fruit from the shiny green plant could help him stay awake.
Another legend gives us the name for coffee, "mocha". Omar, an Arabian was thrown to the desert with his followers to die of starvation. In desperation, Omar had his friends boil and eat the fruit from an unknown plant. Not only did the soup save the group, but the residents of the nearest town, Mocha, took their survival as a religious sign. The plant and its beverage were named Mocha to honor this event.
Coffee was introduced much later to countries beyond Arabia, whose inhabitants believed it to be a tasty thing and guarded its secret as if they were top secret military plans. The government forbade transportation of the plant out of the Moslem nations. The actual spread of coffee was started illegally. One Arab named Baba Budan smuggled beans to some mountains near Mysore, India, and started a farm there. Early in this century, some of those original plants were found still growing fruitfully in the region.
Coffee today is grown and enjoyed worldwide, and is one of the few crops that small farmers in third-world countries can profitably export.
Question: What did a sheepherder notice when his sheep ate coffee beans?
Answer: | EFFECT |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Legends about the development of coffee are varied and interesting, involving chance occurrences, political tricks, and the pursuit of wealth and power.
According to one story, a sheepherder named Kaldi, as he tended his sheep, noticed the effect of coffee beans. He noticed that the sheep became excited after eating the red "cherries" from a certain plant when they changed pastures . He tried it himself, and was soon as overactive as his sheep. Another story relates that a monk happened to discover that this fruit from the shiny green plant could help him stay awake.
Another legend gives us the name for coffee, "mocha". Omar, an Arabian was thrown to the desert with his followers to die of starvation. In desperation, Omar had his friends boil and eat the fruit from an unknown plant. Not only did the soup save the group, but the residents of the nearest town, Mocha, took their survival as a religious sign. The plant and its beverage were named Mocha to honor this event.
Coffee was introduced much later to countries beyond Arabia, whose inhabitants believed it to be a tasty thing and guarded its secret as if they were top secret military plans. The government forbade transportation of the plant out of the Moslem nations. The actual spread of coffee was started illegally. One Arab named Baba Budan smuggled beans to some mountains near Mysore, India, and started a farm there. Early in this century, some of those original plants were found still growing fruitfully in the region.
Coffee today is grown and enjoyed worldwide, and is one of the few crops that small farmers in third-world countries can profitably export.
Question: What did a sheepherder notice when his sheep ate coffee beans?
Answer:EFFECT
Question: what kind of effect?
Answer: | sheep became excited |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Legends about the development of coffee are varied and interesting, involving chance occurrences, political tricks, and the pursuit of wealth and power.
According to one story, a sheepherder named Kaldi, as he tended his sheep, noticed the effect of coffee beans. He noticed that the sheep became excited after eating the red "cherries" from a certain plant when they changed pastures . He tried it himself, and was soon as overactive as his sheep. Another story relates that a monk happened to discover that this fruit from the shiny green plant could help him stay awake.
Another legend gives us the name for coffee, "mocha". Omar, an Arabian was thrown to the desert with his followers to die of starvation. In desperation, Omar had his friends boil and eat the fruit from an unknown plant. Not only did the soup save the group, but the residents of the nearest town, Mocha, took their survival as a religious sign. The plant and its beverage were named Mocha to honor this event.
Coffee was introduced much later to countries beyond Arabia, whose inhabitants believed it to be a tasty thing and guarded its secret as if they were top secret military plans. The government forbade transportation of the plant out of the Moslem nations. The actual spread of coffee was started illegally. One Arab named Baba Budan smuggled beans to some mountains near Mysore, India, and started a farm there. Early in this century, some of those original plants were found still growing fruitfully in the region.
Coffee today is grown and enjoyed worldwide, and is one of the few crops that small farmers in third-world countries can profitably export.
Question: What did a sheepherder notice when his sheep ate coffee beans?
Answer:EFFECT
Question: what kind of effect?
Answer:sheep became excited
Question: did he try it himslef?
Answer: | YES |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Legends about the development of coffee are varied and interesting, involving chance occurrences, political tricks, and the pursuit of wealth and power.
According to one story, a sheepherder named Kaldi, as he tended his sheep, noticed the effect of coffee beans. He noticed that the sheep became excited after eating the red "cherries" from a certain plant when they changed pastures . He tried it himself, and was soon as overactive as his sheep. Another story relates that a monk happened to discover that this fruit from the shiny green plant could help him stay awake.
Another legend gives us the name for coffee, "mocha". Omar, an Arabian was thrown to the desert with his followers to die of starvation. In desperation, Omar had his friends boil and eat the fruit from an unknown plant. Not only did the soup save the group, but the residents of the nearest town, Mocha, took their survival as a religious sign. The plant and its beverage were named Mocha to honor this event.
Coffee was introduced much later to countries beyond Arabia, whose inhabitants believed it to be a tasty thing and guarded its secret as if they were top secret military plans. The government forbade transportation of the plant out of the Moslem nations. The actual spread of coffee was started illegally. One Arab named Baba Budan smuggled beans to some mountains near Mysore, India, and started a farm there. Early in this century, some of those original plants were found still growing fruitfully in the region.
Coffee today is grown and enjoyed worldwide, and is one of the few crops that small farmers in third-world countries can profitably export.
Question: What did a sheepherder notice when his sheep ate coffee beans?
Answer:EFFECT
Question: what kind of effect?
Answer:sheep became excited
Question: did he try it himslef?
Answer:YES
Question: what happened?
Answer: | HE WASoveractive |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Legends about the development of coffee are varied and interesting, involving chance occurrences, political tricks, and the pursuit of wealth and power.
According to one story, a sheepherder named Kaldi, as he tended his sheep, noticed the effect of coffee beans. He noticed that the sheep became excited after eating the red "cherries" from a certain plant when they changed pastures . He tried it himself, and was soon as overactive as his sheep. Another story relates that a monk happened to discover that this fruit from the shiny green plant could help him stay awake.
Another legend gives us the name for coffee, "mocha". Omar, an Arabian was thrown to the desert with his followers to die of starvation. In desperation, Omar had his friends boil and eat the fruit from an unknown plant. Not only did the soup save the group, but the residents of the nearest town, Mocha, took their survival as a religious sign. The plant and its beverage were named Mocha to honor this event.
Coffee was introduced much later to countries beyond Arabia, whose inhabitants believed it to be a tasty thing and guarded its secret as if they were top secret military plans. The government forbade transportation of the plant out of the Moslem nations. The actual spread of coffee was started illegally. One Arab named Baba Budan smuggled beans to some mountains near Mysore, India, and started a farm there. Early in this century, some of those original plants were found still growing fruitfully in the region.
Coffee today is grown and enjoyed worldwide, and is one of the few crops that small farmers in third-world countries can profitably export.
Question: What did a sheepherder notice when his sheep ate coffee beans?
Answer:EFFECT
Question: what kind of effect?
Answer:sheep became excited
Question: did he try it himslef?
Answer:YES
Question: what happened?
Answer:HE WASoveractive
Question: whaty does the word Mocha derive from?
Answer: | soup |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Legends about the development of coffee are varied and interesting, involving chance occurrences, political tricks, and the pursuit of wealth and power.
According to one story, a sheepherder named Kaldi, as he tended his sheep, noticed the effect of coffee beans. He noticed that the sheep became excited after eating the red "cherries" from a certain plant when they changed pastures . He tried it himself, and was soon as overactive as his sheep. Another story relates that a monk happened to discover that this fruit from the shiny green plant could help him stay awake.
Another legend gives us the name for coffee, "mocha". Omar, an Arabian was thrown to the desert with his followers to die of starvation. In desperation, Omar had his friends boil and eat the fruit from an unknown plant. Not only did the soup save the group, but the residents of the nearest town, Mocha, took their survival as a religious sign. The plant and its beverage were named Mocha to honor this event.
Coffee was introduced much later to countries beyond Arabia, whose inhabitants believed it to be a tasty thing and guarded its secret as if they were top secret military plans. The government forbade transportation of the plant out of the Moslem nations. The actual spread of coffee was started illegally. One Arab named Baba Budan smuggled beans to some mountains near Mysore, India, and started a farm there. Early in this century, some of those original plants were found still growing fruitfully in the region.
Coffee today is grown and enjoyed worldwide, and is one of the few crops that small farmers in third-world countries can profitably export.
Question: What did a sheepherder notice when his sheep ate coffee beans?
Answer:EFFECT
Question: what kind of effect?
Answer:sheep became excited
Question: did he try it himslef?
Answer:YES
Question: what happened?
Answer:HE WASoveractive
Question: whaty does the word Mocha derive from?
Answer:soup
Question: why was Omar thrown into the desert?
Answer: | to die |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer: | no precise area |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer: | a cultural entity |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer: | Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer: | Five |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer: | during the Cold War |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer: | Eastern Bloc |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer:Eastern Bloc
Question: Which former communist states are named as being Eastern Europe?
Answer: | states outside the Soviet Union |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer:Eastern Bloc
Question: Which former communist states are named as being Eastern Europe?
Answer:states outside the Soviet Union
Question: Are these old definitions?
Answer: | Some historians and social scientists say so |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer:Eastern Bloc
Question: Which former communist states are named as being Eastern Europe?
Answer:states outside the Soviet Union
Question: Are these old definitions?
Answer:Some historians and social scientists say so
Question: What are definitions missing?
Answer: | precision |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer:Eastern Bloc
Question: Which former communist states are named as being Eastern Europe?
Answer:states outside the Soviet Union
Question: Are these old definitions?
Answer:Some historians and social scientists say so
Question: What are definitions missing?
Answer:precision
Question: Do all political scientists agree?
Answer: | no |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer:Eastern Bloc
Question: Which former communist states are named as being Eastern Europe?
Answer:states outside the Soviet Union
Question: Are these old definitions?
Answer:Some historians and social scientists say so
Question: What are definitions missing?
Answer:precision
Question: Do all political scientists agree?
Answer:no
Question: Are there a lot of connotations to the term?
Answer: | yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region". A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct".
One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term "Eastern Bloc". A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.
Several other definitions of Eastern Europe exist today, but they often lack precision, are too general or outdated. These definitions vary both across cultures and among experts, even political scientists, as the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations.
Question: What exact area does Eastern Europe cover?
Answer:no precise area
Question: What is one way it is defined?
Answer:a cultural entity
Question: How many influence does that say it has?
Answer:Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian , and some Ottoman culture influences
Question: How many is that?
Answer:Five
Question: When did they come up with another way to define it?
Answer:during the Cold War
Question: What does it basically have for a synonym?
Answer:Eastern Bloc
Question: Which former communist states are named as being Eastern Europe?
Answer:states outside the Soviet Union
Question: Are these old definitions?
Answer:Some historians and social scientists say so
Question: What are definitions missing?
Answer:precision
Question: Do all political scientists agree?
Answer:no
Question: Are there a lot of connotations to the term?
Answer:yes
Question: Where is Eastern Europe?
Answer: | the eastern part of the European continent |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Index Medicus (IM) is a curated subset of MEDLINE, which is a bibliographic database of life science and biomedical science information, principally scientific journal articles. From 1879 to 2004, "Index Medicus" was a comprehensive bibliographic index of such articles in the form of a print index or (in later years) its onscreen equivalent. It was begun by John Shaw Billings, head of the Library of the Surgeon General's Office, United States Army. This library later evolved into the United States National Library of Medicine (NLM). In the 1960s, the NLM began the indexing work by creating MEDLARS, a bibliographic database, which became MEDLINE. "Index Medicus" thus became the print presentation of the MEDLINE database's content, which users accessed usually by visiting a library which subscribed to "Index Medicus" (for example, a university scientist at the university library). It continued in this role through the 1980s and 1990s, while various electronic presentations of MEDLINE's content also evolved, first with proprietary online services (accessed mostly at libraries) and later with CD-ROMs, then with Entrez and PubMed. As users gradually migrated from print to online use, "Index Medicus" print subscriptions dwindled. During the 1990s, the dissemination of home internet connections, the launch of the Web and web browsers, and the launch of PubMed greatly accelerated the shift of online access to MEDLINE from something one did at the library to something one did anywhere. This dissemination, along with the superior usability of search compared with use of a print index in serving the user's purpose (which is to distill relevant subsets of information from a vast superset), caused the use of MEDLINE's print output, "Index Medicus", to drop precipitously. In 2004, print publication ceased. Today, "Index Medicus" and "Abridged Index Medicus" still exist conceptually as content curation services that curate MEDLINE content into search subsets or database views (in other words, subsets of MEDLINE records from some journals but not others). This filters search results with a view toward excluding poor-quality articles (such as by excluding junk journals), which is often helpful depending on the needs of the user.
Question: What year did print publication stop?
Answer: | unknown |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer: | Sony Music Entertainment Inc. |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer: | American |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer: | 1929 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer: | ARC |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer: | 1938 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer: | Columbia Recording Corporation |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer: | 1966 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer: | CBS Records |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer: | 1987 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer:1987
Question: What did they rename it
Answer: | SME |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer:1987
Question: What did they rename it
Answer:SME
Question: Are they the largest music group
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer:1987
Question: What did they rename it
Answer:SME
Question: Are they the largest music group
Answer:No
Question: Who is the largest
Answer: | Universal Music Group |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer:1987
Question: What did they rename it
Answer:SME
Question: Are they the largest music group
Answer:No
Question: Who is the largest
Answer:Universal Music Group
Question: Who did SME merge with in 2004
Answer: | Bertelsmann Music Group |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer:1987
Question: What did they rename it
Answer:SME
Question: Are they the largest music group
Answer:No
Question: Who is the largest
Answer:Universal Music Group
Question: Who did SME merge with in 2004
Answer:Bertelsmann Music Group
Question: What were they called after the merger
Answer: | Sony BMG Music Entertainment |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (sometimes known as Sony Music or by the initials, SME) is an American music corporation managed and operated by Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate Sony Corporation. In 1929, the enterprise was first founded as American Record Corporation (ARC) and, in 1938, was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation, following ARC's acquisition by CBS. In 1966, the company was reorganized to become CBS Records. In 1987, Sony Corporation of Japan bought the company, and in 1991, renamed it SME. It is the world's second largest recorded music company, after Universal Music Group.
In 2004, SME and Bertelsmann Music Group merged as Sony BMG Music Entertainment. When Sony acquired BMG's half of the conglomerate in 2008, Sony BMG reverted to the SME name. The buyout led to the dissolution of BMG, which then relaunched as BMG Rights Management. Out of the "Big Three" record companies, with Universal Music Group being the largest and Warner Music Group, SME is middle-sized.
Question: What company is the article about
Answer:Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
Question: What country are they out of
Answer:American
Question: What year were they founded
Answer:1929
Question: What was the original name
Answer:ARC
Question: What year did this change
Answer:1938
Question: What was the new name
Answer:Columbia Recording Corporation
Question: What year did CBS obtain it
Answer:1966
Question: What were they called then
Answer:CBS Records
Question: What year did Sony Corporation of Japan purchase it
Answer:1987
Question: What did they rename it
Answer:SME
Question: Are they the largest music group
Answer:No
Question: Who is the largest
Answer:Universal Music Group
Question: Who did SME merge with in 2004
Answer:Bertelsmann Music Group
Question: What were they called after the merger
Answer:Sony BMG Music Entertainment
Question: What year did Sony acquire BMG's half of the conglomerate
Answer: | 2008 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer: | monthly spikes in their water bills |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer: | $200 to $250. |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer: | $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer: | no |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer:no
Question: Why?
Answer: | they were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks and its a high price |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer:no
Question: Why?
Answer:they were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks and its a high price
Question: What did the company do?
Answer: | installed a device on her meter to track daily usage |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer:no
Question: Why?
Answer:they were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks and its a high price
Question: What did the company do?
Answer:installed a device on her meter to track daily usage
Question: Is she by herself?
Answer: | no |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer:no
Question: Why?
Answer:they were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks and its a high price
Question: What did the company do?
Answer:installed a device on her meter to track daily usage
Question: Is she by herself?
Answer:no
Question: Where else?
Answer: | in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer:no
Question: Why?
Answer:they were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks and its a high price
Question: What did the company do?
Answer:installed a device on her meter to track daily usage
Question: Is she by herself?
Answer:no
Question: Where else?
Answer:in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts
Question: What are people doing because of it?
Answer: | a class-action lawsuit, |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Atlanta (CNN) -- Imagine paying as much for water as you do for your mortgage.
Residents throughout Atlanta are outraged by hundreds, even thousands of dollars in monthly spikes in their water bills, and have questioned the legitimacy of the charges for years. Now, they're demanding answers.
"I thought we were sinking in a hole of water," said Debbi Scarborough. "It scared me to death. I thought we had a major leak when I got the bill."
Over two months last summer, her family's monthly water bill, shot up to $1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000. She said in the past her bill has averaged $200 to $250.
"I'm not paying a $3,000 bill. And for those three months, we were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks," she said, showing CNN a copy of her plumber's report.
The city installed a device on her meter to track daily usage. In the meantime, Scarborough's bill remains unpaid while she disputes the charges.
She is not alone.
While similar complaints about huge water bill spikes have popped up in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts; it appears that the issue has lasted the longest in Atlanta.
See how top 50 cities rank
It's led to a class-action lawsuit, countless meetings with city officials and continuing complaints from fed-up residents.
Thousands of residents who have seen unusual spikes have appealed their high water bills. Just last year, the city issued credits totaling $466,368 to customers.
Question: What is Debbi mad about?
Answer:monthly spikes in their water bills
Question: What was it in the past?
Answer:$200 to $250.
Question: What is it now?
Answer:$1,805 In July and then $1,084 in August, leaving a balance due of more than $3,000.
Question: Is she going to pay it?
Answer:no
Question: Why?
Answer:they were pretty much out of town most of the time and there's no leaks and its a high price
Question: What did the company do?
Answer:installed a device on her meter to track daily usage
Question: Is she by herself?
Answer:no
Question: Where else?
Answer:in Cleveland, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; Tampa, Florida; and Brockton, Massachusetts
Question: What are people doing because of it?
Answer:a class-action lawsuit,
Question: How much in credit sent out?
Answer: | $466,368 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer: | unknown |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer: | Kevin Nealon |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer:No
Question: what did they call him?
Answer: | Gable |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer:No
Question: what did they call him?
Answer:Gable
Question: what is Kevin's profession?
Answer: | comedian |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer:No
Question: what did they call him?
Answer:Gable
Question: what is Kevin's profession?
Answer:comedian
Question: was he on a television show?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer:No
Question: what did they call him?
Answer:Gable
Question: what is Kevin's profession?
Answer:comedian
Question: was he on a television show?
Answer:Yes
Question: what one?
Answer: | SNL |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer:No
Question: what did they call him?
Answer:Gable
Question: what is Kevin's profession?
Answer:comedian
Question: was he on a television show?
Answer:Yes
Question: what one?
Answer:SNL
Question: is that an acronym?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN) -- "We looked at ports in Europe. We looked at street signs. Things on the menu."
In the end, comedian Kevin Nealon and his wife decided to name their son Gable. As in Clark Gable. They simply liked the sound of it, and most people will agree it's far better than Helsinki, 43rd Avenue or Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
This was 4½ years ago, but the former "Saturday Night Live" star still loves to talk about his son. In 2009, he even published a book about becoming a first-time dad called "Yes, You're Pregnant, But What About Me?"
"We finally got the pacifier away from him," Nealon says of Gable. "And now we're potty training him. It would've been easier to get the pacifier away from him if we taught him how to pee on it."
Nealon describes himself as a hands-on father but admits, "It's because I don't work that much."
In that sense, he sort of sounds like his character, Doug Wilson, on Showtime's "Weeds," a pot-smoking, former CPA-drifter with a pretty much nonexistent moral compass. However, as you'll see and hear in our recent video interview, Nealon and Doug Wilson are really nothing alike.
"I have a lot of hobbies, and I have a lot of friends," he says. "And I'm not so insecure as Doug."
They have even greater differences, but everyone still loves Doug. For all his faults and failures, fans just can't get enough of the self-centered, shamed city councilman of fictional Agrestic, and he has become, perhaps, Nealon's most beloved character on TV. This, from the man who spent a decade on "SNL," "entertaining viewers with Hans and Franz and Mr. Subliminal.
Question: what is the title of the book?
Answer:unknown
Question: who is the article about?
Answer:Kevin Nealon
Question: is he married?
Answer:Yes
Question: did he have a baby?
Answer:Yes
Question: was it a girl?
Answer:No
Question: did they name him Tom?
Answer:No
Question: what did they call him?
Answer:Gable
Question: what is Kevin's profession?
Answer:comedian
Question: was he on a television show?
Answer:Yes
Question: what one?
Answer:SNL
Question: is that an acronym?
Answer:Yes
Question: what does it stand for?
Answer: | "Saturday Night Live" |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer: | Mirth Pham |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer: | Vietnam |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer: | almost two years |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer: | 23 |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer: | a box of cereal |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer: | to a movie |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer: | the process of re-socialization |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer: | many years |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer:Yes
Question: For help?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer:Yes
Question: For help?
Answer:No
Question: For what?
Answer: | to dinner |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer:Yes
Question: For help?
Answer:No
Question: For what?
Answer:to dinner
Question: Where did Minh want to go before seeing the film?
Answer: | a restaurant |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer:Yes
Question: For help?
Answer:No
Question: For what?
Answer:to dinner
Question: Where did Minh want to go before seeing the film?
Answer:a restaurant
Question: Did his friend pull him towards a place to eat?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer:Yes
Question: For help?
Answer:No
Question: For what?
Answer:to dinner
Question: Where did Minh want to go before seeing the film?
Answer:a restaurant
Question: Did his friend pull him towards a place to eat?
Answer:No
Question: Do people in the US hold hands much?
Answer: | No |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: Mirth Pham was born in Vietnam. He left his native country when he was 21 years old. Minh has been in America for almost two years. There is still much he does not understand about America.
Once Minh was in a supermarket. He saw an old man and an old woman. They wanted a box of cereal .The box was on a high shelf. The man and the woman couldn't reach it. Minh saw a ladder. He got on the ladder and got the box. He handed it to the elderly couple. They thanked him.
"Where are your children?" asked Minh. "Why don' t they help you buy food?"
"Our children have their own lives," said the man and the woman. "We like to be independent." Mirth doesn't think this is right. In his country, .children help their parents. Minh gave the elderly couple his phone number. He told them to call him if they needed help. One night they asked Mirth to dinner, but they never asked him for help.
One day, Minh was walking with a Vietnamese friend. The two were going to a movie. Minh wanted to go to a restaurant first. Minh took his friend's hand. He pulled him toward the restaurant. People on the street stared at Minh. In Vietnam, friends often hold hands. Minh found out that people in America are not used to holding hands.
Minh Pham is going through a process known as re-socialization. Socialization is the process in which a person learns to live in a society. Everyone goes through this process. Minh went through it when he lived in Vietnam. But the Vietnamese way of life is much different from the American way of life. When Mirth came to America, he had to learn a new way of life. He had to learn how to live in a new society.
Minh has learned a lot about American life in two years. He still has a lot to learn. The process of re-socialization can take many years.
Question: Who is this story about?
Answer:Mirth Pham
Question: Where's he from?
Answer:Vietnam
Question: How long has he be in the US?
Answer:almost two years
Question: How old is he?
Answer:23
Question: What were elderly couple in the store wanting to buy?
Answer:a box of cereal
Question: Did he help them?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did the couple have kids?
Answer:Yes
Question: Where was he and his friend going, on foot?
Answer:to a movie
Question: Do friends normally hold hands where he's from?
Answer:Yes
Question: Is the way of life there the same as the in the US?
Answer:No
Question: What did he go through to learn to live in a new country?
Answer:the process of re-socialization
Question: How long can it take?
Answer:many years
Question: Did the elderly couple have a way to contact him?
Answer:Yes
Question: Did they?
Answer:Yes
Question: For help?
Answer:No
Question: For what?
Answer:to dinner
Question: Where did Minh want to go before seeing the film?
Answer:a restaurant
Question: Did his friend pull him towards a place to eat?
Answer:No
Question: Do people in the US hold hands much?
Answer:No
Question: Does Minh have more to learn about the US?
Answer: | Yes |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN)After weeks of controversy and the sudden departures of two co-hosts, "Fashion Police" is going on an extended break.
The fashion commentary show on E! channel announced Tuesday that it will be on hiatus until September.
"We look forward to taking this opportunity to refresh the show before the next awards season," it said in a statement.
The announcement caps a rocky few months.
Last week, co-host Kathy Griffin bid the show bye-bye after seven episodes, saying her style did not blend in with her co-hosts. She made a dig at the show on her way out.
"There is plenty to make fun of in pop culture without bringing people's bodies into it," she said in a statement. "I do not want to use my comedy to contribute to a culture of unattainable perfectionism and intolerance towards difference."
Shortly before her departure, co-host Giuliana Rancic faced backlash last month for suggesting that Disney star Zendaya Coleman's dreadlocks smelled of marijuana.
Rancic later issued an on-air apology to the 18-year-old after social media jumped to the teen's defense.
But her apology was not enough for co-host Kelly Osbourne, who criticized her remarks and quit a few days later.
Rancic and fellow co-host Brad Goreski will return in September, along with executive producer Melissa Rivers.
Question: What channel is the show on?
Answer: | E! channel |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN)After weeks of controversy and the sudden departures of two co-hosts, "Fashion Police" is going on an extended break.
The fashion commentary show on E! channel announced Tuesday that it will be on hiatus until September.
"We look forward to taking this opportunity to refresh the show before the next awards season," it said in a statement.
The announcement caps a rocky few months.
Last week, co-host Kathy Griffin bid the show bye-bye after seven episodes, saying her style did not blend in with her co-hosts. She made a dig at the show on her way out.
"There is plenty to make fun of in pop culture without bringing people's bodies into it," she said in a statement. "I do not want to use my comedy to contribute to a culture of unattainable perfectionism and intolerance towards difference."
Shortly before her departure, co-host Giuliana Rancic faced backlash last month for suggesting that Disney star Zendaya Coleman's dreadlocks smelled of marijuana.
Rancic later issued an on-air apology to the 18-year-old after social media jumped to the teen's defense.
But her apology was not enough for co-host Kelly Osbourne, who criticized her remarks and quit a few days later.
Rancic and fellow co-host Brad Goreski will return in September, along with executive producer Melissa Rivers.
Question: What channel is the show on?
Answer:E! channel
Question: What is the name of the show?
Answer: | Fashion Police |
The following are stories and questions about them. Each story is followed by a question and answer to a given question.
Story: (CNN)After weeks of controversy and the sudden departures of two co-hosts, "Fashion Police" is going on an extended break.
The fashion commentary show on E! channel announced Tuesday that it will be on hiatus until September.
"We look forward to taking this opportunity to refresh the show before the next awards season," it said in a statement.
The announcement caps a rocky few months.
Last week, co-host Kathy Griffin bid the show bye-bye after seven episodes, saying her style did not blend in with her co-hosts. She made a dig at the show on her way out.
"There is plenty to make fun of in pop culture without bringing people's bodies into it," she said in a statement. "I do not want to use my comedy to contribute to a culture of unattainable perfectionism and intolerance towards difference."
Shortly before her departure, co-host Giuliana Rancic faced backlash last month for suggesting that Disney star Zendaya Coleman's dreadlocks smelled of marijuana.
Rancic later issued an on-air apology to the 18-year-old after social media jumped to the teen's defense.
But her apology was not enough for co-host Kelly Osbourne, who criticized her remarks and quit a few days later.
Rancic and fellow co-host Brad Goreski will return in September, along with executive producer Melissa Rivers.
Question: What channel is the show on?
Answer:E! channel
Question: What is the name of the show?
Answer:Fashion Police
Question: Is it going to air in August?
Answer: | no |
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