premise stringlengths 10 639 | hypothesis stringlengths 7 461 | label stringclasses 3
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|---|---|---|
N otting Hill opens with an superfluous voice-over that sets the scene and makes certain that the audience is oriented. | There is a superfluous voice-over at the opening of Notting Hill. | entailment |
When a decision-maker is more conscious of costs than of benefits, he tends to make decisions that are overly conservative. | If a decision makers is thinking more about costs than benefits, they will make an aggressive decision. | contradiction |
How does one tell foresight from fear? | How can fear and foresight be differentiated? | entailment |
And has the following point been made on the Op-Ed that Arianna Huffington and Warren Beatty have chosen to attack centrist Democrats as cynical sellouts who ignore American poverty just when, according to the Census Bureau, those cynical centrists are making the greatest strides against poverty that have been made in... | Huffington and Beatty may be attacking the wrong people to solve the problem. | neutral |
The larger bill would fortify the Border Patrol, facilitate deportations, and restrict the benefits available to illegal aliens; the detached bill would let states exclude children of illegal aliens from public schools. | The larger bill would reinforce the border between America and illegal immigrants. | entailment |
The little identifying cards psychologist Gordon sets beside each item display an impressive mastery of the manipulative arts. | Gordon enjoys the art of manipulation. | entailment |
And by following up his serious accusation (i.e. | This particular accusation was rather trivial | contradiction |
She and her colleagues could trust him to win peace without appeasement. | Her and her colleagues never trusted him and wanted to handle the matter themselves. | contradiction |
And second, in fact, there is no obligation to disclose anything. | The author doesn't want anyone to disclose statements they shouldn't. | neutral |
The world is not now in depression, nor is a full-scale replay of the 1930s likely. | While the depression may be unlikely, a recession could happen in a shorter timeframe. | neutral |
No wonder, then, that right-wingers think of PBS as liberal and lefties regard it as a corporate/conservative tool. | PBS is seen in a highly favorable manner by both right and left wing individuals. | contradiction |
Trent Lott recently called the agency intrusive, abusive, and out of control. | His comments came in response to the recent news that was released. | neutral |
It'll be a good thing for all of us if she finally gets into the habit of speaking for herself. | She does not speak for herself sometimes. | entailment |
We should lead by example and suasion. | We should not lead by persuasion or example. | contradiction |
That's what the Globe had to do last week for actress Bo Derek and her director husband, John. | The Globe covered a story about Bo Derek and her husband | entailment |
Please, do you have an answer for these well-wishers that would not require giving them private and personal information? | The author wants to give the poor his identifying details. | contradiction |
Some evidence from public records is suggestive. | Some of the evidence is not objective. | entailment |
The Supreme Court has never ruled on FISA, and it did not overturn a McCarthy-era statute which, like the removal court, was used to deport noncriminal aliens based on their political affiliations. | Some noncriminal aliens were not removed because they were affiliated with Republicans. | neutral |
An entire six pack. | There were a dozen of items in the pack | contradiction |
I also think it is commendable that his articles, although unfavorable to Microsoft in the main, are being hosted on a Microsoft-owned site. | The articles are commendable to me. | neutral |
I never spoke to my aunt, and I am not a student of the large literature by and about her. | I do not speak to my aunt and I do not study the literature that pertains to her. | entailment |
But I have been unable to visualize one think-tank scholar killing another. | One is able to clearly see a think-tank scholar killing. | contradiction |
Maybe even Al Gore will soon exalt with a broad smile the vibrant U.S. ecology. | The U.S ecology is dull and declining. | contradiction |
Another time I had to go and look after my brother Kenny in Buffalo. | Kenny was my cousin and lived in California. | contradiction |
But he was abrupt with her--not rude, just abrupt. | He dealt with her in a slow and methodical manner. | contradiction |
Even the title of Cohen's book and its cover art--a brass-knuckled fist--are lifted directly from a book published eight years ago, Paul Breines' Tough Political Fantasies and the Moral Dilemma of American Jewry , which analyzes the psychological underpinnings of the cult of Jewish toughness born after Israel's victor... | Paul Breines' found it offensive that one would plagiarize his work. | neutral |
Every computer Apple makes costs a lot to make. | Apple must use the highest quality parts in their computers. | neutral |
And on tour with the president in Africa, Jesse Jackson gives Maureen Dowd his theology of the Lewinsky There are nine more Commandments. | Jesse Jackson was good friends with a president in Africa. | neutral |
Meanwhile, Russia is debating whether to cut its conventional forces and authorize first use of its nukes as a substitute deterrent (as the United States will still do). | Russia is contemplating to more readily take the nuclear option. | entailment |
The New Yorker began offering . Brown did her producing buzz to fuel circulation. | Brown sought to ruin The New Yorker magazine. | contradiction |
One regular precaution before driving out into the boonies used to be marking a giant TV with adhesive tape on the back and side windows, which we believed was easy-to-spot shorthand for don't shoot, I'm a reporter. | Every trip to the boonies is risky business. | neutral |
And to show me the famous window of the Defenestration of Prague, the glorious day in May 1618 during the Thirty Years War when two royal Catholic officers had been hurled from the window by the Protestant members of the Bohemian Diet--and being in Prague, had landed on a haystack below. | The Defenestration of Prague depicts two Protestant members being hurled out of a window. | contradiction |
Even so, analysts' recommendations have manifested the Wall Street equivalent of grade inflation. | The Wall Street equivalent of grade inflation are what analysts' recommendations have manifested. | entailment |
What a fascinating and generous letter. | The written message contained a supple amount of money in it. | neutral |
In the closing weeks of the presidential campaign, Bob Dole made a big fuss about Clinton's refusal to categorically rule out pardons for former associates caught up in Whitewater. | Bob Dole made it point in the closing weeks of the presidential campaign, to acknowledge Clinton's refusal to rule out pardons for his former associates that were caught up in Whitewater. | entailment |
But they would get farther in their agendas if they would give a little respect to conventional marriage by letting heterosexual people keep the word marriage to themselves. | The agenda would suffer from focusing on the heterosexual marriage alone | contradiction |
Economist Robert Barro decided to stay at Harvard rather than take Columbia's offer of a $300,000 salary and lavish perks. | Robert Barro declined $300,000 so that he could stay in Harvard. | entailment |
The eternal shortage of judges means that some cases are adjudicated peremptorily. | The biggest problem for the courts is the judge shortage. | neutral |
Lonely and anxious to be used, the condom grows so weary of the wait that he throws away his Either the condom's owner is abstinent, or he's careless. | The condom grows tired of waiting to be used by someone. | entailment |
Or, more creatively yet, maybe one new senator could just stop talking for a while. | If a new senator could just shut up, that would be great. | entailment |
One regular precaution before driving out into the boonies used to be marking a giant TV with adhesive tape on the back and side windows, which we believed was easy-to-spot shorthand for don't shoot, I'm a reporter. | It was a smart move to tape up your TV so as to not be shot. | entailment |
In that case the big loans organized a few months ago could have made the difference. | The loans that were organized a few months ago could have made a difference. | entailment |
Another way to generate profits is to buy up hospitals cheap--though regulation and competition have made it harder to lowball purchase prices. | Hospitals are always overpriced. | contradiction |
Someone, maybe a family counselor, needs to deal with the alienation the youngster feels and the hostility harbored by your husband. | The child feels like they are isolated from the rest of the family. | entailment |
After Robert Kennedy's assassination in 1968, he endorsed strong gun control legislation, and as recently as last year he declared that AK-47s are inappropriate for private use. | He packs heat to rile the law. | contradiction |
Then Lehman hit into the rough by the 16 th green and lost a stroke. | Often you hit into the grass when trying to get out of the rough. | neutral |
The forgery story churned its way into the Washington Times on Oct. 26. | The story was on the front page of the Washington Times. | neutral |
Time has fresh shots of an anguished Ethel and a plaintive Rory Kennedy. | Ethel and Rory Kennedy have been photographed in a moment of suffering | entailment |
By June, Gerth was writing, with a tinge of desperation, that the Pentagon did not find grave damage but did conclude that the United States national security had been harmed. | Gerth wrote that US national security was harmed, according to the Pentagon. | entailment |
Johnson's naivete is as convincingly natural as her nose, her lips, and her breasts. | Even the least perceptive dunderhead could see through Johnson's façade of innocence. | contradiction |
Also, the routine random inspections used by U.S. government agencies such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency are almost exactly like those planned under the CWC, and these have been found constitutional. | The randomness of the investigations surprises and angers corporations. | neutral |
The transformation of normal to abnormal may start with a pill. | The pill was prescribed many times for people with schizophrenia. | neutral |
These are the Most nominees are confirmed smoothly. | These nominees are the most that have been confirmed without difficulties. | entailment |
Now he believes he can be president. | He's sure of his ability to hold the office of president. | entailment |
You can be the birthplace of Heidegger, Hegel, Leibniz, Bach, Beethoven, Brecht, and Martin Luther, but you start one little world war ... | The birthplace of Heidegger started a world war when they didn't really want to. | neutral |
He recognized a Christian duty to charity but was gripped by a fear that his charity would be wasted, thereby incriminating him in sin. | He was once a muslim but recently converted. | neutral |
One possibility is that these ads will develop into a new form of micro-pandering, but the process will be interesting no matter where it leads. | These new ads may lead to a type of begging on a small scale. | entailment |
Other IOC members have resigned or are still being investigated. | The investigation of IOC members has completed. | contradiction |
Pulitzer Prizes, for example, go to books and newspapers but not to magazines. | Pulitzer Prizes do not go to magazines. | entailment |
(And yes, we'd like one, hypocrites that we are, thank you very much.) | It's ridiculous that we haven't received one this past year while being so underrepresented. | neutral |
Nevertheless, if you're into printing out, it's worth investigating. | It’s a great idea to check out the information before printing it out. | entailment |
Misconception #3: Workfare workers shouldn't do work unionized city workers used to do. | There's confusion regarding whether workfare workers should do former unionized work. | entailment |
Also, Newsweek tells the weird story of Jerry Stuchiner, a high-level Immigration and; Naturalization Service agent alleged to have sold passports to illegal Chinese immigrants. | Newsweek reported on Immigration and; Naturalization Service agent Jerry Stuchiner. | entailment |
Henceforth, as Tucker sees it, Monet searched for a more private and less jingoistic tie to the French landscape and discovered it in the multiple layers of his own water garden. | Monet looked for a more personal and less patriotic tie to the French landscape, and found it in the multiple layers of his own water garden. | entailment |
Every time he turns up on the scene--and even when (as in the case of Kathleen Willey) he doesn't--people What's he doing here? | His presence would often be ignored by others at any of the scenes he turned up in. | contradiction |
By abandoning macroeconomics the profession not only leaves the world without guidance it desperately needs | The world will run with good guidance with macroeconomics. | neutral |
Now that consumers know that there is a fluid aftermarket for video games, they are more likely to go into a store and buy one of these games for full price on the day it comes out. | Customers will buy videogames at full price if they know they can resell them later and get a higher price than they paid. | neutral |
For people who are not immersed in recovery but are receptive to the notion of sex addiction, the president's dysfunction simply means that, like Ken Starr, he is out of control. | The President was a model for moral behavior. | contradiction |
But who window shops anymore, except at 35 mph, through a window set in the frame of a vehicle? | People can see things to buy while driving 35 mph. | neutral |
But in the final five minutes, I raised my bid to $250, then $275, then $300, and finally won the auction, exhilarated by my victory. | The bid was raised $50 in the last five minutes. | entailment |
Furthermore she wrote, scathingly, about class, and Americans have never liked to hear about class. | What she wrote was incorrect. | neutral |
For instance, as the mobility of capital reduces the power of unions, the chance for including labor rights in the world trade treaty known as GATT--the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs--grows remote. | Despite its negative effects on unions, the mobility of capital has benefits as well. | neutral |
Whether the voters deserve it or not, we're likely to hear a lot more in coming spots about which man is better--or worse. | Whether the voters deserve it, we've likely heard the last thing that we're going to hear about which man is better or worse. | contradiction |
In 1984 Charles Murray wrote, in Losing Ground , that government programs sap the initiative of the black population, creating feelings of dependency and entitlement. | Charles Murray was known for his book titled Gaining Ground, in 1984. | contradiction |
It is hard to imagine, though, why any government would embargo such a product, unless the plastic surgeons' lobby has already got to them. | The product to be embargoed is a surgeon's knife. | neutral |
He did so with surety, using the elbow of his bad arm to steady himself at the threshold, then raising both fists in a stretch. | He stood up for others, even though he was injured. | entailment |
[E]ven after being taken down a notch or two, [cities] will remain, by virtue of their concentrations of energy and intellect, at the center of the American political imagination. | While the importance of cities has been diminished in term of politics, they are still quite important. | entailment |
In the 1970s, he was known as a tough-minded supporter who could be counted on for a meticulous review of how the endowments were spending their money. | He was known for ignoring how the endowments spent their money. | contradiction |
We must have unselfish, far-seeing leadership or we fail. | Close-seeing leadership is required to not fail. | contradiction |
Today, such a book--not that Wachtler has written one--would be greeted with a shrug. | People aren't aware of Wachtler's writing. | neutral |
The verdict? | The trial has just started. | contradiction |
They are well armed and wear bulletproof vests. | Some precincts do not have enough bulletproof vests for all their officers, | neutral |
Starr has been especially squirmy about this. | Starr doesn't really care about this. | contradiction |
An article explicates curling (shuffleboard on ice with brooms), the one game in all the world wherein the human participants move faster than the object they put in play. | Moving fast is a disadvantage in curling. | neutral |
But if they just gave the magazine away, advertisers would lose interest. | Institutions would pay a pretty penny for ads in publications that are freely handed out. | contradiction |
Exploiting the newly dead sounds ghoulish, but the medical establishment rationalizes the practice--at least in private--by saying that it's better than letting interns fumble on live patients. | This practice has allowed it's interns to become proficient at working with patients, which has seen the number of successful operations by newer surgeons go up. | neutral |
to the credible evolution of what's really become of me. | I've really become completely unrecognizable, through a form of evolution. | neutral |
Mostyes voters dismissed the predictions of doom as exaggeration, according to polls conducted on either side of Election Day. | The voters did not take the predictions seriously. | entailment |
Much of the money given away by the Slate 60 goes to finance new buildings at already wealthy universities. | Wealthy universities receive financing from Slate 60. | entailment |
And, oh, to know what a frolic is! | They are clueless about what frolic is. | contradiction |
It is quite likely that you are suffering from the Grass-Is-Greener Syndrome. | You don't look like you are affected. | contradiction |
A capitalist, of whom there are one or two among us, I hear tell, might bear this in mind when targeting malt liquor, fast food, and sneaker commercials. | Capitalists Ignore commercials of fast food, sneakers, and malt liquor. | contradiction |
Insurers would then have to cater to their needs. | Insurance is available for all needs. | neutral |
The book that resulted, Bosnia and the Failure of the West , is an unrelenting indictment of the international community's inability--or unwillingness--to step in and stop the killing. | The international community did not step in and stop the killing in Bosnia. | entailment |
For example, we asked Jeeves, Where can I find information about Bill Bradley and Medicaid? | Jeeves provided reasonable answers. | neutral |
What's completely intolerable is to be accurately quoted and seen--even by yourself--to be no better than you actually are. | Inaccurate quotations are intolerable. | neutral |
I've always said that victory is the best exit strategy. | I believe that winning is a viable exit strategy. | entailment |
Once again, a plea to Susan and Sylvester. | Again, we have demands for Susan and Sylvester. | contradiction |
Henry V would have inspired no one on St. Crispin's day by | The king raised the spirits of his people. | contradiction |
It is part of a line of products intended to be usable by people with arthritis or hand injuries, as well as by those without disabilities. | Using this product would facilitate the life of disabled people | neutral |
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