premise stringlengths 10 639 | hypothesis stringlengths 7 461 | label stringclasses 3
values |
|---|---|---|
As it stands now, police officers, especially in urban areas, present more illegally obtained evidence than legally obtained evidence. | Police officers in urban areas present more legally obtained evidence than illegally obtained evidence. | contradiction |
On The Simpsons , for example, Nixon has appeared in caricature at least 20 times (according to the Simpsons Archive Web site). | Nixon appeared in caricature at least 20 times on The Simpsons during the 1990's. | neutral |
Here was an obviously experienced man coming into this young upstart's company, probably extremely well-dressed and with credentials earned before the CEO was even born. | The person that just joined the company was much older than the CEO. | entailment |
Third, the woman serves the man's need to be needed. | Woman serves the man's need for speed | contradiction |
But then I don't know whether you mean that the attraction is physical or that the consummated relationship is physical and sexual. | I'm not sure if by physical you mean the attraction or the consummated relationship itself. | entailment |
Recently, three economists named Harold Cole, George Mailath, and Andrew Postlewaite (for whom I will use the collective abbreviation CMP) have proposed a compromise between the two On the one hand, people do not care directly about their relative positions in the wealth distribution. | a compromise was made thanks to Harold Cole, George Mailath, and Andrew Postlewaite | neutral |
One common mistake is to count federal grants-in-aid as state and local taxes, but that's double counting, since they're already paid for by federal taxes. | One common mistake results in double counting. | entailment |
Most alarmingly, convenience gambling exacts huge social costs in the form of addiction and financial hardship without providing any economic benefit. | convenience gambling is extremely fun. | neutral |
Take the long U.S. policy wobbles because it is always responding to the crisis du jour--the Cox report, WTO, the latest suppression of dissidents, etc. | U.S. policy is unchanging even in the face of current crises. | contradiction |
At the first, Brock, under the guise of fairness, slings enough mud to drown a Bangladeshi village. | Brock is deceiving those around him. | entailment |
The proposed HearSLATE could then offer discriminating commuters and professional drivers some intellectual refuge from the endless tirade of mindless drivel currently broadcast by the common carriers. | Slate's intellectual tirade is mindless, offering commuters and drivers endless drivel. | contradiction |
Microsoft has been defensive about its low-key Washington role when it could legitimately be boasting about it. | Bill Gates's company closed down years ago | contradiction |
I don't envy next year's teen-sex filmmaker the challenge of topping the pie scene or the cloudy glass of beer bit. | They are jealous of next year's teen-sex filmmaker | contradiction |
Standard Medicare coverage pays only 80 percent of doctor and hospital bills and nothing for drugs. | Most people have Standard Medicare. | neutral |
He and Els were on the 17 th green, tied at 4 under. | He and Els were tied at 18 under | contradiction |
The wrestlers also enact crucifixions, sadomasochism, and prostitution. | The wrestlers portray prayer. | neutral |
Quota sampling assumes that the answers of a particular demographic group such as white, 18-to-25-year-old Internet users can be projected to describe the opinions of white 18-to-25-year-olds at large. | The assumption is the answers of one segment of the population can be applied to dogs | contradiction |
Ajami's book is an indispensable guide to why anyone in the Arab world still listens to it. | The people of the Arab world consider Ajami's book to be helpful. | entailment |
But it is probably true that the quality of politics in America has suffered from the erosion of public trust in institutions that used to act, to at least some degree, as watchdogs. | The public lost their trust in institutions because they saw how ineffective they were. | neutral |
To heed the better angels of your nature, you must know the devils first. | Everyone has a devilish side to themself. | neutral |
John Glenn's space shuttle ride as a medical guinea pig. | John Glenn Road in the space shuttle. | entailment |
Last year, advertisers spent $2 billion on the Internet, compared with $35 billion spent on broadcast TV and $10 billion spent on cable. | Advertisers chose to spend only two billion dollars online because they wanted to spend more money on broadcast and cable. | neutral |
Why are you subjecting your loyal and (usually) enthusiastic readership to the reactionary, bigoted, and sexist drivel of Midge Decter and Norman Podhoretz in ? We don't subscribe to Slate in order to expose ourselves to the ramblings of Anita Bryant's spiritual parents. | not a lot of fan fan for Midge Decter and Norman Podhoretz | neutral |
Greenberg and the contributors to The New Majority think Democrats can win future elections by identifying with the concerns of working people. | Greenberg does not think Democrats can win future elections | contradiction |
Oh, come on, my date insisted. | The date did not insist. | contradiction |
This is a drop in the bucket. | It was only 1% of what needed to be done. | neutral |
( explains what Greenspan really said.) | What Greenspan said was explained. | entailment |
During the Cold War, liberals shunned military intervention--even humanitarian military intervention--because such adventurism could provoke conflict with the Soviets and tended to buttress thuggish right-wingers. | The Soviets were in the Cold War. | entailment |
Telegraph reported exclusively that billionaire philanthropist John Paul Getty II, 65, had sealed his love affair with Britain by taking out UK citizenship after 25 years' residence in this country. | John Paul Getty II is a billionaire. | entailment |
Impeachment is twisting the presidential race, too. | Legal problems are effecting the race. | entailment |
So who wins Round Two? | This is not the first round. | entailment |
In 1990, Milliken supplied crucial seed money to the Economic Strategy Institute, a think tank headed by former Reagan administration official Clyde Prestowitz; thereafter, he contributed more than 10 percent of ESI's budget. | Milliken provided less than 10% of the Economic Strategy Institute's budget after 1990. | contradiction |
Otherwise you will not get a good table or will have crumbs brushed into your laptop, even though, strictly speaking, you are abiding by the rules. | It is possible to not get a good table at the restaurant. | entailment |
The long Relax, dynasties haven't killed the men's game. | The men's game is for control of Pluto. | contradiction |
Didion, in other words, has written a fast-paced story, not just her usual series of fractured stories. | Didion has written a slow-paced story | contradiction |
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. | Gun control lobbies showed a strong level of concern after the assassination of Robert Kennedy. | neutral |
Moral indignation over the incident was almost overshadowed by disbelief that nobody had noticed her condition. | Nobody noticed her condition. | entailment |
And malignancy develops slowly. | malignancy occurs suddenly. | contradiction |
Moreover, even if the '80s dramatized Soviet economic incompetence because the U.S. economy was growing so rapidly, this is no reason for the Soviet empire to implode in the way that it did. | The US economy grew rapidly in the 80s. | entailment |
Joe Biden, D-Del., betrayed the No, I don't think we can negotiate with him--if you mean can we, in fact, work out something other than those minimal demands that were stated by NATO. | Joe Biden broke trust by taking foreign bribes | neutral |
and she was talking gibberish. | she was upset | neutral |
Why, if Isikoff's so bad? | Isikoff's journalism has brought him disdain from others. | entailment |
Any sure thing attracts too many hackneyed ideas, like Wolff's, and too much foolish money. | Sure things attract too much foolish money and too many hackneyed ideas. | entailment |
Nixon's Watergate sins (dismissed by the public on the eve of the election as, at most, the work of overzealous campaign aides) caught up with him in his second term. | The mistakes of the 37th President of the United States reared their head during after he had been in office for more than four years. | entailment |
a) Had an adulterous affair with a young intern. | The affair led to divorce. | neutral |
Having fractured the international coalition, Saddam no longer fears the prospect of invasion from the Nations like France, Russia, and China have sworn to veto any U.N. military action because they want to protect the post-sanctions oil deals they've penned with Iraq. | Some Nations could still feel compelled to invade Iraq. | neutral |
The editorial side of Graham's Post has only compliments for the PDFA, while the advertising side has donated ad space to it. | The PDFA enjoys a lot of support | neutral |
But they admit that at least some consumers are being misled by the logo. | The logo is intentionally misleading. | neutral |
After smoking a pack of Camels a day for a dozen years, I gave it up in 1985. | The speaker was addicted to cigarettes. | entailment |
Congress, the United Nations, and other international forums. | Members can belong to both Congress and the United Nations. | neutral |
I >n cases labeled as serious physical abuse, the reported injury could be mental or emotional. | Serious physical abuse can cause mental or emotional injuries. | entailment |
either Lee or Chang or Wong. | It's neither Lee, Chang, or Wong. | contradiction |
When Kurlak cuts his rating on Intel, what matters is not that he's right or wrong about Intel's prospects but that his cut in the rating will drop the stock regardless. | Intel's stock will depend on Kurlak's rating. | entailment |
But that only raises more questions--such as how tides are supposed to make women menstruate. | Tides effect women's bodies. | neutral |
Another part of the answer--one that Kindleberger suggested two decades ago--is that to introduce global financial markets into a world of merely national monetary authorities is, in a very real sense, to walk a tightrope without a net. | Kindleberger made a suggestion two decades ago pertaining to global financial markets. | entailment |
In the '60s and '70s, rumors of Sinatra's Mob ties were family entertainment. | Sinatra was well known in the 60s and 70s. | entailment |
He's just finished Isaac's Storm, a history of the Galveston hurricane of 1900, and reads Robert Parker's detective-for-hire stories. | Isaac's Storm is a science fiction novel. | contradiction |
Wag the Dog director Barry Levinson writes that his movie was just a joke but compares Hillary Clinton's allegation of a right-wing conspiracy to the distraction ploys found in the film. | Barry Levinson is a right-winger. | neutral |
The New York Times reports that Santeria , the West Indian religion notorious for animal sacrifice, is gaining American adherents and coming out of the closet. | Sacrificing animals accomplishes nothing. | neutral |
Personally, I think the Bush camp is acting like brats that didn't get everything they wanted at Christmas. | The author is talking about a camp in Australia. | contradiction |
American Beauty won three Golden Globes, including Best Drama . Acting awards went to Hilary Swank for Boys Don't Cry , Denzel Washington for The Hurricane , Janet McTeer for Tumbleweeds , and Jim Carrey for Man on the Moon . HBO series, including the critically hyped The Sopranos , won most of the television awards. | American Beauty won awards | entailment |
The article's author, Smithsonian curator Paul Forman, accused Gross and Levitt of trying to place science back on its pre-postmodern pedestal. | Paul Forman made an accusation | entailment |
In January 1993, the Bush administration launched cruise missiles at Baghdad to force compliance. | Baghdad struck the US first. | contradiction |
Dissatisfied with the chump change earned by selling untaxed cigarettes and fireworks, the Indians have opened gambling casinos on reservations all over the state. | Gambling casinos were opened by Indians because they were not happy with the money that they were earning. | entailment |
Keyes : Join me in a prayer to Our Creator. | Keyes wants someone to join them in prayer. | entailment |
Morris' small-bore ideas, as he calls them, made the presidency look somewhat ridiculous in 1995 and 1996. | Morris' ideas are all inherently ridiculous. | neutral |
If, as we say, there is one God, surely he is God of the whole universe, including the gentiles. | He is thought of as the deity of everything | entailment |
I remember the epigraph of James T. Farrell's book Studs Lonigan , which I read more than 60 years | James T. Farrell's book Studs Lonigan has been around for a lot of years. | entailment |
With this retrospective, the newspaper photographer Arthur Fellig a k a Weegee (1899-1968) is judged a technical virtuoso, a great artist, and an inspiration to his followers. | Arthur Fellig and Weegee were friends. | contradiction |
But why should Bradley shut up about the Clinton-Gore fund-raising scandal? | Bradley had talked about a Clinton-Gore fund-raising scandal | entailment |
But the overall thrust of the incarceration section of the 1994 edition is that too many criminals are avoiding jail sentences. | The 1994 mostly ignored anything to do with Jail. | contradiction |
We've collected all of Harry's O.J. Dispatches into one gargantuan Microsoft Word (and Adobe Acrobat) document that will you can dowload by clicking here. | Harry gathered multiple O.J. dispatches. | entailment |
The private quarters, a k a the residence, occupy the second and third floors of the White House. | There are fifteen rooms on the second floor of the White House. | neutral |
Upon him All ultimatelyrests. | He has assumed all the responsibility. | neutral |
Almost nothing is going to happen if a majority must already favor it before any political leader will speak out in its favor. | Minorities will take over power from the Majority, gaining more clout, and will get all their laws passed. | contradiction |
By my calculations, it probably went about 479 feet. | Based on my complex calculations involving wind speed, moon phase, and what the thrower's last meal was, it went about 479 miles. | contradiction |
The great historical novels are always about contemporary consciousness. | Contemporary consciousness is a popular topic for great historical novels. | entailment |
The theory that only a monopolist can price discriminate is standard textbook fare, and it's borne out by a lot of observations. | The observations are correct. | neutral |
Congress cannot impose community service on the president without his permission--that would be an unconstitutional bill of attainder. | Congress can force the president into community service whether he likes it or not. | contradiction |
Some people want a Caddy and others want a Chevy, he shrugs. | He is not interested in a Caddy nor a Chevy. | entailment |
All of these measures together will not cause the ghettos to disappear. | The ghettos will disappear by building over the ghettos. | neutral |
I remember the epigraph of James T. Farrell's book Studs Lonigan , which I read more than 60 years | The book Studs Lonigan by James T. Farrell has been out for more than 60 years. | neutral |
How did the team do last night? | There was a game last night. | entailment |
Gopnik dismisses the cult of Picasso as just another kind of celebrity worship. | Gopnik dislikes Picasso | neutral |
NBC had fired him a year and a half ago after he pleaded guilty to biting a woman during sex. | He admitted to using teeth while copulating | entailment |
Now economists are pointing out the unfairness of subsidizing the reduction in the number of doctors while refusing to do the same for other professions, such as economists. | Everyone thinks the subsidies were fair. | contradiction |
Another time I had to go and look after my brother Kenny in Buffalo. | I had to travel to Buffalo to look after my brother. | neutral |
But more often the word is OPEN--evidence, says one neon connoisseur there, of continental affection for Americana, along with a changing European culture. | European culture is steadfast. | contradiction |
Continue to give a 20-percent discount on hardback books to unborn children. | The families of unborn children are eligible receive a 20% discount on hardback books, as well as a further discount on future purchases for the child after birth, into perpetuity. | neutral |
That said, I am now officially Hillary'd out. | They want to see more of Hillary | contradiction |
For instance, in a hot-selling series of novels co-authored by the well-known preacher Tim LaHaye, he's Romanian. | The novels appeared on the New York Bestsellers list. | neutral |
There's a name for this personnel It's called Pass the Trash. | The former name was Ditch the Bitch | neutral |
Now economists are pointing out the unfairness of subsidizing the reduction in the number of doctors while refusing to do the same for other professions, such as economists. | there was a reduction in the number of practitioners in any professions. | neutral |
A Saving Private Ryan backlash begins. | There were protests at theaters when Saving Private Ryan came out. | neutral |
And the signs made it easier for visitors to find their way around. | The museum was very easy to navigate. | entailment |
Could this anti-missile insurance policy reawaken a Cold War confrontation thought dead, lo, these past 10 years? | The Cold War confrontation was believed to be over, but this anti-missile insurance policy could reawaken it. | entailment |
They even agree that this would be a big mistake. | They felt that it would be a poor decision. | entailment |
They don't understand that they've lost that fight and that Bush is willing to repudiate the fight and everyone in it--including them--in order to ruin Gore's strategy and beat him. | Bush will do anything to win. | neutral |
As I write, the house is alive with flowers and foliage, and it is starting to snow again. | It is hot outside | contradiction |
It is hard to believe that people who have spent years, even decades, writing about economics are really so fuzzy-minded that they cannot see the difference between protecting consumers from tainted produce and protecting workers from competing products. | Some experts in economics exist who are still unclear on the details of the subject. | entailment |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.