premise stringlengths 10 639 | hypothesis stringlengths 7 461 | label stringclasses 3
values |
|---|---|---|
You have definitely identified a problem for the '90s. | A problem exists for the '90s. | entailment |
If after three months of age your baby wakes at night and wants to be fed, she is developing a sleep problem. | Your baby should be sleeping through the night after she reaches three months of age. | neutral |
High praise for The New Yorker writer's stories about disaffected youth. | The writer works for a British publication | contradiction |
Do they have an open marriage in which his extracurricular activity is accepted, or is each new revelation a painful surprise to her? | Their family disapproves of their marriage. | neutral |
What I love about this Jordan thing is that he has embraced an opportunity that could lead to his total failure on a basketball court. | Jordan loves a challenge, and that's why he wanted to come back to the basketball court. | neutral |
Newsweek notes that while the Dalai Lama promotes religious understanding and meditation, he opposes abortion, contraception, and homosexual acts. | The Dalai Lama is for women's freedom to choose. | contradiction |
But Jacob was pierced by shafts of doubt. | Jacob was unsure. | entailment |
It doesn't say much of anything on the subject. | The subject lacks depth. | neutral |
No adult ever played with Ninja Turtles or Power Rangers. | If Ninja Turtles fought the Power rangers to the death, sure as shooting, the Turtles would win. | neutral |
We have close friends who have us to their home for dinner almost every week. | We go to a friend's house for dinner quite often. | entailment |
Boris shot up his hand and Kerensky did not make the February revolution. | Kerensky made the February revolution | contradiction |
Most societies prohibit adultery--sex between a married person and someone other than his or her spouse--at least, formally. | Most societies celebrate adultery. | contradiction |
Now the practice has its own a triple--a woman and her two men--whose child was taken away because of their unusual living arrangement. | The women had an unconventional relationship | 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. | American national security had been damaged by the time of Gerth's writing | entailment |
And if there were, any elective late abortion--even by induction--would be wrong, though D and E and partial-birth abortion would seem especially cruel. | Many agree with this statement. | neutral |
How do Mary Matalin and James Carville do it? | Matalin and Carville are divorced. | contradiction |
Specifically, it wants $90,000 for a confiscated file of telegrams and letters sent in response to Nixon's famous Silent Majority speech. | The material that Nixon has is worthless. | contradiction |
The Army discharged a 20-year decorated veteran one week before he would have been eligible for retirement benefits, because investigators discovered evidence of his homosexuality after an arsonist torched his home. | His house was set on fire because he is a homoseual | neutral |
Schor's right--it is depressing when people get into the grip of an all-engulfing need to establish their identity by buying stuff, especially if it's stuff they can't afford. | It is depressing that consumers buy based on a prconceived notion about themselves and what they cannot afford. | entailment |
Youth may be wasted on the young, but it's not wasted on the president. | The youth take advantage of the time they have with great responsibility. | contradiction |
The changes were attributed 1) increased cohabitation | More people are living together. | entailment |
The new health scare is a staph germ that is becoming immune to the antibiotic of last resort. | The antibiotic that the microorganism is resisting is called Vancomycin | neutral |
In any event, Gore dropped out of the race shortly after the debate. | Gore dropped out of the race years after the debate. | contradiction |
Why don't you refresh your recollection for a while, and we'll talk when I'm back. | I'm leaving now. | entailment |
Even readers who share Wilson's worldview will find much to provoke them. | Wilson's writings evoke the same reaction in everyone. | contradiction |
Bennett is right to the extent that there's no excuse for telling falsehoods in the course of raising otherwise legitimate issues. | Bennett is a proponent for telli g the truth | entailment |
Newsweek 's cover Home schooling--it's not just for zealots anymore! | According to Newsweek, home schooling is becoming more common and accepted. | entailment |
, and appeared here in 1977. | It appeared in the 21st century. | contradiction |
Hanson co-wrote the underrated White Dog (1982) with Sam Fuller, and there's a touch of Fuller in this film's lugubrious trashiness. | The White Dog has a sadness in it's main themes. | entailment |
The sportswriters were tapping on their laptops. | Sportswriters were working on laptops. | entailment |
But you could very well make the opposite argument. | The argument in the other direction was also possible then, and is still possible now. | entailment |
Buy utilities, bottom feed on mutual funds that invested in the Southeast Asian markets and got slammed, try real estate investment funds, and seek stability in U.S. bonds. | Mutual funds investing in Southeast Asia did not do well | entailment |
(For the neutral-interrogator approach, try France.) | France uses an aggressive-interrogator approach | contradiction |
Saturated fat is still evil. | Saturated fat is part of a healthy diet. | contradiction |
So why persist in newspaper reading? | The author wonders why one should persist in reading newspapers. | entailment |
A story says that there is still virtually no evidence linking the Sudanese pharmaceutical plant bombed by the United States last year to chemical weapons production or terrorist Osama Bin Laden. | The proof was covered up by the American government. | neutral |
(DiGenova says it has since issued five subpoenas and has a hearing scheduled for late next month.) | DiGenova is barred from court | contradiction |
That's because theories apply only in certain circumstances, and circumstances change. | Theories are difficult to implement in practice, particularly when a situation is still developing. | neutral |
(Mother Teresa cared passionately about animals.) | People were favored by Mother Teresa. | neutral |
recalls one ex- Vogue staffer wistfully. | The ex-Vogue staffer was fired because of poor performance but wistfully recalls pleasant memories of past experiences there. | neutral |
But when Indonesians started running from their banks a few months ago, what they wanted was dollars--and neither the Indonesian government nor the IMF can give them enough of what they want. | Indonesians ran from their banks | entailment |
But the big news in Ireland is the peace negotiations between British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern. | Tony Blair managed to push the English advantage during peace talks. | neutral |
Guess what, so is the Chinese rate of osteoporosis. | The Chinese documents this rate of osteoporosis. | neutral |
But by the time Avis' employees bought the company, the new thinking was that there was no better way of encouraging their creativity and dedication. | Avis is terrible to its employees | contradiction |
And with those four stigmatic words, the music business was born. | The music business had no beginning | contradiction |
On the rare occasions the service is queried, it invokes the Dead President. | The service is quite accomplished in its activities. | neutral |
There will be no Revenge of the Nebbishes , no nebbish liberation. | Any acts of revenge is automatically assumed negated. | entailment |
Monica, ever imaginative, bragged about the dress to Linda Tripp even though it was just an ordinary dress. | The dress is extraordinary | contradiction |
The Army discharged a 20-year decorated veteran one week before he would have been eligible for retirement benefits, because investigators discovered evidence of his homosexuality after an arsonist torched his home. | Military members are eligible for retirement benefits after 20 years | entailment |
As the century's greatest thinker, as an immigrant who fled from oppression to freedom, as a political idealist, he best embodies the century, says Time . | The greatest thinker was a citizen of the country he belonged to. | contradiction |
For my part, I plan to endorse the Baptist boycott of Disney. | Disney will release a statement regarding the Baptist boycott of their company. | neutral |
The important question is not whether Clinton had sex with her and lied about it but what the country should do about this. | Clinton did not lie about the affair. | contradiction |
But if smoking is addictive, then it makes sense to try to keep tobacco out of the hands of kids who are too young to take the warnings seriously. | Cigarettes should be away from children because they don't know any better. | entailment |
But the press only borrows the martial rhetoric that business leaders use themselves. | Some business leaders use aggressive manners of speaking | entailment |
In his Feb. 3 from the Clinton trial, he writes, History and the American people have already rendered their verdict. | He wrote that the Americans already rendered their verdict from the Clinton trial. | entailment |
Bradley, who has belittled Gore's microproposals (sprawl, traffic, etc.), will see his own self-proclaimed questioned. | Bradley is going to have to defend his own proposals. | entailment |
So far, Campbell and Frank have enlisted only 34 co-signers, and the administration shows no signs of paying attention. | The administration shows no signs of paying attention to Campbell and Frank. | entailment |
Besides denying reproductive freedom to women, such efforts would increase the number of children born and reared in impoverished single-parent families. | Cities that ban abortion see an uptick in crime. | neutral |
Across the board, in fact, investors are willing to overlook short-term losses due to strikes if they feel that a company's hard line will pay off in lower costs down the road. | Strikes cause losses in the short term. | entailment |
Dostoyevsky wrote a book called The Idiot about a guy who is unprepossessing and naturally holy. | Dostoyevsky was an author, and may be recognized. | entailment |
In Ireland, compassionate teachers would seem to be painfully rare. | Compassionate teachers are abundant in Ireland. | contradiction |
But there's a larger explanation. | The larger explanation is way larger | neutral |
As Van Buren knew, parties are inherently democratic, the most effective way of organizing otherwise powerless individuals. | Van Buren was a bad president and no one liked him | contradiction |
Also, the semiannual Home Design supplement insists that simplicity--incredibly expensive simplicity, that is--is chic. | Home Design favors simplicity. | entailment |
That is, because you can always declare bankruptcy and walk away, it is as if you owned the right to sell those assets at a fixed price, whatever might happen in the market. | The individual who owns the rights to the assets can always declare bankruptcy | entailment |
And yet, while this oversaving is costly to any given generation, it enriches future generations. | Future generations would also oversave for the benefit of the generation after them. | neutral |
(All gynaecologists are idealists. | The author believes that gynecologists have no values, goals, or universal standards. | contradiction |
Steve Forbes' Internet guru Rick Segal tried to work the Iowa straw poll this way. | Everyone knows who Steve Forbes is. | neutral |
The computer, now much faster and smarter, may triumph, but humans shouldn't fret. | The computer should be human's biggest dilemma. | contradiction |
The only really arresting work he did after 1950 is . With its electric brightness, this huge painting, which Pollock's friends started for him, is stunning but sad, a big smile for the camera and perhaps a kind of requiem for his earlier work. | Pollock's work was well known for it's realism and complete lack of color. | contradiction |
Now I find I hate returning e-mails. | E-mails are becoming an outdated form of communication. | entailment |
Close banks for one day to allow them to reorganize | Banks can only reorganize if they are closed | neutral |
Nor would she blame the media for an inordinate focus on the issue. | She would blame something other than the media. | neutral |
Some condemn the novel, in which an arrogant barrister who defends rogues is murdered, for its cliched depiction of lawyering and its unconvincingly tidy ending. | The barrister just happened to be at the right place at the right time in the unconvincingly tidy ending. | neutral |
Such self-referential questions can be pointless and irritating, and books that dwell on them generally belong in a category that one friend of mine calls art about art supplies. | The author considers self-referential questions pointless | entailment |
Admirably reticent, compared to Robert Bennett. | It is bad to be reticent | contradiction |
Such a show might have opened with the same Robert Henri portrait of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney included here and brought many of the same paintings she collected out of the vault for a fresh look. | Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney never collected any paintings. | contradiction |
Coke refuses to concede, directing inordinate attention to even tiny neighborhoods. | Coke directed inordinate attention to even tiny neighborhoods. | entailment |
Instead, the cost of computer gear is falling precipitously, and affordable bandwidth--the measure of data transmission--is growing at an exponential rate. | The rise of affordable bandwih is rising while the cost of computer tech is falling. | entailment |
It's not like we want it by mid-February. | Mid-February is not when we want it by, but the closer we get it by that date the better. | neutral |
Because, at the risk of sentimentality, it's the News Quiz participants that make it fun for me. | Everyone enjoys the News Quiz participants. | neutral |
Young people work in a corporate world by day but play in a moral and cultural universe shaped by the Sixties. | Some younger workers say that their cultural sphere has been shaped by the Sixties. | neutral |
Chernomyrdin is not all that qualified to succeed in his new mission, and he may not even be motivated to do so. | Chernomyrdin was extremely well qualified to succeed in his mission. | contradiction |
The pope did, however, suggest the extradition of Tinky Winky, for 'crimes against God. | The extradition of Tinky Winky was suggested by the Pope. | entailment |
The reality, though, is that this kind of stuff still happens all the time (even though eventually everyone does seem to get caught). | People who commit crimes and are caught do not commit crimes again. | neutral |
I'd be smoking right now if it weren't for the part about the hideous respiratory illness and coughing away my life in a painful and protracted demise. | Smoking causes respiratory illnesses. | entailment |
Slate 's Web site might be at the moment, and how clogged your local-area network might be. | Slate is as clogged your local network. | entailment |
Saturated fat is still evil. | Saturated fat is bad for you. | entailment |
The AIB delivers real-time information in the banner. | The AIB usually delivers real-time information in the banner. | neutral |
Time 's Terry Teachout says the 75-minute work's themes are nondescript, its harmonies blandly predictable, [and] its structure maddeningly repetitious. | The bad review led to improvements on the workout | neutral |
The New York Times offered moral indignation | The New York Times is a well respected newpaper. | entailment |
People can be weak, and money is all too often the way to their heart. | Many people are motivated by money. | entailment |
But that wacky theory aside, the point for Lemann's book is He brilliantly shows how the Protestant Establishment gave way to the educated elite. | Lemann dislikes the educated elite. | neutral |
Not only do thousands of economists agree on something, but what they agree on is the warm and cuddly idea that we should do more to protect the environment. | There are thousands of economists. | entailment |
They are well armed and wear bulletproof vests. | Their poor weaponry and armor signaled a powerless unit. | contradiction |
And a number of large firms have downsized successfully, most obviously General Electric, which cut an astounding 170,000 jobs worldwide in 12 years while simultaneously tripling its sales. | General Electric cut jobs due to decreasing sales | contradiction |
Why would you assume that this comment has to do with African-Americans anyway? | It was right to assume the comment had a lot to do with race. | contradiction |
Would it be better for the president, and the first lady too, for that matter, to be able to give their undivided attention to getting America across that bridge into the next millennium than it is to have them distracted by the Monica affair? | Monica's affair was a bigger distraction than the new millennium. | neutral |
But Szwed overlooks a crucial distinction between Sun Ra and his forebears. | Details are tricky while studying Ancient Egypt. | entailment |
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. | Clinton promised pardons to certain people who had a role in Whitewater. | neutral |
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