premise stringlengths 10 639 | hypothesis stringlengths 7 461 | label stringclasses 3
values |
|---|---|---|
In the case of Prusiner's prize, the Nobel Committee has settled for enthusiasm and single-mindedness. | The Nobel committee met this month. | neutral |
Music that conjures up a sense of suspended time and a still, suburban afterglow seems a perfect occasion for its debut. | The music fell flat. | contradiction |
Unless you can go back in time, cutting the tax rate on existing capital gains cannot possibly increase investment in productive resources. | You can make billions on your investments if you go back in time. | neutral |
It is hard to imagine a smaller step than the one Greenspan took. | Greenspan inched things forward. | entailment |
Or Caltech on Top (Until We Fiddle With Rules Again). | Caltech will be on the bottom when the rules are changed. | neutral |
Like many NBA old-timers, Bird deplores the MTVification of the league. | Bird was once considered one of the best players in the NBA. | neutral |
NBC had fired him a year and a half ago after he pleaded guilty to biting a woman during sex. | He used teeth on her neck | neutral |
Being loyal Republicans, Lamar's contributors talk about such happenings only obliquely. | Lamar is an Independent. | neutral |
God how I love this country. | I am stateless. | contradiction |
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. | a lot of people trusted his detailed review of how the people were spending their money | neutral |
His delaying strategy is to run the clock down until the November elections, then win Congress back with just 12 new seats and shut down the Hill investigations with his new majority. | He could get more than just 12 new seats. | neutral |
This is the amount on the check the new owner writes. | The new owner is very happy. | neutral |
Capital Legislator Want More Facts on Daylight Savings Time from Mexico's News . A close second is Why Farm Sheep at All? | Daylight Savings no longer exists in the specified country. | contradiction |
You never know for sure what you're getting, which, unfortunately, is an argument for ponying up. | There is an argument to be made. | entailment |
Kanter's price for 100 note-sized sheets and envelopes on Crane's paper is $166 ($1. | 100 note-sized sheets and envelopes on Crane's paper from Kanter is $166 | entailment |
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. | Children should be able to buy cigarettes especially if they can get hooked on them. | contradiction |
As Jodie T. Allen in Slate in 1997, a primary function of any disaster is to funnel pork to important states. | Important states always get pork pushed their way. | entailment |
The MacDonalds of the world won't go away just because you think they're not worth responding to. | If we don't pay attention to the MacDonalds of the world, they will just go away on their own. | contradiction |
Quayle may be a formidable candidate, but the subsequent article explains that George W. Bush has already been anointed the inevitable one. | Nobody knew who any of those running were, in this Topsy Turvy race. | contradiction |
North American Man Boy Like Association. | The association dislikes boys | contradiction |
Critics have demanded that UFC install ropes instead. | The UFC uses something other than ropes | neutral |
The problem is that when a documentary filmmaker seems too scared or cool or arty to violate his own immaculate aesthetic, he ends up weakening his case. | Documentary filmmakers obey their rules, like biting at the bit, but rein themselves in, strenthening their case. | contradiction |
It can be a bit like a claustrophobic small town, where your private life is part of the public dialogue. | private life is part of the public dialogue in small towns | entailment |
He suffered the strange fate of many artists who aim for the sublime, then find their work enlisted in other all-too-human narratives. | He suffered a strange fate. | entailment |
The economics are easy enough to understand, lacking major stars, these movies are inexpensive to make and draw the ideal teens who are capable of seeing Titanic 17 times. | Few A-list actresses would join the cast because of the low pay. | neutral |
It is this matter, he has said, which led him to found Judicial Watch in 1994. | There was a famous case that led to the founding of Judicial Watch in 1994 | neutral |
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 illegally obtained evidence than legally obtained evidence because of problems with warrants. | neutral |
Listen, I really don't want to criticize. | I want to testify for the person mentioned to help them. | neutral |
) to keep him out of their way. | They need to have the way free. | entailment |
Needless to say, one such entry would be unacceptable, and we've adopted strict safeguards to prevent any such problems. | One entry would be great | contradiction |
Dentists can now make crowns that last forever, bridges that stay anchored, dentures that behave almost like real teeth. | Dentists have more techniques available today than in the past. | entailment |
Yale law professor and quirky constitutional historian Bruce Ackerman, testifying before the House of Representatives in December, argued that a newly elected Congress has little authority to try an official who was impeached by the previous one. | All Yale law professors are quirky historians. | neutral |
I particularly enjoyed your colored sky; a nice choice, blue, popular, everybody likes that blue. | People are more of fan of green. | contradiction |
Degas, according to Daniel Halevy, carried his camera as proudly as a child carrying a rifle. | Degas was formerly known as an excellent photographer, he later became a painter. | neutral |
Other candidates may be sexier at this hour, but once we go through the battering of New Hampshire and Iowa it might be a different story, says Connors. | After the primaries in Iowa and New Hampshire a more complete picture of the race may emerge. | entailment |
While Coz preaches decorum, the Globe has added more sensationalism, more gore, more nasty gossip. | Coz is adding more sensationalism at the moment, but the Globe preaches decorum | contradiction |
Such an affair is improbable, but--take heart, Clinton-haters--it's not impossible. | There is no way the affair occured | contradiction |
But we also may have missed a couple of more fundamental truths about the Web. | The Web was created in the 1800s. | contradiction |
Except that the executive who was assigned the difficult task of dealing with the Shopping Avenger, one Jennifer Nemeth, did a provisionally satisfactory job of making the Shopping Avenger happy. | The Shopping Avenger was dissatisfied with Jennifer. | contradiction |
Demonstrations on television never look right. | The failure to engender reforms can be blamed on the televised nature of the demonstrations. | neutral |
The clearest proof of the new left's poverty is what Clinton and Blair have to say about the middle class. | Poverty does not exist in the US | contradiction |
The movie made me remember why I like Holly Hunter. | Holly Hunter only acts on television | contradiction |
Because Accidents Happen , on Tuesday and Wednesday (8-10 p.m.) Using the fig leaf of studying survival engineering and safety pointers, PBS gives us fires, crashes, and sinking ships. | PBS doesn't give anything. | contradiction |
So out of 78 confirmed hypotheses, it seems that approximately zero are true. | None, or very close to none, of the hypotheses are true. | entailment |
I maintained throughout the Reagan years that appearances was a dodge for accusers and malefactors alike. | Appearances were not a dodge before the Reagan years. | neutral |
How can you gain the moral high ground, that lofty crag from which to hurl down scorn, when your native city--what's the word? | It is clear how you can gain the moral high ground | contradiction |
A hint of hulk is apparently not unwelcome in the modern woman's image, and a slightly humped back, spinal curve, and forward-thrusting neck go well with that. | Having a bit of hulk is acceptable for modern women | entailment |
A rancid little nothing of a movie (Stephen Holden, the New York Times ) that's a grim, gross wannabe Farrelly brothers flick. | Stephen Holden writes movie reviews for the New York Times. | entailment |
Geniuses slipping into madness also tend to disrobe in public (I learned this from a volume on chess prodigies, who have a proclivity for disrobing on public buses). | Chess prodigies have been know to disrobe on public buses. | entailment |
If not, stadium seating will always be accessible to the average fan. | The average fan will always be able to access stadium seating because no one wants to pay a premium for those kinds of seats. | neutral |
A recent article in Science claimed to rebut Noam Chomsky's theory that our capacity for language is hard-wired in a particular--and uniquely human--module of the brain. | Noam Chomsky's theory is widely accepted without argument. | contradiction |
Songs like their biggest hit, , are sense-less but skillful pastiches of classic Beatles moments. | There are pastiches of Beatles moments. | entailment |
More Did Kaufman himself consider some of his experiments failures, or had his aesthetic finally become so punk/pro-wrestling that he thought driving people crazy was enough? | Kaufman intentionally drove people crazy | entailment |
The cover story reports on Robert McNamara's visit with his old North Vietnamese counterparts. | Robert McNamara has many friends from Asia. has many friends from Asia. | neutral |
So we all have benefited indirectly. | The direct benefits paled in comparison to the indirect benefits. | neutral |
The other piece on the recording, the Fantasy for Pianoforte, Chorus, and Orchestra in C Minor Op. | The other copy is missing vital pieces of music. | neutral |
The High-Minded Dismissal. | The dismissal stemmed from the organization's strict ethics policies. | entailment |
The second instance of Bennett's dishonesty concerns incarceration . In the 1994 volume, Bennett defines the incarceration problem as the failure to imprison criminals. | Bennett is very involved in criminal incarcerations. | neutral |
Time 's cover story celebrates Hip-Hop Nation and chronicles the genre's 20 year rise. | Many different hip-hop artists were interviewed for the cover story. | neutral |
In a way, I think it has already helped Microsoft's image. | It was something that made Microsoft look good. | entailment |
All this amounts to clear and convincing proof of Jones' allegation--which has never been specifically denied by the president personally or by his lawyer Robert Bennett--that then-governor Clinton sent a state trooper to interrupt a state employee's performance of her job and bring her to his hotel room. | Clinton invited Robert Bennett to his hotel room | contradiction |
There's more free stuff available online to fill up the time when the boss isn't around than the proxy-censor will ever let us read. | They wouldn't waste time if the boss was around. | neutral |
to my aunt's cleaning woman in upstate Pennsylvania and learned to adore the small town with its rows of stores and trees on the sidewalk and only a short walk into the country, in this case up a steep hill, | My aunt employs a cleaning lady | entailment |
This Johnny was just a wig and a smear of lipstick on a clenched fist, but he made Seeor Wences that rarest of performers, a genuinely funny ventriloquist. | Seeor Wences was a genuinely funny ventriloquist. | entailment |
The territory's gross domestic product is expected to grow by 5 percent or 6 percent in 1997 and 1998, up from 4.7 percent in 1996. | The territory's rate of GDP growth has steadily improved over time. | neutral |
For two earners each making $23,350, Alterman is serendipitously close to the mark when he asserts a marriage penalty of $1,001 a year. | A two person household with two incomes has a certain yearly fine. | entailment |
Undaunted, Chatterbox marched off to a nearby bookstore and purchased What the Face Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System (FACS) , edited by Ekman and Erika Rosenberg. | In the heat of the moment, Chatterbox stormed away from the meeting to shop for reading material. | entailment |
(Belize and Gibraltar are best, because they don't recognize American divorce judgments.) | American divorce judgements are not recognized everywhere. | entailment |
[Monica] made him feel good about himself. | She blew sunshine up his behind. | entailment |
Three kinds of theories of history have been prominent in recent discussion--ending theories, wave theories, and cycle theories. | The three prominent theories are cycle theories, linear theories, and ending theories | contradiction |
Ajami's book is an indispensable guide to why anyone in the Arab world still listens to it. | The ban was caused by Ajami's book's unholy content. | contradiction |
She made a great number of friends, from village women to guerrilla leaders, multiplying the number of foreign contacts she faithfully reported on the security form required of all CIA applicants. | She was worried that some of the people she knew would be a problem | neutral |
A considerably audible tsk, tsk I send you, Slate. | Slate you made a mistake with what you did and you shouldn't let it happen again. | neutral |
But they won't be able to say they weren't helped with their math homework by the very best. | They were helped with their math homework by the worst of society. | contradiction |
Is it Simhat Torah again already? | Almost all jews observe Simhat Torah. | neutral |
In 1992, only 1,070 abortions were performed after the 25 th week. | More than one-thousand abortions were performed after the 25th week of pregnancy in 1992. | entailment |
I throw rocks through the window of a different McDonald's every week. | I am very favorable to McDonalds. | contradiction |
The rules are very clear. | The rules were not very clear. | contradiction |
Dentistry is a hassle now because it works. | The author finds dentistry frustrating | entailment |
Terrible scenes of massacres, bombings, and the like are displayed almost daily. | Images of inspiring events that uplifts others are shown daily. | contradiction |
Most shops closed at 6 p.m. weekdays and on Saturday were not open or were open only until noon. | No shops were open past noon on Saturday. | neutral |
(And where is a percontativus now that I need one?) | I found it so easily, it blows my mind that other people may have problems locating it. | contradiction |
Crazy Richard Nixon and All That Jazz , by Leonard Garment (Times Books). | This is a publication at least partly about Richard Nixon, written by Leonard Garment | entailment |
Lee's bodyguard and cook (and, one presumes, slave). | Lee has a person for each role as a cook and a bodyguard. | contradiction |
May the people forever keep you in their memory, Day as beautiful as glory, Cold as the tomb! | The speaker finds tombs to be cold. | entailment |
Give Microsoft a monopoly on browsers, and you'll intensify the downward pressure on the price of its operating systems. | The only browser on most operating systems is by Microsoft. | neutral |
Hippocrates believed the answer was in the balance of four bodily fluids, or humors--blood, black bile, phlegm, and yellow bile. | Hippocrates thought black bile could cure cancer | contradiction |
Framing the election around the desirability of tax cuts is risky business for Clinton; since the age of Reagan, the public assumes that the Republicans are the anti-tax party. | Clinton was a republican president. | contradiction |
Physical modesty is not a Baldwin trait. | Baldwin is not physically modest. | entailment |
After they're caught, they disappear for awhile, then re-emerge, apologize for their venality (usually to Larry King), and retake their place in the pantheon. | Disappearing and running away from a problem is enough to get away from it if you're a celebrity. | neutral |
I almost wish she'd included more voice-over narration, more commentary on the things that, as a filmmaker, she hasn't learned to bring out. | More commentary on the things that, as a filmmaker, she hasn't learned to bring out, was something they would put in the director's cut. | neutral |
Babies, especially preemies, are more relaxed, have better digestion, and are generally happier when they are massaged. | Babies are generally happier when they are given massages. | entailment |
Bush himself couldn't utter these words with a straight face. | Bush thought it was a joke. | neutral |
Affirmative action in its current guises is unlikely to be the best or even a good way forward | With a few adjustments Affirmative Action produce could positive outcomes. | neutral |
After the return to Colgate Gel--because of its positive characteristics when used with the Sonicare cordless brush--my mouth was just about back to normal. | Sonicare makes a cordless toothbrush. | entailment |
The prototypical criminal turned out to be way too handsome. | The prototypical criminal is good looking | entailment |
There are many things that are permitted to adults--e.g. | Adults are restricted from everything. | contradiction |
On Cultural The Wilson-Brustein Discussion , moderated by Anna Deavere Smith (Town Hall, New York). | The town hall was held in Los Angeles | contradiction |
Cook might just as well be gambling on what color tie President Clinton will wear tomorrow. | President Clinton will wear a tie tomorrow. | entailment |
This is mentioned in the 1999 edition, but only in passing. | The 1999 edition mentioned it in passing. | entailment |
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