premise stringlengths 10 639 | hypothesis stringlengths 7 461 | label stringclasses 3
values |
|---|---|---|
You'd have to invoke your own gods for the requisite charm. | There will have to be some invoking of your own gods for that. | entailment |
The conceit is that Benigni tries to keep the 5-year-old from realizing what's going on by pretending that the whole thing is a game and that if the boy gets through it without crying or complaining he wins a tank. | If the child misbehaves, they won't win a prize. | neutral |
Sunday's contests determined that the Tennessee Titans will face the St. Louis Rams in Super Bowl XXXIV. | Games were held on Sunday. | entailment |
Still, for barbed wisdom, surprises, and technique, there's no one like Spark. | Spark is one of a kind | entailment |
In the latter, the director used farce not to lighten the drama but to darken it, so that the slapstick debacles seemed to spring from the hero's roiling unconscious. | The director wanted to make the movie funnier and more upbeat. | contradiction |
No one blinks 40-car motorcades that shut down interstates and gridlock traffic, the 200-plus-strong Secret Service delegation that accompanies the president abroad, the transformation of the open White House into an impenetrable fortress. | People pay no mind to the security measures put into place to protect the president of the United States. | entailment |
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., and House impeachment leader Rep. | Trent Lott is from Mississippi. | 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. | Liberals shunned military intervention during the Cold War in fear of provoking conflict with Russia. | entailment |
Two years later, after the massacres at Srebrenica and Vukovar, the slaughter and displacement of tens of thousands more Croats and Muslims, the decimation of Sarajevo, and the Serb conquest of more territory, the administration pushed through the Dayton Accords. | Two years after several massacres occurred, the administration passed the Dayton Accords. | entailment |
It would take only one-tenth of one second to download a Slate article via ADSL. | It is possible to download an article off the internet in less than one second. | entailment |
Alan Greenspan's still funny. | Alan Greenspan was funny mostly for the way that he looked. | neutral |
Starr told me that, and Bennett confirmed it but would not tell me specifics. | Bennett will eventually tell the specifics. | neutral |
This is the amount on the check the new owner writes. | When compared to the old owner, the amount on the check is now vastly larger. | neutral |
The 1) They've agreed to give peace a chance. | The two sides have decided to fight on. | contradiction |
The Supreme Court began its new term. | The Supreme Court started a new term. | entailment |
Kinsley fails to address the main point of the privatization Social Security changes people's behavior. | Kinsley evaded the main point. | entailment |
Now they admit they were wrong. | They were wrong about the impact of climate change. | neutral |
Well, there has been an excruciatingly technical argument about this, mysteriously known as the double dividend debate; the general consensus seems to be no, and that on balance pollution taxes would be more likely to reduce GDP slightly than to increase it. | Much of the debate around the double dividend topic does not make some people happy. | neutral |
If you want to look like a propaganda organ of Microsoft, about the best thing you could do would be to publish an article about a very hotly contested industry issue, take Microsoft's side, and support your point with misinformation and untruths. | Microsoft recently shut down all their public forums. | neutral |
George Bush didn't ask permission to invade Panama in 1989. | Panama did not get invaded by George Bush. | contradiction |
An interview with Unabomber Ted Kaczynski finds him good-humored and sincere. | Ted Kaczynski did the interview over the phone. | neutral |
Russia continues to bomb Chechnya. | Russia is at war with Chechnya. | neutral |
to the credible evolution of what's really become of me. | I have become this person by practicing meditation. | neutral |
either Lee or Chang or Wong. | It will be one of the three. | entailment |
Finally, on July 30, the committee passed a third, slightly weaker, article 21-17, which charged the president with having willfully disobeyed subpoenas. | No other president has ever been charged with disobeying subpoenas. | neutral |
When a trompe l'oeil shaving brush and a match turn up later in the show in Magritte's Personal Values (1952), they have an oneiric suggestiveness quite in contrast to Murphy's flat factuality. | The audience was surprised by the shaving brush. | neutral |
In hindsight, should you have stopped all private law practice? | You should have stopped practicing law because you lost your license. | neutral |
Participation in the new currency requires nations to cut their national debt below 3 percent of GDP. | To use the new currency, nations need to meet higher standards. | entailment |
The more she's covered, the less people care about her, and the more reporters hyperbolize. | The woman does not want to be known by lots of people. | neutral |
Providing escape routes from the inner city may make the ghettos worse by depriving them of their most competent residents. | Having comptent residents leave the ghetto could result in an overall less quality of life for the rest. | neutral |
His technique is too methodical and slow, she said. | The techniques are being applied to wood-working. | neutral |
Sam Johnson, R-Texas, has suggested that Clinton be court-martialed for his treatment of Paula Jones. | Sam Johnson is associated with the state of Texas. | entailment |
Most Americans will have a tough time living up to its standards. | Something has high standards. | entailment |
I also watched a boy in Lucca try to run over pigeons with his bike. | The pigeons had been growing in population in the area. | neutral |
Barry McCaffrey, has made it clear he regards the two laws as the work of deceptive and mischievous drug legalizers who have snookered a lot of otherwise right-thinking people. | Barry thinks drug legalizers had a hand in creating the 2 laws. | entailment |
The wrist supporters I ordered were black neoprene with a metal brace and a flexible magnetic band. | A wrist supporter has a metal brace and a flexible magnetic band. | entailment |
I don't suppose that everyone is like that. | I know everyone is like that. | contradiction |
He's calling all hands on deck. | The man issuing the call is the boat's captain. | neutral |
Andy's If you must wager on sports, go to Vegas or stick with your neighborhood bookie--he's probably more reputable, if more clearly illegal. | Bookies are more legitimate than going to Vegas. | contradiction |
In the short term, readjustment hits EITC, Social Security, WIC, food stamps, and school lunches, says Dean Baker of the Economic Policy Institute, but in the long term, taxes will be 30 [percent] or 40 percent higher. | The majority of people will not see a tax increase. | neutral |
The wagons will circle to defend this last bastion of human conceit. | No one cares about human conceit in themselves. | contradiction |
Microsoft has been defensive about its low-key Washington role when it could legitimately be boasting about it. | Microsoft has been on the attack in regards to its role in Washington. | contradiction |
Time has fresh shots of an anguished Ethel and a plaintive Rory Kennedy. | Rory Kennedy appears sad. | entailment |
After vowing never to discuss his drug history, he admitted that he had made some mistakes but said he would have passed a 15-year background check in 1989. | He has used drugs in the past. | entailment |
Even so, analysts' recommendations have manifested the Wall Street equivalent of grade inflation. | Out of concern for the market, no analyst is willing to provide recommendations. | contradiction |
As developers kill the bugs, they incorporate the solutions into a daily build of the program and test the build to make certain the solutions don't cause additional bugs. | Developers make no efforts when removing bugs from their software to mitigate the chance of future bugs. | contradiction |
5) The superstars are eating up all the available money and crowding out new talent. | There is little room for new talent. | entailment |
Brazilians, for instance, with their mestizo consciousness and their many gradations of tipo , or type, behold with disdain our crude bifurcation of race. | The Brazilians are an evil race of Chinese descent. | contradiction |
The drive to find and eat food was integral to the survival of our early ancestors. | Our ancestors shopped at grocery stores much like we do. | contradiction |
It offered reportage that chronicles the good, the bad, and the otherwise, and leaves readers fully informed and equipped to judge what deserves their attention and support. | Only the good was chronicled in the report. | contradiction |
My situation is something of a good news-bad news thing. | my situation is perfect, zero issues. | contradiction |
Along with many Americans, I first caught Andy Kaufman on the Tonight Show in the mid-'70s. | Kaufman appeared on the Tonight Show. | entailment |
(And we have reached a degree of liberation that permits me to think of these potholes as Mayor Barry's potholes without feeling guilty of racism.) | I do not feel at liberty to discuss Mayor Barry. | contradiction |
Later, I thought the subject required more analysis. | It didn't need any extra analysis. | contradiction |
The Booker, and all the laurels, are about my past, not my future, says this ace of the apothegm. | I have not received any awards. | contradiction |
The Vatican barred an American priest and nun from ministering to gays. | The priest and nun do not have the support of the Vatican to minister to gay people. | entailment |
But even the Standard , it seems, has its limits. | There is no limit. | contradiction |
Shareholder value, which is shorthand for executives' obsession with their companies' stock prices, has become the prism through which most of corporate America now sees business. | business executives like to artificially inflate their company stocks. | neutral |
But Will He Bring Back the Football Team? | The subject is being asked if they consider bringing back the football team. | entailment |
You don't need to play Mike Wallace and demolish Leuchter on camera. | Avoiding playing Mike Wallace and demolish Leuchter on camera. | entailment |
For instance, in a hot-selling series of novels co-authored by the well-known preacher Tim LaHaye, he's Romanian. | LaHaye became an author so that he might better serve God. | neutral |
on Late Edition , citing the Serb surrender to the Dayton peace conference as an example. | The Late Edition is a show for children on PBS. | contradiction |
For instance, Colorado school administrators like to brag that their state's average SAT score is the highest in the country. | Students in Colorado score the highest SAT scores than any other state in the United States. | entailment |
It concerns itself with something that matters--a million bucks--yet Regis' presence makes it frivolous. | Regis' presence adds to the gravitas of the situation. | entailment |
The other holds a gun to your head every day. | The other absolved you of all responsibility. | contradiction |
Congress, the United Nations, and other international forums. | Congress and the United Nations enjoy working together. | neutral |
Newsweek 's ninth health cover of the year warns that E. coli food contamination is more common than is reported and won't be eradicated with simple beef recalls like the one at Hudson Foods. | E. coli food contamination is a thing of the past. | contradiction |
Latin American gangs routinely kidnap rich foreign executives and demand multimillion-dollar ransoms. | Gangs in Latin America use kidnapping of important foreigners as a tactic to help make their communities richer. | neutral |
As for me, I wrote my book about Reagan because I'd like to see him get at least some of the recognition he deserves during his lifetime. | The person who wrote the book wanted Nixon do get the recognition he deserved. | contradiction |
Time 's Terry Teachout says the 75-minute work's themes are nondescript, its harmonies blandly predictable, [and] its structure maddeningly repetitious. | Time's Terry Teachout had only positive things to say about the work. | contradiction |
If Birdwhistell, in his travels, had been looking not for smiles but for smirks , Chatterbox strongly suspects he would have found lots of them on the smile-barren East Coast, especially in the vicinity of its prep schools and Ivy League universities . Here's a thought Summon up a mental image of Ali McGraw, the smirk... | Chatterbox believe a lot of people smirk at Ivy League schools. | entailment |
That was a satisfying moment. | They are happy. | neutral |
H ome Every baby superstore features a section that could be called the Wall of Death. | Baby superstores where known for their Wall of Life section. | contradiction |
And Stewart Brand's II Cybernetic Frontiers (1974), which recounts how this generation of computer kids designed computer games based on science fiction and used the Internet to fashion a universe of their own. | Many did not believe kids could use computers in this way. | neutral |
Despite a lineup of big-name talent--including Roy Lichtenstein, Jeff Koons, and Claus Oldenberg--the world's most prestigious contemporary art exhibition fails to excite. | The exhibition failed to draw any known artists. | contradiction |
We anticipate accidents at stock car races. | It is due to a lack of safe driving techniques that these accidents will occur. | neutral |
The Post reminds readers of what else she said (Hillary's words are in italics): | The Post gives quotes from Hillary. | entailment |
Or maybe what's new about the rules is the claim that now, for the first time, they apply to a large part of the economy. | The rules have not changed at all. | contradiction |
But these targets still seem far out of reach. | The targets have all been obtained. | contradiction |
Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. | Joel Klein is currently employed as an assistant attorney general. | entailment |
There is lots of truth to that view. | The view posited is truthful. | entailment |
Internet service is a You can be reasonably sure, but no more, that you can send your data to another Internet user pretty quickly. | At no time could you be or ever have been even a little bit sure about anything. | contradiction |
The wise course for Republicans might be to accept a plea bargain under which neither Clinton's behavior nor Starr's will be further investigated with regard to the Lewinsky matter. | Some Republicans are seriously considering accepting the plea bargain. | neutral |
The superficial The even split of many of his assets vindicates her argument and bodes well for corporate wives. | The even split of assets is satisfactory for the corporate wives. | entailment |
Former Republican National Committee Chairman Haley Barbour, too, is working on behalf of the companies involved in the settlement, and he deserves as much scorn as his Democratic counterparts. | Haley Barbour is a millionaire. | neutral |
His apology, June 12: If I knew it was like a religious-type deal, I would have never said it. | He is remorseful. | neutral |
Fashion is as acceptable in France as any imaginative work, and criticism about it has certainly flourished there. | The people of France welcome fashion artists. | neutral |
Lindbergh openly admired Hitler, cozied up to Hermann Goering, and branded Jews as un-American agitators who used their alleged power to attain their parochial ends. | Hitler was admired by Lindbergh, who had no problem with people knowing that. | entailment |
Moral indignation over the incident was almost overshadowed by disbelief that nobody had noticed her condition. | Nobody realized she had a condition. | entailment |
Now I find I hate returning e-mails. | There is nothing better than returning e-mails. | contradiction |
In theory, mandatory insurance could make life better for everyone , including those who currently prefer to be uninsured. | Mandatory insurance could improve everyone's lives. | entailment |
There is the rejection letter I received from George , which he was too modest to put his own name on. | The letter is a thank you card that I received for being a good citizen. | contradiction |
That was a satisfying moment. | They feel like life can't get worse. | contradiction |
Fine, then simply means test it. | Okay, test the item. | entailment |
But I have been unable to visualize one think-tank scholar killing another. | The scholars are of Chinese descent. | neutral |
But I hope the British people will see it in the spirit in which it is intended--one of reconciliation and peace and hopes for the future. | The act was intended to instill fear and disdain. | contradiction |
The original Seattleites--the NW Indians--have become so Californian they're Nevadans. | They have nothing in common with Nevadans. | contradiction |
The most commonly stolen models are Honda Accords and Toyota Camrys. | Vehicles are sometimes stolen. | entailment |
Newsweek 's longer piece likens this to swapping Katharine Hepburn for Whitney was revered for her practicality, whereas Fuller exudes buzz. | Katharine Hepburn is a practical woman that focuses more on fact. | neutral |
As federal employees, postal workers are not allowed to strike and, if a negotiated settlement cannot be reached, contractual disputes are resolved by binding arbitration. | Several postal workers in the northeastern region are unhappy with the current arrangement. | neutral |
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