premise stringlengths 10 639 | hypothesis stringlengths 7 461 | label stringclasses 3
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|---|---|---|
According to Time , dopamine explains how and why we become addicted to sex, drugs, booze, gambling, food, cheap thrills, and yes, tobacco. | Dopamine is a chemical produced in the brain to give you a feeling of satisfaction. | entailment |
The wrist supporters I ordered were black neoprene with a metal brace and a flexible magnetic band. | The black neoprene on the wrist supporter is a nice cosmetic touch. | neutral |
That is George Richey, widower of country singer Tammy Wynette. | George Richey was never married. | contradiction |
At his 1977 trial, Flynt was sentenced to seven to 25 years for obscenity and for engaging in organized crime. | People thought Flynt's sentence was too short for his crimes. | neutral |
Eszterhas is reminiscent of Playboy 's Hugh They share the same exaggerated sense of importance, the same pontificating humorlessness about their ridiculous jobs. | Eszterhas likes to read Playboy magazine for the articles. | neutral |
Christopher is precisely the sort of mobster who turns government witness at the thought of real jail time. | Christopher is a part of a crime mob. | entailment |
In a delicious turn, Christopher Plummer makes the co-anchor less a journalist than a pompous prima donna, but he also gives him a bullying force and real charisma. | The author is satisfied with the performance put on by Plummer. | entailment |
Coulter argues ad Clinton's China satellite policy was treason. | Coulter thinks Clinton committed treason. | entailment |
So we all have benefited indirectly. | The group has benefited from what has happened. | entailment |
Also, Time reports that the IRS fails to collect $150 billion a year in owed taxes, largely because its ancient computer system is too crude to catch frauds. | the IRS is looking into improving their outdated systems. | neutral |
The personal destruction spin is a big winner. | It's not about personal destruction. | contradiction |
He doesn't really want to run, but perhaps he can use the threat of a candidacy to make himself a behind-the-scenes player, the guy who delivers the left to Al Gore or Bill Bradley. | He wants to run no matter what may occur. | contradiction |
For one thing, it's relentless--80,000 houses. | The amount of houses has increased tremendously in the last couple of years. | neutral |
Consider the sex lives of older Americans. | Those sexual happenings of older Americans is something that is important to consider. | neutral |
Mostly I just skim the retractions), and himself (I am so sorry ... | I have no regrets. | contradiction |
We may have lumped several different diseases together in describing the syndrome. | The syndrome can be described by more than one disease. | entailment |
By the 1820s and '30s, most states were allowing all white men to vote (before that, they had to own land), and President Andrew Jackson was leading his famous war on the national bank. | Andrew Jackson was leading a famous war. | entailment |
(After all, Scheck earns a pittance compared with what he could if he were a full-time criminal defense attorney.) | Scheck could earn more money elsewhere. | entailment |
Someone asks the CNN guy, How are the ratings these days? | The CNN guy has no clue what TV ratings are. | contradiction |
The brawny Neeson is a calamity as Wilde, says New York's John Simon. | Disregarding Neeson's performance, the rest of the movie was still bad according to John Simon. | neutral |
Does he himself play, or has he merely observed others? | he constantly plays and never observes anyone else. | contradiction |
The story was singularly inappropriate in 1936--the deluge had come after Coolidge and Hoover, and Roosevelt's spending was an effort to stem the deluge, or at least to keep some people from drowning in it. | Coolidge and Hoover were unaware of the problem. | neutral |
Preventing developers from adding features is not as easy as it sounds. | The builder's code for the area in question is very developer-friendly. | neutral |
Presidents derived their license to serve as leader-preacher from Theodore Roosevelt's remark that the presidency was a bully pulpit, a remark that did not appear in his Inaugural Address. | Theodore Roosevelt has never had any influence or effect on any other president. | contradiction |
(George W. Bush spent his 1978 congressional campaign excusing his father's membership in the Trilateral Commission.) | George W. Bush's father was part of the campaign. | contradiction |
I remember that some people complained President Eisenhower was distracted from the business of his office because he was out playing golf so much. | President Eisenhower enjoyed playing golf in his free time. | neutral |
If the jocks don't know why Bradley should be president, why are they endorsing him? | The jocks were bribed to endorse Bradley. | neutral |
This part of the story is based more on interview and less on research in archives, but I think it is told well. | This portion of the story is mostly based on interviews. | entailment |
' All of President Clinton's untruths, all of his lying under oath, if you will, about an extramarital relationship does not subvert the Constitution (Schumer). | Clinton lied under oath about his extramarital relationship. | entailment |
The rules are very clear. | There are a lot of rules. | neutral |
Confidential to You might have had a better chance of getting your money had the Globe not run a World Exclusive interview in which you're quoted disclosing titillating details about your ex's sexual fantasies and happy-hour proclivities. | The person would have gotten their money back if they had not talked to the Globe. | neutral |
Here again, Artaud's ferocity, anguish, and hallucinatory paranoia are matched and joined by his intelligence and paradoxical control. | Artaud is a happy person. | contradiction |
Mind you, not just something wrong, but something that would separate you from God and send you to hell if death came before confession. | As long as death comes before confession, you can't possibly go to hell no matter what happened. | contradiction |
Gays should come up with a word for their own committed relationships. | Committed relationships can be found outside the confines of heterosexual relationships. | entailment |
The admonition, You become what you behold, has yielded to You become what you belittle. | You become what you behold is a saying many people already know. | neutral |
As a result, sentences are short and clear, often brilliantly compressed. | The sentences were full of imagery and description. | contradiction |
That was Joyce's age when J.D. summoned her to his hilltop aerie in Cornish, N.H. | J.D. Salinger had an inappropriate relationship with a girl who was a minor. | neutral |
As in the case of slavery and the Holocaust, alongside which the famine will be taught, there must be a culprit. | The Holocaust never caused problems, including famine. | contradiction |
TUMORS AND IS A TERMINAL ILLNESS. | The terminal illness does not come with tumors. | contradiction |
c) Evidence of suborning perjury in the Kathleen Willey matter. | There is no evidence in this matter; perjury or otherwise. | contradiction |
That argument which holds that the attempt to raise saving will end up lowering national income, because consumption will fall, and with it profits, output, and employment. | It has been economically proven that savings raise national income and profits. | contradiction |
If we focus on small problems that make headlines, we will ignore bigger problems that don't. | We need to focus on the small problems more than the bigger problems. | contradiction |
I am 18 years old and face a serious problem. | The best thing about being 18 is that all of your problems are insignificant. | contradiction |
Kaaterskill Falls ,by Allegra Goodman (Dial Press). | Allegra Goodman took a series of pictures of Kaaterskill Falls. | neutral |
But it's a heckuva lot more arduous to conduct, in effect, a nationally televised cross-examination than to spend night after night droning, So Ms. | The cross-examination will not be on TV. | contradiction |
In the 1980s, Democrats could be counted upon to argue that Republican presidents needed congressional authorization for military action. | Republicans also argued with Democratic presidents in the 1980s. | contradiction |
So what's a randy president to do? | The randy president has no choice or nothing to do. | entailment |
The Supreme Court might not cooperate in rejecting the administration's public position and embracing its secret desire. | The administration has secret desires the The Supreme Court is aware of. | neutral |
The talking animals and discombobulated cityscapes are so exquisite that I started to snivel about 10 minutes in and more or less kept it up for the next hour and a half. | I did not snivel once. | contradiction |
Half of them die within five years of diagnosis. | A little over half do not die within the five year diagnosis. | neutral |
These decisions are made by middle management, who are free to indulge their prejudices, regardless of a calculation of what's best for the corporate bottom line. | Middle management isn't able to make any decisions. | contradiction |
In 1936, well before No Depression was launched, the Carter Family recorded a song called No Depression in Heaven. | The Carter Family was recording songs in the 1930s. | entailment |
On Wednesday , NBC sinks to new lows with The Hard Evidence of Aliens Among Us? | NBC sunk to new lows with The Hard Evidence of Aliens Among Us. | entailment |
In the New York Times Book Review , Daphne Merkin calls Allegra Goodman's Kaaterskill Falls a throwback to a time before fiction turned graphic and interior and hot to the touch. | Allegra Goodman is a canine that like to chew tennis balls. | contradiction |
It happened in the late 1960s, when state and local officials embarked on a campaign to encourage welfare and food-stamp use--to remove stigma and boost participation rates. | By 1960, public officials were doing everything they could to remove people from the bloated welfare program. | contradiction |
Having done so, they finally agree to marry but with She has privacy, freedom to pursue her own life and friends, control over money, etc. | A pair agree to get married. | entailment |
A great many of us witness to a faith of grace, not judgment--and do it with grace, not judgment. | The author is juxtaposing being graceful with being judgmental. | entailment |
The errors range from the trivial (misspelling the name of former Gov. | After close inspection, no errors could be found. | contradiction |
But just two weeks later, Charlton shared the distressing news that the couple's love life is being ruined by his penchant for antiques hunting on the He's apparently so caught up in his Net surfing that he forgets Jennifer's keeping his bed warm. | Jennifer doesn't care about Charlton's net surfing. | contradiction |
Food irradiators do produce radioactive waste that must be stored under nuclear regulatory guidelines, but the current regulations governing hospitals and sterilization companies seem to work, and the amount of radwaste generated is far too small to cause Three Mile Island-like effects. | The radwaste is a byproduct of greek yogurt. | neutral |
You can fault Clinton's piety and recklessness from a realistic standpoint. | Bill Clinton is an atheist. | 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. | Robert Kennedy was never assassinated. | contradiction |
In the age of the divine entrepreneur, no one cares how badly you treat your kid. | Successful entrepreneurs can escape certain criticisms like mistreating your child. | entailment |
George Custer's left pinkie has, over the years, been traded for a horse and sold for its weight in gold. | Custer's left pinkie has a high prize that has been sold for horses and gold. | neutral |
1 is the easy-to-forget point that money shouldn't be able to buy influence with a democratic government. | The first point is unforgettable; buying influence in government with money can not be forgotten. | contradiction |
Gays should come up with a word for their own committed relationships. | Many politicians are uncomfortable with using the term marriage when referencing a gay relationship. | neutral |
Oh, come on, my date insisted. | The demands from my date last night made me a bit uncomfortable. | neutral |
He sat next to Johnny Carson and in his helium-pitched foreign man voice told jokes without punch lines (Her cooking ees so bad--ees terrible) and did non-impressionistic impressions | The man spoke told jokes in a deep, baritone voice. | contradiction |
Nickles advocated a compromise, and Lott expressed interest in Yugoslavia's proposal for a lightly armed U.N. peacekeeping force in Kosovo rather than a fully equipped NATO force. | Nickles isn't prudent with his suggestion of compromise. | contradiction |
Regular Sunday reviewers, on the model of Cyril Connolly, the longtime critic for the Sunday Times , become trusted guides. | Cyril Connolly was known for his sharp book critiques and scathing movie reviews. | neutral |
Revealed Clinton family troubles immediately after his pastoral visit. | The family troubles involve marriage issues. | neutral |
Give Microsoft a monopoly on browsers, and you'll intensify the downward pressure on the price of its operating systems. | Microsoft's operating systems are expensive. | neutral |
*The scalpers-and-brokers point was brought to Chatterbox's attention by Randolph Cohen's brother Andrew, who is an assistant professor of history at Syracuse. | Randolph Cohen has a brother. | entailment |
This makes it one of the few possible end runs around the meritocratic-credentialing complex, whereby standardized test scores determine future opportunities. | Standardized test scores determine future opportunities. | entailment |
But editorialists said Nicholson had made the investigators' job comically easy (he even climbed into a car with diplomatic plates registered to the Russian Embassy) and, even so, hadn't been caught and busted soon enough. | He was finally caught in January of last year. | neutral |
The problem isn't so much that men are designed by natural selection to fight as what they're designed to fight women . | Like their male counterparts, women are also fighters. | neutral |
Oh, it often gets the least important things right, the facts, the small t truth. | Something gets at least some things right. | entailment |
Boone claims that the album's purpose is to attract metal enthusiasts to Jesus, and that his get-up was a spoof of his old choirboy image. | Boone's get-up featured a leather jacket. | contradiction |
To protect your privacy, ask your bank to restrict access to your records and beg your member of Congress for legislative protections. | It is responsible to take reasonable efforts in order to secure your privacy. | neutral |
Obviously, it's easy for me to complain about players who aren't big on self-effacement or deference to authority. | It's hard for me to complain about anything. | contradiction |
And you have made other people happy, as well. | You have created a very hostile environment. | contradiction |
It was a pleasure working with you. | The working experience was bad for both. | contradiction |
And a great marketing Buy my books, because they're good for your daughter. | My novels will benefit your daughter. | entailment |
Videotape of her answers will be shown to the Arkansas Whitewater grand jury, which will disband May 7. Pundits played up the tension between Starr and the first lady (since she recently called him a politically motivated prosecutor who is allied with the right-wing opponents of my husband) and debated whether he will ... | The tension between Starr and the first lady was respectfully dealt with by the various pundits around the networks. | contradiction |
Newsweek 's cover story explores how schools handle learning disabilities. | The story is not prominent in the issue. | contradiction |
By contrast, many nerds can be handsome (Gore) or self-confident to the point of arrogance (Gates, Gingrich). | Nerds can be attractive individuals. | entailment |
Consider just the Pell Grants for students who have already defaulted on past That one mistake cost $210 million. | Students have never defaulted on anything. | contradiction |
ATandT's plan, announced in February, to use wireless systems to offer local phone service has been widely dismissed as unconvincing. | A large amount of people are impressed with ATandT's new plan to offer local phone service with wireless systems. | contradiction |
They also see it as easing their way toward economic integration with Western Europe. | Western Europe would welcome the economic integration. | neutral |
oh, I'm sorry--are we out of time? | Time has actually expired. | neutral |
They want laws that require of teens that they behave like obedient children. | Much is expected of the teens. | entailment |
Clinton has the ability to sustain that perception despite the test ban's defeat. | The test ban treaty was ratified by all parties and is still in existence. | contradiction |
But the Post made a telling omission here. | the Post was totally trustworthy. | contradiction |
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. | If the detached bill passes, states are likely to ban illegal aliens' children from attending school. | neutral |
Pecker is a breezy, agreeable picture--a charmer, thumbs-up, three stars--but there's something disappointing about a John Waters film that's so evenhanded and all-embracing, even if its sunniness is ironic. | Pecker received only praise. | contradiction |
Either way, Mother Teresa is a shoo-in. | Mother Teresa likes being a shoo-in. | neutral |
On The Simpsons , for example, Nixon has appeared in caricature at least 20 times (according to the Simpsons Archive Web site). | Nixon has been depicted on The Simpsons. | 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 involves more rights for the LGBT. | neutral |
The healing of the Gifford marriage is now complete, and Frank will never cheat again. | Frank will not cheat because of his healed marriage. | entailment |
Yes, he's an asshole-junkie, but, in the capable hands of Michael Imperioli, he is not only He is a cursing, bitch-slapping metaphor for the entire decline of the mob. | The mafia is not seen in the work. | contradiction |
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