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Sentence 1: The teacher asked how many people made up his home.
Sentence 2: Deliver the package to my home.
Question: Is the word 'home' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Give thought to.
Sentence 2: Give priority to.
Question: Is the word 'give' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Immolate the valuables at the temple.
Sentence 2: The Aztecs immolated human victims.
Question: Is the word 'immolate' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Draw a conclusion.
Sentence 2: He spent the day drawing in the garden.
Question: Is the word 'draw' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: The new law will come into effect on the first day of next year.
Sentence 2: The law is still in effect.
Question: Is the word 'effect' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Bind the books in leather.
Sentence 2: The hydrogen binds the oxygen.
Question: Is the word 'bind' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He was on the heavy side.
Sentence 2: It brought out his better side.
Question: Is the word 'side' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: They stopped at an open space in the jungle.
Sentence 2: They tested his ability to locate objects in space.
Question: Is the word 'space' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He's just been released from Shadwell nick prison after doing ten years for attempted murder.
Sentence 2: He was arrested and taken down to Sun Hill nick police station to be charged.
Question: Is the word 'nick' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The clarinet was out of tune.
Sentence 2: He can not sing in tune.
Question: Is the word 'tune' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: To face the front of a coat, or the bottom of a dress.
Sentence 2: Face the lapels of the jacket.
Question: Is the word 'face' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Night spot.
Sentence 2: A leopard's spots.
Question: Is the word 'spot' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Can you take this bag, please.
Sentence 2: Take the case of China.
Question: Is the word 'take' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: She can hold an audience spellbound.
Sentence 2: This story held our interest.
Question: Is the word 'hold' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: She didn't think to harm me.
Sentence 2: We thought to return early that night.
Question: Is the word 'think' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Charge a conductor.
Sentence 2: The speaker charged up the crowd with his inflammatory remarks.
Question: Is the word 'charge' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Did you see today's newspaper?
Sentence 2: Today is beautiful.
Question: Is the word 'today' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Remove a threat.
Sentence 2: Doug removed the smudges.
Question: Is the word 'remove' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: A check on its dependability under stress.
Sentence 2: He paid all his bills by check.
Question: Is the word 'check' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: I tried to call you all night.
Sentence 2: The new dean calls meetings every week.
Question: Is the word 'call' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: It's getting quite stuffy in this room: let's open the windows and air it.
Sentence 2: She aired her opinions on welfare.
Question: Is the word 'air' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: The lines converge at this point.
Sentence 2: The crowd converged on the movie star.
Question: Is the word 'converge' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: I know him under a different name.
Sentence 2: We know this movie.
Question: Is the word 'know' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Do you take me for a fool?
Sentence 2: He was often taken to be a man of means.
Question: Is the word 'take' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: England scored a goal at the death to even the score at one all.
Sentence 2: It was the death of all his plans.
Question: Is the word 'death' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Fall by the wayside.
Sentence 2: We must stand or fall.
Question: Is the word 'fall' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Hunger for affection.
Sentence 2: I have a hunger to win.
Question: Is the word 'hunger' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Stop playing with the seam of the tablecloth! You will unravel it.
Sentence 2: Mother couldn't unravel the ball of wool after the cat had played with it.
Question: Is the word 'unravel' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Drive the game.
Sentence 2: He drives a bread truck.
Question: Is the word 'drive' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Mothers fondle their babies.
Sentence 2: They fondled in the back seat of the taxi.
Question: Is the word 'fondle' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: He is on the purchasing side of the business.
Sentence 2: Look on the bright side.
Question: Is the word 'side' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: In the year 1920.
Sentence 2: A normal year has 365 full days, but there are 366 days in a leap year.
Question: Is the word 'year' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: You drive nails into wood with a hammer.
Sentence 2: Their debts finally drove them to sell the business.
Question: Is the word 'drive' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Burn garbage.
Sentence 2: The car burns only Diesel oil.
Question: Is the word 'burn' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The locus of points equidistant from a given point is a circle.
Sentence 2: A circle is the locus of points from which the distance to the center is a given value, the radius.
Question: Is the word 'locus' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Drive the forest.
Sentence 2: She drove me to school every day.
Question: Is the word 'drive' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Catch one's breath.
Sentence 2: I caught some Z's on the train.
Question: Is the word 'catch' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The Holocaust was insanity on an enormous scale.
Sentence 2: There are some who question the scale of our ambitions.
Question: Is the word 'scale' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The life of this milk carton may be thousands of years in this landfill.
Sentence 2: There is no life on the moon.
Question: Is the word 'life' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: This computer will connect well to the network.
Sentence 2: The new railroad will connect the northern part of the state to the southern part.
Question: Is the word 'connect' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: An advance in health or knowledge.
Sentence 2: She rejected his advances.
Question: Is the word 'advance' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: To admit evidence in the trial of a cause.
Sentence 2: We can not admit non-members into our club building.
Question: Is the word 'admit' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Raise a mutiny.
Sentence 2: Raised edges.
Question: Is the word 'raise' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: She has a thing about him.
Sentence 2: He has a thing about seafood.
Question: Is the word 'thing' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The doctor-patient relationship is based on trust.
Sentence 2: He betrayed their trust.
Question: Is the word 'trust' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He searched for treasure on the ocean bed.
Sentence 2: There's a lot of trash on the bed of the river.
Question: Is the word 'bed' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: A high-pitched voice that could shatter glass.
Sentence 2: The old oak tree has been shattered by lightning.
Question: Is the word 'shatter' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: He stuck the point of the knife into a tree.
Sentence 2: He knows my bad points as well as my good points.
Question: Is the word 'point' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: I think that he is her boyfriend.
Sentence 2: I think he is very smart.
Question: Is the word 'think' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: May God keep you.
Sentence 2: The student was kept after school.
Question: Is the word 'keep' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He stared as she buttoned her top.
Sentence 2: Put your books on top of the desk.
Question: Is the word 'top' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He played a trick on me.
Sentence 2: As the businessman rounded the corner, she thought, "Here comes another trick.".
Question: Is the word 'trick' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He was unable to make his motion because he couldn't get recognition by the chairman.
Sentence 2: Increasing recognition that diabetes frequently coexists with other chronic diseases.
Question: Is the word 'recognition' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: At the start of their turn, each player must draw a card.
Sentence 2: She drew an elephant.
Question: Is the word 'draw' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: They joined the wagon train for safety.
Sentence 2: The bride's train was carried by her two young nephews.
Question: Is the word 'train' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Restore law and order.
Sentence 2: He restored my lost faith in him by doing a good deed.
Question: Is the word 'restore' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The formation of sentences.
Sentence 2: A defensive formation.
Question: Is the word 'formation' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Begin a cigar.
Sentence 2: My property begins with the three maple trees.
Question: Is the word 'begin' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Her former friends now avoid her.
Sentence 2: We avoided the area.
Question: Is the word 'avoid' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: This guy can press 300 pounds.
Sentence 2: She is pressing her opponent but will eventually lose.
Question: Is the word 'press' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Hastened the period of time of his recovery.
Sentence 2: In England they call a period a stop.
Question: Is the word 'period' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Accept students for graduate study.
Sentence 2: I can not accept your invitation.
Question: Is the word 'accept' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He came out of the coal mine with a face covered in black.
Sentence 2: Most coal and ore comes from open-pit mines nowadays.
Question: Is the word 'mine' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: A few words would answer.
Sentence 2: She answered the door.
Question: Is the word 'answer' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Hey, buddy, you got a light?
Sentence 2: Although he saw it in a different light, he still did not understand.
Question: Is the word 'light' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: A filming session.
Sentence 2: A training session.
Question: Is the word 'session' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Shovel sand.
Sentence 2: He shovelled in the backyard all afternoon long.
Question: Is the word 'shovel' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Raise a siege.
Sentence 2: Raise a family.
Question: Is the word 'raise' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Take the gun from your pocket.
Sentence 2: Mother took our plates away and came back with some fruit for us to eat.
Question: Is the word 'take' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Pull a horse.
Sentence 2: You'll be sent home if you pull another stunt like that.
Question: Is the word 'pull' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Haul nets.
Sentence 2: Haul stones.
Question: Is the word 'haul' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Break the cycle of poverty.
Sentence 2: The first winter storm broke over New York.
Question: Is the word 'break' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: They put it into containers for ease of transportation.
Sentence 2: A life of luxury and ease.
Question: Is the word 'ease' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Fall by the wayside.
Sentence 2: Christmas falls on a Monday this year.
Question: Is the word 'fall' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Swing forward.
Sentence 2: This action swung many votes over to his side.
Question: Is the word 'swing' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: See you another time.
Sentence 2: When was the last time we went out? I don't remember.
Question: Is the word 'time' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: He's always stuffing his face with chips.
Sentence 2: Dew dripped from the face of the leaf.
Question: Is the word 'face' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Tomorrow the doctor will take the cast off her arm.
Sentence 2: He took off his shoes.
Question: Is the word 'take' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: I wanted to create an impression of success.
Sentence 2: He watched the impression of the seal on the hot wax.
Question: Is the word 'impression' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Did you catch the thief?
Sentence 2: He caught her staring out the window.
Question: Is the word 'catch' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: When will the meeting be?
Sentence 2: The postman has been today, but my tickets have still not yet come.
Question: Is the word 'be' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Tomorrow the doctor will take the cast off her arm.
Sentence 2: Take the gun from your pocket.
Question: Is the word 'take' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: My students range from very bright to dull.
Sentence 2: The instruments ranged from tuba to cymbals.
Question: Is the word 'range' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The family's fortune waned and they could not keep their household staff.
Sentence 2: Keep count.
Question: Is the word 'keep' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: I have to catch a train at 7 o'clock.
Sentence 2: I have some free time tonight so I think I'll catch a movie.
Question: Is the word 'catch' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Please focus on your studies and not on your hobbies.
Sentence 2: We focused on it.
Question: Is the word 'focus' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: Now we have a fine mess.
Sentence 2: What do we have here?
Question: Is the word 'have' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: He sailed around the world.
Sentence 2: All the world loves a lover.
Question: Is the word 'world' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: A life of luxury and ease.
Sentence 2: He passed all the exams with ease.
Question: Is the word 'ease' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Can you live on $2000 a month in New York City?
Sentence 2: I lived through two divorces.
Question: Is the word 'live' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Please focus the image.
Sentence 2: You'll need to focus the microscope carefully in order to capture the full detail of this surface.
Question: Is the word 'focus' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: These dyes and colors are guaranteed not to run.
Sentence 2: The sale will run for ten days.
Question: Is the word 'run' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: He came to a bad end.
Sentence 2: The end of the pier.
Question: Is the word 'end' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Many children join a sports club.
Sentence 2: Most politicians have joined a party.
Question: Is the word 'join' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: They agreed about the difficulty of the climb.
Sentence 2: Finished the test only with great difficulty.
Question: Is the word 'difficulty' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Pottery was his life.
Sentence 2: He appointed himself emperor for life.
Question: Is the word 'life' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: Your wish will come true.
Sentence 2: The shoes came untied.
Question: Is the word 'come' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: He wrote on the flap of the envelope.
Sentence 2: The flap of a wing.
Question: Is the word 'flap' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
Sentence 1: The general term of an algebraic equation of the n-th degree.
Sentence 2: He was sentenced to a term of six years in prison.
Question: Is the word 'term' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: no |
Sentence 1: The two buildings touch.
Sentence 2: Their hands touched.
Question: Is the word 'touch' used in the same way in the two sentences above?
Answer: yes |
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