Datasets:
id
stringlengths 16
20
| question
stringlengths 27
101
| annotations
sequence | viewed_doc_titles
sequencelengths 1
11
| used_queries
sequence | nq_answer
sequencelengths 1
18
| nq_doc_title
stringlengths 2
84
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-4469503464110108318 | When did the simpsons first air on television? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"When did the Simpsons first air on television as an animated short on the Tracey Ullman Show?",
"When did the Simpsons first air as a half-hour prime time show?"
],
"answer": [
[
"April 19, 1987"
],
[
"December 17, 1989"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"The Simpsons"
] | {
"query": [
"When did the simpsons first air on television?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"History of The Simpsons",
"The Simpsons",
"The Simpsons shorts",
"The Simpsons (season 1)",
"List of The Simpsons episodes",
"The Simpsons opening sequence",
"Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire",
"Stark Raving Dad",
"The Simpsons (season 20)",
"Non-English versions of The Simpsons"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American animated <b>television</b> sitcom starring the animated \nSimpson family, ... Since its <b>debut</b> on December 17, 1989, the show <b>has</b> \nbroadcast 673 episodes and its 30th season started ... The <b>Simpsons first</b> season \n<b>was</b> the Fox network's <b>first TV</b> series to rank among a season's top 30 highest-\nrated shows.",
"The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American animated sitcom created by Matt Groening for the \nFox ... Since its <b>debut</b> on December 17, 1989, 674 episodes of The <b>Simpsons</b> \nhave been broadcast. ... When producer James L. Brooks <b>was</b> working on the \n<b>television</b> variety show The Tracey Ullman Show, he decided to include small \nanimated ...",
"... in shorts from The Tracey Ullman Show as their <b>television debut</b> in 1987. The \n<b>Simpsons</b> shorts are a series of animated shorts that <b>aired</b> as a recurring \nsegment on Fox variety <b>television</b> series The Tracey ... The final short to <b>air was</b> "\n<b>TV Simpsons</b>", originally airing on May 14, 1989. The <b>Simpsons</b> later debuted on\n ...",
"The <b>first</b> season of the American animated <b>television</b> series The <b>Simpsons</b> \noriginally <b>aired</b> on the Fox network between December 17, 1989, and May 13, \n1990, beginning with the Christmas special "<b>Simpsons</b> Roasting on an Open Fire\n". The executive producers for the <b>first</b> production season <b>were</b> Matt Groening, ...",
"The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American animated <b>television</b> sitcom created by Matt \nGroening for the Fox ... Since its <b>debut</b> on December 17, 1989, The <b>Simpsons</b> \n<b>has</b> broadcast 674 episodes. The show holds several American <b>television</b> \nlongevity ...",
"The opening sequence of the American animated <b>television</b> series The <b>Simpsons</b> \nis among the most popular opening sequences in <b>television</b> and is accompanied \nby one of <b>television's</b> most recognizable theme songs. The <b>first</b> episode to use \nthis intro <b>was</b> the series' second episode "Bart the ... <b>was</b> the <b>first</b> episode of The \n<b>Simpsons</b> to <b>air</b> in 720p high-definition <b>television</b>, ...",
""<b>Simpsons</b> Roasting on an Open Fire", titled onscreen as "The <b>Simpsons</b> \nChristmas Special", is the premiere episode of the American animated <b>TV</b> series \nThe <b>Simpsons</b>, ... The show <b>was</b> originally intended to <b>debut</b> earlier in 1989 with "\nSome Enchanted Evening", but due to animation problems with that episode, the \nshow ...",
""Stark Raving Dad" is the <b>first</b> episode of the third season of the American \nanimated <b>television</b> series The <b>Simpsons</b>. It <b>first aired</b> on the Fox network in the \nUnited States on September 19, 1991. ... The <b>Simpsons was</b> the second highest \nrated show on Fox the week it <b>aired</b>, behind Married... with Children. "Stark \nRaving Dad," ...",
"The <b>Simpsons</b>' twentieth season <b>aired</b> on Fox from September 28, 2008 to May \n17, 2009. With this season, the show tied Gunsmoke as the longest-running \nAmerican primetime <b>television</b> series in terms of total number ... It <b>was</b> the <b>first</b>-\never episode of the show to <b>air</b> in Europe before being seen in the United States.",
"The animated <b>TV</b> show The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American English language \nanimated sitcom which ... The <b>Simpsons was</b> dubbed for the <b>first</b> time in Punjabi \nand <b>aired</b> on Geo <b>TV</b> in Pakistan. The name of the localised Punjabi version is \nTedi Sim ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"December 17 , 1989"
] | The Simpsons |
4790842463458965203 | Who played george washington in the john adams series? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"David Morse"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"John Adams (miniseries)"
] | {
"query": [
"John adams tv"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"John Adams (miniseries)",
"John Adams (book)",
"William Daniels",
"Profiles in Courage (TV series)",
"Talk:John Adams (miniseries)",
"The Adams Chronicles",
"The Dead Zone (TV series)",
"List of television series and miniseries about the American Revolution",
"David Morse",
"Sons of Liberty (miniseries)"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>John Adams</b> is a 2008 American <b>television</b> miniseries chronicling most of U.S. \nPresident <b>John Adams</b>'s political life and his role in the founding of the United ...",
"<b>John Adams</b>. is a 2001 biography of the Founding Father and second U.S. \nPresident <b>John Adams</b>, written by the popular American historian David \nMcCullough, which won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography. \nIt has been made into a <b>TV</b> miniseries with the same name by HBO Films.",
"William David Daniels (born March 31, 1927) is an American actor, known for his \nroles as Dr. ... Daniels portrayed strict but loving educator George Feeny at <b>John</b> \n<b>Adams</b> High School in Boy Meets World from 1993 to 2000. ... A familiar \ncharacter actor, he has appeared as a guest star on numerous <b>TV</b> comedies and \ndramas, ...",
"Profiles in Courage is an American historical anthology series that was telecast \nweekly on NBC ... 7, December 27, 1964, <b>John Adams</b> · David McCallum.",
""The event is dramatized and shown as.... It portrays.... The show portrays <b>John</b> \n<b>Adams</b>.... Adams is depicted to ...",
"The Adams Chronicles is a thirteen-episode miniseries by PBS that aired in 1976 \nto ... The most prominent role in the series is <b>John Adams</b>, played by George \nGrizzard. ... The Adams Chronicles won a number of Emmy Awards for <b>television</b>\n ...",
"The Dead Zone, a.k.a. Stephen King's Dead Zone (in USA) is an American/\nCanadian science ... Bruce Lewis (played by <b>John</b> L. <b>Adams</b>)—A physiotherapist \nwho helps Johnny regain his strength after his coma. Bruce is an open-minded ...",
"This is a list of <b>television</b> series and miniseries about the American Revolution. \nThis is a ... <b>John Adams</b> – 2008 HBO biopic miniseries about <b>John Adams</b>, based \non David McCullough's biography also entitled <b>John Adams</b>. Sleepy Hollow – a ...",
"David Bowditch Morse (born October 11, 1953) is an American actor, singer, \ndirector and writer. ... He portrayed George Washington in the 2008 HBO \nminiseries <b>John Adams</b>, which garnered him a second Emmy nomination. ... \nMorse's big break came in 1982 when he was cast in the <b>television</b> medical \ndrama St. Elsewhere.",
"Sons of Liberty is an American <b>television</b> miniseries dramatizing the early \nAmerican Revolution ... Various American Revolutionary figures are central \ncharacters in various episodes, such as Samuel Adams, <b>John Adams</b>, Benjamin \nFranklin, ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"David Morse"
] | John Adams (miniseries) |
-6631915997977101143 | What is the legal age of marriage in usa? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"What is the legal age of marriage, without parental consent or other authorization, in all but two states in the usa?",
"What is the legal age of marriage, without parental consent or other authorization, in Nebraska?",
"What is the legal age of marriage, without parental consent or other authorization, in Mississippi?",
"What is youngest legal age of marriage possible in some US states when circumstances permit?"
],
"answer": [
[
"18 years of age",
"18"
],
[
"19"
],
[
"21"
],
[
"0"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Marriage age in the United States"
] | {
"query": [
"legal age of marriage in usa"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Marriage age in the United States",
"Child marriage in the United States",
"Marriageable age",
"Marriage in the United States",
"List of countries by age at first marriage",
"Child marriage",
"Age disparity in sexual relationships",
"Same-sex marriage law in the United States by state",
"Ages of consent in South America",
"Cousin marriage law in the United States"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>marriage age</b> in <b>the United States</b> is set by each state and territory, either by \nstatute or the common <b>law</b> applies. An individual can <b>marry in the United States</b> ...",
"According to a report published by the Tahirih Justice Center, there are 13 states \nin which there is no <b>minimum age</b> for <b>marriage</b>.",
"Marriageable <b>age</b> (or <b>marriage age</b>) is the <b>minimum age</b> at which a person is \nallowed by <b>law to</b> ... In the <b>US</b>, the lax child <b>marriage</b> laws that exist in many \nstates have attracted international attention. In recent years, several <b>US</b> states \nhave ...",
"In states with no set <b>minimum age</b>, the traditional common <b>law minimum age</b> is \n14 for boys and 12 for girls – <b>ages</b> which have ...",
"This is a list of countries by <b>age</b> at first <b>marriage</b>. Definition of <b>marriage</b> is the \n<b>legally</b> or formally ... <b>United States</b>, 29.3, 27.1, 28.2, 2.2, 1.08, 2015. Venezuela, \n26.0 ...",
"However, even in developed countries such as <b>the United States legal</b> \nexceptions mean that 17 <b>US</b> states have no <b>minimum age</b> ...",
"<b>Age</b> disparity in sexual relationships is the difference in <b>ages</b> of individuals in \nsexual ... A 2011 study suggested that <b>age</b> disparity in <b>marriage</b> is positively \ncorrelated with ... older or younger partners, and for excluding <b>the United States</b> \nfrom the study. ... at predicting the <b>minimum age</b> of woman that a man would \n<b>marry</b> or date.",
"License not issued to persons under <b>age</b> or to persons of the same sex. (b) It \nshall be the declared public policy of the State of Arkansas to recognize the \nmarital ...",
"The <b>age</b> of consent for sexual activity varies by jurisdiction across South <b>America</b>. \nThe specific ... Sexual acts with someone under this <b>minimum age</b> are <b>legally</b> \nclassified as sexual abuse. ... The Bolivian Family Code (Art. 44 and Art. 53) \nallows <b>marriage</b> if the male is 16 years or older and if the female is 14 years or \nolder with ...",
"Cousin <b>marriage</b> laws in <b>the United States</b> vary considerably from one state to \nanother, ranging from cousin <b>marriages</b> being <b>legal</b> in some to being a criminal ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"18",
"Nebraska ( 19 )",
"Mississippi ( 21 )"
] | Age of marriage in the United States |
-3098213414945179817 | Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway as Corie Bratter?",
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway as Victor Velasco?",
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway as Mrs. Banks?",
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway as Paul Bratter?",
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway as Telephone Man?",
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway as Delivery Man?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Elizabeth Ashley"
],
[
"Kurt Kasznar"
],
[
"Mildred Natwick"
],
[
"Robert Redford"
],
[
"Herbert Edelman"
],
[
"Joseph Keating"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Barefoot in the Park",
"Barefoot in the Park (film)"
] | {
"query": [
"Who starred in barefoot in the park on broadway?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Barefoot in the Park",
"Barefoot in the Park (film)",
"Barefoot in the Park (TV series)",
"Neil Simon",
"Mildred Natwick",
"The Star-Spangled Girl",
"Saint Subber",
"Sunday in the Park with George",
"Elizabeth Ashley",
"Jules Munshin"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Barefoot in the Park</b> is a romantic comedy by Neil Simon. The play premiered on \n<b>Broadway</b> in 1963, <b>starring</b> Robert Redford and Elizabeth Ashley. It was made ...",
"<b>Barefoot in the Park</b> is a 1967 American comedy film <b>starring</b> Jane Fonda and \nRobert Redford. ... Gene Saks directed Redford, reprising his <b>Broadway</b> role of \nPaul, and Fonda, who replaced the play's Elizabeth Ashley. Mildred Natwick \nreprises ...",
"<b>Barefoot in the Park</b> is an American sitcom that aired in 1970 on ABC. Based on \nthe Neil Simon's <b>Broadway</b> play of the same name, the series cast ... <b>Barefoot in</b> \n<b>the Park</b> had been a 1967 film <b>starring</b> Robert Redford and Jane Fonda.",
"Marvin Neil Simon (July 4, 1927 – August 26, 2018) was an American playwright, \nscreenwriter ... It was followed by two more successes, <b>Barefoot in the Park</b> (1963\n) and The Odd ... Simon's first <b>Broadway</b> experience was on Catch a <b>Star</b>!",
"Mildred Natwick (June 19, 1905 – October 25, 1994) was an American stage, film \nand television actress. In 1967, she earned an Oscar nomination for her \nsupporting role in <b>Barefoot in the Park</b>. ... Natwick made her <b>Broadway</b> debut in \n1932 playing Mrs. Noble in Frank McGrath's play Carry Nation, about the famous\n ...",
"The <b>Star</b>-Spangled Girl is a comedy written by Neil Simon. The play is set in San \nFrancisco in the 1960s. Contents. 1 Production; 2 Plot overview; 3 History and \nreception; 4 Film; 5 References; 6 External links. Production[edit]. The <b>Star</b>-\nSpangled Girl opened on <b>Broadway</b> at the Plymouth Theatre on ... display on \n<b>Broadway</b> in <b>Barefoot in the Park</b> and The Odd Couple when The ...",
"Arnold Saint-Subber (February 18, 1918 – April 19, 1994), usually known as \nSaint Subber, was ... on <b>Broadway</b>: <b>Barefoot in the Park</b>, The Odd Couple, The \n<b>Star</b>-Spangled Girl, Plaza Suite, Last of the Red Hot Lovers, The Gingerbread \nLady, ...",
"Lapine directed and Patinkin and Peters <b>starred</b>, with ... Sunday opened on \n<b>Broadway</b> to mixed critical responses.",
"... She's Mine, then later <b>starred</b> as Corie in the original <b>Broadway</b> production of \nNeil Simon's <b>Barefoot in the Park</b> (1963) and, later, as Maggie in a <b>Broadway</b> ...",
"Jules Munshin (February 22, 1915 – February 19, 1970) was an actor, comedian \nand singer who had made his name on <b>Broadway</b> when he <b>starred</b> in Call Me \nMister. His additional <b>Broadway</b> credits include The Gay Life and <b>Barefoot in the</b> \n<b>Park</b>."
]
}
]
} | [
"Robert Redford",
"Elizabeth Ashley"
] | Barefoot in the Park |
-927805218867163489 | When did the manhattan project began and end? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Based on the initial thoughts of the project, when did the Manhattan project begin and end?",
"Based on when the project was being worked on, when did the Manhattan project begin and end?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Began 1939, end 1946"
],
[
"Began 1942, end 1946"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Timeline of the Manhattan Project",
"Manhattan Project"
] | {
"query": [
"When did the manhattan project began and end?",
"Manhattan project 1939"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Manhattan Project",
"Timeline of the Manhattan Project",
"Dayton Project",
"German nuclear weapons program",
"Ames Project",
"Project Alberta",
"British contribution to the Manhattan Project",
"Y-12 National Security Complex",
"Uranium mining and the Navajo people",
"The Manhattan Projects"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>Manhattan Project was</b> a research and development undertaking during \nWorld War II that ... The <b>Manhattan Project began</b> modestly in 1939, but grew to \nemploy more than 130,000 people ... The idea of locating Project Y at Oak Ridge \n<b>was</b> considered, but in the <b>end</b> it <b>was</b> decided that it should be in a remote \nlocation.",
"The <b>Manhattan Project was</b> a research and development project that produced \nthe first atomic ... The <b>Manhattan Project began</b> modestly in 1939, but grew to \nemploy more than 130,000 people and cost nearly ... July 15: The MAUD \nCommittee issues <b>final</b> detailed technical report on design and costs to develop a \nbomb.",
"The Dayton Project <b>was</b> a research and development project to produce \npolonium during World ... The Dayton Project <b>began</b> in 1943 when Monsanto's \nCharles Allen Thomas <b>was</b> recruited by the Manhattan ... Port Hope <b>was</b> already \nunder contract from the <b>Manhattan Project</b> for the supply and refining of uranium \nore.",
"The German nuclear weapons project <b>was</b> an unsuccessful scientific effort led by \nGermany to ... The first effort <b>started</b> in April 1939, just months after the discovery \nof nuclear fission in December 1938, but <b>ended</b> only months ... For the <b>Manhattan</b> \n<b>Project</b>, the second condition <b>was</b> met on 9 October 1941 or shortly thereafter.",
"The Ames Project <b>was</b> a research and development project that <b>was</b> part of the \nlarger <b>Manhattan Project</b> to build ... Spedding and Wilhelm <b>began</b> looking for \nways to create the uranium metal. At the time, it <b>was</b> ... Thorium sold for $3 a gram \nbefore the war; by its <b>end</b>, the Ames Project <b>was</b> producing it for less than 5¢ a \ngram.",
"Project Alberta, also known as Project A, <b>was</b> a section of the <b>Manhattan Project</b> \nwhich assisted ... The <b>Manhattan Project began</b> in October 1941, just before U.S. \nentry into World War II. ... Tests continued until the <b>end</b> of the war in August 1945.",
"Britain contributed to the <b>Manhattan Project</b> by helping initiate the effort to build \nthe first atomic ... Initially the British project <b>was</b> larger and more advanced, but \nafter the United States entered the war, the American ... By the <b>end</b> of June 1945, \nit had supplied the <b>Manhattan Project</b> with 5,000 long tons (5,100 t) of nickel \npowder, ...",
"The Y-12 National Security Complex is a United States Department of Energy \nNational Nuclear Security Administration facility located in Oak Ridge, \nTennessee, near the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. It <b>was</b> built as part of the \n<b>Manhattan Project</b> for the purpose of enriching ... However, K-25 <b>did</b> not <b>begin</b> \noperating until March 1945 and fed slightly ...",
"In 1944, uranium mining under the U.S military's <b>Manhattan Project began</b> on \nNavajo Nation lands and on Lakota Nation lands. On August 1, 1946, the \nresponsibility for atomic science and technology <b>was</b> ... When forced relocation \nprograms <b>were ended</b> in 2007, the organization shifted focus to a broader variety \nof issues ...",
"The Manhattan Projects is a comic book series co-created by writer Jonathan \nHickman and artist Nick Pitarra published by Image Comics. It is a story about an \nalternate history of the <b>end</b> of World War II in which the <b>Manhattan Project was</b> a \nfront for other ... The series is a monthly ongoing and <b>began</b> in March 2012 to \nmuch critical ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"Manhattan Project",
"Timeline of the Manhattan Project",
"Einstein–Szilárd letter",
"German nuclear weapons program",
"Timeline of World War II",
"Leo Szilard",
"Ernest Lawrence",
"John R. Dunning",
"S-1 Executive Committee",
"Enrico Fermi"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>Manhattan Project</b> was a research and development undertaking during \nWorld War II that ... The <b>Manhattan Project</b> began modestly in <b>1939</b>, but grew to \nemploy more than 130,000 people and cost nearly US$2 billion (about $23 \nbillion in ...",
"<b>1939</b>[edit]. August 2: Albert Einstein signs the letter (Einstein–Szilárd letter), \nauthored by physicist Leó Szilárd and addressed to President ...",
"The Einstein–Szilárd letter was a letter written by Leó Szilárd and signed by \nAlbert Einstein that was sent to the United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt \non August 2, <b>1939</b>. ... own nuclear program. It prompted action by Roosevelt, \nwhich eventually resulted in the <b>Manhattan Project</b> developing the first atomic \nbombs.",
"The German nuclear weapons project was an unsuccessful scientific effort led by \nGermany to ... The first effort started in April <b>1939</b>, just months after the discovery \nof nuclear ... Even with all four of these conditions in place the <b>Manhattan Project</b> \nsucceeded only after the war in Europe had been brought to a conclusion.",
"Eastern Front · Manhattan Project · United Kingdom home front · Surrender of the \nAxis armies · v · t · e. This is a list of timelines of events over the period of World \nWar II, as well as the prelude to the ... Pact (1918–1941); Timeline of Sweden \nduring World War II (1939–1945); Timeline of the <b>Manhattan Project</b> (<b>1939</b>–1947)\n ...",
"Leo Szilard was a Hungarian-German-American physicist and inventor. He \nconceived the nuclear chain reaction in 1933, patented the idea of a nuclear \nfission reactor in 1934, and in late <b>1939</b> wrote the letter for Albert Einstein's \nsignature that resulted in the <b>Manhattan Project</b> that built the atomic bomb.",
"Ernest Orlando Lawrence (August 8, 1901 – August 27, 1958) was a pioneering \nAmerican nuclear scientist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in <b>1939</b> for \nhis invention of the cyclotron. He is known for his work on uranium-isotope \nseparation for the <b>Manhattan Project</b>, ...",
"John Ray Dunning (September 24, 1907 – August 25, 1975) was an American \nphysicist who played key roles in the <b>Manhattan Project</b> that ... On 25 January \n<b>1939</b>, Dunning was a member of the Columbia team that conducted the first \nnuclear ...",
"The Uranium Committee was a committee of the National Defense Research \nCommittee ... It laid the groundwork for the <b>Manhattan Project</b> by initiating and \ncoordinating the early research efforts in the United States, and liaising with the ... \nThe Advisory Committee on Uranium reported to the President on November 1, \n<b>1939</b>.",
"Enrico Fermi was an Italian–American physicist and the creator of the world's first \nnuclear ... Fermi arrived in New York City on 2 January <b>1939</b>. ... The <b>Manhattan</b> \n<b>Project</b> was replaced by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) on 1 January ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"From 1942 to 1946"
] | Timeline of the Manhattan Project |
-8765341210106443690 | When did the frozen ride open at epcot? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"June 21, 2016"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Frozen Ever After"
] | {
"query": [
"When did the frozen ride open at epcot?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Frozen Ever After",
"Maelstrom (ride)",
"Norway Pavilion at Epcot",
"Soarin'",
"Frozen (franchise)",
"Gran Fiesta Tour Starring The Three Caballeros",
"Horizons (Epcot)",
"Journey into Imagination with Figment",
"Spaceship Earth (Epcot)",
"Test Track"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Frozen Ever After</b> is a reversing log flume <b>attraction</b> in <b>Epcot</b> at the Walt Disney \nWorld Resort ... The <b>attraction</b> will <b>open</b> at Hong Kong Disneyland in 2021.",
"Maelstrom was a reversing log flume dark <b>ride attraction</b> located in the <b>Epcot</b> \ntheme park at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida. Designed by Walt Disney \nImagineering, the <b>ride opened</b> on July 5, 1988, ... film <b>Frozen</b>. Maelstrom's final \nday of operation was October 5, 2014. <b>Frozen Ever After opened</b> on June 21, \n2016.",
"Soft <b>opening</b> date, May 6, 1988. <b>Opening</b> date, June 3, 1988. General statistics. \n<b>Attraction</b> type, Themed Pavilion. Theme, Norwegian Village. The Norway \nPavilion is a Norwegian-themed pavilion that is part of the World Showcase, \nwithin ... <b>Frozen Ever After</b>, which <b>opened</b> in 2016, features the same <b>ride</b> \nvehicles and basic ...",
"Soarin', also known as Soarin' Around the World, Soaring Over the Horizon and \nSoaring: Fantastic Flight, is a flight motion simulator <b>attraction</b> at Disney \nCalifornia Adventure, <b>Epcot</b>, ... A fourth <b>attraction</b> under the name Soaring: \nFantastic Flight <b>opened</b> at Tokyo DisneySea on July 23, 2019. ... <b>Frozen Ever</b> \n<b>After</b>.",
"On September 12, 2014, Walt Disney World announced that a <b>Frozen attraction</b> is \nscheduled to <b>open</b> in June 2016 at <b>Epcot</b>'s World Showcase in the Norway ...",
"Gran Fiesta Tour Starring The Three Caballeros is a musical dark boat <b>ride</b> \nhoused within the pyramid-shaped Mexico Pavilion, at the <b>Epcot</b> theme ... it \nclosed its Maelstrom <b>ride</b> to make room for <b>Frozen Ever After</b>, which <b>opened</b> in \n2016.",
"Horizons was a dark <b>ride attraction</b> at <b>Epcot</b> a theme park at Walt Disney World in \nBay Lake, ... Horizons <b>opened</b> exactly one year after <b>Epcot opened</b> and was \nlocated between World of Motion and the Universe of Energy. ... <b>Frozen Ever</b> \n<b>After</b>.",
"Journey into Imagination with Figment is the third and latest incarnation of a dark \n<b>ride attraction</b> located within the Imagination! pavilion on the western side of \nFuture World at <b>Epcot</b>, a theme park at the Walt Disney World Resort in Bay Lake, \nFlorida. Originally <b>opened</b> on March 5, 1983, its original and current version \nfeature ... <b>Frozen Ever After</b>.",
"The <b>attraction opened</b> for "soft launch" previews starting in December 2007. After \nsome last-minute adjustments in January, the <b>ride</b> had its official re-<b>opening</b> on ...",
"Test Track is a high speed giant slot car <b>attraction</b> on the eastern side of Future \nWorld at <b>Epcot</b>, ... The <b>ride</b> was still prone to breakdowns and <b>did</b> not officially \n<b>open</b> until March 17, 1999. Even after its grand ... <b>Frozen Ever After</b> · United \nKingdom."
]
}
]
} | [
"June 21 , 2016"
] | Frozen Ever After |
-8984315366060644345 | Name the landforms that form the boundaries of the peninsular plateau? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Aravali Range, Satpura Range, Vindhyan Range"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Deccan Plateau"
] | {
"query": [
"Name the landforms that form the boundaries of the peninsular plateau?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Deccan Plateau",
"Iranian Plateau",
"Geography of California",
"Geography of South India",
"Geography of Spain",
"Geography of India",
"Geography of Europe",
"Eastern Ghats",
"Indian Plate",
"Arabian Peninsula"
],
"snippet": [
"Native <b>name</b>, Dakkan, Dakkhin, Dakkhan. The <b>Deccan Plateau</b> is a large plateau \nin western and southern Indian subcontinent. It rises to ... The <b>name</b> Deccan is an \nanglicised <b>form</b>, via Indo-Persian dakkan or dakkin (دکن), of the ... north to \nGodavari River in south, depending on the southern <b>boundary</b> of the northern \nempires.",
"Closeup of the <b>boundaries</b> with the Eurasian, Arabian and Indian plates. The \nIranian <b>Plateau</b> or the Persian <b>Plateau</b> is a geological feature in Western Asia \nand Central ... The Zagros Mountains <b>form</b> the <b>plateau's</b> western <b>boundary</b>, and \nits eastern slopes may be included ... Geography of Iran · <b>List</b> of Iranian four-\nthousanders ...",
"California is a U.S. state on the western coast of North America. Covering an area \nof 163,696 ... The <b>boundaries</b> of California were defined by Spanish claims of \nMexico, as part of the province of Alta California. ... In the northeast corner of the \nstate lies the Modoc <b>Plateau</b>, an expanse of lava flows that formed a million years\n ...",
"The Geography of South India comprises the diverse topological and climatic \npatterns of South ... The Satpura ranges define the northern spur of the <b>Deccan</b> \n<b>plateau</b>, one of the ... Ghats, along the western coast, mark another <b>boundary</b> of \nthe plateau. ... The Western Ghats continue south, <b>forming</b> the Malnad (Canara) \nregion ...",
"Spain is a country located in southwestern Europe occupying most (about 82 \npercent) of the ... 1 External <b>boundaries</b> and <b>landform</b> regions ... Most of Spain's \n<b>boundaries</b> are water: the Mediterranean Sea along the east from the ... The \nmajority of Spain's <b>peninsular</b> region consists of the Meseta Central, a highland \n<b>plateau</b> ...",
"India lies on the Indian Plate, the northern part of the Indo-Australian Plate, \nwhose continental ... Northern Mountains: Himalayas; <b>Peninsular Plateau</b>: \ncontains mountain ... These mountains are recognised by biogeographers as the \n<b>boundary</b> ... They <b>form</b> India's northeastern border, separating it from \nnortheastern Asia.",
"Europe is traditionally defined as one of seven continents. Physiographically, it is \nthe ... The <b>boundary</b> continues to the Caspian Sea, the crest of the Caucasus \nMountains (or, less ... as does mainland Europe itself, where the relief contains \nmany <b>plateaus</b>, river valleys and basins that ... Partial <b>list</b> of European peninsulas\n.",
"The Eastern Ghats are a discontinuous range of mountains along India's eastern \ncoast. The Eastern Ghats run from the northern Odisha through Andhra Pradesh \nto Tamil Nadu in the south passing some parts of Karnataka . They are eroded \nand cut through by four major rivers of peninsular India, viz. ... The <b>Deccan</b> \n<b>Plateau</b> lies to the west of the range, between the Eastern Ghats ...",
"The Indian Plate or India Plate is a major tectonic plate straddling the equator in \nthe eastern hemisphere. Originally a part of the ancient continent of Gondwana, ...",
"The Arabian Peninsula, or simply Arabia is a peninsula of Western Asia situated \nnortheast of ... 1.1 Political <b>boundaries</b>; 1.2 Population ... Kuwait, on the border \nwith Iraq, is an important country strategically, <b>forming</b> one of the main ... A central \n<b>plateau</b>, the Najd, with fertile valleys and pastures used for the grazing of sheep ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Western Ghats",
"Eastern Ghats"
] | Deccan Plateau |
-3359151041540098032 | When was the last time uga won a national championship? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"When was the last time UGA won a national football championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national gymnastics championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national baseball championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national golf championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national women's swimming and diving championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national track and field championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national tennis championship?",
"When was the last time UGA won a national equestrian championship?"
],
"answer": [
[
"1980"
],
[
"2009"
],
[
"1990"
],
[
"2005"
],
[
"2016"
],
[
"2018"
],
[
"2019"
],
[
"2014"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Georgia Bulldogs basketball",
"List of Georgia Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs championships ...",
"Georgia Bulldogs football",
"Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball",
"NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championships"
] | {
"query": [
"When was the last time uga won a national women's gymnastics championship",
"When was the last time uga won a national basketball championship?",
"When was the last time uga won a national women's basketball championship?",
"UGA sports championships",
"When was the last time uga won a national championship?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championships",
"Georgia Gymdogs",
"Georgia Bulldogs",
"Courtney Kupets",
"List of Southeastern Conference champions",
"Simone Biles",
"List of Georgia Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs championships ...",
"List of Pac-12 Conference champions",
"Alabama Crimson Tide women's gymnastics",
"Suzanne Yoculan"
],
"snippet": [
"... W. Bush for their <b>winning</b> the 2008 Division I team <b>national championship</b>. The \nNCAA introduced <b>women's gymnastics</b> as a <b>championship</b> sport in 1982. \n<b>Gymnastics</b> was ... During the late 1980s and 1990s, the University of Georgia (\n<b>UGA</b>), coached by Suzanne ... The <b>Final</b> Four teams: UCLA, LSU, Oklahoma, \nDenver.",
"The Georgia Gymdogs (officially the Georgia Bulldogs) is the <b>women's</b> \ngymnastics team of the ... After the 1979–80 season, the team began competing \nin the <b>National</b> ... As of 2012, the team had <b>won</b> 10 NCAA <b>Women's Gymnastics</b> \n<b>championships</b>. ... "<b>UGA</b> reaches into its <b>recent</b> past for new gymnastics coach: \nCourtney ...",
"The Georgia Bulldogs are the athletic teams that represent the University of \nGeorgia. ... The official mascot is an English Bulldog named <b>Uga</b>, (derived from \nan ... football, men's and <b>women's</b> golf, <b>women's gymnastics</b>, <b>women's</b> soccer, \nsoftball, men's and ... Those 19 teams have <b>won</b> a combined 890 <b>national</b> \n<b>championships</b> ...",
"Courtney Anne Kupets Carter (born July 27, 1986) is a former American artistic \n<b>gymnast</b>. She is ... During her <b>time</b> at the University of Georgia, the Georgia \n<b>women's gymnastics</b> team <b>won</b> four straight NCAA <b>national championships</b> from \n2006-2009. During the 2009–10 ... (<b>UGA</b>), joining her older sister, Ashley Kupets.",
"The Southeastern Conference (SEC) sponsors nine men's sports and twelve \n<b>women's</b> sports. This is a list of conference <b>champions</b> for each sport. Also see \nthe list of SEC <b>national champions</b>. ... 11 <b>Women's gymnastics</b>. 11.1 <b>Champions</b> \n... 1993-1995: Determined by conference and <b>tournament winning</b> percentage.",
"Simone Arianne Biles (born March 14, 1997) is an American artistic <b>gymnast</b>. \nWith a total of 30 ... Additionally, she is a three-<b>time</b> World silver medalist (2013 \nand 2014 on ... Biles competed at the 2013 USA <b>Gymnastics National</b> \n<b>Championships</b> in ... In the <b>women's</b> floor exercise <b>final</b>, she <b>won</b> gold with a \nscore of 15.966.",
"The University of Georgia Bulldogs have fielded competitive sports teams since \n1892. Since that <b>time</b>, teams and individuals have earned honor and glory \nthrough conference and <b>national championships</b>. To date, the Bulldogs have \namassed 44 <b>national championships</b> and 136 ... Team, <b>Last national</b> title, \nNumber of <b>national</b> titles, <b>Last</b> conference title ...",
"This is a list of conference <b>champions</b> in sports sponsored by the Pac-12 \nConference. Contents. 1 Current members; 2 Affiliate members; 3 Former \nmembers; 4 Football; 5 Men's basketball; 6 <b>Women's</b> basketball; 7 Baseball; 8 \nSoftball; 9 <b>Women's gymnastics</b>; 10 Men's ... Oregon, the 1939 PCC <b>champion</b>, \n<b>won</b> the <b>championship</b> game in the 1939 ...",
"One of only six <b>gymnastics</b> teams to <b>win</b> the <b>national</b> title, the Crimson Tide has \n<b>won</b> six NCAA <b>championships</b>, eight SEC <b>championships</b>, and an NCAA-record ...",
"5 <b>Time</b> NCAA Coach of the Year (1987, 1993, 1998, 2006, 2008, 2009). Suzanne \nPaige Yoculan was the head coach of the <b>women's</b> gymnastics program at the \nUniversity of Georgia in Athens, Georgia from 1983 to 2009. During her tenure, \nshe built the Georgia gymnastics program into a <b>national</b> ... 10 NCAA <b>Women's</b> \n<b>Gymnastics championships</b> – 1987, '89, '93, '98, '99, '05, ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"Georgia Bulldogs basketball",
"Georgia Bulldogs",
"2008 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament",
"Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball",
"List of Georgia Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs championships ...",
"Auburn Tigers men's basketball",
"Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate",
"Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball",
"2003 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament",
"List of Southeastern Conference men's basketball champions ..."
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>Georgia</b> Bulldogs <b>basketball</b> program is the <b>men's</b> college <b>basketball</b> team \nrepresenting ... This <b>time UGA</b> made it all the way to the NIT <b>Final</b> Four defeating \nTemple, Maryland, and Virginia Tech before ... (8–8) record, reaching the 20 <b>win</b> \nmark for the third consecutive year for the first <b>time</b> in <b>Georgia basketball</b> history.",
"Main article: <b>Georgia</b> Lady Bulldogs <b>basketball</b> ... (an average of 24.4 <b>wins</b> per \nseason), 23 <b>NCAA</b> tournaments, and five <b>Final</b> Fours. ... The Lady Dogs' all-<b>time</b> \nAP ranking stands at 4th as of 2005.",
"The <b>win</b> marked only the third <b>time</b> the Tar Heels had <b>won</b> their first two \n<b>tournament</b> games by <b>more</b> than 20 points. The ...",
"The <b>Georgia</b> Lady Bulldogs <b>basketball</b> team represents the University of <b>Georgia</b> \nin <b>basketball</b>. ... Please update this article to reflect recent events or newly \navailable ... <b>Georgia</b> has <b>won</b> seven Southeastern Conference regular-season ... \nand appeared in the <b>NCAA</b> Women's Division I <b>Basketball Tournament</b> 33 <b>times</b>, \ntied ...",
"The University of <b>Georgia</b> Bulldogs have fielded competitive sports teams since \n1892. Since that <b>time</b>, teams and individuals have <b>earned</b> honor and glory \nthrough conference and <b>national championships</b>. ... Team, <b>Last national</b> title, \nNumber of <b>national</b> titles, <b>Last</b> conference title, Number of conference titles, Notes\n. Football ...",
"The 1985 Auburn Tigers <b>won</b> the <b>tournament</b> after beating ... has reached the \nSEC <b>Tournament final</b> two other <b>times</b>: in 1984, ...",
"Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate is an American college football rivalry between the \n<b>Georgia</b> ... <b>Georgia</b> made the <b>Final</b> Four in its first <b>NCAA Tournament</b> appearance \nin ... During this <b>time</b> the Bulldogs have had <b>win</b> streaks of six games (1978–1983\n), ... Since 1994, the Tech-<b>UGA basketball</b> game has had the highest average ...",
"The <b>Georgia</b> Tech Yellow Jackets <b>Men's Basketball</b> team represents the <b>Georgia</b> \nTech Yellow ... The next <b>time</b> Tech had a <b>basketball</b> team, it was under the \nfamous coach John ... In 1964, <b>Georgia</b> Tech's <b>final</b> season in the Southeastern \nConference, the ... The following year, the Yellow Jackets <b>won</b> the ACC \n<b>Tournament</b>.",
"The 2003 <b>NCAA</b> Division I <b>Men's Basketball Tournament</b> involved 65 schools \nplaying in ... Syracuse <b>won</b> their first <b>national championship</b> in three tries under \nJim Boeheim, defeating Kansas 81–78 in what ... To date, this is the <b>last</b> \n<b>tournament</b> to feature what is now known as the <b>Times</b> Union Center in Albany; \nhowever, the ...",
"Kentucky defeated <b>Georgia</b> in the 1988 SEC <b>Tournament final</b>, but the \n<b>tournament</b> title was vacated later because of <b>NCAA</b> violations. Award Winners \nby school[ ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball",
"List of Georgia Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs championships ...",
"Georgia Bulldogs",
"List of Southeastern Conference champions",
"Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball",
"Andy Landers",
"Southeastern Conference",
"2001 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament",
"List of Pac-12 Conference champions",
"Florida Gators women's basketball"
],
"snippet": [
"The Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball team represents the University of Georgia \nin basketball. ... They have historically been among collegiate <b>Womens</b> \n<b>Basketball's</b> best ... appeared in 5 <b>Final</b> Fours and 11 Elite Eights, but have never \n<b>won a National</b> ... Coach Landers was hired as the team's first full-<b>time</b> coach in \n1979.",
"The University of Georgia Bulldogs have fielded competitive sports teams since \n1892. Since that <b>time</b>, teams and individuals have earned honor and glory \nthrough conference and <b>national championships</b>. To date, the Bulldogs have \namassed 44 <b>national championships</b> and 136 ... Team, <b>Last national</b> title, \nNumber of <b>national</b> titles, <b>Last</b> conference title ...",
"Landers currently stands as the winningest <b>women's</b> college <b>basketball</b> coach \nnot to have <b>won</b> the <b>national championship</b>. The Lady Dogs' all-<b>time</b> AP ranking ...",
"The Southeastern Conference (SEC) sponsors nine men's sports and twelve \nwomen's sports. This is a list of conference <b>champions</b> for each sport. Also see \nthe list of SEC <b>national champions</b>. ... Although the SEC began sponsoring \n<b>women's basketball</b> competition in the ... <b>UGA</b>, 2–1), No <b>Tournament</b>, Georgia, \nAlabama.",
"The Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball team represents the University of \nTennessee in Knoxville, Tennessee in NCAA <b>women's basketball</b> competition. \nThe team has been a contender for <b>national</b> titles for over thirty years, having \nmade every NCAA Women's Division I Basketball <b>Championship tournament</b> \nsince ... Tennessee not only made it to the NCAA <b>Final</b> Four for the second <b>time</b> \nout of ...",
"Andrew Grady Landers (born October 8, 1952) is a retired American college \nbasketball coach who was head <b>women's basketball</b> coach ... At the <b>time</b> he \nretired, Georgia's five <b>Final</b> Four appearances (all under Landers) ... 944 total \n<b>wins</b>, which ranked fifth all-<b>time</b> among women's college basketball coaches. ... \n<b>UGA</b> Today.",
"The Southeastern Conference (SEC) is an American college athletic conference \nwhose ... The SEC participates in the <b>National</b> Collegiate Athletic Association (\nNCAA) ... of its <b>winning</b> reputation, with 43 <b>national</b> football <b>championships</b>, 21 \n<b>basketball</b> ... team <b>championships</b> in nine men's sports and twelve <b>women's</b> \nsports.",
"Connecticut went into a scoring drought, going <b>more</b> than five minutes without a \npoint. Notre Dame went on to <b>win</b> 90–75, to head to their first <b>national</b> ...",
"^ Arizona was <b>National Champion</b> in 1997, though it did not <b>win</b> the conference. \n<b>Women's basketball</b>[edit]. See also: Pac-12 Conference Women's ...",
"The Florida Gators <b>women's basketball</b> team represents the University of Florida \nin the sport of basketball. The Gators compete in Division I of the <b>National</b> \nCollegiate Athletic ... They made local headlines in 1976 by <b>winning</b> the "state \n<b>championship</b>" by beating the other three women's teams in the state at that <b>time</b>."
]
},
{
"title": [
"List of Georgia Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs championships ...",
"Georgia Bulldogs",
"Georgia Bulldogs football",
"Georgia Bulldogs basketball",
"List of Southeastern Conference champions",
"Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate",
"Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball",
"Georgia Gymdogs",
"Southeastern Conference",
"Vince Dooley"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Basketball</b> arena, Stegeman Coliseum. Mascot, Que (English bulldog) <b>UGA</b> X. \nNickname, Bulldogs, '<b>Dawgs</b>. Fight song, Glory, Glory. Colors, Red and Black. \nWebsite, www.georgiadogs.com. The University of Georgia Bulldogs have fielded \ncompetitive <b>sports</b> teams since 1892.",
"The Georgia Bulldogs are the <b>athletic</b> teams that represent the University of \nGeorgia. ... Equestrian was added as <b>UGA's</b> 21st intercollegiate varsity <b>sport</b> in \n2001. ... Georgia has won 13 Southeastern Conference (SEC) <b>championships</b> (\nthe most ...",
"The Georgia Bulldogs football program represents the University of Georgia in \nthe <b>sport</b> of ... <b>UGA</b> claims two consensus national <b>championships</b> (1942 and \n1980); the AP and Coaches Polls have each voted the Bulldogs the national \nchampion ...",
"Conference Tournament <b>Champions</b>. 1917, 1932, 1983, 2008. Conference \nRegular Season <b>Champions</b>. 1931, 1990. The Georgia Bulldogs <b>basketball</b> \nprogram is the men's college <b>basketball</b> team representing ... <b>UGA</b> previously \nhad won the Southeastern Conference tournament in Birmingham, AL defeating \nOle Miss, ...",
"The Southeastern Conference (SEC) sponsors nine men's <b>sports</b> and twelve \nwomen's <b>sports</b>. ... <b>UGA</b>, 2–1), No Tournament, Georgia, Alabama. 1956, Florida\n ...",
"Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate is an American college football rivalry between the \nGeorgia ... Georgia Tech claims four national <b>championships</b>: 1917, 1928, 1952, \nand 1990. ... After the war, Dan Magill, long-time <b>UGA sports</b> information director, \nfelt that the Bulldogs teams were at an unfair competitive disadvantage against ...",
"Conference Regular Season <b>Champions</b>. 1983, 1984, 1986, 1991, 1996, 1997, \n2000, 2001. The Georgia Lady Bulldogs <b>basketball</b> team represents the \nUniversity of Georgia in <b>basketball</b>. ... <b>UGA Sports</b> Communications. February 26, \n2007.",
"The Georgia Gymdogs (officially the Georgia Bulldogs) is the women's \ngymnastics team of the ... As of 2012, the team had won 10 NCAA Women's \nGymnastics <b>championships</b>. ... their winning the National Collegiate <b>Athletic</b> \nAssociation Division I team <b>championship</b>. ... Georgia Gymnastics [@\n<b>UGAGymnastics</b>] (9 May 2017).",
"The SEC is regarded as one of the most accomplished <b>sports</b> conferences in \nterms of its winning reputation, with 43 national football <b>championships</b>, 21 \n<b>basketball</b> ...",
"After leading <b>UGA</b> to 201 victories, 6 SEC <b>championships</b>, and one national \n<b>championship</b> as head football coach, Dooley retired to focus on his post as \n<b>athletic</b> ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"Georgia Bulldogs football",
"Georgia Bulldogs",
"List of Georgia Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs championships ...",
"SEC Championship Game",
"1980 Georgia Bulldogs football team",
"Georgia Bulldogs baseball",
"Georgia Bulldogs basketball",
"2018 College Football Playoff National Championship",
"Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate",
"2008 Sugar Bowl"
],
"snippet": [
"^ "Who Has the Most SEC Football <b>Championships</b>?". University of Georgia \nAthletics. ^ "<b>College</b> Football Data Warehouse - Division I-A ALL-<b>TIME WINS</b> \nrankings" ...",
"The Georgia Bulldogs are the athletic teams that represent the University of \nGeorgia. ... seasons (an average of 24.4 <b>wins</b> per season), 23 NCAA \ntournaments, and five <b>Final</b> Fours. ... Georgia holds the all-<b>time</b> advantage in the \nseries, posting a <b>win</b>-loss record of ... His inaugural <b>UGA</b> team <b>won</b> the <b>national</b> \n<b>championship</b>.",
"The University of Georgia Bulldogs have fielded competitive sports teams since \n1892. Since that <b>time</b>, teams and individuals have earned honor and glory \nthrough conference and <b>national championships</b>. To date, the Bulldogs have \namassed 44 <b>national championships</b> and 136 ... Team, <b>Last</b> national title, \nNumber of national titles, <b>Last</b> conference title ...",
"The SEC Championship Game is an annual American football game that has \ndetermined the ... Each of these teams has <b>won</b> the championship multiple <b>times</b>. \n... in the 2010 BCS <b>National Championship</b> Game, which it went on to <b>win</b> as well\n. ... the <b>last</b> held in the BCS era, was not thought of as such at the <b>time</b> of the \ngame, ...",
"The 1980 Georgia Bulldogs football team represented the Georgia Bulldogs of \nthe University of ... The team was named <b>national champion</b> by NCAA-\ndesignated major ... minutes later on a 9-yard touchdown run as Georgia went on \nto <b>win</b> the game, 16–15. ... Walker rushed 25 <b>times</b> for 205 yards against the \nRamblin' Wreck.",
"Georgia <b>won</b> the <b>College</b> World Series in 1990. The Bulldogs play their home \ngames on <b>UGA's</b> campus in Foley Field, and are coached by head coach Scott ...",
"The Georgia Bulldogs basketball program is the men's <b>college</b> basketball team \nrepresenting ... This <b>time UGA</b> made it all the way to the NIT <b>Final</b> Four defeating \nTemple, Maryland, and Virginia Tech before losing a ... <b>UGA</b> previously had <b>won</b> \nthe Southeastern Conference <b>tournament</b> in Birmingham, AL defeating Ole Miss,\n ...",
"The 2018 College Football Playoff <b>National Championship</b> was a college football \nbowl game ... Alabama and Georgia advanced to the <b>national championship</b> after \n<b>winning</b> ... defense held yet again and Alabama's JK Scott punted for the third \n<b>time</b>. ... "Alabama's Sugar Bowl <b>win</b> against Clemson sets up all-SEC <b>final</b>: <b>Final</b> ...",
"Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate is an American college football rivalry between the \nGeorgia ... Georgia Tech claims four <b>national championships</b>: 1917, 1928, 1952, \nand ... During his reign, the Yellow Jackets <b>won</b> eight in a row against <b>UGA</b> from \n... During this <b>time</b> the Bulldogs have had <b>win</b> streaks of six games (1978–1983),\n ...",
"The 2008 Allstate Sugar Bowl was an American <b>college</b> football bowl game. It \nwas part of the Bowl <b>Championship</b> Series (BCS) for the 2007 NCAA ... WAC \n<b>champion</b> Hawaii Warriors, the <b>last</b> undefeated major <b>college</b> football team ... \nMVP of the Sugar Bowl Game, the first <b>time</b> in its history that a purely defensive \nplayer ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"1980"
] | Georgia Bulldogs football |
6601536662148726350 | Who sing play that funky music white boy? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Who sing play that funky music white boy in 1976?",
"Who sing play that funky music white boy in 1989?",
"Who sing play that funky music white boy in 1988?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Rob Parissi"
],
[
"Vanilla Ice"
],
[
"Roxanne"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Play That Funky Music"
] | {
"query": [
"play that funky music white boy"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Play That Funky Music",
"Wild Cherry (band)",
"Wild Cherry (album)",
"Rob Parissi",
"Talk:Play That Funky Music",
"Funk rock",
"Mark Avsec",
"Funk",
"Boogie Nights (musical)",
"Honky"
],
"snippet": [
""<b>Play That Funky Music</b>" is a song written by Rob Parissi and recorded by the \nband Wild Cherry. The single was the first released by the Cleveland-based \nSweet ...",
"Wild Cherry was an American <b>funk</b> rock band formed in Mingo Junction, Ohio in \n1970 that was ... While brainstorming for new song ideas, Beitle recounted \nhearing a fan shout "Are you <b>white boys</b> gonna <b>play</b> some <b>funky music</b>?" Parissi \nwas ...",
"Wild Cherry is the first studio album by Wild Cherry, released in 1976. The album \nincludes the group's only major single success, "<b>Play That Funky Music</b>".",
"Robert "Rob" Parissi is an American singer, songwriter and guitarist, perhaps \nbest known as frontman for the American funk group Wild Cherry. He also wrote \nthe group's only hit, the 1976 chart-topping "<b>Play That Funky Music</b>".",
"An infobox for the Vanilla Ice version of "<b>Play That Funky Music</b>" was ... How lame \nis the city of Boston to make the band change the lyrics to "right, <b>boy</b>"? Kolef88 ...",
"Funk rock is a fusion genre that mixes elements of funk and rock. James Brown \nand others ... Rick Derringer, David Bowie, Aerosmith, Wild Cherry, Average \n<b>White</b> Band, ... During the 1980s and 1990s funk rock music experienced a surge \nin ... Gary Wright ("Love is Alive", 1976) and Wild Cherry ("<b>Play That Funky Music</b>"\n, ...",
"He also toured with the band, performing "<b>Play That Funky Music</b>" at the 1976 \nGrammy Awards. During this period, he befriended Donnie Iris, with whom he ...",
"Funk is a music genre that originated in African-American communities in the mid\n-1960s when ... Even though in <b>white</b> culture, the term "funk" has negative \nconnotations of odor or being in a bad mood ("in a ... For example, "<b>Play that</b> \n<b>funky music</b>" (by Wild Cherry) mainly uses an E ninth chord, but it also uses F#9 \nand F9.",
"Boogie Nights is a British musical play, based upon the pop music of the 1970s, \nwritten by Jon ... Funky Music No 1 - "<b>Play That Funky Music White Boy</b>" - Roddy; \n"A Little Bit More" - Recorded Track; "Last Dance" / "Reach Out" - Lorraine, ...",
"Honky is a racial slur for <b>white</b> people, predominantly heard in the United States. \nThe term was ... The uncensored version of the 1976 disco/funk hit "<b>Play That</b> \n<b>Funky Music</b>", by Wild Cherry, uses "honky" in the final ... In the Family <b>Guy</b> \nepisode "Brian Sings and Swings", Peter Griffin uses the word to try to get out of \njury duty."
]
}
]
} | [
"Wild Cherry"
] | Play That Funky Music |
-4757397641844293607 | When was the first airplane used in war? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Blériot XI",
"Nieuport IV"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"History of aerial warfare"
] | {
"query": [
"first airplane used in war"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"History of aerial warfare",
"Military aviation",
"Aviation in World War I",
"Aerial warfare",
"List of jet aircraft of World War II",
"History of the aircraft carrier",
"Aerial bomb",
"Fighter aircraft",
"First-generation jet fighter",
"List of aircraft of World War II"
],
"snippet": [
"The history of aerial warfare began in ancient times, with the <b>use</b> of kites in China\n. In the third century, it progressed to balloon warfare. <b>Airplanes</b> were put to <b>use</b> \nfor <b>war</b> starting in 1911, initially for reconnaissance, ... The <b>first use</b> of <b>airplanes</b> in \nan actual <b>war</b> occurred in the 1911 Italo-Turkish <b>War</b> with Italian Army Air Corps ...",
"Military aviation is the <b>use</b> of military <b>aircraft</b> and other flying machines for the \npurposes of ... While they <b>first</b> appeared during World <b>War</b> I, ground attack <b>aircraft</b> \ndidn't provide a decisive contribution until the Germans introduced Blitzkrieg \nduring ...",
"Ljutovac <b>used</b> a slightly modified ... This was the <b>first</b> time that a ...",
"Aerial warfare is the battlespace <b>use</b> of military <b>aircraft</b> and other flying machines \nin warfare. ... <b>Airplanes</b> were put to <b>use</b> for <b>war</b> starting in 1911, initially for aerial \n... The <b>first</b> military satellites were <b>used</b> for reconnaissance in the 1950s, and ...",
"World <b>War</b> II was the <b>first war</b> in which jet <b>aircraft</b> participated in combat with \nexamples being <b>used</b> on both sides of the conflict during the latter stages of the \n<b>war</b>.",
"The <b>first</b> British warship lost in the <b>war</b> was HMS Courageous sunk ... The <b>use</b> of \ncarriers prevented the Italian Navy and land-based ...",
"An aerial bomb is a type of explosive or incendiary weapon intended to travel \nthrough the air on ... The <b>first</b> bombs dropped from a heavier-than-air <b>aircraft</b> were \ngrenades or grenade-like devices. Historically, the <b>first use</b> was by Giulio Gavotti \non 1 November 1911, during the Italo-Turkish <b>War</b>. An F-100 Super Sabre of the\n ...",
"The word "fighter" was <b>first used</b> to describe a two-seater <b>aircraft</b> ... However at \nthe outbreak of World <b>War</b> I, front-line <b>aircraft</b> were ...",
"The plans for the <b>first</b> operational jet fighter, the ... equipment to the piston-\nengined counterparts <b>used</b> during the <b>war</b>.",
"The List of <b>aircraft</b> of World <b>War</b> II includes all the <b>aircraft used</b> by those countries \nwhich were at ... The date the <b>aircraft</b> entered service, or was <b>first</b> flown if the \nservice date is unknown or it did not enter service follows the name, followed by \nthe ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"1911"
] | Aerial warfare |
-6857918454805495301 | What color is a negative benedict's test? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"clear blue",
"blue",
"deep-blue"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Benedict's reagent"
] | {
"query": [
"What color is a negative benedict's test?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Benedict's reagent",
"Fehling's solution",
"Tollens' reagent",
"Molisch's test",
"Clinical urine tests",
"Barfoed's test",
"Schiff test",
"Biuret test",
"Melzer's reagent",
"Seliwanoff's test"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Benedict's reagent</b> is a chemical reagent and complex mixture of sodium \ncarbonate, sodium ... A positive test with <b>Benedict's reagent</b> is shown by a <b>color</b> \nchange from clear blue to a brick-red precipitate. Generally, Benedict's ... Inositol \n(myoinositol) is another carbohydrate which produces a <b>negative</b> test. <b>Benedict's</b> \n<b>reagent</b> ...",
"Left side <b>negative</b>, right side positive. Classification, Colorimetric method. \nAnalytes, Monosaccharides. Fehling's solution is a chemical reagent used to \ndifferentiate between water-soluble ... Formic acid (HCO2H) also gives a positive \nFehling's test result, as it does with Tollens' test and <b>Benedict's test</b> also. The \npositive tests ...",
"Tollens' test for aldehyde: left side positive (silver mirror), right side <b>negative</b>. Ball-\nand-stick model of the diamminesilver(I) complex. Tollens' reagent is a chemical \nreagent used to determine the presence of aldehyde and ... See also[edit]. \n<b>Benedict's reagent</b> · Walden reductor (opposite use involving metallic silver) ...",
"Molisch's test is a sensitive chemical test, named after Austrian botanist Hans \nMolisch, for the ... <b>Benedict's reagent</b> (reducing sugars etc); Aniline acetate test (\npentoses); Starch indicator; Molisch's test (carbs). Proteins & amino acids. Biuret \ntest ...",
"Clinical urine tests are various tests of urine for diagnostic purposes. A urinalysis \n(UA) is one of ... The following are examples of some urine <b>colors</b> and their \ncauses (not a complete listing). Nearly colorless: Excessive fluid ... Glucose, n/a, \n0 / <b>negative</b>, Glucose can be measured with <b>Benedict's test</b>. Although glucose is \neasily ...",
"<b>Barfoed's test</b> is a chemical test used for detecting the presence of \nmonosaccharides. It is based on the reduction of copper(II) acetate to copper(I) \noxide (Cu2O), ...",
"The Schiff test is an early organic chemistry named reaction developed by Hugo \nSchiff, and is a ... give rise to false <b>negative</b> tests such as in the case of testing for \nthe aldehydic terminus of glucose. Schiff's reagent on reaction with Acetaldehyde \ngives pink <b>colour</b>. ... Fehling's solution · <b>Barfoed's test</b> · <b>Benedict's reagent</b> ...",
"The biuret <b>test</b>, also known as Piotrowski's <b>test</b>, is a chemical <b>test</b> used for \ndetecting the presence of peptide bonds. In the presence of peptides, a copper(II) \nion ...",
"Melzer's reagent is a chemical reagent used by mycologists to assist with the \nidentification of ... Inamyloid or Melzer's-<b>negative</b>, in which the tissues do not \nchange <b>color</b>, or react faintly yellow-brown. Among the ... <b>Benedict's reagent</b> (\nreducing sugars etc); Aniline acetate test (pentoses); Starch indicator · Molisch's \ntest (carbs).",
"Seliwanoff's <b>test</b> is a chemical <b>test</b> which distinguishes between aldose and \nketose sugars. ... When added to a solution containing ketoses, a red <b>color</b> is \nformed rapidly indicating a positive <b>test</b>. When added to a solution containing \naldoses, ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"blue"
] | Benedict's reagent |
-4132174036373265970 | Consubstantial with the father in the creed means what? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Consubstantial with the father in the creed means what in humanity?",
"What do translations into English often say Consubstantial with the father in the creed means what?",
"What do some English-speaking translators and authors still prefer Consubstantial with the father in the creed means what?"
],
"answer": [
[
"common humanity which is shared by all human persons."
],
[
"of the same being"
],
[
"nature of God in Christianity"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Consubstantiality"
] | {
"query": [
"Consubstantial with the father in the creed means what?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Consubstantiality",
"English versions of the Nicene Creed",
"Nicene Creed",
"Filioque",
"Homoousion",
"Athanasius of Alexandria",
"Council of Chalcedon",
"Trinity",
"Eastern Orthodox teaching regarding the Filioque",
"Arius"
],
"snippet": [
"Consubstantiality (Latin: consubstantialitas), or coessentiality (Latin: \ncoessentialitas), is a ... Thus, Jesus Christ is said to be <b>consubstantial with the</b> \n<b>Father</b> in his divinity and ... ratified in the Nicene Council and <b>Creed</b>, was actually \na term reported to also ... It is <b>defined</b> by Burke as "a practice-related concept \nbased on stylistic ...",
"The Nicene <b>Creed</b>, composed in part and adopted at the First Council of Nicaea (\n325) and ... The <b>translation</b> for use in Mass of the Roman Rite is found in the \nOrder of Mass. ... begotten, not made, <b>consubstantial with the Father</b>; through him \nall ...",
"The Nicene <b>Creed</b> is a statement of belief widely used in Christian liturgy. It is \ncalled Nicene ... In this sense, processio is similar in <b>meaning</b> to the Greek term \nπροϊέναι, used by the <b>Fathers</b> from ... Again, the terms "ὁμοούσιον" and "\nconsubstantialem", translated as "of one being" or "<b>consubstantial</b>", have different \novertones, ...",
"Filioque is a Latin term added to the original Niceno-Constantinopolitan <b>Creed</b> \nand which has ... For some, the term implies a serious underestimation of <b>God</b> the \n<b>Father</b>'s role in the Trinity; for others, its denial ... the Niceno-Constantinopolitan \n<b>Creed</b>,; about the authority of the Pope to <b>define</b> the orthodoxy of the doctrine or ...",
"Homoousion is a Christian theological term, most notably used in the Nicene \n<b>Creed</b> for describing <b>Jesus</b> (<b>God</b> the Son) as ... Hence the English terms \ncoessential and <b>consubstantial</b>. ... <b>meaning</b> that, to Sabellius, the <b>Father</b> and Son \nwere "one essential Person", though operating as different faces, roles, or modes.",
"Athanasius of Alexandria also called Athanasius the Great, Athanasius the \nConfessor or, ... Athanasius was a Christian theologian, a Church <b>Father</b>, the \nchief defender of Trinitarianism against Arianism, and ... From this time to the end \nof the Arian controversies the word "<b>consubstantial</b>" continued to be the test of \northodoxy.",
"The Council of Chalcedon was a church council held from 8 October to 1 \nNovember, 451, ... The council <b>fathers</b>, however, felt that no new <b>creed</b> was \nnecessary, and that ... The Council of Chalcedon issued the Chalcedonian \n<b>Definition</b>, which ... the <b>Father</b> according to the Godhead, and <b>consubstantial</b> with \nus according to ...",
"The Christian doctrine of the Trinity holds that <b>God</b> is one <b>God</b>, but three \ncoeternal <b>consubstantial</b> persons or hypostases—the <b>Father</b>, the Son (<b>Jesus</b> \nChrist), ... He explicitly <b>defined</b> the Trinity as <b>Father</b>, Son, and Holy Spirit and \ndefended his ... The Confession of the First Council of Nicaea, the Nicene <b>Creed</b>, \nsaid little about ...",
"The position of the Eastern Orthodox Church regarding the Filioque controversy \nis <b>defined</b> by the Bible, teachings of the Church <b>Fathers</b>, <b>creeds</b> and <b>definitions</b> ... \nthe <b>Father</b> alone, as the hypostatic cause of the <b>consubstantial</b> hypostases, we ...",
"Arius was a Libyan presbyter and ascetic, and priest in Baucalis in Alexandria, \nEgypt. ... The Son's precise relationship with the <b>Father</b> had been discussed for \ndecades ... It included the word homoousios, <b>meaning</b> "<b>consubstantial</b>", or "one in \n... condemned Arius anew while reaffirming and expanding the Nicene <b>Creed</b>."
]
}
]
} | [
"the Greek term homoousios"
] | Consubstantiality |
1561260788294720798 | What was elvis presley's first uk number 1? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"All Shook Up"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"List of artists by number of UK Singles Chart number ones",
"Lists of UK Singles Chart number ones"
] | {
"query": [
"Elvis, first UK number 1"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Lists of UK Singles Chart number ones",
"List of artists by number of UK Singles Chart number ones",
"Elvis Presley singles discography",
"List of posthumous number ones on the UK Singles Chart",
"UK Singles Chart records and statistics",
"List of posthumous number ones on the UK Albums Chart",
"List of UK Singles Chart number ones of the 1950s",
"ELV1S: 30 No. 1 Hits",
"List of UK Singles Chart number ones of the 1960s",
"2005 in British music charts"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Elvis Presley</b> has achieved 21 <b>number ones</b> on the <b>UK</b> Singles Chart, more than \nany other act. The <b>UK</b> Singles Chart is a weekly record chart which for most of its \nhistory was based on single ... The Beatles' <b>first</b> chart-topper, "From Me to You", \nreached <b>number one</b> in May 1963. In the 1970s the required <b>number</b> of sales ...",
"This is a list of artists and the titles of their <b>number</b>-<b>one</b> singles in order of total \n<b>number</b>-<b>one</b> ... Credited as <b>Elvis</b> vs JXL. "Jailhouse Rock", 2005, <b>1</b> ... "My Love", <b>1</b>\n, <b>First</b> to have its <b>first</b> seven consecutive <b>number one</b> singles. "Uptown Girl", 2001, \n<b>1</b>.",
"The singles discography of <b>Elvis Presley</b> began in 1954 with the release of his \n<b>first</b> commercial ... Following his return to civilian life, <b>Presley</b> released his <b>first</b> \nnew single, "Stuck on You", which was a <b>No</b>. <b>1</b> hit in the United States and \nreached the top 10 in ten other countries around the world. The follow-up single, "\nIt's Now or ...",
"The death of a popular musician, and likewise, the use of a dead musician's work \nin advertising ... The <b>first</b> deceased artist to top the charts was Buddy Holly, who \ndied in a plane crash on 3 February 1959. Three weeks later his ... climbed to \n<b>number one</b>. <b>Presley</b> achieved four further posthumous <b>number ones</b> in the \n2000s.",
"Spice Girls became the <b>first British</b> music act and girl group to have their <b>first</b> six \nsingles reach <b>number one</b> on the <b>UK</b> singles chart ... the fastest <b>number one</b> \nmusic act beating <b>Elvis Presley</b>'s ...",
"<b>Elvis Presley</b> has achieved five posthumous <b>number ones</b> on the <b>UK</b> Albums \nChart, more than any other artist. The <b>UK</b> Albums Chart is a weekly record chart \nbased on sales of albums in the United Kingdom. The <b>first</b> weekly albums chart in \nthe <b>UK</b> was published by Record Mirror in ...",
"The <b>UK</b> Singles Chart is the official record chart in the United Kingdom. Record \ncharts in the <b>UK</b> ... In terms of <b>number</b>-<b>one</b> singles, Frankie Laine, Guy Mitchell \nand <b>Elvis Presley</b> were the most successful artists of the ... Al Martino's "Here in \nMy Heart" was the <b>first</b> ever <b>number</b>-<b>one</b> single and held the top spot for nine \nweeks.",
"It is the <b>first Elvis Presley</b> album to feature the remix of "A Little Less Conversation\n" by Junkie XL that was ... <b>1</b> on the Billboard 200 and was his <b>first number one</b> \nsince 1973. ... ELV1S: 30 #<b>1</b> Hits has sold over 1,861,800 copies in the <b>UK</b>.",
"The <b>UK</b> Singles Chart is the official record chart in the United Kingdom. Prior to \n1969 there was ... In 1969, the <b>first</b> BMRB chart was compiled using postal \nreturns of sales logs ... <b>Elvis Presley</b> had eleven <b>number</b>-<b>ones</b> throughout the \ndecade.",
"The <b>first</b>, "Jailhouse Rock", entered at <b>Number One</b> in <b>early</b> January. ... <b>Elvis</b> \nreturned to the top spot in the fourth week, with "It's Now or Never"."
]
}
]
} | [
"`` All Shook Up ''"
] | Elvis Presley singles discography |
-3609553841261159056 | Voice of the snake in the jungle book? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Who was the voice of Kaa the snake in the 2016 film The Jungle Book?",
"Who was the voice of Kaa the snake in the 1967 film The Jungle Book?",
"Who was the voice of Kaa in the Jungle Book TV series?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Scarlett Johansson"
],
[
"Sterling Holloway"
],
[
"Joseph J Terry"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Kaa",
"The Jungle Book (2016 film)",
"The Jungle Book (video game)",
"The Jungle Book (1994 film)",
"The Jungle Book (1967 film)",
"The Jungle Book (TV series)"
] | {
"query": [
"Voice of the snake in the jungle book?",
"The jungle book"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Kaa",
"The Jungle Book (1967 film)",
"The Jungle Book (2016 film)",
"Sterling Holloway",
"The Jungle Book 2",
"List of The Jungle Book characters",
"Shere Khan",
"Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle",
"Jungle Book Shōnen Mowgli",
"The Jungle Book (1994 film)"
],
"snippet": [
"Kaa is a fictional character from The <b>Jungle Book</b> stories written by Rudyard \nKipling. Kaa is one ... in the story "Kaa's Hunting" in The <b>Jungle Book</b>, Kaa is a \nhuge and powerful <b>snake</b>, more ... The <b>voice</b> of Kaa is provided by Sterling \nHolloway.",
"The <b>Jungle Book</b> is a 1967 American animated musical comedy film produced by \nWalt Disney ... This use of familiar <b>voices</b> for key characters was a rarity in \nDisney's past films. ... films based on children's books · The <b>Jungle Book</b> (\nfranchise) · Films about bears · Films about elephants · Films about <b>snakes</b> · \nFilms about tigers ...",
"The <b>Jungle Book</b> is a 2016 American fantasy adventure film directed and \nproduced by Jon ... The film introduces Neel Sethi as Mowgli, along with <b>voice</b> \nand motion ... by French horns and strings, and Kaa's music features <b>snake</b>-like \nsounds, ...",
"Sterling Price Holloway Jr. (January 14, 1905 – November 22, 1992) was an \nAmerican actor and <b>voice</b> actor, who appeared in over 100 films and 40 \ntelevision ...",
"Haley Joel Osment as Mowgli, a young boy raised in the <b>jungle</b>, who ... Additional \n<b>voices</b> provided by Jeff Bennett, Baron Davis, Jess ...",
"This is a list of characters that appear in Rudyard Kipling's <b>Jungle Book</b> story \ncollection, ... Kaa (का Kā; Indian rock python) - A villainous <b>snake</b> who plans to \nconsume ... Disney was originally going to have The Beatles <b>voice</b> them, but \nJohn ...",
"Shere Khan /ˈʃɪər ˈkɑːn/ is a fictional Bengal tiger and the main antagonist \nof Rudyard ... He later encounters Kaa just as he was going to eat Mowgli, but the \n<b>snake</b> denies any knowledge of the man-cub. Doubting Kaa's ... Idris Elba <b>voices</b> \nShere Khan in the 2016 live-action film The <b>Jungle Book</b>. In this incarnation ...",
"Talks of a new <b>Jungle Book</b> film from Warner Bros. ... goes on to say that with \nShere Khan and Lockwood both gone for good, Mowgli gave the jungle a <b>voice</b>.",
"<b>Jungle Book</b> Shōnen Mowgli is a Japanese anime adaptation of Rudyard Kipling'\ns original ... 5.1 Japanese <b>Voice</b> Actors; 5.2 American-Canadian <b>Voice</b> Actors; 5.3 \nIndian <b>Voice</b> Actors ... Animated television series about bears · Television series \nabout <b>snakes</b> · Television series about wolves · Television series about tigers ...",
"Rudyard Kipling's The <b>Jungle Book</b> is a 1994 live-action American adventure film \nco-written ... Forced to fight for his life, Mowgli succeeds in wounding the <b>snake</b> \nwith a golden dagger that he retrieves from the treasure horde. Winning King ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"The Jungle Book (2016 film)",
"The Jungle Book (1967 film)",
"The Jungle Book",
"The Jungle Book (1994 film)",
"The Jungle",
"The Jungle Book (video game)",
"The Jungle Book (TV series)",
"The Jungle Book (disambiguation)",
"The Jungle Book (soundtrack)",
"The Jungle Book (franchise)"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>The Jungle Book</b> is a 2016 American fantasy adventure film directed and \nproduced by Jon Favreau, produced by Walt Disney Pictures, and written by \nJustin ...",
"<b>The Jungle Book</b> is a 1967 American animated musical comedy film produced by \nWalt Disney Productions. Based on Rudyard Kipling's book of the same name, ...",
"<b>The Jungle Book</b> (1894) is a collection of stories by the English author Rudyard \nKipling. Most of the characters are animals such as Shere Khan the tiger and ...",
"Rudyard Kipling's <b>The Jungle Book</b> is a 1994 live-action American adventure film \nco-written and directed by Stephen Sommers, produced by Edward S.",
"<b>The Jungle</b> is <b>a</b> 1906 novel by <b>the</b> American journalist and novelist Upton Sinclair \n(1878–1968) ... <b>The</b> main character in <b>the book</b>, Jurgis Rudkus, <b>a</b> Lithuanian \nimmigrant, tries to make ends meet in Chicago. <b>The book</b> begins with his wife \nOna ...",
"Disney's <b>The Jungle Book</b> is a series of platform video games based on the 1967 \nDisney animated film of the same name. The game was released by Virgin ...",
"<b>The Jungle Book</b> is a 3D CGI animated television series. This series is based on \nthe original book by Rudyard Kipling. Contents. 1 Plot; 2 Characters. 2.1 Main ...",
"<b>The Jungle Book</b> is an 1894 collection of stories written by Rudyard Kipling, \ninspired by his life in India. <b>The Jungle Book</b> or Jungle Book may also refer to: ...",
"<b>The Jungle Book</b>, the soundtrack to the eponymous Disney film, has been \nreleased in three different versions since the film's release in 1967. The film score \nwas ...",
"<b>The Jungle Book</b> is a Disney media franchise that commenced in 1967 with the \ntheatrical release of <b>The Jungle Book</b>. It is based on Rudyard Kipling's works of ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Scarlett Johansson"
] | The Jungle Book (2016 film) |
128788970421661020 | Where are the majority of cases heard in the united states? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"State courts",
"State court"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"State court (United States)"
] | {
"query": [
"majority of cases heard in the united states"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"State court (United States)",
"Procedures of the Supreme Court of the United States",
"United States district court",
"Judicial panel",
"United States courts of appeals",
"Subject-matter jurisdiction",
"Warren Court",
"Schenck v. United States",
"Elonis v. United States",
"Citizens United v. FEC"
],
"snippet": [
"The vast <b>majority</b> of non-criminal <b>cases</b> in the <b>United States</b> are ... <b>hear</b> the types \nof <b>cases</b> specified in the Constitution and federal ...",
"... Act" in some texts), the <b>majority of the</b> Supreme Court's jurisdiction has been \ndiscretionary. ... <b>Cases</b> not designated for discussion by any Justice are ... briefs \nand <b>hear</b> oral arguments as in an appellate <b>case</b>.",
"The <b>United States</b> district courts are the general trial courts of the <b>United States</b> \nfederal judiciary. Both civil and criminal <b>cases</b> are filed in the district court, which \nis a court of ... Unlike some state courts, the power of federal courts to <b>hear cases</b> \nand ... For <b>most</b> of these <b>cases</b>, the jurisdiction of the federal district courts is ...",
"In the <b>United States</b>, <b>most</b> federal appellate <b>cases</b> are <b>heard</b> by three-judge \npanels. The governing statute, 28 U.S.C. § 46(c), provides: <b>Cases</b> and \ncontroversies ...",
"The <b>United States</b> courts of appeals or circuit courts are the intermediate \nappellate courts of the ... The <b>United States</b> courts of appeals are considered \namong the <b>most</b> powerful and influential courts in the <b>United States</b>. ... agency \ndecisions and rulemaking, with by far the largest share of these <b>cases heard</b> by \nthe D.C. Circuit.",
"Subject-matter jurisdiction is the authority of a court to <b>hear cases</b> of a particular \ntype or <b>cases</b> ... <b>Most</b> U.S. state court systems, however, include a superior court \nthat has "general" jurisdiction; that is, it is competent to <b>hear</b> any <b>case</b> over ... \nSubject-matter jurisdiction is significantly more limited in <b>United States</b> federal \ncourts.",
"The Warren Court was the period in the history of the Supreme Court of the \n<b>United States</b> ... Warren led a liberal <b>majority</b> that used judicial power in dramatic \nfashion, to the consternation of conservative opponents. The Warren Court ... \nMain article: List of <b>United States</b> Supreme Court <b>cases</b> by the Warren Court. \nImportant ...",
"The <b>most</b> stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely \nshouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic. ... The question in every <b>case</b> is ...",
"Elonis v. <b>United States</b>, 575 U.S. ___ (2015), was a <b>United States</b> Supreme Court \n<b>case</b> ... It was the first time the Court has <b>heard</b> a <b>case</b> considering true threats \nand the limits of speech on social media. ... Chief Justice John G. Roberts wrote \nfor a seven-justice <b>majority</b>, Samuel Alito authored an opinion concurring in part ...",
"Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. 310 (2010), is a \nlandmark <b>United States</b> Supreme Court <b>case</b> concerning campaign finance. ... In \na <b>majority</b> opinion joined by four other justices, Associate Justice Anthony \nKennedy held that the ... The poll also found that only 22 percent had <b>heard</b> of the \n<b>case</b>."
]
}
]
} | [
"State courts"
] | State court (United States) |
4722519916015127979 | When is magnus chase book 3 coming out? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"October 3, 2017"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard"
] | {
"query": [
"When is magnus chase book 3 coming out?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"The Ship of the Dead",
"Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard",
"The Hammer of Thor",
"Rick Riordan",
"Alex Fierro",
"Percy Jackson & the Olympians",
"The Sword of Summer",
"The Kane Chronicles",
"List of characters in mythology novels by Rick Riordan",
"List of fictional non-binary characters"
],
"snippet": [
"The Ship of Dead is a young-adult fantasy novel based on Norse mythology \nwritten by American author Rick Riordan. It is the third and final novel in the \n<b>Magnus Chase</b> and the Gods of Asgard trilogy, preceded by The Hammer of Thor\n. It was released on October <b>3</b>, 2017 by Disney-Hyperion, an imprint of Disney \n<b>Book</b> Group. ... <b>Magnus Chase</b> receives an ocean survival jumping lesson <b>from</b> \nPercy ...",
"<b>Magnus Chase</b> and the Gods of Asgard is a trilogy of fantasy novels written by \nAmerican author ... The Ship of the Dead is the <b>third book</b> in the <b>Magnus Chase</b> \nand the Gods of Asgard series ... The fifth story, “My Eighth-Grade Physics \nActually <b>Comes</b> in Handy,” takes place in Jotunheim, and is written <b>from</b> the \nperspective of ...",
"Before the <b>release</b> of The Sword of Summer, the first <b>book</b> in his series <b>Magnus</b> \n<b>Chase</b> and the Gods of Asgard, author Rick Riordan had plans to publish a ...",
"His most recent publications are three <b>books</b> in the <b>Magnus Chase</b> and the Gods \nof Asgard series, based on Norse mythology. The first <b>book</b> of his The Trials of ...",
"Last appearance, 9 <b>from</b> the Nine Worlds. Created by, Rick Riordan. Occupation, \nDemigod hero, Einherjar · Godly parent · Loki. Information. Species, Demigod. \nTitle, Child of Loki. Alex Fierro is a fictional character and one of the main \ncharacters in Rick Riordan's <b>Magnus Chase</b> and the Gods of Asgard series. ... \nRiordan had used the <b>book</b> of interviews Beyond Magenta as a source of ...",
"Archived <b>from</b> the original on 15 October 2010. Retrieved 8 April 2013. ^ "PRESS \n<b>RELEASE</b>: Disney <b>Book</b> Group Launches Rick Riordan's New ...",
"The Sword of Summer is a young-adult fantasy novel based on Norse mythology \nwritten by ... The novel is narrated in the first-person view by <b>Magnus Chase</b>, 16-\nyear-old demigod ... Since its <b>release</b>, the novel has been translated into 9 \nlanguages. ... It was also #<b>3</b> on Amazon's best-selling Children's <b>Books</b> list for \n2015.",
"No. of <b>books</b>, <b>3</b>. The Kane Chronicles is a trilogy of adventure and Egyptian \nmythological fiction <b>books</b> written by American author Rick Riordan. The series is \nset in the same universe as Riordan's other franchises, Camp Half-Blood \nChronicles and <b>Magnus Chase</b> and the Gods of Asgard. ... The idea of having \ntwo multiracial siblings narrate the <b>books</b> also <b>came from</b> ...",
"At the end of The Battle of the Labyrinth, Daedalus gives Annabeth his incredibly \nadvanced laptop which she loses in Tartarus. In the <b>third book</b> of <b>Magnus Chase</b>\n ...",
"This is a list of fictional characters that either self-identify as non-binary (or \ngenderqueer) or ... Eighty percent of non-binary people noted in a survey <b>from</b> \nTrans Media ... are <b>getting</b> "increasing critical and aesthetic prominence" in \nliterature. ... "<b>Book</b> Review — "<b>Magnus Chase</b> and the Gods of Asgard: The \nHammer of Thor""."
]
}
]
} | [
"October 3 , 2017"
] | Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard |
-1911980845281550523 | Who has more super bowl wins afc or nfc? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"tied"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"List of Super Bowl champions"
] | {
"query": [
"super bowl wins afc or nfc"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"List of Super Bowl champions",
"Super Bowl",
"AFC West",
"Seattle Seahawks",
"Pro Bowl",
"NFC East",
"Super Bowl indicator",
"NFC West",
"NFC South",
"History of the National Football League championship"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>NFC</b>/NFL is currently tied with the <b>AFC</b>/AFL at 27 <b>wins</b> for each. 20 \nfranchises, including teams that have relocated to ...",
"In the <b>AFC</b>, this era was dominated by the New ... In <b>Super Bowl</b> XLVII, the <b>NFC's</b> \nSan Francisco 49ers were ... The Seattle Seahawks <b>won</b> their first NFL title with a\n ...",
"The American Football Conference – Western Division or <b>AFC</b> West is one of the \nfour divisions ... The Chiefs are 2–1 in the <b>Super Bowl</b>, while the Chargers lost \ntheir lone <b>Super Bowl</b> appearance in <b>Super Bowl</b> XXIX. ... <b>won</b> that division with a \n7-9 record and the Panthers <b>won</b> the <b>NFC</b> South division with a 7–8–1 record.",
"The Seattle Seahawks are a professional American football team based in \nSeattle, Washington. ... This realignment restored the <b>AFC</b> West to its initial post-\nmerger roster of original AFL teams Denver, San Diego, ... They <b>won</b> the <b>NFC</b> \nChampionship Game in 2005, but lost in <b>Super Bowl</b> XL against the Pittsburgh \nSteelers.",
"When the Pro Bowl was held after the <b>Super Bowl</b>, the head coaches were \ntraditionally the head coaches of the teams that lost in the <b>AFC</b> and <b>NFC</b> ...",
"The National Football Conference – Eastern Division or <b>NFC</b> East is one of the \nfour divisions of ... #4; Eagles #10). The next closest division is the <b>AFC</b> North, \nwhich is not completed until the 26th ranked Cincinnati Bengals. ... ++ The 1987 \nRedskins are the only <b>NFC</b> 3rd Seed to <b>win</b> the <b>Super Bowl</b>. ^ The 2007 Dallas ...",
"The <b>Super Bowl</b> Indicator is a superstition that says that the stock market's \nperformance in a ... (<b>NFC</b>) or a team that was in the NFL before the NFL/AFL \nmerger <b>wins</b>, it will be a bull market (up market). ... 2002, Patriots, AFL, <b>AFC</b>, \nDecrease ... However, since a particular football league <b>winning</b> a <b>Super Bowl</b> \nand the US ...",
"The National Football Conference – Western Division or <b>NFC</b> West is one of the \nfour divisions ... The Baltimore Colts moved to the <b>AFC</b> East and were replaced \nby the New ... Since re-alignment, the Seahawks have led the division in <b>wins</b>, \ndivision titles, and ... Place cursor over year for division champ or <b>Super Bowl</b> \nteam.",
"The National Football Conference – South Division or <b>NFC</b> South is one of the \nfour divisions of ... Prior to the 2002 season, the Buccaneers belonged to the <b>AFC</b> \nWest (1976) and <b>NFC</b> Central (1977–2001), while the ... The Saints record is 375\n–438–5; their <b>win</b> in <b>Super Bowl</b> XLIV is the highlight of a 9–11 playoff record.",
"Throughout its history, the National Football League (NFL) and other rival \nAmerican football ... The Green Bay Packers have <b>won</b> the most NFL \nchampionship titles with 13 total (thrice named NFL champion-prior ... Two weeks \nlater, the <b>AFC</b> and <b>NFC</b> champions met in the <b>Super Bowl</b>, now the league's \nchampionship game."
]
}
]
} | [
"NFC"
] | List of Super Bowl champions |
-8524801800420428358 | Which is the most recent state to have joined the united states of america? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"The Islands of Aloha",
"The Aloha State",
"Hawaii",
"Paradise of the Pacific"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Hawaii",
"51st state"
] | {
"query": [
"Which is the most recent state to have joined the united states of america?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union",
"Hawaii",
"51st state",
"Secession in the United States",
"United States Climate Alliance",
"Admission to the Union",
"Member states of NATO",
"Enlargement of NATO",
"List of states and territories of the United States",
"List of U.S. state partition proposals"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>A state</b> of the <b>United States</b> is one of the 50 constituent entities that shares its \nsovereignty with ... Each <b>new state</b> has been admitted on an equal footing with \nthe existing states. ... The first 13 became states in July 1776 upon agreeing to \nthe <b>United States</b> Declaration of Independence, and each <b>joined</b> the first Union of \nstates ...",
"Hawaii is <b>a state</b> of the <b>United States of America</b> located in the Pacific Ocean. It is \nthe only <b>U.S.</b> ... Hawaii is the <b>most recent state</b> to join the union, on August 21, \n1959. ... known to <b>have</b> occurred in the modern era in what is now the <b>United</b> \n<b>States</b>. ... widely recognized independent nations prior to <b>joining</b> the <b>United</b> \n<b>States</b>.",
"Proposals of <b>new states</b> by partition include: ... Cochise, Yuma, and Santa Cruz \n<b>joining</b> to form <b>a state</b>. ... Current Texas politics and self-image <b>make</b> any \ntampering with Texas' ...",
"Some <b>state</b> movements seek secession from the United ... that they <b>have</b> the 6th \nlargest economy in the world, and <b>more</b> residents than any other <b>state</b> in the \nunion. ... due to <b>a</b> quirk in the definitions <b>of the US</b>-Canada border. ... to vote on \nseceding from the <b>United States</b> and <b>joining</b> Canada.",
"^ Jump up to: "<b>United States</b> Climate Alliance Launches Website to Inform \n<b>Americans</b> on <b>State</b> Actions to Address Climate Change". Governor of <b>New</b> York. \nJuly 13 ...",
"The Admission to the Union Clause of the <b>United States</b> Constitution, often called \nthe <b>New</b> ... Of the 37 states admitted to the Union by Congress, all but six <b>have</b> \nbeen ... 1787 Northwest Ordinance, both of which predate the present <b>U.S.</b> \nConstitution. ... Then, upon enacting <b>a state</b> constitution which affirmed that the \n<b>new state</b> ...",
"NATO is an international alliance that consists of 29 member <b>states</b> from North \n<b>America</b> and Europe. It was established at the signing <b>of the</b> North Atlantic Treaty\n ...",
"Enlargement <b>of the</b> North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is the process of \nincluding <b>new</b> member <b>states</b> in NATO. NATO is <b>a</b> military alliance of twenty-\nseven European and two North <b>American</b> countries that constitutes <b>a</b> system of \ncollective defense. The process of <b>joining</b> the alliance is governed by Article 10 <b>of</b> \n<b>the</b> North ... The <b>most recent</b> member <b>state</b> to be added to NATO is Montenegro \non 5 June ...",
"The <b>United States of America</b> is <b>a</b> federal republic consisting of <b>50 states</b>, <b>a</b> \nfederal district five ... As it is not <b>a state</b>, the district does not <b>have</b> representation \nin the Senate. ... Constitution was Delaware, which it did on December 7, 1787, \nwhile the <b>newest state</b> is Hawaii, which was admitted to the Union on August 21, \n1959.",
"Since the establishment of the <b>United States</b> in 1776, numerous <b>state</b> partition \nproposals <b>have</b> ... <b>New</b> States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; \nbut no <b>new State</b> shall be formed or erected within the ... <b>A</b> 1919 tax-protest \nproposal filed in the <b>state</b> legislature would <b>have</b> created an independent <b>State</b> of \nBoston."
]
}
]
} | [
"Hawaii"
] | Territorial evolution of the United States |
4776000106366522865 | When was the song believer by imagine dragons made? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"February 1, 2017"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Believer (Imagine Dragons song)"
] | {
"query": [
"believer imagine dragons"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Believer (Imagine Dragons song)",
"Imagine Dragons",
"Believer (2018 American film)",
"Evolve (Imagine Dragons album)",
"List of awards and nominations received by Imagine Dragons ...",
"Dan Reynolds (singer)",
"Matt Eastin",
"Imagine Dragons (EP)",
"Category:Imagine Dragons songs",
"Thunder (Imagine Dragons song)"
],
"snippet": [
""<b>Believer</b>" is a song by American rock band <b>Imagine Dragons</b>. The song was \nreleased on February 1, 2017 through Interscope Records and Kidinakorner as \nthe ...",
"<b>Imagine Dragons</b> is an American pop rock band from Las Vegas, Nevada, \nconsisting of lead ... On February 1, 2017, <b>Imagine Dragons</b> released "<b>Believer</b>" \nas the lead single for their next album. "<b>Believer</b>" was used as part of the Super \nBowl ad ...",
"<b>Believer</b> focuses on Dan Reynolds of <b>Imagine Dragons</b> and the 2017 Utah \nLoveLoud Fest dedicated to LGBTQ+ youth. <b>Believer</b> is an American \ndocumentary that examines the intersection between LGBT people ...",
""<b>Believer</b>" Released: February 1, 2017; "Thunder" Released: April 27, 2017; "\nWhatever It Takes" Released: May 8, 2017; "Next to Me" Released: February 21, \n2018. Evolve (stylized as ƎVOLVE) is the third studio album by American pop \nrock band <b>Imagine</b> ...",
"<b>Imagine Dragons</b> is an American pop rock band from Las Vegas, Nevada, \nconsisting of lead ... It spawned the singles, "<b>Believer</b>" and Thunder", which both \nwent on to peak at number four on the Billboard Hot 100 and were nominated at \nthe ...",
"Daniel Coulter Reynolds (born July 14, 1987) is an American singer, songwriter, \nand record ... With Reynolds as lead vocalist, <b>Imagine Dragons</b> won BYU's "Battle \nof the Bands" and other local competitions. ... <b>Believer</b> topped the Billboard Hot \nRock Songs (29 weeks), Alternative Songs (13 weeks), and Adult Top 40 charts.",
"Matt Eastin (born June 3 1979) is a Utah-based music video, documentary, and \ncommercial director and editor. He is perhaps best known for his work with \n<b>Imagine Dragons</b>, directing and editing the <b>Believer</b>, ...",
"<b>Imagine Dragons</b> is an EP by American pop rock band <b>Imagine Dragons</b>, \nreleased in 2009 in ... "I Was Me"; "Sucker for Pain"; "<b>Believer</b>"; "Thunder"; "\nWhatever It Takes"; "Next to Me"; "Born to Be Yours"; "Natural"; "Zero"; "Machine"; \n"Bad Liar".",
"List of songs recorded by Imagine Dragons ... Bad Liar (Imagine Dragons song) · \nBattle Cry (Imagine Dragons song) · <b>Believer</b> (<b>Imagine Dragons</b> song) ...",
""Thunder" is a song by American pop rock band <b>Imagine Dragons</b>. It was \nreleased by Interscope Records and Kidinakorner on April 27, 2017, as the \nsecond ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"February 1 , 2017"
] | Believer (Imagine Dragons song) |
4723481094198751540 | When did the han solo movie come out? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"When did the han solo movie first premiered in Los Angeles?",
"When did the han solo movie came out in United States?"
],
"answer": [
[
"May 10, 2018"
],
[
"May 25, 2018"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Solo: A Star Wars Story"
] | {
"query": [
"When did the han solo movie come out?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Solo: A Star Wars Story",
"Han Solo",
"Han shot first",
"Millennium Falcon",
"Harrison Ford",
"Solo family",
"Chewbacca",
"Boba Fett",
"Star Wars (film)",
"The Han Solo Adventures"
],
"snippet": [
"It is the first <b>Star Wars film</b> to be considered a box-office failure, grossing $393 \nmillion ... the production <b>did</b> not want to wait for his availability to make a <b>release</b> \nin ...",
"<b>Han Solo</b> is a fictional character and protagonist in the <b>Star Wars</b> franchise. A \nprimary character in the original <b>film</b> trilogy, Han is the owner and captain of the ...",
"In the original 1977 <b>release</b>, Han is the only one to fire. This slow-motion clip \nshows the 2004 version, where they shoot at the same time. "Han shot first" refers \nto a controversial change made to a scene in the science fiction action <b>film Star</b> \n<b>Wars</b> (1977), in which <b>Han Solo</b> ... shot first, Greedo or <b>Han Solo</b>, in Episode IV, \nwhat I <b>did</b> was try to clean up the ...",
"The Millennium Falcon is a fictional starship in the <b>Star Wars</b> franchise. Designed \nby Joe Johnston for the <b>movie Star Wars</b> (1977), she has ... Johnston <b>did</b> not want \nto produce a "basic flying saucer", so he created the offset ... and promotional \nmaterials for the <b>Star Wars</b> universe prior to the <b>release</b> of The Force Awakens.",
"Harrison Ford (born July 13, 1942) is an American actor, aviator, and \nenvironmental activist. He gained worldwide fame for his starring role as <b>Han</b> \n<b>Solo</b> in the original ... Solo: A <b>Star Wars</b> Story, a spin-off <b>movie</b> focusing on the life \nof a young Han ... In 2008, Ford enjoyed success with the <b>release</b> of Indiana \nJones and the ...",
"The Solo family is a fictional family of characters in the <b>Star Wars</b> franchise, \nwhose key member ... <b>Han Solo's</b> first <b>film</b> appearance however was in 1977's \n<b>Star Wars</b>: A New Hope where he ... lead the Jedi Order, but this was changed \ndue to the <b>release</b> of the <b>Star Wars</b> prequel films, in which the hero was also \nnamed Anakin.",
"Chewbacca nicknamed "Chewie", is a fictional character in the <b>Star Wars</b> \nfranchise. He is a ... In the 2005 prequel <b>film Star Wars</b>: Episode III – Revenge of \nthe Sith, ... is also being made as an electronic handheld Bop It game to <b>be</b> \n<b>released</b> in Fall 2019. ... <b>Does Han Solo</b> really understand Chew's monotonous \nnoises?",
"Boba Fett is a fictional character, a bounty hunter in the <b>Star Wars</b> franchise. In \nEpisode V – The ... In this <b>film</b>, he <b>does</b> not have any verbal lines. ... The 2002 \nprequel <b>film Star Wars</b>: Episode II – Attack of the Clones revealed that Boba Fett \n... Before the <b>release</b> of the prequel trilogy, Daniel Keys Moran developed a \nbackstory ...",
"<b>Star Wars</b> was originally slated for <b>release</b> on Christmas 1976; however, its \nproduction delays pushed the <b>film's</b> ...",
"The <b>Han Solo</b> Adventures is a trilogy of novels set in the <b>Star Wars</b> fictional \nuniverse by American science-fiction novelist Brian Daley. It follows the \nsmuggling days of <b>Han Solo</b> and Chewbacca before the events of the original \n<b>Star Wars film</b>. ... Han works <b>out</b> a deal with Jessa: in exchange for the Waiver \nand upgrades to the ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"May 25 , 2018"
] | Solo: A Star Wars Story |
-7461719336882424985 | What name is given to fats that are liquid at room temperature? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"oil",
"oils"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Animal fat",
"Saturated fat",
"Vegetable oil"
] | {
"query": [
"fats that are liquid at room temperature"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Vegetable oil",
"Saturated fat",
"Animal fat",
"Fat",
"Triglyceride",
"Cooking oil",
"Margarine",
"Monounsaturated fat",
"Trans fat",
"Butter"
],
"snippet": [
"In common usage, vegetable oil may refer exclusively to vegetable <b>fats</b> which are \n<b>liquid at room temperature</b>. Vegetable oils are usually edible; non-edible oils ...",
"... to be <b>liquid at room temperature</b> with varying degrees of viscosity (meaning \nboth saturated and unsaturated <b>fats</b> are found to be <b>liquid</b> at body temperature).",
"Animal <b>fats</b> and oils are lipid materials derived from animals. Physically, oils are \n<b>liquid at room temperature</b>, and <b>fats</b> are solid. Chemically, both <b>fats</b> and oils are ...",
"<b>Fats</b> are one of the three main macronutrients, along with carbohydrates and \nproteins. ... Oil normally refers to a lipid with short or unsaturated fatty acid chains \nthat is <b>liquid at room temperature</b>, while fat (in the strict sense) specifically refers \nto ...",
"A triglyceride is an ester derived from glycerol and three fatty acids (from tri- and \nglyceride). ... Unsaturated <b>fats</b> have double bonds between some of the carbon \natoms, reducing the number of places where hydrogen atoms can bond to ... \nThese have a lower melting point and are more likely to be <b>liquid at room</b> \n<b>temperature</b>.",
"Cooking oil is plant, animal, or synthetic fat used in frying, baking, and other types \nof cooking. ... Cooking oil is typically a <b>liquid at room temperature</b>, although some \noils that contain saturated fat, such as ... Mayo Clinic has highlighted certain oils \nthat are high in saturated <b>fats</b>, including coconut, palm oil and palm kernel oil.",
"<b>Fats that are liquid at room temperature</b> are generally known as oils. The melting \npoints are related to the presence of carbon-carbon double bonds in the fatty ...",
"In biochemistry and nutrition, monounsaturated fatty acids are fatty acids that \nhave one double ... Monounsaturated fatty acids are <b>liquids at room temperature</b> \nand semisolid or solid when refrigerated resulting in an isotopic lattice structure. \n... Foods containing monounsaturated <b>fats</b> reduce low-density lipoprotein (LDL) ...",
"Trans fat, also called trans-unsaturated fatty acids or trans fatty acids, is a type of \nunsaturated ... In food production, <b>liquid</b> cis-unsaturated <b>fats</b> such as vegetable \noils are hydrogenated to produce ... Many baked foods require semi-solid <b>fats</b> to \nsuspend solids at <b>room temperature</b>; partially hydrogenated oils have the right ...",
"<b>Fats</b> such as cocoa butter and shea butter that remain solid at <b>room temperature</b> \nare also known as "butters". Non-dairy items that have a dairy-butter ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Oil"
] | Fat |
6629199459601104475 | What is the airport code for abu dhabi? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"What is the IATA airport code for Abu Dhabi International Airport?",
"What is the IACO airport code for Abu Dhabi International Airport?"
],
"answer": [
[
"AUH"
],
[
"OMAA"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"List of airports in the United Arab Emirates",
"Abu Dhabi International Airport"
] | {
"query": [
"What is the airport code for abu dhabi?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Abu Dhabi International Airport",
"List of airports in the United Arab Emirates",
"Etihad Airways",
"AUH",
"Al Bateen Executive Airport",
"List of airports by ICAO code: O",
"Al Ain International Airport",
"Al Dhafra Air Base",
"List of the busiest airports in Asia",
"List of airports by IATA code: A"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Abu Dhabi</b> International <b>Airport</b> (<b>IATA</b>: AUH, <b>ICAO</b>: OMAA) is an international \n<b>airport</b> in the Emirate of <b>Abu Dhabi</b>, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.",
"This is a list of <b>airports</b> in the United Arab Emirates, sorted by location. <b>Airports</b> in \nbold have commercial service. <b>Airports</b>[edit]. Location · Emirate · <b>ICAO</b> · <b>IATA</b>, \n<b>Airport</b> name, Coordinates · <b>Abu Dhabi</b> · <b>Abu Dhabi</b>, OMAA, AUH, <b>Abu Dhabi</b> \nInternational <b>Airport</b> ... Transport in the United Arab Emirates · List of <b>airports</b> by \n<b>ICAO code</b>: O#OM ...",
"Etihad Airways is the second-largest airline in the UAE (after Emirates). Its head \noffice is in Khalifa City, <b>Abu Dhabi</b>, near <b>Abu Dhabi</b>'s International <b>Airport</b>. ... "\nEtihad and Lufthansa strike <b>code</b>-share deal". ^ "Arabian Aerospace - Etihad \nAirways ...",
"AUH or AuH may refer to: <b>Abu Dhabi</b> International <b>Airport</b> (<b>IATA airport code</b>: \nAUH), United Arab Emirates; Aurora Municipal <b>Airport</b> (Nebraska) (FAA <b>airport</b> ...",
"Al Bateen Executive <b>Airport</b> (<b>IATA</b>: AZI, <b>ICAO</b>: OMAD) is a dedicated business jet \n<b>airport</b> located 6.5 nautical miles (12.0 km; 7.5 mi) south east of <b>Abu Dhabi</b> city ...",
"OM - United Arab Emirates[edit]. Also see <b>airport</b> category and list. OMAA (AUH) \n– <b>Abu Dhabi</b> International <b>Airport</b> – <b>Abu Dhabi</b>; OMAD (AZI) ...",
"Al Ain International <b>Airport</b> is an <b>airport</b> located 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9.2 mi) \nwest or northwest of Al Ain in the Eastern Region of the Emirate of <b>Abu Dhabi</b>, the\n ...",
"Al Dhafra Air Base (Arabic:قاعدة الظفرة الجوية) (<b>IATA</b>: DHF, <b>ICAO</b>: OMAM) is a \nmilitary installation in the United Arab Emirates. The base is located \napproximately 20 mi (32 km) south of <b>Abu Dhabi</b> and is ...",
"This is a list of busiest <b>airports</b> in Asia, ranked by total passengers per year, \nwhich includes ... Rank, <b>Airport</b>, City, Country, <b>Code</b>. (<b>IATA</b>) ... <b>Abu Dhabi</b> \nInternational <b>Airport</b>, <b>Abu Dhabi</b>, United Arab Emirates, AUH, OMAA, 22,010,868, \n-1 7.4% ...",
"List of <b>airports</b> by <b>IATA code</b>: A. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to \nnavigation Jump to search. Wikimedia list article. List of ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"IATA : AUH",
"ICAO : OMAA"
] | Abu Dhabi International Airport |
-1688500492894023725 | Who won the last open at st andrews? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Zach Johnson",
"Zachary Harris Johnson"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"The Open Championship"
] | {
"query": [
"st andrews open"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Old Course at St Andrews",
"The Open Championship",
"2015 Open Championship",
"2000 Open Championship",
"2005 Open Championship",
"1990 Open Championship",
"2010 Open Championship",
"1970 Open Championship",
"1984 Open Championship",
"1995 Open Championship"
],
"snippet": [
"Six years later, when the <b>Open</b> Championship returned to <b>St Andrews</b>, Jones \nalso returned. Not only did he win, he also ...",
"Previous champions will often choose <b>St Andrews</b> as their final <b>Open</b> tournament. \nIt has become traditional to come ...",
"The 2015 <b>Open</b> Championship was a men's major golf championship and the \n144th <b>Open</b> Championship, held from 16–20 July at the Old Course at <b>St</b> \n<b>Andrews</b> ...",
"The 2000 <b>Open</b> Championship was a men's major golf championship and the \n129th <b>Open</b> Championship, held from 20–23 July at the Old Course in <b>St</b> \n<b>Andrews</b>, ...",
"History of The <b>Open</b> Championship at The Old Course at <b>St Andrews</b>[ ...",
"The 1990 <b>Open</b> Championship was a men's major golf championship and the \n119th <b>Open</b> Championship, held from 19–22 July at the Old Course in <b>St</b> \n<b>Andrews</b>, ...",
"The 2010 <b>Open</b> Championship was a men's major golf championship and was \nheld from 15–18 July over the Old Course at <b>St Andrews</b>, Fife, Scotland. It was \nthe ...",
"The 1970 <b>Open</b> Championship was the 99th <b>Open</b> Championship, played 8–12 \nJuly at the Old Course in <b>St Andrews</b>, Scotland. Jack Nicklaus won the second of\n ...",
"The 1984 <b>Open</b> Championship was a men's major golf championship and the \n113th <b>Open</b> Championship, held from 19–22 July at the Old Course in <b>St</b> \n<b>Andrews</b>, ...",
"The 1995 <b>Open</b> Championship was a men's major golf championship and the \n124th <b>Open</b> Championship held from 20–23 July at the Old Course at <b>St Andrews</b>\n ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Zach Johnson"
] | List of The Open Championship champions |
-4920697783415402962 | Who helped lewis and clark on their journey? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Sacajawea",
"Sakakawea",
"Sacagawea"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Sacagawea"
] | {
"query": [
"Who helped lewis and clark on their journey?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Sacagawea",
"Lewis and Clark Expedition",
"Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery",
"York (explorer)",
"William Clark",
"Meriwether Lewis",
"Timeline of the Lewis and Clark Expedition",
"Seaman (dog)",
"Corps of Discovery",
"Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail"
],
"snippet": [
"Sacagawea was <b>a</b> Lemhi Shoshone woman who, at age 16, met and <b>helped the</b> \n<b>Lewis and Clark</b> Expedition in achieving <b>their</b> ... As he traveled downriver from \nFort Mandan at <b>the</b> end of <b>the journey</b>, Clark wrote to Charbonneau: You have ...",
"<b>The Lewis and Clark</b> Expedition from May 1804 to September 1806, also known \nas <b>the</b> Corps ... <b>The route</b> of <b>Lewis and Clark's</b> expedition took them up <b>the</b> \nMissouri River to <b>its</b> headwaters, then on to <b>the</b> Pacific ... with two dozen Indian \nnations, without whose <b>help the</b> expedition would have risked starvation during \n<b>the</b> harsh ...",
"He suggested, in keeping with <b>the</b> "<b>help</b> along <b>the</b> way" spirit of <b>the</b> expedition, <b>a</b> \npreview ...",
"York (1770 – before 1832) was an African-American explorer best known for <b>his</b> \nparticipation with <b>the Lewis and Clark</b> Expedition. ... He was part of <b>the</b> team, and \nhe <b>contributed</b> just like <b>the</b> rest with hunting, fishing, putting up tents etc. ... In <b>the</b> \nPBS series Lewis & Clark: <b>The Journey</b> of <b>the</b> Corps of Discovery, director Ken ...",
"William Clark (August 1, 1770 – September 1, 1838) was an American explorer, \nsoldier, Indian ... Along with Meriwether <b>Lewis</b>, <b>Clark helped</b> lead <b>the Lewis and</b> \n<b>Clark</b> Expedition of ... They completed <b>the journey</b> down <b>the</b> Ohio River by \nflatboat.",
"<b>The</b> two-year exploration by <b>Lewis and Clark</b> was <b>the</b> first ... <b>The</b> success of <b>their</b> \n<b>journey helped</b> to strengthen <b>the</b> American ...",
"This is <b>the</b> timeline of <b>the Lewis and Clark</b> Expedition through <b>the</b> American West \n(1803–1806). This list is incomplete; you can <b>help</b> by expanding it. ... As Clark \nwas surveying <b>route</b> he discovered <b>a</b> giant fountain (Giant Springs). June 22 to \nJuly ...",
"Seaman, <b>a</b> Newfoundland dog, became famous for being <b>a</b> member of <b>the</b> first \nAmerican overland expedition from <b>the</b> Mississippi River to <b>the</b> Pacific coast and \nback. He was <b>the</b> only animal to complete <b>the</b> entire <b>trip</b>. ... <b>Lewis and Clark's</b> \nCorps of Discovery ate over 200 dogs while traveling <b>the Lewis and Clark</b> Trail, \nbut ...",
"<b>The</b> Corps of Discovery was <b>a</b> specially-established unit of <b>the</b> United States \nArmy which ... Over <b>the</b> next two years, <b>the Lewis and Clark</b> Expedition \nestablished relations with more than two dozen indigenous nations between \nMissouri and ... He would be <b>the</b> only member of <b>the</b> Corps of Discovery who died \non <b>the journey</b>.",
"<b>The Lewis and Clark</b> National Historic Trail is <b>a route</b> across <b>the</b> United States \ncommemorating <b>the Lewis and Clark</b> Expedition of 1804 to 1806. It is part of <b>the</b> ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Sacagawea"
] | Lewis and Clark Expedition |
-4950316745090894056 | Who sings don't mess around with jim? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Who sings the original recording of \"You Don't Mess Around with Jim\"?",
"What character sings \"You Don't Mess Around with Jim\" on Stranger Things?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Jim Croce",
"James Joseph Croce"
],
[
"Hawkins sheriff Jim Hopper",
"the sheriff",
"Jim Hopper"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"You Don't Mess Around with Jim (song)"
] | {
"query": [
"don't mess around with jim song"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"You Don't Mess Around with Jim (song)",
"You Don't Mess Around with Jim",
"Jim Croce",
"Bad, Bad Leroy Brown",
"Jim Croce discography",
"Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels)",
"Jerry Reed Sings Jim Croce",
"Photographs & Memories",
"Time in a Bottle: Jim Croce's Greatest Love Songs",
"Time in a Bottle"
],
"snippet": [
""You <b>Don't Mess Around with Jim</b>" is a 1972 single by Jim Croce from his album \nof the same name. The <b>song</b> was also Croce's debut single when it was ...",
"You <b>Don't Mess Around with Jim</b> is the third studio album by American singer-\nsongwriter Jim ... The <b>song</b> "You <b>Don't Mess Around with Jim</b>" has been covered \nby Ty Herndon on What Mattered Most, Josh Turner on Long Black Train, and ...",
"James Joseph Croce was an American folk and rock singer-songwriter. Between \n1966 and ... His breakthrough came in 1972; his third album You <b>Don't Mess</b> \n<b>Around with Jim</b> produced three charting singles, ... The follow-up album, Life \nand Times contained the <b>song</b> "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown", which was the only No. 1 \nhit he ...",
""Bad, Bad Leroy Brown" is a <b>song</b> written by American folk rock singer Jim Croce. \nReleased as ... The story of a widely feared man being bested in a fight is similar \nto that of Croce's earlier <b>song</b> "You <b>Don't Mess Around With Jim</b>." ...",
"Jim Croce was an American singer-songwriter with five studio albums and 11 \nsingles to his ... This album featured three singles, "You <b>Don't Mess Around with</b> \n<b>Jim</b>", ... The <b>song</b>, "I Got a Name" had been released as a single during Croce's ...",
"Operator is a 1972 <b>song</b> written by Jim Croce. Croce's record was released on \nAugust 23, 1972. It was the second single released from Croce's album You <b>Don't</b> \n<b>Mess Around with Jim</b>.",
"Jerry Reed Sings Jim Croce is an album by American country singer Jerry Reed, \nreleased by RCA Records in 1980. The album is a tribute album for Jim Croce \nwho died in 1973 in a plane crash during the peak of his career. Seven of the ten \n<b>songs</b> were singles released by Croce. ... "You <b>Don't Mess Around with Jim</b>", 3:08\n.",
"Photographs & Memories: His Greatest Hits is a 1974 compilation album (and \nsecond ... The title track originally appeared on the You <b>Don't Mess Around with</b> \n<b>Jim</b> LP as well as the ... "I'll Have to Say I Love You in a <b>Song</b>", I Got a Name, 2:34\n.",
"Time in a Bottle: Jim Croce's Greatest Love <b>Songs</b> is a greatest hits album by ... "\nA Long Time Ago" (From You <b>Don't Mess Around with Jim</b>), Croce, 2:06. 12.",
""Time in a Bottle" is a hit single by singer-songwriter Jim Croce. Croce wrote the \nlyrics after his wife Ingrid told him she was pregnant, in December 1970. It \nappeared on his 1972 ABC debut album You <b>Don't Mess Around with Jim</b> ... ABC \noriginally did not intend to release the <b>song</b> as a single; but when Croce was \nkilled in a ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Jim Croce"
] | You Don't Mess Around with Jim |
-8652199953083038138 | How many ligue 1 titles does psg have? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"How many ligue 1 titles does psg have as of 2017?",
"How many ligue 1 titles does psg have as of 2016?",
"How many ligue 1 titles does psg have as of 2015?"
],
"answer": [
[
"6"
],
[
"6"
],
[
"5"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Paris Saint-Germain F.C."
] | {
"query": [
"How many ligue 1 titles does psg have?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Paris Saint-Germain F.C.",
"List of Paris Saint-Germain F.C. records and statistics",
"Ligue 1",
"List of Paris Saint-Germain F.C. seasons",
"Football derbies in France",
"Le Classique",
"History of Paris Saint-Germain F.C.",
"Nasser Al-Khelaifi",
"Kylian Mbappé",
"List of Paris Saint-Germain F.C. managers"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Paris Saint-Germain</b> Football Club commonly referred to as <b>Paris Saint-Germain</b>, \nParis SG, ... Domestically, the Parisians <b>have</b> won eight <b>Ligue 1 titles</b>, a record \ntwelve Coupe de France, a record eight Coupe de la ... <b>Paris Saint-Germain is</b> \nthe most popular football club in France with 22% of fans identifying as Parisians.",
"<b>Paris Saint-Germain</b> Football Club <b>is</b> a French professional association football \nclub founded in 1970, and based in the city of Paris in France. The club's first \nteam play in the highest tier of French football, the <b>Ligue 1</b>. <b>PSG</b> holds <b>many</b> \nrecords, most notably being the only club to <b>have</b> never ... Domestically, the \ncapital club <b>has</b> won eight <b>Ligue 1 championships</b>, a record ...",
"<b>Ligue 1</b>, also called <b>Ligue 1</b> Conforama for sponsorship reasons, <b>is</b> a French \nprofessional ... The current champions <b>are Paris Saint-Germain</b>, who won their \neighth <b>title</b> in the 2018–19 season. ... <b>Many</b> clubs disagreed with the subjective \ncriteria, most notably Strasbourg, RC Roubaix, Amiens SC, and Stade Français, \nwhile ...",
"<b>Paris Saint-Germain</b> Football Club <b>is</b> a French professional football club based in \nParis and founded in 1970. The club's first team play in the highest tier of French \nfootball, the <b>Ligue 1</b>. Since its inception, <b>PSG have</b> played 49 seasons, all of \nthem within the top ... Therefore, <b>PSG have</b> never formally been relegated from \n<b>Ligue 1</b>.",
"In <b>many</b> countries the term local derby, or simply just derby means a sporting \nfixture between two (generally local) rivals, particularly in Association Football. In \nNorth America, crosstown rivalry <b>is</b> a more common term. Although there <b>are</b> no \nstrict rules, derby games in France <b>are</b> commonly ... Because <b>Paris Saint-</b>\n<b>Germain have</b> only won six <b>Ligue 1 titles</b>, which <b>is</b> less ...",
"Le Classique <b>is</b> a football match contested between French clubs <b>Paris Saint-</b>\n<b>Germain</b> and ... Following the buyout, <b>PSG have</b> won 22 <b>titles</b>, becoming the most \nsuccessful French ... Now with the money to compete with the best clubs in \nEurope, <b>many</b> great players <b>have</b> been part of <b>PSG's</b> all star-lineup that <b>Ligue 1</b> \n<b>had</b> not ...",
"<b>Paris Saint-Germain</b> Football Club was founded on 12 August 1970 after the \nmerger of Paris Football Club and Stade Saint-Germain. <b>PSG</b> made an \nimmediate impact, winning promotion to <b>Ligue 1</b> in their first season after \nclaiming the Ligue 2 <b>title</b>. ... Therefore, <b>PSG have</b> never formally been relegated \nfrom <b>Ligue 1</b>.",
"Nasser bin Ghanim Al-Khelaifi <b>is</b> a Qatari businessman and <b>is</b> the chairman of \nbeIN Media ... Nasser Al-Khelaifi <b>has</b> been chairman of Qatar Sports Investments \n(QSi) since June 2011. ... In the 2012–13 season, <b>PSG</b> won the <b>Ligue 1 title</b> and \nalso made it to the quarter-finals of the UEFA Champions League, thanks partly \nto ...",
"Kylian Mbappé Lottin <b>is</b> a French professional footballer who plays as a forward \nfor <b>Ligue 1</b> ... With <b>PSG</b>, Mbappé won two <b>Ligue 1 titles</b>, a Coupe de France, <b>has</b> \nfinished as <b>Ligue 1</b> top ... Kylian could <b>do much</b> more than the other children.",
"Georges Peyroche <b>is</b> the club's longest-serving manager, as well as the only ... \nand Emery (once) <b>are</b> the only <b>PSG</b> managers to <b>have</b> won the <b>Ligue 1</b> ... In his \nthree seasons in charge, Paris SG won three <b>Ligue 1 titles</b>, two ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"six"
] | Paris Saint-Germain F.C. |
7030758716024791080 | Who won season 2 of america's got talent? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Terry Fator"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Terry Fator",
"America's Got Talent (season 2)",
"America's Got Talent: The Champions"
] | {
"query": [
"who won season 2 of america's got talent"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"America's Got Talent (season 2)",
"America's Got Talent: The Champions",
"America's Got Talent",
"Terry Fator",
"Darci Lynne",
"Got Talent",
"America's Got Talent (season 11)",
"America's Got Talent (season 9)",
"America's Got Talent (season 12)",
"America's Got Talent (season 14)"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Season Two of America's Got Talent</b>, an American talent show competition, \nbegan ... The second season was <b>won</b> by singing ventriloquist and impressionist \nTerry Fator, with singer and guitarist Cas Haley finishing in second place, and \nsinging ...",
"Unlike the format and operations of the main competition of <b>America's Got Talent</b>, \nincluding the main rounds being aired live for each <b>season</b>, The ... to participate \nin the contest range from <b>winners</b>, runner-ups and finalists, to the ...",
"Main article: <b>America's Got Talent</b> (<b>season 2</b>) ... This season was <b>won</b> by singing \nimpressionist and ventriloquist Terry Fator, ...",
"Terry Wayne Fator is an American ventriloquist, impressionist, stand-up \ncomedian, and singer from Dallas, Texas. Fator does ventriloquial \nimpersonations, and uses 15 different puppets in his act. He was the <b>winner</b> of \n<b>season two of America's Got Talent</b>, and received the ...",
"Darci Lynne Farmer (born October 12, 2004) is an American ventriloquist and \nsinger. She was the <b>winner</b> of season twelve of the NBC competition show \n<b>America's Got Talent</b> ... Maglio, Tony (21 September 2017). "Watch '<b>America's Got</b> \n<b>Talent</b>' Puppet Duel With Darci Lynne, <b>Season 2 Winner</b> Terry Fator (Video)". \nTheWrap.",
"Got Talent is a British talent show TV format conceived and owned by Simon \nCowell's SYCOtv ... After the pilot proved a success, work began on producing a \n<b>season</b> of the ... NBC launched a spin-off series, <b>America's Got Talent</b>: The \nChampions in ... The <b>winner</b> of this spin-off series was Canadian-American card \nmagician ...",
"Moya Angela, <b>2</b>, Singer, Eliminated. Viktor Kee, 3 ... Advanced (Judges' Vote Tied \n- <b>Won</b> by Public Vote).",
"Baila Conmigo, <b>2</b>, Salsa Dance Troupe, Eliminated. Jaycob Curlee, 3 ... \nAdvanced (<b>Won</b> Judges' Vote).",
"Celine Tam, <b>2</b>, Singer, Advanced. Mirror Image, 3, Vocal ... Advanced (Judges' \nVote Tied - <b>Won</b> by Public Vote).",
"Nick & Lindsay, <b>2</b>, Opera Singer & Danger Act, Crystal Clear action button cancel.\nsvg ... Advanced (<b>Won</b> Judges' Vote)"
]
}
]
} | [
"Terry Fator"
] | America's Got Talent (season 2) |
1237920926774398276 | When's the next time easter falls on april fools day? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"As of 2015, when is the next time Easter falls on April fools day?",
"As of 2016, when is the next time Easter falls on April fools day?",
"As of 2017, when is the next time Easter falls on April Fools Day?"
],
"answer": [
[
"2018"
],
[
"2018"
],
[
"2018"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"List of dates for Easter"
] | {
"query": [
"When's the next time easter falls on april fools day?",
"easter dates"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"1997 April Fool's Day blizzard",
"April Fools' Day",
"April Fool's Day (1986 film)",
"List of Google Easter eggs",
"List of Google April Fools' Day jokes",
"So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show",
"April 1",
"English festivals",
"Talk:April Fools' Day/Archive 1",
"Public holidays in Canada"
],
"snippet": [
"The 1997 <b>April Fool's Day</b> blizzard was a major winter storm in the Northeastern \nUnited States ... A cold front passed early <b>next</b> day (Monday March 31), dropping \nthe ... of the storm from about 11 p.m. March 31 to 3 a.m. April 1, snow <b>fell</b> in \nBoston at ... Commuter trolleys in Boston were closed for the first <b>time</b> in nearly \ntwenty ...",
"<b>April Fools</b>' <b>Day</b> or <b>April Fool's Day</b> is an annual custom on April 1, consisting of \npractical jokes ... Authorities gravely back with it to the <b>time</b> of Noah and the ark. \n... It is a day <b>when</b> many pranks are played: hoaxes – sometimes very \nsophisticated – are ... But the celebration of <b>this</b> day has died out in favor of <b>April</b> \n<b>Fools</b>' <b>Day</b>.",
"<b>April Fool's Day</b> is a 1986 American mystery slasher film directed by Fred Walton, \nproduced by ... In spite of <b>this</b>, the group try to relax, until Skip goes missing, and \nKit catches a ... During a search for the pair, Nikki <b>falls</b> into the island's well, \nwhere she finds the ... "<b>When</b> it comes to '<b>April Fool's Day</b>' the joke is on the \nviewers".",
"The technology company Google has added <b>Easter</b> eggs and <b>April Fools</b>' <b>Day</b> \njokes and ... <b>This</b> does not work on mobile devices or <b>when</b> there is a Google \nDoodle on that day. ... discovery in an article on "geekosystem.com" (now The \nMary Sue), stating that he was "Not sure if <b>this falls</b> in the category of <b>Easter</b> Egg \nor clever ...",
"Google frequently inserts jokes and hoaxes into its products on <b>April Fools</b>' <b>Day</b>, \nwhich takes ... It was claimed <b>this</b> boost was achieved through real-<b>time</b> analysis \nof the ... <b>This</b> was the first year YouTube participated in Google's <b>April Fool's Day</b> \ntradition. ... <b>When</b> using Google Books or GMail, a user would come across an ...",
"The story begins on <b>April Fools</b>' <b>Day</b> as Homer is playing pranks on Bart ... <b>When</b> \nHomer opens the beer, it results in a massive explosion that puts him in the ... in \nwhich Homer <b>falls</b> down Springfield Gorge a second <b>time</b> after the ambulance ...",
"<b>April</b> 1 is the 91st <b>day</b> of the year (92nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. \n274 <b>days</b> ... Deposed and replaced by Yuan Zhao the <b>next day</b>, she was the first \nfemale ... 1854 – Charles Dickens' novel Hard <b>Times</b> begins serialisation in his ... \nend of the Spanish Civil War, <b>when the last</b> of the Republican forces surrender.",
"English festivals are the Christian and secular festivals that are traditionally \ncelebrated in ... The United Kingdom celebrates Mothering Sunday, which <b>falls</b> \non the fourth ... <b>April Fools</b>' <b>Day</b> is an annual celebration commemorated on April \n1 by ... The tradition dates back to the <b>time when</b> most buildings had earthen \nfloors and ...",
"2004 archive. There is a whole list of April Fool's jokes on <b>this</b> website if someone \nwants to list ... <b>April fools day fell</b> on a saturday. ... Does a holiday need to be a \nday <b>when</b> you don't have work? ... They had to issue a clarification the <b>next week</b> \nor month or so that it was an april fools' joke, because many people had called ...",
"Public holidays in Canada, known as statutory holidays, stat holidays, or simply \nstats, consist of ... In most provinces, <b>when</b> a statutory holiday <b>falls</b> on a normal \n<b>day</b> off ... <b>Easter</b> Monday – optional holiday, variable date between March 23 and \n<b>April</b> 26 ... If <b>this</b> date <b>falls</b> on a Sunday: July 2 (Canada <b>Day</b>); First Monday in ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"List of dates for Easter",
"Computus",
"Easter",
"Reform of the date of Easter",
"Easter controversy",
"Template:Table of dates of Easter",
"Ecclesiastical full moon",
"Template:Dates for Easter",
"Aleppo Easter dating method",
"File:Eastern and Western Easter Dates.png"
],
"snippet": [
"This is a list of dates for Easter. The <b>Easter dates</b> also affect when Ash \nWednesday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday, Feast of the \nAscension and ...",
"The computus (Latin for 'computation') is a calculation that determines the \ncalendar <b>date</b> of <b>Easter</b>. <sup>:xviii</sup> <b>Easter</b> is traditionally celebrated on the first Sunday \nafter ...",
"While martyrs' days (usually the individual <b>dates</b> of martyrdom) were celebrated \non fixed <b>dates</b> in the local solar calendar, the ...",
"A reform of the <b>date</b> of <b>Easter</b> has been proposed several times because the \ncurrent system for determining the <b>date</b> of <b>Easter</b> is seen as presenting two ...",
"For the various systems used to calculate <b>dates</b> for <b>Easter</b>, see computus. \nControversy over ...",
"Table of <b>dates</b> of <b>Easter</b> 2001–2025 (in Gregorian <b>dates</b>). Year, Full Moon, \nJewish Passover, Astronomical <b>Easter</b> · Gregorian <b>Easter</b>, Julian <b>Easter</b>. 2001, \nApril 8 ...",
"The <b>date</b> of <b>Easter</b> is determined as the first Sunday after the "paschal full moon" \nthat falls on or after March 21 (the ecclesiastical fixed <b>date</b> for the Spring Equinox;\n ...",
"<b>Dates</b> for <b>Easter</b> for 20 years in the past and in the future (Gregorian <b>dates</b>, 2000 \nto 2040). Year, Western, Eastern. 2000, April 23, April 30. 2001, April 15.",
"The World Council of Churches proposed a reform of the method of determining \nthe <b>date</b> of <b>Easter</b> at a summit in Aleppo, Syria, in 1997: ...",
"English: Computus: Distribution of the <b>date</b> of <b>Easter</b> in most Eastern churches \n1900–2099 vs Western <b>Easter</b> distribution. <b>Date</b>, 6 March 2009 (original upload ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"2029"
] | List of dates for Easter |
4737873499269724327 | What is the original name of puerto rico? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Borinquen"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Puerto Rico",
"History of Puerto Rico"
] | {
"query": [
"puerto rico history"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"History of Puerto Rico",
"Puerto Rico",
"Puerto Ricans",
"San Juan, Puerto Rico",
"Flag of Puerto Rico",
"History of the Jews in Puerto Rico",
"Afro-Puerto Ricans",
"Stateside Puerto Ricans",
"Ponce, Puerto Rico",
"Vieques, Puerto Rico"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>history</b> of <b>Puerto Rico</b> began with the settlement of the archipelago of <b>Puerto</b> \n<b>Rico</b> by the Ortoiroid people between 3,000 and 2,000 BC. Other tribes, such ...",
"<b>Puerto Rico</b> officially the Commonwealth of <b>Puerto Rico</b> and briefly called Porto \nRico, is an unincorporated territory of the United States ...",
"<b>Puerto Ricans</b> (Spanish: Puertorriqueños; or boricuas) are the people of <b>Puerto</b> \n<b>Rico</b>, the ... "Adiós, Borinquen querida": The <b>Puerto Rican</b> Diaspora, Its <b>History</b>, \nand Contributions, by Edna Acosta-Belen, et al. (Albany, New York: Center for ...",
"San Juan is the capital and most populous municipality in the Commonwealth of \n<b>Puerto Rico</b>, an unincorporated territory of the United ...",
"The flag of <b>Puerto Rico</b> represents and symbolizes the island of <b>Puerto Rico</b> and \nits people. The origins of the current flag of <b>Puerto Rico</b>, ...",
"The Jewish immigration to <b>Puerto Rico</b> began in the 15th century with the arrival \nof the anusim who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his second voyage.",
"The <b>history</b> of <b>Puerto Ricans</b> of African descent begins with free African men, \nknown as libertos, who accompanied the Spanish Conquistadors in the invasion \nof ...",
"A Stateside <b>Puerto Rican</b>, also ambiguously <b>Puerto Rican</b> American or <b>Puerto</b> \n<b>Ricans</b> in the United States is a term for residents ...",
"Ponce is both a city and a municipality on the southern coast of <b>Puerto Rico</b>. The \ncity is the seat of the municipal government.",
"Vieques in full Isla de Vieques, is an island–municipality of <b>Puerto Rico</b>, in the \nnortheastern Caribbean, part of an island ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Borikén"
] | Puerto Rico |
4123548744340087331 | Sharon two guys a girl and a pizza place? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Traylor Howard"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Two Guys and a Girl"
] | {
"query": [
"Sharon two guys a girl and a pizza place?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Two Guys and a Girl",
"List of Two Guys and a Girl episodes",
"The Pilot (Two Guys and a Girl)",
"Traylor Howard",
"Maury Ginsberg",
"Rena Sofer",
"Anthony Head",
"Cheryl Ladd",
"Body swap appearances in media",
"List of Super Bowl commercials"
],
"snippet": [
"Two Guys and a Girl is an American television sitcom created by Kenny Schwartz \nand Danny ... They both attend Tufts University, with <b>Sharon</b>, who after \ngraduation, works as the spokesperson (or apologist) for Immaculate Chemicals. \n... ("<b>Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Delivery</b>"); Kathy Kinney as Mimi (1998) – \nKinney played ...",
"The following is a list of episodes for the television show <b>Two Guys, a Girl and a</b> \n<b>Pizza Place</b> ... They are close friends with the feisty <b>Sharon</b> Carter (Traylor \nHoward), the spokesperson of Immaculate Chemicals. The show aired on \nWednesday ...",
""The Pilot" is the first episode from the ABC sitcom <b>Two Guys</b> and a <b>Girl</b>. The \nepisode aired on ... Pete tells Berg and <b>Sharon</b> that he is going to break up with \nhis girlfriend Melissa because he doesn't think "she's the one" but he then \ndecides not to. ... Then, Pete realizes what he has lost and loiters around the \n<b>pizza place</b>.",
"Traylor Elizabeth Howard (born June 14, 1966) is a former American actress. Her \nroles include <b>Sharon</b> Carter on the television series Two Guys and a Girl, ... ABC \nsitcom <b>Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place</b> (later retitled Two Guys and a Girl) ...",
"Maury Ginsberg is an American theater, film and television actor. He is best \nknown for his ... From 1998-1999 he played the recurring role of Kamen on <b>Two</b> \n<b>Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place</b> opposite Ryan Reynolds and ... Eberson, <b>Sharon</b>.",
"Rena Sherel Sofer (born December 2, 1968) is an American actress, known for \nher ... 1998, <b>Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place</b>, Lauren Henderson, Episode: "\nTwo Guys, a Girl, and a Recovery" ... Rena Sofer (1995); Anna Holbrook (1996); \nMichelle Stafford (1997); Julia Barr (1998); <b>Sharon</b> Case (1999); Sarah Joy \nBrown ...",
"Anthony Stewart Head (born 20 February 1954) is an English actor and musician. \nHe rose to ... In 2002, he co-starred in the BBC Two television series Manchild, a \nshow revolving around four friends approaching their ... 1999, <b>Two Guys, a Girl</b> \n<b>and a Pizza Place</b>, Dr Staretski, Episode: "Two Guys, a Girl and a Mother's Day".",
"Cheryl Ladd is an American actress, singer and author best known for her role as \nKris Munroe ... 2000, <b>Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place</b>, Berg's Mom, 2 \nepisodes. 2002, Her Best Friend's Husband, Jane Thornton, TV film. 2003, \nCharmed ...",
"Body swaps have been a common storytelling device in fiction media. Novels \nsuch as Vice ... This list features exchanges between two beings, and thus \nexcludes similar phenomena of body hopping, ... <b>Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza</b> \n<b>Place</b>, "Halloween 2: Mind Over Body", Pete and Ashley, Berg and <b>Sharon</b>, Mad \nscientist.",
"This article is a list of Super Bowl commercials, that is, commercials that aired on \nthe television ... "Welcome to Miller Time" | <b>Restaurant</b> | Burger King ... Food, \nDoritos tortilla chips, <b>Two guys</b> in a laundromat try to impress a <b>girl</b> (Ali Landry) ... \nWe cut to <b>Pizza</b> hut to find this rumor true, as he's come back from the dead for \ntheir ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Traylor Howard"
] | Two Guys and a Girl |
-3430387669519489370 | How many seasons are there of star wars the clone wars? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"How many seasons are there of Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008)?",
"How many seasons are there of Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003)?"
],
"answer": [
[
"7"
],
[
"3"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008 TV series)"
] | {
"query": [
"star wars clone wars "
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008 TV series)",
"Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003 TV series)",
"Clone Wars (Star Wars)",
"Star Wars: The Clone Wars (film)",
"List of Star Wars: The Clone Wars episodes",
"List of Star Wars television series",
"Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2002 video game)",
"Palpatine",
"Lego Star Wars III: The Clone Wars",
"Clone Wars"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Star Wars</b>: The <b>Clone Wars</b> is an American computer-animated television series \ncreated by George Lucas and produced by Lucasfilm Animation, Lucasfilm and ...",
"<b>Star Wars</b>: <b>Clone Wars</b> is an American animated television micro-series set in the \nStar Wars universe and developed and drawn by Genndy Tartakovsky.",
"The <b>Clone Wars</b>, occasionally referred to in the singular as the Clone War, is a \nseries of fictional conflicts in the <b>Star Wars</b> franchise by George Lucas. Though ...",
"<b>Star Wars</b>: The <b>Clone Wars</b> is a 2008 American computer-animated epic military \nscience fiction film directed by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm Animation, ...",
"It is set in the fictional <b>Star Wars</b> galaxy, during the three-year interim between \nStar ... The hour-long premiere episode of <b>Star Wars</b>: The <b>Clone Wars</b> aired on ...",
"Main article: <b>Star Wars</b>: The <b>Clone Wars</b> (2008 TV ... it to produce his first in-\nhouse <b>Star Wars</b> CGI-animated series.",
"The game is split up into two segments, vehicles and third-person Jedi fighting. \nThe vehicle segments involve most vehicles from the <b>Star Wars</b> universe: STAPs,\n ...",
"Sheev Palpatine is a fictional character in the <b>Star Wars</b> franchise created by \nGeorge Lucas. ... In the 2008 animated film <b>Star Wars</b>: The <b>Clone Wars</b> and the \nsubsequent animated series (set between Attack of the Clones and Revenge of \nthe ...",
"Lego <b>Star Wars</b> III: The <b>Clone Wars</b> is a Lego-themed action-adventure video \ngame based on The <b>Clone Wars</b> animated film and its follow-up television series\n ...",
"<b>Clone Wars</b> may refer to: Contents. 1 Film and television; 2 Video games; 3 Other\n; 4 See also. Film and television[edit]. <b>Star Wars</b>: The <b>Clone Wars</b> (film), a 2008 ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"6"
] | List of Star Wars: The Clone Wars episodes |
6389345907245133102 | When was the national world war ii memorial built? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"When did construction start on the national World War II memorial?",
"When was the National World War II memorial officially established?"
],
"answer": [
[
"September, 2001"
],
[
"April 29, 2004"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"World War II Memorial"
] | {
"query": [
"When was the national world war ii memorial built?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"World War II Memorial",
"The National WWII Museum",
"National World War I Museum and Memorial",
"Lincoln Memorial",
"USS Arizona Memorial",
"National World War I Memorial (Washington, D.C.)",
"National D-Day Memorial",
"National War Memorial (Canada)",
"National War Memorial (India)",
"Indiana World War Memorial Plaza"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>World War II Memorial</b> is a <b>memorial</b> of <b>national</b> significance dedicated to \nAmericans who ... veteran Roger Durbin approached Representative Marcy \nKaptur, a Democrat from Ohio, to ask if a <b>World War II memorial</b> could be \n<b>constructed</b>.",
"Within the large atrium of the Louisiana <b>Memorial</b> Pavilion several ... In January \n2013, the museum <b>opened</b> The US Freedom Pavilion: The ... and freedom," as \nwell as how the legacy of <b>World War II</b> affects us today.",
"The <b>National World War</b> I Museum and <b>Memorial</b> of the United States is located \nin Kansas City, Missouri. <b>Opened</b> to the public as the Liberty <b>Memorial</b> museum \nin 1926, it was ... Visitors enter the exhibit space within the 32,000-square-foot (\n3,000 m<sup><b>2</b></sup>) facility across a glass bridge above a field of 9,000 red poppies, each \none ...",
"The Lincoln <b>Memorial</b> is an American <b>national memorial built</b> to honor the 16th \nPresident of the ... <b>National World War II Memorial</b> – the <b>memorial</b> is administered \nby the <b>National</b> Park Service under its <b>National</b> Mall and <b>Memorial</b> Parks group.",
"Website, <b>World War II</b> Valor in the Pacific <b>National Monument</b> · USS Arizona \nsinking and burning during the attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. The \nUSS Arizona <b>Memorial</b>, at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii, marks the resting \nplace of ... The <b>memorial</b>, <b>built</b> in 1962, has been visited by more than two million \npeople ...",
"But no <b>national memorial</b> commemorating <b>World War</b> I was erected over the next \n70 years, which upset <b>World War</b> I veterans. ... for the museum's extensive \ncollection, <b>opened</b> in 2006.",
"The <b>National</b> D-Day <b>Memorial</b> is a war <b>memorial</b> located in Bedford, Virginia. It \nserves as the ... all Allied Armed Forces during the D-Day invasion of Normandy, \nFrance on June 6, 1944 during <b>World War II</b>. ... It officially <b>opened</b> on June 6, \n2001 with 15,000 people present, including then-President George W. Bush. \nAbout ...",
"The <b>National War Memorial</b> titled The Response (French: La Réponse) is a tall, \ngranite <b>memorial</b> arch with accreted bronze sculptures in Ottawa, Ontario, \nCanada, designed by Vernon March and first dedicated by King George VI in \n1939. Originally <b>built</b> to commemorate the Canadians who died in the First <b>World</b> \n... The lowest step of the pedestal is 15.9 m (52 ft <b>2</b> in) by 8.08 m (26 ft 6 in).",
"The <b>National War Memorial</b> would be <b>constructed</b> at 'C' Hexagon of India ... 30 \nAugust 2016 - A <b>global</b> design competition for the <b>National War</b> ...",
"Both buildings were <b>constructed</b> from Indiana limestone in ... the American \nLegion Auxiliary, and the <b>National</b> Forty and Eight."
]
}
]
} | [
"April 29 , 2004"
] | National World War II Memorial |
7063169977317265636 | With what are the german die brücke artists associated? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"With what group are the german die brücke artists associated?",
"With what art type are the german die brücke artists associated?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Fauves",
"the Fauves"
],
[
"expressionism"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Die Brücke"
] | {
"query": [
"german die brücke artists"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Die Brücke",
"Die Brücke (film)",
"Brücke Museum",
"Der Blaue Reiter",
"Erich Heckel",
"Ernst Ludwig Kirchner",
"Karl Schmidt-Rottluff",
"Über die Brücke geh'n",
"Otto Mueller",
"German art"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Die Brücke</b> (<b>The Bridge</b>) was a group of <b>German</b> expressionist <b>artists</b> formed in \nDresden in 1905. Founding members were Fritz Bleyl, Erich Heckel, Ernst ...",
"<b>Die Brücke</b> (<b>The Bridge</b>) is a 1959 West <b>German</b> film directed by Austrian \nfilmmaker Bernhard ... film Black Orpheus. The film was released in the United \nStates in 1961 by Allied <b>Artists</b>, and currently holds a 100% rating on Rotten \nTomatoes.",
"The Brücke Museum in Berlin houses the world's largest collection of works by \nmembers of the group <b>Die Brücke</b> ("<b>The Bridge</b>"), an early 20th-century <b>German</b> \nexpressionist ... The collection includes a donation from the <b>painter</b> Karl Schmidt-\nRottluff to the state of Berlin, and a later donation from Erich Heckel featuring key\n ...",
"Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) was a group of <b>artists</b> united in rejection of the \nNeue Künstlervereinigung München in Munich, <b>Germany</b>. ... 1911 to 1914, \nfundamental to Expressionism, along with <b>Die Brücke</b> which was founded in \n1905.",
"Erich Heckel was a <b>German painter</b> and printmaker, and a founding member of \nthe group <b>Die Brücke</b> ("<b>The Bridge</b>") which existed 1905-1913. Contents.",
"Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (6 May 1880 – 15 June 1938) was a <b>German</b> expressionist \n<b>painter</b> and printmaker and one of the founders of the <b>artists</b> group <b>Die Brücke</b> ...",
"Karl Schmidt-Rottluff was a <b>German</b> expressionist <b>painter</b> and printmaker; he was \none of the four founders of the <b>artist</b> group <b>Die Brücke</b>. Contents. 1 Life and ...",
"Über <b>die Brücke</b> geh'n was the <b>German</b> entry in the Eurovision Song Contest \n1986, performed ... Germany "Über die Brücke geh'n". Eurovision Song Contest \n1986 entry. Country. Germany. Artist(s). Ingrid Peters. Composer(s). Hans Blum.",
"Otto Müller (16 October 1874 – 24 September 1930) was a <b>German painter</b> and \nprintmaker of the <b>Die Brücke</b> expressionist movement.",
"<b>German art</b> has a long and distinguished tradition in the visual <b>arts</b>, from the \nearliest known ... <b>Die Brücke</b> was a group of <b>German</b> expressionist <b>artists</b> formed \nin Dresden in 1905 by architecture students who wanted to be <b>painters</b>: Fritz \nBleyl ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Expressionism"
] | Die Brücke |
-1672733591597131629 | Alter-ego adopted by rosalind in as you like it? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"a shepherd named Ganymede"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Rosalind (As You Like It)"
] | {
"query": [
"Alter-ego adopted by rosalind in as you like it?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Rosalind (As You Like It)",
"As You Like It",
"Twelfth Night",
"Mulan (Disney character)",
"Darkwing Duck",
"Awkwafina",
"Dame Edna Everage",
"Red Skelton",
"Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)",
"Stompin' Tom Connors"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Rosalind</b> is the heroine and protagonist of the play As <b>You Like It</b> (1600) by \nWilliam Shakespeare. She is the daughter of the exiled Duke Senior and niece to \nhis ...",
"<b>Jaques</b>, ever melancholic, declines their invitation to return to the court, preferring \nto stay in the forest and to <b>adopt</b> a religious life as well. <b>Rosalind</b> speaks an ...",
"Twelfth Night, or What You Will is a romantic comedy by William Shakespeare, \nbelieved to have ... They convince Malvolio that Olivia is secretly in love with him \nby planting a love letter, written by Maria in Olivia's handwriting. ... in the plot (\nunlike other Shakespearean heroines such as <b>Rosalind in As You Like It</b> and \nPortia in ...",
"Mulan is a character, inspired by a legendary figure, who appears in Walt Disney \nPictures' 36th ... Throughout the movie <b>they</b> are constantly working towards \nhelping each ... However, the directors eventually felt that her attempt at \nimpersonating a man in the form of Mulan's male <b>alter</b>-<b>ego</b> "Ping" was rather \nunconvincing, and ...",
"In his secret identity of Drake Mallard (a parody of Kent Allard, the <b>alter ego</b> of the \nShadow), he lives in an unassuming suburban house with his <b>adopted</b> ...",
"Nora Lum known professionally as Awkwafina, is an American actress, comedian\n, writer, ... Her second album, In Fina <b>We</b> Trust, was released in 2018. ... At age \n16, she <b>adopted</b> the stage name Awkwafina, "definitely a person I repressed" and \nan <b>alter ego</b> to her "quiet and more passive" personality during her college years.",
"Dame Edna Everage, often known simply as Dame Edna, is a character created \nand performed ... Then he caused the Edna character to <b>adopt</b> an increasingly \noutlandish wardrobe after ... In 1982, Dame Edna's <b>alter</b>-<b>ego</b> Barry Humphries \nwas made an Officer of the Order of ... <b>You</b> know, I even <b>like</b> Roman Catholics.",
"Richard Bernard "Red" Skelton (July 18, 1913 – September 17, 1997) was an \nAmerican ... <b>They</b> are part of the Red Skelton Museum of American Comedy at \nVincennes. ... He <b>enjoyed</b> his work on the riverboat, moving on only after he \nrealized that ... 1973: Martha Raye; 1974: Walter Pidgeon; 1975: <b>Rosalind</b> \nRussell; 1976: ...",
"Daredevil is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published \nby Marvel ... The Black Widow served as Daredevil's crime-fighting ally as well as \nhis <b>love</b> interest from ... had an affair with Mary Walker, and Walker reveals \nherself as the <b>alter ego</b> of Typhoid Mary. ... <b>They</b> reconcile once the truth is \ndiscovered.",
"Charles Thomas "Stompin' Tom" Connors, OC (February 9, 1936 – March 6, 2013\n) was a ... While <b>they</b> did not marry, the family would take on his surname. ... Aid \nSociety and later <b>adopted</b> by Cora and Russell Aylward in Skinners Pond, ... as a \npassionist poet within Canadian culture, <b>similar to</b> Milton Acorn and Stan Rogers."
]
}
]
} | [
"a shepherd named Ganymede"
] | Rosalind (As You Like It) |
3459755935653104243 | Who did phil daniels play in east enders? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Kevin Wicks"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Phil Daniels"
] | {
"query": [
"phil daniels"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Phil Daniels",
"Kevin Wicks",
"Parklife (song)",
"Quadrophenia (film)",
"Outlaws (2004 TV series)",
"Breaking Glass",
"Meantime (film)",
"Vinyl (2012 film)",
"Scum (film)",
"Holding On (TV series)"
],
"snippet": [
"Philip William <b>Daniels</b> (born 25 October 1958) is an English actor, most noted for \nfilm and television roles playing Londoners, such as the lead role of Jimmy ...",
"Kevin Wicks is a fictional character from the BBC soap opera EastEnders, played \nby <b>Phil Daniels</b>. Kevin made his first appearance on 17 February 2006 when ...",
"The song is noted for containing elements of spoken word in the verses, narrated \nby actor <b>Phil Daniels</b>, who also appears in the song's music video.",
"The film stars <b>Phil Daniels</b> as Jimmy, a young 1960s London-based Mod who \nescapes from his dead-end job as a mailroom boy by dancing, partying, taking ...",
"The series stars <b>Phil Daniels</b> as Bruce Dunbar, the head of a shifty legal firm \ndealing in criminal law, who trains new employee Theodore Gulliver (Ray Emmet\n ...",
"Breaking Glass is a 1980 British film starring Hazel O'Connor, <b>Phil Daniels</b> and \nJonathan Pryce. It was co-produced by Dodi Fayed and written and directed by ...",
"<b>Phil Daniels</b> · Gary Oldman. Cinematography, Roger Pratt. Edited by, Lesley \nWalker. Release date. 1983 (1983). Running time. 112 minutes. Country, United \nKingdom. Language, English. Meantime is a 1983 made for television comedy \ndrama film directed by Mike Leigh, produced ...",
"Vinyl has a soundtrack written and performed by The Alarm with Mike Peters, <b>Phil</b> \n<b>Daniels</b> and Keith Allen all making contributions. Filmed mostly on location in ...",
"Ray Winstone, John Blundell, <b>Phil Daniels</b>, John Judd, Ray Burdis and Patrick \nMurray all reprise their respective roles as Carlin, Banks, Richards, Sands, ...",
"While some of the group are able to take a newfound hope from the remains of \nthe tragic event, others including food critic Gary Rickey (<b>Phil Daniels</b>) simply ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Kevin Wicks"
] | Kevin Wicks |
-7563488770313519534 | Which state has the smallest population in nigeria? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Bayelsa State",
"Bayelsa"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"List of Nigerian states by population"
] | {
"query": [
"Which state has the smallest population in nigeria?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"List of Nigerian states by population",
"Lagos State",
"Bauchi State",
"List of Nigerian cities by population",
"Benue State",
"Imo State",
"List of African countries by population",
"List of Nigerian states by area",
"Bayelsa State",
"Edo State"
],
"snippet": [
"The following table presents a listing of <b>Nigeria</b>'s 36 states ranked in order of their \ntotal <b>population</b> based on preliminary 2006 Census figures. Rank, <b>State</b>, \n<b>Population</b> ...",
"Lagos, sometimes referred to as Lagos <b>State</b> to distinguish it from Lagos \nMetropolitan Area, is a <b>state</b> in the southwestern geopolitical zone of <b>Nigeria</b>. The \n<b>smallest</b> in area of <b>Nigeria's</b> 36 states, Lagos <b>State</b> is arguably the most ... It <b>has</b> \nthe highest <b>population</b> density of <b>Nigeria's</b> states. The actual <b>population</b> total is \ndisputed ...",
"What is now known as Bauchi was until 1976 a province in the then North-\nEastern <b>State</b> of <b>Nigeria</b>. According to the 2006 census, the <b>state has</b> a \n<b>population</b> of ...",
"The following are lists of the most populous fully defined incorporated settlements \nin <b>Nigeria</b> by ... agglomerations. A city is displayed in bold if it is a <b>state</b> or federal \ncapital, and in italics if it is the most populous city in the <b>state</b>. ... This is section \nlists contiguous urban areas in <b>Nigeria</b>, with a <b>population</b> of at <b>least</b> 500,000.",
"The <b>State</b>, which is located in the North Central region of <b>Nigeria</b>, <b>has</b> a total \n<b>population</b> of 4,253,641 in ...",
"Imo is one of the 36 States of <b>Nigeria</b> and is in the south east region of <b>Nigeria</b>. \nOwerri is its ... The Orashi River <b>has</b> its source in Imo <b>State</b> (named after a \npowerful <b>Nigerian</b> family with the family name ... Agriculture is the primary \noccupation, but due to over-farming and high <b>population</b> density, the soil <b>has</b> \ngreatly degraded.",
"This is a list of African countries and dependent territories sorted by <b>population</b>, \nwhich is sorted ... 1, <b>Nigeria</b>, 200,963,599, 2019, Worldometers. 2, Ethiopia ...",
"The following table presents a listing of <b>Nigeria</b>'s 36 states ranked in order of their \nsurface area. Rank, <b>State</b>, km². 1, Niger <b>State</b>, 76,363 ... See also[edit]. List of \n<b>Nigerian</b> states by <b>population</b> · <b>Demographics</b> of <b>Nigeria</b> ...",
"<b>Population</b>. (2006 census). • Total, 1,704,515. Ranked 35th · Demonym(s), \nBayelsan. ISO 3166 code, NG-BY. Total, $4.34 billion. Per capita, $2,484. HDI (\n2018), 0.642 medium · 6th of 37. Bayelsa is a <b>state</b> in southern <b>Nigeria</b> in the core \nNiger Delta region, between Delta <b>State</b> and ... This <b>has</b> been a large problem in \nthe <b>state</b> since its creation; successive <b>state</b> ...",
"Edo <b>State</b> is a <b>state</b> in <b>Nigeria</b>. Its capital is Benin City. The 2014 estimated \n<b>population</b> of the Edo <b>state</b> is 5 million people. It is made up of 4 major ethnic \ngroups; namely the Bini, Esan, Owan, and Etsako. However the <b>State has</b> a high \npresence of residents from across the country ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Bayelsa State"
] | List of Nigerian states by population |
3630976503357786326 | What is the scientific name for a red fox? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"What is the scientific name for all red foxes?",
"What is the scientific name for a european red fox?",
"What is the scientific name for the red foxes in Alaska and western Canada?",
"What is the scientific name for the red foxes in the rocky mountains, the cascade range, and sierra nevada?",
"What is the scientific name for the red foxes in Sacramento Valley?"
],
"answer": [
[
"V. vulpes",
"Vulpes vulpes"
],
[
"V. v. crucigera"
],
[
"V. v. alascensis, V. v. abietorum, V. v. regalis, and V. v. rubricosa"
],
[
"V. v. macroura, V. v. cascadensis, and V. v. necator"
],
[
"V. v. patwin"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Red fox"
] | {
"query": [
"red fox"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Red fox",
"Red Fox James",
"Domesticated red fox",
"American red fox",
"Fox",
"Ezo red fox",
"Red fox sparrow",
"Sierra Nevada red fox",
"The Quick Red Fox",
"Red foxes in Australia"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>red fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes) is the largest of the true foxes and one of the most \nwidely distributed members of the order Carnivora, being present across the \nentire ...",
"Rev. <b>Red Fox</b> James[edit]. Rev. <b>Red Fox</b> James PH D. D. D., also known as <b>Red</b> \n<b>Fox</b> Skiuhushu, was a Native American, presumed to be from the Blackfoot ...",
"The Russian domesticated <b>red fox</b> is a form of the wild <b>red fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes) \nwhich has been domesticated to an extent, under laboratory conditions. They are\n ...",
"The American <b>red fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes fulvus), commonly known as the eastern \nAmerican <b>red fox</b>, is a North American subspecies of the <b>red fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes).",
"Foxes are small-to-medium-sized, omnivorous mammals belonging to several \ngenera of the ... By far the most common and widespread species of fox is the <b>red</b> \n<b>fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes) with about 47 recognized subspecies. The global distribution\n ...",
"The ezo <b>red fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes schrencki) is a subspecies of <b>red fox</b> widely \ndistributed in Hokkaido, Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands and the surrounding islands of\n ...",
"<b>Red fox</b> sparrow is the collective name for the most brightly colored taxa in the \nAmerican sparrow genus Passerella, the Passerella iliaca iliaca group.",
"The Sierra Nevada <b>red fox</b> (Vulpes vulpes necator), also known as the High \nSierra fox, is a subspecies of <b>red fox</b> and likely one of the most endangered ...",
"The Quick <b>Red Fox</b> (1964) is the fourth novel in the Travis McGee series by John \nD. MacDonald. In it, McGee is hired to aid a fictitious Hollywood star named ...",
"According to the Tasmanian government, <b>red</b> foxes were introduced to the \npreviously <b>fox</b> free island of Tasmania in ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Vulpes vulpes"
] | Red fox |
5998037098651415370 | Who is the father of accounting when and what did he describe? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Who is the \"father of accounting\"?",
"When did the \"father of accounting\" live?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Luca di Borgo",
"Luca Pacioli",
"Fra Luca Bartolomeo de Pacioli"
],
[
"c. 1447 – 19 June 1517"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Luca Pacioli"
] | {
"query": [
"father of accounting"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Luca Pacioli",
"History of accounting",
"Double-entry bookkeeping system",
"Summa de arithmetica",
"J. Lee Nicholson",
"Accounting ethics",
"N.I.O.C. school of Accounting and Finance",
"Accounting",
"Bookkeeping",
"William W. Cooper"
],
"snippet": [
"Fra Luca Bartolomeo de Pacioli was an Italian mathematician, Franciscan friar, \ncollaborator with Leonardo da Vinci, and an early contributor to the field now \nknown as accounting. He is referred to as "The <b>Father of Accounting</b> and \nBookkeeping" in Europe ...",
"The history of accounting or accountancy is thousands of years old and can be \ntraced to ... The Italian Luca Pacioli, recognized as The <b>Father of accounting</b> and \nbookkeeping was the first person to publish a work on double-entry bookkeeping,\n ...",
"Double-entry bookkeeping, in accounting, is a system of bookkeeping where \nevery entry to an ... Pacioli is often called the "<b>father of accounting</b>" because he \nwas the first to publish a detailed description of the double-entry system, thus \nenabling ...",
"Summa de arithmetica, geometria, proportioni et proportionalita is a book on \nmathematics written by Luca Pacioli and first published in 1494. It contains a \ncomprehensive summary of Renaissance mathematics, including practical \narithmetic, basic algebra, basic geometry and accounting, ... was so great that \nPacioli is sometimes referred to as the "<b>father of accounting</b>.",
"Jerome Lee (J. Lee) Nicholson (1863 - November 2, 1924) was an American \naccountant, industrial consultant, author and educator at the New York University \nand Columbia University, known as pioneer in cost <b>accounting</b>. He is considered \nin the United States to be the "<b>father</b> of cost <b>accounting</b>.",
"Accounting ethics is primarily a field of applied ethics and is part of business \nethics and human ... Luca Pacioli, the "<b>Father of Accounting</b>", wrote on \naccounting ethics in his first book Summa de arithmetica, geometria, proportioni,\n ...",
"Faculty of Accounting and Financial Sciences of Petroleum University of \nTechnology, National ... Hassan Sadjadi Nejad, the <b>father of accounting</b> in Iran \nand Dr. Esmail Erfani with the support of Abdullah Entezam, then CEO of \nNational Iranian ...",
"Accounting or accountancy is the measurement, processing, and communication \nof financial ... on a double-entry bookkeeping system was the Summa de \narithmetica, published in Italy in 1494 by Luca Pacioli (the "<b>Father of Accounting</b>")\n.",
"Pacioli is regarded as the <b>Father of Accounting</b>. Bookkeeping is the recording of \nfinancial transactions, and is part of the process of accounting ...",
"William Wager Cooper (July 23, 1914 – June 20, 2012) was an American \noperations researcher, known as a <b>father</b> of management science and as "Mr. \nLinear Programming". ... The journal is published by the American <b>Accounting</b> \nAssociation; its first issue appeared in 1981. He served as president of the \n<b>Accounting</b> ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"Fra Luca Bartolomeo de Pacioli"
] | Luca Pacioli |
7208068189874944399 | When did the lightning thief book come out? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"July 1, 2005"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"The Lightning Thief"
] | {
"query": [
"lightning thief"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"The Lightning Thief",
"Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief",
"The Lightning Thief (musical)",
"Percy Jackson & the Olympians",
"Percy Jackson (film series)",
"Percy Jackson",
"Rick Riordan",
"George Salazar",
"Jake Abel",
"Portal:Children's literature/Selected article/20"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>Lightning Thief</b> is an American fantasy-adventure novel based on Greek \nmythology, the first young adult novel written by Rick Riordan in the Percy \nJackson ...",
"In the Underworld, Hades finds the <b>lightning</b> bolt hidden inside Luke's shield, \nrevealing that Luke was the <b>thief</b>. Hades has Persephone feed the group to a \ngate of ...",
"The <b>Lightning Thief</b>: The Percy Jackson Musical is a musical with music and \nlyrics by Rob Rokicki and a book by Joe Tracz, based on the 2005 novel of the ...",
"The <b>Lightning Thief</b> is the first book in the series and was released on July 1, \n2005. Percy returns home for the summer vacation, wherein he and his mortal \nmother ...",
"Films[edit]. Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The <b>Lightning Thief</b> (2010)[edit].",
"In the first novel of the series, The <b>Lightning Thief</b>, he is twelve years old. His \npersonality is described as "changeable like the sea" and hard to predict — with \nthe ...",
"His big breakthrough was The <b>Lightning Thief</b> (2005), the first novel in the five-\nvolume Percy Jackson series, which placed a group of adolescents in a Greco- ...",
"D in the Off-Broadway premiere of The <b>Lightning Thief</b>. The limited production ran \nfrom March 23 to May 6. In 2018, Salazar reprised his role as ...",
"Jacob Allen Abel (born November 18, 1987) is an American actor and singer who \nis known for playing Adam Milligan in the CW series Supernatural (2009–10, \n2019), Luke Castellan in the film adaptation of Percy Jackson & the Olympians: \nThe <b>Lightning Thief</b> (2010), ...",
"The <b>Lightning Thief</b> is a 2005 fantasy adventure novel based on Greek mythology\n, the first young adult novel written by author Rick Riordan. It is the first novel in ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"2005"
] | The Lightning Thief |
-3713688239328074547 | How many jury members in a criminal trial? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"How many jury members deliberate in a criminal trial for serious felonies in most of US?",
"How many minimum jury members in a criminal trial in Florida?",
"How many jury members in a criminal trial in Scotland?",
"How many jury members in a criminal trial in republic of ireland?",
"How many jury members in a criminal trial during WWII in England and Wales (except murder and treason)?"
],
"answer": [
[
"usually 12",
"12"
],
[
"6"
],
[
"15"
],
[
"15",
"can, but do not have to, have 15 jurors"
],
[
"7"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Jury",
"Criminal procedure",
"Juries in England and Wales"
] | {
"query": [
"criminal trial",
"criminal trial jury",
" jury members in a criminal trial?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Trial",
"Criminal procedure",
"O. J. Simpson murder case",
"Nuremberg trials",
"Trial of Michael Jackson",
"International Military Tribunal for the Far East",
"McMartin preschool trial",
"Prosecutor",
"Trial in absentia",
"Jury"
],
"snippet": [
"A <b>criminal trial</b> is designed to resolve accusations brought (usually by a \ngovernment) against a person accused of a crime.",
"<b>Criminal</b> procedure is the adjudication process of the <b>criminal</b> law. While <b>criminal</b> \nprocedure differs dramatically by jurisdiction, the process generally begins with a \nformal <b>criminal</b> charge with the person on <b>trial</b> either being free ...",
"The O. J. Simpson murder case was a <b>criminal trial</b> held in Los Angeles County \nSuperior Court. Former National Football League (NFL) player, broadcaster, and\n ...",
"The categorization of the <b>crimes</b> and the constitution of the court represented a \njuridical ...",
"People v. Jackson was a 2005 <b>criminal trial</b> held in Santa Barbara County \nSuperior Court in Santa Maria, California, in which American singer Michael \nJackson ...",
"The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE), also known as the \nTokyo <b>Trial</b> or the Tokyo War <b>Crimes</b> Tribunal, was a military <b>trial</b> convened on ...",
"After six years of <b>criminal trials</b>, no convictions were obtained, and all charges \nwere dropped in 1990. When the trial ended in 1990, it had been the longest and\n ...",
"The prosecution is the legal party responsible for presenting the case in a \n<b>criminal trial</b> against an individual accused of breaking the law. Typically, the ...",
"<b>Trial</b> in absentia is a <b>criminal</b> proceeding in a court of law in which the person \nwho is subject to it is not physically present at those proceedings. In absentia is ...",
"Jury <b>trials</b> were abolished in most Indian courts by the 1973 Code of <b>Criminal</b> \nProcedure . . Nanavati Case was not the last Jury <b>trial</b> in India. West Bengal had \nJury ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"Jury",
"Jury trial",
"Juries in the United States",
"O. J. Simpson murder case",
"Trial of Michael Jackson",
"Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution",
"Jury nullification",
"Juries in England and Wales",
"McMartin preschool trial",
"Hung jury"
],
"snippet": [
"The size of the <b>jury</b> varies; in <b>criminal</b> cases involving serious felonies there are \nusually 12 <b>jurors</b>. In civil cases many <b>trials</b> require ...",
"<b>Jury trials</b> are used in a significant share of serious <b>criminal</b> cases in many but \nnot all common ...",
"A petit <b>jury</b>, also known as a <b>trial jury</b>, is the standard type of <b>jury</b> used in <b>criminal</b> \ncases in the United States. Petit <b>juries</b> are responsible for deciding whether or not\n ...",
"The O. J. Simpson murder case was a <b>criminal trial</b> held in Los Angeles County \nSuperior Court. ... On February 4, 1997, the <b>jury</b> unanimously found Simpson \nresponsible for both deaths. The families were awarded compensatory and \npunitive ...",
"Prosecutors pursued the <b>criminal</b> case and presented the evidence to two \nseparate grand <b>juries</b>, neither of which indicted. Gavin Arvizo was introduced to \nJackson ...",
"The Sixth Amendment grants <b>criminal</b> defendants the right to a speedy and public \n<b>trial</b> by an impartial <b>jury</b> consisting of <b>jurors</b> from the state and district in which ...",
"Jury nullification (US) or a perverse verdict (UK) generally occurs when members \nof a <b>criminal trial jury</b> believe that a defendant is guilty, but choose to acquit the ...",
"Criminal <b>juries</b>[edit]. <b>Juries</b> are summoned for <b>criminal trials</b> in the Crown Court \nwhere the offence is an indictable offence or an ...",
"The McMartin preschool trial was a day care sexual abuse case in the 1980s, \nprosecuted by ... After six years of <b>criminal trials</b>, no convictions were obtained, \nand all charges were ... Only 41 of the original 360 children ultimately testified in \nthe grand <b>jury</b> and pre-trial hearings, and fewer than a dozen testified at the \nactual trial.",
"In Australia, it used to be the case in <b>criminal trials</b>, that a unanimous verdict must \nbe reached, until the advent of majority <b>juries</b>. Canada[edit]. In Canada, the <b>jury</b> ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"Jury",
"Jury trial",
"Jury nullification",
"Grand juries in the United States",
"Juries in the United States",
"Juror misconduct",
"Hung jury",
"Jury selection",
"Apodaca v. Oregon",
"McMartin preschool trial"
],
"snippet": [
"A <b>jury</b> is a sworn body of <b>people</b> (the <b>jurors</b>) convened to render an impartial ... In \nScotland, a <b>jury</b> in a <b>criminal trial</b> consists of 15 <b>jurors</b>, which is thought to be the \nlargest in the world. In 2009 a review by the ...",
"<b>Criminal trials</b> in the High Court are by <b>jury</b>. The <b>juries</b> are generally made of \nseven <b>members</b>, who can return a verdict based on a majority of five. There are \nno ...",
"<b>Jury</b> nullification (US) or a perverse verdict (UK) generally occurs when <b>members</b> \nof a <b>criminal trial jury</b> believe that a defendant is guilty, but choose to acquit the ...",
"... <b>Criminal Procedure</b> governs grand <b>juries</b>. It requires grand <b>juries</b> to be \ncomposed of 16 to 23 <b>members</b> ...",
"There are three types of <b>juries</b> in the United States: <b>criminal</b> grand <b>juries</b>, <b>criminal</b> \npetit <b>juries</b>, ... A grand <b>jury</b> has 16-23 <b>members</b>, and its <b>proceedings</b> are not open \nto the public. Unlike a ... Most states' constitutions also grant the right of <b>trial</b> by \n<b>jury</b> in lesser <b>criminal</b> matters, though most have eliminated that right in offenses\n ...",
"<b>Juror</b> misconduct is when the law of the court is violated by a <b>member</b> of the <b>jury</b> \nwhile a court case is in progression or after it has reached a verdict. Misconduct \ncan take several forms: Communication by the <b>jury</b> with those outside of the trial/\ncourt case. ... <b>criminal trial jurors</b> accused of misconduct have never been tried in \nthis way.",
"Each <b>jury</b> in <b>criminal</b> courts contain twelve <b>jurors</b>. However this is not the <b>case</b> in \ncivil <b>cases</b>. In civil <b>cases</b>, only six <b>people</b> are necessary for a <b>jury</b>, and if there is ...",
"<b>Jury</b> selection is the selection of the <b>people</b> who will serve on a <b>jury</b> during a <b>jury</b> \n<b>trial</b>. ... <b>Jury</b> Identification When empanelling the <b>jury</b>, section 631(3) of the \n<b>Criminal</b> Code states that the court clerk will draw out the appropriate number of \n<b>juror</b> ...",
"Apodaca v. Oregon, 406 U.S. 404 (1972), was a United States Supreme Court \ncase in which ... Federal law requires that <b>juries</b> return a unanimous verdict—one \nthat all <b>members</b> of the <b>jury</b> agree upon—in <b>criminal trials</b>. While most states \nfollow ...",
"The McMartin preschool trial was a day care sexual abuse case in the 1980s, \nprosecuted by the Los Angeles District Attorney Ira Reiner. <b>Members</b> of the \nMcMartin family, who operated a preschool in Manhattan ... After six years of \n<b>criminal trials</b>, no convictions were obtained, and all charges were dropped in \n1990. When the ..."
]
}
]
} | [
"usually 12 jurors"
] | Jury |
2034739379280412436 | Who has conceded the most goals in the premiership? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Which team has conceded the most goals in the premiership?",
"Which goalkeeper has conceded the most goals in the premiership?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Tottenham Hotspur"
],
[
"Tim Krul"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Premier League records and statistics"
] | {
"query": [
"Who has conceded the most goals in the premiership?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Premier League records and statistics",
"List of Premier League goalkeepers with 100 or more clean sheets ...",
"Football records and statistics in England",
"Scottish Premier League",
"2004–05 Chelsea F.C. season",
"List of Premier League highest scoring games",
"A-League records and statistics",
"List of Chelsea F.C. records and statistics",
"2018–19 Premier League",
"List of Newcastle United F.C. records and statistics"
],
"snippet": [
"The top tier of English football <b>was</b> renamed the <b>Premier League</b> for the start of \nthe 1992–93 ... <b>Most goals conceded</b> at home in a season (21 games): 45, \nSwindon Town (1993–94); <b>Most goals conceded</b> at home in a season (19 games\n): 43.",
"In association football, a goalkeeper may be said to "keep a clean sheet" if they \nprevent their opponents scoring any <b>goals</b> during an entire match. Since the \n<b>Premier League</b>'s formation at the start of the 1992–93 season, 15 goalkeepers \n<b>have</b> managed to keep 100 or <b>more</b> clean sheets in the <b>Premier League</b>. ... \nSouthampton and Tottenham Hotspur; all other goalkeepers <b>conceded</b> that ...",
"This article concerns football records in England. Unless otherwise stated, \nrecords are taken ... During the <b>Premiership</b> era, there were eight participants in \nthe historic ... The city <b>has</b> always <b>had</b> a top flight member of either Everton or \nLiverpool. ... <b>Most</b> league <b>goals</b> scored in a season: 134, Peterborough United (\nFourth ...",
"The Scottish <b>Premier League</b> (SPL) <b>was</b> the top level league competition for \nprofessional ... For <b>most</b> of its history, the Scottish Football League <b>had</b> a two \ndivisional ... Teams were ranked by total points, then <b>goal</b> difference, and then \n<b>goals</b> scored. ... 23 <b>goals</b>, 2010–11; <b>Most goals conceded</b> in a season: Aberdeen\n, 83 <b>goals</b>, ...",
"The 2004–05 season <b>was</b> Chelsea F.C.'s 91st competitive season, 13th \nconsecutive season in the <b>Premier League</b> and 99th year as a club. Managed by \nJosé Mourinho during his first season at the club, Chelsea won the <b>Premier</b> \n<b>League</b> title (their first league title in 50 years) and ... <b>most</b> consecutive away wins \n(9), fewest <b>goals conceded</b> in a season (15) and ...",
"This <b>is</b> a summary of the <b>highest</b> scoring games and biggest winning margins in \nthe <b>Premier</b> ... This game boasts the record total number of <b>goals</b> scored in one \nhalf of <b>Premier League</b> football (nine), and by one team in one half of <b>Premier</b> ...",
"The top tier of Australian soccer <b>was</b> renamed the A-League for the start of the \n2005–06 season ... '<b>Most goals conceded</b> in a season: 70, Central Coast \nMariners (2015–16) ... <b>Most goals</b> in a match: 5, Archie Thompson (for Melbourne \nVictory v Adelaide ... <b>Most</b> A-League <b>Premiership</b> wins: 4, Michael Theo; <b>Most</b> A-\nLeague ...",
"Chelsea Football Club <b>is</b> an English professional association football club based \nin Fulham, ... Frank Lampard <b>is</b> Chelsea's record goalscorer, scoring 211 <b>goals</b> in \ntotal. ... <b>Most Premier League</b>/First Division <b>goals</b> in total aggregate: 147, Frank \nLampard ... <b>Most</b> League <b>goals conceded</b> in one season: 100 in 42 matches, First\n ...",
"The 2018–19 <b>Premier League was</b> the 27th season of the <b>Premier League</b>, the \ntop English ... Liverpool finished runners-up with 97 points – the <b>highest</b> total in \nEnglish top-flight history for a second-placed team. ... The fastest <b>goal</b> in <b>Premier</b> \n<b>League</b> history <b>was</b> scored this season on 23 April by Shane Long in a 1–1 draw\n ...",
"This article lists the records of Newcastle United Football Club. Contents. 1 Club \nRecords ... <b>Most</b> League <b>goals</b> scored in a season — 98 in 42 matches, First \nDivision, 1951–52; Fewest League <b>goals</b> scored ... The following <b>have</b> won the \n<b>Premier League</b> Manager of the Season award while managing for Newcastle \nUnited :."
]
}
]
} | [
"Tottenham Hotspur"
] | Premier League records and statistics |
8651809831547260844 | Where did the 60's scoop take place? | {
"type": [
"multipleQAs"
],
"answer": [
[]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [
"Which country did the 60's scoop take place?",
"Which providence in which the 60's scoop took place had an Indigenous transracial adoption program?"
],
"answer": [
[
"Canada"
],
[
"Saskatchewan"
]
]
}
]
} | [
"Sixties Scoop"
] | {
"query": [
"60's scoop take place?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Sixties Scoop",
"Baby Scoop Era",
"Raven Sinclair",
"Forced adoption in Australia",
"Tasha Hubbard",
"Canadian Indian residential school system",
"The Andromeda Strain (film)",
"Henry M. Jackson",
"Barbara Frum",
"Connie Walker (journalist)"
],
"snippet": [
"The <b>Sixties Scoop</b> refers to a practice that occurred in Canada of <b>taking</b>, or "\nscooping up," ... The school system was in <b>effect</b> from the 1880s until 1996, when \nthe last school closed. Children were forcibly removed from their families and \nhomes ...",
"The Baby Scoop Era was a period in anglosphere history starting after the end of \nWorld War II ... A similar social development <b>took place</b> in the United Kingdom, \nNew Zealand, Australia, and Canada. ... The term Baby Scoop Era is similar to \nthe term <b>Sixties Scoop</b>, which was coined by Patrick Johnston, author of Native ...",
"Raven Sinclair (Ótiskewápíwskew) is Cree/Assinniboine/Saulteaux and a \nmember of Gordon First Nation of the Treaty#4 area of southern Saskatchewan \nand member of the Faculty of Social Work at the University of Saskatchewan. She \nis a survivor and expert on the <b>Sixties Scoop</b>, the practice of <b>taking</b> ...",
"Forced adoption in Australia was the practice of taking babies from unmarried \nmothers, against ... There are no precise estimates of the number of adoptions \nthat <b>took place</b> in Australia, with estimates of around 250,000 being feasible. ... \nBaby Scoop Era · <b>Sixties Scoop</b> · Home Children · Romania · Missionaries of \nCharity, ...",
"Tasha Hubbard is a First Nations/Cree filmmaker and educator living in \nSaskatoon, whose ... a 2017 feature-length documentary about four siblings \nseparated during Canada's <b>Sixties Scoop</b>, and nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand \nUp, a 2019 ... Jump up to: "'We Will Stand Up,' 'Hope Frozen' <b>Take</b> Top Prizes at \nHot Docs".",
"In Canada, the Indian residential school system was a network of boarding \nschools for ... In the 1960s, a major confrontation <b>took place</b> at the Saddle Lake \nReserve in ... to issue a formal apology for the government's role in the <b>Sixties</b> \n<b>Scoop</b>.",
"The Andromeda Strain is a 1971 American science fiction thriller film produced \nand directed by ... After a satellite, a U.S. government project code-named <b>Scoop</b>, \ncrashes near the small rural town of Piedmont, New Mexico, almost all of the \ntown's ... The filming in the fictional town of Piedmont <b>took place</b> in Shafter, Texas.",
"Henry Martin "<b>Scoop</b>" Jackson (May 31, 1912 – September 1, 1983) was an \nAmerican politician ... July 17, 1960 – January 21, 1961 ... Jackson successfully \nran for Congress as a Democrat in 1940 and <b>took</b> his seat in the ... <b>Scoop</b> \nJackson was convinced that there's no <b>place</b> for partisanship in foreign and \ndefense policy.",
"Barbara Frum, OC (September 8, 1937 – March 26, 1992) was a US-born \nCanadian radio and ... whom the Frums adopted in the 1960s during the so-\ncalled <b>Sixties Scoop</b>, had problems as a teenager, and ultimately reclaimed his \naboriginal ...",
"Connie Walker is an award-winning Cree journalist. Contents. 1 Personal life; 2 \nCareer ... After graduation Walker, <b>took</b> a permanent <b>position</b> with the Canadian \n... Semaganis, who was removed from her family as part of the <b>Sixties Scoop</b>."
]
}
]
} | [
"Canada"
] | Sixties Scoop |
1533477128984345682 | Who did alyssa trask play in isabelle dances into the spotlight? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Emma",
"Renata's friend"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"An American Girl: Isabelle Dances Into the Spotlight"
] | {
"query": [
"Alyssa Trask",
"alyssa trask isabelle dances into spotlight",
"alyssa traks isabelle dances into spotlight"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"An American Girl: Isabelle Dances Into the Spotlight",
"Backstage (Canadian TV series)",
"List of Backstage characters",
"List of Backstage episodes",
"List of Fablehaven characters",
"Silvermane",
"Alicia Masters",
"Wong (comics)",
"Boston Herald",
"List of people from Staten Island"
],
"snippet": [
"His band consists of him, Uncle Davi (Luisa's dad), and some others. <b>Alyssa</b> \n<b>Trask</b> as Emma, Renata's friend who also bullies Isabelle when on by Renata's \nside.",
"Backstage is a Canadian drama series about a performing arts high school \ncreated by Jennifer ... 30, 2017. The series' ensemble cast includes Devyn \nNekoda, <b>Alyssa Trask</b>, Josh Bogert, Aviva Mongillo, Matthew Isen, and Julia \nTomasone.",
"Backstage is a Canadian drama series about a performing arts high school \ncreated by Jennifer ... 30, 2017. The series' ensemble cast includes Devyn \nNekoda, <b>Alyssa Trask</b>, Josh Bogert, Aviva Mongillo, Matthew Isen, and Julia \nTomasone.",
"Backstage is a Canadian drama series about a performing arts high school \ncreated by Jennifer ... 30, 2017. The series' ensemble cast includes Devyn \nNekoda, <b>Alyssa Trask</b>, Josh Bogert, Aviva Mongillo, Matthew Isen, and Julia \nTomasone.",
"This is a list of characters in the Fablehaven fantasy novel series by Brandon Mull\n. ... He holds conference with <b>Trask's</b> team and reveals himself as one of the last \nactual wizards on earth. He informs the team that they are there at their own risk,\n ...",
"Silvermane is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published \nby Marvel Comics. He is a supervillain and a prominent figure in the Maggia, ...",
"Alicia Reiss Masters is a fictional character appearing in American comic books \npublished by Marvel Comics. She is usually depicted as a supporting character ...",
"Wong is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by \nMarvel Comics. He is the sidekick and valet of Doctor Strange, the Sorcerer ...",
"The Boston Herald is an American daily newspaper whose primary market is \nBoston, ... Pulitzer Prizes for Photography, Harry A. <b>Trask</b>. ... <b>Alyssa</b> Martino [2].",
"This is a list of notable people who were either born or have lived in Staten Island\n, today a ... <b>Alyssa</b> Milano ... Gustavus <b>Trask</b> (1836–1914) – sea captain; \ngovernor of Sailors' Snug Harbor · Vanderbilt family – wealthy Dutch-American \nrailroad ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"An American Girl: Isabelle Dances Into the Spotlight",
"List of people who have learned Transcendental Meditation ...",
"Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics/Articles",
"Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics/Articles/Page3"
],
"snippet": [
"An American Girl: <b>Isabelle Dances Into</b> the <b>Spotlight</b> (2014) is the eighth film in ... \n<b>Alyssa Trask</b> as Emma, Renata's friend who also bullies Isabelle when on by ...",
"A list of notable individuals who have practiced or learned the Transcendental \nMeditation ... Retrieved September 9, 2017. one of my favorite things when I get \n<b>into</b> a ... "'<b>Dancing</b> With the Stars' host Tom Bergeron says meditation helps him \nreact ... <b>SPOTLIGHT</b>: Nancy Veitch Cooke de Herrera, '43 TM Believer, By Wendy\n ...",
"There are too many articles (OVER 9000!!!!!) in this project to list them all <b>on</b> one \npage. This page and the ones linked below contain links to all articles, ...",
"There are too many articles (more than 9000) in this project to list them all <b>on</b> one \npage. This page and the ones linked from the main page contain links to all ..."
]
},
{
"title": [
"List of Canadian Jews",
"Wikipedia:WikiProject Canadian music/Recent changes"
],
"snippet": [
"This list of Canadian Jews includes notable Canadian Jews or Canadians of \nJewish descent, ... Archived from the original <b>on</b> 2014-08-19. ... "Bader, Drs. \nAlfred and <b>Isabel</b>". Queen's Encyclopedia. ... "A 'good Jewish boy' seeks the \n<b>spotlight</b> in LA". ... "A-<b>Trak</b> and Chromeo's Dave 1: A Chat With the First Brothers \nof <b>Dance</b>".",
"... Canada|2=music=yes}} <b>on</b> their talk page. The list is updated by User:Femto \nBot. Its purpose is to be able to <b>track</b> the project history using related changes."
]
}
]
} | [
"Emma"
] | An American Girl: Isabelle Dances Into the Spotlight |
-5492391637682725131 | Which us president appears as a character in the play annie? | {
"type": [
"singleAnswer"
],
"answer": [
[
"Franklin D Roosevelt"
]
],
"qaPairs": [
{
"question": [],
"answer": []
}
]
} | [
"Annie (musical)"
] | {
"query": [
"Which us president appears as a character in the play annie?"
],
"results": [
{
"title": [
"Annie (1982 film)",
"Annie (musical)",
"Little Orphan Annie",
"Christopher Walken",
"Carol Burnett",
"Edward Herrmann",
"Josiah Bartlet",
"List of Twin Peaks characters",
"List of The West Wing characters",
"List of The Boys characters"
],
"snippet": [
"<b>Annie is</b> a 1982 <b>American musical</b> comedy-<b>drama</b> film based on the Broadway \n<b>musical of</b> the ... Warbucks <b>appears</b> on Bert Healy's radio show and offers \n$50,000 to find <b>Annie's</b> ... Warbucks flies <b>Annie</b> to the White House and \nintroduces her to <b>President</b> ... Oscar nominee, Quvenzhané Wallis was cast as \nthe title <b>character</b>.",
"Source: MTI <b>Shows</b> ... <b>Annie</b>, The title <b>character</b>. ... Franklin D. Roosevelt, \n<b>President of</b> the <b>United States</b>, he aids Daddy Warbucks in ...",
"Little Orphan <b>Annie is</b> a daily <b>American</b> comic strip created by Harold Gray and \nsyndicated by ... The <b>characters</b> now <b>appear</b> occasionally as supporting ones in \nDick Tracy. ... When the <b>US</b> entered World War II, <b>Annie</b> not only <b>played</b> her part \nby blowing up a German submarine but organized and led groups <b>of</b> children \ncalled ...",
"Christopher Walken (born Ronald Walken, March 31, 1943) <b>is</b> an <b>American</b> actor, \nsinger, comedian, director, producer, screenwriter, and dancer, who has \n<b>appeared</b> in more than 100 films and television programs, including <b>Annie</b> ... In \n1963, he <b>appeared as a character</b> named Chris in an episode <b>of</b> Naked City, \nstarring Paul ...",
"Carol Creighton Burnett (born April 26, 1933) <b>is</b> an <b>American</b> actress, comedian, \nsinger, and ... During and after her variety show, Burnett <b>appeared</b> in many \ntelevision and ... She portrayed a number <b>of characters</b>, most memorably the put-\nupon ... <b>Annie</b> - The Broadway <b>Musical</b> 30th Anniversary Production - Various \nArtists ...",
"Edward Kirk Herrmann (July 21, 1943 – December 31, 2014) was an <b>American</b> \nactor, director, ... One <b>of</b> the first professional productions he <b>appeared</b> in was the \n<b>U.S.</b> ... For his performance he won a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a \n<b>Play</b>. ... Ray Richmond commented that Herrmann "makes a swell <b>U.S. President</b>,\n ...",
"Josiah Edward "Jed" Bartlet <b>is</b> a fictional <b>character</b> from the <b>American</b> television \nserial <b>drama</b> ... Bartlet's tenure as a Democratic <b>President of</b> the <b>United States is</b> \na ... Elizabeth - <b>Annie</b>, <b>who is</b> 12 in the pilot (although she <b>is shown</b> as and <b>is</b> ...",
"The following <b>is</b> a list <b>of characters</b> from the television series Twin Peaks, the film \nTwin Peaks: ... Gordon Cole (<b>played</b> by David Lynch, and also named for a minor \n<b>character</b> in Sunset ... A picture <b>of President</b> Truman <b>appears</b> in his office. ... \n<b>Annie</b> Blackburn, <b>played</b> by Heather Graham, <b>is</b> the sister <b>of</b> Norma Jennings, \nfrom ...",
"The television series The West Wing <b>is</b> a political <b>drama</b> series which was \noriginally broadcast ... Estevez <b>is</b> the daughter <b>of</b> Martin Sheen, who <b>plays</b> the \n<b>President</b>. ... he first <b>appears</b> advising <b>President</b> Bartlet when the <b>President is</b> \nconsidering revealing his ... <b>Annie</b> Westin: The <b>President's</b> granddaughter and \nLiz's daughter.",
"The following <b>is</b> a list <b>of</b> fictional <b>characters</b> in the comic book series The Boys, \ncreated by Garth ... In the television series, Pegg <b>played</b> the recurring part <b>of</b> \nHughie's father. Ennis has said that ... over with, mm?" A female version <b>of</b> the \n<b>character</b> named Grace Mallory <b>appears</b> in the television series, <b>played</b> by Laila \nRobins."
]
}
]
} | [
"Franklin D. Roosevelt"
] | Annie (musical) |
Dataset Card for AmbigQA: Answering Ambiguous Open-domain Questions
Dataset Summary
AmbigNQ, a dataset covering 14,042 questions from NQ-open, an existing open-domain QA benchmark. We find that over half of the questions in NQ-open are ambiguous. The types of ambiguity are diverse and sometimes subtle, many of which are only apparent after examining evidence provided by a very large text corpus. AMBIGNQ, a dataset with
14,042 annotations on NQ-OPEN questions containing diverse types of ambiguity.
We provide two distributions of our new dataset AmbigNQ: a full
version with all annotation metadata and a light
version with only inputs and outputs.
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
question-answering
Languages
English
Dataset Structure
Data Instances
An example from the data set looks as follows:
{'annotations': {'answer': [[]],
'qaPairs': [{'answer': [['April 19, 1987'], ['December 17, 1989']],
'question': ['When did the Simpsons first air on television as an animated short on the Tracey Ullman Show?',
'When did the Simpsons first air as a half-hour prime time show?']}],
'type': ['multipleQAs']},
'id': '-4469503464110108318',
'nq_answer': ['December 17 , 1989'],
'nq_doc_title': 'The Simpsons',
'question': 'When did the simpsons first air on television?',
'used_queries': {'query': ['When did the simpsons first air on television?'],
'results': [{'snippet': ['The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American animated <b>television</b> sitcom starring the animated \nSimpson family, ... Since its <b>debut</b> on December 17, 1989, the show <b>has</b> \nbroadcast 673 episodes and its 30th season started ... The <b>Simpsons first</b> season \n<b>was</b> the Fox network's <b>first TV</b> series to rank among a season's top 30 highest-\nrated shows.',
'The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American animated sitcom created by Matt Groening for the \nFox ... Since its <b>debut</b> on December 17, 1989, 674 episodes of The <b>Simpsons</b> \nhave been broadcast. ... When producer James L. Brooks <b>was</b> working on the \n<b>television</b> variety show The Tracey Ullman Show, he decided to include small \nanimated ...',
'... in shorts from The Tracey Ullman Show as their <b>television debut</b> in 1987. The \n<b>Simpsons</b> shorts are a series of animated shorts that <b>aired</b> as a recurring \nsegment on Fox variety <b>television</b> series The Tracey ... The final short to <b>air was</b> "\n<b>TV Simpsons</b>", originally airing on May 14, 1989. The <b>Simpsons</b> later debuted on\n ...',
'The <b>first</b> season of the American animated <b>television</b> series The <b>Simpsons</b> \noriginally <b>aired</b> on the Fox network between December 17, 1989, and May 13, \n1990, beginning with the Christmas special "<b>Simpsons</b> Roasting on an Open Fire\n". The executive producers for the <b>first</b> production season <b>were</b> Matt Groening, ...',
'The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American animated <b>television</b> sitcom created by Matt \nGroening for the Fox ... Since its <b>debut</b> on December 17, 1989, The <b>Simpsons</b> \n<b>has</b> broadcast 674 episodes. The show holds several American <b>television</b> \nlongevity ...',
'The opening sequence of the American animated <b>television</b> series The <b>Simpsons</b> \nis among the most popular opening sequences in <b>television</b> and is accompanied \nby one of <b>television's</b> most recognizable theme songs. The <b>first</b> episode to use \nthis intro <b>was</b> the series' second episode "Bart the ... <b>was</b> the <b>first</b> episode of The \n<b>Simpsons</b> to <b>air</b> in 720p high-definition <b>television</b>, ...',
'"<b>Simpsons</b> Roasting on an Open Fire", titled onscreen as "The <b>Simpsons</b> \nChristmas Special", is the premiere episode of the American animated <b>TV</b> series \nThe <b>Simpsons</b>, ... The show <b>was</b> originally intended to <b>debut</b> earlier in 1989 with "\nSome Enchanted Evening", but due to animation problems with that episode, the \nshow ...',
'"Stark Raving Dad" is the <b>first</b> episode of the third season of the American \nanimated <b>television</b> series The <b>Simpsons</b>. It <b>first aired</b> on the Fox network in the \nUnited States on September 19, 1991. ... The <b>Simpsons was</b> the second highest \nrated show on Fox the week it <b>aired</b>, behind Married... with Children. "Stark \nRaving Dad," ...',
'The <b>Simpsons</b>' twentieth season <b>aired</b> on Fox from September 28, 2008 to May \n17, 2009. With this season, the show tied Gunsmoke as the longest-running \nAmerican primetime <b>television</b> series in terms of total number ... It <b>was</b> the <b>first</b>-\never episode of the show to <b>air</b> in Europe before being seen in the United States.',
'The animated <b>TV</b> show The <b>Simpsons</b> is an American English language \nanimated sitcom which ... The <b>Simpsons was</b> dubbed for the <b>first</b> time in Punjabi \nand <b>aired</b> on Geo <b>TV</b> in Pakistan. The name of the localised Punjabi version is \nTedi Sim ...'],
'title': ['History of The Simpsons',
'The Simpsons',
'The Simpsons shorts',
'The Simpsons (season 1)',
'List of The Simpsons episodes',
'The Simpsons opening sequence',
'Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire',
'Stark Raving Dad',
'The Simpsons (season 20)',
'Non-English versions of The Simpsons']}]},
'viewed_doc_titles': ['The Simpsons']}
Data Fields
Full
{'id': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'question': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'annotations': Sequence(feature={'type': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'answer': Sequence(feature=Value(dtype='string', id=None), length=-1, id=None), 'qaPairs': Sequence(feature={'question': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'answer': Sequence(feature=Value(dtype='string', id=None), length=-1, id=None)}, length=-1, id=None)}, length=-1, id=None),
'viewed_doc_titles': Sequence(feature=Value(dtype='string', id=None), length=-1, id=None),
'used_queries': Sequence(feature={'query': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'results': Sequence(feature={'title': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'snippet': Value(dtype='string', id=None)}, length=-1, id=None)}, length=-1, id=None),
'nq_answer': Sequence(feature=Value(dtype='string', id=None), length=-1, id=None),
'nq_doc_title': Value(dtype='string', id=None)}
In the original data format annotations
have different keys depending on the type
field = singleAnswer
or multipleQAs
. But this implementation uses an empty list []
for the unavailable keys
please refer to Dataset Contents(https://github.com/shmsw25/AmbigQA#dataset-contents) for more details.
for example in train_light_dataset:
for i,t in enumerate(example['annotations']['type']):
if t =='singleAnswer':
# use the example['annotations']['answer'][i]
# example['annotations']['qaPairs'][i] - > is []
print(example['annotations']['answer'][i])
else:
# use the example['annotations']['qaPairs'][i]
# example['annotations']['answer'][i] - > is []
print(example['annotations']['qaPairs'][i])
please refer to Dataset Contents(https://github.com/shmsw25/AmbigQA#dataset-contents) for more details.
Light version only has id
, question
, annotations
fields
Data Splits
- train: 10036
- validation: 2002
Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
[More Information Needed]
Source Data
- Wikipedia
- NQ-open:
@article{ kwiatkowski2019natural,
title={ Natural questions: a benchmark for question answering research},
author={ Kwiatkowski, Tom and Palomaki, Jennimaria and Redfield, Olivia and Collins, Michael and Parikh, Ankur and Alberti, Chris and Epstein, Danielle and Polosukhin, Illia and Devlin, Jacob and Lee, Kenton and others },
journal={ Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics },
year={ 2019 }
}
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
[More Information Needed]
Who are the source language producers?
[More Information Needed]
Annotations
Annotation process
[More Information Needed]
Who are the annotators?
[More Information Needed]
Personal and Sensitive Information
[More Information Needed]
Considerations for Using the Data
Social Impact of Dataset
[More Information Needed]
Discussion of Biases
[More Information Needed]
Other Known Limitations
[More Information Needed]
Additional Information
Dataset Curators
[More Information Needed]
Licensing Information
Citation Information
@inproceedings{ min2020ambigqa,
title={ {A}mbig{QA}: Answering Ambiguous Open-domain Questions },
author={ Min, Sewon and Michael, Julian and Hajishirzi, Hannaneh and Zettlemoyer, Luke },
booktitle={ EMNLP },
year={2020}
}
Contributions
Thanks to @cceyda for adding this dataset.
- Downloads last month
- 275