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dev_200 | Who voices the character in Spongebob Squarepants who is named after a glowing species found in some beaches in Portugal? | [
"Mr. Lawrence",
"Doug Lawrence"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 38828,
"question": "What type of glowing species can be found on some beaches in Portugal?",
"answer": "plankton",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "Portugal",
"paragraph_text": "There are more than 100 freshwater fish species, varying from the giant European catfish (in the Tagus International Natural Park) to some small and endemic species that live only in small lakes (along the western portion of country, for example). Some of these rare and specific species are highly endangered because of habitat loss, pollution and drought. Up-welling along the west coast of Portugal makes the sea extremely rich in nutrients and diverse species of marine fish; the Portuguese marine waters are one of the richest in the world. Marine fish species are more common, and include thousands of species, such as the sardine (Sardina pilchardus), tuna and Atlantic mackerel. Bioluminescent species are also well represented (including species in different colour spectrum and forms), like the glowing plankton that are possible to observe in some beaches.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 89399,
"question": "who does #1 's voice in spongebob squarepants",
"answer": "Mr. Lawrence",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "List of SpongeBob SquarePants cast members",
"paragraph_text": "Actor Character (s) Tom Kenny SpongeBob SquarePants Gary the Snail French Narrator Hans Patchy the Pirate Harold SquarePants Dirty Bubble Grandpa SquarePants Other miscellaneous characters Clancy Brown Mr. Krabs Other miscellaneous characters Rodger Bumpass Squidward Tentacles Other miscellaneous characters Bill Fagerbakke Patrick Star Other miscellaneous characters Mr. Lawrence Plankton Potty the Parrot Realistic Fish Head Larry the Lobster Other miscellaneous characters Jill Talley Karen Other miscellaneous characters Carolyn Lawrence Sandy Cheeks Other miscellaneous characters Mary Jo Catlett Mrs. Puff Other miscellaneous characters Lori Alan Pearl Other miscellaneous characters",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_201 | What administrative territorial entity does Heinrich Gross's birth place located? | [
"Senica District"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 587048,
"question": "Heinrich Gross >> place of birth",
"answer": "Senica",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Heinrich Gross (rabbi)",
"paragraph_text": "Heinrich Gross, writing also as Henri Gross (born Szenicz, Hungarian Kingdom, now Senica, Slovakia, November 6, 1835; died 1910), was a German rabbi. He was a pupil in rabbinical literature of Judah Aszod.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 621800,
"question": "#1 >> located in the administrative territorial entity",
"answer": "Senica District",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "Senica District",
"paragraph_text": "Senica District (\"okres Senica\") is a district in the Trnava Region of western Slovakia. The district is relatively rich in natural resources oil, gas, lignite. It is industrial district, in the late period had been established here new industrial facilities. Senica District in its present borders had been established in 1996. Administrative, cultural and economic center is its seat and largest town Senica. In Senica District is located spa Smrdáky and of cultural importance is also basilica in Šaštín.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_202 | In what year did the founder of the Presbyterian Church die? | [
"1572"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 86458,
"question": "who was the founder of the presbyterian church",
"answer": "John Knox",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "Presbyterianism",
"paragraph_text": "Presbyterian history is part of the history of Christianity, but the beginning of Presbyterianism as a distinct movement occurred during the 16th - century Protestant Reformation. As the Catholic Church resisted the reformers, several different theological movements splintered from the Church and bore different denominations. Presbyterianism was especially influenced by the French theologian John Calvin, who is credited with the development of Reformed theology, and the work of John Knox, a Scotsman and a Roman Catholic Priest, who studied with Calvin in Geneva, Switzerland. He brought back Reformed teachings to Scotland. The Presbyterian church traces its ancestry back primarily to England and Scotland. In August 1560 the Parliament of Scotland adopted the Scots Confession as the creed of the Scottish Kingdom. In December 1560, the First Book of Discipline was published, outlining important doctrinal issues but also establishing regulations for church government, including the creation of ten ecclesiastical districts with appointed superintendents which later became known as presbyteries.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 20273,
"question": "What year did #1 past away?",
"answer": "1572",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Presbyterianism",
"paragraph_text": "John Knox (1505–1572), a Scot who had spent time studying under Calvin in Geneva, returned to Scotland and urged his countrymen to reform the Church in line with Calvinist doctrines. After a period of religious convulsion and political conflict culminating in a victory for the Protestant party at the Siege of Leith the authority of the Church of Rome was abolished in favour of Reformation by the legislation of the Scottish Reformation Parliament in 1560. The Church was eventually organised by Andrew Melville along Presbyterian lines to become the national Church of Scotland. King James VI and I moved the Church of Scotland towards an episcopal form of government, and in 1637, James' successor, Charles I and William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury, attempted to force the Church of Scotland to use the Book of Common Prayer. What resulted was an armed insurrection, with many Scots signing the Solemn League and Covenant. The Covenanters would serve as the government of Scotland for nearly a decade, and would also send military support to the Parliamentarians during the English Civil War. Following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II, despite the initial support that he received from the Covenanters, reinstated an episcopal form of government on the church.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_203 | What year did the author of History of the Reformation in Scotland die? | [
"1572"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 609313,
"question": "History of the Reformation in Scotland >> author",
"answer": "John Knox",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "The History of the Reformation in Scotland",
"paragraph_text": "The History of the Reformation in Scotland is a five-volume book written by the Scottish reformer, John Knox, between 1559 and 1566.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 20273,
"question": "What year did #1 past away?",
"answer": "1572",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Presbyterianism",
"paragraph_text": "John Knox (1505–1572), a Scot who had spent time studying under Calvin in Geneva, returned to Scotland and urged his countrymen to reform the Church in line with Calvinist doctrines. After a period of religious convulsion and political conflict culminating in a victory for the Protestant party at the Siege of Leith the authority of the Church of Rome was abolished in favour of Reformation by the legislation of the Scottish Reformation Parliament in 1560. The Church was eventually organised by Andrew Melville along Presbyterian lines to become the national Church of Scotland. King James VI and I moved the Church of Scotland towards an episcopal form of government, and in 1637, James' successor, Charles I and William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury, attempted to force the Church of Scotland to use the Book of Common Prayer. What resulted was an armed insurrection, with many Scots signing the Solemn League and Covenant. The Covenanters would serve as the government of Scotland for nearly a decade, and would also send military support to the Parliamentarians during the English Civil War. Following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II, despite the initial support that he received from the Covenanters, reinstated an episcopal form of government on the church.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_204 | What year did the author of The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women die? | [
"1572"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 799936,
"question": "The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women >> author",
"answer": "John Knox",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women",
"paragraph_text": "The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women is a polemical work by the Scottish reformer John Knox, published in 1558. It attacks female monarchs, arguing that rule by females is contrary to the Bible.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 20273,
"question": "What year did #1 past away?",
"answer": "1572",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "Presbyterianism",
"paragraph_text": "John Knox (1505–1572), a Scot who had spent time studying under Calvin in Geneva, returned to Scotland and urged his countrymen to reform the Church in line with Calvinist doctrines. After a period of religious convulsion and political conflict culminating in a victory for the Protestant party at the Siege of Leith the authority of the Church of Rome was abolished in favour of Reformation by the legislation of the Scottish Reformation Parliament in 1560. The Church was eventually organised by Andrew Melville along Presbyterian lines to become the national Church of Scotland. King James VI and I moved the Church of Scotland towards an episcopal form of government, and in 1637, James' successor, Charles I and William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury, attempted to force the Church of Scotland to use the Book of Common Prayer. What resulted was an armed insurrection, with many Scots signing the Solemn League and Covenant. The Covenanters would serve as the government of Scotland for nearly a decade, and would also send military support to the Parliamentarians during the English Civil War. Following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II, despite the initial support that he received from the Covenanters, reinstated an episcopal form of government on the church.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_205 | What month did the person with whom Henry fought a short war in 1183 go away from the holy land? | [
"October",
"Oct"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 13986,
"question": "Who did Henry fight a short war with in 1183?",
"answer": "Richard",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "John, King of England",
"paragraph_text": "Henry the Young King fought a short war with his brother Richard in 1183 over the status of England, Normandy and Aquitaine. Henry II moved in support of Richard, and Henry the Young King died from dysentery at the end of the campaign. With his primary heir dead, Henry rearranged the plans for the succession: Richard was to be made King of England, albeit without any actual power until the death of his father; Geoffrey would retain Brittany; and John would now become the Duke of Aquitaine in place of Richard. Richard refused to give up Aquitaine; Henry II was furious and ordered John, with help from Geoffrey, to march south and retake the duchy by force. The two attacked the capital of Poitiers, and Richard responded by attacking Brittany. The war ended in stalemate and a tense family reconciliation in England at the end of 1184.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 161674,
"question": "What month did #1 go away from the Holy Land?",
"answer": "October",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "Third Crusade",
"paragraph_text": "Richard had intended to return to England when he heard the news that Saladin and his army had captured Jaffa. Richard and a small force of little more than 2,000 men went to Jaffa by sea in a surprise attack. Richard's forces stormed Jaffa from their ships and the Ayyubids, who had been unprepared for a naval attack, were driven from the city. Richard freed those of the Crusader garrison who had been made prisoner, and these troops helped to reinforce the numbers of his army. Saladin's army still had numerical superiority, however, and they counter-attacked. Saladin intended a stealthy surprise attack at dawn, but his forces were discovered; he proceeded with his attack, but his men were lightly armoured and lost 700 men killed due to the missiles of the large numbers of Crusader crossbowmen. The battle to retake Jaffa ended in complete failure for Saladin, who was forced to retreat. This battle greatly strengthened the position of the coastal Crusader states.On 2 September 1192, following his defeat at Jaffa, Saladin was forced to finalize a treaty with Richard providing that Jerusalem would remain under Muslim control, while allowing unarmed Christian pilgrims and traders to visit the city. Ascalon was a contentious issue as it threatened communication between Saladin's dominions in Egypt and Syria; it was eventually agreed that Ascalon, with its defences demolished, be returned to Saladin's control. Richard departed the Holy Land on 9 October 1192.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_206 | In what year did Margaret Knox's spouse pass away? | [
"1572"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 433694,
"question": "Margaret Knox >> spouse",
"answer": "John Knox",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Margaret Knox",
"paragraph_text": "Margaret Knox (née Stewart; 1547 – after 1612) was a Scottish noblewoman and the second wife of Scottish reformer John Knox, whom she married when she was 17 years old and he 54. The marriage caused consternation from Mary, Queen of Scots, as the couple had married without having obtained royal consent.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 20273,
"question": "What year did #1 past away?",
"answer": "1572",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Presbyterianism",
"paragraph_text": "John Knox (1505–1572), a Scot who had spent time studying under Calvin in Geneva, returned to Scotland and urged his countrymen to reform the Church in line with Calvinist doctrines. After a period of religious convulsion and political conflict culminating in a victory for the Protestant party at the Siege of Leith the authority of the Church of Rome was abolished in favour of Reformation by the legislation of the Scottish Reformation Parliament in 1560. The Church was eventually organised by Andrew Melville along Presbyterian lines to become the national Church of Scotland. King James VI and I moved the Church of Scotland towards an episcopal form of government, and in 1637, James' successor, Charles I and William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury, attempted to force the Church of Scotland to use the Book of Common Prayer. What resulted was an armed insurrection, with many Scots signing the Solemn League and Covenant. The Covenanters would serve as the government of Scotland for nearly a decade, and would also send military support to the Parliamentarians during the English Civil War. Following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II, despite the initial support that he received from the Covenanters, reinstated an episcopal form of government on the church.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_207 | What year did the storm hit the fleet of the person that Henry fought a short war with in 1183? | [
"1191"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 13986,
"question": "Who did Henry fight a short war with in 1183?",
"answer": "Richard",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "John, King of England",
"paragraph_text": "Henry the Young King fought a short war with his brother Richard in 1183 over the status of England, Normandy and Aquitaine. Henry II moved in support of Richard, and Henry the Young King died from dysentery at the end of the campaign. With his primary heir dead, Henry rearranged the plans for the succession: Richard was to be made King of England, albeit without any actual power until the death of his father; Geoffrey would retain Brittany; and John would now become the Duke of Aquitaine in place of Richard. Richard refused to give up Aquitaine; Henry II was furious and ordered John, with help from Geoffrey, to march south and retake the duchy by force. The two attacked the capital of Poitiers, and Richard responded by attacking Brittany. The war ended in stalemate and a tense family reconciliation in England at the end of 1184.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 40169,
"question": "What year did the storm hit #1 's fleet?",
"answer": "1191",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Normans",
"paragraph_text": "In April 1191 Richard the Lion-hearted left Messina with a large fleet in order to reach Acre. But a storm dispersed the fleet. After some searching, it was discovered that the boat carrying his sister and his fiancée Berengaria was anchored on the south coast of Cyprus, together with the wrecks of several other ships, including the treasure ship. Survivors of the wrecks had been taken prisoner by the island's despot Isaac Komnenos. On 1 May 1191, Richard's fleet arrived in the port of Limassol on Cyprus. He ordered Isaac to release the prisoners and the treasure. Isaac refused, so Richard landed his troops and took Limassol.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_208 | In True Grit, who did the star play? | [
"U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn",
"America",
"U.S.",
"the United States",
"United States",
"US"
] | {
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"id": 25344,
"question": "Who starred in True Grit?",
"answer": "John Wayne",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Turner Classic Movies",
"paragraph_text": "In October 2015, TCM announced the launch of the TCM Wineclub, in which they teamed up with Laithwaite to provide a line of mail-order wines from famous vineyards such as famed writer-director-producer Francis Ford Coppola's winery. Wines are available in 3 month subscriptions, and can be selected as reds, whites, or a mixture of both. From the wines chosen, TCM also includes recommended movies to watch with each, such as a \"True Grit\" wine, to be paired with the John Wayne film of the same name.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 88628,
"question": "who did #1 play in true grit",
"answer": "U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn",
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"title": "True Grit (1969 film)",
"paragraph_text": "True Grit is a 1969 American western film. It is the first film adaptation of Charles Portis' 1968 novel of the same name. The screenplay was written by Marguerite Roberts. The film was directed by Henry Hathaway and starred Kim Darby as Mattie Ross and John Wayne as U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn. Wayne won his only Academy Award for his performance in this film and reprised his role for the 1975 sequel Rooster Cogburn.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_209 | Who did the producer of Big Jim McLain play in True Grit? | [
"U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn",
"the US",
"America",
"U.S.",
"United States",
"US"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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"id": 657913,
"question": "Big Jim McLain >> producer",
"answer": "John Wayne",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Big Jim McLain",
"paragraph_text": "Big Jim McLain is a 1952 political thriller film starring John Wayne and James Arness as HUAC investigators hunting down communists in the post-war Hawaii organized labor scene. Edward Ludwig directed.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 88628,
"question": "who did #1 play in true grit",
"answer": "U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn",
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"title": "True Grit (1969 film)",
"paragraph_text": "True Grit is a 1969 American western film. It is the first film adaptation of Charles Portis' 1968 novel of the same name. The screenplay was written by Marguerite Roberts. The film was directed by Henry Hathaway and starred Kim Darby as Mattie Ross and John Wayne as U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn. Wayne won his only Academy Award for his performance in this film and reprised his role for the 1975 sequel Rooster Cogburn.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_210 | Who did the cast member of Rooster Cogburn play in True Grit? | [
"U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn",
"America",
"USA",
"U.S.",
"the United States",
"United States",
"US"
] | {
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"id": 734057,
"question": "Rooster Cogburn >> cast member",
"answer": "John Wayne",
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"title": "Rooster Cogburn (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Rooster Cogburn is a 1975 American Western adventure film directed by Stuart Millar and starring John Wayne (in his penultimate film), reprising his role as U.S. Marshal Reuben J. \"Rooster\" Cogburn, and Katharine Hepburn. Written by Martha Hyer, based on the character Rooster Cogburn created by Charles McColl Portis in his 1968 western novel \"True Grit\", the film is about an aging one-eyed lawman whose badge was recently suspended for a string of routine arrests that ended in bloodshed. To earn back his badge, he is tasked with bringing down a ring of bank robbers that has hijacked a wagon shipment of nitroglycerin. He is helped by a spinster searching for her father's killer. \"Rooster Cogburn\" is a sequel to the 1969 film \"True Grit\".",
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}
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"id": 88628,
"question": "who did #1 play in true grit",
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"title": "True Grit (1969 film)",
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"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_211 | Who did the actor in Advernture's End play in True Grit? | [
"U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn",
"U.S.",
"US",
"America"
] | {
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"id": 95878,
"question": "Who has acted in the film Adventure's End?",
"answer": "John Wayne",
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"idx": 18,
"title": "Adventure's End",
"paragraph_text": "Adventure's End is a 1937 American adventure film from Universal Pictures, directed by Arthur Lubin and starring John Wayne and Diana Gibson. Filming took place in July 1937.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 88628,
"question": "who did #1 play in true grit",
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"title": "True Grit (1969 film)",
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"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_212 | Which is the body of water by Leo Bennett's place of death? | [
"River Thames"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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{
"id": 726892,
"question": "Leo Bennett >> place of death",
"answer": "Thames Ditton",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Leo Bennett",
"paragraph_text": "Major Alfred Charles Leopold (Leo) Bennett, MBE born at West Norwood in London on 31 December 1914, and died at Thames Ditton, Surrey, on 24 September 1971, was a first-class cricketer who played for Northamptonshire for three seasons after the Second World War.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 131968,
"question": "Which is the body of water by #1 ?",
"answer": "River Thames",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Thames Ditton",
"paragraph_text": "Thames Ditton is a suburban village by and on the River Thames, in the Elmbridge borough of Surrey, England. Apart from a large inhabited island in the river, it lies on the southern bank, centred 12.2 miles (19.6 km) southwest of Charing Cross in central London. Thames Ditton is just outside Greater London but within the Greater London Urban Area as defined by the Office for National Statistics. Its clustered village centre and shopping area on a winding High Street is surrounded by housing, schools and sports areas. Its riverside faces the Thames Path and Hampton Court Palace Gardens and golf course in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. Its most commercial area is spread throughout its conservation area and contains restaurants, cafés, shops and businesses.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_213 | What is the body of water by the area where Athlete was formed? | [
"River Thames"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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{
"id": 693157,
"question": "Athlete >> location of formation",
"answer": "Deptford",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "Athlete (band)",
"paragraph_text": "Athlete are an English indie rock band formed in Deptford, London, comprising Joel Pott (lead vocals and guitar), Carey Willetts (bass and backing vocals), Stephen Roberts (drums and backing vocals) and Tim Wanstall (keyboards and backing vocals).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 131890,
"question": "Which is the body of water by #1 ?",
"answer": "River Thames",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Deptford",
"paragraph_text": "Deptford borders the areas of Brockley and Lewisham to the south, New Cross to the west and Rotherhithe to the north west; Deptford Creek divides it from Greenwich to the east, and the River Thames separates the area from the Isle of Dogs to the north east; it is contained within the London SE8 post code area. The area referred to as North Deptford is the only part of the London Borough of Lewisham to front the Thames and is sandwiched between Rotherhithe and Greenwich. Much of this riverside estate is populated by the former Naval Dockyards, now known as Convoys Wharf, the Pepys Estate and some eastern fringes of the old Surrey Commercial Docks.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_214 | Which is the body of water by the village which borders Long Ditton? | [
"River Thames"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 611178,
"question": "Long Ditton >> shares border with",
"answer": "Thames Ditton",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "The Rythe",
"paragraph_text": "The Rythe is a river or stream in north Surrey, England which is generally open and which is a natural woodland feature for approximately half of its course before being variously culverted and a suburban garden feature, passing between Thames Ditton and Long Ditton, then discharging into the Thames, its longest branch is the Arbrook which drains Arbrook Common, a woodland of the mainly wooded Esher Commons.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 131968,
"question": "Which is the body of water by #1 ?",
"answer": "River Thames",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Thames Ditton",
"paragraph_text": "Thames Ditton is a suburban village by and on the River Thames, in the Elmbridge borough of Surrey, England. Apart from a large inhabited island in the river, it lies on the southern bank, centred 12.2 miles (19.6 km) southwest of Charing Cross in central London. Thames Ditton is just outside Greater London but within the Greater London Urban Area as defined by the Office for National Statistics. Its clustered village centre and shopping area on a winding High Street is surrounded by housing, schools and sports areas. Its riverside faces the Thames Path and Hampton Court Palace Gardens and golf course in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. Its most commercial area is spread throughout its conservation area and contains restaurants, cafés, shops and businesses.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_215 | Which is the body of water near George Mills' place of birth? | [
"River Thames"
] | {
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{
"id": 728969,
"question": "George Mills >> place of birth",
"answer": "Deptford",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 8,
"title": "George Mills (footballer)",
"paragraph_text": "George Robert Mills (born 29 December 1908 in Deptford, died 15 July 1970) was an English footballer, principally for Chelsea.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 131890,
"question": "Which is the body of water by #1 ?",
"answer": "River Thames",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Deptford",
"paragraph_text": "Deptford borders the areas of Brockley and Lewisham to the south, New Cross to the west and Rotherhithe to the north west; Deptford Creek divides it from Greenwich to the east, and the River Thames separates the area from the Isle of Dogs to the north east; it is contained within the London SE8 post code area. The area referred to as North Deptford is the only part of the London Borough of Lewisham to front the Thames and is sandwiched between Rotherhithe and Greenwich. Much of this riverside estate is populated by the former Naval Dockyards, now known as Convoys Wharf, the Pepys Estate and some eastern fringes of the old Surrey Commercial Docks.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_216 | When was the celestial body that transforms nuclear potential energy to other forms of energy discovered to be the center of the solar system? | [
"as early as the 3rd century BC"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 30032,
"question": "What transforms nuclear potential energy to other forms of energy?",
"answer": "Sun",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Energy",
"paragraph_text": "Examples of energy transformation include generating electric energy from heat energy via a steam turbine, or lifting an object against gravity using electrical energy driving a crane motor. Lifting against gravity performs mechanical work on the object and stores gravitational potential energy in the object. If the object falls to the ground, gravity does mechanical work on the object which transforms the potential energy in the gravitational field to the kinetic energy released as heat on impact with the ground. Our Sun transforms nuclear potential energy to other forms of energy; its total mass does not decrease due to that in itself (since it still contains the same total energy even if in different forms), but its mass does decrease when the energy escapes out to its surroundings, largely as radiant energy.",
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}
},
{
"id": 46621,
"question": "when was the #1 discovered to be the center of the solar system",
"answer": "as early as the 3rd century BC",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "Heliocentrism",
"paragraph_text": "Heliocentrism is the astronomical model in which the Earth and planets revolve around the Sun at the center of the Solar System. Historically, Heliocentrism was opposed to geocentrism, which placed the Earth at the center. The notion that the Earth revolves around the Sun had been proposed as early as the 3rd century BC by Aristarchus of Samos, but at least in the medieval world, Aristarchus's Heliocentrism attracted little attention -- possibly because of the loss of scientific works of the Hellenistic Era.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_217 | When was the star to which Solgränd is named after discovered to be the center of the solar system? | [
"as early as the 3rd century BC"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 135822,
"question": "What is Solgränd named after?",
"answer": "Sun",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Solgränd",
"paragraph_text": "Solgränd (Swedish: \"Sun Alley\") is an alley in Gamla stan, the old town of Stockholm, Sweden. It connects the Stortorget square to the street Prästgatan. It is a parallel street to Storkyrkobrinken, Ankargränd, Spektens gränd, and Kåkbrinken.",
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}
},
{
"id": 46621,
"question": "when was the #1 discovered to be the center of the solar system",
"answer": "as early as the 3rd century BC",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Heliocentrism",
"paragraph_text": "Heliocentrism is the astronomical model in which the Earth and planets revolve around the Sun at the center of the Solar System. Historically, Heliocentrism was opposed to geocentrism, which placed the Earth at the center. The notion that the Earth revolves around the Sun had been proposed as early as the 3rd century BC by Aristarchus of Samos, but at least in the medieval world, Aristarchus's Heliocentrism attracted little attention -- possibly because of the loss of scientific works of the Hellenistic Era.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_218 | Who employs the author of "Ravenswood: The Steelworkers' Victory and the Revival of American Labor"? | [
"Cornell University",
"Cornell"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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{
"id": 581084,
"question": "Ravenswood: The Steelworkers' Victory and the Revival of American Labor >> author",
"answer": "Kate Bronfenbrenner",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Ravenswood: The Steelworkers' Victory and the Revival of American Labor",
"paragraph_text": "Ravenswood: The Steelworkers' Victory and the Revival of American Labor is a labor history book by Kate Bronfenbrenner and Tom Juravich.",
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}
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"id": 828685,
"question": "#1 >> employer",
"answer": "Cornell University",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "Kate Bronfenbrenner",
"paragraph_text": "Kate Bronfenbrenner (March 23, 1954) is the Director of Labor Education Research at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations. She is a leading authority on successful strategies in labor union organizing, and on the effects of outsourcing and offshoring on workers and worker rights.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_219 | When was the celestial object that eluded efforts to measure oxygen discovered to be the center of the solar system? | [
"as early as the 3rd century BC"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 40697,
"question": "What celestial object eluded efforts to measure oxygen?",
"answer": "the Sun",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "Oxygen",
"paragraph_text": "Planetary geologists have measured different abundances of oxygen isotopes in samples from the Earth, the Moon, Mars, and meteorites, but were long unable to obtain reference values for the isotope ratios in the Sun, believed to be the same as those of the primordial solar nebula. Analysis of a silicon wafer exposed to the solar wind in space and returned by the crashed Genesis spacecraft has shown that the Sun has a higher proportion of oxygen-16 than does the Earth. The measurement implies that an unknown process depleted oxygen-16 from the Sun's disk of protoplanetary material prior to the coalescence of dust grains that formed the Earth.",
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}
},
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"id": 46621,
"question": "when was the #1 discovered to be the center of the solar system",
"answer": "as early as the 3rd century BC",
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"idx": 2,
"title": "Heliocentrism",
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"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_220 | When was the celestial body that all objects focus on according to Kepler's laws discovered to be the center of the solar system? | [
"as early as the 3rd century BC"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 157737,
"question": "What do all objects focus on according to Kepler's laws?",
"answer": "Sun",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Solar System",
"paragraph_text": "Kepler's laws of planetary motion describe the orbits of objects about the Sun. Following Kepler's laws, each object travels along an ellipse with the Sun at one focus. Objects closer to the Sun (with smaller semi-major axes) travel more quickly because they are more affected by the Sun's gravity. On an elliptical orbit, a body's distance from the Sun varies over the course of its year. A body's closest approach to the Sun is called its perihelion, whereas its most distant point from the Sun is called its aphelion. The orbits of the planets are nearly circular, but many comets, asteroids, and Kuiper belt objects follow highly elliptical orbits. The positions of the bodies in the Solar System can be predicted using numerical models.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 46621,
"question": "when was the #1 discovered to be the center of the solar system",
"answer": "as early as the 3rd century BC",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 8,
"title": "Heliocentrism",
"paragraph_text": "Heliocentrism is the astronomical model in which the Earth and planets revolve around the Sun at the center of the Solar System. Historically, Heliocentrism was opposed to geocentrism, which placed the Earth at the center. The notion that the Earth revolves around the Sun had been proposed as early as the 3rd century BC by Aristarchus of Samos, but at least in the medieval world, Aristarchus's Heliocentrism attracted little attention -- possibly because of the loss of scientific works of the Hellenistic Era.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_221 | Who is the father of the man who conceived of the 'new' police? | [
"Arthur Peel",
"1st Viscount Peel",
"Arthur Peel, 1st Viscount Peel"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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"id": 39063,
"question": "Who came up with the concept of the 'new' police?",
"answer": "Robert Peel",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "Police",
"paragraph_text": "Colquhoun's utilitarian approach to the problem – using a cost-benefit argument to obtain support from businesses standing to benefit – allowed him to achieve what Henry and John Fielding failed for their Bow Street detectives. Unlike the stipendiary system at Bow Street, the river police were full-time, salaried officers prohibited from taking private fees. His other contribution was the concept of preventive policing; his police were to act as a highly visible deterrent to crime by their permanent presence on the Thames. Colquhoun's innovations were a critical development leading up to Robert Peel's \"new\" police three decades later.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"id": 212301,
"question": "#1 >> child",
"answer": "Arthur Peel",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Sidney Peel",
"paragraph_text": "Peel was the second son of Arthur Peel, 1st Viscount Peel, Speaker of the House of Commons and the youngest son of Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel, Bt. His mother was Adelaide, daughter of William Stratford Dugdale. Peel sat as Member of Parliament for Uxbridge bretween 1918 and 1922. He was also a Colonel in the British Army. In 1936 he was created a Baronet, of Eyeworth in the County of Bedford.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_222 | Who was the father of the person who issued the Tamworth manifesto? | [
"Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 25396,
"question": "Who Issued the Tamworth manifesto?",
"answer": "Robert Peel",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Political party",
"paragraph_text": "The modern Conservative Party was created out of the 'Pittite' Tories of the early 19th century. In the late 1820s disputes over political reform broke up this grouping. A government led by the Duke of Wellington collapsed amidst dire election results. Following this disaster Robert Peel set about assembling a new coalition of forces. Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto in 1834 which set out the basic principles of Conservatism; – the necessity in specific cases of reform in order to survive, but an opposition to unnecessary change, that could lead to \"a perpetual vortex of agitation\". Meanwhile, the Whigs, along with free trade Tory followers of Robert Peel, and independent Radicals, formed the Liberal Party under Lord Palmerston in 1859, and transformed into a party of the growing urban middle-class, under the long leadership of William Ewart Gladstone.",
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}
},
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"id": 593388,
"question": "#1 >> father",
"answer": "Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "William Yates Peel",
"paragraph_text": "Peel was the second son of Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet, and his first wife Ellen (née Yates). He was the younger brother of Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, and the elder brother of Jonathan Peel. He was educated at Harrow and St John's College, Cambridge. Peel sat as Member of Parliament for Bossiney from 1817 to 1818, for Tamworth from 1818 to 1830, 1835 to 1837 and in 1847, for Yarmouth from 1830 to 1831 and for Cambridge University from 1831 to 1832 and served under the Duke of Wellington as Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department from 1828 to 1830 and as a Lord of the Treasury under Wellington in 1830 and again under his brother Sir Robert Peel from 1834 to 1835. In 1834 he was admitted to the Privy Council.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_223 | Who is the child of the person who issued the Tamworth manifesto? | [
"Arthur Peel",
"1st Viscount Peel",
"Arthur Peel, 1st Viscount Peel"
] | {
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"question": "Who Issued the Tamworth manifesto?",
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"idx": 11,
"title": "Political party",
"paragraph_text": "The modern Conservative Party was created out of the 'Pittite' Tories of the early 19th century. In the late 1820s disputes over political reform broke up this grouping. A government led by the Duke of Wellington collapsed amidst dire election results. Following this disaster Robert Peel set about assembling a new coalition of forces. Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto in 1834 which set out the basic principles of Conservatism; – the necessity in specific cases of reform in order to survive, but an opposition to unnecessary change, that could lead to \"a perpetual vortex of agitation\". Meanwhile, the Whigs, along with free trade Tory followers of Robert Peel, and independent Radicals, formed the Liberal Party under Lord Palmerston in 1859, and transformed into a party of the growing urban middle-class, under the long leadership of William Ewart Gladstone.",
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}
},
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"id": 212301,
"question": "#1 >> child",
"answer": "Arthur Peel",
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"title": "Sidney Peel",
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"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_224 | Who is the father of the person who came up with the concept of the "new" police? | [
"Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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"question": "Who came up with the concept of the 'new' police?",
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"idx": 1,
"title": "Police",
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}
},
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"id": 593388,
"question": "#1 >> father",
"answer": "Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet",
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"title": "William Yates Peel",
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"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_225 | When does season 4 of the series that The Bag or the Bat is a part of come out? | [
"June 20, 2016"
] | {
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"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 153532,
"question": "What series is The Bag or the Bat a part of?",
"answer": "Ray Donovan",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "The Bag or the Bat",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Bag or the Bat\" is the pilot episode of the Showtime original series \"Ray Donovan\", and premiered on June 30, 2013. The series premiere was directed by Allen Coulter and written by series creator Ann Biderman. Prior to the premiere television airing, the episode was uploaded to YouTube by Showtime and was previewed over 150,000 times.",
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}
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"id": 72380,
"question": "when does season 4 of #1 come out",
"answer": "June 20, 2016",
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"idx": 3,
"title": "List of Ray Donovan episodes",
"paragraph_text": "37 ``Girl with Guitar ''Liev Schreiber David Hollander June 20, 2016 (2016 - 06 - 20) (online) June 26, 2016 (2016 - 06 - 26) (Showtime) 1.11",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_226 | When does season 4 of the series The Bag or the Bat was part of come out? | [
"June 20, 2016"
] | {
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{
"id": 619265,
"question": "The Bag or the Bat >> part of the series",
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"title": "The Bag or the Bat",
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}
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"question": "when does season 4 of #1 come out",
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"title": "List of Ray Donovan episodes",
"paragraph_text": "37 ``Girl with Guitar ''Liev Schreiber David Hollander June 20, 2016 (2016 - 06 - 20) (online) June 26, 2016 (2016 - 06 - 26) (Showtime) 1.11",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_227 | Who were the leaders of the opposition of the political group that has a large number of Protestants? | [
"anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 37765,
"question": "What political group has a disproportionately large number of Protestants?",
"answer": "Republican Party",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Protestantism",
"paragraph_text": "Episcopalians and Presbyterians, as well as other WASPs, tend to be considerably wealthier and better educated (having graduate and post-graduate degrees per capita) than most other religious groups in United States, and are disproportionately represented in the upper reaches of American business, law and politics, especially the Republican Party. Numbers of the most wealthy and affluent American families as the Vanderbilts and the Astors, Rockefeller, Du Pont, Roosevelt, Forbes, Whitneys, the Morgans and Harrimans are Mainline Protestant families.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"id": 85990,
"question": "who were the leaders of the opposition #1",
"answer": "anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Republican Party (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "Founded in the Northern states in 1854 by anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers, the Republican Party quickly became the principal opposition to the dominant Democratic Party and the briefly popular Know Nothing Party. The main cause was opposition to the Kansas -- Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise by which slavery was kept out of Kansas. The Northern Republicans saw the expansion of slavery as a great evil. The first public meeting of the general ``anti-Nebraska ''movement where the name`` Republican'' was suggested for a new anti-slavery party was held on March 20, 1854, in a schoolhouse in Ripon, Wisconsin. The name was partly chosen to pay homage to Thomas Jefferson's Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_228 | What watercourse is the river on which the Lostock Dam is located the mouth of? | [
"Hunter River"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 623501,
"question": "Lostock Dam >> located on terrain feature",
"answer": "Paterson River",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Lostock Dam",
"paragraph_text": "Lostock Dam is a minor rockfill and clay core embankment dam with a concrete lined, flip bucket spillway across the Paterson River upstream of the village of East Gresford in the Hunter region of New South Wales, Australia. The dam's purpose includes flood mitigation, irrigation, water supply and conservation. Mini hydro-power facilities were retrofitted in 2010. The impounded reservoir is also called Lostock Dam.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"id": 297043,
"question": "#1 >> mouth of the watercourse",
"answer": "Hunter River",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Paterson River",
"paragraph_text": "Paterson River, a perennial river that is part of the Hunter River catchment, is located in the Hunter and Mid North Coast regions of New South Wales, Australia.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_229 | Who were the leaders of the opposition of the party that controlled the house of representatives in 2002? | [
"anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 46550,
"question": "who controlled the house of representatives in 2002",
"answer": "the Republican Party",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "2002 United States House of Representatives elections",
"paragraph_text": "The Elections for the United States House of Representatives on 5 November 2002 was in the middle of President George W. Bush's first term. Although it was a midterm election, the Republican Party gained a net eight seats, solidifying their majority. Together with gains made in the Senate, it was one of the few mid-term elections that the party in control of the White House increased their number of seats in the House (the other such mid-term elections were in 1934 and 1998).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"id": 85990,
"question": "who were the leaders of the opposition #1",
"answer": "anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "Republican Party (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "Founded in the Northern states in 1854 by anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers, the Republican Party quickly became the principal opposition to the dominant Democratic Party and the briefly popular Know Nothing Party. The main cause was opposition to the Kansas -- Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise by which slavery was kept out of Kansas. The Northern Republicans saw the expansion of slavery as a great evil. The first public meeting of the general ``anti-Nebraska ''movement where the name`` Republican'' was suggested for a new anti-slavery party was held on March 20, 1854, in a schoolhouse in Ripon, Wisconsin. The name was partly chosen to pay homage to Thomas Jefferson's Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_230 | Who were the leaders of the opposition of the party that dominated until the mid-20th century? | [
"anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers"
] | {
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"id": 30741,
"question": "What party dominated until the mid-20th century",
"answer": "Republican Party",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Philadelphia",
"paragraph_text": "From the American Civil War until the mid-20th century, Philadelphia was a bastion of the Republican Party, which arose from the staunch pro-Northern views of Philadelphia residents during and after the war (Philadelphia was chosen as the host city for the first Republican National Convention in 1856). After the Great Depression, Democratic registrations increased, but the city was not carried by Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt in his landslide victory of 1932 (in which Pennsylvania was one of the few states won by Republican Herbert Hoover). Four years later, however, voter turnout surged and the city finally flipped to the Democrats. Roosevelt carried Philadelphia with over 60% of the vote in 1936. The city has remained loyally Democratic in every presidential election since. It is now one of the most Democratic in the country; in 2008, Democrat Barack Obama drew 83% of the city's vote. Obama's win was even greater in 2012, capturing 85% of the vote.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"id": 85990,
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"answer": "anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers",
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"idx": 14,
"title": "Republican Party (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "Founded in the Northern states in 1854 by anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers, the Republican Party quickly became the principal opposition to the dominant Democratic Party and the briefly popular Know Nothing Party. The main cause was opposition to the Kansas -- Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise by which slavery was kept out of Kansas. The Northern Republicans saw the expansion of slavery as a great evil. The first public meeting of the general ``anti-Nebraska ''movement where the name`` Republican'' was suggested for a new anti-slavery party was held on March 20, 1854, in a schoolhouse in Ripon, Wisconsin. The name was partly chosen to pay homage to Thomas Jefferson's Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_231 | Who were the leaders of the opposition party that was created as a result of the kansas-nebraska act? | [
"anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers"
] | {
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{
"id": 66149,
"question": "what new political party was created as a result of the kansas-nebraska act",
"answer": "Republican Party",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "Kansas–Nebraska Act",
"paragraph_text": "The Kansas -- Nebraska Act divided the nation and pointed it toward civil war. The Act itself virtually nullified the Missouri Compromise of 1820. The turmoil over the act split both the Democratic and Whig parties and gave rise to the Republican Party, which split the United States into two major political camps, the Republican North and the Democratic South.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"id": 85990,
"question": "who were the leaders of the opposition #1",
"answer": "anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers",
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"idx": 17,
"title": "Republican Party (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "Founded in the Northern states in 1854 by anti-slavery activists, modernizers, ex Whigs and ex Free Soilers, the Republican Party quickly became the principal opposition to the dominant Democratic Party and the briefly popular Know Nothing Party. The main cause was opposition to the Kansas -- Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise by which slavery was kept out of Kansas. The Northern Republicans saw the expansion of slavery as a great evil. The first public meeting of the general ``anti-Nebraska ''movement where the name`` Republican'' was suggested for a new anti-slavery party was held on March 20, 1854, in a schoolhouse in Ripon, Wisconsin. The name was partly chosen to pay homage to Thomas Jefferson's Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_232 | In what city is Alain Lascoux's employer located? | [
"Tianjin"
] | {
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{
"id": 216535,
"question": "Alain Lascoux >> employer",
"answer": "Nankai University",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Alain Lascoux",
"paragraph_text": "Alain Lascoux (October 17, 1944 – October 20, 2013) was a French mathematician at the University of Marne la Vallée and Nankai University. His research was primarily in algebraic combinatorics, particularly Hecke algebras and Young tableaux.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 370666,
"question": "#1 >> located in the administrative territorial entity",
"answer": "Tianjin",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Tian Yunzhang",
"paragraph_text": "Tian Yunzhang (田蕴章;born in May 1, 1945 in Tianjin, China) is a Chinese calligrapher and a calligraphy professor of Nankai University.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_233 | What worldwide ranking does the university that Pedro Ramirez Vasquez attended hold? | [
"74th"
] | {
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{
"id": 846388,
"question": "Pedro Ramírez Vázquez >> educated at",
"answer": "UNAM",
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"idx": 1,
"title": "Pedro Ramírez Vázquez",
"paragraph_text": "He won several awards including the National Arts Award in 1973, Cemex Award in 2003 and IDSA's Special Award in 1969 for notable results, creative and innovative concepts and long-term benefits to the industrial design profession, its educational functions and society at large. He was minister of public infrastructure and human settlements during president's José López Portillo government. He was founder and rector of the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana. He was part of the faculty of the UNAM and received various honorary degrees (doctor honoris causa) granted by several universities including the UNAM.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 19320,
"question": "What worldwide ranking does #1 hold?",
"answer": "74th",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "Mexico City",
"paragraph_text": "The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), located in Mexico City, is the largest university on the continent, with more than 300,000 students from all backgrounds. Three Nobel laureates, several Mexican entrepreneurs and most of Mexico's modern-day presidents are among its former students. UNAM conducts 50% of Mexico's scientific research and has presence all across the country with satellite campuses, observatories and research centres. UNAM ranked 74th in the Top 200 World University Ranking published by Times Higher Education (then called Times Higher Education Supplement) in 2006, making it the highest ranked Spanish-speaking university in the world. The sprawling main campus of the university, known as Ciudad Universitaria, was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2007.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_234 | Who did the original voice of the character played by mila kunis in the cleveland show? | [
"Lacey Chabert"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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"id": 91211,
"question": "who does mila kunis play in the cleveland show",
"answer": "Meg Griffin",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "List of Family Guy cast members",
"paragraph_text": "Mila Kunis voices Meg Griffin. Kunis won the role after auditions and a slight rewrite of the character, in part due to her performance on That '70s Show. MacFarlane called Kunis back after her first audition, instructing her to speak slower, and then told her to come back another time and enunciate more. Once she claimed that she had it under control, MacFarlane hired her. Kunis described her character as ``the scapegoat ''. She further explained,`` Meg gets picked on a lot. But it's funny. It's like the middle child. She is constantly in the state of being an awkward 14 - year - old, when you're kind of going through puberty and what - not. She's just in a perpetual mode of humiliation. And it's fun.''",
"is_supporting": true
}
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"question": "who did the original voice of #1",
"answer": "Lacey Chabert",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Meg Griffin",
"paragraph_text": "Meg Griffin Family Guy character First appearance 1998 Pilot Pitch of Family Guy (Early version) ``Death Has a Shadow ''(Official version) Created by Seth MacFarlane Voiced by Lacey Chabert (1999 -- 2000, 2011, 2012) Mila Kunis (1999 -- present) Tara Strong (singing voice) Information Occupation High school student Family Peter Griffin (father) Lois Griffin (mother) Chris Griffin (brother) Stewie Griffin (brother) Brian Griffin (dog) Spouse (s) Dr. Michael Milano (ex-fiancé) Nationality American",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_235 | Who did the original voice of the character Mila Kunis plays on family Guy? | [
"Lacey Chabert"
] | {
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"id": 48033,
"question": "who does mila kunis voice in family guy",
"answer": "Meg Griffin",
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"title": "List of Family Guy cast members",
"paragraph_text": "Mila Kunis voices Meg Griffin. Kunis won the role after auditions and a slight rewrite of the character, in part due to her performance on That '70s Show. MacFarlane called Kunis back after her first audition, instructing her to speak slower, and then told her to come back another time and enunciate more. Once she claimed that she had it under control, MacFarlane hired her. Kunis described her character as ``the scapegoat ''. She further explained,`` Meg gets picked on a lot. But it's funny. It's like the middle child. She is constantly in the state of being an awkward 14 - year - old, when you're kind of going through puberty and what - not. She's just in a perpetual mode of humiliation. And it's fun.''",
"is_supporting": true
}
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"id": 90973,
"question": "who did the original voice of #1",
"answer": "Lacey Chabert",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Meg Griffin",
"paragraph_text": "Meg Griffin Family Guy character First appearance 1998 Pilot Pitch of Family Guy (Early version) ``Death Has a Shadow ''(Official version) Created by Seth MacFarlane Voiced by Lacey Chabert (1999 -- 2000, 2011, 2012) Mila Kunis (1999 -- present) Tara Strong (singing voice) Information Occupation High school student Family Peter Griffin (father) Lois Griffin (mother) Chris Griffin (brother) Stewie Griffin (brother) Brian Griffin (dog) Spouse (s) Dr. Michael Milano (ex-fiancé) Nationality American",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_236 | Who did the original voice of the character Mila Kunis plays on Family Guy? | [
"Lacey Chabert"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
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"id": 64175,
"question": "who does mila kunis play on family guy",
"answer": "Meg Griffin",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "List of Family Guy cast members",
"paragraph_text": "Mila Kunis voices Meg Griffin. Kunis won the role after auditions and a slight rewrite of the character, in part due to her performance on That '70s Show. MacFarlane called Kunis back after her first audition, instructing her to speak slower, and then told her to come back another time and enunciate more. Once she claimed that she had it under control, MacFarlane hired her. Kunis described her character as ``the scapegoat ''. She further explained,`` Meg gets picked on a lot. But it's funny. It's like the middle child. She is constantly in the state of being an awkward 14 - year - old, when you're kind of going through puberty and what - not. She's just in a perpetual mode of humiliation. And it's fun.''",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
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"question": "who did the original voice of #1",
"answer": "Lacey Chabert",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "Meg Griffin",
"paragraph_text": "Meg Griffin Family Guy character First appearance 1998 Pilot Pitch of Family Guy (Early version) ``Death Has a Shadow ''(Official version) Created by Seth MacFarlane Voiced by Lacey Chabert (1999 -- 2000, 2011, 2012) Mila Kunis (1999 -- present) Tara Strong (singing voice) Information Occupation High school student Family Peter Griffin (father) Lois Griffin (mother) Chris Griffin (brother) Stewie Griffin (brother) Brian Griffin (dog) Spouse (s) Dr. Michael Milano (ex-fiancé) Nationality American",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_237 | Who did the original voice of the character that Mila Kunis plays in Family Guy? | [
"Lacey Chabert"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 50936,
"question": "who does mila kunis play in american dad",
"answer": "Meg Griffin",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "List of Family Guy cast members",
"paragraph_text": "Mila Kunis is the voice of the character named Meg Griffin. Kunis won the role after auditions and a slight rewrite of the character, in part due to her performance on That '70s Show. MacFarlane called Kunis back after her first audition, instructing her to speak slower, and then told her to come back another time and enunciate more. Once she claimed that she had it under control, MacFarlane hired her. Kunis described her character as ``the scapegoat ''. She further explained,`` Meg gets picked on a lot. But it's funny. It's like the middle child. She is constantly in the state of being an awkward 14 - year - old, when you're kind of going through puberty and what - not. She's just in a perpetual mode of humiliation. And it's fun.''",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
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"question": "who did the original voice of #1",
"answer": "Lacey Chabert",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "Meg Griffin",
"paragraph_text": "Meg Griffin Family Guy character First appearance 1998 Pilot Pitch of Family Guy (Early version) ``Death Has a Shadow ''(Official version) Created by Seth MacFarlane Voiced by Lacey Chabert (1999 -- 2000, 2011, 2012) Mila Kunis (1999 -- present) Tara Strong (singing voice) Information Occupation High school student Family Peter Griffin (father) Lois Griffin (mother) Chris Griffin (brother) Stewie Griffin (brother) Brian Griffin (dog) Spouse (s) Dr. Michael Milano (ex-fiancé) Nationality American",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_238 | What worldwide ranking does Javier Barros Sierra's employer hold? | [
"74th"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 599396,
"question": "Javier Barros Sierra >> employer",
"answer": "UNAM",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Javier Barros Sierra",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Mexico city, he studied civil engineering at UNAM. He became president of the student society of the Faculty of Sciences in 1936 and University Counsellor in 1938. He taught for more than 20 years in the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria (a high school of UNAM) and the National School of Engineering (later Faculty of Engineering), of whom he was director from 1955 to 1958. He became Rector on May 5, 1966. During his rectorship, the government and the army entered Ciudad Universitaria, UNAM's main campus. In protest of these actions and the indiscriminate beating of UNAM's students, he resigned his post on September 23, 9 days before the massacre in Tlatelolco. He was reinstated as Rector after the liberation of CU, a post he held until May 5, 1970.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 19320,
"question": "What worldwide ranking does #1 hold?",
"answer": "74th",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "Mexico City",
"paragraph_text": "The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), located in Mexico City, is the largest university on the continent, with more than 300,000 students from all backgrounds. Three Nobel laureates, several Mexican entrepreneurs and most of Mexico's modern-day presidents are among its former students. UNAM conducts 50% of Mexico's scientific research and has presence all across the country with satellite campuses, observatories and research centres. UNAM ranked 74th in the Top 200 World University Ranking published by Times Higher Education (then called Times Higher Education Supplement) in 2006, making it the highest ranked Spanish-speaking university in the world. The sprawling main campus of the university, known as Ciudad Universitaria, was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2007.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_239 | What worldwide ranking is held by Mario Pani's alma mater? | [
"74th"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 365236,
"question": "Mario Pani >> educated at",
"answer": "UNAM",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Enrique del Moral",
"paragraph_text": "Del Moral modernized curricula during his time as director of the Faculty of Architecture (UNAM) (1944–1949), incorporating philosophies acquired from like-minded architects such as Mies van der Rohe at the Illinois Institute of Technology as well as Mexican philosophy on esthetic espoused by Dr. Jose Gaos in the Faculty of Philosophy and Literature (UNAM). He dedicated a large amount of his academic life to lecturing both domestically and abroad, and published books and essays on the evolution of architectural styles. He theorized about functionalism in Mexico and debated controversial issues of his time, such as the integration of plastic arts into architecture, and promoted the conservation of cities, approaching architecture in a way that could find balance between traditional and modern styles.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 19320,
"question": "What worldwide ranking does #1 hold?",
"answer": "74th",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Mexico City",
"paragraph_text": "The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), located in Mexico City, is the largest university on the continent, with more than 300,000 students from all backgrounds. Three Nobel laureates, several Mexican entrepreneurs and most of Mexico's modern-day presidents are among its former students. UNAM conducts 50% of Mexico's scientific research and has presence all across the country with satellite campuses, observatories and research centres. UNAM ranked 74th in the Top 200 World University Ranking published by Times Higher Education (then called Times Higher Education Supplement) in 2006, making it the highest ranked Spanish-speaking university in the world. The sprawling main campus of the university, known as Ciudad Universitaria, was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2007.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_240 | What worldwide ranking does the university where Manuel Isaías López was educated hold? | [
"74th"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 685045,
"question": "Manuel Isaías López >> educated at",
"answer": "UNAM",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Manuel Isaías López",
"paragraph_text": "In the last quarter of the twentieth century, Manuel Isaías López was considered the most influential psychiatrist in Mexico. In the early eighties, he was simultaneously President of the Mexican Psychoanalytic Association; Secretary General of the Mexican Board of Psychiatry; Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at UNAM; and Main Consultant to the System for the Integral Development of the Family (DIF), a nationwide government funded system of child and family guidance centers. His later contributions were in Bioethics, and he evolved into a researcher within this field and an International Psychoanalytic Association officer.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 19320,
"question": "What worldwide ranking does #1 hold?",
"answer": "74th",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Mexico City",
"paragraph_text": "The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), located in Mexico City, is the largest university on the continent, with more than 300,000 students from all backgrounds. Three Nobel laureates, several Mexican entrepreneurs and most of Mexico's modern-day presidents are among its former students. UNAM conducts 50% of Mexico's scientific research and has presence all across the country with satellite campuses, observatories and research centres. UNAM ranked 74th in the Top 200 World University Ranking published by Times Higher Education (then called Times Higher Education Supplement) in 2006, making it the highest ranked Spanish-speaking university in the world. The sprawling main campus of the university, known as Ciudad Universitaria, was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2007.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_241 | Who did Hay work for after being hired by his other notable influence regarding resource distribution other than Max Weber? | [
"the Austrian government",
"Austria",
"AT",
"at"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 30384,
"question": "Other than Max Weber, who was a notable influence to Hayek's statements regarding resource distribution?",
"answer": "Ludwig von Mises",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Friedrich Hayek",
"paragraph_text": "Building on the earlier work of Ludwig von Mises and others, Hayek also argued that while in centrally planned economies an individual or a select group of individuals must determine the distribution of resources, these planners will never have enough information to carry out this allocation reliably. This argument, first proposed by Max Weber, says that the efficient exchange and use of resources can be maintained only through the price mechanism in free markets (see economic calculation problem).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 30351,
"question": "For whom did Hayek work upon being hired by #1 ?",
"answer": "the Austrian government",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Friedrich Hayek",
"paragraph_text": "During Hayek's years at the University of Vienna, Carl Menger's work on the explanatory strategy of social science and Friedrich von Wieser's commanding presence in the classroom left a lasting influence on him. Upon the completion of his examinations, Hayek was hired by Ludwig von Mises on the recommendation of Wieser as a specialist for the Austrian government working on the legal and economic details of the Treaty of Saint Germain. Between 1923 and 1924 Hayek worked as a research assistant to Prof. Jeremiah Jenks of New York University, compiling macroeconomic data on the American economy and the operations of the US Federal Reserve.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_242 | Who did Hayek work for upon being hired by the author of Omnipotent Government? | [
"the Austrian government",
"Austria",
"AT",
"at",
"AUT"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 555792,
"question": "Omnipotent Government >> author",
"answer": "Ludwig von Mises",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Omnipotent Government",
"paragraph_text": "Omnipotent Government: The Rise of the Total State and Total War is a book by Austrian School economist Ludwig von Mises first published in 1944 by Yale University Press. It is one of the most influential writings in Libertarian social thought and critique of statist ideology and socialism, examining the rise of Nazism as an example. The book treats Nazism as a species of orthodox socialist theory. At the same time the book offers a critique of economic interventionism, industrial central planning, the welfare state and world government, denouncing the trends of the Western Allies towards the total state. The book was made available online by the Ludwig von Mises Institute in 2004.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 30351,
"question": "For whom did Hayek work upon being hired by #1 ?",
"answer": "the Austrian government",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "Friedrich Hayek",
"paragraph_text": "During Hayek's years at the University of Vienna, Carl Menger's work on the explanatory strategy of social science and Friedrich von Wieser's commanding presence in the classroom left a lasting influence on him. Upon the completion of his examinations, Hayek was hired by Ludwig von Mises on the recommendation of Wieser as a specialist for the Austrian government working on the legal and economic details of the Treaty of Saint Germain. Between 1923 and 1924 Hayek worked as a research assistant to Prof. Jeremiah Jenks of New York University, compiling macroeconomic data on the American economy and the operations of the US Federal Reserve.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_243 | Who did Hayek work for after being hired by the author of Human Action? | [
"the Austrian government",
"Austria",
"AT",
"at",
"AUT"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 431934,
"question": "Human Action >> author",
"answer": "Ludwig von Mises",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Human Action",
"paragraph_text": "Human Action: A Treatise on Economics is a work by the Austrian economist and philosopher Ludwig von Mises. Widely considered Mises' \"magnum opus\", it presents the case for laissez-faire capitalism based on praxeology, or rational investigation of human decision-making. It rejects positivism within economics. It defends an \"a priori\" epistemology and underpins praxeology with a foundation of methodological individualism and speculative laws of apodictic certainty. Mises argues that the free-market economy not only outdistances any government-planned system, but ultimately serves as the foundation of civilization itself.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 30351,
"question": "For whom did Hayek work upon being hired by #1 ?",
"answer": "the Austrian government",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Friedrich Hayek",
"paragraph_text": "During Hayek's years at the University of Vienna, Carl Menger's work on the explanatory strategy of social science and Friedrich von Wieser's commanding presence in the classroom left a lasting influence on him. Upon the completion of his examinations, Hayek was hired by Ludwig von Mises on the recommendation of Wieser as a specialist for the Austrian government working on the legal and economic details of the Treaty of Saint Germain. Between 1923 and 1924 Hayek worked as a research assistant to Prof. Jeremiah Jenks of New York University, compiling macroeconomic data on the American economy and the operations of the US Federal Reserve.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_244 | Who did Hayek work for upon being hired by the author of Bureaucracy? | [
"the Austrian government",
"Austria",
"AT",
"at",
"AUT"
] | {
"answerable": true,
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"question": "Bureaucracy >> author",
"answer": "Ludwig von Mises",
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"idx": 3,
"title": "Bureaucracy (book)",
"paragraph_text": "Bureaucracy is a political book written by Austrian School economist and libertarian thinker Ludwig von Mises. The author's motivation in writing the book is his concern with the spread of socialist ideals and the increasing bureaucratization of economic life. While he does not deny the necessity of certain bureaucratic structures for the smooth operation of any civilized state, he disagrees with the extent to which it has come to dominate the public life of European countries and the United States. The author's purpose is to demonstrate that the negative aspects of bureaucracy are not a result of bad policies or corruption, as the public tends to think. Instead, he explains, those problems are necessarily built into bureaucratic structures. They are due to the very tasks such a system has to deal with. The main body of the book is therefore devoted to a comparison between private enterprise on the one hand and bureaucratic agencies/public enterprise on the other.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 30351,
"question": "For whom did Hayek work upon being hired by #1 ?",
"answer": "the Austrian government",
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"title": "Friedrich Hayek",
"paragraph_text": "During Hayek's years at the University of Vienna, Carl Menger's work on the explanatory strategy of social science and Friedrich von Wieser's commanding presence in the classroom left a lasting influence on him. Upon the completion of his examinations, Hayek was hired by Ludwig von Mises on the recommendation of Wieser as a specialist for the Austrian government working on the legal and economic details of the Treaty of Saint Germain. Between 1923 and 1924 Hayek worked as a research assistant to Prof. Jeremiah Jenks of New York University, compiling macroeconomic data on the American economy and the operations of the US Federal Reserve.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_245 | What date did the Japanese get to the city where New Plaza Stadium is located, and the rest of the Guangdong province? | [
"November 5"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 837900,
"question": "New Plaza Stadium >> located in the administrative territorial entity",
"answer": "Foshan",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "New Plaza Stadium",
"paragraph_text": "New Plaza Stadium (Simplified Chinese: 佛山新广场体育场) was a multi-use stadium in Foshan, China. It was used mostly for football matches and was one of the six stadiums used for the 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup. The stadium was a capacity of 14,000 people.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 71701,
"question": "what year did the japanese get to #1 and the rest of guangdong province",
"answer": "November 5",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 8,
"title": "Twenty-First Army (Japan)",
"paragraph_text": "On October 12, the 18th and 104th Divisions landed, followed by command units the following day. By October 21, the provincial capital of Guangzhou was under Japanese control. The IJA 5th Division continued to advance up the Pearl River and by November 5 had taken the city of Foshan. By the end of November, the entire province was under Japanese control.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_246 | what year did the Japanese get to city where Wang Yue died and the rest of Guangdong province? | [
"November 5"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 278022,
"question": "Wang Yue >> place of death",
"answer": "Foshan",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 16,
"title": "Death of Wang Yue",
"paragraph_text": "Wang Yue (), also known as \"Little Yue Yue\" (), was a two-year-old Chinese girl who was run over by two vehicles on the afternoon of 13 October 2011 in a narrow road in Foshan, Guangdong. As she lay bleeding on the road for more than seven minutes, at least 18 passers-by skirted around her body, ignoring her. She was eventually helped by a female rubbish scavenger and sent to a hospital for treatment, but succumbed to her injuries and died eight days later. The closed-circuit television recording of the incident was uploaded onto the Internet, and quickly stirred widespread reaction in China and overseas. Many commentators saw this as indicative of a growing apathy in contemporary Chinese society.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 71701,
"question": "what year did the japanese get to #1 and the rest of guangdong province",
"answer": "November 5",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Twenty-First Army (Japan)",
"paragraph_text": "On October 12, the 18th and 104th Divisions landed, followed by command units the following day. By October 21, the provincial capital of Guangzhou was under Japanese control. The IJA 5th Division continued to advance up the Pearl River and by November 5 had taken the city of Foshan. By the end of November, the entire province was under Japanese control.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_247 | Who led the military expedition to where now Min dialects are spoken on border with Zhejiang? | [
"Chen Zheng"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 10122,
"question": "Min dialects are spoken on the border where?",
"answer": "with Fujian",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Zhejiang",
"paragraph_text": "Zhejiang is mountainous and has therefore fostered the development of many distinct local cultures. Linguistically speaking, Zhejiang is extremely diverse. Most inhabitants of Zhejiang speak Wu, but the Wu dialects are very diverse, especially in the south, where one valley may speak a dialect completely unintelligible to the next valley a few kilometers away. Other varieties of Chinese are spoken as well, mostly along the borders; Mandarin and Huizhou dialects are spoken on the border with Anhui, while Min dialects are spoken on the border with Fujian. (See Hangzhou dialect, Shaoxing dialect, Ningbo dialect, Wenzhou dialect, Taizhou dialect, Jinhua dialect, and Quzhou dialect for more information).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 18974,
"question": "Who led the military expedition in #1 ?",
"answer": "Chen Zheng",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Hokkien",
"paragraph_text": "In 677 (during the reign of Emperor Gaozong), Chen Zheng (陳政), together with his son Chen Yuanguang (陳元光), led a military expedition to pacify the rebellion in Fujian. They settled in Zhangzhou and brought the Middle Chinese phonology of northern China during the 7th century into Zhangzhou; In 885, (during the reign of Emperor Xizong of Tang), the two brothers Wang Chao (王潮) and Wang Shenzhi (王審知), led a military expedition force to pacify the Huang Chao rebellion. They brought the Middle Chinese phonology commonly spoken in Northern China into Zhangzhou. These two waves of migrations from the north generally brought the language of northern Middle Chinese into the Fujian region. This then gradually evolved into the Zhangzhou dialect.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_248 | What year did the japanese get to the current administrative territorial entity of the Century Lotus Stadium and the rest of the guangdong province? | [
"November 5"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 370564,
"question": "Century Lotus Stadium >> located in the administrative territorial entity",
"answer": "Foshan",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "Century Lotus Stadium",
"paragraph_text": "Century Lotus Stadium () is a multi-purpose stadium in Foshan, China. It is currently used mostly for football matches. The stadium holds 36,686 people and was built in 2005. It hosted a first round match between China and Myanmar during 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifying. This building has a design similar to the reconstructed Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, Delhi built by the same designers.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 71701,
"question": "what year did the japanese get to #1 and the rest of guangdong province",
"answer": "November 5",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Twenty-First Army (Japan)",
"paragraph_text": "On October 12, the 18th and 104th Divisions landed, followed by command units the following day. By October 21, the provincial capital of Guangzhou was under Japanese control. The IJA 5th Division continued to advance up the Pearl River and by November 5 had taken the city of Foshan. By the end of November, the entire province was under Japanese control.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_249 | When did the Japanese get to Liang Jiahong's birthplace and the rest of Guangdong? | [
"November 5"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 753260,
"question": "Liang Jiahong >> place of birth",
"answer": "Foshan",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "Liang Jiahong",
"paragraph_text": "Liang Jiahong (born 6 March 1988 in Longjiang, Shunde, Foshan, Guangdong) is a Chinese sprinter who specializes in the 100 metres.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 71701,
"question": "what year did the japanese get to #1 and the rest of guangdong province",
"answer": "November 5",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Twenty-First Army (Japan)",
"paragraph_text": "On October 12, the 18th and 104th Divisions landed, followed by command units the following day. By October 21, the provincial capital of Guangzhou was under Japanese control. The IJA 5th Division continued to advance up the Pearl River and by November 5 had taken the city of Foshan. By the end of November, the entire province was under Japanese control.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_250 | Who led the military expedition in the province where Gong Beibi was born? | [
"Chen Zheng"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 631024,
"question": "Gong Beibi >> place of birth",
"answer": "Fujian",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Gong Beibi",
"paragraph_text": "Gong Beibi () (born February 21, 1978 in Fujian, China) is a Chinese film and television actress. Beginning her career as a child actress, she later graduated from the prestigious Central Academy of Drama where she gained fame and popularity among young audiences in China after starring in several popular TV series and feature films in both China and Hong Kong. Due to her success while still a student, she became dubbed in the media at the time as \"little Gong Li\".",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 18974,
"question": "Who led the military expedition in #1 ?",
"answer": "Chen Zheng",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Hokkien",
"paragraph_text": "In 677 (during the reign of Emperor Gaozong), Chen Zheng (陳政), together with his son Chen Yuanguang (陳元光), led a military expedition to pacify the rebellion in Fujian. They settled in Zhangzhou and brought the Middle Chinese phonology of northern China during the 7th century into Zhangzhou; In 885, (during the reign of Emperor Xizong of Tang), the two brothers Wang Chao (王潮) and Wang Shenzhi (王審知), led a military expedition force to pacify the Huang Chao rebellion. They brought the Middle Chinese phonology commonly spoken in Northern China into Zhangzhou. These two waves of migrations from the north generally brought the language of northern Middle Chinese into the Fujian region. This then gradually evolved into the Zhangzhou dialect.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_251 | Who led the military expedition in the place where the fight between Ming loyalists and Manchus occurred? | [
"Chen Zheng"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 36747,
"question": "Where did the fight between Ming loyalists and Manchus occur?",
"answer": "Fujian",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 16,
"title": "Qing dynasty",
"paragraph_text": "The Manchus sent Han Bannermen to fight against Koxinga's Ming loyalists in Fujian. The Qing carried out a massive depopulation policy and seaban forcing people to evacuated the coast in order to deprive Koxinga's Ming loyalists of resources, this has led to a myth that it was because Manchus were \"afraid of water\". In Fujian, it was Han Bannermen who were the ones carrying out the fighting and killing for the Qing and this disproved the entirely irrelevant claim that alleged fear of the water on part of the Manchus had to do with the coastal evacuation and seaban. Even though a poem refers to the soldiers carrying out massacres in Fujian as \"barbarian\", both Han Green Standard Army and Han Bannermen were involved in the fighting for the Qing side and carried out the worst slaughter. 400,000 Green Standard Army soldiers were used against the Three Feudatories besides 200,000 Bannermen.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 18974,
"question": "Who led the military expedition in #1 ?",
"answer": "Chen Zheng",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "Hokkien",
"paragraph_text": "In 677 (during the reign of Emperor Gaozong), Chen Zheng (陳政), together with his son Chen Yuanguang (陳元光), led a military expedition to pacify the rebellion in Fujian. They settled in Zhangzhou and brought the Middle Chinese phonology of northern China during the 7th century into Zhangzhou; In 885, (during the reign of Emperor Xizong of Tang), the two brothers Wang Chao (王潮) and Wang Shenzhi (王審知), led a military expedition force to pacify the Huang Chao rebellion. They brought the Middle Chinese phonology commonly spoken in Northern China into Zhangzhou. These two waves of migrations from the north generally brought the language of northern Middle Chinese into the Fujian region. This then gradually evolved into the Zhangzhou dialect.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_252 | Who led the military expedition in the province that borders Zhejiang to the south? | [
"Chen Zheng"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 10017,
"question": "Which province is Zhejiang bordered by to the south?",
"answer": "Fujian",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "Zhejiang",
"paragraph_text": "Zhejiang (help·info), formerly romanized as Chekiang, is an eastern coastal province of China. Zhejiang is bordered by Jiangsu province and Shanghai municipality to the north, Anhui province to the northwest, Jiangxi province to the west, and Fujian province to the south; to the east is the East China Sea, beyond which lie the Ryukyu Islands of Japan.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 18974,
"question": "Who led the military expedition in #1 ?",
"answer": "Chen Zheng",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "Hokkien",
"paragraph_text": "In 677 (during the reign of Emperor Gaozong), Chen Zheng (陳政), together with his son Chen Yuanguang (陳元光), led a military expedition to pacify the rebellion in Fujian. They settled in Zhangzhou and brought the Middle Chinese phonology of northern China during the 7th century into Zhangzhou; In 885, (during the reign of Emperor Xizong of Tang), the two brothers Wang Chao (王潮) and Wang Shenzhi (王審知), led a military expedition force to pacify the Huang Chao rebellion. They brought the Middle Chinese phonology commonly spoken in Northern China into Zhangzhou. These two waves of migrations from the north generally brought the language of northern Middle Chinese into the Fujian region. This then gradually evolved into the Zhangzhou dialect.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_253 | What other film is the cast member of Now You See Him, Now You Don't a character for? | [
"The Hateful Eight",
"Hateful Eight"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 810411,
"question": "Now You See Him, Now You Don't >> cast member",
"answer": "Kurt Russell",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Now You See Him, Now You Don't",
"paragraph_text": "Now You See Him, Now You Don't is a 1972 Walt Disney Productions film starring Kurt Russell as a chemistry student who accidentally discovers the secret to invisibility. It is the sequel to the 1969 film \"The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes\" and was followed by 1975's \"The Strongest Man in the World\".",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 159673,
"question": "#1 is a character in which film?",
"answer": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_text": "The Hateful Eight (often marketed as The H8ful Eight) is a 2015 American western thriller film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. It stars Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Walton Goggins, Demián Bichir, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, and Bruce Dern as eight strangers who seek refuge from a blizzard in a stagecoach stopover some time after the American Civil War.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_254 | What other movie did the cast member of Escape from L.A. play a character in? | [
"The Hateful Eight",
"Hateful Eight"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 96062,
"question": "Who is in Escape from L.A. as a cast member?",
"answer": "Kurt Russell",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "Escape from L.A.",
"paragraph_text": "Escape from L.A. (also known as John Carpenter's Escape from L.A. or Escape from Los Angeles) is a 1996 American postapocalyptic action film co-written, co-scored, and directed by John Carpenter, co-written and produced by Debra Hill and Kurt Russell, with Russell also starring as Snake Plissken. A sequel to \"Escape from New York\", \"Escape from L.A.\" co-stars Steve Buscemi, Stacy Keach, Bruce Campbell, and Pam Grier. The film received a mixed reception and was a box-office bomb.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 159673,
"question": "#1 is a character in which film?",
"answer": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_text": "The Hateful Eight (often marketed as The H8ful Eight) is a 2015 American western thriller film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. It stars Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Walton Goggins, Demián Bichir, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, and Bruce Dern as eight strangers who seek refuge from a blizzard in a stagecoach stopover some time after the American Civil War.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_255 | In what league did Jose Miranda's team compete? | [
"United Soccer League",
"Southwest Independent Soccer League",
"USISL",
"SISL",
"United Soccer Leagues",
"USL"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 203985,
"question": "Jose Miranda >> member of sports team",
"answer": "Tucson Amigos",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Jose Miranda (soccer)",
"paragraph_text": "In 1989, Miranda joined the Tucson Amigos for the 1989–90 Southwest Independent Soccer League. He earned Rookie of the Year honors with the Amigos. Miranda graduated from Sunnyside High School. In 1990, Miranda entered Yavapai College where he was a member of the 1990 National Junior College Champions and 1991 National Junior College Runner-Up men’s soccer teams. He then transferred to Sangamon State for the 1992 and 1993 seasons. In 1993, Sangamon State won the NAIA national men's soccer championship. In 1996, Miranda played for the New Mexico Chiles in the USISL Select League. In 1997, he moved to the Arizona Sahuaros of the USISL D-3 Pro League. He broke his leg during the season. This led to his taking the boy’s head coaching position at Sunnyside High School. He returned to playing in 2000 with the Tucson Fireballs. In 2009, Miranda became an assistant coach of the women’s team at Pima Community College.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 524737,
"question": "#1 >> league",
"answer": "United Soccer League",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Tucson Amigos",
"paragraph_text": "The Tucson Amigos were a soccer club based in Tucson, Arizona that competed in the SISL, USISL and United Soccer Leagues. Founder of the Tucson Amigos was Dennis Archer a local business owner of the Tucson Amigos Indoor Soccer Center.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_256 | The actor who plays copper in Fox and the Hound is a character in which film? | [
"The Hateful Eight",
"Hateful Eight"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 77832,
"question": "who plays copper in fox and the hound",
"answer": "Kurt Russell",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "The Fox and the Hound",
"paragraph_text": "Mickey Rooney as Tod Kurt Russell as Copper Pearl Bailey as Big Mama Jack Albertson as Amos Slade Sandy Duncan as Vixey Jeanette Nolan as Widow Tweed Pat Buttram as Chief John Fiedler as The Porcupine John McIntire as The Badger Dick Bakalyan as Dinky Paul Winchell as Boomer Keith Coogan as Young Tod Corey Feldman as Young Copper",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 159673,
"question": "#1 is a character in which film?",
"answer": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_text": "The Hateful Eight (often marketed as The H8ful Eight) is a 2015 American western thriller film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. It stars Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Walton Goggins, Demián Bichir, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, and Bruce Dern as eight strangers who seek refuge from a blizzard in a stagecoach stopover some time after the American Civil War.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_257 | This cast member in "Search for the Gods" also plays a character in which film? | [
"The Hateful Eight",
"Hateful Eight"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 527400,
"question": "Search for the Gods >> cast member",
"answer": "Kurt Russell",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Search for the Gods",
"paragraph_text": "Search for the Gods is a 1975 television film directed by Jud Taylor, and stars Kurt Russell and Stephen McHattie. It was intended to be the pilot episode of a TV series that never made it into production.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 159673,
"question": "#1 is a character in which film?",
"answer": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "The Hateful Eight",
"paragraph_text": "The Hateful Eight (often marketed as The H8ful Eight) is a 2015 American western thriller film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. It stars Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Walton Goggins, Demián Bichir, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, and Bruce Dern as eight strangers who seek refuge from a blizzard in a stagecoach stopover some time after the American Civil War.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_258 | What county is Erik Hort's birthplace a part of? | [
"Rockland County",
"Rockland County, New York"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 766973,
"question": "Erik Hort >> place of birth",
"answer": "Montebello",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "Erik Hort",
"paragraph_text": "Erik Hort (born February 16, 1987 in Montebello, New York) is an American soccer player who is currently a Free Agent.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 770570,
"question": "#1 >> located in the administrative territorial entity",
"answer": "Rockland County",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "Montebello, New York",
"paragraph_text": "Montebello (Italian: \"Beautiful mountain\") is an incorporated village in the town of Ramapo, Rockland County, New York, United States. It is located north of Suffern, east of Hillburn, south of Wesley Hills, and west of Airmont. The population was 4,526 at the 2010 census.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_259 | How many games in a season of the league in which Barcelona won titles in 1948 and 1949? | [
"38"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 13592,
"question": "What titles did Barcelona win in 1948 and 1949?",
"answer": "La Liga",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "FC Barcelona",
"paragraph_text": "After the construction was complete there was no further room for expansion at Les Corts. Back-to-back La Liga titles in 1948 and 1949 and the signing of László Kubala in June 1950, who would later go on to score 196 goals in 256 matches, drew larger crowds to the games. The club began to make plans for a new stadium. The building of Camp Nou commenced on 28 March 1954, before a crowd of 60,000 Barça fans. The first stone of the future stadium was laid in place under the auspices of Governor Felipe Acedo Colunga and with the blessing of Archbishop of Barcelona Gregorio Modrego. Construction took three years and ended on 24 September 1957 with a final cost of 288 million pesetas, 336% over budget.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 49388,
"question": "#1 standings how many games in a season",
"answer": "38",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "La Liga",
"paragraph_text": "The competition format follows the usual double round - robin format. During the course of a season, which lasts from August to May, each club plays every other club twice, once at home and once away, for a total of 38 matchdays. Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the highest - ranked club at the end of the season crowned champion.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_260 | How many games does the team play that had the most champion league wins between 1992 and 2013? | [
"38"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 34495,
"question": "Which league had the most Champions League wins between 1992 and 2013?",
"answer": "La Liga",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Premier League",
"paragraph_text": "Between the 1992–93 season and the 2012–13 season, Premier League clubs had won the UEFA Champions League four times (as well as supplying five of the runners-up), behind Spain's La Liga with six wins, and Italy's Serie A with five wins, and ahead of, among others, Germany's Bundesliga with three wins (see table here). The FIFA Club World Cup (or the FIFA Club World Championship, as it was originally called) has been won by Premier league clubs once (Manchester United in 2008), and they have also been runners-up twice, behind Brazil's Brasileirão with four wins, and Spain's La Liga and Italy's Serie A with two wins each (see table here).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 85544,
"question": "how many games do #1 teams play",
"answer": "38",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 16,
"title": "La Liga",
"paragraph_text": "The competition format follows the usual double round - robin format. During the course of a season, which lasts from August to May, each club plays every other club twice, once at home and once away, for 38 matchdays. Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the highest - ranked club at the end of the season crowned champion.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_261 | How many games are in a season for the league that had the most Champions League wins between 1992 and 2013? | [
"38"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 34495,
"question": "Which league had the most Champions League wins between 1992 and 2013?",
"answer": "La Liga",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "Premier League",
"paragraph_text": "Between the 1992–93 season and the 2012–13 season, Premier League clubs had won the UEFA Champions League four times (as well as supplying five of the runners-up), behind Spain's La Liga with six wins, and Italy's Serie A with five wins, and ahead of, among others, Germany's Bundesliga with three wins (see table here). The FIFA Club World Cup (or the FIFA Club World Championship, as it was originally called) has been won by Premier league clubs once (Manchester United in 2008), and they have also been runners-up twice, behind Brazil's Brasileirão with four wins, and Spain's La Liga and Italy's Serie A with two wins each (see table here).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 49388,
"question": "#1 standings how many games in a season",
"answer": "38",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "La Liga",
"paragraph_text": "The competition format follows the usual double round - robin format. During the course of a season, which lasts from August to May, each club plays every other club twice, once at home and once away, for a total of 38 matchdays. Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the highest - ranked club at the end of the season crowned champion.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_262 | How many games do team in the league where Barcelona won titles in 1948 and 1949 play? | [
"38"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 13592,
"question": "What titles did Barcelona win in 1948 and 1949?",
"answer": "La Liga",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "FC Barcelona",
"paragraph_text": "After the construction was complete there was no further room for expansion at Les Corts. Back-to-back La Liga titles in 1948 and 1949 and the signing of László Kubala in June 1950, who would later go on to score 196 goals in 256 matches, drew larger crowds to the games. The club began to make plans for a new stadium. The building of Camp Nou commenced on 28 March 1954, before a crowd of 60,000 Barça fans. The first stone of the future stadium was laid in place under the auspices of Governor Felipe Acedo Colunga and with the blessing of Archbishop of Barcelona Gregorio Modrego. Construction took three years and ended on 24 September 1957 with a final cost of 288 million pesetas, 336% over budget.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 85544,
"question": "how many games do #1 teams play",
"answer": "38",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "La Liga",
"paragraph_text": "The competition format follows the usual double round - robin format. During the course of a season, which lasts from August to May, each club plays every other club twice, once at home and once away, for 38 matchdays. Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the highest - ranked club at the end of the season crowned champion.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_263 | In which county was Larkin I. Smith born? | [
"Pearl River County",
"Pearl River County, Mississippi"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 506035,
"question": "Larkin I. Smith >> place of birth",
"answer": "Poplarville",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Larkin I. Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Smith was born in Poplarville, Mississippi to Nona Orene Bounds and her husband Hezekiah K. Smith, Sr. Smith was named after his maternal grandfather Larkin Bounds and his maternal uncle Irvin E. Bounds. He received his bachelor's degree from William Carey University and then served at various positions in the police forces in both Pearl River and then Harrison counties. He became the police chief in Gulfport and thereafter the Harrison County sheriff.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 325512,
"question": "#1 >> located in the administrative territorial entity",
"answer": "Pearl River County",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "Poplarville, Mississippi",
"paragraph_text": "Poplarville is a city in Pearl River County, Mississippi, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 2,894. It is the county seat of Pearl River County. It hosts an annual Blueberry Jubilee, which includes rides, craft vendors and rodeos.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_264 | Who was the father of The Portrait of George Dyer Talking's creator? | [
"Nicholas Bacon",
"Sir Nicholas Bacon"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 107690,
"question": "The Portrait of George Dyer Talking was made by whom?",
"answer": "Francis Bacon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "Portrait of George Dyer Talking",
"paragraph_text": "Portrait of George Dyer Talking is an oil painting by Francis Bacon executed in 1966. It is a portrait of his lover George Dyer made at the height of Bacon's creative power. It depicts Dyer sitting on a revolving office stool in a luridly coloured room. His body and face are contorted, and his legs are tightly crossed. His head appears to be framed within a window or door. Above him is a naked hanging lightbulb, a favourite motif of Bacon's. The work contains a number of spatial ambiguities, not least that Dyer's body seems to be positioned both in the fore- and background.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 124896,
"question": "What is the name of #1 father?",
"answer": "Nicholas Bacon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Francis Bacon",
"paragraph_text": "Francis Bacon was born on 22 January 1561 at York House near the Strand in London, the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon (Lord Keeper of the Great Seal) by his second wife, Anne (Cooke) Bacon, the daughter of the noted humanist Anthony Cooke. His mother's sister was married to William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, making Burghley Bacon's uncle.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_265 | Who is the father of the author of Novum Organum? | [
"Nicholas Bacon",
"Sir Nicholas Bacon"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 507722,
"question": "Novum Organum >> author",
"answer": "Francis Bacon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Novum Organum",
"paragraph_text": "The Novum Organum, fully Novum Organum, sive indicia vera de Interpretatione Naturae (New organon, or true directions concerning the interpretation of nature), is a philosophical work by Francis Bacon, written in Latin and published in 1620. The title is a reference to Aristotle's work \"Organon\", which was his treatise on logic and syllogism. In \"Novum Organum\", Bacon details a new system of logic he believes to be superior to the old ways of syllogism. This is now known as the Baconian method.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 124896,
"question": "What is the name of #1 father?",
"answer": "Nicholas Bacon",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "Francis Bacon",
"paragraph_text": "Francis Bacon was born on 22 January 1561 at York House near the Strand in London, the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon (Lord Keeper of the Great Seal) by his second wife, Anne (Cooke) Bacon, the daughter of the noted humanist Anthony Cooke. His mother's sister was married to William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, making Burghley Bacon's uncle.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_266 | Who is the father of the artist who painted Head I? | [
"Nicholas Bacon",
"Sir Nicholas Bacon"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 107548,
"question": "Who is Head I by?",
"answer": "Francis Bacon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 8,
"title": "Head I",
"paragraph_text": "Head I is a relatively small oil and tempera on hardboard painting by the Irish-born British figurative artist Francis Bacon. Completed in 1948, it is the first in a series of six heads, the remainder of which were painted the following year in preparation for a November 1949 exhibition at the Hanover Gallery in London. Like the others in the series, it shows a screaming figure alone in a room, and focuses on the open mouth. The work shows a skull which has disintegrated on itself and is largely a formless blob of flesh. The entire upper half has disappeared, leaving only the jaw, mouth and teeth and one ear still intact. It is the first of Bacon's paintings to feature gold background railings or bars; later to become a prominent feature of his 1950s work, especially in the papal portraits where they would often appear as enclosing or cages around the figures. It is not known what influences were behind the image; most likely they were multiple – press or war photography, and critic Denis Farr detects the influence of Matthias Grünewald.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 124896,
"question": "What is the name of #1 father?",
"answer": "Nicholas Bacon",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Francis Bacon",
"paragraph_text": "Francis Bacon was born on 22 January 1561 at York House near the Strand in London, the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon (Lord Keeper of the Great Seal) by his second wife, Anne (Cooke) Bacon, the daughter of the noted humanist Anthony Cooke. His mother's sister was married to William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, making Burghley Bacon's uncle.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_267 | What movement was Vibullia Alcia Agrippina's child a proponent for? | [
"Second Sophistic"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 754682,
"question": "Vibullia Alcia Agrippina >> child",
"answer": "Herodes Atticus",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "Vibullia Alcia Agrippina",
"paragraph_text": "Herodes Atticus with his wife, the Roman Aristocrat Aspasia Annia Regilla, had erected a great outdoor nymphaeum (a monumental fountain) at Olympia, Greece. The monumental fountain features statues and honors members of the ruling imperial family, relatives of Herodes Atticus and his wife. Among the statues is a statue of Vibullia. The statue bust of Vibullia is on display at the Archaeological Museum of Olympia.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 730690,
"question": "#1 >> movement",
"answer": "Second Sophistic",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Herodes Atticus",
"paragraph_text": "Herodes Atticus (, \"Hērōidēs ho Attikos\"; 177), or Atticus Herodes, was a distinguished and rich Greek aristocrat and sophist who served as a Roman senator. Appointed consul at Rome in 143, he was the first Greek to hold the rank of \"consul ordinarius\", as opposed to \"consul suffectus\". In Latin, his full name was given as Lucius Vibullius Hipparchus Tiberius Claudius Atticus Herodes (). According to Philostratus, Herodes Atticus was a notable proponent of the Second Sophistic. M.I. Finley described Herodes Atticus as \"patron of the arts and letters (and himself a writer and scholar of importance), public benefactor on an imperial scale, not only in Athens but elsewhere in Greece and Asia Minor, holder of many important posts, friend and kinsman of emperors.\"",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_268 | Where is the mission for the agency that controls the monetary policy of the EU found? | [
"Article 2 of the Statute of the ECB"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 68590,
"question": "who controls the monetary policy of the eu",
"answer": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The European Central Bank (ECB; German: Europäische Zentralbank (EZB), French: Banque centrale européenne (BCE)) is the central bank for the euro and administers monetary policy of the eurozone, which consists of 19 EU member states and is one of the largest currency areas in the world. It is one of the world's most important central banks and is one of the seven institutions of the European Union (EU) listed in the Treaty on European Union (TEU). The capital stock of the bank is owned by the central banks of all 28 EU member states. The Treaty of Amsterdam established the bank in 1998, and it is headquartered in Frankfurt, Germany. As of 2015 the President of the ECB is Mario Draghi, former governor of the Bank of Italy, former member of the World Bank, and former managing director of the Goldman Sachs international division (2002 -- 2005). The bank primarily occupied the Eurotower prior to, and during, the construction of the new headquarters.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 27619,
"question": "Where is the mission for #1 found?",
"answer": "Article 2 of the Statute of the ECB",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 8,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The primary objective of the European Central Bank, as mandated in Article 2 of the Statute of the ECB, is to maintain price stability within the Eurozone. The basic tasks, as defined in Article 3 of the Statute, are to define and implement the monetary policy for the Eurozone, to conduct foreign exchange operations, to take care of the foreign reserves of the European System of Central Banks and operation of the financial market infrastructure under the TARGET2 payments system and the technical platform (currently being developed) for settlement of securities in Europe (TARGET2 Securities). The ECB has, under Article 16 of its Statute, the exclusive right to authorise the issuance of euro banknotes. Member states can issue euro coins, but the amount must be authorised by the ECB beforehand.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_269 | Where is the headquarters of the operator of Operation Entebbe? | [
"Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport",
"Paris"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 269076,
"question": "Operation Entebbe >> operator",
"answer": "Air France",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 8,
"title": "Jonathan Gruber (filmmaker)",
"paragraph_text": "His film, \"Follow Me: The Yoni Netanyahu Story\", was an in depth look into the private life of the man who became the hero and pivotal strategist in the Israeli rescue of the Israeli hostages from Entebbe, Uganda following the hijacking of an Air France plane by Palestinian militants, which Idi Amin permitted to land in his country. After the Jewish and Israeli passengers were separated and threatened, the Israeli government quickly devised Operation Entebbe, which ended with the rescue of the passengers, but the death of Netanyahu. The film won awards at several national film festivals.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 449113,
"question": "#1 >> headquarters location",
"answer": "Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "Brit Air",
"paragraph_text": "Brit Air (short for Brittany Air International) is a regional airline based at Morlaix Airport in Ploujean, Morlaix, Brittany, France, operating scheduled services as an Air France franchise from Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport, Paris-Orly Airport and Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_270 | Where is the mission for the bank that began to increase their coverage of weaker debts found? | [
"Article 2 of the Statute of the ECB"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 27650,
"question": "Who began to increase their coverage of weaker debts?",
"answer": "The European Central Bank",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The European Central Bank had stepped up the buying of member nations debt. In response to the crisis of 2010, some proposals have surfaced for a collective European bond issue that would allow the central bank to purchase a European version of US Treasury bills. To make European sovereign debt assets more similar to a US Treasury, a collective guarantee of the member states' solvency would be necessary.[b] But the German government has resisted this proposal, and other analyses indicate that \"the sickness of the euro\" is due to the linkage between sovereign debt and failing national banking systems. If the European central bank were to deal directly with failing banking systems sovereign debt would not look as leveraged relative to national income in the financially weaker member states.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 27619,
"question": "Where is the mission for #1 found?",
"answer": "Article 2 of the Statute of the ECB",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The primary objective of the European Central Bank, as mandated in Article 2 of the Statute of the ECB, is to maintain price stability within the Eurozone. The basic tasks, as defined in Article 3 of the Statute, are to define and implement the monetary policy for the Eurozone, to conduct foreign exchange operations, to take care of the foreign reserves of the European System of Central Banks and operation of the financial market infrastructure under the TARGET2 payments system and the technical platform (currently being developed) for settlement of securities in Europe (TARGET2 Securities). The ECB has, under Article 16 of its Statute, the exclusive right to authorise the issuance of euro banknotes. Member states can issue euro coins, but the amount must be authorised by the ECB beforehand.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_271 | Who is the Vice-President of the organization that controls the monetary policy of the EU? | [
"Vitor Constâncio"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 68590,
"question": "who controls the monetary policy of the eu",
"answer": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The European Central Bank (ECB; German: Europäische Zentralbank (EZB), French: Banque centrale européenne (BCE)) is the central bank for the euro and administers monetary policy of the eurozone, which consists of 19 EU member states and is one of the largest currency areas in the world. It is one of the world's most important central banks and is one of the seven institutions of the European Union (EU) listed in the Treaty on European Union (TEU). The capital stock of the bank is owned by the central banks of all 28 EU member states. The Treaty of Amsterdam established the bank in 1998, and it is headquartered in Frankfurt, Germany. As of 2015 the President of the ECB is Mario Draghi, former governor of the Bank of Italy, former member of the World Bank, and former managing director of the Goldman Sachs international division (2002 -- 2005). The bank primarily occupied the Eurotower prior to, and during, the construction of the new headquarters.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 27628,
"question": "Who is the Vice-President of #1 ?",
"answer": "Vitor Constâncio",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The Executive Board is responsible for the implementation of monetary policy (defined by the Governing Council) and the day-to-day running of the bank. It can issue decisions to national central banks and may also exercise powers delegated to it by the Governing Council. It is composed of the President of the Bank (currently Mario Draghi), the Vice-President (currently Vitor Constâncio) and four other members. They are all appointed for non-renewable terms of eight years. They are appointed \"from among persons of recognised standing and professional experience in monetary or banking matters by common accord of the governments of the Member States at the level of Heads of State or Government, on a recommendation from the Council, after it has consulted the European Parliament and the Governing Council of the ECB\". The Executive Board normally meets every Tuesday.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_272 | What record label does the performer of Adventures in Your Own Backyard belong to? | [
"Secret City Records"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 809785,
"question": "Adventures in Your Own Backyard >> performer",
"answer": "Patrick Watson",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Adventures in Your Own Backyard",
"paragraph_text": "Adventures in Your Own Backyard is the fourth studio album by Canadian musician Patrick Watson, released in April 2012. It is the band's follow-up to the Polaris Music Prize-nominated 2009 release \"Wooden Arms\", but by comparison is a musically simpler and more emotional album.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 606637,
"question": "#1 >> record label",
"answer": "Secret City Records",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Wooden Arms",
"paragraph_text": "Wooden Arms is the third album by Patrick Watson, released April 28, 2009 on Secret City Records. The album's first single, \"Tracy's Waters\", was released on March 5 and the group performed a new song, \"Beijing\", on CBC Radio's \"Q\" radio show on April 6. \"Fireweed\" was also released as a single and a music video was filmed, which features both live action and animation.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_273 | Who is the Vice-President of the body that began to increase their coverage of weaker debts? | [
"Vitor Constâncio"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 27650,
"question": "Who began to increase their coverage of weaker debts?",
"answer": "The European Central Bank",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The European Central Bank had stepped up the buying of member nations debt. In response to the crisis of 2010, some proposals have surfaced for a collective European bond issue that would allow the central bank to purchase a European version of US Treasury bills. To make European sovereign debt assets more similar to a US Treasury, a collective guarantee of the member states' solvency would be necessary.[b] But the German government has resisted this proposal, and other analyses indicate that \"the sickness of the euro\" is due to the linkage between sovereign debt and failing national banking systems. If the European central bank were to deal directly with failing banking systems sovereign debt would not look as leveraged relative to national income in the financially weaker member states.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 27628,
"question": "Who is the Vice-President of #1 ?",
"answer": "Vitor Constâncio",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "European Central Bank",
"paragraph_text": "The Executive Board is responsible for the implementation of monetary policy (defined by the Governing Council) and the day-to-day running of the bank. It can issue decisions to national central banks and may also exercise powers delegated to it by the Governing Council. It is composed of the President of the Bank (currently Mario Draghi), the Vice-President (currently Vitor Constâncio) and four other members. They are all appointed for non-renewable terms of eight years. They are appointed \"from among persons of recognised standing and professional experience in monetary or banking matters by common accord of the governments of the Member States at the level of Heads of State or Government, on a recommendation from the Council, after it has consulted the European Parliament and the Governing Council of the ECB\". The Executive Board normally meets every Tuesday.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_274 | The singer, who starred in Shake It Up, signed to which record label? | [
"Hollywood Records"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 656411,
"question": "Shake It Up >> cast member",
"answer": "Zendaya",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "Swag It Out",
"paragraph_text": "\"Swag It Out\" is the official debut single by American singer Zendaya, known for starring in the series \"Shake It Up\". The song was composed by Bobby Brackins and was released on May 30, 2011 as the first single of Zendaya's career on an independent label, not being included on any album or soundtrack of Walt Disney Records, just their record label.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 345851,
"question": "#1 >> record label",
"answer": "Hollywood Records",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "Zendaya (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Zendaya is the eponymous debut studio album by American singer and actress Zendaya, released on September 17, 2013 by Hollywood Records. After acting in the Disney Channel series \"Shake It Up\", Zendaya signed a recording contract with Hollywood Records, in which she began recording her debut in late 2012. \"Zendaya\" consists of 12 songs; musically, the album is a electropop album that incorporates urban pop, R&B and dubstep. Lyrically, the album discusses issues of heartbreak and love. Zendaya co-wrote all the songs on the album.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_275 | When does the new season of the Carolina Hurricanes' league start? | [
"October 3, 2018"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 24661,
"question": "What league do the Carolina Hurricanes belong to?",
"answer": "NHL",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "North Carolina",
"paragraph_text": "In Raleigh many tourists visit the Capital, African American Cultural Complex, Contemporary Art Museum of Raleigh, Gregg Museum of Art & Design at NCSU, Haywood Hall House & Gardens, Marbles Kids Museum, North Carolina Museum of Art, North Carolina Museum of History, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, Raleigh City Museum, J. C. Raulston Arboretum, Joel Lane House, Mordecai House, Montfort Hall, and the Pope House Museum. The Carolina Hurricanes NHL hockey team is also located in the city.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 66233,
"question": "when does the new season of #1 start",
"answer": "October 3, 2018",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "2018–19 NHL season",
"paragraph_text": "The 2018 -- 19 NHL season will be the 102nd season of operation (101st season of play) of the National Hockey League. 31 teams will be competing in an 82 - game regular season. The regular season is scheduled to begin on October 3, 2018, and will end on April 6, 2019. The 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs will then begin a few days afterwards, with the Stanley Cup Finals held in early June.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_276 | In which year did Taifa of Francisco Giner de los Rios' birthplace cease to exist? | [
"1065"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 329676,
"question": "Francisco Giner de los Ríos >> place of birth",
"answer": "Ronda",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "Francisco Giner de los Ríos",
"paragraph_text": "Francisco Giner de los Ríos (10 October 1839 in Ronda, Spain – 18 February 1915 in Madrid) was a philosopher, educator and one of the most influential Spanish intellectuals at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 119915,
"question": "In which year Taifa of #1 ceased to exist?",
"answer": "1065",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "Taifa of Ronda",
"paragraph_text": "The Taifa of Ronda was a medieval Berber taifa kingdom centered in Moorish al-Andalus in what is now southern Spain. It existed from 1039 to 1065. The taifa was ruled by a family from the Berber Banu Ifran tribe of North Africa. Its capital was the city of Ronda. From 1065 until 1091, the taifa was under the control of the Taifa of Seville, led by Abbad II al-Mu'tadid.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_277 | In what year did Taifa, of the birthplace of Ibn Abbad al-Rundi, cease to exist? | [
"1065"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 539184,
"question": "Ibn Abbad al-Rundi >> place of birth",
"answer": "Ronda",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "Ibn Abbad al-Rundi",
"paragraph_text": "Ibn Abbad al-Rundi (in full, Abu 'abd Allah Muhammad Ibn Abi Ishaq Ibrahim An-nafzi Al-himyari Ar-rundi) (1333–1390) was one of the leading Sufi theologians of his time who was born in Ronda. Attracted to Morocco by the famous madrasahs, Ibn Abbad emigrated there at an early age. He spent most of his life in Morocco, living in different cities (Salé, Marrakesh, Fes...), and was buried in Bab al-Futuh (south-eastern gate) cemetery in Fes.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 119915,
"question": "In which year Taifa of #1 ceased to exist?",
"answer": "1065",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Taifa of Ronda",
"paragraph_text": "The Taifa of Ronda was a medieval Berber taifa kingdom centered in Moorish al-Andalus in what is now southern Spain. It existed from 1039 to 1065. The taifa was ruled by a family from the Berber Banu Ifran tribe of North Africa. Its capital was the city of Ronda. From 1065 until 1091, the taifa was under the control of the Taifa of Seville, led by Abbad II al-Mu'tadid.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_278 | When does the regular season for the league which the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team had most of its members from begin? | [
"October 4, 2017"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 26642,
"question": "What league were most members of the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team from?",
"answer": "NHL",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "Exhibition game",
"paragraph_text": "The Flying Fathers, a Canadian group of Catholic priests, regularly toured North America playing exhibition hockey games for charity. One of the organization's founders, Les Costello, was a onetime NHL player who was ordained as a priest after retiring from professional hockey. Another prominent exhibition hockey team is the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team, which is composed almost entirely of retired NHL players, the majority of whom (as the name suggests) played at least a portion of their career for the Buffalo Sabres.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 81961,
"question": "when does the regular season for the #1 begin",
"answer": "October 4, 2017",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "2017–18 NHL season",
"paragraph_text": "The 2017 -- 18 NHL season is the 101st season of operation (100th season of play) of the National Hockey League. With the addition of a new expansion team, the Vegas Golden Knights, 31 teams compete in an 82 - game regular season. The regular season began on October 4, 2017, and will end on April 7, 2018. The 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs will then begin a few days afterwards, with the Stanley Cup Finals held in early June.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_279 | When does the regular season begin for the league the Carolina Hurricanes belong to? | [
"October 4, 2017"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 24661,
"question": "What league do the Carolina Hurricanes belong to?",
"answer": "NHL",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "North Carolina",
"paragraph_text": "In Raleigh many tourists visit the Capital, African American Cultural Complex, Contemporary Art Museum of Raleigh, Gregg Museum of Art & Design at NCSU, Haywood Hall House & Gardens, Marbles Kids Museum, North Carolina Museum of Art, North Carolina Museum of History, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, Raleigh City Museum, J. C. Raulston Arboretum, Joel Lane House, Mordecai House, Montfort Hall, and the Pope House Museum. The Carolina Hurricanes NHL hockey team is also located in the city.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 81961,
"question": "when does the regular season for the #1 begin",
"answer": "October 4, 2017",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "2017–18 NHL season",
"paragraph_text": "The 2017 -- 18 NHL season is the 101st season of operation (100th season of play) of the National Hockey League. With the addition of a new expansion team, the Vegas Golden Knights, 31 teams compete in an 82 - game regular season. The regular season began on October 4, 2017, and will end on April 7, 2018. The 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs will then begin a few days afterwards, with the Stanley Cup Finals held in early June.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_280 | Who does William Clito's father follow? | [
"William the Conqueror",
"William I"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 233551,
"question": "William Clito >> father",
"answer": "Robert Curthose",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 4,
"title": "Clito",
"paragraph_text": "\"See also : William Clito (1102-1128), the son of Robert Curthose, Duke of Normandy, by his marriage with Sibylla of Conversano and count of Flanders.\"",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 746883,
"question": "#1 >> follows",
"answer": "William the Conqueror",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "Rebellion of 1088",
"paragraph_text": "The Rebellion of 1088 occurred after the death of William the Conqueror and concerned the division of lands in the Kingdom of England and the Duchy of Normandy between his two sons William Rufus and Robert Curthose. Hostilities lasted from 3 to 6 months starting around Easter of 1088.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_281 | When does the new season of the league where most members of the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team are from start? | [
"October 3, 2018"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 26642,
"question": "What league were most members of the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team from?",
"answer": "NHL",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "Exhibition game",
"paragraph_text": "The Flying Fathers, a Canadian group of Catholic priests, regularly toured North America playing exhibition hockey games for charity. One of the organization's founders, Les Costello, was a onetime NHL player who was ordained as a priest after retiring from professional hockey. Another prominent exhibition hockey team is the Buffalo Sabres Alumni Hockey Team, which is composed almost entirely of retired NHL players, the majority of whom (as the name suggests) played at least a portion of their career for the Buffalo Sabres.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 66233,
"question": "when does the new season of #1 start",
"answer": "October 3, 2018",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "2018–19 NHL season",
"paragraph_text": "The 2018 -- 19 NHL season will be the 102nd season of operation (101st season of play) of the National Hockey League. 31 teams will be competing in an 82 - game regular season. The regular season is scheduled to begin on October 3, 2018, and will end on April 6, 2019. The 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs will then begin a few days afterwards, with the Stanley Cup Finals held in early June.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_282 | Who is the mother of the father of Julia Murdock Smith? | [
"Lucy Mack Smith"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 124933,
"question": "What is the name of Julia Murdock Smith father?",
"answer": "Joseph Smith",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Julia Murdock Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Julia Murdock Smith Dixon Middleton (May 1, 1831 – September 12, 1880) was an early member of the Latter Day Saint movement and the eldest surviving child and only daughter of Joseph Smith and Emma Hale Smith. She was adopted by the Smiths.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 653666,
"question": "#1 >> mother",
"answer": "Lucy Mack Smith",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "History of Joseph Smith by His Mother",
"paragraph_text": "History of Joseph Smith by His Mother is a biography of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, according to his mother, Lucy Mack Smith. It was originally titled Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and His Progenitors for Many Generations and was published by Orson Pratt in Liverpool in 1853.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_283 | Who is the mother of the founder of Mormonism? | [
"Lucy Mack Smith"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 76402,
"question": "who founded the mormon faith in new york",
"answer": "Joseph Smith",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 18,
"title": "Mormonism",
"paragraph_text": "Mormonism is the predominant religious tradition of the Latter Day Saint movement of Restorationist Christianity. Joseph Smith founded the movement in Western New York in the 1820s. During the 1830s and 1840s, it distinguished itself from traditional Protestantism. Mormonism represents the faith taught by Smith in the 1840s. After he was killed in 1844, most Mormons followed Brigham Young on his westward journey to the area that became the Utah Territory, calling themselves The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints (LDS Church). Other sects include Mormon fundamentalism, which seeks to maintain practices and doctrines such as polygamy, and various other small independent denominations. The second - largest Latter Day Saint denomination, the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints, since 2001 called the Community of Christ, does not describe itself as ``Mormon '', but instead follows a Trinitarian Christian restorationist theology, and also considers itself Restorationist in terms of Latter Day Saint doctrine.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 653666,
"question": "#1 >> mother",
"answer": "Lucy Mack Smith",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "History of Joseph Smith by His Mother",
"paragraph_text": "History of Joseph Smith by His Mother is a biography of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, according to his mother, Lucy Mack Smith. It was originally titled Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and His Progenitors for Many Generations and was published by Orson Pratt in Liverpool in 1853.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_284 | Who was the mother of the person who found the sacred writings that became the Book of Mormon? | [
"Lucy Mack Smith"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 73717,
"question": "found gold plates engraved with sacred writings that became the book of mormon",
"answer": "Joseph Smith",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 17,
"title": "Golden plates",
"paragraph_text": "According to Latter Day Saint belief, the golden plates (also called the gold plates or in some 19th - century literature, the golden bible) are the source from which Joseph Smith said he translated the Book of Mormon, a sacred text of the faith. Some witnesses described the plates as weighing from 30 to 60 pounds (14 to 27 kg), being golden in color, and being composed of thin metallic pages engraved on both sides and bound with three D - shaped rings.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 653666,
"question": "#1 >> mother",
"answer": "Lucy Mack Smith",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 14,
"title": "History of Joseph Smith by His Mother",
"paragraph_text": "History of Joseph Smith by His Mother is a biography of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, according to his mother, Lucy Mack Smith. It was originally titled Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and His Progenitors for Many Generations and was published by Orson Pratt in Liverpool in 1853.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_285 | Who played the character in the Santa Clause 3 that has a series named after it that includes Frost at Christmas? | [
"Martin Short"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 252521,
"question": "Frost at Christmas >> part of the series",
"answer": "Jack Frost",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Frost at Christmas",
"paragraph_text": "Frost at Christmas (1984) is the first of the series of novels written by R. D. Wingfield, the creator of the character Detective Inspector Jack Frost, who is more famously known in the television series \"A Touch of Frost\", where the character is played by Sir David Jason. This novel was adapted into the TV episode 'Care and Protection', which was also the first in the series.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 80650,
"question": "who played #1 in the santa clause 3",
"answer": "Martin Short",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 16,
"title": "The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause",
"paragraph_text": "The film stars Tim Allen returning as Scott Calvin / Santa Claus and Martin Short as Jack Frost. Allen and Short had previously worked together in the 1997 Disney comedy feature film, Jungle 2 Jungle. Most of the supporting actors from the first two films reprise their roles, with the exception of David Krumholtz, who played Bernard the Arch - elf. As a result of his absence, Curtis (played by Spencer Breslin), who was previously the Assistant Head Elf, has now been promoted to Bernard's former position. Like the previous film, this film was shot in the Canadian cities of Vancouver and Calgary. This was Peter Boyle's final film to be released before he died from cancer one month after its release. (The 2008 film All Roads Lead Home would be released posthumously.)",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_286 | What former contestant did the performer of Addicted ask to marry him? | [
"Diana DeGarmo"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 538735,
"question": "Addicted >> performer",
"answer": "Ace Young",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "Addicted (Ace Young song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Addicted\" is Ace Young's second single, after his 2006 song \"Scattered\". \"Addicted\" is the first and only single from his self-titled 2008 CD. The song was written by Desmond Child and Andreas Carlsson, who was part of the team who wrote for the Backstreet Boys. It was produced by Desmond Child.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 3296,
"question": "What former contestant did #1 ask to marry him?",
"answer": "Diana DeGarmo",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "Phillips became the winner, beating Sanchez. Prior to the announcement of the winner, season five finalist Ace Young proposed marriage to season three runner-up Diana DeGarmo on stage – which she accepted.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_287 | What season was the performer of Addicted a part of? | [
"season five"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 538735,
"question": "Addicted >> performer",
"answer": "Ace Young",
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"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 6,
"title": "Addicted (Ace Young song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Addicted\" is Ace Young's second single, after his 2006 song \"Scattered\". \"Addicted\" is the first and only single from his self-titled 2008 CD. The song was written by Desmond Child and Andreas Carlsson, who was part of the team who wrote for the Backstreet Boys. It was produced by Desmond Child.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 3299,
"question": "Which season was #1 on?",
"answer": "season five",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "Phillips became the winner, beating Sanchez. Prior to the announcement of the winner, season five finalist Ace Young proposed marriage to season three runner-up Diana DeGarmo on stage – which she accepted.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_288 | What season was the performer of Blue Skies on? | [
"season three"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 811015,
"question": "Blue Skies >> performer",
"answer": "Diana DeGarmo",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "Blue Skies (Diana DeGarmo album)",
"paragraph_text": "Blue Skies is the debut album by American Idol runner-up Diana DeGarmo, released in December 7, 2004 on RCA Records. It debuted at number 52, selling 47,000 copies in its first week and currently 168,000 copies.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 3300,
"question": "Which season was #1 on?",
"answer": "season three",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "Phillips became the winner, beating Sanchez. Prior to the announcement of the winner, season five finalist Ace Young proposed marriage to season three runner-up Diana DeGarmo on stage – which she accepted.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_289 | Which season was the runner up of the third season of American Idol on? | [
"season three"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 3131,
"question": "Who was the runner up on the third season of American Idol?",
"answer": "Diana DeGarmo",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 7,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "The performance of \"Summertime\" by Barrino, later known simply as \"Fantasia\", at Top 8 was widely praised, and Simon Cowell considered it as his favorite Idol moment in the nine seasons he was on the show. Fantasia and Diana DeGarmo were the last two finalists, and Fantasia was crowned as the winner. Fantasia released as her coronation single \"I Believe\", a song co-written by season one finalist Tamyra Gray, and DeGarmo released \"Dreams\". Fantasia went on to gain some successes as a recording artist, while Hudson, who placed seventh, became the only Idol contestant so far to win both an Academy Award and a Grammy.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 3300,
"question": "Which season was #1 on?",
"answer": "season three",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "Phillips became the winner, beating Sanchez. Prior to the announcement of the winner, season five finalist Ace Young proposed marriage to season three runner-up Diana DeGarmo on stage – which she accepted.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_290 | who did the performer of Sings America play on young and restless? | [
"Snapper Foster"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 143915,
"question": "Whose performance is Sings America?",
"answer": "David Hasselhoff",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "Sings America",
"paragraph_text": "Sings America is an album released by David Hasselhoff in August 2004 (see 2004 in music). The album contains covers of songs originally made famous by artists such as Elvis Presley, The Beach Boys, Glen Campbell, Burt Bacharach and Madonna. The German release contains a bonus track, \"More Than Words Can Say\", which is the only original Hasselhoff composition on the album (written in conjunction with Wade Hubbard and Glenn Morrow).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 68489,
"question": "who did #1 play on young and restless",
"answer": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_text": "Snapper Foster is a fictional character on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless. An original character since the show's inception, the role was played by William Gray Espy from March 26, 1973 to July 1975, and David Hasselhoff from 1975 to May 1982. Espy briefly reprised the character from February 28, 2003 to March 5, 2003, and Hasselhoff briefly reprised the role from June 15 -- 21, 2010.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_291 | What country does team that Pa Amadou Gai is a member of play for? | [
"Senegal",
"SEN"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 593688,
"question": "Pa Amadou Gai >> member of sports team",
"answer": "ASC HLM",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "Pa Amadou Gai",
"paragraph_text": "Pa Amadou Gai (born June 18, 1984 in Bakau) is a Gambian soccer player who currently plays for ASC HLM,",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 292889,
"question": "#1 >> country",
"answer": "Senegal",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 0,
"title": "Stade de ASC HLM",
"paragraph_text": "Stade de ASC HLM is a multi-use stadium in Dakar, Senegal. It is currently used mostly for football matches and serves as a home ground of ASC HLM. The stadium holds 5,000 people.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_292 | Who did the performer from Night Rocker play on Young and Restless? | [
"Snapper Foster"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 598467,
"question": "Night Rocker >> performer",
"answer": "David Hasselhoff",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "Night Rocker",
"paragraph_text": "Night Rocker is the debut studio album by the American actor David Hasselhoff. It was released in January 1985 on Silver Blue Records, produced by record producer Joel Diamond.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 68489,
"question": "who did #1 play on young and restless",
"answer": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 12,
"title": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_text": "Snapper Foster is a fictional character on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless. An original character since the show's inception, the role was played by William Gray Espy from March 26, 1973 to July 1975, and David Hasselhoff from 1975 to May 1982. Espy briefly reprised the character from February 28, 2003 to March 5, 2003, and Hasselhoff briefly reprised the role from June 15 -- 21, 2010.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_293 | Who did the performer of Night Rocker play on Young and Restless? | [
"Snapper Foster"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 142842,
"question": "Which performer released Night Rocker?",
"answer": "David Hasselhoff",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Night Rocker",
"paragraph_text": "Night Rocker is the debut studio album by the American actor David Hasselhoff. It was released in January 1985 on Silver Blue Records, produced by record producer Joel Diamond.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 68489,
"question": "who did #1 play on young and restless",
"answer": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_text": "Snapper Foster is a fictional character on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless. An original character since the show's inception, the role was played by William Gray Espy from March 26, 1973 to July 1975, and David Hasselhoff from 1975 to May 1982. Espy briefly reprised the character from February 28, 2003 to March 5, 2003, and Hasselhoff briefly reprised the role from June 15 -- 21, 2010.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_294 | Who did the actor who played Michael Knight play on Young and Restless? | [
"Snapper Foster"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 230022,
"question": "Michael Knight >> performer",
"answer": "David Hasselhoff",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 3,
"title": "Michael Knight (Knight Rider)",
"paragraph_text": "Michael Knight is a fictional character and the protagonist of the 1980s television series \"Knight Rider\", played by David Hasselhoff. The character first appeared in the opening scenes as Michael Long, played by Larry Anderson in the beginning of the pilot.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 68489,
"question": "who did #1 play on young and restless",
"answer": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 13,
"title": "Snapper Foster",
"paragraph_text": "Snapper Foster is a fictional character on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless. An original character since the show's inception, the role was played by William Gray Espy from March 26, 1973 to July 1975, and David Hasselhoff from 1975 to May 1982. Espy briefly reprised the character from February 28, 2003 to March 5, 2003, and Hasselhoff briefly reprised the role from June 15 -- 21, 2010.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_295 | Who is the spouse of the person who voices Smokey the bear? | [
"Katharine Ross"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 78756,
"question": "who does the voice of smokey the bear",
"answer": "Sam Elliott",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 5,
"title": "Smokey Bear",
"paragraph_text": "Washington, D.C., radio station WMAL personality Jackson Weaver served as the primary voice representing Smokey until Weaver's death in October 1992. Others who have provided a voice to Smokey include Jim Cummings, Roger C. Carmel, Jack Angel, Los Angeles radio station KNX's George Walsh, and Gene Moss. In June 2008, the Forest Service launched a new series of public service announcements voiced by actor Sam Elliott, simultaneously giving Smokey a new visual design intended to appeal to young adults. Patrick Warburton provides the voice of an anonymous park ranger.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 198548,
"question": "#1 >> spouse",
"answer": "Katharine Ross",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 16,
"title": "Murder in Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Murder in Texas is a 1981 television film starring Katharine Ross, Sam Elliott, Farrah Fawcett, and Andy Griffith. The film was directed by William Hale, and was based on a true story; that was written for the TV screen by John McGreevey. It first aired on television in two parts on Sunday and Monday May 3-4, 1981.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_296 | Who is the wife of the actor of Grace's boyfriend in Frankie and Grace? | [
"Katharine Ross"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 47808,
"question": "who plays grace's boyfriend in frankie and grace",
"answer": "Sam Elliott",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 1,
"title": "Grace and Frankie",
"paragraph_text": "Casting announcements began in June 2014, with Martin Sheen cast in the role of Robert, Grace's husband. The following month, Sam Waterston was cast in the role of Sol, Frankie's husband. June Diane Raphael and Baron Vaughn were then added to the cast, with Raphael cast in the role of Brianna, Grace and Robert's elder daughter, who rebels against Grace's decorum. Vaughn signed onto the role of Nwabudike, Frankie and Sol's son. Shortly afterwards, Ethan Embry and Brooklyn Decker were cast in the remaining roles on the series. Embry joined in the role of Coyote, Frankie and Sol's recovering drug addicted son, while Decker signed onto the role of Mallory, Grace and Robert's younger daughter. In October 2015, it was announced Sam Elliott would appear in the second season as Grace's love interest. In April 2017, it was reported that Lisa Kudrow will appear in the fourth season as Sheree, Grace's manicurist. In February 2018, the same day as the fifth season was commissioned, RuPaul was confirmed to appear in the fifth season as a rival of Grace and Frankie.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 198548,
"question": "#1 >> spouse",
"answer": "Katharine Ross",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 11,
"title": "Murder in Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Murder in Texas is a 1981 television film starring Katharine Ross, Sam Elliott, Farrah Fawcett, and Andy Griffith. The film was directed by William Hale, and was based on a true story; that was written for the TV screen by John McGreevey. It first aired on television in two parts on Sunday and Monday May 3-4, 1981.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_297 | Who is the spouse of the person who played the sergeant major in We Were Soldiers? | [
"Katharine Ross"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 70584,
"question": "who played the sergeant major in we were soldiers",
"answer": "Sam Elliott",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 2,
"title": "Basil L. Plumley",
"paragraph_text": "Plumley was a prominent and central figure in the 1992 book We Were Soldiers Once... and Young by Lt. Gen Hal Moore and Joseph L. Galloway about the Battle of Ia Drang and was portrayed by actor Sam Elliott in the 2002 film adaption.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 198548,
"question": "#1 >> spouse",
"answer": "Katharine Ross",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 9,
"title": "Murder in Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Murder in Texas is a 1981 television film starring Katharine Ross, Sam Elliott, Farrah Fawcett, and Andy Griffith. The film was directed by William Hale, and was based on a true story; that was written for the TV screen by John McGreevey. It first aired on television in two parts on Sunday and Monday May 3-4, 1981.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_298 | Who is the spouse of the person who does the voice for Smokey the Bear? | [
"Katharine Ross"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 84172,
"question": "who does the voice for smokey the bear",
"answer": "Sam Elliott",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 19,
"title": "Smokey Bear",
"paragraph_text": "Washington, D.C., radio station WMAL personality Jackson Weaver served as the primary voice representing Smokey until Weaver's death in October 1992. Others who have provided a voice to Smokey include Jim Cummings, Roger C. Carmel, Jack Angel, Los Angeles radio station KNX's George Walsh, and Gene Moss. In June 2008, the Forest Service launched a new series of public service announcements voiced by actor Sam Elliott, simultaneously giving Smokey a new visual design intended to appeal to young adults. Patrick Warburton provides the voice of an anonymous park ranger.",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 198548,
"question": "#1 >> spouse",
"answer": "Katharine Ross",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 16,
"title": "Murder in Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Murder in Texas is a 1981 television film starring Katharine Ross, Sam Elliott, Farrah Fawcett, and Andy Griffith. The film was directed by William Hale, and was based on a true story; that was written for the TV screen by John McGreevey. It first aired on television in two parts on Sunday and Monday May 3-4, 1981.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
dev_299 | What award did the author of The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden receive? | [
"Pulitzer Prize for Drama"
] | {
"answerable": true,
"question_decomposition": [
{
"id": 415518,
"question": "The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden >> author",
"answer": "Thornton Wilder",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 15,
"title": "The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden",
"paragraph_text": "The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden is a one act play by American novelist and playwright Thornton Wilder written in 1931. It was first published in \"The Long Christmas Dinner and Other Plays in One Act\" (New York: Coward-McCann, 1931).",
"is_supporting": true
}
},
{
"id": 616002,
"question": "#1 >> award received",
"answer": "Pulitzer Prize for Drama",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10,
"support_paragraph": {
"idx": 10,
"title": "The Skin of Our Teeth",
"paragraph_text": "The Skin of Our Teeth is a play by Thornton Wilder which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. It opened on October 15, 1942, at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut, before moving to the Plymouth Theatre on Broadway on November 18, 1942. It was produced by Michael Myerberg and directed by Elia Kazan. The play is a three-part allegory about the life of mankind, centering on the Antrobus family of the fictional town of Excelsior, New Jersey. The original production starred Tallulah Bankhead, Fredric March, Florence Eldridge, and Montgomery Clift. Bankhead won a Variety Award for Best Actress and the New York Drama Critics Award for Best Actress of the Year for her role as Sabina. When she left the production in March 1943, she was replaced by Miriam Hopkins. Hopkins was in turn replaced by Gladys George. For two performances, while George was ill, Lizabeth Scott, who had been Bankhead's understudy, was called in to play the role. Scott then played the role for the production's run in Boston. Originally billed in New York as \"Elizabeth Scott\", she dropped the \"E\" before taking the part in Boston, and it became her breakthrough role.",
"is_supporting": true
}
}
]
} |
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