triplets
sequence | passage
stringlengths 654
2.68k
| label_str
stringlengths 5
48
| label
int64 0
68
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sequence | __index_level_0__
int64 2
103k
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[
"Taylor Swift",
"notable work",
"Red"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Taylor Swift<\e1> and <e2>Red<\e2>.
" I Knew You Were Trouble. "is a song recorded by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift for her fourth studio album, Red (2012). It was released on October 9, 2012, in the United States by Big Machine Records as the third promotional single from the album. Later, " I Knew You Were Trouble " was released as the third single from Red on November 27, 2012, in the United States. It was written by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, with the production handled by the latter two. " I Knew You Were Trouble " received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commended its mainstream appeal yet noted Swift's experimentation with dubstep as relatively limited. Due to strong digital sales, the song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, selling more than 416,000 copies within its first week ; it later peaked at number two in January 2013, blocked from the top spot by Bruno Marss " Locked Out of Heaven ". At the inaugural YouTube Music Awards in 2013, " I Knew You Were Trouble " won the award for YouTube phenomenon. The single has been certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The song had sold 5 million copies in the United States alone by 2014. | notable work | 33 | [
"Taylor Swift",
"Red"
] | 41,424 |
[
"Max Martin",
"notable work",
"Red"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Max Martin<\e1> and <e2>Red<\e2>.
" I Knew You Were Trouble. "is a song recorded by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift for her fourth studio album, Red (2012). It was released on October 9, 2012, in the United States by Big Machine Records as the third promotional single from the album. Later, " I Knew You Were Trouble " was released as the third single from Red on November 27, 2012, in the United States. It was written by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, with the production handled by the latter two. " I Knew You Were Trouble " received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commended its mainstream appeal yet noted Swift's experimentation with dubstep as relatively limited. Due to strong digital sales, the song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, selling more than 416,000 copies within its first week ; it later peaked at number two in January 2013, blocked from the top spot by Bruno Marss " Locked Out of Heaven ". At the inaugural YouTube Music Awards in 2013, " I Knew You Were Trouble " won the award for YouTube phenomenon. The single has been certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The song had sold 5 million copies in the United States alone by 2014. | notable work | 33 | [
"Max Martin",
"Red"
] | 41,425 |
[
"Bruno Marss",
"notable work",
"Locked Out of Heaven"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Bruno Marss<\e1> and <e2>Locked Out of Heaven<\e2>.
" I Knew You Were Trouble. "is a song recorded by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift for her fourth studio album, Red (2012). It was released on October 9, 2012, in the United States by Big Machine Records as the third promotional single from the album. Later, " I Knew You Were Trouble " was released as the third single from Red on November 27, 2012, in the United States. It was written by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, with the production handled by the latter two. " I Knew You Were Trouble " received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commended its mainstream appeal yet noted Swift's experimentation with dubstep as relatively limited. Due to strong digital sales, the song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, selling more than 416,000 copies within its first week ; it later peaked at number two in January 2013, blocked from the top spot by Bruno Marss " Locked Out of Heaven ". At the inaugural YouTube Music Awards in 2013, " I Knew You Were Trouble " won the award for YouTube phenomenon. The single has been certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The song had sold 5 million copies in the United States alone by 2014. | notable work | 33 | [
"Bruno Marss",
"Locked Out of Heaven"
] | 41,426 |
[
"Shellback",
"notable work",
"I Knew You Were Trouble"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Shellback<\e1> and <e2>I Knew You Were Trouble<\e2>.
" I Knew You Were Trouble. "is a song recorded by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift for her fourth studio album, Red (2012). It was released on October 9, 2012, in the United States by Big Machine Records as the third promotional single from the album. Later, " I Knew You Were Trouble " was released as the third single from Red on November 27, 2012, in the United States. It was written by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, with the production handled by the latter two. " I Knew You Were Trouble " received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commended its mainstream appeal yet noted Swift's experimentation with dubstep as relatively limited. Due to strong digital sales, the song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, selling more than 416,000 copies within its first week ; it later peaked at number two in January 2013, blocked from the top spot by Bruno Marss " Locked Out of Heaven ". At the inaugural YouTube Music Awards in 2013, " I Knew You Were Trouble " won the award for YouTube phenomenon. The single has been certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The song had sold 5 million copies in the United States alone by 2014. | notable work | 33 | [
"Shellback",
"I Knew You Were Trouble"
] | 41,427 |
[
"Swift",
"notable work",
"I Knew You Were Trouble"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Swift<\e1> and <e2>I Knew You Were Trouble<\e2>.
" I Knew You Were Trouble. "is a song recorded by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift for her fourth studio album, Red (2012). It was released on October 9, 2012, in the United States by Big Machine Records as the third promotional single from the album. Later, " I Knew You Were Trouble " was released as the third single from Red on November 27, 2012, in the United States. It was written by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, with the production handled by the latter two. " I Knew You Were Trouble " received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commended its mainstream appeal yet noted Swift's experimentation with dubstep as relatively limited. Due to strong digital sales, the song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, selling more than 416,000 copies within its first week ; it later peaked at number two in January 2013, blocked from the top spot by Bruno Marss " Locked Out of Heaven ". At the inaugural YouTube Music Awards in 2013, " I Knew You Were Trouble " won the award for YouTube phenomenon. The single has been certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The song had sold 5 million copies in the United States alone by 2014. | notable work | 33 | [
"Swift",
"I Knew You Were Trouble"
] | 41,428 |
[
"Swift",
"notable work",
"Red"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Swift<\e1> and <e2>Red<\e2>.
" I Knew You Were Trouble. "is a song recorded by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift for her fourth studio album, Red (2012). It was released on October 9, 2012, in the United States by Big Machine Records as the third promotional single from the album. Later, " I Knew You Were Trouble " was released as the third single from Red on November 27, 2012, in the United States. It was written by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, with the production handled by the latter two. " I Knew You Were Trouble " received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commended its mainstream appeal yet noted Swift's experimentation with dubstep as relatively limited. Due to strong digital sales, the song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States, selling more than 416,000 copies within its first week ; it later peaked at number two in January 2013, blocked from the top spot by Bruno Marss " Locked Out of Heaven ". At the inaugural YouTube Music Awards in 2013, " I Knew You Were Trouble " won the award for YouTube phenomenon. The single has been certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The song had sold 5 million copies in the United States alone by 2014. | notable work | 33 | [
"Swift",
"Red"
] | 41,429 |
[
"Ceduna",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australia"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Ceduna<\e1> and <e2>South Australia<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Ceduna",
"South Australia"
] | 41,670 |
[
"Ceduna",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australian"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Ceduna<\e1> and <e2>South Australian<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Ceduna",
"South Australian"
] | 41,672 |
[
"Nullabor",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australia"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Nullabor<\e1> and <e2>South Australia<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Nullabor",
"South Australia"
] | 41,683 |
[
"Nullabor",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australian"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Nullabor<\e1> and <e2>South Australian<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Nullabor",
"South Australian"
] | 41,685 |
[
"GSACUS",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australian"
] | Find the relation between <e1>GSACUS<\e1> and <e2>South Australian<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"GSACUS",
"South Australian"
] | 41,697 |
[
"Great Australian Bight",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australia"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Great Australian Bight<\e1> and <e2>South Australia<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Great Australian Bight",
"South Australia"
] | 41,701 |
[
"Great Australian Bight",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Victoria"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Great Australian Bight<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Great Australian Bight",
"Victoria"
] | 41,703 |
[
"GSACUS",
"located on terrain feature",
"Great Australian Bight"
] | Find the relation between <e1>GSACUS<\e1> and <e2>Great Australian Bight<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located on terrain feature | 65 | [
"GSACUS",
"Great Australian Bight"
] | 41,704 |
[
"GSACUS",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Victoria"
] | Find the relation between <e1>GSACUS<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"GSACUS",
"Victoria"
] | 41,705 |
[
"Great Australian Bight",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"South Australian"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Great Australian Bight<\e1> and <e2>South Australian<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Great Australian Bight",
"South Australian"
] | 41,706 |
[
"Great Australian Bight",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Western Australia"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Great Australian Bight<\e1> and <e2>Western Australia<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Great Australian Bight",
"Western Australia"
] | 41,707 |
[
"GSACUS",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Tasmania"
] | Find the relation between <e1>GSACUS<\e1> and <e2>Tasmania<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"GSACUS",
"Tasmania"
] | 41,708 |
[
"Portland",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Victoria"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Portland<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>.
The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System is a seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight, extending from Ceduna, South Australia, to Portland, Victoria, over a distance of about. Upwelling events occur in the austral summer (from November to May) when seasonal winds blow from the southeast. These winds blow parallel to the shoreline at certain areas of the coast, which forces coastal waters offshore via Ekman transport and draws up cold, nutrient - rich waters from the ocean floor. Because the deep water carries abundant nutrients up from the ocean floor, the upwelling area differs from the rest of the Great Australian Bight, especially the areas offshore of Western Australia and the Nullabor in South Australia, which are generally nutrient - poor. Every summer, the upwelling sustains a bountiful ecosystem that attracts blue whales and supports rich fisheries. The Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System (GSACUS) is Australia's only deep - reaching coastal upwelling system, with nutrient - enriched water stemming from depths exceeding. Recently, a new upwelling centre has been discovered on the western shelf of Tasmania. Since this new upwelling centre is located outside South Australian waters, the entire upwelling system should be rather called the Great Southern Australian Coastal Upwelling System. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Portland",
"Victoria"
] | 41,709 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"Windows"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>Windows<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"Windows"
] | 41,816 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"PlayStation 2"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>PlayStation 2<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"PlayStation 2"
] | 41,817 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"PlayStation Portable"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>PlayStation Portable<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"PlayStation Portable"
] | 41,818 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"publisher",
"Activision"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>Activision<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | publisher | 48 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"Activision"
] | 41,819 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"GameCube"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>GameCube<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"GameCube"
] | 41,820 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"N-Gage"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>N-Gage<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"N-Gage"
] | 41,821 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"Xbox"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>Xbox<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"Xbox"
] | 41,822 |
[
"Greatest Hits",
"platform",
"PlayStation 2"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Greatest Hits<\e1> and <e2>PlayStation 2<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"Greatest Hits",
"PlayStation 2"
] | 41,826 |
[
"X - Men",
"has part(s)",
"X - Men Legends"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men<\e1> and <e2>X - Men Legends<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | has part(s) | 10 | [
"X - Men",
"X - Men Legends"
] | 41,827 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"developer",
"Raven Software"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>Raven Software<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | developer | 54 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"Raven Software"
] | 41,829 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"platform",
"Xbox"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>Xbox<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"Xbox"
] | 41,830 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"follows",
"X - Men Legends"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>X - Men Legends<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | follows | 44 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"X - Men Legends"
] | 41,831 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"platform",
"GameCube"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>GameCube<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"GameCube"
] | 41,833 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"platform",
"N-Gage"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>N-Gage<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"N-Gage"
] | 41,834 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"publisher",
"Activision"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>Activision<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | publisher | 48 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"Activision"
] | 41,835 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"platform",
"PlayStation 2"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>PlayStation 2<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"PlayStation 2"
] | 41,836 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"developer",
"Raven Software"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>Raven Software<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | developer | 54 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"Raven Software"
] | 41,837 |
[
"X - Men",
"publisher",
"Activision"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men<\e1> and <e2>Activision<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | publisher | 48 | [
"X - Men",
"Activision"
] | 41,838 |
[
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"platform",
"Microsoft"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse<\e1> and <e2>Microsoft<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse",
"Microsoft"
] | 41,839 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"platform",
"Microsoft"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>Microsoft<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | platform | 53 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"Microsoft"
] | 41,840 |
[
"X - Men Legends",
"part of",
"X - Men"
] | Find the relation between <e1>X - Men Legends<\e1> and <e2>X - Men<\e2>.
X - Men Legends II : Rise of Apocalypse is an action role - playing game developed primarily by Raven Software and published by Activision. It is the follow up to 2004's X - Men Legends. It was released in September 2005 for the GameCube, Microsoft Windows, N - Gage, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Xbox. It is set after the events of X - Men Legends and features the mutant supervillain Apocalypse as the primary antagonist. The developers intended the game to have a greater sense of scale than its predecessor, and writers created a story where the villains known as the Brotherhood of Mutants would need to ally themselves with the heroic X - Men to defeat a greater threat. High quality cinematics were created by Blur Studio. Online multiplayer was also added. The game was well received by gaming critics on all platforms. Critics felt that the inclusion of online play, additional mutant powers, and a larger cast made the game an improvement over its predecessor. Some reviewers were critical of the game's voice acting and felt that the gameplay was repetitive. It sold enough copies to be added to the budget line known as PlayStation 2's Greatest Hits. | part of | 7 | [
"X - Men Legends",
"X - Men"
] | 41,842 |
[
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"member of sports team",
"SC Freiburg"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Çağlar Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>SC Freiburg<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of sports team | 39 | [
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"SC Freiburg"
] | 42,030 |
[
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"country of citizenship",
"Turkish"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Çağlar Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Turkish<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"Turkish"
] | 42,032 |
[
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"member of sports team",
"Leicester City"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Çağlar Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Leicester City<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of sports team | 39 | [
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"Leicester City"
] | 42,033 |
[
"Sait Altınordu",
"country of citizenship",
"Turkey"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Sait Altınordu<\e1> and <e2>Turkey<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"Sait Altınordu",
"Turkey"
] | 42,036 |
[
"Söyüncü",
"country of citizenship",
"Turkey"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Turkey<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"Söyüncü",
"Turkey"
] | 42,040 |
[
"Söyüncü",
"member of sports team",
"SC Freiburg"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>SC Freiburg<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of sports team | 39 | [
"Söyüncü",
"SC Freiburg"
] | 42,041 |
[
"Söyüncü",
"country of citizenship",
"Turkish"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Turkish<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"Söyüncü",
"Turkish"
] | 42,043 |
[
"Altınordu S.K.",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"İzmir"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Altınordu S.K.<\e1> and <e2>İzmir<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Altınordu S.K.",
"İzmir"
] | 42,046 |
[
"Sait Altınordu",
"member of",
"Altınordu S.K."
] | Find the relation between <e1>Sait Altınordu<\e1> and <e2>Altınordu S.K.<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of | 24 | [
"Sait Altınordu",
"Altınordu S.K."
] | 42,048 |
[
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"member of",
"Altınordu S.K."
] | Find the relation between <e1>Çağlar Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Altınordu S.K.<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of | 24 | [
"Çağlar Söyüncü",
"Altınordu S.K."
] | 42,052 |
[
"Söyüncü",
"member of",
"Altınordu S.K."
] | Find the relation between <e1>Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Altınordu S.K.<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of | 24 | [
"Söyüncü",
"Altınordu S.K."
] | 42,053 |
[
"Söyüncü",
"member of",
"Leicester City"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Söyüncü<\e1> and <e2>Leicester City<\e2>.
Çağlar Söyüncü (born 23 May 1996) is a Turkish professional footballer, who plays as a defender for Premier League side Leicester City and the Turkish national team. Joining SC Freiburg in 2016 Bundesliga summer transfer window, he is the first Turkish footballer who made a transfer to Bundesliga directly from TFF First League, the second highest professional level football league of Turkey. Making his senior national team debut in 2016, Söyüncü is the first Altınordu S.K.player called up to Turkey national football team after 78 years, since Sait Altınordu, the iconic player of the club, was selected in 1937. He is also the first player called up to national team from any İzmir - based football clubs since 1997. | member of | 24 | [
"Söyüncü",
"Leicester City"
] | 42,054 |
[
"William James Wallace",
"educated at",
"Syracuse University"
] | Find the relation between <e1>William James Wallace<\e1> and <e2>Syracuse University<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | educated at | 25 | [
"William James Wallace",
"Syracuse University"
] | 42,212 |
[
"William James Wallace",
"educated at",
"Hamilton College"
] | Find the relation between <e1>William James Wallace<\e1> and <e2>Hamilton College<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | educated at | 25 | [
"William James Wallace",
"Hamilton College"
] | 42,213 |
[
"William James Wallace",
"country of citizenship",
"the United States"
] | Find the relation between <e1>William James Wallace<\e1> and <e2>the United States<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"William James Wallace",
"the United States"
] | 42,216 |
[
"the United States",
"head of government",
"Ulysses S. Grant"
] | Find the relation between <e1>the United States<\e1> and <e2>Ulysses S. Grant<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | head of government | 0 | [
"the United States",
"Ulysses S. Grant"
] | 42,226 |
[
"the United States",
"head of government",
"Chester A. Arthur"
] | Find the relation between <e1>the United States<\e1> and <e2>Chester A. Arthur<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | head of government | 0 | [
"the United States",
"Chester A. Arthur"
] | 42,227 |
[
"Syracuse University",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Syracuse"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Syracuse University<\e1> and <e2>Syracuse<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Syracuse University",
"Syracuse"
] | 42,229 |
[
"William James Wallace",
"employer",
"United States District Court for the Northern District of New York"
] | Find the relation between <e1>William James Wallace<\e1> and <e2>United States District Court for the Northern District of New York<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | employer | 38 | [
"William James Wallace",
"United States District Court for the Northern District of New York"
] | 42,233 |
[
"United States District Court for the Northern District of New York",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"New York"
] | Find the relation between <e1>United States District Court for the Northern District of New York<\e1> and <e2>New York<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"United States District Court for the Northern District of New York",
"New York"
] | 42,235 |
[
"Syracuse",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"New York"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Syracuse<\e1> and <e2>New York<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Syracuse",
"New York"
] | 42,237 |
[
"United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York",
"instance of",
"United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit"
] | Find the relation between <e1>United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York<\e1> and <e2>United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | instance of | 2 | [
"United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York",
"United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit"
] | 42,239 |
[
"William James Wallace",
"place of birth",
"New York"
] | Find the relation between <e1>William James Wallace<\e1> and <e2>New York<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | place of birth | 19 | [
"William James Wallace",
"New York"
] | 42,241 |
[
"Syracuse University",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"New York"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Syracuse University<\e1> and <e2>New York<\e2>.
William James Wallace (April 14, 1837 – March 11, 1917) was a federal judge in the United States. A native of Syracuse, New York, Wallace attended Syracuse University and obtained a law degree from Hamilton College. He spent 15 years as a lawyer in private practice in Syracuse before serving as mayor of that city in 1873 – 74. In 1874, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wallace as a judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur promoted Wallace to the United States Circuit Court for the Second Circuit in New York. In 1891, the Evarts Act converted Wallace's judgeship to a position on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Wallace retired from the Second Circuit in 1907 and returned to private practice in Syracuse until his death ten years later. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Syracuse University",
"New York"
] | 42,250 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"employer",
"University of Oxford"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>University of Oxford<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | employer | 38 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"University of Oxford"
] | 42,434 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"educated at",
"Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | educated at | 25 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich"
] | 42,438 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"member of",
"European Academy of Sciences and Arts"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>European Academy of Sciences and Arts<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | member of | 24 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"European Academy of Sciences and Arts"
] | 42,439 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"educated at",
"Cambridge"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Cambridge<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | educated at | 25 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Cambridge"
] | 42,440 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"member of",
"Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | member of | 24 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities"
] | 42,444 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"employer",
"NYU"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>NYU<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | employer | 38 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"NYU"
] | 42,446 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"employer",
"Harvard"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Harvard<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | employer | 38 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Harvard"
] | 42,447 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Germany<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Germany"
] | 42,448 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"employer",
"Tulane"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Tulane<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | employer | 38 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Tulane"
] | 42,451 |
[
"University of Oxford",
"has part(s)",
"Faculty of Law"
] | Find the relation between <e1>University of Oxford<\e1> and <e2>Faculty of Law<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | has part(s) | 10 | [
"University of Oxford",
"Faculty of Law"
] | 42,452 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"employer",
"Stanford"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>Stanford<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | employer | 38 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"Stanford"
] | 42,453 |
[
"Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Berlin"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities<\e1> and <e2>Berlin<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities",
"Berlin"
] | 42,454 |
[
"Faculty of Law",
"part of",
"University of Oxford"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Faculty of Law<\e1> and <e2>University of Oxford<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | part of | 7 | [
"Faculty of Law",
"University of Oxford"
] | 42,455 |
[
"Institute for Advanced Study",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Berlin"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Institute for Advanced Study<\e1> and <e2>Berlin<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Institute for Advanced Study",
"Berlin"
] | 42,459 |
[
"Eidenmüller",
"member of",
"St. Hugh"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Eidenmüller<\e1> and <e2>St. Hugh<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | member of | 24 | [
"Eidenmüller",
"St. Hugh"
] | 42,461 |
[
"Institute for Advanced Study",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Germany"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Institute for Advanced Study<\e1> and <e2>Germany<\e2>.
Horst Eidenmüller (born 23 October 1963) is the Freshfields Professor of Commercial Law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St. Hugh ’s. Eidenmüller was born in Munich, Germany. He is a graduate of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and of Cambridge (LLM 1989). Prior to joining Oxford, Eidenmüller held professorships at the universities of Münster (1999 - 2003) and Munich (2003 - 2015). He was visiting professor at Cambridge (2007), Oxford (2009 - 2014), Harvard (2011), Tulane (2011), NYU (2013 and 2015), and Stanford (2015), as well as fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2008 - 2009). Eidenmüller is a member of the Berlin - Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (since 2008) and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (since 2016). Eidenmüller ’s research focuses on commercial contracts, company law, insolvency law, and alternative dispute resolution. He is known for economic and empirical studies in these fields. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Institute for Advanced Study",
"Germany"
] | 42,465 |
[
"Goght",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Kotayk Province"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Goght<\e1> and <e2>Kotayk Province<\e2>.
Goght (; formerly Goghot) is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located on the right bank of the upper - Azat River. It is known from 13th - century manuscripts as Goghot. It is located near Garni and sits along the road leading to Geghard Monastery. The village has a small ruined basilica from the 17th or 18th century located straight down a dirt road from the main square. Some khachkars are built into the exterior walls of the church, as well as at its altar. Goght sits overlooking a large gorge and upon a promontory on the other side is the 11th- to 13th - century monastery of Havuts Tar. It may be reached by foot from the town, but more easily from Garni via the Garni Gorge. The community has a school, kindergarten, house of culture, and a library. The local economy is heavily dependent on agriculture, based primarily on grain farming, orchard cultivation, and cattle - breeding. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Goght",
"Kotayk Province"
] | 42,751 |
[
"Garni",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Kotayk Province"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Garni<\e1> and <e2>Kotayk Province<\e2>.
Goght (; formerly Goghot) is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located on the right bank of the upper - Azat River. It is known from 13th - century manuscripts as Goghot. It is located near Garni and sits along the road leading to Geghard Monastery. The village has a small ruined basilica from the 17th or 18th century located straight down a dirt road from the main square. Some khachkars are built into the exterior walls of the church, as well as at its altar. Goght sits overlooking a large gorge and upon a promontory on the other side is the 11th- to 13th - century monastery of Havuts Tar. It may be reached by foot from the town, but more easily from Garni via the Garni Gorge. The community has a school, kindergarten, house of culture, and a library. The local economy is heavily dependent on agriculture, based primarily on grain farming, orchard cultivation, and cattle - breeding. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Garni",
"Kotayk Province"
] | 42,756 |
[
"Garni Gorge",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Garni"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Garni Gorge<\e1> and <e2>Garni<\e2>.
Goght (; formerly Goghot) is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located on the right bank of the upper - Azat River. It is known from 13th - century manuscripts as Goghot. It is located near Garni and sits along the road leading to Geghard Monastery. The village has a small ruined basilica from the 17th or 18th century located straight down a dirt road from the main square. Some khachkars are built into the exterior walls of the church, as well as at its altar. Goght sits overlooking a large gorge and upon a promontory on the other side is the 11th- to 13th - century monastery of Havuts Tar. It may be reached by foot from the town, but more easily from Garni via the Garni Gorge. The community has a school, kindergarten, house of culture, and a library. The local economy is heavily dependent on agriculture, based primarily on grain farming, orchard cultivation, and cattle - breeding. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Garni Gorge",
"Garni"
] | 42,759 |
[
"Azat River",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Kotayk Province"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Azat River<\e1> and <e2>Kotayk Province<\e2>.
Goght (; formerly Goghot) is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located on the right bank of the upper - Azat River. It is known from 13th - century manuscripts as Goghot. It is located near Garni and sits along the road leading to Geghard Monastery. The village has a small ruined basilica from the 17th or 18th century located straight down a dirt road from the main square. Some khachkars are built into the exterior walls of the church, as well as at its altar. Goght sits overlooking a large gorge and upon a promontory on the other side is the 11th- to 13th - century monastery of Havuts Tar. It may be reached by foot from the town, but more easily from Garni via the Garni Gorge. The community has a school, kindergarten, house of culture, and a library. The local economy is heavily dependent on agriculture, based primarily on grain farming, orchard cultivation, and cattle - breeding. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Azat River",
"Kotayk Province"
] | 42,760 |
[
"Garni Gorge",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Kotayk Province"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Garni Gorge<\e1> and <e2>Kotayk Province<\e2>.
Goght (; formerly Goghot) is a village in the Kotayk Province of Armenia, located on the right bank of the upper - Azat River. It is known from 13th - century manuscripts as Goghot. It is located near Garni and sits along the road leading to Geghard Monastery. The village has a small ruined basilica from the 17th or 18th century located straight down a dirt road from the main square. Some khachkars are built into the exterior walls of the church, as well as at its altar. Goght sits overlooking a large gorge and upon a promontory on the other side is the 11th- to 13th - century monastery of Havuts Tar. It may be reached by foot from the town, but more easily from Garni via the Garni Gorge. The community has a school, kindergarten, house of culture, and a library. The local economy is heavily dependent on agriculture, based primarily on grain farming, orchard cultivation, and cattle - breeding. | located in the administrative territorial entity | 3 | [
"Garni Gorge",
"Kotayk Province"
] | 42,767 |
[
"Peder Anker",
"country of citizenship",
"Sweden"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Peder Anker<\e1> and <e2>Sweden<\e2>.
The Riksakten was the 1815 Act of Union that regulated the terms of the constitutional personal union between Sweden and Norway established in 1814. The fundamental documents of the union were only the Convention of Moss and the revised Norwegian constitution of 4 November 1814. The Norwegian constitution had been adapted to the union before it was entered into, but the Swedish one was never adjusted correspondingly. The conservative Swedish Riksdag had not allowed the Swedish constitution of 1809 to be revised. Therefore, a bilateral treaty had to be negotiated in order to clarify procedures for treating constitutional questions that had to be decided jointly by both governments. The Act of Union (Riksakten) was negotiated during the spring of 1815, with prime minister Peder Anker leading the Norwegian delegation. The treaty contained twelve articles dealing with the king's authority, the relationship between the two legislatures, how the executive power was to be exercised if the king should die before the crown prince had attained majority, and the relationship between the cabinets. It also confirmed the practice of treating questions of foreign policy in the Swedish cabinet, with the Norwegian prime minister present. Vital questions pertaining to the Union were to be treated in a joint cabinet meeting, where all the Norwegian ministers in Stockholm would be present. The Act was passed by the Storting 31 July 1815 and by the Riksdag 6 August, and sanctioned by the king on 15 August. In Sweden the Act of Union was a set of provisions under regular law, but the Norwegian Storting gave it constitutional status, so that its provisions could only be revised according to the procedures laid down in the constitution. The Riksakten contained 12 paragraphs : | country of citizenship | 29 | [
"Peder Anker",
"Sweden"
] | 42,814 |
[
"Norwegian",
"head of government",
"Peder Anker"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Norwegian<\e1> and <e2>Peder Anker<\e2>.
The Riksakten was the 1815 Act of Union that regulated the terms of the constitutional personal union between Sweden and Norway established in 1814. The fundamental documents of the union were only the Convention of Moss and the revised Norwegian constitution of 4 November 1814. The Norwegian constitution had been adapted to the union before it was entered into, but the Swedish one was never adjusted correspondingly. The conservative Swedish Riksdag had not allowed the Swedish constitution of 1809 to be revised. Therefore, a bilateral treaty had to be negotiated in order to clarify procedures for treating constitutional questions that had to be decided jointly by both governments. The Act of Union (Riksakten) was negotiated during the spring of 1815, with prime minister Peder Anker leading the Norwegian delegation. The treaty contained twelve articles dealing with the king's authority, the relationship between the two legislatures, how the executive power was to be exercised if the king should die before the crown prince had attained majority, and the relationship between the cabinets. It also confirmed the practice of treating questions of foreign policy in the Swedish cabinet, with the Norwegian prime minister present. Vital questions pertaining to the Union were to be treated in a joint cabinet meeting, where all the Norwegian ministers in Stockholm would be present. The Act was passed by the Storting 31 July 1815 and by the Riksdag 6 August, and sanctioned by the king on 15 August. In Sweden the Act of Union was a set of provisions under regular law, but the Norwegian Storting gave it constitutional status, so that its provisions could only be revised according to the procedures laid down in the constitution. The Riksakten contained 12 paragraphs : | head of government | 0 | [
"Norwegian",
"Peder Anker"
] | 42,817 |
[
"Norway",
"head of government",
"Peder Anker"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Norway<\e1> and <e2>Peder Anker<\e2>.
The Riksakten was the 1815 Act of Union that regulated the terms of the constitutional personal union between Sweden and Norway established in 1814. The fundamental documents of the union were only the Convention of Moss and the revised Norwegian constitution of 4 November 1814. The Norwegian constitution had been adapted to the union before it was entered into, but the Swedish one was never adjusted correspondingly. The conservative Swedish Riksdag had not allowed the Swedish constitution of 1809 to be revised. Therefore, a bilateral treaty had to be negotiated in order to clarify procedures for treating constitutional questions that had to be decided jointly by both governments. The Act of Union (Riksakten) was negotiated during the spring of 1815, with prime minister Peder Anker leading the Norwegian delegation. The treaty contained twelve articles dealing with the king's authority, the relationship between the two legislatures, how the executive power was to be exercised if the king should die before the crown prince had attained majority, and the relationship between the cabinets. It also confirmed the practice of treating questions of foreign policy in the Swedish cabinet, with the Norwegian prime minister present. Vital questions pertaining to the Union were to be treated in a joint cabinet meeting, where all the Norwegian ministers in Stockholm would be present. The Act was passed by the Storting 31 July 1815 and by the Riksdag 6 August, and sanctioned by the king on 15 August. In Sweden the Act of Union was a set of provisions under regular law, but the Norwegian Storting gave it constitutional status, so that its provisions could only be revised according to the procedures laid down in the constitution. The Riksakten contained 12 paragraphs : | head of government | 0 | [
"Norway",
"Peder Anker"
] | 42,821 |
[
"1815 Act of Union",
"applies to jurisdiction",
"Sweden"
] | Find the relation between <e1>1815 Act of Union<\e1> and <e2>Sweden<\e2>.
The Riksakten was the 1815 Act of Union that regulated the terms of the constitutional personal union between Sweden and Norway established in 1814. The fundamental documents of the union were only the Convention of Moss and the revised Norwegian constitution of 4 November 1814. The Norwegian constitution had been adapted to the union before it was entered into, but the Swedish one was never adjusted correspondingly. The conservative Swedish Riksdag had not allowed the Swedish constitution of 1809 to be revised. Therefore, a bilateral treaty had to be negotiated in order to clarify procedures for treating constitutional questions that had to be decided jointly by both governments. The Act of Union (Riksakten) was negotiated during the spring of 1815, with prime minister Peder Anker leading the Norwegian delegation. The treaty contained twelve articles dealing with the king's authority, the relationship between the two legislatures, how the executive power was to be exercised if the king should die before the crown prince had attained majority, and the relationship between the cabinets. It also confirmed the practice of treating questions of foreign policy in the Swedish cabinet, with the Norwegian prime minister present. Vital questions pertaining to the Union were to be treated in a joint cabinet meeting, where all the Norwegian ministers in Stockholm would be present. The Act was passed by the Storting 31 July 1815 and by the Riksdag 6 August, and sanctioned by the king on 15 August. In Sweden the Act of Union was a set of provisions under regular law, but the Norwegian Storting gave it constitutional status, so that its provisions could only be revised according to the procedures laid down in the constitution. The Riksakten contained 12 paragraphs : | applies to jurisdiction | 62 | [
"1815 Act of Union",
"Sweden"
] | 42,828 |
[
"Convention of Moss",
"country",
"Norway"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Convention of Moss<\e1> and <e2>Norway<\e2>.
The Riksakten was the 1815 Act of Union that regulated the terms of the constitutional personal union between Sweden and Norway established in 1814. The fundamental documents of the union were only the Convention of Moss and the revised Norwegian constitution of 4 November 1814. The Norwegian constitution had been adapted to the union before it was entered into, but the Swedish one was never adjusted correspondingly. The conservative Swedish Riksdag had not allowed the Swedish constitution of 1809 to be revised. Therefore, a bilateral treaty had to be negotiated in order to clarify procedures for treating constitutional questions that had to be decided jointly by both governments. The Act of Union (Riksakten) was negotiated during the spring of 1815, with prime minister Peder Anker leading the Norwegian delegation. The treaty contained twelve articles dealing with the king's authority, the relationship between the two legislatures, how the executive power was to be exercised if the king should die before the crown prince had attained majority, and the relationship between the cabinets. It also confirmed the practice of treating questions of foreign policy in the Swedish cabinet, with the Norwegian prime minister present. Vital questions pertaining to the Union were to be treated in a joint cabinet meeting, where all the Norwegian ministers in Stockholm would be present. The Act was passed by the Storting 31 July 1815 and by the Riksdag 6 August, and sanctioned by the king on 15 August. In Sweden the Act of Union was a set of provisions under regular law, but the Norwegian Storting gave it constitutional status, so that its provisions could only be revised according to the procedures laid down in the constitution. The Riksakten contained 12 paragraphs : | country | 4 | [
"Convention of Moss",
"Norway"
] | 42,834 |
[
"Riksakten",
"applies to jurisdiction",
"Sweden"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Riksakten<\e1> and <e2>Sweden<\e2>.
The Riksakten was the 1815 Act of Union that regulated the terms of the constitutional personal union between Sweden and Norway established in 1814. The fundamental documents of the union were only the Convention of Moss and the revised Norwegian constitution of 4 November 1814. The Norwegian constitution had been adapted to the union before it was entered into, but the Swedish one was never adjusted correspondingly. The conservative Swedish Riksdag had not allowed the Swedish constitution of 1809 to be revised. Therefore, a bilateral treaty had to be negotiated in order to clarify procedures for treating constitutional questions that had to be decided jointly by both governments. The Act of Union (Riksakten) was negotiated during the spring of 1815, with prime minister Peder Anker leading the Norwegian delegation. The treaty contained twelve articles dealing with the king's authority, the relationship between the two legislatures, how the executive power was to be exercised if the king should die before the crown prince had attained majority, and the relationship between the cabinets. It also confirmed the practice of treating questions of foreign policy in the Swedish cabinet, with the Norwegian prime minister present. Vital questions pertaining to the Union were to be treated in a joint cabinet meeting, where all the Norwegian ministers in Stockholm would be present. The Act was passed by the Storting 31 July 1815 and by the Riksdag 6 August, and sanctioned by the king on 15 August. In Sweden the Act of Union was a set of provisions under regular law, but the Norwegian Storting gave it constitutional status, so that its provisions could only be revised according to the procedures laid down in the constitution. The Riksakten contained 12 paragraphs : | applies to jurisdiction | 62 | [
"Riksakten",
"Sweden"
] | 42,835 |
[
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"part of",
"Central Asia"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Republic of Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Central Asia<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | part of | 7 | [
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"Central Asia"
] | 43,042 |
[
"Kazakhstan",
"part of",
"Central Asia"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Central Asia<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | part of | 7 | [
"Kazakhstan",
"Central Asia"
] | 43,045 |
[
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"head of government",
"Nursultan Nazarbayev"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Republic of Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Nursultan Nazarbayev<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | head of government | 0 | [
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"Nursultan Nazarbayev"
] | 43,048 |
[
"Kazakhstan",
"member of",
"Eurasian Economic Union"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Eurasian Economic Union<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | member of | 24 | [
"Kazakhstan",
"Eurasian Economic Union"
] | 43,049 |
[
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"member of",
"Eurasian Economic Union"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Republic of Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Eurasian Economic Union<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | member of | 24 | [
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"Eurasian Economic Union"
] | 43,050 |
[
"Kazakhstan",
"head of government",
"Nursultan Nazarbayev"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Nursultan Nazarbayev<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | head of government | 0 | [
"Kazakhstan",
"Nursultan Nazarbayev"
] | 43,055 |
[
"On the Astana International Financial Centre",
"country",
"Kazakhstan"
] | Find the relation between <e1>On the Astana International Financial Centre<\e1> and <e2>Kazakhstan<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | country | 4 | [
"On the Astana International Financial Centre",
"Kazakhstan"
] | 43,058 |
[
"Kazakhstan",
"capital",
"Astana"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Astana<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | capital | 1 | [
"Kazakhstan",
"Astana"
] | 43,059 |
[
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"capital",
"Astana"
] | Find the relation between <e1>Republic of Kazakhstan<\e1> and <e2>Astana<\e2>.
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018. On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “ 100 Concrete Steps ” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country ’s ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050. As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure. The Constitutional Law " On the Astana International Financial Centre " approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants. The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe. | capital | 1 | [
"Republic of Kazakhstan",
"Astana"
] | 43,060 |
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