source
stringclasses 6
values | term
stringlengths 1
42
| quantifier_frequency
stringclasses 6
values | quantifier_number
stringclasses 13
values | generic_sentence
stringlengths 10
100
| score
float64 0.23
1
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) quill feathers. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) rib cages. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) second joints. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) sections. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) skulls. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) sterna. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) talons. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) vacuoles. | 1 |
||
WordNet3.0 | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have (part) wishbones. | 1 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have a third eyelid to help protect their eyes from debris while drilling into trees. | 0.807974 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have a unique form of communication, called drumming. | 0.607631 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have bones. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have chisel-like beaks for searching under tree bark to find insects. | 0.803015 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have definite economic importance. | 0.267993 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have feathers. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have feet. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have four toes - two facing forward and two facing back. | 0.784244 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have right stuff. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have short legs. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have short strong legs. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have special feet. | 0.513894 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have sticky tongues. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have stiff tail feathers which act as a brace for moving along vertical tree trunks. | 0.796343 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have strong, straight, chisel-like bills for drilling into wood to catch insects. | 0.820321 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have stuff. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have tail feathers. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have tails. | 1 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have to protect themselves from flying wood particles. | 0.612072 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have tongues. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have touch-sensitive cells at the tip of the tongue. | 0.807598 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have white feathers. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers have wings. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers hollow out nests in old trees decayed by the activity of such fungi as shelf fungus. | 0.795269 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers inhabit forest woodlands. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers inhabit orchards. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers inhabit woodlands. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers just use the wood chips at the bottom of the nest. | 0.45152 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers lack the syrinx, or voice box, that characterizes songbirds. | 0.537488 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers like to eat bark beetle larvae. | 0.784351 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers live in areas. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers live in colonies, which use the same storage trees year after year. | 0.793209 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers live in every continent except for polar regions, Australia, and Madagascar. | 0.714187 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers live in neighborhoods. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers look for their food on tree trunks. | 0.639123 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers make holes in houses for two basic reasons. | 0.303727 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers make nests. | 1 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers make new nest cavities in trees each year, which are later used by many birds. | 0.708705 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers make noise. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers meet the nesting challenge by gouging cavities in the trunks of dead trees. | 0.338247 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers nest in cavities. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers nest in holes. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers nest in the riverine trees. | 0.767619 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers nest in tree cavities, particularly in dead standing trees. | 0.829538 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers nest in trees. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers occasionally drill on houses to obtain insects in the wood. | 0.726719 |
||
SimpleWikipedia | woodpecker | Woodpeckers operate mainly on tree trunks, staying in place propped up by their stiff tail feathers. | 0.756181 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers peck holes in the saguaro cactus to make their nests in it. | 0.679681 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers peck holes in trees to get at insect food. | 0.693503 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers pecking to drum or to make cavities - Woodpeckers also peck on house siding to drum. | 0.328679 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers play an important part in Alaska's forest ecosystems. | 0.459604 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers prefer habitats. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers prefer large trees. | 1 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers prefer trees. | 1 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers primarily eat insects, along with fruit, acorns and nuts. | 0.77135 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers probe into tree holes with their tongues to feel for insects. | 0.761929 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers rely on trees for food. | 0.687683 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers remove the outer bark from infested trees to feed on the larvae. | 0.768295 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers riddle the wood with holes searching for the immature stages of carpenter bees. | 0.564164 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers roost and nest in cavities. | 0.816395 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers spend most of their time spiralling up tree trunks searching for insects. | 0.708219 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use bills. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use resonant undecayed portions of snags as drumming sites for territorial signals. | 0.477332 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use snags both for feeding and for nesting. | 0.681657 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use snags for drumming, nesting, roosting, and feeding. | 0.703706 |
||
TupleKB | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use tails. | 1 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use their beaks to sing and drum on trees. | 0.779327 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use their long bills to dig out and eat insects living deep inside tree bark. | 0.83506 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use their long, sticky tongues to pierce the ant's nest and eat ant eggs. | 0.822406 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use their long, thin beaks to search for insects in tree bark. | 0.795064 |
||
ARC | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use their stiff tail as a prop while climbing in order to balance themselves. | 0.665884 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | Woodpeckers use their tail for support when they peck tree trunks in search of insects. | 0.811011 |
||
Waterloo | woodpecker | sometimes | Woodpeckers sometimes use telephone poles in the place of dead trees. | 0.535894 |
|
Waterloo | woodpecker | usually | Woodpeckers usually drill holes in wood to eat insects that are inside. | 0.811889 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | usually | Woodpeckers usually excavate new nesting holes each year. | 0.734138 |
|
Waterloo | woodpecker | all | All Woodpeckers are extremely expert at discovering insects as they lie under the bark of trees. | 0.449777 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | all | All woodpeckers use excavated holes for nesting and roosting at night. | 0.612419 |
|
Waterloo | woodpecker | many | Many woodpeckers also eat fruits, nuts, and even bark. | 0.645504 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | many | Many woodpeckers are considered to be endangered animals. | 0.506087 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | many | Many woodpeckers hammer on dead, dry limbs to communicate. | 0.438709 |
|
Waterloo | woodpecker | many | Many woodpeckers have a black back with white sideways marks. | 0.450821 |
|
Waterloo | woodpecker | many | Many woodpeckers prefer dead or rotting trees for excavating their nest holes. | 0.655355 |
|
Waterloo | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers also have four toes, but two face forward and two are directed to the rear. | 0.687392 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers catch fly insects. | 0.653602 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers close inner eyelids. | 0.71204 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers drill into wood to find their food. | 0.646256 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers eat food. | 0.527653 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers eat larvae. | 0.740987 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers eat many different food. | 0.456355 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers eat nuts. | 0.470491 |
|
ARC | woodpecker | Most | Most woodpeckers eat termites. | 0.661983 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.