question
stringlengths 27
101
| id
stringlengths 16
20
| nq_doc_title
stringlengths 2
84
| nq_answer
sequencelengths 1
18
| viewed_doc_titles
sequencelengths 1
11
| annotations
listlengths 1
3
| used_queries
listlengths 1
13
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Who is the best selling latin artist of all time? | 2827421782024911739 | List of best-selling Latin albums in the United States | [
"Selena"
] | [
"List of best-selling Latin music artists",
"List of best-selling Latin singles in the United States",
"List of best-selling Latin albums in the United States"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Julio Iglesias",
"Julio José Iglesias de la Cueva",
"Iglesias"
],
"question": "Who is the overall best selling latin artist of all time?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Selena Quintanilla-Pérez",
"Selena Quintanilla",
"Selena"
],
"question": "Who is the latin artist with the best selling album of all time?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Fonsi",
"Ramón Luis Ayala Rodríguez",
"Bieber",
"Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee, Justin Bieber",
"Luis Fonsi",
"Daddy Yankee",
"Luis Alfonso Rodríguez López-Cepero",
"Justin Drew Bieber",
"Justin Bieber"
],
"question": "Who is the artists with the best selling latin single of all time?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "best selling latin artist of all time",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "This list is of <b>Latin</b> music <b>artists</b> with claimed record sales of 15 million or more. \nThe <b>artists</b> in the ... "Ricky Martin To Release New Album Showcasing His \nGreatest Hits Of <b>All Time</b>". The Huffington Post. April 1, 2013. Retrieved March 8, \n2014.",
"title": "List of best-selling Latin music artists"
},
{
"snippet": "Since July 1993, Billboard has published the <b>best</b>-<b>selling Latin</b> albums in the \nUnited States on the Top <b>Latin</b> Albums chart. <b>Latin</b> music is defined by Billboard ...",
"title": "List of best-selling Latin albums in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Latin</b> music in the United States is defined by both the Recording Industry \nAssociation of ... 1.1 Records; 1.2 English-language songs by <b>Latin artists</b> with \nSpanish versions ... 2014, "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)" by Shakira \nfeaturing Freshlyground <b>sold</b> ... "J Balvin Earns First-<b>Ever Latin</b> Digital Diamond \nHonor - RIAA".",
"title": "List of best-selling Latin singles in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "American singer Selena has released five studio albums, three live albums, three \nboxsets, two ... She was named the <b>top</b>-<b>selling Latin artist</b> of the 1990s decade by \nBillboard magazine. ... 2015, Dreaming of You has sold five million copies \nworldwide, and remains the <b>best</b>-<b>selling Latin</b> album of <b>all</b>-<b>time</b> in the United \nStates.",
"title": "Selena albums discography"
},
{
"snippet": "Puerto Rican recording <b>artist</b> Ricky Martin has released ten studio albums, seven \ncompilation albums, two live albums, one soundtrack album and four box sets. \nMartin has sold over 70 million records, making him one of the <b>best</b>-<b>selling Latin</b> \nmusic <b>artists of all time</b>.",
"title": "Ricky Martin albums discography"
},
{
"snippet": "She was named the "top Latin artist of the '90s" and "Best selling Latin artist of the \n... She is the 3rd <b>best selling Latin artist of all time</b>, just behind Shakira in 2nd ...",
"title": "Portal:Hispanic and Latino Americans/Selected Individual/3 ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Shakira is a Colombian singer and songwriter. She began her career in 1990 \nwith Sony Music ... Awards and 12 <b>Latin</b> Grammy Awards, making her the most \nawarded <b>Latin</b> female <b>artist of all time</b>. ... Awards from thirteen nominations and \nWorld <b>best Selling Latin</b> American <b>artist</b> of the year at 2010 World Music Awards.",
"title": "List of awards and nominations received by Shakira"
},
{
"snippet": "Selena Quintanilla-Pérez was an American singer, songwriter, spokesperson, \nmodel, actress, ... She also ranks among the most influential <b>Latin artists of all</b> \n<b>time</b> and is credited for ... As of 2016, Selena has sold 60-65 million albums \nworldwide, making her one of the <b>best</b>-<b>selling</b> female <b>artists</b> in <b>Latin</b> music history\n.",
"title": "Selena"
},
{
"snippet": "Luis Miguel Gallego Basteri (born 19 April 1970) is a Puerto Rican-born Mexican \nsinger and ... Warner Music Group recognized Luis Miguel as the <b>best</b>-<b>selling</b> \n<b>artist</b> in the history of Chile with over 2.5 million records sold. In 2003 ... It was the \nhighest-grossing tour <b>ever</b> made by a <b>Latin artist</b>, as well as the most extended.",
"title": "Luis Miguel"
},
{
"snippet": "I originally had the list based on the RIAA certifications, but Billboard has come \nout with an actual <b>bestselling Latin</b> albums in the US of <b>all</b>-<b>time</b> last month (which\n ...",
"title": "Wikipedia:Featured list candidates/List of best-selling Latin albums ..."
}
]
}
] |
Who played taylor in the pilot of american housewife? | -5388748526224800697 | American Housewife | [
"Johnny Sequoyah"
] | [
"American Housewife"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Johnny Sequoyah",
"Johnny Sequoyah Friedenberg",
"Sequoyah"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "taylor in the pilot of american housewife",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Johnny Sequoyah Friedenberg (born October 25, 2002) is an American actress, \nbest known for ... In 2016 portrayed "<b>Taylor</b> Otto" in the <b>pilot</b> for the ABC series \n<b>American Housewife</b>, but was replaced by actress Meg Donnelly before the \nseries ...",
"title": "Johnny Sequoyah"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>American Housewife</b> is an American sitcom television series that debuted on \nOctober 11, 2016, ... <b>Taylor</b> is their athletic, headstrong, but somewhat dimwitted \noldest daughter who wants to ... On January 28, 2016, it was announced that \nABC had given the production a <b>pilot</b> order as The Second Fattest Housewife In \nWestport.",
"title": "American Housewife"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Taylor</b> Daniel Lautner is an <b>American</b> actor, voice actor, and model. He is known \nfor playing Jacob Black in The Twilight Saga film series based on the novels of \nthe same name by Stephenie Meyer. Lautner began his acting career playing bit \nroles in comedy series such as The Bernie Mac Show (2003) and My <b>Wife</b> and \nKids ... software development company, while his father was a Midwest Airlines \n<b>pilot</b>.",
"title": "Taylor Lautner"
},
{
"snippet": ""Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" is the first episode of the first season of the <b>American</b> \nperiod drama television series Mad Men. It first aired on July 19, 2007 in the \nUnited States on AMC and was written by creator Matthew Weiner and directed \nby Alan <b>Taylor</b>. ... Before writing the <b>pilot</b> episode, he studied <b>American</b> literature \nand cinema of ...",
"title": "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes (Mad Men)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>American Housewife</b> is an American sitcom television series that debuted on \nOctober 11, 2016, ... Meanwhile, Greg tries to teach <b>Taylor</b> and Oliver about the \ntrue meaning of Christmas by ... 1, "<b>Pilot</b>", October 11, 2016, 1.9/7, 6.61, 0.9, 2.8.",
"title": "List of American Housewife episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>American</b> Woman is an <b>American</b> comedy series inspired by the childhood of \nactress and ... On June 2, 2015, it was announced that TV Land was developing \na television <b>pilot</b> based on the life of The Real <b>Housewives</b> of Beverly Hills star ... \nExecutive producers included John Wells and John Riggi, who wrote the <b>pilot</b> \nscript.",
"title": "American Woman (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Longmire is an <b>American</b> modern Western crime drama television series that \npremiered on ... Walt Longmire (Robert <b>Taylor</b>) is the sheriff of fictional Absaroka \nCounty. ... to hire Ridges to kill Walt's <b>wife</b> in hopes of helping Branch become \nsheriff. ... The <b>pilot</b> was written by John Coveny and Hunt Baldwin, and directed \nby ...",
"title": "Longmire (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Friday Night Lights is an <b>American</b> sports drama television series developed by \nPeter Berg, that ... He cast Connie Britton as the <b>wife</b> of head coach Eric <b>Taylor</b>, \nand Brad Leland as Buddy Garrity, a major ... In the <b>pilot</b>, Berg featured former \nTexas Longhorns football coach Mack Brown as a Dillon booster and had a caller \nto ...",
"title": "Friday Night Lights (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Bull is an American drama television series starring Michael Weatherly. CBS \nordered the ... Bull eventually sees things <b>Taylor's</b> way, and takes up Lee's case. \n... "NCIS Michael Weatherly to Play Dr. Phil in CBS Drama <b>Pilot</b> Bull". TVLine. ... "'\n<b>American Housewife</b>' adjusts up, final World Series numbers: Tuesday final \nratings".",
"title": "List of Bull (2016 TV series) episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Regina Annette <b>Taylor</b> (born August 22, 1960) is an <b>American</b> actress and \nplaywright. She has ... She was a cast member for all four seasons of the CBS \ndrama The Unit as Molly Blane, the tough-minded <b>housewife</b> who holds the \nwomen ... In 2016, <b>Taylor</b> starred in the original <b>pilot</b> of Time After Time as \nVanessa Anders, but ...",
"title": "Regina Taylor"
}
]
}
] |
This is gonna be the best day of my life singer? | 7651203280269560184 | Best Day of My Life | [
"Zac Barnett"
] | [
"Best Day of My Life"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Barnett",
"Zac Barnett"
],
"question": "Singer of the song Best day of my life, released in 2013?"
},
{
"answer": [
"American Authors"
],
"question": "Band that sings the song Best day of my life, released in 2013?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "This is gonna be the best day of my life singer?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>Best Day of My Life</b>" is a song by American pop rock band American Authors. \nThe song was ... and the third track on their debut studio <b>album</b>, Oh, What a Life (\n2014). ... getting matching tattoos, visiting a strip club, and <b>going to</b> a playground.",
"title": "Best Day of My Life"
},
{
"snippet": "They are best known for their hit singles "Believer" and "<b>Best Day of My Life</b>" from \ntheir debut <b>album</b> Oh, What a Life, as well as their top 20 hit, "Go Big or Go ...",
"title": "American Authors"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Best Days of My Life</b> is an <b>album</b> by American pop <b>singer</b> Johnny Mathis that \nwas released on January 29, 1979, by Columbia ...",
"title": "The Best Days of My Life"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Best Day" is a song written by Dean Dillon and Carson Chamberlain, and \nperformed by American country music <b>singer</b> George Strait. It was released in \nJanuary 2000 as the first single from his compilation <b>album</b> ... points of his life: "I'\nm the luckiest man alive, this is the <b>best day of my life</b>" — in this final verse, \nreplacing ...",
"title": "The Best Day (song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Summer of '69" is a song recorded by the Canadian musician Bryan Adams, \nfrom his fourth <b>album</b>, Reckless. ... While the lyric "<b>Best days of my life</b>" appeared \nseven times in the first draft, on the final draft it had been replaced by "summer of\n ...",
"title": "Summer of '69"
},
{
"snippet": ""First <b>Day of My Life</b>" is a song by British <b>singer</b>-songwriter, Melanie C. It was \nreleased on 30 September 2005 in Germany, Austria and Switzerland as the third\n ...",
"title": "First Day of My Life (Melanie C song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""First <b>Day of My Life</b>" is a single from the <b>album</b> I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning by \nthe American band Bright Eyes, released on March 21, 2005. The song reached\n ...",
"title": "First Day of My Life (Bright Eyes song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Beautiful Soul is the debut studio <b>album</b> by American <b>singer</b> Jesse McCartney. It \nwas released ... features karaoke versions of six tracks from the <b>album</b> Beautiful \nSoul, as well as two non-<b>album</b> tracks "Good Life" and "<b>Best Day of My Life</b>".",
"title": "Beautiful Soul (Jesse McCartney album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Last <b>Day of My Life</b>" is a song co-written and recorded by American country \nmusic <b>singer</b> Phil Vassar. It was released in February 2006 as the first single from \nhis compilation <b>album Greatest</b> Hits, ...",
"title": "Last Day of My Life"
},
{
"snippet": ""First <b>Day of My Life</b>" is a song by the Finnish alternative rock band The Rasmus, \noriginally released on the band's fifth <b>album</b> Dead Letters on 21 March 2003. It \nbecame one of numerous hit singles from the <b>album</b>, with the <b>highest</b> ...",
"title": "First Day of My Life (The Rasmus song)"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote the power of love celine dion? | -3783527244651039711 | The Power of Love (Jennifer Rush song) | [
"Jennifer Rush",
"Mary Susan Applegate",
"Gunther Mende",
"Candy DeRouge"
] | [
"The Power of Love (Jennifer Rush song)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Gunther Mende, Candy DeRouge, Jennifer Rush, Mary Susan Applegate"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "power of love celine dion",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "It has been covered by several artists, most notably by Air Supply, <b>Celine Dion</b> \nand Laura Branigan. Rush's original version, ...",
"title": "The Power of Love (Jennifer Rush song)"
},
{
"snippet": "She also scored a series of international number-one hits, including "The <b>Power</b> \n<b>of Love</b>", " ...",
"title": "Celine Dion"
},
{
"snippet": "The Colour of My Love is the third English-language studio album by Canadian \nsinger <b>Celine Dion</b>. ... The album features cover versions of "The <b>Power of Love</b>" \nand "When I Fall in Love". After its release, The Colour of My Love received ...",
"title": "The Colour of My Love"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Celine Dion's</b> version of "The <b>Power Of Love</b>“ won Mary S. Applegate the ASCAP \nPop Award for “Most Performed Song” in the United States and was nominated ...",
"title": "Mary Susan Applegate"
},
{
"snippet": "Talk:<b>Power of Love</b> (<b>Celine Dion</b> song). From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. \nJump to navigation Jump to search. Shouldn't this be redirected to ...",
"title": "Talk:Power of Love (Celine Dion song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Best of <b>Celine Dion</b> & David Foster is a compilation album by Canadian \nsinger <b>Celine Dion</b> ... It includes hits like "Because You Loved Me," "The <b>Power of</b> \n<b>Love</b>," "All by Myself," "Tell Him" (duet with Barbra Streisand) and "To Love You ...",
"title": "The Best of Celine Dion & David Foster"
},
{
"snippet": ""The <b>Power</b> of the Dream" is a song by Canadian singer <b>Celine Dion</b>, released as \na single in ... In 2008, the song was included on the U.S. version of My <b>Love</b>: \nEssential Collection. Dion performed the song during her 1996/1997 Falling Into\n ...",
"title": "The Power of the Dream"
},
{
"snippet": "Released in late 1993, The Colour of My Love spawned <b>Dion's</b> first US and \nAustralian, and second Canadian number-one single, "The <b>Power of Love</b>".",
"title": "Celine Dion singles discography"
},
{
"snippet": "He was also nominated for a Grammy with the song “The <b>power of love</b>” sung by \n<b>Celine Dion</b>. 2010 Gunther Mende has been in the charts with “The spirit never ...",
"title": "Gunther Mende"
},
{
"snippet": "Jennifer Rush (born Heidi Stern; September 28, 1960) is an American singer and \nsongwriter. Rush achieved success during the mid-1980s around the world, with \nthe release of a number of singles and albums including the million-selling single \n"The <b>Power of Love</b>", ... After several cover versions by other artists, the <b>Celine</b> \n<b>Dion</b> version made a ...",
"title": "Jennifer Rush"
}
]
}
] |
Who played pumbaa in the lion king movie? | 3367058652368460203 | Timon and Pumbaa | [
"Ernie Sabella"
] | [
"Timon and Pumbaa"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Ernie Sabella",
"Sabella",
"Ernest Sabella"
],
"question": "Who played pumbaa in the original lion king movie?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Rogen",
"Seth Rogen",
"Seth Aaron Rogen"
],
"question": "Who played pumbaa in the 2019 lion king movie?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "pumba",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Timon and Pumbaa are an animated meerkat and warthog duo introduced in \nDisney's 1994 ... "Pumba" redirects here. For Pune University's business ...",
"title": "Timon and Pumbaa"
},
{
"snippet": "Established in 1971, The Department of Management Sciences (DMS) , \nSavitribai Phule Pune University is one of the premier business schools in India. \nIt is an ...",
"title": "Department of Management Sciences (PUMBA)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Lion King's Timon & Pumbaa, often simply referred to as Timon & Pumbaa, is \nan American ... "Timon And Pumbaa: Around The World With Timon And Pumbaa \nDVD: Amazon.co.uk: Timon & <b>Pumba</b>: DVD & Blu-ray". Amazon.co.uk.",
"title": "Timon & Pumbaa (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "After the formation of the Queensland Maritime Defence Force in 1884, the \ncolonial government ... The ships were as follows: Bonito, Bream, Dolphin, \n<b>Pumba</b>, and Stingaree. Steam-propelled twin screwed "hopper barges", these \nships were ...",
"title": "Queensland Maritime Defence Force Auxiliary Gunboats"
},
{
"snippet": "Ernest Sabella (born September 19, 1949) is an American actor. He is the voice \nof Pumbaa from The Lion King franchise, and played the role of Leon Carosi in ...",
"title": "Ernie Sabella"
},
{
"snippet": "This is an episode list for The Lion King's Timon & Pumbaa, an American \nanimated television series made by The Walt Disney Company. It follows the ...",
"title": "List of Timon & Pumbaa episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Phacochoerus is a genus in the family Suidae, commonly known as warthogs. It \nis the sole genus of subfamily Phacochoerinae. These pigs live in open and ...",
"title": "Phacochoerus"
},
{
"snippet": "Eumseong County (Eumseong-gun) is a county in North Chungcheong Province, \nSouth Korea, ... They host two cultural festivals: the <b>Pumba</b> (traditional vagabond) \nFestival (품바축제) in the spring and the Gochu (chili pepper) Festival (고추 ...",
"title": "Eumseong County"
},
{
"snippet": "Unorthodox is the debut studio album by Mexican-American rapper Snow Tha \nProduct. ... Producer, Omeguh, Redhook Noodles, Pumba, Superstar O, Essay \nPotna, Hannibal Hector (of The Nominees), AR Beats, Keise on da Track, Smoke\n ...",
"title": "Unorthodox (Snow Tha Product album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Producer · Arthur McArthur, Focus…, DJ <b>Pumba</b>, David Doman · Snow Tha \nProduct chronology. The Rest Comes Later (2015), Half Way There...Pt. 1 (2016). \nHalf Way There...Pt. 1 is the debut extended play (EP) by Mexican rapper Snow \nTha Product, ...",
"title": "Half Way There...Pt. 1"
}
]
},
{
"query": "pumbaa in the lion king movie",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Main article: The <b>Lion King</b> 1½. Timon and <b>Pumbaa</b> are the main characters in \nthis followup, and are revealed to have passed by and caused some key events \nin the first <b>film</b> before their first appearance.",
"title": "Timon and Pumbaa"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Lion King</b> is a 2019 American animated musical <b>film</b> directed and produced \nby Jon ... King Mufasa's and Queen Sarabi's newborn son, <b>Simba</b>, is presented to \nthe gathering animals by Rafiki the mandrill, the kingdom's shaman and advisor.",
"title": "The Lion King (2019 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Lion King</b> is a 1994 American animated musical <b>film</b> produced by Walt \nDisney Feature ... King Mufasa's and Queen Sarabi's newborn son, <b>Simba</b>, is \npresented to the gathering animals by Rafiki the mandrill, the kingdom's shaman \nand ...",
"title": "The Lion King"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Lion King</b> 1 <sup>1</sup>⁄2 is a 2004 American animated comedy adventure <b>film</b> \nproduced by the ... As Timon and <b>Pumbaa</b> watch the original <b>film</b> in a theater, \nTimon decides to fast-forward to their scenes. <b>Pumbaa's</b> protest over this \neventually ...",
"title": "The Lion King 1½"
},
{
"snippet": "The series The <b>Lion King's</b> Timon & <b>Pumbaa</b> had a direct-to-video <b>film</b> named \nAround the World with ...",
"title": "The Lion King (franchise)"
},
{
"snippet": "Main article: The <b>Lion King</b> 3: Hakuna Matata! ... because the <b>film's</b> primary focus \nis on Timon and <b>Pumbaa's</b> ...",
"title": "Simba"
},
{
"snippet": "When they first meet <b>Simba in The Lion King</b>, they save an ... In the live-action \n<b>film</b>, Timon and <b>Pumbaa</b> had different animals ...",
"title": "List of The Lion King characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The following characters from The <b>Lion King</b> appear in this series: ... of The <b>Lion</b> \n<b>King</b> and best friend of Timon and <b>Pumbaa</b>, who is ... betrayal in the <b>movie</b>, they \nleave the Elephant Graveyard and now live ...",
"title": "Timon & Pumbaa (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Lion King</b> II: <b>Simba's</b> Pride (later retitled The <b>Lion King</b> 2: <b>Simba's</b> Pride) is a \n1998 American animated direct-to-video romantic musical <b>film</b> and a sequel to ...",
"title": "The Lion King II: Simba's Pride"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Lion King</b> on Broadway showing originally at ... nearly drowning in a \nwaterfall while <b>Simba</b> feels ...",
"title": "The Lion King (musical)"
}
]
}
] |
What are the neighboring countries of south korea? | 8057366203415601013 | Geography of South Korea | [
"North Korea"
] | [
"Geography of South Korea",
"South Korea"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"North Korea"
],
"question": "What are the neighboring countries to the North of South Korea? What is the only neighboring land border country of South Korea?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Japan"
],
"question": "What are the neighboring countries to the South of South Korea?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "south korea neighboring countries",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>South Korea</b> is located in East Asia, on the southern half of the Korean Peninsula \nlocated out from the far east of the Asian landmass. The only <b>country</b> with a land \nborder to <b>South Korea</b> is North Korea, lying to ... 1 Land area and <b>borders</b>; 2 \nTopography and drainage; 3 Climate; 4 Resources and land use; 5 \nEnvironmental ...",
"title": "Geography of South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "Japan–<b>South Korea</b> relations refers to international relations between Japan and \n<b>South Korea</b>. ... Japan and <b>South Korea</b> are close <b>neighbors</b>, and they are both \nmain allies of the ... This has led to a decrease in trade and export between both \n<b>countries</b>; Japanese tourism is one of the big exporting services <b>South Korea</b> ...",
"title": "Japan–South Korea relations"
},
{
"snippet": "North Korea is located in East Asia on the Northern half of the Korean Peninsula. \nNorth Korea shares a border with three <b>countries</b>; China along the Amnok River, \nRussia along the Tumen River, and <b>South Korea</b> along the Korean Demilitarized \nZone (DMZ). ... Unlike <b>neighboring</b> Japan or northern China, North Korea \nexperiences few ...",
"title": "Geography of North Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "This is list of earthquakes in <b>South Korea</b>. Historical earthquakes[edit]. \nEarthquakes in <b>South Korea</b> are less frequent than in <b>neighboring countries</b>, \nsuch as ...",
"title": "List of earthquakes in South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "The Republic of China government recognized the formation of the Provisional \nGovernment of ... President Roh Tae-woo'<b>s</b> next political ambition was to begin \nimplementing Realpolitik with the <b>neighboring countries</b> in Northeast Asia. ... \nRepublic of <b>Korea</b> was the last Asian <b>country</b> with formal diplomatic relations with \nROC.",
"title": "South Korea–Taiwan relations"
},
{
"snippet": "White Day is a day that is marked in Japan, Taiwan, <b>South Korea</b>, Vietnam, Hong \nKong, ... Eventually, this practice spread to the <b>neighboring</b> East Asian <b>countries</b> \nof China and some of its territories, such as Hong Kong, as well as Taiwan and ...",
"title": "White Day"
},
{
"snippet": "Korea is a region in East Asia consisting of the Korean Peninsula, Jeju Island, \nand several minor islands near the peninsula. Korea has been divided since \n1948 between two distinct sovereign states, North Korea and <b>South Korea</b>. ... \ndespite the Korean Empire's effort to modernize, the <b>country</b> was annexed by \nJapan in ...",
"title": "Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>South Korea</b> officially the Republic of Korea is a <b>country</b> in East Asia, constituting \nthe southern ... Morris (May 20, 1983). China Among Equals: The Middle \nKingdom and Its <b>Neighbors</b>, 10th–14th Centuries. University of California Press. \np.",
"title": "South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "Daegu formerly spelled Taegu and officially known as the Daegu Metropolitan \nCity, is a city in <b>South Korea</b>, ... In 1895, Daegu became the site of one of the \n<b>country's</b> first modern post offices, as a part of the 'Gab-o' reforms introduced ... \nAdministratively, the site itself is located in the <b>neighboring</b> city, Gyeongsan, \nGyeongbuk.",
"title": "Daegu"
},
{
"snippet": "Anti-Japanese sentiment in Korean society has its roots in historic, cultural, and \nnationalistic ... This puts <b>South Korea</b> behind mainland China as the <b>country</b> with \nthe second most negative feelings of Japan in the world. ... came under scrutiny \nwhen the media of Japan and its <b>neighboring countries</b> gave extensive coverage \nto ...",
"title": "Anti-Japanese sentiment in Korea"
}
]
},
{
"query": "south korea",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>South Korea</b> officially the Republic of Korea is a country in East Asia, constituting \nthe southern part of the Korean Peninsula and sharing a land border with North ...",
"title": "South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>South Korea</b> national football team represents <b>South Korea</b> in international \nfootball and is controlled by the Korea Football Association. Since the 1950s ...",
"title": "South Korea national football team"
},
{
"snippet": "The first confirmed case of the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) \nin <b>South Korea</b> was announced on 20 January 2020. On 19 February, the ...",
"title": "2020 coronavirus outbreak in South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "The economy of <b>South Korea</b> is the 4th largest in Asia and the 12th largest in the \nworld. It is a highly developed mixed economy dominated by family-owned ...",
"title": "Economy of South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "The First Republic of Korea was the government of <b>South Korea</b> from August \n1948 to April 1960. The First Republic was founded on 15 August 1948 after the ...",
"title": "First Republic of Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "The Republic of Korea Armed Forces (Korean: 대한민국 국군), also known as the \nROK Armed Forces, are the armed forces of <b>South Korea</b>. The ROK Armed ...",
"title": "Republic of Korea Armed Forces"
},
{
"snippet": "Seoul officially the Seoul Special City, is the capital and largest metropolis of \n<b>South Korea</b>. With the surrounding Incheon metropolis and Gyeonggi province, ...",
"title": "Seoul"
},
{
"snippet": "An outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus occurred in <b>South</b> \n<b>Korea</b> from May 2015 to July 2015. The virus, which causes Middle East ...",
"title": "2015 Middle East respiratory syndrome outbreak in South Korea ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The history of <b>South Korea</b> formally begins with its establishment on 15 August \n1948. Korea was administratively partitioned in 1945, at the end of World War II.",
"title": "History of South Korea"
},
{
"snippet": "Beginning in the 6th century, Silla'<b>s</b> power gradually extended across the <b>Korean</b> \nPeninsula. Silla first annexed the ...",
"title": "Korea"
}
]
}
] |
Who plays governor conway in house of cards? | 732021851808830834 | Joel Kinnaman | [
"Charles Joel Nordström Kinnaman"
] | [
"List of House of Cards characters"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Joel Kinnaman"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who plays governor conway in house of cards?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "... Takeshi Kovacs in the first season of Altered Carbon, and <b>Governor</b> Will \n<b>Conway</b> in the U.S. version of <b>House of Cards</b>. He has also <b>played</b> Alex Murphy \nin the ...",
"title": "Joel Kinnaman"
},
{
"snippet": "In 2016, McElligott <b>played</b> Hannah <b>Conway</b>, wife of the Republican presidential \nnominee, in the fourth and fifth season of the Netflix show <b>House of Cards</b>.",
"title": "Dominique McElligott"
},
{
"snippet": "The fourth season of the American web television drama series <b>House of Cards</b> \nwas ... Doris' daughter; Joel Kinnaman as Will <b>Conway</b>, the Republican nominee \nfor president and <b>Governor</b> of New York ... Claire starts her own power <b>play</b> for \nDoris Jones' congressional seat, putting her and Frank at odds with each other.",
"title": "House of Cards (season 4)"
},
{
"snippet": "The fifth season of <b>House of Cards</b>, an American political drama web television \nseries created ... Following a series of sexual misconduct allegations made \nagainst Kevin Spacey in October 2017, Netflix fired the <b>actor</b>, making the fifth \nseason his ... as Will <b>Conway</b>, the Republican nominee for president and \n<b>Governor</b> of New ...",
"title": "House of Cards (season 5)"
},
{
"snippet": "Will <b>Conway</b> (Joel Kinnaman) is a former <b>Governor</b> of New York and was the \nRepublican Party nominee for President of the United States in the 2016 election.",
"title": "List of House of Cards characters"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>House of Cards</b> is an American political thriller web television series created by \nBeau Willimon. ... Because the new Vice President is the former <b>Governor</b> of \nPennsylvania, ... Frank invites <b>Conway</b> to the White House to assist in the \nnegotiations as a ... He then <b>played</b> Richard III at The Old Vic, which Fincher said \nwas "great ...",
"title": "House of Cards (American TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Francis Joseph "Frank" Underwood is a fictional character and the protagonist of \nthe American ... I've always thought that the profession closest to that of an <b>actor</b> \nis being a ... the election of Colorado <b>Governor</b> Garrett Walker (Michel Gill) as \nPresident. ... Neither Underwood nor <b>Conway</b> receive enough votes, however, ...",
"title": "Frank Underwood (House of Cards)"
},
{
"snippet": "Arkansas is a state in the south central region of the United States, home to more \nthan three ... The higher peaks in the Arkansas River Valley <b>play</b> host to scores of \nferns, ... In an 1854 message to the legislature, <b>Governor</b> Elias N. <b>Conway</b> said, "\nWe have ... The Republican Party majority status in the Arkansas State <b>House</b> of\n ...",
"title": "Arkansas"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles Duane Baker IV (born November 13, 1956) is an American businessman \nand politician serving as the 72nd <b>governor</b> of Massachusetts since January 8, \n2015. A moderate Republican, he was a cabinet official under two <b>governors</b> of ... \nIn 1965 his father became vice president of Harbridge <b>House</b>, a Boston ...",
"title": "Charlie Baker"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of fictional candidates who ran for the office of President of the United \nStates, ... Candidate in: Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance (2013); <b>Played</b> by: \nAlistair ... <b>Governor</b> of Illinois while campaigning for the democratic nomination \nduring ... Republican nominee for the presidency in <b>House of Cards</b> (U.S. TV \nseries) ...",
"title": "List of fictional United States presidential candidates"
}
]
}
] |
What is the population of the phoenix area? | 774735201568901341 | Phoenix metropolitan area | [
"4,574,351"
] | [
"Phoenix metropolitan area"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"4,192,887"
],
"question": "What is the population of the phoenix area in 2010?"
},
{
"answer": [
"3,251,876"
],
"question": "What is the population of the phoenix area in 2000?"
},
{
"answer": [
"2,238,480"
],
"question": "What is the population of the phoenix area in 1990?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "What is the population of the phoenix area?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "As of the Census Bureau's 2017 <b>population</b> estimates, Metro <b>Phoenix</b> had \n4,737,270 residents, making it the 11th largest Metropolitan <b>Area</b> in the nation by\n ...",
"title": "Phoenix metropolitan area"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Phoenix</b> is the capital and most populous city in Arizona, with 1,660,272 people (\nas of 2018). It is also the fifth most populous city in the United States, and the only \nstate capital with a <b>population</b> of more than one million residents. <b>Phoenix</b> is the \nanchor of the <b>Phoenix</b> metropolitan <b>area</b>, also known as the ... The metropolitan \n<b>area</b> is the 11th largest by <b>population</b> in the United States, ...",
"title": "Phoenix, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>population</b> growth rate of the <b>Phoenix</b> metro <b>area</b> has been nearly 4% per \nyear for the past 40 years. That growth rate slowed during the Great Recession ...",
"title": "History of Phoenix, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "600-1300 AD – Hohokam build large network or irrigation canals throughout the \n<b>area</b>. 1300 AD – Hohokam have largest <b>population</b> in the southwest.",
"title": "Timeline of Phoenix, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "With the advent of air conditioning and the rise of tourism, <b>population</b> growth \nexploded in Mesa as well as the rest of the <b>Phoenix area</b>. Industry—especially \nearly ...",
"title": "Mesa, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "34.5% of Gilbert residents hold a bachelor's degree or higher. Highest household \nmedian income in the <b>Phoenix</b> Metropolitan <b>Area</b> with <b>population</b> 50,000+ (U.S. ...",
"title": "Gilbert, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Phoenix</b> is a city in Jackson County, Oregon, United States. The <b>population</b> was \n4,538 at the 2010 census. <b>Phoenix</b> is a part of the Medford Metropolitan \nStatistical <b>Area</b>, in the Rogue ...",
"title": "Phoenix, Oregon"
},
{
"snippet": "Maricopa County is located in the south-central part of the U.S. state of Arizona. \nThe U.S. Census Bureau estimated its <b>population</b> was 4,410,824 as of 2018, ... \nMaricopa County is one of the largest counties in the United States by <b>area</b>, with \na ... While the city of <b>Phoenix</b> leans towards the Democratic Party, along with \nsome ...",
"title": "Maricopa County, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "Scottsdale is a city in the eastern part of Maricopa County, Arizona, United States, \npart of the Greater <b>Phoenix Area</b>. ... a <b>population</b> of 2,000. The 2018 <b>population</b> of \nthe city was estimated to be 255,310 according to the U.S. Census Bureau.",
"title": "Scottsdale, Arizona"
},
{
"snippet": "Most of the <b>population</b> is concentrated within the <b>Phoenix</b> metropolitan <b>area</b>, with \nan 2010 census <b>population</b> of 4,192,887 (65.60% of the state <b>population</b>).",
"title": "List of cities and towns in Arizona"
}
]
}
] |
When will the next world series game be played? | -3762541613423151425 | 2017 World Series | [
"October 24 and November 1"
] | [
"2017 World Series"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"October 24 - November 1"
],
"question": "Between what dates was the 2017 World Series played?"
},
{
"answer": [
"October 25 – November 2"
],
"question": "Between what dates was the 2016 World Series played?"
},
{
"answer": [
"October 27 – November 1"
],
"question": "Between what dates was the 2015 World Series played?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "world series",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>World Series</b> is the annual championship series of Major League Baseball (\nMLB) and concludes the MLB postseason. First played in 1903, the <b>World Series</b>\n ...",
"title": "List of World Series champions"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>World Series</b> is the annual championship series of Major League Baseball (\nMLB) in North America, contested since 1903 between the American League ...",
"title": "World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 2019 season. The 115th edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "2019 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2017 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 2017 season. The 113th edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "2017 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2016 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 2016 season. The 112th edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "2016 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2013 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 2013 season. The 109th edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "2013 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1973 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 1973 season. The 70th edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "1973 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2014 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 2014 season. The 110th edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "2014 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2005 <b>World Series</b> was the championship series of Major League Baseball's \n(MLB) 2005 season. The 101st edition of the <b>World Series</b>, it was a ...",
"title": "2005 World Series"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1964 <b>World Series</b> pitted the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals \nagainst the American League champion New York Yankees, with the Cardinals ...",
"title": "1964 World Series"
}
]
}
] |
What are the five great lakes of north america called? | 7386825770531278499 | Great Lakes | [
"Superior",
"Michigan",
"Huron",
"Erie",
"Ontario"
] | [
"Great Lakes - Wikidata",
"Great Lakes"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"The Great Lakes",
"Great Lakes of North America,",
"Laurentian Great Lakes"
],
"question": "What is the collective name of the five great lakes in North America?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Superior",
"Michigan",
"Huron",
"Ontario",
"Erie"
],
"question": "What lakes make up the Great Lakes?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "grat lakes",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The Anglican Diocese of the <b>Great Lakes</b> is a diocese of the Anglican Church in \nNorth America, since June 2010. It has 58 congregations, in the American states\n ...",
"title": "Anglican Diocese of the Great Lakes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Lake</b> Lahontan, <b>Lake</b> Manly, and <b>Lake</b> Mojave were similar Pleistocene <b>lakes</b>. \nNative American tribes that inhabited the <b>Great</b> Basin were divided between the "\n ...",
"title": "Great Basin"
},
{
"snippet": "This article is about the desert in Iran. For the North American desert, see <b>Great</b> \nSalt <b>Lake</b> Desert. This article needs additional citations for verification.",
"title": "Dasht-e Kavir"
},
{
"snippet": "English: This is a map of the <b>Great Lakes</b> / Saint Lawrence River Watershed in \nNorth America. I, Karl Musser, created it based on USGS data. A variant of this ...",
"title": "File:Grlakes lawrence map.png"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Great Lakes</b>. lakes in North America. In more languages. Spanish. Grandes \nLagos. grupo de cinco grandes lagos de Norteamérica, en la cuenca del río San\n ...",
"title": "Great Lakes - Wikidata"
},
{
"snippet": "Congress chartered the Northern Pacific Railway Company on July 2, 1864 with \nthe goals of connecting the <b>Great Lakes</b> with Puget Sound on the Pacific, \nopening ...",
"title": "Northern Pacific Railway"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>great</b> crested grebe breeds in vegetated areas of freshwater <b>lakes</b>. The \nsubspecies P. c. cristatus is found across Europe and east across the Palearctic.",
"title": "Great crested grebe"
},
{
"snippet": "This hybrid is sometimes known as "<b>Great Lakes</b> gull". Herring gull and glaucous \ngull hybridise to a limited extent in Greenland, Iceland and Alaska. The offspring\n ...",
"title": "Hybridisation in gulls"
},
{
"snippet": "The East African Rift (EAR) or East African Rift System (EARS) is an active \ncontinental rift zone in East Africa. The EAR began developing around the onset \nof the Miocene, 22–25 million years ago. In the past it was considered to be part \nof a larger <b>Great</b> Rift Valley that ... Valley includes the Albertine Rift, and farther \nsouth, the valley of <b>Lake</b> Malawi.",
"title": "East African Rift"
},
{
"snippet": "Black Wolf Lodge was purchased by The <b>Great Lakes</b> Companies Inc in 1999. In \n2000, founders Marc Vaccaro and Bruce Neviaser changed the name to Great ...",
"title": "Great Wolf Resorts"
}
]
},
{
"query": "great lakes",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Great Lakes</b> (French: les Grands Lacs), also called the Laurentian <b>Great</b> \n<b>Lakes</b> and the <b>Great Lakes</b> of North America, are a series of interconnected ...",
"title": "Great Lakes"
},
{
"snippet": "The African <b>Great Lakes</b> (Swahili: Maziwa Makuu) are a series of lakes \nconstituting the part of the Rift Valley lakes in and around the East African Rift.",
"title": "African Great Lakes"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Great Lakes</b> region of North America is a bi-national Canadian–American \nregion that includes portions of the eight U.S. states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,\n ...",
"title": "Great Lakes region"
},
{
"snippet": "Naval Station <b>Great Lakes</b> (NAVSTA <b>Great Lakes</b>) is the home of the United \nStates Navy's only boot camp, located near North Chicago, in Lake County, \nIllinois.",
"title": "Naval Station Great Lakes"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Great Lakes</b> Megalopolis consists of the group of metropolitan areas in North \nAmerica largely in the <b>Great Lakes</b> region and along the Saint Lawrence ...",
"title": "Great Lakes Megalopolis"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Great Lakes</b> Twa, also known as Batwa, Abatwa or Ge-Sera, are a Bantu \nethnic group native to the African <b>Great Lakes</b> region on the border of the Central\n ...",
"title": "Great Lakes Twa"
},
{
"snippet": "Michigan is a state in the <b>Great Lakes</b> and Midwestern regions of the United \nStates. Its name originates from the Ojibwe word mishigamaa, meaning "large ...",
"title": "Michigan"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Great Lakes</b>–St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact is a \nlegally binding interstate compact among the U.S. states of Illinois, Indiana, \nMichigan ...",
"title": "Great Lakes Compact"
},
{
"snippet": "Lake freighters, or lakers, are bulk carrier vessels that ply the <b>Great Lakes</b> of \nNorth America. These vessels are traditionally called boats, although classified \nas ...",
"title": "Lake freighter"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Great Lakes</b> Avengers are a fictional superhero team appearing in American \ncomic books published by Marvel Comics. The characters were introduced in ...",
"title": "Great Lakes Avengers"
}
]
}
] |
When did good guys go out of business? | 6000911296262491450 | Good Guys (American company) | [
"2006"
] | [
"Good Guys (American company)",
"The Good Guys (Australian company)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"September 2003"
],
"question": "When was The Good Guys acquired by CompUSA?"
},
{
"answer": [
"2005"
],
"question": "When did all of The Good Guys stores close?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When did good guys go out of business?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Good Guys</b> was an American chain of consumer electronics retail stores with \n71 stores in California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington. The <b>company</b> was ...",
"title": "Good Guys (American company)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Good Guys</b> is a chain of consumer electronics retail stores in Australia and \nformerly New ... Auckland Metropolitan Area when the <b>company</b> announced it \nwould pull <b>out</b> of the New Zealand ... "The <b>Good Guys</b> may be the next guys to <b>go</b>\n".",
"title": "The Good Guys (Australian company)"
},
{
"snippet": "When Kyle blows them <b>off</b> Jack thinks that Kyle is involved in the corruption and a \nprobably third victim after two other men from the <b>company</b> have been murdered.",
"title": "The Good Guys (2010 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Good Guys</b> Wear Black is a 1978 American action film starring Chuck Norris and \ndirected by ... (The actor estimated he <b>did</b> over 2,000 interviews in a year and \nsays he had to <b>go</b> to hospital ... I <b>went</b> to Steve [McQueen], and he said, 'In <b>Good</b> \n<b>Guys</b> you talk too much. Too much dialogue. Let the character actors lay <b>out</b> the \nplot.",
"title": "Good Guys Wear Black"
},
{
"snippet": "2001 – In July, CompUSA Call Center Services became The Telvista <b>Company</b>. \n2003 – Acquired <b>Good Guys</b>. 2005 – Converted three CompUSA stores and 13 ...",
"title": "CompUSA"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Goodguys</b> Rod & Custom Association is America's largest association \ncatering to street ... Their son, Marc Meadors serves as <b>company</b> president. ... In \n1987, <b>Goodguys went</b> national with a small team of employees staging ten \nevents ...",
"title": "Goodguys Rod & Custom Association"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Good Guys</b> and the Bad Guys is a 1969 American western film directed by \nBurt Kennedy. ... Flagg sets <b>out</b> on his own and discovers McKay has joined up \nwith a band of youthful outlaws. After being taken ... McKay remarks to Flagg that \nhe "thought he could beat him [Waco]" to which Flagg replies "You <b>did</b> beat him.".",
"title": "The Good Guys and the Bad Guys"
},
{
"snippet": "When Rufus finds that he can't stand living with the boisterous Big Tom, he and \nBert <b>come</b> up with a scheme to get Big Tom to move <b>out</b> by having Rufus \nromance ...",
"title": "The Good Guys (1968 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Circuit City Corporation is an American consumer electronics retail <b>company</b>, \nestablished by ... By 2000, many Circuit City stores were <b>out</b> of date and in bad \nlocations, ... At that time, Circuit City's stock traded <b>well</b> below $1 per share, and \nwas ... "<b>going out of business</b>" commercials, as they started closing all of their \nstores.",
"title": "Circuit City"
},
{
"snippet": "On April 4, 1991, in Sacramento, California, 41 people were taken hostage at a \n<b>Good Guys</b>! ... Throughout the incident, the hostage takers <b>did</b> not present a clear \nset of ... Suddenly, the phone <b>went</b> dead, and the CINT immediately tried to ... into \nthe store from <b>outside</b>, and Curt Warburton, one of the <b>Good Guys</b> employees, ...",
"title": "1991 Sacramento hostage crisis"
}
]
}
] |
How many times has philly been in super bowl? | -4747897492335785152 | Philadelphia Eagles | [
"3"
] | [
"History of the Philadelphia Eagles",
"Philadelphia Eagles"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1"
],
"question": "How many times has philly been in super bowl up to 1981?"
},
{
"answer": [
"2"
],
"question": "How many times has philly been in super bowl up to 2005?"
},
{
"answer": [
"3"
],
"question": "How many times has philly been in super bowl up to 2018?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "philly been in super bowl",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The NFC <b>was</b> represented by the number-one playoff seed <b>Philadelphia</b> Eagles, \nwhile the AFC <b>was</b> represented by the ...",
"title": "Super Bowl LII"
},
{
"snippet": "In the 2017 season the team <b>won Super Bowl</b> LII, their first <b>Super Bowl win</b> in \nfranchise history and their fourth ...",
"title": "Philadelphia Eagles"
},
{
"snippet": "They <b>won</b> three NFL Championships, the precursor to the <b>Super Bowl</b>, in four \nappearances. They have a ...",
"title": "History of the Philadelphia Eagles"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Super Bowl</b> XXXIX <b>was</b> an American football game <b>played</b> between the American \nFootball ... <b>Philadelphia's</b> running game <b>was</b> not as strong as their passing attack, \nranking just 24th in the league in rushing yards (1,639). Running back Brian ...",
"title": "Super Bowl XXXIX"
},
{
"snippet": "The Raiders <b>were</b> led by head coach Tom Flores, the first Hispanic coach to <b>win</b> \na <b>Super Bowl</b>. <b>Philadelphia</b> Eagles[edit].",
"title": "Super Bowl XV"
},
{
"snippet": "Andrew Walter Reid (born March 19, 1958) is an American football coach who is \nthe head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). \nReid <b>was</b> previously the head coach of the <b>Philadelphia</b> Eagles, a position he ... \nHe also coached the NFC to a 30–24 <b>win</b> in the 2009 <b>Pro Bowl</b>. However, the ...",
"title": "Andy Reid"
},
{
"snippet": "After the <b>Super Bowl</b>, he stated that the last time he had caught a pass for a \ntouchdown <b>was</b> when he ...",
"title": "Philly Special"
},
{
"snippet": "Nicholas Edward Foles (born January 20, 1989) is an American football \nquarterback for the Jacksonville Jaguars of the National Football League (NFL). \nHe <b>played</b> college football at Arizona and <b>was</b> drafted by the <b>Philadelphia</b> ... \ntouchdown. Foles <b>won</b> the <b>Pro Bowl</b> Offensive MVP award, which included a new \nGMC truck.",
"title": "Nick Foles"
},
{
"snippet": "However, the team could not reach the <b>Super Bowl</b>, despite <b>being</b> favored in the \nfinal two NFC title ...",
"title": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season"
},
{
"snippet": "Wing Bowl <b>was</b> an annual eating contest founded in 1993 by <b>Philadelphia</b> talk-\nradio hosts ... Al Morganti, who came up with the idea when it became apparent \nthe <b>Philadelphia</b> Eagles <b>were</b> not going to make the <b>Super Bowl</b> anytime soon.",
"title": "Wing Bowl"
}
]
}
] |
Who was dante what is he most famous for writing? | -4780610811750359101 | Dante Alighieri | [
"Divine Comedy"
] | [
"Dante Alighieri"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Italian poet"
],
"question": "Who is Dante Alighieri?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Divine Comedy"
],
"question": "What is Dante Alighieri most famous for writing?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "dante",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Durante di Alighiero degli Alighieri commonly known by his pen name <b>Dante</b> \nAlighieri or simply as <b>Dante</b> (/ˈdɑːnteɪ, ˈdænteɪ, ˈdænti/, also US: /ˈdɑːnti\n/, ...",
"title": "Dante Alighieri"
},
{
"snippet": "Inferno is the first part of Italian writer <b>Dante</b> Alighieri's 14th-century epic poem \nDivine Comedy. It is followed by Purgatorio and Paradiso. The Inferno tells the ...",
"title": "Inferno (Dante)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dante</b> (Japanese: ダンテ), also known under the alias of Tony Redgrave (トニー・\nレッドグレイブ), is a fictional character in the video game series Devil May Cry, ...",
"title": "Dante (Devil May Cry)"
},
{
"snippet": "Joseph James <b>Dante</b> Jr is an American film director, producer, editor and actor. \nHis films—notably Gremlins (1984)—often mix fantastical storylines with comedic\n ...",
"title": "Joe Dante"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dante</b> is a combination of software, hardware, and network protocols that delivers \nuncompressed, multi-channel, low-latency digital audio over a standard ...",
"title": "Dante (networking)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Divine Comedy is a long Italian narrative poem by <b>Dante</b> Alighieri, begun c. \n1308 and completed in 1320, a year before his death in 1321. It is widely ...",
"title": "Divine Comedy"
},
{
"snippet": "Gabriel Charles <b>Dante</b> Rossetti (12 May 1828 – 9 April 1882), generally known \nas <b>Dante</b> Gabriel Rossetti was an English poet, illustrator, painter and translator,\n ...",
"title": "Dante Gabriel Rossetti"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Delivery of Advanced Network Technology to Europe</b> (<b>DANTE</b>) is a not-for-profit \ncompany that plans, builds and operates the consecutive generations of the ...",
"title": "DANTE"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dante</b> Bonfim Costa Santos (born 18 October 1983), commonly known as <b>Dante</b> \nis a Brazilian professional footballer who plays for and captains French club ...",
"title": "Dante (footballer)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dante</b> R. Basco (born August 29, 1975) is an American actor and voice actor. He \nis best known for his role as Rufio, the leader of the Lost Boys in Steven ...",
"title": "Dante Basco"
}
]
}
] |
When was south africa banned from international cricket? | -7130774985408690253 | South Africa national cricket team | [
"1970"
] | [
"Cricket in South Africa"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1970"
],
"question": "When was the beginning of the ban of South Africa from International Cricket?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1991"
],
"question": "When was the end of the ban of South Africa from International Cricket?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When was south africa banned from international cricket?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>South Africa</b> is one of the world's leading <b>cricket</b>-playing nations, and is one of 12 \ncountries sanctioned by the <b>International Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>) to play <b>Test</b> ...",
"title": "Cricket in South Africa"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Cricket</b> had been organised on racial lines in <b>South Africa</b> from its earliest ... The \n<b>International Cricket</b> Conference (<b>ICC</b>) imposed a moratorium on ... Participants \nin the latter were <b>banned</b> by their national federations ...",
"title": "Sporting boycott of South Africa during the apartheid era"
},
{
"snippet": "This article describes the history of <b>South African cricket</b> from the end of the \nSecond World War in 1945 to the start of <b>South Africa's cricket</b> isolation in 1970. \n<b>International</b> feeling against <b>South Africa's</b> apartheid policy became stronger ... \nnigh for apartheid in sport and <b>South Africa</b> was <b>banned from Test cricket</b> for 22 \nyears.",
"title": "History of cricket in South Africa from 1945–46 to 1970"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>South Africa</b> national <b>cricket</b> team also known as Proteas represents <b>South</b> \n<b>Africa</b> in men's <b>international cricket</b> is ...",
"title": "South Africa national cricket team"
},
{
"snippet": "Sport in <b>South Africa</b> has a significant role in <b>South African</b> culture. The three \nmost popular ... <b>South Africa</b> hosted the 2003 <b>ICC Cricket</b> World Cup and 2007 \n<b>ICC</b> World Twenty20. <b>South Africa</b> is among a ... <b>South Africa</b> was <b>banned</b> from \nthe 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo due to the apartheid policies. This <b>ban</b> \neffectively ...",
"title": "Sport in South Africa"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Test</b> series against Australia in 1969–70 was to be their last for 22 years.",
"title": "History of cricket in South Africa from 1970–71 to 1990"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>South African</b> rebel tours were a series of seven <b>cricket</b> tours staged \nbetween 1982 and 1990. They were known as the rebel tours because the \n<b>international</b> cricketing bodies <b>banned South Africa</b> from competitive <b>international</b> \n<b>cricket</b> throughout ...",
"title": "South African rebel tours"
},
{
"snippet": "7, Hansie Cronje · <b>South Africa</b>, Life <b>ban</b>, Guilty of accepting monetary rewards \nfrom bookmakers for providing information ...",
"title": "List of cricketers banned for corruption"
},
{
"snippet": "Wessel Johannes "Hansie" Cronje (25 September 1969 – 1 June 2002) was a \n<b>South African international cricketer</b> and captain of the <b>South African</b> national \n<b>cricket</b> team in the 1990s. He was voted the 11th greatest <b>South African</b> in 2004 \ndespite having been <b>banned</b> from <b>cricket</b> ...",
"title": "Hansie Cronje"
},
{
"snippet": "The Australia <b>cricket</b> team toured <b>South Africa</b> between February and April 2018 \nto play four <b>Test</b> matches. It was the first four-<b>Test</b> series between the two teams \nsince <b>South Africa's</b> ... <b>South Africa's</b> Kagiso Rabada was given a two-match <b>ban</b> \nby the <b>International Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>) after he made contact with Australia's ...",
"title": "Australian cricket team in South Africa in 2017–18"
}
]
}
] |
What was the first practical and affordable home computer? | 155738414467677300 | Home computer | [
"the Altair 8800"
] | [
"Home computer",
"Apple II",
"History of personal computers"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"apple ][",
"Apple II"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "apple I",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple</b> Computer 1, originally released as the <b>Apple</b> Computer, also known \nlater as the <b>Apple I</b>, or <b>Apple</b>-1, is a desktop computer released by the <b>Apple</b> ...",
"title": "Apple I"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Apple</b> Inc. is an American multinational technology company headquartered in \nCupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, ...",
"title": "Apple Inc."
},
{
"snippet": "The Replica 1 is a clone of the <b>Apple I</b> designed by Vince Briel with permission \nfrom the <b>Apple I's</b> original creator Steve Wozniak. The Replica 1 is functionally a ...",
"title": "Replica 1"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Apple's</b> first computer lacked a case, power supply, keyboard, and display—all \ncomponents that had to be provided by the user. Eventually about 200 <b>Apple I</b> ...",
"title": "Steve Wozniak"
},
{
"snippet": "This timeline of <b>Apple</b> Inc. products is a list of all stand-alone <b>Apple</b> II, Macintosh, \nand other computers, as well as computer peripherals, expansion cards, ...",
"title": "Timeline of Apple Inc. products"
},
{
"snippet": "Integer BASIC, written by Steve Wozniak, is a BASIC interpreter for the <b>Apple I</b> \nand <b>Apple</b> II computers. Originally available on cassette for the <b>Apple I</b> in 1976, ...",
"title": "Integer BASIC"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Apple</b> Watch is a line of smartwatches produced by <b>Apple</b> Inc. It incorporates \nfitness tracking and health-oriented capabilities with integration with iOS and \nother ...",
"title": "Apple Watch"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of operating systems released by <b>Apple</b> Inc. Contents. 1 \n<b>Apple</b> computers. 1.1 <b>Apple</b> II; 1.2 <b>Apple</b> III; 1.3 <b>Apple</b> Lisa. 2 Macintosh \ncomputers.",
"title": "List of Apple operating systems"
},
{
"snippet": "It would be nice to get an image version with better resolution! My question is \nabout the ... special stuff at the upright wooden plate with engraved "<b>APPLE</b> ...",
"title": "File talk:Apple I.jpg"
},
{
"snippet": "Jobs and Wozniak co-founded <b>Apple</b> in 1976 to sell Wozniak's <b>Apple I</b> personal \ncomputer. Together the duo gained fame and wealth a year later with the <b>Apple</b> II,\n ...",
"title": "Steve Jobs"
}
]
},
{
"query": "What was the first practical and affordable home computer?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Home computers</b> were a class of microcomputers that entered the market in 1977 \nand became common during the 1980s. They were marketed to consumers as \n<b>affordable</b> and accessible <b>computers</b> that, for the <b>first</b> time, ... <b>early home</b> \n<b>computers</b> were rife with possibilities for their <b>practical</b> use in the <b>home</b>, from \ncataloging ...",
"title": "Home computer"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>history</b> of the <b>personal computer</b> as a mass-market consumer electronic \ndevice began with ... After the development of the microprocessor, individual \n<b>personal computers</b> were low enough in cost that they eventually became \n<b>affordable</b> ...",
"title": "History of personal computers"
},
{
"snippet": "Streaming media is multimedia that is constantly received by and presented to an \nend-user ... Attempts to display media on <b>computers</b> date back to the <b>earliest</b> \ndays of ... of audio and video content to <b>computer</b> users in their <b>homes</b> and \nworkplaces. ... made streaming media <b>practical and affordable</b> for ordinary \nconsumers.",
"title": "Streaming media"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>history</b> of <b>computing</b> hardware starting at 1960 is marked by the conversion \nfrom vacuum ... These advances led to the miniaturized <b>personal computer</b> (<b>PC</b>) \nin the 1970s, starting with <b>home computers</b> and ... The <b>earliest</b> multi-chip \nmicroprocessors were the Four-Phase Systems AL-1 in 1969 and Garrett \nAiResearch ...",
"title": "History of computing hardware (1960s–present)"
},
{
"snippet": "Sound recording and reproduction is an electrical, mechanical, electronic, or \ndigital inscription ... The <b>first practical</b> sound recording and reproduction device \nwas the ... By 1929 only the <b>budget</b> label Harmony was still issuing new \nrecordings ... to create <b>home</b>-recorded music "compilations" since 8-track \nrecorders were rare ...",
"title": "Sound recording and reproduction"
},
{
"snippet": "In the <b>history</b> of <b>computing</b>, <b>early</b> experimental machines could be operated ... \nMicral N was the <b>earliest</b> commercial, non-kit microcomputer based ... not \ncommercialized, as the parts were too expensive to be <b>affordable</b>.",
"title": "Personal computer"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Home</b> cinema, also called a <b>home</b> theater, a <b>home</b> theatre, and a theater room, \nare <b>home</b> ... In the 2010s, <b>affordable</b> large HDTV flatscreen TVs, high resolution \nvideo ... Some <b>home</b> theaters include a HTPC (<b>Home</b> Theater <b>PC</b>) with a media \ncenter ... often without sound, this system became the <b>first practical home</b> theater.",
"title": "Home cinema"
},
{
"snippet": "Recognizing a demand for more <b>practical and affordable</b> electronic music \nequipment, he began developing the Moog synthesizer, guided by suggestions \nand ...",
"title": "Moog synthesizer"
},
{
"snippet": "The Apple II series is a family of <b>home computers</b>, one of the <b>first</b> highly \nsuccessful ... The <b>earliest</b> Apple IIs were assembled in Silicon Valley, and later in \nTexas; printed ... Cassette storage may have been <b>inexpensive</b>, but it was also \nslow and ...",
"title": "Apple II series"
},
{
"snippet": "A television set or television receiver, more commonly called a television, TV, TV \nset, telly, or tele, is a device that combines a tuner, display, and loudspeakers, for \nthe purpose of viewing and hearing television broadcasting through satellites or \ncables, or viewing and hearing a <b>computer</b>. ... The <b>earliest</b> commercially made \ntelevisions were radios with the addition of a ...",
"title": "Television set"
}
]
},
{
"query": "first affordable home computer",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Home computers</b> were a class of microcomputers that entered the market in 1977 \nand became common during the 1980s. They were marketed to consumers as \n<b>affordable</b> and accessible <b>computers</b> that, for the <b>first</b> time, ...",
"title": "Home computer"
},
{
"snippet": "The history of the <b>personal computer</b> as a mass-market consumer electronic \ndevice began with ... After the development of the microprocessor, individual \n<b>personal computers</b> were low enough in cost that they eventually became \n<b>affordable</b> consumer ... Some of the <b>first computers</b> that might be called "<b>personal</b>\n" were early ...",
"title": "History of personal computers"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael S. Tomczyk was responsible for guiding the development and launch of \nthe Commodore VIC-20, the <b>first</b> microcomputer to sell one million units; and for \nhis early role as a pioneer in telecomputing. The VIC-20 was the <b>first affordable</b>, \nfull-featured color <b>computer</b> and the <b>first home computer</b> to ...",
"title": "Michael Tomczyk"
},
{
"snippet": "The history of video games goes as far back as the early 1950s, when academic \n<b>computer</b> ... During the 1970s, the <b>first</b> generation of <b>home</b> consoles emerged, \nincluding the popular game ... and popular, <b>affordable home</b> consoles such as \nthe Atari 2600 and Intellivision enabled people to play games on their <b>home</b> TVs.",
"title": "History of video games"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Computer</b> music is the application of <b>computing</b> technology in music composition, \nto help ... The world's <b>first computer</b> to play music was the CSIR Mark 1 (later \nnamed ... eventually leading to the development of the <b>affordable</b> FM synthesis-\nbased ... In the 1980s, Japanese <b>personal computers</b> such as the NEC <b>PC</b>-88 \ncame ...",
"title": "Computer music"
},
{
"snippet": "The Apple II series is a family of <b>home computers</b>, one of the <b>first</b> highly \nsuccessful ... "Build a better <b>computer</b>; a look at some new, interesting, and \n<b>affordable</b> ...",
"title": "Apple II series"
},
{
"snippet": "The Commodore 64, also known as the C64 or the CBM 64, is an 8-bit <b>home</b> \n<b>computer</b> ... to middle-class households via creative and <b>affordable</b> mass-\nproduction. ... The SX-64 has the distinction of being the <b>first</b> full-color portable \n<b>computer</b>.",
"title": "Commodore 64"
},
{
"snippet": "Casio <b>Computer</b> Co., Ltd is a Japanese multinational consumer electronics and \ncommercial ... Kashio's <b>first</b> major product was the yubiwa pipe, a finger ring that \nwould hold a ... In the 1980s, Casio's budget electronic instruments and its line of \n<b>affordable home</b> electronic musical keyboard instruments became popular.",
"title": "Casio"
},
{
"snippet": "The history of <b>computing</b> hardware starting at 1960 is marked by the conversion \nfrom vacuum ... These advances led to the miniaturized <b>personal computer</b> (<b>PC</b>) \nin the 1970s, ... IBM <b>first</b> used ICs in <b>computers</b> for the logic of the System/360 \nModel 85 ... Smaller, <b>affordable</b> hardware also brought about the development of\n ...",
"title": "History of computing hardware (1960s–present)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Sord M5 is a <b>home computer</b> launched by Sord <b>Computer</b> Corporation in \n1982. Primarily ... and was reasonably popular in Czechoslovakia, where the M5 \nstood as one of the <b>first affordable computers</b> available to the general public.",
"title": "Sord M5"
}
]
},
{
"query": "apple II",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple II</b> (stylized as apple ][) is an 8-bit home computer and one of the \nworld's first highly successful mass-produced microcomputer products, designed\n ...",
"title": "Apple II"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple II</b> series is a family of home computers, one of the first highly \nsuccessful mass-produced microcomputer products, designed primarily by Steve\n ...",
"title": "Apple II series"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple II</b> Plus (stylized as Apple ][+) is the second model of the <b>Apple II</b> series \nof personal computers produced by Apple Computer, Inc. It was sold from June ...",
"title": "Apple II Plus"
},
{
"snippet": "This timeline of <b>Apple II</b> Family models lists all major types of <b>Apple II</b> computers \nproduced by Apple Computer in order of introduction date. The Apple I, Apple III ...",
"title": "Timeline of the Apple II family"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple IIe</b> Card is a compatibility card which allows compatible Macintosh \ncomputers to run software designed for the <b>Apple II</b> series of computers Released\n ...",
"title": "Apple IIe Card"
},
{
"snippet": "Throughout it's lengthy, multi-model lifespan, the <b>Apple II</b> series computers \nlacked any serious built-in sound capabilities. At the time of its release in 1977 \nthis ...",
"title": "Apple II sound cards"
},
{
"snippet": "These include seven general-purpose expansion slots compatible with those on \nthe <b>Apple II</b>, II+, and IIe, plus a memory ...",
"title": "Apple IIGS"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple II</b> character set is a character set developed by Apple Inc. for the <b>Apple</b> \n<b>II</b>. Character sets[edit]. <b>Apple II</b>/II+/IIc/IIgs character sets[edit]. <b>Apple IIe</b> ...",
"title": "Apple II character set"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple II</b> graphics were composed of idiosyncratic modes and settings that \ncould be exploited. This graphics system debuted on the original <b>Apple II</b>, ...",
"title": "Apple II graphics"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple IIe</b> (styled as Apple //e) is the third model in the <b>Apple II</b> series of \npersonal computers produced by Apple Computer. The e in the name stands for ...",
"title": "Apple IIe"
}
]
}
] |
Who does the voice of sanjay and craig? | 3265576826448545969 | Sanjay and Craig | [
"Maulik Pancholy"
] | [
"Sanjay and Craig"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Maulik Pancholy"
],
"question": "Who does the voice of Sanjay in the show Sanjay and Craig?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Chris Hardwick"
],
"question": "Who does the voice of Craig in the show Sanjay and Craig?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who does the voice of sanjay and craig?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Sanjay</b> Patel (<b>voiced</b> by Maulik Pancholy) is a 12-year-old Indian-American boy \nwho goes on adventures with his best friend, <b>Craig</b>. He has a crush on Belle ...",
"title": "Sanjay and Craig"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Sanjay and Craig</b> · Gravity Falls · Home: Adventures with Tip & Oh. Mark "Thurop" \nVan Orman (born April 26, 1976) is an American cartoonist, animator, <b>voice</b> artist\n ...",
"title": "Thurop Van Orman"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Sanjay and Craig</b> is an American animated television series produced by \nNickelodeon. ... Craig loses his <b>voice</b> while screaming too much, so Sanjay, \nMegan, and Hector must ... <b>Sanjay and Craig</b> hear a sad song that <b>makes</b> them \nfeel better.",
"title": "List of Sanjay and Craig episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Apple & Onion is an American-British animated television series created for \nCartoon Network by George Gendi, a former storyboard artist on The Amazing \nWorld of Gumball and <b>Sanjay and Craig</b>, who also serves as executive producer. \n... Hoagie (<b>voiced</b> by Danny Jacobs, George Gendi, and Roger Craig Smith) – A ...",
"title": "Apple & Onion"
},
{
"snippet": "Maulik Navin Pancholy is an American actor and author who is best known for his \nroles as Jonathan on 30 Rock, Baljeet Tjinder in Phineas and Ferb, Neal in the \nfirst season of Whitney, and characters named Sanjay Patel in both Weeds and \n<b>Sanjay and Craig</b>. ... and <b>voiced</b> the characters of Baljeet Tjinder on Disney's \nPhineas & Ferb and ...",
"title": "Maulik Pancholy"
},
{
"snippet": "Christopher Ryan Hardwick (born November 23, 1971) is an American stand-up \ncomedian, ... Between May 2013 and July 2016, he <b>voiced</b> "Craig the Snake" on \n<b>Sanjay and Craig</b>. He also <b>voiced</b> the character Vaughn in Telltale Games's ...",
"title": "Chris Hardwick"
},
{
"snippet": "Nika Futterman (born October 25, 1969) is an American actress, <b>voice</b> actress \nand singer, best ... Futterman has <b>voiced</b> 'PAD' in the animated adult comedy \nYouTube Red series, Paranormal Action Squad, alongside YouTube stars Evan \nFong, ... Mila (pilot); <b>Sanjay and Craig</b> – Belle Pepper, additional <b>voices</b>; Scooby-\nDoo!",
"title": "Nika Futterman"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael-Leon Wooley is an American theatre, film, television and <b>voice</b> actor, \nsinger and ... In 2014, he <b>voiced</b> Chill Bill from <b>Sanjay and Craig</b> as well as \nMaster Lun in Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness and Pumpers in \nBreadwinners.",
"title": "Michael-Leon Wooley"
},
{
"snippet": "Matthew Lee Jones (born November 1, 1981) is an American actor, <b>voice</b> artist, \ncomedian, ... He appeared in the 2011 film Red State, and <b>voiced</b> minor \ncharacters in the ... 2013–2016, <b>Sanjay and Craig</b>, Hector Flanagan (<b>voice</b>), Main \nrole.",
"title": "Matt Jones (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "Christopher William D'Elia (born March 29, 1980) is an American stand-up \ncomedian, actor, ... When he was 25 he decided to <b>do</b> stand-up comedy, which \nhe had always ... 2013–2016, <b>Sanjay and Craig</b>, Remington Tufflips, recurring. \n<b>Voice</b>.",
"title": "Chris D'Elia"
}
]
}
] |
Who owns the largest independent fleet of ships? | 374588260740055930 | Carnival Cruise Line | [
"Carnival Corporation & PLC"
] | [
"Costamare"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Stavros Spyros Niarchos"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Stavros Spyros Niarchos",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Stavros Spyros Niarchos</b> was a billionaire Greek shipping tycoon. Starting in \n1952, he had the world's biggest supertankers built for his fleet. Propelled by both\n ...",
"title": "Stavros Niarchos"
},
{
"snippet": "Spyros <b>Stavros</b> "<b>Spiros" Niarchos</b> is the second son of the Greek shipping \nmagnate Stavros Niarchos and Eugenia Livanos. He is a grandson of another \nGreek ...",
"title": "Spyros Niarchos"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos Foundation was established in 1996 to honor Greek \nshipping magnate ... Philip Niarchos, Co-President (son of <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos); \n<b>Spyros Niarchos</b>, Co-President (son of <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos); Andreas Dracopoulos,\n ...",
"title": "Stavros Niarchos Foundation"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Stavros</b> George Livanos was a Greek shipowner, native of Chios, and the \nfounder of the Livanos shipping empire. He was also a rival as well as father-in-\nlaw to billionaire Greek shipping tycoons Aristotle Onassis and <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos. \n... Children of Eugenia Livanos and <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos · Philip Niarchos · <b>Spyros</b> \n<b>Niarchos</b>.",
"title": "Stavros G. Livanos"
},
{
"snippet": "Philip Niarchos (born 1954) is a Greek billionaire, the eldest son of the Greek \nshipping magnate <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos and Eugenia ... Alongside his younger \nbrother, <b>Spyros</b>, <b>Niarchos</b> is co-president and member of the board of directors at \nthe ...",
"title": "Philip Niarchos"
},
{
"snippet": "Daphne Diana Joan Susanna Guinness (born 9 November 1967) is an English \nsocialite and ... In 1987, she married <b>Spyros Niarchos</b>, the second son of <b>Stavros</b> \nNiarchos, the shipping magnate. The couple had three children. Her settlement ...",
"title": "Daphne Guinness"
},
{
"snippet": "Niarchos may refer to: Philip Niarchos (born 1954), eldest son of the Greek \nshipping magnate <b>Stavros</b> Niarchos; <b>Spyros Niarchos</b> (born 1955), second son of \nthe ...",
"title": "Niarchos"
},
{
"snippet": "... talk:WikiProject Greece § <b>Stavros</b> "<b>Spyros" Niarchos</b>: name or patronymic ...",
"title": "Talk:Stavros Niarchos"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Stavros</b> Niarchos III; Eugenie Niarchos; Theodorakis ("Theo") Niarchos; Electra \nNiarchos. <b>Spyros Niarchos</b> ... |state=collapsed : {{Niarchos family|state=collapsed\n}} to show the template collapsed, i.e., hidden apart from its title bar ...",
"title": "Template:Niarchos family"
},
{
"snippet": "Eugenia Livanos-<b>Niarchos</b> was the third wife of <b>Stavros Niarchos</b>. She was the \ndaughter of ... In 1947 she married <b>Stavros Niarchos</b>. The couple had four \nchildren, Philip, <b>Spyros</b>, Konstantinos and Maria. On 4 May 1970, she was found \ndead at ...",
"title": "Eugenia Livanos"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who owns the largest independent fleet of ships?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Carnival Cruise Line is an international cruise line with headquarters in Doral, \nFlorida. Its logo ... It <b>has</b> 26 <b>vessels</b> and is the <b>largest fleet</b> in the Carnival group. \n... The split enabled Arison to enter into new relationships with <b>independent</b> travel\n ...",
"title": "Carnival Cruise Line"
},
{
"snippet": "The Black Sea <b>Fleet</b> is the <b>fleet</b> of the Russian Navy in the Black Sea, the Sea of \nAzov and the ... The Black Sea <b>Fleet has</b> its official primary headquarters and \nfacilities in the city ... 30th <b>independent</b> Maritime Reconnaissance Aviation \nRegiment ... <b>own</b> Ukrainian Navy based on the Black Sea <b>Fleet</b>; several <b>ships</b> \nand ground ...",
"title": "Black Sea Fleet"
},
{
"snippet": "The Russian Navy is the naval arm of the Russian Armed Forces. It <b>has</b> existed in \nvarious forms since 1696, the present iteration of which was formed in January \n1992 when it succeeded the Navy of the Commonwealth of <b>Independent</b> States (\nwhich had ... The Soviet Navy's Typhoon-class ballistic missile <b>boats</b> are the \nworld's <b>largest</b> ...",
"title": "Russian Navy"
},
{
"snippet": "Costamare Inc. (NYSE:CMRE) is a Marshall Islands corporation and one of the \nworld's leading owners and providers of containerships for charter. Its \nheadquarters are in Athens, Greece. Costamare Inc. <b>has</b> 37 years of history in the \ninternational shipping industry and a <b>fleet</b> of ... <b>fleet of ships</b> directly or indirectly \n<b>owned</b> by the Constantakopoulos family ...",
"title": "Costamare"
},
{
"snippet": "Princess Cruises is a cruise line <b>owned</b> by Carnival Corporation & plc. The \n<b>company</b> is incorporated in Bermuda and its headquarters are in Santa Clarita, \nCalifornia. As of 2018, it is the second <b>largest</b> cruise line by net revenue. ... In \nMay 2013, Royal Princess, the first Royal-class <b>ship</b> and the <b>largest ship</b> \nconstructed for ...",
"title": "Princess Cruises"
},
{
"snippet": "Viking Cruises is a cruise line providing river and ocean cruises. Its operating \nheadquarters are in Basel, Switzerland, and its marketing headquarters in Los \nAngeles, California. The <b>company has</b> two divisions, Viking River Cruises and \nViking Ocean ... As of July 2018, it operates a <b>fleet</b> of 62 river <b>vessels</b> and 6 \nocean <b>ships</b>, ...",
"title": "Viking Cruises"
},
{
"snippet": "P&O Cruises is a British cruise line based at Carnival House in Southampton, \nEngland, ... At 69,153 gross tons, the new Oriana was one of the <b>largest</b> cruise \n<b>ships</b> in the ... Canberra departed the <b>fleet</b> in 1997 and was replaced the same \nyear by a ... formed the <b>independent company</b> P&O Princess Cruises, which now \n<b>owned</b> ...",
"title": "P&O Cruises"
},
{
"snippet": "Carnival Corporation & plc is a British-American cruise operator, currently the \nworld's <b>largest</b> travel leisure <b>company</b>, with a combined <b>fleet</b> of over 100 <b>vessels</b> \n... "P&O warns of difficult cruise market ahead of demerger". The <b>Independent</b>.",
"title": "Carnival Corporation & plc"
},
{
"snippet": "Cunard Line is a British cruise line based at Carnival House at Southampton, \nEngland, operated by Carnival UK and <b>owned</b> by Carnival Corporation & plc. \nSince 2011, Cunard and its three <b>ships</b> have been registered in Hamilton, ... \nCunard was forced to suspend construction on its <b>own</b> new superliner because of \nthe Great ...",
"title": "Cunard Line"
},
{
"snippet": "Maersk Line is a Danish international container shipping <b>company</b> and the \n<b>largest</b> operating subsidiary of the Maersk Group, a Danish business \nconglomerate. It is the world's <b>largest</b> container shipping <b>company</b> by both <b>fleet</b> \nsize and ... Its container <b>fleet</b>, consisting of <b>owned</b> and leased <b>vessels</b>, had a \ncapacity of 635,000 ...",
"title": "Maersk Line"
}
]
}
] |
Who owns the san diego padres baseball team? | 8754676645953693494 | List of San Diego Padres owners and executives | [
"John Moores",
"Ray Kroc",
"Joan Kroc",
"Tom Werner",
"C. Arnholdt Smith",
"Ron Fowler"
] | [
"San Diego Padres"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Ronald L Fowler",
"Ron Fowler",
"Fowler"
],
"question": "What individual is the face of owernship for the san diego padres baseball team?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Fowler/Siedler/O'Malley group"
],
"question": "Which group owns the san diego padres baseball team?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "owns the san diego padres baseball team",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "In 1969, the <b>Padres</b> joined the ranks of Major League <b>Baseball</b> as one of four \nnew expansion <b>teams</b>, along with the Montreal ...",
"title": "San Diego Padres"
},
{
"snippet": "Ronald L Fowler (born 1943/1944) is the executive chairman of the <b>ownership</b> \ngroup of the <b>San Diego Padres</b> franchise in Major League <b>Baseball</b> (<b>MLB</b>). He is \nthe CEO of Liquid Investments Inc, a San Diego beer distributorship. ... Fowler \n<b>owned the San</b> Diego Sockers, an indoor soccer <b>team</b> that won 10 \nchampionships in ...",
"title": "Ron Fowler"
},
{
"snippet": "This article is a list of the all-time owners and executives for the <b>San Diego</b> \n<b>Padres</b>, a Major League <b>Baseball</b> (<b>MLB</b>) club based in San Diego, ... Major \nLeague <b>Baseball</b> owners by <b>team</b> · American League ...",
"title": "List of San Diego Padres owners and executives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Padres adopted their name from the Pacific Coast League <b>team</b> which \narrived in San ... In 1969, the <b>San Diego Padres</b> joined the ranks of Major League \n<b>Baseball</b> as one of four ... <b>Ownership</b> of the <b>team</b> passed to his third wife, Joan \nKroc.",
"title": "History of the San Diego Padres"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>San Diego Padres</b> farm system consists of eight Minor League <b>Baseball</b> \naffiliates across the United States and in the Dominican Republic. Five <b>teams</b> are \nindependently <b>owned</b>, while three—two Arizona League ...",
"title": "List of San Diego Padres minor league affiliates"
},
{
"snippet": "Petco Park is a <b>baseball</b> park located in the downtown area of San Diego, \nCalifornia, United States, that is home to the <b>San Diego Padres</b> of Major League \n<b>Baseball</b> (<b>MLB</b>). ... The San Diego State Aztecs <b>baseball team</b>, of which retired \nPadres player Tony Gwynn was the head coach, defeated Houston. It was the \nlargest ...",
"title": "Petco Park"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>San Diego Padres</b> were a minor league <b>baseball team</b> which played in the \nPacific Coast ... operated without a working agreement with or outright <b>ownership</b> \nby a major league <b>team</b> throughout much of the 1930s and 1940s, and again in ...",
"title": "San Diego Padres (PCL)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Chargers were the main tenant of the stadium until 1968, when the AAA \nPacific Coast League <b>San Diego Padres baseball team</b> played its last season in \nthe ...",
"title": "SDCCU Stadium"
},
{
"snippet": "Raymond Albert Kroc (October 5, 1902 – January 14, 1984) was an American \nfast-food tycoon. ... amassed a multi-million dollar fortune during his lifetime. He \n<b>owned the San Diego Padres baseball team</b> from 1974 until his death in 1984.",
"title": "Ray Kroc"
},
{
"snippet": "The San Antonio Missions are a Minor League <b>Baseball team</b> of the Pacific Coast \nLeague and ... In 1972, another <b>ownership</b> group brought <b>baseball</b> into town to \nreplace the group that left to Midland, and brought ... The Missions entered into a \nnew player development contract with the <b>San Diego Padres</b> beginning in 2007.",
"title": "San Antonio Missions"
}
]
}
] |
Who played the music for eddie and the cruisers? | 2364081827403261314 | Eddie and the Cruisers | [
"Sal Amato",
"Joann Carlino",
"Kenny Hopkins",
"Wendell Newton",
"Frank Ridgeway"
] | [
"Eddie and the Cruisers"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "eddie and the cruisers",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b> is a 1983 American film directed by Martin Davidson with \nthe screenplay written by the director and Arlene Davidson, based on the novel ...",
"title": "Eddie and the Cruisers"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b> II: Eddie Lives! is the 1989 sequel to the 1983 cult film \n<b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b>. Despite being a failure at the box office, it has since \njoined ...",
"title": "Eddie and the Cruisers II: Eddie Lives!"
},
{
"snippet": ""On the Dark Side" is a song by American rock band John Cafferty & The Beaver \nBrown Band, though they were credited as <b>Eddie</b> & the <b>Cruisers</b>. The song was ...",
"title": "On the Dark Side"
},
{
"snippet": "John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band is an American rock band from Rhode \nIsland which ... In 2016, Rolling Stone ranked the fictional <b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b> \nat #18 in their list of 25 Greatest Movie Bands. John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown\n ...",
"title": "John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael Kevin Paré (born October 9, 1958) is an American actor. Contents. 1 \nEarly life; 2 ... His best-known film roles were as Eddie Wilson in <b>Eddie and the</b> \n<b>Cruisers</b> (1983) and its sequel <b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b> II: Eddie Lives! (1989), as \nwell ...",
"title": "Michael Paré"
},
{
"snippet": "Tough All Over is an album by American rock band John Cafferty and the Beaver \nBrown Band, released in 1985. It was first released in 1985 and was Cafferty's \nfirst attempt to pull his band away from the <b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b> franchise; ...",
"title": "Tough All Over (John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band album ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Tom Berenger is an American television and motion picture actor. He was \nnominated for the ... Other films he appeared in include Looking for Mr. Goodbar (\n1977), The Dogs of War (1980), The Big Chill (1983), <b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b> (\n1983), ...",
"title": "Tom Berenger"
},
{
"snippet": "Didn't <b>Eddie</b> drive off of the Victory Bridge? ... Wendell Newton, the saxophone \nplayer in the <b>Cruisers</b> is actually Michael "Tunes" Antunes, the saxophone player\n ...",
"title": "Talk:Eddie and the Cruisers"
},
{
"snippet": "Aurora Productions was a film production company established in Hollywood, \nCalifornia in ... 3, <b>Eddie and the Cruisers</b>, September 23, 1983, N/A, $4.8 million, \n36%. 4, Maxie, September 27, 1985, N/A, $2.6 million, N/A. 5, <b>Eddie and the</b> ...",
"title": "Aurora Productions, Hollywood"
},
{
"snippet": "Bernard "Bernie" Coulson (born 1965) is a Canadian actor best known for his \nroles as "The ... He played "Rick Diesel" in <b>Eddie and The Cruisers</b> II, Eddie Lives\n. He was most recently cast as Frank Becker in the film Dark Harvest. On \ntelevision ...",
"title": "Bernie Coulson"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote if we make it through december? | -6409493268585659542 | If We Make It Through December | [
"Merle Haggard"
] | [
"If We Make It Through December"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Merle Ronald Haggard",
"Merle Haggard"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "if we make it through december",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>If We Make It Through December</b>" is a song written and recorded by American \ncountry music singer Merle Haggard and The Strangers. It was released in ...",
"title": "If We Make It Through December"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>If We Make It Through December</b> is the sixteenth studio album by American \ncountry singer Merle Haggard and The Strangers, released in 1974. It reached ...",
"title": "If We Make It Through December (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "All songs by Merle Haggard unless otherwise noted. "<b>If We Make It Through</b> \n<b>December</b>" – 2:42; "Santa Claus and Popcorn" – 2:13; "Bobby Wants a ...",
"title": "Merle Haggard's Christmas Present"
},
{
"snippet": "3. "<b>If We Make It Through December</b>", Merle Haggard, 3:28. 4. "Remember Me", \nR.L. Feek, Tim ...",
"title": "A Farmhouse Christmas"
},
{
"snippet": "These are the Canadian number-one country songs of 1974, per the RPM \nCountry Tracks chart. Issue date, Title, Artist. January 12, Amazing Love · Charley \nPride. January 19, <b>If We Make It Through December</b> · Merle Haggard.",
"title": "List of RPM number-one country singles of 1974"
},
{
"snippet": "After only having a hand in writing three songs on his previous album <b>If We Make</b> \n<b>It Through December</b>, Haggard composed the majority of the tracks on this LP, ...",
"title": "Merle Haggard Presents His 30th Album"
},
{
"snippet": ""Jesus Christ" (Big Star cover)-- 2:41; "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"—3\n:56; "<b>If We Make It Through December</b>" (Merle Haggard cover)-- 2:38; "River" ...",
"title": "A Merrie Christmas to You"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>If We Make It Through December</b>", Merle Haggard, 2:45. 4. "If You Don't Want to \nSee Santa Claus Cry", Keith Stegall, 3:14. 5. "I Only Want You for Christmas" ...",
"title": "Honky Tonk Christmas"
},
{
"snippet": "Ben Cramer, better known as Old Sea Brigade, is an American indie folk singer-\nsongwriter, ... <b>If We Make It Through December</b>, Original Song Cover of Elvis ...",
"title": "Old Sea Brigade"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>If We Make It Through December</b>" (1973), "Things Aren't Funny Anymore" (1974)\n, "Old Man from the Mountain" (1974). "Things Aren't Funny Anymore" is a song \nwritten and recorded by American country music artist ...",
"title": "Things Aren't Funny Anymore"
}
]
}
] |
Who is in line for the royal throne? | 6966180498093881232 | Succession to the British throne | [
"Charles , Prince of Wales"
] | [
"Succession to the Norwegian throne",
"Succession to the Spanish throne",
"Succession to the Danish throne"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Prince Charles, Prince William, Prince George"
],
"question": "Who is in line for the British royal throne?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Crown Prince Haakon, Princess Ingrid Alexandra, Prince Sverre Magnus"
],
"question": "Who is in line for the Norwegian royal throne?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Crown Prince Frederik, Prince Christian, Princess Isabella"
],
"question": "Who is in line for the Danish royal throne?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who is in line for the royal throne?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "No official, complete version of the <b>line</b> of succession is currently maintained. ... (\n14) Anne, Princess <b>Royal</b> (b. 1950).",
"title": "Succession to the British throne"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of the individuals who were, at any given time, considered the next in \n<b>line</b> to ... There has been one female heir presumptive who was displaced as heir \nby her younger brother: Victoria, Princess <b>Royal</b> (daughter of Victoria).",
"title": "List of heirs to the British throne"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Throne</b> in the <b>Royal</b> Palace of Madrid · Spain uses the system of male-preference \ncognatic primogeniture. Dynasts who marry against ... If the word "successors" is \ndeemed to mean "descendants", the <b>line</b> ends with Irene Urdangarín y de ...",
"title": "Succession to the Spanish throne"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>line</b> of succession to the Norwegian <b>throne</b> consists of people entitled to \nbecome head of ... "His <b>Royal</b> Highness The Crown Prince". www.royalcourt.no.",
"title": "Succession to the Norwegian throne"
},
{
"snippet": "The Danish Act of Succession, adopted on 27 March 1953, restricts the <b>throne</b> to \nthose ... This created a class of people with <b>royal</b> titles but no rights to the <b>throne</b>. \n... Since her death, the <b>line</b> of succession has consisted only of descendants of ...",
"title": "Succession to the Danish throne"
},
{
"snippet": "The current <b>line</b> of succession to the Chrysanthemum <b>Throne</b> is based on the \nImperial Household Law. At present, only direct male-<b>line</b> males are allowed to ...",
"title": "Line of succession to the Japanese throne"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>line</b> of succession to the Swedish <b>throne</b> is determined by the Act of \nSuccession (Swedish: ... On 7 October 2019, King Carl Gustaf of Sweden \nreduced the number members of the <b>royal</b> house, stripping five of his \ngrandchildren of their <b>royal</b> ...",
"title": "Succession to the Swedish throne"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Royal</b> Standard of the Crown Prince. <b>Line</b> of succession to the Jordanian <b>throne</b> \nis the <b>line</b> of people who are eligible to succeed to ...",
"title": "Line of succession to the Jordanian throne"
},
{
"snippet": "Succession to the <b>throne</b> of Brunei is amongst the legitimate male descendants of \nSultan ... External links[edit]. <b>Royal</b> Ark ...",
"title": "Line of succession to the Bruneian throne"
},
{
"snippet": "There are sixteen persons in the <b>line</b> of succession to the Belgian <b>throne</b>. The \nmonarch is ... <b>throne</b>. However, on November 12, 2015, a <b>Royal</b> Decree was \npublished which showed that consent had been given after the marriage \nretroactively.",
"title": "Line of succession to the Belgian throne"
}
]
}
] |
Who was the youngest us president to die in office? | 2069203741741768591 | List of presidents of the United States by age | [
"John F. Kennedy"
] | [
"List of presidents of the United States who died in office"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"John F. Kennedy",
"John Fitzgerald Kennedy"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "youngest us president to die in office",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Since the <b>office</b> was established in 1789, 44 people have served as <b>President of</b> \nthe <b>United States</b>. <b>Of</b> these, eight <b>presidents</b> have <b>died in office</b>: four were ...",
"title": "List of presidents of the United States who died in office"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list <b>of presidents of</b> the <b>United States</b> by date <b>of</b> death, plus \nadditional lists <b>of presidential</b> death related statistics. <b>Of</b> the 44 people who have \nserved as <b>President of</b> the <b>United States</b> since the <b>office</b> came into existence in \n1789, 39 have <b>died</b> ... the <b>youngest</b> to have <b>died</b> by natural causes was James K. \nPolk, who <b>died of</b> ...",
"title": "List of presidents of the United States by date of death"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list <b>of presidents of</b> the <b>United States</b> by age. The first table charts the \nage <b>of</b> each ... The oldest at the time <b>of</b> leaving <b>office</b> was Ronald Reagan (77 \nyears, 349 days) ... The <b>youngest</b> living <b>president</b> is Barack Obama, born August \n4, 1961 (age 58 ... The shortest-lived <b>president</b> to have <b>died</b> by natural causes (\nthereby ...",
"title": "List of presidents of the United States by age"
},
{
"snippet": "There have been 48 vice <b>presidents of</b> the <b>United States</b> since the <b>office</b> came \ninto existence in ... The <b>youngest</b> person to become vice <b>president</b> was John C. \nBreckinridge at 36 years <b>of</b> age while the oldest was Alben W. Barkley ... The \nmost recent former vice <b>president to die</b> was George H. W. Bush on November 30\n, 2018.",
"title": "List of vice presidents of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "William Henry Harrison (February 9, 1773 – April 4, 1841) was an <b>American</b> \nmilitary officer and politician who served as the ninth <b>president of</b> the <b>United</b> \n<b>States</b> in 1841. He <b>died of</b> typhoid, pneumonia or paratyphoid fever 31 days into \nhis term (the shortest tenure), becoming the first <b>president to die in office</b>. ... \nHarrison was the seventh and <b>youngest</b> child <b>of</b> Benjamin Harrison V and ...",
"title": "William Henry Harrison"
},
{
"snippet": "Florence Mabel Harding (née Kling; August 15, 1860 – November 21, 1924) was \nthe First Lady <b>of</b> the <b>United States</b> from 1921 to 1923 as the wife <b>of President</b> ... \nFlorence's son Marshall <b>died</b> on January 1, 1915, <b>of</b> tuberculosis. ... correctly \nforecast that Warren would become <b>President</b>, but added that he would <b>die in</b> \n<b>office</b>.",
"title": "Florence Harding"
},
{
"snippet": "The following are historical lists <b>of</b> the <b>youngest</b> members <b>of</b> the <b>United States</b> \nCongress, ... On taking <b>office</b>, they became the <b>youngest</b> two members <b>of</b> the \n116th <b>United States</b> Congress; Ocasio-Cortez also ... William James Bryan was \nthe <b>youngest U.S.</b> Senator to <b>die in office</b> at the age <b>of</b> 31. ^ Sen. ... <b>President</b> pro \ntempore.",
"title": "List of youngest members of the United States Congress"
},
{
"snippet": "Frances Clara Cleveland Preston was First Lady <b>of</b> the <b>United States</b> from 1886 \nto 1889 and again from 1893 to 1897 as the wife <b>of President</b> Grover Cleveland. \nBecoming first lady at age 21, she remains the <b>youngest</b> wife <b>of</b> a sitting <b>president</b>\n. ... She <b>died</b> at the age <b>of</b> 12 <b>of</b> diphtheria and is buried in Princeton, New Jersey.",
"title": "Frances Cleveland"
},
{
"snippet": "Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr was an <b>American</b> politician who served as the 38th \n<b>president of</b> the ... His 895 day-long presidency is the shortest in <b>U.S.</b> history for \nany <b>president</b> who did not <b>die in office</b>. As <b>president</b>, Ford ... In 1975, Rumsfeld \nwas named by Ford as the <b>youngest</b>-ever Secretary <b>of</b> Defense. Ford chose a \nyoung ...",
"title": "Gerald Ford"
},
{
"snippet": "Theodore Roosevelt Jr was an <b>American</b> statesman, politician, conservationist, \nnaturalist, and ... After Vice <b>President</b> Garret Hobart <b>died</b> in 1899, the New York \nstate party ... Roosevelt took <b>office</b> as vice <b>president</b> in March 1901 and assumed \nthe ... He remains the <b>youngest</b> person to become <b>President of</b> the <b>United States</b>.",
"title": "Theodore Roosevelt"
}
]
}
] |
When did the united states became a country? | 2457812710477094129 | History of the United States | [
"1776"
] | [
"History of the United States (1776–1789)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"July 2, 1776"
],
"question": "When did the United States vote to declare independence as the United States of America?"
},
{
"answer": [
"July 4, 1776"
],
"question": "When did the United States adopt the Declaration of Independence?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When did the united states became a country?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "However, as the development of the <b>country</b> moved west, the question of slavery \n<b>became</b> too much to ignore, as there <b>was</b> a struggle to keep the number of ...",
"title": "Territorial evolution of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "The history of the <b>United States</b>, a <b>country</b> in North America, started with the \narrival of Native ... The <b>United States became</b> the world's leading industrial power \nat the turn of the 20th century, due to an outburst of ... The Indians <b>were</b> the big \nlosers; they never gained the <b>independent</b> nationhood Britain had promised and \nno ...",
"title": "History of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "Between 1776 and 1789 thirteen British colonies emerged as a new <b>independent</b> \nnation The ... In every state, a minority professed loyalty to the King, but nowhere \n<b>did</b> they have power. These Loyalists <b>were</b> ... The papers <b>became</b> seminal \ndocuments for the new <b>United States</b> and have often been cited by jurists. These \n<b>were</b> ...",
"title": "History of the United States (1776–1789)"
},
{
"snippet": "The society of the <b>United States</b> is based on Western culture, and has been \ndeveloping since long before the <b>United States became a country</b> with its own ...",
"title": "Society of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "In May 2011, the <b>country became</b> a net exporter of refined petroleum products. As \nof 2014, the <b>United States was</b> the world's third-largest producer of crude oil, ...",
"title": "United States energy independence"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>United States</b> Declaration of Independence is the pronouncement adopted \nby the Second ... The declaration <b>was</b> signed by representatives from New \nHampshire, ... The issue of Parliament's authority in the colonies <b>became</b> a crisis \nafter ... the United Colonies free and <b>independent</b> States, absolved from all \nallegiance to, ...",
"title": "United States Declaration of Independence"
},
{
"snippet": "The colonial history of the <b>United States</b> covers the history of European \ncolonization of America ... Other <b>countries did</b> attempt to found colonies in \nAmerica over the following century, but most of those attempts ended in failure. ... \nMany territories that had been part of New Spain <b>became</b> part of the <b>United</b> \n<b>States</b> after 1776 ...",
"title": "Colonial history of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "The urbanization of the <b>United States</b> has progressed throughout its entire history\n. Over the last two centuries, the <b>United States</b> of America has been transformed \nfrom a predominantly rural, agricultural nation into an urbanized, industrial one. \nThis <b>was</b> largely due to the Industrial Revolution in the <b>United States</b> (and ... The \nMidwestern and Western <b>United States became</b> urban majority in the ...",
"title": "Urbanization in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>United States</b> of America (<b>USA</b>), commonly known as the <b>United States</b> (<b>U.S.</b> \nor <b>US</b>) or ... A highly developed <b>country</b>, the <b>United States</b> is the world's largest \neconomy by nominal GDP, the ... the 13 colonies that would <b>become</b> the <b>United</b> \n<b>States</b> of America <b>were</b> administered by the British as overseas dependencies.",
"title": "United States"
},
{
"snippet": "Puerto Rico (and some smaller islands) <b>became</b> permanent <b>U.S.</b> possessions, as \n<b>did</b> Alaska (added by purchase in 1867). The <b>independent</b> Republic of Hawaii ...",
"title": "History of the United States (1865–1918)"
}
]
}
] |
Who played mr. carlson on wkrp in cincinnati? | -5199777322387956321 | Arthur Carlson | [
"Gordon Jump"
] | [
"WKRP in Cincinnati"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Gordon Jump",
"Alexander Gordon Jump"
],
"question": "Who played mr. Arthur carlson Sr. on wkrp in cincinnati?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sparky Marcus"
],
"question": "Who played mr. Arthur carlson Jr. on wkrp in cincinnati?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "wkrp in cincinnati",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b> is an American sitcom television series that features the \nmisadventures of the staff of a struggling fictional radio station in Cincinnati, Ohio.",
"title": "WKRP in Cincinnati"
},
{
"snippet": "Howard Hesseman (born February 27, 1940) is an American actor best known for \nplaying DJ Dr. Johnny Fever on <b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b>, Captain Pete Lassard in ...",
"title": "Howard Hesseman"
},
{
"snippet": ""In Concert" is a very special episode of the television series <b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b>. \nAiring as the 19th episode of the second season, it was first broadcast in the ...",
"title": "In Concert (WKRP in Cincinnati)"
},
{
"snippet": "The New <b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b> is an American sitcom television series that aired in \nfirst-run syndication from September 14, 1991, to May 1, 1993, as a sequel to ...",
"title": "The New WKRP in Cincinnati"
},
{
"snippet": "Loni Kaye Anderson (born August 5, 1945) is an American actress. She is known \nfor her role as receptionist Jennifer Marlowe on the CBS sitcom <b>WKRP in</b> \n<b>Cincinnati</b> (1978–1982), which earned her three ...",
"title": "Loni Anderson"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b> is an American situation comedy television series that \nfeatures the misadventures of the staff of a struggling fictional radio station in ...",
"title": "List of WKRP in Cincinnati episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Gary Lee Sandy (born December 25, 1945) is an American actor. Sandy played \nprogram director Andy Travis on the television sitcom <b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b>.",
"title": "Gary Sandy"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>WKRP in Cincinnati</b> characters". The following 8 pages are in \nthis category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more) ...",
"title": "Category:WKRP in Cincinnati characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Venus Flytrap is a character on the television situation comedy <b>WKRP in</b> \n<b>Cincinnati</b> (1978–82), played by Tim Reid. He is the evening and early night-time \ndisc ...",
"title": "Venus Flytrap (WKRP in Cincinnati)"
},
{
"snippet": "Dr. Johnny Fever is a fictional character on the American television sitcom <b>WKRP</b> \n<b>in Cincinnati</b>. He was inspired by Atlanta DJ Skinny Bobby Harper, who ...",
"title": "Dr. Johnny Fever"
}
]
}
] |
Rome was sacked in 410 by the goths who were led by? | -5336706154408322897 | Sack of Rome (410) | [
"King Alaric"
] | [
"Sack of Rome (410)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"King Alaric",
"Alaric I"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "who led the goths",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The Sack of Rome occurred on 24 August 410 CE. The city was attacked by <b>the</b> \n<b>Visigoths led</b> by King Alaric. At that time, Rome was no longer the capital of the ...",
"title": "Sack of Rome (410)"
},
{
"snippet": "Alaric I was the first king of <b>the Visigoths</b> from 395–410, son (or paternal \ngrandson) of chieftain ... In 394, he <b>led</b> a Gothic force of 20,000 that helped \nRoman Emperor Theodosius defeat the Frankish usurper Arbogast at the Battle \nof Frigidus.",
"title": "Alaric I"
},
{
"snippet": "The Battle of Adrianople (9 August 378), sometimes known as the Battle of \nHadrianopolis, was fought between an Eastern Roman army <b>led</b> by the Eastern \nRoman Emperor Valens ... In 376, displaced by the invasions of the Huns, <b>the</b> \n<b>Goths</b>, <b>led</b> by Alavivus and Fritigern, asked to be allowed to settle in the Eastern \nRoman ...",
"title": "Battle of Adrianople"
},
{
"snippet": "The Ostrogothic Kingdom, officially the Kingdom of Italy (Latin: Regnum Italiae), \nwas established by the Ostrogoths in Italy and neighbouring areas from 493 to \n553. In Italy the Ostrogoths, <b>led</b> by Theodoric the Great, killed and replaced ... The \nwar between the Franks and <b>Visigoths led</b> to renewed friction between Theodoric\n ...",
"title": "Ostrogothic Kingdom"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Goths</b> were a Germanic people who played a major role in the fall of the \nWestern Roman ... In this conflict, the Thervingi were <b>led</b> by Vidigoia, "the bravest \nof <b>the Goths</b>" and were victorious, although Vidigoia was killed. Jordanes states \nthat ...",
"title": "Goths"
},
{
"snippet": "Between about 376 and 382 the Gothic War against the Eastern Roman Empire, \nand in ... Fritigern <b>led the Goths</b> away from Marcianople towards Scythia.",
"title": "Gothic War (376–382)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (or Fields), also called the Battle of the \nCampus Mauriacus, Battle of Châlons, Battle of Troyes or the Battle of Maurica, \ntook place on June 20, 451 CE, between a coalition led by the Roman general \nFlavius Aetius and the ... Hughes argues that their assistance at the Catalaunian \nPlains <b>led the Goths</b> ...",
"title": "Battle of the Catalaunian Plains"
},
{
"snippet": "Fritigern (fl. 370s) was a Thervingian Gothic chieftain whose decisive victory at \nAdrianople during the Gothic War (376–382) <b>led</b> to favourable terms for <b>the Goths</b>\n ...",
"title": "Fritigern"
},
{
"snippet": "Fravitta redirects here. It may also refer to Patriarch Fravitta of Constantinople. \nFlavius Fravitta (died 402/403) was a chieftain of <b>the Visigoths</b>, who entered ... \nFravitta, on the other side, <b>led</b> those <b>Goths</b> who wanted to stay faithful to the treaty \nand ...",
"title": "Fravitta"
},
{
"snippet": "Oium or Aujum was a name for an area in Scythia (modern Ukraine), where the \nGoths, under ... Jordanes states that King Filimer <b>led the Goths</b> in a search for \nsuitable lands; when they arrived in Oium, they were delighted with the richness \nof ...",
"title": "Oium"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the highest goal scorer in the football history? | -7660453865374723850 | List of men's footballers with 500 or more goals | [
"Josef Bican"
] | [
"List of footballers with 500 or more goals"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Josef \"Pepi\" Bican",
"Josef Bican"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who is the highest goal scorer in the football history?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "In <b>top</b>-level <b>football</b>, 28 players have <b>scored</b> 500 or more <b>goals</b> over the course of \ntheir career, according (in <b>most</b> cases) to research by the Rec.Sport.Soccer ...",
"title": "List of footballers with 500 or more goals"
},
{
"snippet": "This page lists the <b>top</b> all-time male <b>goal scorer</b> for each national <b>football</b> team \nwhere the <b>top</b> ... As of 2 December 2019: Players in bold are still active at \ninternational level. Players in italics also hold the <b>record</b> for <b>most</b> caps for their \nnation.",
"title": "List of top international association football goal scorers by country ..."
},
{
"snippet": "A list of English <b>football</b> first tier <b>top scorers</b> from 1888 (as the <b>Football</b> League \nFirst <b>Division</b>) to the present (as the Premier League).",
"title": "List of English football first tier top scorers"
},
{
"snippet": "Ferenc Puskás, the second player to <b>score</b> 50 <b>goals</b> in international <b>football</b>, held \nthe <b>record</b> of <b>highest</b> number of international <b>goals</b> with 84 for 47 years following\n ...",
"title": "List of footballers with more than 50 international goals"
},
{
"snippet": "The current world <b>record</b> for an international is held by Archie Thompson, who \n<b>scored</b> 13 <b>goals</b> against American Samoa in Australia's 31–0 victory during the ...",
"title": "List of players with the most goals in an association football game ..."
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Most</b> league <b>goals scored</b> in a season: 134, Peterborough United (Fourth \n<b>Division</b>, 1960–61); <b>Most top</b>-flight <b>goals scored</b> in a season (42 ...",
"title": "Football records and statistics in England"
},
{
"snippet": "Association <b>football</b> at the professional level is a low <b>scoring</b> sport An athlete in \nassociation ... All players <b>scored</b> at a <b>high</b> average rate of more than one <b>goal</b> \nevery three matches. International <b>goals</b> in this list ... The Italian <b>Football</b> \nFederation (FIGC) website lists her <b>record</b> as 97 <b>goals</b> in 95 matches. <sup>2</sup> Only \nMarta's <b>goals</b> ...",
"title": "List of women's footballers with 100 or more international goals ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Fontaine holds the <b>record</b> for the <b>most goals scored</b> at a single tournament, with \n13 goals in 1958. The players that came closest were Kocsis in 1954, Müller in ...",
"title": "FIFA World Cup top goalscorers"
},
{
"snippet": "... for the <b>largest</b> victory in an international <b>football</b> match, winning the game 31–0\n. Australia's Archie Thompson also broke the <b>record</b> for <b>most goals scored</b> by a ...",
"title": "Australia 31–0 American Samoa"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Goals scored</b> by goalkeepers are a somewhat rare event in <b>football</b>. Goalkeepers \nspend the ... The <b>most</b> prolific goalscoring goalkeepers are those who take \npenalties or free kicks. ... On the other hand, the <b>record</b> for longest goal is held by \nthe Korean Koo Sang-min, with measured shot length of 100 meters, and \napproved ...",
"title": "List of goalscoring goalkeepers"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the movie phantom thread based on? | 383673612158153905 | Phantom Thread | [
"Charles James"
] | [
"Phantom Thread"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Charles Wilson Brega James",
"Charles James"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": " phantom thread",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Phantom Thread</b> is a 2017 American-British period romantic drama film written \nand directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, set in the haute couture world of London\n ...",
"title": "Phantom Thread"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Phantom Thread</b> is a 2017 American period drama film written and directed by \nPaul Thomas Anderson. It is about the complex relationship between a ...",
"title": "List of accolades received by Phantom Thread"
},
{
"snippet": "Film portal · v · t · e. This file is within the scope of WikiProject Film. If you would \nlike to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion\n ...",
"title": "File talk:Phantom Thread.png"
},
{
"snippet": "The 30th Chicago Film Critics Association Awards were announced on \nDecember 12, 2017. ... Call Me by Your Name received the most nominations (8), \nfollowed by The Shape of Water (7), Dunkirk (6), Lady Bird (6) and <b>Phantom</b> \n<b>Thread</b> (6).",
"title": "Chicago Film Critics Association Awards 2017"
},
{
"snippet": "Lesley Ann Manville OBE (born 12 March 1956) is an English actress. She is \nknown for her ... She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting \nActress for <b>Phantom Thread</b> (2017). Other film roles include Maleficent (2014) \nand its ...",
"title": "Lesley Manville"
},
{
"snippet": "JoAnne R. Sellar (born 1963) is an English film producer. She is married to \nproducer Daniel Lupi and both have a long collaboration with filmmaker Paul \nThomas Anderson. Sellar was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture \nfor the films There Will Be Blood and <b>Phantom Thread</b>, both of which she co-\nproduced.",
"title": "JoAnne Sellar"
},
{
"snippet": "Mark Bridges is an American costume designer and a frequent collaborator with \nPaul Thomas ... Bridges has won two Academy Awards for Best Costume Design \nfor The Artist and <b>Phantom Thread</b>. At the 90th Academy Awards, host Jimmy ...",
"title": "Mark Bridges (costume designer)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Phantom Thread</b>. The 38th Boston Society of Film Critics Awards, honoring the \nbest in filmmaking in 2017, were ...",
"title": "Boston Society of Film Critics Awards 2017"
},
{
"snippet": "Jonathan Richard Guy Greenwood (born 5 November 1971) is an English \nmusician and ... Greenwood wrote the music for another of Anderson's films, \n<b>Phantom Thread</b>, in 2017; it was nominated for the Academy Award for Best \nOriginal Score ...",
"title": "Jonny Greenwood"
},
{
"snippet": "The Bristol 404 and Bristol 405 are British luxury cars which were manufactured \nby the Bristol ... 405 around Whitby (Yorkshire) in his last film <b>Phantom Thread</b>, \ndirected by Paul Thomas Anderson and released on Christmas Day 2017.",
"title": "Bristol 404 and 405"
}
]
}
] |
When did singer start making electric sewing machines? | 991426739405022772 | Singer Corporation | [
"1889"
] | [
"Singer Corporation"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1889"
],
"question": "When did singer demonstrate the first workable electric sewing machine?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1910"
],
"question": "When did singer start mass-producing domestic electric sewing machines?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "electric sewing machines singer",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The company demonstrated the first workable <b>electric sewing machine</b> at the ...",
"title": "Singer Corporation"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>sewing machine</b> thus electrified now fit entirely inside a woman-portable \ncarrying case. <b>Electric</b> motors became so common that ...",
"title": "Singer Model 27 and 127"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>sewing machine</b> is a machine used to sew fabric and other materials together \nwith thread. ... The first <b>electric</b> machines were developed by <b>Singer</b> Sewing Co. \nand introduced in 1889. By the end of the First World War, <b>Singer</b> was offering ...",
"title": "Sewing machine"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Singer</b> Featherweight is a model series of lockstitch domestic <b>sewing</b> \n<b>machines</b> produced ... Retrieved August 6, 2019. ^ Instructions for Using <b>Singer</b> \n<b>Electric Sewing Machine</b> 221 (PDF). <b>Singer</b> Manufacturing Company. 1955. pp. \n31–54.",
"title": "Singer Featherweight"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Singer</b> colors and numbers its needles with the following system of codes to \nindicate the needle point type and ...",
"title": "Sewing machine needle"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of notable <b>sewing machine</b> brands and companies. A <b>sewing</b> \n<b>machine</b> is a ... Launched S-7300A NEXIO the world's first <b>electronic</b> feeding \nsystem in 2015. ... <b>Singer</b> – American manufacturer of <b>sewing machines</b>, first \nestablished as I. M. <b>Singer</b> & Co. in 1851 by Isaac Merritt <b>Singer</b> with New York \nlawyer Edward ...",
"title": "List of sewing machine brands"
},
{
"snippet": "Diehl's work at <b>Singer</b> to improve the <b>sewing machine</b> led to developments in \n<b>electric</b> motors, first to power <b>sewing machines</b> and later for other uses as well.",
"title": "Philip Diehl (inventor)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Singer</b> Motors Limited was a British motor vehicle manufacturing business, \noriginally a bicycle ... At the time, he was foreman of the Coventry <b>Sewing</b> \n<b>Machine</b> Company, from which he resigned. He was joined in the ... Former. \nEurostar Automobilwerk · Global <b>Electric</b> Motorcars · Chrysler First Financial \nServices Corporation ...",
"title": "Singer Motors"
},
{
"snippet": "Many others, including Walter Hunt and Elias Howe, had patented <b>sewing</b> \n<b>machines</b> before <b>Singer</b>, but his success was based on the practicality of his \nmachine, ...",
"title": "Isaac Singer"
},
{
"snippet": "A treadle is a mechanism operated with a pedal for converting reciprocating \nmotion into rotating motion. Along with cranks, treadmills, and treadwheels, \ntreadles allow human and animal <b>machine</b> power in the absence of <b>electricity</b> ... \nElias Howe and Isaac <b>Singer</b> popularized their use and they became a fixture in ...",
"title": "Treadle"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the keyboard player for the rolling stones? | 4507340438181247480 | Chuck Leavell | [
"Charles Alfred Leavell"
] | [
"Ian McLagan",
"Billy Preston",
"Chuck Leavell",
"Nicky Hopkins",
"Ian Stewart (musician)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Ian Stewart"
],
"question": "Who was the keyboard player for the Rolling Stones until May 1963?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Chuck Leavell"
],
"question": "Who has been the keyboard player for the Rolling Stones since 1982?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Nicky Hopkins"
],
"question": "Who is the keyboard player for the Rolling Stones from 1967-1975?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Mick Jagger"
],
"question": "Who was the keyboard player for the Rolling Stones from 1962-present?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Brian Jones"
],
"question": "Who was the keyboard player for the Rolling Stones from 1962-1969?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who is the keyboard player for the rolling stones?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Charles Alfred Leavell (born April 28, 1952) is an American musician. A member \nof the Allman ... He has served as the principal touring <b>keyboardist</b> and de facto \nmusical director of The <b>Rolling Stones</b> since 1982. As a session musician, \nLeavell ...",
"title": "Chuck Leavell"
},
{
"snippet": "Ian Andrew Robert Stewart (18 July 1938 – 12 December 1985) was a Scottish \n<b>keyboardist</b> and co-founder of the <b>Rolling Stones</b>. He was removed from the ...",
"title": "Ian Stewart (musician)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Rolling Stones</b> are an English rock band formed in London in 1962. The first \nstable line-up ... The Stones have not had an official <b>keyboardist</b> since 1963, but \nhave employed several musicians in that role, including Jack Nitzsche ...",
"title": "The Rolling Stones"
},
{
"snippet": "Nicholas Christian Hopkins (24 February 1944 – 6 September 1994) was an \nEnglish pianist ... Hopkins <b>played</b> with the <b>Rolling Stones</b> on their studio albums \nfrom Between the Buttons in 1967 through Black and Blue in 1975. ... incensed \nwhen Ray Davies apparently credited himself for the majority of the <b>keyboard</b> \n<b>playing</b>.",
"title": "Nicky Hopkins"
},
{
"snippet": "William Everett Preston (September 2, 1946 – June 6, 2006) was an American \nmusician whose work encompassed R&B, rock, soul, funk, and gospel. Preston \nwas a top session <b>keyboardist</b> in the 1960s, during which he backed ... and Eric \nClapton, and he <b>played keyboards</b> for the <b>Rolling Stones</b> on many of the group's\n ...",
"title": "Billy Preston"
},
{
"snippet": "Robert Henry <b>Keys</b> (December 18, 1943 – December 2, 2014) was an American \nsaxophonist ... <b>Keys played</b> on hundreds of recordings and was a touring \nmusician from 1956 until his death in 2014. ... <b>Keys</b> met the <b>Rolling Stones</b> at the \nSan Antonio Teen Fair while sharing a bill with the group as a member of Vee's \nband in ...",
"title": "Bobby Keys"
},
{
"snippet": "Ian Patrick McLagan was an English <b>keyboard</b> instrumentalist, best known as a \nmember of the English rock bands Small Faces and Faces. He also collaborated \nwith the <b>Rolling Stones</b> and led his own band from the ... McLagan <b>played</b> \n<b>keyboards</b> in the band that backed Bob Dylan on his 1984 joint European tour \nwith ...",
"title": "Ian McLagan"
},
{
"snippet": "Havana Moon is a concert film by the <b>Rolling Stones</b>, directed by Paul Dugdale. \nHavana ... "The <b>Rolling Stones</b> are <b>playing</b> a free open air concert in Cuba".",
"title": "The Rolling Stones: Havana Moon"
},
{
"snippet": ""Angie" is a song by the rock band The <b>Rolling Stones</b>, featured on their 1973 \nalbum Goats ... The song's distinctive piano accompaniment, written by Richards, \nwas <b>played</b> on the album by Nicky Hopkins, a <b>Rolling Stones</b> recording-session ...",
"title": "Angie (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Al Kooper is an American songwriter, record producer and musician, known for \norganizing ... Instruments, Vocals, guitar, bass, Hammond organ, keyboards, \npercussion, mandolin ... Throughout much of the 1960s and 1970s, he was a \nprolific studio musician, <b>playing</b> organ on the Bob Dylan song "Like A <b>Rolling</b> \n<b>Stone</b>", ...",
"title": "Al Kooper"
}
]
}
] |
Who does the voice of paulie the bird? | 6171354912254325767 | Paulie | [
"Jay Mohr"
] | [
"Paulie"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Jay Mohr",
"Jon Ferguson \"Jay\" Mohr",
"Mohr"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "does the voice of paulie the bird",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Paulie is</b> a 1998 American adventure fantasy comedy film about a disobedient \n<b>bird</b> named <b>Paulie</b>, starring Tony Shalhoub, Cheech Marin, Gena Rowlands, \nHallie Eisenberg, and Jay Mohr. Mohr performs both the <b>voice of Paulie</b> and the \non-screen supporting role of ...",
"title": "Paulie"
},
{
"snippet": "Jon Ferguson "Jay" Mohr (born August 23, 1970) <b>is</b> an American actor, comedian \nand radio ... Since making his feature film debut with Jerry Maguire, he has \nappeared in the films Suicide Kings (1997), Picture Perfect (1997), <b>Paulie</b> (1998), \nMafia! (1998) ... He was the <b>voice</b>-over artist for Fox Sports Net's Beyond the \nGlory.",
"title": "Jay Mohr"
},
{
"snippet": "Paul Montgomery Shore (born February 1, 1968) <b>is</b> an American actor, comedian \nand ... 2017, Star vs. the Forces of Evil, Johnny Blowhole (<b>voice</b>). 2017, Sandy ...",
"title": "Pauly Shore"
},
{
"snippet": "T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) <b>is</b> an American computer-animated \ntelevision series. ... <b>Paulie</b> (<b>voiced</b> by Dee Bradley Baker) – A <b>parrot</b> who <b>is</b> the \nair traffic controller at T.O.T.S. and often speaks his sentences twice. Mr. \nWoodbird ...",
"title": "T.O.T.S."
},
{
"snippet": "SpongeBob SquarePants <b>is</b> an American animated television series created by \nmarine biologist and animator Stephen Hillenburg that debuted on Nickelodeon \nin the United States on May 1, 1999. The regular <b>voice</b> cast consists of Tom \nKenny, Bill Fagerbakke, Rodger ... Potty the <b>Parrot</b>, Hillenburg <b>voiced</b> the \nrecurring character during the show's ...",
"title": "List of SpongeBob SquarePants cast members"
},
{
"snippet": "This <b>is</b> the list of characters appearing in the anime series Samurai Pizza Cats \nand its original ... Although Speedy <b>is</b> the leader, <b>Polly does</b> her fair share of \nbossing her teammates around. ... Being from the country, Bad <b>Bird's</b> natural \n<b>voice</b> has a deep country accent, which he only speaks in when meeting with his \nchildhood ...",
"title": "List of Samurai Pizza Cats characters"
},
{
"snippet": "This <b>is</b> a list of characters seen on Dinosaur Train, a 2009 CGI animated \ntelevision series ... Tiny (<b>voiced</b> by Claire Corlett) — Tiny <b>is</b> a female Pteranodon. \n... She has an affinity for <b>bird</b> watching and drawing, namely species of <b>birds</b> she \n... by the Troodon conductor, <b>Paulie</b> becomes friends with Buddy who <b>is</b> a land T-\nRex.",
"title": "List of Dinosaur Train characters"
},
{
"snippet": ""Eloise" <b>is</b> the 51st episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the 12th \nof the show's ... The song played in the background of a scene between Silvio \nand <b>Paulie is</b> Metallica's cover of "The Small Hours" by Holocaust. The song ... \nThe song played over the end credits <b>is</b> "Little <b>Bird</b>" (Live version) by Annie \nLennox.",
"title": "Eloise (The Sopranos)"
},
{
"snippet": "A Goofy Movie <b>is</b> a 1995 animated musical comedy film produced by Disney \nMovieToons and ... Aaron Lohr <b>makes</b> a guest appearance as Max's singing \n<b>voice</b>. ... as Roxanne, Jenna von Oÿ as Stacey, and <b>Pauly</b> Shore as Bobby \nZimuruski.",
"title": "A Goofy Movie"
},
{
"snippet": "Pauley Perrette (born March 27, 1969) <b>is</b> an American actress. She <b>is</b> known for \nplaying Abby ... Perrette has worked in television and film, mostly doing \ncommercials, <b>voice</b>-overs, music videos and short films. She worked as a \nbartender in New ...",
"title": "Pauley Perrette"
}
]
}
] |
Where did the detroit tigers play before comerica park? | -3564100537536913350 | Tiger Stadium (Detroit) | [
"Tiger Stadium"
] | [
"Detroit Tigers"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Tiger Stadium",
"Briggs Stadium",
"Navin Field"
],
"question": "Where did the detroit tigers play from 1912 to 1999 before comerica park?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Burns Park"
],
"question": "Where did the detroit tigers play from 1901 to 1902 on Sundays before comerica park?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Bennett Park"
],
"question": "Where did the detroit tigers play from 1896 to 1911 before comerica park?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "detroit tigers",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Detroit Tigers</b> are an American professional baseball team based in Detroit, \nMichigan. They compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member of the ...",
"title": "Detroit Tigers"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2006 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> won the American League Pennant. They represented \nthe AL in the World Series before falling to the St. Louis Cardinals 4 games to 1.",
"title": "2006 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1979 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> finished in fifth place in the American League East with a \nrecord of 85-76, 18 games behind the Orioles. They outscored their opponents ...",
"title": "1979 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1984 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> won the 1984 World Series, defeating the San Diego \nPadres, 4 games to 1. The season was their 84th since they entered the \nAmerican ...",
"title": "1984 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1995 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> finished in fourth place in the American League Eastern \nDivision with a record of 60–84 (.417). The strike-shortened 1995 season was ...",
"title": "1995 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1935 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> won the 1935 World Series, defeating the Chicago Cubs \n4 games to 2. The season was their 35th since they entered the American ...",
"title": "1935 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2012 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> season was the team's 112th season. On October 1, the \nTigers clinched the AL Central title, the club's first repeat title since 1934–1935.",
"title": "2012 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1934 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> season was the 34th season for the <b>Detroit Tigers</b> since \nentering the American League in 1901. The Tigers won the American League ...",
"title": "1934 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1968 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> won the 1968 World Series, defeating the St. Louis \nCardinals four games to three. The 1968 baseball season, known as the "Year of \nthe ...",
"title": "1968 Detroit Tigers season"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2013 <b>Detroit Tigers</b> season was the team's 113th season. They finished 93–\n69, first place in the American League (AL) Central Division. During the season ...",
"title": "2013 Detroit Tigers season"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote the song the house i live in? | 8024690833118864649 | The House I Live In (1945 film) | [
"Abel Meeropol",
"Earl Robinson"
] | [
"The House I Live In"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Robinson",
"Earl Robinson"
],
"question": "Who wrote the music for the song the house i live in?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Abel Meeropol",
"Lewis Allan",
"Meeropol"
],
"question": "Who wrote the lyrics for the song the house i live in?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who wrote the song the house i live in?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Robinson was later blacklisted during the McCarthy era for being a member of \nthe Communist Party. He also <b>wrote</b> campaign <b>songs</b> ...",
"title": "The House I Live In (1945 film)"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>The House I Live In</b>" (<b>song</b>), a <b>song</b> by Abel Meeropol and Earl Robinson, the \ntitle <b>song</b> of the 1945 film. Disambiguation icon. Disambiguation page providing ...",
"title": "The House I Live In"
},
{
"snippet": "Earl Hawley Robinson (July 2, 1910 – July 20, 1991) was a composer, arranger \nand folk music singer-songwriter from Seattle, Washington. Robinson is \nremembered for his music, including the cantata "Ballad for Americans" and \n<b>songs</b> such as "Joe Hill" and ... With Lewis Allan, in 1942 Robinson <b>wrote</b> "<b>The</b> \n<b>House I Live In</b>", a hit ...",
"title": "Earl Robinson"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>The House I Live In</b>". Spouse(s), Anne Meeropol. Children, Robert Meeropol · \nMichael Meeropol. Abel Meeropol (February 10, 1903 – October 29, 1986) was \nan American songwriter and poet whose works were published under his \npseudonym, Lewis Allan. He <b>wrote</b> "Strange Fruit" (1937), which was recorded by \nBillie Holiday. ... Meeropol <b>wrote</b> numerous poems and <b>songs</b>, including the \nFrank Sinatra and ...",
"title": "Abel Meeropol"
},
{
"snippet": ""Burning Down <b>the House</b>" is a <b>song</b> by new wave band Talking Heads, released \nin July 1983 ... The single was backed with Jones' <b>live</b> recordings of the EMF \n<b>song</b> "Unbelievable" and The Beatles' "Come ... <b>Who Wrote</b> The Book Of Love?",
"title": "Burning Down the House"
},
{
"snippet": ""It's My <b>House</b>" is a <b>song composed</b> and produced by Ashford & Simpson and \nreleased as a single by singer Diana Ross on the Motown label in 1979. While \nnot ...",
"title": "It's My House (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The House</b> of Love are an English alternative rock band, formed in London in \n1986 by ... He <b>wrote</b> a new <b>song</b> called "Christine", which gave him ideas for \nfurther ... in Paris; the concert was broadcast <b>live in</b> prime time on radio France \nInter.",
"title": "The House of Love"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" is a <b>song</b> written, <b>composed</b>, and \nperformed by ... B-side, "The House You Live In" ... In a later <b>live</b> recording, \nLightfoot recounts that a parishioner of the church informed him that the church is \nnot "musty".",
"title": "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>The House</b> of the Rising Sun" is a traditional folk <b>song</b>, sometimes called "Rising \nSun Blues". It tells of a life gone wrong in New Orleans; many versions also ...",
"title": "The House of the Rising Sun"
},
{
"snippet": "Lee Hays (March 14, 1914 – August 26, 1981) was an American folk-singer and \nsongwriter, ... (Together the two men later <b>wrote</b>, perhaps Hays' best <b>song</b>, "Wasn'\nt That a Time? ... blacklist victim Earl Robinson (composer of "<b>The House I Live In</b>\n", "Ballad for Americans", and "Joe Hill"), in a brownstone in Brooklyn Heights.",
"title": "Lee Hays"
}
]
}
] |
Rock and roll hall of fame 1995 inductees? | 1269205631249308560 | List of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees | [
"The Allman Brothers Band",
"Led Zeppelin",
"Janis Joplin",
"Neil Young",
"Al Green",
"Martha and the Vandellas",
"Frank Zappa"
] | [
"List of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"The Allman Brothers Band, Al Green, Janis Joplin, Led Zeppelin, Neil Young, Martha and the Vandellas, Frank Zappa"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Rock and roll hall of fame 1995 inductees?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Rock and Roll Hall of Fame</b>, established in 1983 and located in Cleveland, \nOhio, United ... <b>1995</b>, Green in concert at the Chumash Casino Resort, Santa \nYnez, California, July 2006, Al Green · Natalie Cole. <b>1995</b>, Janis Joplin seated \n1970.",
"title": "List of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Rock and Roll Hall of Fame</b> (RRHOF) is a museum and hall of fame located \nin downtown ... The museum was dedicated on September 1, <b>1995</b>, with the \nribbon being cut by an ensemble that included Yoko Ono and Little Richard, \namong others, ... Since 1986, the <b>Rock and Roll Hall of Fame</b> has selected new \n<b>inductees</b>.",
"title": "Rock and Roll Hall of Fame"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>Hall of Fame</b> is a <b>hall of fame</b> which honors professional wrestlers and \nprofessional ... While WWE promotes Warrior Award recipients as <b>Hall of Fame</b> \n<b>inductees</b>, they are ... The <b>1995</b> class featured two posthumous <b>inductees</b>. ... as \nwell as the inductions of the likes of The <b>Rock</b> '<b>n</b>' <b>Roll</b> Express and The Fabulous\n ...",
"title": "WWE Hall of Fame"
},
{
"snippet": "Neil Percival Young OC OM (born November 12, 1945) is a Canadian American \n... The <b>Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted</b> him twice: as a solo artist in <b>1995</b> ...",
"title": "Neil Young"
},
{
"snippet": "Dire Straits were a British rock band formed in London in 1977 by Mark Knopfler \nDavid ... After disbanding once again in <b>1995</b>, Knopfler launched his solo career \nfull-time. ... They were <b>inducted</b> into the <b>Rock and Roll Hall of Fame</b> in 2018.",
"title": "Dire Straits"
},
{
"snippet": "Curtis Lee Mayfield (June 3, 1942 – December 26, 1999) was an American \nsinger-songwriter, ... Award in <b>1995</b>. He is a double <b>inductee</b> into the <b>Rock and</b> \n<b>Roll Hall of Fame</b>, as a member of the Impressions in 1991, and again in 1999 as \na solo artist. ... Mayfield received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in \n<b>1995</b>.",
"title": "Curtis Mayfield"
},
{
"snippet": "James Vernon Taylor (born March 12, 1948) is an American singer-songwriter \nand guitarist. A five-time Grammy Award winner, he was <b>inducted</b> into the <b>Rock</b> \n<b>and Roll Hall of Fame</b> in 2000. ... a jigsaw puzzle with his face as the missing \nfinal piece. In <b>1995</b>, Taylor performed the role of the Lord in Randy Newman's \nFaust.",
"title": "James Taylor"
},
{
"snippet": "Ross Lamont Valory (born February 2, 1949) is an American musician best \nknown as the bass player for the rock band Journey. He was absent from the \nband between 1985 and <b>1995</b>. Valory was <b>inducted</b> into the <b>Rock and Roll Hall</b> \n<b>of Fame</b> as a member of ...",
"title": "Ross Valory"
},
{
"snippet": "The Hip Hop Hall of Fame, also known as the Hip Hop Hall of Fame + Museum, is \na New York ... The Hip Hop Hall of Fame was launched globally in September \n<b>1995</b> at Harlem's historic restaurant Sylvia's, ... with Juanita Williams of Dove \nEntertainment in the mid 1990s, modeled after the Rock <b>n Roll Hall of Fame</b> \nmodel.",
"title": "Hip Hop Hall of Fame"
},
{
"snippet": "The Grateful Dead was an American rock band formed in 1965 in Palo Alto, \nCalifornia. ... The band was <b>inducted</b> into the <b>Rock and Roll Hall of Fame</b> in 1994 \nand a ... After the death of Garcia in <b>1995</b>, former members of the band, along \nwith ...",
"title": "Grateful Dead"
}
]
}
] |
What is the fourth amendment in the bill of rights? | -4315337576053482251 | Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution | [
"prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures"
] | [
"Presbyterian Church (USA)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Triennium"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "TRIENNIUM presbyterian church",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The very first Youth <b>Triennium</b> was held in 1980 at Indiana University and the \nconference for teens is an effort of the <b>Presbyterian Church</b> (USA), the largest ...",
"title": "Presbyterian Church (USA)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Presbyterian Youth Connection is for all <b>Presbyterian Church</b> (U.S.A.) Youth \nand Adults. ... It was founded at Presbyterian Youth <b>Triennium</b> and the General \nAssembly meeting in July 1995. It is the first youth ministry organization for the ...",
"title": "Presbyterian Youth Connection"
},
{
"snippet": "The Episcopal <b>Church</b> (TEC) is a member <b>church</b> of the worldwide Anglican \nCommunion and is ... is done by interim bodies, the most powerful being the \nExecutive Council, which oversees the work of the national <b>church</b> during the \n<b>triennium</b>.",
"title": "Episcopal Church (United States)"
},
{
"snippet": "Integrity USA (1974-2019) is a nonprofit organization working in the Episcopal \n<b>Church</b> in the ... Metropolitan Community Church · Presbyterian · Quaker · Roman \nCatholic · Seventh-day Adventist · United ... A provisional rite for the blessing of \nsame-sex relationships, developed over the prior <b>triennium</b> as an act of the last ...",
"title": "Integrity USA"
},
{
"snippet": "The Monastery of Santa Maria de Maceira Dão is a monastery in the civil parish \nof Fornos de ... In 1162, D. Odório, bishop of Viseu, transferred the <b>church</b> in \nMoimenta de Azurara to ... In 1567 the abbots begin to be elected by <b>triennium</b>. ... \nrectangular <b>presbytery</b>, with chamfered interior angles, forming polygons, divided \nin ...",
"title": "Monastery of Santa Maria de Maceira Dão"
},
{
"snippet": "Laltluangliana Khiangte is an Indian scholar, playwright and poet of Mizo \nliterature. He was the ... He was born on 28th June 1961 to a <b>church</b> elder \nTlanghmingthanga (formerly teacher ... As an active Christian youth leader, he \nhad also attended the grand <b>Presbyterian</b> Youth <b>Triennium</b> at Purdue University, \nUS, in 1995 as a ...",
"title": "Laltluangliana Khiangte"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1820s decade ran from January 1, 1820, to December 31, 1829. It saw the \nrise of the First ... March 9, 1820 – King Ferdinand VII of Spain accepts the new \nconstitution, beginning the Liberal <b>Triennium</b> ("Trienio Liberal"). ... May 26, 1822 \n– 116 people die in the Grue <b>Church</b> fire, the biggest fire disaster in Norway's \nhistory.",
"title": "1820s"
}
]
}
] |
What type of duck is a yellow duckling? | -6345274230328783167 | Mallard | [
"mallards"
] | [
"Friendly Floatees",
"Muscovy duck",
"Mallard",
"American Pekin"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Mallard"
],
"question": "What type of duckling is yellow with streaks by the eyes?"
},
{
"answer": [
"C. moschata",
"Musovy duck"
],
"question": "What type of duckling is yellow with buff-brown markings on the tail and wings?"
},
{
"answer": [
"American Pekin"
],
"question": "What type of duckling is yellow with an orange beak?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Pekin ducklings",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "American <b>Pekin ducks</b>. The Pekin or White Pekin is an American breed of \ndomestic duck, raised primarily for meat.",
"title": "American Pekin"
},
{
"snippet": "Peking duck, a Chinese duck dish; Peking Duk, an Australian music duo. See \nalso[edit]. Beijing <b>Ducks</b>, a ...",
"title": "Pekin duck"
},
{
"snippet": "The German <b>Pekin</b> (German: Deutsche Pekingente) is a European breed of \ndomestic duck. ... In Germany the Chinese <b>ducks</b> were cross-bred with upright \nwhite <b>ducks</b> brought from Japan by Dutch ships, resulting in birds with a steep \nbody ...",
"title": "German Pekin"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Pekin ducks</b> are similar to the Aylesbury, but with orange bills and a more upright \nposture. In 1873 the Pekin duck was introduced from China to Britain for the first ...",
"title": "Aylesbury duck"
},
{
"snippet": "Nowadays, Peking Duck is prepared from the white feathered <b>Pekin</b> duck (Anas \nplatyrhynchos domestica). Newborn <b>ducks</b> are raised in a free range \nenvironment ...",
"title": "Peking duck"
},
{
"snippet": "The white muscovy and <b>Pekin</b> are the two most common purebred, commercially \nfarmed <b>ducks</b>. Hybrids of the two are hardier and calmer, in addition to ...",
"title": "Mulard"
},
{
"snippet": "Jul 23, 2012 <b>...</b> English: A domesticated <b>Pekin</b> duck with day-old <b>ducklings</b>. In this case, a <b>Pekin</b> \nand Magpie were interbred, resulting in two yellow hatchlings ...",
"title": "File:Pekin Duck With Ducklings.jpg - Wikimedia Commons"
},
{
"snippet": "I've read that <b>Pekin ducks</b> are bred to not sit on the eggs that they lay; meaning, \nonce they are laid, the <b>Pekin ducks</b> will forget it ever happened; and the ducks ...",
"title": "Talk:Duck/Archive 1"
},
{
"snippet": "Jessie Isabelle Price (January 1, 1930 – November 12, 2015) was a veterinary \nmicrobiologist. ... Isolating Pasteurella anatipestifer in white pekin ducks; \nDeveloping avian vaccines. Scientific career. Fields. Veterinary microbiologist. \nInstitutions.",
"title": "Jessie Isabelle Price"
},
{
"snippet": "Disney cartoon <b>ducks</b>[edit]. Disney animators have created an entire universe of \n<b>ducks</b>, most of which are modeled after the American <b>Pekin</b> duck.",
"title": "List of fictional ducks"
}
]
},
{
"query": "What type of duck is a yellow duckling?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) is a dabbling <b>duck</b> that breeds throughout the \ntemperate and ... Upon hatching, the plumage of the <b>duckling</b> is <b>yellow</b> on the \nunderside and face (with streaks by the eyes) and black on the back (with some \n... In captivity, domestic <b>ducks</b> come in wild-<b>type</b> plumages, white, and other \ncolours.",
"title": "Mallard"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Yellow Duckling</b> was an early development of an infrared linescan camera, \ndeveloped for the detection of submarines during the Cold War. The name is one \nof ...",
"title": "Yellow Duckling"
},
{
"snippet": "The Muscovy <b>duck</b> (Cairina moschata) is a large <b>duck</b> native to Mexico and \nCentral and South ... C. moschata <b>ducklings</b> are mostly <b>yellow</b> with buff-brown \nmarkings on the tail and wings. For a while after hatching, juveniles ... \nDomesticated Muscovy <b>ducks</b> can <b>breed</b> up to three times each year. The hen \nlays a clutch of 8–16 ...",
"title": "Muscovy duck"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Duck</b> is the common name for numerous species in the waterfowl family Anatidae \nwhich also ... <b>Ducks</b> are sometimes confused with several <b>types</b> of unrelated \nwater birds with similar forms, such as ... Most domestic <b>ducks</b> neglect their eggs \nand <b>ducklings</b>, and their eggs must be hatched under a broody hen or artificially.",
"title": "Duck"
},
{
"snippet": "Yakky Doodle is a cartoon <b>duck</b> created by Hanna-Barbera Productions. Yakky's \nname is a ... used for the voice of Donald <b>Duck</b>) is an anthropomorphic <b>yellow</b> \n<b>duckling</b> with green wings who lives with his best friend Chopper the bulldog.",
"title": "Yakky Doodle"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a List of fictional <b>ducks</b> in animation and is a subsidiary to the List of \nfictional <b>ducks</b> and ... Baby <b>Ducks</b>, Regular Show · Cartoon Network Studios, \nFour <b>ducklings</b> who were ... Donald <b>Duck</b> · Donald <b>Duck</b> · Disney, Donald is an \nanthropomorphic white <b>duck</b> with a <b>yellow</b>-orange bill, legs, and feet. ... By <b>type</b> · \nDragons.",
"title": "List of fictional ducks in animation"
},
{
"snippet": "Even the presence of a hunter does not stop the <b>yellow duckling</b> from stopping \nDaffy with a loud, "AAH, LAY OFF, YOU... <b>DUCK</b>!" The hunter (a caricature of ...",
"title": "Ain't That Ducky"
},
{
"snippet": "By the end of the cartoon, the two have fallen in love and given birth to roughly \nten black, white and <b>yellow ducklings</b> of their own. The blonde <b>duck</b> in this ...",
"title": "Melissa Duck"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>yellow</b>-billed <b>duck</b> (Anas undulata) is a 51–58 cm long dabbling <b>duck</b> which \nis an abundant resident breeder in southern and eastern Africa. This <b>duck</b> is not ...",
"title": "Yellow-billed duck"
},
{
"snippet": "The mandarin <b>duck</b> (Aix galericulata) is a perching <b>duck</b> species native to the \nEast Palearctic. ... The <b>ducklings</b> can be distinguished from mallard <b>ducklings</b> \nbecause the eye-stripe of mandarin <b>ducklings</b> (and wood ... In the wild, mandarin \n<b>ducks breed</b> in densely wooded areas near shallow lakes, marshes or ponds.",
"title": "Mandarin duck"
}
]
},
{
"query": "yellow ducklings",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Yellow Duckling</b> was an early development of an infrared linescan camera, \ndeveloped for the detection of submarines during the Cold War. The name is one \nof ...",
"title": "Yellow Duckling"
},
{
"snippet": "Upon hatching, the plumage of the <b>duckling</b> is <b>yellow</b> on the underside and face (\nwith streaks by the eyes) and black on the back (with some <b>yellow</b> spots) all the ...",
"title": "Mallard"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a List of fictional ducks in animation and is a subsidiary to the List of \nfictional ducks and ... Baby Ducks, Regular Show · Cartoon Network Studios, \nFour <b>ducklings</b> who were found by Mordecai and ... Donald Duck · Donald Duck · \nDisney, Donald is an anthropomorphic white duck with a <b>yellow</b>-orange bill, legs, \nand feet.",
"title": "List of fictional ducks in animation"
},
{
"snippet": "C. moschata <b>ducklings</b> are mostly <b>yellow</b> with buff-brown markings on the tail and \nwings. For a while after hatching, juveniles lack the distinctive wattles ...",
"title": "Muscovy duck"
},
{
"snippet": "Friendly Floatees are plastic bath toys marketed by The First Years, and made \nfamous by the work of Curtis Ebbesmeyer, an oceanographer who models ocean \ncurrents on the basis of flotsam movements. Ebbesmeyer studied the movements \nof a consignment of 29,000 Friendly Floatees—<b>yellow</b> ducks, ... "Ugly <b>Ducklings</b>".",
"title": "Friendly Floatees"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>yellow</b>-billed duck (Anas undulata) is a 51–58 cm long dabbling duck which \nis an abundant resident breeder in southern and eastern Africa. This duck is not ...",
"title": "Yellow-billed duck"
},
{
"snippet": "When the <b>yellow duckling</b> ruins Daffy's fun at the expense of the hunter, Daffy \ndecides enough is enough and tries grabbing the satchel. However, he is \nknocked ...",
"title": "Ain't That Ducky"
},
{
"snippet": "Yakky Doodle is a cartoon duck created by Hanna-Barbera Productions. Yakky's \nname is a ... used for the voice of Donald Duck) is an anthropomorphic <b>yellow</b> \n<b>duckling</b> with green wings who lives with his best friend Chopper the bulldog.",
"title": "Yakky Doodle"
},
{
"snippet": "By the end of the cartoon, the two have fallen in love and given birth to roughly \nten black, white and <b>yellow ducklings</b> of their own. The blonde duck in this \ncartoon ...",
"title": "Melissa Duck"
},
{
"snippet": "The father then buys a <b>yellow duckling</b> for Agnes, who she transfers her \naffections to. The father comes at Daffy with murder in his eyes, and chases Daffy \naround ...",
"title": "Nasty Quacks"
}
]
}
] |
Who plays doug ross' father in er? | -53407835365300400 | List of supporting characters in ER | [
"James Farentino"
] | [
"Doug Ross",
"Cast of ER"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"James Farentino"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who plays doug ross' father in er?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "(<b>father</b>; deceased) Sarah Ross (mother). Spouse, Carol Hathaway (wife). \nChildren, Unnamed child (son, with unnamed woman) Kate Ross (daughter, with \nCarol) Tess Ross (daughter, with Carol). Born, 1962. Dr. Douglas "<b>Doug</b>" <b>Ross</b> is \na fictional character from the television series <b>ER</b>, portrayed by ... I can <b>play</b> him.".",
"title": "Doug Ross"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>ER</b> is an American <b>drama</b> series that aired on NBC from September 19, 1994 \nuntil April 2, 2009 ... on the spur of the moment to go to Seattle, Washington, and \nreunite with <b>Doug Ross</b>, her true love and the <b>father</b> of her twin daughters.",
"title": "Cast of ER"
},
{
"snippet": "Unnamed <b>father</b> (deceased) Unnamed Sisters. Spouse, <b>Doug Ross</b> (husband). \nChildren, Kate Ross (daughter, with Doug) Tess Ross (daughter, with Doug). \nNurse Carol Hathaway Ross is a fictional character on the popular television \nshow <b>ER</b>, ... In Season 5, after a fiasco with <b>Doug Ross</b>, a dying child, and an \noverdose of ...",
"title": "Carol Hathaway"
},
{
"snippet": "The second season of the American fictional <b>drama</b> television series <b>ER</b> first \naired on ... He locks horns with close friend Dr. <b>Doug Ross</b>, whose reckless \nprofessional behavior is called into question by the hospital ... Later in the season\n, his <b>father</b> returns, and while attempting to bond his <b>father</b> again walks out on \nhim.",
"title": "ER (season 2)"
},
{
"snippet": "Dr. John Truman Carter III, portrayed by Noah Wyle, is a fictional character from \nthe American ... He is supported emotionally by his <b>father</b> and by his friends Luka \nKovač and Abby Lockhart. Kem and Carter's relationship ... She cheats on Carter \nvery early in the relationship with Dr. <b>Doug Ross</b>. Carter forgives her, only for her\n ...",
"title": "John Carter (ER)"
},
{
"snippet": "Dr. Mark Greene is a fictional medical doctor from the television series <b>ER</b>, \nportrayed by the <b>actor</b> Anthony Edwards. ... Mark Greene, an only child, was \nraised by his mother, Ruth, and <b>father</b>, David. David Greene served in the United \n... While in medical school, he met future colleague <b>Doug Ross</b>. He then \ncompleted his ...",
"title": "Mark Greene"
},
{
"snippet": "The sixth season of the American fictional <b>drama</b> television series <b>ER</b> first aired \non September ... Hathaway struggles to begin parenting on her own, then \ndecides to leave Chicago to begin a new life with <b>Doug Ross</b>. Greene and \nCorday begin their relationship and he deals with the death of his <b>father</b>. Abby \nLockhart begins ...",
"title": "ER (season 6)"
},
{
"snippet": "Meanwhile, as Greene copes with his beating, he and <b>Ross</b> travel to California to \nbury <b>Ross</b>' <b>dad</b>. While there, Greene visits his own parents, where he finds out ...",
"title": "ER (season 4)"
},
{
"snippet": "Nick Clooney (<b>father</b>). Relatives. Rosemary Clooney (aunt); Miguel Ferrer (cousin\n); Rafael Ferrer (cousin); Betty Clooney (aunt). George Timothy Clooney (born \nMay 6, 1961) is an American <b>actor</b>, director, producer and ... Clooney rose to \nfame when he <b>played</b> Dr. <b>Doug Ross</b>, alongside Anthony Edwards, Julianna \nMargulies, ...",
"title": "George Clooney"
},
{
"snippet": "The fifteenth and final season of the American fictional <b>drama</b> television series \n<b>ER</b> premiered ... Peter Benton, <b>Doug Ross</b>, Carol Hathaway, Susan Lewis, \nElizabeth Corday, Kerry Weaver and Ray Barnett return in various episodes. The \nseries ... Morris receives an unwanted package from his <b>father</b> at the <b>ER</b> doorstep\n. Sam is ...",
"title": "ER (season 15)"
}
]
}
] |
Where are the 2020 olympic games being held? | 6155560793917430810 | 2020 Summer Olympics | [
"Tokyo"
] | [
"2020 Summer Olympics",
"2020 Winter Youth Olympics"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Lausanne, Switzerland",
"Switzerland",
"Lausanne"
],
"question": "Where are the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics being held?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Tokyo",
"Tokyo, Japan",
"Japan"
],
"question": "Where are the 2020 Summer Olympics being held?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "2020 olympics",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b> officially known as the Games of the XXXII Olympiad \nand commonly known as Tokyo <b>2020</b> (tōkyō nisen-nijū) or the Recovery ...",
"title": "2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The cycling competitions of the <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b> in Tokyo will feature 22 \nevents. Cycling competitions had been contested in every Summer <b>Olympics</b> ...",
"title": "Cycling at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Baseball will be featured at the <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b>, in Tokyo, for the first time \nsince the 2008 Summer <b>Olympics</b>. Six national teams will compete in the ...",
"title": "Baseball at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Basketball at the <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b> in Tokyo, Japan will be held within July \nto August <b>2020</b>. Contents. 1 Qualification. 1.1 Men's qualification; 1.2 Women's ...",
"title": "Basketball at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "For the cycling competitions at the <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b>, the following \nqualification systems are in place. Contents. 1 Track cycling; 2 Road cycling ...",
"title": "Cycling at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "There were a total of six bids which were initially submitted for the <b>2020</b> Summer \n<b>Olympics</b>. Tokyo was ultimately elected as the host city at the 125th IOC ...",
"title": "Bids for the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "On 8 September 2013, IOC added wrestling to the <b>Olympic</b> programme for the \n<b>2020</b> and 2024 Games, representing one of these additional sports. FILA (now ...",
"title": "2024 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The handball tournaments at the <b>2020</b> Tokyo Summer <b>Olympics</b> are scheduled to \ntake place from 24 July to 9 August <b>2020</b>.",
"title": "Handball at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Athletics at the <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b> will be held during the last ten days of the \nGames, from 31 July – 9 August <b>2020</b>, at the <b>Olympic</b> Stadium, Tokyo, Japan.",
"title": "Athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Qualification for the boxing events at the <b>2020</b> Summer <b>Olympics</b> is determined \nby the performances at four Continental <b>Olympic</b> Qualifying Tournaments and at ...",
"title": "Boxing at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification"
}
]
},
{
"query": "2020 olympics jr",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>2020</b> Winter Youth <b>Olympic</b> Games officially known as the <b>III</b> Winter Youth \n<b>Olympic</b> Games, and commonly known as Lausanne <b>2020</b> was the third edition \nof ...",
"title": "2020 Winter Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Only one quota place per discipline and NOC can be earned through the 2019–\n20 ISU <b>Junior</b> Grand Prix series, and only if a NOC doesn't already have a quota\n ...",
"title": "Figure skating at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The Youth <b>Olympic</b> Games (YOG) is an international multi-sport event organized \nby the ... Not to be confused with Junior Olympics (disambiguation). ... The most \nrecent Winter YOG was the <b>2020</b> Winter Youth <b>Olympic</b> Games of Lausanne.",
"title": "Youth Olympic Games"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>2020</b> Russian Figure Skating Championships were held from 24 to 29 \nDecember 2019 in ... Qualification based on qualifying for the 2019–20 <b>Junior</b> \nGrand Prix Final. However ... The list with preliminary entries of the Russia's team \nto the <b>2020</b> Winter Youth <b>Olympics</b> was published on 16 December 2019. The \nfinal list ...",
"title": "2020 Russian Figure Skating Championships"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>2020</b> TOYOTA U.S. Figure Skating Championships were held from January \n20–26, <b>2020</b> at the Greensboro Coliseum Complex in Greensboro, North \nCarolina. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' \nsingles, pair skating, and ice dance at the senior and <b>junior</b> levels. ... The <b>2020</b> \nWinter Youth <b>Olympics</b> were held in Lausanne, Switzerland from ...",
"title": "2020 U.S. Figure Skating Championships"
},
{
"snippet": "The AAU <b>Junior Olympic</b> Games are the pinnacle competitions held annually by \nthe US ... <b>2020</b>, Hampton Roads, VA, TBD, TBD. 2021, Houston, TX, TBD, TBD ...",
"title": "AAU Junior Olympic Games"
},
{
"snippet": "As <b>junior</b> national champion, Kagiyama was named to represent Japan at the \n<b>2020</b> Winter Youth <b>Olympics</b> and the <b>2020</b> World <b>Junior</b> Championships. He was\n ...",
"title": "Yuma Kagiyama"
},
{
"snippet": "Curling. at the <b>III</b> Winter Youth <b>Olympic</b> Games. Curling <b>2020</b> YOG.png. Venue, \nPalladium de Champéry. Dates, 10–22 January. Competitors, 96 from 24 nations.",
"title": "Curling at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Ksenia Alexeyevna Sinitsyna is a Russian figure skater. She is the <b>2020</b> Youth \n<b>Olympic</b> silver ... In February 2019 at the 2019 Russian <b>Junior</b> Championships, \nSinitsyna finished 4th (behind Trusova, Kostornaia and Shcherbakova). A few \ndays ...",
"title": "Ksenia Sinitsyna"
},
{
"snippet": "He is the <b>2020</b> Youth <b>Olympic</b> bronze medalist, the 2019 <b>Junior</b> Grand Prix Final \nbronze medalist, the 2019 JGP Poland champion, the 2019 Winter Children of ...",
"title": "Daniil Samsonov"
}
]
}
] |
When were automatic weapons made illegal in the united states? | -9106352059962090621 | National Firearms Act | [
"June 26 , 1934"
] | [
"Automatic firearm"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"May 19, 1986"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "automatic weapons",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Other similar <b>weapons</b> not usually referred to as <b>automatic</b> firearms include the \nfollowing: Autocannon, which are 15 mm or ...",
"title": "Automatic firearm"
},
{
"snippet": "An <b>automatic</b> rifle is a type of self-loading rifle that is capable of <b>automatic</b> fire. \n<b>Automatic</b> rifles are select-fire <b>weapons</b> that are capable of firing in semi-\n<b>automatic</b> ...",
"title": "Automatic rifle"
},
{
"snippet": "A semi-automatic firearm, also called self-loading firearm or autoloading firearm \nis one that not ... With fully <b>automatic weapons</b>, open-bolt operation allows air to \ncirculate, cooling the barrel; with semi-automatic firearms, the closed-bolt ...",
"title": "Semi-automatic firearm"
},
{
"snippet": "A machine gun is a fully automatic mounted or portable firearm designed to fire \nrifle cartridges ... Other <b>automatic weapons</b> are subdivided into several \ncategories based on the size of the bullet used, whether the cartridge is fired from \na closed ...",
"title": "Machine gun"
},
{
"snippet": "A squad <b>automatic weapon</b> (SAW), also known as a section <b>automatic weapon</b> or \nlight support weapon (LSW), is a fully automatic firearm used to give infantry ...",
"title": "Squad automatic weapon"
},
{
"snippet": "The Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act or Federal \nAssault Weapons ... It was argued that it banned some semi-<b>automatic weapons</b> \nthat were functional equivalents of exempted semi-<b>automatic weapons</b> and that \nto do ...",
"title": "Federal Assault Weapons Ban"
},
{
"snippet": "Assault weapon is a term used in the United States to define some types of \nfirearms. ... Legislative definitions do not include fully <b>automatic weapons</b>, which \nare ...",
"title": "Assault weapon"
},
{
"snippet": "The M249 light machine gun (LMG), formerly designated the M249 Squad \n<b>Automatic Weapon</b> (SAW) and formally written as Light Machine Gun, 5.56 mm, \nM249, ...",
"title": "M249 light machine gun"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "Squad <b>automatic weapons</b>". The following 18 pages are in \nthis category, out of 18 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Squad automatic weapons"
},
{
"snippet": "M1 Garand Variants (E1-E6 and E9-E14) (Semi-<b>Automatic</b> Rifle, .30-'06); Mk 2 \nMod 0/1/2 (Semi-<b>Automatic</b> Rifle, ...",
"title": "List of individual weapons of the U.S. Armed Forces"
}
]
}
] |
The cosby show sondra and elvin get married? | 3062489952282448886 | List of The Cosby Show characters | [
"season four"
] | [
"List of The Cosby Show characters",
"List of The Cosby Show episodes"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"season four"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "cosby show sondra and elvin get married",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "She <b>married</b> her boyfriend, <b>Elvin</b> Tibideaux, in season ... <b>Sondra was</b> created \nwhen Bill <b>Cosby</b> wanted the <b>show</b> to ...",
"title": "List of The Cosby Show characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The episodes for the NBC television sitcom The <b>Cosby Show</b> aired from \nSeptember 20, 1984 to ... Two versions of the show's theme song <b>are</b> used in this \nsequence. ... Midway through the season, following her <b>marriage</b> to NBC \nsportscaster ... Geoffrey Owens (<b>Elvin</b> Tibideaux) is introduced to the regular cast \nby Cosby ...",
"title": "List of The Cosby Show episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Geoffrey Louis Owens (born March 18, 1961) is an American actor known for his \nrole as <b>Elvin</b> Tibideaux on The <b>Cosby Show</b> (1985–1992). ... Owens <b>was</b> born in \nBrooklyn, New York, to Ethel, a music and literature teacher, and Major ... \nTibideaux <b>married Sondra</b> and became a regular character in 1987 and \nappeared on the ...",
"title": "Geoffrey Owens"
},
{
"snippet": "Clair Olivia Hanks Huxtable is a fictional character who appears on the American \nsitcom The ... <b>Sondra and Elvin</b> eventually have children of their own, twins \nWinnie and Nelson, named after South African activists Winnie and Nelson \nMandela, ... Clair <b>was</b> created for The <b>Cosby Show</b> by series creator, comedian \nBill Cosby.",
"title": "Clair Huxtable"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Sondra</b> Huxtable Tibideaux is a fictional character from the 1980s television \nseries, The <b>Cosby Show</b>. Background and production[edit]. <b>Sondra</b> Huxtable did \nnot originally appear in the pilot episode of the show. <b>Sondra was</b> created when \nBill Cosby wanted the show to express the ... Spouse, Elvin Tibideaux. Relatives\n ...",
"title": "Sondra Huxtable"
},
{
"snippet": "Children, <b>Sondra</b> Huxtable · Denise Huxtable · Theodore Huxtable Vanessa \nHuxtable Rudy Huxtable. Nationality, American. Dr. Heathcliff "Cliff" Huxtable is a \nfictional character on the NBC sitcom, The <b>Cosby Show</b>. He <b>was</b> portrayed by Bill \nCosby. ... such as <b>Sondra</b> finally leaving to <b>marry</b> her husband <b>Elvin</b>, only to move \ninto a ...",
"title": "Cliff Huxtable"
},
{
"snippet": "Gary LeRoi Gray (born February 12, 1987) is an American actor, involved with \nmovies, television, and animation. He is best known for his childhood role as \nNelson Tibideaux, the son of <b>Sondra</b> Huxtable Tibideaux and <b>Elvin</b> Tibideaux on \nthe NBC sitcom The <b>Cosby Show</b>. ... people that is unsourced or poorly sourced \nmust be removed immediately.",
"title": "Gary LeRoi Gray"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cosby Show</b> is an American sitcom television series co-created by and \nstarring Bill Cosby, ... The <b>Cosby Show was</b> based on comedy routines in \nCosby's stand-up act, which in turn ... They have four daughters and one son: \n<b>Sondra</b>, Denise, Theo, Vanessa, and Rudy. ... Geoffrey Owens, <b>Elvin</b> Tibideaux, \nRecurring, Main.",
"title": "The Cosby Show"
},
{
"snippet": "Phylicia Rashād (née Ayers-Allen; June 19, 1948) is an American actress, singer \nand stage director. She is known for her role as Clair Huxtable on the NBC sitcom \nThe <b>Cosby Show</b> (1984–92), ... She <b>was</b> dubbed "The Mother Of The Black \nCommunity“ at the 2010 NAACP Image Awards. In 2004, Rashad became the \nfirst ...",
"title": "Phylicia Rashad"
},
{
"snippet": "Will the Dec 10 Led Zeppelin concert <b>be</b> televised or anything? Maybe ... I think I \nsaw it on The <b>Cosby Show</b> when they went to <b>Sondra and Elvin's</b> ... More along \nthe lines of making comments about gay <b>marriage</b> or religion...something like that\n.",
"title": "Wikipedia:Reference desk/Archives/Entertainment/2007 December 4"
}
]
},
{
"query": "the cosby show episodes",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>episodes</b> for the NBC television sitcom <b>The Cosby Show</b> aired from \nSeptember 20, 1984 to April 30, 1992. There were 201 <b>episodes</b> and an outtakes\n ...",
"title": "List of The Cosby Show episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Main article: List of <b>The Cosby Show episodes</b>. Season, Episodes, Originally \naired, Rank, Rating, Tied with. First aired, Last aired.",
"title": "The Cosby Show"
},
{
"snippet": "Will Geer guest stars in this <b>episode</b> as a lonesome elderly man looking for \ncompanionship. He befriends Chet, and ...",
"title": "The Bill Cosby Show"
},
{
"snippet": "The episodes for the CBS television sitcom Cosby aired from September 16, \n1996 to April 28, ... the free encyclopedia. Jump to navigation Jump to search. \nNot to be confused with List of The Cosby Show episodes or The Bill Cosby \nShow.",
"title": "List of Cosby episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Cosby Show</b> is an American television sitcom starring Bill Cosby, which \naired for eight ... In the pilot <b>episode</b>, Cosby's character's full name is Clifford, as \nshown on a sign on the exterior of the house. His full name was subsequently ...",
"title": "List of The Cosby Show characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Pilot is the pilot and the first <b>episode</b> of the first <b>season</b> of the American sitcom \n<b>The Cosby Show</b>. "Pilot" originally aired in the United States on NBC on \nThursday, ...",
"title": "Pilot (The Cosby Show)"
},
{
"snippet": "Denise Huxtable Kendall is a fictional character who appears on the American \nsitcom The ... Philips originally guest starred in an early <b>episode</b> of <b>The Cosby</b> \n<b>Show</b> as one of Sondra's love interests before he was recast as Denise's \nhusband for ...",
"title": "Denise Huxtable"
},
{
"snippet": "Rudith Lillian "Rudy" Huxtable is a fictional character who appears on the \nAmerican sitcom <b>The Cosby Show</b> (1984–1992). Portrayed by actress Keshia \nKnight Pulliam, Rudy is the youngest child of Cliff and Clair Huxtable. First \nappearing alongside her family in the pilot <b>episode</b> "Theo's Economic ... \nComedian Bill Cosby began developing <b>The Cosby Show</b> partially because ...",
"title": "Rudy Huxtable"
},
{
"snippet": "The pages in this category are redirects from <b>The Cosby Show episodes</b>. To add \na redirect to this category, place {{Rcat shell|{{R to TV episode list entry|1=The ...",
"title": "Category:The Cosby Show episode redirects to lists"
},
{
"snippet": "A Different World is an American sitcom television series that aired for six \nseasons on NBC from ... While it was a spin-off from <b>The Cosby Show</b>, A Different \nWorld typically ... to her family, and eventually travel to Africa throughout the fifth \n<b>season</b> of <b>The Cosby Show</b>, ensuring that viewers would not see a pregnant \nDenise.",
"title": "A Different World"
}
]
}
] |
What is the name of fred flintstones wife? | 8060354377497346929 | The Flintstones | [
"Wilma Flintstone"
] | [
"Fred Flintstone"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Wilma Flintstone"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "fred flintstone wife",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Fred Flintstone</b> is the main character of the animated sitcom The Flintstones, \nwhich aired during prime-time on ABC during the original series' run from 1960 to \n1966. Fred is the husband of Wilma Flintstone and father of Pebbles Flintstone. \nHis best friend is his next door neighbor, Barney, who has a <b>wife</b> named Betty ...",
"title": "Fred Flintstone"
},
{
"snippet": "Wilma Flintstone is a fictional character in the television animated series The \nFlintstones. Wilma is the red-headed <b>wife</b> of caveman <b>Fred Flintstone</b>, daughter \nof ...",
"title": "Wilma Flintstone"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Flintstones</b> is an American animated sitcom produced by Hanna-Barbera. \nThe series takes ... Wilma <b>Flintstone</b> is <b>Fred's wife</b> and Pebbles' mother. She is ...",
"title": "The Flintstones"
},
{
"snippet": "The Flintstones is a 1994 American comedy film directed by Brian Levant and \nwritten by Tom S. Parker, Jim Jennewein, and Steven E. de Souza. It is a live-\naction motion picture adaptation of the 1960–1966 animated television series of \nthe same name. The film stars John Goodman as <b>Fred Flintstone</b>, Rick Moranis \nas Barney ... Despite his mother-in-law Pearl Slaghoople's objections, Fred's <b>wife</b> \nWilma ...",
"title": "The Flintstones (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Spouse, Betty Rubble (<b>wife</b>). Children, Bamm-Bamm Rubble (adopted son). \nBarney Rubble is a fictional character who appears in the television animated \nseries The <b>Flintstones</b>. ... Usually, after <b>Fred</b> had hatched one of his plans, \nBarney showed his agreement by laughing and saying, "uh hee hee hee... OK, \n<b>Fred</b>!" or "hee ...",
"title": "Barney Rubble"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Fred Flintstone</b> and Friends is a 30-minute weekday animated anthology wheel \nseries and a spin-off of The Flintstones produced by Hanna-Barbera and ...",
"title": "Fred Flintstone and Friends"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Fred Flintstone</b> has promised his <b>wife</b> Wilma they will take a vacation. He wants \nto request days off work and money from his boss Mr. Slate who just then is ...",
"title": "The Flintstones & WWE: Stone Age SmackDown!"
},
{
"snippet": "John Stephen Goodman (born June 20, 1952) is an American actor. Early in his \ncareer, ... In addition, Goodman starred as <b>Fred Flintstone</b> in the film adaptation of \nThe ... "Playing Second Fiddle to TV <b>Wife</b> Roseanne Barr, Big John Goodman ...",
"title": "John Goodman"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Fred Flintstone</b> (godfather/father-in-law) Wilma Flintstone (godmother/mother-in-\nlaw) Stony Flintstone (brother-in-law). Spouse, Pebbles Rubble (<b>wife</b>). Children, \nChip Rubble (son) Roxy Rubble (daughter). Bamm-Bamm Rubble is a fictional \ncharacter in the Flintstones franchise, the adopted son of ...",
"title": "Bamm-Bamm Rubble"
},
{
"snippet": "Alan Reed was an American actor and voice actor, best known as the original \nvoice of <b>Fred Flintstone</b> on The Flintstones and various spinoff series. He also ...",
"title": "Alan Reed"
}
]
}
] |
When does qualifying for world cup 2022 start? | 7919435139824322376 | 2022 FIFA World Cup | [
"not yet been announced"
] | [
"2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (CAF)",
"2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL)",
"2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (UEFA)",
"2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF)",
"2022 FIFA World Cup qualification",
"2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"March 23, 2020"
],
"question": "When does qualifying for FIFA world cup 2022 start for the CONMEBOL?"
},
{
"answer": [
"June 6, 2019"
],
"question": "When does qualifying for FIFA world cup 2022 start for the AFC?"
},
{
"answer": [
"March 25, 2021"
],
"question": "When does qualifying for FIFA world cup 2022 start for the UEFA?"
},
{
"answer": [
"September 4, 2019"
],
"question": "When does qualifying for FIFA world cup 2022 start for the CAF?"
},
{
"answer": [
"September 2020"
],
"question": "When does qualifying for FIFA world cup 2022 start for the CONCACAF?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "qualifying for world cup 2022",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> process is a series of tournaments \norganised by the six FIFA confederations to decide 31 of the 32 teams which \nwould ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "The Asian section of the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> acts as <b>qualifiers</b> for \nthe <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup</b>, to be held in Qatar, for national teams which are ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)"
},
{
"snippet": "The North, Central American and Caribbean section of the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup</b> \n<b>qualification</b> will act as <b>qualifiers</b> for the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup</b>, to be held in ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF)"
},
{
"snippet": "The AFC second round of <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b>, which also serves \nas the second round of 2023 AFC Asian Cup <b>qualification</b>, is being played from ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Second Round"
},
{
"snippet": "See also: <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> ... stage as the first two rounds also \nact as <b>qualification</b> for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup.",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Team has won the <b>World Cup</b> ... or are yet to start in the <b>2022 qualification</b>.",
"title": "FIFA World Cup qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "The South American section of the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> will act as \n<b>qualifiers</b> for the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup</b>, to be held in Qatar, for national teams ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL)"
},
{
"snippet": "The European section of the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> will act as \n<b>qualifiers</b> for the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup</b>, to be held in Qatar, for national teams \nwhich ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (UEFA)"
},
{
"snippet": "The second round of CAF matches for <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> are \nplayed over 6 matchdays, from 5 October 2020 to 12 October 2021. The African ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification – CAF Second Round"
},
{
"snippet": "The African section of the <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup qualification</b> acts as <b>qualifiers</b> for \nthe <b>2022</b> FIFA <b>World Cup</b>, to be held in Qatar, for national teams which are ...",
"title": "2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (CAF)"
}
]
}
] |
What two countries claim the virgin islands in the caribbean sea? | 5017466933372505180 | Virgin Islands | [
"United Kingdom",
"United States"
] | [
"Virgin Islands"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"United States",
"United States and Great Britain",
"Great Britain"
],
"question": "What two countries claim parts of the virgin islands in the caribbean sea?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Great Britain"
],
"question": "What country claims the British virgin islands in the caribbean sea?"
},
{
"answer": [
"United States"
],
"question": "What country claims the United States virgin islands in the caribbean sea?"
},
{
"answer": [
"United States"
],
"question": "What country claims the Spanish virgin islands in the caribbean sea?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "What two countries claim the virgin islands in the caribbean sea?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Virgin Islands</b> (Spanish: Islas Vírgenes) are an archipelago in the <b>Caribbean</b> \n<b>Sea</b>. They are ... In practice, the <b>two</b> island groups are almost universally referred \nto as the British <b>Virgin Islands</b> and ... Outlying territories of European <b>countries</b>.",
"title": "Virgin Islands"
},
{
"snippet": "Territories of the United States are sub-national administrative divisions overseen \nby the United ... <b>Two</b> additional territories (Bajo Nuevo Bank and Serranilla Bank) \nare <b>claimed</b> by the United ... The U.S. has five permanently inhabited territories: \nPuerto Rico and the U.S. <b>Virgin Islands in the Caribbean Sea</b>, Guam and the ...",
"title": "Territories of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "The Caribbean (Spanish: El Caribe; French: la Caraïbe; Haitian Creole: Karayib; \nDutch: De Caraïben; Caribbean Hindustani: कैरेबियन / کیریبین; Chinese: \n加勒比) is a region of the Americas that consists of the <b>Caribbean Sea</b>, its islands \n(some ... The <b>Virgin Islands</b> as part of the Puerto Rican bank are sometimes \nincluded ...",
"title": "Caribbean"
},
{
"snippet": "The British Overseas Territories (BOTs) or United Kingdom Overseas Territories (\nUKOTs) are ... 6.1 British Indian <b>Ocean</b> Territory <b>claimed</b> by Mauritius and \nSeychelles ... a group of 16 independent <b>countries</b> (including the United Kingdom\n) each ... Bermuda, the British <b>Virgin Islands</b> and the Cayman Islands are the only \nBritish ...",
"title": "British Overseas Territories"
},
{
"snippet": "Contents. 1 Mainland In North America; <b>2 Caribbean Sea</b>. 2.1 Netherlands (\nDutch) Antilles; 2.2 Tobago; 2.3 <b>Virgin Islands</b>. 3 South America. 3.1 Brazil; 3.2 \nChile ...",
"title": "Dutch colonization of the Americas"
},
{
"snippet": "Saint Croix is an <b>island in the Caribbean Sea</b>, and a county and constituent \ndistrict of the United States <b>Virgin Islands</b> ... St. Croix's nickname is "Twin City", for \nits <b>two</b> towns, Frederiksted on the western end ... ya ("born here" in Crucian \ndialect) on Saint Croix, they can <b>claim</b> to be Crucian, but not necessarily a native \nCrucian.",
"title": "Saint Croix"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>island countries</b>. An <b>island</b> is a landmass (smaller than a continent\n) that is ... Some states, such as Taiwan, officially <b>claim</b> to hold continental \nterritories but are de facto limited to control over ... Trinidad and Tobago, <b>Two</b> \nmain <b>islands</b>, Continental shelf, 1,299,953, 5,131, 254.4, <b>Caribbean Sea</b>, South \nAmerica.",
"title": "List of island countries"
},
{
"snippet": "The United States <b>Virgin Islands</b>, often abbreviated <b>USVI</b>, is a group of islands \nand cays in the Caribbean to the east of Puerto Rico. Consisting of three larger \nislands (Saint Croix, Saint John, and Saint Thomas plus fifty smaller islets and \ncays, it covers approximately 133 square miles (340 km<sup><b>2</b></sup>). ... the Atlantic Ocean \nand <b>Caribbean Sea</b>), the United States <b>Virgin Islands</b> are ...",
"title": "History of the United States Virgin Islands"
},
{
"snippet": "The Bahamas known officially as the Commonwealth of The Bahamas, is a \n<b>country</b> within the Lucayan Archipelago in the West Indies. It is a member of the \nCommonwealth Realms under the monarchy of Queen Elizabeth II. The \narchipelagic state consists of more than 700 <b>islands</b>, cays, and islets in the \nAtlantic <b>Ocean</b>, ... The Bahamas also associates closely with other <b>nations</b> of the \n<b>Caribbean</b> ...",
"title": "The Bahamas"
},
{
"snippet": "The Commonwealth Caribbean consists of <b>nations</b> and territories, which include \nCaribbean <b>islands</b> or parts of the mainland surrounding the <b>Caribbean Sea</b> of ...",
"title": "Commonwealth Caribbean"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the song about you're so vain? | -6847324909293248286 | You're So Vain | [
"actor Warren Beatty"
] | [
"You're So Vain"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"three men",
"Warren Beatty"
],
"question": "Who is the song about you're so vain according to Carly Simon?"
},
{
"answer": [
"David Cassidy",
"Cat Steven",
"David Bowie"
],
"question": "Who is the song about you're so vain according to the press?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Warren Beatty"
],
"question": "Who is the song about you're so vain according to Warren Beatty?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Dan Armstrong"
],
"question": "Who is the song about you're so vain according to Sheila Weller?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": " you're so vain",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>" is a song written in 1971 by Carly Simon and released in \nNovember 1972. It is one of the songs that Simon is most identified with, and \nupon its ...",
"title": "You're So Vain"
},
{
"snippet": "Ruhlmann noted that "<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>", "set the album's saucy tone, with its air of \nsexually frank autobiography and its reflections on the jet-set lifestyle." He also ...",
"title": "No Secrets (Carly Simon album)"
},
{
"snippet": "who or whom?[edit]. in the phrase "who[/m] is it about?", who[/m] serves as the \nobject of the preposition; therefore it should be whom. why does someone keep ...",
"title": "Talk:You're So Vain"
},
{
"snippet": "It featured Simon and a live band performing the majority of her Coming Around \nAgain album as well as her classic hits such as "Anticipation", "<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>", ...",
"title": "Carly Simon: Live from Martha's Vineyard"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>" received Grammy Award nominations for Record of the Year, \nSong of the Year, and Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female. Additionally, in \n2008, it ...",
"title": "Carly Simon"
},
{
"snippet": "' It's about a few people that have entered and exited my life." Simon created a \nsimilar controversy when she released "<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>". It was speculated to be ...",
"title": "Son of a Gun (I Betcha Think This Song Is About You)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>You</b>'<b>re so vain</b>. I bet you think this song is about you. Don't you? These lyrics \nwere changed for the video version of "Starsuckers, Inc." to: Overplayed And \nsoon ...",
"title": "Starfuckers, Inc."
},
{
"snippet": "Their highest charting single, "<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>", was a cover version of Carly \nSimon's 1972 hit. It peaked at No. 11 on the ARIA Singles Chart in September \n1993.",
"title": "Chocolate Starfish"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>" Released: 15 August 1993; "All Over Me" Released: 31 October \n1993; "Mountain" Released: February 1994; "Four Letter Word" Released: June \n1994; "Sign of Victory" Released: 1994. Chocolate Starfish is the debut studio \nalbum by Australian rock music group, Chocolate Starfish ...",
"title": "Chocolate Starfish (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "The album's title is taken from a refrain in Simon's song "<b>You</b>'<b>re So Vain</b>." Track \nlisting[edit]. All tracks are written by Carly Simon, except ...",
"title": "Clouds in My Coffee"
}
]
}
] |
Who sang the song lay your head on my pillow? | 7652507160044995242 | (Lay Your Head on My) Pillow | [
"Tony ! Toni ! Toné"
] | [
"(Lay Your Head on My) Pillow"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Raphael Saadiq",
"D'wayne Wiggins"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "lay your head on my pillow",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b>" is a song by American R&B group Tony! Toni! \nToné!. It was released by Mercury and Polygram Records on January 11, 1994, ...",
"title": "(Lay Your Head on My) Pillow"
},
{
"snippet": "File talk:(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b> (Tony! Toni! Toné! song - sample).ogg. \nFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to navigation Jump to search ...",
"title": "File talk:(Lay Your Head on My) Pillow (Tony! Toni! Toné! song ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Released: September 14, 1993; "(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b>" Released: \nJanuary 11, 1994; "Leavin'" Released: April 12, 1994; "Slow Wine" Released: \nJuly 19, 1994. Sons of Soul is the third album by American R&B band Tony! Toni! \nToné! It was released on ...",
"title": "Sons of Soul"
},
{
"snippet": ""(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b>" (1994), "Leavin'" (1994), "Slow Wine" (1994). "\nLeavin'" is a song by American R&B group Tony! Toni! Toné! It was released on \nApril 12, 1994, ...",
"title": "Leavin' (Tony! Toni! Toné! song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Media in category "Tony! Toni! Toné! audio samples". The following 7 files are in \nthis category, out of 7 total. (. File:(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b> (Tony! Toni!",
"title": "Category:Tony! Toni! Toné! audio samples"
},
{
"snippet": "... II (I Don't Know What You Come to Do)"; "If I Had No Loot"; "Anniversary"; "(<b>Lay</b> \n<b>Your Head on My) Pillow</b>"; "Leavin'"; "Slow Wine"; "Let's Get Down"; "Diary" ...",
"title": "Template:Tony! Toni! Toné!"
},
{
"snippet": "(1993), "(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b>" (1994). "Anniversary" is a song by \nAmerican R&B group Tony! Toni! Toné!. It was released on ...",
"title": "Anniversary (Tony! Toni! Toné! song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is the discography of American soul/R&B group Tony! Toni! Toné! \n... "If I Had No Loot"; "Anniversary"; "(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b>"; "Leavin'" ...",
"title": "Tony! Toni! Toné! discography"
},
{
"snippet": "(<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b> · Leavin' (Tony! Toni! Toné! song) · Let's Get Down \n(Tony! Toni! Toné! song) · Little Walter (song) ...",
"title": "Category:Tony! Toni! Toné! songs"
},
{
"snippet": "L. (<b>Lay Your Head on My) Pillow</b> · Little Walter (song). M. My Song (Destiny's \nChild song). S. Slow Wine · Sweet Sixteen (Destiny's Child song). T. Temptation ...",
"title": "Category:Songs written by D'wayne Wiggins"
}
]
}
] |
What album is the chain by fleetwood mac on? | -7658018667914411678 | The Chain | [
"Rumours"
] | [
"The Chain"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Rumours"
],
"question": "What album was the chain by Fleetwood Mac originally on?"
},
{
"answer": [
"The Dance"
],
"question": "What 1997 live concert CD/DVD release was the chain by fleetwood mac on?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "What album is the chain by fleetwood mac on?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""The <b>Chain</b>" is a song by the British-American rock band <b>Fleetwood Mac</b>, \nreleased on their critically acclaimed, best-selling <b>album</b> Rumours. It is the only \nsong ...",
"title": "The Chain"
},
{
"snippet": "25 Years – The <b>Chain</b> is a box set by British-American rock band <b>Fleetwood Mac</b> \noriginally ... on a commercial release, and this collection also marked the first \ntime Nicks' "Silver Springs" had appeared on a full-length <b>Fleetwood Mac album</b>.",
"title": "25 Years – The Chain"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Fleetwood Mac's</b> main writers — Buckingham, Christine McVie and Nicks — \nworked individually on songs but sometimes shared lyrics with each other. "The \n<b>Chain</b> ...",
"title": "Rumours (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Dance is a live <b>album</b> by British-American rock band <b>Fleetwood Mac</b>, \nreleased in 1997. ... This <b>album</b> spawned three singles in the USA: "Landslide", "\nThe <b>Chain</b>" and "Silver Springs", and earned the band three Grammy \nnominations in ...",
"title": "The Dance (Fleetwood Mac album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Greatest Hits is a compilation <b>album</b> by British-American rock band <b>Fleetwood</b> \n<b>Mac</b>. It covers ... Woman · The Original <b>Fleetwood Mac</b> · Greatest Hits · Vintage \nYears; Greatest Hits; 25 Years – The <b>Chain</b> · Madison Blues · The Vaudeville \nYears ...",
"title": "Greatest Hits (1988 Fleetwood Mac album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Paper Doll" is a song by British-American band <b>Fleetwood Mac</b>. It was also \nreleased as a single exclusively in North America with The <b>Chain</b> ... Single by \nFleetwood Mac. from the album 25 Years: The Chain. Released, 24 November \n1992.",
"title": "Paper Doll (Fleetwood Mac song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Silver Springs" is a song written by Stevie Nicks and performed by <b>Fleetwood</b> \n<b>Mac</b>. It was originally intended for the band's 1977 <b>album</b> Rumours, but became \na ... Mac box set. The song did appear in the 1992 box set 25 Years – The <b>Chain</b>.",
"title": "Silver Springs (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Tusk sold four million copies worldwide. <b>Fleetwood</b> blamed the <b>album's</b> relative \nlack of commercial success on the RKO radio <b>chain</b> having played the <b>album</b> in \nits ...",
"title": "Fleetwood Mac"
},
{
"snippet": "Tusk is the 12th studio <b>album</b> by British-American rock band <b>Fleetwood Mac</b>, \nreleased as a ... Fleetwood, however, blames the <b>album's</b> relative failure on the \nRKO radio <b>chain</b> playing the <b>album</b> in its entirety prior to release, thus allowing \nmass ...",
"title": "Tusk (album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Love Shines" is a song by British-American band <b>Fleetwood Mac</b>. The song was \nreleased as a single in 1992 to support the compilation <b>album</b> 25 Years – The \n<b>Chain</b>.",
"title": "Love Shines (song)"
}
]
}
] |
Who made the song i can't make you love me? | -2967147012681420067 | I Can't Make You Love Me | [
"Allen Shamblin",
"Mike Reid"
] | [
"I Can Make You Love Me",
"I Can't Make You Love Me"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Bonnie Raitt"
],
"question": "Who sang the song I Can't Make You Love Me in 1991?"
},
{
"answer": [
"George Michael"
],
"question": "Who sang the song I Can't Make You Love Me in 1997?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Boyz II Men"
],
"question": "Who sang the song I Can't Make You Love Me in 2009?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Adele"
],
"question": "Who sang the song I Can't Make You Love Me in 2011?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Priyanka Chopra"
],
"question": "Who sang the song I Can't make You Love Me in 2014?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who made the song i can't make you love me?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>I Can't Make You Love Me</b>" is a <b>song</b> written by Mike Reid and Allen Shamblin \nand recorded ... Eventually, the <b>song made</b> its way to Bonnie Raitt, who recorded \nthe track for her eleventh studio album, Luck of the Draw (1991).",
"title": "I Can't Make You Love Me"
},
{
"snippet": "I Can <b>Make You Love Me</b>, also known as Stalking Laura, is an American <b>made</b>-\nfor-television ... Theme music composer, Sylvester Levay. Country of origin, \nUnited States. Original language(s), English. Production. Executive producer(s), \nFrank Abatemarco",
"title": "I Can Make You Love Me"
},
{
"snippet": "Allen Shamblin is a country music songwriter who was born in Tennessee, and \nwas brought up ... He co-<b>wrote</b> with Steve Seskin for number one hits with "Life is \na Dance" and "Don't Laugh at Me. ... His biggest <b>song</b>, "<b>I Can't Make You Love</b> \n<b>Me</b>," was co-written with Mike Reid and was a hit for Bonnie Raitt. His <b>song</b> "The\n ...",
"title": "Allen Shamblin"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael Barry Reid (born May 24, 1947) is an American country music artist, \n<b>composer</b>, and ... 2 hit from early 1988. He also co-<b>wrote</b>, with Allen Shamblin, \nBonnie Raitt's standard "<b>I Can't Make You Love Me</b>". In 1990, Reid signed to \nColumbia ...",
"title": "Mike Reid (singer)"
},
{
"snippet": ""I'm Gonna <b>Make You Love Me</b>" is a soul <b>song</b> most popularly released as a joint \nsingle performed by Diana Ross & the Supremes and The Temptations for the ...",
"title": "I'm Gonna Make You Love Me"
},
{
"snippet": ""Do <b>You Love Me</b>" is a 1962 hit single recorded by The Contours for Motown's \nGordy Records ... A main point of the <b>song</b> is to name the Mashed Potato, The \nTwist, and a variation ... Berry Gordy <b>wrote</b> "Do <b>You Love Me</b>" with the intention \nthat The Temptations, who ... Not logged in; Talk · Contributions · <b>Create</b> account · \nLog in ...",
"title": "Do You Love Me"
},
{
"snippet": "The line "my loneliness ain't killing me no more" <b>makes</b> reference to the ... Lines \non "<b>Can't Make You Love Me</b>", a Europop <b>song</b>, state that ...",
"title": "Oops!... I Did It Again (album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Older" is a single released by George Michael in 1997. It was also released as \nan EP under the name The Older EP. The single's B-side is a cover of Bonnie \nRaitt's single "<b>I Can't Make You Love Me</b>".",
"title": "Older (George Michael song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Released: January 25, 2011; "<b>I Can't Make You Love Me</b>" Released: May 10, \n2011. Now or Never is the fourth studio album by American R&B singer Tank. It \nwas released on ... The <b>original</b> title for the album was Sex Love & Pain II: The All \nNight ... It debuted at number 74 on Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop <b>Songs</b> chart.",
"title": "Now or Never (Tank album)"
},
{
"snippet": "(1991), "<b>I Can't Make You Love Me</b>" (1991). "Something to Talk About" is a <b>song</b> \nwritten by Canadian singer-songwriter Shirley Eikhard and ... that she released \nthat year Something to Talk About even though it <b>did</b> not include this <b>song</b>.",
"title": "Something to Talk About (Bonnie Raitt song)"
}
]
}
] |
Who plays the voice of bob's burgers? | 2325344380521873006 | H. Jon Benjamin | [
"Harry Jon Benjamin"
] | [
"Bob's Burgers"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"H. Jon Benjamin",
"Benjamin"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who plays the voice of bob's burgers?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Bob's Burgers</b> is an American animated sitcom created by Loren Bouchard for the \nFox ... In this cameo, H. Jon Benjamin <b>voiced</b> Bob, as he works on Family Guy. In \nAqua Teen Hunger Force, a character previously known as Dr. Eugene Mirman ...",
"title": "Bob's Burgers"
},
{
"snippet": "Harry Jon Benjamin (born May 23, 1966) is an American <b>actor</b>, <b>voice actor</b> and \ncomedian. He is known for his roles in various adult animated series such as \nSterling Archer in Archer; Bob Belcher in <b>Bob's Burgers</b>; Carl Graves in Family \nGuy; ...",
"title": "H. Jon Benjamin"
},
{
"snippet": "Kristen Joy Schaal is an American actress, <b>voice</b> actress, comedian, and writer. \nShe is best known for her <b>voice</b> roles as Louise Belcher on <b>Bob's Burgers</b> and \nMabel Pines on Gravity Falls, as well as for <b>playing</b> Mel on ...",
"title": "Kristen Schaal"
},
{
"snippet": "John Roberts is an American <b>actor</b>, <b>voice actor</b>, comedian, writer, and singer who \n<b>voices</b> Linda Belcher on the animated sitcom <b>Bob's Burgers</b>.",
"title": "John Roberts (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "Daniel Alexander Mintz (born September 25, 1981) is an American comedian, \n<b>voice actor</b> and writer best known for his role as Bob's oldest daughter Tina \nBelcher on the animated show <b>Bob's Burgers</b>.",
"title": "Dan Mintz"
},
{
"snippet": "Tina Belcher[edit]. <b>Voiced</b> by Dan Mintz. Tina Ruth Belcher is the eldest Belcher \nchild. She generally speaks in a low, monotone <b>voice</b>, ...",
"title": "List of Bob's Burgers characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Dana Snyder (born November 14, 1973) is an American <b>actor</b> and <b>voice actor</b>. \nHe is known for ... 2013, 2015, <b>Bob's Burgers</b>, Pud, Sheldon (<b>voices</b>), 2 episodes. \n2013–2018, The Thundermans, Dr. Colosso (<b>voice</b>), Recurring role. 2014, The ...",
"title": "Dana Snyder"
},
{
"snippet": "He <b>voices</b> Teddy in the animated Fox series <b>Bob's Burgers</b>. He <b>voiced</b> the hostile \nimmigration officer Lt. Francis Grimes on the Comedy Central series Ugly ...",
"title": "Larry Murphy (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Christopher Parnell is an American <b>actor</b>, <b>voice</b> artist, comedian, and \nsinger. He was a ... <b>Bob's Burgers</b>, Warren Fitzgerald (<b>voice</b>), Episode: "Pro Tiki/\nCon Tiki". Ask the StoryBots, Reindeer (<b>voice</b>), Episode: "Where <b>Does</b> Rain \nCome ...",
"title": "Chris Parnell"
},
{
"snippet": "David Herman (born February 20, 1967) is an American <b>actor</b>, <b>voice actor</b> and \ncomedian. He was an original cast member on MADtv and <b>played</b> Michael Bolton \nin Office Space. He is known for his <b>voice</b>-work on the shows <b>Bob's Burgers</b>, \nFuturama, King ...",
"title": "David Herman"
}
]
}
] |
City with highest density of population in world? | -69082125495738845 | List of cities by population density | [
"Manila"
] | [
"List of cities by population density"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Manila"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "City with highest density of population in world?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "... <b>largest cities</b> proper; <b>World's</b> densest <b>population</b>; <b>World's largest</b> conurbations · \n<b>World's largest</b> urban areas · <b>World</b> megacities · <b>World</b> megalopolises · v · t · e. \nThis is a list of <b>cities</b> worldwide by <b>population density</b>. The <b>population</b>, <b>population</b> \n<b>density</b> and ...",
"title": "List of cities by population density"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of incorporated places in the United States with a \n<b>population density</b> of ... The following data about <b>the most</b> densely populated \nincorporated places in ... List of <b>cities</b> by <b>population density</b> · List of <b>countries</b> and \ndependencies by <b>population density</b> · List of <b>the most</b> densely populated country \nsubdivisions ...",
"title": "List of United States cities by population density"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>countries</b> and dependent territories ranked by <b>population density</b>, \nmeasured by ... All 193 member states of the United Nations plus the Vatican <b>City</b> \nare given a rank number. The figures in the following table ... Contents. 1 Main \ntable; 2 <b>Density</b> of <b>the most</b> populous <b>countries</b>; 3 See also; 4 Notes; 5 \nReferences ...",
"title": "List of countries and dependencies by population density"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>World's largest cities</b>; <b>World's largest cities</b> proper; <b>World's</b> densest <b>population</b> · \n<b>World's largest</b> conurbations · <b>World's largest</b> urban areas · <b>World</b> megacities · \n<b>World</b> megalopolises · v · t · e. A <b>city</b> proper is a locality defined according to legal \nor political boundaries and an ... List of <b>cities</b> by <b>population density</b> · List of \nmetropolitan areas by <b>population</b> ...",
"title": "List of cities proper by population"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Population density</b> is a measurement of <b>population</b> per unit area, or exceptionally \nunit volume; ... Several of <b>the most</b> densely populated territories in the <b>world</b> are \n<b>city</b>-states, microstates and urban dependencies. These territories have a ...",
"title": "Population density"
},
{
"snippet": "Determining the <b>world's largest cities</b> depends on which definitions of <b>city</b> are \nused, as well as ... Because of this definition, the <b>city</b> proper <b>population</b> figure \nmay differ greatly with the urban area <b>population</b> figure, ... of 2,000 people, \nalthough this varies globally between 200 and 50,000), <b>population density</b>, \neconomic function ...",
"title": "List of largest cities"
},
{
"snippet": "of <b>world cities</b>. Tokyo skyline · <b>World's largest cities</b> · <b>World's largest cities</b> proper · \n<b>World's</b> densest <b>population</b> · <b>World's largest</b> conurbations; <b>World's largest</b> urban \nareas; <b>World</b> megacities · <b>World</b> megalopolises · v · t · e. This is a list of \ncontiguous urban areas of the <b>world</b> ranked according to <b>population</b>. Figures ... \nThe estimates are quite different from the list of <b>World's largest</b> urban ...",
"title": "List of urban areas by population"
},
{
"snippet": "One concept which measures the <b>world's largest cities</b> is that of the metropolitan \narea, which is based on the concept of a labor market area and is typically \ndefined as an employment core (an area with a high <b>density</b> of available jobs) \nand the surrounding areas ...",
"title": "List of metropolitan areas by population"
},
{
"snippet": "New York <b>City</b>'s <b>demographics</b> show that it is a large and ethnically diverse \nmetropolis. It is the <b>largest city</b> in the United States with a long history of \ninternational ... The <b>city's population density</b> of 26,403 people per square mile (\n10,194/km²), makes ... The eleven <b>largest countries</b> of origin are the Dominican \nRepublic, China, ...",
"title": "Demographics of New York City"
},
{
"snippet": "New York <b>City</b> (NYC), also known as the <b>City</b> of New York or simply New York (\nNY), is <b>the most</b> populous <b>city</b> in the United States. With an estimated 2018 \n<b>population</b> of 8,398,748 distributed over a land area ... New York is home to the \n<b>highest</b> number of billionaires of any <b>city</b> in the <b>world</b>. New York <b>City</b> traces its \norigins to a ...",
"title": "New York City"
}
]
}
] |
When did oil consumption peak as a share of global energy? | 4016735717252895786 | World energy consumption | [
"1973"
] | [
"Peak oil",
"Oil depletion",
"World energy consumption"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"2020s to the 2040s"
],
"question": "When is it projected that oil consumption will peak as a share of global energy?"
},
{
"answer": [
"peak oil"
],
"question": "What do they call it when oil consumption will peak?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "oil consumption",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "This is a list of countries by <b>oil consumption</b>. The total worldwide <b>oil consumption</b> \nwas 93 million barrels per day (bbl/day) on average in 2015 according to the ...",
"title": "List of countries by oil consumption"
},
{
"snippet": "Demand[edit]. Global <b>consumption</b> of <b>oil</b> 1980–2013 (Energy Information \nAdministration). The demand side of peak ...",
"title": "Peak oil"
},
{
"snippet": "Northern Europe and North America <b>consume</b> far less, around 0.7 l, but the \n<b>consumption</b> of olive <b>oil</b> outside its home territory ...",
"title": "Olive oil"
},
{
"snippet": "In 2014, petroleum and natural gas were the two largest sources of energy in the \nU.S., together providing 63 percent of the energy <b>consumed</b> (<b>oil</b> provided 35 ...",
"title": "Petroleum in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "In the United States, Europe, and Japan, <b>oil consumption</b> had fallen 13% from \n1979 to 1981, "in part, in reaction to the very large increases in oil prices by the ...",
"title": "1980s oil glut"
},
{
"snippet": "Annual energy <b>consumption</b> by source[edit]. 2008 worldwide renewable-energy \nsources. Source: REN21.",
"title": "Cubic mile of oil"
},
{
"snippet": "India generated 35.2 million tons of petroleum products from indigenous crude <b>oil</b> \nproduction whereas the <b>consumption</b> of petroleum ...",
"title": "Oil and gas industry in India"
},
{
"snippet": "Nineteen percent of imported oil comes from the Middle East. The fraction of \ncrude <b>oil consumed</b> in the US that was imported went from 35% immediately \nbefore ...",
"title": "United States energy independence"
},
{
"snippet": "The United States Energy Information Administration predicted in 2006 that world \n<b>consumption</b> of <b>oil</b> will increase to 98.3 million barrels per day (15,630,000 ...",
"title": "Oil depletion"
},
{
"snippet": "Excessive <b>oil consumption</b>[edit]. The 2AZ-FE engine in the 2007-2009 Camry \nmay burn excessive oil and is involved in this lawsuit.",
"title": "Toyota AZ engine"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When did oil consumption peak as a share of global energy?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Peak</b> oil is the theorized point in time when the maximum rate of extraction of \npetroleum is ... In addition, Hubbert's original predictions for <b>world peak oil</b> \n<b>production</b> proved ... A comprehensive 2009 study of oil depletion by the UK \n<b>Energy</b> Research Centre ... This sector also <b>has</b> the highest consumption rates, \naccounting for ...",
"title": "Peak oil"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>World energy consumption</b> is the total energy produced and used by the entire \nhuman ... In 2008, the <b>share</b> export of the total energy <b>production</b> by <b>fuel was</b>: <b>oil</b> \n50% ... <b>Peak oil</b> · Renewable energy commercialization · Renewable energy by ...",
"title": "World energy consumption"
},
{
"snippet": "From the mid-1980s to September 2003, the inflation-adjusted price of a barrel of \ncrude oil on ... <b>World</b> crude <b>oil demand</b> grew an average of 1.76% per year from \n1994 to ... the largest <b>proportion</b> of <b>energy</b>, and <b>has</b> seen the largest growth in \ndemand in ... "The <b>Peak</b> of <b>World Oil Production</b> and the Road to the Olduvai \nGorge".",
"title": "2000s energy crisis"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1980s oil glut <b>was</b> a serious surplus of crude oil caused by falling demand \nfollowing the 1970s <b>energy</b> crisis. The <b>world</b> price of oil had peaked in 1980 at \nover US$35 per barrel ... The Alaskan Prudhoe Bay Oil Field entered <b>peak</b> \nproduction, supplying 2 million bpd of crude oil in 1988, 25 <b>percent</b> of all U.S. <b>oil</b> \n<b>production</b> ...",
"title": "1980s oil glut"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>World energy</b> resources are the estimated maximum capacity for energy \nproduction given all ... There are also theories that <b>peak</b> of the global <b>oil</b> \n<b>production</b> may occur in as little as 2–3 years. The ASPO predicts <b>peak</b> ... \ninvestors in solar energy. Solar power's <b>share of worldwide electricity</b> usage at \nthe end of 2014 <b>was</b> 1%.",
"title": "World energy resources"
},
{
"snippet": "The United States <b>Energy</b> Information ... This would require a more than 35 \n<b>percent</b> increase in <b>world oil production</b> by 2030. ... supply; <b>does</b> not assume pre/\npost-<b>peak</b> ...",
"title": "Predicting the timing of peak oil"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1973 and 1979 <b>energy</b> crisis had caused <b>petroleum</b> prices to <b>peak</b> in 1980 at \n... Time Magazine stated: "the <b>world</b> temporarily floats in a glut of <b>oil</b>", ... He wrote \nthat the main cause of the glut <b>was</b> declining <b>consumption</b>. ... decline in <b>oil</b> prices \nculminating with a 46 <b>percent</b> price drop in 1986.",
"title": "1970s energy crisis"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>energy</b> policy of India is largely defined by the country's expanding <b>energy</b> \ndeficit and ... India <b>has</b> built surplus <b>world</b> class refining capacity using imported \ncrude <b>oil</b> ... In India, coal is the bulk primary <b>energy</b> contributor with 56.90% <b>share</b> \n... per capita <b>energy consumption</b> at par with USA/Japan for the <b>peak</b> population \nin ...",
"title": "Energy policy of India"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Energy</b> in the United States comes mostly from fossil fuels: in 2010, data showed \nthat 25% of ... At the beginning of the 20th century, <b>petroleum was</b> a minor \nresource used to ... The <b>share</b> of <b>energy</b> import <b>was</b> 26% of the primary <b>energy</b> \nuse. ... Natural gas <b>was</b> the largest source of <b>energy production</b> in the United \nStates in ...",
"title": "Energy in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Petroleum</b> is a naturally occurring, yellowish-black liquid found in geological \nformations ... The <b>world's</b> first <b>oil</b> refinery <b>was</b> built in 1856 by Ignacy Łukasiewicz. \n... <b>Petroleum</b> also makes up 40 <b>percent</b> of total <b>energy consumption</b> in the United \nStates, but is responsible for ... <sup>1</sup> <b>peak production</b> of <b>oil</b> already passed in this \nstate.",
"title": "Petroleum"
}
]
}
] |
Khatron ke khiladi season 8 monica full name? | -1573037454259239459 | Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi | [
"Monica Dogra"
] | [
"Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi 8"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Monica Dogra"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Khatron ke khiladi season 8 monica full name?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>name</b> of the <b>season</b> was <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b>: Pain in Spain. ... The <b>season</b> \nended on 30 September 2017 with Shantanu Maheshwari declared ... "<b>Khatron</b> \n<b>Ke Khiladi 8</b>: Nia Sharma, Hina Khan And Geeta Phogat Leave A Mark In The \n<b>First Episode</b>". ... "<b>Khatron Ke Khiladi 8</b> 13 August 2017 Review: <b>Monica</b> Dogra \nGets ...",
"title": "Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi 8"
},
{
"snippet": "Fear Factor: <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b> ... (Season 6); Siddharth Shukla (Season 7); \nShantanu Maheshwari (<b>Season 8</b>); Punit Pathak (Season 9).",
"title": "Monica Dogra"
},
{
"snippet": "Fear Factor: <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b> (Fear Factor: Players of Danger) is an Indian \nstunt reality television ... The <b>first</b> two <b>seasons</b> were hosted by Akshay Kumar.",
"title": "Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi"
},
{
"snippet": "Shantanu Maheshwari (born 7 March 1991) is an Indian television actor, dancer, \nchoreographer and host. He debuted in the show Dil Dosti Dance on Channel V \nin his breakout performance as the protagonist Swayam Shekhawat.He also won \n'Fear Factor: <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b>' Maheshwari is a part of the ... Maheshwari was \nthen seen in Fear Factor: <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi Season 8</b> as a ...",
"title": "Shantanu Maheshwari"
},
{
"snippet": "Hina Khan (born 2 October 1987) is an Indian television and film actress. She is \nwell known for playing Akshara in Star Plus's Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai and \nportraying Komolika in Kasautii Zindagii Kay. She participated in the reality show \nBigg Boss 11 and emerged as the <b>first</b> ... She had confirmed on Fear Factor: \n<b>Khatron Ke Khiladi 8</b> that she suffers from ...",
"title": "Hina Khan"
},
{
"snippet": "Geeta Phogat (born 15 December 1988) is a freestyle wrestler who won India's \n<b>first</b> ever gold ... Geeta Phogat At Khatron Ke Khiladi Season 8.png ... Full name, \nGeeta Kumari Phogat ... <b>Season 8</b>. Nia Sharma · <b>Monica</b> Dogra · Lopamudra \nRaut · Karan Wahi · Rithvik Dhanjani; Geeta Phogat; Manveer Gurjar; Shiny \nDoshi ...",
"title": "Geeta Phogat"
},
{
"snippet": "The ninth <b>season</b> of Fear Factor: <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b>, Jigar pe Trigger ,an Indian \nreality ... For the <b>first</b> time, the Finale was broadcast live on 10 March 2019 to \npromote Rising Star 3 and Akshay Kumar's Kesari (film). ... <b>Name</b>, Occupation, \nStatus, Place ... Vikas Gupta, Producer, Creative head, Host, Disqualified in Week \n7, <b>8</b>.",
"title": "Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi 9"
},
{
"snippet": "Diandra Soares (born (1979-08-13)13 August 1979) is an Indian model, fashion \ndesigner and television host. She is most noted for her bald looks on the ramp.",
"title": "Diandra Soares"
},
{
"snippet": "Ashish Chaudhary (born 21 July 1978) is a Bollywood actor. Then he hosted a \nprogram for ... He is the winner of <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b> : Darr Ka Blockbuster \nReturns. ... dance show Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa (<b>Season 8</b>) but was eliminated in the \nsixth week. ... Ashish Chaudhary on IMDb · Ashish Chaudhary <b>biography</b> at \nKoimoi ...",
"title": "Ashish Chaudhary"
},
{
"snippet": "Shibani Dandekar (born 27 August 1980) is an Indian singer, actress, anchor and \nmodel. ... 1 <b>Biography</b>; 2 Filmography; 3 Television; 4 References; 5 External \nlinks ... 2015—Present The Stage as Host; 2015 I Can Do That as Contestant; \n2017 <b>Khatron Ke Khiladi</b> as Contestant; 2018 Top Model India as ... "IPL <b>Season</b> \n4".",
"title": "Shibani Dandekar"
}
]
}
] |
When did the fast and the furious start? | -6645277989185145910 | The Fast and the Furious | [
"2001"
] | [
"The Fast Saga",
"The Fast and the Furious (2001 film)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"July 2000"
],
"question": "When did the fast and the furious start filming?"
},
{
"answer": [
"June 22, 2001"
],
"question": "When did the fast and the furious start in theaters?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When did the fast and the furious start?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""Gunwalking", or "letting guns walk", <b>was</b> a tactic used by the Arizona U.S. \nAttorney's Office and ... As guns traced to <b>Fast</b> and <b>Furious began</b> turning up at \nviolent crime scenes in Mexico, ATF agents stationed there also voiced \nopposition.",
"title": "ATF gunwalking scandal"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Fast</b> Saga is an American media franchise centered on a series of action \nfilms that are ... The first film <b>was</b> released in 2001, which <b>began</b> the original \ntrilogy of films focused on racing, and culminated in the ... They <b>were</b> mostly \nincluded as special features for The <b>Fast and the Furious</b> (2001), 2 <b>Fast</b> 2 <b>Furious</b> \n(2003), and ...",
"title": "The Fast Saga"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Fast and the Furious</b> is a 2001 crime action adventure film directed by Rob \nCohen and ... The <b>Fast and the Furious was</b> released in the United States on \nJune 22, 2001. The film <b>was</b> a commercial ... Vince, who <b>has</b> a crush on Mia, \n<b>starts</b> a fight with Brian until Dominic intervenes. That night, Brian brings a \nmodified 1995 ...",
"title": "The Fast and the Furious (2001 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Plans for a seventh installment <b>were</b> first announced in February 2012 when \nJohnson stated that production on the film would <b>begin</b> after the completion of \n<b>Fast</b> ...",
"title": "Furious 7"
},
{
"snippet": "Paul William Walker IV (September 12, 1973 – November 30, 2013) <b>was</b> an \nAmerican actor and philanthropist best known for his role as Brian O'Conner in \nThe <b>Fast and the Furious</b> franchise. Walker <b>began</b> his career as a child actor \nduring the 1970s and 1980s, but first ...",
"title": "Paul Walker"
},
{
"snippet": "The film <b>was</b> rebranded in Chinese as The <b>Fast and the Furious</b> 8 to make clear \nits connection to <b>Furious</b> 7. After ticket sales <b>began</b> on April 2, the film pre-sold ...",
"title": "The Fate of the Furious"
},
{
"snippet": "Principal photography <b>began</b> in Miami in October 2002, with the majority of \nfilming being done on location in Miami and South Florida. 2 <b>Fast</b> 2 <b>Furious was</b> ...",
"title": "2 Fast 2 Furious"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Fast</b> & <b>Furious</b> is a 2009 American action adventure film directed by Justin Lin \nand written by ... Casting <b>began</b> in July 2007, after Universal Studios confirmed \nthe returns of ... <b>Fast</b> & <b>Furious was</b> released in the United States on April 3, 2009\n.",
"title": "Fast & Furious (2009 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "However, filming <b>did</b> not officially <b>begin</b> until July 30, 2012. In February 2013, it \n<b>was</b> confirmed that the film would be titled <b>Fast</b> & <b>Furious</b> 6.",
"title": "Fast & Furious 6"
},
{
"snippet": "A sequel, <b>Fast</b> & <b>Furious</b> 6, <b>was</b> released in May 2013 to box office success, \nsurpassing <b>Fast</b> Five as the highest-grossing film in the franchise. Another sequel\n ...",
"title": "Fast Five"
}
]
}
] |
Who has the key to the church of the holy sepulchre? | 864933336937104933 | Nusaybah clan | [
"Nusaybah family",
"Joudeh Al - Goudia family"
] | [
"Nusaybah clan"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"The Nussaiba Clan"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "key to the church of the holy sepulchre",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The Nussaiba Clan is the oldest Muslim dynasty in Jerusalem. The Nussaiba \nfamily has a long ... The <b>keys</b> of the <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b> were placed in \nthe custody of the family and is so until today. The ancient records and \nmanuscripts ...",
"title": "Nusaybah clan"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b> (Latin: Ecclesia Sancti Sepulchri) is a church \nin the Christian ... "Muslims (literally) hold <b>key</b> to Jerusalem's <b>Church of the Holy</b> \n<b>Sepulcher</b>". www.catholicnews.com. Retrieved 11 May 2019. ^ Harash, Rinat (30\n ...",
"title": "Church of the Holy Sepulchre"
},
{
"snippet": "The Destruction of the <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b> refers to the destruction of \nthe Church of ... <b>Keys</b> to Jerusalem: Collected Essays. OUP Oxford. pp. 245–.",
"title": "Destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre"
},
{
"snippet": "Sari Nusseibeh (Arabic: سري نسيبة) (born in 1949) is a Palestinian Professor of \nPhilosophy ... According to family tradition, they retained an exclusive right to the \n<b>keys</b> of the <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b> down to the Ottoman period, when the ...",
"title": "Sari Nusseibeh"
},
{
"snippet": "The Old City is a 0.9 square kilometers (0.35 sq mi) walled area within the \nmodern city of ... The Old City is home to several sites of <b>key</b> religious importance: \nthe Temple Mount and Western Wall for Jews, the Church of ... The quarter \ncontains the <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b>, viewed by many as Christianity's \nholiest place.",
"title": "Old City (Jerusalem)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem also called Order of the \nHoly ... In 15 July 1149 in the Holy Land, the <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b> in \nJerusalem was consecrated after reconstruction. The Aedicule inside the church, \nalleged ...",
"title": "Order of the Holy Sepulchre"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b>, generally known as The Round Church, is an \nAnglican church in the city of Cambridge, England. It is located on the corner of ...",
"title": "Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Cambridge"
},
{
"snippet": "The Fathers of the Holy Sepulchre, or Guardians of the Holy Sepulchre, are six or \nseven Franciscan fathers, who with as many lay brothers keep watch over the \n<b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b> ... The <b>keys</b> which lock the basilica shut the friars \noff from the outer world leaving their only means of communication as aperture in \nthe ...",
"title": "Fathers of the Holy Sepulchre"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Holy Sepulchre</b> is a Norman round <b>church</b> in Sheep Street, Northampton, \nEngland. It is a Grade I listed building. Dating from circa 1100, it was probably \nbuilt ...",
"title": "The Holy Sepulchre, Northampton"
},
{
"snippet": "Sophronius (c. 560 – March 11, 638; Greek: Σωφρόνιος) was the Patriarch of \nJerusalem from ... During the tour of the <b>Church of the Holy Sepulchre</b>, the time \nfor prayer came, and despite Sophronius's offer to Umar to pray inside the \nChurch, ... So appreciating the caliph's intelligence he gave the <b>keys</b> of the \nchurch to him.",
"title": "Sophronius of Jerusalem"
}
]
}
] |
When does dragon ball super new episode come out? | 3358975644387484941 | List of Dragon Ball Super episodes | [
"January 7 , 2018"
] | [
"List of Dragon Ball Super episodes"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"December 24, 2017"
],
"question": "When does Japanese dragon ball super new episode 121 come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 17, 2017"
],
"question": "When does Japanese dragon ball super new episode 120 come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 10, 2017"
],
"question": "When does Japanese dragon ball super new episode 119 come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 16, 2017"
],
"question": "When does American dragon ball super new episode 44 come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 9, 2017"
],
"question": "When does American dragon ball super new episode 43 come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 2, 2017"
],
"question": "When does American dragon ball super new episode 42 come out?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "dragon ball super",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Dragon Ball Super</b> is a Japanese manga series and anime television series. Its \noverall plot outline is written by Dragon Ball franchise creator Akira Toriyama, ...",
"title": "Dragon Ball Super"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dragon Ball Super</b> is a Japanese anime television series produced by Toei \nAnimation that began airing on July 5, 2015 on Fuji TV. It is the first Dragon Ball ...",
"title": "List of Dragon Ball Super episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dragon Ball Super</b>: Broly (Japanese: ドラゴンボール 超 ( スーパー ) ブロリー, ... \nHaving received positive reviews from critics, <b>Dragon Ball Super</b>: Broly is the ...",
"title": "Dragon Ball Super: Broly"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Dragon Ball Super</b> is a Japanese manga series written by Akira Toriyama and \nillustrated by Toyotarou. It is a sequel to Toriyama's original Dragon Ball and ...",
"title": "List of Dragon Ball Super chapters"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Super Dragon Ball</b> Heroes is a Japanese original net animation and promotional \nanime series for the card and video games of the same name. Similar to ...",
"title": "Super Dragon Ball Heroes (anime)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Dragon Ball manga series features an ensemble cast of characters created \nby Akira ... <b>Dragon Ball Super</b> in particular expanded the setting of the series to \ninclude parallel universes; Universe 7, or the Seventh Universe in the English \ndub, ...",
"title": "List of Dragon Ball characters"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of films based on the Dragon Ball franchise that began with the \nmanga of the same ... The latest and most successful movie to date, <b>Dragon Ball</b> \n<b>Super</b>: Broly (2018), grossed more than $100 million worldwide, and is—as of \nMarch ...",
"title": "List of Dragon Ball films"
},
{
"snippet": "Dragon Ball GT is a Japanese anime series based on Akira Toriyama's Dragon \nBall manga. ... with an original story using the same characters and universe. It \nwas succeeded by <b>Dragon Ball Super</b>, which acts as an alternate sequel to Z.",
"title": "Dragon Ball GT"
},
{
"snippet": "Son Goku (Japanese: 孫悟空, Hepburn: Son Gokū) (/ˈɡoʊ.kuː, ɡoʊˈkuː/) is \na fictional ... During the plans of the final story arc of <b>Dragon Ball Super</b>, it was \ndecided that Goku should have another transformation: The Ultra Instinct.",
"title": "Goku"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Super</b>[edit]. Z Warriors. Examples: Goku, Krillin, Gohan, Yamcha, Trunks, Master \nRoshi,Vegeta, etc.",
"title": "Dragon Ball Collectible Card Game"
}
]
}
] |
Which country will host the summer olympics in 2020? | 82962824946062598 | 2020 Summer Olympics | [
"Tokyo"
] | [
"2020 Summer Olympics"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Japan"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "summer olympics",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Summer Olympic</b> Games or the Games of the Olympiad, first held in 1896, is \na major international multi-sport event held once every four years. The most ...",
"title": "Summer Olympic Games"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2020 <b>Summer Olympics</b> officially known as the Games of the XXXII Olympiad \nand commonly known as Tokyo 2020 (tōkyō nisen-nijū) is an upcoming ...",
"title": "2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2016 <b>Summer Olympics</b> officially known as the Games of the XXXI Olympiad \nand commonly known as Rio 2016, was an international multi-sport event that ...",
"title": "2016 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2000 <b>Summer Olympics</b>, officially known as the Games of the XXVII \nOlympiad and commonly known as Sydney 2000 or the Millennium Olympic ...",
"title": "2000 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1988 <b>Summer Olympics</b> officially known as the Games of the XXIV Olympiad, \nwas an international multi-sport event celebrated from 17 September to 2 ...",
"title": "1988 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1936 <b>Summer Olympics</b> (German: Olympische Sommerspiele 1936), \nofficially known as the Games of the XI Olympiad, was an international multi-sport\n ...",
"title": "1936 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1996 <b>Summer Olympics</b>, officially known as the Games of the XXVI Olympiad\n, commonly known as Atlanta 1996, and also referred to as the Centennial ...",
"title": "1996 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2012 <b>Summer Olympics</b>, formally the Games of the XXX Olympiad and \ncommonly known as London 2012, was an international multi-sport event that \nwas ...",
"title": "2012 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Figure skating and ice hockey were also included in the <b>Summer Olympics</b> \nbefore the Winter Olympics were introduced in 1924.",
"title": "Olympic sports"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1952 <b>Summer Olympics</b> officially known as the Games of the XV Olympiad, \nwere an international multi-sport event held in Helsinki, Finland, from July 19 to ...",
"title": "1952 Summer Olympics"
}
]
},
{
"query": "2020 summer olympics",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> officially known as the Games of the XXXII Olympiad \nand commonly known as Tokyo 2020 (tōkyō nisen-nijū) is an upcoming ...",
"title": "2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> torch relay ran from 12 March until 24 July 2020. \nAfter being lit in Olympia, Greece, the torch was handed over to the Olympic ...",
"title": "2020 Summer Olympics torch relay"
},
{
"snippet": "The boxing tournaments at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> in Tokyo will take place \nfrom 25 July to 9 August 2020 at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan. On 22 May 2019, the ...",
"title": "Boxing at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Baseball will be featured at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b>, in Tokyo, for the first time \nsince the 2008 Summer Olympics. Six national teams will compete in the ...",
"title": "Baseball at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The association football tournament at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> will be held \nfrom 22 July to 8 August 2020 in Japan. In addition to the Olympic host city of ...",
"title": "Football at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Wrestling at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> in Tokyo will feature two disciplines, \nfreestyle and Greco-Roman, which will be further divided into different weight ...",
"title": "Wrestling at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The handball tournaments at the <b>2020</b> Tokyo <b>Summer Olympics</b> are scheduled to \ntake place from 24 July to 9 August <b>2020</b>.",
"title": "Handball at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "India is scheduled to compete at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> in Tokyo from 24 \nJuly to 9 August 2020. Indian athletes have appeared in every edition of the ...",
"title": "India at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "Athletics at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> will be held during the last ten days of the \nGames, from 31 July – 9 August 2020, at the Olympic Stadium, Tokyo, Japan.",
"title": "Athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The women's football tournament at the <b>2020 Summer Olympics</b> will be held from \n22 July to 7 August 2020. It will be the seventh edition of the women's Olympic ...",
"title": "Football at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament ..."
}
]
},
{
"query": "youth summer olympics",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Summer Youth Olympic Games</b> of Singapore in 2010 and Nanjing in 2014 \neach played host to 3600 athletes ...",
"title": "Youth Olympic Games"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2018 <b>Summer Youth Olympics</b> officially known as the III <b>Summer Youth</b> \n<b>Olympic Games</b>, and commonly known as Buenos Aires 2018, were an \ninternational ...",
"title": "2018 Summer Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2022 <b>Summer Youth Olympics</b>, officially known as the IV <b>Summer Youth</b> \n<b>Olympic Games</b> and commonly known as Dakar 2022 will be the fourth edition of\n ...",
"title": "2022 Summer Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2014 <b>Summer Youth Olympic Games</b> officially known as II <b>Summer Youth</b> \n<b>Olympic Games</b>, were the second <b>Summer Youth Olympic Games</b>, ...",
"title": "2014 Summer Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2026 <b>Summer Youth Olympics</b>, officially known as the V <b>Summer Youth</b> \n<b>Olympic Games</b> will be the fifth edition of the <b>Summer Youth Olympics</b>, ...",
"title": "2026 Summer Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 European <b>Youth Summer Olympic</b> Festival was held in Baku, \nAzerbaijan on 21 to 27 July 2019. Contents. 1 Sports; 2 Venues; 3 Schedule ...",
"title": "2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2015 European <b>Youth Summer Olympic</b> Festival was held in Tbilisi, Georgia, \nbetween 26 July and 1 August 2015. Contents. 1 Sports; 2 Venues ...",
"title": "2015 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival"
},
{
"snippet": "The festival has a <b>summer</b> edition, held for the first time in Brussels in 1991, and \na winter edition, which began two years later in ...",
"title": "European Youth Olympic Festival"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2010 <b>Summer Youth Olympics</b> officially known as the I <b>Summer Youth</b> \n<b>Olympic Games</b>, were the inaugural edition of the <b>Youth Olympic Games</b> (YOG), ...",
"title": "2010 Summer Youth Olympics"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2007 European <b>Youth Summer Olympic</b> Festival was held in Belgrade, \nSerbia, from 21 until 28 July 2007. Contents. 1 Sports; 2 Venues; 3 Participating ...",
"title": "2007 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival"
}
]
}
] |
Who played the elephant man in the 1980 movie? | -4012737301753236219 | The Elephant Man (film) | [
"John Hurt"
] | [
"The Elephant Man (film)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"John Hurt"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who played the elephant man in the 1980 movie?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Elephant Man</b> is a <b>1980</b> British-American historical drama film about Joseph \nMerrick a ... And every time it's used in a <b>movie</b> it's going to diminish the effect of \nthe scene." ... There had been a <b>play</b> about Merrick on Broadway called <b>The</b> \n<b>Elephant Man</b>, which was enjoying a successful run on Broadway at the time of \nthe ...",
"title": "The Elephant Man (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Joseph Carey Merrick (5 August 1862 – 11 April 1890), often erroneously called \nJohn Merrick, was an English man with severe deformities. He was first exhibited \nat a freak show as <b>the "Elephant Man</b>", and then went to ... Merrick's life was \ndepicted in a 1979 <b>play</b> by Bernard Pomerance and a <b>1980</b> film by David Lynch, \nboth ...",
"title": "Joseph Merrick"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Elephant Man</b> is a <b>1980</b> American drama film based on the true story of \nJoseph Merrick a ... Best <b>Actor</b> – Drama, John Hurt, Nominated. Best Screenplay \n... External links[edit]. Awards for <b>The Elephant Man</b> at the Internet <b>Movie</b> \nDatabase ...",
"title": "List of accolades received by The Elephant Man"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Elephant Man</b> is a <b>play</b> by Bernard Pomerance. It premiered at the \nHampstead Theatre in London on 7 November 1977. It later <b>played</b> in repertory \nat the ...",
"title": "The Elephant Man (play)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Elephant Man</b> is a 1982 American biographical television film directed by \nJack Hofsiss ... For the 1980 David Lynch film, see The Elephant Man (film). ... In \nthe film, Philip Anglim and Kevin Conway reprised their roles from the <b>play</b> as ... "\nAwards For <b>The Elephant Man</b>", Internet <b>Movie</b> Database, retrieved June 27, \n2010 ...",
"title": "The Elephant Man (1982 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir John Vincent Hurt CBE (22 January 1940 – 25 January 2017) was an English \n<b>actor</b> whose career spanned more than 50 years. Hurt came to prominence for \nhis role as Richard Rich in the film A Man for All ... As the deformed Joseph \nMerrick in <b>The Elephant Man</b> (<b>1980</b>), he won ... "The 100 Scariest <b>Movie</b> \nMoments".",
"title": "John Hurt"
},
{
"snippet": "The True History of <b>the Elephant Man</b> is a biography of Joseph Merrick written by \nMichael Howell and Peter Ford. It was published in <b>1980</b> in London, by Allison & \nBusby. ... Monagu's book inspired numerous dramatic works about Merrick, \nnotably a 1979 <b>play</b> by Bernard Pomerance and a <b>1980</b> film by David Lynch. \nBetween ...",
"title": "The True History of the Elephant Man"
},
{
"snippet": "Frederick Charles Jones (12 September 1927 – 9 July 2019) was an English \n<b>actor</b> who had an ... in <b>The Elephant Man</b> (<b>1980</b>); and in television, he was best \nknown for <b>playing</b> ... 1984, The Zany Adventures of Robin Hood, Orlando, TV \n<b>movie</b>.",
"title": "Freddie Jones"
},
{
"snippet": "David Keith Lynch (born January 20, 1946) is an American filmmaker, painter, \nmusician, singer, ... After Eraserhead became a success on the midnight <b>movie</b> \ncircuit, Lynch was hired to ... <b>1980</b>–1982: <b>The Elephant Man</b> and mainstream \nsuccess[edit] ... On hearing the title of the first, <b>The Elephant Man</b>, Lynch chose \nthe script.",
"title": "David Lynch"
},
{
"snippet": "Most nominations, <b>The Elephant Man</b> and Raging Bull (8). TV in the United \nStates. Network, ABC. Duration, 3 hours, 13 minutes. ← 52nd · Academy Awards \n· 54th →. The 53rd Academy Awards, honoring the best in film for <b>1980</b>, were \npresented March 31, 1981, ... In addition, Hutton was the youngest ever Best \nSupporting <b>Actor</b> winner.",
"title": "53rd Academy Awards"
}
]
}
] |
When did the magic school bus come out? | 5885483358536848428 | The Magic School Bus (TV series) | [
"September 10 , 1994"
] | [
"The Magic School Bus"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1986"
],
"question": "When did the Magic School Bus books first come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1986–2010"
],
"question": "In what years were the Magic School Bus books published?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1994"
],
"question": "When did Microsoft Home's Magic School Bus software come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"September 10, 1994",
"1994"
],
"question": "When did the Magic School Bus original TV show premiere?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1994-1997"
],
"question": "For how long did new episodes of the Magic School Bus original TV show keep coming out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1994–2001"
],
"question": "When did the Magic School Bus video game series come out?"
},
{
"answer": [
"September 29, 2017"
],
"question": "When did the Netflix reboot of The Magic School Bus come out?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "magic school bus",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> is an American-Canadian animated children's television \nseries, based on the book series of the same name by Joanna Cole and Bruce ...",
"title": "The Magic School Bus (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> is a Canadian- American edutainment media franchise \nthat includes a book series, a TV series, and video games. Each of the stories ...",
"title": "The Magic School Bus"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> is a series of children's books about science, written by \nJoanna Cole and illustrated by Bruce Degen. They feature the antics of Ms.",
"title": "The Magic School Bus (book series)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of episodes of the children's television series The <b>Magic School Bus</b>, \nwhich is based on the series of books of the same name written by Joanna ...",
"title": "List of The Magic School Bus episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> Rides Again is a Canadian-American animated children's \ntelevision series, based on the book series of the same name by Joanna Cole ...",
"title": "The Magic School Bus Rides Again"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> Lost in the Solar System is the fourth book in Joanna Cole \nand Bruce Degen's The <b>Magic School Bus</b> series. The book depicts arguably ...",
"title": "The Magic School Bus Lost in the Solar System"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> franchise includes many units of educational software \npublished by Microsoft. The video game series of interactive adventures was \nbased ...",
"title": "The Magic School Bus (video game series)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of characters that appear in The <b>Magic School Bus</b> television series \nand The <b>Magic School Bus</b> Rides Again.",
"title": "List of The Magic School Bus characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Magic School Bus</b> at the Waterworks is the first book in The <b>Magic School</b> \n<b>Bus</b> series. Written by Joanna Cole and illustrated by Bruce Degen, it is a picture\n ...",
"title": "The Magic School Bus at the Waterworks"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "The <b>Magic School Bus</b>". The following 10 pages are in this \ncategory, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:The Magic School Bus"
}
]
}
] |
How many states were there when the declaration of independence was signed? | -2619483654181496975 | United States Declaration of Independence | [
"thirteen"
] | [
"Signing of the United States Declaration of Independence"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"13"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "How many states were there when the declaration of independence was signed?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>signing</b> of the United <b>States Declaration of Independence</b> occurred primarily \non August 2, ... That assertion <b>is</b> seemingly confirmed by the <b>signed</b> copy of the \nDeclaration, <b>which is</b> dated July 4. ... had not been present in Congress on July 4, \nand that some delegates <b>may</b> have added <b>their</b> signatures even after August 2.",
"title": "Signing of the United States Declaration of Independence"
},
{
"snippet": "The United <b>States Declaration of Independence is</b> the pronouncement adopted \nby the Second Continental Congress meeting at the ...",
"title": "United States Declaration of Independence"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Signing</b> of the United <b>States</b> Constitution occurred on September 17, 1787, ... \nIncluded <b>are</b>, a statement pronouncing the document's adoption by the <b>states</b> ... It \nwas feared that <b>many</b> of the delegates would refuse to give <b>their</b> individual ... \nseven had <b>signed</b> the <b>Declaration of Independence</b>, and thirty had served on \nactive ...",
"title": "Signing of the United States Constitution"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>signed</b>, Engrossed Copy of the Declaration, now badly faded, <b>is</b> on display at \nthe National Archives in Washington, DC. The physical history of the United \n<b>States Declaration of Independence</b> spans from its original ... the thirteen <b>states</b>. \nUpon receiving these broadsides, <b>many states</b> issued <b>their</b> own broadside \neditions.",
"title": "Physical history of the United States Declaration of Independence ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Founding Fathers of the United <b>States</b>, or simply the Founding Fathers, <b>were</b> \na group of ... Two further groupings of Founding Fathers include: 1) those who \n<b>signed</b> the ... The second Congress adopted the <b>Declaration of Independence</b>. ... \n<b>There were</b> indeed disparities of wealth, earned or inherited: some Signers <b>were</b>\n ...",
"title": "Founding Fathers of the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Declaration of Independence is</b> a 12-by-18-foot (3.7 by 5.5 m) oil-on-canvas \npainting by American John Trumbull depicting the presentation of the draft of the \n<b>Declaration of Independence</b> to Congress. It was based on a <b>much</b> smaller \nversion of the same scene, presently held by ... <b>There were</b> 14 signers of the \nDeclaration who <b>did</b> not appear in the painting:.",
"title": "Declaration of Independence (Trumbull)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Texas <b>Declaration of Independence</b> was the formal <b>declaration of</b> \n<b>independence</b> of the Republic of Texas from Mexico in the Texas Revolution. It \nwas adopted at the Convention of 1836 at Washington-on-the-Brazos on March 2\n, 1836, and was formally <b>signed</b> the next day after mistakes <b>were</b> noted in the text\n. ... <b>Many</b> of the delegates to the 1836 convention <b>were</b> young men who had only\n ...",
"title": "Texas Declaration of Independence"
},
{
"snippet": "The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union was an agreement among the \n13 original ... Afterward, <b>there were</b> long debates on such issues as <b>state</b> \nsovereignty, the ... Only the central government <b>may declare</b> war, or conduct \nforeign political or ... After the first <b>signing</b>, some delegates <b>signed</b> at the next \nmeeting they ...",
"title": "Articles of Confederation"
},
{
"snippet": "Independence Day <b>is</b> a federal holiday in the United <b>States</b> commemorating the \n<b>Declaration of</b> ... Most historians have concluded that the Declaration was <b>signed</b> \nnearly a ... by raucous gatherings often incorporating bonfires as <b>their</b> \ncenterpiece. ... Firework shows <b>are</b> held in <b>many states</b>, and <b>many</b> fireworks <b>are</b> \nsold for ...",
"title": "Independence Day (United States)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Israeli <b>Declaration of Independence</b>, formally the Declaration of the \nEstablishment of the ... Through this letter, <b>which</b> became known as the Balfour \nDeclaration, British ... The Jewish <b>state</b> was to receive <b>around</b> 56% of the land \narea of Mandate ... THE <b>STATE</b> OF ISRAEL <b>is</b> prepared to cooperate with the \nagencies and ...",
"title": "Israeli Declaration of Independence"
}
]
}
] |
When did stan lee write the black panther? | 412587473447045913 | Black Panther (comics) | [
"July 1966"
] | [
"Black Panther (Marvel Comics)",
"Black panther"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"July 1966"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "the black panther",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Black Panther</b> is a 2018 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics \ncharacter of the same name. Produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt\n ...",
"title": "Black Panther (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Black Panther</b> Party (BPP), originally <b>the Black Panther</b> Party for Self-\nDefense, was a revolutionary political organization founded by Bobby Seale ...",
"title": "Black Panther Party"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Black Panther</b> is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books \npublished by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer-editor Stan Lee \nand ...",
"title": "Black Panther (Marvel Comics)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>A black panther</b> is the melanistic colour variant of any Panthera, particularly of the \nleopard (P. pardus) in Asia and Africa, and the jaguar (P. onca) in the ...",
"title": "Black panther"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Black Panther</b> was the official newspaper of <b>the Black Panther</b> Party. It began \nas a four-page newsletter in Oakland, California, in 1967, and was founded by ...",
"title": "The Black Panther (newspaper)"
},
{
"snippet": "The New <b>Black Panther</b> Party voter intimidation case was a political controversy \nin the United States concerning an incident that occurred during the 2008 ...",
"title": "New Black Panther Party voter intimidation case"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Black Panther</b> banishes Man-Ape from Wakanda on order of execution if he \nreturns. Man-Ape later joins a new Lethal Legion (consisting of the Grim Reaper, \nBlack ...",
"title": "Man-Ape"
},
{
"snippet": "The soundtrack for the 2018 American superhero film <b>Black Panther</b>, based on \nthe Marvel Comics character of the same name and produced by Marvel Studios,\n ...",
"title": "Black Panther (soundtrack)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Black Panthers</b> were an Israeli protest movement of second-generation \nJewish immigrants from North Africa and Middle Eastern countries. It was one of \nthe ...",
"title": "Black Panthers (Israel)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Black Panther</b> is an American motion comic and television series by Marvel \nKnights Animation, based on the popular Marvel Comics superhero of the same ...",
"title": "Black Panther (TV series)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "the black panther stan lee ",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Black Panther</b> is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books \npublished by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer-editor <b>Stan Lee</b> \nand ...",
"title": "Black Panther (Marvel Comics)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Black Panther</b> is an American motion comic and television series by Marvel \nKnights Animation, ... Djimon Hounsou – T'Challa / <b>Black Panther</b> · <b>Stan Lee</b> – \nGeneral Wallace; Kerry Washington – Princess Shuri · Alfre Woodard – Dondi \nReese, ...",
"title": "Black Panther (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "It is home to the superhero <b>Black Panther</b>. Wakanda first appeared in Fantastic \nFour #52 (July 1966), and was created by <b>Stan Lee</b> and Jack Kirby. Wakanda ...",
"title": "Wakanda"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of cameo appearances by <b>Stan Lee</b> (December 28, 1922 – \nNovember 12, ... In <b>Black Panther</b> (2018), Lee appears as a patron of a casino in \nBusan, South Korea, and takes T'Challa's won but unclaimed casino tokens.",
"title": "List of cameo appearances by Stan Lee"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Stan Lee</b> was an American comic book writer, editor, publisher, and producer. He \nrose through ... 117: <b>Stan Lee</b> wanted to do his part by co-creating the first black \nsuper hero. Lee discussed his ideas ... 137: "<b>The Black Panther</b> may have broken \nthe mold as Marvel's first black superhero, but he was from Africa. The Falcon ...",
"title": "Stan Lee"
},
{
"snippet": "Jack Kirby was an American comic book artist, writer and editor, widely regarded \nas one of the ... There, in the 1960s under writer-editor <b>Stan Lee</b>, Kirby created \nmany of the company's major characters, including the Fantastic Four, the X-Men \n... He wrote and drew <b>Black Panther</b> and drew numerous covers across the line.",
"title": "Jack Kirby"
},
{
"snippet": "The Black Knight is the alias of several fictional characters appearing in \nAmerican comic books published by Marvel Comics. The first is a medieval \nKnight created by writer-editor <b>Stan Lee</b> and artist Joe ... He is defeated by <b>Black</b> \n<b>Panther</b> who takes the Ebony Blade from him. He had his own version of Aragorn \nto use as a ...",
"title": "Black Knight (comics character)"
},
{
"snippet": "Vibranium is a fictional metal appearing in American comic books published by \nMarvel Comics, noted for its extraordinary abilities to absorb, store, and release \nlarge amounts of kinetic energy. Mined only in Wakanda, the metal is associated \nwith <b>Black Panther</b>, who ... Later in Fantastic Four #53 (August 1966), by <b>Stan</b> \n<b>Lee</b> and Jack Kirby, a new ...",
"title": "Vibranium"
},
{
"snippet": "<sup>:i</sup> Comedian Trevor Noah voices Griot, a Wakandan ship A.I., <b>Black Panther</b> co-\ncreator <b>Stan Lee</b> has a cameo as a patron in the South Korean casino, and ...",
"title": "Black Panther (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>A black panther</b> is any large, felid animal ("big cat") with dark fur. <b>Black panther</b> \nmay also refer ... (film), a 2018 American film based on the Marvel Character \ncreated by <b>Stan Lee</b>; <b>Black Panther</b> (TV series), an animated television series ...",
"title": "Black panther (disambiguation)"
}
]
}
] |
What is the meaning of the word toronto? | 2326399182617564061 | Name of Toronto | [
"`` plenty ''"
] | [
"Toronto"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"a whisky cocktail"
],
"question": "What is the meaning of the cocktail toronto?"
},
{
"answer": [
"largest city in Canada and the capital of Ontario"
],
"question": "What is the meaning of the city toronto in Canada?"
},
{
"answer": [
"homeomorphic to every proper subspace of the same cardinality"
],
"question": "What is the meaning of the space toronto?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "toronto",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Toronto</b> is the provincial capital of Ontario and the most populous city in Canada, \nwith a population of 2,954,024 as of July 2018. Current to 2016, the <b>Toronto</b> ...",
"title": "Toronto"
},
{
"snippet": "Lester B. Pearson International Airport (IATA: YYZ, ICAO: CYYZ), branded as \n<b>Toronto</b> Pearson International Airport is the primary international airport serving ...",
"title": "Toronto Pearson International Airport"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Toronto</b> Football Club is a Canadian professional soccer club based in <b>Toronto</b>, \nOntario. The club competes in Major League Soccer (MLS) as a member of the ...",
"title": "Toronto FC"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Toronto</b> International Film Festival is one of the largest publicly attended film \nfestivals in the world, attracting over 480,000 people annually. Since its ...",
"title": "Toronto International Film Festival"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Toronto</b> was a Canadian rock band formed in the late 1970s in <b>Toronto</b>, Ontario, \nCanada and perhaps best known for the top-ten Canadian hit "Your Daddy ...",
"title": "Toronto (band)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Toronto</b> Blessing, a term coined by British newspapers, refers to the \nChristian revival and associated phenomena that began in January 1994 at the \n<b>Toronto</b> ...",
"title": "Toronto Blessing"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Toronto</b> Raptors are a Canadian professional basketball team based in \n<b>Toronto</b>. The Raptors compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a\n ...",
"title": "Toronto Raptors"
},
{
"snippet": "The University of <b>Toronto</b> is a public research university in <b>Toronto</b>, Ontario, \nCanada, located on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. It was founded by \nroyal ...",
"title": "University of Toronto"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Toronto</b> Argonauts are a professional Canadian football team competing in \nthe East Division of the Canadian Football League (CFL). Based in <b>Toronto</b> ...",
"title": "Toronto Argonauts"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Toronto</b> Maple Leafs, officially the <b>Toronto</b> Maple Leaf Hockey Club and \noften simply referred to as the Leafs, are a professional ice hockey team based in\n ...",
"title": "Toronto Maple Leafs"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote the lyrics to elton john songs? | 3207148745645754275 | Bernie Taupin | [
"Bernard John Taupin"
] | [
"Your Song",
"Elton John",
"Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Bernie Taupin"
],
"question": "Who wrote the lyrics to most of Elton John's songs?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Gary Osborne"
],
"question": "Who wrote the lyrics to Elton John's songs on A Single Man?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Tim Rice"
],
"question": "Who wrote the lyrics with Elton John for The Lion King?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Paul Rudnick"
],
"question": "Who wrote the lyrics to Elton John's songs for the Broadway musical version of The Devil Wears Prada?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who wrote the lyrics to elton john songs?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Bernard John Taupin (born 22 May 1950) is an English lyricist, poet, singer and \nartist. He is best known for his long-term collaboration with <b>Elton John</b>, having \n<b>written the lyrics</b> for most of John's <b>songs</b>.",
"title": "Bernie Taupin"
},
{
"snippet": "Bernie Taupin is an English lyricist, poet, and singer. In his long-term \ncollaboration with <b>Elton John</b>, he has <b>written the lyrics</b> for most of John's <b>songs</b>. \nOver the ...",
"title": "List of songs with lyrics by Bernie Taupin"
},
{
"snippet": ""Your <b>Song</b>" is a <b>song composed</b> and performed by English musician <b>Elton John</b> \nwith <b>lyrics</b> by his longtime collaborator, Bernie Taupin. It originally appeared on ...",
"title": "Your Song"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir Elton Hercules John CH CBE is an English singer, ... John <b>wrote</b> music for the \n<b>lyrics</b> and then sent it to Taupin, beginning a ... the first <b>Elton John</b>/Bernie Taupin \n<b>song</b>, "Scarecrow".",
"title": "Elton John"
},
{
"snippet": ""Candle in the Wind" is a threnody with music and <b>lyrics</b> by <b>Elton John</b> and Bernie \nTaupin. It was originally <b>written</b> in 1973, in honor of Marilyn Monroe, who had \ndied 11 years earlier. In 1997, John performed a rewritten version of the <b>song</b> as \na tribute to Diana, ... Taupin was inspired to <b>write the song</b> after hearing the \nphrase "candle in the ...",
"title": "Candle in the Wind"
},
{
"snippet": "It was <b>written</b> by <b>John</b> and his lyricist Bernie Taupin. In the United Kingdom, the \n<b>song</b> reached no. 4 in the official chart. In the US ...",
"title": "Daniel (Elton John song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Someone Saved My Life Tonight" is a <b>song written</b> by <b>Elton John</b> (music) and \nBernie Taupin (<b>lyrics</b>) from <b>Elton John's</b> 1975 album Captain Fantastic and the ...",
"title": "Someone Saved My Life Tonight"
},
{
"snippet": ""Electricity" is a <b>song composed</b> by <b>Elton John</b> and Lee Hall for Billy Elliot the \nMusical. It was John's 63rd UK top-forty hit, peaking at number four on the UK ...",
"title": "Electricity (Elton John song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Bitch Is Back" is a rock <b>song</b> by <b>Elton John</b>, <b>written</b> with his longtime \ncollaborator Bernie Taupin. It was the second single released from his 1974 \nalbum ...",
"title": "The Bitch Is Back"
},
{
"snippet": ""Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny)" is a <b>song composed</b> by <b>Elton John</b> and Bernie \nTaupin and originally performed by <b>Elton John</b>. The <b>song</b> first appeared on ...",
"title": "Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny)"
}
]
}
] |
What style of painting did salvador dali use? | -7785592577648277422 | Salvador Dalí | [
"Dada",
"Cubism",
"Surrealism"
] | [
"Salvador Dalí"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"surrealism"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "salvador dali",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Salvador</b> Domingo Felipe Jacinto <b>Dalí</b> i Domènech, Marquis of <b>Dalí</b> de Púbol was \na Spanish surrealist artist. Born in Figueres, Catalonia, <b>Dalí</b> was a skilled ...",
"title": "Salvador Dalí"
},
{
"snippet": "The Persistence of Memory is a 1931 painting by artist <b>Salvador Dalí</b>, and one of \nthe most recognizable works of Surrealism. First shown at the Julien Levy ...",
"title": "The Persistence of Memory"
},
{
"snippet": "The Dalí Theatre and Museum is a museum dedicated to the artist <b>Salvador Dalí</b> \nin his home town of Figueres, in Catalonia, Spain. <b>Salvador Dalí</b> is buried in a ...",
"title": "Dalí Theatre and Museum"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Salvador Dalí</b> Museum is an art museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, United \nStates, dedicated to the works of <b>Salvador Dalí</b>. It houses the largest collection of\n ...",
"title": "Salvador Dalí Museum"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1948 work Dali Atomicus explores the idea of suspension, depicting three \ncats flying, water thrown from a bucket, an easel, a footstool and <b>Salvador Dalí</b> all\n ...",
"title": "File:Salvador Dali A (Dali Atomicus) 09633u.jpg"
},
{
"snippet": "The Ecumenical Council is a surrealist painting by Spanish artist <b>Salvador Dalí</b> \ncompleted in 1960. It is one of his masterpieces, taking two years to complete ...",
"title": "The Ecumenical Council (painting)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Swallow's Tail — Series of Catastrophes was <b>Salvador Dalí</b>'s last painting. It \nwas completed in May 1983, as the final part of a series based on the ...",
"title": "The Swallow's Tail"
},
{
"snippet": "Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus) is a 1954 oil-on-canvas painting by <b>Salvador</b> \n<b>Dalí</b>. A nontraditional, surrealist portrayal of the Crucifixion of Jesus, it depicts ...",
"title": "Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Salvador Dalí</b> (1904–1989) was a Spanish surrealist. It can also refer to: \n<b>Salvador Dalí</b> Museum, a museum in Florida; <b>Salvador Dalí</b> (film), a 1966 film \ndirected ...",
"title": "Salvador Dalí (disambiguation)"
},
{
"snippet": "Gala Dalí, Marquis of Dalí de Púbol (7 September [O.S. 26 August] 1894 – 10 \nJune 1982), usually known simply as Gala, was the Russian wife of poet Paul \nÉluard and later of artist <b>Salvador Dalí</b>, ...",
"title": "Gala Dalí"
}
]
}
] |
Where is the mercedes benz stadium located in atlanta? | -8871133363631413845 | Mercedes-Benz Stadium | [
"1 AMB Drive NW"
] | [
"Mercedes-Benz Stadium"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1 AMB Drive NW"
],
"question": "What address is the mercedes benz stadium located in atlanta?"
},
{
"answer": [
"33°45′20″N 84°24′00″W"
],
"question": "What coordinates is the mercedes benz stadium located in atlanta?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "mercedes benz stadium",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Stadium</b> is a multi-purpose stadium located in Atlanta, Georgia, \nUnited States. Opened in August 2017 as a replacement for the Georgia Dome, ...",
"title": "Mercedes-Benz Stadium"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> may refer to: <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> (Berlin), Germany; \n<b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> (Stuttgart), Germany; <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> (Shanghai), ...",
"title": "Mercedes-Benz Arena"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> is a multipurpose indoor arena in the Friedrichshain \nneighborhood of Berlin, Germany, which opened in 2008. With a capacity of ...",
"title": "Mercedes-Benz Arena (Berlin)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> is a stadium located in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, \nGermany and home to German Bundesliga club VfB Stuttgart. Before 1993 it was\n ...",
"title": "Mercedes-Benz Arena (Stuttgart)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Arena</b> formerly known as the Shanghai World Expo Cultural \nCenter, is an indoor arena located on the former grounds of Expo 2010 in ...",
"title": "Mercedes-Benz Arena (Shanghai)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz</b> Superdome, often referred to simply as the Superdome, is a \ndomed sports and exhibition <b>stadium</b> located in the Central Business District of ...",
"title": "Mercedes-Benz Superdome"
},
{
"snippet": "This article is a list of current National Football League stadiums, sorted by \ncapacity, their ... <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Stadium</b> <sup>double-dagger</sup>, 71,000, Atlanta, \nGeorgia · FieldTurf Revolution, Retractable, Atlanta Falcons, 2017. New \nMeadowlands Stadium Mezz ...",
"title": "List of current National Football League stadiums"
},
{
"snippet": "Mercedes-Benz_Stadium_roof_animation_2.gif (480 × 270 pixels, file size: 3.57 \n... English: Animation showing the opening of the <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Stadium</b> roof.",
"title": "File:Mercedes-Benz Stadium roof animation 2.gif"
},
{
"snippet": "Atlanta United FC, commonly known as Atlanta United, is an American \nprofessional soccer club ... Following its move to <b>Mercedes</b>-<b>Benz Stadium</b>, the \nteam continued leading the league in attendance and averaged more than \n48,000 in its ...",
"title": "Atlanta United FC"
},
{
"snippet": "The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent \ncomments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits \nshould ...",
"title": "Talk:Mercedes-Benz Stadium/Archive 1"
}
]
}
] |
When did joseph smith publish the book of mormon? | 1408626099204646959 | Book of Mormon | [
"March 1830"
] | [
"Book of Mormon"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"March 1830"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "book of Mormon",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Book of Mormon</b> is a musical comedy with music, lyrics and book by Trey \nParker, Robert Lopez, and Matt Stone. First staged in 2011, the play is a satirical\n ...",
"title": "The Book of Mormon (musical)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Book of Mormon</b> is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which, \naccording to adherents, contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the ...",
"title": "Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the <b>Book</b> \n<b>of Mormon</b>: <b>Book of Mormon</b> – sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, ...",
"title": "Outline of the Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "There are several theories as to the origin of the <b>Book of Mormon</b>. Most \nadherents to the Latter Day Saint movement view the book as a work of inspired \nscripture ...",
"title": "Origin of the Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Book of Mormon</b> is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which \nadherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the \nAmerican ...",
"title": "Criticism of the Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "Since the publication of the <b>Book of Mormon</b> in 1830, Mormon archaeologists \nhave attempted to find archaeological evidence to support it. Although historians\n ...",
"title": "Archaeology and the Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Book of Mormon</b> has been called the longest and most complex of Smith's \nrevelations. It is organized as a compilation of smaller books, each named after \nits ...",
"title": "Joseph Smith"
},
{
"snippet": "Studies of the <b>Book of Mormon</b> is a collection of essays written at the beginning of \nthe 20th century (though not published until 1985) by B. H. Roberts ...",
"title": "Studies of the Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "There are a number of words and phrases in the <b>Book of Mormon</b> that are \nanachronistic—their existence in the text of the <b>Book of Mormon</b> is at odds with \nknown ...",
"title": "Anachronisms in the Book of Mormon"
},
{
"snippet": "The Amalekites in the <b>Book of Mormon</b>, are first mentioned described as a group \nof dissenters from the Nephites They, along with the Lamanites and the ...",
"title": "Amalekites (Book of Mormon)"
}
]
}
] |
Who won the title of miss world 2000? | 5781667698677140572 | Miss World 2000 | [
"Priyanka Chopra"
] | [
"Miss World 2000"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Priyanka Chopra"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "miss world 2000",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Miss World 2000</b>, the 50th edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 30 \nNovember 2000 at the Millennium Dome in London, United Kingdom.",
"title": "Miss World 2000"
},
{
"snippet": "Priyanka Chopra Jonas is an Indian actress, singer, film producer, and the winner \nof the <b>Miss World 2000</b> pageant. One of India's highest-paid and most popular ...",
"title": "Priyanka Chopra"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of women who have won the <b>Miss World</b> title. Contents. 1 \n<b>Miss World</b> ... India, 6, 1966, 1994, 1997, 1999, <b>2000</b>, 2017. Venezuela, 1955 ...",
"title": "List of Miss World titleholders"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>Miss World 2000</b> delegates". The following 10 pages are in \nthis category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Miss World 2000 delegates"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Miss World</b> is the oldest running international beauty pageant. It was created in \nthe United Kingdom by Eric Morley in 1951. Since his death in <b>2000</b>, Morley's ...",
"title": "Miss World"
},
{
"snippet": "Initial visibility: currently defaults to autocollapse. To set this template's initial \nvisibility, the |state= parameter may be used: |state=collapsed : {{<b>Miss World 2000</b>\n ...",
"title": "Template:Miss World 2000 delegates"
},
{
"snippet": "Year, <b>Miss World</b> Germany, Represented, Site ... <b>2000</b>, Natascha Berg, Hesse · \nHannover ...",
"title": "Miss World Germany"
},
{
"snippet": "Sonia Gazi is a Bangladeshi model and beauty pageant titleholder who was \ncrowned Miss Bangladesh 2000 and represented Bangladesh at <b>Miss World</b> \n<b>2000</b>.",
"title": "Sonia Gazi"
},
{
"snippet": "The United States has continuously sent a representative to <b>Miss World</b> since its \ninception in ... In 1998, Hirsh Wilck succeeded GuyRex and became the license \nholder and sent contestants from 1998 to <b>2000</b>. In 2001, the <b>Miss World</b> ...",
"title": "United States representatives at Miss World"
},
{
"snippet": "Miss Mondo Italia, or Miss World Italy, is an Italian beauty pageant in Italy that \nselects the Italian ... went on to become the 1st runner-up at <b>Miss World 2000</b>, \nand found its final incarnation in 2005 as Miss Mondo Italia - La sfida italiana. \nAfter a ...",
"title": "Miss World Italy"
}
]
}
] |
How many nba games does each team play? | 5977557104954330791 | National Basketball Association | [
"82"
] | [
"National Basketball Association"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"82"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season?"
},
{
"answer": [
"41"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season at home?"
},
{
"answer": [
"41"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season as the away team?"
},
{
"answer": [
"16"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season against its own division?"
},
{
"answer": [
"24"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season against six of the teams from the other two divisions in its conference?"
},
{
"answer": [
"12"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season against the three teams from the other two divisions in its conference that it does not play four times?"
},
{
"answer": [
"30"
],
"question": "How many NBA games does each team play in the regular season against teams from the other conference?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "nba games in a season",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The regular <b>season</b> began on October 22, 2019 and will end on April 15, 2020. \nThe 2020 <b>NBA</b> All-Star <b>Game</b> was played on ...",
"title": "2019–20 NBA season"
},
{
"snippet": "The regular <b>season</b> began on October 16, 2018 and ended on April 10, 2019. \nThe 2019 <b>NBA</b> All-Star <b>Game</b> was played on ...",
"title": "2018–19 NBA season"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>NBA's</b> regular <b>season</b> runs from October to April, with each team playing 82 \n<b>games</b>. Its playoffs extend into June. As of 2015, <b>NBA</b> players are the world's ...",
"title": "National Basketball Association"
},
{
"snippet": "The National Basketball Association (<b>NBA</b>) is the major professional basketball \nleague in North ... Each team plays 82 <b>games</b> in the regular <b>season</b>. Eight teams\n ...",
"title": "List of National Basketball Association seasons"
},
{
"snippet": "A revised 66-<b>game</b> regular <b>season</b> began on December 25, 2011, with five \nChristmas Day <b>games</b>, two more than the ...",
"title": "2011–12 NBA season"
},
{
"snippet": "All 29 teams played a shortened 50-<b>game</b> regular <b>season</b> schedule and the 16 \nteams who qualified for the playoffs played a full post-<b>season</b> schedule. That ...",
"title": "1998–99 NBA season"
},
{
"snippet": "He only played 2 <b>games</b>. Most points per <b>game</b> by a rookie. 37.6 by Wilt \nChamberlain ...",
"title": "NBA regular season records"
},
{
"snippet": "Earliest team to clinch a playoff berth in <b>NBA</b> history; 18 <b>game</b> winning streak; \nHighest point-differential in <b>NBA</b> regular-<b>season</b> history (+12.8). Mike \nBudenholzer.",
"title": "List of NBA teams by single season win percentage"
},
{
"snippet": "It marked the <b>NBA's</b> sixth regular-<b>season game</b> in London. List of preseason \n<b>games</b>[edit] ...",
"title": "NBA Global Games"
},
{
"snippet": "Robertson would also set the record for consecutive <b>games</b> with a steal (105), \nwhich stood for 22 years. In the third <b>game</b> of the <b>season</b>, Chicago Bulls \nsensation ...",
"title": "1985–86 NBA season"
}
]
}
] |
When was sing something simple on the radio? | -5510503624861666842 | Sing Something Simple | [
"from 1959 until 2001"
] | [
"Sing Something Simple"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1959"
],
"question": "When did Sing Something Simple debut on the radio?"
},
{
"answer": [
"2001"
],
"question": "Until when was Sing Something Simple on the radio?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When was sing something simple on the radio?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Sing Something Simple</b> was a half-hour <b>radio</b> programme, which featured Cliff \nAdams and The Cliff Adams Singers, with Jack Emblow on accordion.",
"title": "Sing Something Simple"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "2001 <b>radio</b> programme endings". The following 3 pages are \nin this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn ...",
"title": "Category:2001 radio programme endings"
},
{
"snippet": "The Cliff Adams Singers were a British male/female vocal group, known for \nballads and novelty songs, and especially their regular performances on BBC \n<b>Radio</b> from the 1950s onwards. ... singers first appeared on the BBC Light \nProgramme in <b>Sing Something Simple</b>, also featuring Jack Emblow on piano and \naccordion.",
"title": "Cliff Adams Singers"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "1959 <b>radio</b> programme debuts". The following 8 pages are in \nthis category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:1959 radio programme debuts"
},
{
"snippet": "Danny Street was a Scottish session singer and big band singer. Life[edit]. He \nwas born in ... As a member of the Cliff Adams Singers he was heard in <b>Sing</b> \n<b>Something Simple</b> on BBC <b>Radio</b> 2 for 14 years. He was in backing groups on TV\n ...",
"title": "Danny Street"
},
{
"snippet": "British classical music <b>radio</b> programmes (11 P) ... Scott Mills (<b>radio</b> show) · <b>Sing</b> \n<b>Something Simple</b> · Slashmusic · Sounds of the 60s · Sounds of the Seventies ...",
"title": "Category:British music radio programmes"
},
{
"snippet": "John Logan Browell was a <b>radio</b> producer who worked primarily in BBC <b>Radio</b>. \nBorn in Poplar ... a senior sound engineer in light entertainment, and, from 1954, \na producer, initially working on music such as <b>Sing Something Simple</b>.",
"title": "John Browell"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of events in British <b>radio</b> during 1974. Contents. 1 Events. 1.1 \nJanuary; 1.2 ... The Today Programme (1957–Present); The Navy Lark (1959–\n1977); <b>Sing Something Simple</b> (1959–2001); Your Hundred Best Tunes (1959–\n2007) ...",
"title": "1974 in British radio"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of events in British <b>radio</b> during 1977. Contents. 1 Events. 1.1 \nJanuary; 1.2 ... The Archers (1950–Present); The Today Programme (1957–\nPresent); <b>Sing Something Simple</b> (1959–2001); Your Hundred Best Tunes (1959\n–2007) ...",
"title": "1977 in British radio"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of events in British <b>radio</b> during 1976. Contents. 1 Events. 1.1 \nJanuary to February ... Programme (1957–Present); The Navy Lark (1959–1977); \n<b>Sing Something Simple</b> (1959–2001); Your Hundred Best Tunes (1959–2007) ...",
"title": "1976 in British radio"
}
]
}
] |
Who has the most points per game in nhl history? | 4863819055370896563 | List of NHL statistical leaders | [
"Wayne Gretzky"
] | [
"List of NHL records (team)",
"Points per game",
"List of NHL statistical leaders"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Wayne Gretzky"
],
"question": "Which player has the most points per regular season game in nhl history?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Wayne Gretzky"
],
"question": "Which player has the most points per playoff game in nhl history?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Edmonton Oilers"
],
"question": "Which team has the most goals per playoff game in nhl history?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "points per game nhl",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Active skaters (during 2019–20 <b>NHL</b> season) are listed in boldface. Regular \nseason: <b>Points</b>[edit]. Active <b>NHL</b> ...",
"title": "List of NHL statistical leaders"
},
{
"snippet": "In ice hockey, <b>point</b> has three contemporary meanings. Contents. 1 Personal stat; \n2 Team stat ... The Art Ross Trophy is awarded to the National Hockey League (\n<b>NHL</b>) player who leads the league in scoring <b>points</b> at the end of the ... For \nwinning a <b>game</b>, a team always earns two <b>points</b> in the standings in regulation \ntime.",
"title": "Point (ice hockey)"
},
{
"snippet": "Upon his first retirement, Lemieux became the only player to retire from the <b>NHL</b> \nwith a greater than 2 <b>points per game</b> average (1494 <b>points</b> in 745 <b>games</b>).",
"title": "Mario Lemieux"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Points per game</b>, often abbreviated PPG, is the average number of <b>points</b> scored \nby a player <b>per game</b> played in a sport, over the course of a series of <b>games</b>, ...",
"title": "Points per game"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of career achievements by Wayne Gretzky in the National Hockey \nLeague (<b>NHL</b>). ... (13) have passed Gretzky's record (12) for most All-Star <b>game</b> \nassists. Wayne Gretzky finished his career with a 1.921 <b>points per game</b> average.",
"title": "List of career achievements by Wayne Gretzky"
},
{
"snippet": "... Highest <b>points</b>-<b>per</b>-<b>game</b> average, career (among players with 500-or-more \n<b>points</b>): Wayne ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (individual)"
},
{
"snippet": "He also led the <b>NHL</b> in goals <b>per game</b> and <b>points per game</b> for three straight \nseasons, from 2008 to 2010. Ovechkin is the Capitals all time leader in goals. In ...",
"title": "Alexander Ovechkin"
},
{
"snippet": "Peter Mattias "Foppa" Forsberg is a Swedish retired professional ice hockey \nplayer and was for ... Forsberg had an average of less than one <b>point per game</b> in \nthe regular season for the ... Coming back from a ten-month break Forsberg was \nfirst among all <b>NHL</b> players in terms of average-<b>points</b>-<b>per</b>-<b>game</b> (PPG) during \nthe ...",
"title": "Peter Forsberg"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of players who have scored eight or more <b>points</b> in a National \nHockey League <b>game</b>. Scoring eight or more <b>points</b> in a single <b>game</b> is \nconsidered a ...",
"title": "List of players with eight or more points in an NHL game"
},
{
"snippet": "He averaged better than a <b>point per game</b> in his <b>NHL</b> career (779 <b>points</b> with 437 \ngoals in 702 <b>NHL games</b>) and is fourth all-time in goals <b>per game</b>. After six ...",
"title": "Pavel Bure"
}
]
},
{
"query": "team records nhl",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>team records</b> recognized by the National Hockey League through \nthe end of the 2018–19 <b>NHL</b> season. Contents. 1 Season <b>records</b>. 1.1 1949–50 ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (team)"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of the all-time <b>records</b> for each of the 31 active National \nHockey League (<b>NHL</b>) <b>teams</b>, beginning with the first <b>NHL</b> season (1917–18) \nand ...",
"title": "List of all-time NHL standings"
},
{
"snippet": "Most goals, both <b>teams</b>, 1 game – 29, <b>Team</b> Toews 17, <b>Team</b> ... both <b>teams</b>, 1 \ngame – 2, <b>NHL</b> All-Stars 1, Montreal Canadiens 1, ...",
"title": "List of NHL All-Star Game records"
},
{
"snippet": "The Hartford Whalers were an American professional ice hockey <b>team</b> based for \nmost of its ... As a result, both <b>teams</b> broke <b>NHL records</b> in penalty minutes for an \nindividual playoff game and a whole playoff series. The Nordiques won the next ...",
"title": "Hartford Whalers"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Team</b> regular season single game <b>records</b> ... Consecutive goals scored, 15 <b>NHL</b> \n<b>record</b> ... Largest margin of victory, 15 <b>NHL record</b> ...",
"title": "List of Detroit Red Wings records"
},
{
"snippet": "The Philadelphia Flyers are a professional ice hockey <b>team</b> based in \nPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania. They are members of the Metropolitan Division of \nthe National Hockey League's (<b>NHL</b>) Eastern Conference. The Flyers were \nfounded in 1967 as one of six expansion <b>teams</b>, increasing the size of the <b>NHL</b> at \nthat time to 12 <b>teams</b>.",
"title": "List of Philadelphia Flyers records"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexander Ovechkin leads the <b>team</b> in goals scored in a season. Most goals in a \nseason: Alexander Ovechkin, 65 (2007–08); Most ...",
"title": "List of Washington Capitals records"
},
{
"snippet": "A cash bonus of $350,000 was awarded to the winning <b>team</b> with the <b>NHL's</b> best \nregular-season <b>record</b> during these years, to which the Presidents' Trophy was ...",
"title": "Presidents' Trophy"
},
{
"snippet": "The first outdoor game on <b>record</b> to feature an <b>NHL team</b> was attempted on \nFebruary 2, 1954. The Detroit Red Wings played an exhibition game on an \noutdoor ...",
"title": "NHL outdoor games"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of individual <b>records</b> recognized by the National Hockey League \nthrough the end of ... Won the Stanley Cup with the highest number of different \n<b>teams</b>. Player - Jack Marshall (Winnipeg Victorias 1901, Montreal AAA 1902, \n1903, ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (individual)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "team with most points nhl",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Starting with the 1999-2000 season, the <b>NHL</b> credited one <b>point</b> to the <b>team</b> that \nlost in overtime, <b>leading</b> to a system in ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (team)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Arizona Coyotes have the lowest <b>point</b> percentage among active <b>NHL teams</b> \n(.478) while the Golden Knights have <b>the highest</b> (.616). The Florida Panthers ...",
"title": "List of all-time NHL standings"
},
{
"snippet": "The Presidents' Trophy (French: Trophée des présidents) is an award presented \nby the National <b>Hockey</b> League (<b>NHL</b>) to the <b>team</b> that finishes with the <b>most</b> \n<b>points</b> (i.e. best <b>record</b>) during the <b>NHL</b> regular season. If two <b>teams</b> tie for the \n<b>most points</b>, then the Trophy goes to the <b>team</b> with the ...",
"title": "Presidents' Trophy"
},
{
"snippet": "The List of National <b>Hockey</b> League (<b>NHL</b>) players with 1,000 <b>points</b> is a list of \nthe individual ... of the <b>NHL</b> (1986–87). The <b>most</b> recent player to reach 1,000 \n<b>points</b> was Patrick Kane, on January 19, 2020. ... Only three times have multiple \nplayers reached 1,000 <b>points</b> on the same <b>team</b> in the same season. The \nWashington ...",
"title": "List of NHL players with 1,000 points"
},
{
"snippet": "Only eight unique players, on eleven occasions, playing for only five <b>teams</b>, \nreached the century mark. A <b>record</b> 21 players ...",
"title": "List of NHL players with 100-point seasons"
},
{
"snippet": "Stanley Cup, 1893, Awarded to the <b>NHL</b> playoff champion. ... the regular season \nwith the best overall <b>record</b> (based on <b>points</b>).",
"title": "List of National Hockey League awards"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Most goals</b>, both <b>teams</b>, 1 game – 29, <b>Team</b> Toews 17, <b>Team</b> ... at Columbus; \nFewest <b>goals</b>, 1 <b>team</b>, 1 game – 0, <b>NHL</b> All-Stars vs.",
"title": "List of NHL All-Star Game records"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Most goals</b> career: Wayne Gretzky, 894; <b>Most goals</b> playoffs career; ... 4; <b>Most</b> \n<b>goals</b> scored by a single player in an expansion <b>team's</b> ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (individual)"
},
{
"snippet": "Jaromir Jagr has the second <b>most points</b> in <b>NHL</b> history. Rank, Name, <b>Team</b>(s), \nGP, Pts, PPG. 1, Jaromir Jagr · PIT, ...",
"title": "List of NHL statistical leaders by country"
},
{
"snippet": "The Stanley Cup Finals in ice <b>hockey</b> is the National <b>Hockey</b> League (<b>NHL</b>)'s \nchampionship ... Professional <b>teams</b> first became eligible to challenge for the \nStanley Cup in ... The WHL folded in 1926, and <b>most</b> of the players moved to the \n<b>NHL</b>. ... One of the above (<b>most points</b>, <b>most goals</b>) is incorrect, as 14 <b>goals</b> are \nalso 14 ...",
"title": "Stanley Cup Finals"
}
]
},
{
"query": "highest scoring nhl games",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "... and the overall <b>most</b> prolific, <b>scoring</b> at least five goals in five different <b>games</b>. \nPatrik Laine is the latest player to <b>score</b> five goals in an <b>NHL game</b>, doing it on \nNovember 24, 2018. This is a list of players who have <b>scored</b> five or more goals \nin a National <b>Hockey</b> League (<b>NHL</b>) ...",
"title": "List of players with five or more goals in an NHL game"
},
{
"snippet": "Sam Gagner is the <b>most</b> recent <b>NHL</b> player to <b>score</b> an eight-point <b>game</b>. This is \na list of players who have <b>scored</b> eight or more points in a National <b>Hockey</b> ...",
"title": "List of players with eight or more points in an NHL game"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Most</b> Playoff Goals <b>Scored</b> in a Series by One Team: 44, ... <b>Most</b> Playoff Goals \n<b>Scored</b> by Both Teams in One <b>Game</b>: ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (team)"
},
{
"snippet": "Martin Brodeur has <b>scored</b> the <b>most NHL</b> goals by a goaltender, with two in the \nregular season and one in the playoffs. The <b>most</b> recent goal credited to a ...",
"title": "List of goaltenders who have scored a goal in an NHL game ..."
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scoring</b> 50 goals in one season is one of the <b>most</b> celebrated individual \nachievements in the ... Wayne Gretzky <b>scored</b> his 50th goal in his 39th <b>game</b> in \n1981–82, the fastest any player has done so. He also shares the record for <b>most</b> \n50-goal ...",
"title": "List of NHL players with 50-goal seasons"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of individual records recognized by the National <b>Hockey</b> League \nthrough the end of ... <b>Most games</b>: Gordie Howe, 1,767; <b>Most games</b>, including \nplayoffs: Mark Messier, 1,992; <b>Most</b> playoff <b>games</b>: ... Longest goal <b>scoring</b> streak \nin his first <b>NHL</b> Season: Joe Malone (1917–18), 14 <b>games</b>; Longest point streak \nby a ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (individual)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of career achievements by Wayne Gretzky in the National <b>Hockey</b> \nLeague (<b>NHL</b>). ... Gretzky <b>scored</b> his first 1,000 points faster (424 <b>games</b>) than \nany other player in <b>NHL</b> history, and <b>scored</b> a second ... The <b>NHL</b> has an official \nrecord for the <b>most</b> goals in first 50 <b>games</b>, but not the fastest 50 goals; Fastest \n100 ...",
"title": "List of career achievements by Wayne Gretzky"
},
{
"snippet": "In sports, a blowout is an easy or one-sided victory. It occurs when one athletic \nteam or ... Georgia Tech football <b>game</b>, called "the <b>biggest</b> blowout in football \nhistory" by Los Angeles ... The final <b>score</b> was 149–0, with players on the winning \nteam (Adema) not ... For NCAA men's <b>hockey</b> records in Divisions I and III since \n2004: ...",
"title": "Blowout (sports)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of the records established in the playing of the annual <b>NHL</b> All-Star \n<b>Game</b>. ... <b>Most games</b> played – 23, Gordie Howe; <b>Most</b> goals – 13, Wayne \nGretzky, ... Owen Nolan <b>scored</b> at 18:54 and at 19:02 of second period for \nWestern.",
"title": "List of NHL All-Star Game records"
},
{
"snippet": "The player who <b>scores</b> during this extra five minutes is given the overtime goal. \nAll overtime in the <b>NHL</b> is ...",
"title": "List of NHL statistical leaders"
}
]
},
{
"query": "points per game nhl team",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "For winning <b>a game</b>, <b>a team</b> always earns two <b>points</b> in the standings in \nregulation time.In overtime <b>a team</b> receives 1 <b>point</b> win or loss.",
"title": "Point (ice hockey)"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexander Mikhailovich Ovechkin often referred to as "Ovi", "the Great Eight" and \n"Alexander ... Ovechkin had <b>a</b> youth <b>hockey game</b> the next day, which his parents \ninsisted he play in. ... and re-joined Dynamo Moscow with his teammate Nicklas \nBäckström. In 31 <b>games</b> for the <b>team</b>, Ovechkin scored 19 goals and 40 <b>points</b>.",
"title": "Alexander Ovechkin"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>NHL</b> has <b>a</b> record for most 60 goal seasons, but not 70. ... in 1983–84; Most \nseasons averaging at least 1 <b>point per game</b>: 19 ... was his <b>team's</b> leading scorer: \n19; Highest Plus/Minus in <b>a</b> single playoff ...",
"title": "List of career achievements by Wayne Gretzky"
},
{
"snippet": "Mario Lemieux OC CQ is <b>a</b> Canadian former professional ice <b>hockey</b> player. He \nplayed parts of ... The <b>team</b> had declared bankruptcy after the 1974–75 season, \nand <b>by</b> 1983, they were averaging fewer than ... He tied the <b>NHL</b> record for most \ngoals and <b>points</b> in <b>a</b> postseason <b>game</b>, most goals in <b>a</b> postseason period (four \nin ...",
"title": "Mario Lemieux"
},
{
"snippet": "Most <b>points</b> regular season career: Wayne Gretzky, 2,857; Most <b>points</b> ... the start \nof <b>a</b> season: Wayne Gretzky (December 27, 1981), 34 <b>games</b> ... Rick Middleton (\nseven-<b>game</b> series) (1983), 19; Most <b>points</b>, <b>team's</b> first ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (individual)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Points</b> percentage is determined <b>by</b> the number of <b>points a team</b> earns (equal to \nthe number of ties and ... of wins) divided <b>by</b> the total possible <b>points</b> (equal to \ntwice the number of <b>games</b>).",
"title": "List of NHL statistical leaders"
},
{
"snippet": "This is <b>a</b> list of <b>team</b> records recognized <b>by</b> the National <b>Hockey</b> League through \nthe end of the ... Starting with the 1999-2000 season, the <b>NHL</b> credited one <b>point</b> \nto the <b>team</b> that lost in overtime, leading to <b>a</b> system in which <b>teams</b> could \npotentially earn three <b>points</b> between them in <b>a</b> single <b>game</b>, rather than <b>a</b> fixed \nnumber ...",
"title": "List of NHL records (team)"
},
{
"snippet": "The List of National <b>Hockey</b> League (<b>NHL</b>) players with 1,000 <b>points</b> is <b>a</b> list of \nthe individual ... Player achievements[edit]. The fewest <b>NHL games</b> required to \nreach the mark was 424, set <b>by</b> Wayne Gretzky. ... Only three times have multiple \nplayers reached 1,000 <b>points</b> on the same <b>team</b> in the same season. The \nWashington ...",
"title": "List of NHL players with 1,000 points"
},
{
"snippet": "Joseph Eric Thornton (born July 2, 1979) is <b>a</b> Canadian-American professional \nice <b>hockey</b> ... Thornton scored his 1,000th career <b>point</b> with <b>a</b> goal in <b>a game</b> \nagainst the ... However, Los Angeles won the next four <b>games</b> and became just \nthe fourth <b>team</b> in <b>NHL</b> history to win <b>a</b> playoff series after trailing three <b>games</b> to \nnone.",
"title": "Joe Thornton"
},
{
"snippet": "Sidney Patrick Crosby ONS (born August 7, 1987) is <b>a</b> Canadian professional ice \n<b>hockey</b> ... <b>By</b> his second season, he led the <b>NHL</b> with 120 <b>points</b> to capture the \nArt Ross ... Crosby captained <b>Team</b> Canada at the 2014 Winter Olympics, \nwinning his ... Crosby recorded 16 <b>points</b> (7 goals and 9 assists) over 9 playoff \n<b>games</b>.",
"title": "Sidney Crosby"
}
]
}
] |
Who chooses the vice-president if no candidate receives a majority of the electoral votes? | 6682685195140867582 | Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution | [
"the Senate"
] | [
"Contingent election"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"United States Senate"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who chooses the vice-president if no candidate receives a majority of the electoral votes?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "In the United States, the president and <b>vice president</b> are indirectly ... actually \n<b>choose electors when</b> they <b>vote</b> for president and <b>vice president</b>. ... <b>If no</b> \n<b>candidate receives</b> a <b>majority</b> in the <b>election</b> for ...",
"title": "Contingent election"
},
{
"snippet": "The Twelfth Amendment (Amendment XII) to the United States Constitution \nprovides the ... president <b>if no candidate</b> won a <b>majority</b> of the <b>vice presidential</b> \n<b>electoral vote</b>, ... the Senate shall <b>choose</b> the <b>Vice</b>-<b>President</b>; a quorum for the \npurpose shall ... Whichever <b>candidate received</b> the second greatest number of \nvotes for ...",
"title": "Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>If no candidate receives</b> a <b>majority</b> of the <b>electoral vote</b> (at least ... A ballot of the \nSenate is held to <b>choose</b> the <b>Vice President</b>.",
"title": "United States presidential election"
},
{
"snippet": "There have been five United States <b>presidential</b> elections in which the winner lost \nthe popular ... Alternatively, <b>if no candidate receives</b> an absolute <b>majority</b> of \n<b>electoral votes</b>, the election is ... mattered, as 18 states <b>chose presidential</b> \nelectors by popular vote in 1824 (six states still left the choice up to their state \nlegislatures).",
"title": "United States presidential elections in which the winner lost the ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The table below is a list of United States <b>presidential</b> elections ordered by margin \nof victory in ... The exception would occur <b>if no candidate receives</b> an absolute \n<b>majority</b> of votes in the <b>Electoral College</b>. ... votes does <b>not receive</b> a simple \n<b>majority</b> of the <b>electors voting</b>, the House of Representatives <b>chooses</b> the \n<b>president</b>.",
"title": "List of United States presidential elections by Electoral College margin"
},
{
"snippet": "In United States politics, a brokered convention can occur during a <b>presidential</b> \n<b>election when</b> a political party fails to <b>choose</b> a nominee on the first round of \ndelegate <b>voting</b> at the party's nominating convention. Once the first ballot, or <b>vote</b>, \nhas occurred, and <b>no candidate</b> has a <b>majority</b> of ... Rule 40e then states that <b>if no</b> \n<b>candidate</b> has <b>received</b> the <b>majority</b> of <b>votes</b>, ...",
"title": "Brokered convention"
},
{
"snippet": "Despite its name, the two-round system may resolve an <b>election</b> in a single round \n<b>if</b> one <b>candidate receives</b> enough of the <b>vote</b>, usually a simple <b>majority</b>. <b>If no</b> ...",
"title": "Two-round system"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>If no candidate</b> for <b>vice president receives</b> an absolute <b>majority</b> of <b>electoral votes</b>, \nthen the Senate must go into ... The only time the Senate <b>chose</b> the <b>vice president</b> \nwas in 1837.",
"title": "United States Electoral College"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>If no</b> presidential <b>candidate receives</b> a <b>majority</b> in the <b>Electoral College</b>, then the \n... The president-elect and <b>vice president</b>-elect are scheduled to be inaugurated \n... which voters in an election do <b>not</b> actually <b>choose</b> between <b>candidates</b> for an ...",
"title": "Portal:Politics/Selected article/archive"
},
{
"snippet": "The United States Senate is the upper chamber of the United States Congress, \nwhich, along ... cases wherein <b>no candidate receives</b> a <b>majority</b> of <b>electors</b> for \n<b>vice president</b>, ... primary can win the overall <b>election if</b> he or she <b>received</b> a \n<b>majority</b> of the <b>vote</b>, ... Each senator <b>chooses</b> a desk based on seniority within the \nparty.",
"title": "United States Senate"
}
]
}
] |
Who won icc award 2008 for test player of the year? | -3438450592166624904 | ICC Awards | [
"Dale Steyn"
] | [
"ICC Test Player of the Year"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Dale Steyn",
"Dale Willem Steyn"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "icc test players of the year",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Test Player of the Year</b>: Steve Smith (2 awards) ODI <b>Player of the Year</b>: AB de \nVilliers, Virat Kohli (3 awards). Editions. 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · \n2010 · 2011 · 2012 · 2013 · 2014 · 2015 · 2016 · 2017 · 2018 · 2019. The <b>ICC</b> \nAwards are a set of sports awards for cricket. The awards recognise and honor \nthe ...",
"title": "ICC Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>ICC Test Player of the Year</b> is an annual award, presented since 2004 by the \nInternational Cricket Council to the best Test player over the year in question.",
"title": "ICC Test Player of the Year"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>ICC Test</b> Team of the <b>Year</b> is an honour awarded each <b>year</b> by the \nInternational Cricket Council. It recognises the top cricket <b>players</b> from around the \nworld ...",
"title": "ICC Test Team of the Year"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2010 <b>ICC</b> Awards were held on 6 October 2010 in Bengaluru, India in \nassociation with the ... The <b>ICC</b> awards the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy to the \nCricketer of the Year, which is considered to be the most prestigious award in \nworld cricket. ... 2.1 Cricketer of the Year; 2.2 <b>Test Player of the Year</b>; 2.3 ODI \n<b>Player of the Year</b> ...",
"title": "2010 ICC Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "The Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy is a cricket trophy awarded annually by the \nInternational Cricket Council (<b>ICC</b>) to its chosen world <b>player of the year</b>. ... Also \nnamed <b>Test Player of the Year</b> and named in the <b>Test</b> Team of the Year. 2005 · \nJacques ...",
"title": "Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy"
},
{
"snippet": "Date, Top <b>Batsman</b>, Country, Top <b>Bowler</b> ... 1945, No <b>Test</b> cricket took place (due \nto ...",
"title": "ICC Player Rankings"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 ICC Awards were the sixteenth edition of ICC Awards. The voting panel \ntook into account players' performance between 1 January 2019 and 31 \nDecember 2019. The announcement of the World Test XI and World one-day XI, \nalong with the ... Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy (ICC Cricketer of the Year); <b>ICC Test</b> \n<b>Player of the</b> ...",
"title": "2019 ICC Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "Emerging <b>Player of the year</b>, West Indies Cricket Board Devendra Bishoo. \nWebsite, www.<b>icc</b>-cricket.com. ← 2010 · <b>ICC</b> Awards · 2012 →. 2011 LG <b>ICC</b> \nAwards Logo. The 2011 LG <b>ICC</b> Awards were held on 12 September 2011 in \nLondon, England. The awards ... 2.1 Cricketer of the Year; 2.2 <b>Test Player of the</b> \n<b>Year</b>; 2.3 ODI <b>Player of the</b> ...",
"title": "2011 LG ICC Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2009 <b>ICC</b> Awards were held on 1 October 2009 in Johannesburg, South \nAfrica for before ... The <b>ICC</b> awards the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy to the \nCricketer of the Year, that of which is considered to be the most prestigious award \nin world cricket. ... 3.1 Cricketer of the Year; 3.2 <b>Test Player of the Year</b>; 3.3 ODI \n<b>Player of the</b> ...",
"title": "2009 ICC Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "Emerging <b>Player of the year</b>, West Indies Cricket Board Sunil Narine. Website, \nwww.<b>icc</b>-cricket.com. ← 2011 · <b>ICC</b> Awards · 2013 →. 2012 LG <b>ICC</b> Awards Logo. \nThe 2012 LG <b>ICC</b> Awards were held on 15 September 2012 in Colombo, Sri \nLanka. ... 2.1 Cricketer of the Year; 2.2 <b>Test Player of the Year</b>; 2.3 ODI <b>Player of</b> \n<b>the</b> ...",
"title": "2012 LG ICC Awards"
}
]
}
] |
When was the first general election held in india? | 2846433786227545111 | Indian general election, 1951–52 | [
"1951 -- 52"
] | [
"1951–52 elections in India"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"25 October 1951"
],
"question": "When was the first general election started in india?"
},
{
"answer": [
"21 February 1952"
],
"question": "When was the first general election finished in india?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "first general election held in india",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Indian general election</b> of 1951–52, <b>held</b> from 25 October 1951 to 21 \nFebruary 1952, was the <b>first</b> election to the Lok Sabha since <b>India</b> became ...",
"title": "1951–52 Indian general election"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>General elections</b> to the <b>first</b> Lok Sabha since independence were <b>held in India</b> \nbetween 25 October 1951 and 21 February 1952.",
"title": "1951–52 elections in India"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>General elections</b> were <b>held</b> in British <b>India</b> in 1920 to elect members to the \nImperial Legislative Council and the Provincial Councils. They were the <b>first</b> ...",
"title": "1920 Indian general election"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 <b>Indian general election</b> was <b>held</b> in seven phases from 11 April to 19 \nMay 2019 to ... According to Business Today, this report is the "<b>first</b> \ncomprehensive survey on employment conducted by a government agency after \nPrime Minister ...",
"title": "2019 Indian general election"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Indian general election</b>, 2014 was <b>held</b> to constitute the 16th Lok Sabha, \nelecting members ... Along with the <b>general elections</b>, polls were also <b>held</b> for the \n<b>first</b> Legislative Assembly of Andhra Pradesh excluding Telangana region.",
"title": "2014 Indian general election"
},
{
"snippet": "Provincial <b>elections</b> were <b>held</b> in British <b>India</b> in the winter of 1936-37 as \nmandated by the ... The <b>Indian National</b> Congress emerged in power in eight of \nthe provinces - the exceptions ... B.G. Kher became the <b>first</b> Chief Minister of \nBombay.",
"title": "1937 Indian provincial elections"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>General elections</b> were <b>held in India</b> in 1984 soon after the assassination of \nprevious Prime ... riots in November and most of <b>India</b> supported Congress. The \nBharatiya Janata Party won its <b>first</b> two seats, in Hanamkonda and Mahesana.",
"title": "1984 Indian general election"
},
{
"snippet": "The Lok Sabha, or House of the People, is the lower house of <b>India</b>'s bicameral \nParliament, with the upper house being the Rajya Sabha. Members of the Lok \nSabha are elected by adult universal suffrage and a <b>first</b>-past-the-post ... for the \n<b>first</b> time on 17 April 1952 after the <b>first General Elections held</b> from 25 October \n1951 ...",
"title": "Lok Sabha"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Indian general election</b> of 1957, <b>held</b> from 24 February to 9 June, was the \nsecond election to the Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament of <b>India</b>. \nThey were <b>held</b> five years after the <b>first general election</b>, according to the ...",
"title": "1957 Indian general election"
},
{
"snippet": "In a major turn of events, the ruling Congress lost control of <b>India</b> for the <b>first</b> time \nin ... <b>India held general elections</b> to the 6th Lok Sabha. This sixth general ...",
"title": "1977 Indian general election"
}
]
}
] |
When was the first apple ipod touch released? | 326113684132323859 | iPod Touch | [
"September 5 , 2007"
] | [
"iPod Touch"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"September 5, 2007"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When was the first apple ipod touch released?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>iPod Touch</b> is a brand of iOS-based all-purpose mobile computers designed \nand marketed ... The current <b>iPod touch</b> is the seventh-generation model, \n<b>released</b> on May 28, 2019. ... The <b>iPod Touch</b> runs <b>Apple's</b> Unix-based iOS \noperating system (called 'iPhone OS' ... It dropped support for the <b>first</b> generation \n<b>iPod Touch</b>.",
"title": "iPod Touch"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>iPod</b> was <b>released</b> in late 2001. The <b>iPod</b> line came from <b>Apple's</b> "digital hub\n" category, when the company began creating software ...",
"title": "iPod"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Apple</b> iPod line has been upgraded many times, and each significant \nrevision is called a "generation". Only the most recent generation of the <b>iPod</b> \n<b>Touch</b> line is available from <b>Apple</b>. ... On October 13, 2006, <b>Apple released</b> a \nspecial edition 4 GB red iPod nano as part of the Product Red campaign. An 8 \nGB version was ...",
"title": "List of iPod models"
},
{
"snippet": "The sixth-generation <b>iPod Touch</b> (stylized and marketed as the <b>iPod touch</b>, and \ncolloquially ... The <b>iPod Touch</b> (6th generation) was officially discontinued by \n<b>Apple</b> on May 28, ... The sixth-generation <b>iPod touch</b> supports iOS 9 that was \n<b>released</b> in ... The sixth-generation <b>iPod touch</b> support for iOS 12 made this the \n<b>first</b> iPod ...",
"title": "iPod Touch (6th generation)"
},
{
"snippet": "The fifth-generation <b>iPod Touch</b> was unveiled at <b>Apple's</b> media event alongside \nthe iPhone 5 ... This makes it the <b>first</b> and only <b>iPod touch</b> to support 4 major \nversions of iOS being iOS 6, iOS 7, iOS 8 and iOS 9. ... the 30-pin <b>Apple</b> dock \nconnector which was <b>first introduced</b> by <b>Apple</b> in 2003 on the third generation \niPod.",
"title": "iPod Touch (5th generation)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>iPod touch</b> (4th generation) was the 4th generation <b>iPod Touch</b> by <b>Apple</b> Inc. \n<b>Released</b> alongside the iPhone 4, it was the <b>first</b> iPod to offer front and rear ...",
"title": "iPod Touch (4th generation)"
},
{
"snippet": "The seventh-generation <b>iPod Touch</b> is a multipurpose handheld device designed \nand marketed by <b>Apple</b> Inc. with a touchscreen-based user interface. It is the \nsuccessor to the <b>iPod Touch</b> (6th generation), becoming the <b>first</b> major update to \nthe <b>iPod touch</b> since 2015. It was <b>released</b> on the online <b>Apple</b> Store on May 28, \n2019.",
"title": "iPod Touch (7th generation)"
},
{
"snippet": "iOS is a mobile operating system, developed by <b>Apple</b> Inc. for iPhone, iPad, <b>iPod</b> \n<b>Touch</b>, and HomePod. Updates for iOS are <b>released</b> through the iTunes ...",
"title": "iOS version history"
},
{
"snippet": "Earbuds that shipped with the second generation <b>iPod touch</b> and fourth \ngeneration iPod Shuffle. <b>Apple</b> Inc. has produced and sold numerous in-ear \nheadphones since 2001, available for ... Comparison of <b>early</b> and later iPod \nearphones. <b>Apple's original</b> earbuds shipped with the <b>original</b> iPod, <b>released</b> on \nOctober 23, 2001.",
"title": "Apple earbuds"
},
{
"snippet": "The iPhone is the <b>first</b> smartphone designed and marketed by <b>Apple</b> Inc. After ... \nThe <b>iPod Touch</b>, a touchscreen device with the media and internet abilities and \ninterface of the iPhone but without the ability to ...",
"title": "iPhone (1st generation)"
}
]
}
] |
Who played little ricky on the lucille ball show? | -2114090333732305933 | Richard Keith (actor) | [
"Keith Thibodeaux"
] | [
"Richard Keith (actor)",
"Lucille Ball",
"Ricky Ricardo Jr."
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"James John Ganzer"
],
"question": "Who played little ricky on the lucille ball show in season 2 episode 16?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Richard Keith"
],
"question": "Who played little ricky on the lucille ball show starting in season 6?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Joseph and Michael Mayer"
],
"question": "Who played little ricky on the lucille ball show in season 5?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Richard and Ronald Lee Simmons"
],
"question": "Who played little ricky on the lucille ball show in season2 episodes 22 and 24?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "little ricky on lucille ball",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Desiderio Alberto Arnaz IV (born January 19, 1953), known professionally as \nDesi Arnaz Jr., is an American actor and musician. He is the son of <b>Lucille Ball</b> \nand Desi Arnaz. ... The same day Ball gave birth to Desi Jr., the fictional Lucy \nRicardo gave birth to "<b>Little Ricky</b>". As a testament to how interested the American \npublic ...",
"title": "Desi Arnaz Jr."
},
{
"snippet": "Keith Thibodeaux (born December 1, 1950), also known as Richard Keith, is an \nAmerican former child actor and musician, best known for playing <b>Little Ricky</b> on \nthe television sitcoms I Love Lucy and The Lucy-Desi Comedy ... With <b>Lucille Ball</b> \nand Desi Arnaz on I Love Lucy (1956). Thibodeaux showed skill on the drums at \na ...",
"title": "Richard Keith (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "Enrique Alberto Ricardo IV, "<b>Little Ricky</b>," is a fictional character from the \nAmerican television ... In the show, <b>Little Ricky</b> is the son of Lucy Ricardo and \nRicky Ricardo. ... in which he is born, "Lucy goes to the Hospital," was aired on \nthe same day as the birth of <b>Lucille Ball's</b> real son, Desi Arnaz Jr. – Monday, \nJanuary 19, 1953.",
"title": "Ricky Ricardo Jr."
},
{
"snippet": "I Love <b>Lucy</b> is an American television sitcom that originally ran on CBS from \nOctober 15, 1951 to May 6, 1957, with a ...",
"title": "I Love Lucy"
},
{
"snippet": "Finally, that evening, while <b>Ricky</b> is performing, Lucy pens a ... They sing "We're \nHaving a <b>Baby</b>", with <b>Lucille Ball</b> actually ...",
"title": "Lucy and Ricky Ricardo"
},
{
"snippet": ""Lucy Goes to the Hospital" is an episode of the 1950s American television show \nI Love Lucy in which the title character, Lucy Ricardo, gives birth to her son, "<b>Little</b> \n<b>Ricky</b>," after a "predictably chaotic" ... Twelve hours before the broadcast, the \nactress who played Lucy Ricardo, <b>Lucille Ball</b>, had given birth to Desi Arnaz, Jr. \nby ...",
"title": "Lucy Goes to the Hospital"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Lucille</b> Désirée <b>Ball</b> (August 6, 1911 – April 26, 1989) was an American actress, \ncomedienne, ... <b>Ball</b> recalled <b>little</b> from the day her father died, but remembered a \nbird getting trapped in the house. ... A scene in which <b>Lucy</b> and <b>Ricky</b> practice the \ntango, in the episode "<b>Lucy</b> Does The Tango", evoked the longest recorded ...",
"title": "Lucille Ball"
},
{
"snippet": "I Love Lucy is an American television sitcom starring <b>Lucille Ball</b>, Desi Arnaz, \nVivian Vance, ... With the <b>baby</b> coming, <b>Ricky</b> decides that Lucy should stay in \nbed while he does the chores. Lucy thinks it is just because of the <b>baby</b>. 47, 12, "\nLucy's ...",
"title": "List of I Love Lucy episodes"
},
{
"snippet": ""Lucy and Superman" is an episode of the sitcom I Love Lucy, and was first \nbroadcast on ... Bandleader Ricky Ricardo (Desi Arnaz) and his young son <b>Little</b> \n<b>Ricky</b> watch the latest episode of the ... As Ricky's wife Lucy (<b>Lucille Ball</b>) enters \nand sends her son to bed, she promises to take him to see Superman at Macy's.",
"title": "Lucy and Superman"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Lucy</b>–Desi Comedy Hour is a collection of thirteen black-and-white one-hour \nspecials ... Except for the main cast (<b>Ball</b>, Arnaz, Vance, Frawley, and <b>Little Ricky</b>) \nonly two characters from I Love <b>Lucy</b> appeared on Comedy Hour: <b>Lucy's</b> ...",
"title": "The Lucy–Desi Comedy Hour"
}
]
}
] |
Who is harvey's love interest on suits? | 3942917706148956778 | List of Suits characters | [
"Dana `` Scottie '' Scott",
"several female romantic interests"
] | [
"List of Suits characters"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Donna Paulsen, Zoe Lawford, Dana \"Scottie\" Scott, Dr. Paula Agard"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who is harvey's love interest on suits?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Harvey</b> Reginald Specter (Gabriel Macht) is a newly ... <b>Harvey</b> has several \nfemale <b>romantic interests</b>, but he has trouble ...",
"title": "List of Suits characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Gabriel Swann Macht (born January 22, 1972) is an American actor and film \nproducer best known for playing The Spirit in the eponymous 2008 film \nadaptation, as well as for his role as <b>Harvey</b> Specter on the USA Network series \n<b>Suits</b>. Contents. 1 Early <b>life</b>; 2 Career; 3 Personal <b>life</b>; 4 Filmography ... He has \nappeared in many film and television roles including A <b>Love</b> Song for ...",
"title": "Gabriel Macht"
},
{
"snippet": "The third season of the American legal comedy-drama <b>Suits</b> was ordered on \nOctober 12, 2012. ... The series revolves around corporate lawyer <b>Harvey</b> \nSpecter and his associate attorney Mike Ross who, between the ... Meanwhile, \nDonna forgives Mike and Rachel, and Mike and Rachel discuss being boyfriend \nand <b>girlfriend</b>.",
"title": "Suits (season 3)"
},
{
"snippet": "The second season of the American legal comedy-drama <b>Suits</b> was ordered on \nAugust 11, ... The series revolves around corporate lawyer <b>Harvey</b> Specter and \nhis ... that Zoe's <b>brother</b> has just dropped off his daughter, Olivia, on short notice.",
"title": "Suits (season 2)"
},
{
"snippet": "The eighth season of the American legal drama <b>Suits</b> was ordered on January 30\n, 2018, and ... <b>Harvey</b> leaves to represent his <b>brother</b> when his sister-in-law files \nfor divorce, which becomes a painful reminder of his family's secretive behaviors.",
"title": "Suits (season 8)"
},
{
"snippet": "Abigail Leigh Spencer (born August 4, 1981) is an American actress. She began \nher career ... Spencer played the role of a blogging enthusiast in Twix \nadvertisements, and portrayed Miss Farrell, a <b>love interest</b> of Don Draper, on \nAMC's Mad Men ... Gabriel Macht's character's old rival, on the USA Network \nlegal drama <b>Suits</b>.",
"title": "Abigail Spencer"
},
{
"snippet": "The sixth season of the American legal drama <b>Suits</b> was ordered on July 1, 2015, \nand began ... When <b>Harvey</b> visits Mike in prison as his lawyer and learns about \nGallo, he reveals that he put the man behind bars for ... Now, he reconnects with \nhis <b>brother's</b> family, but doesn't understand why his mother blames him for \nleaving.",
"title": "Suits (season 6)"
},
{
"snippet": "The first season of the American legal comedy-drama <b>Suits</b> originally aired on \nUSA Network in ... The series revolves around corporate lawyer <b>Harvey</b> Specter \nand his ... Vanessa Ray plays Trevor's <b>girlfriend</b> Jenny Griffith in seven episodes.",
"title": "Suits (season 1)"
},
{
"snippet": "Broderick Stephen <b>Harvey</b> (born January 17, 1957) is an American comedian, \nbusinessman ... The same year he played the role of Clarence Johnson in the \nfilm <b>Love</b> Don't Cost a Thing. ... with a larger amount of creative control held by \n<b>Harvey</b>, as opposed to the previous program's larger focus on human <b>interest</b> \nsubjects.",
"title": "Steve Harvey"
},
{
"snippet": "Christina Cole (born 8 May 1981) is an English actress known for portraying \nCassie Hughes in the Sky One supernatural television series Hex. Contents. 1 \nEarly <b>life</b>; 2 Career; 3 Filmography ... She has a younger sister, Cassandra, and a \n<b>brother</b>, Dominic. Her mother is a ... 2016–2018, <b>Suits</b>, Dr. Paula Agard, \nRecurring role.",
"title": "Christina Cole"
}
]
}
] |
Who won the seven day battle civil war? | 1292686946061535605 | Seven Days Battles | [
"Confederacy"
] | [
"Seven Days Battles"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Confederate States of America"
],
"question": "Who is the belligerent that won the seven day battle civil war?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Robert E. Lee",
"Robert Edward Lee"
],
"question": "Who is the leader that won the seven day battle civil war?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": " Who won the seven day battle civil war?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> were a series of <b>seven battles</b> over <b>seven</b> days from \nJune 25 to July 1, 1862, near Richmond, Virginia, during the American <b>Civil War</b>. \n... He had <b>received</b> intelligence that Lee was prepared to move and that the ... For \nthe second <b>day</b>, Magruder was able to continue fooling McClellan south of the \nriver ...",
"title": "Seven Days Battles"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Gaines' Mill, sometimes known as the <b>Battle</b> of Chickahominy River, \ntook place on June 27, 1862, in Hanover County, Virginia, as the third of the \n<b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> (Peninsula Campaign) of the American <b>Civil War</b>. ... Gaines' \nMill was an intense <b>battle</b>, the largest of the <b>Seven Days and</b> the only clear-cut ...",
"title": "Battle of Gaines's Mill"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Shiloh was a <b>battle</b> in the Western Theater of the American <b>Civil War</b>\n, fought April 6–<b>7</b>, ... On April 6, the first <b>day</b> of the <b>battle</b>, the Confederates struck \nwith the intention of driving the Union defenders away ... Albert Sidney Johnston \nhad <b>received</b> a report from Breckenridge that one of his brigades was refusing ...",
"title": "Battle of Shiloh"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Beaver Dam Creek, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of Mechanicsville or \nEllerson's Mill, took place on June 26, 1862, in Hanover County, Virginia, as the \nfirst major engagement of the <b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> during the Peninsula \nCampaign of the American <b>Civil War</b>. ... The next <b>day</b> the <b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> \ncontinued as Lee attacked Porter at the ...",
"title": "Battle of Beaver Dam Creek"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Malvern Hill, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of Poindexter's Farm, was \nfought on July 1, ... It was the final <b>battle</b> of the <b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> during the \nAmerican <b>Civil War</b>, taking ... On the first <b>day</b>, as Lee led the Army of Northern \nVirginia toward the Union lines, McClellan preempted him with an attack at Oak \nGrove.",
"title": "Battle of Malvern Hill"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Antietam /ænˈtiːtəm/, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of Sharpsburg, \nparticularly in the Southern United States, was a <b>battle</b> of the American <b>Civil War</b>, \nfought on September 17, 1862, ... It was the bloodiest <b>day</b> in United States \nmilitary history, with a combined tally of 22,717 dead, wounded, or missing. After \npursuing ...",
"title": "Battle of Antietam"
},
{
"snippet": "The Six-<b>Day War</b> also known as the June <b>War</b>, 1967 Arab–Israeli <b>War</b>, or Third \nArab–Israeli ... In May 1967, Nasser <b>received</b> false reports from the Soviet Union \nthat Israel was massing on the Syrian border. ... On 5 June at <b>7</b>:45 Israeli time, as \n<b>civil</b> defence sirens sounded all over Israel, the IAF launched Operation Focus ...",
"title": "Six-Day War"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Gettysburg was fought July 1–3, 1863, in and around the town of \nGettysburg, Pennsylvania, by Union and Confederate forces during the American \n<b>Civil War</b>. The <b>battle</b> involved the largest number of casualties of the entire war \nand is ... On the third <b>day</b> of <b>battle</b>, fighting resumed on Culp's Hill, and cavalry \n<b>battles</b> ...",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Glendale, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of Frayser's Farm, Frazier's Farm\n, Nelson's Farm, Charles City Crossroads, New Market Road, or Riddell's Shop, \ntook place on June 30, 1862, in Henrico County, Virginia, on the sixth <b>day</b> of the \n<b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> (Peninsula Campaign) of the American <b>Civil War</b>. ... \nMcClellan has <b>received</b> significant criticism from historians about his ...",
"title": "Battle of Glendale"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Oak Grove, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of French's Field or King's \nSchool House, took place on June 25, 1862, in Henrico County, Virginia, the first \nof the <b>Seven</b> Days <b>Battles</b> (Peninsula Campaign) of the American <b>Civil War</b>. ... \nBurton, Brian K. The Peninsula & <b>Seven Days: A</b> Battlefield Guide. Lincoln: \nUniversity of ...",
"title": "Battle of Oak Grove"
}
]
}
] |
Where is hocus pocus supposed to take place? | -2145254819181941042 | Hocus Pocus (1993 film) | [
"Salem , Massachusetts"
] | [
"Hocus Pocus (1993 film)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Salem, Massachusetts"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "hocus pocus",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus Pocus</b> is a 1993 American dark fantasy comedy horror film directed by \nKenny Ortega and written by Neil Cuthbert and Mick Garris, and it is based on a ...",
"title": "Hocus Pocus (1993 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus Pocus</b> is a Hip Hop / Jazz band from Nantes, France. Formed in 1995, \ntheir music is a mix of hip-hop, jazz, soul and funk. Originally being 20syl's ...",
"title": "Hocus Pocus (group)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus Pocus</b>, or What's the Hurry, Son? is a 1990 novel by Kurt Vonnegut. \nContents. 1 Structure; 2 Plot summary; 3 References; 4 External links. Structure[\nedit].",
"title": "Hocus Pocus (novel)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus</b>-<b>pocus</b> is a generic term that may be derived from an ancient language \nand is currently used to refer to the actions of magicians, often as the \nstereotypical ...",
"title": "Hocus-pocus"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus Pocus</b> or <b>Hokus Pokus</b> may refer to: <b>Hocus</b>-<b>pocus</b>, an exclamation used \nby magicians, usually the magic words spoken when bringing about some sort of\n ...",
"title": "Hocus Pocus"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Hocus Pocus</b>" is a song by the Dutch rock band Focus, written by keyboardist, \nflautist and vocalist Thijs van Leer and guitarist Jan Akkerman. It was recorded ...",
"title": "Hocus Pocus (song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Hocus</b>-<b>Pocus</b> and Frisby" is episode 95 (season 3, number 30) of the American \ntelevision anthology series The Twilight Zone.",
"title": "Hocus-Pocus and Frisby"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus Pocus</b> is an album released by Enon. It was released September 9, 2003, \non Touch and Go Records. The album contains a URL to a hidden website that ...",
"title": "Hocus Pocus (Enon album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Sean Harland Murray (born November 15, 1977) is an American actor known for \nhis role as Special Agent Timothy McGee on the American TV drama NCIS. He \nalso played Thackery Binx in Disney's Halloween classic film <b>Hocus Pocus</b> and \nDanny Walden in the military drama series JAG.",
"title": "Sean Murray (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hocus Pocus</b> ("Time Tripping", "Shattered Worlds", "Warped and Weary", "\nDestination Home"), MS-DOS, June 1, 1994, Moonlite Software. Mystic Towers",
"title": "List of 3D Realms games"
}
]
}
] |
Who produces the most coffee in the world? | 2186130823211158111 | List of countries by coffee production | [
"Brazil"
] | [
"List of countries by coffee production"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Brazil"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who produces the most coffee in the world?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The following table lists the total <b>coffee</b> production of <b>coffee</b> exporting <b>countries</b>. \nMain exporters by <b>country</b> in 2018[edit]. <b>Country</b>, 60 kilogram bags, Metric Tons ...",
"title": "List of countries by coffee production"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Coffee</b> is a brewed drink prepared from roasted <b>coffee</b> beans, the seeds of \nberries from certain ... <b>Coffee</b> plants are now cultivated in over 70 <b>countries</b>, \nprimarily in the ... <b>coffee</b> is one of the <b>most</b> traded agricultural commodities in the \n<b>world</b>.",
"title": "Coffee"
},
{
"snippet": "Kopi luwak is a <b>coffee</b> that consists of partially digested <b>coffee</b> cherries, which \nhave been eaten ... Kopi luwak is <b>produced</b> mainly on the Indonesian islands of \nSumatra, Java, Bali, Sulawesi, and in East Timor. ... Kopi luwak is one of the <b>most</b> \nexpensive <b>coffees in the world</b>, selling for between US$100 and $500 per pound \nin ...",
"title": "Kopi luwak"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Coffee</b> production in Brazil is responsible for about a third of all <b>coffee</b>, making \nBrazil by far the <b>world's largest</b> producer, a position the <b>country</b> has held for the ...",
"title": "Coffee production in Brazil"
},
{
"snippet": "In 2009, Brazil was the <b>world</b> leader in production of green <b>coffee</b>, ... Beans from \ndifferent <b>countries</b> or regions can usually be ...",
"title": "Economics of coffee"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Coffee</b> production in Colombia has a reputation as <b>producing</b> mild, well-balanced \n<b>coffee</b> beans. Colombia's average annual <b>coffee</b> production of 11.5 million bags \nis the second total <b>highest</b> in the <b>world</b>, ...",
"title": "Coffee production in Colombia"
},
{
"snippet": "Indonesia was the fourth-<b>largest</b> producer of <b>coffee in the world</b> in 2014. <b>Coffee</b> \ncultivation in ... Indonesia <b>produced</b> an estimated 660,000 metric tons of <b>coffee</b> in \n2017. Of this total, it is estimated that 154,800 tons were slated for domestic ...",
"title": "Coffee production in Indonesia"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Coffee</b> varieties are the diverse subspecies derived through selective breeding or \nnatural ... Already, the <b>majority of coffee produced</b> originates from producers \nusing selected breeds. For this ... outbreak of <b>coffee</b> leaf rust (CLR) disease \ndecimated crops around the <b>world</b>, prompting many farmers to explore alternative \ncrops.",
"title": "List of coffee varieties"
},
{
"snippet": "Organic <b>coffee</b> is <b>coffee produced</b> without the aid of artificial chemical substances\n, such as ... In addition, a number of Asian and African <b>countries produce</b> organic \n<b>coffee</b>, including Indonesia and Ethiopia. ... "3.2.11-Niche markets, environment \nand social aspects-<b>World</b> market for organic <b>coffee</b>". www.thecoffeeguide.org.",
"title": "Organic coffee"
},
{
"snippet": "The well-known <b>coffee</b>-break was created in the Nordic region, particularly \nSweden and Finland. The fika (pause) tradition calls ...",
"title": "Coffee in world cultures"
}
]
}
] |
Where did hot tub time machine take place? | 7250950515949733012 | Hot Tub Time Machine | [
"Kodiak Valley Ski Resort"
] | [
"Hot Tub Time Machine",
"Hot Tub Time Machine 2"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Kodiak Valley Ski Resort"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "hot tub time machine",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b> is a 2010 American science fiction comedy film directed \nby Steve Pink and starring John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Clark ...",
"title": "Hot Tub Time Machine"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b> 2 is a 2015 American comedy film directed by Steve Pink \nand written by Josh Heald. The film stars Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Clark ...",
"title": "Hot Tub Time Machine 2"
},
{
"snippet": "... Alpine Resort was transformed into the fictional Kodiak Valley ski resort, ca. \n1986, for exterior location shots of the Hollywood film <b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b>.",
"title": "Fernie Alpine Resort"
},
{
"snippet": "He has also performed in character in multiple episodes of The Office, and was \nfeatured on the <b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b> soundtrack, singing "Jessie's Girl" and ...",
"title": "Craig Robinson (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "Clark Bailey Duke (born May 5, 1985) is an American actor, comedian, and \ndirector known for his roles in the films Kick-Ass, Sex Drive, <b>Hot Tub Time</b> \n<b>Machine</b>, ...",
"title": "Clark Duke"
},
{
"snippet": "Jessica Paré (born December 5, 1980) is a Canadian actress and singer known \nfor her co-starring role as Megan Draper on the AMC series Mad Men. She has \nalso appeared in the films Stardom (2000), Lost and Delirious (2001), Wicker \nPark (2004), Suck (2009), <b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b> (2010), and Brooklyn (2015).",
"title": "Jessica Paré"
},
{
"snippet": "Robert William Corddry (born February 4, 1971) is an American actor and \ncomedian. He is known for his work as a correspondent on The Daily Show with \nJon Stewart (2002–2006) and for his starring role in the film <b>Hot Tub Time</b> \n<b>Machine</b>.",
"title": "Rob Corddry"
},
{
"snippet": "Steve Pink (born February 3, 1966) is an American actor, director and writer. He \nis the director of the comedy films Accepted and <b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b>, and the ...",
"title": "Steve Pink"
},
{
"snippet": "The Drive was an offensive series in the fourth quarter of the 1986 AFC \nChampionship Game ... The Drive was featured in the movie <b>Hot Tub Time</b> \n<b>Machine</b>, but due to the butterfly effect, Jackson was distracted by a squirrel and \nfailed to catch a ...",
"title": "The Drive"
},
{
"snippet": "Lyndsy Marie Fonseca (born January 7, 1987) is an American actress. She \nbegan her career ... Fonseca has also appeared in a variety of film roles, \nincluding Jenny in <b>Hot Tub Time Machine</b> (2010) and Katie Deauxma in Kick-Ass \n(2010) and ...",
"title": "Lyndsy Fonseca"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the singer of ae dil hai mushkil? | 3438412115171309166 | Ae Dil Hai Mushkil | [
"Arijit Singh"
] | [
"Ae Dil Hai Mushkil (soundtrack)",
"Ae Dil Hai Mushkil",
"Ae Dil Hai Mushkil (song)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Singh",
"Arijit Singh"
],
"question": "Who is the singer of ae dil hai mushkil song?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Kapoor",
"Sharma",
"Rai",
"Aishwarya Rai Bachchan",
"Ranbir Kapoor, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Anushka Sharma"
],
"question": "Who is the singer of ae dil hai mushkil soundtrack album?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "singer of ae dil hai mushkil",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b> is an Indian 2016 Hindi language musical romantic drama film \ndirected, ... The film begins with the interview of Ayan Sanger (Ranbir Kapoor), a \n<b>singer</b> who has newly acquired fame with his non-filmy songs. He tells the story ...",
"title": "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b> is the soundtrack album composed by Pritam, with lyrics \nwritten by Amitabh ... "<b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b>: When Ranbir Kapoor inspired Arijit \nSingh to <b>sing</b> the title track". India Today. Ist. Retrieved 2019-10-25. ^ Jump up to:\n ...",
"title": "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil (soundtrack)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b> is a Hindi song from the soundtrack of the Indian film of the \nsame name. ... 2017, Mirchi Music Awards, Male <b>Vocalist</b> of the Year, Arijit Singh.",
"title": "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Amitabh Bhattacharya is an Indian lyricist and playback <b>singer</b> of Bengali origin \nfrom Uttar ... Some of his written songs are "Channa Mereya","<b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b>"\n, "Bulleya", "Kabira", "Balam Pichkari", "Badtameez Dil", "Mast Magan", "Raabta",\n ...",
"title": "Amitabh Bhattacharya"
},
{
"snippet": "Pritam Chakraborty (born 14 June 1971), also known mononymously as Pritam, \nis an Indian composer, instrumentalist, electronic guitar player, <b>singer</b> for \nBollywood films. ... He also composed the whole soundtracks of Dishoom, <b>Ae Dil</b> \n<b>Hai Mushkil</b> and Dangal. In 2017, he composed the soundtracks of Jagga Jasoos\n, Raabta ...",
"title": "Pritam"
},
{
"snippet": "Album of the Year, <b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b>. Website, Music Mirchi Awards 2016. \nTelevision/radio coverage. Network, Zee TV. ← 8th · Mirchi Music Awards · 10th \n→. The 9th Mirchi Music Awards, presented by the Radio Mirchi, honoured the \nbest of Hindi music ... Alka Yagnik - playback <b>singer</b>; Milind Srivastava - music \ndirector; Anu Malik ...",
"title": "9th Mirchi Music Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "Most nominations, <b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b> (9) Udta Punjab (9). Television coverage. \nNetwork, Sony Entertainment Television (India). ← 61st · Filmfare Awards · 63rd \n→. 62nd Filmfare Awards ceremony, presented by the Filmfare magazine, \nhonored the best Hindi ... Best Playback <b>Singer</b> – Male · Best Playback <b>Singer</b> – \nFemale.",
"title": "62nd Filmfare Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "C.I.D. is a 1956 Indian crime thriller film directed by Raj Khosla and produced by \nGuru Dutt. ... Title, <b>Singer</b>(s), Length. 1. ... "Jata Kahan <b>Hai</b> Diwane", Geeta Dutt, 3\n:14. 5. ... The song "<b>Aye Dil</b> Hain <b>Mushkil</b>" (also known as "Bombay Meri Jaan"), ...",
"title": "C.I.D. (1956 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Amit Mishra is an Indian <b>singer</b>, songwriter, voice actor and live performer. He \nbecame more well known after the release of the song "Bulleya" sung by him \nfrom the film <b>Ae Dil Hai Mushkil</b>; ...",
"title": "Amit Mishra (singer)"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2017 IIFA Awards, officially known as the 18th International Indian Film \nAcademy Awards ... Pink – Tanveer Ghazi. Best Male Playback <b>Singer</b> · Best \nFemale Playback <b>Singer</b> ... Anuj Mathur – Sultan. Shadab Rayeen – <b>Ae Dil Hai</b> \n<b>Mushkil</b>.",
"title": "18th IIFA Awards"
}
]
}
] |
Who owns all the rights to the beatles music? | -4065453887946687683 | Sony/ATV Music Publishing | [
"Sony / ATV Music Publishing"
] | [
"Sony/ATV Music Publishing"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Sony/ATV Music Publishing"
],
"question": "What music publisher owns all the rights to the beatles music as of 2016?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sony Entertainment"
],
"question": "What entertainment company owns all the rights to the beatles music as of 2016?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Jackson",
"Michael Jackson"
],
"question": "Who owned all the rights to the beatles music, with their publishing company's purchase in 1985?"
},
{
"answer": [
"ATV Music"
],
"question": "What music publisher owned all the rights to the beatles in 1985?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "owns all the rights to the beatles music?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Sony/ATV <b>Music</b> Publishing is an American <b>music</b> publisher <b>owned</b> by Sony \nEntertainment. ... Jackson had essentially sold half <b>ownership</b> of the <b>Beatles</b>' and \nothers' songs for a large profit. ... On June 27, 2017, Sony/ATV agreed to \nadminister the <b>music</b> publishing <b>rights</b> of French motion picture company \nEuropaCorp, soon ...",
"title": "Sony/ATV Music Publishing"
},
{
"snippet": "Apple Records is a record label founded by the <b>Beatles</b> in 1968 as a division of \nApple Corps ... Apple Records <b>owns</b> the <b>rights</b> to <b>all</b> of the <b>Beatles</b>' videos and \nmovie clips, and the <b>rights</b> to recordings of other artists signed to the label. ... \nWhen Universal <b>Music</b> Group acquired EMI and the <b>Beatles</b>' recorded <b>music</b> \ncatalogue, ...",
"title": "Apple Records"
},
{
"snippet": "Northern Songs Ltd was a limited company founded in 1963, by <b>music</b> publisher \nDick James, ... Allen Klein (then de facto <b>Beatles</b> manager) attempted to set up a \ndeal for Apple Corps to buy out ATV, but this also failed. ... McCartney showed \nJackson a thick booklet displaying <b>all</b> the song and publishing <b>rights</b> he <b>owned</b>, \nfrom ...",
"title": "Northern Songs"
},
{
"snippet": "Between 1978 and 2006 there were a number of legal disputes between Apple \nCorps (<b>owned</b> by The <b>Beatles</b>) and ... Outlined in the settlement was each \ncompany's respective trademark <b>rights</b> to the term "Apple". ... During that year's \n<b>All</b> Things Digital conference, Jobs quoted the <b>Beatles</b> song "Two of Us" in \nreference to his ...",
"title": "Apple Corps v Apple Computer"
},
{
"snippet": "Allen Klein (December 18, 1931 – July 4, 2009) was an American businessman, \n<b>music</b> ... <b>All</b> royalties and publishing profits go to the Klein's corporation. ... As a \nresult, ABKCO acquired <b>ownership</b> of the disputed songs and was able to publish \n... Klein ultimately secured the <b>Beatles</b>' <b>rights</b> in their previous work for just four ...",
"title": "Allen Klein"
},
{
"snippet": "Apple Corps Limited (informally known as Apple) is a multi-armed multimedia \ncorporation ... To <b>all</b> intents and purposes, <b>Beatles</b> and Co. was an updated \nversion on the ... In addition to providing an umbrella to cover the <b>Beatles</b>' <b>own</b> \nfinancial and ... Those <b>rights</b> were transferred to Bug <b>Music</b>, now a branch of BMG \n<b>Rights</b> ...",
"title": "Apple Corps"
},
{
"snippet": "ABKCO <b>Music</b> & Records, Inc is a major American independent record label, \n<b>music</b> publisher, and film and video production company. It <b>owns</b> and/or \nadministers the <b>rights</b> to <b>music</b> by Sam Cooke, the Rolling ... In January 1970, the \n<b>Beatles</b> signed a <b>music</b> publishing management ... <b>All</b> Things Must Pass (Album \n& CD). EMI.",
"title": "ABKCO Records"
},
{
"snippet": "Yellow Submarine is a 1968 British animated film inspired by the <b>music</b> of the \n<b>Beatles</b>, directed by animation producer George Dunning, and produced by \nUnited Artists and King Features Syndicate. Initial press reports stated that the \n<b>Beatles</b> themselves would provide their <b>own</b> character voices. ... As they operate \nthe submarine, they sing "<b>All</b> Together Now", after which they ...",
"title": "Yellow Submarine (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Universal <b>Music</b> Group is an American global <b>music</b> corporation that is majority \n<b>owned</b> by the ... UMG retained The <b>Beatles</b> (formerly of Parlophone) and Robbie \nWilliams (formerly of Chrysalis). ... The exclusive deal also saw UMG granted \nunlimited access to <b>all rights</b> pertaining to Disney's 85-year back catalog of ...",
"title": "Universal Music Group"
},
{
"snippet": "Lennon–McCartney (sometimes McCartney–Lennon) was the songwriting \npartnership between English <b>musicians</b> John Lennon (1940–1980) and Paul \nMcCartney (born 1942) of the <b>Beatles</b>. It is the best known and most successful \n<b>musical</b> collaboration ever by records sold, with the <b>Beatles</b> selling ... Author \nDavid Rowley points out that at least half of <b>all</b> Lennon–McCartney ...",
"title": "Lennon–McCartney"
}
]
}
] |
Who acquired the rights for the book 'shrek ' in 1991? | -2845885818560224009 | Shrek! | [
"Steven Spielberg"
] | [
"Shrek!"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Steven Allan Spielberg",
"Steven Spielberg"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "shrek book 1991",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Shrek</b>! is a humorous children's <b>book</b> published in 1990 by American <b>book</b> writer \nand cartoonist ... Steven Spielberg acquired the rights for the <b>book</b> in <b>1991</b>, \nplanning to produce a traditionally animated film based on the <b>book</b>. However, \naround ...",
"title": "Shrek!"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Shrek</b> is a 2001 American computer-animated comedy film loosely based on the \n1990 fairytale picture <b>book</b> of the same name by William Steig. ... The rights to \nSteig's <b>book</b> were purchased by Steven Spielberg in <b>1991</b>. He originally planned \nto ...",
"title": "Shrek"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Shrek</b> is a fictional ogre character created by American author William Steig. \n<b>Shrek</b> is the protagonist of the <b>book</b> of the same name and of eponymous ... \nWhen Steven Spielberg purchased the <b>book</b> rights in <b>1991</b>, he had planned for \nBill Murray ...",
"title": "Shrek (character)"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>1991 books</b>". The following 53 pages are in this category, out \nof 53 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:1991 books"
},
{
"snippet": "Princess Fiona is a fictional character in DreamWorks' <b>Shrek</b> franchise, first \nappearing in the ... William Steig's children's <b>book Shrek</b>!, from which her role and \nappearance were significantly modified. ... and Beauty and the Beast (<b>1991</b>), \nultimately convincing the studio by referring to Fiona as an enchanted princess \ninstead.",
"title": "Princess Fiona"
},
{
"snippet": "This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in <b>1991</b>. Contents. \n1 Events; 2 New <b>books</b>. 2.1 Fiction; 2.2 Children and young people; 2.3 Drama ...",
"title": "1991 in literature"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of unmade and unreleased animated projects by Universal Pictures. \nSome of these ... 2.1 <b>1991</b>; 2.2 1993; 2.3 1996; 2.4 1997; 2.5 1998 ... In <b>1991</b>, \nSteven Spielberg bought the rights to William Steig's 1990 children's <b>book Shrek</b>!",
"title": "List of unproduced Universal Pictures animated projects"
},
{
"snippet": ""Bam Thwok" is a download-only single by the American alternative rock band \nthe Pixies. ... The song was the band's first recording since Trompe le Monde (\n<b>1991</b>). Originally composed for the film <b>Shrek</b> 2, "Bam Thwok" was not selected \nfor the ... Deal's inspiration was a discarded child's art <b>book</b> she found on a New \nYork ...",
"title": "Bam Thwok"
},
{
"snippet": "Partner(s), Bryan Lourd (<b>1991</b>–1994). Children, Billie Lourd. Parent(s). Eddie \nFisher · Debbie Reynolds. Relatives. Todd Fisher (brother); Joely Fisher (half-\nsister); Tricia Leigh Fisher (half-sister). Website, https://carriefisher.com/. Carrie \nFrances Fisher (October 21, 1956 – December 27, 2016) was an American \nactress, ... Fisher "hid in <b>books</b>" as a child, becoming known in her family as "the ...",
"title": "Carrie Fisher"
},
{
"snippet": "Prince Gaston is a fictional character who appears in Walt Disney Pictures' 30th \nanimated feature film Beauty and the Beast (<b>1991</b>). ... Prince Charming, a similar \ncharacter who appears in the <b>Shrek</b> film series, using the critique of not ... In his \n<b>book</b> Tradigital Animate CC: 12 Principles of Animation in Adobe Animate, author\n ...",
"title": "Gaston (Beauty and the Beast)"
}
]
}
] |
When was the last time notre dame won a bowl game? | -1647090791708361428 | Notre Dame Fighting Irish football | [
"December 30 , 2014"
] | [
"Notre Dame Fighting Irish football"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"January 1, 2016"
],
"question": "When was the last time notre dame won a fiesta bowl game?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 30, 2014"
],
"question": "When was the last time notre dame won a music city bowl game?"
},
{
"answer": [
"December 28, 2013"
],
"question": "When was the last time notre dame won a pinstripe bowl game?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "notre dame",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Notre</b>-<b>Dame</b> de Paris (/ˌnɒtrə ˈdæm, ˌnɒtrə ˈdɑːm, ˌnoʊtrə ˈdɑːm, ˌnoʊ\ntrə ˈdeɪm/; French: [nɔtʁə dam də paʁi] ( About this sound listen); meaning ...",
"title": "Notre-Dame de Paris"
},
{
"snippet": "The University of <b>Notre Dame</b> du Lac is a private Catholic research university in \n<b>Notre Dame</b>, Indiana, outside the city of South Bend. It was founded in 1842 by ...",
"title": "University of Notre Dame"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Notre Dame</b> Fighting Irish are the athletic teams that represent the University \nof <b>Notre Dame</b>. The Fighting Irish participate in 23 National Collegiate Athletic ...",
"title": "Notre Dame Fighting Irish"
},
{
"snippet": "On 15 April 2019, just before 18:20 CEST, a structure fire broke out beneath the \nroof of <b>Notre</b>-<b>Dame</b> de Paris cathedral in Paris. By the time it was extinguished, ...",
"title": "Notre-Dame de Paris fire"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Notre Dame</b> Fighting Irish football team is the intercollegiate football team \nrepresenting the University of <b>Notre Dame</b> in <b>Notre Dame</b>, Indiana. The team is ...",
"title": "Notre Dame Fighting Irish football"
},
{
"snippet": "The Hunchback of <b>Notre</b>-<b>Dame</b> is a French Gothic novel by Victor Hugo, \npublished in 1831. The novel has been described as a key text in French \nliterature and ...",
"title": "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Notre Dame</b> is French for "Our Lady", a title of Mary, mother of Jesus. The term \nmay also refer to: Contents. 1 Most common uses; 2 Churches and cathedrals.",
"title": "Notre Dame"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Notre Dame</b> is a census-designated place north of the city of South Bend in St. \nJoseph County, in the U.S. state of Indiana. It includes the campuses of three ...",
"title": "Notre Dame, Indiana"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Notre</b>-<b>Dame</b> du Haut is a Roman Catholic chapel in Ronchamp, France. Built in \n1955, it is one of the finest examples of the architecture of Franco-Swiss architect\n ...",
"title": "Notre-Dame du Haut"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Notre Dame</b> Fighting Irish men's basketball team is the intercollegiate men's \nbasketball program representing the University of <b>Notre Dame</b> in <b>Notre Dame</b>, ...",
"title": "Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball"
}
]
}
] |
Who has won the most men's tennis grand slam titles? | -3329198403170464177 | List of Grand Slam men's singles champions | [
"Roger Federer"
] | [
"List of Grand Slam men's singles champions"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Roger Federer"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who has won the most men's tennis grand slam titles?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "This article details the list of <b>men's</b> singles <b>Grand Slam</b> tournaments <b>tennis</b> \nchampions. Some major changes <b>have</b> taken place in history and <b>have</b> affected \nthe number of <b>titles that have</b> been <b>won</b> by various players. These <b>have</b> included \nthe opening of the French national championships to ... 2.2 <b>Most Grand Slam</b> \nsingles <b>titles</b> (5 or more); 2.3 <b>Most</b> singles <b>titles</b> by ...",
"title": "List of Grand Slam men's singles champions"
},
{
"snippet": "These are records for <b>Grand Slam</b> tournaments, also known as majors, which are \nthe four <b>most</b> ... 9.1 <b>Men's</b> singles; 9.2 <b>Men's</b> doubles; 9.3 Women's singles; 9.4 \nWomen's ... "W" means the person was the champion, i.e., the <b>winning</b> finalist. ... \nThese players <b>won</b> the <b>title</b> of the final <b>Grand Slam</b> tournament they played.",
"title": "List of Grand Slam related tennis records"
},
{
"snippet": "All-time <b>tennis</b> records – <b>men's</b> singles, covers the period from 1877 to present. \nBefore the ... A player who <b>wins</b> all four Majors, in singles or as part of a doubles \nteam, in the ... 5.8.1 <b>Most titles</b> at a single tournament; 5.8.2 <b>Most</b> finals at a single \n... Today, the ultimate pursuit in <b>tennis</b> is to <b>win</b> the <b>Grand Slam</b>; <b>winning</b> all four ...",
"title": "All-time tennis records – men's singles"
},
{
"snippet": "Only twelve unique players - nine women and three <b>men</b> - <b>have won</b> at least six \nmajor ...",
"title": "Grand Slam (tennis)"
},
{
"snippet": "... www.rolandgarros.com/en_FR/about/history/<b>winners</b>.html. <b>Most titles</b>. 12: \nRafael Nadal. Current champion. Rafael Nadal (Twelfth <b>title</b>). The French Open is \nan annual <b>tennis</b> tournament held over two weeks in May and June. ... French \nplayers <b>have won the most</b> French Open <b>men's</b> singles <b>titles</b>, with 38 victories, \nfollowed ...",
"title": "List of French Open men's singles champions"
},
{
"snippet": "Roger Federer is a Swiss professional <b>tennis</b> player who is ranked world No. 3 in \n<b>men's</b> singles <b>tennis</b> by the Association of <b>Tennis</b> Professionals (ATP). <b>He has</b> \n<b>won</b> 20 <b>Grand Slam</b> singles <b>titles</b>—the <b>most</b> in history for a male ...",
"title": "Roger Federer"
},
{
"snippet": "Since 1983, <b>men's tennis has had</b> a very strong tradition and clear hierarchy of \ntournaments: (1) ... Likewise, when Rod Laver captured the amateur <b>Grand Slam</b> \nin 1962, <b>he did</b> not ... <b>Grand slam titles</b> are different from the Pro slams and this \nlist comprises <b>winners</b> of ... However the <b>most</b> important ones <b>have</b> been \npreserved.",
"title": "Tennis male players statistics"
},
{
"snippet": "Roger Federer <b>has won</b> an all-time record 20 <b>Grand Slam</b> singles <b>titles</b> and <b>has</b> \nreached a ... <b>He</b> is one of eight <b>men</b> to <b>have won</b> a career <b>Grand Slam</b> (<b>winning</b> \nall four <b>Grand Slams</b> at least once) and one of four ... 1 for 237 consecutive \nweeks), the <b>most</b> of any <b>men's tennis</b> player since the inception of these rankings \nin 1973.",
"title": "List of career achievements by Roger Federer"
},
{
"snippet": "Rafael "Rafa" Nadal Parera is a Spanish professional <b>tennis</b> player currently \nranked world No. 2 in <b>men's</b> singles <b>tennis</b> by the Association of <b>Tennis</b> \nProfessionals (ATP). Nadal <b>has won</b> 19 <b>Grand Slam</b> singles <b>titles</b>, the second-\n<b>most</b> in history for a ...",
"title": "Rafael Nadal"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of the main career statistics of Swiss professional <b>tennis</b> player \nRoger Federer. All statistics are according to the ATP Tour website. To date, \nFederer <b>has won</b> 103 ATP singles <b>titles</b> including a record 20 <b>Grand Slam</b> ... \nFederer <b>has won the most Grand Slam</b> tournaments of any male player in <b>tennis</b> \nhistory (20).",
"title": "Roger Federer career statistics"
}
]
}
] |
Who's won the snooker world championship the most? | -8111256428109698206 | List of world snooker champions | [
"Joe Davis"
] | [
"List of world snooker champions"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Stephen Hendry"
],
"question": "Who has won the snooker world championship the most in the modern era?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Joe Davis"
],
"question": "Who won the snooker world championship the most before the modern era?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Most wins in snooker world championship",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Mark Selby <b>won</b> the <b>world title</b> in 2014 by ... the prize exceeding the previous \n<b>highest</b> of ...",
"title": "World Snooker Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of professional <b>snooker</b> players ordered by the number of "ranking \ntitles" they have <b>won</b>. A ranking <b>title</b> is a <b>tournament</b> which counts towards the \n<b>snooker world</b> ... 2016 were part of the Players Tour <b>Championship</b>. Stephen \nHendry and Ronnie O'Sullivan jointly hold the record for the <b>most</b> ranking titles \nwith 36.",
"title": "List of snooker players by number of ranking titles"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>World Snooker Championship</b> is an annual ranking <b>snooker tournament</b> \nfounded in 1927 ... The <b>most</b> successful player at the <b>World Snooker</b> \n<b>Championship</b> was Joe Davis, who <b>won</b> fifteen consecutive titles between 1927 \nand 1946. ... is held by Stephen Hendry, who <b>won</b> the <b>title</b> seven times between \n1990 and 1999.",
"title": "List of world snooker champions"
},
{
"snippet": "Only Davis, Hendry and Williams have <b>won</b> all three Triple ... took the record for \nthe <b>most wins</b> in Triple Crown events, with 19, ... Crown, <b>winning</b> the Masters and \n<b>World Championship</b> in 2018–19, ...",
"title": "Triple Crown (snooker)"
},
{
"snippet": "Stephen Gordon Hendry MBE (born 13 January 1969) is a Scottish former \nprofessional <b>snooker</b> player and current commentator for the BBC and ITV. One \nof the <b>most</b> successful players in the history of <b>snooker</b>, he has <b>won snooker's</b> \n<b>most</b> prestigious <b>tournament</b>, the <b>World Snooker</b> ...",
"title": "Stephen Hendry"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2018 World <b>Snooker</b> Championship was a professional <b>snooker</b> tournament \nheld from 21 ... In <b>winning</b> the event, he received the <b>highest</b> prize money \nawarded for a <b>snooker</b> event at £425,000 of a total pool of £1,968,000. ... \nDefending and three-time world champion Mark Selby had <b>won</b> the <b>world title</b> for \nthe previous ...",
"title": "2018 World Snooker Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "Ronald Antonio O'Sullivan OBE (born 5 December 1975) is an English \nprofessional <b>snooker</b> player who is one of the <b>most</b> successful players in the \nhistory of the sport. Since turning professional in 1992, he has <b>won</b> five <b>World</b> \n<b>Championships</b>, ...",
"title": "Ronnie O'Sullivan"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Snooker</b> is a cue sport that originated among British Army officers stationed in \nIndia in the ... The <b>World Snooker Championship</b> has taken place since 1927. \nJoe Davis, a ... Since 2000, Ronnie O'Sullivan has <b>won</b> the <b>most world</b> titles, with \nfive.",
"title": "Snooker"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1985 World <b>Snooker</b> Championship was a ranking professional <b>snooker</b> \ntournament that ... The final between Davis and Taylor holds the record for the \n<b>most</b>-viewed broadcast in the United Kingdom of a ... The first <b>World</b> \n<b>Championship</b>, in 1927, was <b>won</b> by Joe Davis in a final at Camkin's Hall in \nBirmingham, England.",
"title": "1985 World Snooker Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 World <b>Snooker</b> Championship was a professional <b>snooker</b> tournament \nthat took ... Joe Davis <b>won</b> the first <b>World Championship</b> in 1927, the final match \nbeing held in Camkin's Hall, Birmingham, England. ... Stephen Hendry is the \n<b>most</b> successful player in the modern era, having <b>won</b> the <b>World Championship</b> a\n ...",
"title": "2019 World Snooker Championship"
}
]
}
] |
When was the women's first world cup held? | 6775520303477184949 | FIFA Women's World Cup | [
"1991"
] | [
"FIFA Women's World Cup",
"Women's Cricket World Cup",
"National Women's Hockey League",
"2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup",
"Rugby World Cup (women's)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1991",
"16 to 30 November 1991"
],
"question": "When was the first FIFA Women's World Cup held?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1973",
"20 June – 28 July 1973"
],
"question": "When was the first Women's Cricket World Cup held?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1991",
"1991-04-06 – 1991-04-14"
],
"question": "When was the first Women's Rugby World Cup?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "women's world cup held?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Number of goals scored in the matches <b>played</b> between the teams in question;; \nFair play points in all group matches (only one deduction could be applied to a ...",
"title": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The competition has been <b>held</b> every four years since 1991, when the inaugural \ntournament, then called the FIFA <b>Women's World</b> Championship, was <b>held</b> in ...",
"title": "FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The ICC <b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World Cup</b> is the sport's oldest world championship, \nwith the first tournament <b>held</b> in England in 1973. Matches are <b>played</b> as One \nDay ...",
"title": "Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2020 ICC <b>Women's</b> T20 <b>World Cup</b> was the seventh ICC <b>Women's</b> T20 \n<b>World Cup</b> tournament. It was <b>held</b> in Australia between 21 February and 8 \nMarch ...",
"title": "2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "It was also the first <b>World Cup</b> for either men or <b>women</b> to be <b>played</b> on artificial \nturf, with all matches <b>played</b> on such surfaces, even though there were some ...",
"title": "2015 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The tournament is <b>held</b> in even-numbered years. It was first conducted in 2002 as \nthe FIFA U-19 <b>Women's World</b> Championship with an upper age limit of 19. In ...",
"title": "FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Sue Redfern became the first woman to have <b>played</b> in a <b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World</b> \n<b>Cup</b> and then stand in a tournament as an umpire. Umpires. Umpire, Country.",
"title": "2017 Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 FIFA <b>Women's World Cup</b> qualification process decided all 24 teams \nwhich <b>played</b> in the 2019 FIFA <b>Women's World Cup</b>, with the hosts France ...",
"title": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "It was <b>held</b> in the United States from 20 September to 12 October 2003 at six \nvenues in six cities across the country. The tournament was won by Germany, \nwho ...",
"title": "2003 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2021 ICC <b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World Cup</b> will be the twelfth edition of the \n<b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World Cup</b> and is scheduled to be <b>held</b> in New Zealand \nbetween 6 ...",
"title": "2021 Women's Cricket World Cup"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When was the women's first world cup held?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "After the <b>first</b> international <b>women's</b> tournaments were <b>held</b> in Asia in 1975 and \nEurope in 1984, Ellen Wille declared that she wanted better effort from the FIFA ...",
"title": "FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Women's</b> international cricket was <b>first played</b> in 1934, when a party from \nEngland toured Australia and New Zealand. The <b>first</b> ...",
"title": "Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The "Year" column refers to the year the <b>World Cup</b> was <b>held</b>, and wikilinks to the \narticle about that tournament. The wikilinks in the "Final score" column point to ...",
"title": "List of FIFA Women's World Cup finals"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>first</b> of these was an event <b>held</b> in August 1990 in New Zealand. Though not \nconsidered a <b>world cup</b>, the tournament was referred to as the World Rugby ...",
"title": "Rugby World Cup (women's)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>first Women's World Cup</b> was <b>held</b> in the People's Republic of China, in \nNovember 1991, and was won by the ...",
"title": "Women's association football"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1973 <b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World Cup</b> was the <b>first</b> tournament of its kind, <b>held</b> \ntwo years before the <b>first</b> limited overs <b>World Cup</b> for men in 1975.",
"title": "1973 Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Sue Redfern became the <b>first</b> woman to have <b>played</b> in a <b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World</b> \n<b>Cup</b> and then stand in a tournament as an umpire. Umpires. Umpire, Country.",
"title": "2017 Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "It was also the <b>first World Cup</b> for either men or <b>women</b> to be <b>played</b> on artificial \nturf, with all matches <b>played</b> on such surfaces, even though there were some \ninitial ...",
"title": "2015 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2012 Kabaddi World Championship was the <b>first</b> Kabaddi <b>World Cup held</b> for \n<b>women</b>. It was organised by The Government of Bihar and the Amateur ...",
"title": "2012 Women's Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style)"
},
{
"snippet": "Brazil and Germany <b>played</b> on the final matchday for <b>first</b> place in Group B, as the \nsecond-place team would be drawn against the United States in the quarter- ...",
"title": "1999 FIFA Women's World Cup"
}
]
},
{
"query": "women's first world cup held?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "After the <b>first</b> international <b>women's</b> tournaments were <b>held</b> in Asia in 1975 and \nEurope in 1984, Ellen Wille declared that she wanted better effort from the FIFA ...",
"title": "FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Women's</b> international cricket was <b>first played</b> in 1934, when a party from \nEngland toured Australia and New Zealand. The <b>first</b> ...",
"title": "Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>first</b> tournament referred to as the <b>Women's</b> Rugby <b>World Cup</b> was <b>held</b> in \n1991 and hosted by Wales. Twelve countries were divided into four groups of \nthree.",
"title": "Rugby World Cup (women's)"
},
{
"snippet": "The "Year" column refers to the year the <b>World Cup</b> was <b>held</b>, and wikilinks to the \narticle about that tournament. The wikilinks in the "Final score" column point to ...",
"title": "List of FIFA Women's World Cup finals"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1973 <b>Women's</b> Cricket <b>World Cup</b> was the <b>first</b> tournament of its kind, <b>held</b> \ntwo years before the <b>first</b> limited overs <b>World Cup</b> for men in 1975.",
"title": "1973 Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>first Women's World Cup</b> was <b>held</b> in the People's Republic of China, in \nNovember 1991, and was won by the ...",
"title": "Women's association football"
},
{
"snippet": "It was also the <b>first World Cup</b> for either men or <b>women</b> to be <b>played</b> on artificial \nturf, with all matches <b>played</b> on such surfaces, even though there were some \ninitial ...",
"title": "2015 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "An equivalent tournament for <b>women's</b> football, the FIFA <b>Women's World Cup</b>, \nwas <b>first held</b> in 1991 in China. The <b>women's</b> tournament is smaller in scale and ...",
"title": "FIFA World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The tournament is <b>held</b> in even-numbered years. It was <b>first</b> conducted in 2002 as \nthe FIFA U-19 <b>Women's World</b> Championship with an upper age limit of 19.",
"title": "FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The Men's FIH Hockey <b>World Cup</b> is an international field hockey competition \norganised by the ... For the women's tournament, see Women's FIH Hockey World \nCup. ... The FIH had inadvertently scheduled the <b>first World Cup</b> to be <b>played</b> in ...",
"title": "Men's FIH Hockey World Cup"
}
]
},
{
"query": "women's nhl cup",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "... the namesake of the <b>Stanley Cup</b>. The front of the trophy is engraved with "The \n<b>Lady</b> Isobel Gathorne-Hardy Cup ...",
"title": "National Women's Hockey League"
},
{
"snippet": "Fifteen <b>women</b> have had their names engraved on the <b>Stanley Cup</b>. The first \n<b>woman</b> to have her name engraved on the <b>Stanley Cup</b> is Marguerite Norris, who \nwon ...",
"title": "Stanley Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "It is viewed as the <b>Stanley Cup</b> of <b>women's</b> hockey. Contents. 1 History.",
"title": "Clarkson Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The Isobel <b>Cup</b> is the <b>championship</b> trophy awarded annually to the National \n<b>Women's</b> Hockey League (NWHL) playoff winner. It is named after <b>Lady</b> Isobel \nGathorne-Hardy, one of the first known <b>women</b> to play the game and daughter of \nLord <b>Stanley</b> (the namesake ...",
"title": "Isobel Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Ice hockey is a contact team sport played on ice, usually in a rink, in which two \nteams of skaters ... The <b>Stanley Cup</b>, emblematic of ice hockey club supremacy, \nwas first ... Stanley's son Arthur helped organize the Ontario Hockey Association, \nand Stanley's daughter Isobel was one of the first <b>women</b> to play ice hockey.",
"title": "Ice hockey"
},
{
"snippet": "Seattle's sports history began at the start of the 20th century with the Pacific Coast \nHockey Association (PCHA)'s Seattle Metropolitans, which in 1917 became the \nfirst American hockey team to win the <b>Stanley Cup</b>. ... In 2013, Seattle's \nprofessional <b>women's</b> soccer team OL Reign, including several members of the \nWorld Cup ...",
"title": "Sports in Seattle"
},
{
"snippet": "... hockey coach for the University of Wisconsin–Madison <b>women's</b> ice hockey \nteam. He is a former <b>NHL</b> player who appeared in 669 <b>NHL</b> regular season \ngames ...",
"title": "Mark Johnson (ice hockey)"
},
{
"snippet": "Marguerite Ann Norris (February 16, 1927 – May 12, 1994), also known as \nMarguerite Riker and Marguerite Norris-Riker, was an American ice hockey \nexecutive. She was the first <b>female</b> team executive in National Hockey League (\nNHL) ... During her tenure with the Red Wings, she saw the team win the <b>Stanley</b> \n<b>Cup</b> in both ...",
"title": "Marguerite Norris"
},
{
"snippet": "Manon Rhéaume (born February 24, 1972) is a retired Canadian ice hockey \ngoaltender. ... She also played on the Canada <b>women's</b> national ice hockey team\n, winning ... In 1992, Rhéaume tried out for the Tampa Bay Lightning; this was the \nfirst time a <b>woman</b> tried out for an <b>NHL</b> team. ... "Montreal wins first Clarkson <b>Cup</b>"\n.",
"title": "Manon Rhéaume"
},
{
"snippet": "The first instances of organized <b>women's</b> ice hockey in Canada date back to the \n1890s when it ... In February 1921 a <b>women's</b> international championship series \nwas played in conjunction ... referred to as the <b>Stanley Cup</b>, Lord Stanley played \na significant role in the development and growth of Canadian <b>women's</b> hockey.",
"title": "Canadian women's ice hockey history"
}
]
},
{
"query": "women's first world cup",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>first</b> instance of a <b>Women's World Cup</b> dates back to 1970, with the <b>first</b> \ninternational tournament taking place in Italy in July 1970. This was followed by ...",
"title": "FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The FIFA <b>Women's World Cup</b> is an international association football competition \nestablished in 1991. It is contested by the <b>women's</b> national teams of the ...",
"title": "List of FIFA Women's World Cup finals"
},
{
"snippet": "Following their 2015 <b>World Cup</b> win, the team was honored with a ticker tape \nparade in New York City, the <b>first</b> for a <b>women's</b> sports team, and honored by ...",
"title": "United States women's national soccer team"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Women's</b> international cricket was <b>first</b> played in 1934, when a party from \nEngland toured Australia and New Zealand. The <b>first</b> ...",
"title": "Women's Cricket World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Carin Jennings scored the <b>first</b> two <b>World Cup</b> goals for the United States. After a \n5-0 win over Brazil and a 3-0 win over Japan, the group winners reached the ...",
"title": "United States at the FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "It was also the <b>first World Cup</b> for either men or <b>women</b> to be played on artificial \nturf, with all matches played on such surfaces, even though there were some \ninitial ...",
"title": "2015 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The 1991 FIFA <b>Women's World Cup</b> was the inaugural FIFA <b>Women's World Cup</b>, \nthe world ... For only the <b>first</b> edition of the <b>Women's World Cup</b>, all matches \nlasted only 80 minutes, instead of the typical 90, and two points were awarded for \na ...",
"title": "1991 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>first</b> tournament referred to as the <b>Women's</b> Rugby <b>World Cup</b> was held in \n1991 and hosted by Wales. Twelve countries were divided into four groups of \nthree.",
"title": "Rugby World Cup (women's)"
},
{
"snippet": "The tournament was the <b>first Women's World Cup</b> to use the video assistant \nreferee (VAR) system. The United States entered the competition as defending ...",
"title": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "The tournament, which had several modified rules and was officially known as \nthe <b>1st</b> FIFA <b>World</b> Championship for <b>Women's</b> Football for the M&M's <b>Cup</b> until ...",
"title": "1999 FIFA Women's World Cup"
}
]
}
] |
How many times has mount vesuvius erupted since 79 ad? | -148617601450369948 | Mount Vesuvius | [
"many times"
] | [
"Mount Vesuvius"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"42",
"around three dozen times"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "How many times has mount vesuvius erupted since 79 ad?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "A <b>few times since</b> 1944, landslides in the crater <b>have</b> raised clouds of ash dust, \nraising false alarms of an <b>eruption</b>. Before <b>AD 79</b>.",
"title": "Mount Vesuvius"
},
{
"snippet": "Of the many eruptions of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in Italy, the most famous <b>is</b> the <b>eruption</b> \nin <b>79 AD</b>. ... <b>After</b> archaeological excavations revealed much about the lives of \nthe ... Further support for an October/November <b>eruption has long</b> been known in\n ...",
"title": "Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>AD 79</b> (LXXIX) <b>was</b> a common year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar. At \nthe <b>time</b>, it <b>was</b> known as the Year of the Consulship of Titus and Vespasianus (or\n, less frequently, year 832 Ab urbe condita). The denomination <b>AD 79</b> for this year \n<b>has</b> been used <b>since</b> the early ... <b>Eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in <b>79</b>: <b>Mount</b> \n<b>Vesuvius erupts</b>, destroying Pompeii ...",
"title": "AD 79"
},
{
"snippet": "Pompeii <b>was</b> an ancient city located in the modern comune of Pompei near \nNaples in the ... <b>After</b> many excavations prior to 1960 that <b>had</b> uncovered most of \nthe city but left it in ... The inhabitants of Pompeii <b>had long</b> been used to minor \nearthquakes (indeed, the writer ... Main article: <b>Eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in <b>AD</b> \n<b>79</b>.",
"title": "Pompeii"
},
{
"snippet": "The Amphitheatre of Pompeii <b>is</b> the oldest surviving Roman amphitheatre. It <b>is</b> \nlocated in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii, and <b>was</b> buried by the <b>eruption</b> of \n<b>Vesuvius</b> in <b>79 AD</b>, ... <b>has</b> been used for concerts and other public events in \nmodern <b>times</b>. ... It <b>was</b> his first performance in the amphitheatre <b>since</b> recording \nLive at ...",
"title": "Amphitheatre of Pompeii"
},
{
"snippet": "Herculaneum <b>was</b> an ancient town, located in the modern-day comune of \nErcolano, Campania, Italy. The city <b>was</b> destroyed and buried under volcanic ash \nand pumice in the <b>eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in <b>79 AD</b>. Like its neighbouring city \nPompeii, Herculaneum <b>is</b> famous as one of the <b>few</b> ... <b>After</b> the <b>eruption</b> of <b>Mount</b> \n<b>Vesuvius</b> in <b>79 AD</b>, the town of Herculaneum <b>was</b> ...",
"title": "Herculaneum"
},
{
"snippet": "... the <b>eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in <b>AD 79</b> and a fire in Rome in 80. <b>After</b> barely \ntwo years in office, Titus died of a fever on 13 September 81. He <b>was</b> deified by ...",
"title": "Titus"
},
{
"snippet": "Plinian eruptions or Vesuvian eruptions are volcanic eruptions marked by their \nsimilarity to the <b>eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in <b>79 AD</b>, which destroyed the ancient \nRoman cities of Herculaneum and Pompeii. The <b>eruption was</b> described in a \nletter written by Pliny the Younger, <b>after</b> the ... Plinian eruptions are <b>often</b> \naccompanied by loud noises, such as those ...",
"title": "Plinian eruption"
},
{
"snippet": "Gaius Plinius Secundus (<b>AD</b> 23/24–<b>79</b>), called Pliny the Elder <b>was</b> a Roman \nauthor, a naturalist ... Pliny's dates are pinned to the <b>eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> \nin <b>AD 79</b> and a statement of his nephew that he died in ... It <b>has</b> been <b>long</b> \ncompleted and its accuracy confirmed; but I <b>have</b> determined to commit the \ncharge of it to my ...",
"title": "Pliny the Elder"
},
{
"snippet": "... prior to the <b>eruption</b> of <b>Mount Vesuvius</b> in <b>79 AD</b>. Although <b>many</b> examples of \nRoman wall painting were able to be preserved from the <b>eruption</b>, no new styles \nof wall painting developed <b>after</b> the incident. People ... instead, a combination of \nthe four styles <b>was</b> used among painters.",
"title": "Roman wall painting (200 BC–AD 79)"
}
]
}
] |
Who has scored the most points in the nba? | -8071040109351293643 | List of National Basketball Association career scoring leaders | [
"Kareem Abdul - Jabbar"
] | [
"List of National Basketball Association career scoring leaders ..."
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Kareem Abdul Jabbar"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "most points nba",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "This page contains two charts: The first chart is a list of the top 50 all-time scorers \nin the history ... As of February 27, 2020, the active <b>NBA</b> player with the <b>most</b> \ncareer <b>points</b> scored is LeBron James. James holds third place on the all-time list\n.",
"title": "List of National Basketball Association career scoring leaders ..."
},
{
"snippet": "This is a complete listing of National Basketball Association players who have \nscored 60 or more <b>points</b> in a game. This feat has been accomplished 74 times in \n<b>NBA</b> history. Twenty-seven different players have scored 60 or more <b>points</b> in a \ngame, ... <b>NBA</b> Finals record (game 5 victory); <b>most points</b> in a regulation playoff \ngame.",
"title": "List of National Basketball Association single-game scoring leaders ..."
},
{
"snippet": "In basketball, <b>points</b> are accumulated through free throws or field goals. The \nNational Basketball Association's (<b>NBA</b>) scoring title is awarded to the ... Michael \nJordan has won the <b>most</b> scoring titles, with ten. Jordan and Chamberlain are the\n ...",
"title": "List of National Basketball Association annual scoring leaders ..."
},
{
"snippet": "This article lists all-time records achieved in the <b>NBA</b> regular season in major \nstatistical ... <b>Most</b> 3-<b>point</b> field goals attempted in a game, none made. 12 by \nBrook ...",
"title": "NBA regular season records"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Points</b> in basketball are used to keep track of the score in a game. <b>Points</b> can be \naccumulated ... the player scores three <b>points</b>. The team that has recorded the \n<b>most points</b> at the end of a game is declared that game's winner. Contents. 1 <b>NBA</b>\n. 1.1 Regular season; 1.2 Playoffs. 2 U.S. college; 3 See also; 4 References ...",
"title": "Point (basketball)"
},
{
"snippet": "Highest three-<b>point</b> percentage – career .600 by Glen Rice. <b>Most</b> three-<b>point</b> field \ngoals made – career. 38 by LeBron ...",
"title": "NBA All-Star Game records"
},
{
"snippet": "Wilt Chamberlain set the single-game scoring record in the National Basketball \nAssociation (<b>NBA</b>) by scoring 100 <b>points</b> for the Philadelphia Warriors in a 169–\n147 win ... Before Chamberlain, the <b>most</b> dominant big man in the <b>NBA</b> was ...",
"title": "Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game"
},
{
"snippet": "The Three-<b>Point</b> Shootout is a National Basketball Association (<b>NBA</b>) contest \nheld on the ... to just six competitors. Buddy Hield of the Sacramento Kings is the \n<b>most</b> recent winner of the event which was held at the United Center in Chicago.",
"title": "Three-Point Contest"
},
{
"snippet": "This article lists all-time records achieved in the <b>NBA</b> post-season in major \ncategories ... 3-game series. <b>Most points</b> - 135 by Michael Jordan, Chicago Bulls \n(vs.",
"title": "NBA post-season records"
},
{
"snippet": "In basketball, <b>points</b> are used to keep track of the score in a game. <b>Points</b> can be \naccumulated ... The two teams also set several other <b>NBA</b> records, including the \n<b>most points</b> scored by one team (186 <b>points</b>), the <b>most points</b> scored by a losing ...",
"title": "List of highest-scoring NBA games"
}
]
}
] |
Who played the son in steptoe and son? | 7965161300531640273 | Steptoe and Son | [
"Wilfrid Brambell"
] | [
"Steptoe and Son"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Corbett",
"Harry H. Corbett"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who played the son in steptoe and son?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Steptoe and Son</b> is a British sitcom written by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson \nabout a ... In 2005, the <b>play Steptoe and Son</b> in Murder at Oil Drum Lane, written \nby Ray Galton and John Antrobus, brought the storyline to a close.",
"title": "Steptoe and Son"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Steptoe and Son</b> is a British sitcom created by comedy writers Ray Galton and \nAlan Simpson, ... Albert Edward Ladysmith Steptoe (Wilfrid Brambell) <b>was</b> born \non 26 September 1899,, though he always claimed to have been born in 1901.",
"title": "List of Steptoe and Son characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Sanford and <b>Son</b> is an American sitcom television series that ran on the NBC \ntelevision network from January 14, 1972, to March 25, 1977. It <b>was</b> based on the \nBBC Television program <b>Steptoe and Son</b>, which had its ...",
"title": "Sanford and Son"
},
{
"snippet": "Henry Wilfrid Brambell (22 March 1912 – 18 January 1985) <b>was</b> an Irish \ntelevision and film ... After the final series of <b>Steptoe and Son was</b> made, in 1974, \nBrambell had some guest roles in films and on television. He and Harry H. \nCorbett also ...",
"title": "Wilfrid Brambell"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Steptoe and Son</b> Ride Again is a 1973 comedy film. It is a sequel to the film \n<b>Steptoe and Son</b> ... The removal company featured in the film <b>was</b> the then state-\nowned Pickfords Removals. The greyhound racing scenes were shot at White \nCity ...",
"title": "Steptoe and Son Ride Again"
},
{
"snippet": "When <b>Steptoe</b> Met <b>Son</b> is a 2002 Channel 4 documentary about the personal \nlives of Wilfrid ... Corbett felt he had a promising career as a serious <b>actor</b>, but \n<b>was</b> trapped by his role as Harold and forced to keep returning to the series after\n ...",
"title": "When Steptoe Met Son"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Steptoe and Son</b> is a 1972 British comedy drama film and a spin-off from the \npopular British ... Albert and Harold Steptoe respectively. It also features Carolyn \nSeymour. A sequel, <b>Steptoe and Son</b> Ride Again, <b>was</b> released the following \nyear.",
"title": "Steptoe and Son (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Harry H. Corbett, OBE (28 February 1925 – 21 March 1982) <b>was</b> an English <b>actor</b> \nand comedian, who co-starred in the long-running BBC television sitcom <b>Steptoe</b> \n<b>and Son</b> alongside Wilfrid Brambell, which <b>was</b> ...",
"title": "Harry H. Corbett"
},
{
"snippet": "This is an episode list of the British sitcom <b>Steptoe and Son</b>. All episodes were \noriginally shown on what is now known as BBC One, although the station <b>was</b> ...",
"title": "List of Steptoe and Son episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Steptoe and Son</b> in Murder at Oil Drum Lane is a <b>play</b> written by Ray Galton and \nJohn Antrobus that brought the <b>Steptoe and Son</b> saga to an end. It <b>was</b> first ...",
"title": "Steptoe and Son in Murder at Oil Drum Lane"
}
]
}
] |
Where is the cadbury creme egg factory located in england? | -7888688422609882552 | Cadbury Creme Egg | [
"Birmingham"
] | [
"Cadbury Creme Egg"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Birmingham, West Midlands, UK"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Where is the cadbury creme egg factory located in england?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "At the Bournville <b>factory</b> in Birmingham, in <b>the UK</b>, they <b>are</b> manufactured at a \nrate of 1.5 million per day. The <b>Creme Egg</b> was also previously manufactured in ...",
"title": "Cadbury Creme Egg"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Cadbury</b>, formerly <b>Cadbury's</b> and <b>Cadbury</b> Schweppes, is a British multinational \nconfectionery company wholly owned by Mondelez International (originally Kraft \nFoods) since 2010. It is the second largest confectionery brand in the world after \nMars. <b>Cadbury</b> is internationally <b>headquartered</b> in Uxbridge, west London, and ... \nIt is known for its Dairy Milk chocolate, the <b>Creme Egg</b> and Roses selection ...",
"title": "Cadbury"
},
{
"snippet": "Somerdale was a chocolate <b>factory located</b> in Keynsham near Bristol in south \nwest <b>England</b>, closed by Kraft foods in 2011. It was the home of a <b>Cadbury</b> plc's ...",
"title": "Somerdale Factory"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Cadbury</b> Mini <b>Eggs are</b> a milk chocolate product created and produced by \n<b>Cadbury UK</b>, also produced in <b>Cadbury</b> Adams (in Canada). Introduced by the ...",
"title": "Mini Eggs"
},
{
"snippet": "An Oreo is a sandwich cookie consisting of two (usually chocolate) wafers with a \nsweet <b>crème</b> ... The origin of the name Oreo is unknown, but there <b>are</b> many \nhypotheses, including derivations ... On December 6, 2011, Kraft announced that \nproduction of Oreo biscuits was to start in <b>the UK</b> – their <b>Cadbury factory</b> in \nSheffield, ...",
"title": "Oreo"
},
{
"snippet": "Reese's Peanut Butter Cups <b>are</b> an American candy consisting of a chocolate \ncup filled with peanut <b>cream</b> ... Reese's Peanut Butter <b>Eggs</b>: Available mainly \nduring March and April, these <b>are egg</b>-shaped ... <b>Are</b> you a <b>Cadbury Crème</b> or \nReese's Peanut Butter <b>Egg</b>? Retrieved 2013-12-9; ^ Cox, Dan (27 November \n2015).",
"title": "Reese's Peanut Butter Cups"
},
{
"snippet": "Fry's Chocolate <b>Cream</b> was a chocolate bar made by <b>Cadbury</b>, and formerly by \nJ. S. Fry & Sons in Union Street, Bristol, <b>England</b>. ... There <b>are</b> currently four \nvariants of Fry's <b>Cream</b>: Fry's Chocolate ... In 1923, Fry's (now <b>Cadbury</b>) \nchocolate <b>factory</b> moved to Somerdale Garden City, Keynsham, <b>England</b>. \nFollowing a 2010 ...",
"title": "Fry's Chocolate Cream"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Cadbury</b> World is a visitor attraction, featuring a self-guided exhibition tour, \ncreated and run by the <b>Cadbury</b> Company. One <b>location</b> exists: Birmingham, \nUnited ...",
"title": "Cadbury World"
},
{
"snippet": "Founded, Bristol, <b>England</b>, 1761. Defunct, closed 2011. Parent · Mondelez \nInternational. J. S. Fry & Sons, Ltd. better known as Frys, was a British chocolate \ncompany owned by Joseph ... In 1847, the Fry's chocolate <b>factory</b>, <b>located</b> in \nUnion Street, Bristol, moulded a chocolate ... Fry's Chocolate <b>Cream</b> · Fry's \nTurkish Delight ...",
"title": "J. S. Fry & Sons"
},
{
"snippet": "Terry's Chocolate Orange is a chocolate product created by Terry's in 1932 at \nTerry's Chocolate Works in York, <b>England</b>. ... The company opened the Art Deco-\nstyle <b>factory</b> known as Terry's Chocolate Works in 1926, and ... Spoon: a milk \nchocolate egg filled with an orange fondant filling (similar to <b>Cadbury</b>'s <b>Creme</b> \n<b>Egg</b>) ...",
"title": "Terry's Chocolate Orange"
}
]
}
] |
Who led the confederate army in the battle of gettysburg? | -5605569397330843145 | Battle of Gettysburg | [
"Robert E. Lee"
] | [
"Battle of Gettysburg"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Lee",
"Robert E. Lee"
],
"question": "Who was the primary leader the confederate army in the battle of gettysburg?"
},
{
"answer": [
"George Pickett, James Longstreet, Isaac R. Trimble, and J. Johnston Pettigrew"
],
"question": "Who led the confederate army's Pickett's Charge in the battle of gettysburg?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who led the confederate army in the battle of gettysburg?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The charge was repulsed by Union rifle and artillery fire, at great loss to the \n<b>Confederate army</b>. Lee <b>led</b> his <b>army</b> on a torturous retreat ...",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Army</b> of Northern Virginia was the primary military force of the <b>Confederate</b> \nStates of ... Part of the confusion results from the fact that Johnston <b>commanded</b> \nthe Department of Northern Virginia (as of ... distinguished themselves in \nnumerous battles, such as during their fight for the Devil's Den at the <b>Battle of</b> \n<b>Gettysburg</b>.",
"title": "Army of Northern Virginia"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Confederate</b> cavalry forces under Stuart for this operation consisted of the three \nbrigades he had taken on his ride around the Union <b>Army</b> (<b>commanded</b> by Brig.",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg, third day cavalry battles"
},
{
"snippet": "Pickett's Charge was an infantry assault ordered by <b>Confederate</b> Gen. Robert E. \nLee against Maj. Gen. George G. Meade's Union positions on July 3, 1863, the \nlast day of the <b>Battle of Gettysburg</b> in the state of Pennsylvania during the ... \nPickett's Charge was planned for three <b>Confederate</b> divisions, <b>commanded</b> by \nMaj. Gen.",
"title": "Pickett's Charge"
},
{
"snippet": "Little Round Top is the smaller of two rocky hills south of <b>Gettysburg</b>, \nPennsylvania—the companion to the adjacent, taller hill named Big Round Top. It \nwas the site of an unsuccessful assault by <b>Confederate troops</b> against the ... The \n20th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment, <b>commanded</b> by Colonel Joshua \nLawrence ...",
"title": "Little Round Top"
},
{
"snippet": "By early afternoon, the Union XI Corps, <b>commanded</b> by Major General Oliver Otis \nHoward, had arrived, and the Union position was in a semicircle from west to ...",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg, first day"
},
{
"snippet": "John Bell Hood was a <b>Confederate</b> general during the American Civil War. Hood \nhad a ... At the <b>Battle of Gettysburg</b>, he was severely wounded, rendering his left \narm useless for the rest of his life. ... served at Fort Jones, California, and later \ntransferred to the 2nd U.S. Cavalry in Texas, where he was <b>commanded</b> by Col.",
"title": "John Bell Hood"
},
{
"snippet": "Robert Edward Lee (January 19, 1807 – October 12, 1870) was an American and \n<b>Confederate</b> soldier, best known as a commander of the <b>Confederate</b> States \n<b>Army</b>. He <b>commanded</b> the <b>Army</b> of Northern Virginia in the American Civil War \nfrom ... His aggressive tactics, especially at the <b>Battle of Gettysburg</b>, which \nresulted in ...",
"title": "Robert E. Lee"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Confederate Army</b> of Northern Virginia began its Retreat from Gettysburg on \nJuly 4, 1863. Following General Robert E. Lee's failure to defeat the Union <b>Army</b> \nat the <b>Battle of Gettysburg</b> (July 1–3, ... The Union <b>Army</b> of the Potomac, \n<b>commanded</b> by Maj. Gen. George G. Meade, was unable to maneuver quickly \nenough to ...",
"title": "Retreat from Gettysburg"
},
{
"snippet": "During the second day of the <b>Battle of Gettysburg</b> (July 2, 1863) <b>Confederate</b> Gen\n. Robert E. Lee attempted to capitalize on his first day's success. His <b>Army</b> of \nNorthern Virginia launched multiple attacks on the flanks of the Union <b>Army</b> of the \nPotomac, <b>commanded</b> by Maj.",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg, second day"
}
]
}
] |
Name the ocean which is located within antarctic circle? | -2824920499020509981 | Antarctic Circle | [
"Southern Ocean"
] | [
"Antarctic Circle"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Southern Ocean"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "antarctic circle ocean",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Arctic Circle</b> is one of the two <b>polar circles</b> and the most northerly of the five \nmajor circles of ... The <b>Arctic Circle</b> passes through the Arctic <b>Ocean</b>, the \nScandinavian Peninsula, North Asia, Northern America, and Greenland. The land \nwithin ...",
"title": "Arctic Circle"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Antarctic Circle</b> is the most southerly of the five major circles of latitude that \nmark maps of ... That is true at <b>sea</b> level; those limits increase with elevation \nabove <b>sea</b> level, although in mountainous regions there is often no direct view of \nthe ...",
"title": "Antarctic Circle"
},
{
"snippet": "The Arctic <b>Ocean</b> is the smallest and shallowest of the world's five major <b>oceans</b>. \nIt is also ... The few expeditions to penetrate much beyond the <b>Arctic Circle</b> in this \nera added only small islands, such as Novaya Zemlya (11th century) and ...",
"title": "Arctic Ocean"
},
{
"snippet": "On 17 January 1773 the <b>Antarctic Circle</b> was crossed for the first time in history \nand the two ships reached 67° 15' S ...",
"title": "Southern Ocean"
},
{
"snippet": "The Arctic is a polar region located at the northernmost part of Earth. The Arctic \nconsists of the Arctic <b>Ocean</b>, adjacent seas, and parts of Alaska ... The area can \nbe defined as north of the <b>Arctic Circle</b> (66° 33'N), the approximate southern limit \nof ...",
"title": "Arctic"
},
{
"snippet": "Antarctica is Earth's southernmost continent. It contains the geographic South \nPole and is situated in the Antarctic region of the Southern Hemisphere, almost \nentirely south of the <b>Antarctic Circle</b>, and is surrounded by the Southern <b>Ocean</b>.",
"title": "Antarctica"
},
{
"snippet": "Arctic Alaska or Far North Alaska is a region of the U.S. state of Alaska generally \nreferring to the northern areas on or close to the Arctic <b>Ocean</b>. ... Map of the Arctic \nregion, Alaska is in the upper left side, the Arctic Circle is shown in blue.",
"title": "Arctic Alaska"
},
{
"snippet": "The climate of the Arctic is characterized by long, cold winters and short, cool \nsummers. There is a large amount of variability in climate across the Arctic, but all \nregions experience extremes of solar radiation in both summer and winter. Some \nparts of the Arctic are covered by ice (<b>sea</b> ice, glacial ice, or snow) ... The most \nwidely used definition, the area north of the <b>Arctic Circle</b>, where the ...",
"title": "Climate of the Arctic"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Arctic Circle</b> defining the "midnight sun" encompasses the Atlantic <b>Ocean</b> \nfrom the northern edge of Iceland to the Bering Strait. The area is often \nconsidered ...",
"title": "Arctic naval operations of World War II"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Antarctic</b> Circumpolar Wave (ACW) is a coupled <b>ocean</b>/atmosphere wave \nthat <b>circles</b> the Southern <b>Ocean</b> in approximately eight years at 6–8 cm/s (2.4–3.1\n ...",
"title": "Antarctic Circumpolar Wave"
}
]
}
] |
What are the books in the game of thrones series? | -4963196883435353600 | A Song of Ice and Fire | [
"A Storm of Swords",
"A Dance with Dragons",
"The Winds of Winter",
"A Dream of Spring",
"A Clash of Kings",
"A Feast for Crows",
"A Game of Thrones"
] | [
"A Song of Ice and Fire"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings, A Storm of Swords, A Feast for Crows, A Dance with Dragons"
],
"question": "What are the books in the game of thrones series, 1-5, that have already been released?"
},
{
"answer": [
"The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring"
],
"question": "What are the books in the game of thrones series, 6-7, that haven't been released yet?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Tidal volume",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Tidal volume</b> is the lung volume representing the normal volume of air displaced \nbetween normal inhalation and exhalation when extra effort is not applied.",
"title": "Tidal volume"
},
{
"snippet": "Lung volumes and lung capacities refer to the volume of air in the lungs at \ndifferent phases of the respiratory cycle. The average total lung capacity of an \nadult human male is about 6 litres of air. Tidal breathing is normal, resting \nbreathing; the <b>tidal volume</b> is the volume of ...",
"title": "Lung volumes"
},
{
"snippet": "Respiratory minute volume is the volume of gas inhaled (inhaled minute volume) \nor exhaled ... If both <b>tidal volume</b> (VT) and respiratory rate (ƒ or RR) are known, \nminute volume can be calculated by multiplying the two values. One must also ...",
"title": "Respiratory minute volume"
},
{
"snippet": "The rapid shallow breathing index (RSBI) is a tool that is used in the weaning of \nmechanical ventilation on intensive care units. The RSBI is defined as the ratio of \nrespiratory frequency to <b>tidal volume</b> (f/VT).",
"title": "Rapid shallow breathing index"
},
{
"snippet": "Spirometry is the most common of the pulmonary function tests (PFTs). It \nmeasures lung function, specifically the amount (volume) and/or speed ... <b>Tidal</b> \n<b>volume</b> (TV)[edit]. <b>Tidal volume</b> is the amount of air inhaled or exhaled normally \nat rest.",
"title": "Spirometry"
},
{
"snippet": "Vital capacity (VC) is the maximum amount of air a person can expel from the \nlungs after a maximum inhalation. It is equal to the sum of inspiratory reserve \nvolume, <b>tidal volume</b>, and expiratory reserve volume.",
"title": "Vital capacity"
},
{
"snippet": "Pulmonary function test (PFT) is a complete evaluation of the respiratory system \nincluding ... The lung volumes are <b>tidal volume</b> (VT), inspiratory reserve volume (\nIRV), expiratory reserve volume (ERV), and residual volume (RV). The four lung ...",
"title": "Pulmonary function testing"
},
{
"snippet": "Dead space is the volume of air that is inhaled that does not take part in the gas \nexchange, ... Example: For a <b>tidal volume</b> of 500 mL, an arterial carbon dioxide of \n42 mm Hg, and an end-expired carbon dioxide of 40 mm Hg: V alveolar dead ...",
"title": "Dead space (physiology)"
},
{
"snippet": "In medicine, the ratio of physiologic dead space over <b>tidal volume</b> (VD/VT) is a \nroutine measurement, expressing the ratio of dead-space ventilation (VD) to tidal\n ...",
"title": "VD/VT"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>tidal volume</b> is the volume expired in a single breath in a resting person. The \nvital capacity includes the <b>tidal volume</b>, as well as the inspiratory reserve ...",
"title": "Talk:Tidal volume"
}
]
},
{
"query": " books in the game of thrones series",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "A Song of Ice and Fire is a <b>series</b> of epic fantasy novels by the American novelist \nand screenwriter George R. R. Martin. He began the first volume of the <b>series</b>, A \n<b>Game of Thrones</b>, in 1991, and it ... <b>Books</b> in the A Song of Ice and Fire <b>series</b> are \nfirst published in hardcover and are later re-released as paperback editions.",
"title": "A Song of Ice and Fire"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>Game of Thrones</b> is the first novel in A Song of Ice and Fire, a <b>series</b> of fantasy \nnovels by the ... This viewpoint characterizes the <b>book</b> and is evident in the \nactions of several different families which frequently have conflicts with each \nother.",
"title": "A Game of Thrones"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Game of Thrones</b> is an American fantasy drama television <b>series</b> created by \nDavid Benioff and ... "<b>Game of Thrones</b>: how does the TV <b>series</b> compare to the \n<b>books</b>?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on June 10, 2016. Retrieved \nApril 6 ...",
"title": "Game of Thrones"
},
{
"snippet": "George Raymond Richard Martin also known as GRRM, is an American novelist \nand short story writer in the fantasy, horror, and science fiction genres, \nscreenwriter, and television producer. He wrote the <b>series</b> of epic fantasy novels, \nA Song of Ice and Fire, which was ... Fire, which was adapted into the HBO <b>series</b> \n<b>Game of Thrones</b> (2011–2019).",
"title": "George R. R. Martin"
},
{
"snippet": "The Winds of Winter is the planned sixth novel in the epic fantasy <b>series</b> A Song \nof Ice and Fire by American writer George R. R. Martin. Martin believes the last \ntwo volumes of the <b>series</b> will total over 3,000 manuscript pages. They will take \nreaders farther north than any of the previous <b>books</b>, and the ... the HBO <b>series</b> \n<b>Game of Thrones</b> (which would cover material from the <b>book</b>) ...",
"title": "The Winds of Winter"
},
{
"snippet": "The eighth and final season of the fantasy drama television <b>series Game of</b> \n<b>Thrones</b>, produced ... He explained that the ends of both the television and the \n<b>book series</b> would unavoidably be thematically similar, although Martin could still \nmake ...",
"title": "Game of Thrones (season 8)"
},
{
"snippet": "The sixth season of the fantasy drama television <b>series Game of Thrones</b> \npremiered on HBO on ... based on discussions the writers have had with George \nMartin, because the <b>series</b> has now surpassed the <b>books</b> in terms of what's \navailable.",
"title": "Game of Thrones (season 6)"
},
{
"snippet": "The fifth season of the fantasy drama television <b>series Game of Thrones</b> \npremiered on HBO on ... "<b>Game of Thrones</b> Season Five Outpaces the <b>Book</b> \n<b>Series</b>: Here's What You Need to Know". Vogue. Retrieved May 6, 2015. ^ \nAckerman, Spencer ...",
"title": "Game of Thrones (season 5)"
},
{
"snippet": "A Song of Ice and Fire, the <b>series</b> of fantasy novels by George R. R. Martin, has \nformed the ... In 2016 the parody recap <b>series</b> of <b>Game of Thrones</b>, called Gay of \nThrones was nominated for a Primetime Emmy ... The World of Ice & Fire, an \nillustrated companion <b>book</b> for A Song of Ice and Fire written by Martin, Elio M. \nGarcía ...",
"title": "Works based on A Song of Ice and Fire"
},
{
"snippet": "Fire & Blood is a fantasy <b>book</b> by American writer George R. R. Martin. It tells the \nhistory of House Targaryen, a family from his <b>series</b> A Song of Ice ... The <b>book</b> is \nto be adapted into an upcoming HBO <b>Game of Thrones</b> prequel called House of ...",
"title": "Fire & Blood (novel)"
}
]
}
] |
Box office collection of star wars the force awakens? | 4426807211816319683 | List of box office records set by Star Wars: The Force Awakens | [
"$2.068 billion"
] | [
"Star Wars: The Force Awakens"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"$936.7 million"
],
"question": "What is the box office collection of Star Wars: The Force Awakens in the United States and Canada?"
},
{
"answer": [
"$1.132 billion"
],
"question": "What is the box office collection of Star Wars: The Force Awakens in other countries except United States and Canada?"
},
{
"answer": [
"$2.068 billion"
],
"question": "What is the box office collection of Star Wars: The Force Awakens in total before adjusted for inflation?"
},
{
"answer": [
"$2.103 billion"
],
"question": "What is the box office collection of Star Wars: The Force Awakens in total after adjusted for inflation?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Box office collection of star wars the force awakens?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The figure represents the combined gross of all movies in theaters on the \nweekend of December 18–20, 2015 of which <b>The Force Awakens</b> grossed $247 \nmillion ( ...",
"title": "List of box office records set by Star Wars: The Force Awakens ..."
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Star Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b> (also known as <b>Star Wars</b>: Episode VII – The ... \nThe film broke various <b>box office</b> records and became, unadjusted for inflation, \nthe ... "'<b>Star Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b>': A <b>collection</b> of cameos and Easter eggs: \nLost ...",
"title": "Star Wars: The Force Awakens"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Star Wars</b> franchise has spawned multiple live-action and animated films. \nThe franchise ... A sequel trilogy began with Episode VII – <b>The Force Awakens</b> (\n2015), continued with ... The combined <b>box office</b> revenue of the films equates to \nover US$9 billion, and it is currently the ... Hasbro: Vintage <b>Collection</b> · \nTransformers.",
"title": "List of Star Wars films"
},
{
"snippet": "Biggest worldwide openings on record[edit]. This list charts films the 50 biggest \nworldwide ... 2015, <b>Star Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b>, $529.0 ... <b>Box office</b> between \nthe first Friday and first Sunday of release (and including Thursday previews).",
"title": "List of highest-grossing openings for films"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Box office</b> tracking had The Rise of Skywalker grossing around $205 ... for the \nholiday after <b>The Force Awakens</b>' $49.3 million in 2015.",
"title": "Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker"
},
{
"snippet": "It made $52.4 million in its third weekend, again topping the <b>box office</b>. ... <b>Star</b> \n<b>Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b> opened to $52 million two years prior and Rogue One,\n ...",
"title": "Star Wars: The Last Jedi"
},
{
"snippet": "The success of a film is assessed by trade publications primarily by its theatrical \n<b>box office</b> ... "<b>Star Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b> Destroys Opening Day <b>Box Office</b> \nRecord with $120.5M". MovieWeb. Archived from the original on May 7, 2018.",
"title": "List of fastest-grossing films"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Star Wars</b> sequel trilogy is the third trilogy of the main <b>Star Wars</b> franchise, an \nAmerican ... The first installment, <b>Star Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b>, was released \non December 18, 2015. ... The film broke opening weekend <b>box office</b> records in \nNorth America with $248 million ($39 ... Hasbro: Vintage <b>Collection</b> · \nTransformers.",
"title": "Star Wars sequel trilogy"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Box office</b> is the revenue produced by a film while in theaters. All records here \nare for the ... 3, <b>Star Wars</b>: <b>The Force Awakens</b>, December 18–20, 2015, \n$247,966,675. 4, <b>Star Wars</b>: The Last Jedi, December 15–17, 2017, \n$220,009,584.",
"title": "List of box office records in United States and Canada"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Star Wars</b> is an American epic space-opera media franchise created by George \nLucas, which ... Episode VII: <b>The Force Awakens</b> was released on December 16, \n2015, Episode VIII: The ... Episode VII was met with both critical and <b>box office</b> \nsuccess, and Episode VIII, while also ... Hasbro: Vintage <b>Collection</b> · \nTransformers.",
"title": "Star Wars"
}
]
}
] |
Where is the girl on the train set? | 6883807461134642012 | The Girl on the Train (2016 film) | [
"New York City"
] | [
"The Girl on the Train (2016 film)",
"The Girl on the Train (2013 film)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"outside London"
],
"question": "Where was the novel The Girl on the Train set?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Paris"
],
"question": "Where was the 2009 film The Girl on the Train set?"
},
{
"answer": [
"New York"
],
"question": "Where was the 2013 film The Girl on the Train set?"
},
{
"answer": [
"West Chester, NY"
],
"question": "Where was the 2016 film The Girl on the Train set?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "The girl on the train",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2016 American mystery thriller drama film directed by \nTate Taylor and written by Erin Cressida Wilson, based on British author Paula ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2016 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2015 psychological thriller novel by British author Paula \nHawkins that gives narratives from three different women about relationship ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (novel)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on The Train</b> is an upcoming Indian Hindi-language mystery thriller film \ndirected by Ribhu Dasgupta and produced under the banner of Reliance ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2020 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> may refer to: <b>The Girl on the Train</b> (novel), a 2015 novel by \nPaula Hawkins. <b>The Girl on the Train</b> (2016 film), an American film based on the ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2013 American independent thriller film directed and \nwritten by Larry Brand, and produced by James Carpenter, Rebecca Reynolds, ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2013 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2009 French drama film directed by André Téchiné, \nstarring Emilie Dequenne, Catherine Deneuve and Michel Blanc. The plot \ncenters ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2009 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Lady on a Train is a 1945 American film noir crime film directed by Charles David \nand starring ... It is possible with all the similarities that this film may have inspired \nthe writing of <b>The Girl on the Train</b>, although that has never been addressed to ...",
"title": "Lady on a Train"
},
{
"snippet": "Paula Hawkins (born 26 August 1972) is a Zimbabwe-born British author, best \nknown for her best-selling psychological thriller novel <b>The Girl on the Train</b> (2015\n) ...",
"title": "Paula Hawkins (author)"
},
{
"snippet": "Die geschiedene Frau (<b>The</b> Divorcée), is an operetta in three acts by Leo Fall \nwith <b>a</b> libretto by ... <b>The</b> 1910 English adaptation, <b>The Girl</b> in <b>the Train</b>, was \nproduced in two acts by George Edwardes at <b>the</b> Vaudeville Theatre in London, \nwith lyrics ...",
"title": "Die geschiedene Frau"
},
{
"snippet": "Actress Emily Blunt has received numerous awards and nominations for her work \nin film. ... Devil Wears Prada, Nominated. 2009, British Artist of the Year, N/A, \nWon. 2017, Best Actress in a Leading Role · <b>The Girl On The Train</b>, Nominated ...",
"title": "List of awards and nominations received by Emily Blunt"
}
]
},
{
"query": "The girl on the train 2014",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2013 American independent thriller film directed and \nwritten by Larry ... In November 2013, Monterey Media bought the United States \ndistribution rights to the film, and they released the film in the United States in \n<b>2014</b>.",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2013 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2016 American mystery thriller drama film directed by \nTate Taylor and ... The film was expected to play like the similarly themed Gone \nGirl, which opened to $37.5 million in October <b>2014</b>, although that film had more\n ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2016 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2015 psychological thriller novel by British author Paula \nHawkins that ... The film rights were acquired before the book was even \npublished, in <b>2014</b>, by DreamWorks Pictures for Marc Platt Productions. The \nAmerican ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (novel)"
},
{
"snippet": "Tate Taylor (born June 3, 1969) is an American filmmaker and actor. He is best \nknown for directing The Help (2011), Get on Up (<b>2014</b>), and <b>The Girl on the Train</b>\n ...",
"title": "Tate Taylor"
},
{
"snippet": "... The Hole (2009), Kaboom (2010), The Equalizer (<b>2014</b>), Kristy (<b>2014</b>), \nHardcore Henry (2015), The Magnificent Seven (2016), <b>The Girl on the Train</b> (\n2016), ...",
"title": "Haley Bennett"
},
{
"snippet": "Allison Brooks Janney (born November 19, 1959) is an American actress. A \nhighly prolific ... In <b>2014</b>, she won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding \nGuest Actress in a Drama Series for her role as Margaret ... Home for Peculiar \nChildren, and portrayed a homicide detective in the mystery thriller <b>The Girl on</b> \n<b>the Train</b>.",
"title": "Allison Janney"
},
{
"snippet": "Emily Olivia Leah Blunt (born 23 February 1983) is a British-American actress. \nShe is the ... In <b>2014</b>, Blunt starred opposite Tom Cruise in Edge of Tomorrow, a \nfilm ... Blunt then headlined the mystery thriller <b>The Girl on the Train</b>, directed by ...",
"title": "Emily Blunt"
},
{
"snippet": "Clare Corbett is an English actress and voiceover artist, and is a winner (2000) of \na Carleton ... Investigation (Book 6) (<b>2014</b>); Shopaholic to the Stars (<b>2014</b>); <b>The</b> \n<b>Girl on the Train</b> (2015); The Ghost Fields: A Ruth Galloway Investigation (Book ...",
"title": "Clare Corbett"
},
{
"snippet": "Years active, <b>2014</b>–present. Labels, Wax Records / Universal Music. Website, \nhttp://www.blitzberlinmusic.com/. Members, Martin Macphail Dean Rode Tristan \nTarr. Past members, Casey Benson. Blitz//Berlin is a Canadian trio of composers \nbased in Los Angeles, California. They are known ... song "Surfboard Fire" \ncomposed for the official trailer for <b>The Girl on the Train</b>, ...",
"title": "Blitz//Berlin"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Girl on the Train</b> is a 2009 French drama film directed by André Téchiné, \nstarring Emilie ... Witnesses (2007); <b>The Girl on the Train</b> (2009); Unforgivable (\n2011); In the Name of My Daughter (<b>2014</b>); Being 17 (2016); Golden Years (2017\n) ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2009 film)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Where is the girl on the train set?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Girl on the Train</b> is a 2016 American mystery thriller drama film directed by \nTate Taylor and ... "On the <b>Set</b> for 11/6/15: Emily Blunt and Luke Evans Start '<b>Girl</b> \n<b>on the Train</b>', Brad Pitt Wraps 'Lost City of Z'". ssninsider.com. November 6, 2015.",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2016 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "The film rights for the novel were acquired in March 2014 by DreamWorks \nPictures and Marc Platt Productions, with Jared Leboff (a producer at Marc Platt) \n<b>set</b> to ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (novel)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Girl on The Train</b> is an upcoming Indian Hindi-language mystery thriller film \ndirected by ... Films based on thriller novels · Films <b>set</b> on trains · Films shot in \nEngland · Hindi remakes of English films · Indian films · Indian mystery thriller \nfilms ...",
"title": "The Girl on the Train (2020 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of films <b>set</b> on trains. List[edit]. Title, Year. 3 for Bedroom C, 1952. \nThe 15:17 to ... List of films set on trains ... Train, 1941. The <b>Girl on the Train</b>, 2016\n.",
"title": "List of films set on trains"
},
{
"snippet": "Lady on a <b>Train</b> is a 1945 American film noir crime film directed by Charles David \nand starring Deanna Durbin, Ralph Bellamy, and David Bruce. Based on a story \nby Leslie Charteris, the film is about a <b>woman</b> who witnesses a murder in a \nnearby building from her <b>train</b> window. ... Films <b>set</b> on <b>trains</b> · Films scored by \nMiklós Rózsa · 1940s crime comedy films ...",
"title": "Lady on a Train"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Girl</b> on the Bridge is a 1999 French drama film shot in black and white and \ndirected by Patrice ... Love Street · The Man on the <b>Train</b> · Intimate Strangers · \nDogora: Ouvrons les yeux · Les Bronzés 3 : Amis pour la ... Films <b>set</b> in France · \nFilms <b>set</b> in Monaco · Films <b>set</b> in Paris · Films <b>set</b> in Italy · Films <b>set</b> in Istanbul · \nFilms <b>set</b> ...",
"title": "Girl on the Bridge"
},
{
"snippet": "Millennium is a series of best-selling and award-winning Swedish crime novels, \ncreated by journalist Stieg Larsson. The two primary characters in the saga are \nLisbeth Salander, a <b>woman</b> in her ... In them Larsson wrote "The plot is <b>set</b> 120 \nkilometres north of Sachs Harbour, at Banks Island in the month of September .",
"title": "Millennium (novel series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Strangers on a <b>Train</b> is a 1951 American psychological thriller film noir produced \nand directed ... This triggers a flashback and he actually starts to strangle the \n<b>woman</b> before blacking out. ... moving toward a <b>train</b> — carries a gruff bass motif \n<b>set</b> against Gershwin-like riffs, a two-part medley called "Strangers" and "Walking\n" ...",
"title": "Strangers on a Train (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "... different <b>set</b> of characters, as they try to find a way to leave the <b>train</b>. The first \nseason, retroactively titled The Perennial Child, follows a young <b>girl</b> named Tulip\n ...",
"title": "Infinity Train"
},
{
"snippet": "The Polar Express is a 2004 American computer-animated adventure film based \non the 1985 ... When the know-it-all claims the conductor will throw the <b>girl from</b> \n<b>the train</b>, the boy recovers the ticket and dashes to ... Within the game, the \nEbenezer Scrooge puppet—who is <b>set</b> as the main antagonist of the game—\nattempts to ...",
"title": "The Polar Express (film)"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote 50 ways to leave your lover? | 3129235235303130512 | 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover | [
"Paul Simon"
] | [
"50 Ways to Leave Your Lover"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Paul Frederic Simon",
"Paul Simon"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "50 ways to leave your lover",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Paul \nSimon. It was the second single from his fourth studio album, Still Crazy After ...",
"title": "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover"
},
{
"snippet": ""50 Ways to Say Goodbye" is a song by American pop rock band Train. It is the \nsecond single ... The song had some inspiration from Paul Simon's "<b>50 Ways to</b> \n<b>Leave Your Lover</b>" and was originally going to be titled "50 Ways to Kill Your \nLover".",
"title": "50 Ways to Say Goodbye"
},
{
"snippet": "Nice to Be Around is a 1977 album by Rosemary Clooney. Contents. 1 Track \nlisting; 2 Personnel. 2.1 Performance. 3 References. Track listing[edit]. "You" (\nRandy Edelman) – 4:15; "<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>" (Paul Simon) ...",
"title": "Nice to Be Around (Rosemary Clooney album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Undercovers (often misspelled Undercover) is an album of cover songs released \nby melodic ... "<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>" – 4:42 (originally performed by Paul \nSimon); "Terrible Lie" – 4:24 (originally performed by Nine Inch Nails); "Take ...",
"title": "Undercovers (Trixter album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Paul Simon – vocals, acoustic guitar on "My Little Town", "I Do it For Your Love", "\n<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>" and "You're Kind", electric guitar on "Night ...",
"title": "Still Crazy After All These Years"
},
{
"snippet": "Sonny Curtis (born May 9, 1937) is an American singer and songwriter. Most of \nhis work falls ... Curtis did leave the band several times to pursue his solo career \nbut even during those periods made ... b/w "<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>", 70, —\n.",
"title": "Sonny Curtis"
},
{
"snippet": "The Backyard Sessions are two series of music videos released by Miley Cyrus \non YouTube in ... In two videos posted on May 19, Cyrus performed covers of "\nHappy Together" by The Turtles, and Paul Simon's "<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>\n".",
"title": "Backyard Sessions"
},
{
"snippet": "These are the singles the reached number one on the Cash Box Top 100 chart \nduring 1976. ... February 14, "<b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b>", Paul Simon.",
"title": "List of Cash Box Top 100 number-one singles of 1976"
},
{
"snippet": "Tok Tok Tok was a German acoustic soul band, active between 1998 and 2013. \n... 1998: This Can't Be Love (CD); 1999: <b>50 Ways to Leave Your Lover</b> (CD) ...",
"title": "Tok Tok Tok"
},
{
"snippet": "Their covers of Sade's "Cherish The Day" in 2004, and Paul Simon's "<b>50 Ways to</b> \n<b>Leave Your Lover</b>" (also the name of their debut album) in 2005, became hits ...",
"title": "Plummet (group)"
}
]
}
] |
Who played conan's mother in conan the barbarian? | 2851985740934087474 | Conan the Barbarian (1982 film) | [
"Nadiuska"
] | [
"Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)",
"Conan the Barbarian (2011 film)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Nadiuska"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who played conan's mother in conan the barbarian?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Conan the Barbarian</b> is a 1982 American epic sword and sorcery film directed \nand co-written by ... She dies in <b>Conan's</b> arms, acknowledging the price of the "\ntoll" forewarned by the wizard in exchange for <b>Conan's</b> ... Osric's daughter, Jorge \nSanz acted as the nine-year-old version of Conan, and Nadiuska <b>played</b> his \n<b>mother</b>.",
"title": "Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Conan the Barbarian</b> is a fictional sword and sorcery hero who originated in pulp \nmagazines ... A conspicuous element of <b>Conan's</b> character is his chivalry. He is ... \nThe character of Conan was <b>played</b> by Arnold Schwarzenegger and was his ...",
"title": "Conan the Barbarian"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Conan the Barbarian</b> is a 2011 American sword and sorcery film based on the \ncharacter of the ... Tamara rescues him and they return to <b>Conan's</b> ship, where \nhis friend Artus helps ... She is presumed to have inherited her powers from her \n<b>mother</b> Maliva. ... She <b>plays</b> Marique, the daughter of Khalar Zym (Stephen Lang)\n.",
"title": "Conan the Barbarian (2011 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Nadiuska is a retired German-born model and actress who became a well-known \ncelebrity in ... 1981, Las siete cucas, Julita. 1982, <b>Conan the Barbarian</b>, <b>Conan's</b> \n<b>Mother</b> ... This article about a Spanish <b>actor</b> or actress is a stub. You can help ...",
"title": "Nadiuska"
},
{
"snippet": "Conan the Adventurer is an American-French-Canadian animated television \nseries adaptation of <b>Conan the Barbarian</b>, the literary character created by \nRobert E. ... This first incarnation of Conan in cartoon form <b>performed</b> much better \nthan its ... <b>Conan's</b> father told Wrath-Amon that he had sold all of the Star Metal, \nbut the ...",
"title": "Conan the Adventurer (1992 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Sandahl Bergman (born November 14, 1951) is an American actress. She is best \nknown for her role in the film <b>Conan the Barbarian</b> (1982), for which she won a ...",
"title": "Sandahl Bergman"
},
{
"snippet": "Valeria is a pirate and adventuress in the fictional universe of Robert E. Howard's \n<b>Conan the</b> ... The name was also used for <b>Conan's</b> love interest in the 1982 film \n<b>Conan the Barbarian</b>. ... Valeria had a major role in the 1982 movie <b>Conan the</b> \n<b>Barbarian</b>, where she was <b>played</b> by Sandahl Bergman, although the character ...",
"title": "Valeria (Conan the Barbarian)"
},
{
"snippet": "Conan the Savage is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter \nfeaturing Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero <b>Conan the Barbarian</b>. ... as \nher <b>mother</b> is raped and killed by mercenaries in the service of Typhas, the king \nof Brythunia ... There is a reference to <b>Conan's</b> time spent with raiding with the \nVanir.",
"title": "Conan the Savage"
},
{
"snippet": "Red Sonja is a 1985 Dutch-American sword and sorcery action film directed by \nRichard ... Meyer as Red Sonja's father; Francesca Romana Coluzzi as Red \nSonja's <b>mother</b>; Stefano Maria Mioni as Barlok (Red Sonja's brother) ... In <b>Conan</b> \n<b>the Barbarian</b>, Sandahl Bergman <b>played</b> Valeria, a thief and the love of <b>Conan's</b> \nlife.",
"title": "Red Sonja (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Conan</b> and the Young Warriors is a 1994 television animated series produced by \nSunbow ... Aside from <b>Conan's</b> character design, which is identical to the one in \n<b>Conan</b> the Adventurer, this series has a ... In 2009, Topless Robot featured the "\nCartoon <b>Conan</b>" from this show on the list of "The 8 Dumbest <b>Barbarian</b> Heroes".",
"title": "Conan and the Young Warriors"
}
]
}
] |
An external cost or external benefit is also known as? | 3540600415751443287 | Externality | [
"spillover effects"
] | [
"Social cost",
"Externality"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"externality"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "external cost or external benefit",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "In economics, an externality is the cost or <b>benefit</b> that affects a third party who did \nnot choose to ... If <b>external costs</b> exist, such as pollution, the producer may \nchoose to produce more of the product than would be produced if the producer \nwere ...",
"title": "Externality"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Social cost</b> in neoclassical economics is the sum of the <b>private costs</b> resulting \nfrom a transaction and the costs imposed on the consumers as a consequence of \nbeing exposed to the transaction for which they are not compensated or charged. \nIn other words, it is the sum of personal and <b>external costs</b>. ... Quantification of \n<b>social costs</b>, for damages or <b>benefits</b> in the future resulting ...",
"title": "Social cost"
},
{
"snippet": "Nevertheless, in the majority of western nations, the <b>external costs</b> of driving, are \nnot covered totally either by taxes, or by any kind of car usage limitation. Traffic ...",
"title": "Externalities of automobiles"
},
{
"snippet": "Compared to other popular modes of passenger transportation, the car has a \nrelatively high ... The <b>benefits</b> of using a car differ by many factors, in regard to \nlocation and culture. ... The <b>external costs</b> of automobiles, as similarly other \neconomic externalities, are the measurable costs for other parties except the car \nproprietor, ...",
"title": "Economics of car use"
},
{
"snippet": "In production, research, retail, and accounting, a cost is the value of money that \nhas been used ... <b>External costs</b> (also called externalities), in contrast, are the \ncosts that people other than the buyer are forced to pay as a result of the \ntransaction. ... assess whether revenues/<b>benefits</b> will cover costs (see cost-\n<b>benefit</b> analysis).",
"title": "Cost"
},
{
"snippet": "Search <b>costs</b> are one facet of transaction <b>costs</b> or switching <b>costs</b>. ... a better \nproduct or service until the marginal <b>cost</b> of searching exceeds the marginal \n<b>benefit</b>. ... The <b>costs</b> of searching are divided into <b>external</b> and internal <b>costs</b> (\nSmith et al.",
"title": "Search cost"
},
{
"snippet": "These solutions can occur because the positive <b>external benefits</b> are clearly \nidentified and we assume that 1) transaction <b>costs</b> are low; 2) property rights are\n ...",
"title": "Coase theorem"
},
{
"snippet": "29 (S2): 931–952. doi:10.1086/468100. <b>External</b> links[edit]. <b>Benefit</b>– ...",
"title": "Cost–benefit analysis"
},
{
"snippet": "The discount rate is considered as a critical element in <b>cost</b>-<b>benefit</b> analysis \nwhen the <b>costs</b> and the <b>benefits</b> differ in ...",
"title": "Social discount rate"
},
{
"snippet": "In the social sciences, the free-rider problem is a type of market failure that occurs \nwhen those ... Free-riding is experienced when the production of goods does not \nconsider the <b>external costs</b>, particularly the use of ecosystem services. \nEconomists ... In this case, they are equivalent to the private marginal <b>benefits</b> \nand costs.",
"title": "Free-rider problem"
}
]
}
] |
Canadas oldest national park located in the rocky mountains? | 6720404321434937899 | Banff National Park | [
"Banff National Park"
] | [
"List of National Parks of Canada"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Banff National Park",
"Banff"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Canadas national park",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Canada's National Parks are protected areas under the <b>Canada National Parks</b> \nAct, owned by the Government of Canada and administered for the benefit, ...",
"title": "List of National Parks of Canada"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>National Parks</b> of <b>Canada</b> are protected natural spaces throughout the country \nthat represent distinct geographical regions of the nation. Under the ...",
"title": "National Parks of Canada"
},
{
"snippet": "Banff <b>National Park</b> (French: Parc national Banff) is <b>Canada</b>'s oldest <b>national park</b> \nand was established in 1885. Located in Rocky Mountains of Alberta, ...",
"title": "Banff National Park"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Canada National Parks</b> Act is a Canadian federal law that regulates \nprotection of natural areas of national significance. As of March 2019, the \nCanada ...",
"title": "Canada National Parks Act"
},
{
"snippet": "Parks <b>Canada</b>, is an agency of the Government of <b>Canada</b> run by a chief \nexecutive who ... Parks <b>Canada</b> manages 38 <b>National Parks</b>, three National \nMarine ...",
"title": "Parks Canada"
},
{
"snippet": "Grasslands National Park is a <b>Canadian national park</b> located near the village of \nVal Marie, Saskatchewan, and one of 44 national parks and park reserves in ...",
"title": "Grasslands National Park"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>National</b> Historic Sites of <b>Canada</b> are places that have been designated by the \nfederal Minister of the Environment on the advice of the Historic Sites and \nMonuments Board of <b>Canada</b> (HSMBC), as being of <b>national</b> historic significance\n. <b>Parks Canada</b>, a federal agency, manages the <b>National</b> Historic Sites ...",
"title": "National Historic Sites of Canada"
},
{
"snippet": "Glacier <b>National Park</b> is part of a system of 43 parks and park reserves across \n<b>Canada</b>, and one of seven <b>national parks</b> in British Columbia. Established in \n1886 ...",
"title": "Glacier National Park (Canada)"
},
{
"snippet": "Wood Buffalo <b>National Park</b> is the largest <b>National Park</b> of <b>Canada</b> at 44,807 km<sup>2</sup> \n(17,300 sq mi). It is located in northeastern Alberta and the southern Northwest ...",
"title": "Wood Buffalo National Park"
},
{
"snippet": "Buffalo <b>National Park</b> was created near the town of Wainwright in east central \nAlberta on June 5, 1909. It was closed in 1940 and delisted in 1947 when the \nland was transferred to the Department of National Defence. The 583 km<sup>2</sup> (225 \nsq mi) park land now comprises the majority of <b>Canadian</b> ...",
"title": "Buffalo National Park"
}
]
}
] |
Who played peter parker in the first spider man? | -7599663597240725617 | Spider-Man (2002 film) | [
"Tobey Maguire"
] | [
"Spider-Man in film",
"Spider-Man"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Nicholas Hammond"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "spider man",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b> is a fictional superhero created by writer-editor Stan Lee and writer-\nartist Steve Ditko. He first appeared in the anthology comic book Amazing ...",
"title": "Spider-Man"
},
{
"snippet": "The fictional character <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>, a comic book superhero created by Stan Lee \nand Steve Ditko and featured in Marvel Comics publications, has appeared as ...",
"title": "Spider-Man in film"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b> is a 2002 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics \ncharacter of the same name. Directed by Sam Raimi from a screenplay by David\n ...",
"title": "Spider-Man (2002 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "The film required up to 140 animators, the largest crew used by Sony Pictures \nAnimation. The film was dedicated to the memories of the creators of <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>,\n ...",
"title": "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse"
},
{
"snippet": "Marvel's <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b> is a 2018 action-adventure game developed by Insomniac \nGames and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment. Based on the Marvel ...",
"title": "Spider-Man (2018 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b> is an animated television series in the superhero fiction genre. It was \nthe original animated TV series based on the <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b> comic book series ...",
"title": "Spider-Man (1967 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>, also known as <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>: The Animated Series is an American \nanimated television series based on the Marvel Comics superhero of the same ...",
"title": "Spider-Man (1994 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "In February 2015, Marvel Studios and Sony reached a deal to share the \ncharacter rights of <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>, integrating the character into the established \nMCU. The ...",
"title": "Spider-Man: Homecoming"
},
{
"snippet": "Feige stated that Marvel and Sony were "just starting to solidify our plans" for the \nfilm, and felt <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man's</b> appearances in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: ...",
"title": "Spider-Man: Far From Home"
},
{
"snippet": "For the Logic song, see Black <b>Spiderman</b>. For the Peter Parker <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>, see \n<b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>. Fictional character in Marvel Comics. <b>Spider</b>-<b>Man</b>.",
"title": "Miles Morales"
}
]
}
] |
What was the number one song on august 3 1984? | -6357015709702983334 | List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1984 | [
"`` When Doves Cry ''"
] | [
"List of number-one singles from the 1980s (New Zealand)",
"List of number-one R&B singles of 1984 (U.S.)",
"List of Dutch Top 40 number-one singles of 1984",
"List of number-one singles of 1984 (Canada)",
"List of number-one hits of 1984 (Germany)",
"List of Hot Country Singles number ones of 1984",
"List of UK Singles Chart number ones of the 1980s",
"List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1984",
"List of Cash Box Top 100 number-one singles of 1984"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"When Doves Cry"
],
"question": "What was the number one Cash box Top 100 song on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"When Doves Cry"
],
"question": "What was the number one Billboard Hot 100 song on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sister Christian"
],
"question": "What was the number one song in Canada on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Angel in Disguise"
],
"question": "What was the number one Hot country singles song on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go"
],
"question": "What was the number one dutch song on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Two Tribes"
],
"question": "What was the number one uk singles song on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"One Love/People Get Ready"
],
"question": "What was the number one song in new zealand on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"When Doves Cry"
],
"question": "What was the number one R&B song on august 3 1984?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Two Tribes"
],
"question": "What was the number one song in Germany on august 3 1984?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "What was the number one song on august 3 1984?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "This is <b>a</b> list of <b>singles</b> that reached <b>number one</b> on the Cash Box Top 100 \n<b>Singles</b> chart in ... <b>August</b> 18. <b>August</b> 25, "What's Love Got to Do with It", Tina \nTurner. September <b>1</b>. September 8. September 15 ... November <b>3</b>. November 10, \n"Purple ...",
"title": "List of Cash Box Top 100 number-one singles of 1984"
},
{
"snippet": "These are the Billboard Hot 100 <b>number one hits</b> of <b>1984</b>. Overall, Prince spent \nthe most weeks ... to Do with It". Turner was 44 when the song spent <b>three</b> weeks \nat the top, at the time making her the oldest female solo artist to top the US Hot \n100. ... <b>August</b> 25. 554, September 1, "What's Love Got to Do with It", Tina Turner.",
"title": "List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1984"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of the weekly Canadian RPM magazine Top Singles <b>number</b>-<b>one</b> \n<b>singles</b> of <b>1984</b>. Key. dagger Indicates best-performing single of <b>1984</b>. Contents. \n1 Chart history; 2 Notes; <b>3</b> See also; 4 References; 5 External links ... Library and \nArchives Canada. Retrieved 2 April 2019. ^ "RPM 100 Singles – <b>August</b> 11, <b>1984</b>\n".",
"title": "List of number-one singles of 1984 (Canada)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>One</b> is playing <b>a</b> violin, <b>three</b>. Having been active since the 1960s, the Nitty Gritty \nDirt Band achieved its first <b>number one single</b> in <b>1984</b>. Hot Country <b>Songs</b> is <b>a</b> \nchart that ranks the top-performing country <b>music songs</b> in the United ... Retrieved \nFebruary 27, 2018. ^ "Hot Country <b>Songs</b> chart for <b>August</b> 11, <b>1984</b>". Billboard.",
"title": "List of Hot Country Singles number ones of 1984"
},
{
"snippet": "These <b>hits</b> topped the Dutch Top 40 in <b>1984</b>. Issue Date, <b>Song</b>, Artist(s), \nReference. 7 January ... 18 <b>August</b>. 25 <b>August</b>, "Smalltown Boy", Bronski Beat. <b>1</b> \nSeptember. 8 September ... <b>1984</b> in <b>music</b> ... "De Nederlandse Top 40, week <b>3</b>, \n<b>1984</b>".",
"title": "List of Dutch Top 40 number-one singles of 1984"
},
{
"snippet": "During the 1980s, Michael Jackson had <b>number</b>-<b>one singles</b> with ... Frankie Goes \nto Hollywood had <b>three</b> consecutive singles reach number one, of which two, ... \n1970s; 1980; 1981; 1982; 1983; <b>1984</b>; 1985; 1986; 1987 ... 463, ABBA, "The \nWinner Takes It All", 9 <b>August</b> 1980, 2.",
"title": "List of UK Singles Chart number ones of the 1980s"
},
{
"snippet": "Lipps Inc. "Funkytown", <b>1</b> week. 20 July, Ritz, "Locomotion", 7 weeks. 27 July. <b>3</b> \n<b>August</b>.",
"title": "List of number-one singles from the 1980s (New Zealand)"
},
{
"snippet": "5 <b>August</b> – Now <b>3</b> becomes the 300th album to reach <b>number one</b> on the UK \nAlbums Chart. 23 October – <b>A</b> report on the ...",
"title": "1984 in British music"
},
{
"snippet": "These are the Billboard magazine R&B singles chart <b>number one hits</b> of <b>1984</b>: \nSee also: <b>1984</b> ... March <b>3</b>, "Somebody's Watching Me", Rockwell. March 10 ... \n<b>August</b> 18. <b>August</b> 25, "Ghostbusters", Ray Parker, Jr. September 1. September 8\n ...",
"title": "List of number-one R&B singles of 1984 (U.S.)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is <b>a</b> list of the German Media Control Top100 <b>Singles</b> Chart <b>number</b>-ones of \n<b>1984</b>. ... 13 <b>August</b>. 20 <b>August</b>. 27 <b>August</b>. <b>3</b> September, "Reach Out", Giorgio \nMoroder. 10 September. 17 September. 24 September. <b>1</b> October, "I Just Called \nto ...",
"title": "List of number-one hits of 1984 (Germany)"
}
]
}
] |
Top of the lake series 2 how many episodes? | -1203900231472254302 | Top of the Lake | [
"6"
] | [
"Top of the Lake"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"6"
],
"question": "Top of the lake series 2 how many episodes as of August 31, 2017?"
},
{
"answer": [
"5"
],
"question": "Top of the lake series 2 how many episodes as of August 24, 2017?"
},
{
"answer": [
"4"
],
"question": "Top of the lake series 2 how many episodes as of August 17, 2017?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Top of the lake",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Top of the Lake</b> is a mystery drama television series created and written by Jane \nCampion and Gerard Lee, and directed by Campion and Garth Davis. It aired in ...",
"title": "Top of the Lake"
},
{
"snippet": "Georgina Kristine Noe Kingsley most commonly known by her stage name \nGeorgi Kay, is an ... 2012, Kay played the role of Melissa in the Jane Campion \ndirected television miniseries, <b>Top of the Lake</b>, filmed in Otago, New Zealand.",
"title": "Georgi Kay"
},
{
"snippet": "Lake stratification is the separation of lakes into three layers: Epilimnion: the <b>top</b> \n<b>of the lake</b>. Metalimnion (or thermocline): the middle layer, which may change ...",
"title": "Lake stratification"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Michael Wright (born 22 June 1983) is an Australian actor, writer, \ndirector and producer. He is the director of the feature film Acute Misfortune and \nthe co-founder and director of theatre company Black Lung. As an actor he came \nto attention in Jane Campion's series <b>Top of the Lake</b>, ...",
"title": "Tom Wright (Australian actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Top Of The Lake</b>: China Girl, also directed by Campion, premiered at the Cannes \nFilm Festival 2017. Starring Elisabeth Moss who reprises her role as Detective ...",
"title": "See-Saw Films"
},
{
"snippet": "Gwendoline Tracey Philippa Christie (born 28 October 1978) is an English \nactress. She is best ... In 2017, Christie had a main role in China Girl, the second \nseason of <b>Top of the Lake</b>, as Miranda Hilmarson, a Constable in the Sydney \nPolice ...",
"title": "Gwendoline Christie"
},
{
"snippet": "An Olszewski tube is a pipe designed to bring oxygen-poor water from the bottom \nof a <b>lake</b> to the <b>top</b>. This tube was first proposed by a Polish limnologist named ...",
"title": "Olszewski tube"
},
{
"snippet": "In television, Mullan appeared in Gerard Lee's and Jane Campion's acclaimed \nminiseries <b>Top of the Lake</b> as Matt Mitcham, head of the Mitcham family and ...",
"title": "Peter Mullan"
},
{
"snippet": "This is the origin of the local term "<b>top</b> of <b>Lake</b>," which refers to the northernmost \nneighborhoods. In the days of the Red Car in Altadena (1902–1941), <b>Lake</b> \nAvenue ...",
"title": "Lake Avenue (Pasadena)"
},
{
"snippet": "The second season of <b>Top of the Lake</b>, consisting of six episodes, premiered at \nthe Cannes Film Festival in May 2017 which is set in Sydney, Australia. That \nsame ...",
"title": "Elisabeth Moss"
}
]
}
] |
Subsets and Splits
No saved queries yet
Save your SQL queries to embed, download, and access them later. Queries will appear here once saved.