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2hop__597604_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Honey bee life cycle",
"paragraph_text": "Unlike a bumble bee colony or a paper wasp colony, the life of a honey bee colony is perennial. The three types of honey bees in a hive are: queens (egg - producers), workers (non-reproducing females), and drones (males whose main duty is to find and mate with a queen). Honey bees hatch from eggs in three to four days. They are then fed by worker bees and develop through several stages in the cells. Cells are capped by worker bees when the larva pupates. Queens and drones are larger than workers, so require larger cells to develop. A colony may typically consist of tens of thousands of individuals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Time for Loving",
"paragraph_text": "Time for Loving (released in Italy as Sapore di mare) is a 1983 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Vanzina. It obtained a great commercial success and launched a short-living subgenre of revival-nostalgic comedy films. It also generated a sequel, \"Sapore di mare 2 - Un anno dopo\". For her performance in this film Virna Lisi won a David di Donatello for Best Supporting Actress and a Silver Ribbon in the same category.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "King Bee (album)",
"paragraph_text": "King Bee is the fourteenth and final studio album by blues singer and guitarist Muddy Waters. Released in 1981, it is third in a series of records done for the label Blue Sky Records under producer/guitarist Johnny Winter. Recorded in three days (and in the wake of Muddy's failing health) some of the band members, namely Winter and guitarist Bob Margolin, were not happy with the result. As his health deteriorated, Muddy was forced to cancel an increasing number of shows. He died of a heart attack on April 30, 1983.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Bee Gees",
"paragraph_text": "When it, too, failed to attract much interest, Mardin encouraged them to work within the soul music style. The brothers attempted to assemble a live stage band that could replicate their studio sound. Lead guitarist Alan Kendall had come on board in 1971 but did not have much to do until Mr. Natural. For that album, they added drummer Dennis Bryon, and they later added ex-Strawbs keyboard player Blue Weaver, completing the Bee Gees band that lasted through the late '70s. Maurice, who had previously performed on piano, guitar, harpsichord, electric piano, organ, mellotron and bass guitar, as well as mandolin and Moog synthesiser, by then confined himself to bass onstage.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "The Last Hunter",
"paragraph_text": "The Last Hunter () is a 1980 Italian \"macaroni combat\" war film directed by Antonio Margheriti and starring David Warbeck and Tony King. Initially made to capitalize on the success of \"The Deer Hunter\", \"The Last Hunter\" marked the first Euro War set during the Vietnam War, as opposed to World War II like all previous entries in the subgenre.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Genius Loves Company",
"paragraph_text": "Genius Loves Company is the final studio album by rhythm and blues and soul musician Ray Charles, posthumously released August 31, 2004, on Concord Records. Recording sessions for the album took place between June 2003 and March 2004. The album consists of rhythm and blues, soul, country, blues, jazz and pop standards performed by Charles and several guest musicians, such as Natalie Cole, Elton John, James Taylor, Norah Jones, B.B. King, Gladys Knight, Diana Krall, Van Morrison, Willie Nelson and Bonnie Raitt. \"Genius Loves Company\" was the last album recorded and completed by Charles before his death in June 2004.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "The Birds and the Bees (Jewel Akens song)",
"paragraph_text": "``The Birds and the Bees ''was a 1964 single release by Jewel Akens with a lyric based on the`` birds and the bees'' idiom commonly referenced with regard to affording young people their introductory sex education. An international hit in 1965, ``The Birds and the Bees ''was reminiscent of such 1950s' honky tonk - style hits as`` Blueberry Hill'' by Fats Domino and ``Kansas City ''by Wilbert Harrison.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Bee Movie",
"paragraph_text": "Bee Movie opened on November 2, 2007. Upon release, the film was met with mixed reviews, with primary criticism directed at the film's premise. While domestic box office performance failed to recoup its $150 million budget, it ultimately saw worldwide box office performance of $287.6 million and Domestic Video Sales of $92.7 million.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Edward M. Barrows",
"paragraph_text": "Edward M. Barrows (born August 8, 1946, in Detroit, Michigan) is a biologist who earned his BS in Botany and Zoology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1968, and his PhD in entomology, mentored by Charles Duncan Michener, at the University of Kansas, Lawrence in 1975. Further, he is a retired U.S. Army officer. He has had a lifetime interest in nature, science, and art. He performed research on bee nesting, predation, and reproductive behavior, for example, finding that female \"Lasioglossum zephyrum\" sweat bees have individual odors perceived by conspecific males. This was evidently the first discovery of invertebrate individual odors, as opposed to group or nest odors. He later found that males of the \"Xylocopa virginica virginica\" (large carpenter bee) have highly complex mate searching and mate-acquisition behaviors, perhaps more complicated that any other bee species and many other animal species. Students and he studied feeding behavior and recovery from injuries in \"Mimus polyglottos\" (northern mockingbirds). With students and established scientists, he studied or is studying arthropod community structure in a rare, freshwater, tidal, marsh, and associated habitats, evolution of floral display in \"Asclepias syriaca\" (common milkweed), parasitization and reproductive behavior of chalcidoid wasps, floral associates of rare plants, and other topics. His research in scientific communication led to the book \"Animal Desk Reference, A Dictionary of Animal Behavior, Ecology, and Evolution\" (3rd edition). His current research laboratory, the Laboratory of Entomology and Biodiversity, is in the Heyden Observatory of Georgetown University.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Billy Don't Be a Hero",
"paragraph_text": "Because the song was released in 1974, it was associated by some listeners with the Vietnam War, though the war to which it actually refers is never identified in the lyrics. It has been suggested that the drum pattern, references to a marching band leading soldiers in blue, and ``riding out ''(cavalry) refer to the American Civil War. However the drum beat and cavalry`` riding out'' is not specific to the American Civil War, and blue uniforms were common in the 19th century. That being said, Paper Lace themselves performed the song on Top of the Pops wearing Union - style uniforms, as can be seen on Youtube.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "The Chronic",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Chronic\" peaked at number three on the \"Billboard\" 200 and has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America with sales of 5.7 million copies in the United States, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. Dr. Dre's production has been noted for popularizing the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap. \"The Chronic\" has been widely regarded as one of the most important and influential albums of the 1990s and regarded by many fans and peers to be one of the most well-produced hip hop albums of all time. \"The Chronic\" was ranked at #138 on \"Rolling Stone\"'s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Wayne King",
"paragraph_text": "Wayne King (February 16, 1901 – July 16, 1985) was an American musician, songwriter, singer and orchestra leader with a long association with both NBC And CBS. He was sometimes referred to as the Waltz King because much of his most popular music involved waltzes; \"The Waltz You Saved for Me\" was his standard set closing song in live performance and on numerous radio broadcasts at the height of his career.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Eddie King (musician)",
"paragraph_text": "Eddie King (April 21, 1938 – March 14, 2012) was an American Chicago blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. \"Living Blues\" magazine stated that \"King is a potent singer and player with a raw, gospel-tinged voice and an aggressive, thick-toned guitar sound\". He was noted as creating a \"straightforward style, after Freddie King and Little Milton\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Born Under a Bad Sign (song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Born Under a Bad Sign\" is a blues song recorded by American blues singer and guitarist Albert King in 1967. Called \"a timeless staple of the blues\", the song also had strong crossover appeal to the rock audience with its bass and guitar harmony line and topical astrology reference. \"Born Under a Bad Sign\" became an R&B chart hit for King and numerous blues and other musicians have made it perhaps the most recorded Albert King song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Sunrise (Jimmy Ruffin album)",
"paragraph_text": "Sunrise is an album by American soul singer Jimmy Ruffin, it was released in May 1980 and was produced by Robin Gibb (of the Bee Gees) and Blue Weaver. The songs were co-written by Gibb either with Weaver and/or his brothers. This album was released in US, Netherlands, UK, Norway and Germany. The lead single \"Hold On (To My Love)\" reached top ten in UK and US.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "In Vanda's Room",
"paragraph_text": "In Vanda's Room (Portuguese: No Quarto da Vanda, 2000) is a docufiction (a subgenre of cinéma vérité) film by Portuguese director Pedro Costa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Blue Country Heart",
"paragraph_text": "Blue Country Heart is a Jorma Kaukonen studio album released in June, 2002. It was his first album on a major label since 1980's \"Barbeque King\". Kaukonen didn't write any new compositions for the album, and instead played mostly country-blues cover songs.The album features performances by Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas, Byron House and Bela Fleck, and was nominated for a Grammy award in 2003 for \"Best Traditional Folk Album.\"",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The performer of King Bee is associated with which subgenre of the blues?
|
[
{
"id": 597604,
"question": "King Bee >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__532160_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "In Vanda's Room",
"paragraph_text": "In Vanda's Room (Portuguese: No Quarto da Vanda, 2000) is a docufiction (a subgenre of cinéma vérité) film by Portuguese director Pedro Costa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Bach to the Blues",
"paragraph_text": "Bach to the Blues is an album performed by the Ramsey Lewis Trio that was recorded in 1964 and released on the Argo label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Beyoncé",
"paragraph_text": "On January 7, 2012, Beyoncé gave birth to her first child, a daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. Five months later, she performed for four nights at Revel Atlantic City's Ovation Hall to celebrate the resort's opening, her first performances since giving birth to Blue Ivy.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Life After Death",
"paragraph_text": "Life After Death is the second and final studio album by American rapper the Notorious B.I.G., released on March 25, 1997, on Bad Boy Records and Arista Records. A double album, it was released sixteen days after his death. It features collaborations with guest artists such as 112, Jay-Z, Lil' Kim, Mase, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, Too $hort, Angela Winbush, D.M.C. of Run-D.M.C., R. Kelly, The LOX and Puff Daddy. \"Life After Death\" exhibits The Notorious B.I.G. further delving into the mafioso rap subgenre. The album is a sequel to his first album, \"Ready to Die\", and picks up where the last song, \"Suicidal Thoughts\", ends.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Ethel Waters",
"paragraph_text": "Ethel Waters (October 31, 1896 -- September 1, 1977) was an American singer and actress. Waters frequently performed jazz, big band, and pop music, on the Broadway stage and in concerts, but she began her career in the 1920s singing blues. Waters notable recordings include ``Dinah '',`` Stormy Weather'', ``Taking a Chance on Love '',`` Heat Wave'', ``Supper Time '',`` Am I Blue?'', ``Cabin in the Sky '',`` I'm Coming Virginia'', and her version of the spiritual ``His Eye Is on the Sparrow ''. Waters was the second African American, after Hattie McDaniel, to be nominated for an Academy Award. She was also the first African - American woman to be nominated for an Emmy Award, in 1962.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "I'm Going Down (Rose Royce song)",
"paragraph_text": "``I'm Going Down ''is a song written and produced by Norman Whitfield, and performed by Rose Royce. The single is from the film Car Wash and is featured on the film's soundtrack.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "I'm Ready (blues song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"I'm Ready\" is a blues song written by Willie Dixon and first recorded by Muddy Waters in 1954. It was a hit, spending nine weeks on the Billboard R&B chart where it reached number four. The song became a blues standard and has been compared to \"Hoochie Coochie Man\", the standard also written by Dixon that Waters recorded earlier in 1954.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Time for Loving",
"paragraph_text": "Time for Loving (released in Italy as Sapore di mare) is a 1983 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Vanzina. It obtained a great commercial success and launched a short-living subgenre of revival-nostalgic comedy films. It also generated a sequel, \"Sapore di mare 2 - Un anno dopo\". For her performance in this film Virna Lisi won a David di Donatello for Best Supporting Actress and a Silver Ribbon in the same category.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Blake Shelton",
"paragraph_text": "Blake Shelton (2001) The Dreamer (2003) Blake Shelton's Barn & Grill (2004) Pure BS (2007) Startin 'Fires (2008) Red River Blue (2011) Cheers, It's Christmas (2012) Based on a True Story... (2013) Bringing Back the Sunshine (2014) If I'm Honest (2016) Texoma Shore (2017)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Billy Don't Be a Hero",
"paragraph_text": "Because the song was released in 1974, it was associated by some listeners with the Vietnam War, though the war to which it actually refers is never identified in the lyrics. It has been suggested that the drum pattern, references to a marching band leading soldiers in blue, and ``riding out ''(cavalry) refer to the American Civil War. However the drum beat and cavalry`` riding out'' is not specific to the American Civil War, and blue uniforms were common in the 19th century. That being said, Paper Lace themselves performed the song on Top of the Pops wearing Union - style uniforms, as can be seen on Youtube.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Eria Fachin",
"paragraph_text": "Originally from Hamilton, Ontario, Fachin began performing in the Toronto area at the age of 15 in a variety of capacities, including nightclub performances, roles in musical theatre, recording commercial jingles for local advertisers and performing on television variety shows. She also recorded a number of singles during this era, including \"I'm Not Your Puppet\", and married her musical collaborator Lou Bartolomucci in 1986.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Belaya Rus",
"paragraph_text": "Belaya Rus () is a Belarusian public association founded on 17 November 2007 to support President Alexander Lukashenko. Since then, the leaders of the organization have regularly announced that they are ready to become a political party. President Lukashenko neither firmly opposed the idea, nor supported it. He has made comments such as: \"Well, if they are ready, let them be a party, I am not against it. On the contrary, I will support it because they are patriots. But I wouldn't advise them to hurry.\" The party is based on the idea of the All-Russia People's Front. It has no real ideology outside of absolute support for Lukashenko. The leader of the association is former minister of Education of Belarus, Alexander Radkov. The NGO has a membership of over 160,000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "I'm on Fire",
"paragraph_text": "\"I'm on Fire\" is a song written and performed by American rock performer Bruce Springsteen. Released in 1985, it was the fourth single from his album \"Born in the U.S.A.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Don't Say Goodbye Girl",
"paragraph_text": "\"Don't Say Goodbye Girl\" is the fourth single to be released from R&B singer Tevin Campbell's second album \"I'm Ready\". The song reached #28 on the U.S. R&B chart and #71 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 pop singles chart. \"Brown Eyed Girl\" released June 30, 1995 would be the final single from \"I'm Ready\" to be released for Airplay.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "The Blue Kitchen",
"paragraph_text": "The Blue Kitchen (Norwegian: Det blå kjøkken; dated 1913) is the title of a neo-impressionist painting by Norwegian artist Ludvig Karsten, showing a kitchen table ready for breakfast, while the morning sun is shining through the window.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Adult contemporary music",
"paragraph_text": "Over the years, AC has spawned subgenres including \"hot AC\", \"soft AC\" (also known as \"lite AC\"), \"urban AC\", \"rhythmic AC\", and \"Christian AC\" (a softer type of contemporary Christian music). Some stations play only \"hot AC\", \"soft AC\", or only one of the variety of subgenres. Therefore, it is not usually considered a specific genre of music; it is merely an assemblage of selected tracks from musicians of many different genres.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "The Chronic",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Chronic\" peaked at number three on the \"Billboard\" 200 and has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America with sales of 5.7 million copies in the United States, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. Dr. Dre's production has been noted for popularizing the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap. \"The Chronic\" has been widely regarded as one of the most important and influential albums of the 1990s and regarded by many fans and peers to be one of the most well-produced hip hop albums of all time. \"The Chronic\" was ranked at #138 on \"Rolling Stone\"'s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Raise Your Voice",
"paragraph_text": "Raise Your Voice is a 2004 American teen musical drama film directed by Sean McNamara. Canadian rock band Three Days Grace appeared in this movie as special guests, performing the songs \"Are You Ready\" and \"Home\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What subgenre of the blues is the performer of I'm Ready associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 532160,
"question": "I'm Ready >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__216409_42092
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Battle of Rasil",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Rasil was fought between the Rashidun Caliphate and the Rai kingdom ruled by Raja Rasil in early 644. It was first encounter of Rashidun Caliphate in South Asia. The exact location of the battle is not known but historians suggest it was fought at the western bank of River Indus.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "List of Star vs. the Forces of Evil episodes",
"paragraph_text": "A two - hour television film called The Battle for Mewni, which comprises the first four episodes of the third season, premiered on July 15, 2017. The season concluded on April 7, 2018, with a two - part one hour finale. The fourth season is scheduled to premiere in early 2019.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "SMS Kurfürst Friedrich Wilhelm",
"paragraph_text": "In 1910, Kurfürst Friedrich Wilhelm was sold to the Ottoman Empire and renamed Barbaros Hayreddin. She saw heavy service during the Balkan Wars, primarily providing artillery support to Ottoman ground forces in Thrace. She also took part in two naval engagements with the Greek Navy — the Battle of Elli in December 1912, and the Battle of Lemnos the following month. Both battles were defeats for the Ottoman Navy. In a state of severe disrepair, the old battleship was partially disarmed after the Ottoman Empire joined the Central Powers early in World War I. On 8 August 1915 the ship was torpedoed and sunk off the Dardanelles by the British submarine HMS E11 with heavy loss of life.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Joyrex Tape",
"paragraph_text": "The Joyrex Tape is the name given to a collection of unreleased tracks from the early 1990s by Richard D. James, best known by his alias Aphex Twin. The original tape was copied from one of James' DATs sometime in the 1990s and was leaked onto the internet in 2011. In January 2015, James began to upload high quality versions of the tracks to SoundCloud as part of a track dump.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Battle of Cisterna",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Cisterna took place during World War II, on 30 January–2 February 1944, near Cisterna, Italy, as part of the Battle of Anzio, part of the Italian Campaign. The battle was a clear German victory which also had repercussions on the employment of U.S. Army Rangers that went beyond the immediate tactical and strategic results of the battle.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Battle of the Bridges",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of the Bridges or Kuwaiti Bridges (), also known as the Battle of Jal al Atraf, was a battle that took place on 2 August 1990, in Kuwait following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Battle of Basantar",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Basantar or the Battle of Barapind (December 4–16, 1971) was one of the vital battles fought as part of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 in the western sector of India. The Indian troops won a hard fought battle that secured this area in the Punjab/Jammu sector. The name Battle of Basantar actually encompasses the entire gamut of battles and skirmishes fought in the Shakargarh sector.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Islamism",
"paragraph_text": "Another factor in the early 1990s that worked to radicalize the Islamist movement was the Gulf War, which brought several hundred thousand US and allied non-Muslim military personnel to Saudi Arabian soil to put an end to Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait. Prior to 1990 Saudi Arabia played an important role in restraining the many Islamist groups that received its aid. But when Saddam, secularist and Ba'athist dictator of neighboring Iraq, attacked Saudi Arabia (his enemy in the war), western troops came to protect the Saudi monarchy. Islamists accused the Saudi regime of being a puppet of the west.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Battle of Khafji",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Khafji was the first major ground engagement of the Persian Gulf War. It took place in and around the Saudi Arabian city of Khafji, from 29 January to 1 February 1991 and marked the culmination of the Coalition's air campaign over Kuwait and Iraq, which had begun on 17 January 1991.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Magach",
"paragraph_text": "Since the 1980s and 1990s, the Magachs have been gradually replaced by Merkava tanks as Israel's front-line main battle tank. However, a large majority of the IDF's armored corps continued to consist of Magach variants until the 1990s, and the tank was continuously upgraded during this time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Winger (band)",
"paragraph_text": "Winger is an American rock band that has combined elements of glam metal and progressive metal. Formed in New York City, Winger gained popularity during the late 1980s and early 1990s. The band's two platinum albums, \"Winger\" and \"In the Heart of the Young\", along with charting singles \"Seventeen\", \"Headed for a Heartbreak\" and \"Miles Away\", put them on the top of the charts by the early 1990s. In 1990, the band was nominated for an American Music Award for \"Best New Heavy Metal Band\". As the music scene changed in the early to mid-1990s due to the popularity of grunge, their success faded after their third release \"Pull\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Just Say No",
"paragraph_text": "``Just Say No ''was an advertising campaign, part of the U.S.`` War on Drugs'', prevalent during the 1980s and early 1990s, to discourage children from engaging in illegal recreational drug use by offering various ways of saying no. The slogan was created and championed by First Lady Nancy Reagan during her husband's presidency.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Battle of Qurna (Iraq War)",
"paragraph_text": "Battle of Qurna was a battle during the Iraq War between the Multinational force in Iraq and Iraqi insurgents. The battle took part in Al-Qurna. In the battle, the insurgents tried to take the control of the city from the allies, mainly Danish, Lithuanian and British soldiers. The insurgents were later forced to retreat.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Battle of Lade (201 BC)",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Lade was fought between the navy of Rhodes and the navy of Macedon. The battle took place in 201 BC and it was part of the Cretan War. The battle was fought off the shore of Asia Minor and the island of Lade, near Miletus. The battle ended in a crushing victory for the Macedonians and it nearly spelled the end for the Rhodians but the result of this battle caused the Romans to intervene and Rhodes was saved.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Stranger Things",
"paragraph_text": "Stranger Things is set in the fictional rural town of Hawkins, Indiana, during the early 1980s. The nearby Hawkins National Laboratory ostensibly performs scientific research for the United States Department of Energy, but secretly does experiments into the paranormal and supernatural, including those that involve human test subjects. Inadvertently, they have created a portal to an alternate dimension called ``the Upside Down ''. The influence of the Upside Down starts to affect the unknowing residents of Hawkins in calamitous ways.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "AMX-30",
"paragraph_text": "As early as 1969, the AMX-30 and variants were ordered by Greece, soon followed by Spain. In the coming years, the AMX-30 would be exported to Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Cyprus and Chile. By the end of production, 3,571 units of AMX-30s and its variants had been manufactured. Both Spain and Venezuela later began extensive modernization programs to extend the life of their vehicles and to bring their tanks up to more modern standards. In the 1991 Gulf War, AMX-30s were deployed by both the French and Qatari armies. Qatari AMX-30s saw action against Iraqi forces at the Battle of Khafji. France and most other nations replaced their AMX-30s with more up-to-date equipment by the end of the 20th century.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Battle of Haslach-Jungingen",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Haslach-Jungingen, also known as the Battle of Albeck, fought on 11 October 1805 at Ulm-Jungingen north of Ulm at the Danube between French and Austrian forces, was part of the War of the Third Coalition, which was a part of the greater Napoleonic Wars. The outcome of this battle was a French victory.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "It (miniseries)",
"paragraph_text": "Originally conceived as a four - part eight - hour series, ABC enlisted writer Lawrence D. Cohen to adapt the 1,138 - page King novel. Cohen's script condensed the source work into a two - part, three - hour mini-series that retained the core elements of the novel, but Cohen was forced to abandon numerous subplots by virtue of the novel's length and the network's time - slot restrictions. Production on It began in early 1990, and the series was filmed over a period of three months in New Westminster, British Columbia in mid-1990.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Army Combat Uniform",
"paragraph_text": "First unveiled in June 2004, it is the successor to the Battle Dress Uniform (BDU) and Desert Camouflage Uniform (DCU) worn from the 1980s and 1990s through the early 2000s, respectively. The ACU and its component materials are manufactured by the existing industrial infrastructure which produced the now - obsolete BDU. Official military - grade ACUs are made of 50% nylon and 50% cotton. All other blends are not official issue.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Thirteenth City",
"paragraph_text": "Thirteenth City (, \"Trinadtsatiy gorod\") is a science fiction novella written by the popular Russian science fiction and fantasy writer Sergey Lukyanenko. First published in 1990, then in 1996. In 2007, the novella was republished as part of a collection of Lukyanenko's early short stories titled \"Quay for Yellow Ships\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the conflict the Battle of Khafji was part of advertently do in the early 1990s?
|
[
{
"id": 216409,
"question": "Battle of Khafji >> part of",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8
},
{
"id": 42092,
"question": "What did #1 inadvertently do in the early 1990s?",
"answer": "radicalize the Islamist movement",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
}
] |
radicalize the Islamist movement
|
[] | true |
2hop__734425_42696
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Michael Millett",
"paragraph_text": "Michael Millett (22 September 1977 – 21 September 1995) was an English footballer who played for Wigan Athletic. Millett was regarded as a talented youngster who could play in defence or midfield. He had represented England at U16 and U18 level, and made his first-team debut for Wigan towards the end of the 1994-95 season. He played three league games and one League Cup match for the Latics, before being killed in a car crash on 21 September 1995, one day before his 18th birthday. The crash happened near Garswood, Merseyside. According to Graham Barrow, Wigan's manager at the time, \"Michael was a real talent and as far as football goes it was not a case of if he'd make it, but when. I could tell from my very early days at the club that he was going to be a very good player.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Michal Jordán",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Jordán (born 17 July 1990) is a Czech professional ice hockey defenceman currently playing for Amur Khabarovsk of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). He previously played for the Carolina Hurricanes of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was selected by the Hurricanes in the fourth round, 105th overall, of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Boots Day",
"paragraph_text": "A native of Ilion, New York, Day played Major League Baseball for all or parts of six seasons (1969–74), with the bulk of that time spent with the Montreal Expos.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "One Day at a Time",
"paragraph_text": "One Day at a Time is an American sitcom that aired on CBS from December 16, 1975, until May 28, 1984. It starred Bonnie Franklin as a divorced mother raising two teenaged daughters in Indianapolis. The daughters were played by Mackenzie Phillips and Valerie Bertinelli.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Jan Uczkowski",
"paragraph_text": "Jan Antoni Uczkowski (born October 7, 1996) is an American actor, widely known for his roles as Philip King in the movie \"Contest\". He has an older brother, Dariusz Michal, who is also an actor.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Michal Mendelsohn",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Mendelsohn (born Michal Bernstein) became the first presiding female rabbi in a North American congregation when she was hired by Temple Beth El Shalom in San Jose, California, in 1976.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "One Day at a Time",
"paragraph_text": "Ann Romano, a divorced mother, moves from their home in Logansport, Indiana, to Indianapolis with her daughters, the rebellious Julie and the wisecracking Barbara. Ann frequently struggles with maintaining her role as mother while affording her daughters the freedom she never had as a young woman. Ann begins dating her divorce lawyer, David Kane (Richard Masur). They become engaged and call it off on their wedding day, when David says he wants kids, but Ann does not. Dwayne Schneider, the building's quirky superintendent (most often referred to only by his last name), provides usually unwanted advice to the tenants.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Michal Piter-Bučko",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Piter-Bučko (born 28 October 1985, in Prešov) is a Slovak football player who currently plays for Sandecja Nowy Sącz in the Ekstraklasa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Charlie Straight",
"paragraph_text": "Charlie Straight are a Czech indie rock band formed in Třinec, Czech Republic in 2006. They combine indie rock with melodic and often electronic musical elements while also drawing on a Britpop influence. The band is named after a chat nickname that frontman Albert Černý used online one time. They cite influences from a number of other artists including Bat For Lashes, Yuck and Churches. The band have received a number of different awards. The current line up consists of Albert Černý (lead vocals), Jan Cienciala (bass), Michal Šupák (guitar, programming) and Pavel Pilch (drums). One of the band's current ambitions is to play the Glastonbury festival.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "NFL regular season",
"paragraph_text": "The National Football League (NFL) regular season begins the weekend after Labor Day in early September and ends in December or early January. It consists of 256 games, where each team (32 total) plays 16 games during a 17 - week period. Since 2012, the NFL schedule generally has games in one of five time slots during the week. The first game of the week is played on Thursday night, kicking off at 8: 25 PM (ET). The majority of games are played on Sunday, most kicking off at 1: 00 PM (ET), some late afternoon games starting at 4: 05 or 4: 25 PM (ET). Additionally, one Sunday night game is played every week at 8: 30 PM (ET). One Monday night game then starts at 8: 30 PM (ET) every week with the exception of the first week of the regular season, in which two Monday night games are played back - to - back (the second game always occurring on the West coast), as well as the last week of the season, in which no Monday night game is held. In addition to these regularly scheduled games, there are occasionally games at other times, such as a Saturday afternoon or evening, or the annual Thanksgiving Day games in which three games are played. During the final week of the regular season, all games are held on Sunday.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Michal Towber",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Towber (born August 30, 1980 in Ashkelon, Israel) is an Israeli singer and composer. Signed to Columbia/Sony at the age of 17, she has released three CDs, \"Sky with Stars\", \"Coma\" and \"Lovesick\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "The Labyrinth of Time",
"paragraph_text": "The Labyrinth of Time is a graphic adventure computer game created by Terra Nova Development, a two-man team composed of Bradley W. Schenck and Michal Todorovic. Intended to be the first in a series of games, \"The Labyrinth of Time\" was less successful than similar graphic adventures released around the same time, such as \"The 7th Guest\" and \"Myst\". It is the sole game produced by Terra Nova Development. In the years after its release, \"The Labyrinth of Time\" was published on more recent platforms by The Wyrmkeep Entertainment Co. in collaboration with the original developers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Ujwala Nikam",
"paragraph_text": "Ujwala Vasudev Nikam (born 19 June 1958, in Pune, Maharashtra) is a former Test and One Day International cricketer who represented India. She also represented Maharashtra women's cricket team in the domestic league. She played eight Test matches and two One Day Internationals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Michal Prášek",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Prášek is a Grand Prix motorcycle racer from Czech Republic. He currently competes aboard a BMW S1000RR in the Alpe Adria Road Race Superstock 1000 Championship. He is a two-time Alpe Adria Road Race Superstock 1000 Champion, winning it in 2015 and 2016.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Palti, son of Laish",
"paragraph_text": "Michal was originally David's wife, but Saul gave her to Palti after she helped David escape from Saul. Later after David was anointed, but before he succeeded Saul as king of Judah, David demanded of Ish-bosheth, Saul's son (and Michal's brother), that she return to David as his wife. This Ish-bosheth granted. David demanded that Abner, a military leader, bring Michal to David in return for a meeting between them.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Social Security (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "Originally the benefits received by retirees were not taxed as income. Beginning in tax year 1984, with the Reagan - era reforms to repair the system's projected insolvency, retirees with incomes over $25,000 (in the case of married persons filing separately who did not live with the spouse at any time during the year, and for persons filing as ``single ''), or with combined incomes over $32,000 (if married filing jointly) or, in certain cases, any income amount (if married filing separately from the spouse in a year in which the taxpayer lived with the spouse at any time) generally saw part of the retiree benefits subject to federal income tax. In 1984, the portion of the benefits potentially subject to tax was 50%. The Deficit Reduction Act of 1993 set the portion to 85%.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Michal Kolomazník",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Kolomazník (born 20 July 1976) is a Czech former footballer who played as a forward. He played three matches for the Czech Republic national team. He won the Czech Cup with FK Teplice in 2003.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Ohrožený druh",
"paragraph_text": "Ohrožený druh (\"Threatened Species\") is a compilation album by Czech recording artist Michal Horáček, released on Sony BMG in 2008.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Martin Lébl",
"paragraph_text": "Martin Lébl (born 12 April 1980 in Prague) is a volleyball player from the Czech Republic, who competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics in the beach volleyball competition alongside Michal Palinek. As an indoor player he became \"Best Attacker\" at the 2001 European Championship, where the men's national team ended up in fourth place. With Lube Banca Marche Macerata he played at the 2008-09 Indesit Champions League and also was individually awarded \"Best Spiker\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Michal Kropík",
"paragraph_text": "Michal Kropík (born 20 February 1985) is a professional Czech football player who currently plays for FK Viktoria Žižkov. He has represented his country at youth international level.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who plays the One Day at a Time character that shares a first name with the spouse of Michal?
|
[
{
"id": 734425,
"question": "Michal >> spouse",
"answer": "David",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 42696,
"question": "who played #1 on one day at a time",
"answer": "Richard Masur",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
}
] |
Richard Masur
|
[] | true |
2hop__70786_72667
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Solomon's Temple",
"paragraph_text": "The Hebrew Bible states that the temple was constructed under Solomon, king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah and that during the Kingdom of Judah, the temple was dedicated to Yahweh, and is said to have housed the Ark of the Covenant. Jewish historian Josephus says that ``the temple was burnt four hundred and seventy years, six months, and ten days after it was built '', although rabbinic sources state that the First Temple stood for 410 years and, based on the 2nd - century work Seder Olam Rabbah, place construction in 832 BCE and destruction in 422 BCE, 165 years later than secular estimates.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Torah ark",
"paragraph_text": "The ark in a synagogue (also called the Torah ark or holy ark) is generally a receptacle, or ornamental closet, which contains each synagogue's Torah scrolls (Sifrei Torah in Hebrew). Most arks feature a parokhet (curtain) placed either outside the doors of the holy ark (Ashkenazi and Mizrachi custom) or inside the doors of the ark (Spanish and Portuguese and Moroccan Sephardi custom). The ark is known in Hebrew as the aron kodesh (``holy ark '') by the Ashkenazim and as the hekhál (`` holy place'') among most Sefardim.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The New Colossus",
"paragraph_text": "The line ``Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp! ''is missing a comma, and reads`` Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!'' on the plaque hanging inside the Statue of Liberty since its unveiling in 1903.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Ark of the Covenant",
"paragraph_text": "During the construction of Solomon's Temple, a special inner room, named Kodesh Hakodashim (Eng. Holy of Holies), was prepared to receive and house the Ark; and when the Temple was dedicated, the Ark -- containing the original tablets of the Ten Commandments -- was placed therein. When the priests emerged from the holy place after placing the Ark there, the Temple was filled with a cloud, ``for the glory of the Lord had filled the house of the Lord ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Old City (Jerusalem)",
"paragraph_text": "In 1980, Jordan proposed that the Old City be listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It was added to the List in 1981. In 1982, Jordan requested that it be added to the List of World Heritage in Danger. The United States government opposed the request, noting that the Jordanian government had no standing to make such a nomination and that the consent of the Israeli government would be required since it effectively controlled Jerusalem. In 2011, UNESCO issued a statement reiterating its view that East Jerusalem is \"part of the occupied Palestinian territory, and that the status of Jerusalem must be resolved in permanent status negotiations.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "The New Colossus",
"paragraph_text": "``The New Colossus ''is a sonnet that American poet Emma Lazarus (1849 -- 1887) wrote in 1883 to raise money for the construction of the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty. In 1903, the poem was engraved on a bronze plaque and mounted inside the pedestal's lower level.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Angel with the Crown of Thorns",
"paragraph_text": "Angel with the Crown of Thorns is a statue by Italian artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Originally commissioned by Pope Clement IX for the Ponte Sant'Angelo project, the statue was replaced with a copy and the original was moved to Sant'Andrea delle Fratte in Rome, Italy. The statue was started in 1667 and completed in 1669. A terracotta modello for the sculpture is held by the musée du Louvre in Paris.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Freemasonry",
"paragraph_text": "Many Islamic anti-Masonic arguments are closely tied to both antisemitism and Anti-Zionism, though other criticisms are made such as linking Freemasonry to al-Masih ad-Dajjal (the false Messiah). Some Muslim anti-Masons argue that Freemasonry promotes the interests of the Jews around the world and that one of its aims is to destroy the Al-Aqsa Mosque in order to rebuild the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem. In article 28 of its Covenant, Hamas states that Freemasonry, Rotary, and other similar groups \"work in the interest of Zionism and according to its instructions ...\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Zion",
"paragraph_text": "Zion (Hebrew: צִיּוֹן Tsiyyon), also transliterated Sion, Sayon, Syon, Tzion or Tsion, is a placename often used as a synonym for Jerusalem. The word is first found in 2 Samuel 5: 7 which dates from c. 630 -- 540 BC according to modern scholarship. It commonly referred to a specific hill in Jerusalem, (Mount Zion) located to the south of Mount Moriah or the Temple Mount, on which stood a Jebusite fortress of the same name that was conquered by David and was named the City of David. The hill (``mount '') is one of the many squat hills that form Jerusalem, to include the Mount of Olives etc. In the past many centuries, that was the only section of Jerusalem inside city wall that was the Jewish quarter.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Torah ark",
"paragraph_text": "Aron Kodesh comes from Hebrew אָרוֹן קׄדֶש ʼārōn qōdeš (i.e. aron kodesh), Holy Ark. This name is a reference to the 'ārōn haqqōdeš, the Hebrew name for the Ark of the Covenant which was stored in the Holy of Holies in the inner sanctuary of both the ancient Tabernacle and the Temple in Jerusalem. Similarly, Hekhál, also written hechal, echal or heichal -- and sometimes also Echal Kodesh (mainly among Balkan Sephardim) comes from Hebrew הֵיכָל (hēkhāl)' palace ', was used in the same time period to refer to the inner sanctuary. The hekhal contained the Menorah, Altar of Incense, and Table of the Showbread.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "David (Michelangelo)",
"paragraph_text": "In 1873, the statue of David was removed from the piazza, to protect it from damage, and displayed in the Accademia Gallery, Florence, where it attracted many visitors. A replica was placed in the Piazza della Signoria in 1910.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights",
"paragraph_text": "The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) is a multilateral treaty adopted by the United Nations General Assembly with resolution 2200A (XXI) on 19 December 1966, and in force from 23 March 1976 in accordance with Article 49 of the covenant. Article 49 allowed that the covenant will enter into force three months after the date of the deposit of the thirty - fifth instrument of ratification or accession. The covenant commits its parties to respect the civil and political rights of individuals, including the right to life, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, electoral rights and rights to due process and a fair trial. As of February 2017, the Covenant has 170 parties and six more signatories without ratification.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Ark of the Covenant",
"paragraph_text": "The Ark of the Covenant (Hebrew: אָרוֹן הַבְּרִית, Modern Arōn Ha'brēt, Tiberian ʾĀrôn Habbərîṯ), also known as the Ark of the Testimony, is a gold - covered wooden chest with lid cover described in the Book of Exodus as containing the two stone tablets of the Ten Commandments. According to various texts within the Hebrew Bible, it also contained Aaron's rod and a pot of manna.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Meanwhile, Begin's government provided incentives for Israelis to settle in the occupied West Bank, increasing friction with the Palestinians in that area. The Basic Law: Jerusalem, the Capital of Israel, passed in 1980, was believed by some to reaffirm Israel's 1967 annexation of Jerusalem by government decree, and reignited international controversy over the status of the city. No Israeli legislation has defined the territory of Israel and no act specifically included East Jerusalem therein. The position of the majority of UN member states is reflected in numerous resolutions declaring that actions taken by Israel to settle its citizens in the West Bank, and impose its laws and administration on East Jerusalem, are illegal and have no validity. In 1981 Israel annexed the Golan Heights, although annexation was not recognized internationally.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "United Nations General Assembly resolution ES-10/L.22",
"paragraph_text": "On 6 December 2017, US President Donald Trump said that he would recognise Jerusalem as Israel's capital and begin the process of moving the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. This was a departure from previous Security Council resolutions and prevailing international norms (where no state either recognises Jerusalem as a national capital nor has an embassy there).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Ark of the Covenant",
"paragraph_text": "On hearing that God had blessed Obed - edom because of the presence of the Ark in his house, David had the Ark brought to Zion by the Levites, while he himself, ``girded with a linen ephod... danced before the Lord with all his might ''and in the sight of all the public gathered in Jerusalem - a performance that caused him to be scornfully rebuked by his first wife, Saul's daughter Michal (2 Sam. 6: 12 - 16, 20 - 22; 1 Chron. 15). In Zion, David put the Ark in the tabernacle he had prepared for it, offered sacrifices, distributed food, and blessed the people and his own household (2 Sam. 6: 17 - 20; 1 Chron. 16: 1 - 3; 2 Chron. 1: 4).",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Vendyl Jones",
"paragraph_text": "Vendyl Miller Jones (May 29, 1930 – December 27, 2010) was an American Noahide scholar who directed archaeological searches for biblical artifacts such as the Ark of the Covenant.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Ark of the Covenant",
"paragraph_text": "In 587 BC, the Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem and Solomon's Temple. There is no record of what became of the Ark in the Books of Kings and Chronicles. An ancient Greek version of the biblical third Book of Ezra, 1 Esdras, suggests that Babylonians took away the vessels of the ark of God, but does not mention taking away the Ark:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Covenant (biblical)",
"paragraph_text": "The covenant found in Genesis 12 -- 17 is known as the Brit bein HaBetarim, the ``Covenant Between the Parts ''in Hebrew, and is the basis for brit milah (covenant of circumcision) in Judaism. The covenant was for Abraham and his seed, or offspring, both of natural birth and adoption.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Ark of the Covenant",
"paragraph_text": "Beside the classic Ark of the Covenant made of wood and gold plated described in Exodus, there is a second and less known ark described only in Deuteronomy 10: 3 - 5. This modest ark is made of acacia wood. Researchers do not know whether both arks belong to the same tradition, an older and a more recent, or belong to two different traditions.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When was the statue of the person who brought the ark of the covenant to Jerusalem moved inside?
|
[
{
"id": 70786,
"question": "who brought the ark of the covenant to jerusalem",
"answer": "David",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
},
{
"id": 72667,
"question": "when was the statue of #1 moved inside",
"answer": "1873",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
1873
|
[] | true |
2hop__145405_180874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Moore Station, Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Moore Station is a city in Henderson County, Texas, United States. The population was 201 at the 2010 census. It was founded in 1876 by Anderson Moore, a former \"mulatto\" slave.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Sweet Home Chicago",
"paragraph_text": "\"Sweet Home Chicago\" is a blues standard first recorded by Robert Johnson in 1936. Although he is often credited as the songwriter, several songs have been identified as precedents. The song has become a popular anthem for the city of Chicago despite ambiguity in Johnson's original lyrics. Numerous artists have interpreted the song in a variety of styles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Robert Johnson Henderson",
"paragraph_text": "Robert Johnson Henderson was born in Newton County, Georgia on November 12, 1822. His parents were Isaac and Ruth Shepherd (Johnson) Henderson. Isaac Henderson, who was born in Maryland, was a wealthy planter and a representative in the state legislature.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Johnson City, Tennessee",
"paragraph_text": "Johnson City is a city in Washington, Carter, and Sullivan counties in the U.S. state of Tennessee, with most of the city being in Washington County. As of the 2010 census, the population of Johnson City was 63,152, and by 2015 the estimated population was 66,027, making it the ninth - largest city in the state.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Robert Johnson Henderson",
"paragraph_text": "Robert Johnson Henderson (November 12, 1822 – February 3, 1891) was a Confederate States Army colonel during the American Civil War (Civil War). His obituary stated that he was made a brigadier general by General Joseph E. Johnston, after Johnston witnessed Henderson making a desperate charge at the Battle of Bentonville, North Carolina, on March 10, 1865. At the suggestion of his divisional commanders, Henderson signed his parole as a brigadier general. Later, Henderson stated in his pardon application that he had been recommended for promotion to brigadier general but had never received a commission. Henderson commanded a brigade for several weeks at the end of the war but never was officially appointed by Confederate President Jefferson Davis and confirmed by the Confederate States Senate to brigadier general rank.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Kosciusko, Mississippi",
"paragraph_text": "Kosciusko is a city in Attala County, Mississippi, United States, and is the birthplace of James Meredith and Oprah Winfrey. The population was 7,402 at the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Attala County.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Pendleton, Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Pendleton is an unincorporated community in Bell County, Texas, United States. Although it is unincorporated, Pendleton has a post office, with the ZIP code of 76564. The community was the birthplace of acclaimed blues musician Blind Willie Johnson.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Bob Johnson (infielder)",
"paragraph_text": "Robert Wallace Johnson (born March 4, 1936 in Omaha, Nebraska), nicknamed \"Rocky\", is a retired American professional baseball player. Largely a utility infielder and pinch hitter, Johnson appeared in 11 Major League Baseball seasons, from until . Johnson was a member of the 1966 World Series champion Baltimore Orioles. He threw and batted right-handed, stood tall, and weighed .",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Rome",
"paragraph_text": "Rome's history spans 28 centuries. While Roman mythology dates the founding of Rome at around 753 BC, the site has been inhabited for much longer, making it one of the oldest continuously occupied sites in Europe. The city's early population originated from a mix of Latins, Etruscans, and Sabines. Eventually, the city successively became the capital of the Roman Kingdom, the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire, and is regarded by some as the first ever metropolis. It was first called \"The Eternal City\" (; ) by the Roman poet Tibullus in the 1st century BC, and the expression was also taken up by Ovid, Virgil, and Livy. Rome is also called the \"Caput Mundi\" (Capital of the World). After the fall of the Western Empire, which marked the beginning of the Middle Ages, Rome slowly fell under the political control of the Papacy, and in the 8th century it became the capital of the Papal States, which lasted until 1870. Beginning with the Renaissance, almost all the popes since Nicholas V (1447–1455) pursued over four hundred years a coherent architectural and urban programme aimed at making the city the artistic and cultural centre of the world. In this way, Rome became first one of the major centres of the Italian Renaissance, and then the birthplace of both the Baroque style and Neoclassicism. Famous artists, painters, sculptors and architects made Rome the centre of their activity, creating masterpieces throughout the city. In 1871, Rome became the capital of the Kingdom of Italy, which, in 1946, became the Italian Republic.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Lake Havasu City, Arizona",
"paragraph_text": "Lake Havasu City is a city in Mohave County, Arizona, United States. According to 2010 census, the population of the city was 52,527 people. It is served by Lake Havasu City Airport. Lake Havasu City is geographically isolated from the other cities in Mohave County and is the southernmost community of the Las Vegas–Henderson, NV–AZ combined statistical area.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "James Crichton",
"paragraph_text": "James Crichton was from Clunie, in Perthshire, although some sources maintain his birthplace was Dumfries. He was the son of Robert Crichton of Eliok, Lord Advocate of Scotland, and Elizabeth Stewart, from whose line James could claim Royal descent.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Robert Macnish",
"paragraph_text": "Robert Macnish was born at Henderson’s Court, Jamaica Street, Glasgow. His father and grandfather were doctors and after private education in Glasgow and at the long-established Old Grammar School of Hamilton (renamed the Hamilton Academy in 1848), Robert Macnish undertook his medical studies at the University of Glasgow obtaining a C.M. degree in 1820 and an M.D. in 1825. In 1827 he became a Member of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow (now known as the Royal College).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "John Seward Johnson I",
"paragraph_text": "John Seward Johnson I (July 14, 1895 – May 23, 1983) was one of the sons of Robert Wood Johnson I (co-founder of Johnson & Johnson). He was also known as J. Seward Johnson Sr. and Seward Johnson. He founded the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution (HBOI), and was the grandfather of Jamie Johnson, who directed the documentary \"Born Rich\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Henderson's Boys",
"paragraph_text": "Henderson's Boys is a series of young adult spy novels written by English author Robert Muchamore. The series follows Charles Henderson, the creator of the fictitious CHERUB organisation. The novels are set between 1940 and 1945, during the Nazi occupation of France in World War II. Throughout the novels, Henderson leads a series of war missions, aided by children.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Cecil Johnson",
"paragraph_text": "Cecil Johnson (born August 19, 1955 in Miami, Florida) is a former professional American football player who played linebacker for nine seasons for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Cecil was the brother of Robert Johnson, a drummer for KC and the Sunshine Band.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Henderson's Boys",
"paragraph_text": "Henderson's Boys is a series of young adult spy novels written by the English author Robert Muchamore. The series follows Charles Henderson, the creator of the fictitious CHERUB organisation. The novels are set between 1940 and 1945, during the Nazi occupation of France in the Second World War. Throughout the novels, Henderson leads a series of war missions, aided by children.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Henderson Chambers",
"paragraph_text": "Henderson Chambers (May 1, 1908 in Alexandria, Louisiana – October 19, 1967 in New York City) was an American jazz trombonist.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Newton County Courthouse (Georgia)",
"paragraph_text": "Newton County Courthouse is a historic county courthouse in Courthouse Square in Covington, Georgia, the county seat of Newton County, Georgia. The courthouse was designed by Bruce & Morgan in a Second Empire architecture style and built in 1884. It was constructed on the same site as a previouse county courthouse building that burned down on December 31, 1883. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 18, 1980.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "3 Doors Down",
"paragraph_text": "Brad Arnold -- lead vocals (1996 -- present), drums (1996 -- 2000) Chet Roberts -- lead guitar, backing vocals (2012 -- present) Chris Henderson -- rhythm guitar (1998 -- present) Justin Biltonen -- bass (2013 -- present) Greg Upchurch -- drums (2005 -- present)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Jeremiah Johnson (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Jeremiah Johnson is a 1972 American western film directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Robert Redford as the title character and Will Geer as ``Bear Claw ''Chris Lapp. It is said to have been based partly on the life of the legendary mountain man Liver - Eating Johnson, recounted in Raymond Thorp and Robert Bunker's book Crow Killer: The Saga of Liver - Eating Johnson and Vardis Fisher's Mountain Man.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the capital of the county where Robert Johnson Henderson was born?
|
[
{
"id": 145405,
"question": "Which city was the birthplace of Robert Johnson Henderson?",
"answer": "Newton County",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 180874,
"question": "#1 >> capital",
"answer": "Covington",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
}
] |
Covington
|
[] | true |
2hop__668382_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Martyn Wyndham-Read",
"paragraph_text": "Arnold Martyn Wyndham-Read (born 23 August 1942, Sussex) is an English folk singer, who was a collector and singer of Australian folk music. He lived and worked in Australia from 1958 to 1967 and was subsequently a regular visitor to the country.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Along the Road to Gundagai",
"paragraph_text": "\"Along the Road to Gundagai\" is an Australian folk song written by Jack O'Hagan in 1922 and was first recorded by Peter Dawson in 1924, O'Hagan performed his own version later that year. It is well-known among Australians, and one of a small number of pieces which are considered to be Australian folk tunes. Gundagai is a rural town of New South Wales. In May 2001 the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA), as part of its 75th Anniversary celebrations, named \"Along the Road to Gundagai\" as one of its Top 30 Australian songs of all time. It was used as the theme to the \"Dad and Dave\" radio show.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "When I Took That Train",
"paragraph_text": "When I Took That Train is the 40th release by avant-folk/blues singer/songwriter Jandek, and the first of four released in 2005 by his own Corwood Industries label, as #0778.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Louise Hoffsten",
"paragraph_text": "Louise Hoffsten, born September 6, 1965 in Linköping, Sweden, is a Swedish songwriter, musician and singer spanning several genres, notably rock, blues, folk and pop. Her father, Gunnar Hoffsten, was also a musician and played the trumpet in a jazz band.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Mr. Tambourine Man",
"paragraph_text": "The song has been performed and recorded by many artists, including the Byrds, Judy Collins, Melanie, Odetta, and Stevie Wonder among others. The Byrds version was released in April of 1965 as their first single on Columbia Records, reaching number 1 on both the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and the UK Singles Chart, as well as being the title track of their debut album, \"Mr. Tambourine Man.\" The Byrds' recording of the song was influential in popularizing the musical subgenres of folk rock and jangle pop, leading many contemporary bands to mimic its fusion of jangly guitars and intellectual lyrics in the wake of the single's success.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Leela and Ellie Grace",
"paragraph_text": "Leela and Ellie Grace are a duo of American singer/songwriters. They are sisters, the daughters of Paul and Win Grace. They perform a mixture of original compositions by both sisters, traditional folk and old time songs, and covers of songs by other contemporary folk songwriters.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Trouble No More",
"paragraph_text": "Trouble No More is American singer-songwriter and musician John Mellencamp's 18th studio album and his final recording for Columbia Records, released in 2003. It consists of blues and folk covers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Johnnyswim",
"paragraph_text": "Johnnyswim is an American folk, soul, blues, pop music duo, consisting of singer-songwriters Amanda Sudano and Abner Ramirez. The duo formed in 2005 in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Andreas Gabalier",
"paragraph_text": "Andreas Gabalier (born next to Friesach on 21 November 1984) is an Austrian folk singer. In 2012, he won the ECHO music award in folk music category, the Amadeus Austrian Music Award in 2012 as Best Live Act and best 'Schlager' singer and in 2013, again the Amadeus award in Folk music category.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Hasan Yükselir",
"paragraph_text": "Hasan Yükselir (born Pazarcık, Turkey, 1954 or 1955) is a Turkish singer and composer, who predominantly performs Turkish folk songs (Türkü).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Chair Beside a Window",
"paragraph_text": "Chair Beside a Window is the fourth album by avant-folk/blues singer-songwriter Jandek, and Corwood Industries' first release of 1982 ( 742).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Al Jones",
"paragraph_text": "Alun Ashworth-Jones (31 October 1945 – 1 June 2008), known as Al Jones, was an influential English folk and blues songwriter, guitarist and singer, noted for his distinctive and original folk-rock guitar style and his often darkly humorous lyrics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Joel Rafael",
"paragraph_text": "Joel Rafael is an American singer-songwriter and folk musician from San Diego County, California. Rafael's second volume to celebrate the songs of Woody Guthrie, was released on Appleseed in 2005. The first volume, \"Woodeye\", was released on Inside Recordings in 2003. Joel and his acoustic band have been performing and touring nationally since 1993. In 2000, the Joel Rafael Band, comprising Joel Rafael, (lead vocals and guitar), his daughter Jamaica (violin, viola and vocals), Carl Johnson (acoustic lead guitar) and Jeff Berkley (ethno-percussion), released their third album, \"Hopper\" on Inside Recordings, an independent label created by Jackson Browne and his management. The album was nominated in 2001 for an Association For Independent Music (AFIM) Best Contemporary Folk award.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Poem, ballader och lite blues",
"paragraph_text": "Poem, ballader och lite blues (English: \"Poems, ballads and a little blues\") is the sixth studio album by the Swedish-Dutch folk singer-songwriter Cornelis Vreeswijk.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Folk Singer (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Folk Singer is the fourth studio album by Muddy Waters, released in April 1964 by Chess Records. The album features Waters on acoustic guitar, backed by Willie Dixon on string bass, Clifton James on drums, and Buddy Guy on acoustic guitar. It is Waters's only all-acoustic album. Numerous reissues of \"Folk Singer\" include bonus tracks from two subsequent sessions, in April 1964 and October 1964.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Alistair Hulett",
"paragraph_text": "Alistair Hulett (15 October 1951 – 28 January 2010) was a Scottish acoustic folk singer best known as the singer of the folk punk band, Roaring Jack.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Bathtub Blues",
"paragraph_text": "Bathtub Blues is an album by folk singer/guitarist Greg Brown, released in 1993. It is directed towards children and uses a children's chorus on many of the songs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The performer of Folk Singer is associated with which subgenre of the blues?
|
[
{
"id": 668382,
"question": "Folk Singer >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__97093_154727
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "USS Margaret O (SP-614)",
"paragraph_text": "USS \"Margaret O\" (SP-614) was a civilian motorboat that temporarily served in the U.S. Navy during World War I. She was outfitted by the Navy as a patrol craft and patrolled on the U.S. East Coast. Post-war she was returned to her owner.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Crimean War",
"paragraph_text": "In the north Eristov pushed southwest, fought two battles, forced the Turks back to Batum, retired behind the Cholok River and suspended action for the rest of the year (June). In the far south Wrangel pushed west, fought a battle and occupied Bayazit. In the center the main forces stood at Kars and Gyumri. Both slowly approached along the Kars-Gyumri road and faced each other, neither side choosing to fight (June–July). On 4 August Russian scouts saw a movement which they thought was the start of a withdrawal, the Russians advanced and the Turks attacked first. They were defeated, losing 8000 men to the Russian 3000. 10000 irregulars deserted to their villages. Both sides withdrew to their former positions. About this time the Persians made a semi-secret agreement to remain neutral in exchange for the cancellation of the indemnity from the previous war.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Infantry mobility vehicle",
"paragraph_text": "An infantry mobility vehicle (IMV) is a wheeled armored personnel carrier (APC) serving as a military patrol, reconnaissance or security vehicle. Examples include the ATF Dingo, Oshkosh, Iveco LMV, M-ATV, AMZ Dzik, AMZ Tur, Mungo ESK, and Bushmaster IMV. This term also applies to those vehicles fielded as part of the MRAP program.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Kia Mohave",
"paragraph_text": "The Kia Mohave, marketed in North America and China as the Kia Borrego, is a sport-utility vehicle (SUV) manufactured by the South Korea manufacturer Kia Motors. The vehicle debuted in 2008 in the Korean and US markets. The Kia Borrego is named after the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in California; Borrego means \"bighorned sheep\" which can be found in the state park.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Forty Years' War",
"paragraph_text": "The Forty Years' War (; 1385 – 1424; also Ava-Pegu War or the Mon-Burmese War) was a military conflict fought between the Burmese-speaking Kingdom of Ava and the Mon-speaking Kingdom of Hanthawaddy Pegu. The war was fought during two separate periods: 1385 to 1391, and 1401 to 1424, interrupted by two truces of 1391–1401 and 1403–1408. It was fought primarily in today's Lower Burma and also in Upper Burma, Shan State and Rakhine State. It ended in a stalemate, preserving the independence of Hanthawaddy, and effectively ending Ava's efforts to rebuild the erstwhile Pagan Kingdom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Italian invasion of Egypt",
"paragraph_text": "The war was fought primarily in the Western Desert, which was about 390 kilometres (240 mi) long, from Mersa Matruh in Egypt, west to Gazala on the Libyan coast, along Via Balbia, the only paved road. The Sand Sea, 150 mi (240 km) inland, marked the southern limit of the desert at its widest at Giarabub and Siwa; in British parlance, Western Desert came to include eastern Cyrenaica in Libya. From the coast, extending into the hinterland lies a raised, flat plain of stony desert about 500 feet (150 m) above sea level, that runs 120–190 mi (200–300 km) in depth until the Sand Sea. The region is inhabited by a small number of Bedouin nomads, scorpions, vipers and flies.Bedouin tracks linked wells and the easier traversed ground; desert navigation was by sun, star, compass and \"desert sense\", good perception of the environment gained by experience. When Italian troops advanced into Egypt in September 1940, the Maletti Group, lacking experience of desert conditions, got lost leaving Sidi Omar, disappeared and had to be found by aircraft. In spring and summer, days are miserably hot and nights very cold. The Sirocco (Gibleh or Ghibli), a hot desert wind, blows clouds of fine sand, which reduces visibility to a few yards and coats eyes, lungs, machinery, food and equipment; motor vehicles and aircraft need special oil and air filters and the barren ground means that water and food as well as military stores, have to be transported from outside.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "BRDM-2",
"paragraph_text": "The BRDM-2 (\"Boyevaya Razvedyvatelnaya Dozornaya Mashina\", Боевая Разведывательная Дозорная Машина, literally \"Combat Reconnaissance/Patrol Vehicle\") is an amphibious armoured patrol car used by Russia and the former Soviet Union. It was also known under the designations BTR-40PB, BTR-40P-2 and GAZ 41-08. This vehicle, like many other Soviet designs, has been exported extensively and is in use in at least 38 countries. It was intended to replace the earlier BRDM-1, compared to which it had improved amphibious capabilities and better armament.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Battle of Cissa",
"paragraph_text": "While Hannibal was marching through Gaul, Scipio had landed with his army at the allied Greek city of Massilia. He then sent a cavalry patrol north, up the eastern bank of the Rhone River, which clashed with a similar force of Numidian light cavalry and, after a hard fought skirmish, drove off the Carthaginians. Scipio marched north from his base, while Hannibal marched east towards the Alps. Arriving at the deserted Carthaginian camp, Scipio learned that Hannibal was three day's march away and decided to send his forces to Iberia under the command of his elder brother Gnaeus, who had been consul in 221 BC, while he himself returned to Northern Italy to organize the defences against Hannibal.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "First Battle of El Alamein",
"paragraph_text": "The First Battle of El Alamein (1 -- 27 July 1942) was a battle of the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, fought in Egypt between Axis forces (Germany and Italy) of the Panzer Army Africa (Panzerarmee Afrika, which included the Afrika Korps) (Field Marshal (Generalfeldmarschall) Erwin Rommel) and Allied (British Imperial and Commonwealth) forces (Britain, British India, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand) of the Eighth Army (General Claude Auchinleck).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "First Battle of El Alamein",
"paragraph_text": "The First Battle of El Alamein (1–27 July 1942) was a battle of the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, fought in Egypt between Axis forces (Germany and Italy) of the Panzer Army Africa (, which included the under Field Marshal () Erwin Rommel and Allied (British Imperial and Commonwealth) forces (Britain, British India, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand) of the Eighth Army (General Claude Auchinleck).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "War on Terror",
"paragraph_text": "Following the ceasefire agreement that suspended hostilities (but not officially ended) in the 1991 Gulf War, the United States and its allies instituted and began patrolling Iraqi no-fly zones, to protect Iraq's Kurdish and Shi'a Arab population—both of which suffered attacks from the Hussein regime before and after the Gulf War—in Iraq's northern and southern regions, respectively. U.S. forces continued in combat zone deployments through November 1995 and launched Operation Desert Fox against Iraq in 1998 after it failed to meet U.S. demands of \"unconditional cooperation\" in weapons inspections.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Battle of Freiberg",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Freiberg was fought on 29 October 1762 and was the last great battle of the Third Silesian War (and of the wider Seven Years' War).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Thirty Years' War",
"paragraph_text": "The Thirty Years' War was a war fought primarily in Central Europe between 1618 and 1648. One of the longest and most destructive conflicts in human history, as well as the deadliest European religious war, in history, the war resulted in eight million casualties.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "North African campaign",
"paragraph_text": "The North African Campaign of the Second World War took place in North Africa from 10 June 1940 to 13 May 1943. It included campaigns fought in the Libyan and Egyptian deserts (Western Desert Campaign, also known as the Desert War) and in Morocco and Algeria (Operation Torch), as well as Tunisia (Tunisia Campaign).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Desert Patrol Vehicle",
"paragraph_text": "The Desert Patrol Vehicle (DPV), formerly called the Fast Attack Vehicle (FAV), is a high-speed, lightly armored sandrail-like vehicle first used in combat during the Gulf War in 1991. Due to their dash speed and off-road mobility, the DPVs were used extensively during Operation Desert Storm. The first U.S. forces to enter Kuwait City were United States Navy SEALs in DPVs.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Java War",
"paragraph_text": "The Java War or Diponegoro War was fought in central Java from 1825 to 1830, between the colonial Dutch Empire and native Javanese rebels. It started as a rebellion led by Prince Diponegoro, a leading member of the Javanese aristocracy who had previously cooperated with the Dutch.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Skirmish at Top Malo House",
"paragraph_text": "The Skirmish at Top Malo House was fought on 31 May 1982 during the Falklands War, between 1st Assault Section Argentine Special Forces from 602 Commando Company and a patrol formed from staff and trainees of the British Mountain and Arctic Warfare Cadre, a training detachment of the Royal Marines who were under the Control of 3 Commando Brigade for Operation Corporate.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Korea Patrol",
"paragraph_text": "Korea Patrol (working title \"Korean Patrol\") is a 1951 war film released by Eagle-Lion Films. Together with Sam Fuller’s \"The Steel Helmet\" and Sam Katzman’s \"A Yank in Korea\", it was one of the first Hollywood films exploiting the Korean War.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "PAW Patrol",
"paragraph_text": "Ryder is the human leader of the PAW Patrol. He is a ten - year - old boy who gives the dogs their mission instructions and builds the vehicles and equipment they use. His vehicle is an ATV. He is the only character to be featured in every mission, and the only member to use his vehicle in every episode. He was voiced by Owen Mason from 2013 -- 2015, by Elijha Hammill from 2015 -- 2016, and by Jaxon Mercey from 2016 onward.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_text": "The Gulf War (2 August 199028 February 1991), codenamed Operation Desert Shield (2 August 199017 January 1991) for operations leading to the buildup of troops and defense of Saudi Arabia and Operation Desert Storm (17 January 199128 February 1991) in its combat phase, was a war waged by coalition forces from 35 nations led by the United States against Iraq in response to Iraq's invasion and annexation of Kuwait arising from oil pricing and production disputes. The war is also known under other names, such as the Persian Gulf War, First Gulf War, Gulf War I, Kuwait War, First Iraq War or Iraq War, before the term \"Iraq War\" became identified instead with the post-2003 Iraq War.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
What year did the war that involved Desert Patrol Vehicles start?
|
[
{
"id": 97093,
"question": "In which war did Desert Patrol Vehicle fought?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 154727,
"question": "What year did #1 start?",
"answer": "2 August 1990",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
}
] |
2 August 1990
|
[] | true |
2hop__475138_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "The Chronic",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Chronic\" peaked at number three on the \"Billboard\" 200 and has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America with sales of 5.7 million copies in the United States, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. Dr. Dre's production has been noted for popularizing the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap. \"The Chronic\" has been widely regarded as one of the most important and influential albums of the 1990s and regarded by many fans and peers to be one of the most well-produced hip hop albums of all time. \"The Chronic\" was ranked at #138 on \"Rolling Stone\"'s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "John Franzese Jr.",
"paragraph_text": "John Franzese Jr., (born 1960/61) now living as Mat Pazzarelli is a former associate of the Colombo crime family, and son of underboss John Franzese. He is notable for being the first New York mobster's son to turn state's evidence and testify against his father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Cleopatra III of Egypt",
"paragraph_text": "Cleopatra III was also known as Cleopatra Euergetis while associated with her husband Ptolemy VIII or her son Ptolemy X. She is attested as Cleopatra Philometor Soteira while associated with her eldest son Ptolemy IX. According to Strabo, she was sometimes known as Kokke when discussed in relation to her son Ptolemy X.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Evgenios Spatharis",
"paragraph_text": "Evgenios Spatharis was born in Kifissia in 1924, son of Sotiris Spatharis, himself a famous puppeteer. He progressively got introduced to his father's art, despite his father's reluctance, since his wish was for Evgenios to become an architect. His first public performances were during the German occupation of Greece, when he frequently used heroic themes in order to strengthen the morale of the population. During one of his shows, the Germans arrested him and brought him to the local \"Kommandantur\" for interrogation. Using an old connection of his, he managed to perform for them and they were so impressed that they decided to send him to perform to Germany.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Beyoncé",
"paragraph_text": "On January 7, 2012, Beyoncé gave birth to her first child, a daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. Five months later, she performed for four nights at Revel Atlantic City's Ovation Hall to celebrate the resort's opening, her first performances since giving birth to Blue Ivy.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Thomas A. Dorsey",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Andrew Dorsey (July 1, 1899 -- January 23, 1993) was known as ``the father of black gospel music ''and was at one time so closely associated with the field that songs written in the new style were sometimes known as`` dorseys''. Earlier in his life he was a leading blues pianist known as Georgia Tom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Andronikos IV Palaiologos",
"paragraph_text": "Born on 11 April 1348, Andronikos IV Palaiologos was the eldest son of Emperor John V Palaiologos by his wife Helena Kantakouzene. Already in 1352 he was associated as co-emperor with his father, and when John V left for Italy in 1369 to affirm his submission to the Pope, John left Andronikos behind in Constantinople as regent, while his younger son Manuel II Palaiologos was sent to govern Thessalonica.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Walkin' Blues",
"paragraph_text": "\"Walkin' Blues\" or \"Walking Blues\" is a blues standard written and recorded by American Delta blues musician Son House in 1930. Although unissued at the time, it was part of House's repertoire and other musicians, including Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters, adapted the song and recorded their own versions.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Time for Loving",
"paragraph_text": "Time for Loving (released in Italy as Sapore di mare) is a 1983 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Vanzina. It obtained a great commercial success and launched a short-living subgenre of revival-nostalgic comedy films. It also generated a sequel, \"Sapore di mare 2 - Un anno dopo\". For her performance in this film Virna Lisi won a David di Donatello for Best Supporting Actress and a Silver Ribbon in the same category.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "W. C. Handy",
"paragraph_text": "William Christopher Handy (November 16, 1873 -- March 28, 1958) was a composer and musician, known as the Father of the Blues. An African American, Handy was one of the most influential songwriters in the United States. One of many musicians who played the distinctively American blues music, Handy did not create the blues genre and was not the first to publish music in the blues form, but he took the blues from a regional music style (Delta blues) with a limited audience to a new level of popularity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "John VIII Palaiologos",
"paragraph_text": "John VIII Palaiologos was the eldest son of Manuel II Palaiologos and Helena Dragaš, the daughter of the Serbian prince Constantine Dragaš. He was associated as co-emperor with his father before 1416 and became sole emperor in 1425.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "In Vanda's Room",
"paragraph_text": "In Vanda's Room (Portuguese: No Quarto da Vanda, 2000) is a docufiction (a subgenre of cinéma vérité) film by Portuguese director Pedro Costa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Fathers and Sons (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Fathers and Sons is the seventh studio album by American blues musician Muddy Waters, originally released as a double LP by Chess Records in August 1969.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Jerningham Wakefield",
"paragraph_text": "Edward Jerningham Wakefield (25 June 1820 – 3 March 1879), known as Jerningham Wakefield, was the only son of Edward Gibbon Wakefield. As such, he was closely associated with his father's interest in colonisation. He worked for the New Zealand Company and later was a member of the Canterbury Association. He was active as a politician in New Zealand, both at national and provincial level, but became an alcoholic and died penniless in an old people's home.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Bach to the Blues",
"paragraph_text": "Bach to the Blues is an album performed by the Ramsey Lewis Trio that was recorded in 1964 and released on the Argo label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "List of High Priests of Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Aaron Eleazar, son of Aaron (Numbers 20: 28) Phinehas, son of Eleazar Abishua, son of Phinehas The Samaritans insert Shesha as the son of Abishua and father of Bukki. Bukki, son of Abishua Uzzi, son of Bukki",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Adult contemporary music",
"paragraph_text": "Over the years, AC has spawned subgenres including \"hot AC\", \"soft AC\" (also known as \"lite AC\"), \"urban AC\", \"rhythmic AC\", and \"Christian AC\" (a softer type of contemporary Christian music). Some stations play only \"hot AC\", \"soft AC\", or only one of the variety of subgenres. Therefore, it is not usually considered a specific genre of music; it is merely an assemblage of selected tracks from musicians of many different genres.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Which subgenre of the blues is the performer of Fathers and Sons associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 475138,
"question": "Fathers and Sons >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__97238_28376
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Fredrik Bajer",
"paragraph_text": "He was son of a clergyman born in Næstved in 1837. Bajer served as an officer in the Danish army, fighting in the 1864 war against Prussia and Austria where he was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant. He was discharged in 1865, and moved to Copenhagen where he became a teacher, translator and writer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Great Turkish War",
"paragraph_text": "The Great Turkish War () or the War of the Holy League () was a series of conflicts between the Ottoman Empire and the Holy League consisting of the Habsburg Monarchy, Poland-Lithuania, Venice and Russia. Intensive fighting began in 1683 and ended with the signing of the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699. The war was a defeat for the Ottoman Empire, which for the first time lost large amounts of territory. It lost lands in Hungary and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, as well as part of the western Balkans. The war was also significant in that it marked the first time Russia was involved in a western European alliance.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Blue at the Mizzen",
"paragraph_text": "The novel Blue at the Mizzen is the twentieth and last completed historical novel in the Aubrey-Maturin series by Patrick O'Brian, first published in 1999. It is set after the Napoleonic wars, in the fight for Chilean independence from Spain.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "William Vaughan (royalist)",
"paragraph_text": "Sir William Vaughan (died 1649) was an English royalist commander in the First English Civil War. He was killed at the Battle of Rathmines during the Irish Confederate Wars, fighting the English Republican army led by Michael Jones.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Capture of Jericho",
"paragraph_text": "The Capture of Jericho occurred between 19 and 21 February 1918 to the east of Jerusalem beginning the Occupation of the Jordan Valley during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the First World War. Fighting took place in an area bordered by the Bethlehem–Nablus road in the west, the Jordan River in the east, and north of a line from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea. Here a British Empire force attacked Ottoman positions, forcing them back to Jericho and eventually across the Jordan River.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "80th Infantry (Reserve) Division (United Kingdom)",
"paragraph_text": "The 80th Infantry (Reserve) Division was an infantry division of the British Army formed at the beginning of 1943, during the Second World War. For the twenty months that the division existed, it was a training formation. Army recruits that had been assigned to the division and fully trained were allocated to formations fighting overseas. Notably, the division was used as a source of reinforcements for the 21st Army Group, which was fighting in Normandy. After all available troops left the United Kingdom for France, the division was disbanded.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Ten Years' War",
"paragraph_text": "The Ten Years' War () (1868–1878), also known as the Great War (\"Guerra Grande\") and the War of '68, was part of Cuba's fight for independence from Spain. The uprising was led by Cuban-born planters and other wealthy natives. On October 10, 1868 sugar mill owner Carlos Manuel de Céspedes and his followers proclaimed independence, beginning the conflict. This was the first of three liberation wars that Cuba fought against Spain, the other two being the Little War (1879–1880) and the Cuban War of Independence (1895–1898). The final three months of the last conflict escalated with United States involvement, leading to the Spanish–American War.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Willis Bradley Haviland",
"paragraph_text": "Commander Willis Bradley Haviland, (10 March 1890 – 28 November 1944) was a pioneer military pilot in World War I and a Naval Air Station Commanding Officer in World War II. As the sixteenth American volunteer in the Lafayette Escadrille, he was among the first air combat pilots to fight the Germans in World War I, before the United States officially entered the war. He would later become the first pilot to launch a plane from a battleship.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Lugalo",
"paragraph_text": "Lugalo is a village in Tanzania near Iringa which in 1891 was the site of a battle between a German colonial military force and the Hehe army of Chief Mkwawa. This was the first major defeat for the German Schutztruppe and the beginning of the Hehe wars.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "USS Sovereign (1855)",
"paragraph_text": "The first USS \"Sovereign\" (1855) was a 336-ton steamer captured on the Mississippi River by the Union Navy during the beginning of the American Civil War.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Jameel Sayhood",
"paragraph_text": "Jameel Sayhood was an Iraqi pilot in the Gulf War who it is claimed managed to attain one of the few aerial victories by the Iraqi Air Force in his MiG-29B, before being shot down by USAF Captain Craig Underhill and Captain Cesar Rodriguez with their F-15Cs mere minutes after his air-air victory.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Why We Fight (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Why We Fight is the first album from Seattle-based Gatsbys American Dream. It is presumably named after the World War II documentary series.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "El Salvador: Another Vietnam",
"paragraph_text": "El Salvador: Another Vietnam is a 1981 American documentary film directed by Glenn Silber. This political documentary illustrates the turbulent history of El Salvador from the 1920s-1970s, and the role of the U.S. government in that history. As the title suggests, the presence of U.S. military advisors in a country fighting against socialist guerrilla factions is highly reminiscent of the beginnings of the U.S. escalation of the war in Vietnam. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Battle of Rafa",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Rafa, also known as the Action of Rafah, fought on 9 January 1917, was the third and final battle to complete the recapture of the Sinai Peninsula by British forces during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the First World War. The Desert Column of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) attacked an entrenched Ottoman Army garrison at El Magruntein to the south of Rafah, close to the frontier between the Sultanate of Egypt and the Ottoman Empire, to the north and east of Sheikh Zowaiid. The attack marked the beginning of fighting in the Ottoman territory of Palestine.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Halls of Montezuma (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Halls of Montezuma is a 1951 World War II war film starring Richard Widmark, Richard Boone, Jack Palance and Karl Malden. The film, which is about U.S. Marines fighting on a Japanese-held island, was directed by Academy Award-winner Lewis Milestone. It also starred Robert Wagner in his first credited screen role and featured Richard Boone in his feature film debut. Real color combat footage from the war in the Pacific was incorporated into the film's cinematography.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "War on Terror",
"paragraph_text": "Following the ceasefire agreement that suspended hostilities (but not officially ended) in the 1991 Gulf War, the United States and its allies instituted and began patrolling Iraqi no-fly zones, to protect Iraq's Kurdish and Shi'a Arab population—both of which suffered attacks from the Hussein regime before and after the Gulf War—in Iraq's northern and southern regions, respectively. U.S. forces continued in combat zone deployments through November 1995 and launched Operation Desert Fox against Iraq in 1998 after it failed to meet U.S. demands of \"unconditional cooperation\" in weapons inspections.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Indo-Pakistani War of 1971",
"paragraph_text": "The Indian Army Chief in 1971 Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw had the highest respect for the fighting capability of the Pakistan Army but he did not accept the theory that they did not fight the Bangladesh war with enough vigor and zeal. In a BBC interview, he said:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Spain in Flames",
"paragraph_text": "Spain in Flames is a 1937 compilation film made by Helen van Dongen during the Spanish Civil War. Hal Erickson has written that the film \"... is remarkable in its willingness to offer both sides of the conflict -- though its sympathies are firmly with the Loyalists.\" The film consists of two parts. The first, \"The Fight for Freedom\", was based on film footage from a Spanish government documentary \"Spain and the Fight for Freedom\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "French and Indian War",
"paragraph_text": "In Europe, the North American theater of the Seven Years' War usually is not given a separate name. The entire international conflict is known as the Seven Years' War. \"Seven Years\" refers to events in Europe, from the official declaration of war in 1756 to the signing of the peace treaty in 1763. These dates do not correspond with the fighting on mainland North America, where the fighting between the two colonial powers was largely concluded in six years, from the Battle of Jumonville Glen in 1754 to the capture of Montreal in 1760.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Whiskey Rebellion",
"paragraph_text": "The Whiskey Rebellion (also known as the Whiskey Insurrection) was a tax protest in the United States beginning in 1791 during the presidency of George Washington. The so - called ``whiskey tax ''was the first tax imposed on a domestic product by the newly formed federal government. It became law in 1791, and was intended to generate revenue for the war debt incurred during the Revolutionary War. The tax applied to all distilled spirits, but American whiskey was by far the country's most popular distilled beverage in the 18th century, so the excise became widely known as a`` whiskey tax''. Farmers of the western frontier were accustomed to distilling their surplus rye, barley, wheat, corn, or fermented grain mixtures into whiskey. These farmers resisted the tax. In these regions, whiskey often served as a medium of exchange. Many of the resisters were war veterans who believed that they were fighting for the principles of the American Revolution, in particular against taxation without local representation, while the federal government maintained that the taxes were the legal expression of Congressional taxation powers.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the war begin in which Iraqi pilot Jameel Sayhood fought in?
|
[
{
"id": 97238,
"question": "In what war did Jameel Sayhood fight in?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
},
{
"id": 28376,
"question": "When did the first #1 begin?",
"answer": "1991",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
}
] |
1991
|
[] | true |
2hop__132470_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Dell",
"paragraph_text": "Dell's manufacturing process covers assembly, software installation, functional testing (including \"burn-in\"), and quality control. Throughout most of the company's history, Dell manufactured desktop machines in-house and contracted out manufacturing of base notebooks for configuration in-house. The company's approach has changed, as cited in the 2006 Annual Report, which states, \"We are continuing to expand our use of original design manufacturing partnerships and manufacturing outsourcing relationships.\" The Wall Street Journal reported in September 2008 that \"Dell has approached contract computer manufacturers with offers to sell\" their plants. By the late 2000s, Dell's \"configure to order\" approach of manufacturing—delivering individual PCs configured to customer specifications from its US facilities was no longer as efficient or competitive with high-volume Asian contract manufacturers as PCs became powerful low-cost commodities.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Ashley Furniture Industries",
"paragraph_text": "Ashley Furniture Industries, Inc. is an American home furnishings manufacturer and retailer, headquartered in Arcadia, Wisconsin. The company is owned by father and son team Ron and Todd Wanek. Ashley Furniture manufactures and distributes home furniture products throughout the world.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Nigeria",
"paragraph_text": "Nigeria in recent years has been embracing industrialisation. It currently has an indigenous vehicle manufacturing company, Innoson Motors, which manufactures Rapid Transit Buses, Trucks and SUVs with an upcoming introduction of Cars. Nigeria also has few Electronic manufacturers like Zinox, the first Branded Nigerian Computer and Electronic gadgets (like tablet PCs) manufacturers. In 2013, Nigeria introduced a policy regarding import duty on vehicles to encourage local manufacturing companies in the country. In this regard, some foreign vehicle manufacturing companies like Nissan have made known their plans to have manufacturing plants in Nigeria. Ogun is considered to be the current Nigeria's industrial hub, as most factories are located in Ogun and more companies are moving there, followed by Lagos.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Sheffield Pharmaceuticals",
"paragraph_text": "Sheffield Pharmaceuticals is a manufacturer of over the counter pharmaceutical products to retailers in the United States. It manufactures and sells products both under its own labels and privately for other companies, and is an FDA registered cGMP facility. The company was founded in 1880 as the Sheffield Dentifrice Company by Washington Sheffield, the inventor of modern toothpaste.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER",
"paragraph_text": "The AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER (Standoff Land Attack Missile-Expanded Response) is an advanced stand off precision-guided, air-launched cruise missile produced by Boeing Defense, Space & Security for the United States Armed Forces and their allies. Developed from the AGM-84E SLAM (Standoff Land Attack Missile) (itself developed by Boeing Integrated Defense Systems from the McDonnell Douglas Harpoon antiship missile), the SLAM-ER is capable of attacking land and sea targets medium to long range (155 nautical miles/270 km maximum). The SLAM-ER relies on the Global Positioning System (GPS) and infrared imaging for its navigation and control, and it can strike both moving and stationary targets.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Taunton Locomotive Manufacturing Company",
"paragraph_text": "The Taunton Locomotive Manufacturing Company was one of the earliest firms in the United States established especially for the manufacture of steam locomotives. Located in Taunton, Massachusetts, the company was organized in 1849 and incorporated the following year by William A. Crocker, Willard W. Fairbanks, William R. Lee and their associates. Their first engine, the \"Rough and Ready\" was delivered in May 1849.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Colt's Manufacturing Company",
"paragraph_text": "Colt's Manufacturing Company, LLC (CMC, formerly Colt's Patent Firearms Manufacturing Company) is an American firearms manufacturer, founded in 1855 by Samuel Colt. It is the successor corporation to Colt's earlier firearms-making efforts, which started in 1836. Colt is known for the engineering, production, and marketing of firearms, most especially between the 1850s and World War I, when it was a dominating force in its industry and a seminal influence on manufacturing technology. Colt's earliest designs played a major role in the popularization of the revolver and the shift away from earlier single-shot pistols. Although Samuel Colt did not invent the revolver concept, his designs resulted in the first very successful ones.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Star Model PD",
"paragraph_text": "The Star Model PD is a compact and lightweight semi-automatic pistol which was manufactured from 1975 to 1990 by the firearms manufacturing company Star Bonifacio Echeverria, S.A., located in the city of Eibar in the Basque region of Spain.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is an American wide - body commercial jet airliner and cargo aircraft, often referred to by its original nickname, ``Jumbo Jet ''. Its distinctive`` hump'' upper deck along the forward part of the aircraft makes it among the world's most recognizable aircraft, and it was the first wide - body produced. Manufactured by Boeing's Commercial Airplane unit in the United States, the original version of the 747 was envisioned to have 150 percent greater capacity than the Boeing 707, one of the common large commercial aircraft of the 1960s. First flown commercially in 1970, the 747 held the passenger capacity record for 37 years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Paasche Airbrush Company",
"paragraph_text": "The Paasche Airbrush Company is based in Chicago, Illinois. The company manufactures airbrushes, industrial spray guns, air compressors and related equipment. Paasche has been a manufacturer of airbrushes for over 100 years, based on patented designs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Renishaw plc",
"paragraph_text": "Renishaw plc () is a British engineering company based in Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucestershire. The company specialises in measurement, motion control, healthcare, spectroscopy and manufacturing and is best known for its coordinate-measuring machines and machine tool products. It is a leading company in metal additive manufacturing where machines print parts from metal powder. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Xonox",
"paragraph_text": "Xonox, a division of K-tel Software Inc., was an American third-party manufacturer of cartridges for the Atari 2600, ColecoVision, Commodore 64 and Commodore VIC-20 in the early 1980s. Xonox was one of many small video game companies to fold during the Video Game Crash of 1983.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Bally Manufacturing",
"paragraph_text": "The Bally Manufacturing Corporation was founded by Raymond Moloney on January 10, 1932, when Bally's original parent, Lion Manufacturing, established the company to make pinball games. The company took its name from its first game, Ballyhoo. The company, based in Chicago, quickly became a leading maker of the games. In the late 1930s, Moloney began making gambling equipment, and had great success developing and improving the mechanical slot machines that were the core of the nascent gaming industry. After manufacturing munitions and airplane parts during World War II, Bally Manufacturing Corporation continued to produce innovations in flipperless pinball machines, bingo machines, payout machines and console slot machines through the late 1950s. They also designed and manufactured vending machines and established a coffee vending service. The company made a brief venture into the music business with their own record label, Bally Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Lam Research",
"paragraph_text": "Lam Research was founded in 1980 by Dr. David K. Lam and is headquartered in Fremont, California, in the Silicon Valley. As of 2018, it was the second largest manufacturer in the Bay Area, after Tesla.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Boulton Paul Aircraft",
"paragraph_text": "Boulton Paul Aircraft Ltd was a British aircraft manufacturer that was incorporated in 1934, although its origins in aircraft manufacturing began earlier in 1914, and lasted until 1961. The company mainly built and modified aircraft under contract to other manufacturers, but had a few notable designs of its own, such as the Defiant fighter and the Balliol trainer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Glide (automobile)",
"paragraph_text": "The Glide automobile was an American automobile manufactured by the Bartholomew Company in Peoria Heights, Illinois beginning in 1902. Founded by John B. Bartholomew, the company continued to produce automobiles until 1920, when the company began manufacturing trucks for the Avery Company, of which Bartholomew was also president.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Colt Diamondback",
"paragraph_text": "The Colt Diamondback is a revolver manufactured by Colt's Manufacturing Company of Hartford, Connecticut, in calibers of .22 LR and .38 Special. Inspired by the successful Colt Python, the Diamondback was manufactured from 1966 to 1988 and was available in barrel lengths of 2½, 4, and 6 inches.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
Who manufactured the 747, bearing the name of the company that manufactured the AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER?
|
[
{
"id": 132470,
"question": "By which company, AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER has been manufactured?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[] | true |
2hop__503938_154727
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Tristan Dyer",
"paragraph_text": "Tristan Dyer is an American film director, stop-motion animator, and Iraq war veteran from Waldoboro, Maine. He served in the U.S. Army for five years and spent one year at Camp Taji, Iraq with an Air Cavalry unit. After being honorably discharged from the Army in 2005, Dyer attended the Brooks Institute of Photography in Ventura, CA where he earned a BA in Visual Journalism.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Indian Rebellion of 1857",
"paragraph_text": "At Meerut, a large military cantonment, 2,357 Indian sepoys and 2,038 British soldiers were stationed along with 12 British-manned guns. The station held one of the largest concentrations of British troops in India and this was later to be cited as evidence that the original rising was a spontaneous outbreak rather than a pre-planned plot.Although the state of unrest within the Bengal Army was well known, on 24 April Lieutenant Colonel George Carmichael-Smyth, the unsympathetic commanding officer of the 3rd Bengal Light Cavalry, ordered 90 of his men to parade and perform firing drills. All except five of the men on parade refused to accept their cartridges. On 9 May, the remaining 85 men were court martialled, and most were sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment with hard labour. Eleven comparatively young soldiers were given five years' imprisonment. The entire garrison was paraded and watched as the condemned men were stripped of their uniforms and placed in shackles. As they were marched off to jail, the condemned soldiers berated their comrades for failing to support them.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Soldier Five",
"paragraph_text": "Soldier Five – The Real Truth About the Bravo Two Zero Mission is the third book about the Bravo Two Zero mission during the Gulf War to have been written by a member of the eight-man patrol involved.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Los Tres",
"paragraph_text": "Los Tres recorded nine albums during their first period, from 1989 until 2000, starting with \"Los Tres\": a jazz/folk/rock blending, in 1991. The band dissolved in 2000 and its members continued their musical careers in personal projects, during the following five years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Battle of Boroughbridge",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Boroughbridge was a battle fought on 16 March 1322 between a group of rebellious barons and King Edward II of England, near Boroughbridge, north-west of York. The culmination of a long period of antagonism between the King and Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, his most powerful subject, it resulted in Lancaster's defeat and execution. This allowed Edward to re-establish royal authority, and hold on to power for another five years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Boston Massacre",
"paragraph_text": "The Boston Massacre, known as the Incident on King Street by the British, was an incident on March 5, 1770, in which British Army soldiers shot and killed people while under attack by a mob. The incident was heavily publicized by leading Patriots, such as Paul Revere and Samuel Adams, to encourage rebellion against the British authorities. British troops had been stationed in Boston, capital of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, since 1768 in order to protect and support crown - appointed colonial officials attempting to enforce unpopular Parliamentary legislation. Amid ongoing tense relations between the population and the soldiers, a mob formed around a British sentry, who was subjected to verbal abuse and harassment. He was eventually supported by eight additional soldiers, who were subjected to verbal threats and repeatedly hit by clubs, stones and snowballs. They fired into the crowd, without orders, instantly killing three people and wounding others. Two more people died later of wounds sustained in the incident.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Frederic Ives Lord",
"paragraph_text": "Frederic Ives Lord (April 18, 1897 – July 21, 1967) or sometimes Frederick Ives Lord, was a captain, a World War I flying ace, and a soldier of fortune who fought in five wars.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Channel 4 News",
"paragraph_text": "\"Channel 4 News\" is among the highest-rated television programmes in the United Kingdom, winning a record five Royal Television Society Television Awards in February 2006. These included TV Journalist of the Year for Jon Snow, Home News Award for the Attorney General leak, and the International News Award for Congo's Tin Soldiers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Alaska",
"paragraph_text": "Starting in 1982, dividends from the fund's annual growth have been paid out each year to eligible Alaskans, ranging from an initial $1,000 in 1982 (equal to three years' payout, as the distribution of payments was held up in a lawsuit over the distribution scheme) to $3,269 in 2008 (which included a one-time $1,200 \"Resource Rebate\"). Every year, the state legislature takes out 8% from the earnings, puts 3% back into the principal for inflation proofing, and the remaining 5% is distributed to all qualifying Alaskans. To qualify for the Permanent Fund Dividend, one must have lived in the state for a minimum of 12 months, maintain constant residency subject to allowable absences, and not be subject to court judgments or criminal convictions which fall under various disqualifying classifications or may subject the payment amount to civil garnishment.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Estonia",
"paragraph_text": "The tradition of Estonian Song Festivals (Laulupidu) started at the height of the Estonian national awakening in 1869. Today, it is one of the largest amateur choral events in the world. In 2004, about 100,000 people participated in the Song Festival. Since 1928, the Tallinn Song Festival Grounds (Lauluväljak) have hosted the event every five years in July. The last festival took place in July 2014. In addition, Youth Song Festivals are also held every four or five years, the last of them in 2011, and the next is scheduled for 2017.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "President of Germany",
"paragraph_text": "The 12th and current officeholder is Frank - Walter Steinmeier who was elected on 12 February 2017 and started his first five - year - term on 19 March 2017.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Nuns and Soldiers",
"paragraph_text": "Nuns and Soldiers is a 1980 novel by Iris Murdoch. The setting is England and two of the main characters are Gertrude, a widow, and Anne, an ex-nun.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Five Nights at Freddy's",
"paragraph_text": "The main characters in the Five Nights at Freddy's series are generally security guards working at a Freddy Fazbear's Pizza or related location. None of them have distinct personalities and most of the gameplay takes place from their point of view. In Five Nights at Freddy's, the guard's name is Mike Schmidt. In Five Nights at Freddy's 2, the guard is named Jeremy Fitzgerald for all of the main five nights and the bonus sixth night, though he is replaced in the custom seventh night by another guard, Fritz Smith. The security guard for Fazbear's Fright: The Horror Attraction in Five Nights at Freddy's 3, is unknown. The main character of Five Nights at Freddy's 4 is an unnamed boy, who experiences nightmares of the animatronics. The player in Five Nights at Freddy's: Sister Location is a technician who has their name jokingly autocorrected to Eggs Benedict. The technician's name is assumed, although not confirmed to be, Mike.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "National Curriculum for England",
"paragraph_text": "In 2013, the government produced a draft National Curriculum, followed by a final version in September 2013, for first teaching in September 2014. Due to the short timescales for introduction, the curriculum was introduced only for certain subjects and year groups in 2014, with the core subjects in Years 2 and 6 (the final years of Key Stages 2 and 4) only becoming statutory in September 2015, to allow time for the introduction of new testing arrangements at the end of the Key Stages. Similarly, core subjects at Key Stage 4 are to be introduced on a year - by - year basis starting in September 2015 for English and Maths, and September 2016 for Science.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Delkash",
"paragraph_text": "Delkash started public singing in 1943 and was employed in Radio Iran in 1945, only five years after the establishment of the program. There, she worked with the composer Mehdi Khaledi for seven years, until 1952, which made them both very famous. The best of her songs were written by Rahim Moeini Kermanshahi, Iranian lyricist, and Ali Tajvidi, Iranian composer, from 1954 until 1969.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_text": "The Gulf War (2 August 199028 February 1991), codenamed Operation Desert Shield (2 August 199017 January 1991) for operations leading to the buildup of troops and defense of Saudi Arabia and Operation Desert Storm (17 January 199128 February 1991) in its combat phase, was a war waged by coalition forces from 35 nations led by the United States against Iraq in response to Iraq's invasion and annexation of Kuwait arising from oil pricing and production disputes. The war is also known under other names, such as the Persian Gulf War, First Gulf War, Gulf War I, Kuwait War, First Iraq War or Iraq War, before the term \"Iraq War\" became identified instead with the post-2003 Iraq War.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Seasons of Love",
"paragraph_text": "\"Seasons of Love\" is a song from the Broadway musical \"Rent\", written and composed by Jonathan Larson. The song starts with an ostinato piano motif, which provides the harmonic framework for the cast to sing \"Five hundred twenty-five thousand, six hundred minutes\" (the number of minutes in a common year [60 minutes × 24 hours × 365 days]). The main instruments used throughout the song are piano, vocals, guitar, organ, bass and drums.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Chen Zhe",
"paragraph_text": "former professional snooker player from Shanxi, China who won five matches at Q School in 2012 to earn a two-year card to play on the World Snooker Tour starting in the 2012/13 season. He is based in Romford, England during the season and practises with Ronnie O'Sullivan.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "León Krauze",
"paragraph_text": "For five years, Krauze hosted “Segunda Emisión”, Mexico’s highest rated afternoon radio newsmagazine. Upon moving to television, Krauze quickly became a success as well, anchoring “Hora 21”, the main newscast for Foro TV, Televisa’s 24/7 news network. Krauze is currently the main anchor at Univision’s Los Angeles station, KMEX. He’s also a regular at \"Fusion\", where he hosted the show \"Open Source\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Luc-Olivier Merson",
"paragraph_text": "Born Nicolas Luc-Olivier Merson in Paris, France, he grew up in an artistic household, the son of Charles-Olivier Merson, a painter and art critic. He studied under Gustave Chassevent at the École de Dessin and then Isidore Pils at the École des Beaux-Arts. Merson had his first work exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1866 and three years later was awarded the Prix de Rome. During the five years spent working in Italy, he concentrated on religious and historical subjects for his art.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What year did the war in Soldier Five start?
|
[
{
"id": 503938,
"question": "Soldier Five >> main subject",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 154727,
"question": "What year did #1 start?",
"answer": "2 August 1990",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
}
] |
2 August 1990
|
[] | true |
2hop__142046_177328
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "You Belong to Me (2008 Jo Stafford album)",
"paragraph_text": "You Belong to Me is a 2008 compilation album of songs by American artist Jo Stafford. Released on the Dynamic label on April 8, 2008, the album features 16 of Stafford's hits.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Nine Million Bicycles",
"paragraph_text": "\"Nine Million Bicycles\" is a song written and produced by Mike Batt for the singer Katie Melua's second album, \"Piece by Piece\". It was released as the album's first single in September 2005 and reached number five on the UK Singles Chart, becoming Melua's first top five hit as a solo artist. It was a finalist for The Record of the Year prize, losing to \"You Raise Me Up\" by Westlife.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Les Misérables in Concert: The 25th Anniversary",
"paragraph_text": "It featured Alfie Boe as Jean Valjean, Norm Lewis as Javert, Lea Salonga as Fantine, Nick Jonas as Marius, Katie Hall as Cosette, Ramin Karimloo as Enjolras, Samantha Barks as Éponine, Mia Jenkins as Young Cosette, Robert Madge as Gavroche, Matt Lucas and Jenny Galloway as the Thénardiers, and Earl Carpenter as the Bishop of Digne. Originally, Camilla Kerslake had been selected to perform as Cosette; however, she was unable to attend. Katie Hall was selected in her place. Hall had previously acted as Cosette at the Queen's Theatre from 2009 and in the 25th Anniversary Tour production at the Barbican. Casts of the current London, international tour, and original 1985 London productions took part, comprising an ensemble of three hundred performers and musicians. The orchestra was conducted by David Charles Abell, who also conducted the 10th Anniversary performance in Royal Albert Hall in 1995.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Kati Simveni",
"paragraph_text": "Kati Simveni (; ) is the name of a Greek album by singer Anna Vissi. The album was released in Greece and Cyprus by CBS Greece in 1985. This album includes her signature song \"Dodeka\". The album reached gold status.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Paranormal Activity 2",
"paragraph_text": "Sprague Grayden as Kristi Rey Brian Boland as Daniel Rey, Kristi's husband Molly Ephraim as Ali Rey, Daniel's daughter Katie Featherston as Katie, Kristi's sister Micah Sloat as Micah, Katie's boyfriend Seth Ginsberg as Brad, Ali's boyfriend Vivis Cortez as Martine, the nanny / housekeeper Jackson Xenia Prieto and William Juan Prieto as Hunter Rey, Daniel and Kristi's infant son",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Interracial marriage",
"paragraph_text": "Interracial marriage is a form of marriage outside a specific social group (exogamy) involving spouses who belong to different socially - defined races or racialized ethnicities. In the past, it was outlawed in the United States of America and in South Africa as miscegenation. It became legal in the entire United States in 1967 when the Supreme Court of the United States ruled in the case Loving v. Virginia that race - based restrictions on marriages violated the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Crush (Jennifer Paige song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Crush\" is a 1998 pop song recorded by American singer Jennifer Paige. The song was written by Andy Goldmark, Mark Mueller, Berny Cosgrove and Kevin Clark. It was released as the first single from her debut album, \"Jennifer Paige\" (see 1998 in music). The music video for \"Crush\" was produced by Kati Haberstok and directed by David Hogan.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "I Kissed a Girl",
"paragraph_text": "``I Kissed a Girl ''Single by Katy Perry from the album One of the Boys Released April 28, 2008 (2008 - 04 - 28) Format CD single digital download Studio Dr. Luke's Studios Legacy Recording Studio (New York City) Conway Recording Studio (Hollywood) Genre Pop rock Length 3: 00 Label Capitol Songwriter (s) Katy Perry Lukasz Gottwald Max Martin Cathy Dennis Producer (s) Dr. Luke Benny Blanco Katy Perry singles chronology`` I Kissed a Girl'' (2008) ``Hot n Cold ''(2008)`` I Kissed a Girl'' (2008) ``Hot n Cold ''(2008) Music video`` I Kissed a Girl'' on YouTube",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "The Flood (Katie Melua song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Flood\" is a song performed by the Georgian-born, British singer Katie Melua and the lead single from her 4th studio album The House. It was released on 17 May 2010 by Digital download and by CD on 24 May 2010.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Substitution Mass Confusion: A Tribute to The Cars",
"paragraph_text": "Substitution Mass Confusion: A Tribute to The Cars is a 2005 compilation album featuring covers of songs originally performed by the American rock band The Cars. The album was released by Not Lame Recordings. Many of the performers featured on the album were from the Boston area, where The Cars first gained exposure in the late 1970s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "The Royal Scam",
"paragraph_text": "The Royal Scam is the fifth studio album by Steely Dan, originally released by ABC Records in 1976. The album went gold and peaked at #15 on the charts. \"The Royal Scam\" features more prominent guitar work than the prior Steely Dan album, \"Katy Lied\", which had been the first without founding guitarist Jeff Baxter. Guitarists on the recording include Walter Becker, Denny Dias, Larry Carlton, Elliott Randall and Dean Parks.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Les Misérables in Concert: The 25th Anniversary",
"paragraph_text": "It featured Alfie Boe as Jean Valjean, Norm Lewis as Javert, Lea Salonga as Fantine, Nick Jonas as Marius, Katie Hall as Cosette, Ramin Karimloo as Enjolras, Samantha Barks as Éponine, Mia Jenkins as Young Cosette, Robert Madge as Gavroche, Matt Lucas and Jenny Galloway as the Thénardiers, and Earl Carpenter as the Bishop of Digne. Originally, Camilla Kerslake had been selected to perform as Cosette, however she was unable to attend. Katie Hall was selected in her place. Hall had previously acted as Cosette at the Queen's Theatre from 2009 and in the 25th Anniversary Tour production at the Barbican. Casts of the current London, international tour, and original 1985 London productions took part, comprising an ensemble of three hundred performers and musicians. The orchestra was conducted by David Charles Abell, who also conducted the 10th Anniversary performance in Royal Albert Hall in 1995.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Walk Through Walls",
"paragraph_text": "Walk Through Walls is the fifth studio album by the American singer-songwriter Katie Herzig. The album was recorded at her own St. Cecelia Studios in Nashville together with Cason Cooley. The album was mixed by Justin Gerrish and was self-released.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Katy Hudson (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Katy Hudson is the eponymous debut studio album by American singer Katy Hudson (later known as Katy Perry). It was released on February 8, 2001 by Red Hill Records. The album primarily incorporates Christian rock and contemporary Christian music elements with lyrical themes of childhood, adolescence, and Hudson's faith in God. Before its release, Red Hill went bankrupt, preventing it from marketing and promoting the album, which subsequently sold fewer than 200 copies and received mixed reviews.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Call Off the Search",
"paragraph_text": "Call Off the Search is the debut studio album by Georgian-British jazz and blues singer Katie Melua, released in 2003.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Apla Ta Pragmata",
"paragraph_text": "Apla Ta Pragmata () is an album by popular Greek artist Katy Garbi, released on December 14, 2001 by Sony Music Greece. The album went 2x Platinum in Greece selling over 100,000 units, and 2x Platinum in Cyprus, also producing the Platinum CD Single Ti Theloune Ta Matia Sou. Dewar's whiskey was a main sponsor of the album, including sponsorship of the album's platinum certification party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Emeis",
"paragraph_text": "Emeis (; ) is the name of a Greek album by singers Anna Vissi and Nikos Karvelas. It was released in Greece and Cyprus in 1992 by Sony Music Greece. The album has achieved gold status. It features her Vissi's song \"Den Thelo Na Kseris\".",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "I Belong to You (Caro Emerald song)",
"paragraph_text": "I Belong To You is the tenth single of the Dutch singer Caro Emerald, from the album The Shocking Miss Emerald.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Kelly Severide",
"paragraph_text": "Kelly Severide Chicago Fire character First appearance Pilot (episode 1.01) CPD: ``Chin Check 'Chicago Med:`` Fallback ''Portrayed by Taylor Kinney Other appearances SVU: ``Chicago Crossover'' (episode 16.07) Information Gender Male Family Benny Severide (father) Jennifer Sheridan (mother) Katie Nolan (paternal half - sister) Unnamed paternal half - brothers Spouse (s) Brittany Baker (ex-wife) Significant other (s) Renée Whaley (ex-fiancée) Renée Royce (ex-girlfriend) Erin Lindsay (ex-girlfriend) Stella Kidd (girlfriend) Anna Turner (girlfriend; deceased) Nationality American Career Department Chicago Fire Department Squad 3 Rank Lieutenant",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Turn the Music Louder (Rumble)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Turn the Music Louder (Rumble)\" is a song recorded by British DJ KDA. It is a re-working of his instrumental hit \"Rumble\" and it features vocals from rapper Tinie Tempah and singer Katy B. The song was released as a digital download on 16 October 2015 by Ministry of Sound. The song was written by Tempah and Katy B and produced by KDA. On 23 October 2015, the song debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart, becoming Tempah's seventh single to do so and KDA and Katy B's first. The song appeared on Katy B's third studio album \"Honey\" (2016).",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the spouse of the performer of the album Kati Simveni?
|
[
{
"id": 142046,
"question": "To which performer does the album Kati Simveni belong?",
"answer": "Anna Vissi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
},
{
"id": 177328,
"question": "#1 >> spouse",
"answer": "Nikos Karvelas",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
}
] |
Nikos Karvelas
|
[] | true |
2hop__133022_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "William Goodison",
"paragraph_text": "William Thomas Goodison (16 February 1876 – 3 December 1928) was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in Strathroy, Ontario and became a business executive, business manager and manufacturer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Like its predecessor, the 747X family was unable to garner enough interest to justify production, and it was shelved along with the 767-400ERX in March 2001, when Boeing announced the Sonic Cruiser concept. Though the 747X design was less costly than the 747-500X and -600X, it was criticized for not offering a sufficient advance from the existing 747-400. The 747X did not make it beyond the drawing board, but the 747-400X being developed concurrently moved into production to become the 747-400ER.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "747 Wing House",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 - 100 was a Trans World Airlines (TWA) aircraft (N93106). Its construction number was 19672 and it was the twenty - eighth 747 built. Boeing delivered the 747 to TWA on April 3, 1970, at a cost of approximately $25,000,000. It flew with TWA until 1992, when it was retired to the old El Mirage Air Force Base, before being purchased by Tower Air for its scrap value of $30,000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Electrical telegraph",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Morse independently developed and patented a recording electric telegraph in 1837. Morse's assistant Alfred Vail developed an instrument that was called the register for recording the received messages. It embossed dots and dashes on a moving paper tape by a stylus which was operated by an electromagnet. Morse and Vail developed the Morse code signalling alphabet. The first telegram in the United States was sent by Morse on 11 January 1838, across two miles (3 km) of wire at Speedwell Ironworks near Morristown, New Jersey, although it was only later, in 1844, that he sent the message ``WHAT HATH GOD WROUGHT? ''over the 44 miles (71 km) from the Capitol in Washington to the old Mt. Clare Depot in Baltimore.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is a large, wide-body (two-aisle) airliner with four wing-mounted engines. Its wings have a high sweep angle of 37.5 degrees for a fast, efficient cruise of Mach 0.84 to 0.88, depending on the variant. The sweep also reduces the wingspan, allowing the 747 to use existing hangars. Its seating capacity is over 366 with a 3–4–3 seat arrangement (a cross section of 3 seats, an aisle, 4 seats, another aisle, and 3 seats) in economy class and a 2–3–2 layout in first class on the main deck. The upper deck has a 3–3 seat arrangement in economy class and a 2–2 layout in first class.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Bally Manufacturing",
"paragraph_text": "The Bally Manufacturing Corporation was founded by Raymond Moloney on January 10, 1932, when Bally's original parent, Lion Manufacturing, established the company to make pinball games. The company took its name from its first game, Ballyhoo. The company, based in Chicago, quickly became a leading maker of the games. In the late 1930s, Moloney began making gambling equipment, and had great success developing and improving the mechanical slot machines that were the core of the nascent gaming industry. After manufacturing munitions and airplane parts during World War II, Bally Manufacturing Corporation continued to produce innovations in flipperless pinball machines, bingo machines, payout machines and console slot machines through the late 1950s. They also designed and manufactured vending machines and established a coffee vending service. The company made a brief venture into the music business with their own record label, Bally Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Thomas Whitelock Kempthorne",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Whitelock Kempthorne (c.1834–3 November 1915) was a New Zealand manufacturing chemist and businessman who co-founded Kempthorne Prosser in 1870 in Dunedin. He was born in Cornwall, England c.1834.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "William Doud Packard",
"paragraph_text": "William Doud Packard (November 3, 1861 – November 11, 1923) was an American automobile manufacturer who founded the Packard Motor Car Company and Packard Electric Company with his brother James Ward Packard.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "FM H-12-46",
"paragraph_text": "The FM H-12-46 was a light road switcher of Fairbanks-Morse design manufactured exclusively by the Canadian Locomotive Company from October, 1951–January, 1953 for the Canadian National Railway. Only thirty of the 1,200 hp, six-cylinder opposed piston engine locomotives were produced. The units (assigned #7600–#7629) were configured in an A1A-A1A wheel arrangement, mounted atop a pair of three-axle trucks.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide-body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC-10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC-25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H. W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "TI-Nspire series",
"paragraph_text": "TI - Nspire CX CAS Type Programmable, Graphing, Symbolic Manufacturer Texas Instruments Introduced February 25, 2011 Predecessor TI - Nspire CAS with Touchpad Calculator Entry mode D.A.L. Precision 14 Display type Color LCD Display size 320x240 (3.2 ''diagonal) Programming Programming language (s) TI - Nspire BASIC, Lua User memory 100 MB Memory register 64 MB Other Weight 242 grams (8.5 oz) Dimensions 191 mm × 86 mm × 15 mm (7.5 in × 3.4 in × 0.60 in)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Woolson Morse",
"paragraph_text": "Henry Woolson Morse (February 24, 1858 – May 3, 1897), usually credited as Woolson Morse, was an American composer of musical theatre. Often working with librettist J. Cheever Goodwin, he produced several scores for Broadway productions in the 1890s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Portable media player",
"paragraph_text": "The first portable MP3 player was launched in 1997 by Saehan Information Systems, which sold its ``MPMan ''player in Asia in spring 1998. In mid-1998, the South Korean company licensed the players for North American distribution to Eiger Labs, which rebranded them as the EigerMan F10 and F20. The flash - based players were available in 32 MB or 64 MB (6 or 12 songs) storage capacity and had a LCD screen to tell the user the song currently playing.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Jasper Grosvenor",
"paragraph_text": "Jasper Grosvenor (1794–1857) was an American financier of the early to mid 19th century. In 1832 he partnered with Thomas Rogers and Morris Ketchum to form the manufacturing firm Rogers, Ketchum and Grosvenor which became the second most popular steam locomotive manufacturing company in North America in the 19th century. He remained a partner in the business until his death in 1857.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Oakland Motor Car Company",
"paragraph_text": "The Oakland Motor Car Company of Pontiac, Michigan, was an American automobile manufacturer and division of General Motors. Purchased by General Motors in 1909, the company continued to produce modestly priced automobiles until 1931 when the brand was dropped in favor of the division's Pontiac make.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide - body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC - 10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC - 25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H.W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Thomas-Morse MB-3",
"paragraph_text": "The Thomas-Morse MB-3 was an open-cockpit biplane fighter primarily manufactured by the Boeing Company for the U.S. Army Air Service in 1922. The MB-3A was the mainstay fighter for the Air Service between 1922 and 1925.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
What company manufactures the 747 model for the company that makes Thomas-Morse MB-3?
|
[
{
"id": 133022,
"question": "What company makes Thomas-Morse MB-3?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[] | true |
2hop__85343_63644
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Feel So Right",
"paragraph_text": "\"Feel So Right\" is MAX's 22nd single on the Avex Trax label and was released on December 5, 2001. The title track was used as the ending theme to anime series, . MAX performed the song on their fifth appearance on NHK singing contest, Kōhaku Uta Gassen.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Build Me Up Buttercup",
"paragraph_text": "``Build Me Up Buttercup ''is a song written by Mike d'Abo and Tony Macaulay, and released by The Foundations in 1968 with Colin Young singing lead vocals. Young had replaced Clem Curtis during 1968 and this was the first Foundations hit on which he sang.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Waltraud Meier",
"paragraph_text": "Waltraud Meier was born in Würzburg, Germany. She sang in various choral groups during her younger years. Upon finishing her secondary education, she began graduate studies in English and Romance Languages while also taking voice lessons. She studied singing with Professor Dietger Jacob. In 1976, she decided to concentrate on a singing career and soon thereafter debuted at the Würzburg Opera as Lola in \"Cavalleria rusticana\". Over the next several years she performed regularly at the opera house in Mannheim (1976–78).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The Ballad of Jed Clampett",
"paragraph_text": "``The Ballad of Jed Clampett ''was the theme song for The Beverly Hillbillies TV show and movie, providing the back story for the series. The song was written and composed by Paul Henning, and sung by Jerry Scoggins, who was accompanied by bluegrass musicians Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs. When the theme was released as a single, Flatt sang lead vocals instead.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Mary Sands",
"paragraph_text": "Mary Bullman Sands (April 8, 1872 – April 2, 1949), from Allanstand in Madison County, North Carolina, was a singer of old traditional ballads during the early part of the 20th century. She was known locally as \"Singing Mary\" due to her singing talent and extensive knowledge of the words and melodies of many old-time traditional songs that had been passed down through previous generations. In 1916, English folklorist Cecil Sharp visited Madison County to collect and record traditional folk songs being sung in America that would have originated generations earlier in the British Isles. Sands sang 25 songs for him, 23 of which he included in his book, \"English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Robin Ward (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "Jackie Ward (born Jacqueline McDonnell, 1941), better known as Robin Ward, is an American singer, regarded as a ``one - hit wonder ''of 1963 million - selling song`` Wonderful Summer''. However, using her real name she was highly accomplished and successful singing in groups. Ward's voice is heard in U.S. television series, motion pictures, advertisements, and pop records. She is one of the real singers of the hits attributed to The Partridge Family.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "The Wonder Years",
"paragraph_text": "The Wonder Years Created by Neal Marlens Carol Black Starring Fred Savage Dan Lauria Alley Mills Olivia d'Abo Jason Hervey Danica McKellar Josh Saviano Narrated by Daniel Stern Theme music composer Lennon -- McCartney Opening theme ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''by Joe Cocker Country of origin United States Original language (s) English No. of seasons 6 No. of episodes 115 (list of episodes) Production Camera setup Single - camera Running time 22 -- 24 minutes Production company (s) The Black - Marlens Company New World Television Distributor 20th Television Release Original network ABC Original release January 31, 1988 (1988 - 01 - 31) -- May 12, 1993 (1993 - 05 - 12)",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "The finals are broadcast in prime time from CBS Television City in Los Angeles, in front of a live studio audience. The finals lasted eight weeks in season one, eleven weeks in subsequent seasons until seasons ten and eleven which lasted twelve weeks except for season twelve, which lasted ten weeks, and season thirteen, which lasted for thirteen weeks. Each finalist performs songs based on a weekly theme which may be a musical genre such as Motown, disco, or big band, songs by artists such as Michael Jackson, Elvis Presley or The Beatles, or more general themes such as Billboard Number 1 hits or songs from the contestant's year of birth. Contestants usually work with a celebrity mentor related to the theme. In season ten, Jimmy Iovine was brought in as a mentor for the season. Initially the contestants sing one song each week, but this is increased to two songs from top four or five onwards, then three songs for the top two or three.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Unchained Melody",
"paragraph_text": "``Unchained Melody ''is a 1955 song with music by Alex North and lyrics by Hy Zaret. North used the music as a theme for the little - known prison film Unchained (1955), hence the song title. Todd Duncan sang the vocals for the film soundtrack. It has since become a standard and one of the most often recorded songs of the 20th century, most notably by the Righteous Brothers. According to the song's publishing administrator, over 1,500 recordings of`` Unchained Melody'' have been made by more than 670 artists, in multiple languages.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Jimmy Bryant (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "James Howard Bryant (born June 2, 1929) is a singer, arranger and composer. He is most well known for providing the singing voice of Tony (played onscreen by Richard Beymer) in the 1961 film musical West Side Story. While he received no screen credit, he states that Beymer was ``a nice guy, and every time he did an interview he would mention my name. ''He also sang for James Fox in the 1967 film musical Thoroughly Modern Millie, and sang in`` The Telephone Hour'' number in Bye Bye Birdie. He also sang in the group that performed the theme song of the TV series Batman.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Juliette & Jonathan",
"paragraph_text": "\"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a 1996 Swedish language pop song that Lotta Engberg sang when she competed in the Swedish Melodifestivalen 1996, and finished 3rd. The song was written by Monica Forsberg and Torgny Söderberg. Even Lena Philipsson has recorded this song, and she released it on her 2006 album \"Lady Star\". At first, it was thought that Lena Philipsson should sing this song at Melodifestivalen 1996. \"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a song whose text is about love, but has an anti-racist theme. The song text is about Juliette and Jonathan, two people from different backgrounds who fall in love with each other. According to the song text, love doesn't know any borders or color of skin.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts",
"paragraph_text": "The song appeared in I Could Go On Singing (1963), Judy Garland's last film. A portion of the song also appeared in Disney's 1994 The Lion King (sung by Rowan Atkinson). Nicolas Cage also sang part of this song in National Treasure: Book of Secrets. Ringo Starr sang an impromptu version of the song in Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles' TV special broadcast by the BBC on 26 December 1967. Also, actors Hayden Rorke and Bill Daily performed a few lines of the song on ukulele in the 1969 I Dream of Jeannie episode ``Uncles a Go - Go. In the first episode of the 1977 sitcom Mind Your Language it is mentioned that a professor went crazy and sang this song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Glenn Strange",
"paragraph_text": "On September 20, 1973, at age 74, Strange died of lung cancer in Los Angeles, California. Singer Eddie Dean, with whom Strange had collaborated on various songs and opening themes for films, sang at Strange's funeral service as a final tribute. Strange is interred at Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery. In 1975, two years after Strange's death, his Gunsmoke costar Buck Taylor named his third son Cooper Glenn Taylor after Strange.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Up Where We Belong",
"paragraph_text": "``Up Where We Belong ''is a song written by Jack Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte - Marie and Will Jennings that was recorded by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes for the 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman. It reached record stores in July of that year to coincide with the release of the film. The song is about the belief that love can withstand the struggles of a relationship and make it stronger.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Boyzone",
"paragraph_text": "In 1993, an advertisement appeared in many Irish newspapers calling for auditions to form a new Irish \"boy band\" group. The advertisements were sent out by theatrical manager Walsh who was looking to make an \"Irish Take That\" following on from their success. The auditions were held in The Ormond Center, in Dublin, in November 1993. More than 300 people replied to the advertisement. At the auditions the applicants were asked to sing the song \"Careless Whisper\" by George Michael. Each audition would be taped and watched again to judge the applicant's performance. Out of the 300, 50 were selected for a second audition. For the second audition the applicants where asked to sing two songs, including one of their own choice with a backing tape. Mikey Graham sang \"Two Out of Three Ain't Bad\" by Meat Loaf, Keith Duffy sang \"I'm Too Sexy\" by Right Said Fred, Ronan Keating sang \"Father and Son\" by Cat Stevens (a cover version of which the band would later release), and Stephen Gately sang \"Hello\" by Lionel Richie. Out of this 50, 10 were selected for a third audition. In the end, Keating, Gately, Duffy, Richard Rock (son of Dickie Rock), Shane Lynch and Mark Walton were chosen.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes",
"paragraph_text": "\"For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes\" is a song written and performed by James Brown. Released as an edited two-part single in 1978, it charted #52 R&B in 1979. A full-length version appears on the album \"Take a Look at Those Cakes\". Brown talks loudly and clearly in rhyme without only brief singing involved, this track being in part a precursor to the hip hop style which was yet to mount on record in a few years time. Robert Christgau described the song as \"a great throwaway--an eleven-minute rumination on ass-watching, including genuinely tasteless suggestions that Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder join the fun.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Vice Squad (1982 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Vice Squad is a 1982 action/crime drama film directed by Gary Sherman and starring Wings Hauser, Season Hubley, and Gary Swanson. The original music score was composed by Joe Renzetti and Keith Rubinstein. Wings Hauser sang the vocal track on the film's opening and closing theme song \"Neon Slime\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Wonderful World (Sam Cooke song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Wonderful World ''(occasionally referred to as`` (What A) Wonderful World'') is a song by American singer - songwriter Sam Cooke. Released on April 14, 1960 by Keen Records, it had been recorded during an impromptu session the previous year, Cooke's last recording session at Keen Records. He signed with RCA Victor in 1960 and ``Wonderful World, ''then unreleased, was issued as a single in competition. The song was mainly composed by songwriting team Lou Adler and Herb Alpert, but Cooke revised the lyrics to mention the subject of education more.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Colour Me English",
"paragraph_text": "Colour Me English is a 2011 collection of essays by Caryl Phillips. Written over a period of 20 years, the essays deal with themes of identity, home and belonging.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Cyndi Grecco",
"paragraph_text": "Cyndi Grecco (born May 19, 1952, in New York, New York) is an American singer who performed the theme tune to the popular 1970s American television show Laverne & Shirley. Titled ``Making Our Dreams Come True '', the song (in which Grecco was accompanied by the Ron Hicklin Singers) was also put out as a single and charted at # 25 on July 25, 1976. The song came out on the small Private Stock label (# 45086). An album followed, though a second disco - themed single,`` Dancing, Dancing'', failed to chart. She also provided the theme to another 1970s ABC television sitcom Blansky's Beauties. Nevertheless, Grecco remains a one - hit wonder.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who sang up where we belong with the singer singing the theme song to wonder years?
|
[
{
"id": 85343,
"question": "who sings the theme song to wonder years",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 63644,
"question": "who sang up where we belong with #1",
"answer": "Jennifer Warnes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
Jennifer Warnes
|
[] | true |
2hop__134695_21022
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Political party",
"paragraph_text": "Although the Founding Fathers of the United States did not originally intend for American politics to be partisan, early political controversies in the 1790s over the extent of federal government powers saw the emergence of two proto-political parties- the Federalist Party and the Democratic-Republican Party, which were championed by Framers Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, respectively. However, a consensus reached on these issues ended party politics in 1816 for a decade, a period commonly known as the Era of Good Feelings.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "María Martorell",
"paragraph_text": "María Martorell Pallás (born 28 March 1942 in Valencia, Spain) is a Spanish politician who belongs to the People's Party (PP).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "ARY Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer",
"paragraph_text": "The ARY Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer is one of the ARY Film Awards of Merit presented annually by the ARY Digital Network and Entertainment Channel to male playback singer, who has delivered an outstanding performance in a film song while working in the film industry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Francesc Ricomá de Castellarnau",
"paragraph_text": "Francesc Ricomá de Castellarnau (Tarragona, Spain, 27 January 1960) is a Spanish teacher and politician who belongs to the People's Party (PP), the main opposition party since the 2004 General Election.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Alexander Aris",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander Aris Myint San Aung (, ; born 12 April 1973) is an English civil rights activist. Alexander Aris is the elder son of Aung San Suu Kyi and Michael Aris. He is also a grandson of Aung San, who achieved the Independence Of Myanmar (although he was assassinated in 1947, one year before the Independence)",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Hajiani Lanjo",
"paragraph_text": "Hajiani Lanjo (Sindhi: ) is a liberal political and social activist from Tharparkar, a remote and underdeveloped desert area of Sindh, Pakistan. She belongs to the Qaumi Awami Tehreek party and Sindhiani Tahreek. She reached prominence after challenged Arbab Ghulam Rahim, a powerful tribal leader from Tharparkar, in the constituency of NA-229 in election-2013.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "History of Russia",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander was succeeded by his son Nicholas II (1894–1917). The Industrial Revolution, which began to exert a significant influence in Russia, was meanwhile creating forces that would finally overthrow the tsar. Politically, these opposition forces organized into three competing parties: The liberal elements among the industrial capitalists and nobility, who believed in peaceful social reform and a constitutional monarchy, founded the Constitutional Democratic party or Kadets in 1905. Followers of the Narodnik tradition established the Socialist-Revolutionary Party or Esers in 1901, advocating the distribution of land among those who actually worked it—the peasants. A third radical group founded the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party or RSDLP in 1898; this party was the primary exponent of Marxism in Russia. Gathering their support from the radical intellectuals and the urban working class, they advocated complete social, economic and political revolution.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Two-party system",
"paragraph_text": "There is general agreement that the United States has a two - party system; historically, there have been few instances in which third party candidates won an election. In the First Party System, only Alexander Hamilton's Federalist Party and Thomas Jefferson's Democratic - Republican Party were significant political parties. Toward the end of the First Party System, the Republicans dominated a one - party system (primarily under the Presidency of James Monroe). Under the Second Party System, the Democratic - Republican Party split during the election of 1824 into Adams' Men and Jackson's Men. In 1828, the modern Democratic Party formed in support of Andrew Jackson. The National Republicans were formed in support of John Quincy Adams. After the National Republicans collapsed, the Whig Party and the Free Soil Party quickly formed and collapsed. In 1854, the modern Republican Party formed from a loose coalition of former Whigs, Free Soilers and other anti-slavery activists. Abraham Lincoln became the first Republican president in 1860.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "First Party System",
"paragraph_text": "The First Party System is a model of American politics used in history and political science to periodize the political party system that existed in the United States between roughly 1792 and 1824. It featured two national parties competing for control of the presidency, Congress, and the states: the Federalist Party, created largely by Alexander Hamilton, and the rival Jeffersonian Democratic - Republican Party, formed by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, usually called at the time the ``Republican Party. ''The Federalists were dominant until 1800, while the Republicans were dominant after 1800.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Guinea-Bissau",
"paragraph_text": "In 2012, President Rachide Sambu-balde Malam Bacai Sanhá died. He belonged to PAIGC (African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde), one of the two major political parties in Guinea-Bissau, along with the PRS (Party for Social Renewal). There are more than 20 minor parties.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The impact of the post-election reforms has been observed in numerous areas, including ASEAN's approval of Myanmar's bid for the position of ASEAN chair in 2014; the visit by United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December 2011 for the encouragement of further progress—it was the first visit by a Secretary of State in more than fifty years (Clinton met with the Burmese president and former military commander Thein Sein, as well as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi); and the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2012 by-elections, facilitated by the government's abolition of the laws that previously barred the NLD. As of July 2013, about 100 political prisoners remain imprisoned, while conflict between the Burmese Army and local insurgent groups continues.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Communist Party of Canada",
"paragraph_text": "The Communist Party of Canada (French: Parti communiste du Canada, CPC / PCC) is a communist political party in Canada founded in 1921 under conditions of illegality. Although it is now a political party without any elected political representation, the party's candidates have been elected to the Parliament of Canada, the Ontario legislature, the Manitoba legislature, and various municipal governments across the country. The party has also contributed significantly to trade union organizing and labour history in Canada, peace and anti-war activism, and many other social movements.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Political party",
"paragraph_text": "While there is some international commonality in the way political parties are recognized, and in how they operate, there are often many differences, and some are significant. Many political parties have an ideological core, but some do not, and many represent very different ideologies than they did when first founded. In democracies, political parties are elected by the electorate to run a government. Many countries have numerous powerful political parties, such as Germany and India and some nations have one-party systems, such as China. The United States is a two-party system, with its two most powerful parties being the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Belaya Rus",
"paragraph_text": "Belaya Rus () is a Belarusian public association founded on 17 November 2007 to support President Alexander Lukashenko. Since then, the leaders of the organization have regularly announced that they are ready to become a political party. President Lukashenko neither firmly opposed the idea, nor supported it. He has made comments such as: \"Well, if they are ready, let them be a party, I am not against it. On the contrary, I will support it because they are patriots. But I wouldn't advise them to hurry.\" The party is based on the idea of the All-Russia People's Front. It has no real ideology outside of absolute support for Lukashenko. The leader of the association is former minister of Education of Belarus, Alexander Radkov. The NGO has a membership of over 160,000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Alexander del Mar",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander del Mar (aka Alexander Del Mar and Alexander Delmar) (August 9, 1836 – July 1, 1926) was an American political economist, historian, numismatist and author. He was the first Director of the Bureau of Statistics at the U.S. Treasury Department from 1866–69.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "ARY Film Award for Best Actor in a Negative Role",
"paragraph_text": "ARY Film Award for Best Actor in a Negative Role is one of the ARY Film Awards of Merit presented annually by the ARY Digital Network and Entertainment Channel to recognize the Male and Female negative actor who has delivered an outstanding villain performance while working in the film industry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Meghalaya Progressive Alliance",
"paragraph_text": "The Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) was the ruling coalition of political parties that formed the Government in the state of Meghalaya, India from 2008 to 2009. It was led by the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and the United Democratic Party (UDP) who are the second and third largest parties in the 8th Meghalaya Legislative Assembly. Chief Minister Dr. Donkupar Roy and the other ministers in the Government belong to the MPA.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Dixiecrat",
"paragraph_text": "States' Rights Democratic Party (Dixiecrats) Founded 1948 (1948) Dissolved 1948 (1948) Split from Democratic Party Merged into Democratic Party Ideology States' rights Racial segregation Social conservatism Political position Right - wing Politics of United States Political parties Elections",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Moderation and Development Party",
"paragraph_text": "Moderation and Development Party () is a political party in Iran. It is a pragmatic-centrist political party which held its first congress in 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Ontario Libertarian Party",
"paragraph_text": "Ontario Libertarian Party Parti libertarien de l'Ontario Active provincial party Leader Rob Ferguson (interim) President Gene Balfour Founded 1975 (1975) Headquarters Toronto, Ontario Ideology Libertarianism Colours Yellow Website www.libertarian.on.ca Politics of Ontario Political parties Elections",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
To which political party does the mother of Alexander Aris belong?
|
[
{
"id": 134695,
"question": "Who is the mother of Alexander Aris?",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 21022,
"question": "What political party does #1 belong to ?",
"answer": "National League for Democracy (NLD) party",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
National League for Democracy (NLD) party
|
[
"National League for Democracy",
"NLD"
] | true |
2hop__134695_21032
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "The Diary of a Teenage Girl",
"paragraph_text": "The Diary of a Teenage Girl is a 2015 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Marielle Heller, based on the hybrid novel by Phoebe Gloeckner. It stars Bel Powley as a 15-year-old girl who becomes sexually active by starting a relationship with her mother's boyfriend. It also stars Kristen Wiig, Alexander Skarsgård, Christopher Meloni, Quinn Nagle, and Austin Lyon. It premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival and had a limited release on August 7, 2015 by Sony Pictures Classics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "ARY Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer",
"paragraph_text": "The ARY Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer is one of the ARY Film Awards of Merit presented annually by the ARY Digital Network and Entertainment Channel to male playback singer, who has delivered an outstanding performance in a film song while working in the film industry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Child of a Dream",
"paragraph_text": "Child of a Dream (original title: Il figlio del sogno) is the first part of Valerio Massimo Manfredi's Alexander trilogy, released in 1998. It narrates the childhood of Alexander the Great, son of king Philip II of Macedon and queen Olympias. He is tutored by the great Greek philosopher Aristotle until the age of 16 and, also thank to the friendship of Hephaiston and Ptolemy, he becomes a most charismatic and mighty warrior, ready to take on the challenge of expanding the Macedonian Empire following the assassination of his father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Hellenistic period",
"paragraph_text": "Meleager and the infantry supported the candidacy of Alexander's half-brother, Philip Arrhidaeus, while Perdiccas, the leading cavalry commander, supported waiting until the birth of Alexander's unborn child by Roxana. After the infantry stormed the palace of Babylon, a compromise was arranged – Arrhidaeus (as Philip III) should become king, and should rule jointly with Roxana's child, assuming that it was a boy (as it was, becoming Alexander IV). Perdiccas himself would become regent (epimeletes) of the empire, and Meleager his lieutenant. Soon, however, Perdiccas had Meleager and the other infantry leaders murdered, and assumed full control. The generals who had supported Perdiccas were rewarded in the partition of Babylon by becoming satraps of the various parts of the empire, but Perdiccas' position was shaky, because, as Arrian writes, \"everyone was suspicious of him, and he of them\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands",
"paragraph_text": "Willem - Alexander (Dutch: (ˈʋɪləm aːlɛkˈsɑndər); born Willem - Alexander Claus George Ferdinand, 27 April 1967) is the King of the Netherlands, having ascended the throne following his mother's abdication in 2013.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_text": "Aung San Suu Kyi was born on 19 June 1945 in Rangoon (now Yangon), British Burma. According to Peter Popham, she was born in a small village outside Rangoon called Hmway Saung. Her father, Aung San, allied with the Japanese during World War II. Aung San founded the modern Burmese army and negotiated Burma's independence from the British Empire in 1947; he was assassinated by his rivals in the same year. She grew up with her mother, Khin Kyi, and two brothers, Aung San Lin and Aung San Oo, in Rangoon. Aung San Lin died at the age of eight, when he drowned in an ornamental lake on the grounds of the house. Her elder brother emigrated to San Diego, California, becoming a United States citizen. After Aung San Lin's death, the family moved to a house by Inya Lake where Aung San Suu Kyi met people of various backgrounds, political views and religions. She was educated in Methodist English High School (now Basic Education High School No. 1 Dagon) for much of her childhood in Burma, where she was noted as having a talent for learning languages. She speaks four languages: Burmese, English, French and Japanese. She is a Theravada Buddhist.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "NCIS (season 1)",
"paragraph_text": "The first season of the American police procedural drama NCIS was originally broadcast between September 23, 2003 and May 25, 2004 on CBS. The first season dealt with introducing the characters and their strengths, skills, and weaknesses. Three recurring characters are also introduced: the main foe for the first two seasons, Ari Haswari; Special Agent Timothy McGee and Jimmy Palmer who replaces Gerald Jackson, Ducky's assistant, after he was shot. The season also introduces Sasha Alexander as Special Agent Caitlin Todd who serves as Special Agent Vivian Blackadder's (Robyn Lively) replacement, who was a member of Gibbs' team during the two - part JAG backdoor pilot.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Yun San",
"paragraph_text": "Me Yun San ( ; 1713–1771) was the chief queen of King Alaungpaya of Burma (Myanmar), and the queen mother of three kings of Konbaung Dynasty: Naungdawgyi, Hsinbyushin and Bodawpaya. She is known for keeping the peace between her two eldest sons, Naungdawgyi and Hsinbyushin after Alaungpaya died in 1760, allowing Naungdawgyi to succeed Alaungpaya as king. She died in 1771 during Hsinbyushin's reign.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "ARY Film Award for Best Film Jury",
"paragraph_text": "The ARY Film Award for Best Film Jury is one of the ARY Film Awards of Merit presented annually by the ARY Digital Network and Entertainment Channel to producers working in the film industry and is the only category in which every member is eligible to submit a nomination. Best Film Jury is considered the most important of the ARY Film Awards, as it represents all the directing, acting, music composing, writing, editing and other efforts put forth into a drama. This award is one of the two Best Film awards in ceremony which is awarded to relevant film only on the decision of ceremony Jury, while other being awarded on Viewers Voting's.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Alaungpaya",
"paragraph_text": "Alaungpaya (, ; also spelled Alaunghpaya or Alaung Phra; 11 May 1760) was the founder of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). By the time of his death from illness during his campaign in Siam, this former chief of a small village in Upper Burma had unified Burma, subdued Manipur, conquered Lan Na and driven out the French and the British who had given help to the Mon Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom. He also founded Yangon in 1755.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Halyna Zubchenko",
"paragraph_text": "Halyna Zubchenko was born in Kiev in 1929 into a family of scholars. Her father, Alexander Avksentevich Zubchenko, studied agricultural sciences and her mother, Ganna Skripchinskaya, was a researcher at the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Olympias",
"paragraph_text": "Olympias (, , c. 375–316 BC) was a daughter of king Neoptolemus I of Epirus, sister to Alexander I of Epirus, fourth wife of Philip II, the king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia, and mother of Alexander the Great. According to the 1st century AD biographer, Plutarch, she was a devout member of the orgiastic snake-worshiping cult of Dionysus, and he suggests that she slept with snakes in her bed.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Yin Yin Nwe",
"paragraph_text": "Yin Yin Nwe's father is Sao Saimong Mangrai, a member of the princely Kengtung State and a highly regarded scholar on Shan State and the Head of the Shan State Education Department during the post-Independence years. Yin Yin Nwe's mother is Mi Mi Khaing, also a scholar and a former Principal of Kambawza School. Her father, Sao Saimong, had an administrative career after the Shan principalities agreed to become part of the Union of Burma, and was Chief Education Officer for Shan and Kayah States. Her mother was the author of \"Burmese Family\", a book on Burmese culture and was one of the first women to write in English about Burmese culture and traditions. Yin Yin Nwe is of Mon ancestry on her mother's side and of Tai ancestry on her father's side, given that the state of Kengtung originated in the 13th century, when the Chiang Mai dynasty founded a new kingdom which was named Lanna, sending a prince to Kengtung to establish a separate kingdom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Alexander Bliss",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander Bliss (29 December 1827 – 30 April 1896) was assistant quartermaster general of the Union forces and a colonel in the United States Army during the American Civil War. His father, also named Alexander, died before he was born; and his mother, Elizabeth Davis Bliss, later married George Bancroft, the eminent American historian.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "Sanctions imposed by the United States and European countries against the former military government, coupled with boycotts and other direct pressure on corporations by supporters of the democracy movement, have resulted in the withdrawal from the country of most US and many European companies. On 13 April 2012 British Prime Minister David Cameron called for the economic sanctions on Myanmar to be suspended in the wake of the pro-democracy party gaining 43 seats out of a possible 45 in the 2012 by-elections with the party leader, Aung San Suu Kyi becoming a member of the Burmese parliament.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Myanmar Airways International",
"paragraph_text": "The airline was founded by the government before independence in 1946 as Union of Burma Airways. It initially operated domestic services only. International services were added in 1950. The name was changed to Burma Airways in December 1972, and then to Myanma Airways on April 1, 1989, following the renaming of the country from Burma to Myanmar. International services were transferred to Myanmar Airways International, which was set up in 1993.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Alexander Aris",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander Aris Myint San Aung (, ; born 12 April 1973) is an English civil rights activist. Alexander Aris is the elder son of Aung San Suu Kyi and Michael Aris. He is also a grandson of Aung San, who achieved the Independence Of Myanmar (although he was assassinated in 1947, one year before the Independence)",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Alexander the Great",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander the Great Basileus of Macedon, Hegemon of the Hellenic League, Shahanshah of Persia, Pharaoh of Egypt, Lord of Asia ``Alexander fighting king Darius III of Persia '', Alexander Mosaic, Naples National Archaeological Museum King of Macedonia Reign 336 -- 323 BC Predecessor Philip II Successor Alexander IV Philip III Pharaoh of Egypt Reign 332 -- 323 BC Predecessor Darius III Successor Alexander IV Philip III King of Persia Reign 330 -- 323 BC Predecessor Darius III Successor Alexander IV Philip III King of Asia Reign 331 -- 323 BC Predecessor New office Successor Alexander IV Philip III 20 or 21 July 356 BC Pella, Macedon, Ancient Greece 10 or 11 June 323 BC (aged 32) Babylon Spouse Roxana of Bactria Stateira II of Persia Parysatis II of Persia Issue Alexander IV Full name Alexander III of Macedon Greek Μέγας Ἀλέξανδρος (Mégas Aléxandros, Great Alexander) Ἀλέξανδρος ὁ Μέγας (Aléxandros ho Mégas, Alexander the Great) Dynasty Argead Father Philip II of Macedon Mother Olympias of Epirus Religion Greek polytheism",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Alexander Graham Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander Bell was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on March 3, 1847. The family home was at 16 South Charlotte Street, and has a stone inscription marking it as Alexander Graham Bell's birthplace. He had two brothers: Melville James Bell (1845–70) and Edward Charles Bell (1848–67), both of whom would die of tuberculosis. His father was Professor Alexander Melville Bell, a phonetician, and his mother was Eliza Grace (née Symonds). Born as just \"Alexander Bell\", at age 10 he made a plea to his father to have a middle name like his two brothers.[N 6] For his 11th birthday, his father acquiesced and allowed him to adopt the name \"Graham\", chosen out of respect for Alexander Graham, a Canadian being treated by his father who had become a family friend. To close relatives and friends he remained \"Aleck\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "List of Jessica Jones characters",
"paragraph_text": "Dorothy Walker (portrayed by Rebecca De Mornay) is Trish Walker's abusive mother and talent agent who becomes Jessica's foster mother when she was young.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the mother of Alexander Aris become a part of in Burma?
|
[
{
"id": 134695,
"question": "Who is the mother of Alexander Aris?",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
},
{
"id": 21032,
"question": "What did #1 become a part of in Burma ?",
"answer": "the Burmese parliament",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
the Burmese parliament
|
[] | true |
2hop__623429_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Pinocchio (1940 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Dickie Jones as Pinocchio, a wooden puppet carved by Geppetto, and turned into a living puppet by the Blue Fairy. Jones also provided the voice of Alexander, a boy transformed into a donkey.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Jarekus Singleton",
"paragraph_text": "Jarekus Singleton (born July 11, 1984 in Clinton, Mississippi, United States) is an American blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. \"Refuse To Lose\" was his first nationally and internationally distributed album. It was released on the Chicago-based independent blues record label Alligator Records on May 6, 2014. England's \"Blues & Rhythm\" called Singleton \"a great, new blues talent…young, original, soulful and intense…superb, blistering guitar.\" According to \"Living Blues\" magazine, \"Jarekus Singleton is making some serious blues noise...blending modern-day blues and emotionally intense soul with melodic, hot-toned lead guitar, funk-seasoned rhythms and hip-hop flavored lyrics.\" \"The Washington Post\" said, \"Jarekus Singleton is an exciting new young blues guitarist with melody, hooks, swagger and a strong, original voice. His lyrics are modern, personal, acutely poetic and deeply mature.\" \"USA Today\" said of Singleton, \"Stinging blues guitar and potent, original songs herald the emergence of a major new talent.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Danny Boy",
"paragraph_text": "Initially written to a tune other than ``Londonderry Air '', the words to`` Danny Boy'' were penned by English lawyer and lyricist Frederic Weatherly in Bath, Somerset in 1910. After his Irish - born sister - in - law Margaret (known as Jess) in the United States sent him a copy of ``Londonderry Air ''in 1913 (an alternative version of the story has her singing the air to him in 1912 with different lyrics), Weatherly modified the lyrics of`` Danny Boy'' to fit the rhyme and meter of ``Londonderry Air ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "I Hear You Knocking",
"paragraph_text": "``I Hear You Knocking ''(or`` I Hear You Knockin ''') is a rhythm and blues song written by Dave Bartholomew. New Orleans rhythm and blues singer Smiley Lewis first recorded the song in 1955. The lyrics tell of the return of a former lover who is rebuffed and Huey ``Piano ''Smith provided the prominent piano accompaniment in the style associated with Fats Domino.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy",
"paragraph_text": "``Peace on Earth / Little Drummer Boy ''(sometimes titled`` The Little Drummer Boy / Peace on Earth'') is a Christmas song with an added counterpoint performed by David Bowie and Bing Crosby. ``The Little Drummer Boy ''is a Christmas song written in 1941, while the`` Peace on Earth'' tune and lyrics, written by Ian Fraser, Larry Grossman, and Alan Kohan, were added to the song specially for Bowie and Crosby's recording.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Mannish Boy",
"paragraph_text": "\"Mannish Boy\" (or \"Manish Boy\" as it was originally titled) is a blues standard by Muddy Waters. First recorded in 1955, the song is both an arrangement of and an \"answer song\" to Bo Diddley's \"I'm a Man\", which was in turn inspired by Waters' and Willie Dixon's \"Hoochie Coochie Man\". \"Mannish Boy\" features a repeating stop-time figure on one chord throughout the song and is credited to Waters, Mel London, and Bo Diddley.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Taps",
"paragraph_text": "``Taps ''is a bugle call - a signal, not a song. As such, there is no associated lyric. Many bugle calls had words associated with them as a mnemonic device but these are not lyrics. A Horace Lorenzo Trim wrote a set of words intended to accompany the music:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Sturmtrupp-Pfadfinder",
"paragraph_text": "The Sturmtrupp-Pfadfinder was a Scout association in Germany active from 1926 to 1934. The association never had more than 500 members. It was the first Scout association in Germany to admit boys and girls. It was interdenominational and politically neutral.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Bridging the Gap (song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Bridging the Gap\", the second single from Nas' \"Street's Disciple\", features his father, Olu Dara, and samples music from Muddy Waters' \"Mannish Boy\" composition. Olu Dara provides the hook of the song by talking about his path and how Nas was born. Nas and Olu Dara performed the song many times before the release of \"Street's Disciple\", generating buzz as the release of the album drew near. The song is referenced in the title track of The Game's song \"The Documentary\", when he says, \"Now I understand why Nas did a song with his pops\".",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Bar Mitzvah Boy (musical)",
"paragraph_text": "Bar Mitzvah Boy is a musical with a book by Jack Rosenthal, lyrics by Don Black, and music by Jule Styne.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Daniel Glatman",
"paragraph_text": "Daniel Glatman (born 27 June 1975) is an English pop music manager, best known for co-creating and managing the boy band Blue.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "In Vanda's Room",
"paragraph_text": "In Vanda's Room (Portuguese: No Quarto da Vanda, 2000) is a docufiction (a subgenre of cinéma vérité) film by Portuguese director Pedro Costa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Mr. Tambourine Man",
"paragraph_text": "The song has been performed and recorded by many artists, including the Byrds, Judy Collins, Melanie, Odetta, and Stevie Wonder among others. The Byrds version was released in April of 1965 as their first single on Columbia Records, reaching number 1 on both the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and the UK Singles Chart, as well as being the title track of their debut album, \"Mr. Tambourine Man.\" The Byrds' recording of the song was influential in popularizing the musical subgenres of folk rock and jangle pop, leading many contemporary bands to mimic its fusion of jangly guitars and intellectual lyrics in the wake of the single's success.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "I Hate Boys",
"paragraph_text": "\"I Hate Boys\" is a song recorded by American recording artist Christina Aguilera for her sixth studio album, \"Bionic\" (2010). The song was written by Aguilera, Ester Dean, William Tyler, Bill Wellings, J. J. Hunter and Jamal Jones, who also handled the production of the track. \"I Hate Boys\" is a glam rock and pop song, containing elements of urban pop and synthpop. Lyrically, it is a hate-driven song about ridiculing bad boys.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Twelve-bar blues",
"paragraph_text": "The twelve - bar blues or blues changes is one of the most prominent chord progressions in popular music. The blues progression has a distinctive form in lyrics, phrase, chord structure, and duration. In its basic form, it is predominantly based on the I, IV, and V chords of a key.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Deadman (band)",
"paragraph_text": "Deadman (stylized as deadman) was a Japanese rock band founded in Nagoya in 2000. The group gained notoriety for popularizing the nagoya kei subgenre of visual kei, which is a lot \"darker\" than most and focuses more on musical composition. Deadman also quickly became known for Mako's heavily melancholic lyrical themes, with the music itself touching on alternative rock in sound. The group disbanded in 2006 for unknown reasons.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Which subgenre of the blues is the lyricist of Mannish Boy associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 623429,
"question": "Mannish Boy >> lyrics by",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__49315_787704
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Mountain View High School (Wyoming)",
"paragraph_text": "Mountain View High School is a public high school in Mountain View, Wyoming, United States. It is part of Uinta County School District #4 and serves students in grades nine through twelve. The school's mascot is the Buffalo and their chief athletic rivals are the Lyman Eagles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Here Today (David Grisman album)",
"paragraph_text": "Here Today is a bluegrass album by five American musicians David Grisman, Emory Gordy Jr., Herb Pedersen, Jim Buchanan and Vince Gill, released in 1983 on Rounder Records. This was the only album this group recorded and each continued separate careers in bluegrass, newgrass, and country music.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Go Rest High on That Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "``Go Rest High on That Mountain ''is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Vince Gill. It was released in August 1995 as the sixth single from his album When Love Finds You. It is a eulogic ballad. Gill began writing the song following the death of country music superstar Keith Whitley, who died in 1989. Gill did not finish the song until a few years later following the death of his older brother Bob, in 1993, of a heart attack. Ricky Skaggs and Patty Loveless both sang background vocals on the record.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Wild Mountain Thyme",
"paragraph_text": "``Wild Mountain Thyme ''(also known as`` Purple Heather'' and ``Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go? '') is an Irish / Scottish folk song. The lyrics and melody are a variant of the song`` The Braes of Balquhither'' by Scottish poet Robert Tannahill (1774 -- 1810) and Scottish composer Robert Archibald Smith (1780 -- 1829), but were adapted by Belfast musician Francis McPeake into ``Wild Mountain Thyme ''and first recorded by his family in the 1950s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Høgfonna Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "Høgfonna Mountain () is a high, flat, snow-topped mountain with sheer rock sides, standing southeast of Hogskavlen Mountain in the Borg Massif, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica. It was mapped by Norwegian cartographers from surveys and air photos by the Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition (1949–1952), led by John Schjelderup Giæver, and named Høgfonna (the high snowfield).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "W. Ryerson Johnson",
"paragraph_text": "Walter Ryerson Johnson (October 19, 1901 – May 24, 1995) was a 20th-century American pulp fiction writer and editor. He wrote in many genres, but is probably best known at having been one of the men who wrote Doc Savage novels, under the pseudonym Kenneth Robeson. He also published works under the names \"Matthew Blood\" and \"Peter Field.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Mount Andrews",
"paragraph_text": "Mount Andrews () is a mountain, high, standing between Mount Danforth and Mount Gerdel on the south side of Albanus Glacier, in the Queen Maud Mountains of Antarctica.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Montana",
"paragraph_text": "East of the divide, several roughly parallel ranges cover the southern part of the state, including the Gravelly Range, the Madison Range, Gallatin Range, Absaroka Mountains and the Beartooth Mountains. The Beartooth Plateau is the largest continuous land mass over 10,000 feet (3,000 m) high in the continental United States. It contains the highest point in the state, Granite Peak, 12,799 feet (3,901 m) high. North of these ranges are the Big Belt Mountains, Bridger Mountains, Tobacco Roots, and several island ranges, including the Crazy Mountains and Little Belt Mountains.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "James Moffat (author)",
"paragraph_text": "James Moffat (27 January 1922 in Canada – 8 November 1993 in England) was a \"Canadian-born UK writer who wrote at least 290 novels in several genres under at least 45 pseudonyms\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Geography of the United States",
"paragraph_text": "The Great Plains lie west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains. A large portion of the country's agricultural products are grown in the Great Plains. Before their general conversion to farmland, the Great Plains were noted for their extensive grasslands, from tallgrass prairie in the eastern plains to shortgrass steppe in the western High Plains. Elevation rises gradually from less than a few hundred feet near the Mississippi River to more than a mile high in the High Plains. The generally low relief of the plains is broken in several places, most notably in the Ozark and Ouachita Mountains, which form the U.S. Interior Highlands, the only major mountainous region between the Rocky Mountains and the Appalachian Mountains.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "A Wednesday!",
"paragraph_text": "Mumbai police commissioner Prakash Rathod (Anupam Kher), resting after a jog, describes in a voice-over that he is going to retire the following day. He goes on to describe the most challenging case he faced in his career.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Velký Špičák",
"paragraph_text": "Velký Špičák ( or \"Schmiedeberger Spitzberg\") is a 965 m high mountain in the Czech part of the Ore Mountains of Central Europe.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Weg!",
"paragraph_text": "Weg! (literal English translation: \"Away!\"; title of English-language version: Go!) is an Afrikaans language outdoor and travel magazine. It was first published in April 2004 and is owned by the Media24 division of Naspers. The magazine focuses on affordable destinations in South Africa and the rest of Africa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Literature",
"paragraph_text": "In ancient Greece, the epics of Homer, who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey, and Hesiod, who wrote Works and Days and Theogony, are some of the earliest, and most influential, of Ancient Greek literature. Classical Greek genres included philosophy, poetry, historiography, comedies and dramas. Plato and Aristotle authored philosophical texts that are the foundation of Western philosophy, Sappho and Pindar were influential lyric poets, and Herodotus and Thucydides were early Greek historians. Although drama was popular in Ancient Greece, of the hundreds of tragedies written and performed during the classical age, only a limited number of plays by three authors still exist: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. The plays of Aristophanes provide the only real examples of a genre of comic drama known as Old Comedy, the earliest form of Greek Comedy, and are in fact used to define the genre.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Balmberg Pass",
"paragraph_text": "Balmberg Pass (elevation 1078 m) is a high mountain pass in the Jura Mountains in the canton of Solothurn in Switzerland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Tamborine Mountain State High School",
"paragraph_text": "Tamborine Mountain State High School (TMSHS) is a co-educational, state secondary school located on Tamborine Mountain, Queensland, Australia. Education Queensland has implemented an enrollment catchment area for Tamborine Mountain State High School.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Leave Out All the Rest",
"paragraph_text": "While playing a show in Germany (München) in June 2008, Shinoda spoke with Warner Bros. Records Germany and they told him that the music video they've made for \"Leave Out All the Rest\" was not going to be released just yet due to the high success for the single \"Given Up\" in Germany. He later told this to the fans at the show.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Palermo",
"paragraph_text": "Palermo is surrounded by mountains, formed of calcar, which form a cirque around the city. Some districts of the city are divided by the mountains themselves. Historically, it was relatively difficult to reach the inner part of Sicily from the city because of the mounts. The tallest peak of the range is La Pizzuta, about 1,333 m (4,373 ft.) high. However, historically, the most important mount is Monte Pellegrino, which is geographically separated from the rest of the range by a plain. The mount lies right in front of the Tyrrhenian Sea. Monte Pellegrino's cliff was described in the 19th century by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, as \"The most beautiful promontory in the world\", in his essay \"Italian Journey\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Alnes",
"paragraph_text": "Alnes is a small village in Giske Municipality in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. It is located on the (isolated) north side of the island of Godøya, about northwest of the village of Leitebakk. The rest of the island's population is located on the southern half of the island, separated from Alnes by a large mountain. Alnes is accessible through a tunnel through the mountainous center part of the island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Robert Greenleaf Leavitt",
"paragraph_text": "\"I expect to put in the rest of my time before I retire to my farm in Maine in helping to improve the schools of this State System,\" Leavitt wrote to his Harvard class. \"At 60 I expect to retire for 40 years of research, with special reference to fruits adaptable to Maine, at my experiment station in a beautiful country among the foothills of the White Mountains. (My great great grandfather was a man of God-given taste in scenery).\"",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the genre of the songwriter of Go Rest High on That Mountain?
|
[
{
"id": 49315,
"question": "who wrote go rest high on that mountain",
"answer": "Vince Gill",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 787704,
"question": "#1 >> genre",
"answer": "bluegrass",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
}
] |
bluegrass
|
[
"Bluegrass"
] | true |
2hop__769597_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Hyundai BlueOn",
"paragraph_text": "The Hyundai BlueOn is a subcompact 5-door hatchback electric car produced by Hyundai Motor Company. According to the manufacturer, the Blue-on all-electric range is and has a top speed of over . Field testing with 30 units began in South Korea by late 2010 and sales in the domestic market were scheduled for late 2012.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "IEEE 2030",
"paragraph_text": "IEEE 2030 was a project of the standards association of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) that developed a \"Guide for Smart Grid Interoperability of Energy Technology and Information Technology Operation with the Electric Power System (EPS), and End-Use Applications and Loads\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The Chronic",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Chronic\" peaked at number three on the \"Billboard\" 200 and has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America with sales of 5.7 million copies in the United States, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. Dr. Dre's production has been noted for popularizing the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap. \"The Chronic\" has been widely regarded as one of the most important and influential albums of the 1990s and regarded by many fans and peers to be one of the most well-produced hip hop albums of all time. \"The Chronic\" was ranked at #138 on \"Rolling Stone\"'s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_text": "The Chicago blues is a form of blues music indigenous to Chicago, Illinois. Chicago blues is an electric blues style of urban blues. Urban blues evolved from classic blues following the Great Migration, or the Great Northern Drive, which was both forced and voluntary at times, of African Americans from the southern United States to the industrial cities of the north, such as Chicago. Muddy Waters directly joined that migration, like many others, such as in Florida, avoiding the more harshly southern Jim Crow laws. Bruce Iglauer, founder of Alligator Records stated that, ``Chicago blues is the music of the industrial city, and has an industrial sense about it. ''Additionally, recognizing the shift in blues, Chicago blues singer and guitarist Kevin Moore expressed the blues transition stating,`` You have to put some new life into it, new blood, new perspectives. You ca n't keep talking about mules, workin 'on the levee.'' Chicago blues was heavily influenced by Mississippi bluesmen who traveled to Chicago in the early 1940s. The development of blues, up to Chicago blues, is arguably as follows: Country blues, to city blues, to urban blues. Chicago blues is based on the sound of the electric guitar and the harmonica, with the harmonica played through a PA system or guitar amplifier.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "After the Rain (Muddy Waters album)",
"paragraph_text": "After the Rain is the sixth studio album by Muddy Waters, a follow-up to the previous years' \"Electric Mud\" and sharing many of the musicians from that album. Unlike \"Electric Mud\", \"After the Rain\" contained mostly his own compositions and the songs, while still distorted, are less overtly psychedelic.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Boogie Chillen'",
"paragraph_text": "\"Boogie Chillen'\" or \"Boogie Chillun\" is a blues song first recorded by John Lee Hooker in 1948. It is a solo performance featuring Hooker's vocal, electric guitar, and rhythmic foot stomps. The lyrics are partly autobiographical and alternate between spoken and sung verses. The song was his debut record release and in 1949, it became the first \"down-home\" electric blues song to reach number one in the R&B records chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "38th Grey Cup",
"paragraph_text": "The 38th Grey Cup, played at Varsity Stadium in Toronto on November 25, 1950, before 27,101 fans, also known as the Mud Bowl, was the Canadian football championship game played between the Toronto Argonauts and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. The Argonauts won the game 13–0. Argonauts lay claim to the legendary Mud Bowl.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Christmas lights",
"paragraph_text": "The first known electrically illuminated Christmas tree was the creation of Edward H. Johnson, an associate of inventor Thomas Edison. While he was vice president of the Edison Electric Light Company, a predecessor of today's Con Edison electric utility, he had Christmas tree light bulbs especially made for him. He proudly displayed his Christmas tree, which was hand - wired with 80 red, white and blue electric incandescent light bulbs the size of walnuts, on December 22, 1882 at his home on Fifth Avenue in New York City. Local newspapers ignored the story, seeing it as a publicity stunt. However, it was published by a Detroit newspaper reporter, and Johnson has become widely regarded as the Father of Electric Christmas Tree Lights. By 1900, businesses started stringing up Christmas lights behind their windows. Christmas lights were too expensive for the average person; as such, electric Christmas lights did not become the majority replacement for candles until 1930.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "West Side Soul",
"paragraph_text": "West Side Soul is the debut album by Magic Sam. It is cited by Stephen Thomas Erlewine as one of the great electric blues albums.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers",
"paragraph_text": "The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE, pronounced ``I triple E '') is a professional association with its corporate office in New York City and its operations center in Piscataway, New Jersey. It was formed in 1963 from the amalgamation of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Institute of Radio Engineers. Today, it is the world's largest association of technical professionals with more than 420,000 members in over 160 countries around the world. Its objectives are the educational and technical advancement of electrical and electronic engineering, telecommunications, computer engineering and allied disciplines.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Chris Beard (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "Chris Beard (born August 29, 1957) is an American electric blues singer, guitarist, and songwriter. He has released five albums to date, the first of which was nominated for a Blues Music Award. He is dubbed 'Prince of the Blues'.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Hall & Oates",
"paragraph_text": "Daryl Hall and John Oates, often referred to as Hall & Oates, are an American musical duo. Daryl Hall is generally the lead vocalist; John Oates primarily plays electric guitar and provides backing vocals. The two write most of the songs they perform, separately or in collaboration. They achieved their greatest fame from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s with a fusion of rock and roll and rhythm and blues.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Boo Boo Davis",
"paragraph_text": "James \"Boo Boo\" Davis (born November 4, 1943) is an American electric blues musician. Davis is one of the few remaining blues musicians who gained experience singing the blues in the Mississippi Delta, having sung to help pass the time while picking the cotton fields.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Pat Hare",
"paragraph_text": "Auburn \"Pat\" Hare (December 20, 1930 – September 26, 1980) was an American Memphis electric blues guitarist and singer. His heavily distorted, power chord–driven electric guitar music in the early 1950s is considered an important precursor of heavy metal music. His guitar work with Little Junior's Blue Flames had a major influence on the rockabilly style, and his guitar playing on blues records by artists such as Muddy Waters was influential among 1960s British Invasion blues rock bands such as the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Hooked on a Feeling",
"paragraph_text": "``Hooked on a Feeling ''is a 1968 pop song written by Mark James and originally performed by B.J. Thomas. Thomas's version featured the sound of the electric sitar, and reached number five in 1969 on the Billboard Hot 100. It has been recorded by many other artists, including Blue Swede, whose version reached number one in the United States in 1974. The Blue Swede version made singer Björn Skifs'`` Ooga - Chaka - Ooga - Ooga'' intro well known (and famous in Sweden at the time), although it had been used originally by British musician Jonathan King in his 1971 version of the song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Hard rock",
"paragraph_text": "The roots of hard rock can be traced back to the 1950s, particularly electric blues, which laid the foundations for key elements such as a rough declamatory vocal style, heavy guitar riffs, string-bending blues-scale guitar solos, strong beat, thick riff-laden texture, and posturing performances. Electric blues guitarists began experimenting with hard rock elements such as driving rhythms, distorted guitar solos and power chords in the 1950s, evident in the work of Memphis blues guitarists such as Joe Hill Louis, Willie Johnson, and particularly Pat Hare, who captured a \"grittier, nastier, more ferocious electric guitar sound\" on records such as James Cotton's \"Cotton Crop Blues\" (1954). Other antecedents include Link Wray's instrumental \"Rumble\" in 1958, and the surf rock instrumentals of Dick Dale, such as \"Let's Go Trippin'\" (1961) and \"Misirlou\" (1962).",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The performer of Electric Mud is associated with which subgenre of the blues?
|
[
{
"id": 769597,
"question": "Electric Mud >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__98274_154727
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Thomas Scott (archer)",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Foster Scott (January 3, 1833 - June 23, 1911) was an American archer who competed at the 1904 Summer Olympics. Born in Warren, Ohio, Scott competed in the men's double American round and the men's double York round, but did not win any medals. Scott, who competed in the events at the age of 71 years and 260 days, was the oldest person to compete in an archery event at the Olympics. He died six years later, in Norwood, Ohio. Scott's daughter, Matilda Howell, was also an Olympic archer who won three gold medals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Great power",
"paragraph_text": "Referring to great power relations pre-1960, Joshua Baron highlights that starting from around the 16th century and the rise of several European great powers, military conflicts and confrontations was the defining characteristic of diplomacy and relations between such powers. \"Between 1500 and 1953, there were 64 wars in which at least one great power was opposed to another, and they averaged little more than five years in length. In approximately a 450-year time frame, on average at least two great powers were fighting one another in each and every year.\" Even during the period of Pax Britannica (or \"the British Peace\") between 1815 and 1914, war and military confrontations among the great powers was still a frequent occurrence. In fact, Joshua Baron points out that, in terms of militarized conflicts or confrontations, the UK led the way in this period with nineteen such instances against; Russia (8), France (5), Germany/Prussia (5) and Italy (1).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "United States in World War I",
"paragraph_text": "The United States declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917, over 2 ⁄ years after World War I started. A ceasefire and Armistice was declared on November 11, 1918. Before entering the war, the U.S. had remained neutral, though it had been an important supplier to Great Britain and the other Allied powers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "French and Indian War",
"paragraph_text": "In Europe, the North American theater of the Seven Years' War usually is not given a separate name. The entire international conflict is known as the Seven Years' War. \"Seven Years\" refers to events in Europe, from the official declaration of war in 1756 to the signing of the peace treaty in 1763. These dates do not correspond with the fighting on mainland North America, where the fighting between the two colonial powers was largely concluded in six years, from the Battle of Jumonville Glen in 1754 to the capture of Montreal in 1760.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Mid-twentieth century baby boom",
"paragraph_text": "The end of World War II brought a baby boom to many countries, especially Western ones. There is some disagreement as to the precise beginning and ending dates of the post-war baby boom, but it is most often agreed to have begun in the years immediately after the war, though some place it earlier at the increase of births in 1941 - 1943. The boom started to decline as birth rates in the United States started to decline in 1958, though the boom would only grind to a halt 3 years later in 1961, 20 years after it began.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Indo-Pakistani War of 1971",
"paragraph_text": "The Indian Army Chief in 1971 Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw had the highest respect for the fighting capability of the Pakistan Army but he did not accept the theory that they did not fight the Bangladesh war with enough vigor and zeal. In a BBC interview, he said:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Nine Years' War (Ireland)",
"paragraph_text": "The war against O'Neill and his allies was the largest conflict fought by England in the Elizabethan era. At the height of the conflict (1600–1601) more than 18,000 soldiers were fighting in the English army in Ireland. By contrast, the English army assisting the Dutch during the Eighty Years' War was never more than 12,000 strong at any one time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Warsaw Pact",
"paragraph_text": "For 36 years, NATO and the Warsaw Pact never directly waged war against each other in Europe; the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies implemented strategic policies aimed at the containment of each other in Europe, while working and fighting for influence within the wider Cold War on the international stage.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Kitos War",
"paragraph_text": "The Kitos War (115–117; : \"mered ha'galuyot\" or \"mered ha'tfutzot\" [מרד התפוצות]; translation: rebellion of the diaspora. ) was one of the major Jewish–Roman wars, 66–136. The rebellions erupted in the year 115, when majority of the Roman armies were fighting Trajan's Parthian War on the eastern border of the Roman Empire, major uprisings by ethnic Judeans in Cyrenaica, Cyprus and Egypt spiraled out of control, resulting in a widespread slaughter of left-behind Roman garrisons and Roman citizens by Jewish rebels.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Scott Speicher",
"paragraph_text": "Michael Scott Speicher (12 July 1957 – January 17, 1991) was a United States Navy pilot who was shot down over Iraq during the Persian Gulf War becoming the first American combat casualty of the war. His fate was not known until 2 August 2009 when the Navy reported that Speicher's remains were found in Iraq by United States Marines.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Muslim Atayev",
"paragraph_text": "Muslim Atayev (June 24, 1973 – January 27, 2005), also known as Emir Sayfullah, was the founder of the militant organization Yarmuk Jamaat, which later became part of the Caucasus Front's Kabardino-Balkarian Sector in the Russian-held Caucasian Muslim state Kabardino-Balkaria of the Second Chechen War. Atayev was an ethnic Balkar and started his military career as a volunteer fighting in Chechnya.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Kamakura Gongorō Kagemasa",
"paragraph_text": "Kamakura Gongorō Kagemasa (鎌倉権五郎景政) (born 1069) was a samurai descended from the Taira clan, who fought for the Minamoto clan in the Gosannen War of Japan's Heian period. He is famous for having continued to fight after losing an eye in battle during that war. This was in 1085, when Kagemasa was sixteen years of age.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Léon Bourjade",
"paragraph_text": "Léon Bourjade (25 May 1889 – 22 October 1924), born Jean-Pierre Léon Bourjade, was a leading French fighter pilot in World War I, notable for being his country's leading balloon-busting ace. He interrupted his theological studies to fight in World War I; post-war, he completed his studies and spent the few remaining years of his life as a missionary in what is now Papua New Guinea.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Blue Star Memorial Highway",
"paragraph_text": "Blue Star Memorial Highways are highways in the United States that are marked to pay tribute to the U.S. armed forces. The National Council of State Garden Clubs, now known as National Garden Clubs, Inc., started the program in 1945 after World War II. The blue star was used on service flags to denote a service member fighting in the war. The program has since been expanded to include Memorial Markers and Memorial By-ways (since 1994). These markers are used in National Cemeteries, parks, veterans facilities, and gardens.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_text": "The Gulf War (2 August 199028 February 1991), codenamed Operation Desert Shield (2 August 199017 January 1991) for operations leading to the buildup of troops and defense of Saudi Arabia and Operation Desert Storm (17 January 199128 February 1991) in its combat phase, was a war waged by coalition forces from 35 nations led by the United States against Iraq in response to Iraq's invasion and annexation of Kuwait arising from oil pricing and production disputes. The war is also known under other names, such as the Persian Gulf War, First Gulf War, Gulf War I, Kuwait War, First Iraq War or Iraq War, before the term \"Iraq War\" became identified instead with the post-2003 Iraq War.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "William Scott Chalmers",
"paragraph_text": "William Scott Chalmers CBE DSC (1 May 1888 – 11 June 1971) was a rear admiral of the Royal Navy who served in World War I and World War II.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Ten Years' War",
"paragraph_text": "The Ten Years' War () (1868–1878), also known as the Great War (\"Guerra Grande\") and the War of '68, was part of Cuba's fight for independence from Spain. The uprising was led by Cuban-born planters and other wealthy natives. On October 10, 1868 sugar mill owner Carlos Manuel de Céspedes and his followers proclaimed independence, beginning the conflict. This was the first of three liberation wars that Cuba fought against Spain, the other two being the Little War (1879–1880) and the Cuban War of Independence (1895–1898). The final three months of the last conflict escalated with United States involvement, leading to the Spanish–American War.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Nene Hatun",
"paragraph_text": "Nene Hatun (1857 – 22 May 1955) was a Turkish folk heroine, who became known for fighting against Russian forces during the recapture of Fort Aziziye in Erzurum from Russian forces at the start of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Kukan",
"paragraph_text": "Kukan (1941) is a documentary film co-produced by Li Ling-Ai and Rey Scott and directed by Rey Scott about the Chinese resistance to Japanese aggression during the early part of World War II (see Second Sino-Japanese War). Though Ling-Ai was a co-producer and sponsor of the film, she was credited as a \"technical advisor\" in its credits.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Jean de Clermont",
"paragraph_text": "Jean de Clermont (d. 19 September 1356), Lord of Chantilly and of Beaumont, was a Marshal of France (1352) who was killed fighting in the Hundred Years' War at the Battle of Poitiers.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What year did the war Scott Speicher fought in start?
|
[
{
"id": 98274,
"question": "What war did Scott Speicher fight in?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
},
{
"id": 154727,
"question": "What year did #1 start?",
"answer": "2 August 1990",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
2 August 1990
|
[] | true |
2hop__97238_154727
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Muslim Atayev",
"paragraph_text": "Muslim Atayev (June 24, 1973 – January 27, 2005), also known as Emir Sayfullah, was the founder of the militant organization Yarmuk Jamaat, which later became part of the Caucasus Front's Kabardino-Balkarian Sector in the Russian-held Caucasian Muslim state Kabardino-Balkaria of the Second Chechen War. Atayev was an ethnic Balkar and started his military career as a volunteer fighting in Chechnya.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Warsaw Pact",
"paragraph_text": "For 36 years, NATO and the Warsaw Pact never directly waged war against each other in Europe; the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies implemented strategic policies aimed at the containment of each other in Europe, while working and fighting for influence within the wider Cold War on the international stage.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Jean de Clermont",
"paragraph_text": "Jean de Clermont (d. 19 September 1356), Lord of Chantilly and of Beaumont, was a Marshal of France (1352) who was killed fighting in the Hundred Years' War at the Battle of Poitiers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Morgan McCammon",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Montreal, Quebec, he started studying at McGill University in 1940. He did not complete his education but rather joined the Canadian Army, fighting during World War II with the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry. After the war, he continued his education receiving a law degree in 1949. He worked four years as a lawyer with the law firm of Brais-Campbell before joining Steinberg's real-estate business in 1953. He joined Molson Breweries in 1958 eventually becoming President and Chairman.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Boxing After Dark",
"paragraph_text": "Boxing After Dark is an HBO boxing program, premiering on February 3, 1996, that usually showed fights between well-known contenders, but usually not \"championship\" or \"title\" fights. Unlike its sister program, \"HBO World Championship Boxing\", \"BAD\" featured fighters who were usually moving up from ESPN's \"Friday Night Fights\" or another basic cable boxing program. This was where fighters were given their start to become famous depending on how well they fare on \"BAD\" they might have a title fight on \"World Championship Boxing\" or could fall back (Ex: Jason Litzau had many entertaining fights on ESPN before moving up to \"BAD\" to face Jose Hernandez. After Litzau lost by knockout he returned to \"FNF\")",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Constantin Brătescu",
"paragraph_text": "Constantin Brătescu (March 8, 1892 – April 13, 1971) was a Romanian Major-General during World War II. In 1941, he served first as Chief Propaganda Section General Staff (Romania's Propaganda Minister) and then as a Romanian liaison officer to the German Military Mission, meaning that he served as a German military officer during Operation Barbarossa and the Axis Invasion of the Soviet Union. Starting in 1942 Brătescu was a Romanian General Officer (at the rank of Major-General) and commanded the 1st Cavalry Division throughout the campaign against the Soviets, fighting in such engagements as Operation Barbarossa, Operation Blue, and the Battle of Stalingrad. Following the surrender of Friedrich Paulus' 6th Army at the Battle of Stalingrad, Brătescu became a prisoner of war and was held captive from 1943 to 1948. Finally, in 1948, he was released after five years of imprisonment and subsequently retired from active service. Bratescu ultimately died twenty-three years later, in 1971, at the age of seventy-nine.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Esther Duflo",
"paragraph_text": "Esther Duflo, FBA (; born 25 October 1972) is a French American economist, Co-Founder and Director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), and Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Duflo is an NBER Research Associate, serves on the board of the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD), and is Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research's development economics program.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Blue Star Memorial Highway",
"paragraph_text": "Blue Star Memorial Highways are highways in the United States that are marked to pay tribute to the U.S. armed forces. The National Council of State Garden Clubs, now known as National Garden Clubs, Inc., started the program in 1945 after World War II. The blue star was used on service flags to denote a service member fighting in the war. The program has since been expanded to include Memorial Markers and Memorial By-ways (since 1994). These markers are used in National Cemeteries, parks, veterans facilities, and gardens.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Kamakura Gongorō Kagemasa",
"paragraph_text": "Kamakura Gongorō Kagemasa (鎌倉権五郎景政) (born 1069) was a samurai descended from the Taira clan, who fought for the Minamoto clan in the Gosannen War of Japan's Heian period. He is famous for having continued to fight after losing an eye in battle during that war. This was in 1085, when Kagemasa was sixteen years of age.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_text": "The Gulf War (2 August 199028 February 1991), codenamed Operation Desert Shield (2 August 199017 January 1991) for operations leading to the buildup of troops and defense of Saudi Arabia and Operation Desert Storm (17 January 199128 February 1991) in its combat phase, was a war waged by coalition forces from 35 nations led by the United States against Iraq in response to Iraq's invasion and annexation of Kuwait arising from oil pricing and production disputes. The war is also known under other names, such as the Persian Gulf War, First Gulf War, Gulf War I, Kuwait War, First Iraq War or Iraq War, before the term \"Iraq War\" became identified instead with the post-2003 Iraq War.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Samuel Hearne",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Hearne was born in February 1745 in London UK. Hearne's father was Secretary of the Waterworks, of the London Bridge who died in 1748. His mother's name was Diana, and his sister's name was Sarah, three years younger than Samuel. Samuel Hearne joined the British Royal Navy in 1756 at the age of 11 as midshipman under the fighting captain Samuel Hood. He remained with Hood during the Seven Years' War, seeing considerable action during the conflict, including the bombardment of Le Havre. At the end of the Seven Years' War, having served in the English Channel and then the Mediterranean, he left the Navy in 1763.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Léon Bourjade",
"paragraph_text": "Léon Bourjade (25 May 1889 – 22 October 1924), born Jean-Pierre Léon Bourjade, was a leading French fighter pilot in World War I, notable for being his country's leading balloon-busting ace. He interrupted his theological studies to fight in World War I; post-war, he completed his studies and spent the few remaining years of his life as a missionary in what is now Papua New Guinea.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Nene Hatun",
"paragraph_text": "Nene Hatun (1857 – 22 May 1955) was a Turkish folk heroine, who became known for fighting against Russian forces during the recapture of Fort Aziziye in Erzurum from Russian forces at the start of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Ten Years' War",
"paragraph_text": "The Ten Years' War () (1868–1878), also known as the Great War (\"Guerra Grande\") and the War of '68, was part of Cuba's fight for independence from Spain. The uprising was led by Cuban-born planters and other wealthy natives. On October 10, 1868 sugar mill owner Carlos Manuel de Céspedes and his followers proclaimed independence, beginning the conflict. This was the first of three liberation wars that Cuba fought against Spain, the other two being the Little War (1879–1880) and the Cuban War of Independence (1895–1898). The final three months of the last conflict escalated with United States involvement, leading to the Spanish–American War.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Nine Years' War (Ireland)",
"paragraph_text": "The war against O'Neill and his allies was the largest conflict fought by England in the Elizabethan era. At the height of the conflict (1600–1601) more than 18,000 soldiers were fighting in the English army in Ireland. By contrast, the English army assisting the Dutch during the Eighty Years' War was never more than 12,000 strong at any one time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "United States in World War I",
"paragraph_text": "The United States declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917, over 2 ⁄ years after World War I started. A ceasefire and Armistice was declared on November 11, 1918. Before entering the war, the U.S. had remained neutral, though it had been an important supplier to Great Britain and the other Allied powers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "French and Indian War",
"paragraph_text": "In Europe, the North American theater of the Seven Years' War usually is not given a separate name. The entire international conflict is known as the Seven Years' War. \"Seven Years\" refers to events in Europe, from the official declaration of war in 1756 to the signing of the peace treaty in 1763. These dates do not correspond with the fighting on mainland North America, where the fighting between the two colonial powers was largely concluded in six years, from the Battle of Jumonville Glen in 1754 to the capture of Montreal in 1760.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Jameel Sayhood",
"paragraph_text": "Jameel Sayhood was an Iraqi pilot in the Gulf War who it is claimed managed to attain one of the few aerial victories by the Iraqi Air Force in his MiG-29B, before being shot down by USAF Captain Craig Underhill and Captain Cesar Rodriguez with their F-15Cs mere minutes after his air-air victory.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Kitos War",
"paragraph_text": "The Kitos War (115–117; : \"mered ha'galuyot\" or \"mered ha'tfutzot\" [מרד התפוצות]; translation: rebellion of the diaspora. ) was one of the major Jewish–Roman wars, 66–136. The rebellions erupted in the year 115, when majority of the Roman armies were fighting Trajan's Parthian War on the eastern border of the Roman Empire, major uprisings by ethnic Judeans in Cyrenaica, Cyprus and Egypt spiraled out of control, resulting in a widespread slaughter of left-behind Roman garrisons and Roman citizens by Jewish rebels.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Indo-Pakistani War of 1971",
"paragraph_text": "The Indian Army Chief in 1971 Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw had the highest respect for the fighting capability of the Pakistan Army but he did not accept the theory that they did not fight the Bangladesh war with enough vigor and zeal. In a BBC interview, he said:",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What year did the war Jameel Sayhood fought in start?
|
[
{
"id": 97238,
"question": "In what war did Jameel Sayhood fight in?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
},
{
"id": 154727,
"question": "What year did #1 start?",
"answer": "2 August 1990",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
}
] |
2 August 1990
|
[] | true |
2hop__133289_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "ArmaLite AR-10",
"paragraph_text": "The ArmaLite AR-10 is a 7.62×51mm NATO battle rifle developed by Eugene Stoner in the late 1950s and manufactured by ArmaLite, then a division of the Fairchild Aircraft Corporation. When first introduced in 1956, the AR-10 used an innovative straight-line barrel/stock design with phenolic composite and forged alloy parts resulting in a small arm significantly easier to control in automatic fire and over lighter than other infantry rifles of the day. Over its production life, the original AR-10 was built in relatively small numbers, with fewer than 10,000 rifles assembled. However, the ArmaLite AR-10 would become the progenitor for a wide range of firearms.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "After the initial 747-100, Boeing developed the -100B, a higher maximum takeoff weight (MTOW) variant, and the -100SR (Short Range), with higher passenger capacity. Increased maximum takeoff weight allows aircraft to carry more fuel and have longer range. The -200 model followed in 1971, featuring more powerful engines and a higher MTOW. Passenger, freighter and combination passenger-freighter versions of the -200 were produced. The shortened 747SP (special performance) with a longer range was also developed, and entered service in 1976.The 747 line was further developed with the launch of the 747-300 in 1980. The 300 series resulted from Boeing studies to increase the seating capacity of the 747, during which modifications such as fuselage plugs and extending the upper deck over the entire length of the fuselage were rejected. The first 747-300, completed in 1983, included a stretched upper deck, increased cruise speed, and increased seating capacity. The -300 variant was previously designated 747SUD for stretched upper deck, then 747-200 SUD, followed by 747EUD, before the 747-300 designation was used. Passenger, short range and combination freighter-passenger versions of the 300 series were produced.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Bally Manufacturing",
"paragraph_text": "The Bally Manufacturing Corporation was founded by Raymond Moloney on January 10, 1932, when Bally's original parent, Lion Manufacturing, established the company to make pinball games. The company took its name from its first game, Ballyhoo. The company, based in Chicago, quickly became a leading maker of the games. In the late 1930s, Moloney began making gambling equipment, and had great success developing and improving the mechanical slot machines that were the core of the nascent gaming industry. After manufacturing munitions and airplane parts during World War II, Bally Manufacturing Corporation continued to produce innovations in flipperless pinball machines, bingo machines, payout machines and console slot machines through the late 1950s. They also designed and manufactured vending machines and established a coffee vending service. The company made a brief venture into the music business with their own record label, Bally Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "PVAR rifle",
"paragraph_text": "The Pneumatic Valve and Rod rifle also known as UDMC PVAR rifle is a Filipino assault rifle, manufactured by United Defense Manufacturing Corporation, and is a variant of the Armalite AR-15 and M16 rifle.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "WACO Classic Aircraft",
"paragraph_text": "WACO Classic Aircraft Corporation, founded in 1983 as the Classic Aircraft Corporation and located in Battle Creek, Michigan, is a manufacturer of general aviation airplanes.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "United Aircraft",
"paragraph_text": "The United Aircraft Corporation was an American aircraft manufacturer formed by the break-up of United Aircraft and Transport Corporation in 1934. In 1975, the company became the United Technologies Corporation.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Anti-aircraft warfare",
"paragraph_text": "Area air defence, the air defence of a specific area or location, (as opposed to point defence), have historically been operated by both armies (Anti-Aircraft Command in the British Army, for instance) and Air Forces (the United States Air Force's CIM-10 Bomarc). Area defence systems have medium to long range and can be made up of various other systems and networked into an area defence system (in which case it may be made up of several short range systems combined to effectively cover an area). An example of area defence is the defence of Saudi Arabia and Israel by MIM-104 Patriot missile batteries during the first Gulf War, where the objective was to cover populated areas.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Mitsubishi SpaceJet",
"paragraph_text": "The Mitsubishi SpaceJet, formerly known as the Mitsubishi Regional Jet (), or MRJ for short, is a twin-engine regional jet aircraft seating 70–90 passengers manufactured by Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation, a partnership between majority owner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and minority owner Toyota Motor Corporation with design assistance from Subaru Corporation, itself already an aerospace manufacturer. The SpaceJet will be the first airliner designed and produced in Japan since the NAMC YS-11 of the 1960s, which was produced at a loss.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The combi model, the 747-200M, could carry freight in the rear section of the main deck via a side cargo door. A removable partition on the main deck separated the cargo area at the rear from the passengers at the front. The -200M could carry up to 238 passengers in a three-class configuration with cargo carried on the main deck. The model was also known as the 747-200 Combi. As on the -100, a stretched upper deck (SUD) modification was later offered. A total of 10 converted 747-200s were operated by KLM. Union de Transports Aériens (UTA) also had two aircraft converted.After launching the -200 with Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7 engines, on August 1, 1972 Boeing announced that it had reached an agreement with General Electric to certify the 747 with CF6-50 series engines to increase the aircraft's market potential. Rolls-Royce followed 747 engine production with a launch order from British Airways for four aircraft. The option of RB211-524B engines was announced on June 17, 1975. The -200 was the first 747 to provide a choice of powerplant from the three major engine manufacturers.A total of 393 of the 747-200 versions had been built when production ended in 1991. Of these, 225 were -200B, 73 were -200F, 13 were -200C, 78 were -200M, and 4 were military. Many 747-200s remained in operation, although most large carriers have retired them from their fleets and sold them to smaller operators as of the early 2000s. Large carriers have sped up fleet retirement following the September 11 attacks and the subsequent drop in demand for air travel, scrapping some or turning others into freighters. Iran Air retired the last passenger 747-200 in May 2016, 36 years after it was delivered. As of July 2018, eight 747-200s remain in service as freighters.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Elgé",
"paragraph_text": "The Elgé was a French automobile manufactured from 1924 until 1925. Created at Bordeaux by Roger Louis Maleyre, a pioneer in the field of aerodynamics, it was very low and light, and was well streamlined; the cars used CIM engines. Maleyre also produced a prototype design for a propeller-driven car which was never put into production. In total about thirty cars were produced.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "CIM-10 Bomarc",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing CIM-10 Bomarc (IM-99 Weapon System prior to September 1962) was a supersonic long-range surface-to-air missile (SAM) used during the Cold War for the air defense of North America. In addition to being the first operational long-range SAM, it was the only SAM deployed by the United States Air Force.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Ag-Chem Equipment",
"paragraph_text": "Ag-Chem Equipment Company was a manufacturer of nutrient and pesticide application equipment that was founded in Jackson, Minnesota USA. It was sold to AGCO Corporation in 2001.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "747 Wing House",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 - 100 was a Trans World Airlines (TWA) aircraft (N93106). Its construction number was 19672 and it was the twenty - eighth 747 built. Boeing delivered the 747 to TWA on April 3, 1970, at a cost of approximately $25,000,000. It flew with TWA until 1992, when it was retired to the old El Mirage Air Force Base, before being purchased by Tower Air for its scrap value of $30,000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Raymond Moloney",
"paragraph_text": "Raymond T. Moloney (died February 26, 1958) invented the \"Bally Hoo\" pinball machine in 1931, and founded the Bally Manufacturing Corporation of Chicago, IL, USA on January 10, 1932.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide - body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC - 10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC - 25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H.W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Like its predecessor, the 747X family was unable to garner enough interest to justify production, and it was shelved along with the 767-400ERX in March 2001, when Boeing announced the Sonic Cruiser concept. Though the 747X design was less costly than the 747-500X and -600X, it was criticized for not offering a sufficient advance from the existing 747-400. The 747X did not make it beyond the drawing board, but the 747-400X being developed concurrently moved into production to become the 747-400ER.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is an American wide - body commercial jet airliner and cargo aircraft, often referred to by its original nickname, ``Jumbo Jet ''. Its distinctive`` hump'' upper deck along the forward part of the aircraft makes it among the world's most recognizable aircraft, and it was the first wide - body produced. Manufactured by Boeing's Commercial Airplane unit in the United States, the original version of the 747 was envisioned to have 150 percent greater capacity than the Boeing 707, one of the common large commercial aircraft of the 1960s. First flown commercially in 1970, the 747 held the passenger capacity record for 37 years.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who manufactured the model 747 aircraft, named for the corporation that created the CIM-10 Bomarc?
|
[
{
"id": 133289,
"question": "Which corporation created CIM-10 Bomarc?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[] | true |
2hop__67793_63644
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "The finals are broadcast in prime time from CBS Television City in Los Angeles, in front of a live studio audience. The finals lasted eight weeks in season one, eleven weeks in subsequent seasons until seasons ten and eleven which lasted twelve weeks except for season twelve, which lasted ten weeks, and season thirteen, which lasted for thirteen weeks. Each finalist performs songs based on a weekly theme which may be a musical genre such as Motown, disco, or big band, songs by artists such as Michael Jackson, Elvis Presley or The Beatles, or more general themes such as Billboard Number 1 hits or songs from the contestant's year of birth. Contestants usually work with a celebrity mentor related to the theme. In season ten, Jimmy Iovine was brought in as a mentor for the season. Initially the contestants sing one song each week, but this is increased to two songs from top four or five onwards, then three songs for the top two or three.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "The Wonder Years",
"paragraph_text": "The Time Life DVD releases include approximately 96% of the original music soundtrack (including the opening theme song, ``With a Little Help From My Friends '', as originally sung by Joe Cocker). There were altogether some 15 exceptions, in most instances featuring generic studio replacement music in place of the original song, while on a couple of occasions the original soundtrack song was replaced with another version of the same tune. None of the necessary music replacements resulted in footage from the episodes being removed.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The Ballad of Jed Clampett",
"paragraph_text": "``The Ballad of Jed Clampett ''was the theme song for The Beverly Hillbillies TV show and movie, providing the back story for the series. The song was written and composed by Paul Henning, and sung by Jerry Scoggins, who was accompanied by bluegrass musicians Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs. When the theme was released as a single, Flatt sang lead vocals instead.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Feel So Right",
"paragraph_text": "\"Feel So Right\" is MAX's 22nd single on the Avex Trax label and was released on December 5, 2001. The title track was used as the ending theme to anime series, . MAX performed the song on their fifth appearance on NHK singing contest, Kōhaku Uta Gassen.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Unchained Melody",
"paragraph_text": "``Unchained Melody ''is a 1955 song with music by Alex North and lyrics by Hy Zaret. North used the music as a theme for the little - known prison film Unchained (1955), hence the song title. Todd Duncan sang the vocals for the film soundtrack. It has since become a standard and one of the most often recorded songs of the 20th century, most notably by the Righteous Brothers. According to the song's publishing administrator, over 1,500 recordings of`` Unchained Melody'' have been made by more than 670 artists, in multiple languages.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Cyndi Grecco",
"paragraph_text": "Cyndi Grecco (born May 19, 1952, in New York, New York) is an American singer who performed the theme tune to the popular 1970s American television show Laverne & Shirley. Titled ``Making Our Dreams Come True, ''the song (in which Grecco was accompanied by the Ron Hicklin Singers) was also put out as a single and charted at # 25 on July 25, 1976. The song came out on the small Private Stock label (# 45086). An album followed, though a second disco - themed single,`` Dancing, Dancing,'' failed to chart. She also provided the theme to another 1970s ABC television sitcom, Blansky's Beauties. Nevertheless, Grecco remains a one - hit wonder.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts",
"paragraph_text": "The song appeared in I Could Go On Singing (1963), Judy Garland's last film. A portion of the song also appeared in Disney's 1994 The Lion King (sung by Rowan Atkinson). Nicolas Cage also sang part of this song in National Treasure: Book of Secrets. Ringo Starr sang an impromptu version of the song in Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles' TV special broadcast by the BBC on 26 December 1967. Also, actors Hayden Rorke and Bill Daily performed a few lines of the song on ukulele in the 1969 I Dream of Jeannie episode ``Uncles a Go - Go. In the first episode of the 1977 sitcom Mind Your Language it is mentioned that a professor went crazy and sang this song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "The Brady Bunch",
"paragraph_text": "The theme song, penned by Schwartz and Frank De Vol, and originally arranged, sung, and performed by Paul Parrish, Lois Fletcher, and John Beland under the name the Peppermint Trolley Company, quickly communicated to audiences that the Bradys were a blended family. The Brady family is shown in a tic - tac - toe board with Carol on the top center, Alice in the middle block, and Mike on bottom middle. To the right are three blocks with the boys from the oldest on top to the youngest. To the left are three blocks with the girls from the oldest to the youngest. In season two, the Brady kids took over singing the theme song. In season three, the boys sing the first verse, girls sing the second verse, and all sing together for the third and last verse. The sequence was created and filmed by Howard A. Anderson, Jr., a visual effects pioneer who worked on the title sequences for many popular television series.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Wonderful World (Sam Cooke song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Wonderful World ''(occasionally referred to as`` (What A) Wonderful World'') is a song by American singer - songwriter Sam Cooke. Released on April 14, 1960 by Keen Records, it had been recorded during an impromptu session the previous year, Cooke's last recording session at Keen Records. He signed with RCA Victor in 1960 and ``Wonderful World, ''then unreleased, was issued as a single in competition. The song was mainly composed by songwriting team Lou Adler and Herb Alpert, but Cooke revised the lyrics to mention the subject of education more.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Glenn Strange",
"paragraph_text": "On September 20, 1973, at age 74, Strange died of lung cancer in Los Angeles, California. Singer Eddie Dean, with whom Strange had collaborated on various songs and opening themes for films, sang at Strange's funeral service as a final tribute. Strange is interred at Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery. In 1975, two years after Strange's death, his Gunsmoke costar Buck Taylor named his third son Cooper Glenn Taylor after Strange.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Build Me Up Buttercup",
"paragraph_text": "``Build Me Up Buttercup ''is a song written by Mike d'Abo and Tony Macaulay, and released by The Foundations in 1968 with Colin Young singing lead vocals. Young had replaced Clem Curtis during 1968 and this was the first Foundations hit on which he sang.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Juliette & Jonathan",
"paragraph_text": "\"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a 1996 Swedish language pop song that Lotta Engberg sang when she competed in the Swedish Melodifestivalen 1996, and finished 3rd. The song was written by Monica Forsberg and Torgny Söderberg. Even Lena Philipsson has recorded this song, and she released it on her 2006 album \"Lady Star\". At first, it was thought that Lena Philipsson should sing this song at Melodifestivalen 1996. \"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a song whose text is about love, but has an anti-racist theme. The song text is about Juliette and Jonathan, two people from different backgrounds who fall in love with each other. According to the song text, love doesn't know any borders or color of skin.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Mary Sands",
"paragraph_text": "Mary Bullman Sands (April 8, 1872 – April 2, 1949), from Allanstand in Madison County, North Carolina, was a singer of old traditional ballads during the early part of the 20th century. She was known locally as \"Singing Mary\" due to her singing talent and extensive knowledge of the words and melodies of many old-time traditional songs that had been passed down through previous generations. In 1916, English folklorist Cecil Sharp visited Madison County to collect and record traditional folk songs being sung in America that would have originated generations earlier in the British Isles. Sands sang 25 songs for him, 23 of which he included in his book, \"English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Colour Me English",
"paragraph_text": "Colour Me English is a 2011 collection of essays by Caryl Phillips. Written over a period of 20 years, the essays deal with themes of identity, home and belonging.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Boyzone",
"paragraph_text": "In 1993, an advertisement appeared in many Irish newspapers calling for auditions to form a new Irish \"boy band\" group. The advertisements were sent out by theatrical manager Walsh who was looking to make an \"Irish Take That\" following on from their success. The auditions were held in The Ormond Center, in Dublin, in November 1993. More than 300 people replied to the advertisement. At the auditions the applicants were asked to sing the song \"Careless Whisper\" by George Michael. Each audition would be taped and watched again to judge the applicant's performance. Out of the 300, 50 were selected for a second audition. For the second audition the applicants where asked to sing two songs, including one of their own choice with a backing tape. Mikey Graham sang \"Two Out of Three Ain't Bad\" by Meat Loaf, Keith Duffy sang \"I'm Too Sexy\" by Right Said Fred, Ronan Keating sang \"Father and Son\" by Cat Stevens (a cover version of which the band would later release), and Stephen Gately sang \"Hello\" by Lionel Richie. Out of this 50, 10 were selected for a third audition. In the end, Keating, Gately, Duffy, Richard Rock (son of Dickie Rock), Shane Lynch and Mark Walton were chosen.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Cyndi Grecco",
"paragraph_text": "Cyndi Grecco (born May 19, 1952, in New York, New York) is an American singer who performed the theme tune to the popular 1970s American television show Laverne & Shirley. Titled ``Making Our Dreams Come True '', the song (in which Grecco was accompanied by the Ron Hicklin Singers) was also put out as a single and charted at # 25 on July 25, 1976. The song came out on the small Private Stock label (# 45086). An album followed, though a second disco - themed single,`` Dancing, Dancing'', failed to chart. She also provided the theme to another 1970s ABC television sitcom Blansky's Beauties. Nevertheless, Grecco remains a one - hit wonder.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes",
"paragraph_text": "\"For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes\" is a song written and performed by James Brown. Released as an edited two-part single in 1978, it charted #52 R&B in 1979. A full-length version appears on the album \"Take a Look at Those Cakes\". Brown talks loudly and clearly in rhyme without only brief singing involved, this track being in part a precursor to the hip hop style which was yet to mount on record in a few years time. Robert Christgau described the song as \"a great throwaway--an eleven-minute rumination on ass-watching, including genuinely tasteless suggestions that Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder join the fun.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Up Where We Belong",
"paragraph_text": "``Up Where We Belong ''is a song written by Jack Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte - Marie and Will Jennings that was recorded by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes for the 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman. It reached record stores in July of that year to coincide with the release of the film. The song is about the belief that love can withstand the struggles of a relationship and make it stronger.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Waltraud Meier",
"paragraph_text": "Waltraud Meier was born in Würzburg, Germany. She sang in various choral groups during her younger years. Upon finishing her secondary education, she began graduate studies in English and Romance Languages while also taking voice lessons. She studied singing with Professor Dietger Jacob. In 1976, she decided to concentrate on a singing career and soon thereafter debuted at the Würzburg Opera as Lola in \"Cavalleria rusticana\". Over the next several years she performed regularly at the opera house in Mannheim (1976–78).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Vice Squad (1982 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Vice Squad is a 1982 action/crime drama film directed by Gary Sherman and starring Wings Hauser, Season Hubley, and Gary Swanson. The original music score was composed by Joe Renzetti and Keith Rubinstein. Wings Hauser sang the vocal track on the film's opening and closing theme song \"Neon Slime\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who sang Up Where We Belong with the singer of the theme song from Wonder Years?
|
[
{
"id": 67793,
"question": "who sings the theme song of the wonder years",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
},
{
"id": 63644,
"question": "who sang up where we belong with #1",
"answer": "Jennifer Warnes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
}
] |
Jennifer Warnes
|
[] | true |
2hop__658967_63644
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Cardiac surgery",
"paragraph_text": "The first successful intracardiac correction of a congenital heart defect using hypothermia was performed by Drs. C. Walton Lillehei and F. John Lewis at the University of Minnesota on 2 September 1952. In 1953, Alexander Alexandrovich Vishnevsky conducted the first cardiac surgery under local anesthesia. In 1956, Dr. John Carter Callaghan performed the first documented open heart surgery in Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Cardiac cycle",
"paragraph_text": "The cardiac cycle is the performance of the human heart from the beginning of one heartbeat to the beginning of the next. It consists of two periods: one during which the heart muscle relaxes and refills with blood, called diastole (die - ASS - toe - lee), followed by a period of robust contraction and pumping of blood, dubbed systole (SIS - toe - lee). After emptying, the heart immediately relaxes and expands to receive another influx of blood returning from the lungs and other systems of the body -- before again contracting to pump blood to the lungs and those systems. A normally performing heart must be fully expanded before it can efficiently pump again. Assuming a healthy heart and a typical rate of 70 to 75 beats per minute, each cardiac cycle, or heartbeat, takes about 0.8 second to complete the cycle.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Up Where We Belong",
"paragraph_text": "``Up Where We Belong ''is a song written by Jack Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte - Marie and Will Jennings that was recorded by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes for the 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman. It reached record stores in July of that year to coincide with the release of the film. The song is about the belief that love can withstand the struggles of a relationship and make it stronger.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Heart Full of Soul",
"paragraph_text": "``Heart Full of Soul ''is a song recorded by English rock group the Yardbirds in 1965. Written by Graham Gouldman, it was the Yardbirds' first single after Jeff Beck replaced Eric Clapton as lead guitarist. Released only three months after`` For Your Love'', ``Heart Full of Soul ''reached the top ten on the charts in the United Kingdom and the United States.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Djantoeng Hati",
"paragraph_text": "Djantoeng Hati (Heart and Soul) is a 1941 film from the Dutch East Indies directed by Njoo Cheong Seng. A tragedy warning against modernity, it starred A Sarosa, Rr Anggraini, and Ariati",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "KGTO",
"paragraph_text": "KGTO (1050 AM, \"Heart & Soul 99.1 & 1050\") is a radio station licensed to serve Tulsa, Oklahoma. The station is owned by Perry Publishing and Broadcasting and licensed to KJMM, Inc. It airs an Urban Adult Contemporary music format. Its studios are located in the Copper Oaks complex in South Tulsa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Cardiac surgery",
"paragraph_text": "Nazih Zuhdi performed the first total intentional hemodilution open heart surgery on Terry Gene Nix, age 7, on 25 February 1960 at Mercy Hospital in Oklahoma City. The operation was a success; however, Nix died three years later. In March 1961, Zuhdi, Carey, and Greer performed open heart surgery on a child, age 3 ⁄, using the total intentional hemodilution machine.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Stampede Entertainment",
"paragraph_text": "The partners' previous work includes \"Short Circuit\" (1986), \"Batteries Not Included\" (1987), \"Short Circuit 2\" (1988), \"The Land Before Time\" (1988), \"Tremors\" (1990), and \"City Slickers\" (1991). Stampede Entertainment's first production was \"Heart and Souls\" (1993), followed by \"\" (1995), \"\" (2001), and \"\" (2004).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Rupert Betheras",
"paragraph_text": "A brave utility who poured his heart and soul into the Collingwood Football Club, Rupert Betheras was a crowd favourite amongst the Collingwood faithful between 1999–2004, the latter season marking his delisting from the squad, something which continues to irk Collingwood fans.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Jimmy Bryant (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "James Howard Bryant (born June 2, 1929) is a singer, arranger and composer. He is most well known for providing the singing voice of Tony (played onscreen by Richard Beymer) in the 1961 film musical West Side Story. While he received no screen credit, he states that Beymer was ``a nice guy, and every time he did an interview he would mention my name. ''He also sang for James Fox in the 1967 film musical Thoroughly Modern Millie, and sang in`` The Telephone Hour'' number in Bye Bye Birdie. He also sang in the group that performed the theme song of the TV series Batman.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Heart & Soul (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "Heart & Soul is the nineteenth studio album by Joe Cocker, released in the UK on 12 October 2004, and in the US on 1 February 2005. The album is composed solely of cover songs, including a live version of the U2 song \"One\" taken from Cocker's 2004 Night of the Proms performance in Antwerp, Belgium.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "James Phelps (musician)",
"paragraph_text": "Phelps moved to Chicago in his teens and sang in several gospel groups, such as the Gospel Songbirds, the Holy Wonders (beside Lou Rawls) and the Soul Stirrers (with Sam Cooke). He founded the Clefs of Cavalry in the 1950s before starting a solo career in the 1960s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Fiona Coote",
"paragraph_text": "The procedure was performed by the Chinese - Australian cardiothoracic surgeon Dr Victor Chang. The urgency was due to complications of viral - induced tonsilitis, that dramatically weakened her heart. The surgery was performed at St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney. When she later began rejecting the first heart, Coote was forced to endure a second transplant, which took place in 1986. She has enjoyed good health since.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Breakadawn",
"paragraph_text": "\"Breakadawn\" is a 1993 single by hip hop group De La Soul, released from their third album \"Buhloone Mindstate\". The song samples \"Quiet Storm\" by Smokey Robinson. The song also samples the intro to Michael Jackson's \"I Can't Help It\" (from his \"Off the Wall\" album). Additionally the song samples \"Sang and Dance\" by The Bar-Kays.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Heart and Souls",
"paragraph_text": "Heart and Souls is a 1993 American fantasy comedy-drama film directed by Ron Underwood. The film stars Robert Downey Jr. as Thomas Reilly, a businessman recruited by the souls of four deceased people, his guardian angels from childhood, to help them rectify their unfinished lives, as he is the only one who can communicate with them.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "When Will I See You Again",
"paragraph_text": "``When Will I See You Again ''is a song released in 1974 by American soul group The Three Degrees, from their third album The Three Degrees. The song was written and produced by Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. Sheila Ferguson sang the lead, accompanied by Fayette Pinkney and Valerie Holiday.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "A Heart Is a House for Love",
"paragraph_text": "``A Heart is a House for Love ''Single by The Dells from the album The Five Heartbeats Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Released 1991 Genre R&B, pop, and soul music Length 6: 12 (album version) 4: 12 (single version) Label Virgin Records Songwriter (s) Tristin Sigerson, Davitt Sigerson, and Bob Thiele The Dells singles chronology`` Thought of You Just a Little Too Much'' (1988) ``A Heart is a House for Love ''(1991)`` Come and Get It'' (1992) ``Thought of You Just a Little Too Much ''(1988)`` A Heart is a House for Love'' (1991) ``Come and Get It ''(1992)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Sang Dhesian",
"paragraph_text": "Sang Dhesian (Dhesian Sang) is a village in Phillaur tahsil of Jalandhar district of Punjab state of India known for Baba Sang ji Gurdwara.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Brain",
"paragraph_text": "Early philosophers were divided as to whether the seat of the soul lies in the brain or heart. Aristotle favored the heart, and thought that the function of the brain was merely to cool the blood. Democritus, the inventor of the atomic theory of matter, argued for a three-part soul, with intellect in the head, emotion in the heart, and lust near the liver. Hippocrates, the \"father of medicine\", came down unequivocally in favor of the brain. In his treatise on epilepsy he wrote:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "My Heart Is Calling",
"paragraph_text": "\"My Heart Is Calling\" is a song recorded by the American recording artist Whitney Houston for the 1996 film \"The Preacher's Wife\". It was released on June 10, 1997, as the third and final single from the accompanying . The song was written and produced solely by Babyface. Musically, the song is an R&B ballad, with gospel music and funk influences, and the lyrics speak about meeting someone special. \"My Heart Is Calling\" received mainly positive reviews from music critics, who commended Houston's soulful performance. It peaked at number 77 on the United States \"Billboard\" Hot 100, and number 35 on \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who sang Up Where We Belong with Heart & Soul's singer?
|
[
{
"id": 658967,
"question": "Heart & Soul >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
},
{
"id": 63644,
"question": "who sang up where we belong with #1",
"answer": "Jennifer Warnes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
}
] |
Jennifer Warnes
|
[] | true |
2hop__57583_787704
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Leave Out All the Rest",
"paragraph_text": "While playing a show in Germany (München) in June 2008, Shinoda spoke with Warner Bros. Records Germany and they told him that the music video they've made for \"Leave Out All the Rest\" was not going to be released just yet due to the high success for the single \"Given Up\" in Germany. He later told this to the fans at the show.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Palermo",
"paragraph_text": "Palermo is surrounded by mountains, formed of calcar, which form a cirque around the city. Some districts of the city are divided by the mountains themselves. Historically, it was relatively difficult to reach the inner part of Sicily from the city because of the mounts. The tallest peak of the range is La Pizzuta, about 1,333 m (4,373 ft.) high. However, historically, the most important mount is Monte Pellegrino, which is geographically separated from the rest of the range by a plain. The mount lies right in front of the Tyrrhenian Sea. Monte Pellegrino's cliff was described in the 19th century by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, as \"The most beautiful promontory in the world\", in his essay \"Italian Journey\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Star City Confederate Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The Star City Confederate Memorial is located at the southwest corner of the town square of Star City, Arkansas. The marble monument depicts a Confederate Army soldier standing in mid stride with his left foot forward. His hands hold the barrel of a rifle, whose butt rests on the monument base. The statue is about high and square; it rests on a marble foundation that is long, wide, and high. The monument was erected in 1926 by a local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy at a cost of about $2,500.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Sidhbari",
"paragraph_text": "Sidhbari is a suburb of Dharamshala town, situated in the foothills of Dhauladhar mountains, in Kangra district of the state of Himachal Pradesh, India. The \"Samadhi\" (final resting place) of Sri Chinmayananda is located here.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Velký Špičák",
"paragraph_text": "Velký Špičák ( or \"Schmiedeberger Spitzberg\") is a 965 m high mountain in the Czech part of the Ore Mountains of Central Europe.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Tamborine Mountain State High School",
"paragraph_text": "Tamborine Mountain State High School (TMSHS) is a co-educational, state secondary school located on Tamborine Mountain, Queensland, Australia. Education Queensland has implemented an enrollment catchment area for Tamborine Mountain State High School.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Montana",
"paragraph_text": "East of the divide, several roughly parallel ranges cover the southern part of the state, including the Gravelly Range, the Madison Range, Gallatin Range, Absaroka Mountains and the Beartooth Mountains. The Beartooth Plateau is the largest continuous land mass over 10,000 feet (3,000 m) high in the continental United States. It contains the highest point in the state, Granite Peak, 12,799 feet (3,901 m) high. North of these ranges are the Big Belt Mountains, Bridger Mountains, Tobacco Roots, and several island ranges, including the Crazy Mountains and Little Belt Mountains.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Here Today (David Grisman album)",
"paragraph_text": "Here Today is a bluegrass album by five American musicians David Grisman, Emory Gordy Jr., Herb Pedersen, Jim Buchanan and Vince Gill, released in 1983 on Rounder Records. This was the only album this group recorded and each continued separate careers in bluegrass, newgrass, and country music.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Høgfonna Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "Høgfonna Mountain () is a high, flat, snow-topped mountain with sheer rock sides, standing southeast of Hogskavlen Mountain in the Borg Massif, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica. It was mapped by Norwegian cartographers from surveys and air photos by the Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition (1949–1952), led by John Schjelderup Giæver, and named Høgfonna (the high snowfield).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Go Rest High on That Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "``Go Rest High on That Mountain ''is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Vince Gill. It was released in August 1995 as the sixth single from his album When Love Finds You. It is a eulogic ballad. Gill began writing the song following the death of country music superstar Keith Whitley, who died in 1989. Gill did not finish the song until a few years later following the death of his older brother Bob, in 1993, of a heart attack. Ricky Skaggs and Patty Loveless both sang background vocals on the record.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Alnes",
"paragraph_text": "Alnes is a small village in Giske Municipality in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. It is located on the (isolated) north side of the island of Godøya, about northwest of the village of Leitebakk. The rest of the island's population is located on the southern half of the island, separated from Alnes by a large mountain. Alnes is accessible through a tunnel through the mountainous center part of the island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Wild Mountain Thyme",
"paragraph_text": "``Wild Mountain Thyme ''(also known as`` Purple Heather'' and ``Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go? '') is an Irish / Scottish folk song. The lyrics and melody are a variant of the song`` The Braes of Balquhither'' by Scottish poet Robert Tannahill (1774 -- 1810) and Scottish composer Robert Archibald Smith (1780 -- 1829), but were adapted by Belfast musician Francis McPeake into ``Wild Mountain Thyme ''and first recorded by his family in the 1950s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Balmberg Pass",
"paragraph_text": "Balmberg Pass (elevation 1078 m) is a high mountain pass in the Jura Mountains in the canton of Solothurn in Switzerland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts",
"paragraph_text": "The song appeared in I Could Go On Singing (1963), Judy Garland's last film. A portion of the song also appeared in Disney's 1994 The Lion King (sung by Rowan Atkinson). Nicolas Cage also sang part of this song in National Treasure: Book of Secrets. Ringo Starr sang an impromptu version of the song in Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles' TV special broadcast by the BBC on 26 December 1967. Also, actors Hayden Rorke and Bill Daily performed a few lines of the song on ukulele in the 1969 I Dream of Jeannie episode ``Uncles a Go - Go. In the first episode of the 1977 sitcom Mind Your Language it is mentioned that a professor went crazy and sang this song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Anita Darian",
"paragraph_text": "Born Anita Margaret Esgandarian in Detroit, Michigan of Armenian descent. She was a 1945 graduate of Cooley High School. Anita later studied opera at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and the Juilliard School in New York, but first came to popular attention as a featured singer with the short - lived Sauter - Finegan jazz band of the mid-1950s, with whom she recorded for RCA Victor. She settled in New York City and worked in everything from opera and classical recitals to television jingles and cartoon voice - overs. She appeared in several television productions of musicals and operas from the 1950s to the 1970s. Anita also sang the female soprano portion on The Tokens' 1961 # 1 hit ``The Lion Sleeps Tonight ''. Her high counterpoint to the lead and backup singers was an astounding merging of her operatic training and the pop genre.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Ray Fisher (actor)",
"paragraph_text": "Fisher was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He grew up in Lawnside, New Jersey and attended Haddon Heights High School. It was there that he was introduced to theatre by his high school English teacher. He was active in the school's theatre and choir program and sang in his church's choir. An English teacher introduced him to acting and he auditioned for a school musical in his sophomore year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Weg!",
"paragraph_text": "Weg! (literal English translation: \"Away!\"; title of English-language version: Go!) is an Afrikaans language outdoor and travel magazine. It was first published in April 2004 and is owned by the Media24 division of Naspers. The magazine focuses on affordable destinations in South Africa and the rest of Africa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Warp 11",
"paragraph_text": "In 1996, Karl Miller was working for an Internet broadcasting company, Play TV, making a streaming Internet video show about \"Star Trek\". Karl decided to form a band that only sang songs about \"Star Trek\" to fill time on the show. He had already been in bands with Jeff Hewitt as a teenager and the rest of the band fell into place quickly. Warp 11 formed in 1999 with Karl Miller, Brian Moore, Jeff Hewitt, and Kiki Stockhammer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Running Out of Time 2",
"paragraph_text": "Running Out of Time 2 (, literal title:\"Hidden War 2\") is a 2001 Hong Kong crime caper film co-directed by Johnnie To and Law Wing-cheung. It is a sequel to To's 1999 film \"Running Out of Time\", with Lau Ching-wan returning as Inspector Ho Sheung-sang, who this time has to go after an elusive thief played by Ekin Cheng.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Panic! at the Disco",
"paragraph_text": "Panic! at the Disco was formed in 2004 in the suburban area of Summerlin, Las Vegas, by childhood friends Ryan Ross, who sang and played guitar, and Spencer Smith, who played drums. They both attended Bishop Gorman High School, and they began playing music together in ninth grade. They invited friend Brent Wilson from nearby Palo Verde High School to join on bass, and Wilson invited classmate Brendon Urie to try out on guitar. The quartet soon began rehearsing in Smith's grandmother's living room. Urie grew up in a Mormon family in Las Vegas and early on missed some rehearsals to go to church. Ross initially was the lead vocalist for the group, but after hearing Urie sing back - up during rehearsals, the group decided to make him the lead. Initially, Panic! at the Disco was a Blink - 182 cover band.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the genre of the singer of Go Rest High on That Mountain?
|
[
{
"id": 57583,
"question": "who sang go rest high on that mountain",
"answer": "Vince Gill",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
},
{
"id": 787704,
"question": "#1 >> genre",
"answer": "bluegrass",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
}
] |
bluegrass
|
[
"Bluegrass"
] | true |
2hop__232747_63644
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Live in New York (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "Live in New York is a live album from Joe Cocker, recorded in New York's Central Park on July 12th, 1980 to an audience of 20,000 people. Originally the album was released in Australia and Japan only (in Japan as \"Spirit of Live Concert\"). It was reissued on CD in Australia by Mushroom Records in 1999.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Trouble Doll (The Disappointing 3rd LP)",
"paragraph_text": "Trouble Doll (The Disappointing 3rd LP) is the third album by B.A.L.L., released in 1989 through Shimmy Disc. The first half is a studio album that contains new material, while the second half contain a live performance recorded at CBGB in New York City.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Sonia Rubinsky",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Campinas to a Polish mother and a Lithuanian father, Rubinsky lived in Brazil for the first thirteen years of her life; she later lived in Israel for seven years, then moved to New York. She gave her first concert when she was six years old, gave her first performance as soloist with orchestra when she was twelve, and performed for Arthur Rubinstein when she was sixteen. Rubinsky studied with Vlado Perlemuter, Beveridge Webster, Jacob Lateiner, Olga Normanha and William Daghlian, and graduated from the Juilliard School with a Doctor of Arts degree.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The Only Living Boy in New York",
"paragraph_text": "``The Only Living Boy in New York ''is a song written by Paul Simon and performed by Simon & Garfunkel. It is the eighth track from the American pop duo's fifth and final studio album, Bridge over Troubled Water. The song was also issued as the B - side to the duo's`` Cecilia'' single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Frank Porretta",
"paragraph_text": "Frank Porretta Jr. (May 4, 1930, Detroit – April 23, 2015, Stamford, Connecticut) was an American tenor who had an active career performing in operas, musicals, and concerts from 1952 through 1971. He had a particularly fruitful relationship with the New York City Opera from 1956 to 1970 where he sang a highly diverse repertoire; including roles in new operas by composers Norman Dello Joio, Carlisle Floyd, Vittorio Giannini, and Robert Ward. For the NBC Opera Theatre he portrayed The Astronaut in the world premiere of Gian Carlo Menotti's \"Labyrinth\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Elevator Repair Service",
"paragraph_text": "ERS has performed in various New York City venues including The Public Theater, New York Theatre Workshop, Performance Space 122, The Performing Garage, HERE Arts Center, The Ontological at St. Mark's Church, The Flea Theater, The Kitchen, and Soho Rep. It has also performed elsewhere in the United States, and in Europe, Australia, and Asia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Stephanie Patton",
"paragraph_text": "Born in New Orleans, Louisiana, Patton received her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Painting from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in 1993 and a Master of Fine Arts degree in Photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1996. She has studied various types of vocal and comedic performance in New York, New York through The New School, Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre and the Gotham Writers' Workshop. After living in New York City, she returned to Louisiana in 2001 and currently lives and works in Lafayette, Louisiana. She has co-curated many exhibits at the Acadiana Center for the Arts in Lafayette, Louisiana with curator Brian Guidry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Up Where We Belong",
"paragraph_text": "``Up Where We Belong ''is a song written by Jack Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte - Marie and Will Jennings that was recorded by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes for the 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman. It reached record stores in July of that year to coincide with the release of the film. The song is about the belief that love can withstand the struggles of a relationship and make it stronger.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Leona Mitchell",
"paragraph_text": "Leona Mitchell (born October 13, 1949, Enid, Oklahoma) is an American operatic soprano and an Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame inductee. She is also a Grammy Award-winning soprano who sang for 18 seasons as a leading spinto soprano at the Metropolitan Opera in New York.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Cartoon Dump",
"paragraph_text": "Cartoon Dump is an online comedy series/video podcast created by Frank Conniff (formerly of \"Mystery Science Theater 3000\") and animation historian Jerry Beck. A live version was making monthly performances at the Steve Allen Theater in Los Angeles, California through late 2018 and premiered in New York City in January 2008. The show is currently running on the first Mondays of each month at QED: A Place to Show and Tell in Astoria, New York, and hosted by Conniff.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)\" is a song written and originally recorded by Billy Joel which appeared as the final song on his album \"Turnstiles\" in 1976. Several live performances of the song have been released. He performed this song at benefit concerts: The Concert for New York City for victims of the September 11 attacks in 2001, on the television program \"\" for Hurricane Sandy victims in 2012 and during his set at \"\". Joel has often tweaked the lyrics to the song at his live concerts, particularly at the \"Live at Shea\" and \"Coming Together\" concerts. On New Year's Eve, 2016, Joel performed at the BB&T Center in Sunrise, Florida, a city just north of Miami Dade County. At midnight, he crooned the traditional Auld Lang Syne and then immediately went into \"Miami 2017\". On the January 9, 2017 episode of \"The Late Show with Stephen Colbert\", Billy Joel performed the song with Stay Human, the show's house band.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "The Book of Henry",
"paragraph_text": "Principal photography on the film began in September 2015 in and around New York City, and concluded in November. The music was composed by Michael Giacchino. Stevie Nicks sang a new song in the film.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Eric Staller",
"paragraph_text": "1971 Staller completed a Bachelor Degree in Architecture at the University of Michigan. Toward the end of his tenure at the University of Michigan, Staller began to create sculptures and performance arts. Merce Cunningham and John Cage had performed at the university at that time and praised artwork that Staller had created. They were the first professional performers to make Staller realize that he was truly an artist. In the fall of 1971, Staller moved to New York City and lived there until 1991. He had purchased an 1829-vingtage Lutheran Church, located in Lyons, PA. Staller used and renovated the church as a weekend retreat until 1991, then decided to move out of New York to live full-time in Lyons, PA.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Pure Jerry: Lunt-Fontanne, New York City, The Best of the Rest, October 15–30, 1987",
"paragraph_text": "Pure Jerry: Lunt-Fontanne, New York City, The Best of the Rest, October 15–30, 1987 is a three-CD live album by Jerry Garcia. It features performances by both the Jerry Garcia Band and the Jerry Garcia Acoustic Band. It contains selections from a series of 18 concerts performed at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in New York City in October 1987. The third in the \"Pure Jerry\" series of archival concert albums, it was released in November 2004.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Daniel Bennett (saxophonist)",
"paragraph_text": "Daniel Bennett (born November 27, 1979) is an American saxophonist who lives in Manhattan. Daniel Bennett is best known for his \"folk jazz\" music. Bennett contends that his music is \"a mix of jazz, folk, and twentieth century minimalism.\" The Daniel Bennett Group was voted \"Best New Jazz Group\" in the New York City Hot House Jazz Awards. Daniel Bennett has performed in Broadway, Off-Broadway and commercial recordings in New York City.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "I'm All Right",
"paragraph_text": "\"I'm All Right\" is the opening track of \"Half the Perfect World\", Madeleine Peyroux's third solo album. The song was composed by Walter Becker, Larry Klein and Madeleine Peyroux. It was released as a single and Peyroux sang it in her \"Live from Abbey Road\" episode. When she was awarded with BBC Best International Jazz Artist in 2007, this was the chosen song for the CD with the winning performers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Dezső Ernster",
"paragraph_text": "Dezső Ernster (23 November 1898 – 15 February 1981) was a Hungarian opera singer who sang leading bass roles with the New York Metropolitan Opera from 1946 to 1963. In 1929, he created the role of Baron d'Houdoux in Hindemith's \"Neues vom Tage\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Lionel Tiger",
"paragraph_text": "Lionel Tiger lives in New York City, and regularly contributes to mainstream media such as \"Psychology Today\" and \"The New York Times\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Live (Jake Shimabukuro album)",
"paragraph_text": "Live is Jake Shimabukuro's 2009 solo album. It was released in April 2009, and consists of live in-concert performances from various venues around the world, including New York, Chicago, Japan, and Hawaii.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Saturday Night Live",
"paragraph_text": "Saturday Night Live (also known as SNL) is an American late-night live television variety show created by Lorne Michaels and developed by Dick Ebersol. The show premiered on NBC on October 11, 1975, under the original title NBC's Saturday Night. The show's comedy sketches, which often parody contemporary culture and politics, are performed by a large and varying cast of repertory and newer cast members. Each episode is hosted by a celebrity guest, who usually delivers the opening monologue and performs in sketches with the cast as with featured performances by a musical guest. An episode normally begins with a cold open sketch that ends with someone breaking character and proclaiming, \"Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!\", properly beginning the show.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who sang Up Where We Belong with the performer of Live in New York?
|
[
{
"id": 232747,
"question": "Live in New York >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
},
{
"id": 63644,
"question": "who sang up where we belong with #1",
"answer": "Jennifer Warnes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
}
] |
Jennifer Warnes
|
[] | true |
2hop__90938_787704
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Literature",
"paragraph_text": "In ancient Greece, the epics of Homer, who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey, and Hesiod, who wrote Works and Days and Theogony, are some of the earliest, and most influential, of Ancient Greek literature. Classical Greek genres included philosophy, poetry, historiography, comedies and dramas. Plato and Aristotle authored philosophical texts that are the foundation of Western philosophy, Sappho and Pindar were influential lyric poets, and Herodotus and Thucydides were early Greek historians. Although drama was popular in Ancient Greece, of the hundreds of tragedies written and performed during the classical age, only a limited number of plays by three authors still exist: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. The plays of Aristophanes provide the only real examples of a genre of comic drama known as Old Comedy, the earliest form of Greek Comedy, and are in fact used to define the genre.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Sidhbari",
"paragraph_text": "Sidhbari is a suburb of Dharamshala town, situated in the foothills of Dhauladhar mountains, in Kangra district of the state of Himachal Pradesh, India. The \"Samadhi\" (final resting place) of Sri Chinmayananda is located here.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Montana",
"paragraph_text": "East of the divide, several roughly parallel ranges cover the southern part of the state, including the Gravelly Range, the Madison Range, Gallatin Range, Absaroka Mountains and the Beartooth Mountains. The Beartooth Plateau is the largest continuous land mass over 10,000 feet (3,000 m) high in the continental United States. It contains the highest point in the state, Granite Peak, 12,799 feet (3,901 m) high. North of these ranges are the Big Belt Mountains, Bridger Mountains, Tobacco Roots, and several island ranges, including the Crazy Mountains and Little Belt Mountains.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Here Today (David Grisman album)",
"paragraph_text": "Here Today is a bluegrass album by five American musicians David Grisman, Emory Gordy Jr., Herb Pedersen, Jim Buchanan and Vince Gill, released in 1983 on Rounder Records. This was the only album this group recorded and each continued separate careers in bluegrass, newgrass, and country music.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Høgfonna Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "Høgfonna Mountain () is a high, flat, snow-topped mountain with sheer rock sides, standing southeast of Hogskavlen Mountain in the Borg Massif, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica. It was mapped by Norwegian cartographers from surveys and air photos by the Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition (1949–1952), led by John Schjelderup Giæver, and named Høgfonna (the high snowfield).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "James Moffat (author)",
"paragraph_text": "James Moffat (27 January 1922 in Canada – 8 November 1993 in England) was a \"Canadian-born UK writer who wrote at least 290 novels in several genres under at least 45 pseudonyms\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Balmberg Pass",
"paragraph_text": "Balmberg Pass (elevation 1078 m) is a high mountain pass in the Jura Mountains in the canton of Solothurn in Switzerland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Velký Špičák",
"paragraph_text": "Velký Špičák ( or \"Schmiedeberger Spitzberg\") is a 965 m high mountain in the Czech part of the Ore Mountains of Central Europe.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Robert Greenleaf Leavitt",
"paragraph_text": "\"I expect to put in the rest of my time before I retire to my farm in Maine in helping to improve the schools of this State System,\" Leavitt wrote to his Harvard class. \"At 60 I expect to retire for 40 years of research, with special reference to fruits adaptable to Maine, at my experiment station in a beautiful country among the foothills of the White Mountains. (My great great grandfather was a man of God-given taste in scenery).\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Star City Confederate Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The Star City Confederate Memorial is located at the southwest corner of the town square of Star City, Arkansas. The marble monument depicts a Confederate Army soldier standing in mid stride with his left foot forward. His hands hold the barrel of a rifle, whose butt rests on the monument base. The statue is about high and square; it rests on a marble foundation that is long, wide, and high. The monument was erected in 1926 by a local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy at a cost of about $2,500.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Mountain View High School (Wyoming)",
"paragraph_text": "Mountain View High School is a public high school in Mountain View, Wyoming, United States. It is part of Uinta County School District #4 and serves students in grades nine through twelve. The school's mascot is the Buffalo and their chief athletic rivals are the Lyman Eagles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Tamborine Mountain State High School",
"paragraph_text": "Tamborine Mountain State High School (TMSHS) is a co-educational, state secondary school located on Tamborine Mountain, Queensland, Australia. Education Queensland has implemented an enrollment catchment area for Tamborine Mountain State High School.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Alnes",
"paragraph_text": "Alnes is a small village in Giske Municipality in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. It is located on the (isolated) north side of the island of Godøya, about northwest of the village of Leitebakk. The rest of the island's population is located on the southern half of the island, separated from Alnes by a large mountain. Alnes is accessible through a tunnel through the mountainous center part of the island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "A Wednesday!",
"paragraph_text": "Mumbai police commissioner Prakash Rathod (Anupam Kher), resting after a jog, describes in a voice-over that he is going to retire the following day. He goes on to describe the most challenging case he faced in his career.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Palermo",
"paragraph_text": "Palermo is surrounded by mountains, formed of calcar, which form a cirque around the city. Some districts of the city are divided by the mountains themselves. Historically, it was relatively difficult to reach the inner part of Sicily from the city because of the mounts. The tallest peak of the range is La Pizzuta, about 1,333 m (4,373 ft.) high. However, historically, the most important mount is Monte Pellegrino, which is geographically separated from the rest of the range by a plain. The mount lies right in front of the Tyrrhenian Sea. Monte Pellegrino's cliff was described in the 19th century by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, as \"The most beautiful promontory in the world\", in his essay \"Italian Journey\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Leave Out All the Rest",
"paragraph_text": "While playing a show in Germany (München) in June 2008, Shinoda spoke with Warner Bros. Records Germany and they told him that the music video they've made for \"Leave Out All the Rest\" was not going to be released just yet due to the high success for the single \"Given Up\" in Germany. He later told this to the fans at the show.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "W. Ryerson Johnson",
"paragraph_text": "Walter Ryerson Johnson (October 19, 1901 – May 24, 1995) was a 20th-century American pulp fiction writer and editor. He wrote in many genres, but is probably best known at having been one of the men who wrote Doc Savage novels, under the pseudonym Kenneth Robeson. He also published works under the names \"Matthew Blood\" and \"Peter Field.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Geography of the United States",
"paragraph_text": "The Great Plains lie west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains. A large portion of the country's agricultural products are grown in the Great Plains. Before their general conversion to farmland, the Great Plains were noted for their extensive grasslands, from tallgrass prairie in the eastern plains to shortgrass steppe in the western High Plains. Elevation rises gradually from less than a few hundred feet near the Mississippi River to more than a mile high in the High Plains. The generally low relief of the plains is broken in several places, most notably in the Ozark and Ouachita Mountains, which form the U.S. Interior Highlands, the only major mountainous region between the Rocky Mountains and the Appalachian Mountains.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Weg!",
"paragraph_text": "Weg! (literal English translation: \"Away!\"; title of English-language version: Go!) is an Afrikaans language outdoor and travel magazine. It was first published in April 2004 and is owned by the Media24 division of Naspers. The magazine focuses on affordable destinations in South Africa and the rest of Africa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Go Rest High on That Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "``Go Rest High on That Mountain ''is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Vince Gill. It was released in August 1995 as the sixth single from his album When Love Finds You. It is a eulogic ballad. Gill began writing the song following the death of country music superstar Keith Whitley, who died in 1989. Gill did not finish the song until a few years later following the death of his older brother Bob, in 1993, of a heart attack. Ricky Skaggs and Patty Loveless both sang background vocals on the record.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
What is the genre of the songwriter of Go Rest High on That Mountain?
|
[
{
"id": 90938,
"question": "go rest high on that mountain who wrote it",
"answer": "Vince Gill",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
},
{
"id": 787704,
"question": "#1 >> genre",
"answer": "bluegrass",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
}
] |
bluegrass
|
[
"Bluegrass"
] | true |
2hop__86722_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "You Can Leave Your Hat On",
"paragraph_text": "Joe Cocker recorded ``You Can Leave Your Hat On ''for his 1986 album Cocker. Released as a single, Cocker's version peaked at # 35 on Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks, and it was featured in the 1986 Adrian Lyne film 91⁄2 Weeks during the striptease scene.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Why Me (Kris Kristofferson song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Why Me ''Single by Kris Kristofferson from the album Jesus Was a Capricorn B - side`` Help Me'' Released April 1973 Format 7 ''Recorded July 8, 1972 Genre Country gospel Length 3: 26 Label Monument Records 31909 Songwriter (s) Kris Kristofferson Producer (s) Fred Foster Kris Kristofferson singles chronology ``Jesse Younger'' (1972)`` Why Me ''(1973) ``A Song I'd Like to Sing'' (1973)`` Jesse Younger ''(1972) ``Why Me'' (1973)`` A Song I'd Like to Sing ''(1973)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Andrea Robinson (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "Andrea Robinson is an American singer and voice actress. She has been a chorus member and singing voice for other actresses in many films (animated and live action). She also was the opening act for Burt Bacharach. Her most prominent job as a singing voice of another actress is Sister Mary Robert (Wendy Makkena) in Sister Act. Her most prominent role in animation is the singing voice of Queen Athena in The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Orthodox Judaism",
"paragraph_text": "Externally, Orthodox Jews can be identified by their manner of dress and family lifestyle. Orthodox women dress modestly by keeping most of their skin covered. Additionally, married women cover their hair, most commonly in the form of a scarf, also in the form of hats, bandanas, berets, snoods or, sometimes, wigs. Orthodox men wear a skullcap known as a kipa and often fringes called \"tzitzit\". Haredi men often grow beards and always wear black hats and suits, indoors and outdoors. However, Modern Orthodox Jews are commonly indistinguishable in their dress from those around them.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "You've Got a Friend in Me",
"paragraph_text": "``You've Got a Friend in Me ''Single by Randy Newman and Lyle Lovett from the album Toy Story Released April 12, 1996 Format Cassette, CD single, digital download Genre Country, pop, soundtrack Length 2: 39 Label Walt Disney Songwriter (s) Randy Newman Producer (s) Randy Newman Randy Newman singles chronology`` It's Money That Matters'' / ``Falling in Love ''(1988)`` You've Got a Friend in Me'' (1996) ``We Belong Together ''(2010)`` It's Money That Matters'' / ``Falling in Love ''(1988)`` You've Got a Friend in Me'' (1996) ``We Belong Together ''(2010) Lyle Lovett singles chronology`` Do n't Touch My Hat'' (1996) Do n't Touch My Hat 1996 ``You've Got a Friend in Me ''(1996) You've Got a Friend in Me1996`` Private Conversation'' (1997) Private Conversation1997",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Hole punch",
"paragraph_text": "In Sweden, a four-hole national standard is almost exclusively used. The centers of the holes are 21 mm, 70 mm and 21 mm apart. The guides help keep the paper in a straight line.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "H2O: Just Add Water",
"paragraph_text": "Rikki Chadwick, Emma Gilbert, and Cleo Sertori are three teenage Australian girls who find themselves stranded on the mysterious Mako Island, where they end up in a pool under a dormant volcano just as a full moon passes overhead, bathing the pool in light. The girls are rescued and brought back to shore, where they return to their normal lives, until discovering their lives have become anything but normal. The girls find out that ten seconds after coming into contact with water they transform into mermaids. After further experimentation, the girls also discover they have supernatural powers over water. The trio enlist the help of Cleo's friend Lewis McCartney to help them keep their secret.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Hat-trick",
"paragraph_text": "Wayne Gretzky holds the NHL record for the most hat tricks in a career with 50. Harry Hyland scored the league's first hat trick, in the league's very first game on 19 December 1917, in which Hyland's Montreal Wanderers defeated the Toronto Arenas 10 -- 9.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "The Party's Over (Willie Nelson song)",
"paragraph_text": "``The Party's Over ''is a song written by country music singer Willie Nelson during the mid-1950s. After arriving in Houston, Texas, Nelson was hired to play for the Esquire Ballroom band, where he would be allowed to close the shows singing the song. Guitar instructor and Nelson's friend Paul Buskirk forwarded the song to singer Claude Gray, who recorded the original version of the song, released as`` My Party's Over'' in 1959.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Raven-Symoné",
"paragraph_text": "In 1992, Pearman began her singing career at the age of seven, when she signed with MCA Records. She spent that year and the next taking vocal lessons from Missy Elliott. Her debut album, \"Here's to New Dreams\", was released on June 22, 1993, which spawned two singles: \"That's What Little Girls Are Made Of\" and \"Raven Is the Flavor\". \"That's What Little Girls Are Made Of\" reached No. 68 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. The album however was not successful, and due to low sales she was dropped from MCA Records in 1995. The album sold over 73,000 copies in the US.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "This is Not My Hat",
"paragraph_text": "This Is Not My Hat is a 2012 children's picture book by the author and illustrator Jon Klassen. The story is told through the unreliable narration of a little fish, who has stolen a hat from a big fish and how the big fish reacts to the theft. It is a thematic follow-up to \"I Want My Hat Back\" and was meant to be a more literal sequel until Klassen took a suggestion to change which animals were in the story. The book was well received by critics who praised its dark or ironic humor which could only be understood by comparing the words of the little fish's narration against the events of the illustrations. In addition to several positive reviews, Klassen won the 2013 Caldecott Medal and the 2014 Kate Greenaway Medal becoming the first book to win both awards. \"This is Not My Hat\" was also a commercial success.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Neil Sedaka Sings Little Devil and His Other Hits",
"paragraph_text": "Neil Sedaka Sings Little Devil and His Other Hits is a solo album by Neil Sedaka released in 1961 immediately after the cover versions of earlier hits in \"Circulate\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Bringing It All Back Home",
"paragraph_text": "The album's cover, photographed by Daniel Kramer with an edge - softened lens, features Sally Grossman (wife of Dylan's manager Albert Grossman) lounging in the background. There are also artifacts scattered around the room, including LPs by The Impressions (Keep on Pushing), Robert Johnson (King of the Delta Blues Singers), Ravi Shankar (India's Master Musician), Lotte Lenya (Sings Berlin Theatre Songs by Kurt Weill) and Eric Von Schmidt (The Folk Blues of Eric Von Schmidt). Dylan had ``met ''Schmidt`` one day in the green pastures of Harvard University'' and would later mimic his album cover pose (tipping his hat) for his own Nashville Skyline four years later. A further record, Françoise Hardy's EP J'suis D'accord was on the floor near Dylan's feet but can only be seen in other shots from the same photo session.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Kenn Navarro",
"paragraph_text": "Kenn Navarro (born 1979 in Manila, Philippines) is a Filipino American animator known for creating the popular internet cartoon Happy Tree Friends. He did a one-time role as a green derby-hatted man from the Dick Figures episode \"Kitty Amazing\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "To Have and Have Not (film)",
"paragraph_text": "At his hotel home, hotel owner Gérard (Marcel Dalio) (known as ``Frenchy ''to English speakers) urges Harry to help the French Resistance by smuggling some people off the island. Harry steadfastly refuses, choosing to keep aloof from the current political situation. Also at the hotel, he meets Marie (`` Slim'') Browning (Lauren Bacall), a young American wanderer who has recently arrived in Martinique. An accomplished singer, she sings ``How Little We Know ''with pianist Cricket (Hoagy Carmichael) in the hotel bar.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "That's What Friends Are For (Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams album)",
"paragraph_text": "That's What Friends Are For is an album by American singers Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams that was released in July 1978 by Columbia Records. The project was a continuation of the pairing of the artists that began on his previous LP, \"You Light Up My Life\", which included \"Too Much, Too Little, Too Late\", the duet that was on its way to number one on three different charts in \"Billboard\" magazine as the recording sessions for this album got underway.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Something Is Squeezing My Skull",
"paragraph_text": "The single comes backed with live recordings of \"This Charming Man\", \"Best Friend on the Payroll\" and \"I Keep Mine Hidden\", the latter being performed for the first time ever by Morrissey and his band at BBC Radio 2's 'Live With Morrissey' concert in February 2009.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "A Hat in Time",
"paragraph_text": "A Hat in Time follows Hat Kid, a little girl trying to return to her home world via spaceship. While on her journey, she passes over a planet, and a member of the planet's Mafia comes to collect a toll for the Mafia Town government. When Hat Kid refuses to pay, the Mafia man busts the spaceship door open, causing Hat Kid and all of her \"Time Pieces\", magical hourglasses that power her ship, to fall to the planet below. Hat Kid lands in Mafia Town and meets Mustache Girl, a local troublemaker who hates \"bad guys\". Mustache Girl agrees to look for the missing Time Pieces in exchange for Hat Kid's help fighting the Mafia, and the two defeat the Mafia Boss. When Mustache Girl realizes the Time Pieces can rewind time, she wants to use them to become a time-traveling superhero, but Hat Kid refuses due to the dangers of manipulating time. Angered, Mustache Girl declares the two enemies and sets off to find the Time Pieces on her own.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the singer of you can keep your hat on record with a little help from my friends?
|
[
{
"id": 86722,
"question": "who sings you can keep your hat on",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__550790_42092
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Airbag",
"paragraph_text": "The first commercial designs were introduced in passenger automobiles during the 1970s with limited success and actually caused some fatalities. Broad commercial adoption of airbags occurred in many markets during the late 1980s and early 1990s with a driver airbag, and a front passenger airbag as well on some cars; and many modern vehicles now include six or more units.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Hope Chest: The Fredonia Recordings 1982–1983",
"paragraph_text": "Hope Chest: The Fredonia Recordings 1982-1983, also known as just Hope Chest, is a 1990 album by 10,000 Maniacs. It compiles tracks from their early releases \"Human Conflict Number Five\" and \"Secrets of the I Ching\". All the tracks on the album are remixed from their original versions.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Infantry mobility vehicle",
"paragraph_text": "An infantry mobility vehicle (IMV) is a wheeled armored personnel carrier (APC) serving as a military patrol, reconnaissance or security vehicle. Examples include the ATF Dingo, Oshkosh, Iveco LMV, M-ATV, AMZ Dzik, AMZ Tur, Mungo ESK, and Bushmaster IMV. This term also applies to those vehicles fielded as part of the MRAP program.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Desert Patrol Vehicle",
"paragraph_text": "The Desert Patrol Vehicle (DPV), formerly called the Fast Attack Vehicle (FAV), is a high-speed, lightly armored sandrail-like vehicle first used in combat during the Gulf War in 1991. Due to their dash speed and off-road mobility, the DPVs were used extensively during Operation Desert Storm. The first U.S. forces to enter Kuwait City were United States Navy SEALs in DPVs.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Kia Mohave",
"paragraph_text": "The Kia Mohave, marketed in North America and China as the Kia Borrego, is a sport-utility vehicle (SUV) manufactured by the South Korea manufacturer Kia Motors. The vehicle debuted in 2008 in the Korean and US markets. The Kia Borrego is named after the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in California; Borrego means \"bighorned sheep\" which can be found in the state park.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Israel has 18,096 kilometers (11,244 mi) of paved roads, and 2.4 million motor vehicles. The number of motor vehicles per 1,000 persons was 324, relatively low with respect to developed countries. Israel has 5,715 buses on scheduled routes, operated by several carriers, the largest of which is Egged, serving most of the country. Railways stretch across 949 kilometers (590 mi) and are operated solely by government-owned Israel Railways (All figures are for 2008). Following major investments beginning in the early to mid-1990s, the number of train passengers per year has grown from 2.5 million in 1990, to 35 million in 2008; railways are also used to transport 6.8 million tons of cargo, per year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "BMD-3",
"paragraph_text": "Designed in the 1980s, the vehicle was manufactured by the Volgograd tractor factory under the industrial index Object 950. The BMD-3 entered service with the VDV in 1990 with only 137 vehicles being produced due to the economic depression. The operators of the BMD-3 are Angola and Russia. As of 2013, 123 BMD-3s and 60 BMD-4s are in service with the Russian Airborne Troops.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "PAW Patrol",
"paragraph_text": "The series focuses on a boy named Ryder who leads a pack of search and rescue dogs known as the PAW Patrol. They work together on missions to protect the shoreside community of Adventure Bay. Each dog has a specific set of skills based on a real - life profession, such as a firefighter and a police officer. They all reside in doghouses that can transform into customized vehicles when necessary. They are also equipped with backpacks called ``pup packs ''that contain tools that relate to the pups' jobs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "BRDM-2",
"paragraph_text": "The BRDM-2 (\"Boyevaya Razvedyvatelnaya Dozornaya Mashina\", Боевая Разведывательная Дозорная Машина, literally \"Combat Reconnaissance/Patrol Vehicle\") is an amphibious armoured patrol car used by Russia and the former Soviet Union. It was also known under the designations BTR-40PB, BTR-40P-2 and GAZ 41-08. This vehicle, like many other Soviet designs, has been exported extensively and is in use in at least 38 countries. It was intended to replace the earlier BRDM-1, compared to which it had improved amphibious capabilities and better armament.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Airbag",
"paragraph_text": "In the early 1970s, Ford and General Motors began offering cars equipped with airbags, initially in government fleet purchased Chevrolet automobiles. GM's Oldsmobile Toronado was the first domestic vehicle to include a passenger airbag. The automaker discontinued the option for its 1977 model year, citing lack of consumer interest. Ford and GM then spent years lobbying against air - bag requirements, claiming that the devices were unfeasible and inappropriate. Chrysler made a driver - side airbag standard on 1988 -- 1989 models, but it was not until the early 1990s that airbags became widespread in American cars.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Buddhism",
"paragraph_text": "According to Jan Nattier, the term Mahāyāna \"Great Vehicle\" was originally even an honorary synonym for Bodhisattvayāna \"Bodhisattva Vehicle.\" The Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra, an early and important Mahayana text, contains a simple and brief definition for the term bodhisattva: \"Because he has enlightenment as his aim, a bodhisattva-mahāsattva is so called.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "PAW Patrol",
"paragraph_text": "Everest is a Siberian husky who serves as a snow rescue dog in emergencies relating to snow or ice. Her vehicle is a snowmobile. Like Tracker, she does not stay with the PAW Patrol and instead lives at Adventure Bay's ski resort, but will answer a call for assistance whenever her services are needed. She is voiced by Berkley Silverman. Everest, along with Cap'n Turbot, was added to the opening theme in season three.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Mitsubishi Toppo",
"paragraph_text": "The Mitsubishi Toppo is a light recreational vehicle (RV) produced by Mitsubishi Motors from 1990 until 2004, derived from their Minica kei car. The name is a portmanteau of the English \"top\" (roof) and the Japanese \"noppo\" (lanky).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Salvadoran Civil War",
"paragraph_text": "In 1990 the UN began peace negotiations and on January 16, 1992, a final agreement, The Chapultepec Peace Accords, was signed by the combatants in Mexico City, formally ending the conflict.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_text": "The Gulf War (2 August 1990 -- 28 February 1991), codenamed Operation Desert Shield (2 August 1990 -- 17 January 1991) for operations leading to the buildup of troops and defense of Saudi Arabia and Operation Desert Storm (17 January 1991 -- 28 February 1991) in its combat phase, was a war waged by coalition forces from 35 nations led by the United States against Iraq in response to Iraq's invasion and annexation of Kuwait.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Airbag",
"paragraph_text": "The first commercial designs were introduced in passenger automobiles during the 1970s with limited success. Broad commercial adoption of airbags occurred in many markets during the late 1980s and early 1990s with a driver airbag, and a front passenger airbag as well on some cars; and many modern vehicles now include six or more units.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Islamism",
"paragraph_text": "Another factor in the early 1990s that worked to radicalize the Islamist movement was the Gulf War, which brought several hundred thousand US and allied non-Muslim military personnel to Saudi Arabian soil to put an end to Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait. Prior to 1990 Saudi Arabia played an important role in restraining the many Islamist groups that received its aid. But when Saddam, secularist and Ba'athist dictator of neighboring Iraq, attacked Saudi Arabia (his enemy in the war), western troops came to protect the Saudi monarchy. Islamists accused the Saudi regime of being a puppet of the west.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Army Combat Uniform",
"paragraph_text": "First unveiled in June 2004, it is the successor to the Battle Dress Uniform (BDU) and Desert Camouflage Uniform (DCU) worn from the 1980s and 1990s through the early 2000s, respectively. The ACU and its component materials are manufactured by the existing industrial infrastructure which produced the now - obsolete BDU. Official military - grade ACUs are made of 50% nylon and 50% cotton. All other blends are not official issue.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Italian invasion of Egypt",
"paragraph_text": "The war was fought primarily in the Western Desert, which was about 390 kilometres (240 mi) long, from Mersa Matruh in Egypt, west to Gazala on the Libyan coast, along Via Balbia, the only paved road. The Sand Sea, 150 mi (240 km) inland, marked the southern limit of the desert at its widest at Giarabub and Siwa; in British parlance, Western Desert came to include eastern Cyrenaica in Libya. From the coast, extending into the hinterland lies a raised, flat plain of stony desert about 500 feet (150 m) above sea level, that runs 120–190 mi (200–300 km) in depth until the Sand Sea. The region is inhabited by a small number of Bedouin nomads, scorpions, vipers and flies.Bedouin tracks linked wells and the easier traversed ground; desert navigation was by sun, star, compass and \"desert sense\", good perception of the environment gained by experience. When Italian troops advanced into Egypt in September 1940, the Maletti Group, lacking experience of desert conditions, got lost leaving Sidi Omar, disappeared and had to be found by aircraft. In spring and summer, days are miserably hot and nights very cold. The Sirocco (Gibleh or Ghibli), a hot desert wind, blows clouds of fine sand, which reduces visibility to a few yards and coats eyes, lungs, machinery, food and equipment; motor vehicles and aircraft need special oil and air filters and the barren ground means that water and food as well as military stores, have to be transported from outside.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "PAW Patrol",
"paragraph_text": "Ryder is the human leader of the PAW Patrol. He is a ten - year - old boy who gives the dogs their mission instructions and builds the vehicles and equipment they use. His vehicle is an ATV. He is the only character to be featured in every mission, and the only member to use his vehicle in every episode. He was voiced by Owen Mason from 2013 -- 2015, by Elijha Hammill from 2015 -- 2016, and by Jaxon Mercey from 2016 onward.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the conflict in which Desert Patrol Vehicles was used inadvertently do in the early1990s?
|
[
{
"id": 550790,
"question": "Desert Patrol Vehicle >> conflict",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
},
{
"id": 42092,
"question": "What did #1 inadvertently do in the early 1990s?",
"answer": "radicalize the Islamist movement",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
}
] |
radicalize the Islamist movement
|
[] | true |
2hop__87742_390787
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "John Smith (uncle of Joseph Smith)",
"paragraph_text": "Smith was the younger brother of Joseph Smith Sr., uncle of Joseph Smith and Hyrum Smith, father of George A. Smith, grandfather of John Henry Smith, and great-grandfather of George Albert Smith. He served as a member of the first presiding high council in Kirtland, Ohio, an assistant counselor in the First Presidency under Joseph Smith, and as Presiding Patriarch under Brigham Young. He was succeeded as Presiding Patriarch by his great nephew, who was also named John Smith.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Acharya K. K. Chandy",
"paragraph_text": "Acharya K. K. Chandy (1908–2001) was the President Emeritus, Fellowship of Reconciliation (India). He was also the founding father of the Gurukul Ecumenical Center for Peace and also one of the three founder members of Christavashram, Kottayam.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Andrés Pastrana Arango",
"paragraph_text": "Andrés Pastrana Arango (born August 17, 1954) was the 30th President of Colombia from 1998 to 2002, following in the footsteps of his father, Misael Pastrana Borrero, who was president from 1970 to 1974. As of 2017, he is the last president to come from the Conservative Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Roman Putin",
"paragraph_text": "Roman Putin's grandfather, Alexander, was the uncle of the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin. Putin was born in Ryazan, Russia, in 1977.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Johann Strauss III",
"paragraph_text": "Johann Strauss III (16 February 18669 January 1939; ; also known as Johann Maria Eduard Strauss) was an Austrian composer whose father was Eduard Strauss, whose uncles were Johann Strauss II and Josef Strauss, and whose grandfather was Johann Strauss I. He was unofficially entrusted with the task of upholding his family's tradition after the dissolution of the Strauss Orchestra by his father in 1901. His talents were not fully realized during his lifetime as musical tastes had changed in the Silver Age with more popular composers such as Franz Lehár and Oscar Straus dominating the Viennese musical scene with their operettas, although his uncle, Johann Strauss II, supervised his development as a musician, a fact disputed by Eduard Strauss.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "List of presidents of the United States by age",
"paragraph_text": "The oldest living U.S. president is George H.W. Bush, born June 12, 1924 (age 93 years, 261 days). On November 25, 2017, he also became the longest - lived president, surpassing the lifespan of Gerald Ford, who died at the age of 93 years, 165 days. The second oldest living president, Jimmy Carter, has the distinction of having the longest post-presidency in U.S. history, currently at 37 years, 39 days. He surpassed the previous record, held by Herbert Hoover (31 years, 230 days) on September 7, 2012. The youngest living president is Barack Obama, born August 4, 1961 (age 56 years, 208 days).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "List of presidents of the United States by age",
"paragraph_text": "The oldest living U.S. president is George H.W. Bush, born June 12, 1924 (age 93 years, 346 days). On November 25, 2017, he also became the longest - lived president, surpassing the lifespan of Gerald Ford, who died at the age of 93 years, 165 days. The second oldest living president, Jimmy Carter, has the distinction of having the longest post-presidency in U.S. history, currently at 37 years, 124 days. He surpassed the previous record, held by Herbert Hoover (31 years, 230 days) on September 7, 2012. The youngest living president is Barack Obama, born August 4, 1961 (age 56 years, 293 days).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 -- March 13, 1901) was an American politician and lawyer who served as the 23rd President of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, creating the only grandfather - grandson duo to have held the office. He was also the great - grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a founding father. Before ascending to the presidency, Harrison established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indianapolis, Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six - year term in the U.S. Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "William Henry Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "William Henry Harrison Sr. (February 9, 1773 -- April 4, 1841) was an American military officer, a principal contributor in the War of 1812, and the ninth president of the United States (1841). He was the last president born before the American Revolution, and died of pneumonia just 31 days into his term, thereby serving the shortest tenure in United States presidential history. He was the first president to die in office, and his death sparked a brief constitutional crisis. Its resolution left unsettled Constitutional questions as to the presidential line of succession until the passage of the Twenty - fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1967. Harrison was a son of Founding Father Benjamin Harrison V and the paternal grandfather of Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd United States President (1889 -- 1893).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Vice President of the United States",
"paragraph_text": "Vice President of the United States of America Vice Presidential seal Vice Presidential standard Incumbent Mike Pence since January 20, 2017 Executive branch of the U.S. government Office of the Vice President Style Mr. Vice President (Informal) The Honorable (Formal) Mr. President (When presiding over Senate) His Excellency (In international correspondence) Member of Cabinet National Security Council President of the U.S. Senate Residence Number One Observatory Circle Seat Washington, D.C. Appointer Electoral College Term length 4 years Constituting instrument U.S. Constitution Inaugural holder John Adams (April 21, 1789) Formation March 4, 1789 (228 years ago) (1789 - 03 - 04) Succession First Salary $230,700 Website WhiteHouse.gov",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Richard Nixon",
"paragraph_text": "Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 -- April 22, 1994) was the 37th President of the United States, serving from 1969 until 1974, when he resigned from office, the only U.S. president to do so. He had previously served as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961, and prior to that as a U.S. Representative and also Senator from California.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Samuel P. Bush",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Prescott Bush (October 4, 1863 – February 8, 1948) was an American businessman and industrialist. He was the patriarch of the Bush political family. He was the father of U.S. Senator Prescott Bush, grandfather of former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, and great-grandfather of former U.S. President George W. Bush and Florida Governor Jeb Bush.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial is the final resting place of William Henry Harrison, ninth President of the United States; his wife Anna Harrison; and his son John Scott Harrison, Representative and father of the twenty-third President, Benjamin Harrison. It is located on Brower Road approximately one-half mile west of U.S. Route 50 in North Bend, Ohio.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Age of candidacy",
"paragraph_text": "In the United States, a person must be at least 35 to be President or Vice President, 30 to be a Senator, and 25 to be a Representative, as specified in the U.S. Constitution. Most states in the U.S. also have age requirements for the offices of Governor, State Senator, and State Representative. Some states have a minimum age requirement to hold any elected office (usually 21 or 18).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "José Pardo y Barreda",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Lima, Peru, he was the son of Manuel Justo Pardo y Lavalle, who had been the first civilian president of Peru (1872-1876) and the founder the Civilista Party; he is one of two second-generation Peruvian presidents (Manuel Prado, son of former dictator Mariano Ignacio Prado, is the other). His grandfather, Felipe Pardo y Aliaga (1806-1868), was a distinguished diplomat, writer and politician who was also Foreign Minister and Vice President of the Peruvian Council of State before, during and after the presidencies of Vivanco and Castilla.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Age of candidacy",
"paragraph_text": "In the United States, a person must be aged 35 or over to be President or Vice President, 30 or over to be a Senator, and 25 or over to be a Representative, as specified in the U.S. Constitution. Most states in the U.S. also have age requirements for the offices of Governor, State Senator, and State Representative. Some states have a minimum age requirement to hold any elected office (usually 21 or 18).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "George Washington Custis Lee",
"paragraph_text": "George Washington Custis Lee (September 16, 1832 – February 18, 1913), also known as Custis Lee, was the eldest son of Robert E. Lee and Mary Anna Custis Lee. His grandfather—George Washington Custis—was the step-grandson and adopted son of George Washington. He served as a Confederate general in the American Civil War, primarily as an aide-de-camp to President Jefferson Davis, and succeeded his father as president of Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Rachmawati Sukarnoputri",
"paragraph_text": "or also known Rachmawati Sukarnoputri (born 27 September 1950) is an Indonesian lawyer and politician who is the daughter and sister of two presidents of Indonesia. Her father was the first President of Indonesia and her elder sister is Megawati Sukarnoputri who was also president.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Richard Nixon",
"paragraph_text": "Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 -- April 22, 1994) was an American politician who served as the 37th President of the United States, serving from 1969 until 1974, when he resigned from office, the only U.S. president to do so. He had previously served as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961, and prior to that as a U.S. Representative and also Senator from California.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Korean War",
"paragraph_text": "Acting on State Secretary Acheson's recommendation, President Truman ordered General MacArthur to transfer matériel to the Army of the Republic of Korea while giving air cover to the evacuation of U.S. nationals. The President disagreed with advisers who recommended unilateral U.S. bombing of the North Korean forces, and ordered the US Seventh Fleet to protect the Republic of China (Taiwan), whose government asked to fight in Korea. The United States denied ROC's request for combat, lest it provoke a communist Chinese retaliation. Because the United States had sent the Seventh Fleet to \"neutralize\" the Taiwan Strait, Chinese premier Zhou Enlai criticized both the UN and U.S. initiatives as \"armed aggression on Chinese territory.\"",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the father of the only U.S. President whose grandfather was also President?
|
[
{
"id": 87742,
"question": "who was the only u.s. president whose grandfather was also president",
"answer": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
},
{
"id": 390787,
"question": "#1 >> father",
"answer": "John Scott Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
John Scott Harrison
|
[] | true |
2hop__339367_21032
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Freedom from Fear (Aung San Suu Kyi)",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom from Fear is both an essay by Aung San Suu Kyi, and a book of the same name comprising a collection of her essays.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Freedom Award",
"paragraph_text": "The International Rescue Committee (IRC) bestows its Freedom Award for extraordinary contributions to the cause of refugees and human freedom. According to the IRC, \"The Freedom Award reveals the remarkable ability of an individual to shape history and change for the better a world moving toward freedom for all.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Spain in Flames",
"paragraph_text": "Spain in Flames is a 1937 compilation film made by Helen van Dongen during the Spanish Civil War. Hal Erickson has written that the film \"... is remarkable in its willingness to offer both sides of the conflict -- though its sympathies are firmly with the Loyalists.\" The film consists of two parts. The first, \"The Fight for Freedom\", was based on film footage from a Spanish government documentary \"Spain and the Fight for Freedom\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Dark Hero",
"paragraph_text": "Dark Hero is a 1946 thriller by Peter Cheyney featuring a Chicago gangster involved in the gang wars of the 1930s, who during the Second World War finds himself in Nazi-occupied Norway and becomes a hero of the anti-Nazi resistance - by applying essentially the same skills which had made him a successful and feared gangster.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Estonia",
"paragraph_text": "A developed country with an advanced, high-income economy and high living standards, Estonia ranks very high in the Human Development Index, and performs favourably in measurements of economic freedom, civil liberties, education, and press freedom (third in the world in 2012). Estonia has been among the fastest growing economies in the European Union and is a part of the World Trade Organization and the Nordic Investment Bank. Estonia is often described as one of the most internet-focused countries in Europe.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Degrees of freedom (mechanics)",
"paragraph_text": "The trajectory of an airplane in flight has three degrees of freedom and its attitude along the trajectory has three degrees of freedom, for a total of six degrees of freedom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Fear of the dark",
"paragraph_text": "Fear of the dark is a common fear or phobia among children and, to a varying degree, adults. A fear of the dark does not always concern darkness itself; it can also be a fear of possible or imagined dangers concealed by darkness. Some degree of fear of the dark is natural, especially as a phase of child development. Most observers report that fear of the dark seldom appears before the age of 2 years. When fear of the dark reaches a degree that is severe enough to be considered pathological, it is sometimes called scotophobia (from σκότος – \"darkness\"), or lygophobia (from λυγή – \"twilight\").",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Simon Commission",
"paragraph_text": "However, opinion was divided, with support for co-operation coming from some members of the Muslim League and also both Hindus and members of the Central Sikh League. An All - India Committee for Cooperation with the Simon Commission was established by the Council of India and by selection of the Viceroy, Lord Irwin. The members of the committee were: C. Sankaran Nair (Chairman), Arthur Froom, Nawab Ali Khan, Shivdev Singh Uberoi, Zulfiqar Ali Khan, Hari Singh Gour, Abdullah Al - Mamun Suhrawardy, Kikabhai Premchand and M.C. Rajah. In Burma (Myanmar), which was included in the terms of reference of the Simon Commission, there was strong suspicion either that Burma's unpopular union with India would continue, or that the constitution recommended for Burma by the Commission would be less generous than that chosen for India; these suspicions resulted in tension and violence in Burma leading to the rebellion of Saya San.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "The Young Person's Guide to Becoming a Rock Star",
"paragraph_text": "The Young Person's Guide to Becoming a Rock Star is a British comedy series, which aired on Channel 4 in 1998. It was a six-part satirical take on the music industry, written by \"Skins\" creator Bryan Elsley. The plot centred on a young Glaswegian band – Jocks Wa Hey – as they struggle to find success.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Meskhenet",
"paragraph_text": "In Ancient Egyptian mythology, Meskhenet, (also spelt Mesenet, Meskhent, and Meshkent) was the goddess of childbirth, and the creator of each child's Ka, a part of their soul, which she breathed into them at the moment of birth. She was worshipped from the earliest of times by Egyptians.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "Sanctions imposed by the United States and European countries against the former military government, coupled with boycotts and other direct pressure on corporations by supporters of the democracy movement, have resulted in the withdrawal from the country of most US and many European companies. On 13 April 2012 British Prime Minister David Cameron called for the economic sanctions on Myanmar to be suspended in the wake of the pro-democracy party gaining 43 seats out of a possible 45 in the 2012 by-elections with the party leader, Aung San Suu Kyi becoming a member of the Burmese parliament.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Windows 10 version history",
"paragraph_text": "Windows 10 Mobile Fall Creators Update, or Windows 10 version 1709. Despite sharing a name and version number with the ``Redstone 3 ''- release for desktop is the Windows 10 Mobile build part of the`` Redstone 2'' branch, is the third major update to Windows 10 Mobile and the third in a series of updates planned under the Redstone codenames. The first preview was released to Insiders on April 14, 2017. The Fall Creators Update (Version 1709, 10.0. 15254) was officially released on October 24, 2017.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Alaungpaya",
"paragraph_text": "Alaungpaya (, ; also spelled Alaunghpaya or Alaung Phra; 11 May 1760) was the founder of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). By the time of his death from illness during his campaign in Siam, this former chief of a small village in Upper Burma had unified Burma, subdued Manipur, conquered Lan Na and driven out the French and the British who had given help to the Mon Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom. He also founded Yangon in 1755.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Thakin Tin Mya",
"paragraph_text": "Tin Mya was born on 9 September 1924 in Danuphyu, Ayeyarwady Division, British Burma to parents Pho Nyein and Ohn Pwint. He joined the anti-colonial movement Dobama Asiayone. In 1945, he served as political commissar in the Seventh Military Region of the Burma National Army. In the same year he was included in the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Burma as an alternate member.When the Communist Party was divided in early 1946, he joined Thakin Soe's break-away group (the Red Flag Communist Party).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Myanmar Airways International",
"paragraph_text": "The airline was founded by the government before independence in 1946 as Union of Burma Airways. It initially operated domestic services only. International services were added in 1950. The name was changed to Burma Airways in December 1972, and then to Myanma Airways on April 1, 1989, following the renaming of the country from Burma to Myanmar. International services were transferred to Myanmar Airways International, which was set up in 1993.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "World War I",
"paragraph_text": "The term ``First World War ''was first used in September 1914 by German biologist and philosopher Ernst Haeckel, who claimed that`` there is no doubt that the course and character of the feared 'European War'... will become the first world war in the full sense of the word,'' citing a wire service report in The Indianapolis Star on 20 September 1914.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Freedom Pass",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom Passes have two main versions, an Older Person's Freedom Pass (OPFP) and a Disabled Person's Freedom Pass (DPFP); the former has a blue right hand edge and the latter a yellow one to enable transport operators to quickly identify which concessions are applicable. Greater London residents who turned 60 before 6 April 2010 were eligible for an OPFP but from then on the qualifying age increases in a graduated way, until it becomes 66 by 6 October 2020, although the 2011 government spending review proposes speeding the process to be fully implemented by 2018. London residents over 60 can get a 60 + oystercard on payment of £20. This has all the benefits of the Freedom Pass, but only within Greater London. Unlike the Freedom Pass, it is not valid on buses outside Greater London.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Freddy vs. Jason",
"paragraph_text": "In the film, Freddy (Robert Englund) has grown incapable of haunting people's dreams as the citizens of Springwood, Ohio, have mostly forgotten about him following his death and subsequent imprisonment in Hell for his sins. To regain his power and freedom, Freddy resurrects Jason (Ken Kirzinger) and manipulates him into traveling to Springwood to cause panic and fear, leading to rumors that Freddy has returned. However, while Jason succeeds in causing enough fear for Freddy to haunt the town again, Jason angers Freddy by depriving him of potential victims. This ultimately sends the two undead monsters into a violent conflict.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Lam Bun",
"paragraph_text": "Lam Bun (25 September 1929 – 25 August 1967) was a radio commentator at Commercial Radio Hong Kong who was fiercely critical of leftists. He was assassinated during the Hong Kong 1967 riots, becoming an icon of freedom of speech in Hong Kong.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung",
"paragraph_text": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung () is an Indonesian novel by Mochtar Lubis first published by Balai Pustaka in 1952. It takes place during the Indonesian war of independence and tells the story of Guru Isa, a schoolteacher who assists the guerrilla freedom fighters yet lives in fear.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the creator of Freedom from Fear become a part of in Burma?
|
[
{
"id": 339367,
"question": "Freedom from Fear >> creator",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
},
{
"id": 21032,
"question": "What did #1 become a part of in Burma ?",
"answer": "the Burmese parliament",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
the Burmese parliament
|
[] | true |
2hop__87742_299942
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Richard Nixon",
"paragraph_text": "Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 -- April 22, 1994) was the 37th President of the United States, serving from 1969 until 1974, when he resigned from office, the only U.S. president to do so. He had previously served as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961, and prior to that as a U.S. Representative and also Senator from California.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Grover Cleveland Birthplace",
"paragraph_text": "The Grover Cleveland Birthplace is a registered historic site located in Caldwell, Essex County, New Jersey, United States. It is the only house museum dedicated to U.S. President Grover Cleveland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "John Smith (uncle of Joseph Smith)",
"paragraph_text": "Smith was the younger brother of Joseph Smith Sr., uncle of Joseph Smith and Hyrum Smith, father of George A. Smith, grandfather of John Henry Smith, and great-grandfather of George Albert Smith. He served as a member of the first presiding high council in Kirtland, Ohio, an assistant counselor in the First Presidency under Joseph Smith, and as Presiding Patriarch under Brigham Young. He was succeeded as Presiding Patriarch by his great nephew, who was also named John Smith.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Age of candidacy",
"paragraph_text": "In the United States, a person must be aged 35 or over to be President or Vice President, 30 or over to be a Senator, and 25 or over to be a Representative, as specified in the U.S. Constitution. Most states in the U.S. also have age requirements for the offices of Governor, State Senator, and State Representative. Some states have a minimum age requirement to hold any elected office (usually 21 or 18).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Roman Putin",
"paragraph_text": "Roman Putin's grandfather, Alexander, was the uncle of the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin. Putin was born in Ryazan, Russia, in 1977.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Arlington)",
"paragraph_text": "The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier or the Tomb of the Unknowns is a monument dedicated to U.S. service members who have died without their remains being identified. Having no officially designated name, it is located in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, United States of America. The World War I ``Unknown ''is a recipient of the Medal of Honor, the Victoria Cross, and several other foreign nations' highest service awards. The U.S. Unknowns who were interred are also recipients of the Medal of Honor, presented by U.S. Presidents who presided over their funerals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "George Washington Custis Lee",
"paragraph_text": "George Washington Custis Lee (September 16, 1832 – February 18, 1913), also known as Custis Lee, was the eldest son of Robert E. Lee and Mary Anna Custis Lee. His grandfather—George Washington Custis—was the step-grandson and adopted son of George Washington. He served as a Confederate general in the American Civil War, primarily as an aide-de-camp to President Jefferson Davis, and succeeded his father as president of Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Vice President of the United States",
"paragraph_text": "Vice President of the United States of America Vice Presidential seal Vice Presidential standard Incumbent Mike Pence since January 20, 2017 Executive branch of the U.S. government Office of the Vice President Style Mr. Vice President (Informal) The Honorable (Formal) Mr. President (When presiding over Senate) His Excellency (In international correspondence) Member of Cabinet National Security Council President of the U.S. Senate Residence Number One Observatory Circle Seat Washington, D.C. Appointer Electoral College Term length 4 years Constituting instrument U.S. Constitution Inaugural holder John Adams (April 21, 1789) Formation March 4, 1789 (228 years ago) (1789 - 03 - 04) Succession First Salary $230,700 Website WhiteHouse.gov",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Richard Nixon",
"paragraph_text": "Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 -- April 22, 1994) was an American politician who served as the 37th President of the United States, serving from 1969 until 1974, when he resigned from office, the only U.S. president to do so. He had previously served as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961, and prior to that as a U.S. Representative and also Senator from California.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Paula Frías Allende",
"paragraph_text": "Paula Frías Allende (22 October 1963 – 6 December 1992) was the daughter of Chilean-American author, Isabel Allende Llona. Her grandfather was first cousin to Salvador Allende, President of Chile from 1970 to 1973.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison (bust)",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison is a bust by American artist Richard Peglow, located in the north atrium on the second floor of the Indiana Statehouse, which is in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. The bust is cast in bronze and depicts President Benjamin Harrison. The bust is placed in front of a grey and black marble shield with six stars tracing around the edge of the shape. The bust and shield are approximately wide by high and has a depth of . The artwork was cast and placed in the statehouse in 2008 in accordance with Indiana code Section 2. IC 4-20.5-6-12.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Age of candidacy",
"paragraph_text": "In the United States, a person must be at least 35 to be President or Vice President, 30 to be a Senator, and 25 to be a Representative, as specified in the U.S. Constitution. Most states in the U.S. also have age requirements for the offices of Governor, State Senator, and State Representative. Some states have a minimum age requirement to hold any elected office (usually 21 or 18).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "List of presidents of the United States by age",
"paragraph_text": "The oldest living U.S. president is George H.W. Bush, born June 12, 1924 (age 93 years, 261 days). On November 25, 2017, he also became the longest - lived president, surpassing the lifespan of Gerald Ford, who died at the age of 93 years, 165 days. The second oldest living president, Jimmy Carter, has the distinction of having the longest post-presidency in U.S. history, currently at 37 years, 39 days. He surpassed the previous record, held by Herbert Hoover (31 years, 230 days) on September 7, 2012. The youngest living president is Barack Obama, born August 4, 1961 (age 56 years, 208 days).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 -- March 13, 1901) was an American politician and lawyer who served as the 23rd President of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, creating the only grandfather - grandson duo to have held the office. He was also the great - grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a founding father. Before ascending to the presidency, Harrison established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indianapolis, Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six - year term in the U.S. Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "José Pardo y Barreda",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Lima, Peru, he was the son of Manuel Justo Pardo y Lavalle, who had been the first civilian president of Peru (1872-1876) and the founder the Civilista Party; he is one of two second-generation Peruvian presidents (Manuel Prado, son of former dictator Mariano Ignacio Prado, is the other). His grandfather, Felipe Pardo y Aliaga (1806-1868), was a distinguished diplomat, writer and politician who was also Foreign Minister and Vice President of the Peruvian Council of State before, during and after the presidencies of Vivanco and Castilla.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Korean War",
"paragraph_text": "Acting on State Secretary Acheson's recommendation, President Truman ordered General MacArthur to transfer matériel to the Army of the Republic of Korea while giving air cover to the evacuation of U.S. nationals. The President disagreed with advisers who recommended unilateral U.S. bombing of the North Korean forces, and ordered the US Seventh Fleet to protect the Republic of China (Taiwan), whose government asked to fight in Korea. The United States denied ROC's request for combat, lest it provoke a communist Chinese retaliation. Because the United States had sent the Seventh Fleet to \"neutralize\" the Taiwan Strait, Chinese premier Zhou Enlai criticized both the UN and U.S. initiatives as \"armed aggression on Chinese territory.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Samuel P. Bush",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Prescott Bush (October 4, 1863 – February 8, 1948) was an American businessman and industrialist. He was the patriarch of the Bush political family. He was the father of U.S. Senator Prescott Bush, grandfather of former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, and great-grandfather of former U.S. President George W. Bush and Florida Governor Jeb Bush.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Georgia State Senate",
"paragraph_text": "The presiding officer of the Senate is the President of the Senate. A President Pro Tempore, usually a high - ranking member of the majority party, acts as President in case of the temporary disability of the President. In case of the death, resignation, or permanent disability of the President or in the event of the succession of the President to the executive power, the President Pro Tempore becomes President. The Senate also has as an officer the Secretary of the Senate.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "May Wright Sewall",
"paragraph_text": "May Wright Sewall (May 27, 1844 – July 22, 1920) was an American reformer, who was known for her service to the causes of education, women's rights, and world peace. She was born in Greenfield, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Sewall served as chairman of the National Woman Suffrage Association's executive committee from 1882 to 1890, and was the organization's first recording secretary. She also served as president of the National Council of Women of the United States from 1897 to 1899, and president of the International Council of Women from 1899 to 1904. In addition, she helped organize the General Federation of Women's Clubs, and served as its first vice-president. Sewall was also an organizer of the World's Congress of Representative Women, which was held in conjunction with the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. U.S. President William McKinley appointed her as a U.S. representative of women to the Exposition Universelle (1900) in Paris.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Palácio da Ponta Vermelha",
"paragraph_text": "The Palácio da Ponta Vermelha is the official residence of the President of Mozambique in Maputo. \"Ponta Vermelha\" (lit. \"Red Point\") refers to the area of Maputo where it is located rather than to any feature of the building. The name is also used metonymically to refer to the Mozambican presidency.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the bust of the only U.S. president whose grandfather was also president?
|
[
{
"id": 87742,
"question": "who was the only u.s. president whose grandfather was also president",
"answer": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 299942,
"question": "#1 >> location",
"answer": "Indiana Statehouse",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
Indiana Statehouse
|
[] | true |
2hop__343692_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "I Am Albert Einstein",
"paragraph_text": "I Am Albert Einstein is a children's book written by Brad Meltzer in the \"Ordinary People Change the World\" series. It follows the adventures of a young Albert Einstein learning important lessons.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Justin Bieber",
"paragraph_text": "On August 17, 2017, Bieber released the single ``Friends ''with American record producer and songwriter BloodPop. Songwriters Julia Michaels and Justin Tranter reunited with Bieber to construct the song, just as they helped create his single`` Sorry'' in 2015 on his studio album Purpose. Bieber did not attend the 2018 Grammy Awards Show to perform the nominated song ``Despacito '', claiming that he would not make any award show appearances until his next album was finished.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "That's What Friends Are For",
"paragraph_text": "``That's What Friends Are For ''is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Carole Bayer Sager. It was first recorded in 1982 by Rod Stewart for the soundtrack of the film Night Shift, but it is better known for the 1985 cover version by Dionne Warwick, Elton John, Gladys Knight and Stevie Wonder. This recording, billed as being by`` Dionne & Friends'', was released as a charity single for AIDS research and prevention. It was a massive hit, becoming the # 1 single of 1986 in the United States, and winning the Grammy Awards for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and Song of the Year. Its sales raised over US $3 million for its cause.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Something Is Squeezing My Skull",
"paragraph_text": "The single comes backed with live recordings of \"This Charming Man\", \"Best Friend on the Payroll\" and \"I Keep Mine Hidden\", the latter being performed for the first time ever by Morrissey and his band at BBC Radio 2's 'Live With Morrissey' concert in February 2009.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Sleeping with a Friend",
"paragraph_text": "\"Sleeping with a Friend\" is a song written and performed by American rock band Neon Trees. It was originally recorded by the band for their third studio album, \"Pop Psychology\" (2014). The song was released as the first single from \"Pop Psychology\" on January 11, 2014.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "No Ordinary World",
"paragraph_text": "No Ordinary World is the seventeenth studio album by Joe Cocker, released on 9 September 1999 in Europe and on 22 August 2000 in USA. The US edition of the album features two bonus tracks and has different cover artwork. Notable songs on the album include a cover of Leonard Cohen's \"First We Take Manhattan\" and \"She Believes in Me\" co-written by Bryan Adams, who had also provided backing vocals for the song.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "La Grande Vadrouille",
"paragraph_text": "La Grande Vadrouille (; literally \"The Great Stroll\"; originally released in the United States as Don't Look Now... We're Being Shot At!) is a 1966 French comedy film about two ordinary Frenchmen helping the crew of a Royal Air Force bomber shot down over Paris make their way through German-occupied France to escape arrest.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "That's What Friends Are For (Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams album)",
"paragraph_text": "That's What Friends Are For is an album by American singers Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams that was released in July 1978 by Columbia Records. The project was a continuation of the pairing of the artists that began on his previous LP, \"You Light Up My Life\", which included \"Too Much, Too Little, Too Late\", the duet that was on its way to number one on three different charts in \"Billboard\" magazine as the recording sessions for this album got underway.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "The Wonder Years",
"paragraph_text": "The Wonder Years Created by Neal Marlens Carol Black Starring Fred Savage Dan Lauria Alley Mills Olivia d'Abo Jason Hervey Danica McKellar Josh Saviano Narrated by Daniel Stern Theme music composer Lennon -- McCartney Opening theme ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''by Joe Cocker Country of origin United States Original language (s) English No. of seasons 6 No. of episodes 115 (list of episodes) Production Camera setup Single - camera Running time 22 -- 24 minutes Production company (s) The Black - Marlens Company New World Television Distributor 20th Television Release Original network ABC Original release January 31, 1988 (1988 - 01 - 31) -- May 12, 1993 (1993 - 05 - 12)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Free the World",
"paragraph_text": "\"Free the World\" is a single by American singer La Toya Jackson. Jackson spent six years in seclusion after divorcing her abusive late ex-husband and manager, Jack Gordon, in 1997. After her years in exile, the September 11th attacks inspired Jackson to write \"Free the World\". She recorded and performed it for friends, who immediately fell in love with it. This led to the revival of Jackson's 25-year-old music career.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Strange Free World",
"paragraph_text": "Strange Free World is the second album by British alternative rock band Kitchens of Distinction, released on February 19, 1991 in the US by A&M Records and on March 18, 1991 in the UK by One Little Indian Records. It is the follow-up to their 1989 debut \"Love Is Hell\". Noted producer Hugh Jones, who worked with Echo & the Bunnymen (on their 1981 album \"Heaven Up Here\"), among many others, helped KOD to sound more at ease in the studio.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy",
"paragraph_text": "``Peace on Earth / Little Drummer Boy ''(sometimes titled`` The Little Drummer Boy / Peace on Earth'') is a Christmas song with an added counterpoint performed by David Bowie and Bing Crosby. ``The Little Drummer Boy ''is a Christmas song written in 1941, while the`` Peace on Earth'' tune and lyrics, written by Ian Fraser, Larry Grossman, and Alan Kohan, were added to the song specially for Bowie and Crosby's recording.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "1950s in music",
"paragraph_text": "In 1951, Little Richard Penniman began recording for RCA Records in the late - 1940s jump blues style of Joe Brown and Billy Wright. However, it was n't until he prepared a demo in 1954, that caught the attention of Specialty Records, that the world would start to hear his new, uptempo, funky rhythm and blues that would catapult him to fame in 1955 and help define the sound of rock and roll. A rapid succession of rhythm - and - blues hits followed, beginning with ``Tutti Frutti ''and`` Long Tall Sally'', which would influence performers such as James Brown, Elvis Presley, and Otis Redding.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight",
"paragraph_text": "\"All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight\" is a song written and recorded by American country music performer Hank Williams Jr. It was released in October 1984 as the second single from his album \"Major Moves\". It peaked at number ten on the country music charts. From 1989 to 2011 Williams performed a version of the song (reworked as \"All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night\") as the opening theme to \"Monday Night Football\". The song was reinstated in 2017, with a new version by Williams Jr., Florida Georgia Line and Jason Derulo.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Viva La Bam",
"paragraph_text": "Viva La Bam is an American reality television series that starred Bam Margera and his friends and family. The show was a spin-off from MTV's \"Jackass\", in which Margera and most of the main cast had appeared. Each episode had a specific theme, mission, or challenge which was normally accomplished by performing pranks, skateboarding, and enlisting the help of friends, relations and experts. Although partly improvised, the show was supported by a greater degree of planning and organization.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Robert Barclay (statistician)",
"paragraph_text": "Barclay served as an Ordinary Seaman in the Merchant Service from 1929-33. During World War II he served as Lieutenant in the Royal Naval Reserve.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "The Romance of a Movie Star",
"paragraph_text": "The Romance of a Movie Star is a 1920 British silent romance film directed by Richard Garrick and starring Violet Hopson, Stewart Rome and Gregory Scott. It is based on the novel \"The World's Best Girl\" by Coralie Stanton. A film star risks her reputation to help out a friend.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
when did the performer of No Ordinary World record with a little help from my friends ?
|
[
{
"id": 343692,
"question": "No Ordinary World >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__71350_390787
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "George Washington Custis Lee",
"paragraph_text": "George Washington Custis Lee (September 16, 1832 – February 18, 1913), also known as Custis Lee, was the eldest son of Robert E. Lee and Mary Anna Custis Lee. His grandfather—George Washington Custis—was the step-grandson and adopted son of George Washington. He served as a Confederate general in the American Civil War, primarily as an aide-de-camp to President Jefferson Davis, and succeeded his father as president of Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 -- March 13, 1901) was an American politician and lawyer who served as the 23rd President of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, creating the only grandfather - grandson duo to have held the office. He was also the great - grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a founding father. Before ascending to the presidency, Harrison established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indianapolis, Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six - year term in the U.S. Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Roman Putin",
"paragraph_text": "Roman Putin's grandfather, Alexander, was the uncle of the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin. Putin was born in Ryazan, Russia, in 1977.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "John Smith (uncle of Joseph Smith)",
"paragraph_text": "Smith was the younger brother of Joseph Smith Sr., uncle of Joseph Smith and Hyrum Smith, father of George A. Smith, grandfather of John Henry Smith, and great-grandfather of George Albert Smith. He served as a member of the first presiding high council in Kirtland, Ohio, an assistant counselor in the First Presidency under Joseph Smith, and as Presiding Patriarch under Brigham Young. He was succeeded as Presiding Patriarch by his great nephew, who was also named John Smith.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "John Blair Scribner",
"paragraph_text": "John Blair Scribner was born on June 4, 1850 to Charles Scribner I and Emma Elizabeth Blair (1827-1869). His grandfather and namesake was John Insley Blair. He attended Princeton College, but did not graduate, but instead he came to work at Charles Scribner Company with his father. At the death of his father in 1871, he took over as president of the company.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Andrés Pastrana Arango",
"paragraph_text": "Andrés Pastrana Arango (born August 17, 1954) was the 30th President of Colombia from 1998 to 2002, following in the footsteps of his father, Misael Pastrana Borrero, who was president from 1970 to 1974. As of 2017, he is the last president to come from the Conservative Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial is the final resting place of William Henry Harrison, ninth President of the United States; his wife Anna Harrison; and his son John Scott Harrison, Representative and father of the twenty-third President, Benjamin Harrison. It is located on Brower Road approximately one-half mile west of U.S. Route 50 in North Bend, Ohio.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "John Adams",
"paragraph_text": "John Adams (October 30 (O.S. October 19) 1735 -- July 4, 1826) was an American statesman and Founding Father who served as the first Vice President (1789 -- 97) and second President of the United States (1797 -- 1801). He was a lawyer, diplomat, political theorist, and a leader of the movement for American independence from Great Britain. He was also a dedicated diarist and correspondent, particularly with his wife and closest advisor, Abigail.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "President of Mexico",
"paragraph_text": "The President of the United Mexican States (Spanish: Presidente de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos), commonly shortened to President of Mexico, is the head of state and government of Mexico. Under the Constitution, the president is also the Supreme Commander of the Mexican armed forces. The current President is Enrique Peña Nieto, who took office on December 1, 2012.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Harriet Hemings",
"paragraph_text": "Harriet Hemings (May 1801 – 1870) was born into slavery at Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson, third President of the United States, in the first year of his presidency. Some historians believe her father is Jefferson, who is believed by several historians to have fathered, with his slave Sally Hemings, four children who survived to adulthood.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Speaker (politics)",
"paragraph_text": "The Speaker of the United States House of Representatives presides over the lower house of Congress, the House of Representatives. This post is second in line to the presidency -- after the vice president -- and is therefore the third highest - ranking national office overall. In practice, this post is the highest - ranking in Congress, because the president of the US Senate is the vice president, who has his / her office, and predominant responsibilities, at the White House, and therefore does not have a day - to - day presence at the Congress.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Father's Day",
"paragraph_text": "A bill to accord national recognition of the holiday was introduced in Congress in 1913. In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson went to Spokane to speak at a Father's Day celebration and he wanted to make it an officially recognized federal holiday, but Congress resisted, fearing that it would become commercialized. US President Calvin Coolidge recommended in 1924 that the day be observed throughout the entire nation, but he stopped short at issuing a national proclamation. Two earlier attempts to formally recognize the holiday had been defeated by Congress. In 1957, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith wrote a Father's Day proposal accusing Congress of ignoring fathers for 40 years while honoring mothers, thus ``(singling) out just one of our two parents ''. In 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson issued the first presidential proclamation honoring fathers, designating the third Sunday in June as Father's Day. Six years later, the day was made a permanent national holiday when President Richard Nixon signed it into law in 1972.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Rachmawati Sukarnoputri",
"paragraph_text": "or also known Rachmawati Sukarnoputri (born 27 September 1950) is an Indonesian lawyer and politician who is the daughter and sister of two presidents of Indonesia. Her father was the first President of Indonesia and her elder sister is Megawati Sukarnoputri who was also president.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Prophet, seer, and revelator",
"paragraph_text": "Prophet, seer, and revelator is an ecclesiastical title used in the Latter Day Saint movement. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints (LDS Church) is the largest denomination of the movement, and it currently applies the terms to the members of the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. In the past, it has also been applied to the Presiding Patriarch of the church and the Assistant President of the Church. Other sects and denominations of the movement also use these terms.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "President of Nigeria",
"paragraph_text": "The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is the head of state and head of the national executive of Nigeria. The President of Nigeria is also the commander - in - chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces. The President is elected in national elections which take place every four years. The first President of Nigeria was Nnamdi Azikiwe, who took office on 1 October 1963. The current President, Muhammadu Buhari, took office on 29 May 2015 as the 15th President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Samuel P. Bush",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Prescott Bush (October 4, 1863 – February 8, 1948) was an American businessman and industrialist. He was the patriarch of the Bush political family. He was the father of U.S. Senator Prescott Bush, grandfather of former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, and great-grandfather of former U.S. President George W. Bush and Florida Governor Jeb Bush.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Acharya K. K. Chandy",
"paragraph_text": "Acharya K. K. Chandy (1908–2001) was the President Emeritus, Fellowship of Reconciliation (India). He was also the founding father of the Gurukul Ecumenical Center for Peace and also one of the three founder members of Christavashram, Kottayam.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Joseph Kabila",
"paragraph_text": "Joseph Kabila Kabange (; ; born 4 June 1971) is a Congolese politician who served as President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo between January 2001 and January 2019. He took office ten days after the assassination of his father, President Laurent-Désiré Kabila. He was elected as President in 2006 and re-elected in 2011 for a second term. Since stepping down after the 2018 election, Kabila, as a former president, will be a senator for life, according to the Constitution of the DRC.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "José Pardo y Barreda",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Lima, Peru, he was the son of Manuel Justo Pardo y Lavalle, who had been the first civilian president of Peru (1872-1876) and the founder the Civilista Party; he is one of two second-generation Peruvian presidents (Manuel Prado, son of former dictator Mariano Ignacio Prado, is the other). His grandfather, Felipe Pardo y Aliaga (1806-1868), was a distinguished diplomat, writer and politician who was also Foreign Minister and Vice President of the Peruvian Council of State before, during and after the presidencies of Vivanco and Castilla.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "William Henry Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "William Henry Harrison Sr. (February 9, 1773 -- April 4, 1841) was an American military officer, a principal contributor in the War of 1812, and the ninth president of the United States (1841). He was the last president born before the American Revolution, and died of pneumonia just 31 days into his term, thereby serving the shortest tenure in United States presidential history. He was the first president to die in office, and his death sparked a brief constitutional crisis. Its resolution left unsettled Constitutional questions as to the presidential line of succession until the passage of the Twenty - fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1967. Harrison was a son of Founding Father Benjamin Harrison V and the paternal grandfather of Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd United States President (1889 -- 1893).",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who was the father of the only US president whose grandfather was also president?
|
[
{
"id": 71350,
"question": "who was the only us president whos grandfather was also president",
"answer": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
},
{
"id": 390787,
"question": "#1 >> father",
"answer": "John Scott Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
}
] |
John Scott Harrison
|
[] | true |
2hop__97093_42092
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Kia Mohave",
"paragraph_text": "The Kia Mohave, marketed in North America and China as the Kia Borrego, is a sport-utility vehicle (SUV) manufactured by the South Korea manufacturer Kia Motors. The vehicle debuted in 2008 in the Korean and US markets. The Kia Borrego is named after the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in California; Borrego means \"bighorned sheep\" which can be found in the state park.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Korea Patrol",
"paragraph_text": "Korea Patrol (working title \"Korean Patrol\") is a 1951 war film released by Eagle-Lion Films. Together with Sam Fuller’s \"The Steel Helmet\" and Sam Katzman’s \"A Yank in Korea\", it was one of the first Hollywood films exploiting the Korean War.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Italian invasion of Egypt",
"paragraph_text": "The war was fought primarily in the Western Desert, which was about 390 kilometres (240 mi) long, from Mersa Matruh in Egypt, west to Gazala on the Libyan coast, along Via Balbia, the only paved road. The Sand Sea, 150 mi (240 km) inland, marked the southern limit of the desert at its widest at Giarabub and Siwa; in British parlance, Western Desert came to include eastern Cyrenaica in Libya. From the coast, extending into the hinterland lies a raised, flat plain of stony desert about 500 feet (150 m) above sea level, that runs 120–190 mi (200–300 km) in depth until the Sand Sea. The region is inhabited by a small number of Bedouin nomads, scorpions, vipers and flies.Bedouin tracks linked wells and the easier traversed ground; desert navigation was by sun, star, compass and \"desert sense\", good perception of the environment gained by experience. When Italian troops advanced into Egypt in September 1940, the Maletti Group, lacking experience of desert conditions, got lost leaving Sidi Omar, disappeared and had to be found by aircraft. In spring and summer, days are miserably hot and nights very cold. The Sirocco (Gibleh or Ghibli), a hot desert wind, blows clouds of fine sand, which reduces visibility to a few yards and coats eyes, lungs, machinery, food and equipment; motor vehicles and aircraft need special oil and air filters and the barren ground means that water and food as well as military stores, have to be transported from outside.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Infantry mobility vehicle",
"paragraph_text": "An infantry mobility vehicle (IMV) is a wheeled armored personnel carrier (APC) serving as a military patrol, reconnaissance or security vehicle. Examples include the ATF Dingo, Oshkosh, Iveco LMV, M-ATV, AMZ Dzik, AMZ Tur, Mungo ESK, and Bushmaster IMV. This term also applies to those vehicles fielded as part of the MRAP program.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Desert Patrol Vehicle",
"paragraph_text": "The Desert Patrol Vehicle (DPV), formerly called the Fast Attack Vehicle (FAV), is a high-speed, lightly armored sandrail-like vehicle first used in combat during the Gulf War in 1991. Due to their dash speed and off-road mobility, the DPVs were used extensively during Operation Desert Storm. The first U.S. forces to enter Kuwait City were United States Navy SEALs in DPVs.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Battle of Gazala",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Gazala (near the modern town of \"Ayn al Ghazālah\" عين الغزالة) was fought during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, west of the port of Tobruk in Libya, from 26 May to 21 June 1942. Axis troops of the \"Panzerarmee Afrika\" (\"Generaloberst\" Erwin Rommel) consisted of German and Italian units. Allied forces (Commander-in-Chief Middle East, General Sir Claude Auchinleck) were mainly British, Indian, South African and Free French.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Battle of Cissa",
"paragraph_text": "While Hannibal was marching through Gaul, Scipio had landed with his army at the allied Greek city of Massilia. He then sent a cavalry patrol north, up the eastern bank of the Rhone River, which clashed with a similar force of Numidian light cavalry and, after a hard fought skirmish, drove off the Carthaginians. Scipio marched north from his base, while Hannibal marched east towards the Alps. Arriving at the deserted Carthaginian camp, Scipio learned that Hannibal was three day's march away and decided to send his forces to Iberia under the command of his elder brother Gnaeus, who had been consul in 221 BC, while he himself returned to Northern Italy to organize the defences against Hannibal.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_text": "The Gulf War (2 August 1990 -- 28 February 1991), codenamed Operation Desert Shield (2 August 1990 -- 17 January 1991) for operations leading to the buildup of troops and defense of Saudi Arabia and Operation Desert Storm (17 January 1991 -- 28 February 1991) in its combat phase, was a war waged by coalition forces from 35 nations led by the United States against Iraq in response to Iraq's invasion and annexation of Kuwait.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Airbag",
"paragraph_text": "The first commercial designs were introduced in passenger automobiles during the 1970s with limited success and actually caused some fatalities. Broad commercial adoption of airbags occurred in many markets during the late 1980s and early 1990s with a driver airbag, and a front passenger airbag as well on some cars; and many modern vehicles now include six or more units.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "USS Margaret O (SP-614)",
"paragraph_text": "USS \"Margaret O\" (SP-614) was a civilian motorboat that temporarily served in the U.S. Navy during World War I. She was outfitted by the Navy as a patrol craft and patrolled on the U.S. East Coast. Post-war she was returned to her owner.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "French and Indian War",
"paragraph_text": "The war was fought primarily along the frontiers between New France and the British colonies, from Virginia in the South to Nova Scotia in the North. It began with a dispute over control of the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, called the Forks of the Ohio, and the site of the French Fort Duquesne and present-day Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The dispute erupted into violence in the Battle of Jumonville Glen in May 1754, during which Virginia militiamen under the command of 22-year-old George Washington ambushed a French patrol.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Airbag",
"paragraph_text": "The first commercial designs were introduced in passenger automobiles during the 1970s with limited success. Broad commercial adoption of airbags occurred in many markets during the late 1980s and early 1990s with a driver airbag, and a front passenger airbag as well on some cars; and many modern vehicles now include six or more units.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Islamism",
"paragraph_text": "Another factor in the early 1990s that worked to radicalize the Islamist movement was the Gulf War, which brought several hundred thousand US and allied non-Muslim military personnel to Saudi Arabian soil to put an end to Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait. Prior to 1990 Saudi Arabia played an important role in restraining the many Islamist groups that received its aid. But when Saddam, secularist and Ba'athist dictator of neighboring Iraq, attacked Saudi Arabia (his enemy in the war), western troops came to protect the Saudi monarchy. Islamists accused the Saudi regime of being a puppet of the west.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "War on Terror",
"paragraph_text": "Following the ceasefire agreement that suspended hostilities (but not officially ended) in the 1991 Gulf War, the United States and its allies instituted and began patrolling Iraqi no-fly zones, to protect Iraq's Kurdish and Shi'a Arab population—both of which suffered attacks from the Hussein regime before and after the Gulf War—in Iraq's northern and southern regions, respectively. U.S. forces continued in combat zone deployments through November 1995 and launched Operation Desert Fox against Iraq in 1998 after it failed to meet U.S. demands of \"unconditional cooperation\" in weapons inspections.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Skirmish at Top Malo House",
"paragraph_text": "The Skirmish at Top Malo House was fought on 31 May 1982 during the Falklands War, between 1st Assault Section Argentine Special Forces from 602 Commando Company and a patrol formed from staff and trainees of the British Mountain and Arctic Warfare Cadre, a training detachment of the Royal Marines who were under the Control of 3 Commando Brigade for Operation Corporate.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "BRDM-2",
"paragraph_text": "The BRDM-2 (\"Boyevaya Razvedyvatelnaya Dozornaya Mashina\", Боевая Разведывательная Дозорная Машина, literally \"Combat Reconnaissance/Patrol Vehicle\") is an amphibious armoured patrol car used by Russia and the former Soviet Union. It was also known under the designations BTR-40PB, BTR-40P-2 and GAZ 41-08. This vehicle, like many other Soviet designs, has been exported extensively and is in use in at least 38 countries. It was intended to replace the earlier BRDM-1, compared to which it had improved amphibious capabilities and better armament.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Israel has 18,096 kilometers (11,244 mi) of paved roads, and 2.4 million motor vehicles. The number of motor vehicles per 1,000 persons was 324, relatively low with respect to developed countries. Israel has 5,715 buses on scheduled routes, operated by several carriers, the largest of which is Egged, serving most of the country. Railways stretch across 949 kilometers (590 mi) and are operated solely by government-owned Israel Railways (All figures are for 2008). Following major investments beginning in the early to mid-1990s, the number of train passengers per year has grown from 2.5 million in 1990, to 35 million in 2008; railways are also used to transport 6.8 million tons of cargo, per year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Army Combat Uniform",
"paragraph_text": "First unveiled in June 2004, it is the successor to the Battle Dress Uniform (BDU) and Desert Camouflage Uniform (DCU) worn from the 1980s and 1990s through the early 2000s, respectively. The ACU and its component materials are manufactured by the existing industrial infrastructure which produced the now - obsolete BDU. Official military - grade ACUs are made of 50% nylon and 50% cotton. All other blends are not official issue.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "First Battle of El Alamein",
"paragraph_text": "The First Battle of El Alamein (1 -- 27 July 1942) was a battle of the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, fought in Egypt between Axis forces (Germany and Italy) of the Panzer Army Africa (Panzerarmee Afrika, which included the Afrika Korps) (Field Marshal (Generalfeldmarschall) Erwin Rommel) and Allied (British Imperial and Commonwealth) forces (Britain, British India, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand) of the Eighth Army (General Claude Auchinleck).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "First Battle of El Alamein",
"paragraph_text": "The First Battle of El Alamein (1–27 July 1942) was a battle of the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, fought in Egypt between Axis forces (Germany and Italy) of the Panzer Army Africa (, which included the under Field Marshal () Erwin Rommel and Allied (British Imperial and Commonwealth) forces (Britain, British India, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand) of the Eighth Army (General Claude Auchinleck).",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the war that where the Desert Patrol Vehicle first fought inadvertently do in the early 1990s?
|
[
{
"id": 97093,
"question": "In which war did Desert Patrol Vehicle fought?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 42092,
"question": "What did #1 inadvertently do in the early 1990s?",
"answer": "radicalize the Islamist movement",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
radicalize the Islamist movement
|
[] | true |
2hop__10188_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Messerschmitt KR200",
"paragraph_text": "The Messerschmitt KR200, or \"Kabinenroller\" (Cabin Scooter), is a three-wheeled bubble car designed by the aircraft engineer Fritz Fend and produced in the factory of the German aircraft manufacturer Messerschmitt from 1955 to 1964.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Dell",
"paragraph_text": "By the late 2000s, Dell's \"configure to order\" approach of manufacturing—delivering individual PCs configured to customer specifications from its US facilities was no longer as efficient or competitive with high-volume Asian contract manufacturers as PCs became powerful low-cost commodities. Dell closed plants that produced desktop computers for the North American market, including the Mort Topfer Manufacturing Center in Austin, Texas (original location) and Lebanon, Tennessee (opened in 1999) in 2008 and early 2009, respectively. The desktop production plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, received US$280 million in incentives from the state and opened in 2005, but ceased operations in November 2010. Dell's contract with the state required them to repay the incentives for failing to meet the conditions, and they sold the North Carolina plant to Herbalife. Most of the work that used to take place in Dell's U.S. plants was transferred to contract manufacturers in Asia and Mexico, or some of Dell's own factories overseas. The Miami, Florida, facility of its Alienware subsidiary remains in operation, while Dell continues to produce its servers (its most profitable products) in Austin, Texas. On January 8, 2009, Dell announced the closure of its manufacturing plant in Limerick, Ireland, with the loss of 1,900 jobs and the transfer of production to its plant in Łodź in Poland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Continental Aircraft Corporation",
"paragraph_text": "Continental Aircraft Corporation was an American aircraft manufacturer based in Amityville, New York. The company also maintained offices at 120 Liberty Street, in New York. Continental's chief engineer was Vincent Burnelli, a future advocate of lifting body aircraft.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "WACO Classic Aircraft",
"paragraph_text": "WACO Classic Aircraft Corporation, founded in 1983 as the Classic Aircraft Corporation and located in Battle Creek, Michigan, is a manufacturer of general aviation airplanes.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom)",
"paragraph_text": "In April 2008, a £90m contract was signed with Boeing for a \"quick fix\" solution, so they can fly by 2010: QinetiQ will downgrade the Chinooks—stripping out some of their more advanced equipment.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Boulton Paul Aircraft",
"paragraph_text": "Boulton Paul Aircraft Ltd was a British aircraft manufacturer that was incorporated in 1934, although its origins in aircraft manufacturing began earlier in 1914, and lasted until 1961. The company mainly built and modified aircraft under contract to other manufacturers, but had a few notable designs of its own, such as the Defiant fighter and the Balliol trainer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Dassault Aviation",
"paragraph_text": "Dassault Aviation SA () is an international French aircraft manufacturer of military, regional, and business jets, and is a subsidiary of Dassault Group.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Mitsubishi SpaceJet",
"paragraph_text": "The Mitsubishi SpaceJet, formerly known as the Mitsubishi Regional Jet (), or MRJ for short, is a twin-engine regional jet aircraft seating 70–90 passengers manufactured by Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation, a partnership between majority owner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and minority owner Toyota Motor Corporation with design assistance from Subaru Corporation, itself already an aerospace manufacturer. The SpaceJet will be the first airliner designed and produced in Japan since the NAMC YS-11 of the 1960s, which was produced at a loss.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide - body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC - 10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC - 25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H.W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Sierradyne",
"paragraph_text": "Acme Aircraft Co was an aircraft manufacturer founded by Hugh Crawford and Roger Keeney in Torrance, California. After 1953 the company was known as Sierradyne.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Nissan Stadium",
"paragraph_text": "On June 24, 2015, car manufacturer Nissan, which has its North American headquarters just south of Nashville in Franklin and operates a large manufacturing plant in nearby Smyrna, bought the naming rights for the stadium in a 20 - year contract, rebranding the stadium as Nissan Stadium. As part of the sponsor agreement, a 2016 Nissan Titan pickup truck was placed next to the stadium scoreboard.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "United Aircraft",
"paragraph_text": "The United Aircraft Corporation was an American aircraft manufacturer formed by the break-up of United Aircraft and Transport Corporation in 1934. In 1975, the company became the United Technologies Corporation.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Rolls-Royce Limited",
"paragraph_text": "From 1940, Rolls - Royce participated in the development of the jet engine and built for itself, and retains, a pre-eminent position in aero engine development and manufacture for use in defence and civil aircraft.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is an American wide - body commercial jet airliner and cargo aircraft, often referred to by its original nickname, ``Jumbo Jet ''. Its distinctive`` hump'' upper deck along the forward part of the aircraft makes it among the world's most recognizable aircraft, and it was the first wide - body produced. Manufactured by Boeing's Commercial Airplane unit in the United States, the original version of the 747 was envisioned to have 150 percent greater capacity than the Boeing 707, one of the common large commercial aircraft of the 1960s. First flown commercially in 1970, the 747 held the passenger capacity record for 37 years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Eurogentec",
"paragraph_text": "Eurogentec is an international biotechnology supplier, based in Belgium, that specializes in genomics and proteomics kits and reagents as well as cGMP biologics. The company was founded in 1985 as a spin-off from the University of Liège. Eurogentec's contract manufacturing organization facilities are licensed by the Belgian Ministry of Health to produce clinical trial and commercial biopharmaceutical material and also licensed by the US FDA to manufacture a commercial recombinant protein product for the US market. Eurogentec operates two manufacturing facilities in Belgium that provide custom biologics and oligonucleotide-based components for diagnostic and therapeutic/prophylactic applications.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Dell",
"paragraph_text": "Dell's manufacturing process covers assembly, software installation, functional testing (including \"burn-in\"), and quality control. Throughout most of the company's history, Dell manufactured desktop machines in-house and contracted out manufacturing of base notebooks for configuration in-house. The company's approach has changed, as cited in the 2006 Annual Report, which states, \"We are continuing to expand our use of original design manufacturing partnerships and manufacturing outsourcing relationships.\" The Wall Street Journal reported in September 2008 that \"Dell has approached contract computer manufacturers with offers to sell\" their plants. By the late 2000s, Dell's \"configure to order\" approach of manufacturing—delivering individual PCs configured to customer specifications from its US facilities was no longer as efficient or competitive with high-volume Asian contract manufacturers as PCs became powerful low-cost commodities.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide-body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC-10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC-25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H. W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Which aircraft manufacturer that got a contract with the MoD, was the manufacturer of the 747?
|
[
{
"id": 10188,
"question": "Which aircraft manufacturer got a contract with the MoD?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[] | true |
2hop__275865_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "The Real Folk Blues (Muddy Waters album)",
"paragraph_text": "The Real Folk Blues is a 1966 compilation album of Muddy Waters recordings, released on the Chess record label in January 1966. The album was the first release of \"The Real Folk Blues\" series and has since been re-released on multiple formats. The album features some of Waters' first recordings.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Project Blue Book (TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Project Blue Book is an upcoming American science fiction drama television series, scheduled to premiere on History January 8, 2019. The main role of Josef Allen Hynek is played by Aidan Gillen, and the series will consist of ten episodes. The series is based on the real - life Project Blue Book.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Al Jones",
"paragraph_text": "Alun Ashworth-Jones (31 October 1945 – 1 June 2008), known as Al Jones, was an influential English folk and blues songwriter, guitarist and singer, noted for his distinctive and original folk-rock guitar style and his often darkly humorous lyrics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "M&M's",
"paragraph_text": "In early 1995, Mars ran a promotion in which consumers were invited to vote on which of blue, pink, or purple would replace the tan M&M's. Blue was the winner with 54% of the votes. It replaced tan in late 1995. Consumers could vote by calling 1 - 800 - FUN - COLOR. Ads for the new blue colors featured a plain and an almond blue M&M character as Red and Yellow take notice of trying to do takes in the commercial by painting themselves blue where they appear on stage with B.B. King singing the blues, but the filmmakers had to cut the scene as they were not the real blue M&M's; another featured Red and Yellow holding their breath to look like the new blue M&M's, where Steven Weber sees the three M&M's, Red, Yellow, and Blue; and one more featuring Weber talking to the blue M&M if he had dived into the chocolate pool, but did not.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Chair Beside a Window",
"paragraph_text": "Chair Beside a Window is the fourth album by avant-folk/blues singer-songwriter Jandek, and Corwood Industries' first release of 1982 ( 742).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Bathtub Blues",
"paragraph_text": "Bathtub Blues is an album by folk singer/guitarist Greg Brown, released in 1993. It is directed towards children and uses a children's chorus on many of the songs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Hi Voltage",
"paragraph_text": "Hi Voltage is an album by jazz saxophonist Hank Mobley recorded on October 9, 1967 and released on the Blue Note label the following year. It features performances by Mobley with Jackie McLean, Blue Mitchell, John Hicks, Billy Higgins and Bob Cranshaw.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Beyoncé",
"paragraph_text": "On January 7, 2012, Beyoncé gave birth to her first child, a daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. Five months later, she performed for four nights at Revel Atlantic City's Ovation Hall to celebrate the resort's opening, her first performances since giving birth to Blue Ivy.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Johnnyswim",
"paragraph_text": "Johnnyswim is an American folk, soul, blues, pop music duo, consisting of singer-songwriters Amanda Sudano and Abner Ramirez. The duo formed in 2005 in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Bach to the Blues",
"paragraph_text": "Bach to the Blues is an album performed by the Ramsey Lewis Trio that was recorded in 1964 and released on the Argo label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Transcendental Blues",
"paragraph_text": "Transcendental Blues is the ninth studio album by Steve Earle, released in 2000. It features Sharon Shannon on the track \"The Galway Girl\". The album was nominated for a Grammy in the Best Contemporary Folk Album category.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Poem, ballader och lite blues",
"paragraph_text": "Poem, ballader och lite blues (English: \"Poems, ballads and a little blues\") is the sixth studio album by the Swedish-Dutch folk singer-songwriter Cornelis Vreeswijk.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "WUMB-FM",
"paragraph_text": "WUMB-FM (91.9 FM) in Boston, Massachusetts is the radio station of University of Massachusetts Boston. It broadcasts an Americana/Blues/Roots/Folk mix hosted by its staff weekdays. On weekends the station concentrates on traditional folk, Celtic, blues, and world music including syndicated programs. Overnight programming starting at midnight and usually through 5am is a repeat of a portion of the previous day's programming; an announcement of this fact is made at midnight. The station has received many awards for its folk music programming.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Blue Country Heart",
"paragraph_text": "Blue Country Heart is a Jorma Kaukonen studio album released in June, 2002. It was his first album on a major label since 1980's \"Barbeque King\". Kaukonen didn't write any new compositions for the album, and instead played mostly country-blues cover songs.The album features performances by Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas, Byron House and Bela Fleck, and was nominated for a Grammy award in 2003 for \"Best Traditional Folk Album.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "When I Took That Train",
"paragraph_text": "When I Took That Train is the 40th release by avant-folk/blues singer/songwriter Jandek, and the first of four released in 2005 by his own Corwood Industries label, as #0778.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Music of New York City",
"paragraph_text": "Beginning in the 1940s, New York City was the center for a roots revival of American folk music. Many New Yorkers, especially young people, became interested in blues, Appalachian folk music, and other roots styles. In Greenwich Village, many of these people gathered; the area became a hotbed of American folk music as well as leftist political activism.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What subgenre of the blues is The Real Folk Blues performer associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 275865,
"question": "The Real Folk Blues >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__71350_299942
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison (bust)",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison is a bust by American artist Richard Peglow, located in the north atrium on the second floor of the Indiana Statehouse, which is in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. The bust is cast in bronze and depicts President Benjamin Harrison. The bust is placed in front of a grey and black marble shield with six stars tracing around the edge of the shape. The bust and shield are approximately wide by high and has a depth of . The artwork was cast and placed in the statehouse in 2008 in accordance with Indiana code Section 2. IC 4-20.5-6-12.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Georgia State Senate",
"paragraph_text": "The presiding officer of the Senate is the President of the Senate. A President Pro Tempore, usually a high - ranking member of the majority party, acts as President in case of the temporary disability of the President. In case of the death, resignation, or permanent disability of the President or in the event of the succession of the President to the executive power, the President Pro Tempore becomes President. The Senate also has as an officer the Secretary of the Senate.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Rachmawati Sukarnoputri",
"paragraph_text": "or also known Rachmawati Sukarnoputri (born 27 September 1950) is an Indonesian lawyer and politician who is the daughter and sister of two presidents of Indonesia. Her father was the first President of Indonesia and her elder sister is Megawati Sukarnoputri who was also president.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "George Washington Custis Lee",
"paragraph_text": "George Washington Custis Lee (September 16, 1832 – February 18, 1913), also known as Custis Lee, was the eldest son of Robert E. Lee and Mary Anna Custis Lee. His grandfather—George Washington Custis—was the step-grandson and adopted son of George Washington. He served as a Confederate general in the American Civil War, primarily as an aide-de-camp to President Jefferson Davis, and succeeded his father as president of Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Thomas Jefferson Randolph",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Jefferson Randolph was the son of Thomas Mann Randolph Jr. and Martha Jefferson Randolph, the oldest son and the second born of their eleven children who survived. His mother was the eldest daughter, and he was the eldest grandson of United States President Thomas Jefferson. Part of the time, he grew up at Monticello and was close to his grandfather, who died when Randolph was 34.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Roman Putin",
"paragraph_text": "Roman Putin's grandfather, Alexander, was the uncle of the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin. Putin was born in Ryazan, Russia, in 1977.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "President of Nigeria",
"paragraph_text": "The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is the head of state and head of the national executive of Nigeria. The President of Nigeria is also the commander - in - chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces. The President is elected in national elections which take place every four years. The first President of Nigeria was Nnamdi Azikiwe, who took office on 1 October 1963. The current President, Muhammadu Buhari, took office on 29 May 2015 as the 15th President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Elizabeth Topham Kennan",
"paragraph_text": "Elizabeth Topham Kennan (born February 25, 1938) is an American academic who served as the 16th president of Mount Holyoke College from 1978 to 1995. She also served as president of the Five Colleges consortium from 1985 to 1994.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "United States Senate",
"paragraph_text": "The presiding officer of the Senate is the Vice President of the United States, who is President of the Senate. In the Vice President's absence, the President Pro Tempore, who is customarily the senior member of the party holding a majority of seats, presides over the Senate. In the early 20th century, the practice of majority and minority parties electing their floor leaders began, although they are not constitutional officers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Delano Township, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania",
"paragraph_text": "Delano Township is a township in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, United States. Formed in 1882 from part of Rush Township, it is named for Warren Delano II, maternal grandfather of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States, 1933-1945.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Tomislav Nikolić",
"paragraph_text": "Tomislav Nikolić (, ; born 15 February 1952) is a Serbian politician who served as the President of Serbia from 2012 to 2017. He is also the founder of the Serbian Progressive Party, and he led the party until his election as President. In the 2012 presidential election, he was elected to a five-year term as President in a second round of voting.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Prophet, seer, and revelator",
"paragraph_text": "Prophet, seer, and revelator is an ecclesiastical title used in the Latter Day Saint movement. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints (LDS Church) is the largest denomination of the movement, and it currently applies the terms to the members of the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. In the past, it has also been applied to the Presiding Patriarch of the church and the Assistant President of the Church. Other sects and denominations of the movement also use these terms.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Arlington)",
"paragraph_text": "The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier or the Tomb of the Unknowns is a monument dedicated to U.S. service members who have died without their remains being identified. Having no officially designated name, it is located in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, United States of America. The World War I ``Unknown ''is a recipient of the Medal of Honor, the Victoria Cross, and several other foreign nations' highest service awards. The U.S. Unknowns who were interred are also recipients of the Medal of Honor, presented by U.S. Presidents who presided over their funerals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "José Pardo y Barreda",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Lima, Peru, he was the son of Manuel Justo Pardo y Lavalle, who had been the first civilian president of Peru (1872-1876) and the founder the Civilista Party; he is one of two second-generation Peruvian presidents (Manuel Prado, son of former dictator Mariano Ignacio Prado, is the other). His grandfather, Felipe Pardo y Aliaga (1806-1868), was a distinguished diplomat, writer and politician who was also Foreign Minister and Vice President of the Peruvian Council of State before, during and after the presidencies of Vivanco and Castilla.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Samuel P. Bush",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Prescott Bush (October 4, 1863 – February 8, 1948) was an American businessman and industrialist. He was the patriarch of the Bush political family. He was the father of U.S. Senator Prescott Bush, grandfather of former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, and great-grandfather of former U.S. President George W. Bush and Florida Governor Jeb Bush.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Palácio da Ponta Vermelha",
"paragraph_text": "The Palácio da Ponta Vermelha is the official residence of the President of Mozambique in Maputo. \"Ponta Vermelha\" (lit. \"Red Point\") refers to the area of Maputo where it is located rather than to any feature of the building. The name is also used metonymically to refer to the Mozambican presidency.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "President of Mexico",
"paragraph_text": "The President of the United Mexican States (Spanish: Presidente de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos), commonly shortened to President of Mexico, is the head of state and government of Mexico. Under the Constitution, the president is also the Supreme Commander of the Mexican armed forces. The current President is Enrique Peña Nieto, who took office on December 1, 2012.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 -- March 13, 1901) was an American politician and lawyer who served as the 23rd President of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, creating the only grandfather - grandson duo to have held the office. He was also the great - grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a founding father. Before ascending to the presidency, Harrison established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indianapolis, Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six - year term in the U.S. Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Paula Frías Allende",
"paragraph_text": "Paula Frías Allende (22 October 1963 – 6 December 1992) was the daughter of Chilean-American author, Isabel Allende Llona. Her grandfather was first cousin to Salvador Allende, President of Chile from 1970 to 1973.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Madalyn Murray O'Hair",
"paragraph_text": "Madalyn Murray O'Hair (née Mays; April 13, 1919 -- September 29, 1995), who also used multiple pseudonyms (her most preferred being M. Bible), was an American activist, founder of American Atheists, and the organization's president from 1963 to 1986. She created the first issues of American Atheist Magazine. One of her sons, Jon Garth Murray, became the nominal president of the organization from 1986 to 1995, but she remained de facto president during these nine years.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the bust of the only US president whose grandfather was also a president located?
|
[
{
"id": 71350,
"question": "who was the only us president whos grandfather was also president",
"answer": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
},
{
"id": 299942,
"question": "#1 >> location",
"answer": "Indiana Statehouse",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
}
] |
Indiana Statehouse
|
[] | true |
2hop__97238_42092
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Islamism",
"paragraph_text": "Another factor in the early 1990s that worked to radicalize the Islamist movement was the Gulf War, which brought several hundred thousand US and allied non-Muslim military personnel to Saudi Arabian soil to put an end to Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait. Prior to 1990 Saudi Arabia played an important role in restraining the many Islamist groups that received its aid. But when Saddam, secularist and Ba'athist dictator of neighboring Iraq, attacked Saudi Arabia (his enemy in the war), western troops came to protect the Saudi monarchy. Islamists accused the Saudi regime of being a puppet of the west.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Uruguay",
"paragraph_text": "Montevideo was founded by the Spanish in the early 18th century as a military stronghold in the country. Its natural harbor soon developed into a commercial area competing with Río de la Plata's capital, Buenos Aires. Uruguay's early 19th century history was shaped by ongoing fights for dominance in the Platine region, between British, Spanish, Portuguese and other colonial forces. In 1806 and 1807, the British army attempted to seize Buenos Aires and Montevideo as part of the Napoleonic Wars. Montevideo was occupied by a British force from February to September 1807.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Dale Cook",
"paragraph_text": "Dale Cook (born November 24, 1958) is an American former kickboxer who competed in the middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and cruiserweight divisions. With a background in karate and taekwondo, Cook debuted professionally in 1977 and spent the early part of his career as a full contact rules fighter, winning the PKA World Middleweight Championship. In the 1980s, he began fighting under Oriental and Muay Thai rules and took two world titles under the WKA banner. A short stint in shoot boxing towards the end of his career in the mid-1990s resulted in another world title in that discipline.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Winger (band)",
"paragraph_text": "Winger is an American rock band that has combined elements of glam metal and progressive metal. Formed in New York City, Winger gained popularity during the late 1980s and early 1990s. The band's two platinum albums, \"Winger\" and \"In the Heart of the Young\", along with charting singles \"Seventeen\", \"Headed for a Heartbreak\" and \"Miles Away\", put them on the top of the charts by the early 1990s. In 1990, the band was nominated for an American Music Award for \"Best New Heavy Metal Band\". As the music scene changed in the early to mid-1990s due to the popularity of grunge, their success faded after their third release \"Pull\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Dwight D. Eisenhower",
"paragraph_text": "Early in 1953, the French asked Eisenhower for help in French Indochina against the Communists, supplied from China, who were fighting the First Indochina War. Eisenhower sent Lt. General John W. \"Iron Mike\" O'Daniel to Vietnam to study and assess the French forces there. Chief of Staff Matthew Ridgway dissuaded the President from intervening by presenting a comprehensive estimate of the massive military deployment that would be necessary. Eisenhower stated prophetically that \"this war would absorb our troops by divisions.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Just Say No",
"paragraph_text": "``Just Say No ''was an advertising campaign, part of the U.S.`` War on Drugs'', prevalent during the 1980s and early 1990s, to discourage children from engaging in illegal recreational drug use by offering various ways of saying no. The slogan was created and championed by First Lady Nancy Reagan during her husband's presidency.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Jameel Sayhood",
"paragraph_text": "Jameel Sayhood was an Iraqi pilot in the Gulf War who it is claimed managed to attain one of the few aerial victories by the Iraqi Air Force in his MiG-29B, before being shot down by USAF Captain Craig Underhill and Captain Cesar Rodriguez with their F-15Cs mere minutes after his air-air victory.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Why We Fight (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Why We Fight is the first album from Seattle-based Gatsbys American Dream. It is presumably named after the World War II documentary series.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Secret Moments",
"paragraph_text": "Secret Moments is a film by Swiss filmmaker Steff Gruber. It was filmed in the early 1990s in the Netherlands and edited in 2006.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Stranger Things",
"paragraph_text": "Stranger Things is set in the fictional rural town of Hawkins, Indiana, during the early 1980s. The nearby Hawkins National Laboratory ostensibly performs scientific research for the United States Department of Energy, but secretly does experiments into the paranormal and supernatural, including those that involve human test subjects. Inadvertently, they have created a portal to an alternate dimension called ``the Upside Down ''. The influence of the Upside Down starts to affect the unknowing residents of Hawkins in calamitous ways.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "French and Indian War",
"paragraph_text": "In Europe, the North American theater of the Seven Years' War usually is not given a separate name. The entire international conflict is known as the Seven Years' War. \"Seven Years\" refers to events in Europe, from the official declaration of war in 1756 to the signing of the peace treaty in 1763. These dates do not correspond with the fighting on mainland North America, where the fighting between the two colonial powers was largely concluded in six years, from the Battle of Jumonville Glen in 1754 to the capture of Montreal in 1760.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "William Vaughan (royalist)",
"paragraph_text": "Sir William Vaughan (died 1649) was an English royalist commander in the First English Civil War. He was killed at the Battle of Rathmines during the Irish Confederate Wars, fighting the English Republican army led by Michael Jones.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Andre Fili",
"paragraph_text": "Andre Fili (born June 25, 1990) is an American mixed martial artist who competes in the Featherweight division. Fili is of Samoan and Native Hawaiian descent and is currently signed with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Doom 3",
"paragraph_text": "Ignoring the events of the previous \"Doom \"games, the game is the first reboot to the series. \"Doom 3\" is set in 2145 on Mars, where a military-industrial conglomerate has set up a scientific research facility to research into fields such as teleportation, biological research and advanced weapons design. However, the teleportation experiments inadvertently open a gateway to Hell, resulting in a catastrophic invasion by demons. The player character, an anonymous space marine, must fight through the base and find a way to stop the demons attacking Mars. \"Doom 3\" utilizes the id Tech 4 game engine, which has since been licensed out to other developers, and later released under the GNU General Public License in November 2011.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Indo-Pakistani War of 1971",
"paragraph_text": "The Indian Army Chief in 1971 Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw had the highest respect for the fighting capability of the Pakistan Army but he did not accept the theory that they did not fight the Bangladesh war with enough vigor and zeal. In a BBC interview, he said:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Ray Daniels",
"paragraph_text": "Lieutenant-Colonel Ray Daniels MC (15 July 1923 – 27 April 2003) was awarded the Military Cross for his ‘exemplary actions during fierce fighting’ at the Battle of Cloppenburg in 1945, played rugby for Wasps RFC after World War II and later became Chief Executive of the William Press Group that he led to become a FTSE 100 company in the mid-1970s and early 1980s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "John Daly Burk",
"paragraph_text": "John Daly Burk (ca.1776–1808) was an Irish-born dramatist, historian and newspaperman in the United States in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He died fighting a duel in Virginia in 1808.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Millennials",
"paragraph_text": "Millennials (also known as Generation Y) are the generational demographic cohort following Generation X. There are no precise dates for when this cohort starts or ends; demographers and researchers typically use the early 1980s as starting birth years and the mid-1990s to early 2000s as ending birth years. Millennials are sometimes referred to as ``echo boomers ''due to a major surge in birth rates in the 1980s and 1990s, and because millennials are often the children of the baby boomers. The 20th - century trend toward smaller families in developed countries continued, however, so the relative impact of the`` baby boom echo'' was generally less pronounced than the post -- World War II baby boom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "The Things They Carried",
"paragraph_text": "The Things They Carried (1990) is a collection of linked short stories by American novelist Tim O'Brien, about a platoon of American soldiers fighting on the ground in the Vietnam War. His third book about the war, it is based upon his experiences as a soldier in the 23rd Infantry Division.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Esther Duflo",
"paragraph_text": "Esther Duflo, FBA (; born 25 October 1972) is a French American economist, Co-Founder and Director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), and Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Duflo is an NBER Research Associate, serves on the board of the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD), and is Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research's development economics program.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The war involving Jameel Sayhood did what in the early 1990s?
|
[
{
"id": 97238,
"question": "In what war did Jameel Sayhood fight in?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 42092,
"question": "What did #1 inadvertently do in the early 1990s?",
"answer": "radicalize the Islamist movement",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
}
] |
radicalize the Islamist movement
|
[] | true |
2hop__339367_21022
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Herut",
"paragraph_text": "Herut (, \"Freedom\") was the major right-wing nationalist political party in Israel from 1948 until its formal merger into Likud in 1988. It was an adherent of Revisionist Zionism, and was initially known in part for its militia actions; it became more moderate from 1951.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Dilum Amunugama",
"paragraph_text": "Dilum Amunugama is a Sri Lankan politician, a member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka. He belongs to the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He is the nephew of Sarath Amunugama.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Yrjö Mäkelin",
"paragraph_text": "Mäkelin wrote several important texts: Finnish Labour Party's 1903 Forssa Declaration on Universal Suffrage; the Red Declaration during 1905 general strike that demanded dissolution of Senate of Finland and universal suffrage, political freedoms, and abolition of censorship. 18 July 1917 Socialist-majority Parliament accepted (pro 135, against 55) a law crafted by his committee to transfer the ultimate political power in Finland to Parliament of Finland. The Russian Provisional Government chose to ignore the law and dissolved the Parliament of Finland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Guinea-Bissau",
"paragraph_text": "In 2012, President Rachide Sambu-balde Malam Bacai Sanhá died. He belonged to PAIGC (African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde), one of the two major political parties in Guinea-Bissau, along with the PRS (Party for Social Renewal). There are more than 20 minor parties.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Alliance for the Future of Austria",
"paragraph_text": "The BZÖ was founded on 3 April 2005 by Jörg Haider as a moderate splinter from the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) and immediately took the FPÖ's place in coalition with the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP). The party won seven seats at the 2006 election, ending its involvement in government. The September 2008 election saw the BZÖ breakthrough with 21 seats, while the FPÖ's vote also increased. Thirteen days after the election, Haider died in a car crash; in April 2009, Josef Bucher became leader. Under Bucher's leadership, the party moved towards economic liberalism, leading to the secession of the party's Carinthia branch to form the Freedom Party in Carinthia in December 2009.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Freedom from Fear (Aung San Suu Kyi)",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom from Fear is both an essay by Aung San Suu Kyi, and a book of the same name comprising a collection of her essays.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Flag of Germany",
"paragraph_text": "The colours of the modern flag are associated with the republican democracy first proposed in 1848, formed after World War I, and represent German unity and freedom. During the Weimar Republic, the black - red - gold colours were the colours of the democratic, centrist, and republican political parties, as seen in the name of Reichsbanner Schwarz - Rot - Gold, formed by members of the Social Democratic, the Centre, and the Democratic parties to defend the republic against extremists on the right and left.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Murugesu Chandrakumar",
"paragraph_text": "Murugesu Chandrakumar is a member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and the Deputy Chairman of Committees.He belongs to the Eelam People's Democratic Party. However, he contested under the symbol of United People's Freedom Alliance",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "According to the Crisis Group, since Myanmar transitioned to a new government in August 2011, the country's human rights record has been improving. Previously giving Myanmar its lowest rating of 7, the 2012 Freedom in the World report also notes improvement, giving Myanmar a 6 for improvements in civil liberties and political rights, the release of political prisoners, and a loosening of restrictions. In 2013, Myanmar improved yet again, receiving a score of five in civil liberties and a six in political freedoms",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi",
"paragraph_text": "Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi was a Member of Parliament and the Deputy Minister of Science and Technology of South Africa, appointed on 5 June 2014. She is also President of the National Freedom Party (NFP). Prior to being elected to Parliament, she served for nineteen years as a councillor, fifteen of those years as Mayor of the Zululand District Municipality. She was formerly chairperson of the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and the IFP's candidate for Premier of KwaZulu-Natal in the 2009 general election.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Esther Perel",
"paragraph_text": "Esther Perel (born 1958) is a Belgian psychotherapist who has explored the tension between the need for security (love, belonging and closeness) and the need for freedom (erotic desire, adventure and distance) in human relationships.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The impact of the post-election reforms has been observed in numerous areas, including ASEAN's approval of Myanmar's bid for the position of ASEAN chair in 2014; the visit by United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December 2011 for the encouragement of further progress—it was the first visit by a Secretary of State in more than fifty years (Clinton met with the Burmese president and former military commander Thein Sein, as well as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi); and the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2012 by-elections, facilitated by the government's abolition of the laws that previously barred the NLD. As of July 2013, about 100 political prisoners remain imprisoned, while conflict between the Burmese Army and local insurgent groups continues.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Ingsoc",
"paragraph_text": "The English Socialist Party, better known as Ingsoc (Newspeak for English Socialism), is the fictional political party of the totalitarian government of Oceania in George Orwell's dystopian novel \"Nineteen Eighty-Four\". George Orwell, a self-avowed democratic socialist, feared that a totalitarian impulse would deviate socialism in his native Britain from its age-old creeds and would result in a society governed by an ideology resembling that of Ingsoc.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Dixiecrat",
"paragraph_text": "States' Rights Democratic Party (Dixiecrats) Founded 1948 (1948) Dissolved 1948 (1948) Split from Democratic Party Merged into Democratic Party Ideology States' rights Racial segregation Social conservatism Political position Right - wing Politics of United States Political parties Elections",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Political party",
"paragraph_text": "While there is some international commonality in the way political parties are recognized, and in how they operate, there are often many differences, and some are significant. Many political parties have an ideological core, but some do not, and many represent very different ideologies than they did when first founded. In democracies, political parties are elected by the electorate to run a government. Many countries have numerous powerful political parties, such as Germany and India and some nations have one-party systems, such as China. The United States is a two-party system, with its two most powerful parties being the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung",
"paragraph_text": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung () is an Indonesian novel by Mochtar Lubis first published by Balai Pustaka in 1952. It takes place during the Indonesian war of independence and tells the story of Guru Isa, a schoolteacher who assists the guerrilla freedom fighters yet lives in fear.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights",
"paragraph_text": "The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) is a multilateral treaty adopted by the United Nations General Assembly with resolution 2200A (XXI) on 19 December 1966, and in force from 23 March 1976 in accordance with Article 49 of the covenant. Article 49 allowed that the covenant will enter into force three months after the date of the deposit of the thirty - fifth instrument of ratification or accession. The covenant commits its parties to respect the civil and political rights of individuals, including the right to life, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, electoral rights and rights to due process and a fair trial. As of February 2017, the Covenant has 170 parties and six more signatories without ratification.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Sanee Rohana Kodithuvakku",
"paragraph_text": "Sanee Rohana Kodithuvakku (born 15 February 1961) is a Sri Lankan politician and member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka. He belongs to the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Hajiani Lanjo",
"paragraph_text": "Hajiani Lanjo (Sindhi: ) is a liberal political and social activist from Tharparkar, a remote and underdeveloped desert area of Sindh, Pakistan. She belongs to the Qaumi Awami Tehreek party and Sindhiani Tahreek. She reached prominence after challenged Arbab Ghulam Rahim, a powerful tribal leader from Tharparkar, in the constituency of NA-229 in election-2013.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Moderation and Development Party",
"paragraph_text": "Moderation and Development Party () is a political party in Iran. It is a pragmatic-centrist political party which held its first congress in 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What political party does the creator of Freedom from Fear belong to?
|
[
{
"id": 339367,
"question": "Freedom from Fear >> creator",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5
},
{
"id": 21022,
"question": "What political party does #1 belong to ?",
"answer": "National League for Democracy (NLD) party",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11
}
] |
National League for Democracy (NLD) party
|
[
"National League for Democracy",
"NLD"
] | true |
2hop__143095_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "I Never Made Love (Till I Made It with You)",
"paragraph_text": "\"I Never Made Love (Till I Made It with You)\" is a single by American country music artist Mac Davis. It was released in April 1985 as the first single from his album \"Till I Made It with You\". The song peaked at number 10 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles chart, making it Davis's last top-10 country hit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "I Can't Quit You Baby",
"paragraph_text": "``I Ca n't Quit You Baby ''is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and first recorded by Chicago blues artist Otis Rush in 1956. It was Rush's first recording and became a record chart hit. The song, a slow twelve - bar blues, has been recorded by various artists, including Led Zeppelin, who included it on their debut album.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "At This Moment (album)",
"paragraph_text": "At This Moment is the debut album of American country music artist Neal McCoy, released in 1990 on Atlantic Records Nashville. \"If I Built You a Fire\", \"Hillbilly Blue\" and \"This Time I Hurt Her More Than She Loves Me\" were all released as singles from this album. Although \"Hillbilly Blue\" did not chart, the other two singles both entered the lower regions of the Hot Country Songs charts. \"If I Built You a Fire\" was a Top 20 country hit in Canada as well.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Jack Splash",
"paragraph_text": "Jack Splash is an American recording artist, musician, songwriter, and record producer from the Los Angeles, California area. Splash's works include writing and production on singles for artists such as Alicia Keys (\"Teenage Love Affair\"), (\"Wreckless Love\"), (\"Savior\"), Kendrick Lamar (\"Now or Never\"), John Legend (\"P.D.A. (We Just Don't Care)\"), CeeLo Green (\"Fool for You\"), (\"I Want You\"), Mayer Hawthorne, (\"The Innocent\"), (\"The Only One\"), (\"Kaila\"), Goodie Mob, (\"Valleujah\"), B.o.B, R. Kelly (\"Be My#2\"), Pixie Lott (\"Nasty\"), Christina Aguilera, Lupe Fiasco, T-Pain, Jazmine Sullivan, Jennifer Hudson, Melanie Fiona (\"Wrong Side of A Love Song\"), Musiq Soulchild, K. Michelle, Keyshia Cole (\"I Choose You\"), Anthony Hamilton, Dirt Nasty, Estelle (\"Pretty Please (Love Me)\"), Elijah Blake (\"Towers of Tokyo\") Groove Armada, Zap Mama, Solange (\"T.O.N.Y.\"), Raheem DeVaughn, Natasha Bedingfield, Lemar, Kelis, Katy Perry, Missy Elliott, Mary J. Blige, and Sia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Make You Feel My Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Make You Feel My Love ''Single by Bob Dylan from the album Time Out of Mind Released September 30, 1997 Recorded January 1997 Genre Blues rock Length 3: 32 Label Columbia Songwriter (s) Bob Dylan Producer (s) Daniel Lanois",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Make You Feel My Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Make You Feel My Love ''is a song written by Bob Dylan from his album Time Out of Mind (1997). It was first released commercially by Billy Joel, under the title`` To Make You Feel My Love'', before Dylan's version appeared later that same year. It has since been covered by numerous performers and has proved to be a commercial success for recording artists such as Adele, Garth Brooks, Shane Filan, Bryan Ferry, Kelly Clarkson and Ane Brun. Two covers of the song (one by Garth Brooks and one by Trisha Yearwood) were featured on the soundtrack of the 1998 film Hope Floats. Dylan eventually released the song as a single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Ivan Hrvatska",
"paragraph_text": "Ivan Hrvatska is a Croatian singer living in Canada, known for his songs about \"making love\" to national holidays of Canada and the United States. He first gained attention in 2001 with the song \"First I Make Love to You, Then I Make Love to Christmas\". Other tracks include \"Making Love to the Grey Cup\" and \"Making Love to Vancouver Canucks\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "I Only Want You to Love Me",
"paragraph_text": "I Only Want You to Love Me () is a 1976 West German television movie written and directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and starring Vitus Zeplichal and Elke Aberle.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Make You Feel My Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Make You Feel My Love ''is a song written by Bob Dylan that appeared on his album Time Out of Mind (1997). It was first released commercially by Billy Joel, under the title`` To Make You Feel My Love'', before Dylan's version appeared later that same year. It has since been covered by numerous performers and has proved to be a commercial success for recording artists such as Adele, Garth Brooks, Bryan Ferry, Kelly Clarkson and Ane Brun. Two covers of the song (one by Garth Brooks and one by Trisha Yearwood) were featured on the soundtrack of the 1998 film Hope Floats. Dylan eventually released the song as a single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "You Make Me Wanna...",
"paragraph_text": "\"You Make Me Wanna...\" is a song by American recording artist Usher. It was released by LaFace Records and Arista Records as the lead single from Usher's second studio album, \"My Way\" on August 12, 1997. \"You Make Me Wanna...\" was written by Usher along with Jermaine Dupri and Manuel Seal, who both produced the tune. An R&B, soul and pop ballad in C minor, it makes use of acoustic guitar, hi-hat and bell instrumentation. The song focuses on a love triangle relationship, with the protagonist wishing to leave his girlfriend for his erstwhile best friend, with a hook in which Usher states, \"You make me wanna leave the one I'm with and start a new relationship with you\". The record won a \"Billboard\" Music Award, a Soul Train Music Award, and a WQHT Hip Hop Award, and was nominated for a Grammy Award.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "I Hear You Knocking",
"paragraph_text": "``I Hear You Knocking ''(or`` I Hear You Knockin ''') is a rhythm and blues song written by Dave Bartholomew. New Orleans rhythm and blues singer Smiley Lewis first recorded the song in 1955. The lyrics tell of the return of a former lover who is rebuffed and Huey ``Piano ''Smith provided the prominent piano accompaniment in the style associated with Fats Domino.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Greatest Hits (Dan Fogelberg album)",
"paragraph_text": "Greatest Hits is a compilation album by American recording artist Dan Fogelberg. It included two previously unreleased tracks, \"Missing You\" and \"Make Love Stay\", both of which were released as singles and peaked at chart positions #23 and #29 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart, respectively. Both of the new songs made the Top 10 on the adult contemporary chart, with \"Missing You\" rising to #6 and \"Make Love Stay\" becoming the singer's third #1 on the AC chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "I Just Want to Make Love to You",
"paragraph_text": "\"I Just Want to Make Love to You\" is a 1954 blues song written by Willie Dixon, first recorded by Muddy Waters, and released as \"Just Make Love to Me\". The song reached number four on \"Billboard\" magazine's R&B Best Sellers chart.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "(What Can I Say) To Make You Love Me",
"paragraph_text": "``(What Can I Say) To Make You Love Me ''is a song written by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and recorded by American recording artist Alexander O'Neal. It is the fifth single from the singer's second solo album, Hearsay (1987). The song's distinctive backing vocals were performed by Lisa Keith. Following the successful chart performances of the Hearsay singles`` Fake'', ``Criticize '',`` Never Knew Love Like This'', and ``The Lovers '',`` (What Can I Say) To Make You Love Me'' was released as the album's fifth single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "I Think I Love You",
"paragraph_text": "``I Think I Love You ''Single by The Partridge Family from the album The Partridge Family Album B - side`` Somebody Wants to Love You'' ``To Be Lovers ''(Philippines) Released August 22, 1970 Format 7'' single Genre Pop, baroque pop Length 2: 54 Label Bell Songwriter (s) Tony Romeo Producer (s) Wes Farrell The Partridge Family singles chronology`` I Think I Love You ''(1970) ``Does n't Somebody Want to Be Wanted'' (1971)`` I Think I Love You ''(1970) ``Does n't Somebody Want to Be Wanted'' (1971)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Baby Did a Bad Bad Thing",
"paragraph_text": "``Baby Did a Bad Bad Thing ''is a song by American rock and roll artist Chris Isaak, released as the first track to the 1995 album Forever Blue. Filled with sensuality and erotic imagery, the song was described by Isaak as a declaration to`` somebody who is so evil and twisted and bad, and yet, you still want them''. The title evokes how ``That's a bad bad thing ''is used by both parents scolding misbehaving children and adults during sexual intercourse.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Make You Feel My Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Make You Feel My Love ''is a song written by Bob Dylan that appeared on his 1997 album Time Out of Mind. It was first released commercially by Billy Joel, under the title`` To Make You Feel My Love'', before Dylan's version appeared later that same year. It has since been covered by numerous performers and has proved to be a commercial success for recording artists such as Adele, Garth Brooks, Bryan Ferry, Kelly Clarkson and Ane Brun. Two covers of the song (one by Garth Brooks and one by Trisha Yearwood) were featured on the soundtrack of the 1998 film Hope Floats. Dylan eventually released the song as a single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "But You Know I Love You",
"paragraph_text": "``But You Know I Love You ''is a song written by Mike Settle, which was a 1969 pop hit for Kenny Rogers and The First Edition, a group that included Settle and Kenny Rogers. The song also became a major country hit by Bill Anderson in 1969. Evie Sands recorded the song for her album Any Way That You Want Me and Julie Rogers for her album Once More With Feeling, both in 1970. In 1981, a cover version of`` But You Know I Love You'' by singer Dolly Parton topped the country singles charts.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Which subgenre of the blues is the artist of I Just Want to Make Love to You associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 143095,
"question": "Who is the artist of I Just Want to Make Love to You?",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__454055_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Hallelujah ''is a song written by Canadian singer Leonard Cohen, originally released on his album Various Positions (1984). Achieving little initial success, the song found greater popular acclaim through a recording by John Cale, which inspired a recording by Jeff Buckley. It is considered as the`` baseline'' of secular hymns.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "1950s in music",
"paragraph_text": "In 1951, Little Richard Penniman began recording for RCA Records in the late - 1940s jump blues style of Joe Brown and Billy Wright. However, it was n't until he prepared a demo in 1954, that caught the attention of Specialty Records, that the world would start to hear his new, uptempo, funky rhythm and blues that would catapult him to fame in 1955 and help define the sound of rock and roll. A rapid succession of rhythm - and - blues hits followed, beginning with ``Tutti Frutti ''and`` Long Tall Sally'', which would influence performers such as James Brown, Elvis Presley, and Otis Redding.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The Soul of Broadway",
"paragraph_text": "The Soul of Broadway is a 1915 American silent crime drama film produced and distributed by the Fox Film Corporation and directed by Herbert Brenon. Popular vaudeville performer Valeska Suratt starred in the film which was also her silent screen debut. \"The Soul of Broadway\" is now considered lost. It is one of many silent films that were destroyed in a fire at Fox's film storage facility in Little Ferry, New Jersey in July 1937.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The Wandering of a Little Soul",
"paragraph_text": "The Wandering of a Little Soul () is a violin concerto by the Czech composer Leoš Janáček. The work is also known in English as \"Pilgrimage of a Little Soul\", \"Pilgrimage of a Dear Soul\" or simply as \"Pilgrimage of the Soul\". Nevertheless, the English title of the complete critical edition is \"The Wandering of a Little Soul\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Walter Greatorex",
"paragraph_text": "Walter Greatorex (30 March 1877 – 29 December 1949) was an English composer and musician. He is probably best remembered for his hymn tune \"Woodlands\" which has been used with hymns such as Henry Montagu Butler's \"Lift Up Your Hearts!\" and Timothy Dudley-Smith's \"Tell Out, My Soul\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Rocky Dawuni",
"paragraph_text": "Rocky Dawuni is a Ghanaian singer, songwriter and record producer who performs his signature 'Afro Roots' sound which is a mixture of Reggae, Afrobeat, Highlife and soul music. He currently lives between Ghana and Los Angeles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "The Ones You Love",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Ones You Love\" is a pop song performed by English singer Rick Astley and written by Dave West and himself. It was produced by Gary Stevenson and Rick. The song was recorded for Astley's fourth album, \"Body & Soul\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Soul in Love",
"paragraph_text": "Soul in Love is the fourth studio album and second cover album by Filipino singer Jay R, released in January 2008 by Universal Records. The album showcases his vocal quality and range, singing classical R&B and jazz songs that he grew up listening to, like \"After the Love Has Gone\", \"Always and Forever\" and \"Ain't No Sunshine\". It received highly positive reviews from OPM critics, and won numerous awards for his outstanding vocal performance. It has also helped Jay R gain a new audience and fans.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Lord of the Dance (hymn)",
"paragraph_text": "``Lord of the Dance ''is a hymn with words written by English songwriter Sydney Carter in 1963. He borrowed the tune from the American Shaker song`` Simple Gifts''. The hymn is widely performed in English - speaking congregations and assemblies.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "My Friends & Me",
"paragraph_text": "My Friends & Me is a studio album by American soul singer Dionne Warwick, released in the United States on November 7, 2006 by Concord Records. It is a collection of duets with other artists on re-recordings of past songs by Warwick.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Richard Connolly (composer)",
"paragraph_text": "His published and performed works allow him to be counted as among Australia's most prolific composers of Catholic Church music, particularly with regard to the hymns he composed for the Church in Australia, and which are now published and used inter-denominationally. His hymns have been composed to accommodate and adorn the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Annie Hawks",
"paragraph_text": "Annie Sherwood Hawks (May 28, 1836 - January 3, 1918) was an American poet and gospel hymnist who wrote a number of hymns with her pastor, Robert Lowry. She contributed to several popular Sunday School hymnbooks, and wrote the lyrics to a number of well - known hymns including: ``I Need Thee Every Hour '';`` Thine, Most Gracious Lord''; ``Why Weepest Thou? Who Seekest Thou? '';`` Full and Free Salvation'' and ``My Soul Is Anchored ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Endless Love (song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Endless Love ''is a song written by Lionel Richie and originally recorded as a duet between Richie and fellow soul singer Diana Ross. In this ballad, the singers declare their`` endless love'' for one another. It was covered by soul singer Luther Vandross with R&B singer Mariah Carey and also by country music singer Shania Twain. Richie's friend (and sometimes co-worker) Kenny Rogers has also recorded the song. Billboard has named the original version as the greatest song duet of all - time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Hymn for My Soul",
"paragraph_text": "Hymn for My Soul is the twentieth studio album by Joe Cocker, released in 2007. It was produced by Ethan Johns. Musicians on these special sessions included Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers' Benmont Tench, legendary drummer Jim Keltner, Mike Finnigan, ace guitarist Albert Lee, Dave Palmer, Greg Leisz, James Gadson, Bob Babbitt and Johns. The songs include Cocker's signatures on George Harrison's \"Beware of Darkness\", Bob Dylan's \"Ring Them Bells\", John Fogerty's \"Long As I Can See The Light\" and Stevie Wonder's \"You Haven't Done Nothin'\".",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Spanky Wilson",
"paragraph_text": "Spanky Wilson (born c. 1947) is an American soul, funk and jazz vocalist, who has performed internationally and recorded several albums since the late 1960s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Then Sings My Soul (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Then Sings My Soul is a 2009 inspirational double CD album recorded by country music singer Ronnie Milsap. To date, it is his first and only gospel recording ever. It features several traditional hymns along with Christian-altered hit singles, including Milsap's \"What a Difference You've Made in My Life\" and Ben E. King's \"Stand by Me\". It was being marketed by an extensive TV mail order campaign.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "What a Friend We Have in Jesus",
"paragraph_text": "``What a Friend We Have in Jesus ''is a Christian hymn originally written by Joseph M. Scriven as a poem in 1855 to comfort his mother who was living in Ireland while he was in Canada. Scriven originally published the poem anonymously, and only received full credit for it in the 1880s. The tune to the hymn was composed by Charles Crozat Converse in 1868. William Bolcom composed a setting of the hymn.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the performer of Hymn for My Soul record With a Little Help From My Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 454055,
"question": "Hymn for My Soul >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__414552_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Hey Little One",
"paragraph_text": "Hey, Little One is the eighth album by American singer-guitarist Glen Campbell, released in 1968 by Capitol Records. The single \"I Wanna Live\" became Campbell's first #1 hit on the country charts.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "The Opening (album)",
"paragraph_text": "The Opening is a live album by American jazz pianist Mal Waldron featuring a performance recorded in Paris in 1970 and released on the French Futura label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Justin Bieber",
"paragraph_text": "On August 17, 2017, Bieber released the single ``Friends ''with American record producer and songwriter BloodPop. Songwriters Julia Michaels and Justin Tranter reunited with Bieber to construct the song, just as they helped create his single`` Sorry'' in 2015 on his studio album Purpose. Bieber did not attend the 2018 Grammy Awards Show to perform the nominated song ``Despacito '', claiming that he would not make any award show appearances until his next album was finished.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "A Jackson in Your House",
"paragraph_text": "A Jackson in Your House is a 1969 album by the Art Ensemble of Chicago recorded for the French BYG Actuel label. It features performances by Lester Bowie, Joseph Jarman, Roscoe Mitchell and Malachi Favors Maghostut. When issued on CD by Affinity in 1989, the track \"The Waltz\" was replaced by a six-minute live excerpt (of unknown provenance) entitled \"Hey Friend\" which has never reappeared on any subsequent reissue.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Live at Woodstock (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "Live at Woodstock is a live album documenting Joe Cocker's famous performance with The Grease Band at Woodstock Festival on 17 August 1969. It was released officially for the first time in 2009 by A&M/Universal.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "If I Were a Carpenter (song)",
"paragraph_text": "``If I Were a Carpenter ''is a song written by Tim Hardin. Hardin's own recording of the piece appeared on his 1967 album Tim Hardin 2. It was one of two songs from that release (the other being`` 'Misty Roses'') performed by Hardin at Woodstock in 1969. The song has been covered a number of times by other artists:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Michael Shrieve",
"paragraph_text": "Michael Shrieve (born July 6, 1949, in San Francisco) is an American drummer, percussionist, and composer. He is best known as the drummer of the rock band Santana. He played on its albums from 1969 to 1974. When he was 20, Shrieve was one of the youngest musicians to perform at Woodstock in 1969. His drum solo during ``Soul Sacrifice ''in the Woodstock film has been described as`` electrifying''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "1950s in music",
"paragraph_text": "In 1951, Little Richard Penniman began recording for RCA Records in the late - 1940s jump blues style of Joe Brown and Billy Wright. However, it was n't until he prepared a demo in 1954, that caught the attention of Specialty Records, that the world would start to hear his new, uptempo, funky rhythm and blues that would catapult him to fame in 1955 and help define the sound of rock and roll. A rapid succession of rhythm - and - blues hits followed, beginning with ``Tutti Frutti ''and`` Long Tall Sally'', which would influence performers such as James Brown, Elvis Presley, and Otis Redding.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Jesus at the Center: Live",
"paragraph_text": "Jesus at the Center: Live is a contemporary worship live album recorded and performed by Israel & New Breed. The album is released by Integrity Media and Columbia Records. The album was recorded live at Lakewood Church in early February 2012.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "John B. Sebastian (album)",
"paragraph_text": "John B. Sebastian is the debut album by American singer/songwriter John Sebastian, previously best known as the co-founder and primary singer/songwriter of the 1960s folk-rock band the Lovin' Spoonful. The album, released in January 1970 (see 1970 in music), includes several songs that would become staples of Sebastian's live performances during the early and mid-1970s. Most notably, the album included \"She's a Lady\", Sebastian's first solo single (released in December 1968), and an alternate version of \"I Had a Dream\" which was used to open of the 1970 documentary film \"Woodstock\". \"John B. Sebastian\" also featured support performances by David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash several months before that trio agreed to work together as a performing unit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "The Basement Tapes",
"paragraph_text": "The Basement Tapes is an album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan and The Band. It was released on June 26, 1975, by Columbia Records and is Dylan's 16th studio album. The songs featuring Dylan's vocals were recorded in 1967, eight years before the album's release, at Big Pink and other houses in and around Woodstock, New York, where Dylan and The Band lived. Although most of the Dylan songs had appeared on bootleg records, \"The Basement Tapes\" marked the songs' first official release.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Woodstock Revisited",
"paragraph_text": "Ironically enough, while The Woodstock Festival did not end up happening in the town for which it was named, Woodstock, New York, it would never have transpired had it not been for a series of historical events in Woodstock that influenced the rise of the American counterculture.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Robert A. Leonard",
"paragraph_text": "Robert A. Leonard is an American linguist. He is best known for his work in forensic linguistics, which relates to investigating problems of the law by using the study of language. This includes analyzing legal material work such as notes, audio and video tape recordings, contracts, and confessions. Prior to his academic career, Leonard was a founding member of the rock band Sha Na Na and performed at Woodstock.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Something Is Squeezing My Skull",
"paragraph_text": "The single comes backed with live recordings of \"This Charming Man\", \"Best Friend on the Payroll\" and \"I Keep Mine Hidden\", the latter being performed for the first time ever by Morrissey and his band at BBC Radio 2's 'Live With Morrissey' concert in February 2009.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Alex Bevan",
"paragraph_text": "The release of the album Springboard got him some public recognition due to the local hit song Skinny Little Boy. In 1977 he performed on the air on Cleveland's WMMS Radio with a band called Alex Bevan and the Buzzard Band, featuring DJ Matt the Cat on guitar. He performed in the mid-1970s with an acoustic trio consisting of two guitars and electric bass, and opened for such acts as Seals and Crofts, The Michael Stanley Band, The Doobie Brothers and Hall & Oates. He soon added David Krauss from the band Tiny Alice to the group, supplying percussion and harmonica. They toured either under the name Grand River Band or Alex Bevan and Friends from 1979 until 1981, and produced the albums The Grand River Lullaby, Alex Bevan and Friends Live, and Simple Things Done Well. In the early 80's Bevan produced the direct - to - disk digital solo album Tales of the Low Tech Troubadour Vol. 1. He played in the band Alex Bevan & Cuttlefish from 1984 through 1986. In the late 80s to early 90s, he produced the albums Best Kept Secrets, Cuttlefish Live, and Watersongs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "30th Anniversary Tour: Live",
"paragraph_text": "30th Anniversary Tour: Live is the fourth live album by George Thorogood and the Destroyers. It was recorded on May 4, 2004 at the Royal Concert Hall in Nottingham, England, and on October 19, 2004 on the Eagle Records label. The performance was also released on DVD, and as a CD/DVD collectors' edition.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Live in Japan (Fred Frith album)",
"paragraph_text": "Live in Japan is a 1982 double live album by English guitarist, composer and improvisor Fred Frith. It was recorded during an improvised solo performance tour of Japan in July 1981. The double album was a limited edition release of 1,000 by Recommended Records Japan on two LP records in a black corrugated box containing posters, artwork and booklets in English and Japanese. It was also released as two single LPs, entitled \"Live in Japan, Vol. 1\" and \"Live in Japan, Vol. 2\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Viva La Bam",
"paragraph_text": "Viva La Bam is an American reality television series that starred Bam Margera and his friends and family. The show was a spin-off from MTV's \"Jackass\", in which Margera and most of the main cast had appeared. Each episode had a specific theme, mission, or challenge which was normally accomplished by performing pranks, skateboarding, and enlisting the help of friends, relations and experts. Although partly improvised, the show was supported by a greater degree of planning and organization.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the performer of Live at Woodstock record With a Little Help from My Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 414552,
"question": "Live at Woodstock >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__674688_21022
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Ingsoc",
"paragraph_text": "The English Socialist Party, better known as Ingsoc (Newspeak for English Socialism), is the fictional political party of the totalitarian government of Oceania in George Orwell's dystopian novel \"Nineteen Eighty-Four\". George Orwell, a self-avowed democratic socialist, feared that a totalitarian impulse would deviate socialism in his native Britain from its age-old creeds and would result in a society governed by an ideology resembling that of Ingsoc.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms",
"paragraph_text": "Under the Charter, people physically present in Canada have numerous civil and political rights. Most of the rights can be exercised by any legal person (the Charter does not define the corporation as a ``legal person ''), but a few of the rights belong exclusively to natural persons, or (as in sections 3 and 6) only to citizens of Canada. The rights are enforceable by the courts through section 24 of the Charter, which allows courts discretion to award remedies to those whose rights have been denied. This section also allows courts to exclude evidence in trials if the evidence was acquired in a way that conflicts with the Charter and might damage the reputation of the justice system. Section 32 confirms that the Charter is binding on the federal government, the territories under its authority, and the provincial governments. The rights and freedoms enshrined in 34 sections of the Charter include:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Freedom from Fear (Aung San Suu Kyi)",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom from Fear is both an essay by Aung San Suu Kyi, and a book of the same name comprising a collection of her essays.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Hajiani Lanjo",
"paragraph_text": "Hajiani Lanjo (Sindhi: ) is a liberal political and social activist from Tharparkar, a remote and underdeveloped desert area of Sindh, Pakistan. She belongs to the Qaumi Awami Tehreek party and Sindhiani Tahreek. She reached prominence after challenged Arbab Ghulam Rahim, a powerful tribal leader from Tharparkar, in the constituency of NA-229 in election-2013.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Moderation and Development Party",
"paragraph_text": "Moderation and Development Party () is a political party in Iran. It is a pragmatic-centrist political party which held its first congress in 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights",
"paragraph_text": "The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) is a multilateral treaty adopted by the United Nations General Assembly with resolution 2200A (XXI) on 19 December 1966, and in force from 23 March 1976 in accordance with Article 49 of the covenant. Article 49 allowed that the covenant will enter into force three months after the date of the deposit of the thirty - fifth instrument of ratification or accession. The covenant commits its parties to respect the civil and political rights of individuals, including the right to life, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, electoral rights and rights to due process and a fair trial. As of February 2017, the Covenant has 170 parties and six more signatories without ratification.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "According to the Crisis Group, since Myanmar transitioned to a new government in August 2011, the country's human rights record has been improving. Previously giving Myanmar its lowest rating of 7, the 2012 Freedom in the World report also notes improvement, giving Myanmar a 6 for improvements in civil liberties and political rights, the release of political prisoners, and a loosening of restrictions. In 2013, Myanmar improved yet again, receiving a score of five in civil liberties and a six in political freedoms",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The impact of the post-election reforms has been observed in numerous areas, including ASEAN's approval of Myanmar's bid for the position of ASEAN chair in 2014; the visit by United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December 2011 for the encouragement of further progress—it was the first visit by a Secretary of State in more than fifty years (Clinton met with the Burmese president and former military commander Thein Sein, as well as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi); and the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2012 by-elections, facilitated by the government's abolition of the laws that previously barred the NLD. As of July 2013, about 100 political prisoners remain imprisoned, while conflict between the Burmese Army and local insurgent groups continues.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Sanee Rohana Kodithuvakku",
"paragraph_text": "Sanee Rohana Kodithuvakku (born 15 February 1961) is a Sri Lankan politician and member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka. He belongs to the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Meghalaya Progressive Alliance",
"paragraph_text": "The Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) was the ruling coalition of political parties that formed the Government in the state of Meghalaya, India from 2008 to 2009. It was led by the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and the United Democratic Party (UDP) who are the second and third largest parties in the 8th Meghalaya Legislative Assembly. Chief Minister Dr. Donkupar Roy and the other ministers in the Government belong to the MPA.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Guinea-Bissau",
"paragraph_text": "In 2012, President Rachide Sambu-balde Malam Bacai Sanhá died. He belonged to PAIGC (African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde), one of the two major political parties in Guinea-Bissau, along with the PRS (Party for Social Renewal). There are more than 20 minor parties.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Herut",
"paragraph_text": "Herut (, \"Freedom\") was the major right-wing nationalist political party in Israel from 1948 until its formal merger into Likud in 1988. It was an adherent of Revisionist Zionism, and was initially known in part for its militia actions; it became more moderate from 1951.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Suhasini Chattopadhyay",
"paragraph_text": "1901-1973)) was an Indian communist leader and freedom fighter. She was the first woman member of the Communist Party of India.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Murugesu Chandrakumar",
"paragraph_text": "Murugesu Chandrakumar is a member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and the Deputy Chairman of Committees.He belongs to the Eelam People's Democratic Party. However, he contested under the symbol of United People's Freedom Alliance",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Party of Reason",
"paragraph_text": "The Party of Reason (, PDV) is a libertarian political party in Germany founded in 2009 by the journalist and author Oliver Janich.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Dilum Amunugama",
"paragraph_text": "Dilum Amunugama is a Sri Lankan politician, a member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka. He belongs to the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He is the nephew of Sarath Amunugama.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Ashkenazi Jews",
"paragraph_text": "Religious Ashkenazi Jews living in Israel are obliged to follow the authority of the chief Ashkenazi rabbi in halakhic matters. In this respect, a religiously Ashkenazi Jew is an Israeli who is more likely to support certain religious interests in Israel, including certain political parties. These political parties result from the fact that a portion of the Israeli electorate votes for Jewish religious parties; although the electoral map changes from one election to another, there are generally several small parties associated with the interests of religious Ashkenazi Jews. The role of religious parties, including small religious parties that play important roles as coalition members, results in turn from Israel's composition as a complex society in which competing social, economic, and religious interests stand for election to the Knesset, a unicameral legislature with 120 seats.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Esther Perel",
"paragraph_text": "Esther Perel (born 1958) is a Belgian psychotherapist who has explored the tension between the need for security (love, belonging and closeness) and the need for freedom (erotic desire, adventure and distance) in human relationships.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Yrjö Mäkelin",
"paragraph_text": "Mäkelin wrote several important texts: Finnish Labour Party's 1903 Forssa Declaration on Universal Suffrage; the Red Declaration during 1905 general strike that demanded dissolution of Senate of Finland and universal suffrage, political freedoms, and abolition of censorship. 18 July 1917 Socialist-majority Parliament accepted (pro 135, against 55) a law crafted by his committee to transfer the ultimate political power in Finland to Parliament of Finland. The Russian Provisional Government chose to ignore the law and dissolved the Parliament of Finland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung",
"paragraph_text": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung () is an Indonesian novel by Mochtar Lubis first published by Balai Pustaka in 1952. It takes place during the Indonesian war of independence and tells the story of Guru Isa, a schoolteacher who assists the guerrilla freedom fighters yet lives in fear.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What political party does the author of Freedom from Fear belong to?
|
[
{
"id": 674688,
"question": "Freedom from Fear >> author",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 21022,
"question": "What political party does #1 belong to ?",
"answer": "National League for Democracy (NLD) party",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
}
] |
National League for Democracy (NLD) party
|
[
"National League for Democracy",
"NLD"
] | true |
2hop__141883_787704
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "A Wednesday!",
"paragraph_text": "Mumbai police commissioner Prakash Rathod (Anupam Kher), resting after a jog, describes in a voice-over that he is going to retire the following day. He goes on to describe the most challenging case he faced in his career.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "It's for You",
"paragraph_text": "\"It's for You\" is a song written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney of the Beatles for Cilla Black for whom it was a UK Top Ten hit in 1964. The song is mainly a McCartney composition.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Star City Confederate Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The Star City Confederate Memorial is located at the southwest corner of the town square of Star City, Arkansas. The marble monument depicts a Confederate Army soldier standing in mid stride with his left foot forward. His hands hold the barrel of a rifle, whose butt rests on the monument base. The statue is about high and square; it rests on a marble foundation that is long, wide, and high. The monument was erected in 1926 by a local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy at a cost of about $2,500.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Feel the Spin",
"paragraph_text": "\"Feel the Spin\" is a 1985 song by the American vocalist Debbie Harry, featured on the soundtrack album for the film \"Krush Groove\" (1985). The song was co-written by Harry and producers John \"Jellybean\" Benitez and Toni C. (the latter of whom would go on to collaborate with Harry again on many of her solo albums). Both producers went on to work with Whitney Houston on her 1988 hit \"Love Will Save the Day\", from her album \"Whitney\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "For the Rest of My Life",
"paragraph_text": "``For the Rest of My Life ''(also known as`` 4 the Rest of My Life'') is a song by American R&B singer Robin Thicke from his sixth studio album Blurred Lines (2013). Written and produced by Thicke and ProJay, the song was serviced to urban adult contemporary radio as the second single from Blurred Lines on May 21, 2013.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Velký Špičák",
"paragraph_text": "Velký Špičák ( or \"Schmiedeberger Spitzberg\") is a 965 m high mountain in the Czech part of the Ore Mountains of Central Europe.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Gotta Work",
"paragraph_text": "\"Gotta Work\" is a song by American R&B singer-songwriter Amerie, and is the second international single from her third studio album, \"Because I Love It\" (2007). It samples Sam & Dave's 1966 song \"Hold On, I'm Comin'\", written by Isaac Hayes and David Porter and originally recorded by Reuben Wilson. The sample used is from a cover version by Erma Franklin, off her album 'Soul Sister' (1969). Amerie called the sound of the song \"'go-go soul'\", saying go-go \"[is] like really strong black coffee, some people can't ingest it in its purest form.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Balmberg Pass",
"paragraph_text": "Balmberg Pass (elevation 1078 m) is a high mountain pass in the Jura Mountains in the canton of Solothurn in Switzerland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Mount Lacey",
"paragraph_text": "Mount Lacey () is a high, pyramidal, brown rock mountain with two sharp peaks, standing west of Mount Béchervaise in the Athos Range, Prince Charles Mountains, Antarctica. It was first sighted by an Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions party led by John Béchervaise in November 1955 and plotted by R.H. Lacey, a surveyor at Mawson Station in 1955, for whom it is named.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Yaaḵoosgé Daakahídi Alternative High School",
"paragraph_text": "Yaaḵoosgé Daakahídi Alternative High School is a high school of the Juneau School District in the City and Borough of Juneau, Alaska, United States. The school is an opportunity for students over the age of 16 to have a less mainstream high school experience than that offered by Juneau-Douglas High School or Thunder Mountain High School. In recent years, the school has hosted nearly 100 students ages 16 and up. The school serves students at risk of dropping out, about half of whom are from racial and ethnic minorities. The school graduates about 40 students a year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Old-Time Religion",
"paragraph_text": "(``Give Me That '')`` Old - Time Religion'' (and similar spellings) is a traditional Gospel song dating from 1873, when it was included in a list of Jubilee songs -- or earlier. It has become a standard in many Protestant hymnals, though it says nothing about Jesus or the gospel, and covered by many artists. Some scholars, such as Forrest Mason McCann, have asserted the possibility of an earlier stage of evolution of the song, in that ``the tune may go back to English folk origins ''(later dying out in the white repertoire but staying alive in the work songs of African Americans). In any event, it was by way of Charles Davis Tillman that the song had incalculable influence on the confluence of black spiritual and white gospel song traditions in forming the genre now known as southern gospel. Tillman was largely responsible for publishing the song into the repertoire of white audiences. It was first heard sung by African - Americans and written down by Tillman when he attended a camp meeting in Lexington, South Carolina in 1889.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Weg!",
"paragraph_text": "Weg! (literal English translation: \"Away!\"; title of English-language version: Go!) is an Afrikaans language outdoor and travel magazine. It was first published in April 2004 and is owned by the Media24 division of Naspers. The magazine focuses on affordable destinations in South Africa and the rest of Africa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts",
"paragraph_text": "The song appeared in I Could Go On Singing (1963), Judy Garland's last film. A portion of the song also appeared in Disney's 1994 The Lion King (sung by Rowan Atkinson). Nicolas Cage also sang part of this song in National Treasure: Book of Secrets. Ringo Starr sang an impromptu version of the song in Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles' TV special broadcast by the BBC on 26 December 1967. Also, actors Hayden Rorke and Bill Daily performed a few lines of the song on ukulele in the 1969 I Dream of Jeannie episode ``Uncles a Go - Go. In the first episode of the 1977 sitcom Mind Your Language it is mentioned that a professor went crazy and sang this song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Here Today (David Grisman album)",
"paragraph_text": "Here Today is a bluegrass album by five American musicians David Grisman, Emory Gordy Jr., Herb Pedersen, Jim Buchanan and Vince Gill, released in 1983 on Rounder Records. This was the only album this group recorded and each continued separate careers in bluegrass, newgrass, and country music.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "The Blind Girl",
"paragraph_text": "The Blind Girl (1856) is a painting by John Everett Millais which depicts two itinerant beggars, presumed to be sisters, one of whom is a blind musician, her concertina on her lap. They are resting by the roadside after a rainstorm, before travelling to the town of Winchelsea, visible in the background.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Leave Out All the Rest",
"paragraph_text": "While playing a show in Germany (München) in June 2008, Shinoda spoke with Warner Bros. Records Germany and they told him that the music video they've made for \"Leave Out All the Rest\" was not going to be released just yet due to the high success for the single \"Given Up\" in Germany. He later told this to the fans at the show.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Wild Mountain Thyme",
"paragraph_text": "``Wild Mountain Thyme ''(also known as`` Purple Heather'' and ``Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go? '') is an Irish / Scottish folk song. The lyrics and melody are a variant of the song`` The Braes of Balquhither'' by Scottish poet Robert Tannahill (1774 -- 1810) and Scottish composer Robert Archibald Smith (1780 -- 1829), but were adapted by Belfast musician Francis McPeake into ``Wild Mountain Thyme ''and first recorded by his family in the 1950s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Sare Jahan se Accha",
"paragraph_text": "``Sare Jahan se Accha ''Song Language Urdu Published 16 August 1904 (1904 - 08 - 16) Genre Patriotic song Songwriter (s) Muhammad Iqbal",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Go Rest High on That Mountain",
"paragraph_text": "\"Go Rest High on That Mountain\" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Vince Gill. It was released in August 1995 as the sixth single from his album \"When Love Finds You\". It is a eulogic ballad. Gill began writing the song following the death of country music superstar Keith Whitley, who died in 1989. Gill did not finish the song until a few years later following the death of his older brother Bob of a heart attack in 1993. Ricky Skaggs and Patty Loveless both sang background vocals on the record.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Sidhbari",
"paragraph_text": "Sidhbari is a suburb of Dharamshala town, situated in the foothills of Dhauladhar mountains, in Kangra district of the state of Himachal Pradesh, India. The \"Samadhi\" (final resting place) of Sri Chinmayananda is located here.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the genre of the singer of The song Go Rest High on That Mountain?
|
[
{
"id": 141883,
"question": "The song Go Rest High on That Mountain was by whom?",
"answer": "Vince Gill",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18
},
{
"id": 787704,
"question": "#1 >> genre",
"answer": "bluegrass",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
bluegrass
|
[
"Bluegrass"
] | true |
2hop__69803_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "This Guy's in Love with You",
"paragraph_text": "``This Guy's in Love with You ''is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, and recorded by Herb Alpert. Although known primarily for his trumpet playing as the leader of the Tijuana Brass, Alpert sang lead vocals on this solo recording, arranged by Bacharach.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "England Keep My Bones",
"paragraph_text": "England Keep My Bones is the fourth studio album by London-based singer-songwriter Frank Turner, released on 6 June 2011, on Xtra Mile in the United Kingdom, and on 7 June 2011, on Epitaph Records worldwide. Preceded by the single, \"Peggy Sang the Blues\", the album was produced and mixed by Tristan Ivemy, who had previously mixed \"Love, Ire and Song\", \"Rock & Roll\" and \"Campfire Punkrock\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Need Your Love So Bad",
"paragraph_text": "``Need Your Love So Bad ''sometimes known as`` I Need Your Love So Bad'', is a blues song first published in 1955 and written by Mertis John Jr.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Ivan Hrvatska",
"paragraph_text": "Ivan Hrvatska is a Croatian singer living in Canada, known for his songs about \"making love\" to national holidays of Canada and the United States. He first gained attention in 2001 with the song \"First I Make Love to You, Then I Make Love to Christmas\". Other tracks include \"Making Love to the Grey Cup\" and \"Making Love to Vancouver Canucks\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Never Let Me Go (Johnny Ace song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Never Let Me Go\" is a blues ballad song by American R&B/blues singer Johnny Ace, written by Joseph Scott and released in 1954 under Duke Records. The song is featured on the albums \"My Songs\" and \"Memorial\". \"Never Let Me Go\" was one of his eighth consecutive top ten R&B hits in a row, including \"My Song\", \"Cross My Heart,\" \"Please Forgive Me,\" \"The Clock,\" \"Pledging My Love,\" \"Saving My Love for You,\" and \"Anymore\". The song was R&B hit and peaked to No. 9 in October 1954 on \"Billboards\" Rhythm & Blues Records chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Juliette & Jonathan",
"paragraph_text": "\"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a 1996 Swedish language pop song that Lotta Engberg sang when she competed in the Swedish Melodifestivalen 1996, and finished 3rd. The song was written by Monica Forsberg and Torgny Söderberg. Even Lena Philipsson has recorded this song, and she released it on her 2006 album \"Lady Star\". At first, it was thought that Lena Philipsson should sing this song at Melodifestivalen 1996. \"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a song whose text is about love, but has an anti-racist theme. The song text is about Juliette and Jonathan, two people from different backgrounds who fall in love with each other. According to the song text, love doesn't know any borders or color of skin.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "When I Fall in Love",
"paragraph_text": "``When I Fall in Love ''is a popular song, written by Victor Young (music) and Edward Heyman (lyrics). It was introduced in the film One Minute to Zero. Jeri Southern sang on the first recording released in April 1952 with the song's composer, Victor Young, handling the arranging and conducting duties. The song has become a standard, with many artists recording it, though the first hit version was sung by Doris Day released in July 1952.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Daddy Sang Bass",
"paragraph_text": "\"Daddy Sang Bass\" is a 1968 single written by Carl Perkins, with lines from the chorus of \"Will the Circle Be Unbroken?\" and recorded by Johnny Cash. \"Daddy Sang Bass\" was Johnny Cash's sixty-first release on the country chart. The song went to No. 1 on the \"Billboard\" country chart for 6 weeks and spent a total of 19 weeks on the chart. The single reached No. 56 on the \"Cashbox\" pop singles chart in 1969. \"Daddy Sang Bass\" was also released on the Columbia Records Hall of Fame Series as a 45, #13-33153, b/w \"Folsom Prison Blues\" (live version). The record was nominated in the CMA awards category of Single of the Year by the Country Music Association (CMA) in 1969.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Forever Autumn (song)",
"paragraph_text": "The best - known version is the recording by Justin Hayward from the album Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds. Wayne wanted to include a love song on the album that sounded like ``Forever Autumn '', and he decided that the best course of action was to simply use the original song. Wayne chose Hayward, of The Moody Blues, to sing it saying that he`` wanted that voice from 'Nights in White Satin'''. It was recorded at London's Advision Studios in 1976. The song reached # 5 on the UK Singles Chart in August 1978.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Some Girls (band)",
"paragraph_text": "Some Girls (formed in 2001) is an American indie rock trio composed of Juliana Hatfield (guitar and vocals), Heidi Gluck (electric bass guitar, keyboard, harmonica, lap steel guitar, and vocals) and Freda Love Smith (drums and vocals). Hatfield and Love Smith knew each other from the Blake Babies and wanted to write songs together. The group's songs are generally melodic, upbeat, and lighthearted.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Bringing Back Your Love",
"paragraph_text": "\"Bringing Back Your Love\" is a single by Canadian country music group One Horse Blue. Released in 1995, it was the eighth single from their album \"One Horse Blue\". The song reached #1 on the \"RPM\" Country Tracks chart in July 1995.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "The Glamorous Life",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Glamorous Life\" is a song written by Prince, recorded by singer/percussionist Sheila E. and produced by both. The song has lyrics which reflect a cynicism for the decadence and materialism of the song's protagonist, referred to in the third person, who \"wants to lead a glamorous life\", although she is aware that \"without love, it ain't much\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want to Do It)",
"paragraph_text": "``You Made Me Love You (I Did n't Want to Do It) ''is a popular song. The music was written by James V. Monaco, the lyrics by Joseph McCarthy and the song was published in 1913. It was introduced by Al Jolson in the Broadway revue The Honeymoon Express (1913) and used in the 1973 revival of the musical Irene.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "(What Can I Say) To Make You Love Me",
"paragraph_text": "``(What Can I Say) To Make You Love Me ''is a song written by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and recorded by American recording artist Alexander O'Neal. It is the fifth single from the singer's second solo album, Hearsay (1987). The song's distinctive backing vocals were performed by Lisa Keith. Following the successful chart performances of the Hearsay singles`` Fake'', ``Criticize '',`` Never Knew Love Like This'', and ``The Lovers '',`` (What Can I Say) To Make You Love Me'' was released as the album's fifth single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "I Just Want to Make Love to You",
"paragraph_text": "``I Just Want to Make Love to You ''is a 1954 blues song written by Willie Dixon, first recorded by Muddy Waters, and released as`` Just Make Love to Me'' (Chess 1571). The song reached number four on Billboard magazine's R&B Best Sellers chart.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Jugband Blues",
"paragraph_text": "\"Jugband Blues\" is a song by the English psychedelic rock band Pink Floyd, and is featured on their second album, \"A Saucerful of Secrets\", released in 1968. Written by Syd Barrett, it was his sole compositional contribution to the album, as well as his last published for the band. Barrett and Pink Floyd's management wanted the song to be released as a single, but were vetoed by the rest of the band and producer Norman Smith. \"Jugband Blues\" is directed towards anyone within Barrett's proximity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Wij houden van Oranje",
"paragraph_text": "\"Wij houden van Oranje\" (stylized \"Wij ♥ Oranje\"; Dutch: \"We Love Orange\") is a 1988 Dutch song (and football chant) performed by the Dutch \"levenslied\" singer André Hazes and produced by Hans van Hemert. It is based on the melody of the well-known Scottish song \"Auld Lang Syne\", written by Robert Burns. Orange is the colour of the Dutch royal family. André Hazes sang the song for the first time in 1988 during the European football championships. The Dutch football team sang along on Hazes' single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
Which subgenre of the blues is the singer of I Just Want to Make Love to You associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 69803,
"question": "who sang the song i just want to make love to you",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__503938_42092
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Nuns and Soldiers",
"paragraph_text": "Nuns and Soldiers is a 1980 novel by Iris Murdoch. The setting is England and two of the main characters are Gertrude, a widow, and Anne, an ex-nun.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Welsh-medium education",
"paragraph_text": "Welsh medium education should be distinguished from the teaching of the Welsh language itself as an academic subject. Welsh as a subject is taught as a first language in Welsh medium schools. In the majority of English medium schools, Welsh is taught as a second language and became compulsory for all pupils in Wales at Key Stages 1, 2 and 3 (up to age 14) in 1990. In 1999, it became a compulsory subject for Key Stage 4 pupils (GCSE (ages 15 and 16)). Provision of Welsh as a subject in independent (private) schools is less widespread -- only a few provide it, and it is taught as a second language. There is no private designated Welsh - medium school in Wales, although one does exist in London, known as the London Welsh School.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Hope Chest: The Fredonia Recordings 1982–1983",
"paragraph_text": "Hope Chest: The Fredonia Recordings 1982-1983, also known as just Hope Chest, is a 1990 album by 10,000 Maniacs. It compiles tracks from their early releases \"Human Conflict Number Five\" and \"Secrets of the I Ching\". All the tracks on the album are remixed from their original versions.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Five Nights at Freddy's",
"paragraph_text": "The main characters in the Five Nights at Freddy's series are generally security guards working at a Freddy Fazbear's Pizza or related location. None of them have distinct personalities and most of the gameplay takes place from their point of view. In Five Nights at Freddy's, the guard's name is Mike Schmidt. In Five Nights at Freddy's 2, the guard is named Jeremy Fitzgerald for all of the main five nights and the bonus sixth night, though he is replaced in the custom seventh night by another guard, Fritz Smith. The security guard for Fazbear's Fright: The Horror Attraction in Five Nights at Freddy's 3, is unknown. The main character of Five Nights at Freddy's 4 is an unnamed boy, who experiences nightmares of the animatronics. The player in Five Nights at Freddy's: Sister Location is a technician who has their name jokingly autocorrected to Eggs Benedict. The technician's name is assumed, although not confirmed to be, Mike.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens",
"paragraph_text": "St. Helens produced an additional five explosive eruptions between May and October 1980. Through early 1990 at least 21 periods of eruptive activity had occurred. The volcano remains active, with smaller, dome - building eruptions continuing into 2008.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Stranger Things",
"paragraph_text": "Stranger Things is set in the fictional rural town of Hawkins, Indiana, during the early 1980s. The nearby Hawkins National Laboratory ostensibly performs scientific research for the United States Department of Energy, but secretly does experiments into the paranormal and supernatural, including those that involve human test subjects. Inadvertently, they have created a portal to an alternate dimension called ``the Upside Down ''. The influence of the Upside Down starts to affect the unknowing residents of Hawkins in calamitous ways.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Albert Ghiorso",
"paragraph_text": "Albert Ghiorso (July 15, 1915 -- December 26, 2010) was an American nuclear scientist and co-discoverer of a record 12 chemical elements on the periodic table. His research career spanned five decades, from the early 1940s to the late 1990s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Robert Adams (science fiction writer)",
"paragraph_text": "Franklin Robert Adams (August 31, 1933 – January 4, 1990), who wrote as Robert Adams, was an American science fiction and fantasy writer, and formerly a career soldier. He is best known for his \"Horseclans\" books.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Boston Massacre",
"paragraph_text": "The Boston Massacre, known as the Incident on King Street by the British, was an incident on March 5, 1770, in which British Army soldiers shot and killed people while under attack by a mob. The incident was heavily publicized by leading Patriots, such as Paul Revere and Samuel Adams, to encourage rebellion against the British authorities. British troops had been stationed in Boston, capital of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, since 1768 in order to protect and support crown - appointed colonial officials attempting to enforce unpopular Parliamentary legislation. Amid ongoing tense relations between the population and the soldiers, a mob formed around a British sentry, who was subjected to verbal abuse and harassment. He was eventually supported by eight additional soldiers, who were subjected to verbal threats and repeatedly hit by clubs, stones and snowballs. They fired into the crowd, without orders, instantly killing three people and wounding others. Two more people died later of wounds sustained in the incident.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Dannii Minogue discography",
"paragraph_text": "Australian singer Dannii Minogue has released five studio albums, eight compilation albums, twenty-eight singles, twenty-three music videos, and five video albums. Minogue rose to prominence in the early 1980s for her roles in the Australian television talent show \"Young Talent Time\" and in the soap opera \"Home and Away\", before commencing her career as a pop singer in the early 1990s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Islamism",
"paragraph_text": "Another factor in the early 1990s that worked to radicalize the Islamist movement was the Gulf War, which brought several hundred thousand US and allied non-Muslim military personnel to Saudi Arabian soil to put an end to Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait. Prior to 1990 Saudi Arabia played an important role in restraining the many Islamist groups that received its aid. But when Saddam, secularist and Ba'athist dictator of neighboring Iraq, attacked Saudi Arabia (his enemy in the war), western troops came to protect the Saudi monarchy. Islamists accused the Saudi regime of being a puppet of the west.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Brook Watson",
"paragraph_text": "Sir Brook Watson, 1st Baronet (7 February 1735 – 2 October 1807) was a British merchant, soldier, and later Lord Mayor of London. He is perhaps most famous as the subject of John Singleton Copley's painting \"Watson and the Shark, \"which depicts a shark attack on Watson as a boy that resulted in the loss of his right leg below the knee.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Winger (band)",
"paragraph_text": "Winger is an American rock band that has combined elements of glam metal and progressive metal. Formed in New York City, Winger gained popularity during the late 1980s and early 1990s. The band's two platinum albums, \"Winger\" and \"In the Heart of the Young\", along with charting singles \"Seventeen\", \"Headed for a Heartbreak\" and \"Miles Away\", put them on the top of the charts by the early 1990s. In 1990, the band was nominated for an American Music Award for \"Best New Heavy Metal Band\". As the music scene changed in the early to mid-1990s due to the popularity of grunge, their success faded after their third release \"Pull\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Georgiy Mamedov",
"paragraph_text": "Georgiy Enverovich Mamedov () (born 1947 in Moscow, USSR) is a Russian diplomat of Azerbaijani descent, and one of Russia's foremost authorities on the United States and Canada. In the 1990s and the early 2000s, he was his country's chief interlocutor with the United States on such subjects as NATO, arms control and Kosovo.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Soldier Five",
"paragraph_text": "Soldier Five – The Real Truth About the Bravo Two Zero Mission is the third book about the Bravo Two Zero mission during the Gulf War to have been written by a member of the eight-man patrol involved.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Frederic Ives Lord",
"paragraph_text": "Frederic Ives Lord (April 18, 1897 – July 21, 1967) or sometimes Frederick Ives Lord, was a captain, a World War I flying ace, and a soldier of fortune who fought in five wars.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Monkey D. Luffy",
"paragraph_text": "Monkey D. ``Straw Hat ''Luffy (Japanese: モンキー・ D ・ルフィ, Hepburn: Monkī Dī Rufi) is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the One Piece manga series, created by Eiichiro Oda. Luffy made his debut in One Piece chapter # 1 as a young boy who acquires the properties of rubber after inadvertently eating the supernatural Gum - Gum fruit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Hubble Space Telescope",
"paragraph_text": "Hubble is the only telescope designed to be serviced in space by astronauts. After launch by Space Shuttle Discovery in 1990, five subsequent Space Shuttle missions repaired, upgraded, and replaced systems on the telescope, including all five of the main instruments. The fifth mission was initially canceled on safety grounds following the Columbia disaster (2003). However, after spirited public discussion, NASA administrator Mike Griffin approved the fifth servicing mission, completed in 2009. The telescope is operating as of 2018, and could last until 2030 -- 2040. Its scientific successor, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), is scheduled for launch in March 2021.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Soldier's Joy (house)",
"paragraph_text": "Soldier's Joy is a historic house located at Wingina, Nelson County, Virginia, USA. It was built in 1784–85 by Col. Samuel Jordan Cabell and enlarged approximately twenty-five years later. Along with Bon Aire and Montezuma, it is one of the few remaining Cabell family houses in Nelson County. When constructed it was a five-part Palladian house; reduced in size during the 20th century when the early 19th-century wings were moved. The Late-Georgian dwelling is distinguished by its fine proportions and interior detailing, much of which was added when the house was enlarged. The elaborate woodwork from the ballroom wing was removed to the Cincinnati Art Museum when the house was renovated in the 1920s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "The Things They Carried",
"paragraph_text": "The Things They Carried (1990) is a collection of linked short stories by American novelist Tim O'Brien, about a platoon of American soldiers fighting on the ground in the Vietnam War. His third book about the war, it is based upon his experiences as a soldier in the 23rd Infantry Division.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the war that is the main subject of Soldier Five inadvertently do in the early 1900s?
|
[
{
"id": 503938,
"question": "Soldier Five >> main subject",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 42092,
"question": "What did #1 inadvertently do in the early 1990s?",
"answer": "radicalize the Islamist movement",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
radicalize the Islamist movement
|
[] | true |
2hop__44466_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Ivan Hrvatska",
"paragraph_text": "Ivan Hrvatska is a Croatian singer living in Canada, known for his songs about \"making love\" to national holidays of Canada and the United States. He first gained attention in 2001 with the song \"First I Make Love to You, Then I Make Love to Christmas\". Other tracks include \"Making Love to the Grey Cup\" and \"Making Love to Vancouver Canucks\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "I Have Learned to Respect the Power of Love",
"paragraph_text": "\"I Have Learned to Respect the Power of Love\" is a song sung by American R&B singer, Stephanie Mills, and is the second single from her 1985 self-titled album. The song was written by Angela Winbush and René Moore, of the singing duo Rene & Angela.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Marion Harris",
"paragraph_text": "Marion Harris (April 4, 1896 – April 23, 1944) was an American popular singer who was most successful in the 1920s. She was the first widely known white singer to sing jazz and blues songs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Never Let Me Go (Johnny Ace song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Never Let Me Go\" is a blues ballad song by American R&B/blues singer Johnny Ace, written by Joseph Scott and released in 1954 under Duke Records. The song is featured on the albums \"My Songs\" and \"Memorial\". \"Never Let Me Go\" was one of his eighth consecutive top ten R&B hits in a row, including \"My Song\", \"Cross My Heart,\" \"Please Forgive Me,\" \"The Clock,\" \"Pledging My Love,\" \"Saving My Love for You,\" and \"Anymore\". The song was R&B hit and peaked to No. 9 in October 1954 on \"Billboards\" Rhythm & Blues Records chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Juliette & Jonathan",
"paragraph_text": "\"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a 1996 Swedish language pop song that Lotta Engberg sang when she competed in the Swedish Melodifestivalen 1996, and finished 3rd. The song was written by Monica Forsberg and Torgny Söderberg. Even Lena Philipsson has recorded this song, and she released it on her 2006 album \"Lady Star\". At first, it was thought that Lena Philipsson should sing this song at Melodifestivalen 1996. \"Juliette & Jonathan\" is a song whose text is about love, but has an anti-racist theme. The song text is about Juliette and Jonathan, two people from different backgrounds who fall in love with each other. According to the song text, love doesn't know any borders or color of skin.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Moody's Mood for Love",
"paragraph_text": "\"Moody's Mood for Love\" is a 1952 song by Eddie Jefferson, whose melody is derived from an improvised solo by jazz saxophonist James Moody on a 1949 recording of the 1935 song \"I'm in the Mood for Love\". It gained widespread popularity after being recorded in 1954 by singer King Pleasure. It has since been covered by many artists. Moody himself adopted the song as his own, recording it with Jefferson on the 1956 album \"Moody's Mood for Love\" and often singing the song himself in concert.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Fooled Around and Fell in Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Fooled Around and Fell in Love ''is a single written and performed by blues guitarist Elvin Bishop. It appeared on his 1975 album Struttin 'My Stuff and was released as a single the following year. Bishop does not sing lead vocals on the track; feeling that his gravelly voice would n't do the song justice, he invited vocalist Mickey Thomas, who was a background singer in his band at the time, to sing it. The song peaked at # 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in May 1976. The record was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on June 23, 1976. In Canada, the song reached number 22 on the singles chart and number 8 on the Adult Contemporary chart. The song became a Gold record.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Wish I Didn't Love You",
"paragraph_text": "``Wish I Did n't Love You ''is a song by American singer Chloe Kohanski. It is Kohanski's coronation single following her victory on the thirteenth season of the singing competition The Voice. The song debuted and peaked at number sixty - nine on Billboard Hot 100 for the chart dated January 6, 2018.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Fooled Around and Fell in Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Fooled Around and Fell in Love ''is a song written and performed by blues guitarist Elvin Bishop. It appeared on his 1975 album Struttin 'My Stuff and was released as a single the following year. Bishop does not sing lead vocals on the track; feeling that his gravelly voice would n't do the song justice, he invited vocalist Mickey Thomas, who was a background singer in his band at the time, to sing it. The song peaked at # 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in May 1976. The record was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on June 23, 1976. In Canada, the song reached number 22 on the singles chart and number 8 on the Adult Contemporary chart. The song became a Gold record.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "The Glamorous Life",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Glamorous Life\" is a song written by Prince, recorded by singer/percussionist Sheila E. and produced by both. The song has lyrics which reflect a cynicism for the decadence and materialism of the song's protagonist, referred to in the third person, who \"wants to lead a glamorous life\", although she is aware that \"without love, it ain't much\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "I Just Want to Make Love to You",
"paragraph_text": "``I Just Want to Make Love to You ''is a 1954 blues song written by Willie Dixon, first recorded by Muddy Waters, and released as`` Just Make Love to Me'' (Chess 1571). The song reached number four on Billboard magazine's R&B Best Sellers chart.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "All I Want for Christmas Is My Two Front Teeth",
"paragraph_text": "``All I Want for Christmas Is My Two Front Teeth ''is a novelty Christmas song written in 1944 by Donald Yetter Gardner while teaching music at public schools in Smithtown, New York. He asked his second grade class what they wanted for Christmas, and noticed that almost all of the students had at least one front tooth missing as they answered in a lisp. Gardner wrote the song in 30 minutes. In a 1995 interview, Gardner said,`` I was amazed at the way that silly little song was picked up by the whole country.'' The song was published in 1948 after an employee of Witmark music company heard Gardner sing it at a music teachers conference.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "I've Heard the Mermaids Singing",
"paragraph_text": "I've Heard the Mermaids Singing is a 1987 feature film, directed by Patricia Rozema. The title is taken from \"The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\" by T. S. Eliot.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Jugband Blues",
"paragraph_text": "\"Jugband Blues\" is a song by the English psychedelic rock band Pink Floyd, and is featured on their second album, \"A Saucerful of Secrets\", released in 1968. Written by Syd Barrett, it was his sole compositional contribution to the album, as well as his last published for the band. Barrett and Pink Floyd's management wanted the song to be released as a single, but were vetoed by the rest of the band and producer Norman Smith. \"Jugband Blues\" is directed towards anyone within Barrett's proximity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Forever Autumn (song)",
"paragraph_text": "The best - known version is the recording by Justin Hayward from the album Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds. Wayne wanted to include a love song on the album that sounded like ``Forever Autumn '', and he decided that the best course of action was to simply use the original song. Wayne chose Hayward, of The Moody Blues, to sing it saying that he`` wanted that voice from 'Nights in White Satin'''. It was recorded at London's Advision Studios in 1976. The song reached # 5 on the UK Singles Chart in August 1978.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "One of These Nights (disambiguation)",
"paragraph_text": "``One of These Nights ''is a song written by Don Henley and Glenn Frey and recorded by the American rock band Eagles. The title track from their One of These Nights album, the song became their second single to top the Billboard Hot 100 chart after`` Best of My Love'' and also helped propel the album to number one. The single version was shortened from the album version of the song, removing most of the song's intro and most of its fade - out, as well. Henley is lead vocalist on the verses, while Randy Meisner sings high harmony (not lead) on the refrain. The song features a guitar solo by Don Felder that is ``composed of blues - based licks and sustained string bends using an unusually meaty distortion tone. ''",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Bad Lip Reading",
"paragraph_text": "The Star Wars Trilogy Bad Lip Reading videos also spawned a second musical number titled ``Bushes of Love '', which featured Ben Kenobi singing to Luke Skywalker about the perils of love. The song would hit # 2 on the Billboard Comedy Digital Tracks chart. Hamilton creator and star Lin - Manuel Miranda described the song as`` THE summer jam of 2017''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven",
"paragraph_text": "``Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven ''is a country music song co-written by American songwriters Jim Collins and Marty Dodson. The song was initially to have been recorded by singer George Strait for his 2008 album Troubadour, but after Strait decided not to include the song on this album, it was recorded by Kenny Chesney instead. Released in August 2008, Chesney's rendition is his thirty - eighth Top 40 country hit and his fifteenth Number One hit. Chesney's version is the first single from his album Lucky Old Sun, which was released on his own Blue Chair label in association with BNA Records.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Which subgenre of the blues is the singer who sings the song i just want to make love to you associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 44466,
"question": "who sings the song i just want to make love to you",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__77824_299942
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison (bust)",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison is a bust by American artist Richard Peglow, located in the north atrium on the second floor of the Indiana Statehouse, which is in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. The bust is cast in bronze and depicts President Benjamin Harrison. The bust is placed in front of a grey and black marble shield with six stars tracing around the edge of the shape. The bust and shield are approximately wide by high and has a depth of . The artwork was cast and placed in the statehouse in 2008 in accordance with Indiana code Section 2. IC 4-20.5-6-12.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "2010 United States House of Representatives elections",
"paragraph_text": "Republicans regained control of the chamber they had lost in the 2006 midterm elections, picking up a net total of 63 seats and erasing the gains Democrats made in 2006 and 2008. Although the sitting U.S. President's party usually loses seats in a midterm election, the 2010 election resulted in the highest loss of a party in a House midterm election since 1938, and the largest House swing since 1948. This also happened to be the Republicans' largest gain in House seats since 1938. Republicans gained the most in New York state where they picked up six seats, defeating five incumbents and winning an open Democratic district. The heavy Democratic Party losses were attributed to anger with President Obama, opposition to the Affordable Care Act, large budget deficits and the weak economy. This was also the third consecutive midterm election in a president's first term where the Republican Party has made gains in the House of Representatives, as well as the second consecutive midterm election where party control of the said chamber changed hands. Notable freshmen included future Senators Cory Gardner, Todd Young, James Lankford, and Tim Scott, future Governor of Delaware John Carney, future Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney, future Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, future Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas Tim Griffin, and future Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The government has assembled a National Human Rights Commission that consists of 15 members from various backgrounds. Several activists in exile, including Thee Lay Thee Anyeint members, have returned to Myanmar after President Thein Sein's invitation to expatriates to return home to work for national development. In an address to the United Nations Security Council on 22 September 2011, Myanmar's Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin confirmed the government's intention to release prisoners in the near future.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "National Christmas Tree (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "The National Christmas Tree is a large evergreen tree located in the northeast quadrant of The Ellipse near the White House in Washington, D.C. Each year since 1923, the tree has been decorated as a Christmas tree. Every early December, the tree is traditionally lit by the President of the United States. Every president since Franklin D. Roosevelt has made formal remarks during the tree lighting ceremony. Since 1954, the event has marked the start of month - long festivities known as the Pageant of Peace. Smaller trees representing the U.S. states, District of Columbia, and the five territories around the National Christmas Tree are referred to as the Pathway to Peace.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "National Soccer Hall of Fame",
"paragraph_text": "National Soccer Hall of Fame Established 1950 (as institution in 1979) Location Toyota Stadium (Texas) (future site) Coordinates 33 ° 9 ′ 16 ''N 96 ° 50 ′ 7'' W / 33.15444 ° N 96.83528 ° W / 33.15444; - 96.83528 Coordinates: 33 ° 9 ′ 16 ''N 96 ° 50 ′ 7'' W / 33.15444 ° N 96.83528 ° W / 33.15444; - 96.83528 Type Professional sports hall of fame Visitors 17,000 per year President Jonathan Ullman",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Denton Offutt",
"paragraph_text": "Denton Offutt was a 19th-century American general store operator who hired future President Abraham Lincoln for his first job as an adult in New Salem, Illinois.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Statue of Liberty",
"paragraph_text": "In 1956, an Act of Congress officially renamed Bedloe's Island as Liberty Island, a change advocated by Bartholdi generations earlier. The act also mentioned the efforts to found an American Museum of Immigration on the island, which backers took as federal approval of the project, though the government was slow to grant funds for it. Nearby Ellis Island was made part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument by proclamation of President Lyndon Johnson in 1965. In 1972, the immigration museum, in the statue's base, was finally opened in a ceremony led by President Richard Nixon. The museum's backers never provided it with an endowment to secure its future and it closed in 1991 after the opening of an immigration museum on Ellis Island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Emile Haag",
"paragraph_text": "Dr. Emile Haag (born 24 Juli 1942) is a Luxembourgish historian, trade unionist and former principal of the Athénée de Luxembourg. Since 1987 he has been the national president of the confederation of government employees, a Luxembourgish trade union. In 1997, he was made commander of the Ordre de la couronne de chêne (awarded 1997). Between 2005 and 2015 he was also President of the chamber for government employees. On 29. Juni 2015 he was made honorary president of that chamber.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Guinea-Bissau",
"paragraph_text": "At the legislative level, a unicameral Assembleia Nacional Popular (National People's Assembly) is made up of 100 members. They are popularly elected from multi-member constituencies to serve a four-year term. The judicial system is headed by a Tribunal Supremo da Justiça (Supreme Court), made up of nine justices appointed by the president; they serve at the pleasure of the president.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Arlington)",
"paragraph_text": "The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier or the Tomb of the Unknowns is a monument dedicated to U.S. service members who have died without their remains being identified. Having no officially designated name, it is located in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, United States of America. The World War I ``Unknown ''is a recipient of the Medal of Honor, the Victoria Cross, and several other foreign nations' highest service awards. The U.S. Unknowns who were interred are also recipients of the Medal of Honor, presented by U.S. Presidents who presided over their funerals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Bears Ears National Monument",
"paragraph_text": "Bears Ears National Monument is a United States national monument located in San Juan County in southeastern Utah, established by President Barack Obama by presidential proclamation on December 28, 2016. The monument's original size was 1,351,849 acres (547,074 ha), which was controversially reduced 85% by President Donald Trump on December 4, 2017. The monument protects the public land surrounding the Bears Ears -- a pair of buttes -- and the Indian Creek corridor rock climbing area. The Native American names for the buttes have the same meaning in each of the languages represented in the region. The names are listed in the presidential proclamation as ``Hoon'Naqvut, Shash Jáa (sic), Kwiyagatu Nukavachi, Ansh An Lashokdiwe ''-- all four mean`` Bears Ears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "United States presidential visits to the United Kingdom and Ireland",
"paragraph_text": "Twelve United States presidents have made presidential visits to the United Kingdom and Ireland. The first visit by an incumbent president to the United Kingdom was made in December 1918 by Woodrow Wilson, and was an offshoot of American diplomatic interactions with the Principal Allied Powers at the conclusion of World War I prior to the Paris Peace Conference. The first visit by an incumbent president to Ireland was made in June 1963 by John F. Kennedy. To date, 33 visits have been made to the United Kingdom and nine to Ireland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Johnny Galecki",
"paragraph_text": "Galecki made his acting debut in the 1987 CBS miniseries Murder Ordained with JoBeth Williams and future Roseanne co-star John Goodman. In 1989, Galecki portrayed Rusty Griswold in National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. In 1990, he was cast as Danny Nash, the son of Robert Urich's lead character, on the NBC comedy American Dreamer; the following season, he was a regular cast member on the ABC sitcom Billy, a spin - off from Head of the Class. He appeared in one episode of Blossom in 1991, opposite his future The Big Bang Theory co-star Mayim Bialik.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Metamora Courthouse State Historic Site",
"paragraph_text": "The Metamora Courthouse State Historic Site is a historic American courthouse located in Metamora, Illinois, the former county seat of Woodford County. The courthouse was built in 1845 as the governmental center for Woodford County and as a circuit court for the former Illinois Eighth Circuit. The courthouse is best known for being one of only two surviving Illinois circuit courthouses where future U.S. President Abraham Lincoln practiced law.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 -- March 13, 1901) was an American politician and lawyer who served as the 23rd President of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, creating the only grandfather - grandson duo to have held the office. He was also the great - grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a founding father. Before ascending to the presidency, Harrison established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indianapolis, Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six - year term in the U.S. Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Garfield Peak (Colorado)",
"paragraph_text": "Garfield Peak is a high mountain summit of the Collegiate Peaks in the Sawatch Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The thirteener is located south-southwest (bearing 197°) of Independence Pass, Colorado, United States, on the Continental Divide separating San Isabel National Forest and Chaffee County from White River National Forest and Pitkin County. Garfield Peak was named in honor of James A. Garfield, 20th President of the United States.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Grove Mountains",
"paragraph_text": "The Grove Mountains are a large, scattered group of mountains and nunataks extending over an area of approximately , located east of the Mawson Escarpment in American Highland, Antarctica. They were first photographed from the air by aircraft of U.S. Navy Operation Highjump, 1946–47, and named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for Squadron Leader I.L. Grove, a Royal Australian Air Force pilot with the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions, who made a November 1958 landing in these mountains.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "1972 Republican National Convention",
"paragraph_text": "The 1972 National Convention of the Republican Party of the United States was held from August 21 to August 23, 1972, at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida. It nominated President Richard M. Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew for reelection. The convention was chaired by then-U.S. House Minority Leader and future Nixon successor Gerald Ford of Michigan. It was the fifth time Nixon had been nominated on the Republican ticket as either its vice-presidential (1952 and 1956) or presidential candidate (1960 and 1968). Hence, Nixon's five appearances on his party's ticket matched the major-party American standard of Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat who had been nominated for Vice President once (in 1920) and President four times (in 1932, 1936, 1940 and 1944).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "The Girl Who Returned",
"paragraph_text": "The Girl Who Returned is a 1969 American comedy film, notable as the directorial debut of Lloyd Kaufman, future co-founder and president of Troma Entertainment. It was made during his sophomore year at Yale University.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "2010 United States House of Representatives elections",
"paragraph_text": "Republicans regained control of the chamber they had lost in the 2006 midterm elections, picking up a net total of 63 seats and erasing the gains Democrats made in 2006 and 2008. Although the sitting U.S. President's party usually loses seats in a midterm election, the 2010 election resulted in the highest loss of a party in a House midterm election since 1938, and the largest House swing since 1948. This also happened to be the Republicans' largest gain in House seats since 1938. Republicans gained the most in New York state where they picked up six seats, defeating five incumbents and winning an open Democratic district. The heavy Democratic Party losses were attributed to anger with President Obama, opposition to the Affordable Care Act, large budget deficits and the weak economy. This was also the third consecutive midterm election in a president's first term where the Republican Party has made gains in the House of Representatives, as well as the second consecutive midterm election where party control of the said chamber changed hands. Notable freshmen included future Senators Cory Gardner, Todd Young, James Lankford, and Tim Scott, future Governor of Delaware John Carney, future Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney, future CIA director Mike Pompeo, future Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas Tim Griffin, and future Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where did the future American President who made a national name serve?
|
[
{
"id": 77824,
"question": "who was the future american president who made a national name",
"answer": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 299942,
"question": "#1 >> location",
"answer": "Indiana Statehouse",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
}
] |
Indiana Statehouse
|
[] | true |
2hop__141804_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Let's Stick Together (song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Let's Stick Together ''or`` Let's Work Together'' as it was subsequently titled, is a blues song written by Wilbert Harrison, which was released in 1962. In 1969 and 1970, the song was a hit for Harrison and has been recorded by a variety of artists, including Canned Heat and Bryan Ferry, who had chart successes with the song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Rollin' and Tumblin'",
"paragraph_text": "\"Rollin' and Tumblin'\" (or \"Roll and Tumble Blues\") is a blues song first recorded by American singer/guitarist Hambone Willie Newbern in 1929. Called a \"great Delta blues classic\", it has been interpreted by hundreds of Delta and Chicago blues artists, including well-known recordings by Muddy Waters. \"Rollin' and Tumblin'\" has also been refashioned by a variety of rock-oriented artists.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Mr. Tambourine Man",
"paragraph_text": "The song has been performed and recorded by many artists, including the Byrds, Judy Collins, Melanie, Odetta, and Stevie Wonder among others. The Byrds version was released in April of 1965 as their first single on Columbia Records, reaching number 1 on both the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and the UK Singles Chart, as well as being the title track of their debut album, \"Mr. Tambourine Man.\" The Byrds' recording of the song was influential in popularizing the musical subgenres of folk rock and jangle pop, leading many contemporary bands to mimic its fusion of jangly guitars and intellectual lyrics in the wake of the single's success.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "The Keeper of the Stars",
"paragraph_text": "``The Keeper of the Stars ''is a song written by Dickey Lee, Danny Mayo and Karen Staley, and recorded by American country music artist Tracy Byrd. It was released in February 1995 as the fourth and last single from his album No Ordinary Man, it went on to reach a peak of # 2 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) charts, behind`` I Can Love You Like That'' by John Michael Montgomery. A year after its release, it was named Song of the Year by the Country Music Association.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "I Can't Quit You Baby",
"paragraph_text": "``I Ca n't Quit You Baby ''is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and first recorded by Chicago blues artist Otis Rush in 1956. It was Rush's first recording and became a record chart hit. The song, a slow twelve - bar blues, has been recorded by various artists, including Led Zeppelin, who included it on their debut album.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Driving Wheel",
"paragraph_text": "\"Driving Wheel\", also called \"Drivin' Wheel\" or \"Driving Wheel Blues\", is blues song recorded by Roosevelt Sykes (listed as \"The Honey Dripper\" on early singles) in 1936. It became a standard of the blues and has been recorded by numerous artists, including Junior Parker and Al Green, who had \"Billboard\" magazine charts successes with the song.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Blue Highway (song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Blue Highway\" is a song written by David Womack and Don Henry, and recorded by American country music artist John Conlee. It was released in July 1985 as the third single and title track from the album \"Blue Highway\". The song reached #15 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Rodd Keith",
"paragraph_text": "Rodd Keith (born Rodney Keith Eskelin; January 30, 1937 – December 15, 1974) was an American multi-instrumentalist and songwriter. He is perhaps the best known figure in the obscure musical subgenre known as song poem music.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "How Long, How Long Blues",
"paragraph_text": "\"How Long, How Long Blues\" (also known as \"How Long Blues\" or \"How Long How Long\") is a blues song recorded by the American blues duo Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell in 1928. The song became \"an instant best-seller\" and one of the first blues standards, inspiring many blues songs of the era. It has been recorded by many artists, not only in blues but also country and western, pop, and jazz.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Hoochie Coochie Man",
"paragraph_text": "\"Hoochie Coochie Man\" (originally titled \"I'm Your Hoochie Cooche Man\") is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and first recorded by Muddy Waters in 1954. The song makes reference to hoodoo folk magic elements and makes novel use of a stop-time musical arrangement. It became one of Waters' most popular and identifiable songs and helped secure Dixon's role as Chess Records' chief songwriter.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain",
"paragraph_text": "``Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain ''is a song written by songwriter Fred Rose. Originally performed by Roy Acuff, the song has been covered by many artist; such as Hank Williams Sr. and Charlie Pride. Also the song was later recorded by Willie Nelson as part of his 1975 album Red Headed Stranger. Both the song and album would become iconic in country music history, and jump start Nelson's success as a singer and recording artist.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Howlin' Wolf",
"paragraph_text": "Chester Arthur Burnett (June 10, 1910 – January 10, 1976), known as Howlin' Wolf, was a Chicago blues singer, guitarist, and harmonica player, originally from Mississippi. With a booming voice and imposing physical presence, he is one of the best-known Chicago blues artists. The musician and critic Cub Koda noted, \"no one could match Howlin' Wolf for the singular ability to rock the house down to the foundation while simultaneously scaring its patrons out of its wits.\" Producer Sam Phillips recalled, \"When I heard Howlin' Wolf, I said, 'This is for me. This is where the soul of man never dies. Several of his songs, including \"Smokestack Lightnin'\", \"Killing Floor\" and \"Spoonful\", have become blues and blues rock standards. In 2011, \"Rolling Stone\" magazine ranked him number 54 on its list of the \"100 Greatest Artists of All Time\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Mannish Boy",
"paragraph_text": "\"Mannish Boy\" (or \"Manish Boy\" as it was originally titled) is a blues standard by Muddy Waters. First recorded in 1955, the song is both an arrangement of and an \"answer song\" to Bo Diddley's \"I'm a Man\", which was in turn inspired by Waters' and Willie Dixon's \"Hoochie Coochie Man\". \"Mannish Boy\" features a repeating stop-time figure on one chord throughout the song and is credited to Waters, Mel London, and Bo Diddley.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon",
"paragraph_text": "Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon (or Portrait of a Man with a Blue Hood, earlier Portrait of a Jeweler or Man with a Ring) is a very small (22.5 cm x 16.6 cm with frame) oil on panel portrait of an unidentified man attributed to the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Your Lying Blue Eyes",
"paragraph_text": "\"Your Lying Blue Eyes\" is a song written by Ken McDuffie, and recorded by American country music artist John Anderson. It was released in October 1979 as the third single from the album \"John Anderson\". The song reached #15 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Bluer Than Blue",
"paragraph_text": "\"Bluer Than Blue\" is the title of a 1978 song recorded by Michael Johnson. The song was written by noted pop and country songwriter Randy Goodrum. Originally recorded as a demo, \"Bluer Than Blue\" was taken as the first single from Johnson's subsequent LP, \"The Michael Johnson Album\". The song is from the point of view of a man who is in a failing relationship, and is trying to convince himself that his situation will improve once the one he loved moves on; however, it is evident by the lyrics to the song his efforts are thus far ineffective.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The singer of Hoochie Coochie Man is associated with which subgenre of the blues?
|
[
{
"id": 141804,
"question": "The song Hoochie Coochie Man is by what artist?",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__98274_42092
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "French and Indian War",
"paragraph_text": "In Europe, the North American theater of the Seven Years' War usually is not given a separate name. The entire international conflict is known as the Seven Years' War. \"Seven Years\" refers to events in Europe, from the official declaration of war in 1756 to the signing of the peace treaty in 1763. These dates do not correspond with the fighting on mainland North America, where the fighting between the two colonial powers was largely concluded in six years, from the Battle of Jumonville Glen in 1754 to the capture of Montreal in 1760.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "The Things They Carried",
"paragraph_text": "The Things They Carried (1990) is a collection of linked short stories by American novelist Tim O'Brien, about a platoon of American soldiers fighting on the ground in the Vietnam War. His third book about the war, it is based upon his experiences as a soldier in the 23rd Infantry Division.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Darkest Hour (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Darkest Hour is a 2017 war drama film directed by Joe Wright and written by Anthony McCarten. It stars Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill, and is an account of his early days as Prime Minister, as Nazi Germany's Wehrmacht swept across Western Europe, threatening to defeat the United Kingdom during World War II. The German advance leads to friction at the highest levels of government between those who would make a peace treaty with Adolf Hitler, and Churchill, who refused. The film also stars Kristin Scott Thomas, Lily James, Ben Mendelsohn, Stephen Dillane, and Ronald Pickup.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Andre Fili",
"paragraph_text": "Andre Fili (born June 25, 1990) is an American mixed martial artist who competes in the Featherweight division. Fili is of Samoan and Native Hawaiian descent and is currently signed with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Darkest Hour (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Darkest Hour is a 2017 war drama film directed by Joe Wright and written by Anthony McCarten. It stars Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill, and is an account of his early days as Prime Minister, as Nazi Germany swept across Western Europe, threatening to defeat the United Kingdom during World War II. The Nazi advance leads to friction at the highest levels of government between those who would make a peace treaty with Hitler, and Churchill, who refused. The film also stars Kristin Scott Thomas, Lily James, Ben Mendelsohn, Stephen Dillane, and Ronald Pickup.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Framed (1990 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Framed is a 1990 television movie directed by Dean Parisot and produced on Home Box Office (HBO). It was written by Gary Rosen. Jeff Goldblum and Kristin Scott Thomas star.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Islamism",
"paragraph_text": "Another factor in the early 1990s that worked to radicalize the Islamist movement was the Gulf War, which brought several hundred thousand US and allied non-Muslim military personnel to Saudi Arabian soil to put an end to Saddam Hussein's occupation of Kuwait. Prior to 1990 Saudi Arabia played an important role in restraining the many Islamist groups that received its aid. But when Saddam, secularist and Ba'athist dictator of neighboring Iraq, attacked Saudi Arabia (his enemy in the war), western troops came to protect the Saudi monarchy. Islamists accused the Saudi regime of being a puppet of the west.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Ray Daniels",
"paragraph_text": "Lieutenant-Colonel Ray Daniels MC (15 July 1923 – 27 April 2003) was awarded the Military Cross for his ‘exemplary actions during fierce fighting’ at the Battle of Cloppenburg in 1945, played rugby for Wasps RFC after World War II and later became Chief Executive of the William Press Group that he led to become a FTSE 100 company in the mid-1970s and early 1980s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Just Say No",
"paragraph_text": "``Just Say No ''was an advertising campaign, part of the U.S.`` War on Drugs'', prevalent during the 1980s and early 1990s, to discourage children from engaging in illegal recreational drug use by offering various ways of saying no. The slogan was created and championed by First Lady Nancy Reagan during her husband's presidency.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Millennials",
"paragraph_text": "Millennials (also known as Generation Y) are the generational demographic cohort following Generation X. There are no precise dates for when this cohort starts or ends; demographers and researchers typically use the early 1980s as starting birth years and the mid-1990s to early 2000s as ending birth years. Millennials are sometimes referred to as ``echo boomers ''due to a major surge in birth rates in the 1980s and 1990s, and because millennials are often the children of the baby boomers. The 20th - century trend toward smaller families in developed countries continued, however, so the relative impact of the`` baby boom echo'' was generally less pronounced than the post -- World War II baby boom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Scott Gow",
"paragraph_text": "Scott Gow (born November 6, 1990) is a Canadian biathlete. He competed in the 2014/15 World Cup season, and represented Canada at the Biathlon World Championships 2013 in Nové Město na Moravě and at the Biathlon World Championships 2015 in Kontiolahti.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Stranger Things",
"paragraph_text": "Stranger Things is set in the fictional rural town of Hawkins, Indiana, during the early 1980s. The nearby Hawkins National Laboratory ostensibly performs scientific research for the United States Department of Energy, but secretly does experiments into the paranormal and supernatural, including those that involve human test subjects. Inadvertently, they have created a portal to an alternate dimension called ``the Upside Down ''. The influence of the Upside Down starts to affect the unknowing residents of Hawkins in calamitous ways.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Namsos campaign",
"paragraph_text": "The Namsos campaign, in Namsos, Norway, and its surrounding area involved heavy fighting between Anglo-French and Norwegian naval and military forces on the one hand, and German military, naval and air forces on the other in April and early May 1940. It was one of the first significant occasions during the Second World War when British and French land forces fought the German Army.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Kukan",
"paragraph_text": "Kukan (1941) is a documentary film co-produced by Li Ling-Ai and Rey Scott and directed by Rey Scott about the Chinese resistance to Japanese aggression during the early part of World War II (see Second Sino-Japanese War). Though Ling-Ai was a co-producer and sponsor of the film, she was credited as a \"technical advisor\" in its credits.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Dwight D. Eisenhower",
"paragraph_text": "Early in 1953, the French asked Eisenhower for help in French Indochina against the Communists, supplied from China, who were fighting the First Indochina War. Eisenhower sent Lt. General John W. \"Iron Mike\" O'Daniel to Vietnam to study and assess the French forces there. Chief of Staff Matthew Ridgway dissuaded the President from intervening by presenting a comprehensive estimate of the massive military deployment that would be necessary. Eisenhower stated prophetically that \"this war would absorb our troops by divisions.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Alfonso Bonzo",
"paragraph_text": "Alfonso Bonzo is a 1986 children's book by Andrew Davies and a 1990 children's short-lived television series adapted from the book by the author. The series starred Alex Jennings as Alfonso Bonzo and Scott Riley as Billy Webb.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Scott Speicher",
"paragraph_text": "Michael Scott Speicher (12 July 1957 – January 17, 1991) was a United States Navy pilot who was shot down over Iraq during the Persian Gulf War becoming the first American combat casualty of the war. His fate was not known until 2 August 2009 when the Navy reported that Speicher's remains were found in Iraq by United States Marines.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "William Scott Chalmers",
"paragraph_text": "William Scott Chalmers CBE DSC (1 May 1888 – 11 June 1971) was a rear admiral of the Royal Navy who served in World War I and World War II.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Uruguay",
"paragraph_text": "Montevideo was founded by the Spanish in the early 18th century as a military stronghold in the country. Its natural harbor soon developed into a commercial area competing with Río de la Plata's capital, Buenos Aires. Uruguay's early 19th century history was shaped by ongoing fights for dominance in the Platine region, between British, Spanish, Portuguese and other colonial forces. In 1806 and 1807, the British army attempted to seize Buenos Aires and Montevideo as part of the Napoleonic Wars. Montevideo was occupied by a British force from February to September 1807.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Indo-Pakistani War of 1971",
"paragraph_text": "The Indian Army Chief in 1971 Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw had the highest respect for the fighting capability of the Pakistan Army but he did not accept the theory that they did not fight the Bangladesh war with enough vigor and zeal. In a BBC interview, he said:",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the war that Scott Speicher fought in inadvertently do in the early 1990s?
|
[
{
"id": 98274,
"question": "What war did Scott Speicher fight in?",
"answer": "Gulf War",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
},
{
"id": 42092,
"question": "What did #1 inadvertently do in the early 1990s?",
"answer": "radicalize the Islamist movement",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
}
] |
radicalize the Islamist movement
|
[] | true |
2hop__77824_390787
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "John Payne Todd",
"paragraph_text": "John Payne Todd (February 29, 1792 – January 16, 1852), also known as Payne Todd, was the first son of Dolley Payne and John Todd Jr. His father and younger brother died in the 1793 Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic, which killed nearly 10 percent of the city's population. His mother remarried the following year, to the older James Madison, the future president of the United States.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "2010 United States House of Representatives elections",
"paragraph_text": "Republicans regained control of the chamber they had lost in the 2006 midterm elections, picking up a net total of 63 seats and erasing the gains Democrats made in 2006 and 2008. Although the sitting U.S. President's party usually loses seats in a midterm election, the 2010 election resulted in the highest loss of a party in a House midterm election since 1938, and the largest House swing since 1948. This also happened to be the Republicans' largest gain in House seats since 1938. Republicans gained the most in New York state where they picked up six seats, defeating five incumbents and winning an open Democratic district. The heavy Democratic Party losses were attributed to anger with President Obama, opposition to the Affordable Care Act, large budget deficits and the weak economy. This was also the third consecutive midterm election in a president's first term where the Republican Party has made gains in the House of Representatives, as well as the second consecutive midterm election where party control of the said chamber changed hands. Notable freshmen included future Senators Cory Gardner, Todd Young, James Lankford, and Tim Scott, future Governor of Delaware John Carney, future Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney, future Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, future Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas Tim Griffin, and future Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "From Hand to Mouth",
"paragraph_text": "From Hand to Mouth is a 1919 American short comedy film featuring Harold Lloyd. This was the first film Lloyd made with frequent co-star (and future wife) Mildred Davis. A print of the film survives in the film archive of the British Film Institute.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The Girl Who Returned",
"paragraph_text": "The Girl Who Returned is a 1969 American comedy film, notable as the directorial debut of Lloyd Kaufman, future co-founder and president of Troma Entertainment. It was made during his sophomore year at Yale University.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "John Quincy Adams",
"paragraph_text": "John Quincy Adams (/ ˈkwɪnzi / (listen); July 11, 1767 -- February 23, 1848) was an American statesman who served as a diplomat, minister and ambassador to foreign nations, and treaty negotiator, United States Senator, U.S. Representative (Congressman) from Massachusetts, and the sixth President of the United States from 1825 to 1829. He was a member of the Federalists like his famous influential father, but later switched to the Jeffersonian Democratic - Republican, National Republican, and later the Anti-Masonic and Whig parties when they were organized. He was the son of second President John Adams (1735 - 1826, served 1797 - 1801), and his wife, Abigail Adams.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "2010 United States House of Representatives elections",
"paragraph_text": "Republicans regained control of the chamber they had lost in the 2006 midterm elections, picking up a net total of 63 seats and erasing the gains Democrats made in 2006 and 2008. Although the sitting U.S. President's party usually loses seats in a midterm election, the 2010 election resulted in the highest loss of a party in a House midterm election since 1938, and the largest House swing since 1948. This also happened to be the Republicans' largest gain in House seats since 1938. Republicans gained the most in New York state where they picked up six seats, defeating five incumbents and winning an open Democratic district. The heavy Democratic Party losses were attributed to anger with President Obama, opposition to the Affordable Care Act, large budget deficits and the weak economy. This was also the third consecutive midterm election in a president's first term where the Republican Party has made gains in the House of Representatives, as well as the second consecutive midterm election where party control of the said chamber changed hands. Notable freshmen included future Senators Cory Gardner, Todd Young, James Lankford, and Tim Scott, future Governor of Delaware John Carney, future Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney, future CIA director Mike Pompeo, future Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas Tim Griffin, and future Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Guinea-Bissau",
"paragraph_text": "At the legislative level, a unicameral Assembleia Nacional Popular (National People's Assembly) is made up of 100 members. They are popularly elected from multi-member constituencies to serve a four-year term. The judicial system is headed by a Tribunal Supremo da Justiça (Supreme Court), made up of nine justices appointed by the president; they serve at the pleasure of the president.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Father's Day (United States)",
"paragraph_text": "A bill to accord national recognition of the holiday was introduced in Congress in 1913. In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson went to Spokane to speak in a Father's Day celebration and wanted to make it official, but Congress resisted, fearing that it would become commercialized. US President Calvin Coolidge recommended in 1924 that the day be observed by the nation, but stopped short of issuing a national proclamation. Two earlier attempts to formally recognize the holiday had been defeated by Congress. In 1957, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith wrote a proposal accusing Congress of ignoring fathers for 40 years while honoring mothers, thus ``(singling) out just one of our two parents ''. In 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson issued the first presidential proclamation honoring fathers, designating the third Sunday in June as Father's Day. Six years later, the day was made a permanent national holiday when President Richard Nixon signed it into law in 1972.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Thomas Jefferson",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Jefferson (April 13 (O.S. April 2) 1743 -- July 4, 1826) was an American Founding Father who was the principal author of the Declaration of Independence and later served as the third President of the United States from 1801 to 1809. Previously, he was elected the second Vice President of the United States, serving under John Adams from 1797 to 1801. A proponent of democracy, republicanism, and individual rights motivating American colonists to break from Great Britain and form a new nation, he produced formative documents and decisions at both the state and national level. He was a land owner and farmer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_text": "Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 -- March 13, 1901) was an American politician and lawyer who served as the 23rd President of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, creating the only grandfather - grandson duo to have held the office. He was also the great - grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a founding father. Before ascending to the presidency, Harrison established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indianapolis, Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six - year term in the U.S. Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Johnny Galecki",
"paragraph_text": "Galecki made his acting debut in the 1987 CBS miniseries Murder Ordained with JoBeth Williams and future Roseanne co-star John Goodman. In 1989, Galecki portrayed Rusty Griswold in National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. In 1990, he was cast as Danny Nash, the son of Robert Urich's lead character, on the NBC comedy American Dreamer; the following season, he was a regular cast member on the ABC sitcom Billy, a spin - off from Head of the Class. He appeared in one episode of Blossom in 1991, opposite his future The Big Bang Theory co-star Mayim Bialik.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Statue of Liberty",
"paragraph_text": "In 1956, an Act of Congress officially renamed Bedloe's Island as Liberty Island, a change advocated by Bartholdi generations earlier. The act also mentioned the efforts to found an American Museum of Immigration on the island, which backers took as federal approval of the project, though the government was slow to grant funds for it. Nearby Ellis Island was made part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument by proclamation of President Lyndon Johnson in 1965. In 1972, the immigration museum, in the statue's base, was finally opened in a ceremony led by President Richard Nixon. The museum's backers never provided it with an endowment to secure its future and it closed in 1991 after the opening of an immigration museum on Ellis Island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Patrick Wayne",
"paragraph_text": "Patrick John Morrison (born July 15, 1939), better known by his stage name Patrick Wayne, is an American actor, the second son of movie star John Wayne and his first wife, Josephine Alicia Saenz. He made over 40 films, including eleven with his father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial is the final resting place of William Henry Harrison, ninth President of the United States; his wife Anna Harrison; and his son John Scott Harrison, Representative and father of the twenty-third President, Benjamin Harrison. It is located on Brower Road approximately one-half mile west of U.S. Route 50 in North Bend, Ohio.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Emile Haag",
"paragraph_text": "Dr. Emile Haag (born 24 Juli 1942) is a Luxembourgish historian, trade unionist and former principal of the Athénée de Luxembourg. Since 1987 he has been the national president of the confederation of government employees, a Luxembourgish trade union. In 1997, he was made commander of the Ordre de la couronne de chêne (awarded 1997). Between 2005 and 2015 he was also President of the chamber for government employees. On 29. Juni 2015 he was made honorary president of that chamber.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Denton Offutt",
"paragraph_text": "Denton Offutt was a 19th-century American general store operator who hired future President Abraham Lincoln for his first job as an adult in New Salem, Illinois.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Pedro Atala",
"paragraph_text": "Pedro Atala is a Honduran business owner of Camosa which is the John Deere distributor in Honduras. He is also president of CD Motagua along with his cousin Javier Atala. His father is Pedro Atala Simón which is an emblem in Motagua. Pedro Atala Simon was the president of the national soccer team, and the national team made his first classification to the World Cup in Spain 1982.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "White House",
"paragraph_text": "The modern - day White House complex includes the Executive Residence, West Wing, East Wing, the Eisenhower Executive Office Building -- the former State Department, which now houses offices for the President's staff and the Vice President -- and Blair House, a guest residence. The Executive Residence is made up of six stories -- the Ground Floor, State Floor, Second Floor, and Third Floor, as well as a two - story basement. The property is a National Heritage Site owned by the National Park Service and is part of the President's Park. In 2007, it was ranked second on the American Institute of Architects list of ``America's Favorite Architecture ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "1972 Republican National Convention",
"paragraph_text": "The 1972 National Convention of the Republican Party of the United States was held from August 21 to August 23, 1972, at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida. It nominated President Richard M. Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew for reelection. The convention was chaired by then-U.S. House Minority Leader and future Nixon successor Gerald Ford of Michigan. It was the fifth time Nixon had been nominated on the Republican ticket as either its vice-presidential (1952 and 1956) or presidential candidate (1960 and 1968). Hence, Nixon's five appearances on his party's ticket matched the major-party American standard of Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat who had been nominated for Vice President once (in 1920) and President four times (in 1932, 1936, 1940 and 1944).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "United States presidential visits to the United Kingdom and Ireland",
"paragraph_text": "Twelve United States presidents have made presidential visits to the United Kingdom and Ireland. The first visit by an incumbent president to the United Kingdom was made in December 1918 by Woodrow Wilson, and was an offshoot of American diplomatic interactions with the Principal Allied Powers at the conclusion of World War I prior to the Paris Peace Conference. The first visit by an incumbent president to Ireland was made in June 1963 by John F. Kennedy. To date, 33 visits have been made to the United Kingdom and nine to Ireland.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What offspring was produced by the american president who made a national name?
|
[
{
"id": 77824,
"question": "who was the future american president who made a national name",
"answer": "Benjamin Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
},
{
"id": 390787,
"question": "#1 >> father",
"answer": "John Scott Harrison",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
John Scott Harrison
|
[] | true |
2hop__786533_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Ain't No Sunshine",
"paragraph_text": "``Ai n't No Sunshine ''Single by Bill Withers from the album Just As I Am B - side`` Harlem'' Released 1971 Format 7 ''record Genre Soul R&B blues Length 2: 03 Label Sussex Songwriter (s) Bill Withers Producer (s) Booker T. Jones Bill Withers singles chronology ``Ai n't No Sunshine'' (1971)`` Grandma's Hands ''(1971)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Blue Heron, Kentucky",
"paragraph_text": "Blue Heron, also known as Mine 18, is a former coal mining community or coal town on the banks of the Big South Fork of the Cumberland River in McCreary County, Kentucky, United States, that has been recreated and is maintained as an interpretive history area in the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "List of Bob's Burgers characters",
"paragraph_text": "Gayle (voiced by Megan Mullally) -- Linda's neurotic artist sister, the aunt of Tina, Gene and Louise and the sister - in - law of Bob. Bob dislikes her, much to Linda's consternation. She is desperately lonely and once fell in love with Bob because, Linda explains, she always wants what Linda has. However, men often take an interest in her, including Dr. Yap, Mort, Mr. Frond and Mr. Fischoeder. She loves cats and may suffer from some form of factitious disorder, as she often fakes injuries. Al (voiced by Sam Seder) -- Linda's father, father - in - law of Bob, and the maternal grandfather of Tina, Gene, and Louise. He rarely speaks, is hard of hearing, and wears a hearing aid. He accompanies Gloria everywhere. He has a fetish for the sound of popping balloons. Gloria (voiced by Renée Taylor) -- Linda's mother, mother - in - law of Bob, and maternal grandmother of Tina, Gene and Louise. Bob does n't like her very much and he always tries to hide from her when she and Al come over to visit. Big Bob (voiced by H. Jon Benjamin in ``Bob Fires the Kids, ''Bill Hader in`` Father of the Bob'') -- Robert ``Big Bob ''Belcher, Sr. is Bob's father, the father - in - law of Linda, and the paternal grandfather of Tina, Gene and Louise. Like his son, Big Bob is a restaurateur who owns his own business called`` Big Bob's Diner.'' He's shown to be a tough loving father towards his own son, as shown in flashbacks. Since his pre-teens, Big Bob has been very controlling of Bob and has put him to work most of the time. He enjoys line - dancing, which he practices at the bar next to his diner.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Shake, Rattle and Roll",
"paragraph_text": "``Shake, Rattle and Roll ''is a twelve bar blues - form song, written in 1954 by Jesse Stone under his assumed songwriting name, Charles E. Calhoun. It was originally recorded by Big Joe Turner and most successfully by Bill Haley & His Comets. The song as sung by Big Joe Turner is ranked # 127 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Sweet Lou (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Sweet Lou is an album by jazz saxophonist Lou Donaldson, his final recorded for the Blue Note label, featuring Donaldson with a big band arranged and conducted by Horace Ott.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "You Really Got Me",
"paragraph_text": "``You Really Got Me ''is a song written by Ray Davies for English rock band the Kinks. The song, originally performed in a more blues - oriented style, was inspired by artists such as Lead Belly and Big Bill Broonzy. Two versions of the song were recorded, with the second performance being used for the final single. Although it was rumoured that future Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page had performed the song's guitar solo, the myth has since been proven false.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Rosetta Howard",
"paragraph_text": "She continued to perform in Chicago in the 1940s, and in 1947 featured on recordings with the Big Three, including Willie Dixon and Big Bill Broonzy. The records were unsuccessful, and she did not record again. In the 1950s she sang with Thomas A. Dorsey at the Pilgrim Baptist Church in Chicago.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Black Books",
"paragraph_text": "Black Books is a British sitcom created by Dylan Moran and Graham Linehan, and written by Moran, Kevin Cecil, Andy Riley, Linehan and Arthur Mathews. It was broadcast on Channel 4, running for three series from 2000 to 2004. Starring Moran, Bill Bailey and Tamsin Greig, the series is set in the eponymous London bookshop and follows the lives of its owner Bernard Black (Moran), his assistant Manny Bianco (Bailey) and their friend Fran Katzenjammer (Greig). The series was produced by Big Talk Productions, in association with Channel 4.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Flag of Nebraska",
"paragraph_text": "The flag of the state of Nebraska is a blue rectangular cloth charged with the Nebraskan state seal. The current design was commissioned in 1925, when a bill was passed that the flag would have the Nebraska state seal in gold and silver on a field of national blue.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Big Ten Conference",
"paragraph_text": "Big Ten universities are also members of the Big Ten Academic Alliance, an academic consortium. In 2014 -- 2015, members generated more than $10 billion in research expenditures. Despite the conference's name, the Big Ten has grown to fourteen members, with the following universities accepting invitations to join: Pennsylvania State University in 1990, the University of Nebraska -- Lincoln in 2011, and both the University of Maryland and Rutgers University in 2014. Johns Hopkins University was invited in 2012 to join the Big Ten as an associate member participating in men's lacrosse only. In 2015, it was also accepted as an associate member in women's lacrosse. Notre Dame has joined the Big Ten on July 1st, 2017 as an associate member in men's ice hockey.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Confederate Monument of Morganfield",
"paragraph_text": "The Confederate Monument of Morganfield, Kentucky is a monument to Confederate soldiers from surrounding Union County, Kentucky, of which Morganfield is the county seat. It is in the northernmost corner of the City Cemetery/Odd Fellows Cemetery just outside downtown Morganfield. During the War \"Union\" County was mostly a Confederate-sympathizing county. The county produced 657 soldiers for the Confederacy, but only 187 for the Union, although 131 African-Americans joined the Union forces in 1864. In July 1862, Union forces at Caseyville, Kentucky threatened to arrest everyone in the town of treason, eventually freeing all but nineteen citizens. A skirmish in Morganfield on September 1, 1862, resulted in a Confederate victory.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Big Bill Morganfield",
"paragraph_text": "William \"Big Bill\" Morganfield (born June 19, 1956) is an American blues singer and guitarist, who is the son of Muddy Waters.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "In Vanda's Room",
"paragraph_text": "In Vanda's Room (Portuguese: No Quarto da Vanda, 2000) is a docufiction (a subgenre of cinéma vérité) film by Portuguese director Pedro Costa.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Downtown Blues",
"paragraph_text": "The Grammy-nominated Downtown Blues is Steve Allee's second album. This album contains music from the John Von Ohlen, Chuck Carter and Steve Allee Big Bands.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Introducing Duke Pearson's Big Band",
"paragraph_text": "Introducing Duke Pearson's Big Band is the eleventh album by American pianist and arranger Duke Pearson featuring big band performances recorded in 1967 and released on the Blue Note label. The album was rereleased with six bonus tracks from \"Now Hear This\", Pearson's 1968 big band recording, on a single CD in 1998.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Bill Bishop (author)",
"paragraph_text": "Bill Bishop is an American author, journalist and social commentator. He co-wrote a book with retired college professor Robert Cushing entitled \"The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America is Tearing Us Apart\". His ideas have influenced the speeches of former U.S. President Bill Clinton.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Thomas A. Dorsey",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Andrew Dorsey (July 1, 1899 -- January 23, 1993) was known as ``the father of black gospel music ''and was at one time so closely associated with the field that songs written in the new style were sometimes known as`` dorseys''. Earlier in his life he was a leading blues pianist known as Georgia Tom.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Big Bill Morganfield's father is associated with which subgenre of the blues?
|
[
{
"id": 786533,
"question": "Big Bill Morganfield >> father",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__674688_21032
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Glass Geishas",
"paragraph_text": "Glass Geishas is a 2012 thriller novel by English author Susanna Quinn and was released on 1 June 2012 by Hodder & Stoughton. The book primarily focuses on a young English girl that becomes part of the Japanese hostess and sex industry. Of the novel, Quinn stated that she used her experiences as a hostess in Japan as inspiration for the book.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "The Door in the Wall (novel)",
"paragraph_text": "The story, illustrated by the author, is set in England during the Middle Ages, as the Black Death (bubonic plague) is sweeping across the country. Young Robin is sent away to become a knight like his father, but his dreams are endangered when he loses the use of his legs. A doctor reassures Robin that the weakness in his legs is not caused by the plague and the doctor is supposed to come and help him but does not. His parents are away, serving the king and queen during war, and the servants abandon the house, fearing the plague. Robin is saved by Brother Luke, a friar, who finds him and takes him to a monastery and cares for him.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Thakin Tin Mya",
"paragraph_text": "Tin Mya was born on 9 September 1924 in Danuphyu, Ayeyarwady Division, British Burma to parents Pho Nyein and Ohn Pwint. He joined the anti-colonial movement Dobama Asiayone. In 1945, he served as political commissar in the Seventh Military Region of the Burma National Army. In the same year he was included in the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Burma as an alternate member.When the Communist Party was divided in early 1946, he joined Thakin Soe's break-away group (the Red Flag Communist Party).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Freddy vs. Jason",
"paragraph_text": "In the film, Freddy (Robert Englund) has grown incapable of haunting people's dreams as the citizens of Springwood, Ohio, have mostly forgotten about him following his death and subsequent imprisonment in Hell for his sins. To regain his power and freedom, Freddy resurrects Jason (Ken Kirzinger) and manipulates him into traveling to Springwood to cause panic and fear, leading to rumors that Freddy has returned. However, while Jason succeeds in causing enough fear for Freddy to haunt the town again, Jason angers Freddy by depriving him of potential victims. This ultimately sends the two undead monsters into a violent conflict.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Freedom from Fear (Aung San Suu Kyi)",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom from Fear is both an essay by Aung San Suu Kyi, and a book of the same name comprising a collection of her essays.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Emergency management",
"paragraph_text": "In the United States, all disasters are initially local, with local authorities, with usually a police, fire, or EMS agency, taking charge. Many local municipalities may also have a separate dedicated office of emergency management (OEM), along with personnel and equipment. If the event becomes overwhelming to the local government, state emergency management (the primary government structure of the United States) becomes the controlling emergency management agency. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), is the lead federal agency for emergency management. The United States and its territories are broken down into ten regions for FEMA's emergency management purposes. FEMA supports, but does not override, state authority.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Seven gifts of the Holy Spirit",
"paragraph_text": "The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit is an enumeration of seven spiritual gifts originating with patristic authors, later elaborated by five intellectual virtues and four other groups of ethical characteristics. They are: wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord (wonder).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Barbas (Charmed)",
"paragraph_text": "Barbas, the Demon of Fear, is a fictional character cast as a major foe (an upper level demon in the Charmed universe) from the WB Television Network television series Charmed, who had the ability to sense the greatest fears of his opponent (s) and use it against them. He was played by Billy Drago and repeatedly plotted against the Charmed Ones -- the three sisters who happen to become powerful good witches.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Spain in Flames",
"paragraph_text": "Spain in Flames is a 1937 compilation film made by Helen van Dongen during the Spanish Civil War. Hal Erickson has written that the film \"... is remarkable in its willingness to offer both sides of the conflict -- though its sympathies are firmly with the Loyalists.\" The film consists of two parts. The first, \"The Fight for Freedom\", was based on film footage from a Spanish government documentary \"Spain and the Fight for Freedom\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Freedom Pass",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom Passes have two main versions, an Older Person's Freedom Pass (OPFP) and a Disabled Person's Freedom Pass (DPFP); the former has a blue right hand edge and the latter a yellow one to enable transport operators to quickly identify which concessions are applicable. Greater London residents who turned 60 before 6 April 2010 were eligible for an OPFP but from then on the qualifying age increases in a graduated way, until it becomes 66 by 6 October 2020, although the 2011 government spending review proposes speeding the process to be fully implemented by 2018. London residents over 60 can get a 60 + oystercard on payment of £20. This has all the benefits of the Freedom Pass, but only within Greater London. Unlike the Freedom Pass, it is not valid on buses outside Greater London.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "World War I",
"paragraph_text": "The term ``First World War ''was first used in September 1914 by German biologist and philosopher Ernst Haeckel, who claimed that`` there is no doubt that the course and character of the feared 'European War'... will become the first world war in the full sense of the word,'' citing a wire service report in The Indianapolis Star on 20 September 1914.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Al Neuharth",
"paragraph_text": "Allen Harold \"Al\" Neuharth (March 22, 1924 – April 19, 2013) was an American businessman, author, and columnist born in Eureka, South Dakota. He was the founder of \"USA Today\", The Freedom Forum, and its Newseum.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "Sanctions imposed by the United States and European countries against the former military government, coupled with boycotts and other direct pressure on corporations by supporters of the democracy movement, have resulted in the withdrawal from the country of most US and many European companies. On 13 April 2012 British Prime Minister David Cameron called for the economic sanctions on Myanmar to be suspended in the wake of the pro-democracy party gaining 43 seats out of a possible 45 in the 2012 by-elections with the party leader, Aung San Suu Kyi becoming a member of the Burmese parliament.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Alaungpaya",
"paragraph_text": "Alaungpaya (, ; also spelled Alaunghpaya or Alaung Phra; 11 May 1760) was the founder of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). By the time of his death from illness during his campaign in Siam, this former chief of a small village in Upper Burma had unified Burma, subdued Manipur, conquered Lan Na and driven out the French and the British who had given help to the Mon Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom. He also founded Yangon in 1755.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "The Five Heartbeats",
"paragraph_text": "Tico Wells as Anthony ``Choirboy ''Stone: Stone is given the nickname`` Choirboy'' (much to his chagrin) for his past as a choir boy in his father's church. Similar to Eddie, Stone's father does not support his decision to become a music artist fearing rock and jazz are ``the devil's music. ''He becomes more of a womanizer as the group becomes more successful, but later goes back to being a part of his father's ministry after the group disbands.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Dark Hero",
"paragraph_text": "Dark Hero is a 1946 thriller by Peter Cheyney featuring a Chicago gangster involved in the gang wars of the 1930s, who during the Second World War finds himself in Nazi-occupied Norway and becomes a hero of the anti-Nazi resistance - by applying essentially the same skills which had made him a successful and feared gangster.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung",
"paragraph_text": "Jalan Tak Ada Ujung () is an Indonesian novel by Mochtar Lubis first published by Balai Pustaka in 1952. It takes place during the Indonesian war of independence and tells the story of Guru Isa, a schoolteacher who assists the guerrilla freedom fighters yet lives in fear.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Lam Bun",
"paragraph_text": "Lam Bun (25 September 1929 – 25 August 1967) was a radio commentator at Commercial Radio Hong Kong who was fiercely critical of leftists. He was assassinated during the Hong Kong 1967 riots, becoming an icon of freedom of speech in Hong Kong.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Fear of the dark",
"paragraph_text": "Fear of the dark is a common fear or phobia among children and, to a varying degree, adults. A fear of the dark does not always concern darkness itself; it can also be a fear of possible or imagined dangers concealed by darkness. Some degree of fear of the dark is natural, especially as a phase of child development. Most observers report that fear of the dark seldom appears before the age of 2 years. When fear of the dark reaches a degree that is severe enough to be considered pathological, it is sometimes called scotophobia (from σκότος – \"darkness\"), or lygophobia (from λυγή – \"twilight\").",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Yin Yin Nwe",
"paragraph_text": "Yin Yin Nwe's father is Sao Saimong Mangrai, a member of the princely Kengtung State and a highly regarded scholar on Shan State and the Head of the Shan State Education Department during the post-Independence years. Yin Yin Nwe's mother is Mi Mi Khaing, also a scholar and a former Principal of Kambawza School. Her father, Sao Saimong, had an administrative career after the Shan principalities agreed to become part of the Union of Burma, and was Chief Education Officer for Shan and Kayah States. Her mother was the author of \"Burmese Family\", a book on Burmese culture and was one of the first women to write in English about Burmese culture and traditions. Yin Yin Nwe is of Mon ancestry on her mother's side and of Tai ancestry on her father's side, given that the state of Kengtung originated in the 13th century, when the Chiang Mai dynasty founded a new kingdom which was named Lanna, sending a prince to Kengtung to establish a separate kingdom.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What did the author of Freedom from Fear become a part of in Burma?
|
[
{
"id": 674688,
"question": "Freedom from Fear >> author",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 21032,
"question": "What did #1 become a part of in Burma ?",
"answer": "the Burmese parliament",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
the Burmese parliament
|
[] | true |
2hop__143554_386169
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Raydiation",
"paragraph_text": "Raydiation is the third studio album by American recording artist Ray J. It was released by Sanctuary Records in association with the singer's own label, Knockout Entertainment, on September 20, 2005 in the United States. Ray J's first effort in four years, the album was primarily produced by Detail, featuring additional production from Rodney \"Darkchild\" Jerkins, R. Kelly, Ric Rude, and Timbaland. Rapper Fat Joe, singer Mýa and Ray J's sister, singer Brandy, appear a guest vocalist on the album.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "The Villain in Black",
"paragraph_text": "The Villain in Black is the second album by rapper MC Ren, released April 9, 1996, on Ruthless Records and distributed by Relativity Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Ruthless for Life",
"paragraph_text": "Ruthless for Life is the third album by rapper MC Ren, released June 30, 1998, on Ruthless Records and distributed by Epic Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The DeAndre Way",
"paragraph_text": "The DeAndre Way is the third studio album by American rapper Soulja Boy. It was released on November 30, 2010, by his label Stacks on Deck Entertainment, Collipark Music and Interscope Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Blink Blink",
"paragraph_text": "\"Blink Blink\" is a single by American rapper, LL Cool J and German rapper, Spax from the Spax's album, Engel & Ratten. \"Blink Blink\" was released in America on January 15, 2002 for Def Jam Recordings and November 12, 2001 for Def Jam's German label and was written and produced by LL Cool J and Spax, with remixes made by DJ Brisk Fingaz and DJ Friction. Though the single was available in America, the album was exclusive to the people of Germany.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Revival (Eminem album)",
"paragraph_text": "Revival is the ninth studio album by American rapper Eminem. The album was released on December 15, 2017, through Aftermath Entertainment, Shady Records and Interscope Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Straight Outta Compton",
"paragraph_text": "Straight Outta Compton is the debut studio album by American hip hop group N.W.A, released August 8, 1988, on group member Eazy-E's record label Ruthless Records. Production for the album was handled by Dr. Dre with DJ Yella. The album has been viewed as the pioneering record of gangsta rap with its pervasive graphic profanity and violent lyrics. This was the group's only release with rapper Ice Cube prior to his 1989 departure. It has been considered to be one of the greatest and most influential hip-hop records by music writers and has had an enormous impact on the evolution of hip hop.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Good Kid, M.A.A.D City",
"paragraph_text": "Good Kid, M.A.A.D City (stylized as good kid, m.A.A.d city) is the second studio album by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. The album was released on October 22, 2012, by Top Dawg Entertainment, Aftermath Entertainment, and was distributed by Interscope Records. The album serves as Lamar's major label debut, after his signing to Aftermath and Interscope in early 2012. It was preceded by the release of Kendrick's debut studio album Section. 80 (2011), released exclusively through the iTunes Store as an independent album.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Part III",
"paragraph_text": "Part III is the third studio album by American R&B group 112 released on March 20, 2001 by Bad Boy Records. Unlike the previous releases, the album is described as having edgier, techno-flavored jams, resulting in a more modern and forward-sounding effort. The album was the group's last album with the label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Bad to the Bone",
"paragraph_text": "``Bad to the Bone ''Single by George Thorogood and the Destroyers from the album Bad to the Bone B - side`` No Particular Place to Go'' Released September 17, 1982 Format 7 ''Recorded 1981 Genre Blues rock, hard rock Length 4: 52 Label EMI America Songwriter (s) George Thorogood Producer (s) The Delaware Destroyers George Thorogood and the Destroyers singles chronology ``Nobody but Me'' (1982)`` Bad to the Bone ''(1982) ``Nobody but Me'' (1982)`` Bad to the Bone ''(1982)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Sleep Dank",
"paragraph_text": "Sleep Dank, also known as Sleep Da Danker or Sleepdank, is an American rapper signed to the late Mac Dre's label Thizz Entertainment.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Long Gone Daddy",
"paragraph_text": "Long Gone Daddy is a compilation album by Hank Williams III, released on April 17, 2012, through Williams' former record label Curb Records. The album is a collection of six cover songs as well as outtakes from his first two solo albums, \"Risin' Outlaw\" and \"Lovesick, Broke and Driftin'\". It is Williams’ second release from Curb after his departure from the label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Bad Boy Records",
"paragraph_text": "After his climb from a non-paying internship to becoming an A&R executive at Uptown, Sean ``Puff Daddy ''Combs was fired in 1993 by Andre Harrell. Combs soon founded Bad Boy Records in 1993. The label's first release was`` Flava In Ya Ear'' by Craig Mack, followed quickly by Mack's debut album, Project: Funk Da World in 1994. On the heels of these releases came ``Juicy ''and Ready to Die, the lead single and debut album from The Notorious B.I.G. (a.k.a. Biggie Smalls), released the same year. While Mack's album went Gold, Ready to Die achieved multi-platinum success. Dominating the charts in 1995, B.I.G. became one of the genre's biggest names of the day and Bad Boy's premier star. Also in 1995, the label continued its success with platinum releases by Total and Faith Evans. Bad Boy, meanwhile, staffed a bevy of in - house writer / producers, including: Easy Mo Bee, Chucky Thompson and D Dot -- all of whom were instrumental in producing many of Bad Boy's most noted releases during this time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "The Streets Made Me",
"paragraph_text": "The Streets Made Me is the second studio album by American rapper Soulja Slim, released on No Limit Records. The album wasn't as successful as his previous album.It was his last release with No Limit Records. Production from the album is from Donald XL Robertson. It features guest appearances from Slay Sean & Traci among others., \" Soulja Slim soon left to start his own label, Cut Throat Comitty.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Rapper Gone Bad",
"paragraph_text": "Rapper Gone Bad is the third album by Mac Dre, released September 28, 1999, on Romp Records/Swerve Music in conjunction with Sumo Productions (Original 1999 Pressing). Guest appearances include Warren G, Kokane, The WhoRidas, Little Bruce, B-Legit and others.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Ill Na Na",
"paragraph_text": "Ill Na Na is the debut studio album by American rapper Foxy Brown, released on November 19, 1996 by Def Jam Recordings. It was reissued on September 29, 1997 in the United Kingdom with an addition of the song \"Big Bad Mamma\". Brown began working on the album after being discovered by the production team Trackmasters and appearing on a number of singles by other artists, such as LL Cool J, Case and Jay Z. The immediate success of the singles led to a bidding war at the beginning of 1996, and in March, Def Jam Recordings won and signed the then 17-year-old rapper to the label. Mostly produced by Trackmasters, \"Ill Na Na\" features guest appearances from Blackstreet, Havoc, Method Man, Kid Capri and Jay Z. Lyrically, the album mainly focuses on themes of fashion, sex and mafia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Renincarnated",
"paragraph_text": "Renincarnated is the fourth album by rapper MC Ren, released October 31, 2009, on his own record label Villain Entertainment.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Bad Time Zoo",
"paragraph_text": "Bad Time Zoo is the second studio album by American rapper Sims, a member of Minneapolis indie hip hop collective Doomtree. It was released on Doomtree Records on February 15, 2011. The album is entirely produced by Lazerbeak.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Freedom of Speech (Speech Debelle album)",
"paragraph_text": "Freedom of Speech is the second album by British rapper Speech Debelle. The record was recorded in London, United Kingdom and produced entirely by Kwes. It was her second album release on Big Dada Recordings.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Return of the 1 Hit Wonder",
"paragraph_text": "Return of the 1 Hit Wonder is the fourth album by rapper, Young MC. The album was released in 1997 for Overall Records and was Young MC's first release on an independent record label. While the album did not chart on any album charts, it did have two charting singles; \"Madame Buttafly\" reached No. 25 on the Hot Rap Songs and \"On & Poppin\" reached No. 23. The title refers to Young MC's only Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hit, \"Bust A Move\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the record label of the artist who released the Rapper Gone Bad album?
|
[
{
"id": 143554,
"question": "Who released Rapper Gone Bad album?",
"answer": "Mac Dre",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 386169,
"question": "#1 >> record label",
"answer": "Thizz Entertainment",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
Thizz Entertainment
|
[] | true |
2hop__69238_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)",
"paragraph_text": "\"I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)\" is a song by American rapper Jay-Z, released as the first single from his 2000 album \"\". It is produced by The Neptunes and features a chorus sung by Neptunes member Pharrell Williams, as well as Shay Haley and Omillio Sparks who all remain uncredited. The video for the song features cameos from rappers Lil' Kim, Lil' Cease, Damon Dash, Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek, Jermaine Dupri and actor John Witherspoon. A music video directed by David Meyers was made for \"I Just Wanna Love U.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Busting Loose (album)",
"paragraph_text": "Busting Loose is the sixth album by soul singer, Peggy Scott-Adams. The album peaked at #12 on the Top Blues Albums chart. Includes the hit singles, \"If You Wanna Hear Me Holler, Lick Me Up Some Dollars\" and \"See You Next Weekend\" which was co-written by Scott-Adams.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "I Don't Wanna Cry (Larry Gatlin song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"I Don't Wanna Cry\" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Larry Gatlin. It was released in May 1977 as the second single from the album \"Love Is Just a Game\". The song reached number 3 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "I Just Want to Make Love to You",
"paragraph_text": "``I Just Want to Make Love to You ''is a 1954 blues song written by Willie Dixon, first recorded by Muddy Waters, and released as`` Just Make Love to Me'' (Chess 1571). The song reached number four on Billboard magazine's R&B Best Sellers chart.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Make You Feel My Love",
"paragraph_text": "``Make You Feel My Love ''Single by Bob Dylan from the album Time Out of Mind Released September 30, 1997 Recorded January 1997 Genre Blues rock Length 3: 32 Label Columbia Songwriter (s) Bob Dylan Producer (s) Daniel Lanois",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "You Make Me Wanna...",
"paragraph_text": "\"You Make Me Wanna...\" is a song by American recording artist Usher. It was released by LaFace Records and Arista Records as the lead single from Usher's second studio album, \"My Way\" on August 12, 1997. \"You Make Me Wanna...\" was written by Usher along with Jermaine Dupri and Manuel Seal, who both produced the tune. An R&B, soul and pop ballad in C minor, it makes use of acoustic guitar, hi-hat and bell instrumentation. The song focuses on a love triangle relationship, with the protagonist wishing to leave his girlfriend for his erstwhile best friend, with a hook in which Usher states, \"You make me wanna leave the one I'm with and start a new relationship with you\". The record won a \"Billboard\" Music Award, a Soul Train Music Award, and a WQHT Hip Hop Award, and was nominated for a Grammy Award.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)",
"paragraph_text": "``I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) ''is the first single from Whitney Houston's second studio album Whitney. It was produced by Narada Michael Walden, and written by George Merrill and Shannon Rubicam of the band Boy Meets Girl, who had previously written the number - one Whitney Houston hit`` How Will I Know.'' The original arrangement was written for her grandnephew Mau Rosillo when he was 9 years old, as he was a well renowned dancer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "You Wanna Be There But You Don't Wanna Travel",
"paragraph_text": "You Wanna Be There But You Don't Wanna Travel is the fourth album by Dave Graney 'n' the Coral Snakes (also seen as Dave Graney with the Coral Snakes). With Graney on vocals, the Coral Snakes line-up included his wife Clare Moore on drums and percussion; Robin Casinader on keyboards, violin and mandolin; Rob Hayward on lead guitar; and early member Gordy Blair returned on bass guitar. It was released in June 1994 on Mercury Records. The album peaked at No. 10 on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Album Charts. It was co-produced by the band with Tony Cohen.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Melody of Love (Wanna Be Loved)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Melody of Love (Wanna Be Loved)\" is a 1994 song recorded by American singer Donna Summer as a new track for her 1994 hits compilation \"\". \"Melody of Love\" (Wanna Be Loved) just missed the Top 20 in the United Kingdom (#21). Released as the first single from the complication, the song was formed with several remixes. It was her tenth number 1 hit on the dance charts in the United States. In Australia, the single peaked at #79 in December 1994.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Ivan Hrvatska",
"paragraph_text": "Ivan Hrvatska is a Croatian singer living in Canada, known for his songs about \"making love\" to national holidays of Canada and the United States. He first gained attention in 2001 with the song \"First I Make Love to You, Then I Make Love to Christmas\". Other tracks include \"Making Love to the Grey Cup\" and \"Making Love to Vancouver Canucks\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Blondie (comic strip)",
"paragraph_text": "Originally designed to follow in the footsteps of Young's earlier ``pretty girl ''creations Beautiful Bab and Dumb Dora, Blondie focused on the adventures of Blondie Boopadoop -- a carefree flapper girl who spent her days in dance halls along with her boyfriend Dagwood Bumstead, heir to a railroad fortune. The name`` Boopadoop'' derives from the scat singing lyric that was popularized by Helen Kane's 1928 song ``I Wanna Be Loved by You. ''",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Xtra-Acme USA",
"paragraph_text": "Xtra-Acme USA is the US follow up to the album \"Acme\" by the group Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. It is a collection of B-sides and remixes of songs originally appearing on the main album. This release differs slightly from the UK version called \"Acme Plus\". Two tracks from Xtra-Acme USA are not included in \"Acme Plus\" (\"Lovin' Machine (Automator)\" and \"Calvin (Zebra Ranch)\"), however the same is true for the \"Acme Plus\" album. Two of the tracks contained on it (\"Right Place, Wrong Time\" and \"I Wanna Make it All Right (Zebra Ranch)\") are not on the track listing of \"Xtra-Acme USA\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Daddy Sang Bass",
"paragraph_text": "\"Daddy Sang Bass\" is a 1968 single written by Carl Perkins, with lines from the chorus of \"Will the Circle Be Unbroken?\" and recorded by Johnny Cash. \"Daddy Sang Bass\" was Johnny Cash's sixty-first release on the country chart. The song went to No. 1 on the \"Billboard\" country chart for 6 weeks and spent a total of 19 weeks on the chart. The single reached No. 56 on the \"Cashbox\" pop singles chart in 1969. \"Daddy Sang Bass\" was also released on the Columbia Records Hall of Fame Series as a 45, #13-33153, b/w \"Folsom Prison Blues\" (live version). The record was nominated in the CMA awards category of Single of the Year by the Country Music Association (CMA) in 1969.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "I Wanna Be A Model",
"paragraph_text": "I Wanna Be A Model (我要做 Model) is the Malaysian version of Make Me A Supermodel. The show is open to all Malaysians who can speak fluent Mandarin.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Love & Hip Hop: New York",
"paragraph_text": "Love & Hip Hop: New York (originally known as simply Love & Hip Hop) is the original installment of the Love & Hip Hop reality television franchise on VH1. The series premiered on March 6, 2011, and chronicles the lives of several people in New York City (and nearby areas, including New Jersey, and Yonkers), involved with hip hop music. The show features appearances from notable figures associated with East Coast hip hop. Its success has produced the spin - offs Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta, Chrissy & Mr. Jones, Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood, K. Michelle: My Life, Stevie J & Joseline: Go Hollywood, Leave It To Stevie and Love & Hip Hop: Miami.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "England Keep My Bones",
"paragraph_text": "England Keep My Bones is the fourth studio album by London-based singer-songwriter Frank Turner, released on 6 June 2011, on Xtra Mile in the United Kingdom, and on 7 June 2011, on Epitaph Records worldwide. Preceded by the single, \"Peggy Sang the Blues\", the album was produced and mixed by Tristan Ivemy, who had previously mixed \"Love, Ire and Song\", \"Rock & Roll\" and \"Campfire Punkrock\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)",
"paragraph_text": "``I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) ''Single by Whitney Houston from the album Whitney B - side`` Moment of Truth'' Released May 2, 1987 (1987 - 05 - 02) Format CD single cassette single 7 ''single 12'' single Recorded October 1986 Genre Dance - pop R&B Length 4: 50 (album version) 8: 33 (12 ''remix) Label Arista Songwriter (s) George Merrill Shannon Rubicam Producer (s) Narada Michael Walden Whitney Houston singles chronology ``The Greatest Love of All'' (1986)`` I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me) ''(1987) ``Did n't We Almost Have It All'' (1987)`` The Greatest Love of All ''(1986) ``I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)'' (1987)`` Did n't We Almost Have It All ''(1987) Whitney track listing ``I Wanna Dance With Somebody'' (1)`` Just the Lonely Talking Again ''(2) Music video ``I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)'' on YouTube",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What subgenre of the blues is the singer of I Just Wanna Make Love to You associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 69238,
"question": "who originally sang i just wanna make love to you",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__67793_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "The Wonder of You",
"paragraph_text": "Elvis Presley recorded a live version of ``The Wonder of You ''in Las Vegas, Nevada in February 1970. The song was released as a single on April 20, 1970, backed by the song`` Mama Liked the Roses''. In the United States, both songs charted at # 9 together in the spring of 1970. ``The Wonder of You ''was one of his most successful records in the UK ever, topping the UK Singles Chart for six weeks in the summer of that year. It is his fifth biggest seller in the UK to date, with sales of 891,000. It also stayed at number one in the Irish Charts for three weeks that same year. This was the 59th Top 40 hit of his career. Presley's version also reached number 37 on the US Country Singles chart, and number one on the easy listening chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Jackie Chan",
"paragraph_text": "Chan had vocal lessons whilst at the Peking Opera School in his childhood. He began producing records professionally in the 1980s and has gone on to become a successful singer in Hong Kong and Asia. He has released 20 albums since 1984 and has performed vocals in Cantonese, Mandarin, Japanese, Taiwanese and English. He often sings the theme songs of his films, which play over the closing credits. Chan's first musical recording was \"Kung Fu Fighting Man\", the theme song played over the closing credits of The Young Master (1980). At least 10 of these recordings have been released on soundtrack albums for the films. His Cantonese song Story of a Hero (英雄故事) (theme song of Police Story) was selected by the Royal Hong Kong Police and incorporated into their recruitment advertisement in 1994.Chan voiced the character of Shang in the Chinese release of the Walt Disney animated feature, Mulan (1998). He also performed the song \"I'll Make a Man Out of You\", for the film's soundtrack. For the US release, the speaking voice was performed by B.D. Wong and the singing voice was done by Donny Osmond.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Do You Hear What I Hear?",
"paragraph_text": "``Do You Hear What I Hear? ''was released shortly after Thanksgiving in 1962. The song was originally recorded for Mercury Records by the Harry Simeone Chorale, a group which had also popularized`` The Little Drummer Boy''; and it was released as part of the album ``The Wonderful Songs Of Christmas With The Harry Simeone Chorale ''. As a 45 rpm single, it went on to sell more than a quarter - million copies during the 1962 Christmas holiday season.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Go the Distance",
"paragraph_text": "``Go the Distance ''is a song from Disney's 1997 animated feature film, Hercules. It was written by composer Alan Menken and lyricist David Zippel, and originally recorded by American actor Roger Bart in his film role as the singing voice of Hercules. American singer - songwriter Michael Bolton recorded a pop version of the song for the film's end credits. In the Spanish version, the song is performed by Hercules voicer Ricky Martin, both in the movie and in the credits; this version is included on Martin's album Vuelve. Both the song and its reprise featured in a stage production of Hercules, performed upon the Disney Wonder during 2007 / 2008.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Little Boy Sad",
"paragraph_text": "\"Little Boy Sad\" is a song written by Wayne Walker and performed by Johnny Burnette. The song reached #12 on the UK Singles Chart and #17 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 in 1961. The song appeared on his 1961 album, \"Johnny Burnette Sings\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Robin Ward (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "Jackie Ward (born Jacqueline McDonnell, 1941), better known as Robin Ward, is an American singer, regarded as a ``one - hit wonder ''of 1963 million - selling song`` Wonderful Summer''. However, using her real name she was highly accomplished and successful singing in groups. Ward's voice is heard in U.S. television series, motion pictures, advertisements, and pop records. She is one of the real singers of the hits attributed to The Partridge Family.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Wonder (Hillsong United album)",
"paragraph_text": "The band had several recording sessions for Wonder at The Record Plant in Los Angeles. Lead vocalist Joel Houston felt that the album's title and themes reflected returning wonder to both faith and worship, saying, ``This is the challenge, and this is what worship -- if worship can be summed up as an expression of art and music and story -- is ultimately designed to do. To elevate the conversation, re-awaken the soul to something other, and lift our eyes to the wonder of a superlative truth. ''`` Splinters and Stones'' was described as having ``striking vocal modification and pulsing bass samplings ''while containing personal lyrics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Why Me (Kris Kristofferson song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Why Me ''Single by Kris Kristofferson from the album Jesus Was a Capricorn B - side`` Help Me'' Released April 1973 Format 7 ''Recorded July 8, 1972 Genre Country gospel Length 3: 26 Label Monument Records 31909 Songwriter (s) Kris Kristofferson Producer (s) Fred Foster Kris Kristofferson singles chronology ``Jesse Younger'' (1972)`` Why Me ''(1973) ``A Song I'd Like to Sing'' (1973)`` Jesse Younger ''(1972) ``Why Me'' (1973)`` A Song I'd Like to Sing ''(1973)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Another Suitcase in Another Hall",
"paragraph_text": "``Another Suitcase in Another Hall ''is a song recorded by Scottish singer Barbara Dickson, for the 1976 concept album, Evita, the basis of the musical of the same name. The musical was based on the life of Argentinian leader Eva Perón. Written by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber, the song is presented during a sequence where Eva throws out her husband's mistress on the streets. The latter sings the track, wondering about her future and coming to the conclusion that she would be fine. Dickson was enlisted by the songwriters to record the track after hearing her previous work.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Unchained Melody",
"paragraph_text": "``Unchained Melody ''is a 1955 song with music by Alex North and lyrics by Hy Zaret. North used the music as a theme for the little - known prison film Unchained (1955), hence the song title. Todd Duncan sang the vocals for the film soundtrack. It has since become a standard and one of the most often recorded songs of the 20th century, most notably by the Righteous Brothers. According to the song's publishing administrator, over 1,500 recordings of`` Unchained Melody'' have been made by more than 670 artists, in multiple languages.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Just a Friend",
"paragraph_text": "The song interpolates the 1968 song ``You Got What I Need ''recorded by Freddie Scott, whose basic chord and melody provided the base for the song's chorus and made it famous. Due to the widespread popularity of the song along with its acclaim and its influence on pop culture (and Markie's failure to have another charting Hot 100 song), Biz was classified by VH1 as a one - hit wonder, and`` Just a Friend'' was ranked 81st on VH1's 100 Greatest One - Hit Wonders in 2000, and later as number 100 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop in 2008. Karma, a staff record producer for Cold Chillin 'Records, told Vibe magazine in 2005 that he produced the single, but never received credit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Wonderful World (Sam Cooke song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Wonderful World ''(occasionally referred to as`` (What A) Wonderful World'') is a song by American singer - songwriter Sam Cooke. Released on April 14, 1960 by Keen Records, it had been recorded during an impromptu session the previous year, Cooke's last recording session at Keen Records. He signed with RCA Victor in 1960 and ``Wonderful World, ''then unreleased, was issued as a single in competition. The song was mainly composed by songwriting team Lou Adler and Herb Alpert, but Cooke revised the lyrics to mention the subject of education more.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "That's What Friends Are For",
"paragraph_text": "``That's What Friends Are For ''is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Carole Bayer Sager. It was first recorded in 1982 by Rod Stewart for the soundtrack of the film Night Shift, but it is better known for the 1985 cover version by Dionne Warwick, Elton John, Gladys Knight and Stevie Wonder. This recording, billed as being by`` Dionne & Friends'', was released as a charity single for AIDS research and prevention. It was a massive hit, becoming the # 1 single of 1986 in the United States, and winning the Grammy Awards for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and Song of the Year. Its sales raised over US $3 million for its cause.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "The Wonder Years",
"paragraph_text": "The Time Life DVD releases include approximately 96% of the original music soundtrack (including the opening theme song, ``With a Little Help From My Friends '', as originally sung by Joe Cocker). There were altogether some 15 exceptions, in most instances featuring generic studio replacement music in place of the original song, while on a couple of occasions the original soundtrack song was replaced with another version of the same tune. None of the necessary music replacements resulted in footage from the episodes being removed.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "You've Got a Friend in Me",
"paragraph_text": "``You've Got a Friend in Me ''is a song written and first recorded by Randy Newman. Originally written as the theme song for the 1995 Disney / Pixar animated film Toy Story, it has since become the theme song for its sequels, Toy Story 2 (1999) and Toy Story 3 (2010) as well as a musical leitmotif throughout the whole Toy Story franchise. The song was nominated for both the Academy Award for Best Original Song and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, but lost both to`` Colors of the Wind'' from Disney's Pocahontas.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "The Party's Over (Willie Nelson song)",
"paragraph_text": "``The Party's Over ''is a song written by country music singer Willie Nelson during the mid-1950s. After arriving in Houston, Texas, Nelson was hired to play for the Esquire Ballroom band, where he would be allowed to close the shows singing the song. Guitar instructor and Nelson's friend Paul Buskirk forwarded the song to singer Claude Gray, who recorded the original version of the song, released as`` My Party's Over'' in 1959.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes",
"paragraph_text": "\"For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes\" is a song written and performed by James Brown. Released as an edited two-part single in 1978, it charted #52 R&B in 1979. A full-length version appears on the album \"Take a Look at Those Cakes\". Brown talks loudly and clearly in rhyme without only brief singing involved, this track being in part a precursor to the hip hop style which was yet to mount on record in a few years time. Robert Christgau described the song as \"a great throwaway--an eleven-minute rumination on ass-watching, including genuinely tasteless suggestions that Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder join the fun.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Just a Friend",
"paragraph_text": "The song interpolates the 1968 song ``You Got What I Need ''recorded by Freddie Scott, whose basic chord and melody provided the base for the song's chorus and made it famous. Due to the widespread popularity of the song along with its acclaim and its influence on pop culture (and his failure to have another charting Hot 100 song), Biz was classified by VH1 as a one - hit wonder, and`` Just a Friend'' was ranked 81st on VH1's 100 Greatest One - Hit Wonders in 2000, and later as number 100 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop in 2008. Karma, a staff record producer for Cold Chillin 'Records, told Vibe magazine in 2005 that he produced the single, but never received credit.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the singer of the Wonder Years theme song record With a Little Help from My Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 67793,
"question": "who sings the theme song of the wonder years",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__207212_21032
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Japanese occupation of Burma",
"paragraph_text": "There were informal contacts between the AFO and the Allies in 1944 and 1945 through the British Force 136. On 27 March 1945, the Burma National Army rose up in a country-wide rebellion against the Japanese. 27 March had been celebrated as 'Resistance Day' until the military renamed it 'Tatmadaw (Armed Forces) Day'. Aung San and others subsequently began negotiations with Lord Mountbatten and officially joined the Allies as the Patriotic Burmese Forces (PBF). At the first meeting, the AFO represented itself to the British as the provisional government of Burma with Thakin Soe as Chairman and Aung San as a member of its ruling committee.The Japanese were routed from most of Burma by May 1945. Negotiations then began with the British over the disarming of the AFO and the participation of its troops in a post-war Burma Army. Some veterans had been formed into a paramilitary force under Aung San, called the Pyithu yèbaw tat or People's Volunteer Organisation (PVO), and were openly drilling in uniform. The absorption of the PBF was concluded successfully at the Kandy conference in Ceylon in September 1945.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The impact of the post-election reforms has been observed in numerous areas, including ASEAN's approval of Myanmar's bid for the position of ASEAN chair in 2014; the visit by United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December 2011 for the encouragement of further progress, which was the first visit by a Secretary of State in more than fifty years, during which Clinton met with the Burmese president and former military commander Thein Sein, as well as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi; and the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2012 by-elections, facilitated by the government's abolition of the laws that previously barred the NLD. As of July 2013, about 100 political prisoners remain imprisoned, while conflict between the Burmese Army and local insurgent groups continues.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "For most of its independent years, the country has been engrossed in rampant ethnic strife and Burma's myriad ethnic groups have been involved in one of the world's longest-running ongoing civil wars. During this time, the United Nations and several other organisations have reported consistent and systematic human rights violations in the country. In 2011, the military junta was officially dissolved following a 2010 general election, and a nominally civilian government was installed. While former military leaders still wield enormous power in the country, Burmese Military have taken steps toward relinquishing control of the government. This, along with the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and political prisoners, has improved the country's human rights record and foreign relations, and has led to the easing of trade and other economic sanctions. There is, however, continuing criticism of the government's treatment of the Muslim Rohingya minority and its poor response to the religious clashes. In the landmark 2015 election, Aung San Suu Kyi's party won a majority in both houses, ending military rule.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The impact of the post-election reforms has been observed in numerous areas, including ASEAN's approval of Myanmar's bid for the position of ASEAN chair in 2014; the visit by United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December 2011 for the encouragement of further progress—it was the first visit by a Secretary of State in more than fifty years (Clinton met with the Burmese president and former military commander Thein Sein, as well as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi); and the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2012 by-elections, facilitated by the government's abolition of the laws that previously barred the NLD. As of July 2013, about 100 political prisoners remain imprisoned, while conflict between the Burmese Army and local insurgent groups continues.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Demand-chain management",
"paragraph_text": "Demand-chain management is the same as supply chain management, but with emphasis on consumer pull vs. supplier push. The demand chain begins with customers, then funnels through any resellers, distributors, and other business partners who help sell the company's products and services. The demand chain includes both direct and indirect sales forces. Customers demand is hard to detect because out of stock situations (OOS) falsify data collected from POS-Terminals. According to studies of Corsten/Gruen (2002, 2008) the OOS-rate is about 8%. For products under sales promotion OOS rates up to 30% exist. Reliable information about demand is necessary for DCM therefore lowering OOS is a main factor for successful DCM.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Kaba Sone Hti",
"paragraph_text": "Kaba Sone Hti ( ; lit. Till the End of the World) is a 2005 Burmese musical drama film directed by Khin Maung Oo and Soe Thein Htut.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Alaungpaya",
"paragraph_text": "Alaungpaya (, ; also spelled Alaunghpaya or Alaung Phra; 11 May 1760) was the founder of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). By the time of his death from illness during his campaign in Siam, this former chief of a small village in Upper Burma had unified Burma, subdued Manipur, conquered Lan Na and driven out the French and the British who had given help to the Mon Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom. He also founded Yangon in 1755.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "National League for Democracy",
"paragraph_text": "The National League for Democracy (Burmese: အမျိုးသား ဒီမိုကရေစီ အဖွဲ့ချုပ်, IPA: [ʔəmjóðá dìmòkəɹèsì ʔəpʰwḛdʑoʊʔ]; abbreviated NLD) is a social-democratic and liberal democratic political party in Myanmar (Burma), currently serving as the governing party. Founded on 27 September 1988, it has become one of the most influential parties in Myanmar's pro-democracy movement. Aung San Suu Kyi, the Special Honorary President of the Socialist International and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, serves as its President and she is currently serving as State Counsellor of Myanmar. The party won a substantial parliamentary majority in the 1990 Burmese general election. However, the ruling military junta refused to recognise the result. On 6 May 2010, the party was declared illegal and ordered to be disbanded by the junta after refusing to register for the elections slated for November 2010. In November 2011, the NLD announced its intention to register as a political party to contend future elections, and Myanmar's Union Election Commission approved their application for registration on 13 December 2011.In the 2012 by-elections, the NLD contested 44 of the 45 available seats; winning 43, and losing only one seat to the SNDP. Party leader Aung San Suu Kyi won the seat of Kawhmu.In the 2015 general election, the NLD won a supermajority in both houses of the Assembly, paving the way for the country's first non-military president in 54 years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Lichtentaler Allee",
"paragraph_text": "The Lichtentaler Allee is a historic park and arboretum set out as a 2.3 kilometer strolling avenue along the west bank of the river Oos in Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is open daily without charge.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Aung Thet Mann",
"paragraph_text": "Aung Thet Mann (, ; born 19 June 1977), also known as Shwe Mann Ko Ko (), is a Burmese businessman and currently CEO of Ayer Shwe Wah, a major Burmese company. Aung Thet Mann's father is Shwe Mann, a former military general and Speaker of the Pyithu Hluttaw. He graduated from the Yangon Institute of Economics. Aung Thet Mann is married to Khin Hnin Thandar.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Adolescence",
"paragraph_text": "During childhood, siblings are a source of conflict and frustration as well as a support system. Adolescence may affect this relationship differently, depending on sibling gender. In same-sex sibling pairs, intimacy increases during early adolescence, then remains stable. Mixed-sex siblings pairs act differently; siblings drift apart during early adolescent years, but experience an increase in intimacy starting at middle adolescence. Sibling interactions are children's first relational experiences, the ones that shape their social and self-understanding for life. Sustaining positive sibling relations can assist adolescents in a number of ways. Siblings are able to act as peers, and may increase one another's sociability and feelings of self-worth. Older siblings can give guidance to younger siblings, although the impact of this can be either positive or negative depending on the activity of the older sibling.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Yun San",
"paragraph_text": "Me Yun San ( ; 1713–1771) was the chief queen of King Alaungpaya of Burma (Myanmar), and the queen mother of three kings of Konbaung Dynasty: Naungdawgyi, Hsinbyushin and Bodawpaya. She is known for keeping the peace between her two eldest sons, Naungdawgyi and Hsinbyushin after Alaungpaya died in 1760, allowing Naungdawgyi to succeed Alaungpaya as king. She died in 1771 during Hsinbyushin's reign.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Tigger",
"paragraph_text": "Subsequently, Tigger resides with Kanga and Roo in their house in the part of the Hundred Acre Wood near the Sandy Pit. He becomes great friends with Roo (to whom he becomes a sort of older sibling figure), and Kanga treats him in much the same way she does her own son. Tigger also interacts enthusiastically with all the other characters — sometimes too enthusiastically for the likes of Rabbit, who is sometimes exasperated by Tigger's constant bouncing, Eeyore, who is once bounced into the river by Tigger, and Piglet, who always seems a little nervous about the new, large, bouncy animal in the Forest. Nonetheless, the animals are all shown to be friends.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Myanmar Airways International",
"paragraph_text": "The airline was founded by the government before independence in 1946 as Union of Burma Airways. It initially operated domestic services only. International services were added in 1950. The name was changed to Burma Airways in December 1972, and then to Myanma Airways on April 1, 1989, following the renaming of the country from Burma to Myanmar. International services were transferred to Myanmar Airways International, which was set up in 1993.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "Sanctions imposed by the United States and European countries against the former military government, coupled with boycotts and other direct pressure on corporations by supporters of the democracy movement, have resulted in the withdrawal from the country of most US and many European companies. On 13 April 2012 British Prime Minister David Cameron called for the economic sanctions on Myanmar to be suspended in the wake of the pro-democracy party gaining 43 seats out of a possible 45 in the 2012 by-elections with the party leader, Aung San Suu Kyi becoming a member of the Burmese parliament.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_text": "Aung San Suu Kyi was born on 19 June 1945 in Rangoon (now Yangon), British Burma. According to Peter Popham, she was born in a small village outside Rangoon called Hmway Saung. Her father, Aung San, allied with the Japanese during World War II. Aung San founded the modern Burmese army and negotiated Burma's independence from the British Empire in 1947; he was assassinated by his rivals in the same year. She grew up with her mother, Khin Kyi, and two brothers, Aung San Lin and Aung San Oo, in Rangoon. Aung San Lin died at the age of eight, when he drowned in an ornamental lake on the grounds of the house. Her elder brother emigrated to San Diego, California, becoming a United States citizen. After Aung San Lin's death, the family moved to a house by Inya Lake where Aung San Suu Kyi met people of various backgrounds, political views and religions. She was educated in Methodist English High School (now Basic Education High School No. 1 Dagon) for much of her childhood in Burma, where she was noted as having a talent for learning languages. She speaks four languages: Burmese, English, French and Japanese. She is a Theravada Buddhist.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Moe Hein",
"paragraph_text": "Moe Hein was born on 10 December 1942, as the youngest son of the journalist and writer Journal Kyaw U Chit Maung and the writer Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay. His father was a friend and colleague of the revolutionary nationalist Aung San.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Soe Min Oo",
"paragraph_text": "Soe Min Oo (; born 8 March 1988) is a Burmese footballer who plays for the Myanmar national football team and Shan United of Myanmar National League.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "Since the 2010 election, the government has embarked on a series of reforms to direct the country towards liberal democracy, a mixed economy, and reconciliation, although doubts persist about the motives that underpin such reforms. The series of reforms includes the release of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest, the establishment of the National Human Rights Commission, the granting of general amnesties for more than 200 political prisoners, new labour laws that permit labour unions and strikes, a relaxation of press censorship, and the regulation of currency practices.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Aung San Oo",
"paragraph_text": "Aung San Oo () is the elder brother of State Counsellor of Myanmar and Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi; the two are the only surviving children of Burmese independence leader Aung San. Aung San Oo is an engineer. Aung San Oo has been described by the Burmese Lawyers' Council and the National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma as a potential surrogate of the junta in an attempt to humiliate Aung San Suu Kyi and place her in an untenable position. \"Time\" magazine reports that, according to Burmese exiles and observers in Rangoon, the junta used the alleged surrogacy of Aung San Oo and his lawsuit as an act of spite against the National League for Democracy leader.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
What did the sibling of Aung San Oo become a part of in Burma?
|
[
{
"id": 207212,
"question": "Aung San Oo >> sibling",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
},
{
"id": 21032,
"question": "What did #1 become a part of in Burma ?",
"answer": "the Burmese parliament",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
the Burmese parliament
|
[] | true |
2hop__232747_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Trouble Doll (The Disappointing 3rd LP)",
"paragraph_text": "Trouble Doll (The Disappointing 3rd LP) is the third album by B.A.L.L., released in 1989 through Shimmy Disc. The first half is a studio album that contains new material, while the second half contain a live performance recorded at CBGB in New York City.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Reid Paley",
"paragraph_text": "Reid Paley (born in Brooklyn, New York) is an American singer, songwriter, and musician who has been performing and recording both solo and with his trio since the mid-1990s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The Grip",
"paragraph_text": "The Grip is a live debut album by jazz saxophonist Arthur Blythe which was recorded at the Brook, New York City in 1977 and released on the India Navigation label. The album was released on CD as a compilation with \"Metamorphosis\" which was recorded at the same concert.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Jesus at the Center: Live",
"paragraph_text": "Jesus at the Center: Live is a contemporary worship live album recorded and performed by Israel & New Breed. The album is released by Integrity Media and Columbia Records. The album was recorded live at Lakewood Church in early February 2012.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Live (Jake Shimabukuro album)",
"paragraph_text": "Live is Jake Shimabukuro's 2009 solo album. It was released in April 2009, and consists of live in-concert performances from various venues around the world, including New York, Chicago, Japan, and Hawaii.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Eric Staller",
"paragraph_text": "1971 Staller completed a Bachelor Degree in Architecture at the University of Michigan. Toward the end of his tenure at the University of Michigan, Staller began to create sculptures and performance arts. Merce Cunningham and John Cage had performed at the university at that time and praised artwork that Staller had created. They were the first professional performers to make Staller realize that he was truly an artist. In the fall of 1971, Staller moved to New York City and lived there until 1991. He had purchased an 1829-vingtage Lutheran Church, located in Lyons, PA. Staller used and renovated the church as a weekend retreat until 1991, then decided to move out of New York to live full-time in Lyons, PA.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "30 Rock",
"paragraph_text": "30 Rock is an American satirical television sitcom created by Tina Fey that ran on NBC from October 11, 2006, to January 31, 2013. The series, based on Fey's experiences as head writer for \"Saturday Night Live\", takes place behind the scenes of a fictional live sketch comedy show depicted as airing on NBC. The series's name refers to 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City, the address of the Comcast Building, where the NBC Studios are located and where \"Saturday Night Live\" is written, produced, and performed. This series was produced by Broadway Video and Little Stranger, Inc., in association with NBCUniversal.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Daniel Bennett (saxophonist)",
"paragraph_text": "Daniel Bennett (born November 27, 1979) is an American saxophonist who lives in Manhattan. Daniel Bennett is best known for his \"folk jazz\" music. Bennett contends that his music is \"a mix of jazz, folk, and twentieth century minimalism.\" The Daniel Bennett Group was voted \"Best New Jazz Group\" in the New York City Hot House Jazz Awards. Daniel Bennett has performed in Broadway, Off-Broadway and commercial recordings in New York City.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Cashmere Mafia",
"paragraph_text": "\"Cashmere Mafia\" follows the lives of four ambitious women, longtime best friends since their days at business school, as they try to balance their glamorous and demanding careers with their complex personal lives by creating their own \"boys' club\" (The Cashmere Mafia) to protect one another and discuss their personal ups and downs as they try to have it all in New York City.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Quaker Meeting-house (New York City)",
"paragraph_text": "The Quaker Meeting-house on Hester and Elizabeth Streets, Manhattan, New York was a former meetinghouse for the Religious Society of Friends, built in 1818. Recorded in 1876 by the \"New York Express\" that it “has for a long time been the office of the New York Gas Light Company,” now Consolidated Edison. It was presumed demolished.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Live in New York (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "Live in New York is a live album from Joe Cocker, recorded in New York's Central Park on July 12th, 1980 to an audience of 20,000 people. Originally the album was released in Australia and Japan only (in Japan as \"Spirit of Live Concert\"). It was reissued on CD in Australia by Mushroom Records in 1999.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Something Is Squeezing My Skull",
"paragraph_text": "The single comes backed with live recordings of \"This Charming Man\", \"Best Friend on the Payroll\" and \"I Keep Mine Hidden\", the latter being performed for the first time ever by Morrissey and his band at BBC Radio 2's 'Live With Morrissey' concert in February 2009.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Pure Jerry: Lunt-Fontanne, New York City, The Best of the Rest, October 15–30, 1987",
"paragraph_text": "Pure Jerry: Lunt-Fontanne, New York City, The Best of the Rest, October 15–30, 1987 is a three-CD live album by Jerry Garcia. It features performances by both the Jerry Garcia Band and the Jerry Garcia Acoustic Band. It contains selections from a series of 18 concerts performed at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in New York City in October 1987. The third in the \"Pure Jerry\" series of archival concert albums, it was released in November 2004.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "1950s in music",
"paragraph_text": "In 1951, Little Richard Penniman began recording for RCA Records in the late - 1940s jump blues style of Joe Brown and Billy Wright. However, it was n't until he prepared a demo in 1954, that caught the attention of Specialty Records, that the world would start to hear his new, uptempo, funky rhythm and blues that would catapult him to fame in 1955 and help define the sound of rock and roll. A rapid succession of rhythm - and - blues hits followed, beginning with ``Tutti Frutti ''and`` Long Tall Sally'', which would influence performers such as James Brown, Elvis Presley, and Otis Redding.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)\" is a song written and originally recorded by Billy Joel which appeared as the final song on his album \"Turnstiles\" in 1976. Several live performances of the song have been released. He performed this song at benefit concerts: The Concert for New York City for victims of the September 11 attacks in 2001, on the television program \"\" for Hurricane Sandy victims in 2012 and during his set at \"\". Joel has often tweaked the lyrics to the song at his live concerts, particularly at the \"Live at Shea\" and \"Coming Together\" concerts. On New Year's Eve, 2016, Joel performed at the BB&T Center in Sunrise, Florida, a city just north of Miami Dade County. At midnight, he crooned the traditional Auld Lang Syne and then immediately went into \"Miami 2017\". On the January 9, 2017 episode of \"The Late Show with Stephen Colbert\", Billy Joel performed the song with Stay Human, the show's house band.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb",
"paragraph_text": "Lancelot crashes a performance of the Camelot musical, starring Hugh Jackman and Alice Eve as King Arthur and Queen Guinevere, but Larry and the others chase him to the theatre roof, where the New York exhibits begin to die. Lancelot then sees that the quest was about them and gives the tablet back. The moonlight restores the tablet's power, saving the exhibits. They decide that Ahkmenrah and the tablet should stay with his parents, even if it means the New York exhibits will no longer come to life. Back in New York, Larry spends some final moments with his friends before sunrise.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Axis (Paul Bley album)",
"paragraph_text": "Axis is a live solo album by pianist Paul Bley recorded in New York in 1977 and released on Bley's own Improvising Artists label the following year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
When did the performer of Live in New York record With a Little Help From my Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 232747,
"question": "Live in New York >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__658967_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Endless Love (song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Endless Love ''is a song written by Lionel Richie and originally recorded as a duet between Richie and fellow soul singer Diana Ross. In this ballad, the singers declare their`` endless love'' for one another. It was covered by soul singer Luther Vandross with R&B singer Mariah Carey and also by country music singer Shania Twain. Richie's friend (and sometimes co-worker) Kenny Rogers has also recorded the song. Billboard has named the original version as the greatest song duet of all - time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "1950s in music",
"paragraph_text": "In 1951, Little Richard Penniman began recording for RCA Records in the late - 1940s jump blues style of Joe Brown and Billy Wright. However, it was n't until he prepared a demo in 1954, that caught the attention of Specialty Records, that the world would start to hear his new, uptempo, funky rhythm and blues that would catapult him to fame in 1955 and help define the sound of rock and roll. A rapid succession of rhythm - and - blues hits followed, beginning with ``Tutti Frutti ''and`` Long Tall Sally'', which would influence performers such as James Brown, Elvis Presley, and Otis Redding.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The Soul of Broadway",
"paragraph_text": "The Soul of Broadway is a 1915 American silent crime drama film produced and distributed by the Fox Film Corporation and directed by Herbert Brenon. Popular vaudeville performer Valeska Suratt starred in the film which was also her silent screen debut. \"The Soul of Broadway\" is now considered lost. It is one of many silent films that were destroyed in a fire at Fox's film storage facility in Little Ferry, New Jersey in July 1937.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Heart Full of Soul",
"paragraph_text": "``Heart Full of Soul ''is a song recorded by English rock group the Yardbirds in 1965. Written by Graham Gouldman, it was the Yardbirds' first single after Jeff Beck replaced Eric Clapton as lead guitarist. Released only three months after`` For Your Love'', ``Heart Full of Soul ''reached the top ten on the charts in the United Kingdom and the United States.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "A Heart Is a House for Love",
"paragraph_text": "``A Heart is a House for Love ''Single by The Dells from the album The Five Heartbeats Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Released 1991 Genre R&B, pop, and soul music Length 6: 12 (album version) 4: 12 (single version) Label Virgin Records Songwriter (s) Tristin Sigerson, Davitt Sigerson, and Bob Thiele The Dells singles chronology`` Thought of You Just a Little Too Much'' (1988) ``A Heart is a House for Love ''(1991)`` Come and Get It'' (1992) ``Thought of You Just a Little Too Much ''(1988)`` A Heart is a House for Love'' (1991) ``Come and Get It ''(1992)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "My Friends & Me",
"paragraph_text": "My Friends & Me is a studio album by American soul singer Dionne Warwick, released in the United States on November 7, 2006 by Concord Records. It is a collection of duets with other artists on re-recordings of past songs by Warwick.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Heart & Soul (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "Heart & Soul is the nineteenth studio album by Joe Cocker, released in the UK on 12 October 2004, and in the US on 1 February 2005. The album is composed solely of cover songs, including a live version of the U2 song \"One\" taken from Cocker's 2004 Night of the Proms performance in Antwerp, Belgium.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Little Broken Hearts",
"paragraph_text": "Little Broken Hearts (stylized as ...Little Broken Hearts) is the fifth solo studio album by American singer and songwriter Norah Jones, released on April 25, 2012, through Blue Note Records. The album was produced by Brian Burton, better known as Danger Mouse, who is notable for his production work with The Black Keys, Gnarls Barkley, and Beck among others.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "The Wandering of a Little Soul",
"paragraph_text": "The Wandering of a Little Soul () is a violin concerto by the Czech composer Leoš Janáček. The work is also known in English as \"Pilgrimage of a Little Soul\", \"Pilgrimage of a Dear Soul\" or simply as \"Pilgrimage of the Soul\". Nevertheless, the English title of the complete critical edition is \"The Wandering of a Little Soul\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Rocky Dawuni",
"paragraph_text": "Rocky Dawuni is a Ghanaian singer, songwriter and record producer who performs his signature 'Afro Roots' sound which is a mixture of Reggae, Afrobeat, Highlife and soul music. He currently lives between Ghana and Los Angeles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Heart and Souls",
"paragraph_text": "Heart and Souls is a 1993 American fantasy comedy-drama film directed by Ron Underwood. The film stars Robert Downey Jr. as Thomas Reilly, a businessman recruited by the souls of four deceased people, his guardian angels from childhood, to help them rectify their unfinished lives, as he is the only one who can communicate with them.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Neta Lohnes Frazier",
"paragraph_text": "Neta Lohnes Frazier (1890–1990) was an American children's author best known for her books about the Pacific Northwest. She published 14 books between 1947 and 2015, including \"Stout-Hearted Seven\", \"The Magic Ball\", \"Secret Friend\", \"My Love Is a Gypsy\" and \"Little Rhody\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Why (Annie Lennox song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Why ''Single by Annie Lennox from the album Diva B - side`` Primitive'' Released March 28, 1992 Format 7 ''CD Maxi - Single Recorded July 1991 Genre Soul pop adult contemporary Length 4: 53 Label BMG Arista Songwriter (s) Annie Lennox Producer (s) Stephen Lipson Annie Lennox singles chronology ``Put a Little Love in Your Heart'' (1988)`` Why ''(1992) ``Precious'' (1992)`` Put a Little Love in Your Heart ''(1988) ``Why'' (1992)`` Precious ''(1992)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "My Heart Is Calling",
"paragraph_text": "\"My Heart Is Calling\" is a song recorded by the American recording artist Whitney Houston for the 1996 film \"The Preacher's Wife\". It was released on June 10, 1997, as the third and final single from the accompanying . The song was written and produced solely by Babyface. Musically, the song is an R&B ballad, with gospel music and funk influences, and the lyrics speak about meeting someone special. \"My Heart Is Calling\" received mainly positive reviews from music critics, who commended Houston's soulful performance. It peaked at number 77 on the United States \"Billboard\" Hot 100, and number 35 on \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "The Ones You Love",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Ones You Love\" is a pop song performed by English singer Rick Astley and written by Dave West and himself. It was produced by Gary Stevenson and Rick. The song was recorded for Astley's fourth album, \"Body & Soul\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Justin Bieber",
"paragraph_text": "On August 17, 2017, Bieber released the single ``Friends ''with American record producer and songwriter BloodPop. Songwriters Julia Michaels and Justin Tranter reunited with Bieber to construct the song, just as they helped create his single`` Sorry'' in 2015 on his studio album Purpose. Bieber did not attend the 2018 Grammy Awards Show to perform the nominated song ``Despacito '', claiming that he would not make any award show appearances until his next album was finished.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Spanky Wilson",
"paragraph_text": "Spanky Wilson (born c. 1947) is an American soul, funk and jazz vocalist, who has performed internationally and recorded several albums since the late 1960s.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the performer of Heart & Soul record With a Little Help from My Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 658967,
"question": "Heart & Soul >> performer",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__16075_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "The second and most dramatic boom and bust resulted from the Klondike Gold Rush, which ended the depression that had begun with the Panic of 1893; in a short time, Seattle became a major transportation center. On July 14, 1897, the S.S. Portland docked with its famed \"ton of gold\", and Seattle became the main transport and supply point for the miners in Alaska and the Yukon. Few of those working men found lasting wealth, however; it was Seattle's business of clothing the miners and feeding them salmon that panned out in the long run. Along with Seattle, other cities like Everett, Tacoma, Port Townsend, Bremerton, and Olympia, all in the Puget Sound region, became competitors for exchange, rather than mother lodes for extraction, of precious metals. The boom lasted well into the early part of the 20th century and funded many new Seattle companies and products. In 1907, 19-year-old James E. Casey borrowed $100 from a friend and founded the American Messenger Company (later UPS). Other Seattle companies founded during this period include Nordstrom and Eddie Bauer. Seattle brought in the Olmsted Brothers landscape architecture firm to design a system of parks and boulevards.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Honda HA-420 HondaJet",
"paragraph_text": "The Honda HA-420 HondaJet is the first aircraft developed by the Honda Aircraft Company. It is a twin-engine, seven-seat light business jet, and is also considered as a very light jet. It was designed in Japan in the late 1990s then developed and manufactured in Greensboro, North Carolina, United States. Its first flight took place in 2003 and deliveries commenced in December 2015.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Mitsubishi SpaceJet",
"paragraph_text": "The Mitsubishi SpaceJet, formerly known as the Mitsubishi Regional Jet (), or MRJ for short, is a twin-engine regional jet aircraft seating 70–90 passengers manufactured by Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation, a partnership between majority owner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and minority owner Toyota Motor Corporation with design assistance from Subaru Corporation, itself already an aerospace manufacturer. The SpaceJet will be the first airliner designed and produced in Japan since the NAMC YS-11 of the 1960s, which was produced at a loss.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide-body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC-10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC-25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H. W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "General Electric GEnx",
"paragraph_text": "The General Electric GEnx (\"General Electric Next-generation\") is an advanced dual rotor, axial flow, high-bypass turbofan jet engine in production by GE Aviation for the Boeing 787 and 747-8. The GEnx is intended to replace the CF6 in GE's product line.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Seattle's economy is driven by a mix of older industrial companies, and \"new economy\" Internet and technology companies, service, design and clean technology companies. The city's gross metropolitan product was $231 billion in 2010, making it the 11th largest metropolitan economy in the United States. The Port of Seattle, which also operates Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, is a major gateway for trade with Asia and cruises to Alaska, and is the 8th largest port in the United States in terms of container capacity. Though it was affected by the Great Recession, Seattle has retained a comparatively strong economy, and remains a hotbed for start-up businesses, especially in green building and clean technologies: it was ranked as America's No. 1 \"smarter city\" based on its government policies and green economy. In February 2010, the city government committed Seattle to becoming North America's first \"climate neutral\" city, with a goal of reaching zero net per capita greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide - body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC - 10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC - 25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H.W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Welwyn Tool Group",
"paragraph_text": "Welwyn Tool Group Limited, is a tool distribution company based in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom. The company is responsible for the distribution and after-sales service of products manufactured by Swiss company, Leister Technologies in The United Kingdom and Ireland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "From 1869 until 1982, Seattle was known as the \"Queen City\". Seattle's current official nickname is the \"Emerald City\", the result of a contest held in 1981; the reference is to the lush evergreen forests of the area. Seattle is also referred to informally as the \"Gateway to Alaska\" for being the nearest major city in the contiguous US to Alaska, \"Rain City\" for its frequent cloudy and rainy weather, and \"Jet City\" from the local influence of Boeing. The city has two official slogans or mottos: \"The City of Flowers\", meant to encourage the planting of flowers to beautify the city, and \"The City of Goodwill\", adopted prior to the 1990 Goodwill Games. Seattle residents are known as Seattleites.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Logging was Seattle's first major industry, but by the late 19th century the city had become a commercial and shipbuilding center as a gateway to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush. By 1910, Seattle was one of the 25 largest cities in the country. However, the Great Depression severely damaged the city's economy. Growth returned during and after World War II, due partially to the local Boeing company, which established Seattle as a center for aircraft manufacturing. The Seattle area developed as a technology center beginning in the 1980s, with companies like Microsoft becoming established in the region. In 1994 the Internet retail giant Amazon was founded in Seattle. The stream of new software, biotechnology, and Internet companies led to an economic revival, which increased the city's population by almost 50,000 between 1990 and 2000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Star Model PD",
"paragraph_text": "The Star Model PD is a compact and lightweight semi-automatic pistol which was manufactured from 1975 to 1990 by the firearms manufacturing company Star Bonifacio Echeverria, S.A., located in the city of Eibar in the Basque region of Spain.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "A shipbuilding boom in the early part of the 20th century became massive during World War I, making Seattle somewhat of a company town; the subsequent retrenchment led to the Seattle General Strike of 1919, the first general strike in the country. A 1912 city development plan by Virgil Bogue went largely unused. Seattle was mildly prosperous in the 1920s but was particularly hard hit in the Great Depression, experiencing some of the country's harshest labor strife in that era. Violence during the Maritime Strike of 1934 cost Seattle much of its maritime traffic, which was rerouted to the Port of Los Angeles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Dassault Aviation",
"paragraph_text": "Dassault Aviation SA () is an international French aircraft manufacturer of military, regional, and business jets, and is a subsidiary of Dassault Group.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is an American wide - body commercial jet airliner and cargo aircraft, often referred to by its original nickname, ``Jumbo Jet ''. Its distinctive`` hump'' upper deck along the forward part of the aircraft makes it among the world's most recognizable aircraft, and it was the first wide - body produced. Manufactured by Boeing's Commercial Airplane unit in the United States, the original version of the 747 was envisioned to have 150 percent greater capacity than the Boeing 707, one of the common large commercial aircraft of the 1960s. First flown commercially in 1970, the 747 held the passenger capacity record for 37 years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Hudson Jet",
"paragraph_text": "The Hudson Jet is a compact automobile that was produced by the Hudson Motor Car Company of Detroit, Michigan, during the 1953 and 1954 model years. The Jet was the automaker's response to the popular Nash Rambler and the costs of developing and marketing the Jet ultimately led to Hudson's merger with Nash.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Oklahoma City",
"paragraph_text": "The Oklahoma City Thunder of the National Basketball Association (NBA) has called Oklahoma City home since the 2008–09 season, when owner Clayton Bennett relocated the franchise from Seattle, Washington. The Thunder plays home games at the Chesapeake Energy Arena in downtown Oklahoma City, known affectionately in the national media as 'the Peake' and 'Loud City'. The Thunder is known by several nicknames, including \"OKC Thunder\" and simply \"OKC\", and its mascot is Rumble the Bison.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Douglas DC-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Douglas DC-8 (also known as the McDonnell Douglas DC-8) is an American four-engine mid- to long-range narrow-body jet airliner built from 1958 to 1972 by the Douglas Aircraft Company. Launched after the competing Boeing 707, the DC-8 nevertheless kept Douglas in a strong position in the airliner market, and remained in production until 1972 when it began to be superseded by larger wide-body designs, including the Boeing 747, McDonnell Douglas DC-10, and Lockheed L-1011 TriStar. The DC-8's design allowed it a slightly larger cargo capacity than the 707 and some re-engined DC-8s are still in use as freighters.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the manufacturer of the 747 plane bearing the name of the company that gives Seattle the nickname of Jet City?
|
[
{
"id": 16075,
"question": "From what company does Seattle get its nickname Jet City?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[] | true |
2hop__85343_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes",
"paragraph_text": "\"For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes\" is a song written and performed by James Brown. Released as an edited two-part single in 1978, it charted #52 R&B in 1979. A full-length version appears on the album \"Take a Look at Those Cakes\". Brown talks loudly and clearly in rhyme without only brief singing involved, this track being in part a precursor to the hip hop style which was yet to mount on record in a few years time. Robert Christgau described the song as \"a great throwaway--an eleven-minute rumination on ass-watching, including genuinely tasteless suggestions that Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder join the fun.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Another Suitcase in Another Hall",
"paragraph_text": "``Another Suitcase in Another Hall ''is a song recorded by Scottish singer Barbara Dickson, for the 1976 concept album, Evita, the basis of the musical of the same name. The musical was based on the life of Argentinian leader Eva Perón. Written by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber, the song is presented during a sequence where Eva throws out her husband's mistress on the streets. The latter sings the track, wondering about her future and coming to the conclusion that she would be fine. Dickson was enlisted by the songwriters to record the track after hearing her previous work.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "The Wonder Years",
"paragraph_text": "The Wonder Years Created by Neal Marlens Carol Black Starring Fred Savage Dan Lauria Alley Mills Olivia d'Abo Jason Hervey Danica McKellar Josh Saviano Narrated by Daniel Stern Theme music composer Lennon -- McCartney Opening theme ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''by Joe Cocker Country of origin United States Original language (s) English No. of seasons 6 No. of episodes 115 (list of episodes) Production Camera setup Single - camera Running time 22 -- 24 minutes Production company (s) The Black - Marlens Company New World Television Distributor 20th Television Release Original network ABC Original release January 31, 1988 (1988 - 01 - 31) -- May 12, 1993 (1993 - 05 - 12)",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Do You Hear What I Hear?",
"paragraph_text": "``Do You Hear What I Hear? ''was released shortly after Thanksgiving in 1962. The song was originally recorded for Mercury Records by the Harry Simeone Chorale, a group which had also popularized`` The Little Drummer Boy''; and it was released as part of the album ``The Wonderful Songs Of Christmas With The Harry Simeone Chorale ''. As a 45 rpm single, it went on to sell more than a quarter - million copies during the 1962 Christmas holiday season.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Wonderful World (Sam Cooke song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Wonderful World ''(occasionally referred to as`` (What A) Wonderful World'') is a song by American singer - songwriter Sam Cooke. Released on April 14, 1960 by Keen Records, it had been recorded during an impromptu session the previous year, Cooke's last recording session at Keen Records. He signed with RCA Victor in 1960 and ``Wonderful World, ''then unreleased, was issued as a single in competition. The song was mainly composed by songwriting team Lou Adler and Herb Alpert, but Cooke revised the lyrics to mention the subject of education more.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Robin Ward (singer)",
"paragraph_text": "Jackie Ward (born Jacqueline McDonnell, 1941), better known as Robin Ward, is an American singer, regarded as a ``one - hit wonder ''of 1963 million - selling song`` Wonderful Summer''. However, using her real name she was highly accomplished and successful singing in groups. Ward's voice is heard in U.S. television series, motion pictures, advertisements, and pop records. She is one of the real singers of the hits attributed to The Partridge Family.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "That's What Friends Are For",
"paragraph_text": "``That's What Friends Are For ''is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Carole Bayer Sager. It was first recorded in 1982 by Rod Stewart for the soundtrack of the film Night Shift, but it is better known for the 1985 cover version by Dionne Warwick, Elton John, Gladys Knight and Stevie Wonder. This recording, billed as being by`` Dionne & Friends'', was released as a charity single for AIDS research and prevention. It was a massive hit, becoming the # 1 single of 1986 in the United States, and winning the Grammy Awards for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and Song of the Year. Its sales raised over US $3 million for its cause.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Why Me (Kris Kristofferson song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Why Me ''Single by Kris Kristofferson from the album Jesus Was a Capricorn B - side`` Help Me'' Released April 1973 Format 7 ''Recorded July 8, 1972 Genre Country gospel Length 3: 26 Label Monument Records 31909 Songwriter (s) Kris Kristofferson Producer (s) Fred Foster Kris Kristofferson singles chronology ``Jesse Younger'' (1972)`` Why Me ''(1973) ``A Song I'd Like to Sing'' (1973)`` Jesse Younger ''(1972) ``Why Me'' (1973)`` A Song I'd Like to Sing ''(1973)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Just a Friend",
"paragraph_text": "The song interpolates the 1968 song ``You Got What I Need ''recorded by Freddie Scott, whose basic chord and melody provided the base for the song's chorus and made it famous. Due to the widespread popularity of the song along with its acclaim and its influence on pop culture (and Markie's failure to have another charting Hot 100 song), Biz was classified by VH1 as a one - hit wonder, and`` Just a Friend'' was ranked 81st on VH1's 100 Greatest One - Hit Wonders in 2000, and later as number 100 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop in 2008. Karma, a staff record producer for Cold Chillin 'Records, told Vibe magazine in 2005 that he produced the single, but never received credit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "You've Got a Friend in Me",
"paragraph_text": "``You've Got a Friend in Me ''is a song written and first recorded by Randy Newman. Originally written as the theme song for the 1995 Disney / Pixar animated film Toy Story, it has since become the theme song for its sequels, Toy Story 2 (1999) and Toy Story 3 (2010) as well as a musical leitmotif throughout the whole Toy Story franchise. The song was nominated for both the Academy Award for Best Original Song and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, but lost both to`` Colors of the Wind'' from Disney's Pocahontas.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "The Party's Over (Willie Nelson song)",
"paragraph_text": "``The Party's Over ''is a song written by country music singer Willie Nelson during the mid-1950s. After arriving in Houston, Texas, Nelson was hired to play for the Esquire Ballroom band, where he would be allowed to close the shows singing the song. Guitar instructor and Nelson's friend Paul Buskirk forwarded the song to singer Claude Gray, who recorded the original version of the song, released as`` My Party's Over'' in 1959.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Just a Friend",
"paragraph_text": "The song interpolates the 1968 song ``You Got What I Need ''recorded by Freddie Scott, whose basic chord and melody provided the base for the song's chorus and made it famous. Due to the widespread popularity of the song along with its acclaim and its influence on pop culture (and his failure to have another charting Hot 100 song), Biz was classified by VH1 as a one - hit wonder, and`` Just a Friend'' was ranked 81st on VH1's 100 Greatest One - Hit Wonders in 2000, and later as number 100 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop in 2008. Karma, a staff record producer for Cold Chillin 'Records, told Vibe magazine in 2005 that he produced the single, but never received credit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Wonder (Hillsong United album)",
"paragraph_text": "The band had several recording sessions for Wonder at The Record Plant in Los Angeles. Lead vocalist Joel Houston felt that the album's title and themes reflected returning wonder to both faith and worship, saying, ``This is the challenge, and this is what worship -- if worship can be summed up as an expression of art and music and story -- is ultimately designed to do. To elevate the conversation, re-awaken the soul to something other, and lift our eyes to the wonder of a superlative truth. ''`` Splinters and Stones'' was described as having ``striking vocal modification and pulsing bass samplings ''while containing personal lyrics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Jackie Chan",
"paragraph_text": "Chan had vocal lessons whilst at the Peking Opera School in his childhood. He began producing records professionally in the 1980s and has gone on to become a successful singer in Hong Kong and Asia. He has released 20 albums since 1984 and has performed vocals in Cantonese, Mandarin, Japanese, Taiwanese and English. He often sings the theme songs of his films, which play over the closing credits. Chan's first musical recording was \"Kung Fu Fighting Man\", the theme song played over the closing credits of The Young Master (1980). At least 10 of these recordings have been released on soundtrack albums for the films. His Cantonese song Story of a Hero (英雄故事) (theme song of Police Story) was selected by the Royal Hong Kong Police and incorporated into their recruitment advertisement in 1994.Chan voiced the character of Shang in the Chinese release of the Walt Disney animated feature, Mulan (1998). He also performed the song \"I'll Make a Man Out of You\", for the film's soundtrack. For the US release, the speaking voice was performed by B.D. Wong and the singing voice was done by Donny Osmond.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Go the Distance",
"paragraph_text": "``Go the Distance ''is a song from Disney's 1997 animated feature film, Hercules. It was written by composer Alan Menken and lyricist David Zippel, and originally recorded by American actor Roger Bart in his film role as the singing voice of Hercules. American singer - songwriter Michael Bolton recorded a pop version of the song for the film's end credits. In the Spanish version, the song is performed by Hercules voicer Ricky Martin, both in the movie and in the credits; this version is included on Martin's album Vuelve. Both the song and its reprise featured in a stage production of Hercules, performed upon the Disney Wonder during 2007 / 2008.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Unchained Melody",
"paragraph_text": "``Unchained Melody ''is a 1955 song with music by Alex North and lyrics by Hy Zaret. North used the music as a theme for the little - known prison film Unchained (1955), hence the song title. Todd Duncan sang the vocals for the film soundtrack. It has since become a standard and one of the most often recorded songs of the 20th century, most notably by the Righteous Brothers. According to the song's publishing administrator, over 1,500 recordings of`` Unchained Melody'' have been made by more than 670 artists, in multiple languages.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Little Boy Sad",
"paragraph_text": "\"Little Boy Sad\" is a song written by Wayne Walker and performed by Johnny Burnette. The song reached #12 on the UK Singles Chart and #17 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 in 1961. The song appeared on his 1961 album, \"Johnny Burnette Sings\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the person who sings the theme song to Wonder Years record With a Little Help From My Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 85343,
"question": "who sings the theme song to wonder years",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__15995_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Armenia",
"paragraph_text": "The economy relies heavily on investment and support from Armenians abroad. Before independence, Armenia's economy was largely industry-based – chemicals, electronics, machinery, processed food, synthetic rubber, and textile – and highly dependent on outside resources. The republic had developed a modern industrial sector, supplying machine tools, textiles, and other manufactured goods to sister republics in exchange for raw materials and energy. Recently, the Intel Corporation agreed to open a research center in Armenia, in addition to other technology companies, signalling the growth of the technology industry in Armenia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is a large, wide-body (two-aisle) airliner with four wing-mounted engines. Its wings have a high sweep angle of 37.5 degrees for a fast, efficient cruise of Mach 0.84 to 0.88, depending on the variant. The sweep also reduces the wingspan, allowing the 747 to use existing hangars. Its seating capacity is over 366 with a 3–4–3 seat arrangement (a cross section of 3 seats, an aisle, 4 seats, another aisle, and 3 seats) in economy class and a 2–3–2 layout in first class on the main deck. The upper deck has a 3–3 seat arrangement in economy class and a 2–2 layout in first class.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Robin Hood (bicycle company)",
"paragraph_text": "Robin Hood Cycle Co Ltd bicycles is an English manufacturer made in Nottingham England. Acquired by the Raleigh Bicycle Company in 1906 many of whose bicycles were imported into the United States. Best known for their three-speeds, they were an economy line for Raleigh. They also imported racing bikes as the Lenton Sports.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Seattle's economy is driven by a mix of older industrial companies, and \"new economy\" Internet and technology companies, service, design and clean technology companies. The city's gross metropolitan product was $231 billion in 2010, making it the 11th largest metropolitan economy in the United States. The Port of Seattle, which also operates Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, is a major gateway for trade with Asia and cruises to Alaska, and is the 8th largest port in the United States in terms of container capacity. Though it was affected by the Great Recession, Seattle has retained a comparatively strong economy, and remains a hotbed for start-up businesses, especially in green building and clean technologies: it was ranked as America's No. 1 \"smarter city\" based on its government policies and green economy. In February 2010, the city government committed Seattle to becoming North America's first \"climate neutral\" city, with a goal of reaching zero net per capita greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Like its predecessor, the 747X family was unable to garner enough interest to justify production, and it was shelved along with the 767-400ERX in March 2001, when Boeing announced the Sonic Cruiser concept. Though the 747X design was less costly than the 747-500X and -600X, it was criticized for not offering a sufficient advance from the existing 747-400. The 747X did not make it beyond the drawing board, but the 747-400X being developed concurrently moved into production to become the 747-400ER.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Elayirampannai",
"paragraph_text": "Elayirampannai is a panchayat town in Virudhunagar district in the state of Tamil Nadu, India. The economy of this small town is based on manufacturing safety matches, crackers and agriculture.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Still, very large companies dominate the business landscape. Four companies on the 2013 Fortune 500 list of the United States' largest companies, based on total revenue, are headquartered in Seattle: Internet retailer Amazon.com (#49), coffee chain Starbucks (#208), department store Nordstrom (#227), and freight forwarder Expeditors International of Washington (#428). Other Fortune 500 companies popularly associated with Seattle are based in nearby Puget Sound cities. Warehouse club chain Costco (#22), the largest retail company in Washington, is based in Issaquah. Microsoft (#35) is located in Redmond. Weyerhaeuser, the forest products company (#363), is based in Federal Way. Finally, Bellevue is home to truck manufacturer Paccar (#168). Other major companies in the area include Nintendo of America in Redmond, T-Mobile US in Bellevue, Expedia Inc. in Bellevue and Providence Health & Services — the state's largest health care system and fifth largest employer — in Renton. The city has a reputation for heavy coffee consumption; coffee companies founded or based in Seattle include Starbucks, Seattle's Best Coffee, and Tully's. There are also many successful independent artisanal espresso roasters and cafés.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide-body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC-10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC-25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H. W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747 is an American wide - body commercial jet airliner and cargo aircraft, often referred to by its original nickname, ``Jumbo Jet ''. Its distinctive`` hump'' upper deck along the forward part of the aircraft makes it among the world's most recognizable aircraft, and it was the first wide - body produced. Manufactured by Boeing's Commercial Airplane unit in the United States, the original version of the 747 was envisioned to have 150 percent greater capacity than the Boeing 707, one of the common large commercial aircraft of the 1960s. First flown commercially in 1970, the 747 held the passenger capacity record for 37 years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Seattle's Best Coffee",
"paragraph_text": "In 1983, the name again changed from Stewart Brothers Wet Whisker to Stewart Brothers Coffee. Shortly after, business began to expand, and new shops opened in Bellevue, Washington, and in Seattle's historic Pike Place Market a year later. In 1991, the company was renamed \"Seattle's Best Coffee\" after winning a local competition. Around 1995, Seattle's Best Coffee was purchased by a group of investors who own Torrefazione Italia. They formed a new company made up of both parties called Seattle Coffee Holdings. In 1997, Seattle Coffee Holdings changed its name to Seattle Coffee Company.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Air Force One",
"paragraph_text": "Though Ronald Reagan's two terms as president saw no major changes to Air Force One, the manufacture of the presidential aircraft version of the 747 began during his presidency. The USAF issued a Request For Proposal in 1985 for two wide - body aircraft with a minimum of three engines and an unrefueled range of 6,000 miles (9,700 km). Boeing with the 747 and McDonnell Douglas with the DC - 10 submitted proposals, and the Reagan Administration ordered two identical 747s to replace the aging 707s he used. The interior designs, drawn up by First Lady Nancy Reagan, were reminiscent of the American Southwest. The first of two aircraft, designated VC - 25A, was delivered in 1990, during the administration of George H.W. Bush. Delays were experienced to allow for additional work to protect the aircraft from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "War work again brought local prosperity during World War II, this time centered on Boeing aircraft. The war dispersed the city's numerous Japanese-American businessmen due to the Japanese American internment. After the war, the local economy dipped. It rose again with Boeing's growing dominance in the commercial airliner market. Seattle celebrated its restored prosperity and made a bid for world recognition with the Century 21 Exposition, the 1962 World's Fair. Another major local economic downturn was in the late 1960s and early 1970s, at a time when Boeing was heavily affected by the oil crises, loss of Government contracts, and costs and delays associated with the Boeing 747. Many people left the area to look for work elsewhere, and two local real estate agents put up a billboard reading \"Will the last person leaving Seattle – Turn out the lights.\"",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Southeast Asia",
"paragraph_text": "The region's economy greatly depends on agriculture; rice and rubber have long been prominent exports. Manufacturing and services are becoming more important. An emerging market, Indonesia is the largest economy in this region. Newly industrialised countries include Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines, while Singapore and Brunei are affluent developed economies. The rest of Southeast Asia is still heavily dependent on agriculture, but Vietnam is notably making steady progress in developing its industrial sectors. The region notably manufactures textiles, electronic high-tech goods such as microprocessors and heavy industrial products such as automobiles. Oil reserves in Southeast Asia are plentiful.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Asphalt",
"paragraph_text": "In 1914, Claridge's Company entered into a joint venture to produce tar-bound macadam, with materials manufactured through a subsidiary company called Clarmac Roads Ltd. Two products resulted, namely Clarmac, and Clarphalte, with the former being manufactured by Clarmac Roads and the latter by Claridge's Patent Asphalte Co., although Clarmac was more widely used.[note 1] However, the First World War impacted financially on the Clarmac Company, which entered into liquidation in 1915. The failure of Clarmac Roads Ltd had a flow-on effect to Claridge's Company, which was itself compulsorily wound up, ceasing operations in 1917, having invested a substantial amount of funds into the new venture, both at the outset, and in a subsequent attempt to save the Clarmac Company.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Logging was Seattle's first major industry, but by the late 19th century the city had become a commercial and shipbuilding center as a gateway to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush. By 1910, Seattle was one of the 25 largest cities in the country. However, the Great Depression severely damaged the city's economy. Growth returned during and after World War II, due partially to the local Boeing company, which established Seattle as a center for aircraft manufacturing. The Seattle area developed as a technology center beginning in the 1980s, with companies like Microsoft becoming established in the region. In 1994 the Internet retail giant Amazon was founded in Seattle. The stream of new software, biotechnology, and Internet companies led to an economic revival, which increased the city's population by almost 50,000 between 1990 and 2000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Chihuahua (state)",
"paragraph_text": "During the 1990s after NAFTA was signed, industrial development grew rapidly with foreign investment. Large factories known as maquiladoras were built to export manufactured goods to the United States and Canada. Today, most of the maquiladoras produce electronics, automobile, and aerospace components. There are more than 406 companies operating under the federal IMMEX or Prosec program in Chihuahua. The large portion of the manufacturing sector of the state is 425 factories divided into 25 industrial parks accounting for 12.47% of the maquiladoras in Mexico, which employ 294,026 people in the state. While export-driven manufacturing is one of the most important components of the state's economy, the industrial sector is quite diverse and can be broken down into several sectors, which are: electronics, agro-industrial, wood base manufacturing, mineral, and biotech. Similar to the rest of the country, small businesses continue to be the foundation of the state’s economy. Small business employs the largest portion of the population.[citation needed]",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Economy of the United States",
"paragraph_text": "The US economy is fueled by abundant natural resources, a well - developed infrastructure, and high productivity. It has second highest total estimated value of natural resources, valued at $45 trillion in 2016. Americans have the highest average household and employee income among OECD nations, and in 2010 had the fourth highest median household income, down from second highest in 2007. It has been the world's largest national economy (not including colonial empires) since at least the 1890s. The U.S. is the world's third largest producer of oil and natural gas. In 2016, it was the largest trading nation in the world as well as the world's second largest manufacturer, representing a fifth of the global manufacturing output. The US also has not only the largest economy, but also the largest Industrial sector, at 2005 prices according to the UNCTAD. The US not only has the largest internal market for goods, but also dominates the trade in services. US total trade amounted to $4.92 trillion in 2016. Of the world's 500 largest companies, 134 are headquartered in the US.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the manufacturer of the 747 aircraft, with the name of the company whose downturn drastically affected Seattle's economy?
|
[
{
"id": 15995,
"question": "What company's downturn drastically effected Seattle's economy?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[] | true |
2hop__64563_86874
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "England Keep My Bones",
"paragraph_text": "England Keep My Bones is the fourth studio album by London-based singer-songwriter Frank Turner, released on 6 June 2011, on Xtra Mile in the United Kingdom, and on 7 June 2011, on Epitaph Records worldwide. Preceded by the single, \"Peggy Sang the Blues\", the album was produced and mixed by Tristan Ivemy, who had previously mixed \"Love, Ire and Song\", \"Rock & Roll\" and \"Campfire Punkrock\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker album)",
"paragraph_text": "With a Little Help From My Friends Studio album by Joe Cocker Released May 1969 (1969 - 05) Recorded Early 1968 Studio Olympic Studios and Trident Studios, London Genre Blues rock soul Length 40: 27 Label Regal Zonophone (UK) A&M (US) Producer Denny Cordell Joe Cocker chronology With a Little Help from My Friends (1969) Joe Cocker! (1969) Joe Cocker! 1969",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Unchained Melody",
"paragraph_text": "``Unchained Melody ''is a 1955 song with music by Alex North and lyrics by Hy Zaret. North used the music as a theme for the little - known prison film Unchained (1955), hence the song title. Todd Duncan sang the vocals for the film soundtrack. It has since become a standard and one of the most often recorded songs of the 20th century, most notably by the Righteous Brothers. According to the song's publishing administrator, over 1,500 recordings of`` Unchained Melody'' have been made by more than 670 artists, in multiple languages.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Hymne à l'amour",
"paragraph_text": "``Hymne à l'amour ''was translated into English by Piaf's protégé Eddie Constantine as`` Hymn to Love'', which was recorded by Piaf on her album La Vie En Rose / Édith Piaf Sings In English (1956). This version was featured on Cyndi Lauper's 2003 album At Last. It was also adapted into English as ``If You Love Me (Really Love Me) ''with lyrics by Geoffrey Parsons. Piaf then sang this version in Carnegie Hall at both of her performances in 1956 and 1957. Subsequent covers by Kay Starr in 1954, Shirley Bassey in 1959 and Brenda Lee in 1961 brought fame to this version. Raquel Bitton features`` Hymn to Love'' in her tribute to Piaf 2000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Up Where We Belong",
"paragraph_text": "``Up Where We Belong ''is a Platinum - certified, Grammy Award - winning hit song written by Jack Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte - Marie, and Will Jennings. It was recorded by Joe Cocker (lead vocals) and Jennifer Warnes (lead and background vocals) for the smash 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "When I Fall in Love",
"paragraph_text": "``When I Fall in Love ''is a popular song, written by Victor Young (music) and Edward Heyman (lyrics). It was introduced in the film One Minute to Zero. Jeri Southern sang on the first recording released in April 1952 with the song's composer, Victor Young, handling the arranging and conducting duties. The song has become a standard, with many artists recording it, though the first hit version was sung by Doris Day released in July 1952.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "You've Got a Friend in Me",
"paragraph_text": "``You've Got a Friend in Me ''Single by Randy Newman and Lyle Lovett from the album Toy Story Released April 12, 1996 Format Cassette, CD single, digital download Genre Country, pop, soundtrack Length 2: 39 Label Walt Disney Songwriter (s) Randy Newman Producer (s) Randy Newman Randy Newman singles chronology`` It's Money That Matters'' / ``Falling in Love ''(1988)`` You've Got a Friend in Me'' (1996) ``We Belong Together ''(2010)`` It's Money That Matters'' / ``Falling in Love ''(1988)`` You've Got a Friend in Me'' (1996) ``We Belong Together ''(2010) Lyle Lovett singles chronology`` Do n't Touch My Hat'' (1996) Do n't Touch My Hat 1996 ``You've Got a Friend in Me ''(1996) You've Got a Friend in Me1996`` Private Conversation'' (1997) Private Conversation1997",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and intended as the album's featured vocal for drummer Ringo Starr. The group recorded the song towards the end of the sessions for Sgt. Pepper, with Starr singing as the character`` Billy Shears''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Anne of the Island",
"paragraph_text": "Anne's childhood friend Ruby Gillis dies of consumption very soon after finding her own true love. Anne later welcomes the courtship of Roy Gardner, a darkly handsome Redmond student who showers her with attention and poetic gestures. However, when he proposes after two years, Anne abruptly realizes that Roy does not really belong in her life, and that she had only been in love with the idea of him as the embodiment of her childhood ideal.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Strange Free World",
"paragraph_text": "Strange Free World is the second album by British alternative rock band Kitchens of Distinction, released on February 19, 1991 in the US by A&M Records and on March 18, 1991 in the UK by One Little Indian Records. It is the follow-up to their 1989 debut \"Love Is Hell\". Noted producer Hugh Jones, who worked with Echo & the Bunnymen (on their 1981 album \"Heaven Up Here\"), among many others, helped KOD to sound more at ease in the studio.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Ready Teddy",
"paragraph_text": "\"Ready Teddy\" is a song written by John Marascalco and Robert Blackwell, and first made popular by Little Richard in 1956. Little Richard sang and played piano on the recording, backed by a band consisting of Lee Allen (tenor saxophone), Alvin \"Red\" Tyler (baritone sax), Edgar Blanchard (guitar), Frank Fields (bass), and Earl Palmer (drums).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "This Guy's in Love with You",
"paragraph_text": "``This Guy's in Love with You ''is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, and recorded by Herb Alpert. Although known primarily for his trumpet playing as the leader of the Tijuana Brass, Alpert sang lead vocals on this solo recording, arranged by Bacharach.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "There's a Skeeter on My Peter",
"paragraph_text": "The earliest printed example of this song is found in the book Parodology (1927) where the melody is listed as an adaptation of the tune ``Little Bit of Love ''. This song has been commercially recorded by Valby and by an anonymous person on the 1960 LP The Unexpurgated Folk Songs of Men.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "SoundGirl",
"paragraph_text": "Beardshaw and Shortland were friends and school classmates in London that sang together before another girl from their neighbourhood, Redmond, joined them to form SoundGirl. A management company, Angelic Union, held auditions for a girl band project in a dance studio. The three girls went, wrote a song in ten minutes, and sang it for Angelic Union, who reportedly signed them on the spot.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Angel of the Morning",
"paragraph_text": "In 1995, Chrissie Hynde and The Pretenders sang their own version on the Friends soundtrack album. The song was released as a single, but it did not chart.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Let Them Be Little",
"paragraph_text": "Let Them Be Little is the seventh studio album by American country music singer Billy Dean. His first album since \"Real Man\" seven years previous, it is also his first release on Curb Records. The album was originally to have been released in 2003, on View 2 Records, which promoted the first two singles (\"I'm in Love with You\" and a cover of John Denver's \"Thank God I'm a Country Boy\"). Asylum-Curb promoted the third single, \"Let Them Be Little\", which was co-written by Richie McDonald, lead singer of Lonestar, and recorded by the band on their 2004 album \"Let's Be Us Again\". After this song came \"This Is the Life\", \"Race You to the Bottom\" and \"Swinging for the Fence\". Also included on the album are re-recordings of \"Somewhere in My Broken Heart\" and \"Billy the Kid\", two of Dean's early singles from 1991 and 1992.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "With a Little Help from My Friends",
"paragraph_text": "``With a Little Help from My Friends ''is a song by the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from the album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band issued worldwide in June 1967. The song was written for and sung by the Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr as the character`` Billy Shears''. The song, paired with ``Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''and featuring`` A Day in the Life'' as its B - side, was reissued as a single in the U.S. in August 1978 (# 71) and in the U.K. in September 1978 (# 63). ``With a Little Help from My Friends ''was ranked No. 311 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Neta Lohnes Frazier",
"paragraph_text": "Neta Lohnes Frazier (1890–1990) was an American children's author best known for her books about the Pacific Northwest. She published 14 books between 1947 and 2015, including \"Stout-Hearted Seven\", \"The Magic Ball\", \"Secret Friend\", \"My Love Is a Gypsy\" and \"Little Rhody\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Elevator",
"paragraph_text": "Stage lifts and orchestra lifts are specialized elevators, typically powered by hydraulics, that are used to raise and lower entire sections of a theater stage. For example, Radio City Music Hall has four such elevators: an orchestra lift that covers a large area of the stage, and three smaller lifts near the rear of the stage. In this case, the orchestra lift is powerful enough to raise an entire orchestra, or an entire cast of performers (including live elephants) up to stage level from below. There's a barrel on the background of the image of the left which can be used as a scale to represent the size of the mechanism",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Alexander Graham Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Bell's coffin was constructed of Beinn Bhreagh pine by his laboratory staff, lined with the same red silk fabric used in his tetrahedral kite experiments. To help celebrate his life, his wife asked guests not to wear black (the traditional funeral color) while attending his service, during which soloist Jean MacDonald sang a verse of Robert Louis Stevenson's \"Requiem\":",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the singer of Love Lifts Us Up Where We Belong record With a Little Help From My Friends?
|
[
{
"id": 64563,
"question": "who sang love lifts us up where we belong",
"answer": "Joe Cocker",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 86874,
"question": "when did #1 record with a little help from my friends",
"answer": "Early 1968",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
}
] |
Early 1968
|
[] | true |
2hop__592160_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "The Chronic",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Chronic\" peaked at number three on the \"Billboard\" 200 and has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America with sales of 5.7 million copies in the United States, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. Dr. Dre's production has been noted for popularizing the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap. \"The Chronic\" has been widely regarded as one of the most important and influential albums of the 1990s and regarded by many fans and peers to be one of the most well-produced hip hop albums of all time. \"The Chronic\" was ranked at #138 on \"Rolling Stone\"'s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Sitalkuchi",
"paragraph_text": "Sitalkuchi (community development block) is an administrative division in Mathabhanga subdivision of Cooch Behar district in the Indian state of West Bengal. Sitalkuchi police station serves this block. Headquarters of this block is at Sitalkuchi.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Saturday in the Park (song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Saturday in the Park ''Single by Chicago from the album Chicago V B - side`` Alma Mater'' Released July 1972 Format 7 ''Recorded September 1971 Length 3: 56 Label Columbia Songwriter (s) Robert William Lamm Producer (s) James William Guercio Chicago singles chronology ``Questions 67 and 68'' /`` I'm A Man ''(1971) ``Saturday in the Park'' (1972)`` String Module Error: Match not found ''(1972) ``Questions 67 and 68'' /`` I'm A Man ''(1971) ``Saturday in the Park'' (1972)`` Dialogue (Part I & II) ''(1972)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Mathabhanga II",
"paragraph_text": "Mathabhanga II (community development block) is an administrative division in Mathabhanga subdivision of Cooch Behar district in the Indian state of West Bengal. Mathabhanga and Ghoksadanga police stations serve this block. Headquarters of this block is at Bhogmara.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Abbasuddin Ahmed",
"paragraph_text": "Abbasuddin Ahmed (27 October 1901 – 30 December 1959) was a Bengali folk song composer and singer born in the Bengal province of British India. He was known for Bhawaiya folk song which is a style commonly found in Rangpur and Cooch Behar.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "I'm Going Down (Rose Royce song)",
"paragraph_text": "``I'm Going Down ''is a song written and produced by Norman Whitfield, and performed by Rose Royce. The single is from the film Car Wash and is featured on the film's soundtrack.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Eria Fachin",
"paragraph_text": "Originally from Hamilton, Ontario, Fachin began performing in the Toronto area at the age of 15 in a variety of capacities, including nightclub performances, roles in musical theatre, recording commercial jingles for local advertisers and performing on television variety shows. She also recorded a number of singles during this era, including \"I'm Not Your Puppet\", and married her musical collaborator Lou Bartolomucci in 1986.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Mannish Boy",
"paragraph_text": "\"Mannish Boy\" (or \"Manish Boy\" as it was originally titled) is a blues standard by Muddy Waters. First recorded in 1955, the song is both an arrangement of and an \"answer song\" to Bo Diddley's \"I'm a Man\", which was in turn inspired by Waters' and Willie Dixon's \"Hoochie Coochie Man\". \"Mannish Boy\" features a repeating stop-time figure on one chord throughout the song and is credited to Waters, Mel London, and Bo Diddley.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "I'm on Fire",
"paragraph_text": "\"I'm on Fire\" is a song written and performed by American rock performer Bruce Springsteen. Released in 1985, it was the fourth single from his album \"Born in the U.S.A.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Hoochie Coochie Man",
"paragraph_text": "\"Hoochie Coochie Man\" (originally titled \"I'm Your Hoochie Cooche Man\") is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and first recorded by Muddy Waters in 1954. The song makes reference to hoodoo folk magic elements and makes novel use of a stop-time musical arrangement. It became one of Waters' most popular and identifiable songs and helped secure Dixon's role as Chess Records' chief songwriter.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Spare a Copper",
"paragraph_text": "Spare a Copper is a 1940 British black-and-white musical comedy war film directed by John Paddy Carstairs and starring George Formby, Dorothy Hyson and Bernard Lee. It was produced by Associated Talking Pictures. It is also known as Call a Cop. The film features the songs, \"I'm The Ukulele Man\", \"On The Beat\", \"I Wish I Was Back On The Farm\" and \"I'm Shy\". Beryl Reid makes her film debut in an uncredited role, while Ronald Shiner appears similarly uncredited, in the role of the Piano Mover and Tuner.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Billy Don't Be a Hero",
"paragraph_text": "Because the song was released in 1974, it was associated by some listeners with the Vietnam War, though the war to which it actually refers is never identified in the lyrics. It has been suggested that the drum pattern, references to a marching band leading soldiers in blue, and ``riding out ''(cavalry) refer to the American Civil War. However the drum beat and cavalry`` riding out'' is not specific to the American Civil War, and blue uniforms were common in the 19th century. That being said, Paper Lace themselves performed the song on Top of the Pops wearing Union - style uniforms, as can be seen on Youtube.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "I'm Almost Not Crazy: John Cassavetes, the Man and His Work",
"paragraph_text": "I'm Almost Not Crazy: John Cassavetes, the Man and His Work is a 1989 American documentary directed by Michael Ventura and starring John Cassavetes.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance",
"paragraph_text": "According to NARAS, the new award will encompass all of the subgenres of the American Roots category field, which include Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk and other forms of regional roots music. The category will be open for solo artists, duos, groups and other collaborations and is for singles or tracks only.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Mr. Tambourine Man",
"paragraph_text": "The song has been performed and recorded by many artists, including the Byrds, Judy Collins, Melanie, Odetta, and Stevie Wonder among others. The Byrds version was released in April of 1965 as their first single on Columbia Records, reaching number 1 on both the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and the UK Singles Chart, as well as being the title track of their debut album, \"Mr. Tambourine Man.\" The Byrds' recording of the song was influential in popularizing the musical subgenres of folk rock and jangle pop, leading many contemporary bands to mimic its fusion of jangly guitars and intellectual lyrics in the wake of the single's success.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Braddan A.F.C.",
"paragraph_text": "Braddan A.F.C. is a football club in Douglas on the Isle of Man, competing in the Isle of Man Football League. The team wears royal blue strips and plays home games at Cronkbourne Football Ground, Victoria Road, Douglas.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair",
"paragraph_text": "``I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair ''was adapted for a commercial jingle for Clairol hair coloring in the 1970s. PJ Harvey referenced the song in her 1992 single`` Sheela - Na - Gig'' with the repeated lyric ``gon na wash that man right outa my hair ''. 50 Foot Wave's song`` Bone China'' also references this song in the lyric, ``Gonna wash that man right out of my head / and soap him into my eyes ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon",
"paragraph_text": "Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon (or Portrait of a Man with a Blue Hood, earlier Portrait of a Jeweler or Man with a Ring) is a very small (22.5 cm x 16.6 cm with frame) oil on panel portrait of an unidentified man attributed to the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The musician who first recorded I'm Your Hoochie Cooche Man was part of what subgenre of the blues?
|
[
{
"id": 592160,
"question": "I'm Your Hoochie Cooche Man >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__247833_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Fourth Fraser Ministry",
"paragraph_text": "The Fourth Fraser Ministry was the forty-seventh Australian Commonwealth ministry, and ran from 3 November 1980 to 7 May 1982.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Forty Martyrs of Sebaste",
"paragraph_text": "The Forty Martyrs of Sebaste or the Holy Forty (Ancient/Katharevousa Greek \"Ἃγιοι Τεσσεράκοντα\"; Demotic: \"Άγιοι Σαράντα\") were a group of Roman soldiers in the Legio XII \"Fulminata\" (Armed with Lightning) whose martyrdom in 320 for the Christian faith is recounted in traditional martyrologies.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "John Bates Clark Medal",
"paragraph_text": "The John Bates Clark Medal is awarded by the American Economic Association to \"that American economist under the age of forty who is adjudged to have made a significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Forty Days and Forty Nights",
"paragraph_text": "\"Forty Days and Forty Nights\" is a blues song recorded by Muddy Waters in 1956. Called \"a big, bold record\", it was a hit, spending six weeks in the \"Billboard\" R&B chart, where it reached number seven. \"Forty Days and Forty Nights\" has been interpreted and recorded by a variety of artists.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Terence Blanchard",
"paragraph_text": "Terence Oliver Blanchard (born March 13, 1962) is an American jazz trumpeter, composer, and music educator. Blanchard started his career in 1980 as a member of the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, then Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. He has composed more than forty film scores and performed on more than fifty.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Lisa Stansfield discography",
"paragraph_text": "British singer and songwriter Lisa Stansfield has released eight solo studio albums and one with her band Blue Zone, four compilation albums, three remix albums, one soundtrack album, one extended play and forty-four singles. As of 2004, Stansfield has sold over twenty million albums worldwide, including five million of \"Affection\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Bertram, Texas",
"paragraph_text": "Bertram ( ) is a city in Burnet County, Texas, United States. It is forty-three miles northwest of Austin. The population was 1,353 at the 2010 census.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "The Path of Thorns (Terms)",
"paragraph_text": "The Path of Thorns (Terms) is a hit song by singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan from her album, \"Solace\". It was her first top-forty chart hit in her native Canada, and the 50 millionth song purchased from the iTunes Store. The original music video for this song shows a couple dancing but is distinguished by the fact McLachlan was filmed performing the song nude.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Pierre Poitras",
"paragraph_text": "Pierre Poitras (1810 – July 31, 1889) was a political figure in Manitoba, Canada. He was a member of the Convention of Forty and served in the Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "The Good Guys (1968 TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "The Good Guys is an American situation comedy which aired on CBS from September 25, 1968, to January 23, 1970. Forty-two color episodes were filmed in all. As with \"The Governor & J.J.\" and \"Get Smart\", it was produced by Talent Associates.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Wild Streak",
"paragraph_text": "Wild Streak is the forty-first studio album by American country music artist Hank Williams, Jr. It was released by Warner Bros. Records on June 21, 1988. \"If the South Woulda Won\" and \"Early in the Morning and Late at Night\" were released as singles. The album reached #1 on the Top Country Albums chart and has been certified Gold by the RIAA.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Eurovision Song Contest 2018",
"paragraph_text": "The EBU announced on 7 November 2017 that forty - two countries would participate in the contest. Russia confirmed their return after withdrawing from the previous edition, while Macedonia's participation was provisionally blocked by the EBU due to unpaid debts by its national broadcaster. However, ten days later, the EBU announced that Macedonia would be allowed to enter the contest, raising the number of participating countries to forty - three, equaling the highest number of participants with the 2008 and 2011 editions.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "William Albert",
"paragraph_text": "Albert was an unsuccessful candidate for election in 1866 to the Fortieth Congress and in 1868 to the Forty-first Congress, but was elected as a Republican to the Forty-third Congress, serving from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1875. He was not a candidate for re-election to the Forty-fourth Congress in 1874, and resumed his former business pursuits. Albert worked to found the ‘Soldiers’ Home’ and an Asylum for orphans and worked to assist African American Freedman during the Reconstruction era, co-founding a school for black teachers in Baltimore. He died in Baltimore, and is interred in Greenmount Cemetery.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Saturday Night Live (season 43)",
"paragraph_text": "The forty - third season of the NBC comedy series Saturday Night Live will premiere on September 30, 2017 with host Ryan Gosling and musical guest Jay - Z, during the 2017 -- 2018 television season.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Give Me Forty Acres (To Turn This Rig Around)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Give Me Forty Acres (To Turn This Rig Around)\" is a single by American country music group The Willis Brothers. Released in 1964, it was the first single from their album \"Give Me Forty Acres\". The song peaked at number 9 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles chart. It also reached number 1 on the \"RPM\" Country Tracks chart in Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Glitter/Fated",
"paragraph_text": "\"Glitter\"/\"Fated\" is the forty-first single by Japanese pop singer Ayumi Hamasaki, released on July 18, 2007. \"Glitter\"/\"Fated\" was Hamasaki's first single of 2007 and first single in over a year, since the release of \"Blue Bird\" in June 2006.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Curse of the Forty-Niner",
"paragraph_text": "Curse of the Forty-Niner is a 2002 horror film directed by John Carl Buechler. It is known more commonly by its video title, Miner's Massacre.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Etzikom",
"paragraph_text": "Etzikom is a hamlet in Alberta, Canada within the County of Forty Mile No. 8. It is approximately east of Foremost on Highway 61.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Religion in ancient Rome",
"paragraph_text": "Roman calendars show roughly forty annual religious festivals. Some lasted several days, others a single day or less: sacred days (dies fasti) outnumbered \"non-sacred\" days (dies nefasti). A comparison of surviving Roman religious calendars suggests that official festivals were organized according to broad seasonal groups that allowed for different local traditions. Some of the most ancient and popular festivals incorporated ludi (\"games,\" such as chariot races and theatrical performances), with examples including those held at Palestrina in honour of Fortuna Primigenia during Compitalia, and the Ludi Romani in honour of Liber. Other festivals may have required only the presence and rites of their priests and acolytes, or particular groups, such as women at the Bona Dea rites.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
The performer of Forty Days and Forty Nights is known as the father of what type of blues?
|
[
{
"id": 247833,
"question": "Forty Days and Forty Nights >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__207212_21022
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "Since the 2010 election, the government has embarked on a series of reforms to direct the country towards liberal democracy, a mixed economy, and reconciliation, although doubts persist about the motives that underpin such reforms. The series of reforms includes the release of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest, the establishment of the National Human Rights Commission, the granting of general amnesties for more than 200 political prisoners, new labour laws that permit labour unions and strikes, a relaxation of press censorship, and the regulation of currency practices.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Guinea-Bissau",
"paragraph_text": "In 2012, President Rachide Sambu-balde Malam Bacai Sanhá died. He belonged to PAIGC (African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde), one of the two major political parties in Guinea-Bissau, along with the PRS (Party for Social Renewal). There are more than 20 minor parties.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Moe Hein",
"paragraph_text": "Moe Hein was born on 10 December 1942, as the youngest son of the journalist and writer Journal Kyaw U Chit Maung and the writer Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay. His father was a friend and colleague of the revolutionary nationalist Aung San.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Japanese occupation of Burma",
"paragraph_text": "There were informal contacts between the AFO and the Allies in 1944 and 1945 through the British Force 136. On 27 March 1945, the Burma National Army rose up in a country-wide rebellion against the Japanese. 27 March had been celebrated as 'Resistance Day' until the military renamed it 'Tatmadaw (Armed Forces) Day'. Aung San and others subsequently began negotiations with Lord Mountbatten and officially joined the Allies as the Patriotic Burmese Forces (PBF). At the first meeting, the AFO represented itself to the British as the provisional government of Burma with Thakin Soe as Chairman and Aung San as a member of its ruling committee.The Japanese were routed from most of Burma by May 1945. Negotiations then began with the British over the disarming of the AFO and the participation of its troops in a post-war Burma Army. Some veterans had been formed into a paramilitary force under Aung San, called the Pyithu yèbaw tat or People's Volunteer Organisation (PVO), and were openly drilling in uniform. The absorption of the PBF was concluded successfully at the Kandy conference in Ceylon in September 1945.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Moderation and Development Party",
"paragraph_text": "Moderation and Development Party () is a political party in Iran. It is a pragmatic-centrist political party which held its first congress in 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Open Sans",
"paragraph_text": "Open Sans is a humanist sans-serif typeface designed by Steve Matteson and commissioned by Google. Featuring wide apertures on many letters and a large x-height (tall lower-case letters), the typeface is highly legible on screen and at small sizes. It belongs to the humanist genre of sans-serif typefaces, with a true italic. It was released in 2011.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "For most of its independent years, the country has been engrossed in rampant ethnic strife and Burma's myriad ethnic groups have been involved in one of the world's longest-running ongoing civil wars. During this time, the United Nations and several other organisations have reported consistent and systematic human rights violations in the country. In 2011, the military junta was officially dissolved following a 2010 general election, and a nominally civilian government was installed. While former military leaders still wield enormous power in the country, Burmese Military have taken steps toward relinquishing control of the government. This, along with the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and political prisoners, has improved the country's human rights record and foreign relations, and has led to the easing of trade and other economic sanctions. There is, however, continuing criticism of the government's treatment of the Muslim Rohingya minority and its poor response to the religious clashes. In the landmark 2015 election, Aung San Suu Kyi's party won a majority in both houses, ending military rule.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Aung Thet Mann",
"paragraph_text": "Aung Thet Mann (, ; born 19 June 1977), also known as Shwe Mann Ko Ko (), is a Burmese businessman and currently CEO of Ayer Shwe Wah, a major Burmese company. Aung Thet Mann's father is Shwe Mann, a former military general and Speaker of the Pyithu Hluttaw. He graduated from the Yangon Institute of Economics. Aung Thet Mann is married to Khin Hnin Thandar.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Hajiani Lanjo",
"paragraph_text": "Hajiani Lanjo (Sindhi: ) is a liberal political and social activist from Tharparkar, a remote and underdeveloped desert area of Sindh, Pakistan. She belongs to the Qaumi Awami Tehreek party and Sindhiani Tahreek. She reached prominence after challenged Arbab Ghulam Rahim, a powerful tribal leader from Tharparkar, in the constituency of NA-229 in election-2013.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Myanmar",
"paragraph_text": "The impact of the post-election reforms has been observed in numerous areas, including ASEAN's approval of Myanmar's bid for the position of ASEAN chair in 2014; the visit by United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December 2011 for the encouragement of further progress—it was the first visit by a Secretary of State in more than fifty years (Clinton met with the Burmese president and former military commander Thein Sein, as well as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi); and the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2012 by-elections, facilitated by the government's abolition of the laws that previously barred the NLD. As of July 2013, about 100 political prisoners remain imprisoned, while conflict between the Burmese Army and local insurgent groups continues.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Demand-chain management",
"paragraph_text": "Demand-chain management is the same as supply chain management, but with emphasis on consumer pull vs. supplier push. The demand chain begins with customers, then funnels through any resellers, distributors, and other business partners who help sell the company's products and services. The demand chain includes both direct and indirect sales forces. Customers demand is hard to detect because out of stock situations (OOS) falsify data collected from POS-Terminals. According to studies of Corsten/Gruen (2002, 2008) the OOS-rate is about 8%. For products under sales promotion OOS rates up to 30% exist. Reliable information about demand is necessary for DCM therefore lowering OOS is a main factor for successful DCM.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Naungdawgyi",
"paragraph_text": "Naungdawgyi was born Maung Lauk () to Yun San and Aung Zeya (later King Alaungpaya) on 10 August 1736 (Tuesday, 11th waxing of Wagaung 1096 ME) in a small village of Moksobo, about 60 miles northwest of Ava (Inwa). He was the eldest child of the couple's nine children. In 1736, his father became the chief of Moksobo, and the deputy chief of the Mu valley, their home region.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Kaba Sone Hti",
"paragraph_text": "Kaba Sone Hti ( ; lit. Till the End of the World) is a 2005 Burmese musical drama film directed by Khin Maung Oo and Soe Thein Htut.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Meghalaya Progressive Alliance",
"paragraph_text": "The Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) was the ruling coalition of political parties that formed the Government in the state of Meghalaya, India from 2008 to 2009. It was led by the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and the United Democratic Party (UDP) who are the second and third largest parties in the 8th Meghalaya Legislative Assembly. Chief Minister Dr. Donkupar Roy and the other ministers in the Government belong to the MPA.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_text": "Aung San Suu Kyi was born on 19 June 1945 in Rangoon (now Yangon), British Burma. According to Peter Popham, she was born in a small village outside Rangoon called Hmway Saung. Her father, Aung San, allied with the Japanese during World War II. Aung San founded the modern Burmese army and negotiated Burma's independence from the British Empire in 1947; he was assassinated by his rivals in the same year. She grew up with her mother, Khin Kyi, and two brothers, Aung San Lin and Aung San Oo, in Rangoon. Aung San Lin died at the age of eight, when he drowned in an ornamental lake on the grounds of the house. Her elder brother emigrated to San Diego, California, becoming a United States citizen. After Aung San Lin's death, the family moved to a house by Inya Lake where Aung San Suu Kyi met people of various backgrounds, political views and religions. She was educated in Methodist English High School (now Basic Education High School No. 1 Dagon) for much of her childhood in Burma, where she was noted as having a talent for learning languages. She speaks four languages: Burmese, English, French and Japanese. She is a Theravada Buddhist.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Aung San Oo",
"paragraph_text": "Aung San Oo () is the elder brother of State Counsellor of Myanmar and Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi; the two are the only surviving children of Burmese independence leader Aung San. Aung San Oo is an engineer. Aung San Oo has been described by the Burmese Lawyers' Council and the National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma as a potential surrogate of the junta in an attempt to humiliate Aung San Suu Kyi and place her in an untenable position. \"Time\" magazine reports that, according to Burmese exiles and observers in Rangoon, the junta used the alleged surrogacy of Aung San Oo and his lawsuit as an act of spite against the National League for Democracy leader.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Political party",
"paragraph_text": "While there is some international commonality in the way political parties are recognized, and in how they operate, there are often many differences, and some are significant. Many political parties have an ideological core, but some do not, and many represent very different ideologies than they did when first founded. In democracies, political parties are elected by the electorate to run a government. Many countries have numerous powerful political parties, such as Germany and India and some nations have one-party systems, such as China. The United States is a two-party system, with its two most powerful parties being the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Santuario della Beata Vergine della Consolazione",
"paragraph_text": "Santuario della Beata Vergine della Consolazione is a church in San Marino. It belongs to the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Marino-Montefeltro. It was built in 1964 and consecrated in 1967.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "National League for Democracy",
"paragraph_text": "The National League for Democracy (Burmese: အမျိုးသား ဒီမိုကရေစီ အဖွဲ့ချုပ်, IPA: [ʔəmjóðá dìmòkəɹèsì ʔəpʰwḛdʑoʊʔ]; abbreviated NLD) is a social-democratic and liberal democratic political party in Myanmar (Burma), currently serving as the governing party. Founded on 27 September 1988, it has become one of the most influential parties in Myanmar's pro-democracy movement. Aung San Suu Kyi, the Special Honorary President of the Socialist International and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, serves as its President and she is currently serving as State Counsellor of Myanmar. The party won a substantial parliamentary majority in the 1990 Burmese general election. However, the ruling military junta refused to recognise the result. On 6 May 2010, the party was declared illegal and ordered to be disbanded by the junta after refusing to register for the elections slated for November 2010. In November 2011, the NLD announced its intention to register as a political party to contend future elections, and Myanmar's Union Election Commission approved their application for registration on 13 December 2011.In the 2012 by-elections, the NLD contested 44 of the 45 available seats; winning 43, and losing only one seat to the SNDP. Party leader Aung San Suu Kyi won the seat of Kawhmu.In the 2015 general election, the NLD won a supermajority in both houses of the Assembly, paving the way for the country's first non-military president in 54 years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Confine",
"paragraph_text": "Confine is a village (\"curazia\") located in San Marino. It belongs to the municipality (\"castello\") of Chiesanuova. Its name, in Italian language, means \"border\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the political party of Aung San Oo's sibling?
|
[
{
"id": 207212,
"question": "Aung San Oo >> sibling",
"answer": "Aung San Suu Kyi",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
},
{
"id": 21022,
"question": "What political party does #1 belong to ?",
"answer": "National League for Democracy (NLD) party",
"paragraph_support_idx": 9
}
] |
National League for Democracy (NLD) party
|
[
"National League for Democracy",
"NLD"
] | true |
2hop__16056_449977
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "San Diego",
"paragraph_text": "San Diego hosts several major producers of wireless cellular technology. Qualcomm was founded and is headquartered in San Diego, and is one of the largest private-sector employers in San Diego. Other wireless industry manufacturers headquartered here include Nokia, LG Electronics, Kyocera International., Cricket Communications and Novatel Wireless. The largest software company in San Diego is security software company Websense Inc. San Diego also has the U.S. headquarters for the Slovakian security company ESET. San Diego has been designated as an iHub Innovation Center for collaboration potentially between wireless and life sciences.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Nigeria",
"paragraph_text": "Nigeria in recent years has been embracing industrialisation. It currently has an indigenous vehicle manufacturing company, Innoson Motors, which manufactures Rapid Transit Buses, Trucks and SUVs with an upcoming introduction of Cars. Nigeria also has few Electronic manufacturers like Zinox, the first Branded Nigerian Computer and Electronic gadgets (like tablet PCs) manufacturers. In 2013, Nigeria introduced a policy regarding import duty on vehicles to encourage local manufacturing companies in the country. In this regard, some foreign vehicle manufacturing companies like Nissan have made known their plans to have manufacturing plants in Nigeria. Ogun is considered to be the current Nigeria's industrial hub, as most factories are located in Ogun and more companies are moving there, followed by Lagos.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Hermle AG",
"paragraph_text": "Maschinenfabrik Berthold Hermle AG is a publicly traded German company with headquarters in Gosheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is one of the leading manufacturers of milling machines. There are over 20,000 Hermle-manufactured machines in use worldwide. The chief users are suppliers of medical technology, the optical industry, aviation, and the automotive industry and racing.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Like its predecessor, the 747X family was unable to garner enough interest to justify production, and it was shelved along with the 767-400ERX in March 2001, when Boeing announced the Sonic Cruiser concept. Though the 747X design was less costly than the 747-500X and -600X, it was criticized for not offering a sufficient advance from the existing 747-400. The 747X did not make it beyond the drawing board, but the 747-400X being developed concurrently moved into production to become the 747-400ER.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "1201 Third Avenue",
"paragraph_text": "1201 Third Avenue (formerly Washington Mutual Tower) is a , 55-story skyscraper in Downtown Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington. It is the second-tallest building in the city, the eighth-tallest on the West Coast of the United States, and the 74th-tallest in the United States. Developed by Wright Runstad & Company, construction began in 1986 and finished in 1988. 1201 Third Avenue was designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates and The McKinley Architects. The building was the world headquarters of the financial company Washington Mutual from the building's opening until 2006, when the company moved across the street to the WaMu Center (renamed the Russell Investments Center after the bank collapsed in 2008).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Still, very large companies dominate the business landscape. Four companies on the 2013 Fortune 500 list of the United States' largest companies, based on total revenue, are headquartered in Seattle: Internet retailer Amazon.com (#49), coffee chain Starbucks (#208), department store Nordstrom (#227), and freight forwarder Expeditors International of Washington (#428). Other Fortune 500 companies popularly associated with Seattle are based in nearby Puget Sound cities. Warehouse club chain Costco (#22), the largest retail company in Washington, is based in Issaquah. Microsoft (#35) is located in Redmond. Weyerhaeuser, the forest products company (#363), is based in Federal Way. Finally, Bellevue is home to truck manufacturer Paccar (#168). Other major companies in the area include Nintendo of America in Redmond, T-Mobile US in Bellevue, Expedia Inc. in Bellevue and Providence Health & Services — the state's largest health care system and fifth largest employer — in Renton. The city has a reputation for heavy coffee consumption; coffee companies founded or based in Seattle include Starbucks, Seattle's Best Coffee, and Tully's. There are also many successful independent artisanal espresso roasters and cafés.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Logging was Seattle's first major industry, but by the late 19th century the city had become a commercial and shipbuilding center as a gateway to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush. By 1910, Seattle was one of the 25 largest cities in the country. However, the Great Depression severely damaged the city's economy. Growth returned during and after World War II, due partially to the local Boeing company, which established Seattle as a center for aircraft manufacturing. The Seattle area developed as a technology center beginning in the 1980s, with companies like Microsoft becoming established in the region. In 1994 the Internet retail giant Amazon was founded in Seattle. The stream of new software, biotechnology, and Internet companies led to an economic revival, which increased the city's population by almost 50,000 between 1990 and 2000.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Bobcat Company",
"paragraph_text": "Bobcat Company is an American-based manufacturer of farm and construction equipment, part of Doosan Group of South Korea. Its American headquarters is in West Fargo, North Dakota, USA, formerly in Gwinner, North Dakota. Its European headquarters moved in 2017 from Waterloo, Belgium to Dobris (near Prague) in Czech Republic, where Bobcat operates one of its European manufacturing plants. It was a subsidiary of the Ingersoll Rand Company from 1995 until July 2007, when it was sold for US$4.9 billion to Doosan Infracore. The company sells skid steer loaders, compact excavators, compact utility vehicles, compact tractors, and other small hydraulic equipment under the Bobcat brand name. It is one of the few major manufacturing companies operating in North Dakota.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Holden",
"paragraph_text": "Holden, formerly known as General Motors - Holden, is an Australian automobile importer and former automobile manufacturer with its headquarters in Port Melbourne, Victoria. The company was founded in 1856 as a saddlery manufacturer in South Australia. In 1908 it moved into the automotive field, becoming a subsidiary of the United States - based General Motors (GM) in 1931, when the company was renamed General Motors - Holden's Ltd. It was renamed Holden Ltd in 1998, and General Motors - Holden in 2005.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,544 as of April 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Boeing 747",
"paragraph_text": "Boeing 747 Boeing 747 - 100 of Pan American World Airways, the 747's launch customer, in September 1978 Role Wide - body jet airliner National origin United States Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes First flight February 9, 1969 Introduction January 22, 1970 with Pan American World Airways Status In service Primary users British Airways Lufthansa Korean Air Atlas Air Produced 1968 -- present Number built 1,548 (of which 1,546 delivered to customers) as of July 2018 Program cost US $1 billion at roll - out (1968) 7.0 billion today Unit cost 747 - 100: US $24 million (1972) 747 - 200: US $39 million (1976) 747 - 300: US $83 million (1982) Variants Boeing 747SP Boeing 747 - 400 Boeing 747 - 8 Boeing VC - 25 Boeing E-4 Developed into Boeing YAL - 1 Boeing Dreamlifter",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Ashley Furniture Industries",
"paragraph_text": "Ashley Furniture Industries, Inc. is an American home furnishings manufacturer and retailer, headquartered in Arcadia, Wisconsin. The company is owned by father and son team Ron and Todd Wanek. Ashley Furniture manufactures and distributes home furniture products throughout the world.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Seattle",
"paragraph_text": "Prior to moving its headquarters to Chicago, aerospace manufacturer Boeing (#30) was the largest company based in Seattle. Its largest division is still headquartered in nearby Renton, and the company has large aircraft manufacturing plants in Everett and Renton, so it remains the largest private employer in the Seattle metropolitan area. Former Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels announced a desire to spark a new economic boom driven by the biotechnology industry in 2006. Major redevelopment of the South Lake Union neighborhood is underway, in an effort to attract new and established biotech companies to the city, joining biotech companies Corixa (acquired by GlaxoSmithKline), Immunex (now part of Amgen), Trubion, and ZymoGenetics. Vulcan Inc., the holding company of billionaire Paul Allen, is behind most of the development projects in the region. While some see the new development as an economic boon, others have criticized Nickels and the Seattle City Council for pandering to Allen's interests at taxpayers' expense. Also in 2006, Expansion Magazine ranked Seattle among the top 10 metropolitan areas in the nation for climates favorable to business expansion. In 2005, Forbes ranked Seattle as the most expensive American city for buying a house based on the local income levels. In 2013, however, the magazine ranked Seattle No. 9 on its list of the Best Places for Business and Careers.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Coey-Mitchell Automobile Company",
"paragraph_text": "The Coey-Mitchell Automobile Company was an American automobile manufacturer that built the Coey automobiles and operated a chain of American Driving Schools from 1913 to 1917 and was headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. The company was founded under the name Coey-Mitchell Automobile Company by Charles A. Coey. The Coey family and their name come from Northern Ireland, where one still finds this name, for example in Comber.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "McDonald's",
"paragraph_text": "McDonald's is an American fast food company, founded in 1940 as a restaurant operated by Richard and Maurice McDonald, in San Bernardino, California, United States. They rechristened their business as a hamburger stand. The first time a McDonald's franchise used the Golden Arches logo was in 1953 at a location in Phoenix, Arizona. In 1955, Ray Kroc, a businessman, joined the company as a franchise agent and proceeded to purchase the chain from the McDonald brothers. McDonald's had its original headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois, but moved its global headquarters to Chicago in early 2018.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Paasche Airbrush Company",
"paragraph_text": "The Paasche Airbrush Company is based in Chicago, Illinois. The company manufactures airbrushes, industrial spray guns, air compressors and related equipment. Paasche has been a manufacturer of airbrushes for over 100 years, based on patented designs.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Solarsoft Business Systems",
"paragraph_text": "Solarsoft Business Systems is a privately held software company based in Richmond Hill, Ontario, with UK headquarters in Bracknell. The company supplies modern business management systems, enterprise resource planning (ERP) software and IT services to manufacturers, distributors and wholesale businesses across North America, Europe and Asia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Philadelphia",
"paragraph_text": "Based on the similar shifts underway the nation's economy after 1960, Philadelphia experienced a loss of manufacturing companies and jobs to lower taxed regions of the USA and often overseas. As a result, the economic base of Philadelphia, which had historically been manufacturing, declined significantly. In addition, consolidation in several American industries (retailing, financial services and health care in particular) reduced the number of companies headquartered in Philadelphia. The economic impact of these changes would reduce Philadelphia's tax base and the resources of local government. Philadelphia struggled through a long period of adjustment to these economic changes, coupled with significant demographic change as wealthier residents moved into the nearby suburbs and more immigrants moved into the city. The city in fact approached bankruptcy in the late 1980s. Revitalization began in the 1990s, with gentrification turning around many neighborhoods and reversing its decades-long trend of population loss.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Boeing 747-8",
"paragraph_text": "The Boeing 747-8 is a wide-body jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was officially announced in 2005. The 747-8 is the third generation of the 747, with a lengthened fuselage, redesigned wings, new engines, and improved efficiency. The 747-8 is the largest 747 version, the largest commercial aircraft built in the United States, and the longest operational passenger aircraft in the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Höffner (furniture retailer)",
"paragraph_text": "Höffner is a furniture retailer in Germany. A company of that name was founded in 1874 by Rudolf Höffner, and became Berlin's biggest furniture retailer before World War II. Based in the eastern part of Berlin, the company was discontinued after the war. In 1967 Kurt Krieger bought the right to the name \"Höffner\" and created a new company under that name. This company was initially based in Berlin-Wedding, but the headquarters moved to Schönefeld, Brandenburg after Germany's reunification.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the manufacturer of the aircraft with 747 in its name by the Chicago-headquartered company that was once in Seattle?
|
[
{
"id": 16056,
"question": "Before they moved to Chicago, what was the biggest company headquartered in Seattle?",
"answer": "Boeing",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
},
{
"id": 449977,
"question": "#1 747 >> manufacturer",
"answer": "Boeing Commercial Airplanes",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18
}
] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
|
[
"BCA"
] | true |
2hop__775084_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "This Is What I Do (Sonny Rollins album)",
"paragraph_text": "This Is What I Do is an album by jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, released on the Milestone label in 2000, featuring performances by Rollins with Clifton Anderson, Stephen Scott, Bob Cranshaw, Jack DeJohnette and Perry Wilson.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Work Time",
"paragraph_text": "Work Time is an album by jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, recorded for the Prestige label, featuring performances by Rollins with Ray Bryant, George Morrow, and Max Roach.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Stay (Black Stone Cherry song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Stay ''is a song by American rock band Black Stone Cherry, written by the band along with Joey Moi. Black Stone Cherry recorded it on their 2011 album Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea, produced by Howard Benson.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith",
"paragraph_text": "Dinah Sings Bessie Smith is a 1958 album by blues, R&B and jazz singer Dinah Washington released on the Emarcy label, and reissued by Verve Records in 1999 as The Bessie Smith Songbook. The album arrangements are headed by Robare Edmondson and Ernie Wilkins, and the songs are associated with American blues singer Bessie Smith. Allmusic details the album in its review as saying: \"It was only natural that the \"Queen of the Blues\" should record songs associated with the \"Empress of the Blues.\" The performances by the septet/octet do not sound like the 1920s and the purposely ricky-tick drumming is insulting, but Dinah Washington sounds quite at home on this music\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Lake Burragorang",
"paragraph_text": "Lake Burragorang is impounded by Warragamba Dam and is located in the lower Blue Mountains of New South Wales, within the Greater Blue Mountains Area World Heritage Site. The reservoir collects water from the converged flows of the Coxs, Kowmung, Nattai, Wingecarribee, Wollondilly, and Warragamba rivers and their associated tributaries. The reservoir is the major water storage for greater metropolitan Sydney, and its dam wall is located approximately southwest of the Sydney central business district.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Arthur J. Stone",
"paragraph_text": "Arthur J. Stone (1847–1938), a leading American silversmith, was born, trained and worked in Sheffield, England, and Edinburgh, Scotland, before travelling to the United States in 1884. He was one of the last silversmiths in America to train apprentices to carry out designs in hand-wrought silver. In 1901, Stone set up a workshop in Gardner, Massachusetts which operated under his name until its sale in 1937 to Henry Heywood. Heywood was a Gardner businessman, who renamed it The Stone Silver Shop, and later, Stone Associates. Heywood died in 1945. His sons Henry, Jr. and Jerome ran Stone Associates until 1957.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Killing Car",
"paragraph_text": "\"Killing Car\" was released in France on DVD as part of the Jean Rollin collection from LCJ Editions on 15 November 2004.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Extreme Rules (2017)",
"paragraph_text": "In the main event, Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins, Bray Wyatt, Finn Bálor, and Samoa Joe competed in a fatal five - way extreme rules match to determine the number one contender against Brock Lesnar for the Universal Championship at Great Balls of Fire. After Wyatt and Joe attacked Reigns and Rollins with the steel steps, Wyatt performed a DDT on Rollins onto the steel steps. Joe applied the Coquina Clutch on Bálor, who escaped. Wyatt performed a Side Slam on Reigns onto an announce table. Joe applied the Coquina Clutch on Wyatt, but Bálor struck Joe with a chair. Reigns performed a Spear through the barricade on Bálor and Joe. Rollins performed a Frog Splash on Wyatt through an announce table. Bálor performed a Coup De Grace on Reigns, but as Bálor attempted a pin, Joe applied the Coquina Clutch on Bálor, who passed out, giving Joe the win by technical submission and becoming the number one contender for the Universal Championship.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "War (Bone Thugs-n-Harmony song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"War\" is a single by Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, released in 1998. It was featured on \"Small Soldiers\" and on the 1998 collection album \"The Collection Volume One\". The song is performed by members Layzie, Flesh, and Wish, and also features Henry Rollins, Tom Morello and Flea.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Rollin' Stone: The Golden Anniversary Collection",
"paragraph_text": "Rollin' Stone: The Golden Anniversary Collection is a compilation album collecting the first 50 master recordings of blues singer Muddy Waters for Chess Records. The collection spans Muddy's debut with then named Aristocrat Records circa 1947, and traces his evolution as a songwriter and musician up to September 17, 1952 on what became Chess Records after the company changed ownership. It is the first in a series of releases chronicling Muddy Waters' complete recording career at Chess. The second release in the series is \"\" (2004) and the third release in the series is \"\" (2012).",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "The 50th Anniversary Collection 1964",
"paragraph_text": "The 50th Anniversary Collection 1964 is the third Bob Dylan collection released by Sony Music to prevent the recordings from legally entering the public domain in Europe. Released on vinyl only in December 2014 only 1,000 copies of the nine-LP set were produced.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama",
"paragraph_text": "Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Motion Picture -- Drama Awarded for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Drama Location United States Presented by Hollywood Foreign Press Association Currently held by Frances McDormand for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017) Website http://www.goldenglobes.com/",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "A Fighter's Blues",
"paragraph_text": "A Fighter's Blues () is a 2000 Hong Kong drama film written and directed by Daniel Lee, produced by and starring Andy Lau. Lau, who displays profound emotions as a kickboxer who persistently pursues dignity and honorary value in the film, was awarded the Golden Bauhinia Awards for Best Actor for his performance. Released on 21 December 2000, \"A Fighter's Blues\" is Lau's 100th film role.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Nucleus (Sonny Rollins album)",
"paragraph_text": "Nucleus is an album by jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, released on the Milestone label in 1975, featuring performances by Rollins with George Duke, Raul de Souza, Bennie Maupin, Chuck Rainey, Eddie Moore, Mtume, Bob Cranshaw and Roy McCurdy. It was recorded at Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, CA, on September 2–5, 1975.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "The Chronic",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Chronic\" peaked at number three on the \"Billboard\" 200 and has been certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America with sales of 5.7 million copies in the United States, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. Dr. Dre's production has been noted for popularizing the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap. \"The Chronic\" has been widely regarded as one of the most important and influential albums of the 1990s and regarded by many fans and peers to be one of the most well-produced hip hop albums of all time. \"The Chronic\" was ranked at #138 on \"Rolling Stone\"'s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Soul music",
"paragraph_text": "Little Richard (who inspired Otis Redding) and James Brown were equally influential. Brown was known as the ``Godfather of Soul ''and Richard proclaimed himself the`` king of rockin 'and rollin', rhythm and blues soulin ''', because his music embodied elements of all three, and because he inspired artists in all three genres.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Waiting on a Friend",
"paragraph_text": "The song is noted for its dreamy qualities brought on by the soft guitars, smooth rhythm, and Jagger's lilting refrain of ``doo - doo - doo '''s. Stones - recording veteran Nicky Hopkins performs the track's running piano. The Stones hired jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins to perform the solo on this song, as well as two others on the album. On his addition to the track, Jagger said in 1985:",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Bossa nova",
"paragraph_text": "Bossa nova Stylistic origins Samba jazz blues choro Cultural origins Late 1950s, South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Typical instruments Classical guitar acoustic guitar piano electric organ acoustic bass drums Subgenres Tropicália música popular brasileira Other topics Bossa Nova (dance) sambass",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Old Flames",
"paragraph_text": "Old Flames is an album by jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, released on the Milestone label in 1993, featuring performances by Rollins with Clifton Anderson, Tommy Flanagan, Bob Cranshaw and Jack DeJohnette with Jon Faddis, Byron Stripling, Alex Brofsky and Bob Stewart added on two tracks which were arranged by Jimmy Heath.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What subgenre of blues is associated with the performer of Rollin' Stone: The Golden Anniversary Collection?
|
[
{
"id": 775084,
"question": "Rollin' Stone: The Golden Anniversary Collection >> performer",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 10
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__142247_386169
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Bebe Cool",
"paragraph_text": "Bebe Cool (born 1 September 1977) (real name Moses Ssali) is a top African reggae and ragga musician from Uganda. He started his career around 1997 in Nairobi, Kenya, but a few years later he moved back to his native country. Bebe Cool was one of the first artists affiliated with Ogopa DJs, a production house and record label in Kenya.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "'Bout Changes 'n' Things Take 2",
"paragraph_text": "'Bout Changes 'n' Things Take 2 is a 1967 album by Eric Andersen and was released on the Vanguard Records label. It is nearly the same album as his previous release, with changes in the song sequencing and the addition of additional instruments.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "This Is Country Music",
"paragraph_text": "This Is Country Music is the eighth studio album by American country music artist Brad Paisley. The album was originally scheduled to be released April 19, but was pushed back to May 23, 2011 by recording label Arista Nashville.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "George Jones with Love",
"paragraph_text": "George Jones with Love is an album by American country music artist George Jones, released in 1971 on the Musicor Records label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Mount Hood",
"paragraph_text": "Mount Hood Wy'east Mount Hood reflected in Mirror Lake. Highest point Elevation 11,249 ft (3,429 m) NAVD 88 Prominence 7,706 ft (2,349 m) Listing North America prominent peak 49th US most prominent peaks 28th US state high point 13th Oregon county high points Coordinates 45 ° 22 ′ 25 ''N 121 ° 41 ′ 45'' W / 45.373514489 ° N 121.695918558 ° W / 45.373514489; - 121.695918558 Coordinates: 45 ° 22 ′ 25 ''N 121 ° 41 ′ 45'' W / 45.373514489 ° N 121.695918558 ° W / 45.373514489; - 121.695918558 Geography Location relative to other Oregon volcanoes Location Clackamas / Hood River counties, Oregon, U.S. Parent range Cascade Range Topo map USGS Mount Hood South Geology Age of rock More than 500,000 years Mountain type Stratovolcano Volcanic arc Cascade Volcanic Arc Last eruption 1866 Climbing First ascent July 11, 1857 by Henry Pittock, W. Lymen Chittenden, Wilbur Cornell, and the Rev. T.A. Wood Easiest route Rock and glacier climb",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Matador (Kenny Dorham album)",
"paragraph_text": "Matador is an album by American jazz trumpeter Kenny Dorham featuring performances recorded in 1962 and released on the United Artists label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Peewee Longway",
"paragraph_text": "Quincy Lamont Williams (born August 17, 1984), known by his stage name Peewee Longway, is an American hip hop recording artist who was one of the last signees of 1017 Records before founder Gucci Mane's 2013–2016 imprisonment. He is also the nephew of Brick Squad member Cold Blooded Da Don who introduced him to Gucci Mane. The artist's most celebrated releases to date are his mixtape \"The Blue M&M\" and his collaboration with Young Thug, \"Loaded\". \"The Blue M&M\" also featured the singles \"Sneakin n Geekin\" and \"Servin Lean\" (remix) featuring A$AP Rocky. He is also a member of a rap group with Gucci Mane and Young Dolph, collectively known as \"Felix Brothers\". They released their debut project in July 2014.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Sleep Dank",
"paragraph_text": "Sleep Dank, also known as Sleep Da Danker or Sleepdank, is an American rapper signed to the late Mac Dre's label Thizz Entertainment.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "VHF Records",
"paragraph_text": "VHF Records is an American record label, known for their extensive work with several major experimental artists. The label is based in the Washington, DC suburb of Fairfax, Va., and it initially focused on indie and experimental bands from that region. The label has since branched out to release innovative and offbeat music from around the world, although Northern Virginia artists are still prominently featured in the catalog.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Jeezy",
"paragraph_text": "Jeezy released his first independent album, Thuggin 'Under the Influence (T.U.I.), in 2001 under the name Lil J. It featured artists such as Freddy J., Kinky B, Fidank, and Lil Jon, who also produced some of the tracks. In 2003, Jeezy released (also independently) Come Shop wit Me, a two - CD set featuring completely new tracks with some songs from T.U.I. Jeezy signed with Bad Boy Records in 2004 and joined the group Boyz n da Hood, whose self - titled album was released in June 2005 and peaked at # 5 on the Billboard 200 albums charts.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Boyz n the Hood",
"paragraph_text": "Boyz n the Hood is a 1991 American teen hood drama film written and directed by John Singleton in his directorial debut, and starring Cuba Gooding Jr., Ice Cube, Morris Chestnut, Laurence Fishburne, Nia Long, Regina King and Angela Bassett. This film was the acting debut for both Ice Cube and Morris Chestnut.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "New Country Hits",
"paragraph_text": "New Country Hits is an album by American country music artist George Jones. It was released in 1965 on the Musicor Records label.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Back n da Hood",
"paragraph_text": "Back n da Hood is a 1992 EP by hyphy Bay Area rapper Mac Dre. It was recorded live from Fresno County Jail and U.S.P. Lompoc over the phone. Its lyrics are about life in Fresno County Jail, and about himself in early life.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Nick Records",
"paragraph_text": "Nick Records (also known as Nickelodeon Records or Nick Music) is the record label for the children's television channel Nickelodeon. The label featured new and emerging young musical artists, \"triple threat\" singers who would also act and dance on the network's series, and soundtrack and compilations based on Nickelodeon TV shows.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Golden Era Mixtape 2011",
"paragraph_text": "Golden Era Mixtape 2011 is a mixtape by all artists signed to Australian Hip hop label Golden Era Records. It was released as a free download on 17 January 2011 on the Golden Era Records website. In an interview about the mixtape on Triple J, Suffa of the Hilltop Hoods said that \"everyone's been downloading it so much that the website has crashed\". There is not going to be a commercial release of the album, although physical copies were distributed free with purchases of Golden Era releases and at gigs featuring Golden Era artists.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Weston Burt",
"paragraph_text": "Weston Burt (born in Fort Payne, Alabama) is an American country music singer. Burt is the flagship artist for HitShop Records, a record label distributed by Warner Music Nashville.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Lench Mob Records",
"paragraph_text": "Lench Mob Records is an independently owned record label owned by Los Angeles rapper and actor Ice Cube. Founded as Street Knowledge Records, it was once home to many of Cube's former allies such as DJ Pooh, and Lench Mob's own Chilly Chill, Del tha Funkee Homosapien, Kam, Yo Yo and the group Da Lench Mob. The label, established in 1990, remained dormant for a long period until a revival in 2006 with the release of Ice Cube's album \"Laugh Now, Cry Later\". Lench Mob Records also distributes Bigg Swang Records home to WC, DJ Crazy Toones, Young Maylay and Tha Trapp. Hallway Productionz have produced multiple tracks for the label's two major artists.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Da' Take Over",
"paragraph_text": "Da' Take Over is Angel & Khriz's third studio album. The album was released under VI Records label. It was released on March 23, 2010. It was nominated for a Lo Nuestro Award for Urban Album of the Year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Hootin' 'n Tootin'",
"paragraph_text": "Hootin' 'n Tootin' is the debut album by American saxophonist Fred Jackson, and the sole recording under his leadership, recorded in 1962 and released on the Blue Note label. The CD reissue added seven previously unissued bonus tracks from a later session.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Bakery Music",
"paragraph_text": "Bakery Music is a Thai record label founded in 1994. It pioneered the independent music industry in the 1990s, being the most successful of its time, and inspiring the creation of many other indie labels. The company is now a subsidiary of Sony Music Entertainment Thailand.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the record label of the artist of Back n da Hood?
|
[
{
"id": 142247,
"question": "What artist was responsible for the creation of Back n da Hood?",
"answer": "Mac Dre",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
},
{
"id": 386169,
"question": "#1 >> record label",
"answer": "Thizz Entertainment",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
}
] |
Thizz Entertainment
|
[] | true |
2hop__142969_787704
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Un día",
"paragraph_text": "Un día (; Spanish for \"One day\") is the fifth studio album of Argentine singer-songwriter Juana Molina. It was first released on October 6, 2008 by Domino Records. Sonically, the album is an abstract and consists of layered loops. It received generally positive reviews from music critics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "King of America",
"paragraph_text": "King of America is the tenth studio album by the British rock singer and songwriter Elvis Costello, released in 1986. It peaked at #11 on the UK album chart, and at #39 on the \"Billboard\" 200. It was selected as one of Rolling Stone's top twenty albums of the year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "River (Eminem song)",
"paragraph_text": "``River ''is a song by American rapper Eminem featuring guest vocals by English singer - songwriter Ed Sheeran. It is the fifth track from his ninth solo studio album Revival (2017). The song was written by Mathers, Sheeran and Emile Haynie, and produced by Haynie.`` River'' was released to radio on January 5, 2018 as the album's second single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Late in the Evening",
"paragraph_text": "``Late in the Evening ''is a song by American singer - songwriter Paul Simon. It was the lead single from his fifth studio album, One - Trick Pony (1980), released on Warner Bros. Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "De La Noche: The True Story – A Poperetta",
"paragraph_text": "De La Noche: The True Story – A Poperetta is the fifth and final studio album by American actor, singer and songwriter Paul Jabara.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "A Wonderful Life (album)",
"paragraph_text": "The singer/songwriter, Lara Fabian's second English album and sixth studio album, \"A Wonderful Life\" was released in June 2004. In France, the album sold an estimated 82,000 copies. \"A Wonderful Life\" was Fabian's last album under her contract with Sony Records and she subsequently left the company.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Warming Up to the Ice Age",
"paragraph_text": "Warming Up to the Ice Age was singer-songwriter John Hiatt's seventh album, released in 1985. It was his last album with Geffen Records, who dropped Hiatt after the album failed to chart. It was the last Hiatt studio album to miss the Billboard 200. \"The Usual\" would later be covered by Bob Dylan. \"Living a Little, Laughing a Little\", originally a hit for The Spinners, was a duet with Elvis Costello.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "At or with Me",
"paragraph_text": "\"At or with Me\" is a song by American singer-songwriter Jack Johnson. It is the second single from his fifth studio album, \"To the Sea\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Bachata Rosa",
"paragraph_text": "Bachata Rosa (English: \"Pink Bachata\") is the fifth studio album by Dominican singer-songwriter Juan Luis Guerra and his group 4.40. It was released on December 11, 1990, by Karen Records. Written and produced by Guerra, the record sold over five million copies worldwide. It brought bachata music into the mainstream in the Dominican Republic and gave the genre an international audience. A Portuguese version of the record was released in 1992 under the title \"Romance Rosa\"; it was certified gold in Brazil. The album received a Grammy Award for Best Tropical Latin Album and two Lo Nuestro Awards for Tropical Album of the Year and Tropical Group of the Year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Everything Has Changed",
"paragraph_text": "``Everything Has Changed ''is a song written and performed by American singer - songwriter Taylor Swift and English singer - songwriter Ed Sheeran, taken from Swift's fourth studio album, Red (2012). Produced by Butch Walker, the track was released as the sixth single from the album on July 16, 2013.`` Everything Has Changed'' is a guitar ballad combining folk and pop genres about ``wanting to get to know a new lover better ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Blues My Name",
"paragraph_text": "Blues My Name is the fifth studio album by American country music singer and songwriter Hank Williams, Jr. The album was issued by MGM Records as number E/SE 4344 and later re-issued by Polydor Records as 833 069-1 Y-1.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Wildflower (Sheryl Crow album)",
"paragraph_text": "Wildflower is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow, first released September 27, 2005. Although the album debuted at #2 on the \"Billboard\" 200, it received mixed reviews and was not as commercially successful as previous albums, having also peaked at #25 on the UK Album Chart (where all her previous studio albums had been Top 10 successes).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Flavors of Entanglement",
"paragraph_text": "Flavors of Entanglement is the seventh studio album, fifth international release and last Maverick Records release by Canadian singer-songwriter Alanis Morissette. The album, which was originally set for an April release, came out on May 30, 2008 in Germany, Benelux, and Ireland, internationally on June 2, and in the United States on June 10. It was produced by Guy Sigsworth. The album has sold 233,000 copies in the USA and over 600,000 worldwide. \"Flavors\" won a Juno for Pop Album of the Year at the 2009 Juno Awards. The album gets its name from a lyric in the track \"Moratorium\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Shot of Love",
"paragraph_text": "Shot of Love is the 21st studio album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released on August 10, 1981 by Columbia Records. It is considered to be Dylan's last of a trilogy of Christian albums. Arrangements are rooted more in rock'n'roll, and less in gospel than Dylan's two previous albums.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Secret Codes and Battleships",
"paragraph_text": "Secret Codes and Battleships is the fifth studio album from Australian singer-songwriter Darren Hayes. It was released 21 October 2011 on Mercury Records in Australia, on EMI Records in the United Kingdom on 24 October, and on his own label Powdered Sugar for the rest of the world on 25 October.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "One More Last Chance",
"paragraph_text": "\"One More Last Chance\" is a song recorded by American country music singer Vince Gill. Gill co-wrote the song with Gary Nicholson. It was released in July 1993 as the fourth single from his album, \"I Still Believe in You\". The song reached the top of the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) chart.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Here Today (David Grisman album)",
"paragraph_text": "Here Today is a bluegrass album by five American musicians David Grisman, Emory Gordy Jr., Herb Pedersen, Jim Buchanan and Vince Gill, released in 1983 on Rounder Records. This was the only album this group recorded and each continued separate careers in bluegrass, newgrass, and country music.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Last Days at the Lodge",
"paragraph_text": "Last Days at the Lodge is the third studio album by singer-songwriter Amos Lee, released on June 24, 2008 through Blue Note. The first single from the album, \"Listen\", was made available as a digital download on the iTunes Store on April 29, 2008.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Reiter In",
"paragraph_text": "Reiter In is the thirteenth album by singer-songwriter and guitarist, Chris Whitley. It is his eleventh studio album and the last he made before his death (five months later, at 45) in November 2005.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Les frères existent encore",
"paragraph_text": "\"Les frères existent encore\" is the second single from \"Million Dollar Boy\", the second studio album by French-Canadian rapper from Montreal, K.Maro. In France, this single was the singer's fifth and last top ten hit.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What is the primary musical genre of the singer-songwriter whose fifth studio album is One More Last Chance?
|
[
{
"id": 142969,
"question": "Which singer-songwriter is One More Last Chance the fifth studio album of?",
"answer": "Vince Gill",
"paragraph_support_idx": 15
},
{
"id": 787704,
"question": "#1 >> genre",
"answer": "bluegrass",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
}
] |
bluegrass
|
[
"Bluegrass"
] | true |
2hop__142961_76347
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Walk Through Walls",
"paragraph_text": "Walk Through Walls is the fifth studio album by the American singer-songwriter Katie Herzig. The album was recorded at her own St. Cecelia Studios in Nashville together with Cason Cooley. The album was mixed by Justin Gerrish and was self-released.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Upfront & Down Low",
"paragraph_text": "Upfront & Down Low is the self-produced, third studio album by singer-songwriter Teddy Thompson, released under Verve Forecast Records on July 17, 2007. The album features covers of some of his favorite country songs, along with one original track (\"Down Low\"). Six songs on the album include string arrangements by Robert Kirby, while \"My Blue Tears\" features a string arrangement by friend and fellow singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "James Bourne discography",
"paragraph_text": "The discography of James Bourne, an English singer-songwriter. He released three albums as a part of Busted, one with Son of Dork and has three forthcoming studio albums - one under his stage name Future Boy, another with new band Call Me When I'm 18 and now a new Busted album has been announced following their reunion announcement. Bourne also worked for a while under the name Future Boy.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Trouble No More",
"paragraph_text": "Trouble No More is American singer-songwriter and musician John Mellencamp's 18th studio album and his final recording for Columbia Records, released in 2003. It consists of blues and folk covers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Last Days at the Lodge",
"paragraph_text": "Last Days at the Lodge is the third studio album by singer-songwriter Amos Lee, released on June 24, 2008 through Blue Note. The first single from the album, \"Listen\", was made available as a digital download on the iTunes Store on April 29, 2008.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Les frères existent encore",
"paragraph_text": "\"Les frères existent encore\" is the second single from \"Million Dollar Boy\", the second studio album by French-Canadian rapper from Montreal, K.Maro. In France, this single was the singer's fifth and last top ten hit.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Shakey Jake Harris",
"paragraph_text": "Shakey Jake Harris (April 12, 1921 – March 2, 1990) was an American Chicago blues singer, harmonicist and songwriter. He released five albums over a period of almost 25 years. He was often musically associated with his nephew Magic Sam.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Release the Stars",
"paragraph_text": "Release the Stars is the fifth studio album by Canadian-American singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright, released through Geffen Records on May 15, 2007. Pet Shop Boys' Neil Tennant was the executive producer; the album was mixed by producers Marius de Vries and Andy Bradfield. Wainwright's most commercially successful album to date, \"Release the Stars\" charted in 13 countries, reaching Top 10 positions in Denmark, Norway, and the United Kingdom, and was certified gold in Canada and the UK. The album generated three singles: \"Going to a Town\", which peaked at number 54 on the UK Singles Chart, \"Rules and Regulations\", and \"Tiergarten\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "At or with Me",
"paragraph_text": "\"At or with Me\" is a song by American singer-songwriter Jack Johnson. It is the second single from his fifth studio album, \"To the Sea\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Neck and Neck",
"paragraph_text": "Neck and Neck is a collaborative album by American guitarist Chet Atkins and British singer-songwriter and guitarist Mark Knopfler, released on October 9, 1990 by Columbia Records. \"Poor Boy Blues\" was released as a single.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "De La Noche: The True Story – A Poperetta",
"paragraph_text": "De La Noche: The True Story – A Poperetta is the fifth and final studio album by American actor, singer and songwriter Paul Jabara.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Still Alive and Well",
"paragraph_text": "Still Alive and Well is an album by blues rock guitarist and singer Johnny Winter. It was his fifth studio album, and his first since \"Johnny Winter And\" almost three years earlier. It was released by Columbia Records in 1973.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Mannish Boy",
"paragraph_text": "\"Mannish Boy\" (or \"Manish Boy\" as it was originally titled) is a blues standard by Muddy Waters. First recorded in 1955, the song is both an arrangement of and an \"answer song\" to Bo Diddley's \"I'm a Man\", which was in turn inspired by Waters' and Willie Dixon's \"Hoochie Coochie Man\". \"Mannish Boy\" features a repeating stop-time figure on one chord throughout the song and is credited to Waters, Mel London, and Bo Diddley.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Poem, ballader och lite blues",
"paragraph_text": "Poem, ballader och lite blues (English: \"Poems, ballads and a little blues\") is the sixth studio album by the Swedish-Dutch folk singer-songwriter Cornelis Vreeswijk.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Late in the Evening",
"paragraph_text": "``Late in the Evening ''is a song by American singer - songwriter Paul Simon. It was the lead single from his fifth studio album, One - Trick Pony (1980), released on Warner Bros. Records.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "The Scene of the Crime",
"paragraph_text": "The Scene of the Crime is a studio album by American singer-songwriter Bettye LaVette, released in the United States on September 25, 2007 on the label ANTI-. It is a collaboration with Drive-By Truckers as backing band, Spooner Oldham on piano, and other studio musicians. The album debuted at number one on \"Billboard\"s Top Blues Albums chart and was nominated for Best Contemporary Blues Album at the 2008 Grammy Awards.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Blues My Name",
"paragraph_text": "Blues My Name is the fifth studio album by American country music singer and songwriter Hank Williams, Jr. The album was issued by MGM Records as number E/SE 4344 and later re-issued by Polydor Records as 833 069-1 Y-1.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Un día",
"paragraph_text": "Un día (; Spanish for \"One day\") is the fifth studio album of Argentine singer-songwriter Juana Molina. It was first released on October 6, 2008 by Domino Records. Sonically, the album is an abstract and consists of layered loops. It received generally positive reviews from music critics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_text": "McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 -- April 30, 1983), known professionally as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the ``father of modern Chicago blues ''.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Lisa Stansfield discography",
"paragraph_text": "British singer and songwriter Lisa Stansfield has released eight solo studio albums and one with her band Blue Zone, four compilation albums, three remix albums, one soundtrack album, one extended play and forty-four singles. As of 2004, Stansfield has sold over twenty million albums worldwide, including five million of \"Affection\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
What subgenre of the blues is the singer-songwriter of Mannish Boy associated with?
|
[
{
"id": 142961,
"question": "Which singer-songwriter is Mannish Boy the fifth studio album of?",
"answer": "Muddy Waters",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
},
{
"id": 76347,
"question": "#1 is associated with which subgenre of the blues",
"answer": "Chicago blues",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18
}
] |
Chicago blues
|
[] | true |
2hop__78663_72667
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Gamal Abdel Nasser",
"paragraph_text": "In January 1964, Nasser called for an Arab League summit in Cairo to establish a unified Arab response against Israel's plans to divert the Jordan River's waters for economic purposes, which Syria and Jordan deemed an act of war. Nasser blamed Arab divisions for what he deemed \"the disastrous situation\". He discouraged Syria and Palestinian guerrillas from provoking the Israelis, conceding that he had no plans for war with Israel. During the summit, Nasser developed cordial relations with King Hussein, and ties were mended with the rulers of Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Morocco. In May, Nasser moved to formally share his leadership position over the Palestine issue by initiating the creation of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). In practice, Nasser used the PLO to wield control over the Palestinian fedayeen. Its head was to be Ahmad Shukeiri, Nasser's personal nominee.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Montfort Castle",
"paragraph_text": "The site is now a national park inside the Nahal Kziv nature reserve, and is an important tourist destination attracting many visitors from inside and outside Israel.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Normans",
"paragraph_text": "In 1066, Duke William II of Normandy conquered England killing King Harold II at the Battle of Hastings. The invading Normans and their descendants replaced the Anglo-Saxons as the ruling class of England. The nobility of England were part of a single Normans culture and many had lands on both sides of the channel. Early Norman kings of England, as Dukes of Normandy, owed homage to the King of France for their land on the continent. They considered England to be their most important holding (it brought with it the title of King—an important status symbol).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Nutrition",
"paragraph_text": "The first recorded nutritional experiment with human subjects is found in the Bible's Book of Daniel. Daniel and his friends were captured by the king of Babylon during an invasion of Israel. Selected as court servants, they were to share in the king's fine foods and wine. But they objected, preferring vegetables (pulses) and water in accordance with their Jewish dietary restrictions. The king's chief steward reluctantly agreed to a trial. Daniel and his friends received their diet for 10 days and were then compared to the king's men. Appearing healthier, they were allowed to continue with their diet.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Israel has nine public universities that are subsidized by the state and 49 private colleges. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel's second-oldest university after the Technion, houses the National Library of Israel, the world's largest repository of Judaica and Hebraica. The Technion, the Hebrew University, and the Weizmann Institute consistently ranked among world's 100 top universities by the prestigious ARWU academic ranking. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv University are ranked among the world's top 100 universities by Times Higher Education magazine. Other major universities in the country include Bar-Ilan University, the University of Haifa, The Open University, and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. Ariel University, in the West Bank, is the newest university institution, upgraded from college status, and the first in over thirty years. Israel's seven research universities (excluding the Open University) are consistently ranked among top 500 in the world.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Consequently, the population of Israel rose from 800,000 to two million between 1948 and 1958. Between 1948 and 1970, approximately 1,150,000 Jewish refugees relocated to Israel. The immigrants came to Israel for differing reasons. Some believed in a Zionist ideology, while others moved to escape persecution. There were others that did it for the promise of a better life in Israel and a small number that were expelled from their homelands, such as British and French Jews in Egypt after the Suez Crisis.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "The Israeli Space Agency coordinates all Israeli space research programs with scientific and commercial goals. In 2012 Israel was ranked ninth in the world by the Futron's Space Competitiveness Index. Israel is one of only seven countries that both build their own satellites and launch their own launchers. The Shavit is a space launch vehicle produced by Israel to launch small satellites into low earth orbit. It was first launched in 1988, making Israel the eighth nation to have a space launch capability. Shavit rockets are launched from the spaceport at the Palmachim Airbase by the Israeli Space Agency. Since 1988 Israel Aerospace Industries have indigenously designed and built at least 13 commercial, research and spy satellites. Some of Israel's satellites are ranked among the world's most advanced space systems. In 2003, Ilan Ramon became Israel's first astronaut, serving as payload specialist of STS-107, the fatal mission of the Space Shuttle Columbia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "David (Michelangelo)",
"paragraph_text": "In 1873, the statue of David was removed from the piazza, to protect it from damage, and displayed in the Accademia Gallery, Florence, where it attracted many visitors. A replica was placed in the Piazza della Signoria in 1910.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Meanwhile, Begin's government provided incentives for Israelis to settle in the occupied West Bank, increasing friction with the Palestinians in that area. The Basic Law: Jerusalem, the Capital of Israel, passed in 1980, was believed by some to reaffirm Israel's 1967 annexation of Jerusalem by government decree, and reignited international controversy over the status of the city. No Israeli legislation has defined the territory of Israel and no act specifically included East Jerusalem therein. The position of the majority of UN member states is reflected in numerous resolutions declaring that actions taken by Israel to settle its citizens in the West Bank, and impose its laws and administration on East Jerusalem, are illegal and have no validity. In 1981 Israel annexed the Golan Heights, although annexation was not recognized internationally.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Rodney King",
"paragraph_text": "Rodney King has become a symbol of police brutality, but his family remembers him as a ``human not a symbol ''. Despite being a victim of brutality, King never advocated for hatred or violence against the police, saying that we needed to`` all get along''. King's message of ``can we all just get along ''became the foundation of what he stood for; since his death, his daughter Lori King has worked with the LAPD to build bridges between the police and the African - American community.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "In 1992, Yitzhak Rabin became Prime Minister following an election in which his party called for compromise with Israel's neighbors. The following year, Shimon Peres on behalf of Israel, and Mahmoud Abbas for the PLO, signed the Oslo Accords, which gave the Palestinian National Authority the right to govern parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The PLO also recognized Israel's right to exist and pledged an end to terrorism. In 1994, the Israel–Jordan Treaty of Peace was signed, making Jordan the second Arab country to normalize relations with Israel. Arab public support for the Accords was damaged by the continuation of Israeli settlements and checkpoints, and the deterioration of economic conditions. Israeli public support for the Accords waned as Israel was struck by Palestinian suicide attacks. Finally, while leaving a peace rally in November 1995, Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by a far-right-wing Jew who opposed the Accords.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "David",
"paragraph_text": "David King of Israel Statue of King David by Nicolas Cordier in the Borghese Chapel of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome, Italy Reign c. 1000 BCE Predecessor Saul Ish - bosheth Successor Solomon Born Bethlehem, Judah, Israel Died Jerusalem, Judah, Israel Burial City of David (Jerusalem) Consort 8 wives: (show) Michal Ahinoam Abigail Maachah Haggith Abital Eglah Bathsheba Issue 18 + children: (show) Amnon Chileab Absalom Adonijah Shephatiah Ithream Shammua Shobab Nathan Solomon Ibhar Elishua Nepheg Japhia Elishama Eliada Eliphalet Tamar House House of David Father Jesse Mother Nitzevet (Talmud)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Israel",
"paragraph_text": "Arab nationalists led by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser refused to recognize Israel, and called for its destruction. By 1966, Israeli-Arab relations had deteriorated to the point of actual battles taking place between Israeli and Arab forces. In May 1967, Egypt massed its army near the border with Israel, expelled UN peacekeepers, stationed in the Sinai Peninsula since 1957, and blocked Israel's access to the Red Sea[citation needed]. Other Arab states mobilized their forces. Israel reiterated that these actions were a casus belli. On 5 June 1967, Israel launched a pre-emptive strike against Egypt. Jordan, Syria and Iraq responded and attacked Israel. In a Six-Day War, Israel defeated Jordan and captured the West Bank, defeated Egypt and captured the Gaza Strip and Sinai Peninsula, and defeated Syria and captured the Golan Heights. Jerusalem's boundaries were enlarged, incorporating East Jerusalem, and the 1949 Green Line became the administrative boundary between Israel and the occupied territories.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Sukkot",
"paragraph_text": "The holiday lasts seven days in Israel and eight in the diaspora. The first day (and second day in the diaspora) is a Shabbat - like holiday when work is forbidden. This is followed by intermediate days called Chol Hamoed, when certain work is permitted. The festival is closed with another Shabbat - like holiday called Shemini Atzeret (one day in Israel, two days in the diaspora, where the second day is called Simchat Torah). Shemini Atzeret coincides with the eighth day of Sukkot outside Israel.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Havat Shikmim",
"paragraph_text": "Sharon purchased the ranch in 1972 with the help of a loan from Meshulam Riklis. The ownership of the ranch was turned over to Sharon's sons Omri and Gilad, to avoid conflict of interest when Sharon became Agriculture Minister of Israel and Industry, Trade and Labour Minister of Israel.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Saul",
"paragraph_text": "Saul (/ sɔːl /; Hebrew: שָׁאוּל, Šāʼûl; ``asked for, prayed for ''; Latin: Saul; Arabic: طالوت , Ṭālūt or Arabic: شاؤل , Ša'ūl), according to the Hebrew Bible, was the first king of the Kingdom of Israel and Judah. His reign, traditionally placed in the late 11th century BCE, marked a transition from a tribal society to statehood.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "George VI",
"paragraph_text": "George VI's reign saw the acceleration of the dissolution of the British Empire. The Statute of Westminster 1931 had already acknowledged the evolution of the Dominions into separate sovereign states. The process of transformation from an empire to a voluntary association of independent states, known as the Commonwealth, gathered pace after the Second World War. During the ministry of Clement Attlee, British India became the two independent dominions of India and Pakistan in 1947. George relinquished the title of Emperor of India, and became King of India and King of Pakistan instead. In 1950 he ceased to be King of India when it became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations, but he remained King of Pakistan until his death and India recognised his new title of Head of the Commonwealth. Other countries left the Commonwealth, such as Burma in January 1948, Palestine (divided between Israel and the Arab states) in May 1948 and the Republic of Ireland in 1949.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "National Headquarters of the Israel Police",
"paragraph_text": "During Israel's first two decades, the Israel Police headquarters were in Tel Aviv. As the organization increased its size, the need for a new staff building became apparent. Following the Six-Day War, in which Israel captured all of Jerusalem, a new location was chosen in eastern Jerusalem, between Mount Scopus and the western part of the city.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Samuel (name)",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel (Sometimes spelled Samual) is a male given name and a surname of Hebrew origin meaning either ``name of God ''or`` God has heard'' (שם האלוהים Shem HaElohim) (שמע אלוהים Sh'ma Elohim). Samuel was the last of the ruling judges in the Old Testament. He anointed Saul to be the first King of Israel and later anointed David.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "David",
"paragraph_text": "In the biblical narrative, David is a young shepherd who first gains fame as a musician and later by killing Goliath. He becomes a favorite of King Saul and a close friend of Saul's son Jonathan. Worried that David is trying to take his throne, Saul turns on David. After Saul and Jonathan are killed in battle, David is anointed as King. David conquers Jerusalem, taking the Ark of the Covenant into the city, and establishing the kingdom founded by Saul. As king, David arranges the death of Uriah the Hittite to cover his adultery with Bathsheba. According to the same biblical text, God denies David the opportunity to build the temple and his son, Absalom, tries to overthrow him. David flees Jerusalem during Absalom's rebellion, but after Absalom's death he returns to the city to rule Israel. Before his peaceful death, he chooses his son Solomon as his successor. He is mentioned in the prophetic literature as an ideal king and an ancestor of a future Messiah, and many psalms are ascribed to him.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
When was the statue of the second king of Israel, who became the symbol of an ideal king, moved inside?
|
[
{
"id": 78663,
"question": "who was the second king of israel that became the symbol of an ideal king of israel",
"answer": "David",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
},
{
"id": 72667,
"question": "when was the statue of #1 moved inside",
"answer": "1873",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
}
] |
1873
|
[] | true |
2hop__156830_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Be a Brother",
"paragraph_text": "Be a Brother is the third album by Big Brother and the Holding Company, released in 1970. It was their first album after Janis Joplin's departure. Recruited in her place were guitarist David Shallock and singer-songwriters Nick Gravenites and Kathi McDonald.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Canadian Human Rights Commission",
"paragraph_text": "The Canadian Human Rights Commission (CHRC) was established in 1977 by the government of Canada. It is empowered under the \"Canadian Human Rights Act\" to investigate and try to settle complaints of discrimination in employment and in the provision of services within federal jurisdiction. The CHRC is also empowered under the \"Employment Equity Act\" to ensure that federally regulated employers provide equal opportunities for four designated groups: women, Aboriginal people, the disabled and visible minorities. The CHRC helps enforce these human rights and inform the general public and employers of these rights.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Employer Identification Number",
"paragraph_text": "The Employer Identification Number (EIN), also known as the Federal Employer Identification Number (FEIN) or the Federal Tax Identification Number, is a unique nine - digit number assigned by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to business entities operating in the United States for the purposes of identification. When the number is used for identification rather than employment tax reporting, it is usually referred to as a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), and when used for the purposes of reporting employment taxes, it is usually referred to as an EIN. These numbers are used for tax administration and must be not used for any other purpose. For example, the EIN should not be used in tax lien auction or sales, lotteries, etc.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Jacksonville, Alabama",
"paragraph_text": "Jacksonville is a city in Calhoun County, Alabama, United States. As of the 2010 census the population was 12,548, which is a 49% increase since 2000. It is included in the Anniston-Oxford Metropolitan Statistical Area. Jacksonville State University is located here, which is a center of commerce and one of the largest employers in the area.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That!",
"paragraph_text": "Martin Short as the Cat in the Hat Jacob Ewaniuk as Nick Alexa Torrington as Sally Robert Tinkler as Fish, Thing One and Thing Two Tracey Hoyt as Sally's mom and Nick's mom",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Big Mouth (TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Nick Kroll as Nick Birch / Maurice the Hormone Monster / Coach Steve / Lola / Lady Liberty / Ladybug / Joe Walsh / Ghost of Picasso / Ghost of Richard Burton / Italian Stallion",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Nick Anstead",
"paragraph_text": "Nick Anstead was born in May 1982 and is a lecturer in the Department of Media and Communication at the London School of Economics, focusing on political communication. He was previously a politics lecturer at the University of East Anglia.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "The Great Gatsby",
"paragraph_text": "In the summer of 1922, Nick Carraway, a Yale graduate and veteran of the Great War from the Midwest -- who serves as the novel's narrator -- takes a job in New York as a bond salesman. He rents a small house on Long Island, in the fictional village of West Egg, next door to the lavish mansion of Jay Gatsby, a mysterious multi-millionaire who holds extravagant parties but does not participate in them. Nick drives around the bay to East Egg for dinner at the home of his cousin, Daisy Fay Buchanan, and her husband, Tom, a college acquaintance of Nick's. They introduce Nick to Jordan Baker, an attractive, cynical young golfer. She reveals to Nick that Tom has a mistress, Myrtle Wilson, who lives in the ``valley of ashes, ''an industrial dumping ground between West Egg and New York City. Not long after this revelation, Nick travels to New York City with Tom and Myrtle to an apartment that Tom uses like a hotel room for Myrtle, as well as other women whom he also sleeps with. At Tom's New York apartment, a vulgar and bizarre party takes place. It ends with Tom physically abusing Myrtle, breaking her nose in the process, after she says Daisy's name several times, which makes him angry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Race Against the Machine",
"paragraph_text": "Race Against the Machine is a non-fiction book from 2011 by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee about the interaction of digital technology, employment and organization. The full title of the book is: \"Race Against the Machine: How the Digital Revolution Is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "List of McLeod's Daughters characters",
"paragraph_text": "Tess and Nick eventually rekindle their relationship and get married. Not long after, Nick takes a job on a farm in Argentina, and they leave Drover's. Tess returns after a year, announcing that she's pregnant. While expecting Nick to follow her home shortly, Tess learns that his plane has gone missing and he is assumed dead. Tess begins to mourn him, but Nick is found alive and returns to Drover's. They decide to return to Argentina for another three years, and Tess is not seen on the show again, though she and Nick are referenced by other characters periodically.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Battle of Cisterna",
"paragraph_text": "The Battle of Cisterna took place during World War II, on 30 January–2 February 1944, near Cisterna, Italy, as part of the Battle of Anzio, part of the Italian Campaign. The battle was a clear German victory which also had repercussions on the employment of U.S. Army Rangers that went beyond the immediate tactical and strategic results of the battle.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Ups and Downs in the Sea of Love",
"paragraph_text": "Ups and Downs in the Sea of Love (; literally \"One Hundred Thousand Tons Love\") is a 2003 Hong Kong romantic comedy television drama created and produced by TVB, starring Maggie Cheung Ho-yee, Nick Cheung, Joyce Tang, Ram Chiang, Angela Tong and Stephen Au as the main cast. Filming took place in summer 2002 on location in Hong Kong,California USA and a cruise ship docked at Victoria Harbour. Original broadcast began on Hong Kong's Jade July 5 till May 30, 2003 every Monday through Friday during its 9:30 to 10:30 pm timeslot with a total of 20 episodes.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "New Delhi",
"paragraph_text": "Connaught Place, one of North India's largest commercial and financial centres, is located in the northern part of New Delhi. Adjoining areas such as Barakhamba Road, ITO are also major commercial centres. Government and quasi government sector was the primary employer in New Delhi. The city's service sector has expanded due in part to the large skilled English-speaking workforce that has attracted many multinational companies. Key service industries include information technology, telecommunications, hotels, banking, media and tourism.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Tuvalu",
"paragraph_text": "New Zealand has an annual quota of 75 Tuvaluans granted work permits under the Pacific Access Category, as announced in 2001. The applicants register for the Pacific Access Category (PAC) ballots; the primary criteria is that the principal applicant must have a job offer from a New Zealand employer. Tuvaluans also have access to seasonal employment in the horticulture and viticulture industries in New Zealand under the Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) Work Policy introduced in 2007 allowing for employment of up to 5,000 workers from Tuvalu and other Pacific islands. Tuvaluans can participate in the Australian Pacific Seasonal Worker Program, which allows Pacific Islanders to obtain seasonal employment in the Australian agriculture industry, in particular cotton and cane operations; fishing industry, in particular aquaculture; and with accommodation providers in the tourism industry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Reay Parish Church",
"paragraph_text": "Reay Parish Church is a Church of Scotland parish church serving Reay, Caithness. It is one of the most northerly communities on the Scottish mainland, located several miles to west of Thurso. The largest local employer is the Dounreay nuclear facility.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "2011 Kids' Choice Awards",
"paragraph_text": "Favorite TV Show Favorite TV Actor iCarly Big Time Rush The Suite Life on Deck Wizards of Waverly Place Dylan Sprouse -- The Suite Life on Deck as Zack Martin Joe Jonas -- Jonas as Joseph ``Joe ''Lucas Nick Jonas -- Jonas as Nicholas`` Nick'' Lucas Cole Sprouse -- The Suite Life on Deck as Cody Martin Favorite TV Actress Favorite TV Sidekick Selena Gomez -- Wizards of Waverly Place as Alex Russo Miranda Cosgrove -- iCarly as Carly Shay Miley Cyrus -- Hannah Montana as Miley Stewart / Hannah Montana Victoria Justice -- Victorious as Tori Vega Jennette McCurdy -- iCarly as Sam Puckett David Henrie -- Wizards of Waverly Place as Justin Russo Noah Munck -- iCarly as Gibby Gibson Brenda Song -- The Suite Life on Deck as London Tipton Favorite Reality Show Favorite Cartoon American Idol America's Funniest Home Videos America's Got Talent Wipeout SpongeBob SquarePants The Penguins of Madagascar Phineas and Ferb Scooby - Doo! Mystery Incorporated",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Affirmative action in the United States",
"paragraph_text": "The National Conference of State Legislatures held in Washington D.C. stated in a 2014 overview that many supporters for affirmative action argue that policies stemming from affirmative action help to open doors for historically excluded groups in workplace settings and higher education. Workplace diversity has become a business management concept in which employers actively seek to promote an inclusive workplace. By valuing diversity, employers have the capacity to create an environment in which there is a culture of respect for individual differences as well as the ability to draw in talent and ideas from all segments of the population. By creating this diverse workforce, these employers and companies gain a competitive advantage in an increasingly global economy. According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, many private sector employers have concluded that a diverse workforce makes a \"company stronger, more profitable, and a better place to work.\" Therefore, these diversity promoting policies are implemented for competitive reasons rather than as a response to discrimination, but have shown the value in having diversity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Plymouth",
"paragraph_text": "Devonport Dockyard is the UK's only naval base that refits nuclear submarines and the Navy estimates that the Dockyard generates about 10% of Plymouth's income. Plymouth has the largest cluster of marine and maritime businesses in the south west with 270 firms operating within the sector. Other substantial employers include the university with almost 3,000 staff, as well as the Tamar Science Park employing 500 people in 50 companies. Several employers have chosen to locate their headquarters in Plymouth, including Hemsley Fraser.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Being Human Foundation",
"paragraph_text": "Founded 2007 Founder Salman Khan Type Education and healthcare for underprivileged Focus Underprivileged children Location Mumbai Area served India Products Clothing and watches Services Education, employment and medical treatment Method Direct training, funding medical treatment, supplies for the differently - abled Owner Salman Khan Website www.beinghumanonline.com",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is Nick Anstead's job located?
|
[
{
"id": 156830,
"question": "What is Nick Anstead's place of employment?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__143880_406613
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Ava Jerome",
"paragraph_text": "Ava Jerome General Hospital character Portrayed by Maura West Duration 2013 -- First appearance May 8, 2013 (2013 - 05 - 08) Created by Ron Carlivati Introduced by Frank Valentini Classification Present; regular Profile Other names Denise DeMuccio Occupation Mob heiress Art dealer Residence Port Charles, New York (show) Family Family Jerome Parents Victor Jerome Delia Ryan Stepparents Roger Coleridge Siblings Johnno Ryan Dino Antoinelli Olivia St. John Evan Jerome Julian Jerome Children Kiki Jerome Avery Corinthos Aunts and uncles Bob Reid Nieces and nephews Owen Ryan Evan Jerome, Jr. Sam Morgan Lucas Jones Daniel Morgan Leo Falconeri Emily Morgan",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Terence Koh",
"paragraph_text": "Terence Koh (born 1977 in Beijing, China ) is a Canadian artist who has also worked under the alias \"asianpunkboy\". The artist's work spans a range of media, including drawing, sculpture, video, performance, and the internet. Originally working under the alias asianpunkboy, Koh designed zines and custom-made books. His recent work has expanded to include durational performances, complex installations, and the exploration of natural ecosystems. Much of his diverse work involves queer, punk, and pornographic sensibilities. In 2008, he was listed in \"Out\" magazine's \"Out 100 People of the Year\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Lighting",
"paragraph_text": "Analysis of lighting quality particularly emphasizes use of natural lighting, but also considers spectral content if artificial light is to be used. Not only will greater reliance on natural light reduce energy consumption, but will favorably impact human health and performance. New studies have shown that the performance of students is influenced by the time and duration of daylight in their regular schedules. Designing school facilities to incorporate the right types of light at the right time of day for the right duration may improve student performance and well-being. Similarly, designing lighting systems that maximize the right amount of light at the appropriate time of day for the elderly may help relieve symptoms of Alzheimer's Disease. The human circadian system is entrained to a 24-hour light-dark pattern that mimics the earth’s natural light/dark pattern. When those patterns are disrupted, they disrupt the natural circadian cycle. Circadian disruption may lead to numerous health problems including breast cancer, seasonal affective disorder, delayed sleep phase syndrome, and other ailments.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Betty Clooney",
"paragraph_text": "Betty Clooney (April 12, 1931 – August 5, 1976) was an American singer, TV presenter and pioneer who briefly rose to fame in the 1950s with sister Rosemary Clooney. She led a very brief solo career, with songs like \"Kiki\" and \"You're All I See\". She married actor and musician Pupi Campo in 1955, and they had four children.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "For the Duration",
"paragraph_text": "For the Duration is a 1991 album by Rosemary Clooney, of songs popular during World War II. Clooney is accompanied by her usual small jazz group featuring Warren Vaché Jr., Scott Hamilton, and John Oddo, plus a string section.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "The Degraded",
"paragraph_text": "The Degraded () is the second film by Alexander Sokurov. It was released in 1980 and is of 30 minutes duration.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "The Man Who Sold the World",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Man Who Sold the World\" is a song written and performed by David Bowie. It is the title track of his third album, which was released in the US in November 1970 and in the UK in April 1971. The song has been covered by a number of other artists, notably by Lulu, who had a UK No. 3 hit with her version in 1974, and Nirvana, whose 1993 performance of the song for the television program \"MTV Unplugged\" introduced it to a new audience.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Marga Faulstich",
"paragraph_text": "Marga Faulstich was born in Weimar in 1915. She had two siblings. In 1922, the family moved to Jena, where Faulstich attended secondary school. After graduating from high school in 1935, she began training as a graduate assistant at Schott AG, one of the leading manufacturers of optical and technical specialty glasses in Europe. In her early years there, she worked on the development of thin films. The findings from the basic research performed then are still used in the manufacture of sunglasses, anti-reflective lenses, and glass facades.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Out Here on My Own",
"paragraph_text": "``Out Here on My Own ''is a ballad from the 1980 musical film Fame, performed by Irene Cara. It was written by sibling songwriting duo Lesley Gore (lyricist) and Michael Gore (composer). The song was produced by Michael Gore, and published by MGM BMI / Variety ASCAP. Cara performed the song at the 1981 Academy Awards, where the song was nominated for Best Original Song. The song was released on the soundtrack to the 1980 film Fame, which also contains an instrumental version of the track.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "The Man Who Sold the World",
"paragraph_text": "``The Man Who Sold the World ''is a song written and performed by David Bowie. It is the title track of his third album, which was released in the US in November 1970 and in the UK in April 1971. The song has been covered by a number of other artists, notably by Lulu, who had a UK No. 3 hit with her version in 1974, and Nirvana, whose 1993 performance of the song for the television program MTV Unplugged introduced it to a new audience.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Adolescence",
"paragraph_text": "During childhood, siblings are a source of conflict and frustration as well as a support system. Adolescence may affect this relationship differently, depending on sibling gender. In same-sex sibling pairs, intimacy increases during early adolescence, then remains stable. Mixed-sex siblings pairs act differently; siblings drift apart during early adolescent years, but experience an increase in intimacy starting at middle adolescence. Sibling interactions are children's first relational experiences, the ones that shape their social and self-understanding for life. Sustaining positive sibling relations can assist adolescents in a number of ways. Siblings are able to act as peers, and may increase one another's sociability and feelings of self-worth. Older siblings can give guidance to younger siblings, although the impact of this can be either positive or negative depending on the activity of the older sibling.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Satu Tuomisto",
"paragraph_text": "Satu Tuomisto is a Finnish contemporary dance choreographer whose pieces since the turn of the century have been performed in Britain, Finland and internationally.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Jackson family",
"paragraph_text": "The Jackson family is an American family of singers who originated in Gary, Indiana. Performing as members of The Jackson 5 and as solo artists, the children of Joseph Walter and Katherine Esther Jackson were very successful in the field of popular music from the late 1960s onwards. As a group, the eldest sons Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon, Michael, and later with the inclusion of Randy made the family's reputation, facilitating the subsequent success of siblings Rebbie, La Toya, and Janet. The Jackson 5 became known as the ``First Family of Soul ''(a title first held by the Five Stairsteps). The continued success of Michael and Janet's careers as solo artists led the Jacksons to become known as the`` Royal Family of Pop''. All nine of the Jackson siblings have gold records to their credits with La Toya holding the distinction of being the first Jackson sister to attain one (awarded by France's SNEP for ``Reggae Night '', a song she co-wrote for Jimmy Cliff).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Sibling",
"paragraph_text": "Half - siblings are people who share one parent but not both. They may share the same mother but different fathers (in which case they are known as uterine siblings or maternal half - brothers / half - sisters), or they may have the same father but different mothers (in which case, they are known as agnate siblings or paternal half - brothers / half - sisters. In law, the term consanguine is used in place of agnate). They share only one parent instead of two as full siblings do and are on average 25% related.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Run of the House",
"paragraph_text": "Run of the House is a sitcom on The WB, that aired between September 2003 and May 2004. Nineteen episodes were produced but only sixteen were aired before the show was cancelled. The show was about a family of four siblings, whose parents moved from Grand Rapids, Michigan, to Arizona, because the weather would be better there for their father's health. But they left the mostly-grown children to stay in their old house and look after themselves, with the 3 eldest siblings also having to deal with raising their 15-year-old sister, Brooke. There was also a nosy neighbor named Mrs. Norris who often popped in unannounced to check up on them.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "The Legendary Siblings",
"paragraph_text": "The Legendary Siblings is a Taiwanese television series adapted from Gu Long's novel \"Juedai Shuangjiao\". The series was directed by Lee Kwok-lap and starred Jimmy Lin and Alec Su in the leading roles. It was first broadcast on TTV in Taiwan in 1999 and was followed by \"The Legendary Siblings 2\" in 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Les Podervianskyi",
"paragraph_text": "Les Podervianskyi (, ; born 1952 in Kiev) is a Ukrainian painter, poet, playwright and performer. He is most famous for his absurd, highly satirical, and at times obscene short plays. Their average duration is five to fifteen minutes, with some exceptions. Podervianskyi has a cult following among Kiev intellectuals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "George William Weidler",
"paragraph_text": "George William Weidler was one of six children born to the architect Alfred Weidler (1886–1966) and opera singer Margarete Therese Louisa (née Radon). The first four siblings (Waldtraud, Verena, Werther, and Wolfgang) were born in Germany. The eldest sibling, Waldtraud (later known as Sylvia) and the youngest sibling, Virginia, were both child film actresses. And one of his three brothers, Warner (born Werner Alfred Weidler), was a composer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Direct-sequence spread spectrum",
"paragraph_text": "A method of achieving the spreading of a given signal is provided by the modulation scheme. With DSSS, the message signal is used to modulate a bit sequence known as a Pseudo Noise (PN) code; this PN code consists of a radio pulse that is much shorter in duration (larger bandwidth) than the original message signal. This modulation of the message signal scrambles and spreads the pieces of data, and thereby resulting in a bandwidth size nearly identical to that of the PN sequence. In this context, the duration of the radio pulse for the PN code is referred to as the chip duration. The smaller this duration, the larger the bandwidth of the resulting DSSS signal; more bandwidth multiplexed to the message signal results in better resistance against interference.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "2018 NCAA Division I baseball season",
"paragraph_text": "2018 NCAA Division I baseball season Duration February 12 -- June 28, 2018 Number of teams 299 Preseason # 1 Florida (Unanimous) Tournament Duration June 1 -- June 28 College World Series Seasons ← 2017 2019 →",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who was the sibling of the singer who performed For the Duration?
|
[
{
"id": 143880,
"question": "Whose performance is For the Duration?",
"answer": "Rosemary Clooney",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 406613,
"question": "#1 >> sibling",
"answer": "Betty Clooney",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
}
] |
Betty Clooney
|
[] | true |
2hop__343349_135138
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother",
"paragraph_text": "Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes - Lyon (4 August 1900 -- 30 March 2002) was the wife of King George VI and the mother of Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon. She was Queen consort of the United Kingdom and the Dominions from her husband's accession in 1936 until his death in 1952, after which she was known as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, to avoid confusion with her daughter. She was the last Empress of India.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "The Princess and the Frog",
"paragraph_text": "Oprah Winfrey as Eudora, Tiana's mother who wants to see her happy and worries that Tiana focuses too much on her dream of owning a restaurant. Ruben A. Aquino animated both Eudora and her husband, James.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother",
"paragraph_text": "Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes - Lyon (4 August 1900 -- 30 March 2002) was the wife of King George VI and the mother of Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon. She was Queen of the United Kingdom and the Dominions from her husband's accession in 1936 until his death in 1952, after which she was known as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, to avoid confusion with her daughter. She was the last Empress of India.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Nocturnal Animals",
"paragraph_text": "Amy Adams as Susan Morrow, a rich art gallery owner living in Los Angeles Jake Gyllenhaal as Edward Sheffield, Susan's estranged ex-husband and novelist Armie Hammer as Hutton Morrow, Susan's second husband, who has been neglectful towards Susan Laura Linney as Anne Sutton, Susan's estranged mother Andrea Riseborough as Alessia Holt, Carlos' wife Michael Sheen as Carlos Holt, Alessia's homosexual husband India Menuez as Samantha Morrow, Susan's daughter Zawe Ashton as Alex Jena Malone as Sage Ross Kristin Bauer van Straten as Samantha Van Helsing",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Remo Forlani",
"paragraph_text": "Remo Forlani (1927–2009) was a French writer and screenwriter born in Paris to a French mother and an Italian immigrant father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "An Ideal Husband (1999 film)",
"paragraph_text": "An Ideal Husband is a 1999 film based on the play \"An Ideal Husband\" by Oscar Wilde. The film stars Jeremy Northam, Rupert Everett, Julianne Moore, Minnie Driver and Cate Blanchett. It was directed by Oliver Parker.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Santa Clarita Diet",
"paragraph_text": "Timothy Olyphant as Joel Hammond, Sheila's husband and Abby's father Drew Barrymore as Sheila Hammond, Joel's wife and Abby's mother Liv Hewson as Abby Hammond, Sheila and Joel's daughter Skyler Gisondo as Eric Bemis, the Hammonds' neighbor, Lisa and Dan's stepson",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Suburban Madness",
"paragraph_text": "\"Suburban Madness\" is very loosely based on the true story of 44-year-old Clara Harris a successful Texas dentist and mother of young twins, who hired private investigator Bobbi Bacha, played by actress Sela Ward, to spy on her philandering orthodontist husband.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Queen Victoria",
"paragraph_text": "Though queen, as an unmarried young woman Victoria was required by social convention to live with her mother, despite their differences over the Kensington System and her mother's continued reliance on Conroy. Her mother was consigned to a remote apartment in Buckingham Palace, and Victoria often refused to see her. When Victoria complained to Melbourne that her mother's close proximity promised \"torment for many years\", Melbourne sympathised but said it could be avoided by marriage, which Victoria called a \"schocking [sic] alternative\". She showed interest in Albert's education for the future role he would have to play as her husband, but she resisted attempts to rush her into wedlock.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Grace and Frankie",
"paragraph_text": "Jane Fonda as Grace Hanson, a retired cosmetics mogul Lily Tomlin as Frances ``Frankie ''Bergstein (née Mengela), a hippie art teacher Martin Sheen as Robert Hanson, a successful divorce lawyer and Grace's former husband who later becomes Sol's husband Sam Waterston as Sol Bergstein, a successful divorce lawyer and Frankie's former husband who later becomes Robert's husband June Diane Raphael as Brianna Hanson, older daughter of Grace and Robert, head of the company founded and once run by Grace Baron Vaughn as Nwabudike`` Bud'' Bergstein, son of Frankie and Sol, and also a lawyer at Robert & Sol's firm Brooklyn Decker as Mallory Hanson, younger daughter of Grace and Robert, a wife and mother of four children Ethan Embry as Coyote Bergstein, son of Frankie and Sol, a substitute teacher and recovering addict",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Bottled Passion",
"paragraph_text": "Bottled Passion is a Hong Kong television drama produced by Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB) under executive producer Lee Tim-shing. The drama premiered on Jade and HD Jade channels on 6 December 2011 and ended its run on 2 January 2012 with a total of 21 episodes. The Chinese title literally translates to \"My Ideal Cruel Husband\" (; Cantonese Yale: ngo5 dik1 yu4 yi3 long4 gwan1), with a wordplay on the words \"long4 gwan1\" (郎君), meaning \"husband\" or \"pimp\", and \"long4\" (狼), meaning \"cruel\" or \"cunning\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_text": "Oscar Wilde was born at 21 Westland Row, Dublin (now home of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College), the second of three children born to Sir William Wilde and Jane Wilde, two years behind William (\"Willie\"). Wilde's mother had distant Italian ancestry, and under the pseudonym \"\"Speranza\"\" (the Italian word for 'hope'), wrote poetry for the revolutionary Young Irelanders in 1848; she was a lifelong Irish nationalist. She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. Lady Wilde's interest in the neo-classical revival showed in the paintings and busts of ancient Greece and Rome in her home.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Stephen Geller",
"paragraph_text": "Stephen Geller (b. Los Angeles, California) is an American screenwriter and novelist. He wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's novel \"Slaughterhouse-Five\", and has worked in the film industry in Hollywood and Europe. Geller recently directed his own independent feature, \"Mother's Little Helpers\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Idealism",
"paragraph_text": "Absolute idealism is G. W. F. Hegel's account of how existence is comprehensible as an all-inclusive whole. Hegel called his philosophy \"absolute\" idealism in contrast to the \"subjective idealism\" of Berkeley and the \"transcendental idealism\" of Kant and Fichte, which were not based on a critique of the finite and a dialectical philosophy of history as Hegel's idealism was. The exercise of reason and intellect enables the philosopher to know ultimate historical reality, the phenomenological constitution of self-determination, the dialectical development of self-awareness and personality in the realm of History.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Mother's Day (2016 film)",
"paragraph_text": "As Mother's Day draws close, a group of seemingly unconnected people in Atlanta come to terms with the relationships they have with their mothers. Sandy (Jennifer Aniston) is a divorced mother of two boys whose ex-husband has recently remarried a younger woman named Tina (Shay Mitchell). Miranda (Julia Roberts) is an accomplished writer who gave up her only child, Kristin (Britt Robertson), for adoption at birth. But as a grown - up Kristin prepares herself for marriage, she begins to contemplate the missing part in her life and is encouraged by her friend, Jesse (Kate Hudson), to go out and find her mother. Meanwhile, Jesse and her sister Gabi, who never see their mother, are surprised by their parents when they come to visit and must come to terms with their failing relationship.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Véra Clouzot",
"paragraph_text": "Véra Gibson-Amado, known professionally as Véra Clouzot, (30 December 1913 – 15 December 1960) was a Brazilian-French film actress and screenwriter. She is known for playing Linda in \"The Wages of Fear\" (1953), Christina Delassalle in \"Les Diaboliques\" (1955), and Lucie in \"Les Espions\" (1957). Clouzot also co-wrote the screenplay for \"La Vérité\" (1960). Her husband, director Henri-Georges Clouzot, named his production company after her, \"Véra Films\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Bolero (1984 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Bolero is a 1984 American romantic drama film starring Bo Derek, and written and directed by her husband John Derek. The film centers on the protagonist's sexual awakening and her journey around the world to pursue an ideal first lover who will take her virginity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "David Henrie",
"paragraph_text": "David Clayton Henrie (/ ˈhɛnri / HEN - ree; born July 11, 1989) is an American actor, producer, director, and screenwriter. He is noted for playing Ted Mosby's future son Luke on How I Met Your Mother and Justin Russo in Wizards of Waverly Place, as well as starring in the films in Little Boy and Walt Before Mickey.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Anna Romantowska",
"paragraph_text": "She has been married to the Polish actor and director Krzysztof Kolberger as well as the Polish radio presenter, disc jockey, director, screenwriter and producer Jacek Bromski. With Kolberger, she is the mother of the Polish actress Julia Kolberger.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Lea Fastow",
"paragraph_text": "Fastow is a native of Houston, Texas, where she was born into a Jewish family. Her mother was Miriam Hadar Weingarten, who was winner of the Miss Israel competition in 1958, her father was a real-estate broker. When she was young her parents divorced and her mother went on to marry to Akiva Nof, and from this marriage was born a half-sister. She graduated from Tufts University, where she met her future husband, and earned an MBA at Northwestern University. She and her husband both attended Congregation Or Ami, a conservative synagogue.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who bore the screenwriter of the play An Ideal Husband is based on?
|
[
{
"id": 343349,
"question": "An Ideal Husband >> screenwriter",
"answer": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5
},
{
"id": 135138,
"question": "Who is the mother of #1 ?",
"answer": "Jane Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11
}
] |
Jane Wilde
|
[] | true |
2hop__561171_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Obbola",
"paragraph_text": "Obbola is a locality situated in Umeå Municipality, Västerbotten County, Sweden with 2,197 inhabitants in 2010. It is located close to the town of Holmsund. Obbola lies to the west of the mouth of Ume River at the Gulf of Bothnia in the Baltic Sea. SCA is the biggest employer in the locality. In the school in Obbola there are pupils from grade one to grade nine. After that most of the pupils continue in the city of Umeå.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Race Against the Machine",
"paragraph_text": "Race Against the Machine is a non-fiction book from 2011 by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee about the interaction of digital technology, employment and organization. The full title of the book is: \"Race Against the Machine: How the Digital Revolution Is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Jacksonville, Alabama",
"paragraph_text": "Jacksonville is a city in Calhoun County, Alabama, United States. As of the 2010 census the population was 12,548, which is a 49% increase since 2000. It is included in the Anniston-Oxford Metropolitan Statistical Area. Jacksonville State University is located here, which is a center of commerce and one of the largest employers in the area.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Plymouth",
"paragraph_text": "Devonport Dockyard is the UK's only naval base that refits nuclear submarines and the Navy estimates that the Dockyard generates about 10% of Plymouth's income. Plymouth has the largest cluster of marine and maritime businesses in the south west with 270 firms operating within the sector. Other substantial employers include the university with almost 3,000 staff, as well as the Tamar Science Park employing 500 people in 50 companies. Several employers have chosen to locate their headquarters in Plymouth, including Hemsley Fraser.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Sidel",
"paragraph_text": "Since its foundation in 1965 in Le Havre, France, Sidel has been developing packaging technologies for the beverage industry. In 1961 the company developed the first plastic bottle made of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) as a container for edible oil and, later on, wine, milk and water. In 1973 Sidel released the first plastic HDPE (high-density polyethylene) bottle for milk, sterilised by ultra-heat treatment (UHT). In 1980 Sidel delivered its first PET blow moulding machine to the family-owned soft-drink company Barraclough in Great Britain. Sidel’s first international subsidiary opened in 1984 in Atlanta, USA. In the same year, Sidel also sold the first high-speed PET blow moulding machine. In the 1990s Sidel acquired the French companies Hema (1995), Cermex (1996) and Gebo (1997). In 1997 Sidel introduced a system which combines blow moulding, filling and capping. In same year, the first Sidel dry preforms decontamination by H2O2 spray was launched with the Combi Disis. The development of an internal carbon-based coating in 1999 strengthened the barrier properties of PET packages to gases (O2 and CO2) and made PET-bottles usable for beer. In 2003 Sidel joined Tetra Laval and merged with the Italian company Simonazzi in 2005. Simonazzi was founded in 1850 and had its headquarters in Parma, Italy. In 2006, Sidel launched Predis™, its dry decontamination solution technology for preforms. In April 2013, Sidel announced the launch of a new company as part of the Sidel Group, . Gebo Cermex focuses on engineering, line integration and end-of-line packaging. A partnership with Kortec was communicated in October 2013. The target of the co-operation is to develop new light-blocking PET milk bottles. In March 2014, the divestment of Swedish subsidiary, Tectubes, was announced.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Tuvalu",
"paragraph_text": "New Zealand has an annual quota of 75 Tuvaluans granted work permits under the Pacific Access Category, as announced in 2001. The applicants register for the Pacific Access Category (PAC) ballots; the primary criteria is that the principal applicant must have a job offer from a New Zealand employer. Tuvaluans also have access to seasonal employment in the horticulture and viticulture industries in New Zealand under the Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) Work Policy introduced in 2007 allowing for employment of up to 5,000 workers from Tuvalu and other Pacific islands. Tuvaluans can participate in the Australian Pacific Seasonal Worker Program, which allows Pacific Islanders to obtain seasonal employment in the Australian agriculture industry, in particular cotton and cane operations; fishing industry, in particular aquaculture; and with accommodation providers in the tourism industry.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "John Sidel",
"paragraph_text": "John Thayer Sidel (born 1966) is a political scientist and is the Sir Patrick Gillam Professor of International and Comparative Politics at the London School of Economics (LSE), where he is affiliated with both the Department of Government and International Relations department, as well as the Asia Research Centre.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Tucson, Arizona",
"paragraph_text": "Much of Tucson's economic development has been centered on the development of the University of Arizona, which is currently the second largest employer in the city. Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, located on the southeastern edge of the city, also provides many jobs for Tucson residents. Its presence, as well as the presence of the US Army Intelligence Center (Fort Huachuca, the largest employer in the region in nearby Sierra Vista), has led to the development of a significant number of high-tech industries, including government contractors, in the area. The city of Tucson is also a major hub for the Union Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route that links the Los Angeles ports with the South/Southeast regions of the country.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Temporary foreign worker program in Canada",
"paragraph_text": "The Temporary foreign worker program or TFWP is a program of the Government of Canada to allow employers in Canada to hire foreign nationals. When the program started in 1973, most of the workers brought in were high - skill workers such as specialist doctors. In 2002 a ``low - skilled workers ''category was added; this category now makes up most of the temporary foreign workforce. In 2006, the program was expanded and fast - tracking introduced for some locations. It was revised again in 2013, raising wages, charging employer fees, and removing the accelerated applications.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Being Human Foundation",
"paragraph_text": "Founded 2007 Founder Salman Khan Type Education and healthcare for underprivileged Focus Underprivileged children Location Mumbai Area served India Products Clothing and watches Services Education, employment and medical treatment Method Direct training, funding medical treatment, supplies for the differently - abled Owner Salman Khan Website www.beinghumanonline.com",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Affirmative action in the United States",
"paragraph_text": "The National Conference of State Legislatures held in Washington D.C. stated in a 2014 overview that many supporters for affirmative action argue that policies stemming from affirmative action help to open doors for historically excluded groups in workplace settings and higher education. Workplace diversity has become a business management concept in which employers actively seek to promote an inclusive workplace. By valuing diversity, employers have the capacity to create an environment in which there is a culture of respect for individual differences as well as the ability to draw in talent and ideas from all segments of the population. By creating this diverse workforce, these employers and companies gain a competitive advantage in an increasingly global economy. According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, many private sector employers have concluded that a diverse workforce makes a \"company stronger, more profitable, and a better place to work.\" Therefore, these diversity promoting policies are implemented for competitive reasons rather than as a response to discrimination, but have shown the value in having diversity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Sideling Hill Creek (Aughwick Creek tributary)",
"paragraph_text": "Sideling Hill Creek is a tributary of Aughwick Creek in Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Via Aughwick Creek and the Juniata River, it is part of the Susquehanna River watershed.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Social Security Wage Base",
"paragraph_text": "In 2018, the Social Security Wage Base was $128,400 and the Social Security tax rate was 6.20% paid by the employee and 6.20% paid by the employer. A person with $10,000 of gross income had $620.00 withheld as Social Security tax from his check and the employer sent an additional $620.00. A person with $130,000 of gross income in 2017 incurred Social Security tax of $7,886.40 (resulting in an effective rate of approximately 6.07% - the rate was lower because the income was more than the 2017 ``wage base '', see below), with $7,886.40 paid by the employer. A person who earned a million dollars in wages paid the same $7,886.40 in Social Security tax (resulting in an effective rate of approximately 0.79%), with equivalent employer matching. In the cases of the $130 k and $1 m earners, each paid the same amount into the social security system, and both will take the same out of the social security system.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "American Idol",
"paragraph_text": "Season seven premiered on January 15, 2008, for a two-day, four-hour premiere. The media focused on the professional status of the season seven contestants, the so-called 'ringers', many of whom, including Kristy Lee Cook, Brooke White, Michael Johns, and in particular Carly Smithson, had prior recording contracts. Contestant David Hernandez also attracted some attention due to his past employment as a stripper.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Affirmative action in the United States",
"paragraph_text": "In the 1960 presidential election, Democratic candidate and future President John F. Kennedy \"criticized President Eisenhower for not ending discrimination in federally supported housing\" and \"advocated a permanent Fair Employment Practices Commission\".:59 Shortly after taking office, Kennedy issued Executive Order 10925 in March 1961, requiring government contractors to \"consider and recommend additional affirmative steps which should be taken by executive departments and agencies to realize more fully the national policy of nondiscrimination…. The contractor will take affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin\".:60 The order also established the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity (PCEEO), chaired by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. Federal contractors who failed to comply or violated the executive order were punished by contract cancellation and the possible debarment from future government contracts. The administration was \"not demanding any special preference or treatment or quotas for minorities\" but was rather \"advocating racially neutral hiring to end job discrimination\".:61 Turning to issues of women's rights, Kennedy initiated a Commission on the Status of Women in December 1961. The commission was charged with \"examining employment policies and practices of the government and of contractors\" with regard to sex.:66",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Employer Identification Number",
"paragraph_text": "The Employer Identification Number (EIN), also known as the Federal Employer Identification Number (FEIN) or the Federal Tax Identification Number, is a unique nine - digit number assigned by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to business entities operating in the United States for the purposes of identification. When the number is used for identification rather than employment tax reporting, it is usually referred to as a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), and when used for the purposes of reporting employment taxes, it is usually referred to as an EIN. These numbers are used for tax administration and must be not used for any other purpose. For example, the EIN should not be used in tax lien auction or sales, lotteries, etc.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Canadian Human Rights Commission",
"paragraph_text": "The Canadian Human Rights Commission (CHRC) was established in 1977 by the government of Canada. It is empowered under the \"Canadian Human Rights Act\" to investigate and try to settle complaints of discrimination in employment and in the provision of services within federal jurisdiction. The CHRC is also empowered under the \"Employment Equity Act\" to ensure that federally regulated employers provide equal opportunities for four designated groups: women, Aboriginal people, the disabled and visible minorities. The CHRC helps enforce these human rights and inform the general public and employers of these rights.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Rays Hill",
"paragraph_text": "Rays Hill is a mountain ridge in Pennsylvania's Ridge and Valley Appalachians region. It is bordered to the east by Sideling Hill. About halfway along its run, the west side of Rays Hill ties into Broad Top Mountain, a large plateau. On its west it is bordered by Tussey Mountain south of Broad Top Mountain and Rocky Ridge north of Broad Top Mountain.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Legacy Meridian Park Medical Center",
"paragraph_text": "Legacy Meridian Park Medical Center, formerly Legacy Meridian Park Hospital, is an acute care hospital in Tualatin, Oregon, United States. Opened in 1973, it is operated by Legacy Health System. The facility is licensed for 150 beds, but operates only 128. Located in Clackamas County along the boundary with Washington County, it employs over 800 people and is Tualatin’s second largest employer.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is John Sidel's employer located?
|
[
{
"id": 561171,
"question": "John Sidel >> employer",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__540146_135138
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Dennis Lloyd, Baron Lloyd of Hampstead",
"paragraph_text": "Dennis Lloyd, Baron Lloyd of Hampstead (22 October 1915 – 31 December 1992) was a British jurist, and was raised to the peerage on 14 May 1965.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Cyril Holland",
"paragraph_text": "Cyril Holland (born Cyril Wilde, 5 June 1885 – 9 May 1915) was the older of the two sons of Oscar Wilde and Constance Lloyd and brother to Vyvyan Holland.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Blanche of Anjou",
"paragraph_text": "Blanche of Anjou (1280 – 14 October 1310) was Queen of Aragon as the second spouse of King James II. She was a member of the Capetian House of Anjou, she is also known as \"Blanche of Naples\". She served as Regent or \"Queen-Lieutenant\" of Aragon during the absence of her spouse in 1310.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Aliya bint Ali",
"paragraph_text": "Queen Aliya bint Ali of Hejaz (1911 – 21 December 1950), was an Arabian princess and a queen consort of Iraq. She was the spouse and first cousin of King Ghazi of Iraq and the queen mother of King Faisal II of Iraq. She was the last Queen of Iraq.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_text": "Oscar Wilde was born at 21 Westland Row, Dublin (now home of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College), the second of three children born to Sir William Wilde and Jane Wilde, two years behind William (\"Willie\"). Wilde's mother had distant Italian ancestry, and under the pseudonym \"\"Speranza\"\" (the Italian word for 'hope'), wrote poetry for the revolutionary Young Irelanders in 1848; she was a lifelong Irish nationalist. She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. Lady Wilde's interest in the neo-classical revival showed in the paintings and busts of ancient Greece and Rome in her home.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Simba",
"paragraph_text": "Simba The Lion King character Simba as he appears as a cub in the first film First appearance The Lion King (1994) Created by Irene Mecchi Jonathan Roberts Linda Woolverton Voiced by Matthew Broderick (adult, in 3 films) Jonathan Taylor Thomas (cub) Joseph Williams (singing, adult) Jason Weaver (singing, cub) Matt Weinberg (cub in The Lion King 11⁄2) Cam Clarke (various sequels and merchandise) Rob Lowe (The Lion Guard) Donald Glover (Live Action Remake) Information Species Lion Gender Male Family Mufasa (father, deceased) Sarabi (mother) Sarafina (mother - in - law) Spouse (s) Nala Children Kiara (daughter) Kion (son) Relatives Scar (uncle, deceased)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Bloody Mama",
"paragraph_text": "Bloody Mama is a 1970 American low-budget drama film directed by Roger Corman and starring Shelley Winters in the title role. It was very loosely based on the real story of Ma Barker, who is depicted as a corrupt mother who encourages and organizes her children's criminality. The film features an early appearance by a young Robert De Niro as Lloyd Barker.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Anna Bornemisza",
"paragraph_text": "Anna Bornemisza (1630-1688), was a Hungarian noble, princess consort of Transylvania as the spouse of Michael I Apafi, and mother of Michael II Apafi. Her cookery book from 1680, as well as her preserved household budget book, are regarded as important documents of Hungarian literary history. As Princess of Transylvania, Anna exerted a large and acknowledged influence upon the affairs of state.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "The Mother (How I Met Your Mother)",
"paragraph_text": "Tracy McConnell How I Met Your Mother character The Mother appearing in ``The Locket ''First appearance`` Lucky Penny (unseen)'' ``Something New ''(seen) Last appearance`` Last Forever'' Created by Carter Bays Craig Thomas Portrayed by Cristin Milioti Information Aliases The Mother Gender Female Spouse (s) Ted Mosby Significant other (s) Max (deceased former boyfriend) Louis (ex-boyfriend) Children Penny Mosby (daughter, born in 2015, played by Lyndsy Fonseca) Luke Mosby (son, born in 2017, played by David Henrie) Nationality American Birthdate September 19, 1984 (1984 - 09 - 19) (age 34)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "The Mother (How I Met Your Mother)",
"paragraph_text": "Tracy McConnell How I Met Your Mother character The Mother appearing in ``The Locket ''First appearance`` Lucky Penny (unseen)'' ``Something New ''(seen) Last appearance`` Last Forever'' Created by Carter Bays Craig Thomas Portrayed by Cristin Milioti Information Aliases The Mother Gender Female Spouse (s) Ted Mosby Significant other (s) Max (deceased former boyfriend) Louis (ex-boyfriend) Children Penny Mosby (daughter, born in 2015, played by Lyndsy Fonseca) Luke Mosby (son, born in 2017, played by David Henrie) Nationality American",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Kressbronn am Bodensee",
"paragraph_text": "Kressbronn am Bodensee is a commune and a village in the district of Bodensee in Baden-Württemberg in Germany. It lies on Lake Constance.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Dan Snow",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Westminster, Dan Snow is the youngest son of Peter Snow, BBC television journalist, and Canadian Ann MacMillan, managing editor emeritus of CBC's London Bureau; thus he holds dual British-Canadian citizenship. Through his mother, he is the nephew of Canadian historian Margaret MacMillan and also a great-great-grandson of British Prime Minister David Lloyd George.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Connie McCready",
"paragraph_text": "Constance \"Connie\" McCready (born Constance Averill, August 20, 1921 – December 22, 2000), was a journalist and politician from Portland, Oregon, in the United States. She held several elected offices in Oregon during her career, including the Oregon House of Representatives, the Portland City Council, and culminating with a partial term as Portland's mayor. To date, McCready remains the last Republican to serve as mayor of the city.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "List of Mike & Molly characters",
"paragraph_text": "Molly Flynn - Biggs First appearance ``Pilot ''1x01, September 20, 2010 Last appearance`` I See Love'' 6x13, May 16, 2016 Portrayed by Melissa McCarthy Information Gender Female Occupation 4th Grade Schoolteacher (Prior to Season 1 - Season 4), Writer (Season 4 - Present) Family Joyce Flynn - Moranto (mother) Mr Flynn (father; deceased) Victoria Flynn (Younger Sister) Vince Moranto (step - father) Spouse (s) Mike Biggs Children William Michael Biggs (Adopted Son) Unborn Child (expecting with Mike) Relatives Peggy Biggs (mother - in - law) Jack Biggs (father - in - law) Religion Roman Catholic Nationality American",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Mother Is a Freshman",
"paragraph_text": "Mother Is a Freshman is a 1949 comedy motion picture directed by Lloyd Bacon and starring Loretta Young and Van Johnson.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Meghan, Duchess of Sussex",
"paragraph_text": "Meghan Duchess of Sussex (more) Meghan Markle in March 2018 Rachel Meghan Markle (1981 - 08 - 04) August 4, 1981 (age 37) Los Angeles, California, U.S Spouse Trevor Engelson (m. 2011; div. 2013) Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex (m. 2018) House Windsor (by marriage) Father Thomas Markle Mother Doria Ragland Occupation Actress (2002 -- 2017) Signature",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Anna Catherine Constance Vasa",
"paragraph_text": "Anna Catherine Constance Vasa of Poland (; 7 August 1619 in Warsaw – 8 October 1651 in Cologne) was a Polish princess, daughter of King Sigismund III Vasa and his second wife Constance of Austria.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "John Hosier",
"paragraph_text": "John Hosier was born in the northwest London suburb of Kingsbury, Middlesex. His father, Harry Hosier, was the founder of the building firm Hosier and Dickinson, and his mother, Constance, was a violinist. She overcame the problem of his playing a musical instrument by teaching him to play the xylophone. He attended Fryent Primary School, Kingsbury, Preston Manor County Grammar School, now Preston Manor High School, Wembley and St John's College, Cambridge where he also served as a director of Footlights from 1950–1951.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Zosia March",
"paragraph_text": "Zosia March Holby City character Camilla Arfwedson as Zosia March First appearance ``The Kick Inside ''10 September 2013 Last appearance`` The Prisoner'' 2 January 2018 Portrayed by Camilla Arfwedson Information Occupation Specialist registrar, neurosurgery (prev. F1, F2, CT1, CT2) Family Guy Self (father) Anya Self (mother) Spouse (s) Oliver Valentine (2017 --) Relatives Valerie Sturgeon (grandmother)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Madame Anatole",
"paragraph_text": "Constance-Hippolyte Gosselin (2 January 1793, in Paris – date of death unknown) was a French ballet dancer. The daughter of a dancing master and younger sister of the dancer Geneviève Gosselin, Constance débuted at the Opéra de Paris in 1810, after studying dance under Louis Duport and Jean-François Coulon. She married Auguste-Anatole Petit in 1815 and was thus also known as Madame Anatole.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the mother of Constance Lloyd 's spouse?
|
[
{
"id": 540146,
"question": "Constance Lloyd >> spouse",
"answer": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
},
{
"id": 135138,
"question": "Who is the mother of #1 ?",
"answer": "Jane Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
}
] |
Jane Wilde
|
[] | true |
2hop__116503_171433
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Department of General and Higher Education (Kerala)",
"paragraph_text": "Department of Education വിദ്യാഭ്യാസ വകുപ്പ് Agency overview Formed 1995 Jurisdiction Kerala Headquarters Thiruvananthapuram Agency executives Prof C. Ravindranath, Minister for Education Shri. A.P.M. Mohammed Hanish IAS, Secretary, General Education Department Parent agency Government of Kerala Child agencies IT@School Project Director of Public Instruction Website http://www.education.kerala.gov.in/",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Hugo Gélin",
"paragraph_text": "Hugo Gélin was born to Xavier Gélin on May 4, 1980. His grandparents are Daniel Gélin and Danièle Delorme. His aunts and uncles are actors Maria Schneider, Manuel Gélin and Fiona Gélin. He made two brief appearances as a child actor, and later started working as an assistant director and camera operator. He directed his first short in 2001 and his first feature film in 2012.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "P. David Ebersole",
"paragraph_text": "P. David Ebersole (born March 16, 1964) is an American television director and independent filmmaker. He began his film career as a child actor, playing the lead in the musical \"Junior High School\" (1978), which also starred Paula Abdul.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Dharam Karam",
"paragraph_text": "Dharam Karam is a 1975 Hindi film produced by Raj Kapoor and directed by Randhir Kapoor, who also star as father and son in the film, respectively. The film also stars Rekha, Premnath and Dara Singh. The music is by R.D. Burman and the lyrics by Majrooh Sultanpuri, who received a Filmfare nomination as Best Lyricist for the hit song \"Ek Din Bik Jayega.\" The song is played several times during the film, with playback singing by Mukesh, Kishore Kumar, and Sushma Shrestha. Of the three of them, only Mukesh received a Filmfare nomination as Best Male Playback Singer for the song. According to one source, the film performed \"Above average\" at the box office.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "The Sixth Sense",
"paragraph_text": "The Sixth Sense is a 1999 American supernatural horror film written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. The film tells the story of Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment), a troubled, isolated boy who is able to see and talk to the dead, and an equally troubled child psychologist named Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis) who tries to help him. The film established Shyamalan as a writer and director, and introduced the cinema public to his traits, most notably his affinity for surprise endings.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Orphan Black",
"paragraph_text": "Orphan Black is a Canadian science fiction thriller television series created by screenwriter Graeme Manson and director John Fawcett, starring Tatiana Maslany as several identical people who are clones. The series focuses on Sarah Manning, a woman who assumes the identity of one of her fellow clones, Elizabeth Childs, after witnessing Childs's suicide. The series raises issues about the moral and ethical implications of human cloning, and its effect on issues of personal identity.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Chinnari Mutha",
"paragraph_text": "At the 41st National Film Awards, the film was awarded the Best Feature Film in Kannada. It also won four awards at the 1993-94 Karnataka State Film Awards; Best Children Film, Best Music Director (C. Aswath), Best Child Actor - Male (Master Vijay Raghavendra) and Best Female Playback Singer (Manjula Gururaj).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Directorate General of Civil Aviation (India)",
"paragraph_text": "Directorate General of Civil Aviation नागर विमानन महानिदेशालय Directorate General of Civil Aviation, India Agency overview Headquarters New Delhi, India 28 ° 34 ′ 58.56 ''N 77 ° 12 ′ 47.12'' E / 28.5829333 ° N 77.2130889 ° E / 28.5829333; 77.2130889 Minister responsible Pusapati Ashok Gajapathi Raju, Indian Politician., Minister of Civil Aviation Agency executive BS Bhullar, Director General Child agencies Airports Authority of India Air India Pawan Hans Website Official website",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Anne Kukkohovi",
"paragraph_text": "Anne Kukkohovi (née Laaksonen, 1970) is a retired Finnish model who has worked both in and outside Finland from 1990 to 1998. She currently works as an art director in an advertising agency. Kukkohovi has also been a host on the Finnish television show \"Sinun unelmiesi tähden\" at the end of the 1990s. She is currently the host of the Finnish version of \"America's Next Top Model\", \"Suomen huippumalli haussa\". Kukkohovi is married and has one child.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Unto the Third Generation",
"paragraph_text": "Unto the Third Generation is a 1913 American short silent romantic drama directed by Harry Solter. The film starred Earle Foxe and Florence Lawrence and Matt Moore in the lead roles. It was the third time director Harry Solter had worked together with Foxe and Lawrence that year, previously working together on \"His Wife's Child\" and \"The Spender\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Sophie Ellis-Bextor",
"paragraph_text": "Ellis-Bextor was born in London to Janet Ellis, who was later a presenter on BBC's children's television programmes \"Blue Peter\" and \"Jigsaw\", and Robin Bextor, a film producer and director: they separated when she was four. As a child, Ellis-Bextor occasionally appeared on \"Blue Peter\" alongside her mother, who presented the programme.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Window Water Baby Moving",
"paragraph_text": "Window Water Baby Moving is an experimental short film by Stan Brakhage, filmed in November 1958 and released in 1959. The film documents the birth of the director's first child, Myrrena, by his then-wife Jane Brakhage, now Jane Wodening.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Diana W. Bianchi",
"paragraph_text": "Diana W. Bianchi is an American medical geneticist and neonatologist noted for her research on fetal cell microchimerism and prenatal testing. She is the director of the \"Eunice Kennedy Shriver\" National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Prior to joining NIH, Bianchi was the Natalie V. Zucker Professor of Pediatrics, Obstetrics, and Gynecology at Tufts University School of Medicine and Executive Director of the Mother Infant Research Institute at Tufts Medical Center. She also has served as Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Pediatrics at the Floating Hospital for Children at Tufts Medical Center.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "List of Super Bowl halftime shows",
"paragraph_text": "Date: Feb 3, 2013 Location: Mercedes - Benz Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Performers: Beyoncé, Destiny's Child Producer: Ricky Kirshner Director: Hamish Hamilton Sponsor: Pepsi References: Setlist: ``Run The World (Girls) ''(Intro) / Vince Lombardi`` Excellence'' speech voiceover ``Love on Top ''(chorus a cappella) (Beyoncé)`` Crazy in Love'' (Beyoncé) ``End of Time ''(Beyoncé)`` Baby Boy'' (Beyoncé) ``Bootylicious ''(Destiny's Child)`` Independent Women Part I'' (Destiny's Child) ``Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It) ''(Beyoncé featuring Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams)`` Halo'' (Beyoncé)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Thalattu Ketkuthamma",
"paragraph_text": "Thalattu Ketkuthamma () is a 1991 Tamil-language drama film directed by Raj Kapoor in his directorial debut. The film features Prabhu and Kanaka in lead roles. The film, produced by Vijayalakshmi Srinivasan and Kanchana Sivaraman, had musical score by Ilaiyaraaja and was released on 5 November 1991. The film completed a 100-day run. It was remade in Telugu as \"Chittemma Mogudu\".",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Heather O'Rourke",
"paragraph_text": "Heather Michele O'Rourke (December 27, 1975 -- February 1, 1988) was an American child actress. She was discovered by director Steven Spielberg when she was visiting MGM's studios. Spielberg cast her as Carol Anne Freeling in the horror film Poltergeist (1982), where she had the movie's most recognizable line: ``They're here! ''She reprised the role in the second and third installments.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Child pornography laws in Japan",
"paragraph_text": "Child pornography laws in Japan outlaw child pornography. The production, sale, distribution, and commercialization of child pornography is illegal under Article 7 of the Act on Punishment of Activities Relating to Child Prostitution and Child Pornography, and the Protection of Children and is punishable by a maximum penalty of five years in prison and/or a fine of ¥5,000,000. Possession of child pornography with any intent of distribution and sale is also illegal.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Veera Thalattu",
"paragraph_text": "Veera Thalattu (English: \"Brave Lullaby\") is a 1998 Tamil language action drama film directed by Kasthuri Raja. The film features Murali, Vineetha and Kushboo in the lead roles, while Rajkiran, Raadhika and Lakshmi play other supporting roles. The film, which has music by Ilaiyaraaja, released in April 1998.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Aag (1948 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Aag () is a 1948 Bollywood film which is produced, directed by and stars Raj Kapoor. The film marked the debut of him as producer and director and was the first film produced by his R.K. banner. Nargis, Premnath, Nigar Sultana and Kamini Kaushal also starred in supporting roles. Raj Kapoor's youngest brother Shashi Kapoor appeared as a child artist in this film playing the younger version of his character (Kewal). This was the first film in which Raj Kapoor and Nargis appeared together.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Alex Vincent (actor)",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander Vincent LoScialpo (born April 29, 1981) is an American actor. He is known for his role as Andy Barclay in the Child's Play franchise. He has appeared in Child's Play (1988), Child's Play 2 (1990), Curse of Chucky (2013), and Cult of Chucky (2017).",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the child of the director of Thalattu Ketkuthamma?
|
[
{
"id": 116503,
"question": "Who was the director of Thalattu Ketkuthamma?",
"answer": "Raj Kapoor",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
},
{
"id": 171433,
"question": "#1 >> child",
"answer": "Randhir Kapoor",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
}
] |
Randhir Kapoor
|
[] | true |
2hop__333874_135138
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter",
"paragraph_text": "John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon (29 March 1395 – 5 August 1447) was an English nobleman and military commander during the Hundred Years' War. His father, the 1st Duke of Exeter, was a maternal half-brother to Richard II of England, and was executed after King Richard's deposition. The Holland family estates and titles were forfeited, but John was able to recover them by dedicating his career to royal service. Holland rendered great assistance to his cousin Henry V in his conquest of France, fighting both on land and on the sea. He was marshal and admiral of England and governor of Aquitaine under Henry VI.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_text": "Oscar Wilde was born at 21 Westland Row, Dublin (now home of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College), the second of three children born to Sir William Wilde and Jane Wilde, two years behind William (\"Willie\"). Wilde's mother had distant Italian ancestry, and under the pseudonym \"\"Speranza\"\" (the Italian word for 'hope'), wrote poetry for the revolutionary Young Irelanders in 1848; she was a lifelong Irish nationalist. She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. Lady Wilde's interest in the neo-classical revival showed in the paintings and busts of ancient Greece and Rome in her home.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Michael Trevino",
"paragraph_text": "Trevino was raised in Montebello, California and later moved to Valencia, California. His mother was originally from Zacatecas, Mexico and his father was born in Fresno, California to Mexican immigrants.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Scary Movie 2",
"paragraph_text": "A teenage girl named Megan Voorhees (Natasha Lyonne) becomes possessed by the spirit of Hugh Kane (Richard Moll), the house's previous owner. During a formal dinner party she emerges in her pajamas, insults her mother and the guests, then proceeds to urinate profusely on the floor. In response, Megan's mother (Veronica Cartwright) seeks help from two priests, Father McFeely (James Woods) and Father Harris (Andy Richter). After paying a trip to the bathroom, the men attempt to drive Hugh's ghost out, but the exorcism does not go as planned. After a chain of projectile vomits and various instances of pedophilia, Megan insults Father McFeely's mother. He responds by pulling out a gun and shooting Megan.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Burden of Truth (TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Cassandra Potenza as Georgia Lewis. Benjamin Ayres as Alan Christie, an attorney working for Joanna's father's law firm and Joanna's ex. Jessica Matten as Gerrilyn Spence, Luna's mother. Rebecca Gibson as Wendy Ross, Billy's sister and Molly's mother. Jerni Stewart as Lisa Mitchell. Montana Lehmann as Allie Nash. Alex Carter as David Hanley, Joanna's father and a partner at the law firm she used to work for.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Can I Get a Witness",
"paragraph_text": "\"Can I Get a Witness\" is a song composed by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier and Eddie Holland and produced by Brian Holland and Lamont Dozier as a non-album single for American recording vocalist Marvin Gaye, who issued the record on Motown's Tamla imprint in September 1963.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Remo Forlani",
"paragraph_text": "Remo Forlani (1927–2009) was a French writer and screenwriter born in Paris to a French mother and an Italian immigrant father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Charles-Albert Demoustier",
"paragraph_text": "Charles-Albert Demoustier (13 March 1760 – 2 March 1801) was a French writer. He falsely claimed to be a descendant of La Fontaine by his mother and Racine by his father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)",
"paragraph_text": "``How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You) ''is a 1964 song written by the Motown songwriting team of Holland -- Dozier -- Holland and first recorded by American soul singer Marvin Gaye.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Thomas Thaarup",
"paragraph_text": "Thomas Thaarup was born in Copenhagen, where his father, Niels Thaarup, owned a hardware store. His mother's name was Anna Margaretha and her maiden name was Stupsack.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Michael John Fles",
"paragraph_text": "Michael John Fles was born to a Dutch father, George Fles, and a British mother, Pearl Rimel. As conscious communists, his parents had moved to the Soviet Union, where his father fell victim to Joseph Stalin's Great Purge. The mother, pregnant with Michael John, left the Soviet Union to give birth in London. Mother and son later emigrated to the United States, where Pearl Rimel found employment in the aircraft industry. Michael John grew up in Los Angeles and Ojai, California, where he graduated from the Ojai Valley School in 1950.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Mathieu Razanakolona",
"paragraph_text": "Mathieu Razanakolona (born August 2, 1986) is a Malagasy-Canadian alpine skier, born to a Quebecois mother and a father from Madagascar, currently residing in Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Kad Merad",
"paragraph_text": "Kad Merad was born in Sidi Bel Abbès, Algeria, on 27 March 1964 to an Algerian father and a French mother.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Cyril Holland",
"paragraph_text": "Cyril Holland (born Cyril Wilde, 5 June 1885 – 9 May 1915) was the older of the two sons of Oscar Wilde and Constance Lloyd and brother to Vyvyan Holland.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Nicola Roberts",
"paragraph_text": "Roberts was born in Stamford, Lincolnshire, when her mother was 17. At the time of her birth, her father was working for the RAF and the resulting pay led to financial struggles which saw her father move to work for Ford Motor Company whilst her mother became a photographer to help the family monetary problems. Roberts grew up in Runcorn, Cheshire.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Wonder (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Julia Roberts as Isabel Pullman, Via and Auggie's mother. Owen Wilson as Nate Pullman, Via and Auggie's father, Isabel's husband Jacob Tremblay as August ``Auggie ''Pullman, Via's brother and Isabel and Nate's son Izabela Vidovic as Olivia`` Via'' Pullman, Auggie's sister Maccie Margaret Chbosky as Young Olivia Noah Jupe as Jack Will, Auggie's best friend Bryce Gheisar as Julian Albans Elle McKinnon as Charlotte Cody Millie Davis as Summer Dawson Ty Consiglio as Amos Continu Kyle Harrison Breitkopf as Miles Noury James A. Hughes as Henry Joplin Sônia Braga as Lisa ``Grans ''Minel, Isabel's mother and Via and Auggie's grandmother Mandy Patinkin as Mr. Tushman Daveed Diggs as Mr. Browne Ali Liebert as Ms. Petosa Danielle Rose Russell as Miranda Navas, Via's best friend Nadji Jeter as Justin Hollander, Via's boyfriend Gidget as Darth - Daisy`` Daisy'', Auggie and Via's dog",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Lena Stolze",
"paragraph_text": "Lena Stolze's father is Gerhard Stolze, a tenor, and her mother is the actress Gabi Stolze. In 1961, the family moved from East Germany to Vienna.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Sheryfa Luna",
"paragraph_text": "Sheryfa Luna (born Chérifa Babouche; 25 January 1989) is a French R&B singer born to an Algerian father and a French mother.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Sibling",
"paragraph_text": "Half - siblings are people who share one parent but not both. They may share the same mother but different fathers (in which case they are known as uterine siblings or maternal half - brothers / half - sisters), or they may have the same father but different mothers (in which case, they are known as agnate siblings or paternal half - brothers / half - sisters. In law, the term consanguine is used in place of agnate). They share only one parent instead of two as full siblings do and are on average 25% related.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Carl Wilhelm Cederhielm",
"paragraph_text": "Carl Wilhelm Cederhielm (17051769) was a \"Freiherr\" and Chamberlain (\"kammarherre\") in Sweden. His father was the royal adviser (\"riksråd\") Josias Cederhielm, and his mother was Anna Åkerhielm.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the mother of Vyvyan Holland's father?
|
[
{
"id": 333874,
"question": "Vyvyan Holland >> father",
"answer": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 135138,
"question": "Who is the mother of #1 ?",
"answer": "Jane Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
}
] |
Jane Wilde
|
[] | true |
2hop__226959_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Mount Geoffrey Regional Nature Park",
"paragraph_text": "Mount Geoffrey Regional Nature Park is regional park in British Columbia, Canada, located on Hornby Island. It covers an area of , including the summit of Mount Geoffrey, the highest point on the island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Piopolis, Illinois",
"paragraph_text": "Piopolis is an unincorporated community in Hamilton County, Illinois, United States. Piopolis is located in Crouch Township, south of Belle Prairie City.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "List of heaviest bells",
"paragraph_text": "The 216 - ton Russian Tsar Bell (also known as the Tsar Kolokol III) on display on the grounds of the Moscow Kremlin is the heaviest bell known to exist in the world today. However, a very large piece broke off from the Tsar Bell during a fire which engulfed the tower the bell was intended to be hung in, so this irreparably damaged bell has never been suspended or rung. The Tsar Bell can not be considered as the heaviest functioning bell in the world due to its inability to serve as a percussion instrument. Rather, it may be considered to be the largest bell, or at least the largest bell - shaped sculpture in the world.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Alan Brownjohn",
"paragraph_text": "Alan Brownjohn was born in London and educated at Merton College, Oxford. He taught in schools between 1957 and 1965, and lectured at Battersea College of Education and South Bank Polytechnic until 1979, when he became a full-time writer. He participated in Philip Hobsbaum's weekly poetry discussion meetings known as The Group, which also included Peter Porter, Martin Bell, Peter Redgrove, George MacBeth and Edward Lucie-Smith.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Geoffrey Paterson",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Kent, United Kingdom, Geoffrey Paterson was educated at The Judd School, St John's College, Cambridge, the RSAMD and the National Opera Studio. At the age of 25 he won First Prize at the Ninth Leeds Conductors Competition.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Bell Bay aluminium smelter",
"paragraph_text": "The Bell Bay aluminium smelter is located on the Tamar River at Bell Bay, Tasmania, Australia. The smelter has a production capacity of 178,000 tonnes of aluminium per year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Bell, Wisconsin",
"paragraph_text": "Bell is a town in Bayfield County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 263 at the 2010 census. The unincorporated community of Cornucopia is located within the town.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Alexander Graham Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Alexander Graham Bell was ranked 57th among the 100 Greatest Britons (2002) in an official BBC nationwide poll, and among the Top Ten Greatest Canadians (2004), and the 100 Greatest Americans (2005). In 2006 Bell was also named as one of the 10 greatest Scottish scientists in history after having been listed in the National Library of Scotland's 'Scottish Science Hall of Fame'. Bell's name is still widely known and used as part of the names of dozens of educational institutes, corporate namesakes, street and place names around the world.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Geoffrey Hills",
"paragraph_text": "The Geoffrey Hills () are a group of hills at the west end of the Raggatt Mountains in Enderby Land, Antarctica. They were plotted from air photos taken from Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions aircraft in 1956, and were named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for Geoffrey D.P. Smith, a carpenter at Mawson Station in 1961.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Cuddingwarra, Western Australia",
"paragraph_text": "Cuddingwarra is an abandoned town in the Mid West region of Western Australia. The town is located between Cue and Big Bell.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Gertrude Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Gertrude Bell received her early education from Queen's College in London and then later at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University, at the age of 17. History was one of the few subjects women were allowed to study, due to the many restrictions imposed on them at the time. She specialised in modern history, and it was said that she was the first woman to graduate in Modern History at Oxford with a first class honours degree, a feat she achieved in only two years. Actually, eleven people graduated that year. Nine were recorded because they were men but the other two were Bell and Alice Greenwood.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Cliff Bell's",
"paragraph_text": "Cliff Bell's is a jazz club in Detroit, Michigan which is located at 2030 Park Ave. It originally opened in 1935, and it is named after John Clifford Bell, an entrepreneur in Detroit in the 1930s. Notable artists such as Marcus Miller have performed at Cliff Bell's. Additionally, The Moth storytelling events are held monthly at Cliff Bell's.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Geoffrey Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Grimsby, he was educated at the London School of Economics, before working at Her Majesty's Treasury, and later returning to the LSE to lecture on monetary economics in 1964.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Southern Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Southern Bell, originally incorporated in New York, was reincorporated in Georgia in 1983 as SBT&T Co. The original Southern Bell was then merged into SBT&T Co., at which point that company was renamed Southern Bell. Since BellSouth, the new owner of Southern Bell and South Central Bell upon the divestiture of AT&T, was based in Georgia, it was more practical to have Southern Bell incorporated in the same state. Southern Bell was renamed BellSouth Telecommunications until It was merged into AT&T in 2006.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Wishart Bryan Bell",
"paragraph_text": "Wishart Bryan Bell (born in Canada, currently living in South Bend, Indiana) is an American choral conductor, pianist, music educator, and musicologist. Since 1997, he has been a faculty member at Bethel College, Mishawaka, Indiana.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Bell Range",
"paragraph_text": "The Bell Range, formerly spelled Belle Range, is a small subrange of the Kitimat Ranges, located east of Welcome Harbour on Porcher Island, British Columbia, Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "The Scotland Yard Mystery",
"paragraph_text": "The Scotland Yard Mystery is a 1934 British crime film directed by Thomas Bentley and starring Sir Gerald du Maurier, George Curzon, Grete Natzler, Belle Chrystall and Wally Patch. The screenplay concerns a criminal doctor who operates a racket claiming life insurance by injecting victims with a life suspending serum turning them into living dead. The film is based on a play by Wallace Geoffrey. It was made by one of the biggest British companies of the era, British International Pictures, at their Elstree Studios.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "The Vietnam War (TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "The Vietnam War is a 10 - part, 17 - and - a-quarter - hour American television documentary series about the Vietnam War written by Geoffrey C. Ward and directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick. The first episode premiered on PBS on September 17, 2017. The script is by Geoffrey Ward, and the series is narrated by Peter Coyote.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Coast Guard Station Belle Isle",
"paragraph_text": "The United States Coast Guard Station Belle Isle is located on Belle Isle, Michigan, near Detroit and the mouth of the Detroit River.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the school where Geoffrey Bell was educated located?
|
[
{
"id": 226959,
"question": "Geoffrey Bell >> educated at",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 0
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__143412_197454
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Gusheh-ye Badi ol Zaman",
"paragraph_text": "Gusheh-ye Badi ol Zaman (, also Romanized as Gūsheh-ye Badī‘ ol Zamān; also known as Badī‘ oz Zamān, Gusa, Gūseh, and Gūsheh-ye Sālārābād) is a village in Gamasiyab Rural District, in the Central District of Nahavand County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 452, in 136 families.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Menya",
"paragraph_text": "Menya are a crunk group formed in New York City in 2007 by two musicians, known as \"Coco Dame\" and \"Good Goose\". That year, when both of them were undergraduates at New York University, they saw M.I.A., The Cool Kids, Santigold, and Spank Rock perform at that year's CMJ festival. Angie Ripe soon joined them, and contributed vocals to their debut release, \"The Ol' Reach Around\". They self-released two EPs (\"The Ol' Reach Around\" and \"Puss Coital\"), and a mixtape (\"The Sleepover Series Vol. 1\"), the first two in 2008 and the third on October 23, 2009. Their music is recorded in the members' bedrooms. \"The Ol' Reach Around\" was recorded between their college classes, at the studio where Good Goose was a production assistant.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Biathlon at the 2002 Winter Olympics",
"paragraph_text": "Event Gold Silver Bronze Individual details Ole Einar Bjørndalen Norway 51: 03.3 Frank Luck Germany 51: 39.4 Viktor Maigourov Russia 51: 40.6 Sprint details Ole Einar Bjørndalen Norway 24: 51.3 Sven Fischer Germany 25: 20.2 Wolfgang Perner Austria 25: 44.4 Pursuit details Ole Einar Bjørndalen Norway 32: 34.6 Raphaël Poirée France 33: 17.6 Ricco Groß Germany 33: 30.6 Relay details Norway (NOR) Halvard Hanevold Frode Andresen Egil Gjelland Ole Einar Bjørndalen 1: 23: 42.3 Germany (GER) Ricco Groß Peter Sendel Sven Fischer Frank Luck 1: 24: 27.6 France (FRA) Gilles Marguet Vincent Defrasne Julien Robert Raphaël Poirée 1: 24: 36.6",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Jacob Pedersen",
"paragraph_text": "Ole Jacob Pedersen (April 22, 1889 – March 27, 1961) was a Norwegian track and field athlete who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Bartlomiej Oles",
"paragraph_text": "Bartlomiej Brat Oles (born 1973 in Sosnowiec, Poland) is a jazz and free improvisation drummer, composer and record producer. He is the twin brother of Marcin Oles and Art-director of the Polish independent Jazz Label Fenommedia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Blanche of Anjou",
"paragraph_text": "Blanche of Anjou (1280 – 14 October 1310) was Queen of Aragon as the second spouse of King James II. She was a member of the Capetian House of Anjou, she is also known as \"Blanche of Naples\". She served as Regent or \"Queen-Lieutenant\" of Aragon during the absence of her spouse in 1310.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Ole Bischof",
"paragraph_text": "Ole Bischof (born 27 August 1979 in Reutlingen) is a German judoka. He is trained by 1984 Olympic gold medalist Frank Wieneke.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Ole Doc Methuselah",
"paragraph_text": "Ole Doc Methuselah is a collection of science fiction short stories by American writer L. Ron Hubbard, published in 1970.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Helge Ole Bergesen",
"paragraph_text": "Helge Ole Bergesen (29 September 1949 – 29 June 2015) was a Norwegian political scientist and politician for the Conservative Party.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium",
"paragraph_text": "Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium is an outdoor football stadium in Jackson, Mississippi, United States. Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium has been the home stadium of the Jackson State Tigers football team since 1970, and owned and operated by Jackson State University since July 1, 2011. Originally known as War Veterans Memorial Stadium, it was later known as Hinds County War Memorial Stadium. It was redesigned and enlarged in 1960 and Ole Miss vs. Arkansas dedicated Mississippi Memorial Stadium in 1961 before a capacity crowd of 46,000. With political support from Ole Miss and Mississippi State and leadership from Ole Miss Athletics Director Warner Alford, Mississippi Memorial Stadium was enlarged to 62,500 in 1981 and on September 26, 1981 Ole Miss and Arkansas again dedicated the facility before 63,522.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Ole-Jacob Hoff",
"paragraph_text": "Ole-Jacob Hoff (born 1928 in Oslo) was a Norwegian economist, academician, author, publisher, and scholar. The son of a fellow economist and author, Trygve Hoff, Ole-Jacob Hoff also functioned as editor of the influential Norwegian-language economic periodical Farmand until 1989. He graduated from Harvard University and was an influential social and political critic and speaker.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "BeiDou",
"paragraph_text": "The BeiDou-2 system began offering services for the Asia-Pacific region in December 2012. At this time, the system could provide positioning data between longitude 55°E to 180°E and from latitude 55°S to 55°N.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "OLED",
"paragraph_text": "DuPont stated in a press release in May 2010 that they can produce a 50 - inch OLED TV in two minutes with a new printing technology. If this can be scaled up in terms of manufacturing, then the total cost of OLED TVs would be greatly reduced. DuPont also states that OLED TVs made with this less expensive technology can last up to 15 years if left on for a normal eight - hour day.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "The Zoka-ol-Molk I",
"paragraph_text": "The Zoka-ol-Molk I is a painting by the Iranian realism painter Kamal-ol-molk with oil on cotton duck. It was pained in 1913 and features portrait of Mohammad Hossein Foroughi titled Zoka-ol-Molk I father of Mohammad Ali Foroughi titled Zoka-ol-Molk II.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Bad as Me (song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Bad as Me\" is a song by American rock musician Tom Waits, written collectively by Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan. Written and recorded during the sessions for his studio album of the same name, the song was released as Waits' seventeenth single on August 23, 2011 and was the first new studio material by Waits in seven years, since \"Real Gone\" in 2004.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Theme from The Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol' Boys)",
"paragraph_text": "``Theme from The Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol 'Boys) ''Single by Waylon Jennings from the album Music Man B - side`` It's Alright'' Released August 1980 Format 7 ''Recorded 1980 Genre Country Length 2: 06 Label RCA 12067 Songwriter (s) Waylon Jennings Producer (s) Richie Albright Waylon Jennings singles chronology ``Clyde'' (1980)`` Theme from The Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol' Boys) ''(1980) ``Storms Never Last'' (1981)`` Clyde ''(1980) ``Theme from The Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol 'Boys)'' (1980)`` Storms Never Last ''(duet with Jessi Colter) (1981)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Ole Peter Riis Høegh",
"paragraph_text": "Ole Peter Riis Høegh (also Ole Petter Riis Høegh, often simply Peter Høegh; July 27, 1806 – March 1, 1852) was one of Norway's first trained civilian architects and was Bergen's first town surveyor.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Ole H. Olson",
"paragraph_text": "Ole H. Olson (September 19, 1872 – January 29, 1954) was the 16th Lieutenant Governor and the 18th Governor of North Dakota.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Ol' '55",
"paragraph_text": "\"Ol' '55\" is a song by American musician Tom Waits. It is the opening track and lead single from Waits' debut studio album, \"Closing Time\", released in March 1973 on Asylum Records. Written by Waits and produced by Jerry Yester, \"Ol' '55\" was a minor hit. It has been described as more conventional than Waits' later songs.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Olson (surname)",
"paragraph_text": "Olson (also Olsson, Oleson) is a common surname of Scandinavian origin that literally means ``son of Olof or Ole ''. Olson may refer to:",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who exchanged nuptials with singer of 'Ol' '55?
|
[
{
"id": 143412,
"question": "Who performed Ol' '55?",
"answer": "Tom Waits",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18
},
{
"id": 197454,
"question": "#1 >> spouse",
"answer": "Kathleen Brennan",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
Kathleen Brennan
|
[] | true |
2hop__300077_135138
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Old Mother Riley in Business",
"paragraph_text": "Old Mother Riley in Business is a 1941 British comedy film directed by John Baxter and starring Arthur Lucan, Kitty McShane and Cyril Chamberlain. It was the sixth in the long-running Old Mother Riley series of films. Old Mother Riley's pub faces competition from a large chain store nearby, causing her to declare war on it.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Scary Movie 2",
"paragraph_text": "A teenage girl named Megan Voorhees (Natasha Lyonne) becomes possessed by the spirit of Hugh Kane (Richard Moll), the house's previous owner. During a formal dinner party she emerges in her pajamas, insults her mother and the guests, then proceeds to urinate profusely on the floor. In response, Megan's mother (Veronica Cartwright) seeks help from two priests, Father McFeely (James Woods) and Father Harris (Andy Richter). After paying a trip to the bathroom, the men attempt to drive Hugh's ghost out, but the exorcism does not go as planned. After a chain of projectile vomits and various instances of pedophilia, Megan insults Father McFeely's mother. He responds by pulling out a gun and shooting Megan.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Cyril Connolly",
"paragraph_text": "Cyril Connolly was born in Coventry, Warwickshire, the only child of Major Matthew William Kemble Connolly (1872–1947), an officer in the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, by his Anglo-Irish wife, Muriel Maud Vernon, daughter of Colonel Edward Vernon (1838–1913) J.P., D.L., of Clontarf Castle, Co. Dublin. His parents had met while his father was serving in Ireland, and his father's next posting was to South Africa. Connolly's father was also a malacologist (the scientific study of the Mollusca, i.e. snails, clams, octopus, etc.) and mineral collector of some reputation and collected many samples in Africa. Cyril Connolly's childhood days were spent with his father in South Africa, with his mother's family at Clontarf Castle, and with his paternal grandmother in Bath, Somerset, and other parts of England.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_text": "Oscar Wilde was born at 21 Westland Row, Dublin (now home of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College), the second of three children born to Sir William Wilde and Jane Wilde, two years behind William (\"Willie\"). Wilde's mother had distant Italian ancestry, and under the pseudonym \"\"Speranza\"\" (the Italian word for 'hope'), wrote poetry for the revolutionary Young Irelanders in 1848; she was a lifelong Irish nationalist. She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. Lady Wilde's interest in the neo-classical revival showed in the paintings and busts of ancient Greece and Rome in her home.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Nicola Roberts",
"paragraph_text": "Roberts was born in Stamford, Lincolnshire, when her mother was 17. At the time of her birth, her father was working for the RAF and the resulting pay led to financial struggles which saw her father move to work for Ford Motor Company whilst her mother became a photographer to help the family monetary problems. Roberts grew up in Runcorn, Cheshire.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Michael John Fles",
"paragraph_text": "Michael John Fles was born to a Dutch father, George Fles, and a British mother, Pearl Rimel. As conscious communists, his parents had moved to the Soviet Union, where his father fell victim to Joseph Stalin's Great Purge. The mother, pregnant with Michael John, left the Soviet Union to give birth in London. Mother and son later emigrated to the United States, where Pearl Rimel found employment in the aircraft industry. Michael John grew up in Los Angeles and Ojai, California, where he graduated from the Ojai Valley School in 1950.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Cyril Holland",
"paragraph_text": "Cyril Holland (born Cyril Wilde, 5 June 1885 – 9 May 1915) was the older of the two sons of Oscar Wilde and Constance Lloyd and brother to Vyvyan Holland.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Wonder (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Julia Roberts as Isabel Pullman, Via and Auggie's mother. Owen Wilson as Nate Pullman, Via and Auggie's father, Isabel's husband Jacob Tremblay as August ``Auggie ''Pullman, Via's brother and Isabel and Nate's son Izabela Vidovic as Olivia`` Via'' Pullman, Auggie's sister Maccie Margaret Chbosky as Young Olivia Noah Jupe as Jack Will, Auggie's best friend Bryce Gheisar as Julian Albans Elle McKinnon as Charlotte Cody Millie Davis as Summer Dawson Ty Consiglio as Amos Continu Kyle Harrison Breitkopf as Miles Noury James A. Hughes as Henry Joplin Sônia Braga as Lisa ``Grans ''Minel, Isabel's mother and Via and Auggie's grandmother Mandy Patinkin as Mr. Tushman Daveed Diggs as Mr. Browne Ali Liebert as Ms. Petosa Danielle Rose Russell as Miranda Navas, Via's best friend Nadji Jeter as Justin Hollander, Via's boyfriend Gidget as Darth - Daisy`` Daisy'', Auggie and Via's dog",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Sheryfa Luna",
"paragraph_text": "Sheryfa Luna (born Chérifa Babouche; 25 January 1989) is a French R&B singer born to an Algerian father and a French mother.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Holland Junior/Senior High School",
"paragraph_text": "Holland Junior/Senior High School is a public high school located in the Town of Holland, Erie County, New York, U.S.A., and is the only high school operated by the Holland Central School District.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Cyril Axelrod",
"paragraph_text": "Father Cyril Axelrod (born Sheftil ben Avram Abba on 24 February 1942 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a deafblind Catholic priest of the Redemptorist Order known for his work for the deaf and deafblind people around the world, especially in South Africa, China and the United Kingdom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter",
"paragraph_text": "John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon (29 March 1395 – 5 August 1447) was an English nobleman and military commander during the Hundred Years' War. His father, the 1st Duke of Exeter, was a maternal half-brother to Richard II of England, and was executed after King Richard's deposition. The Holland family estates and titles were forfeited, but John was able to recover them by dedicating his career to royal service. Holland rendered great assistance to his cousin Henry V in his conquest of France, fighting both on land and on the sea. He was marshal and admiral of England and governor of Aquitaine under Henry VI.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Cyrillic Supplement",
"paragraph_text": "Cyrillic Supplement is a Unicode block containing Cyrillic letters for writing several minority languages, including Abkhaz, Kurdish, Komi, Mordvin, Aleut, Azerbaijani, and Jakovlev's Chuvash orthography.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Remo Forlani",
"paragraph_text": "Remo Forlani (1927–2009) was a French writer and screenwriter born in Paris to a French mother and an Italian immigrant father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Carl Wilhelm Cederhielm",
"paragraph_text": "Carl Wilhelm Cederhielm (17051769) was a \"Freiherr\" and Chamberlain (\"kammarherre\") in Sweden. His father was the royal adviser (\"riksråd\") Josias Cederhielm, and his mother was Anna Åkerhielm.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Burden of Truth (TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Cassandra Potenza as Georgia Lewis. Benjamin Ayres as Alan Christie, an attorney working for Joanna's father's law firm and Joanna's ex. Jessica Matten as Gerrilyn Spence, Luna's mother. Rebecca Gibson as Wendy Ross, Billy's sister and Molly's mother. Jerni Stewart as Lisa Mitchell. Montana Lehmann as Allie Nash. Alex Carter as David Hanley, Joanna's father and a partner at the law firm she used to work for.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Mathieu Razanakolona",
"paragraph_text": "Mathieu Razanakolona (born August 2, 1986) is a Malagasy-Canadian alpine skier, born to a Quebecois mother and a father from Madagascar, currently residing in Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Teri Gender Bender",
"paragraph_text": "Suárez was born in Denver to a Mexican mother and a Spanish father, who worked as a prison guard. At age ten she began to have recurring dreams of playing guitar, and was able to convince her father to buy her one. She lived in Denver for the first thirteen years of her life, until she moved to Mexico with her mother and two younger brothers after her father's death from a heart attack.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Allen Clarke (educationalist)",
"paragraph_text": "Cyril Alfred Allen Clarke (20 August 1910 – 12 July 2007) was the founding head of Holland Park School, which was the flagship of the comprehensive education ideal. Holland Park School, of which Allen Clarke was the first headmaster, was in the 1960s the most famous of its kind in the UK. Founded in 1958, it was dubbed the \"socialist Eton\" and was the showcase comprehensive school of state education, which aimed to rectify the divisive damage caused by a system that had virtually typecast children as educable or not by the age of 11.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Kad Merad",
"paragraph_text": "Kad Merad was born in Sidi Bel Abbès, Algeria, on 27 March 1964 to an Algerian father and a French mother.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who is the mother of Cyril Holland's father?
|
[
{
"id": 300077,
"question": "Cyril Holland >> father",
"answer": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 135138,
"question": "Who is the mother of #1 ?",
"answer": "Jane Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 3
}
] |
Jane Wilde
|
[] | true |
2hop__865377_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Eileen Barnes",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen Barnes (1876–1956) was a notable and highly acclaimed botanical artist, well known for her definitive and accurate depictions of Ireland's plant life.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Barker's Bush",
"paragraph_text": "Barker's Bush is a forest located in the Grand River watershed near the banks of the Nith River in the community of Paris, County of Brant, Ontario, Canada. The bush is directly north and west of Lion's Park, and less than one kilometre northwest of the confluence of the Nith and the Grand rivers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Henry Aston Barker",
"paragraph_text": "Henry Aston Barker (1774 – 19 July 1856) was a Scottish landscape and panorama painter and exhibitor, the son of Robert Barker whose business he continued.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Sebastian Barker",
"paragraph_text": "The son of poets George Barker and Elizabeth Smart, Sebastian Barker was educated at The King's School, Canterbury, Corpus Christi, Oxford (MA), and at the University of East Anglia (MA).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Off the Rack",
"paragraph_text": "Off The Rack is an American sitcom television series set in the Los Angeles garment industry that aired on ABC from March 15 until April 19, 1985. The series stars Ed Asner and Eileen Brennan and was originally directed by Noam Pitlik. Its taping location was the ABC Television Center in Hollywood.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Wherever She Goes",
"paragraph_text": "Wherever She Goes is a 1951 Australian feature film that tells the early part of the life story of pianist Eileen Joyce. Directed by Michael Gordon, it stars Eileen Joyce and Muriel Steinbeck.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Bloody Mama",
"paragraph_text": "Bloody Mama is a 1970 American low-budget drama film directed by Roger Corman and starring Shelley Winters in the title role. It was very loosely based on the real story of Ma Barker, who is depicted as a corrupt mother who encourages and organizes her children's criminality. The film features an early appearance by a young Robert De Niro as Lloyd Barker.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Obadiah J. Barker",
"paragraph_text": "Obadiah J. Barker, Jr. (October 31, 1856 – July 1908) was a Los Angeles business man and the founder and president of the furniture company, Barker Brothers. Born in Bloomfield, Indiana, Barker moved with his family to Colorado Springs, Colorado as a young man. He attended Colorado College and also attended dental school in St. Louis. However, he did not complete dental school and moved to Los Angeles with his parents and brothers in 1880. The family began a successful furniture business on Spring Street in Los Angeles. The company became one of the world's biggest house-furnishing stores. Barker died suddenly at the Lankershim Hotel in July 1908 at age 51.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Tralee, West Virginia",
"paragraph_text": "Tralee is an unincorporated community in Wyoming County, West Virginia, United States, along Barkers Creek and West Virginia Route 10.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Eileen Napaltjarri",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen Napaltjarri (born 1956) is a Pintupi-speaking indigenous artist from Australia's Western Desert region. Eileen Napaltjarri, also known as Anyima Napaltjarri or Nanyuma Napaltjarri, began painting for Papunya Tula artists' cooperative in 1996. She was named as one of \"Australian Art Collector\" magazine's 50 Most Collectible artists in 2008; her works are held by the National Gallery of Australia and the Art Gallery of New South Wales.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Dakota Skye",
"paragraph_text": "Dakota Skye is a 2008 coming of age drama directed and produced by John Humber, starring Eileen April Boylan, Ian Nelson and J.B. Ghuman Jr.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Eileen Power",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen Power was the eldest daughter of a stockbroker and was born at Altrincham (now part of Greater Manchester) in 1889. She was a sister of Rhoda Power, the children's writer and broadcaster. When she was three her father, a stockbroker, was arrested for fraud and the family moved to Bournemouth. After her mother died of tuberculosis when Power was only 14, she moved to Oxford with her two sisters to live with her aunt. Power was educated at Oxford High School for Girls, Girton College, Cambridge, and the Sorbonne.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Eileen Cody",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen L. Cody (born January 5, 1954) is an American politician of the Democratic Party. She is a member of the Washington House of Representatives, representing the 34th Legislative District.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Eileen Fairbairn",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen Fairbairn (27 June 1893–9 August 1981) was a New Zealand teacher and geographer. She was born in Dunedin, New Zealand on 27 June 1893.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Warren Barker",
"paragraph_text": "Warren Barker (born in Oakland, California on April 16, 1923; died in Greenville, South Carolina August 3, 2006) was an American composer known for work in film, radio, and television. He also worked in Las Vegas, Nevada clubs. He was educated at the University of California, Los Angeles.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Eileen Moran",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen Moran (January 23, 1952 – December 3, 2012) was an American visual effects producer and former executive producer at Weta Digital.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Eileen Barker",
"paragraph_text": "Eileen Vartan Barker OBE, (born 21 April 1938, Edinburgh, UK) is a professor in sociology, an emeritus member of the London School of Economics (LSE), and a consultant to that institution's Centre for the Study of Human Rights. She is the chairperson and founder of the Information Network Focus on Religious Movements (INFORM) and has written studies about groups she defines as cults and new religious movements (NRMs).",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007 film)",
"paragraph_text": "Johnny Depp as Benjamin Barker / Sweeney Todd Helena Bonham Carter as Nellie Lovett Alan Rickman as Judge Turpin Timothy Spall as Beadle Bamford Jayne Wisener as Johanna Barker Sacha Baron Cohen as Adolfo Pirelli Laura Michelle Kelly as Lucy Barker / Beggar Woman Jamie Campbell Bower as Anthony Hope Ed Sanders as Tobias Ragg",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Mount Barker Football Club",
"paragraph_text": "The Mount Barker Football Club is an Australian rules football club located in Mount Barker, Western Australia. Nicknamed the Bulls, the club plays in the Great Southern Football League, with home games originally being hosted at Frost Oval (\"aka\" Frost Park) in Mount Barker but changed to Sounness Park in 2015.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is Eileen Barker's alma mater located?
|
[
{
"id": 865377,
"question": "Eileen Barker >> educated at",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__175449_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Darlene Remembers Duke, Jonathan Plays Fats",
"paragraph_text": "Darlene Remembers Duke, Jonathan Plays Fats is a 1982 album by Jo Stafford and Paul Weston in which they perform in character as Jonathan and Darlene Edwards. The duo put their own unique interpretation on the music of Duke Ellington and Fats Waller with Stafford singing deliberately off key, while Weston plays an out of tune piano. The album was issued by Corinthian Records (COR-117). \"Billboard\" reviewed the album when it was newly released, saying, \"the sounds they achieve may well lead to another Grammy for the duo next year.\" Stafford and Weston, in their personas of Jonathan and Darlene Edwards, were interviewed by \"Los Angeles Magazine\" following the release of the album.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Felix R. de Zoysa",
"paragraph_text": "Felix R. de Zoysa is the founding Chairman of Stafford Motor Company, Stafford International School and Atlas Hall in Sri Lanka. De Zoysa was the head of Auto & General Agencies who held the distributorship of Honda motor vehicles in Sri Lanka in 1960s. After the incorporation of both companies, Stafford Motor Company became the sole distributor for Honda motor vehicles. He was also nicknamed \"Mr. Honda\" of Sri Lanka.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Stafford Mills",
"paragraph_text": "Stafford Mills is an historic textile mill complex located on County Street in Fall River, Massachusetts, USA. Founded in 1872, it is a well-preserved late-19th century textile complex, typical of the mills built in Fall River during its period of most rapid growth. It is noted in particular for its exceptionally fine Romanesque brick office building. The complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Charles A. Stafford",
"paragraph_text": "Charles Arthur Stafford (8 December 1908 - March 3, 1942) was a Captain and physician in the Medical Corps of the United States Army during World War II. Stafford was posthumously awarded the Silver Star for his actions in the Battle of Java.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Anne of Gloucester",
"paragraph_text": "Anne of Gloucester, Countess of Stafford (30 April 1383 – 16 October 1438) was the eldest daughter of Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester, and Eleanor de Bohun.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Spiders & Snakes (song)",
"paragraph_text": "``Spiders & Snakes ''is a 1974 hit song recorded by Jim Stafford and written by Stafford and David Bellamy. It was the second of four U.S. Top 40 singles released from his eponymous debut album and also the highest - charting.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Katherine de la Pole",
"paragraph_text": "Katherine de la Pole (1410/11 – 1473) was the oldest daughter of Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk and Katherine de Stafford.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Oklahoma City",
"paragraph_text": "Oklahoma City also has its share of very brutal crimes, particularly in the 1970s. The worst of which occurred in 1978, when six employees of a Sirloin Stockade restaurant on the city's south side were murdered execution-style in the restaurant's freezer. An intensive investigation followed, and the three individuals involved, who also killed three others in Purcell, Oklahoma, were identified. One, Harold Stafford, died in a motorcycle accident in Tulsa not long after the restaurant murders. Another, Verna Stafford, was sentenced to life without parole after being granted a new trial after she had previously been sentenced to death. Roger Dale Stafford, considered the mastermind of the murder spree, was executed by lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in 1995.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Canadian Human Rights Commission",
"paragraph_text": "The Canadian Human Rights Commission (CHRC) was established in 1977 by the government of Canada. It is empowered under the \"Canadian Human Rights Act\" to investigate and try to settle complaints of discrimination in employment and in the provision of services within federal jurisdiction. The CHRC is also empowered under the \"Employment Equity Act\" to ensure that federally regulated employers provide equal opportunities for four designated groups: women, Aboriginal people, the disabled and visible minorities. The CHRC helps enforce these human rights and inform the general public and employers of these rights.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Reay Parish Church",
"paragraph_text": "Reay Parish Church is a Church of Scotland parish church serving Reay, Caithness. It is one of the most northerly communities on the Scottish mainland, located several miles to west of Thurso. The largest local employer is the Dounreay nuclear facility.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Henry Stafford, 1st Baron Stafford",
"paragraph_text": "Henry Stafford, 1st Baron Stafford (18 September 1501 – 30 April 1563) was born in Penshurst, Kent, eldest son of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Eleanor Percy, Duchess of Buckingham. Eleanor (or Alianore) was the daughter of Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland and Maud Herbert, Countess of Northumberland. After his father's execution he managed to regain some of his family's position and he was created Baron Stafford in 1547.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Edward Stafford (diplomat)",
"paragraph_text": "After he was appointed ambassador to Paris in 1583, he took money from Henry I, Duke of Guise, in return for access to diplomatic correspondence. He also received money from a Spanish agent, Bernardino de Mendoza, and there is strong evidence that has convinced most historians that Stafford in return for the money passed on secrets to Spain. Further it was his duty to report to London intelligence he possessed on the formation of the Spanish Armada, but did not do so. The English counterspy Francis Walsingham was deeply suspicious but was unable to prove anything, and could not act as long as Stafford was protected by Lord Burghley. No action was taken against him by Elizabeth, although he was not given any posts of consequence after his recall in 1590. McDermott concludes, \"The evidence of Stafford's treachery, though substantial, remains circumstantial, and the precise degree of his culpability is difficult to establish\". Leimon and Parker are convinced of his guilt and add, \" Equally damning is the misinformation about the nonexistence and false destinations of the Armada Stafford forwarded to England\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Stafford Township, Greene County, Indiana",
"paragraph_text": "Stafford Township is one of fifteen townships in Greene County, Indiana, USA. As of the 2010 census, its population was 448.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "1984 Stafford by-election",
"paragraph_text": "The Stafford by-election, 1984 was a parliamentary by-election held on 3 May 1984 for the British House of Commons constituency of Stafford.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Ski Trails",
"paragraph_text": "Ski Trails is a 1956 album by Jo Stafford, with accompaniment by Paul Weston and His Orchestra, The Starlighters, and the Norman Luboff Choir. Most of its songs have a winter theme.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Charles Stafford",
"paragraph_text": "Charles Stafford (born 6 November 1956) is Professor of Anthropology at the London School of Economics; he is also one of the co-founders of the LSE’s Programme in Culture & Cognition. Stafford specialises in the social anthropology of China and Taiwan. His research projects and scholarly publications have focused primarily on child development, learning, schooling, kinship, religion and the psychology of economic life. In July 2018 he was elected Fellow of the British Academy (FBA).",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Phyllis Summers",
"paragraph_text": "Phyllis Summers is a fictional character from \"The Young and the Restless\", an American soap opera on the CBS network. The character was created and introduced by William J. Bell, and debuted in the episode airing on October 17, 1994. Phyllis was originally and most notably portrayed by actress Michelle Stafford, until August 2013 (other than Sandra Nelson portraying Phyllis for nearly two years, until Stafford was brought back by former head writer, Kay Alden, in 2000). Stafford has been praised for her portrayal, for which she has won two Daytime Emmy Awards, but left the series after nearly sixteen years, with the character being written into a coma; Stafford last appeared on August 2, 2013. The role passed to Gina Tognoni, who debuted on August 11, 2014, and continued for nearly five years until she departed in June 2019, when Stafford re-claimed the role.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "You Belong to Me (2008 Jo Stafford album)",
"paragraph_text": "You Belong to Me is a 2008 compilation album of songs by American artist Jo Stafford. Released on the Dynamic label on April 8, 2008, the album features 16 of Stafford's hits.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Plymouth",
"paragraph_text": "Devonport Dockyard is the UK's only naval base that refits nuclear submarines and the Navy estimates that the Dockyard generates about 10% of Plymouth's income. Plymouth has the largest cluster of marine and maritime businesses in the south west with 270 firms operating within the sector. Other substantial employers include the university with almost 3,000 staff, as well as the Tamar Science Park employing 500 people in 50 companies. Several employers have chosen to locate their headquarters in Plymouth, including Hemsley Fraser.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the school that employs Charles Stafford located?
|
[
{
"id": 175449,
"question": "Charles Stafford >> employer",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__122722_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Hywel Teifi Edwards",
"paragraph_text": "Born and raised in Aberarth, Ceredigion, Edwards attended Aberaeron Grammar School and the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth. He taught Welsh at Garw Grammar School, Pontycymmer, where he met his wife Aerona, before becoming an extramural lecturer in Welsh literature at University of Wales, Swansea, and later Professor and Head of the Welsh Department. He and his wife had two children, Huw Edwards and Meinir Edwards now Menir Krishnasamy. He retired from full-time teaching in 1995 but continued to lecture and write books. Edwards was the leading authority on the history of the National Eisteddfod of Wales.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Gary Robichaud",
"paragraph_text": "Robichaud was born in Saint John, New Brunswick. He spent his childhood on Prince Edward Island, attending Evangeline Regional High School and then the University of Prince Edward Island.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Arul Chinnaiyan",
"paragraph_text": "Arul M. Chinnaiyan is a Hicks Endowed Professor of Pathology and professor of pathology and urology at the University of Michigan Medical School. He is also a Howard Hughes medical Investigator (HHMI) at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Hugh O'Connor",
"paragraph_text": "Hugh Edward Ralph O'Connor (April 7, 1962 -- March 28, 1995) was an American actor and the son of actor Carroll O'Connor known for his role as James Flynn in the 1984 film, Brass, and his portrayal as Lonnie Jamison on In the Heat of the Night until his death in 1995.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Don't Ever Leave Me",
"paragraph_text": "Don't Ever Leave Me is a 1949 British comedy film directed by Arthur Crabtree and starring Petula Clark, Jimmy Hanley, Hugh Sinclair, Edward Rigby, and Anthony Newley. Produced by Betty Box during her stint at Gainsborough Pictures, it was written by Robert Westerby.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Ninth Crusade",
"paragraph_text": "Following this victory, Edward realized that to create a force capable of retaking Jerusalem it would be necessary to end the internal unrest within the Christian state, and so he mediated between Hugh and his unenthusiastic knights from the Ibelin family of Cyprus. In parallel to the mediation, Prince Edward and King Hugh began negotiating a truce with Sultan Baibars; a 10-year-10-month-and-10-day agreement was reached in May 1272, at Caesarea. Almost immediately Prince Edmund departed for England, while Edward remained to see if the treaty would hold. The following month, an attempt to assassinate Edward was made. Several versions of who sent the assassin exist. According to different versions, the assassin was sent by the emir of Ramlah or by Baibars. Some legends also say that the assassin was sent by the \"Old Man of the Mountains\", leader of a heretical Muslim sect. Edward killed the assassin but received a festering wound from a poisoned dagger in the process, further delaying Edward's own departure. In September 1272, Edward departed Acre for Sicily and, while recuperating on the island, he first received news of the death of his son John, and then a few months later news of the death of his father. In 1273 Edward started his homeward journey via Italy, Gascony and Paris. Edward finally reached England in the middle of 1274, and was crowned King of England on 19 August 1274.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Ebenezer Sekyi-Hughes",
"paragraph_text": "Ebenezer Sekyi-Hughes was born on 4 September 1939 at Cape Coast, the capital of the Central Region of Ghana. He had his basic education at Cape Coast Government Boys School from 1945 to 1953. His secondary education was at Adisadel College between 1954 and 1960. In 1961 he gained admission to the University of Ghana, Legon, where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1964. He then attended the Ghana School of Law, graduating with an LLB in 1966.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "University of Kansas",
"paragraph_text": "KU's Edwards Campus is in Overland Park, Kansas. Established in 1993, its goal is to provide adults with the opportunity to complete college degrees. About 2,100 students attend the Edwards Campus, with an average age of 32. Programs available at the Edwards Campus include developmental psychology, public administration, social work, systems analysis, information technology, engineering management and design.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Malcolm K. Hughes",
"paragraph_text": "Malcolm K. Hughes is a meso-climatologist and Regents' Professor of Dendrochronology in the Laboratory for Tree-Ring Research at the University of Arizona.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Hugh Bayley",
"paragraph_text": "Sir Hugh Nigel Edward Bayley (born 9 January 1952) is a British Labour Party politician who was Member of Parliament for York Central until 2015, having held the predecessor City of York seat from 1992 to the 2010 general election, when boundary changes took effect.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Hugh Poland (baseball)",
"paragraph_text": "Hugh Reid Poland (January 19, 1910 – March 29, 1984) was an American professional baseball catcher, manager and scout. A native of Tompkinsville, Kentucky, he attended Western Kentucky University. Poland threw right-handed, batted left-handed, and stood tall, weighing .",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Edward Hugh",
"paragraph_text": "He was born Edward Hugh Bengree-Jones in Liverpool, and studied at the London School of Economics, but was drawn more to philosophy, science, sociology and literature. His eclectic intellectual pursuits kept him not only from getting a doctorate, but also prevented him from gaining a full-time professorship.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "University of Kansas",
"paragraph_text": "The university's Medical Center and University Hospital are located in Kansas City, Kansas. The Edwards Campus is in Overland Park, Kansas, in the Kansas City metropolitan area. There are also educational and research sites in Parsons and Topeka, and branches of the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Wichita and Salina. The university is one of the 62 members of the Association of American Universities.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Presidency University, Kolkata",
"paragraph_text": "Presidency University, Kolkata, formerly Hindu College and Presidency College, is a public state university located in Kolkata, West Bengal. The college was established in 1817 with the money donated by Rani Rashmoni, Raja Ram Mohan Roy, Raja Radhakanta Deb, David Hare, Sir Edward Hyde East, Baidyanath Mukhopadhya and Rasamay Dutt.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Cate Edwards",
"paragraph_text": "Edwards attended Princeton University, majoring in Political Economics, and graduating with honors. She is a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority, and was an intern for the Council on Foreign Relations.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Robin Stacey",
"paragraph_text": "Robin Chapman Stacey in an American medievalist and celticist based at the University of Washington, Seattle. After finishing her undergraduate life, she attended the University of Oxford where she complete her M. Litt. under Thomas Charles-Edwards, learning Welsh with the tutorship of David Ellis Evans. In 1986 she completed a Ph.D. with a thesis on Irish and Welsh law at Yale University, under John Boswell. Since 1988 she has been teaching at the University of Washington, where she is now a Professor in history.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Centre Daily Times",
"paragraph_text": "The Centre Daily Times is a daily newspaper located in State College, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is the hometown newspaper for State College and the Pennsylvania State University, one of the best-known and largest universities in the country, with more than 45,000 students attending the main campus.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Atlantic Veterinary College",
"paragraph_text": "The Atlantic Veterinary College (AVC) is an accredited and globally recognized veterinary school at University of Prince Edward Island, located in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Hugh Collins",
"paragraph_text": "Hugh Collins, (born 21 June 1953) is the Vinerian Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford and a fellow of All Souls College.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the university Edward Hugh attended located?
|
[
{
"id": 122722,
"question": "What university did Edward Hugh attend?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 11
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__209350_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Employer Identification Number",
"paragraph_text": "The Employer Identification Number (EIN), also known as the Federal Employer Identification Number (FEIN) or the Federal Tax Identification Number, is a unique nine - digit number assigned by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to business entities operating in the United States for the purposes of identification. When the number is used for identification rather than employment tax reporting, it is usually referred to as a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), and when used for the purposes of reporting employment taxes, it is usually referred to as an EIN. These numbers are used for tax administration and must be not used for any other purpose. For example, the EIN should not be used in tax lien auction or sales, lotteries, etc.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Being Human Foundation",
"paragraph_text": "Founded 2007 Founder Salman Khan Type Education and healthcare for underprivileged Focus Underprivileged children Location Mumbai Area served India Products Clothing and watches Services Education, employment and medical treatment Method Direct training, funding medical treatment, supplies for the differently - abled Owner Salman Khan Website www.beinghumanonline.com",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Saint Patrick's Day",
"paragraph_text": "Saint Patrick's Day, or the Feast of Saint Patrick (Irish: Lá Fhéile Pádraig, ``the Day of the Festival of Patrick ''), is a cultural and religious celebration held on 17 March, the traditional death date of Saint Patrick (c. AD 385 -- 461), the foremost patron saint of Ireland.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Temporary foreign worker program in Canada",
"paragraph_text": "The Temporary foreign worker program or TFWP is a program of the Government of Canada to allow employers in Canada to hire foreign nationals. When the program started in 1973, most of the workers brought in were high - skill workers such as specialist doctors. In 2002 a ``low - skilled workers ''category was added; this category now makes up most of the temporary foreign workforce. In 2006, the program was expanded and fast - tracking introduced for some locations. It was revised again in 2013, raising wages, charging employer fees, and removing the accelerated applications.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Patrick Dunleavy",
"paragraph_text": "Patrick John Dunleavy (born 21 June 1952), is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy within the Government Department of the London School of Economics (LSE). He is also Co-Director of Democratic Audit and Chair of the LSE Public Policy Group. In addition Dunleavy has been appointed to an ANZSOG Institute for Governance Centenary Chair at the University of Canberra, Australia.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Reay Parish Church",
"paragraph_text": "Reay Parish Church is a Church of Scotland parish church serving Reay, Caithness. It is one of the most northerly communities on the Scottish mainland, located several miles to west of Thurso. The largest local employer is the Dounreay nuclear facility.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Transformers: Dark of the Moon",
"paragraph_text": "Patrick Dempsey as Dylan Gould A wealthy car collector and Carly's employer who is secretly in cahoots with the Decepticons.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Star Wars: The Last Jedi",
"paragraph_text": "Second unit photography began during pre-production at Skellig Michael in Ireland on September 14, 2015, due to the difficulties of filming at that location during other seasons. It would have lasted four days, but filming was canceled for the first day due to poor weather and rough conditions. In November 2014, Ivan Dunleavy, chief executive of Pinewood Studios, confirmed that the film would be shot at Pinewood, with additional filming in Mexico. In September 2015, del Toro revealed that principal photography would begin in March 2016; Kennedy later stated that filming would begin in January 2016. The production began work on the 007 Stage at Pinewood Studios on November 15, 2015. Rick Heinrichs served as production designer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Race Against the Machine",
"paragraph_text": "Race Against the Machine is a non-fiction book from 2011 by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee about the interaction of digital technology, employment and organization. The full title of the book is: \"Race Against the Machine: How the Digital Revolution Is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Obbola",
"paragraph_text": "Obbola is a locality situated in Umeå Municipality, Västerbotten County, Sweden with 2,197 inhabitants in 2010. It is located close to the town of Holmsund. Obbola lies to the west of the mouth of Ume River at the Gulf of Bothnia in the Baltic Sea. SCA is the biggest employer in the locality. In the school in Obbola there are pupils from grade one to grade nine. After that most of the pupils continue in the city of Umeå.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Tucson, Arizona",
"paragraph_text": "Much of Tucson's economic development has been centered on the development of the University of Arizona, which is currently the second largest employer in the city. Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, located on the southeastern edge of the city, also provides many jobs for Tucson residents. Its presence, as well as the presence of the US Army Intelligence Center (Fort Huachuca, the largest employer in the region in nearby Sierra Vista), has led to the development of a significant number of high-tech industries, including government contractors, in the area. The city of Tucson is also a major hub for the Union Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route that links the Los Angeles ports with the South/Southeast regions of the country.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Postman Pat: The Movie",
"paragraph_text": "Patrick ``Pat ''Clifton also known as`` Postman Pat'' (voiced by Stephen Mangan), is a friendly postman who has been delivering letters in the village of Greendale in the north of England for years. He wants to take his wife, Sara (voiced by Susan Duerden), on a late honeymoon to Italy. He plans to afford it through a bonus from his employer, the Special Delivery Service (SDS), but their new boss, Edwin Carbunkle (voiced by Peter Woodward), has cancelled all bonuses. He plans to make SDS more efficient by replacing its human workers with robots, thinking that being friendly is a waste of time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Jacksonville, Alabama",
"paragraph_text": "Jacksonville is a city in Calhoun County, Alabama, United States. As of the 2010 census the population was 12,548, which is a 49% increase since 2000. It is included in the Anniston-Oxford Metropolitan Statistical Area. Jacksonville State University is located here, which is a center of commerce and one of the largest employers in the area.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "National Treasure (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Ian returns the Declaration and asks for the next clue, but when Ben remains coy, Ian reveals he has kidnapped Patrick as a hostage. They go inside Trinity Church where they sit and study the back of the Declaration of Independence using the different lenses resulting in the discovery of an underground passage known as Parkington Lane but it appears to lead to a dead end lit by a lone lantern. Patrick claims it is referencing the Midnight Ride of Paul Revere, pointing Ian to the Old North Church in Boston. Ian leaves Gates trapped in the chamber to die, heading for Boston. Patrick reveals the clue was a fake, then enters the treasure room using the clues they gathered on their journey, but it seems looted. After a heart to heart between Ben and Patrick, they find a notch which the meerschaum pipe fits into, opening a large chamber containing the treasure, then escape through a back exit. Ben contacts Sadusky, who is actually a Freemason, surrendering the Declaration and the treasure's location in exchange for clemency. Ian is later arrested when Ben tips the FBI off.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Red Hill Patrick Henry National Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "Red Hill Patrick Henry National Memorial, in Charlotte County, Virginia near the Town of Brookneal, honors Patrick Henry, the fiery legislator and orator of the American Revolution. Henry bought Red Hill Plantation at his retirement in 1794 and occupied it until 1799, the year of his death. In addition to the main house, Henry used another building as his law office. There were also dependencies and slave quarters on the working 520-acre tobacco plantation. The plantation was located on the Staunton River for transportation.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Plymouth",
"paragraph_text": "Devonport Dockyard is the UK's only naval base that refits nuclear submarines and the Navy estimates that the Dockyard generates about 10% of Plymouth's income. Plymouth has the largest cluster of marine and maritime businesses in the south west with 270 firms operating within the sector. Other substantial employers include the university with almost 3,000 staff, as well as the Tamar Science Park employing 500 people in 50 companies. Several employers have chosen to locate their headquarters in Plymouth, including Hemsley Fraser.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Canadian Human Rights Commission",
"paragraph_text": "The Canadian Human Rights Commission (CHRC) was established in 1977 by the government of Canada. It is empowered under the \"Canadian Human Rights Act\" to investigate and try to settle complaints of discrimination in employment and in the provision of services within federal jurisdiction. The CHRC is also empowered under the \"Employment Equity Act\" to ensure that federally regulated employers provide equal opportunities for four designated groups: women, Aboriginal people, the disabled and visible minorities. The CHRC helps enforce these human rights and inform the general public and employers of these rights.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "If You Build It",
"paragraph_text": "If You Build It is a 2013 documentary directed by Patrick Creadon, produced by Neal Baer, and filmed on location largely in the town of Windsor and surrounding Bertie County, North Carolina, the state's poorest county.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Patrick Cudahy Memorial",
"paragraph_text": "The Patrick Cudahy Memorial is a public art work by American artist Felix de Weldon, located in Sheridan Park in Cudahy, Wisconsin. The bronze sculpture depicts industrialist Patrick Cudahy standing and wearing a business suit.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the school that employs Patrick Dunleavy located?
|
[
{
"id": 209350,
"question": "Patrick Dunleavy >> employer",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__689668_135138
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Wukui",
"paragraph_text": "Wukui's father and predecessor was Duke Huan of Qi, who was the first of the Five Hegemons, the most powerful rulers of the Spring and Autumn period. Duke Huan had at least three main wives who bore no sons, six favoured concubines, and more than ten sons. Wukui's mother was the elder Wey Ji, one of the two princesses of the State of Wey who were among Duke Huan's favoured concubines. However, the crown prince of Qi was Prince Zhao (later Duke Xiao), who was born to Zheng Ji, a princess of the State of Zheng. Four other sons of Duke Huan also contended for the throne: Prince Pan (later Duke Zhao), Prince Shangren (later Duke Yi), Prince Yuan (later Duke Hui), and Prince Yong.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Yang Longyan",
"paragraph_text": "Yang Longyan was born in 897, during the reign of Emperor Zhaozong of Tang; he was the second son of Yang Xingmi, who, by the time of his birth, was a major warlord as the military governor (\"Jiedushi\") of Huainan Circuit (淮南, headquartered in modern Yangzhou, Jiangsu). His mother was Yang Xingmi's concubine Lady Shi, who was also the mother of his older brother Yang Wo. (Yang Longyan's four younger brothers all appear to be born of different mothers; Yang Pu was known to be born of Lady Wang, while the mothers of the other three brothers were lost to history.) After Yang Xingmi's death in 905, Yang Wo inherited his domain and carried the title of Prince of Hongnong.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "George V",
"paragraph_text": "George was born on 3 June 1865, in Marlborough House, London. He was the second son of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, and Alexandra, Princess of Wales. His father was the eldest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, and his mother was the eldest daughter of King Christian IX and Queen Louise of Denmark. He was baptised at Windsor Castle on 7 July 1865 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Charles Longley.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The Princess and the Frog",
"paragraph_text": "Oprah Winfrey as Eudora, Tiana's mother who wants to see her happy and worries that Tiana focuses too much on her dream of owning a restaurant. Ruben A. Aquino animated both Eudora and her husband, James.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "David Henrie",
"paragraph_text": "David Clayton Henrie (/ ˈhɛnri / HEN - ree; born July 11, 1989) is an American actor, producer, director, and screenwriter. He is noted for playing Ted Mosby's future son Luke on How I Met Your Mother and Justin Russo in Wizards of Waverly Place, as well as starring in the films in Little Boy and Walt Before Mickey.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Seleucus V Philometor",
"paragraph_text": "The Seleucid king Seleucus V Philometor (Greek: Σέλευκος Ε΄ ὁ Φιλομήτωρ; 126/125 BC), ruler of the Hellenistic Seleucid kingdom, was the eldest son of Demetrius II Nicator and Cleopatra Thea. The epithet \"Philometor\" means \"mother-loving\" and in the Hellenistic world usually indicated that the mother acted as co-regent for the prince.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_text": "Oscar Wilde was born at 21 Westland Row, Dublin (now home of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College), the second of three children born to Sir William Wilde and Jane Wilde, two years behind William (\"Willie\"). Wilde's mother had distant Italian ancestry, and under the pseudonym \"\"Speranza\"\" (the Italian word for 'hope'), wrote poetry for the revolutionary Young Irelanders in 1848; she was a lifelong Irish nationalist. She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. Lady Wilde's interest in the neo-classical revival showed in the paintings and busts of ancient Greece and Rome in her home.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Murong Wei",
"paragraph_text": "Murong Wei was born in 350, during the reign of his father Murong Jun, one year before he claimed the title of emperor. His mother was Murong Jun's wife Empress Kezuhun. At that time, his older brother Murong Ye (慕容曄) was the crown prince. In 354, he was created the Prince of Zhongshan.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Ring My Bell (DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Ring My Bell\" is the second single released from DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince's fourth studio album, \"Homebase\". The song sampled and shared the same name as Anita Ward's 1979 hit, \"Ring My Bell\", though the original lyrics were replaced by those written by the Fresh Prince (Will Smith). Nevertheless, The songs original writer, Fredrick Knight was sole writer who received writing credits. The song appears on Smith's series, \"The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air\" in the closing credits from \"The Mother of All Battles\" off the season 2 episode.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Ludvonga",
"paragraph_text": "Ludvonga II (c. 1855 - 1872) was the Crown Prince of Swaziland, son of Mswati II of Swaziland. His mother's clan was Khumalo. As a result of internal power struggles within the royal family, he was poisoned and died in 1872 before he could take the throne. He was succeeded by his half-brother Mbandzeni, who was adopted by Ludvonga's mother.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Satyavati",
"paragraph_text": "Satyavati () (also spelled Satyawati or Setyawati in Indonesian) was the queen of the Kuru king, Shantanu of Hastinapur and the great-grandmother of the Pandava and Kaurava princes (principal characters of the Hindu epic Mahabharata). She is also the mother of the seer Vyasa, author of the epic. Her story appears in the Mahabharata, the Harivamsa and the Devi Bhagavata Purana.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Yin Yin Nwe",
"paragraph_text": "Yin Yin Nwe's father is Sao Saimong Mangrai, a member of the princely Kengtung State and a highly regarded scholar on Shan State and the Head of the Shan State Education Department during the post-Independence years. Yin Yin Nwe's mother is Mi Mi Khaing, also a scholar and a former Principal of Kambawza School. Her father, Sao Saimong, had an administrative career after the Shan principalities agreed to become part of the Union of Burma, and was Chief Education Officer for Shan and Kayah States. Her mother was the author of \"Burmese Family\", a book on Burmese culture and was one of the first women to write in English about Burmese culture and traditions. Yin Yin Nwe is of Mon ancestry on her mother's side and of Tai ancestry on her father's side, given that the state of Kengtung originated in the 13th century, when the Chiang Mai dynasty founded a new kingdom which was named Lanna, sending a prince to Kengtung to establish a separate kingdom.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Anna Romantowska",
"paragraph_text": "She has been married to the Polish actor and director Krzysztof Kolberger as well as the Polish radio presenter, disc jockey, director, screenwriter and producer Jacek Bromski. With Kolberger, she is the mother of the Polish actress Julia Kolberger.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton",
"paragraph_text": "On 16 November 2010, Clarence House stated that Prince William was to marry Catherine Middleton ``in the Spring or Summer of 2011, in London ''. They were engaged in October 2010, while on a private holiday in Kenya; Prince William gave Middleton the same engagement ring that his father had given to William's mother, Diana, Princess of Wales -- an 18 - karat white gold ring with a 12 - carat oval Ceylon (Sri Lankan) sapphire and 14 round diamonds. It was announced at approximately the same time that, after their marriage, the couple would live on the Isle of Anglesey in Wales, where Prince William was based with the Royal Air Force.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Velma Barfield",
"paragraph_text": "Velma Barfield was born in rural South Carolina, but was raised near Fayetteville, North Carolina. Barfield's father reportedly was physically abusive and her mother, Lillian Bullard, did not intervene. She escaped by marrying Thomas Burke in 1949. The couple had two children and were reportedly happy until Barfield had a hysterectomy and developed back pain. These events led to a behavioral change in Barfield and an eventual drug addiction.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Johari Johnson",
"paragraph_text": "Johari Johnson is an American actress, director, comedian, screenwriter and producer. She has guest starred in a number of notable television series including \"Moesha\", \"The Steve Harvey Show\", \"Smart Guy\", \"In the House\", \"Eve\", \"Cory in the House\", \"Mr. Show with Bob and David\" and among other series. She has also guest starred numerous times on \"The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air\" and the Disney Channel Original Series \"That's So Raven\", each time playing a different character on both series.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Kyle Harmon",
"paragraph_text": "Julia Eberly - Winston (Elizabeth Berkley): Harmon is very happy to see his mother when she first appears in ``Raising Caine, ''as he has been looking for her for some time. When Julia and Horatio file separate custody suits for him, he ultimately chooses his mother. For a while Harmon is quite protective of his mother. However, as time goes on and Winston's mental condition worsens, Harmon appears to grow somewhat weary of Winston's unpredictable temperament. The breaking point comes after she goes on a rampage in the penultimate episode of season 7 (`` Dissolved'') and demands Harmon at gunpoint to return with her. He is obviously disappointed as he watches his father have her arrested and later sent to rehab. During the eighth season, Winston is not mentioned by Harmon or Caine, and it is implied that Harmon no longer has much of a relationship, if any at all, with his mother.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "The Happy Prince (1974 film)",
"paragraph_text": "The Happy Prince is an animated short film adaptation of the short story by Oscar Wilde. The film was produced in 1974 by the Canadian-based Potterton Productions as a follow-up to its 1971 film \"The Selfish Giant\".",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat",
"paragraph_text": "Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat Beg (1499 or 1500–1551) was a Chagatai Turco-Mongol military general, ruler of Kashmir, and a historical writer. He was a Turkic speaking Dughlat prince who wrote in the Persian and Chagatai languages. Prince Haider was a first cousin of Prince Zahir (later Emperor Babur), their mothers were sisters.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Stephen Geller",
"paragraph_text": "Stephen Geller (b. Los Angeles, California) is an American screenwriter and novelist. He wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's novel \"Slaughterhouse-Five\", and has worked in the film industry in Hollywood and Europe. Geller recently directed his own independent feature, \"Mother's Little Helpers\".",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who's the mother of The Happy Prince's screenwriter?
|
[
{
"id": 689668,
"question": "The Happy Prince >> screenwriter",
"answer": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
},
{
"id": 135138,
"question": "Who is the mother of #1 ?",
"answer": "Jane Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
}
] |
Jane Wilde
|
[] | true |
2hop__694049_135138
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Magical Power from Mars",
"paragraph_text": "Magical Power from Mars is an album by Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O., released in 2003 by Important Records. Three of the tracks, \"Ziggy Sitar Dust Raga\", \"Diamond Doggy Peggy\" and \"Cosmic Funky Dolly\", were originally released by Important Records as separate 3\" CD singles, but were later combined into this album, with the bonus track, \"Aladdin Kane\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Mariyam Mukku",
"paragraph_text": "Mariyam Mukku (Malayalam: മറിയം മുക്ക് ) is a 2015 Malayalam romantic fantasy drama written and directed by James Albert. The film marks the directorial debut of Malayalam screenwriter James. The film was distributed by LJ Films. It stars Fahadh Faasil and Sana Althaf in the lead roles along with Manoj K. Jayan, Joy Mathew, Irshad, Sadiq, Nandhu, Prathap Pothan and Saju Navodaya in other important roles. The film score and songs were composed by Vidyasagar.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Anna Romantowska",
"paragraph_text": "She has been married to the Polish actor and director Krzysztof Kolberger as well as the Polish radio presenter, disc jockey, director, screenwriter and producer Jacek Bromski. With Kolberger, she is the mother of the Polish actress Julia Kolberger.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Son of a Smaller Hero",
"paragraph_text": "Son of a Smaller Hero is a novel by Canadian author Mordecai Richler, first published in 1955 by André Deutsch. One of Richler's earliest works, it displays an earnest and gritty realism in comparison to his somewhat more satirical later novels. It is sometimes assigned reading for high school English classes in Canada.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Fritz Lang filmography",
"paragraph_text": "Fritz Lang (1890–1976) was an Austrian film director, producer and screenwriter. In Lang's early career he worked primarily as a screenwriter, finishing film scripts in four to five days. Lang went on to direct popular films of the silent era including \"Metropolis\" and one of the first important German sound films, \"M\". Lang went on to direct some of the most important crime and film noir film of the American studio era, such as \"The Big Heat\". Lang's final film work was an acting role as himself in Jean-Luc Godard's \"Contempt\". Lang returned to America to live out his remaining years.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Serge Korber",
"paragraph_text": "Serge Korber (born 1 February 1936) is a French film director and screenwriter. He directed 45 films between 1962 and 2007. Successful as the director of comedies starring Louis de Funès in \"L'homme orchestre\" and \"Perched on a Tree\" (co-starring Geraldine Chaplin), he earned acclaim with his tragical drama \"Hearth Fires\" starring Annie Girardot and Claude Jade as mother and daughter. This film was official French film at the 1972 Cannes Film Festival.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Sergio Amidei",
"paragraph_text": "Sergio Amidei (30 October 1904 – 14 April 1981) was an Italian screenwriter and an important figure in Italy's neorealist movement.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "The Mother (How I Met Your Mother)",
"paragraph_text": "They chose Cristin Milioti after seeing her on 30 Rock and Once; her musical ability was also helpful, as The Mother had been described as a band member. After competing for the role against at least two others, Milioti filmed her first scene -- for the last episode of season 8 -- having never watched How I Met Your Mother; she recalled, ``I had ignorance on my side. So I did n't know what it meant. ''Milioti learned of the character's importance only after binge watching the show during the summer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Solo Sunny",
"paragraph_text": "Wolfgang Kohlhaase, East Germany’s most important screenwriter, wrote the screenplay for \"Solo Sunny\" and was made co-director of the film. The inspiration for this film was a German singer named Sanije Torka who was born of eastern European immigrant parents. Jutta Voigt, a German journalist who interviewed Torka and had connections to Kohlhaase, was a consultant for the film. The information used for the film drew on an interview Voigt had done with the singer in 1976 that was never published because her lifestyle did not fit East German socialist views.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Julio Porter",
"paragraph_text": "Julio Porter (July 14, 1916 in Buenos Aires – October 24, 1979 in Mexico City) was an Argentine screenwriter and film director known as one of the most prolific screenwriters and film directors in the history of the Cinema of Argentina.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Remo Forlani",
"paragraph_text": "Remo Forlani (1927–2009) was a French writer and screenwriter born in Paris to a French mother and an Italian immigrant father.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "The Importance of Being Earnest",
"paragraph_text": "After the success of Wilde's plays Lady Windermere's Fan and A Woman of No Importance, Wilde's producers urged him to write further plays. In July 1894 he mooted his idea for The Importance of Being Earnest to George Alexander, the actor - manager of the St James's Theatre. Wilde spent the summer with his family at Worthing, where he wrote the play quickly in August. His fame now at its peak, he used the working title Lady Lancing to avoid pre-emptive speculation of its content. Many names and ideas in the play were borrowed from people or places the author had known; Lady Queensberry, Lord Alfred Douglas's mother, for example, lived at Bracknell. There is widespread agreement among Wilde scholars that the most important influence on the play was W.S. Gilbert's 1877 farce Engaged; Wilde borrowed from Gilbert not only several incidents but, in Russell Jackson's phrase ``the gravity of tone demanded by Gilbert of his actors ''.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Kidada Jones",
"paragraph_text": "The elder daughter of composer/arranger Quincy Jones and actress Peggy Lipton, Jones was born in Los Angeles, California. Jones was raised in Bel-Air with her younger sister Rashida, who is now an actress and screenwriter. Jones attended the Los Angeles Fashion Institute for Design and Merchandising and left at age 19 to work with the designer Tommy Hilfiger. She is Jewish on her mother's side, and African-American on her father's side. Lipton's parents were Harold Lipton (1911–1999), a corporate lawyer, and Rita Benson (1912–1986), an artist.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Sidney E. Manning",
"paragraph_text": "Sidney Earnest Manning (July 17, 1892 – December 15, 1960) was a soldier in the United States Army who received the Medal of Honor for his actions during World War I.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_text": "Oscar Wilde was born at 21 Westland Row, Dublin (now home of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College), the second of three children born to Sir William Wilde and Jane Wilde, two years behind William (\"Willie\"). Wilde's mother had distant Italian ancestry, and under the pseudonym \"\"Speranza\"\" (the Italian word for 'hope'), wrote poetry for the revolutionary Young Irelanders in 1848; she was a lifelong Irish nationalist. She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. Lady Wilde's interest in the neo-classical revival showed in the paintings and busts of ancient Greece and Rome in her home.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Every Day is Mother's Day",
"paragraph_text": "Every Day is Mother's Day is the first novel by British author Hilary Mantel, published in 1985 by Chatto and Windus. It was inspired in part by Hilary Mantel's own experiences as a social work assistant at a geriatric hospital which involved visits to patients in the community and access to case notes, the loss of which play an important part of the novel.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Stephen Geller",
"paragraph_text": "Stephen Geller (b. Los Angeles, California) is an American screenwriter and novelist. He wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's novel \"Slaughterhouse-Five\", and has worked in the film industry in Hollywood and Europe. Geller recently directed his own independent feature, \"Mother's Little Helpers\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "David Henrie",
"paragraph_text": "David Clayton Henrie (/ ˈhɛnri / HEN - ree; born July 11, 1989) is an American actor, producer, director, and screenwriter. He is noted for playing Ted Mosby's future son Luke on How I Met Your Mother and Justin Russo in Wizards of Waverly Place, as well as starring in the films in Little Boy and Walt Before Mickey.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Grigoriy Oster",
"paragraph_text": "Grigoriy Bentsionovich Oster (born 1947) is a Russian author and screenwriter. He has written scripts for over 70 animated films, and \"is considered one of the most important living Russian authors of children’s books.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "The Importance of Being Earnest (1952 film)",
"paragraph_text": "The Importance of Being Earnest (1952) is a British film adaptation of the play by Oscar Wilde. It was directed by Anthony Asquith, who also adapted the screenplay, and was produced by Anthony Asquith, Teddy Baird, and Earl St. John.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
Who is the mother of The Importance of Being Earnest's writer?
|
[
{
"id": 694049,
"question": "The Importance of Being Earnest >> screenwriter",
"answer": "Oscar Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
},
{
"id": 135138,
"question": "Who is the mother of #1 ?",
"answer": "Jane Wilde",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
Jane Wilde
|
[] | true |
2hop__312032_127375
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "C. J. Cregg",
"paragraph_text": "C.J.'s lip - synched performance of ``The Jackal ''by Ronny Jordan in the episode`` Six Meetings Before Lunch'' was written in after Sorkin witnessed Janney doing ``some impromptu lip - synching ''in her trailer on the set. Janney's performance was deemed too`` good'' by Sorkin during initial production, and she was advised to make it more ``awkward ''to fit the character for the final screen version.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Idiot Wind",
"paragraph_text": "\"Idiot Wind\" is a song by Bob Dylan, which appeared on his album \"Blood on the Tracks\". The song is likely to have been written, or at least begun, in the summer of 1974, after Dylan's comeback tour with The Band that year.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Top Gear (1977 TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Top Gear is a show that started in April 1977, as a half hour motoring programme on the BBC in the United Kingdom. The original format ran for 24 years up to December 2001. A revamped format of the show began nearly one year later, in October 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again",
"paragraph_text": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again premiered at the Hammersmith Apollo in London on July 16, 2018 and was released in the United Kingdom and the United States on July 20, 2018, ten years to the week of its predecessor's release, in both standard and IMAX formats. The film has grossed over $345 million worldwide and received generally positive reviews, with critics praising the performances and musical numbers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Zone de Sensibilité Picturale Immatérielle",
"paragraph_text": "Zone de Sensibilité Picturale Immatérielle (Zone of immaterial pictorial sensibility) is an artist's book and performance by the French artist Yves Klein. The work involved the sale of documentation of ownership of empty space (the Immaterial Zone), taking the form of a cheque, in exchange for gold; if the buyer wished, the piece could then be completed in an elaborate ritual in which the buyer would burn the cheque, and Klein would throw half of the gold into the Seine. The ritual would be performed in the presence of an art critic or distinguished dealer, an art museum director and at least two witnesses.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Come Back When You Grow Up",
"paragraph_text": "``Come Back When You Grow Up ''is a song written by Martha Sharp and performed by Bobby Vee and The Strangers. The song was a comeback for the 24 year - old Vee, and it reached # 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1967. The song appeared on his 1967 album, Come Back When You Grow Up.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Comeback (Grinspoon song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Comeback\" is the first single from Grinspoon's sixth album \"Six to Midnight\". The song gained radio airplay in Australia and had a music video filmed for it. The song peaked at No. 48 on the ARIA Singles Chart.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again",
"paragraph_text": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again premiered at the Hammersmith Apollo in London on July 16, 2018 and was released in the United Kingdom and the United States on July 20, 2018, ten years to the week of its predecessor's release, in both standard and IMAX formats. The film has grossed over $350 million worldwide and received generally positive reviews, with critics praising the performances and musical numbers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Lean wit It, Rock wit It",
"paragraph_text": "``Lean wit It, Rock wit It ''Single by Dem Franchize Boyz featuring Peanut and Charlay from the album On Top of Our Game Released January 17, 2006 (2006 - 01 - 17) Recorded 2005 Genre Snap southern hip hop Length 3: 51 Label So So Def Recordings EMI America Songwriter (s) Carlos A. Valente Jamall Willingham Gerald Tiller Bernard Leverette Maurice Gleaton D'Angelo Hunt Charles Hammond Robert Hill Producer (s) Maurice`` Parlae'' Gleaton Dem Franchize Boyz singles chronology ``I Think They Like Me ''(2005)`` Lean wit It, Rock wit It'' (2006) ``Ridin 'Rims ''(2006)`` I Think They Like Me'' (Remix) (2005) ``Lean wit It, Rock wit It ''(2006)`` Ridin' Rims'' (2006)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Russell Harlan",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Los Angeles, California, Russell Harlan witnessed the city's development from the construction of its first film studio to being the center for motion picture production in the United States. Harlan embarked on a career in film as an actor and stuntman but by the early 1930s was pursuing his interest behind the camera as an assistant. He performed as the cinematographer for the first time in 1937 on a \"Hopalong Cassidy\" western film that led to a career spanning more than thirty years. He received six nominations for the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, including two in 1962 alone when he worked on \"Hatari!\" and \"To Kill a Mockingbird\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Dope Nose",
"paragraph_text": "\"Dope Nose\" is a song by American alternative rock band Weezer. It is the first single off the band's fourth album, \"Maladroit\". It was officially released in March 2002, though it had been performed live and in the studio during the band's 2000 summer tour comeback after hiatus.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "La Diva (Aretha Franklin album)",
"paragraph_text": "La Diva is the twenty-fifth studio album by American singer Aretha Franklin, Released on September 6, 1979 by Atlantic Records. The album marked the end of Aretha's 12-year tenure with Atlantic and a run of 19 original albums. The album was a commercial flop as the singer attempted to make a comeback by recording a disco-oriented project with producer Van McCoy. It was McCoy's final work as he died in June of that year and the record was released as disco was running its course.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "The Dust of Years",
"paragraph_text": "The Dust of Years is the third studio album by the British metal band Seventh Angel, released 24 June 2009. A comeback album, \"The Dust of Years\" is the band's first release since 1992 to contain new material. While the style continues on the Seventh Angel's trademark thrash and doom metal sound, the vocals are death growls as opposed to the previous thrash metal shouts. The album was produced by Esoteric member Greg Chandler who also contributed some growls. The cover art was done by Matt Vickerstaff of Darkwave Art.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "The Next Witness",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Next Witness\" is a Nero Wolfe mystery novella by Rex Stout, first published as \"The Last Witness\" in the May 1955 issue of \"The American Magazine\". It first appeared in book form in the short-story collection \"Three Witnesses\", published by the Viking Press in 1956.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Grinspoon",
"paragraph_text": "Grinspoon is an Australian rock band from Lismore, New South Wales formed in 1995 and fronted by Phil Jamieson on vocals and guitar with Pat Davern on guitar, Joe Hansen on bass guitar and Kristian Hopes on drums. Also in 1995, they won the Triple J-sponsored Unearthed competition for Lismore, with their post-grunge song \"Sickfest\". Their name was taken from Dr. Lester Grinspoon an Associate Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, who supports marijuana for medical use.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Bobby Lounge",
"paragraph_text": "Bobby Lounge (born Dub Brock, 1950) is an American singer-songwriter from McComb, Mississippi, United States. Lounge began playing for house parties while attending Louisiana Tech University in northern Louisiana in the mid 1970s. In the 1980s, Lounge played a handful of shows at Ruby's Roadhouse in Mandeville, Louisiana. He stopped playing professionally for many years while he battled Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. He launched a comeback from a short lived career when he appeared on stage at the 2005 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Tipitina's, and the New Orleans House of Blues. That performance was enthusiastically received and subsequently glowing reviews appeared in \"Rolling Stone\", \"The New York Times\", \"Living Blues\", \"Blues Review\", \"Down Beat\", \"USA Today\" and other magazines and newspapers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Little Big Shots (Australian TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Little Big Shots is an Australian reality television show which premiered on the Seven Network on 27 August 2017. The program, based on the American format of the same name, is hosted by Shane Jacobson and features performances by children aged 3 to 13 years old.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Melodifestivalen 2002",
"paragraph_text": "The semi-finals for Melodifestivalen 2002 began on 19 January 2002. Ten songs from these semi-finals qualified for the final on 1 March 2002. This was the first year that a semi-final format had been used for the competition. This was the first year that songs were permitted in languages other than Swedish, resulting in a significant number of English language songs, and two songs with lyrics in Spanish. \"Ett vackert par\", composed by Py Bäckman and Micke Wennborn was disqualified before the competition, when the dance band Grönwalls had performed it on the radio before the contest (not knowing it was supposed to enter). Nanne Grönvall and Nick Borgen was thought as possible performers. It was replaced by \"Sista andetaget\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Jehovah's Witnesses",
"paragraph_text": "The Watch Tower Society rejects accusations that it is a false prophet, stating that its teachings are not inspired or infallible, and that it has not claimed its predictions were \"the words of Jehovah.\" George D. Chryssides has suggested that with the exception of statements about 1914, 1925 and 1975, the changing views and dates of the Jehovah's Witnesses are largely attributable to changed understandings of biblical chronology than to failed predictions. Chryssides further states, \"it is therefore simplistic and naïve to view the Witnesses as a group that continues to set a single end-date that fails and then devise a new one, as many counter-cultists do.\" However, sociologist Andrew Holden states that since the foundation of the movement around 140 years ago, \"Witnesses have maintained that we are living on the precipice of the end of time.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Jehovah's Witnesses",
"paragraph_text": "Though Jehovah's Witnesses do not accept blood transfusions of whole blood, they may accept some blood plasma fractions at their own discretion. The Watch Tower Society provides pre-formatted durable power of attorney documents prohibiting major blood components, in which members can specify which allowable fractions and treatments they will personally accept. Jehovah's Witnesses have established Hospital Liaison Committees as a cooperative arrangement between individual Jehovah's Witnesses and medical professionals and hospitals.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When did the performers of Comeback form?
|
[
{
"id": 312032,
"question": "Comeback >> performer",
"answer": "Grinspoon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 127375,
"question": "Which year witnessed the formation of #1 ?",
"answer": "1995",
"paragraph_support_idx": 14
}
] |
1995
|
[] | true |
2hop__63539_91281
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Vice President of India",
"paragraph_text": "The Vice-President of India is also ex officio Chairperson of the Rajya Sabha. When a bill is introduced in Rajya Sabha, vice-president decides whether it is a financial bill or not. If he is of the opinion, a bill introduced in the Rajya Sabha is a money bill, he would refer the case to the Speaker of the Lok Sabha for deciding it.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Akbar Ali Khondkar",
"paragraph_text": "Late Shri Akbar Ali Khondkar was a Member of Parliament (MP) in the Twelfth Lok Sabha & Thirteenth Lok Sabha of India. He was elected from his Lok Sabha Constituency in Serampore, West Bengal in 1998 and 1999 under All India Trinamool Congress Ticket.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Speaker of the Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "The Speaker of the Lok Sabha conducts the business in house; and decides whether a bill is a money bill or not. They maintain discipline and decorum in the house and can punish a member for their unruly behavior by suspending them. They also permit the moving of various kinds of motions and resolutions such as a motion of no confidence, motion of adjournment, motion of censure and calling attention notice as per the rules. The Speaker decides on the agenda to be taken up for discussion during the meeting. The date of election of the speaker is fixed by the President. Further, all comments and speeches made by members of the House are addressed to the speaker. The speaker also presides over the joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament. The counterpart of the Speaker in the Rajya Sabha is the Chairman, who is the Vice President of India. In the warrant of precedence, the speaker of Lok Sabha comes next only to The Deputy Prime Minister of India. Speaker has the sixth rank in the political executive of India",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "2017 Speaker of the United States House of Representatives election",
"paragraph_text": "An election for the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives took place on January 3, 2017, during the opening day of the 115th United States Congress. The incumbent speaker, Paul Ryan, was re-elected. The election took place following the Republican Party's victory in the United States House of Representatives elections, 2016.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Maddi Sudarsanam",
"paragraph_text": "He was elected to the 4th Lok Sabha and 5th Lok Sabha from Narasaraopet (Lok Sabha constituency) in 1967 and 1971 respectively as a member of Indian National Congress.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "Lok Sabha House of the People 16th Lok Sabha Emblem of India Type Type Lower house of the Parliament of India Term limits 5 years Leadership Speaker Sumitra Mahajan, BJP Since 6 June 2014 Deputy Speaker M. Thambidurai, AIADMK Since 13 August 2014 Leader of the House Narendra Modi, BJP Since 26 May 2014 Leader of the Opposition Vacant, as none of the opposition parties has more than 10% of the seats. Structure Seats 545 (543 elected + 2 Nominated from the Anglo - Indian Community by the President) Political groups Government coalition (335) National Democratic Alliance (335) BJP (275) SS (18) TDP (16) LJP (6) SAD (4) RLSP (3) AD (2) JD (U) (2) JKPDP (1) AINRC (1) NPF (1) NPP (1) PMK (1) SDF (1) Speaker, BJP (1) Nominated, BJP (2) Opposition Parties (210) United Progressive Alliance (50) INC (46) IUML (2) KC (M) (1) RSP (1) Janata Parivar Parties (6) RJD (2) INLD (2) JD (S) (2) Unaligned Parties (144) AIADMK (37) AITC (33) BJD (20) TRS (11) CPI (M) (9) YSRCP (9) NCP (6) SP (5) AAP (4) AIUDF (3) JMM (2) AIMIM (1) CPI (1) JKNC (1) SWP (1) JAP (1) Others (10) Independents (3) Vacant (7) Elections Voting system First past the post Last election 7 April -- 12 May 2014 Next election April -- May 2019 Motto धर्मचक्रपरिवर्तनाय Meeting place Lok Sabha Chambers, Sansad Bhavan, Sansad Marg, New Delhi, India Website loksabha.gov.in",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Joint Session of the Parliament of India",
"paragraph_text": "The Parliament of India is bicameral. Concurrence of both houses are required to pass any bill. However, the authors of the Constitution of India visualised situations of deadlock between the upper house i.e. Rajya Sabha and the lower house i.e. Lok Sabha. Therefore, the Constitution of India provides for Joint sittings of both the Houses to break this deadlock. The joint sitting of the Parliament is called by the President and is presided over by the Speaker or, in his absence, by the Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha or in his absence, the Deputy - Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. If any of the above officers are not present then any other member of the Parliament can preside by consensus of both the House.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Speaker of the Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "The current speaker is Sumitra Mahajan of the Bharatiya Janata Party, who is presiding over the 16th Lok Sabha. She is the second woman to hold the office, after her immediate predecessor Meira Kumar.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Member of parliament, Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "A Member of Parliament of Lok Sabha (Hindi: सांसद, लोक सभा) (abbreviated: MP) is the representative of the Indian people in the Lok Sabha; the lower house of the Parliament of India. Members of Parliament of Lok Sabha are chosen by direct elections on the basis of the adult suffrage. Parliament of India is bicameral with two houses; Rajya Sabha (Upper house i.e. Council of States) and the Lok Sabha (Lower house i.e. House of the People). The maximum permitted strength of Members of Parliament in the Lok Sabha is 552. This includes maximum 530 members to represent the constituencies and states, up to 20 members to represent the Union Territories (both chosen by direct elections) and not more than two members of the Anglo - Indian community to be nominated by the President of India. The majority party in the Lok Sabha chooses the Prime Minister of India.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Gondia (Lok Sabha constituency)",
"paragraph_text": "Gondia Lok Sabha constituency was a Lok Sabha (Parliamentary) constituency of Maharashtra state in western India. This constituency was in existence during Lok Sabha elections of 1962 for the 3rd Lok Sabha. It was abolished from next 1967 Lok Sabha elections. It was reserved for Scheduled Caste candidate.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Elections in India",
"paragraph_text": "India has an asymmetric federal government, with elected officials at the federal, state and local levels. At the national level, the head of government, Prime Minister, is elected by members of the Lok Sabha, the lower house of the parliament of India. The elections are conducted by the Election Commission of India. All members of the Lok Sabha, except two who can be nominated by the President of India, are directly elected through general elections which take place every five years, in normal circumstances, by universal adult suffrage and a first - past - the - post system. Members of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian parliament, are elected by elected members of the legislative assemblies of the states and the Electoral college for the Union Territories of India.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "Lok Sabha House of the People 16th Lok Sabha Emblem of India Type Type Lower house of the Parliament of India Term limits 5 years Leadership Speaker Sumitra Mahajan, BJP Since 6 June 2014 Deputy Speaker M. Thambidurai, AIADMK Since 13 August 2014 Leader of the House Narendra Modi, BJP Since 26 May 2014 Leader of the Opposition Vacant, as none of the opposition parties has more than 10% of the seats. Structure Seats 545 (543 elected + 2 Nominated from the Anglo - Indian Community by the President) Political groups Government coalition (334) National Democratic Alliance (334) BJP (274) SS (18) TDP (16) LJP (6) SAD (4) RLSP (3) AD (2) JD (U) (2) JKPDP (1) AINRC (1) NPF (1) NPP (1) PMK (1) SDF (1) Speaker, BJP (1) Nominated, BJP (2) Opposition Parties (211) United Progressive Alliance (50) INC (46) IUML (2) KC (M) (1) RSP (1) Janata Parivar Parties (6) RJD (2) INLD (2) JD (S) (2) Unaligned Parties (144) AIADMK (37) AITC (33) BJD (20) TRS (11) CPI (M) (9) YSRCP (9) NCP (6) SP (5) AAP (4) AIUDF (3) JMM (2) AIMIM (1) CPI (1) JKNC (1) SWP (1) JAP (1) Others (11) Independents (3) Vacant (8) Elections Voting system First past the post Last election 7 April -- 12 May 2014 Next election April -- May 2019 Motto धर्मचक्रपरिवर्तनाय Meeting place Lok Sabha Chambers, Sansad Bhavan, Sansad Marg, New Delhi, India Website loksabha.gov.in",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Speaker of the Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "The Speaker of the Lok Sabha is the presiding officer of the Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament of India. The speaker is elected in the very first meeting of the Lok Sabha following general elections. Serving for a term of five years, the Speaker chosen from amongst the members of the Lok Sabha, and is by convention a member of the ruling party or alliance.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Speaker of the Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "The first meeting after the election when the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker are selected by members of the Parliament is held under the pro tem Speaker. In absence of the Speaker, the Deputy Speaker acts as Speaker and in the absence of both a committee of six member selected by the Speaker will act as Speaker according to their seniority.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Parliament of India",
"paragraph_text": "Parliament of India Emblem of India Type Type Bicameral Houses Rajya Sabha Lok Sabha History Founded 26 January 1950 (68 years ago) (1950 - 01 - 26) Preceded by Constituent Assembly of India Leadership President Ram Nath Kovind Since 25 July 2017 Chairman of Rajya Sabha (Vice President) Venkaiah Naidu Since 11 August 2017 Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha P.J. Kurien, INC Since 21 August 2012 Speaker of the Lok Sabha Sumitra Mahajan, BJP Since 6 June 2014 Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha M. Thambidurai, AIADMK Since 13 August 2014 Leader of the House (Lok Sabha) Narendra Modi, BJP Since 26 May 2014 Leader of the House (Rajya Sabha) Arun Jaitley, BJP Since 2 June 2014 Structure Seats 790 245 Members of Rajya Sabha 545 Members of Lok Sabha Rajya Sabha political groups NDA (Majority) UPA Lok Sabha political groups NDA (Majority) UPA Elections Rajya Sabha voting system Single transferable vote Lok Sabha voting system First past the post Rajya Sabha last election 21 July and 08 August 2017 Lok Sabha last election 7 April -- 12 May 2014 Rajya Sabha next election 16 January, 23 March and 21 June 2018 Lok Sabha next election April -- May 2019 Meeting place Sansad Bhavan, Sansad Marg, New Delhi, India Website parliamentofindia.nic.in Constitution Constitution of India",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "Lok Sabha House of the People 16th Lok Sabha Emblem of India Type Type Lower house of the Parliament of India Term limits 5 years Leadership Speaker Sumitra Mahajan, BJP Since 6 June 2014 Deputy Speaker M. Thambidurai, AIADMK Since 13 August 2014 Leader of the House Narendra Modi, BJP Since 26 May 2014 Leader of the Opposition Vacant, as none of the opposition parties has more than 10% of the seats. Structure Seats 545 (543 elected + 2 Nominated from the Anglo - Indian Community by the President) Political groups Government coalition (335) National Democratic Alliance (335) BJP (275) SS (18) TDP (16) LJP (6) SAD (4) RLSP (3) AD (2) JD (U) (2) JKPDP (1) AINRC (1) NPF (1) NPP (1) PMK (1) SDF (1) Speaker, BJP (1) Nominated, BJP (2) Opposition Parties (210) United Progressive Alliance (49) INC (45) IUML (2) KC (M) (1) RSP (1) Janata Parivar Parties (6) RJD (2) INLD (2) JD (S) (2) Unaligned Parties (144) AIADMK (37) AITC (33) BJD (20) TRS (11) CPI (M) (9) YSRCP (9) NCP (6) SP (5) AAP (4) AIUDF (3) JMM (2) AIMIM (1) CPI (1) JKNC (1) SWP (1) JAP (1) Others (11) Independents (3) Vacant (8) Elections Voting system First past the post Last election 7 April -- 12 May 2014 Next election April -- May 2019 Motto धर्मचक्रपरिवर्तनाय Meeting place Lok Sabha Chambers, Sansad Bhavan, Sansad Marg, New Delhi, India Website loksabha.gov.in",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Ganesh Vasudev Mavalankar",
"paragraph_text": "Ganesh Vasudev Mavalankar (27 November 1888 – 27 February 1956) popularly known as Dadasaheb was an independence activist, the President (from 1946 to 1947) of the Central Legislative Assembly, then Speaker of the Constituent Assembly of India, and later the first Speaker of the Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament of India. His son Purushottam Mavalankar was later elected to the Lok Sabha twice from Gujarat.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "16th Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_text": "Members of the 16th Lok Sabha were elected during the 2014 Indian general election. The elections were conducted in 9 phases from 7 April 2014 to 12 May 2014 by the Election Commission of India. The results of the election were declared on 16 May 2014. The Bharatiya Janata Party (of the NDA) achieved an absolute majority with 282 seats out of 543, 166 more than previous 15th Lok Sabha. Its PM candidate Narendra Modi took office on 26 May 2014 as the 14th prime minister of independent India. The first session was scheduled to be convened from June 4 to June 11, 2014. There is no leader of the opposition in the 16th Lok Sabha as the Indian Parliament rules state that a party in the Lok Sabha must have at least 10% of total seats (545) in order to be considered the opposition party. The Indian National Congress (of the UPA) could only manage 44 seats while the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party from Tamil Nadu came a close third with 37 seats. Mallikarjun Kharge has been declared the leader of the Indian National Congress in the Lok Sabha. 5 sitting members from Rajya Sabha, the Upper House of Indian Parliament, were elected to 16th Lok Sabha after the Indian general elections, 2014.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives",
"paragraph_text": "The Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives is the presiding officer of the Texas House of Representatives. The Speaker's main duties are to conduct meetings of the House, appoint committees, and enforce the Rules of the House. The current speaker is Joe Straus, a Republican from San Antonio, who was first elected Speaker on January 13, 2009.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Kariya Munda",
"paragraph_text": "In the 2009-2014 Lok Sabha, Mrs. Meira Kumar (its speaker) and Sri Kariya Munda (Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha) were unanimously elected to their posts. Hailing Mr. Munda's election, the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh hoped that the spirit of accommodation seen in the election of the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker, would continue through the duration of the 15th Lok Sabha. Pranab Mukherjee, then the Leader of the House [former President of India], was glad that a 32-year-old unbroken tradition of having the Deputy Speaker from the Opposition, which had begun in 1977, the very 1st year when Sri Munda entered the Lok Sabha, had been carried forward, with his unanimous election. Advani, the BJP stalwart, echoed similar sentiments. Munda has been a 7-time MP from Khunti constituency of Jharkhand State.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Who appoints the speaker of the political body that elects the speaker of lok sabha?
|
[
{
"id": 63539,
"question": "by whom the speaker of lok sabha is elected",
"answer": "the Lok Sabha",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
},
{
"id": 91281,
"question": "who appoints/elects the speaker of #1",
"answer": "members of the Parliament",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
}
] |
members of the Parliament
|
[] | true |
2hop__805141_127375
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Lucy Simon",
"paragraph_text": "Lucy Simon (born 1943) is an American composer for the theatre and popular songs. She has recorded and performed as a singer and songwriter, and is known for the musicals \"The Secret Garden\" and \"Doctor Zhivago\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Zone de Sensibilité Picturale Immatérielle",
"paragraph_text": "Zone de Sensibilité Picturale Immatérielle (Zone of immaterial pictorial sensibility) is an artist's book and performance by the French artist Yves Klein. The work involved the sale of documentation of ownership of empty space (the Immaterial Zone), taking the form of a cheque, in exchange for gold; if the buyer wished, the piece could then be completed in an elaborate ritual in which the buyer would burn the cheque, and Klein would throw half of the gold into the Seine. The ritual would be performed in the presence of an art critic or distinguished dealer, an art museum director and at least two witnesses.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "C. J. Cregg",
"paragraph_text": "C.J.'s lip - synched performance of ``The Jackal ''by Ronny Jordan in the episode`` Six Meetings Before Lunch'' was written in after Sorkin witnessed Janney doing ``some impromptu lip - synching ''in her trailer on the set. Janney's performance was deemed too`` good'' by Sorkin during initial production, and she was advised to make it more ``awkward ''to fit the character for the final screen version.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again",
"paragraph_text": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again premiered at the Hammersmith Apollo in London on July 16, 2018 and was released in the United Kingdom and the United States on July 20, 2018, ten years to the week of its predecessor's release, in both standard and IMAX formats. The film has grossed over $350 million worldwide and received generally positive reviews, with critics praising the performances and musical numbers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Wicker Man (roller coaster)",
"paragraph_text": "Wicker Man is a wooden roller coaster located at Alton Towers in Staffordshire, United Kingdom. Following a weather delay, the ride opened to the public on 20 March 2018 and held its public opening ceremony on 24 March 2018. Manufactured by Great Coasters International at a cost of £16,000,000, Wicker Man set several milestones among wooden coasters including the first to be built at Alton Towers, the first to incorporate fire, and the first in the United Kingdom in over 21 years. Initially codenamed ``Secret Weapon 8 '', a traditional format for naming major projects at Alton Towers, its official name was revealed in January 2018.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Grinspoon",
"paragraph_text": "Grinspoon is an Australian rock band from Lismore, New South Wales formed in 1995 and fronted by Phil Jamieson on vocals and guitar with Pat Davern on guitar, Joe Hansen on bass guitar and Kristian Hopes on drums. Also in 1995, they won the Triple J-sponsored Unearthed competition for Lismore, with their post-grunge song \"Sickfest\". Their name was taken from Dr. Lester Grinspoon an Associate Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, who supports marijuana for medical use.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Secrets (Grinspoon song)",
"paragraph_text": "\"Secrets\" was the second single by Grinspoon which was released from their second studio album \"Easy\". It was released in January 2000 on the Grudge label (the Australian imprint of Universal Records), reaching No. 83 on the Australian Singles Chart and polling at No. 73 on Triple J's Hottest 100 for 2000.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again",
"paragraph_text": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again premiered at the Hammersmith Apollo in London on July 16, 2018 and was released in the United Kingdom and the United States on July 20, 2018, ten years to the week of its predecessor's release, in both standard and IMAX formats. The film has been a box office success, grossing over $392 million worldwide and received generally positive reviews, with critics praising the performances and musical numbers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Melodifestivalen 2002",
"paragraph_text": "The semi-finals for Melodifestivalen 2002 began on 19 January 2002. Ten songs from these semi-finals qualified for the final on 1 March 2002. This was the first year that a semi-final format had been used for the competition. This was the first year that songs were permitted in languages other than Swedish, resulting in a significant number of English language songs, and two songs with lyrics in Spanish. \"Ett vackert par\", composed by Py Bäckman and Micke Wennborn was disqualified before the competition, when the dance band Grönwalls had performed it on the radio before the contest (not knowing it was supposed to enter). Nanne Grönvall and Nick Borgen was thought as possible performers. It was replaced by \"Sista andetaget\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Jehovah's Witnesses",
"paragraph_text": "The Watch Tower Society rejects accusations that it is a false prophet, stating that its teachings are not inspired or infallible, and that it has not claimed its predictions were \"the words of Jehovah.\" George D. Chryssides has suggested that with the exception of statements about 1914, 1925 and 1975, the changing views and dates of the Jehovah's Witnesses are largely attributable to changed understandings of biblical chronology than to failed predictions. Chryssides further states, \"it is therefore simplistic and naïve to view the Witnesses as a group that continues to set a single end-date that fails and then devise a new one, as many counter-cultists do.\" However, sociologist Andrew Holden states that since the foundation of the movement around 140 years ago, \"Witnesses have maintained that we are living on the precipice of the end of time.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Top Gear (1977 TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Top Gear is a show that started in April 1977, as a half hour motoring programme on the BBC in the United Kingdom. The original format ran for 24 years up to December 2001. A revamped format of the show began nearly one year later, in October 2002.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "DAG (American TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "DAG is an American sitcom that aired from November 2000 to May 2001 on NBC. It was named after its star, David Alan Grier, who stars as United States Secret Service agent Jerome Daggett. Daggett's name, in turn, is a back-formation. The show also stars Delta Burke as the First Lady of the United States of America.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Lean wit It, Rock wit It",
"paragraph_text": "``Lean wit It, Rock wit It ''Single by Dem Franchize Boyz featuring Peanut and Charlay from the album On Top of Our Game Released January 17, 2006 (2006 - 01 - 17) Recorded 2005 Genre Snap southern hip hop Length 3: 51 Label So So Def Recordings EMI America Songwriter (s) Carlos A. Valente Jamall Willingham Gerald Tiller Bernard Leverette Maurice Gleaton D'Angelo Hunt Charles Hammond Robert Hill Producer (s) Maurice`` Parlae'' Gleaton Dem Franchize Boyz singles chronology ``I Think They Like Me ''(2005)`` Lean wit It, Rock wit It'' (2006) ``Ridin 'Rims ''(2006)`` I Think They Like Me'' (Remix) (2005) ``Lean wit It, Rock wit It ''(2006)`` Ridin' Rims'' (2006)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "You Raise Me Up",
"paragraph_text": "``You Raise Me Up ''is a song originally composed by Irish - Norwegian duo Secret Garden. The music was written by Secret Garden's Rolf Løvland and the lyrics by Brendan Graham. After the song was performed early in 2002 by the Secret Garden and their invited lead singer, Brian Kennedy, the song only became a minor UK hit. The song has been recorded by more than a hundred other artists including Josh Groban, who popularized the song in 2003; his rendition became a hit in the United States. The Irish band Westlife then popularized the song in the UK two years later.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "That's Amore",
"paragraph_text": "The song first appeared in the soundtrack of the Martin and Lewis comedy film The Caddy, released by Paramount Pictures on August 10, 1953. In the film, the song is performed mainly by Dean Martin, with Jerry Lewis joining in and then followed by the other characters in the scene. It received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Song of that year, but it lost to ``Secret Love ''from Calamity Jane starring Doris Day.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again",
"paragraph_text": "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again premiered at the Hammersmith Apollo in London on July 16, 2018 and was released in the United Kingdom and the United States on July 20, 2018, ten years to the week of its predecessor's release, in both standard and IMAX formats. The film has grossed over $345 million worldwide and received generally positive reviews, with critics praising the performances and musical numbers.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Once More, with Feeling (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)",
"paragraph_text": "All of the regular cast performed their own vocals, although two actors were given minimal singing at their request. ``Once More, with Feeling ''is the most technically complex episode in the series, as extra voice and dance training for the cast was interspersed with the production of four other Buffy episodes. It was Joss Whedon's first attempt at writing music, and different styles -- from 1950s sitcom theme music to rock opera -- express the characters' secrets in specific ways. The episode was well received critically upon airing, specifically for containing the humor and wit to which fans had become accustomed. The musical format allowed characters to stay true to their natures while they struggled to overcome deceit and miscommunication, fitting with the sixth season's themes of growing up and facing adult responsibilities. It is considered one of the most effective and popular episodes of the series, and -- prior to a financial dispute in 2007 -- was shown in theaters with the audience invited to sing along.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Little Big Shots (Australian TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Little Big Shots is an Australian reality television show which premiered on the Seven Network on 27 August 2017. The program, based on the American format of the same name, is hosted by Shane Jacobson and features performances by children aged 3 to 13 years old.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Russell Harlan",
"paragraph_text": "Born in Los Angeles, California, Russell Harlan witnessed the city's development from the construction of its first film studio to being the center for motion picture production in the United States. Harlan embarked on a career in film as an actor and stuntman but by the early 1930s was pursuing his interest behind the camera as an assistant. He performed as the cinematographer for the first time in 1937 on a \"Hopalong Cassidy\" western film that led to a career spanning more than thirty years. He received six nominations for the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, including two in 1962 alone when he worked on \"Hatari!\" and \"To Kill a Mockingbird\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Jehovah's Witnesses",
"paragraph_text": "Though Jehovah's Witnesses do not accept blood transfusions of whole blood, they may accept some blood plasma fractions at their own discretion. The Watch Tower Society provides pre-formatted durable power of attorney documents prohibiting major blood components, in which members can specify which allowable fractions and treatments they will personally accept. Jehovah's Witnesses have established Hospital Liaison Committees as a cooperative arrangement between individual Jehovah's Witnesses and medical professionals and hospitals.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
In which year was the performer of Secrets formed?
|
[
{
"id": 805141,
"question": "Secrets >> performer",
"answer": "Grinspoon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 6
},
{
"id": 127375,
"question": "Which year witnessed the formation of #1 ?",
"answer": "1995",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5
}
] |
1995
|
[] | true |
2hop__318926_127375
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Film speed",
"paragraph_text": "The CIPA DC-004 standard requires that Japanese manufacturers of digital still cameras use either the REI or SOS techniques, and DC-008 updates the Exif specification to differentiate between these values. Consequently, the three EI techniques carried over from ISO 12232:1998 are not widely used in recent camera models (approximately 2007 and later). As those earlier techniques did not allow for measurement from images produced with lossy compression, they cannot be used at all on cameras that produce images only in JPEG format.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "DC×3",
"paragraph_text": "\"DC×3\" (Dead Cat Three Times) is the second single released by Australian alternative metal band Grinspoon, from the debut album, \"Guide to Better Living\". It peaked at No. 50 on the ARIA Singles Chart. It also reached No. 34 on Triple J's Hottest 100 in 1997.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Erika Chong Shuch",
"paragraph_text": "Erika Chong Shuch is an American theatrical performer, director, choreographer, and educator based in San Francisco, California. Her work has appeared on stages in the San Francisco Bay Area, Washington, DC, and Seoul, South Korea.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "105th United States Congress",
"paragraph_text": "The One Hundred Fifth United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, DC from January 3, 1997, to January 3, 1999, during the fifth and sixth years of Bill Clinton's presidency. Apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Twenty - first Census of the United States in 1990. Both chambers had a Republican majority. President Clinton was impeached by the US House of Representatives of the 105th Congress.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)",
"paragraph_text": "This was a signature song for Bon Scott. Brian Johnson, who replaced Scott as AC / DC's lead vocalist from 1980 until his departure in 2016, did not perform it out of respect for his predecessor.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Tryin' to Get to You",
"paragraph_text": "\"Tryin' to Get to You\" is a song written by R&B singer songwriters Rose Marie McCoy and Charles Singleton It was originally recorded by the Washington DC vocal group The Eagles in 1954 and released in mid-1954 on Mercury Records 70391. Advertising in \"Billboard\" magazine indicates that the format of the title on The Eagles’ record was “Tryin’ to Get to You”, with an apostrophe.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Back in Black",
"paragraph_text": "Back in Black is the seventh studio album by Australian rock band AC / DC. Produced by Robert John ``Mutt ''Lange, the album was released on 25 July 1980 by Albert Productions and Atlantic Records. By the late 1970s, AC / DC began to achieve significant popularity outside their native Australia, with high - energy live performances and a string of successful albums. In 1978, they paired with producer Lange and recorded their international breakthrough, Highway to Hell. Back in Black is the band's first album with vocalist Brian Johnson, replacing Bon Scott, who had died in February of the same year, shortly before the band started recording the album. Instead of disbanding, the group decided to continue with Johnson.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales",
"paragraph_text": "Dead Men Tell No Tales was released in conventional, Disney Digital 3 - D, RealD 3D and IMAX 3D formats on May 26, 2017, ten years and one day after release of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007). The film received criticism for its complicated and convoluted plot, though the performances, visuals and shorter running time were praised; some critics considered the film an improvement over its predecessor, while others felt the franchise had run its course. The film has made $794 million worldwide, the second - lowest gross of the series but the eighth highest of 2017.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "C. J. Cregg",
"paragraph_text": "C.J.'s lip - synched performance of ``The Jackal ''by Ronny Jordan in the episode`` Six Meetings Before Lunch'' was written in after Sorkin witnessed Janney doing ``some impromptu lip - synching ''in her trailer on the set. Janney's performance was deemed too`` good'' by Sorkin during initial production, and she was advised to make it more ``awkward ''to fit the character for the final screen version.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Jehovah's Witnesses",
"paragraph_text": "Though Jehovah's Witnesses do not accept blood transfusions of whole blood, they may accept some blood plasma fractions at their own discretion. The Watch Tower Society provides pre-formatted durable power of attorney documents prohibiting major blood components, in which members can specify which allowable fractions and treatments they will personally accept. Jehovah's Witnesses have established Hospital Liaison Committees as a cooperative arrangement between individual Jehovah's Witnesses and medical professionals and hospitals.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Railway electrification system",
"paragraph_text": "There has, however, been interest among railroad operators in returning to DC use at higher voltages than previously used. At the same voltage, DC often has less loss than AC, and for this reason high-voltage direct current is already used on some bulk power transmission lines. DC avoids the electromagnetic radiation inherent with AC, and on a railway this also reduces interference with signalling and communications and mitigates hypothetical EMF risks. DC also avoids the power factor problems of AC. Of particular interest to railroading is that DC can supply constant power with a single ungrounded wire. Constant power with AC requires three-phase transmission with at least two ungrounded wires. Another important consideration is that mains-frequency 3-phase AC must be carefully planned to avoid unbalanced phase loads. Parts of the system are supplied from different phases on the assumption that the total loads of the 3 phases will even out. At the phase break points between regions supplied from different phases, long insulated supply breaks are required to avoid them being shorted by rolling stock using more than one pantograph at a time. A few railroads have tried 3-phase but its substantial complexity has made single-phase standard practice despite the interruption in power flow that occurs twice every cycle. An experimental 6 kV DC railway was built in the Soviet Union.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales",
"paragraph_text": "Dead Men Tell No Tales was released in conventional, Disney Digital 3 - D, RealD 3D and IMAX 3D formats on May 26, 2017, ten years and one day after the release of At World's End (2007). The film received praise for the performances, especially that of Bardem, visuals, music and shorter running time, and criticism for the convoluted and complicated plot; some critics considered the film an improvement over the recent sequels while others thought the franchise had run its course. The film grossed $794 million worldwide, the second - lowest gross of the series but the eighth highest - grossing film of 2017.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Maurice Jackson",
"paragraph_text": "Maurice Jackson is an Associate Professor of History and African-American Studies and an Affiliated Professor of Performing Arts (Jazz) at Georgetown University. He is also a political activist based in Washington, DC.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Railway electrification system",
"paragraph_text": "In the Soviet Union, in the 1970s, a comparison was made between systems electrified at 3 kV DC and 25 kV AC (50 Hz). The results showed that percentage losses in the overhead wires (catenary and contact wires) was over 3 times greater for 3 kV DC than for 25 kV AC. But when the conversion losses were all taken into account and added to overhead wire losses (including cooling blower energy) the 25 kV AC lost a somewhat higher percent of energy than for 3 kV DC. Thus in spite of the much higher losses in the catenary, the 3 kV DC was a little more energy efficient than AC in providing energy from the USSR power grid to the terminals of the traction motors (all DC at that time). While both systems use energy in converting higher voltage AC from the USSR's power grid to lower voltage DC, the conversions for the DC system all took place (at higher efficiency) in the railway substation, while most of the conversion for the AC system took place inside the locomotive (at lower efficiency). Consider also that it takes energy to constantly move this mobile conversion hardware over the rails while the stationary hardware in the railway substation doesn't incur this energy cost. For more details see: Wiki: Soviet Union DC vs. AC.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Richard Farnham",
"paragraph_text": "Richard Farnham (died 1642), was an English self-proclaimed \"prophet\", who claimed, with John Bull, to be one of the witnesses spoken of in the Book of Revelation, xi. 3.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "National Comics Publications",
"paragraph_text": "Despite the official names ``National Comics ''and`` National Periodical Publications'', the company began branding itself as ``Superman - DC ''as early as 1940, and it became known colloquially as DC Comics for years before the official adoption of that name in 1977.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Little Big Shots (Australian TV series)",
"paragraph_text": "Little Big Shots is an Australian reality television show which premiered on the Seven Network on 27 August 2017. The program, based on the American format of the same name, is hosted by Shane Jacobson and features performances by children aged 3 to 13 years old.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Lean wit It, Rock wit It",
"paragraph_text": "``Lean wit It, Rock wit It ''Single by Dem Franchize Boyz featuring Peanut and Charlay from the album On Top of Our Game Released January 17, 2006 (2006 - 01 - 17) Recorded 2005 Genre Snap southern hip hop Length 3: 51 Label So So Def Recordings EMI America Songwriter (s) Carlos A. Valente Jamall Willingham Gerald Tiller Bernard Leverette Maurice Gleaton D'Angelo Hunt Charles Hammond Robert Hill Producer (s) Maurice`` Parlae'' Gleaton Dem Franchize Boyz singles chronology ``I Think They Like Me ''(2005)`` Lean wit It, Rock wit It'' (2006) ``Ridin 'Rims ''(2006)`` I Think They Like Me'' (Remix) (2005) ``Lean wit It, Rock wit It ''(2006)`` Ridin' Rims'' (2006)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Grinspoon",
"paragraph_text": "Grinspoon is an Australian rock band from Lismore, New South Wales formed in 1995 and fronted by Phil Jamieson on vocals and guitar with Pat Davern on guitar, Joe Hansen on bass guitar and Kristian Hopes on drums. Also in 1995, they won the Triple J-sponsored Unearthed competition for Lismore, with their post-grunge song \"Sickfest\". Their name was taken from Dr. Lester Grinspoon an Associate Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, who supports marijuana for medical use.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "History of the FIFA World Cup",
"paragraph_text": "The 1998 World Cup was held in France, and had an expanded format featuring 32 teams. Iran beat the Maldives in qualification by the widest margin in World Cup history -- 17 -- 0. In the finals, the second round match between France and Paraguay witnessed the first golden goal in World Cup history, as Laurent Blanc scored to give the hosts a 1 -- 0 victory. Hosts France won the tournament by beating Brazil 3 -- 0 in the final, as the scorer of four goals in the tournament, Ronaldo, appeared to be less than a hundred percent in the match, and was unable to make any impact. Debutants Croatia finished a commendable third.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
When was the band that did DCx3 formed?
|
[
{
"id": 318926,
"question": "DC×3 >> performer",
"answer": "Grinspoon",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
},
{
"id": 127375,
"question": "Which year witnessed the formation of #1 ?",
"answer": "1995",
"paragraph_support_idx": 18
}
] |
1995
|
[] | true |
2hop__122635_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Lourdes Mount College of Engineering & Technology",
"paragraph_text": "self-financing engineering college set up by the Chellammal Educational Trust in 2013 and located close to Marthandam on a scenic, peaceful and green environment near the border between Kerala and Tamil Nadu. The college is approved by All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE), New Delhi and affiliated to Anna University, Chennai.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Dalian University of Technology",
"paragraph_text": "Dalian University of Technology (DUT) (), colloquially known in Chinese as Dàgōng (大工), is a public research university located in Dalian (main campus) and Panjin in Liaoning province, China. Formerly called the Dalian Institute of Technology, DUT is renowned as one of the Big Four Institutes of Technology in China. It is a Chinese Ministry of Education Class A Double First Class University, and one of the national key universities administered directly under the Ministry of Education.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Northwestern University School of Education and Social Policy",
"paragraph_text": "The School of Education and Social Policy (SESP), established in 1926, is the smallest of the eight undergraduate and graduate institutions at Northwestern University, USA. Located about 12 miles north of downtown Chicago in Evanston, Illinois, SESP is devoted to the academic study of education and is consistently ranked among the top schools of education in the US.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Humboldtian model of higher education",
"paragraph_text": "The concept of holistic academic education (compare Bildung) was an idea of Wilhelm von Humboldt, a Prussian philosopher, government functionary and diplomat. As a privy councillor in the Interior Ministry, he reformed the Prussian school and university system according to humanist principles. He founded the University of Berlin (now the Humboldt University of Berlin) and appointed distinguished scholars to teach and research there. Several scholars have called him the most influential education official in German history. Humboldt sought to create an educational system based on unbiased knowledge and analysis, combining research and teaching and allowing students to choose their own course of study. The University of Berlin was later named after him and his brother, naturalist Alexander von Humboldt.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Vesa Kanniainen",
"paragraph_text": "Vesa Kanniainen studied at the London School of Economics in 1972-73, working within macroeconomic theory and monetary economics, topics that he was also teaching as Visiting Assistant Professor at Brown University and Washington State University in 1977-79. Most of his academic life, he has been working at the University of Helsinki. In research, he subsequently moved to dynamic investment models, including tax effects and he started to teach corporate finance. Later, he has given some courses at Uppsala University, University of Munich and at Hamburg University. He is a research fellow at CESifo in Munich.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Shevchenko Transnistria State University",
"paragraph_text": "Taras Shevchenko Transnistria State University () is the main university located in Tiraspol, the capital of Transnistria. The original university in Tiraspol was founded in 1930 as the Institute of public education in the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, then being a constituent part of the Ukrainian SSR.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "University of New England (Australia)",
"paragraph_text": "The University of New England (UNE) is a public university in Australia with approximately 22,500 higher education students. Its original and main campus is located in the city of Armidale in northern central New South Wales. UNE was the first Australian university established outside a state capital city.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "American University of Paris",
"paragraph_text": "The American University of Paris (AUP) is a private, independent, and accredited liberal arts and sciences university in Paris, France. Founded in 1962, the university is one of the oldest American institutions of higher education in Europe. The university campus consists of ten buildings, centrally located in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, on the Left Bank near the Eiffel Tower, Les Invalides, and the Seine.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Education District, Bakersfield",
"paragraph_text": "Education District is a district in Downtown Bakersfield, California. Its predominant businesses are satellite campuses for both public and private colleges and universities. Unlike several other districts in downtown, the Education District did not come about because of formal planning but because like businesses decided to locate themselves together.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "University of Kansas",
"paragraph_text": "The university's Medical Center and University Hospital are located in Kansas City, Kansas. The Edwards Campus is in Overland Park, Kansas, in the Kansas City metropolitan area. There are also educational and research sites in Parsons and Topeka, and branches of the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Wichita and Salina. The university is one of the 62 members of the Association of American Universities.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Jimma University",
"paragraph_text": "Jimma University (JU) is a public research university located in Jimma, Ethiopia. It is recognized as the leading national university, as ranked first by the Federal Ministry of Education for four successive years (2009 - 2012). The establishment of Jimma university dates back to 1952 when Jimma college of Agriculture was founded. The university got its current name in December 1999 following the amalgamation of Jimma College of Agriculture (founded in 1952) and Jimma Institute of Health Sciences (founded in 1983).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Institute of technology",
"paragraph_text": "New Zealand polytechnics are established under the Education Act 1989 as amended, and are considered state-owned tertiary institutions along with universities, colleges of education, and wānanga; there is today often much crossover in courses and qualifications offered between all these types of Tertiary Education Institutions. Some have officially taken the title 'institute of technology' which is a term recognized in government strategies equal to that of the term 'polytechnic'. One has opted for the name 'Universal College of Learning' (UCOL), and another 'Unitec New Zealand'. These are legal names but not recognized terms like 'polytechnic' or 'institute of technology'. Many if not all now grant at least bachelor-level degrees.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Vesa Hanski",
"paragraph_text": "Vesa Hanski (born September 13, 1973 in Turku) is a retired male butterfly swimmer from Finland, who competed in two consecutive Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in 1992.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "University of Montenegro Faculty of Fine Arts",
"paragraph_text": "The University of Montenegro Faculty of Fine Arts (Montenegrin: Fakultet Likovnih Umjetnosti Univerziteta Crne Gore \"Факултет Ликовних Умјетности Универзитета Црне Горе\") is one of the educational institutions of the University of Montenegro. The Faculty is located in Cetinje, in the building of the former Russian embassy to Montenegro.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Washington University in St. Louis",
"paragraph_text": "Tyson Research Center is a 2,000-acre (809 ha) field station located west of St. Louis on the Meramec River. Washington University obtained Tyson as surplus property from the federal government in 1963. It is used by the University as a biological field station and research/education center. In 2010 the Living Learning Center was named one of the first two buildings accredited nationwide as a \"living building\" under the Living Building Challenge, opened to serve as a biological research station and classroom for summer students.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Bahçeşehir University",
"paragraph_text": "Bahçeşehir University (BAU) is a private educational institution in Turkey, located at the European side of Istanbul. The Turkish National Assembly authorized the establishment of the University of Bahçeşehir by the Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation in 1998. An academic and strategic protocol was signed shortly after (February 1998) with San Diego State University in California, USA. The enrollment of the first students was made after the first placement exam (ÖSYS) in 1999–2000 academic year. The university is one of the few universities in Turkey which has it lectures in English and therefore students applying to BAU are required to have high English proficiency.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Nakhchivan State University",
"paragraph_text": "Nakhchivan State University (NSU, Azerbaijani: \"Naxçıvan Dövlət Universiteti\") is a public university located in Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, Azerbaijan. Founded in 1967 as a part of the Azerbaijan Pedagogical Institute, in 1990 it became the Nakhchivan State University. It has 290 faculty members and currently enrolls 3500 students. In 2003, NSU, in conjunction with George Soros' Open Society Institute - Assistance Foundation opened an Education-Information Center on the NSU campus to develop areas involving education, information and law .",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Lesgaft National State University of Physical Education, Sport and Health",
"paragraph_text": "The Lesgaft National State University of Physical Education, Sport and Health is a university in St. Petersburg, Russia, named after Peter Lesgaft.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Mohi-ud-Din Islamic University",
"paragraph_text": "Mohi-ud-Din Islamic University (MIU) is a university located in Nerian Sharif, Azad Kashmir, Pakistan. MIU offers undergraduate and post-graduate education.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the university that educated Vesa Kanniainen located?
|
[
{
"id": 122635,
"question": "What is the name university that educated Vesa Kanniainen?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 4
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 12
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__150683_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "British Journal of Clinical Psychology",
"paragraph_text": "The British Journal of Clinical Psychology is a medical journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the British Psychological Society covering topics in clinical psychology. It was established in 1981, when the \"British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology\" split in two parts, the other being \"British Journal of Social Psychology\". The editor-in-chief is Jessica Grisham (University of New South Wales). According to the \"Journal Citation Reports\", the journal has a 2018 impact factor of 2.672, ranking it 38th out of 130 journals in the category \"Psychology, Clinical\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Retfærd",
"paragraph_text": "Retfærd (Danish: \"Justice\"), subtitled \"Nordic Journal of Law and Justice\", is a Nordic peer-reviewed academic journal of legal science, publishing research from a \"theoretical and practical point of view on the basis of not only jurisprudence, but also sociology, criminology, political science, history, philosophy, economics, ecology, anthropology, feminism and other sciences.\" Principally oriented towards Scandinavia, it primarily publishes articles in the Scandinavian languages, but also publishes special issues in English with a broader international focus. The journal was established in 1976 and since 2002 is published by the Association of Danish Lawyers and Economists. It was formerly published by Universitetsforlaget/the Scandinavian University Press. The journal is ranked as a Level 2 journal, the highest level, in the official Norwegian ranking (the Norwegian Scientific Index).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Journal of Small Business Management",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal of Small Business Management is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the International Council for Small Business. The journal was first published in 1963. It covers all aspects of managing small companies. The editor-in-chief is George T. Solomon (George Washington University).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Sociological Forum",
"paragraph_text": "Sociological Forum is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Eastern Sociological Society. It has been published since 1986. The current editor is Karen A. Cerulo (Rutgers University). The journal covers all areas of sociology and related fields, emphasizing innovative direction in sociological research.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Continuity and Change",
"paragraph_text": "Continuity and Change is an international peer-reviewed academic journal published three times per year by Cambridge University Press. The journal was established by Richard Wall and Lloyd Bonfield with the intention of defining the field of historical sociology. It publishes articles concerned with long-term continuities and discontinuities in the structures of past societies, taking their methodology from the traditional fields of history, sociology, law, demography, economics, and anthropology.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Journal of Animal Ecology",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal of Animal Ecology is a peer-reviewed scientific journal publishing research in all areas of animal ecology. It began publication in 1932, and as such is the second oldest journal of the British Ecological Society (after the \"Journal of Ecology\"). It is available both in print and online.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Modern Asian Studies",
"paragraph_text": "Modern Asian Studies is a bimonthly peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of Asian studies, published by Cambridge University Press. The journal was established in 1967 by the Syndics of the University of Cambridge and the Committee of Directors at the Centre of South Asian Studies (CSAS), a joint initiative among SOAS University of London, University of Cambridge, University of Hull, University of Leeds, and University of Sheffield. The journal covers the history, sociology, economics, and culture of modern Asia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Göran Therborn",
"paragraph_text": "Göran Therborn FAcSS (23 September 1941, Kalmar, Sweden) is a professor of sociology at Cambridge University and is amongst the most highly cited contemporary Marxian-influenced sociologists. He has published widely in journals such as the \"New Left Review\", and is notable for his writing on topics that fall within the general political and sociological framework of post-Marxism. Topics on which he has written extensively include the intersection between the class structure of society and the function of the state apparatus, the formation of ideology within subjects, and the future of the Marxist tradition.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Sociological Inquiry",
"paragraph_text": "Sociological Inquiry is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of Alpha Kappa Delta. The journal explores the human condition through a sociological lens. It was established in 1928 as \"The Quarterly\" and obtained its current title in 1961. The editor-in-chief is Peter B. Wood (Eastern Michigan University).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Hydrogeology Journal",
"paragraph_text": "Hydrogeology Journal is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published eight times a year by Springer Science+Business Media. It was established in 1992 and is the official journal of the International Association of Hydrogeologists. The journal publishes papers on both theoretical and applied aspects of hydrogeology. Papers focus on integrating subsurface hydrology and geology with other supporting disciplines (such as geochemistry, geophysics, geomorphology, geobiology, surface-water hydrology, tectonics, mathematics, numerical modeling, economics, and sociology) to explain phenomena observed in the field. The journal has a 2013 impact factor of 1.718. The editor-in-chief is Clifford I. Voss (United States Geological Survey).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "TESOL Quarterly",
"paragraph_text": "TESOL Quarterly is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of TESOL International Association. It covers English language teaching and learning, standard English as a second dialect, including articles on the psychology and sociology of language learning and teaching, professional preparation, curriculum development, and testing and evaluation. The editors-in-chief are Charlene Polio and Peter De Costa, both at Michigan State University. TESOL also publishes \"TESOL Journal\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Social Science Quarterly",
"paragraph_text": "Social Science Quarterly is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Southwestern Social Science Association. The journal covers political science, sociology, economics, history, social work, geography, international studies, and women's studies. The editors-in-chief are Keith Gaddie (University of Oklahoma), Kirby Goidel (Texas A&M University), and Kim Gaddie (University of Oklahoma)",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "British Journal of Sociology",
"paragraph_text": "The British Journal of Sociology is a peer-reviewed academic journal that was established in 1950 at the London School of Economics. It represents the mainstream of sociological thinking and research and publishes high quality papers on all aspects of the discipline, by academics from all over the world.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Journal of Agricultural Economics",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal of Agricultural Economics is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Agricultural Economics Society. It was established in 1928 as the \"Journal of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Economics Society\" and became the \"Journal of Agricultural Economics\" in 1955. The journal covers research on agricultural economics with relation to other fields such as statistics, marketing, politics, and business management as well as history and sociology and the environment.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Abraham Lavender",
"paragraph_text": "Abraham D. Lavender (born 1940) is a professor of Sociology at Florida International University in Miami, Florida, where his special areas of interest include ethnic relations, Judaica, political sociology, urban sociology, the sociology of sexuality, and social deviance. He is Editor in Chief of the 'Journal of Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian Crypto Jews', and is past president of the Society for Crypto-Judaic Studies. He has previously been a professor of sociology at St. Mary's College in Maryland, and at the University of Miami. He has taught at FIU since 1990.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Journal of World-Systems Research",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal of World-Systems Research (JWSR) is a biannual, open access, peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of world-systems analysis, established in 1995 by founding editor Christopher Chase-Dunn at the Institute for World-System Research at the University of California at Riverside. As of 2015, it is published by the Political Economy of the World-System (PEWS) Section of the American Sociological Association and by the University Library System, University of Pittsburgh. The journal's current editor-in-chief is Jackie Smith (University of Pittsburgh).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Journal of Religious & Theological Information",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal of Religious & Theological Information is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Routledge that covers research in the field of library and information studies as relating to religious studies and related fields, including philosophy, ethnic studies, anthropology, sociology, and history.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Journal of the British Astronomical Association",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal of the British Astronomical Association is a peer-reviewed scientific journal of astronomy published by the British Astronomical Association since October 1890. It is currently edited by Hazel McGee and publishes original research articles, as well news items relevant to the association and the proceedings of association meetings. Letters to the editor, book reviews, and obituaries are also published.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion",
"paragraph_text": "The Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion (\"JSSR\") is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell in the United States of America under the auspices of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, dedicated to publishing scholarly articles in the social sciences, including psychology, sociology and anthropology, devoted to the study of religion. It is not a theology journal, as its publications tend to be empirical papers in the aforementioned disciplines, rather than papers assessing the truth or falsity, or otherwise attempting to clarify, theological doctrines. However, the eminent theologian Paul Tillich wrote a preface to the first edition, published in 1961. A former editor, Ralph W. Hood, is a major name in the psychology of religion, having published scales to assess religious experience and mystical experience. Hood was succeeded as editor in 1999 by Ted Jelen, the first ever political scientist to edit the journal. Jelen was later succeeded as editor by sociologist Rhys Williams. The current editor of the journal is Tobin Grant (Southern Illinois University Carbondale).",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the publisher of the British Journal of Sociology located?
|
[
{
"id": 150683,
"question": "What company published British Journal of Sociology?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 13
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__122230_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "University of Kansas",
"paragraph_text": "The university's Medical Center and University Hospital are located in Kansas City, Kansas. The Edwards Campus is in Overland Park, Kansas, in the Kansas City metropolitan area. There are also educational and research sites in Parsons and Topeka, and branches of the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Wichita and Salina. The university is one of the 62 members of the Association of American Universities.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Karen Boback",
"paragraph_text": "Boback earned a bachelor's degree in Elementary/Special Education and a master's degree in Education/Certification-Technology from College Misericordia, a master's degree from Elementary School Guidance Counseling Marywood University, a Ph.D. in Organizational Leadership from University of Pennsylvania, and a Supervisory Certificate/School Guidance Counseling from University of Scranton. Prior to elective office she worked as a teacher, guidance counselor and college professor. She was presented with the Excellence in Education Award by College Misericordia in November 2006 and was named Harveys Lake Citizen of the Year in 2006.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "University of New England (Australia)",
"paragraph_text": "The University of New England (UNE) is a public university in Australia with approximately 22,500 higher education students. Its original and main campus is located in the city of Armidale in northern central New South Wales. UNE was the first Australian university established outside a state capital city.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Shevchenko Transnistria State University",
"paragraph_text": "Taras Shevchenko Transnistria State University () is the main university located in Tiraspol, the capital of Transnistria. The original university in Tiraspol was founded in 1930 as the Institute of public education in the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, then being a constituent part of the Ukrainian SSR.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Jeevan Mukt",
"paragraph_text": "Jeevan Mukt (; translation: Freedom in Life) is a 1977 Bollywood film directed by Sudhendu Roy. This family drama stars Girish Karnad and Laxmi in the lead support from Parikshit Sahani, Vidya Sinha, Suresh Oberoi, Meena Roy, Sidhir and Mala Jaggi.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Copán",
"paragraph_text": "Copán is an archaeological site of the Maya civilization located in the Copán Department of western Honduras, not far from the border with Guatemala. It was the capital city of a major Classic period kingdom from the 5th to 9th centuries AD. The city was located in the extreme southeast of the Mesoamerican cultural region, on the frontier with the Isthmo - Colombian cultural region, and was almost surrounded by non-Maya peoples.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Dalian University of Technology",
"paragraph_text": "Dalian University of Technology (DUT) (), colloquially known in Chinese as Dàgōng (大工), is a public research university located in Dalian (main campus) and Panjin in Liaoning province, China. Formerly called the Dalian Institute of Technology, DUT is renowned as one of the Big Four Institutes of Technology in China. It is a Chinese Ministry of Education Class A Double First Class University, and one of the national key universities administered directly under the Ministry of Education.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Nakhchivan State University",
"paragraph_text": "Nakhchivan State University (NSU, Azerbaijani: \"Naxçıvan Dövlət Universiteti\") is a public university located in Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, Azerbaijan. Founded in 1967 as a part of the Azerbaijan Pedagogical Institute, in 1990 it became the Nakhchivan State University. It has 290 faculty members and currently enrolls 3500 students. In 2003, NSU, in conjunction with George Soros' Open Society Institute - Assistance Foundation opened an Education-Information Center on the NSU campus to develop areas involving education, information and law .",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Tixméhuac Municipality",
"paragraph_text": "Tixméhuac Municipality (Yucatec Maya: \"Place of Xmeuac tribe\") is one of the 106 municipalities in the Mexican state of Yucatán containing (251.65 km) of land and is located roughly southeast of the city of Mérida.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Classic Maya collapse",
"paragraph_text": "In archaeology, the classic Maya collapse is the decline of Classic Maya civilization and the abandonment of Maya cities in the southern Maya lowlands of Mesoamerica between the 8th and 9th centuries, at the end of the Classic Maya Period. Preclassic Maya experienced a similar collapse in the 2nd century.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "University of Montenegro Faculty of Fine Arts",
"paragraph_text": "The University of Montenegro Faculty of Fine Arts (Montenegrin: Fakultet Likovnih Umjetnosti Univerziteta Crne Gore \"Факултет Ликовних Умјетности Универзитета Црне Горе\") is one of the educational institutions of the University of Montenegro. The Faculty is located in Cetinje, in the building of the former Russian embassy to Montenegro.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Lesgaft National State University of Physical Education, Sport and Health",
"paragraph_text": "The Lesgaft National State University of Physical Education, Sport and Health is a university in St. Petersburg, Russia, named after Peter Lesgaft.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Northwestern University School of Education and Social Policy",
"paragraph_text": "The School of Education and Social Policy (SESP), established in 1926, is the smallest of the eight undergraduate and graduate institutions at Northwestern University, USA. Located about 12 miles north of downtown Chicago in Evanston, Illinois, SESP is devoted to the academic study of education and is consistently ranked among the top schools of education in the US.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Washington University in St. Louis",
"paragraph_text": "Tyson Research Center is a 2,000-acre (809 ha) field station located west of St. Louis on the Meramec River. Washington University obtained Tyson as surplus property from the federal government in 1963. It is used by the University as a biological field station and research/education center. In 2010 the Living Learning Center was named one of the first two buildings accredited nationwide as a \"living building\" under the Living Building Challenge, opened to serve as a biological research station and classroom for summer students.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Mohi-ud-Din Islamic University",
"paragraph_text": "Mohi-ud-Din Islamic University (MIU) is a university located in Nerian Sharif, Azad Kashmir, Pakistan. MIU offers undergraduate and post-graduate education.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Maya Jaggi",
"paragraph_text": "Born in London, where her parents settled after migrating from India, Maya Jaggi was educated at Oxford University and the London School of Economics.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Institute of technology",
"paragraph_text": "New Zealand polytechnics are established under the Education Act 1989 as amended, and are considered state-owned tertiary institutions along with universities, colleges of education, and wānanga; there is today often much crossover in courses and qualifications offered between all these types of Tertiary Education Institutions. Some have officially taken the title 'institute of technology' which is a term recognized in government strategies equal to that of the term 'polytechnic'. One has opted for the name 'Universal College of Learning' (UCOL), and another 'Unitec New Zealand'. These are legal names but not recognized terms like 'polytechnic' or 'institute of technology'. Many if not all now grant at least bachelor-level degrees.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Jimma University",
"paragraph_text": "Jimma University (JU) is a public research university located in Jimma, Ethiopia. It is recognized as the leading national university, as ranked first by the Federal Ministry of Education for four successive years (2009 - 2012). The establishment of Jimma university dates back to 1952 when Jimma college of Agriculture was founded. The university got its current name in December 1999 following the amalgamation of Jimma College of Agriculture (founded in 1952) and Jimma Institute of Health Sciences (founded in 1983).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Hotel Club Akumal Caribe",
"paragraph_text": "Hotel Club Akumal Caribe is a resort located along the shore of Akumal Bay (62 miles south of Cancún), in the Caribbean tourism district referred to as the Riviera Maya in Quintana Roo, Mexico.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is Maya Jaggi's university located?
|
[
{
"id": 122230,
"question": "What is the name of university that educated Maya Jaggi?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 16
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 8
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__121573_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Marc Garneau",
"paragraph_text": "Joseph Jean-Pierre Marc Garneau was born on February 23, 1949, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. He attended primary and secondary schools in Quebec City and Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Engineering Physics from the Royal Military College of Canada in 1970, and in 1973 received a Doctorate in Electrical Engineering from the Imperial College of Science and Technology in London, England. From 1982 to 1983, he attended the Canadian Forces College in Toronto.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Henry Thacker",
"paragraph_text": "Henry Thacker attended Boys' High School and then Canterbury College (what is now known as the University of Canterbury), from where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts. He then enrolled at Edinburgh University where he gained his M.B. and C.M. diplomas in 1895. Two years later he gained a fellowship in the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Scott MacLeay",
"paragraph_text": "Scott MacLeay earned an Honours B.A. degree with a major in economics from Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario in 1972 and a Master of Science degree in economic theory specializing in development economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science in 1974. He left his doctoral studies at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in 1975 to pursue a career in photography.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "Robert Forsyth Scott",
"paragraph_text": "Sir Robert Forsyth Scott (28 July 1849 – 18 November 1933) was a mathematician, barrister and Master of St John's College, Cambridge",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Supreme Court of Illinois",
"paragraph_text": "Name Party Joined Term Ends District Law school attended Anne M. Burke Democratic 2006 2018 1st Chicago - Kent College of Law Mary Jane Theis Democratic 2022 1st University of San Francisco P. Scott Neville Jr. Democratic 2018 2020 1st Washington University School of Law Robert R. Thomas Republican 2000 2020 2nd Loyola University Chicago School of Law Thomas L. Kilbride Democratic 2000 2020 3rd Antioch School of Law Rita B. Garman Republican 2022 4th University of Iowa College of Law Lloyd A. Karmeier (Chief Justice) Republican 2024 5th University of Illinois College of Law",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Oaky River",
"paragraph_text": "Oaky River, a perennial stream of the Macleay River catchment, is located in the Northern Tablelands district of New South Wales, Australia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Warnes River",
"paragraph_text": "Warnes River, a perennial stream of the Macleay River catchment, is located in the Northern Tablelands district of New South Wales, Australia.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Class reunion",
"paragraph_text": "A class reunion is a meeting of former classmates, often organized at or near their former school or college by one or more class members. It is scheduled near an anniversary of their graduation, e.g. every 5 years. Their teachers and administrators may be invited. Those attending reminisce about their student days and bring each other up to date on what has happened since they last meet.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Temple",
"paragraph_text": "Scott & White Medical Center is a 636 - bed multi-specialty teaching hospital located in Temple, Texas. The facility was founded in 1897, when Dr. Arthur C. Scott and Dr. Raleigh R. White, Jr., opened the Temple Sanitarium in Temple, Texas. The group practice consists of over 800 physicians and scientists. The primary clinical teaching campus of Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, Scott & White is ranked as one of the top 100 hospitals and one of the top 15 teaching hospitals in the United States by Thomson Reuters. Scott & White's has 31 accredited residency and fellowship programs, including programs in emergency medicine, radiology and offers a well - established and respected chaplain resident program.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "This Is What I Do (Sonny Rollins album)",
"paragraph_text": "This Is What I Do is an album by jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, released on the Milestone label in 2000, featuring performances by Rollins with Clifton Anderson, Stephen Scott, Bob Cranshaw, Jack DeJohnette and Perry Wilson.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Scott Jaeck",
"paragraph_text": "Scott Jaeck (born October 29, 1954 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an American actor. He attended New Trier High School in Winnetka, Illinois, graduating in 1973. He attended the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. He was married to actress Mariann Mayberry, a member of the Steppenwolf Theater Company ensemble in Chicago, Illinois, until her death on August 1, 2017.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "Steven Gerber",
"paragraph_text": "Steven Roy Gerber (September 28, 1948 – May 28, 2015) was an American composer of classical music. He attended Haverford College, graduating in 1969 at the age of twenty. He then attended Princeton University with a fellowship to study musical composition.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Josiah Scott",
"paragraph_text": "Josiah Scott was born at Washington County, Pennsylvania, not far from Cannonsburg, where he graduated from Jefferson College (now Washington & Jefferson College) in 1823. He returned to Jefferson College as a tutor from 1827 to 1829. He studied law and in 1830 he moved to Bucyrus, Crawford County, Ohio, where he practiced law.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Mary Augusta Scott",
"paragraph_text": "Mary Augusta Scott (1851–1918) was a scholar and professor of English at Smith College. She was one of the first women to receive a PhD from Yale University, in 1894.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Centre Daily Times",
"paragraph_text": "The Centre Daily Times is a daily newspaper located in State College, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is the hometown newspaper for State College and the Pennsylvania State University, one of the best-known and largest universities in the country, with more than 45,000 students attending the main campus.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Maurice Canning Wilks",
"paragraph_text": "Maurice Canning Wilks (1910–1984) was an Irish landscape painter. Born in Belfast in 1910 to a linen designer, he was educated in Belfast at the Malone Public School and attended evening classes at the Belfast College of Art. While attending college he was awarded the Dunville Scholarship allowing him to attend day classes. He went on to exhibit at the Royal Hibernian Academy (RHA) in Dublin where he would one day become an associate member. He was also elected a full member of the Royal Ulster Academy (RUA).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "HMAS Kinchela",
"paragraph_text": "HMAS \"Kinchela\" (Z96) was an auxiliary boom gate vessel of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). She was built in 1914 as a cargo vessel for the Macleay River Co-operative Steamship Company.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Gene Hiser",
"paragraph_text": "He was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended college at the University of Maryland, where he played on the baseball team.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Thorn Kief Hillsbery",
"paragraph_text": "Thorn Kief Hillsbery is an American novelist. He is the author of \"War Boy\" and \"What We Do Is Secret\", which was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award. He was born in Portland, Oregon, and attended Evergreen State College. He currently lives in Manhattan, and teaches a creative writing workshop at Columbia University.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the alma mater of Scott MacLeay located?
|
[
{
"id": 121573,
"question": "The college Scott MacLeay attended was what?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 2
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 5
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London, England",
"London"
] | true |
2hop__123458_89953
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Florida International University School of Architecture",
"paragraph_text": "The FIU School of Architecture is the architecture school at Florida International University, located in Miami, Florida in the United States. It is one of the university's 26 schools and colleges and is a school within the College of Architecture and the Arts. The school was founded in the 1980s.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "North Carolina",
"paragraph_text": "North Carolina is also home to many well-known private colleges and universities, including Duke University, Wake Forest University, Pfeiffer University, Lees-McRae College, Davidson College, Barton College, North Carolina Wesleyan College, Elon University, Guilford College, Livingstone College, Salem College, Shaw University (the first historically black college or university in the South), Laurel University, Meredith College, Methodist University, Belmont Abbey College (the only Catholic college in the Carolinas), Campbell University, University of Mount Olive, Montreat College, High Point University, Lenoir-Rhyne University (the only Lutheran university in North Carolina) and Wingate University.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Cossatot Community College",
"paragraph_text": "Cossatot Community College of the University of Arkansas (CCCUA) is a public community college serving southwest Arkansas. Its main campus is located in the foothills of the Ouachita Mountains in De Queen, Arkansas.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "The Population Bomb",
"paragraph_text": "\"The Population Bomb\" was written at the suggestion of David Brower the executive director of the environmentalist Sierra Club, and Ian Ballantine of Ballantine Books following various public appearances Ehrlich had made regarding population issues and their relation to the environment. Although the Ehrlichs collaborated on the book, the publisher insisted that a single author be credited, and also asked to change their preferred title: \"Population, Resources, and Environment.\" The title \"Population Bomb\" was taken (with permission) from General William H. Draper, founder of the Population Crisis Committee and a pamphlet issued in 1954 by the Hugh Moore Fund. The Ehrlichs regret the choice of title, which they admit was a perfect choice from a marketing perspective, but think that \"it led Paul to be miscategorized as solely focused on human numbers, despite our interest in all the factors affecting the human trajectory.\"",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Aneek Chatterjee",
"paragraph_text": "Aneek Chatterjee graduated from Presidency College. He completed his MA from the same college and did M.Phil. at Calcutta University. He did Ph.D. at Jadavpur University on the topic \"India-U.S. Relations at the End of the Twentieth Century\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Pervaiz Iqbal Cheema",
"paragraph_text": "Cheema was born at Sialkot and was initially educated at Sialkot, later on he moved to Government College, Lahore where he completed his Master's in History. He also did Master's in Political Science from Punjab University, Certificate in Peace Research and International Relations from Oslo University (Norway), Diploma in International Relations from Vienna University (Austria), M. Litt. in Strategic Studies from Aberdeen University (U.K.) and Ph.D. from Quaid-i-Azam University (Pakistan).",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Restoree",
"paragraph_text": "Betty Ballantine edited \"Restoree\" which initiated a long relationship between McCaffrey and Ballantine Books, or later its science fiction imprint Del Rey.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Ian Ballantine",
"paragraph_text": "Born in New York City, the son of Stella Commins Ballantine (half-niece of anarchist Emma Goldman) and the Scottish actor and sculptor Edward James Ballantine, Ian Ballantine received his undergraduate degree from Columbia College and his graduate degree from the London School of Economics. His Master's thesis featured the possibilities of paperback printing.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Of All Possible Worlds",
"paragraph_text": "Of All Possible Worlds is a collection of science fiction stories by American writer William Tenn. It was published in hardcover by Ballantine Books in 1955, with a cover by Richard Powers. Ballantine issued paperback editions in 1955, 1960, and 1968; a British hardcover appeared in 1956 with a paperback following in 1963. It was Tenn's first collection.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Sardar Patel College of Engineering",
"paragraph_text": "Sardar Patel College of Engineering (SPCE) is an government-aided autonomous engineering college located in Mumbai, India. It is affiliated to the University of Mumbai and offers undergraduate (Bachelor) and graduate (Master) degrees in engineering. It is one of the few Mumbai University affiliated colleges that have received Grade ’A’ rating from the Government of Maharashtra. The college is supported by government funds, and was granted autonomous status by the UGC in June 2010.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "The Human Angle",
"paragraph_text": "The Human Angle is the second collection of science fiction stories by American writer William Tenn, published simultaneously in hardback and paperback by Ballantine Books in 1956. Ballantine reprinted the collection in 1964 and 1968.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Kuala Lumpur Metropolitan University College",
"paragraph_text": "Kuala Lumpur Metropolitan University College (KLMUC) is a university college located in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was established in 1991. The College currently offers over 17 programmes in 3 distinctive faculties.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "College of Horticulture",
"paragraph_text": "The College of Horticulture, is a constituent college of Kerala Agricultural University, situated in Thrissur of Kerala state in India. The College of Horticulture imparts agricultural education at undergraduate, graduate and doctoral levels. The college has 20 departments and 7 centres undertaking the multiple activities of teaching, research and extension. The college is located in the picturesque central campus of Kerala Agricultural University in Vellanikkara, Thrissur. The college received the Sardar Patel Outstanding Institution Award in the year 2003 awarded by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research. Dr. George Thomas , Professor is the current Associate Dean of the College",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Venkateshwara Institute of Technology",
"paragraph_text": "Venkateshwara Institute of Technology (VIT) is an engineering college located on NH-58 Meerut-Delhi Bypass, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India. The college is affiliated to Uttar Pradesh Technical University, Lucknow.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "College of the Siskiyous",
"paragraph_text": "College of the Siskiyous (COS) is a public two-year community college with campuses located in Weed and Yreka in Siskiyou County in Northern California. It is part of the California Community Colleges System, serving as the northernmost college in the state of California and the only college in Siskiyou County. The college is in the service area of California State University, Chico and one of only eleven community colleges in California that provide on-campus housing for students.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Centre Daily Times",
"paragraph_text": "The Centre Daily Times is a daily newspaper located in State College, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is the hometown newspaper for State College and the Pennsylvania State University, one of the best-known and largest universities in the country, with more than 45,000 students attending the main campus.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Presidency University, Kolkata",
"paragraph_text": "Presidency University, Kolkata, formerly Hindu College and Presidency College, is a public state university located in Kolkata, West Bengal. The college was established in 1817 with the money donated by Rani Rashmoni, Raja Ram Mohan Roy, Raja Radhakanta Deb, David Hare, Sir Edward Hyde East, Baidyanath Mukhopadhya and Rasamay Dutt.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_text": "LSE is located in Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn. The area is historically known as Clare Market. The LSE has more than 10,000 students and 3,300 staff, just under half of whom come from outside the UK. It had a consolidated income of £340.7 million in 2015 / 16, of which £30.3 million was from research grants. One hundred and fifty five nationalities are represented amongst LSE's student body and the school has the highest percentage of international students (70%) of all British universities. Despite its name, the school is organised into 25 academic departments and institutes which conduct teaching and research across a range of legal studies and social sciences.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "Charleston, South Carolina",
"paragraph_text": "Public institutions of higher education in Charleston include the College of Charleston (the nation's 13th-oldest university), The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina, and the Medical University of South Carolina. The city is also home to private universities, including the Charleston School of Law . Charleston is also home to the Roper Hospital School of Practical Nursing, and the city has a downtown satellite campus for the region's technical school, Trident Technical College. Charleston is also the location for the only college in the country that offers bachelor's degrees in the building arts, The American College of the Building Arts. The Art Institute of Charleston, located downtown on North Market Street, opened in 2007.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Kathmandu",
"paragraph_text": "Institute of Medicine, the central college of Tribhuwan University is the first medical college of Nepal and is located in Maharajgunj, Kathmandu. It was established in 1972 and started to impart medical education from 1978. A number of medical colleges including Kathmandu Medical College, Nepal Medical College, KIST Medical College, Nepal Army Institute of Health Sciences, National Academy of Medical Sciences (NAMS) and Kathmandu University School of Medical Sciences (KUSMS), are also located in or around Kathmandu.",
"is_supporting": false
}
] |
Where is the university related to Ian Ballantine located?
|
[
{
"id": 123458,
"question": "Which college or university is related with Ian Ballantine?",
"answer": "London School of Economics",
"paragraph_support_idx": 7
},
{
"id": 89953,
"question": "where is #1 located",
"answer": "Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 17
}
] |
Westminster, central London, near the boundary between Covent Garden and Holborn
|
[
"London"
] | true |
2hop__91652_78168
|
[
{
"idx": 0,
"title": "Star Wars: The Last Jedi",
"paragraph_text": "Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment released Star Wars: The Last Jedi digitally in HD and 4K via digital download and Movies Anywhere on March 13, 2018, with an Ultra HD Blu - ray, Blu - ray, and DVD physical release on March 27. It was the first Star Wars film to be released on the Ultra HD Blu - ray format.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 1,
"title": "Taken (film)",
"paragraph_text": "Taken is a 2008 English - language French action thriller film written by Luc Besson and Robert Mark Kamen, and directed by Pierre Morel. It stars Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, Katie Cassidy, Leland Orser, and Holly Valance. Neeson plays Bryan Mills, a former CIA operative who sets about tracking down his teenage daughter Kim (Grace) and her best friend (Cassidy) after the two girls are kidnapped by Albanian sex traffickers while traveling in France.",
"is_supporting": true
},
{
"idx": 2,
"title": "Han Solo",
"paragraph_text": "Han Solo Star Wars character Harrison Ford as Han Solo in a promotional image for Star Wars First appearance Star Wars (1977) Created by George Lucas Portrayed by Harrison Ford (Episodes IV -- VII, Holiday Special) Alden Ehrenreich (Solo: A Star Wars Story) Voiced by Harrison Ford (Holiday Special animated inserts and Lego: The Force Awakens) Kiff VandenHeuvel (Star Wars: Forces of Destiny, old) A.J. Locascio (Star Wars: Forces of Destiny, young) Other: Perry King (radio dramas and read - along storybook CDs) Neil Ross (Star Wars: Rogue Squadron, Star Wars: Force Commander and Star Wars: Masters of Teräs Käsi) David Esch (Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds) Lex Lang (Star Wars: Rogue Squadron III - Rebel Strike and Star Wars: Battlefront II) John Armstrong (Star Wars: Empire at War, Star Wars Battlefront: Renegade Squadron, Lego Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Out, Star Wars: The Force Unleashed II, Disney Infinity 3.0, and Star Wars Battlefront) Keith Ferguson (Robot Chicken, Mad and The Lego Movie) Michael Daingerfield Hall (Lego Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles and Lego Star Wars: Droid Tales) Katie Leigh (Lego Star Wars: The Padawan Menace, young) Ross Marquand (Phineas and Ferb: Star Wars) Information Aliases Captain Solo Gender Male Occupation Captain of the Millennium Falcon General in the Rebel Alliance Smuggler Affiliation Galactic Empire Rebel Alliance New Republic Resistance Galactic Alliance (in Legends) Title Captain General Spouse (s) Leia Organa Sana Starros Significant other (s) Qi'ra Children Ben Solo Legends: Jaina Solo Jacen Solo Anakin Solo Relatives Luke Skywalker (brother - in - law) Anakin Skywalker (father - in - law) Padmé Amidala (mother - in - law) Legends: Mara Jade Skywalker (sister - in - law) Ben Skywalker (nephew) Allana Solo (granddaughter) Homeworld Corellia",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 3,
"title": "List of Star Wars characters",
"paragraph_text": "Verónica Segura is a Mexican actress. She is best known for playing Cordé in Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 4,
"title": "Padmé Amidala",
"paragraph_text": "Padmé Amidala Star Wars character Natalie Portman as Padmé Amidala in Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith First appearance The Phantom Menace (1999) Created by George Lucas Portrayed by Natalie Portman Voiced by Catherine Taber (Star Wars: The Clone Wars film and TV series, Star Wars: The Clone Wars -- Jedi Alliance, Star Wars: The Clone Wars -- Republic Heroes, Disney Infinity 3.0 and Star Wars Forces of Destiny) Grey DeLisle (Star Wars: Clone Wars, Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (video game), Star Wars Episode I: Jedi Power Battles, Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds, Star Wars: Super Bombad Racing and Star Wars: The Clone Wars) Montana Norberg (Lego Star Wars: Droid Tales) Information Occupation Queen of Naboo Senator of Naboo Co-founder of the Rebel Alliance Affiliation Galactic Senate of the Grand Republic Alliance to Restore the Republic Family Jobal Naberrie (mother) Ruwee Naberrie (father) Sola Naberrie (sister) Spouse (s) Anakin Skywalker Children Luke Skywalker Leia Organa Relatives Canon: Han Solo (son - in - law) Ben Solo (grandson) Legends: Mara Jade (daughter - in - law) Ben Skywalker (grandson) Jacen Solo (grandson) Jaina Solo (granddaughter) Anakin Solo (grandson) Allana Solo (great - granddaughter) Homeworld Naboo",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 5,
"title": "Daniel Millican",
"paragraph_text": "Daniel Millican (born June 6, 1965) is an American writer/director in the film industry. His most recent film \"The Imposter\", starring Kevin Max of dcTalk was released in 2010. His previous movie, \"Striking Range\", starring Lou Diamond Phillips, was released in 2006 by Sony Pictures. Millican's movies have played all around the world, distributed by companies Curb Entertainment, Artist View Entertainment, Sony Pictures, First Look Media and played on television, both cable and free TV like Lifetime Movie Network and Starz/Encore. Actors like Lou Diamond Phillips, Adam Baldwin, Sean Patrick Flanery, Mimi Rogers, Joey Lauren Adams, Yancy Butler and Tom Wright have starred in Millican's movies.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 6,
"title": "Virudhagiri",
"paragraph_text": "Virudhagiri is a 2010 Indian Tamil-language action film written and directed by Vijayakanth, making his directorial debut, besides playing the title character as well. The film, co-starring Madhuri Itagi, Arun Pandian and Mansoor Ali Khan among others, released on 10 December 2010. The movie is considered as one of the finest works of Vijaykanth. It broke several records at the box office and regarded as one of the biggest blockbusters of Tamil cinema.. It was later dubbed in Hindi as \"Inspector Dabangg\". It is a remake of the French film \"Taken\".",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 7,
"title": "Sam Witwer",
"paragraph_text": "Samuel Stewart Witwer (born October 20, 1977) is an American actor and musician. He has portrayed Crashdown in Battlestar Galactica, Davis Bloome in Smallville, and vampire Aidan Waite of the US / Canadian remake of BBC's supernatural drama series Being Human on Syfy in the US and Space in Canada. He also voiced protagonist Galen Marek / Starkiller in the multimedia project Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, as well as The Son and Darth Maul in Cartoon Network's Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Emperor Palpatine as well as Maul in Disney XD's Star Wars Rebels. Witwer was also the 2017 reigning Movie Trivia Schmoedown Star Wars Champion, a title he won from Ken Napzok in a 30 - minute Iron Man Star Wars trivia match; he was stripped of the title in June 2018 however as he was unable to defend it due to his upcoming work on the CW series Supergirl. He also had a role as Mr Hyde in Once Upon a Time.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 8,
"title": "Triple Elvis",
"paragraph_text": "Triple Elvis is a 1963 painting of Elvis Presley by the American artist Andy Warhol. The photographic image of Elvis used by Warhol as a basis for this work, taken from a publicity still from the movie \"Flaming Star\", has become iconic and synonymous with the singer.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 9,
"title": "Omega Doom",
"paragraph_text": "Omega Doom is a 1996 American science-fiction action film directed by Albert Pyun and starring Rutger Hauer. It was written by Pyun and Ed Naha. The story, set in a dystopian future, concerns a robot warrior who, during a nuclear winter, plays both sides of a robot civil war in a small town. The film is mostly based on \"Yojimbo\" by Akira Kurosawa, and it was the third movie in Pyun's \"Cyborg Trilogy\". It is considered a cult film.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 10,
"title": "Star Wars: Storm in the Glass",
"paragraph_text": "Star Wars: Storm in the Glass (, refers to operation of Persian Gulf War \"Desert Storm\"), sometimes translated as Star Wars: Tempest in a Teapot, is a humorous 2004 English-to-Russian movie spoof of the 1999 science fantasy film \"\" by popular Russian movie translator Dmitry \"Goblin\" Puchkov. In dubbing the film into Russian, Puchkov altered the plotline, character names, music, and certain visual effects to provide a different (and funny) experience to Russian-speaking audiences.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 11,
"title": "Jake Lloyd",
"paragraph_text": "Jake Matthew Lloyd (born March 5, 1989) is an American former actor who played young Anakin Skywalker in the 1999 film Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace, the first in the Star Wars prequel trilogy. He reprised this role in five subsequent Star Wars video games.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 12,
"title": "List of box office records set by Avengers: Infinity War",
"paragraph_text": "Record Figure Previous record holder Surpassed by Notes Highest opening weekend and single weekend gross $640.5 million The Fate of the Furious -- $541.9 million N / A Fastest to gross $1 billion 11 days Star Wars: The Force Awakens -- 12 days N / A Fastest to gross $1.5 billion 18 days Star Wars: The Force Awakens -- 19 days N / A Highest - grossing superhero movie $2.046 billion The Avengers -- $1.519 billion N / A Highest 4DX gross $13.5 million N / A N / A It was the first movie to reach two million admissions. Highest - grossing movie of 2018 $2.046 billion N / A N / A",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 13,
"title": "Star Wars Day",
"paragraph_text": "Some recognize the following day, May 5, as ``Revenge of the Fifth '', a play on Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith and celebrate the Sith Lords and other villainous characters from the Star Wars series rather than the Jedi.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 14,
"title": "Andharangam",
"paragraph_text": "Andharangam is a Tamil language film, starring Kamal Haasan. Savithri and Major Sundarrajan played Deepa's parents. It was an adult rated movie, released when Kamal was in his early 20s. The movie was taken in black and white, but the song scene of \"\"Gnayiru Oli Mazhaiyil\"\", \"\"Paadaganai Thedikondu\"\" and \"\"Pudhu Mugame\"\" were taken in Gevacolor. The song \"Gnayiru Oli Mazhaiyil\" marked Kamal Haasan's debut as a singer. This film was a debut film for satheesh as a villain and also Deepa's debut film.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 15,
"title": "Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story",
"paragraph_text": "Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story is a 2011 original LMN movie, starring Taraji P. Henson and Terry O'Quinn. The film follows the events surrounding the kidnapping and rescue of the son of Tiffany Rubin, who was kidnapped by his father and taken to South Korea.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 16,
"title": "Star Wars: The Last Jedi",
"paragraph_text": "Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment will release Star Wars: The Last Jedi digitally in HD and 4K via download and Disney Movies Anywhere on March 13, 2018, with an Ultra HD Blu - Ray, Blu - ray, and DVD release on March 27.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 17,
"title": "Wake Me When the War Is Over",
"paragraph_text": "Wake Me When the War Is Over is a 1969 American made-for-television comedy film directed by Gene Nelson and starring Ken Berry and Eva Gabor. It first aired as the \"ABC Movie of the Week\" on October 14, 1969.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 18,
"title": "While There's War There's Hope",
"paragraph_text": "While There's War There's Hope () is a 1974 satirical Commedia all'italiana film written, directed and starring Alberto Sordi. A top-level tragicomedy, the movie was so successful in Italy that its title has become a proverb.",
"is_supporting": false
},
{
"idx": 19,
"title": "Qui-Gon Jinn",
"paragraph_text": "Qui - Gon Jinn is a fictional character in the Star Wars franchise, portrayed by Liam Neeson as the main protagonist of the 1999 film Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace.",
"is_supporting": true
}
] |
Who did the star of the movie Taken play in Star Wars?
|
[
{
"id": 91652,
"question": "who is the star of the movie taken",
"answer": "Liam Neeson",
"paragraph_support_idx": 1
},
{
"id": 78168,
"question": "who did #1 play in star wars",
"answer": "Qui - Gon Jinn",
"paragraph_support_idx": 19
}
] |
Qui - Gon Jinn
|
[
"Qui-Gon Jinn"
] | true |
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