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The dataset generation failed because of a cast error
Error code:   DatasetGenerationCastError
Exception:    DatasetGenerationCastError
Message:      An error occurred while generating the dataset

All the data files must have the same columns, but at some point there are 6 new columns ({'gold', 'category', 'opt2', 'opt0', 'opt1', 'opt3'}) and 3 missing columns ({'date', 'answer', 'q number'}).

This happened while the csv dataset builder was generating data using

hf://datasets/Jingmiao/PUZZLEQA/multiple_big_exp.tsv (at revision e650cfb9d9c0828e9a7f324945bacccd0aef9813)

Please either edit the data files to have matching columns, or separate them into different configurations (see docs at https://hf.co/docs/hub/datasets-manual-configuration#multiple-configurations)
Traceback:    Traceback (most recent call last):
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2011, in _prepare_split_single
                  writer.write_table(table)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/arrow_writer.py", line 585, in write_table
                  pa_table = table_cast(pa_table, self._schema)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2302, in table_cast
                  return cast_table_to_schema(table, schema)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2256, in cast_table_to_schema
                  raise CastError(
              datasets.table.CastError: Couldn't cast
              category: string
              explanation: string
              question: string
              opt0: string
              opt1: string
              opt2: string
              opt3: string
              gold: int64
              -- schema metadata --
              pandas: '{"index_columns": [{"kind": "range", "name": null, "start": 0, "' + 1153
              to
              {'date': Value(dtype='int64', id=None), 'explanation': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'q number': Value(dtype='int64', id=None), 'question': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'answer': Value(dtype='string', id=None)}
              because column names don't match
              
              During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
              
              Traceback (most recent call last):
                File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 1321, in compute_config_parquet_and_info_response
                  parquet_operations = convert_to_parquet(builder)
                File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 935, in convert_to_parquet
                  builder.download_and_prepare(
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1027, in download_and_prepare
                  self._download_and_prepare(
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1122, in _download_and_prepare
                  self._prepare_split(split_generator, **prepare_split_kwargs)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1882, in _prepare_split
                  for job_id, done, content in self._prepare_split_single(
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2013, in _prepare_split_single
                  raise DatasetGenerationCastError.from_cast_error(
              datasets.exceptions.DatasetGenerationCastError: An error occurred while generating the dataset
              
              All the data files must have the same columns, but at some point there are 6 new columns ({'gold', 'category', 'opt2', 'opt0', 'opt1', 'opt3'}) and 3 missing columns ({'date', 'answer', 'q number'}).
              
              This happened while the csv dataset builder was generating data using
              
              hf://datasets/Jingmiao/PUZZLEQA/multiple_big_exp.tsv (at revision e650cfb9d9c0828e9a7f324945bacccd0aef9813)
              
              Please either edit the data files to have matching columns, or separate them into different configurations (see docs at https://hf.co/docs/hub/datasets-manual-configuration#multiple-configurations)

Need help to make the dataset viewer work? Make sure to review how to configure the dataset viewer, and open a discussion for direct support.

date
int64
explanation
string
q number
int64
question
string
answer
string
20,120,101
It's our annual year-end news quiz, compiled with the help of Kathie Baker and Tim Goodman. You are given new names in the news — people you probably never heard of before 2011, but who became famous during the past 12 months. Explain why they're famous.
1
Kim Jong Un
He's the new North Korean leader
20,120,101
It's our annual year-end news quiz, compiled with the help of Kathie Baker and Tim Goodman. You are given new names in the news — people you probably never heard of before 2011, but who became famous during the past 12 months. Explain why they're famous.
2
Gilad Shalit
Gilad Shalit is the Israeli soldier who was released from captivity in exchange for many Palestinians
20,120,101
It's our annual year-end news quiz, compiled with the help of Kathie Baker and Tim Goodman. You are given new names in the news — people you probably never heard of before 2011, but who became famous during the past 12 months. Explain why they're famous.
3
Mohammed Bouazizi
He was a Tunisian street vendor whose self-immolation martyrdom triggered the Arab Spring and led to the overthrow of the Tunisian government
20,120,101
It's our annual year-end news quiz, compiled with the help of Kathie Baker and Tim Goodman. You are given new names in the news — people you probably never heard of before 2011, but who became famous during the past 12 months. Explain why they're famous.
5
Kris Humphries
He married Kim Kardashian for 72 days
20,120,101
It's our annual year-end news quiz, compiled with the help of Kathie Baker and Tim Goodman. You are given new names in the news — people you probably never heard of before 2011, but who became famous during the past 12 months. Explain why they're famous.
6
Watson
the computer that played "Jeopardy!"
20,120,101
It's our annual year-end news quiz, compiled with the help of Kathie Baker and Tim Goodman. You are given new names in the news — people you probably never heard of before 2011, but who became famous during the past 12 months. Explain why they're famous.
7
Siri
the new intelligence software system for the iPhone that answers questions for you.
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
1
male resident of Muscat
Oman man
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
2
statue of a lion made out of a butter substitute
oleo leo
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
3
very wise Arkansas Indian
Osage sage
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
4
area high in the atmosphere where the air is thin
ozone zone
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
5
pumpkin colored stove
orange range
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
6
accommodate R&B singer Mary J
oblige Blige
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
7
grouchy muppet’s marks left by wounds
Oscar’s scars
20,130,414
Every answer is a two-word phrase in which the first word starts with O. Drop the O, and you'll get a new word that ends the phrase.
8
job to find what is left out
omission mission
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
1
Oscar-winning actor (3,5) — expression of appreciation
Tom Hanks, thanks
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
2
Singer with the Supremes (5,4) — worthless stuff
Diana Ross, dross
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
3
Former baseball star (4,4) — writing that's not poetry
Pete Rose, prose
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
4
Comedian and former host of the Oscars (5,4) — earthenware pot
Chris Rock, crock
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
5
Singer with the group Hole (8,4) — garlic bulb
Courtney Love, clove
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
6
Oldtime comedian with a radio show (4,5) — opposite of risen
Fred Allen, fallen
20,200,809
Every answer today is the name of a famous person whose first initial and last name, in order, spell a word. For example, take Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The B of Benjamin + his last name spells BRUSH. I'll give you clues to the parts. You give me the names.
7
Co-star of ""Desperate Housewives"" (4,7) — former British prime minister
Teri Hatcher
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
1
LIKES - E
silk
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
2
ON LOW - N
wool
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
3
NOTARY - T
rayon
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
4
MAIDEN - A
denim
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
5
ANTICS - C
satin
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
6
ARCHLY - H
lycra
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
7
RECIPE - I
crepe
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
8
CONTORT - R
cotton
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
9
CALDRON - L
dacron
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
10
REMATCHES - T
cashmere
20,190,623
Every answer today is the name of a fabric or clothing material. You name it from its anagram.
11
YOUR CROWD - W
corduroy
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
1
Christmas song / Reef material
carol, coral
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
2
No longer fresh / Roof material
stale, slate
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
3
Versions in the testing stage / Motel in ""Psycho"""
betas, Bates
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
4
Sheets, pillowcases, etc. / First leader of the Soviet Union
linen, Lenin
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
5
Song in the Bible / Blood component
psalm, plasm
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
6
Tree secretion / Up
resin, risen
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
7
Trail left by a snail / Grin
slime, smile
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
8
Male singing voice / Cartridge contents
tenor, toner
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
9
Marsh bird / Backbone
snipe, spine
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
10
Group of experts / Word before code or colony
panel, penal
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
11
Temperamental sorts / ___ Cup
divas, Davis
20,170,709
I'm going to give you clues for some 5-letter words. Switch the 2nd and 4th letters to make a new word that answers the second clue.
12
Home / Material for a Southwest home
abode, adobe
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
1
THINGS — Phrase suggesting priority
first things first
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
2
EAT — cutthroat
dog eat dog
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
3
SWEET — What you say after returning from a long trip
home sweet home
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
4
AGAINST — Not give up despite impossible odds
hope against hope
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
5
MEANS — an emphatic refusal
no means no
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
6
VERSUS — a classic feature of Mad magazine
Spy vs. Spy, or Kramer vs. Kramer
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
7
SAY — Don't give up, there's always a possibility
never say never
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
8
BABY — Catchphrase said by Sarah Palin at the 2008 Republican National Convention
drill baby drill
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
9
THOUSAND — The number of ""Arabian Nights""
one thousand one
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
10
CITY — State capital north of Austin, Texas
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
11
GLORIOUS — Song from ""Oliver!"" with the lyric ""Just picture a great big steak / Fried, roasted, or stewed""
Food Glorious Food
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
12
BLOODY — 1971 film with Glenda Jackson and Peter Finch
Sunday Bloody Sunday
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
13
JAMES — 007's introduction
Bond, James Bond
20,181,209
Every answer today is a familiar three-word phrase or title in which the first and last words are the same. I'll give you the middle word (and a clue, if necessary). You tell me the phrase.
14
NOT — Faux apology
sorry, not sorry
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
1
Doug Jones
Democratic upset winner in Alabama who ran against Roy Moore in a special election for Jeff Sessions' seat in the Senate
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
2
Gal Gadot
Israeli actress who starred as Wonder Woman
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
3
Anthony Scaramucci
President Trump's communications director for just 10 days
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
4
Jack Phillips
Colorado baker who refused to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple; his case is now before the Supreme Court
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
5
Emmerson Mnangagwa
New president of Zimbabwe, successor to Robert Mugabe
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
6
Tom Steyer
Billionaire activist who has spent millions of dollars in a campaign to impeach President Trump
20,171,231
This is my annual ""New Names in the News Quiz."" I'll name some people and things you had probably never heard of until 2017 but that sprang to prominence during the past 12 months. You tell me who or what they are.1. Doug Jones 2. Gal Gadot3. Anthony Scaramucci4. Jack Phillips5. Emmerson Mnangagwa6. Tom Steyer7. Salvator Mundi
7
Salvator Mundi
Painting by Leonardo da Vinci that sold at Christie's for a record $450.3 million
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
1
supine
Spain
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
2
climb
Colombia
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
3
hinders
Honduras
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
4
rouses
Russia
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
5
encourage
Nicaragua
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
6
cloned
Iceland
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
7
smile
Somolia
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
8
userlink
Sri Lanka
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
9
origination
Argentina
20,150,517
This week's on-air puzzle is similar to last week's, only a little harder. Every answer is the name of a country. For each word given, ignore the vowels. The consonants, in order from left to right, are the same consonants in the same order as in the country. For example, given the word ""omelet,"" the answer is ""Malta.""
10
sterile
Australia
20,150,405
Every answer is a made-up, two-word phrase in which the first word has seven letters. Drop its first and last letters to get a five-letter word that is the second part of the phrase. For example: Bottled water from France that is not normal is ""deviant Evian.""
1
opposed to profits
against gains
20,150,405
Every answer is a made-up, two-word phrase in which the first word has seven letters. Drop its first and last letters to get a five-letter word that is the second part of the phrase. For example: Bottled water from France that is not normal is ""deviant Evian.""
2
catch sight of slight hobbles
glimpse limps
20,150,405
Every answer is a made-up, two-word phrase in which the first word has seven letters. Drop its first and last letters to get a five-letter word that is the second part of the phrase. For example: Bottled water from France that is not normal is ""deviant Evian.""
3
former Alaska governor with a milky white hue
opaline Palin
20,150,405
Every answer is a made-up, two-word phrase in which the first word has seven letters. Drop its first and last letters to get a five-letter word that is the second part of the phrase. For example: Bottled water from France that is not normal is ""deviant Evian.""
4
narrow walkway covered with a colorful curvy shirt pattern
Paisley aisle
20,150,405
Every answer is a made-up, two-word phrase in which the first word has seven letters. Drop its first and last letters to get a five-letter word that is the second part of the phrase. For example: Bottled water from France that is not normal is ""deviant Evian.""
5
great deal of wreckage from a ship (5-letter word comes first this time)
lotsa flotsam
20,141,214
These are some business-related puzzles made for the New York Times' DealBook conference in New York last Thursday. Every answer is the name of a Fortune 200 company — that is, one of the top 200 corporations according to the 2014 list in Fortune magazine.
1
What company’s name is appropriately inside the phrase METAL COATING?
Alcoa
20,141,214
These are some business-related puzzles made for the New York Times' DealBook conference in New York last Thursday. Every answer is the name of a Fortune 200 company — that is, one of the top 200 corporations according to the 2014 list in Fortune magazine.
2
What company’s name is an anagram of ICE POPS?
PepsiCo
20,141,214
These are some business-related puzzles made for the New York Times' DealBook conference in New York last Thursday. Every answer is the name of a Fortune 200 company — that is, one of the top 200 corporations according to the 2014 list in Fortune magazine.
3
What company’s name consists of 8 letters, 4 of which are L’s?
Eli Lilly
20,141,214
These are some business-related puzzles made for the New York Times' DealBook conference in New York last Thursday. Every answer is the name of a Fortune 200 company — that is, one of the top 200 corporations according to the 2014 list in Fortune magazine.
4
What company’s name becomes the name of an Olympic sport if you change the third letter to an X?
Boeing (making boxing)
20,141,214
These are some business-related puzzles made for the New York Times' DealBook conference in New York last Thursday. Every answer is the name of a Fortune 200 company — that is, one of the top 200 corporations according to the 2014 list in Fortune magazine.
5
What company’s name is pig Latin for an insect?
eBay
20,141,214
These are some business-related puzzles made for the New York Times' DealBook conference in New York last Thursday. Every answer is the name of a Fortune 200 company — that is, one of the top 200 corporations according to the 2014 list in Fortune magazine.
6
What company’s name consists of the names of two presidents’ names? (a tricky clue)
Johnson & Johnson
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
1
Rob Ford
mayor of Toronto who admitted using crack cocaine
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
2
Edward Snowden
NSA whistleblower
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
3
George Alexander Louis Windsor
Royal baby born to Prince William and Duchess Catherine
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
4
North West
Baby of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
5
Hassan Rouhani
New president of Iran, regarded as a moderate
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
6
Janet Yellen
President Obama’s nominee to be the new Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
7
Magnus Carlsen
new world chess champion
20,131,229
Today’s on-air puzzle is called, Now You Know Them.
8
Sunny
the Obama’s new dog
20,140,413
Three words that start with the same letter will be presented in a group. Find a word that shares the same first letter as the three, and that can follow each word within the group to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase. Example: ""big,"" ""broad,"" ""boy""; the answer would be ""band"" to get ""big band,"" ""broadband"" and ""boy band.""
1
calling, credit and Christmas
card
20,140,413
Three words that start with the same letter will be presented in a group. Find a word that shares the same first letter as the three, and that can follow each word within the group to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase. Example: ""big,"" ""broad,"" ""boy""; the answer would be ""band"" to get ""big band,"" ""broadband"" and ""boy band.""
2
cable, cattle and company
car
20,140,413
Three words that start with the same letter will be presented in a group. Find a word that shares the same first letter as the three, and that can follow each word within the group to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase. Example: ""big,"" ""broad,"" ""boy""; the answer would be ""band"" to get ""big band,"" ""broadband"" and ""boy band.""
3
electric, eagle and evil
eye
20,140,413
Three words that start with the same letter will be presented in a group. Find a word that shares the same first letter as the three, and that can follow each word within the group to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase. Example: ""big,"" ""broad,"" ""boy""; the answer would be ""band"" to get ""big band,"" ""broadband"" and ""boy band.""
4
fist, fire and food
fight
20,140,413
Three words that start with the same letter will be presented in a group. Find a word that shares the same first letter as the three, and that can follow each word within the group to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase. Example: ""big,"" ""broad,"" ""boy""; the answer would be ""band"" to get ""big band,"" ""broadband"" and ""boy band.""
5
guessing, golf and ground
game
20,140,413
Three words that start with the same letter will be presented in a group. Find a word that shares the same first letter as the three, and that can follow each word within the group to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase. Example: ""big,"" ""broad,"" ""boy""; the answer would be ""band"" to get ""big band,"" ""broadband"" and ""boy band.""
6
pie, pizza and Peter
pan
End of preview.

Acknowledgements

The PUZZLEQA is scraped from NPR Sunday Puzzle Official Website and NPR Puzzle Synopsis, made by a group of fans by running a mailing list that distributed questions and answers for each week’s puzzle. The authors of the dataset cleaned the data and made some multiple choice based on the question and answers.

Creation

The Multiple Choice Dataset is generated from PUZZLEQA dataset using the following algorithm.

  1. Read the fr_big_exp.tsv.tsv file
  2. Group rule-question-answer triples in a given Sunday together (so the rules of each question will be the same)
  3. For each question, randomly select three other answers from answers on the same Sunday. Shuffle 3 selected answers with the correct answer for the given question to obtain 4 choices for this question. \
  4. identify the correct answer for the given question as the "gold" answer.

Recent.tsv is the dataset based on the NPR PUZZLE in 2023.

Citation

@inproceedings{zhao2023solving, title={Solving and Generating NPR Sunday Puzzles with Large Language Models}, author={Jingmiao Zhao and Carolyn Jane Anderson}, year={2023}, eprint={2306.12255}, archivePrefix={arXiv}, primaryClass={cs.CL} }

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